QUESTIONS OF INHUMANITY See editorial page C I 4c Liltriigaut ~IaiI4 BONE-CHILLING Hligh--20 Low--16 Cloudy, cold, snow likely Vol. LXXXI, No. 101 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, January 29, 1971 Ten Cents Ten Pages 4NDICTMENTS REMAIN: Ju dge Kent dismisses Hevy e a air ra U.S. Ls hit fury report i ;. -Daily-Denny Gainer LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT members discuss the Curricu- lum Committee's decision to delete several sections of the Course Mart course in political action. The government condemned the action and voted to review the performance of the three student members of the Course Mart Committee which recommended the action. The sections deleted include those on repression, gay liberation, independent political action, youth liberation, and the media. CLEVELAND, Ohio (A - A federal judge struck from the record y e s t e r d a y a special grand jury r e p or t on last May's Kent State University disorder, but let s t a n d the jury's 25 indictments. U.S. District Judge William K.' Thomas declared the report could "irreparably damage the rights of the indicted persons," mostly stu- dents, but said there was no basis to stop prosecution of the indicted. He said in a 51 page memoran- dum that the special Portage' County grand jury exceeded its power by making accusations in the report, and that jurors also violated secrecy instructions in the report preparation. "The grand jury is an accuser of crime, not a trying body," Thomas said in the memorandum, adding that the report upset the teaching atmosphere at K e n t State. *He said it leveled charges "bor- dering on criminal accusations" against 23 faculty members who opposed the presence of National Guardsmen. Thomas ordered the report to be "physically expunged and destroy- ed" within 10 days.% However, he overruled defend- ant motions for a three-judge fed- eral panel to study constitution- ality of Ohio's anti-riot law, say- ing that there was no evidence to substantiate claims that the law was unconstitutional. The anti-riot law w.s the basis for most of the 25 indictments re- turned by the jury. The jury investigation was or- dered by former Gov. James A. Rhodes after 13 students were shot, four of them fatally, during a confrontation with National Guardsmen on the campus last May 4. The jury's report was critical of the Kent State administration and stated that the National Guards- men on the campus were not liable to criminal prosecution. The report contended that the university administration had fos-; tered "an attitude of laxity, over- indulgence a n d permissiveness with its students and faculty to the extent that it can no longer regulate the activities of either ..." The report also charged that students, "observers," "cheerlead- ers" and the 23 faculty members who circulated a statement May 3 against the guard presence all shared blame for the shootings. Thomas' ruling was made on two scis jinied in his court one by a By The Associated Press The United States is conducting the heaviest bombing campaign of the war in Laos and Cambodia in an effort to force North Vietnam "to make accommodations" and to pave the way for withdrawal, sources said yesterday. Up to 500 U.S. warplanes from the Air Forces, Navy and Marine Corps, the sources said, are now making daily raids on North Vietnamese troops and supply routes in Laos and Cambodia. Senator John Stennis, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said yesterday after a briefing by Secre- tary of Defense Melvin Laird, that it might become neces- sary to relax the present Congressional restrictions on mili- tary operations in Cambodia. Despite efforts on the part of f e Secretary of State William RogersVu n o yesterday to minimize the import- ance of the use of American heli- copters and planes in last week's battle in Cambodia, however, both Democratic and Republican Sen- adjourn ate Foreign Relations Committee members expressed fears of deep- ened U.S. involvement.fSaFo3 days Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee Chairman J. William Ful- bright told reporters he disagreed By SARA FITZGERALD ith Roers insistence that there Indochina -Daily-Denny Gainer Jerry Rubin speaks for the life culture at Hill Aud. last night LSA govt. hits Ru bin calls for action t t 7 {4 #1( ' i t t 7 l } section By BOB SCHREINER The LSA student government last night condemned the literary *ollege curriculum committee's de- cision to delete six out of the 15 sections of a Course Mart course in political action and unani- mously urged students to fight for a reversal of that decision.' In addition, the representative body for all LSA students v o t e d ,nanimously to review the per- formance of the three student E isenberg " _ - Eeletion s 1 members of the course mart com- mittee, and declared void any fur- ther decisions concerning College Course 327 (Issues, Strategies and Analysis in Political Action) until representatives selected by LSA student government were seated on the Course Mart committee. The three students presently on the committee were appointed by LSA Assistant Dean James Shaw. Earlier in the afternoon, several persons responsible for the decis- ion made Tuesday to delete the sections pronounced the decision "final and unnegotiable", w h i 1e refuting charges that the dele- tions were made for "political rea- aotrials By MARK DILLEN fear and guilt that have immobil- sure must constantly be applied Over 300 heard Yippie spokes- ized young people, Rubin said. to seemingly "liberal" judges like man Jerry Rubin and other "There was this feeling last year Keith to "free John, Jack and Pun radicals speak at Hill Aud. last that if I don't blow up a building, because they are just as dangerous night during what was billed as I'm not a revolutionary," said Ru- as Julius." I k] ' "an evening of talk, a night of action" for Life Culture Week. Joined by members of the