STAND STILL AGGRESSION See Editorial Page C, r Bkr1iAa i43aiIuj NIPPY I-igh-5,9 Law-45 Partly cloudy, sunny and cool I Vol. LXXXI, No. 33 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, October 10, 1 970 Ten Cents Eight Pages Ufp against thi In an effort to liven up the en students have been clandestine classroom in Angell Hall. LEASE UNSIGNED SoisIBiC to meet Ci By MARK Supporters of Solstis schoo tion, Friends of Solstis, Inc., i conditions set by the Univers University-owned house. Despite the formation of t administration has postponed s According to James Brinkerho tions, several legal issues must be signed. Solstis school, established Students get new formS "They're going to wake up one 4 morning and find this place in cinders and wonder why. People can be pushed just so far." Nixon asks ~ FBI p robei. x:%of 3 blasts F - Radical groups claim credit for Coast bombings By The Associated Press President Nixon yesterday ordered the Federal Bureau of ' Investigation to find the per- . sons responsible for the three< bombings on the West Coast Thursday.m The President's order came af- - ter three underground organiza- tions issued statements claiming responsibility for the bombings. A group identifying itself as "The Weatherman Underground" took credit for the bombing that wreck- ed a courtroom and a rest room at the Mann County Civic Center in San Rafael, Calif. Earlier, a Seattle group known as "The Quarter Moon Tribe" said -Daily-Torn Stanton it planted the bomb that caused e painted wall an estimated $150,000 damage to waU~ Navy and Air Force facilities at the University of Washington. virons of a University education, Another organization, "Perfect ly decorating the wall of their 1:Park Home Grown Garden So- ciety." claimed responsibility for -- the bombing of a National Guard armory in Santa Barbara, Calif., : (dedicating the act "to all revolu-_ tionary people throughout the world wherever they fight for love and freedom and life itself." -o r JO rtes The Seattle and Santa Barbara Protesters gathe groups said they timed their at- "o / s tacks to coincide with the death of Cuban revolutionary Ernesto CALLS BOARD 'IL o n dit o nChe Guevara, who was shot to death in Bolivia Oct. 8, 1967. K DILLEN Nixon claimed fast congressional action was needed on antibomb- have formed a new corpora- ing legislation and said he would D n an attempt to comply with sign the measure as soon as it ity for the school's use of a reached him. The Senate approved and sent he corporation, the University to the House Thursday a new "law ' ;iginga lasefo th prpery.and order package," which in-, igning a lease for the propertycludes several antibombing meas- I ff, director of business opera- ures. It would provide for in- be studied before the lease can creased penalties for interstate A graduate student charged with transport of explosive material disruption of. a class during last at the beginning of the sum- and would give authority to the spring's class strike said yesterday FBI to launch immediate investi- he would no longer participate in mer, offers innovative courses gations of a r s o n and bombing the disputed legal proceedings for pre-college students. incidents on federally - subsidized stemming from the charges. The property in question, located university and college campuses. The student, Peter Denton, has at 706 Oakland, was leased to In a letter to the Associated. Solstis for three months this sum- Press in Seattle, The Quarter his case is "illegally constituted" mer, but University officials re- Moon Tribe said "We intend to hisatt case'ist"ilegalyrcntitutd fused to renew the lease,citing disarm,Tdisable and destroy the and at the case's first hearing last expenses that the University would military and pig might of Amerika month, moved that the board incur in complying with city hous- wherever we are, however we can. dissolve itself. ing codes. We have no B52s; our bombs are In a statement issued Wednes- Later, after a petition campaign lovingly constructed by hand," the day, the hearing board rejected in support of the educational pro- letter added. the charges and said it would con- ject, University administrators agreed to re-lease the house if" Soistisagreed to assume full liabi- js lcl as(. im s m duui lity for the property. Incorpora-/j tion was mentioned by the Uni- versity as an acceptable device for -I * 0 " 0 ask 4U to ban Dow recruIing By W. E. SCHROCK Demanding that the University bar Dow Chemical Co. from- using campus facilities to recruit employes, approxi- niately 30 people led by Students for a Democratic Society met yesterday with University officials. Gathering at the Fishbowl, the group marched through Mason and Angell Halls, and the LSA Bldg. to the Student Activities Bldg. where they met with Vice President for Student Services Robert Knauss. Later, five of the group met with Engineering college Dean Gordon Van Wylen. A recruiter from Dow is scheduled to hold job interviews at the engineering college next Tues- - "aily-Tom Stanton r in the office of Vice President Knauss LEGAL': 30 protesters toignore case up (ion of class tinue its proceedings following rat- ification of the rejection by the two graduate school bodies which appointed it. The Denton case has