NATIONAL. HEALTH CARE See Editorial Page WL A& 41P 4.Ait t an la ii4 CLEAR. High--65 Low--38 Sunny and warmer Vol. LXXXI, No. 25 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October 1, 1970 Ten Cents Eight Pages SCHOOL CLOSES: Pioneer H disrupted ligh School by blacks By JONATHAN MILLER Ann Arbor's Pioneer High School closed early yesterday after some 35 black students U. . extends draft liabilit through March WASHINGTON (UP) - Still plugging holes in the draft lot- tery system, the administration is trying to eliminate the chance of someone escaping induction by becoiing 1-A late in the year. The Selective Service System announced yesterday a three-month extension of draft liability for any 1-A man whose draft board has reached his lottery number but who has not been drafted by the end of the year. The aim is to prevent the unfairness of drafting one man according to the lottery of last December; and then passing up another man with a lower lottery number just because he became available along with a crowd of other low-num- bered men after the manpower needs were filled. That is the kind of situation - -- rampaged through parts of the building, attacking the library, cafeteria, and a : women's rest room. ed he disruption, whicn develop- Y ed ~out of a protest against th school's alleged failure to keel promises made last spring for the increased hiring of black faculty, left books piled ;on floors, fittings overturned, windows, broken, and _ an electric typewriter smashed. Sinks in the rest room were de- stroyed as were all the mirrors and hand-driers. The Ann Arbor Board of Eiu- cation announced last night that Pioneer would re-open tomorrow. The disturbance began at t h e end of the morning's first period when some 40 black students gasthered in a hallway to discuss what they called the failure, of -Associated Press the school's administration to im- plement demands which were ac- cepted last Spring, for the hiring of, two black teachers in each de-} r partment and two additional black laAfter faculty members informed the students that they were not Strewn books in Pione permitted to remain in the hall- - n ew d an , OS way, they gathered in the school's! auditorium where they spent se- GOVT. OPPOSITION SEEN: By The Associated Press cond, third and fourth periods. World leaders gathered in Cairo for the funeral today of; During this time school princi- Gamal Abdel Nasser. People throughout the Arab world con- pal Th odorehRie times to ttempt O rt otp tinued to mourn his death, which occurred Monday of a to explains the reasons why he heart attack. .. had been unable to fulfill the.; Meanwhile, Palestinian guerrillas charged yesterday that promises made in the spring.G the Jordanian army launched artillery and ground attacks Rickicki also informed the Ann [,( against two guerrilla-held towns in northern Jordan in viola- sent five officers, under the com- WASHINGTON (P) - Declaring 1967 by Presid tion of the latest truce. mand of Lieut. Kennth Klinge to U.S. adult censorship laws are in- Johnson at thed At the United Nations, the U.S. appealed to Israel and the school. e f f e c t i v e, unwarranted, often gress. Egypt to resume the stalled Mideast peace talks. Rickicki then re-entered the wrongfully enforced and unsup- The White Hc In London, guerrilla heroine Lelia Khaled and six other audtrmtr sass aofficers an ported by most Americans, a pains to note the Arab commandos wene f-eed last night and flown to Cairo read the srespnss l t w sharply divided Presidential Coi- not appointed by I~~~~~~~~~~ pon thPtdnslf..-,,~,,.,.- n,- .-h~.,~s,-. .. Daily-Jim Wallace 'er High School library ommissior asks ons for adults ent Lyndon B. direction of Con- ouse has been at. e commission was President Nixon as Britain, West Germany and Switzerland met the price for _a.....---- - release of hostages from last ." !month's multiple airplane hi- University rule jackings. The last six hostages, U all Americans, h e a d e d for on residence home earlier yesterday. Egypt is saying farewell to its had leader today on a scale probably status change unseen since thedays of the Pha- raohs. Officials said they expected A change in residency require- a million Egyptians to take part ments at the University will affect in the funeral of Nasser. perhaps 100 students. On the eve of the final farewell, Under the new regulation,, which vast crowds of Egyptians, many was approved by the Regents at still screaming their grief, march' their Sept. 18 meeting, a student ed arm-in-arm in downtown Cairo. under the age 21 retains his in- World leaders converging for state residency even if his parents the state funeral filed past Nas- move out of Michigan, provided ser's body, lying in state in Kub- he is continuously enrolled. The beh Palace, the presidential resi-' regulation ,takes effect with the dence. Foremost among them was current term. Premier Alexei N. Kosygin of the Earlier policy at the University Soviet Union who came Tuesday. was that, six months after a minor Others arriving were: Emperor student's parents moved from Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, Presi- dicnigantoanothemrstate, thm dent Makarios of Cyprus, Premier Michignto antherd atnre, th Jacques Chablane D e l m a s of student was declared a non-resi-!France, Foreign Secretary Sir Alec dent and had to pay non-resident Douglas-Home of Britain, U.S. fees. Secretary of Health, Education The new regulation will not re- and Welfare Elliot Richardson, sult in a rebate for past terms to the chiefs of state of most Arab any student who was reclassified countries and high level delega- as a non-resident under earlier tions from nearly '4ll nations. regulations., However, a student Here in Ann Arbor, the Arab who was reclassified as a, non- Student Organization will hold a resident while a minor but who gengral meeting tonight at 