East Coast Conspiracy To Save Lives, radical author Mark Lane, and Genie Plamondon, Rubin discussed the current CIA trial in Detroit and other "policies of genocide undertaken by the U.S. govern- ment." Rubin criticized students and other young people for failing to politically act in support of the defendants in the Detroit trial; John Sinclair, Pun Plamondon and Jack Forrest. Police and gov- ernment response to political dem- onstrations last year has created bin. "But now, every appeal ofj John's (Sinclair) has failed-and it's the fault of you people to put pressure on (U.S. District Courtl Judge Damon) Keith." Rubin and Genie Plamondon fo- cused on the various "conspiracy" trials (which include the Detroit trial) and how the government allegedly jails people because of their potential in youth communi- ties to generate opposition to the government. "Where pig (Judge Julius) Hoff- man hit us directly, Damon Keith is going to hit us with a smile on his teeth," said Rubin. Accordingly, Rubin said, pres- i n (sons''. '1VS Jv~t1CtSACn try V ,y j onvtctec I At a meeting called to clarify group of students and another by the reasons for the deletions, faculty members who contended economics Prof. Locke Anderson, See U.S., Page 10 GE incident chairman of the curriculum com- mittee, psychology Prof. Ronald Susan Eisenberg, '71. was con- Tikofsky, secretary, and S c ott ae victed in Ann Arbor Circuit Court Bass, '71, Sandy Fleming, '71, and nd battery against a police of- lent members of the course mart ficer stemming from a recruiter committee - explained that each During the incident, over 100 ed and evaluated separately by the demonstrators were prevented by course mart committee on Mon- From Wire service Reports police from "locking-in" a Gen- day. DETROIT - A federal jury eral Electric job recruiter. They said while the six sections DEsdOy -oAifederl jury Elecric ob rcruier.were deleted for various reasons, Wednesday convicted Peter Blood, Eisenberg's arrest outside the a common factor was the lack of a 24-year-old Quaker pacifist, of 'Nest Engineering bldg. sparked a qualified teachers for the sec- draft evasion. 20 minute battle between police tions, who by Course Mart rules, The U.S. District Court found and demonstrators attempting to must be approved by the dean and Blood guilty of violating the Se- free her. Police made eleven other executive committee of the college lective Service laws by failing to arrests during the incident, which if not already members of the observe his draft board's order to attracted a crowd of over 500 LSA faculty on a regular or lec- report to a hospital for alternate people. ture basis. service. Police had contended that Eis- The sections deleted from the Last February Blood was in- nberg, after blocking the lens of course include those on repres- dicted by a Federal Grand Jury a police officer's camera, jumped sion, corporations, independent for refusing to perform the alter-, on the back of the officer and at- political action, youth liberation, native service. He did not appear tempted to bring him to the the media and gay liberation. for arraignment, and a vigil was ground. Psychology Prof. Robert H e f- held at the Ann Arbor Friends The defense countered that it ner sponsor and coordinator of Meeting House, where, he in- was improbable the 5'2" Eisen- the course, estimated the number formed authorities, he "could be See STUDENT, Page 10 See LSA, Page 10 located for arrest." NEW APPROACH cifist convicted for not' with alternate service Blood said the vigil, attended 7 for his alternative service assign- by about 35 people, was intended ment in May, 1969. to provide "communication among Blood conducted his own de- each other as well as to those out- fense, focusing on his personal re- side." ligious beliefs. He argued that the He explained that his draft re- draft is a form of slavery, be- sistance stemmed from "a need to cause it is involuntary, and that make a powerful response to the it provides manpower for a de- Vietnam war." structive military machine. -,,. ,n ~ ,-.n.. c . His feelings about Selective Where Rubin's speech, which ended the program and continued with a discussion at the Union, emphasized that any means of op-j posing government "oppression" should be used, other speakers took a more moderate stance. Sister Susan Cordes and Father Phillip Lindon, representing the East Coast Conspiracy, said radi- cals must spread their ideas to "middle Americans" while develop- ing their "own islands of freedom that the government can't touch." "Hope has to be placed an hu- manity - not in political struc- tures," said Lindon, including the Catholic Church as one of the structures that must be changed. Lane, author of the controver- sial book "Conversations with, Vietnam Veterans," discussed his investigation of "U.S. government war crimes throughout the world." Lane, comparing government mil- itary actions in Southeast Asia with those of the German govern- ment during World War II, said that if an investigation were con- ducted against the U.S. as the Nuremburg Trials were against Germany, it would find America likewise guilty. "My Lai was not the result of an aberration or psychological dis- turbance in any individual, but a policy of genocide by the govern- ment," Lane charged. This policy, according to Lane, was the pro- duct of recent government lead- ers and could be ended "only in the streets and on the college campuses." See RUBIN, Page 10 is no U.S. commitment to defend Fact-finding hearings between Cambodia. "I think the events the University and Local 1583 of have created a situation," he con- the American Federation of State, tinued, "where we and the world County, and Municipal Employes believes we are committed." (AFSCME) were postponed until Stennis has suggested that if Monday afternoon as negotiators the military situation in Cambodia for the two sides met without the then mi