ABORTION LAWS: REFORM STILL NEEDED See editorial page Y 5k i~~ A6P' 41latly 0008144upp- DEPRESSING High-2 0 Low-13 Cloudy and cold, snow flurries likely Vol. LXXXI, No. 90 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 16, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages Judiciary plan hit by law school, Profs criticize student, faculty associate judges By KRISTIN RINGSTROM and ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ The faculty of the law school yesterday u r g e d the Regents to reject the proposed University judicial system, cri- ticizing the plan for suggest-' ing that students and faculty members be allowed to over- rule decisions of the judge at disciplinary trials. While the faculty expressed ap- proval of the plan's provision that an all-student jury determine guilt and punishment when stu-j dents are tried before the new judiciary, it said it would only en- dorse a judiciary in which trials were "presided over by a single,, legally-trained judge."i The judiciary plan, drafted byI a committee of students, faculty members, and administrators, pro- poses that the judge be joined by student and faculty associate judges in a panel which would preside over all trials in the pro- poged court system. Since the panel would have the power to rule on motions by either the plaintiff or the defendant, it would have to decide suchtsensi- tive questions as whether to pro- hibit testimony which aims at es- tablishing a political basis for the defendant's alleged actions or whether -to bar people from thea courtroom who interrupt the pro-_ ceedings. The presiding judge, who would, have considerable legal training and be selected from outside the University c o m m u n i t y, would make initial rulings, which could be overruled by the associate judges. The criticisms levied by law school faculty members at the use of associate judges included: -A concern that since the stu-{ AFSCME, SlX resolve issues By SARA FITZGERALD -Daily-Denny Gainer Duizo (left) and Monroe Progress was made in the negotiations between the University and Local 1583 of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) last night as six out of approximately 16 remaining issues were settled. However, negotiators would not reveal which issues were resolved as settlement was only tentative. "If we can continue to move like this," union official Joe King said, "we can wind things up by Monday." Thursday night negotiators for both sides had agreed to extend the contract deadline through midnight Monday to allow more time for settle- ------ - --- ment. "The extension should certainly provide enough time for a contract Policem en settlement," King said earlier. "I can't foresee another extension.ke Ifby Monday night some impor- tant issues remain unsettled, it's obvious they're not going to be resolved at the bargaining table." D State mediator Richard Terepin said that both parties are "mak- ing a sincere effort to settle the contract." Negotiators said that DETROIT (P) - Two off-duty Terepin had been "very helpful" policemen were shot to d e a t h in settling many of the issues. Thursday night in an exchange of As of Friday remaining issues gunfire during a street argument included wage demands, job se-I on Detroit's Southeast side. curity, life insurance, longevity Details of the incident were not pay, retirement pay, and a day- clear yesterday and homicide de- care center proposal. tectives were trying to deter- Also on the table were a union mine exactly what led to the demand for a Blue Cross-Blue shooting. Shield family insurance policy The two patrolmen killed w e r e fully paid by the University and Danny Lee Watson, 29, and Wil- a provision for a cost-of-living lam Wortmann, 28. Both suffered escalatorclausenumerousgunshot uundsan WNRZ DJ's fire chairge political bias By JONATHAN MILLER The firing without notice- of two free-form disc-jockeys by a local radio station yesterday brought charges last night that the firings were politically motivated and constituted "an attack on the life culture in Ann Arbor." Richard Hill, station manager of WNRZ-FM; said yester- day the firings were for "economic reasons." Larry Monroe, one of the disc-jockeys, said last night, "We got fired because we have some definite ideas about radio which don't agree with those of the station manager." -__-_ Monroe said he was summoned -Daily-Denny Gainer Mural $$$ This Sanford Security guard in the Architecture and Design Bldg. is protecting a work of art from overly possessive admirers. The display of $2,200 in dollar bills is the product of the artistic abilities of Eric Staller, '70 A & D. He may or may not know art, but he knows what people like. DEMAND YOUNG JURORS: Jury makemup disputed Army units not ready for combat WASHINGTON MP)-The Army, hard put to fill its manpower needs for the Vietnam war, has found that not one of its divisions outside Vietnam is rated fully ready for combat. Army sources said yesterday that lower than anticipated draft calls over the past'12 to 18 months brought about a shortage number- ing thousands of men in the Army's combat.arms-infantry, ar- tillery and armor. These assignments are filled for the most part with draftees a; only about four per cent of en- listees specifically request train- ing in combat skills. The Defense Department pre- dicted in early 1970 that draft calls for the year would total x, 250 000, but by December only to appear with Jim Dulzo, the o heP disc-jockey who was fired yesterday. at the station manager's office yesterday afternoon. He said EHill informed them their dismissal was "effective immediately," and that their previous night's pro- grams had been their last on the station. Hill explained the abrupt nature of the firings as "not uncommon in the industry. We give all our boys two weeks pay, generally speaking," when they are dismiss- ed, he said. Hill said