8- p.m. has been continuously enrolled at at the Michigan Union in tribute the University is eligible this fall to Nasser's memory. Charles Eastwood, a faculty' member who' has worked exten- sively with student groups at the school, said that after the stu-' dents left the auditorium, "We thought they had gone. The next thing we knew was when they went upstairs and got at the li- brary." After damaging the library, the blacks came downstairs to the first floor, entered the cafeteria and overturned t a b 1 e s, threw chairs through windows and en- tered the women's restroom. At 1 p.m. school was suspended indefinitely, and the 2400 students were told to go home. See BLACKS, Page 8 { mission on roriiograpny recom- mended yesterday that they be re- pealed. It supported state laws against public display of obscene picturesj or their sale to children, but no similar ban on written matter. And it asked mass sex education so Americans can frankly and openly deal with sexual matters|I on an informed basis. t "The commission believes that there is no warrant for continued governmental interference," said the commission's 12-member ma- jority, "with the full freedom of adults to read;' obtain or view whatever material they wish." The commission was named in[ and has, in effect, disavowed its. findings in advance. This indicates that few, if any, of its recom- mendations will 1e submitted as administration-sponsored legisla- tion. The 18-member commission's' majority, led by Chairman Wil- liam B: Lockhart, said "the spirit and letter of our Constitution" prohibit governmental interfer- ence unless there is a clear threat of harm-and extensive investiga- tion has produced no evidence either that smut is a significant cause of sex crimes or deviancy or that it corrupt's the nation's moral climate. But three dissenting commis-j sioners accused the majority of recommending moral anarchy and slanting its report in favor of the pornography business. The dissenters, including Nixon's only appointee, Charles H. Keating Jr., said the purpose of anti-ob- scenity laws is to protect the pub- lic, iot individual,'morality and never N as based on what they; called the impossible task of prov- ing specific harmful effects. "The commission's majority report." they asserted, "is a Magna Carta for the pornographer." "What the American people do1 not know," the dissenters said,I "is that the scanty and manipu-F lated evidence contained within this report is wholly inadequate to support the conclusions and sus- tain the recommendations. Thus, both conclusions and recommen- dations are, in our view, fraud- ulent." Keating and his fellow dissen- ters, the Rev. Morton A. Hill of New York City and Winfrey C. Link of Hermitage, Tenn., rec- ommended federal laws against smut, vigorous Justice Department prosecution of offenders and state film censorship boards across the country. The majority recommended re- created by the mid-year gradua- tion of hundreds of thousands of college students, many holding lower numbers than those already called. The time it takes to process such men into 1-A status leaves them unavailable for a draft call until late in the year, and the Pentagon has been unwililng to wait that long for recruits. The move leaves unsolved, how- ever, a related fairness problem - that of the men already ,draft- ed to meet Pentagon needs be-. cause the latecomers were not available sooner. The carryover men will tend to benefit, the new manpower pool facing next year's draft, while this year's pool sends extra men in their place. - The carryovers will, in fact, be drafted for 1971 calls evep before the regular 1971 manpower pool is touched. Their draft priority will be second only to that of vol- unteers during next January, Feb- ruary and March. Selective Service officials said they have no estimate of how many men will be carried over Iwiththis three-month extended liability, but Tarr said "relative- ly small numbers" would be af- fected. 'The move also leaves unsolved the problems of when one man ' is drafted under extended liability while another man in exactly sim- ilar circumstances escapes extend- ed liability - and military serv- ice - because he is registered with a different draft board which has not reached his number. Selective Service has placed a ceiling of No. 195 nationwide this year, meaning the more than 4,- 000 local boards may not call men with higher numbers. But below that ceiling the boards have reach- ed widely varying upper numb- ers. Some have not yet called num- bers higher than 170, a draft spokesman said. A few are even lower. . Thus, a number such as 180 could mean extended liability for a man whose draft b o a r d has reached 180, but not for a man whose board only reached 179. The new regulations, contained in an executive order signed 1 a s t Saturday by President Nixon, also clarified the induction of men who have reached age 26.' They may be inducted, the or- der said, only if their draft lia- bility extends to age 35. and if the induction order is issued before the 26th birthday. CSJ trial of SDS continues F By MARK DILLEN Engineering Placement Com- mittee and the Engineering Coun- cil moved their case against Stu- dents for a Democratic Society (SDS) into its final stages be- fore Central Student Judiciary (CSJ) last night, preparing t h e way for what SDS members say will be a 'political' defense. The trial results from charges by the placement committee and the council that SDS violated Stucent Government Council (SGC) rules during a Jan. 29 lock-in of a DuPont recruiter in West Engineering Bldg. SGC student conduct rules pro- hibit "individual or mass a c t s that destroy property or signifi- cantly interfere with the free movement of persons or things on the campus," and, "intentional disruption of a function by de- priving needed quiet, light, heat, or, other physical