situmatbe nemcsary tofact-finder for four hours yester- worsens, it may be necessary to dy expand U.S. operations there. day. Though the sides reported that It may be necessary, Stennis discussions were carried on, t said, for the U.S. to send in appeared that little progress was ground controllers to direct the made towards a contract settle- American planes providing air ment. support for Cambodian and South The chief negotiators for the Vietnamese troops. two sides were asked to meet with Such actions would not be per- fact-finder William Ellmann in missible under the Cooper-Church Detroit this morning. The meet- amendment which forbids the ings will supposedly help iron out President to introduce ground contradictions in the evidence pre- combat troops or military ad- sented by the two sides. visors into Cambodia. Congress At yesterday's session, George attached the amendment last year Maurer, attorney for the union, to a supplementary military aid finished his presentation with the bill, introduction of a chart compar- Democratic leader Mike Mans- ing the lowest category of wages field expressed concern about at other state colleges. Stennis' comments. "I think we The University will begin its are treading dangerous ground," presentation Monday at two a.m. he told reporters. Maurer presented statistics for Moreover, sources have reported just the lowest pay grade, because that the Ho Chi Minh trail in University officials had question- southern Laos has become the ed making comparisons between most important objective of the pay grades at different schools U.S. in Indochina. Most of the when people at other schools could American airpower in Southeast be doing different jobs. Asia is now concentrated on the Maurer said that out of nine trail, in the second major cam- state colleges the University paign since last May. ranked ninth in the amount of By choking off North Vietna- wages paid workers in the lowest mese supplies and troops moving pay grade. southward along the trail, sources "The union's own wage pro- said, the U.S. hopes to buy time posal," Maurer said, "ranks be- for the Vietnamization program low the average wage of lower pe- and to reduce Hanoi's capaoilities ninsula colleges." for waging war.-1 Fact-finding proceedings began Some attacks are in direct sup- last Friday after the union and port of South Vietnamese, Cam- the University agreed to recoin- bodian and Laotian troops fight- mend acceptance of the fact- ing the North Vietnamese and the finder's suggestions to the union Viet Cong. But about 75 per cent membership and the Regents re- of the raids are against enemy spectively. supply routes, depots and troops Following an unsuccessful Uni- along the Ho Chi Minn trail versity attempt to get an injunc- through southern Laos. tion served against the union, the The latest report brought U.S. parties agreed to proceed to fact casualties in Indochina since Jan. finding, ending a two-day strike 1, 1961 to 44,355 killed, 294,118 by the 2,600 service and mainte- wounded and 9,145 dead from nance employes that the union non-combatant causes. represents. In Laos, the Defense Ministry Ellmann has estimated that it reported that Laotian government will take two weeks for the sides forces were driven out of Muong to present their arguments and an Phalan, 11 miles southeast of additional week for the prepara Vietiane, the capital. tion of his iecommended settle- Cambodian planes raided enery ,iment. See AIR RAIDS, Page 10 . i . sj . Blood, argued that obeying the draft board's order would violate his personal religious convictions. Although the draft board had granted Blood, an Ann Arbor :'esi- dent, conscientious objector (CO) status, he refused to accept the designation. The board then or- dered him to report to Butter- worth Hospital in Grand Rapids Counseling available By TAMMY JACOBS "Women at the University are channeled, not counseled," says Barbara Kurtz, grad, who is setting up an informal counseling service for undergraduate women. Kurtz is working with Claire Rumelhart, women's advocate in the Office of Student Organizations, to contact graduate and faculty women interested in sharing job and study experiences. such specific programs as the new coun- seling program. She says she wants to "bring together" undergraduate women interested in a spe- cific field with women who have already established themselves in that field. She also says she plans to have under- graduate women sign up in the Office of Student Organizations women's advocate office in the Union, or in the Women's to women Besides the counseling program, Kurtz will head the Women's Liberation office in the SAB. Established by the now-defunct Women's Liberation Coalition, the office has been closed for over a month. Kurtz plans to reopen the office today with a brownbag luncheon at noon for interested women. She is also developing an extensive bib- liography of books of interest to women, Service, Blood explained, maaej him unable in good conscience to comply with it in any way. U.S. District Judge John Feik- ens charged that Blood's testi- mony was irrelevant and that the jury should disregard the "justice" of Selective Service or the war in Vietnam and instead decide only whether Blood was guilty of hav- ing failed to appear at his draft board on the designated date. "The freedom of belief is abso- lute, but the freedom of action is not,"' commented U.S. Attorney James Russell in his trial summa- tion. "The defendant was ordered to report and he refused to per- form that duty. That's all we're concerned with," he continued. Blood faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison and a $10,- 000 fine. Feikens postponed sentencing, pending a hearing by the court's probation section, a process which could last several weeks. S "When I think of Peter going to prison, I kind of shudder," com- Mp..,.nf-,A l *f.-,tl- a fn,'rmn r i i i i I G ;, 1 luU, m -