the station, which has hitherto broadcast a top-40 for- mat from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. with free form radio from 9 p.m. until 6 a.m., will adopt a new format for its day-time programming. Hill added he "regretted" hav- ing to fire Dulzo and Monroe and that they had "provided a service in dent associate judges would be nominated by Student Govern-B ment Council, they would be too By BILL involved in campus politics to ren- Special To der impartial decisions during DETROIT - 'I trials; -$acy bombing tria -An assertion that student as- Panthers contil sociate judges would not have the with further at legal experience to render judi- torneys Leonard clous decisions; Buck Davis to pr -A concern that student and discrimination a faculty associate judges might jury selection. allow a large amount of irrelevent Ann Arbor Whi testimony to be aired by witnesses. ers John Sinclai While many f a c u I t y members don and Jack W agreed that political testimony of- are charged with See JUDICIARY, Page 8 bomb the Ann A to the community." Hill also announced WNRZ-FMdc ic terminated 24 hour broadcasting, SStaldy claimsdcol effective 6 a.m. yesterday. Contacted last night, Dulzo said "The station had just been de- students opose stroying our shows with their for- staigorsae i i omats. The commercials had an air -- dnnr that txa n m l t~ lnr m 1i- ,_. . . White Panther trial DINNER Plamondon is also charged with 29 - are drastically underrepre- The Daily the actual bombing of the of- sented in jury selection. the CIA conspir- fice in September 1968. If Federal District Judge Da- l of three White The defense utilized witnesses mon Keith rules that youth do nued yesterday, Allen Ginsberg and State Repre- indeed constitute a separate, suc- ttempts by at- sentative Jackie Vaughn III, a 1 i cinct class who are discriminated Weinglass a n dI considered experts on different as- against in jury selection, it will be 'ove alleged class pects of youth, in an attempt to up to the Federal government to gainst youth in prove that youth are a definable rectify the problem. group discriminated against in Following a lengthy cross ex- te Panther lead- jury selection. amination by the prosecution of r, Pun Plamon- Thursday the defense submitted poet Allen Ginsberg, Judge Keith aterhouse Forest statistical evidence in an attempt acknowledged Ginsberg as an ex- conspiracy toIto prove that youth - especially pert on all youth. rbor CIA office. those between the ages of 21 and However, the prosecution com- -- -pared Ginsberg's qualificatons to talk on all segments of youth to "Yassir Arafat explaining the e teacherJews or Robert Shelton to t h e l e e h sNegroes." Ginsberg testified about differ- ences among the morals, language, campu vl!ence dress and appearance of the young and their relationship to the "es- tablishment." w, public affairs -There is side agreement among He began by commenting that 7niversity of Cal- students and faculty that there is youth has rediscovered feeling- ey, who directed a need for reform in American spiritual and religious, feelings of nore than 80 per society. But about one-third of anger and alienation that have y members ques- the teachers and graduate stu- been drowned by a mechanical so- t "campus dis- dents and one-half of the under- ciety. ant students are graduates expressed doubt that it "For the first time," Ginsberg mic freedom." can be achieved through "tradi- continued. "youth has found their cent of the fa- tional American politics;" body stuck with genitals and has 72 per cent of -There is significant agreement xct on what tocimact inti ts, and 62 per that improvement is needed, most macy." rgraduates agree notably for education be m ; r e "Society is no longer livable. vho disrupt the relevant to contemporary life and Nature poisoned in its lakes and college should be problems. Student and faculty ma- streams; bodies poisoned by ciga- jorities agreed that higher educa- rettes and artifical additives in ded." tion would be improved if students our food," he added. said: were required to spend a year in See JURY, Page 8 --- community service in the United A union leaflet reported yester- day that the University's wage offer averaged 16.2 cents an hour across-the-board increase for the first year, and 16.4 cents an hour increase the second year, with some union members receiving no increase. University officials have de- clined to comment on the details of their proposal. Union officials would not re- lease the specifics of their revised proposal, claiming only that it provided larger wage increases for those in lower pay scales. At a membership meeting last Satur- day, however, union leaders said they would initially ask for a $2.80 an hour increase over three years or $2 over two years. Four other issues which remain- ed unresolved as of yesterday were: -Limiting the amount of work usually done by union members, that supervisory workers can do., The current contract states that supervisory work "will only sup- plement" and "not result in the displacement of any employe nor in the loss of wages." The union" hopes to limit the amount of bar- gaining unit work a supervisor can do to 20 per cent weekly under the new contract; -Extending the rights of em- ployes so that they may grieve University rules, regulations and policies. Currently, employes may only grieve contract violations, not overall University policies; -Letting the union questionj supervisory employes for informa- tion concerning grievance hear- ings. Presently, the union is only allowedrto talk to union members to get evidence for hearings when an employe has filed a grievance; and -Preventing the University from subcontracting other companies or employes to do work now being done by union members. were in civilian clothes at t h e time. Watson had been on the force since July 1967, and Wortmann