conditions of work." If found guilty, SDS faces a maximum penalty of four months suspension of its privileges as a student organization and a $250 fine. In addition, three SDS mem- bers-Richard Feldman, William Sacks and, Jerome Goldberg, are co-defendants in the case and could be fined up to $50 if con- victed. Last night's testimony in the three week-old tria, centered on director of engineering placement service John Young. Young cor- roborated earlier testimony about the demonstration, made to pro- test policies of the DuPont cor- poration, stating that a "noisy group of 60 to 70 formed a block- ade" in front of th office in which the recruiter was interview- ing. Two students also testified that the demonstration kept them from their interviews. "We just couldn't accomplish the interview," said James War- ner. "A mob of people outside were shouting 'DuPont gets rich, GI's die' outside the door and others were pounding on the back window." BEDL.WRO start new sit-in; seek church funds for poor 4 By CHRIS PARKS Representatives of two 1 o c a 1' groups who are seeking "money for the 'county's poor from local churches, began a sit-in yesterday at the First Presbyterian Church. The Black Economic Develop- ment League (BEDL) and the W e 1 f a r e Rights Organization (WRO) are pressing demands for $50.000 from the church as part A delegation of five people began a sit-in in the second floor foyer yesterday afternoon until the church's attorney read a state- ment asserting the demonstrators were in violation of a court in- junction forbidding the disruption of church services or business. The group left the main office at its 5 p.m. closing time, but remained in the church,tclaiming that mere occupation didn't con- stitute disruption. Later, the group moved to the youth center in the church's base- ment. At 10:30 last night the church was locked up with the to be classified again as a Michi- Arabs mourning for Nasser in of an overall effort to get $60-80 gan resident. the occupied Gaza Strip threw a million from county churches to Students who believe they may burning tire at an Israeli army provide clothes, housing, day care 'be affected by the new policy vehicle and shouted "God is centers, food co-operatives, a med- should contact Larry E. Katz, di-; greater than Israel" when Israeli ical center, job training programs rector of student certification in troops fired over their head. and a drug treatments center for the registrar's office. See GUERRILLAS, page 8 the county's poor. group still inside. It appeared that peal of some 114 federal and state no police action was likely., laws agaisnt importing, showing or BEDL vice-president Hank Bry- selling pornography to adults. It ant said there were several fact- said state laws against publicly ors causing the occupation of the displaying or selling obscene pic- Presbyterian Church, in parti- tures to children should not at- cular. Among these, he said, tempt to include written material were that it had been the f i r s t See PORNOGRAPHY, page 8 church occupied by the gr'oup and -_ _ he claimed that it had extensive connections with the University. h I But the main reason, said Bry- ant, was the church's influence. "It's a big church, and it has to be broken," Bryant said. He said it is the wealthiest church in the coalition which originally secured 3 the injunction against BEDL- WRO, and that if the group could convince First Presbyterian to accede to the groups' demands, the other churches in the coalition would follow suit.k. J r 1 UAW STRIKE. New student aid By SARA FITZGERALD Economists are not the only ones con- cerned with the impact of the United Auto Workers strike this fall. Ngw, the Office of Financial Aids is exploring the effects the strike may have on the financial aid requirements of University students. "If prolonged, the strike may add to the many factors leading to greater financial need among students," said Ronald M. Brown, director of the financial aids of- fice. "We have had a few students who have come in and asked for an increase in aid because of the strike." Daniel S.Roe concerned" over the consequences of the strike. "We have been meeting frequently to discuss the possible effects of the strike," he explained. "If we see the prob- lem growing, we will take steps to secure additional aid for students who require it." In general, the office applies the Col- lege Scholastic Services Need Analysis System to determine the extent of a stu- dent's financial needs. "In respect to students whose needs have changed because of the strike,. our ap- proach thus far has been to determine the facts in each situation andi provide 4m- eds seen The office has had applications for aid from approximately 5,000 students for this year, Brown reported. "I think we have done the best we could, but we have not done as well as we would like," he added. "So far," Brown continued, "we have been able to meet the needs of most of the applicants who, in our judgment, re- quire financial assistance. However, there are several hundred students who have received some aid but who still have unmet financial need." A substantial amount of money remains, Brown said, which is administered outside S Although they say they won't disrupt the church, group minm- bers declare they will stay in the church until either their demands are met or they are forced out by police action. Bryant said he hopes that fear of the adverse publicity ! of forcible ejection of the group by police may influence the church to agree to the dlemands. Seventeen local churches form- ed a coalition last week with the aim of distributing aid to the county's poor, apparently in re- sponse to BEDL-WRO demonstra- tions. The organization-the In- terfaith Coalition of Congregations -has pledged to allow the /poor to participate in the "study, deci- sion-making, distribution of funds U , .,