been a focus of attention recently be- cause of its relation to a contro- versy over University disciplinary procedures. For several years, Student Gov- ernment Council has been de- imanding that all cases not direct- ly related to academic competence be heard by courts composed en- tirely of students. il schools The display of anger came from one of the many students who stood in on the slow lines in the LSA Bldg. yesterday, holding forms containing their c l a s s schedules. They were trying to correct errors in the schedule forms the Office of the Registrar began mailing to all students on Wed- nesday, so that they could verify The Regents Interim Rule and' Disciplinary Procedures place the judicial power in most non-aca- demic cases in the hands of a hearing officer appointed by Pres- ident Robben Fleming. Currently, a committee com- posed of students, faculty mem- bers, administrators, and Regents is formulating a proposal for permanent University-wide judi- cial procedures. Its final proposal is expected to provide for the use of an all-stu- dent jury in cases where the de- fendant is a student. The board hearing the Denton case is the graduate school Board of Inquiry, composed of three fac- ulty members and two students. The faculty members were ap- pointed by the school's Executive Board, and the student members, were appointed by. Graduate As- sembly, the representative body for students in the school. The committee was formed in March, after the disruption'char- ges were leveled by Prof. Bernard Galer of the computer and com- munications sciences department. Denton maintained that under the graduate school's rules, the board should have been formed at the start of the winter term. Since it had not, he said, it was "il- legally constituted." Explaining its rejection of See DENTON, Page 8 day. The students c h a r g e d Dow with discriminating a g a i n s t women and blacks, genocide, im- perialism, and contributing to en- vironmental decay. The group cit- ed University rules which, they said, prohibited job recruiting on campus by corporations w h o practice sexism or racism. Knauss told the group that the Office of Student Services did not have jurisdiction over the Dow Recruiter, since it was coming toI the University under the auspices of the Engineering Placement Service. However, he noted that requests for changes in recruiting poli- cies of the Office of Placement Services, which is in OSS, could be submittad to the OSS P o 1 i c y Board. The board, which has a majority of student members, sets policy for OSS. Van Wylen said that. a decision on the groups' demands would have to be made by the engineer- ing college's executive committee, the top administrative body in the college. However, he suggested that the group discuss ,the issue with En- gineering Placement Office Com- mittee, a group composed pri- marily of engineering students, which can make a recommenda- tion to the executive committee. Yesterday's action was a con- tinuation of an anti-recruiting campaign begun by SDS last win- ter. The radical group sponsored a numberofcdemonstrations in support of the campaign, and em- ployed tactics which included picketing, trashing, and disrup- tion. However, SDS members say they are trying to "work within the system" initially in their current drive because of charges last year that SDS never presented formal complaints against specific re- cruiters, so that the University would have an opportunity to re- act to them. The organization has not ruled out the use of stronger tactics should the recruiter be allowed to hold job interviews on campus. On Oct. 1, SDS members at- tempted to demonstrate against a recruiter ,from the Air Force, but the protest was cancelled when the recruiter did not arrive. Further tactics to be used -against the Dow recruiter will be decided at a meeting of all SDS collectives at 7:30 p.m. in East Quad. Mechanical engineering Prof. Samual Clark, chairman of the advisory committee, said that the committee will meet Monday, "probably at noon," to discuss the charges against Dow. House unit hits talks at colleges WASHINGTON (A")-The House Internal Security Committee has compiled a report expressing the committee's concern that money paid to speakers at U.S. cam- puses is a significant source of funds "for the promoters of dis- orderly and revolutionary activity among students." The report, based on a survey of 134 campuses - 3.5 per cent of all U.S. colleges - will be released early next week. Citing fees paid to speakers from various leftist organizations, the report says that speaking ap- pearances "afford a forum where the radicalization process may be continually expanded." But the report stops short of concluding the campus speeches -finance revolution or disorder, saying the committee had no way to ascertain how the speakers used the money they are paid. It cites 67 speakers who were paid $109, 243 for campus speeches during the past two school years. The speakers range from Mark Rudd, a leader of the Weatherman faction of Students for a Demo- cratic Society, to Benjamin Spock, who has spoken frequently against the draf.t The report says the 67 peakers, who made 155 of the 1,411 speech- es listed by the surveyed cam- puses, have been