joined in July 1968. Two armed men surrendered to officers minutes after the shooting incident and were being question- ed yesterday. The two are broth- ers-Patrick Edwards, 30, and Al- bert Jurich, 22. Edwards surname originally was Jurich, police said, but he had changed it legally. Police said Edwards had a ;38- caliber pistol and Jurich a .45- caliber semi-automatic rifle when they were arrested. Witnesses told investigators that the argument broke out between the policemen and the two broth- ers around the corner from a party store Edwards operates. Detective Sgt. John Faulman of the Homicide Bureau said the two officers had left the Fourth Pre- cinct at 4 p.m. to go bowling. Ed- wards and a young woman had left the party store at 11:25 p.m., he said. Edwards told investigators he carried a registered pistol because the previous operator of the store had been shot to death in a rob- bery last February, and he and his brother had been robbed last month. The woman, who was not iden- tified, told a Detroit News are- porter that as she and Edwards left the store, a car with two men in civilian clothes passed by, and the passenger yelled obscene re- marks at them. She told the reporter the car apparently circled the block and pulled up in front of the apart- ment building where Edwards liv- ed. An argument followed, she add- ed, and the men in the car got out and all three drew t h e i r guns. 163.500 men were called to duty. souni was p e eiyi ncom- NEW ORLEANS (A) - The ma-' Dr. Martin Tro The Army's shortage was com- patable with free form radio. jority of college teachers and stu- professor of the U pounded last summer when troop "They oversold my show over dents oppose campus violence and ifornia at Berkel: withdrawals from Vietnam were the eight minute commercial limit disruptive demonstrations, t h e the survey, said m temporarily slowed after the Cam- they had agreed to-at times there Carnegie Commission on Higher cent of the faculty bodian incursion. were 15-16 spots an hour making Education reported yesterday. tioned agree tha Had the withdrawals proceeded it impossible to play more than g ruptions by nilita at a steady pace, the Army would two records sequentially. from a 1969 survey of 16000 per- a threat to acade not have had to pull men from "I think that as soon as they sons, the commission chairman, He said 79 per units in the United States, Europe started to do that I began to lose Clark Kerr, said people on cam- culty members, and elsewhere in Asia and send my audience," he added. puses "tend to be in strong agree- graduate student them to Vietnam as replacements "That was the best radio sta- ( ment that disruptions by activ- cent of the under for GI's whose 12-month tours tion in the city and the only sta- ists are inimical to academic free- that "students w were ending, Army officials ex- tion in the Ann Arbor-Detroit dole and the educational process" plained. area worth listening to after 2 and are inclined to support poli- functioning of ac 4 "As a result these other units a.m.," said Leni Sinclair of the cies for preventing violence and expelled or suspen have suffered," one source said. ICWhite Panther Party yesterday. 1 punishing the violent. The report also DORMITORY FOOD States or abroad; Student advice improves menus By JOHN MITCHELL "I was enjoying the fish sandwiches to- day until I happened to look at it. Instead of regular looking fish, it was grayish-green. Needless to say, I didn', finish it." Such criticism is one of the suggestions submitted by dorm residents into "cafeteria feedback boxes" - devices which allow resi- dents to air their views on the food system. The feedback program, initiated sporad- ically in past years by individual dorms and strongly recommended this year by Univer- sity food service manager Lynford Tubbs, seeks to provide an effective mechanism through which dieticians and food manag- times of meals have been the primary result of student suggestions. Despite an occasional obscene or threat- ening suggestion, Hodges believes that the bulk of the submitted comments are "very polite and helpful" and adds "if we can af- ford improvements, why not?" Rosa Davis, chief dietitian at West Quad, has noticed a general trend among many students toward more "health foods" an d yogurt. "Many students are worried about chol s- terol," she said, "and they have been asking for an alternative to eggs and white rice." But, she adds, "freeloading, meal sharing, the fa oift Af f-r -l landQi oIlx,, ,a h -There is a generation g a p among faculties, with a significant' differences in attitudes held by younger and older teachers, es- pecially in regard to faculty strikes: -In the past much campus con- flict has pitted faculty and stu- dents together against administra- tion, but now students seek to ex- tend their power into faculty- controlled areas such as promo- tion, admissions and course con- tent. Hence, it is likely that the future conflict on the campuses will be between the students and the faculty." Trow said that when asked to ' place themselves within a five-" segment political spectrum from "left" to "strongly conservative,"E nine out of 10 students and fa-I culty choose the middle three cat- ar-ipct-'1 shn,-1 ", sAA of -thp Panel discusses Chinese society By ANDY ZACK ~*-- A capacity crowd at Natural Sci- ence Aud. last night attended a panel discussion describing t h e character of current Chinese so- ciety. The panel was composed of four members: Leni Sinclair, minister of education of the White Pan- ther party, William Hinton, au- thor of the book Fanshen, Robert Williams, former president of the Republic of New Africa who spent three years in China, and Orville Schell of the Bay Area Institute. The discussion was co-sponsor- ed by the Committee of Con- cerned Asian Scholars (CCAS) and American Revolutionary Me- dia (ARM) as part of Chin a >.-: