Wome By LYNN WEINER The future direction of the women's liberation movement was debated Sunday in the most tumultuous session of the weekend teach-in celebrating the cen- tennial of women at the University. The representative of a coalition of radical women interrupted the introduc- tions of moderator Barbara Newell, as- sistant to President Robben Fleming, and urged the predominantly female audience of over 600 to join the stage. About a1 fifth of the women did so. The coalition rejected as "anti-women" both "the structure and culture of au- thoritarian form" and the "elitism im- plied by the panel" as the audience re- sponded with catcalls and cheers. The panel included Rep. Martha Grif- fiths of Michigan, Robin Morgan, founder of Women's International Terrorist Con- spiracy from Hell (WITCH), Jo Ann Gardner of the Association of Women Psycholgists, Nadine Miller of Radical Lesbians, Catherine East of the U.S. Dept. of Labor and radical sociologist Marlene Dixon.; disrupt 'U' The women eventually presented their views, but only after an emotional audi- ence vote which determined that the panel session should continue. "We are breaking down form to become more human," said Morgan as over 150 women gathered on the stage. "We will not take time limits, we've done that all our lives," added Miller. Morgan urged that "all men who are our brothers leave now," claiming that the presence of men "is unjust, unfair, and counter-revolutionary." Several members of both sexes left. after which Griffiths spoke on legal change, in a discussion punctuated with hisses and hoots from the audience. She urged the passage of the equa' rights amendments, a topic which was argued throughout the session. As she concluded, the group on the stage chanted "free our sisters, free our- selves," causing an intense, vocal audi- ence reaction. "You on the stage are dividing us, you're our enemies," shouted one woman. "You must be willing to others," urged another. When Griffiths attempted t a question, her microphone was an audience member, again c commotion. "I fought for liberation all shouted one older woman, "and are spoiling it for yourselves." As the audience quieted dow spoke on radical lesbianism, again to adhere to the time li "We are living in a male-d capitalistic society of rigid sex r said. "We are all political prison in a society where we have noth with the laws governing our l "We must recognize lesbianis alternative sex role." She contir must have the right to choose we live." "I will literally give my life women's movement," she added, to work with men. But I am n with every woman." East followed with a discussi teach-in listen to importance of self-support and awareness in the movement organization. She en- o answer dorsed Griffiths' statements, and spoke of siezed by organizing a more humane society. "We ausing a must help one another achieve a better life for all," she said. my life," Dixon then linked the women's move- now you ment to the liberation of all oppressed peoples. n, Miller "The sisterhood concept is for liberation refusing from all. We cannot separate oppression mit. for women from the present system be- lominated cause that system itself is built on op- oles," she pression," she said. ers, living She rejected the concept that the ing to do movement focus on an end to sexism in ives." the professions. sm as an "The businesswomen want to sit on nued, "we the board of directors of United Fruit," the way she said. "We want to destroy United Fruit." for the "White male supremacy must be "I refuse eliminated," she continued. "Equality with ot sisters male chauvenists is not liberation." She called for a revolutionary, movement to on of the See RADICAL, Page 6 -Daily-Denny Gainer Student interrupts Newell at Hill And. WOMEN' S LIBERATION See Editorial Page air A :4Iatij APPROPRIATE High-63 Low-5i Cloudy, chance of showers Vol. LXXXI, No. 35 Ann Arbor, Michigan -Tuesday, October 13,1970 Ten Cents Ten Pages MID-1973 DRAFT GOAL: U.S. to end draft, lower troop ceiling WASHINGTON (R) - T h e Pentagon ordered an immed- iate start on all-out prepara- tions to end the draft by mid- 1973 as President Nixon an- nounced "an accelerated rate of withdrawal" of U.S. troops from Vietnam yesterday. Nixon said during a trip to Connecticut that the authorized ceiling on American troops in Viet- nam will be reduced by 40,000 men through the Christmas, sea- son. This will bring the f i g3u.r e down to 344.000 as of Dec. 31. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird forecast Nixon's announce- ment at a news conference at which he said the armed services have been ordered to prepare for ending the draft. The defense chief, who p r e v- iously has set a 1973 goal for ending reliance on the draft, told reporters "we're going to go all out in the Department of De- fense to reach the goal of a zero draft" in three years. Hed made publica memorandum to the service secretaries a n d Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chairman( of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to spur actions "that should be tak- en now" to move toward the zero draft goal. In addition to stepped up em- phasis on military recruiting, oth- er supports may be required for additional enlistments in both the active forces and the reserve and National Guard components, Laird's memorandum said. He