publicly iden- tified with militant, radical or Communist-oriented groups or have provided public support for such groups. "If in a sampling of 3/2 per cent of the institutions of higher edu- cation, funds of this volume are derived by such persons," it says, "the Congress and the people of the United States have a right to conclude that the campus speak- ing circuit is certainly the source of significant financing for the promoters of disorderly and revo- lutionary activity among stu- dents." The report says Spock was paid $21,550 for 12 speeches and Greg- ory $19,550 for 21. Mark Rudd was paid $1,069 for five speeches, it says, and H. Rap Brown, accused of inciting a riot at Cambridge, Md., was paid $1,540 for one speech at an unnamed campus. doing this. Subsequently, Friends of Solstis, Inc. was formed, and a lease was given to officials Monday. Brinkerhoff said yesterday that discriminate against women By The College Press Service is drastically lower than the cor- The first study of the attitudes responding figures in both eastern of U.S. medical schools toward and western Europe. For exam- whether their programs had been the administration must first re- recorded correctly. solve "an issue of corporate inter- According to Associate Registrar relationship." He said it was un- Doug Woolley, the new procedure clear "whether Solstis, while still was instituted so that errors could being a branch of Project Com- be eliminated before the end of munity, could assume full liability the, term. under its organized corporation." "In the past, up to 20 per cent of students' records needed fur-j ther examination at the end of the semester before grades were sent out,"- he said. "Although we would update our files with the drop and add forms and the faculty sub- mitted their class lists, late-! Supporters of Solstis, whose cor- porate members signed the lease' Wednesday, have charged that the delay is "another attempt" to hurt the school's program. "We've been working in the last! month to put a lease together,"' said one staff mcmber. "We've women students has concluded that there is widespread sex dis- crimination in admissions and a callous attitude toward the prob- lems of those women who are ad- mitted. The study was conducted by Prof. Harold Kaplan of the New York College of Medicine. He sentI questionnaires to all medical schools in the United States and Canada, receiving replies from well over i95 per cent of the schools. Only 9 percent of American doctors are women, a figure which ple, 24 percent of British doctors and 65 percent of Russian phy- sicians are women. Kaplan says that the responses of the medical schools show that a major reason for this is prejudice against women medical students on the part of the schools that train them. One medical school stated, "In this school we have not been overly impressed with the women that have been admitted to medi- cine even though academically they are entirely satisfactory. "I think they ordinarily h a v e so many emotional problems that changes and errors weren't caunht done our part while they .delay until the end." I in doing theirs." TV program to focus on Sblacks at U' By JUANITA ANDERSON Nearly a month ago, people crossing the Diag at noon were met by television cameras filming a discussion between members of *the University's black community. Tonight at 8:30, that discussion will be aired by WWJ-TV in Detroit in a program about the life of black students at this campus. The program, part of the station's "Profiles in Black" series, will also focus on the issues surrounding last spring's class strike supporting the demands of the Black Action Movement (BAM) for increased minority admissions. we have not been particularly hap- py with their performance," the statement added. "In this medical school we screen all women appli- cants as carefully as possible, in order to be as certain as we can concerning their motivation f o r studying medicine." Kaplan says that medical schools are less apt to admit mar- ried women than single women, especially those with children. "We have admitted a few mar- ried women without children," wrote one school, "but our ex- perience with them has been al- most uniformly poor. At the pre- sent we would not admit one un- less she were an outstanding stu- dent," it continued, adding, "Up to the present we have refused to admit married women with child- Iren." Many schools explained their at- titudes toward women with child- ren by voicing fears that the wo- men will have to devote too much time to being mothers. The Uni- versity of British Columbia stat- ed, ". . . we would not admit stu- dents where there is likely to be conflict between two jobs: That is the academic pursuit and the re- sponsibility of looking after a family. If these two were in con- flict, we would likely not accept the student." When medical scnools do accept women students, they usually make no provision for pregnancy, expecting the student to return as soon as possible. Kaplan con- cludes that "the most startling and frequent observations f r o m many schools . . . is that most pregnant medical students, after bearvinga c hild.returiin fto afull ------- -.:. _ ___________,:_______ .r -:; , ::--*:: . ~Nt9r. h : ......._ Vii::.: :4 . ..