requested top service offic- ials to review recommendations of* a "Project Volunteer Committee" within the Pentagon for various ways to improve the attractiveness of military careers. With an eye toward Congress, Laird said early Capitol Hill ac- tion is needed on legislation to boost by 20 per cent the base pay for low ranked enlisted men. On troop withdrawals f r o m Vietnam, Laird noted that the goal of reaching 384,000 men by Oct. 15 already has been surpassed and that the U.S. force level there will be "several thousand below" that figure when Oct. 15 arrives. Senate sends anti -0bomb bill to Nixon WASHINGTON U-The Senate yesterday approved and sent to President Nixon an anti-crime bill that includes authority for FBI investigations of camnpus bombings and the death penalty for fatal'bombings. The Senate action came as police blamed unnamed con- spirators for the pre-dawn dynamite bombings of six build- ings, including two government structures, in Rochester, N.Y., early yesterday. Accepted by a voice vote, the anti-crime bill gives the government new legal weapons to combat racketeering and underworld syndicates as well as the bombings that have occurred in eight U.S. cities since Aug. 24. The bill, as it originally passed the Senate last January by a 73-1 vote, did not include -Daiy-Denny Gainer Gilberto Cano speaks at the Union -Associated Press PRESIDENT NIXON climbs up to greet construction workers in Harford, Conn., yesterday. In a speech there, the President announced that he was ordering a reduction in the authorized U.S. troop ceiling in Vietnam. Nixon was on a campaign swing for Republican candidates in New England. DISCRIMINATION CHARGED: Engineering unit refuses to bar Dow recruiter in face of protest Chicano leader its "genocide' in Vietnam By TAMMY JACOBS A representative of the Chicano National Moratorium spoke last night of "genocide" in Vietnam to a group of 60 people at the Michigan Union. Gilberto Cano, a leader of the group centered in Los Angeles, said that 20 per cent of the U.S. soldiers killed in Vietnam are chicanos, and that chicanos comprise 20 per cent of the front line troops, although they only make up three per cent of the U.S. population. "Six out of ten chicanos in Vietnam will come home in a box," Cano told the audience. Charging that many of the national peace groups are racist, Cano said "We found we couldn't work through the national movement anymore," and the Chicano National Moratorium was formed. At a rally in Los Angeles on, k Aug. 29. Cano claimed. 40,000 peo- ple were "attacked" by police. "We were prepared to stop any te to trouble from within," Cano said, "but the police double-crossed us.BU They camne in and clubbed who- By GERI SPRUNG ever they could get." Complaints that the Univer Since Aug. 29, over 500 people doing all it should for the h associated with the chicano peace have launched a state investi movement have been arrested, Within the next two weeks, b most at the Aug. 29 rally and vision personnel from Lansing others' at a march Sept. 16. Cano viewing campus buildings, wi sa"Why shoul we fight in Viet- Languis, director of the state bu nam when ur fight is here?. sion, in a letter of Oct. 7, respo Cano asked. "We must educate complaint from William Nee, a our people. Bursley Hall. Nee complained t "Police must be controlled at University buildings do not co the local level by the people they the Public Act. No. 1 of 1966 are supposed to serve, not club." with the handicapped. By BOB SCHREINER The faculty and student advisory committee to the Engineering Placement Service yesterday turn- ed down a request to prohibit the Dow Chemical Co. from recruiting on campus, but promised to im- mediately investigate allegations brought against the company. Five students in a signed state- ment accused Dow of racial, sexual discrimination in regard to em- ployment practices, and requested that the Engineering Placement Service "investigate the charges of discrimination which are in violation of your own rules." The students claim that Dow violates the principles establishedt in a Regents bylaw which says that the University will not spon- sor or play host to any organiza- tion that practices discrimination. After the meeting, Prof. John Young, Engineering Placement Service director, said "As far as we're concerned, there are no grounds to stop them from re- cruiting at this time." Late yesterday some question arose whether the Dow recruiter would appear on campus. Engin- eering school Dean Gordon Van Wylen confirmed last night, how- UNFIT FOR HANDICAPPED? ever, that "the Dow recruiter is defintely coming." Students have announced plans for a demonstration which is set for 2 p.m. today. Brian Spears, '71, said plans call for a "non-militant picket line to show our disgust at the University's complicity with Dow." Spears said the group was em- phasizing Dow's alleged racial and sexual discrimination instead of its association with the Defense Department, "because according to University rules, a recruiter can be barred from the University on the basis of racism and sexism, but not on the basis of corporate com- plicity with the U.S. war crimes." Spears, told members of the student-faculty committee that Dow is allegedly guilty of racism "both at homesand abroad." He cited a story in a national financial magazine which stated that Dow owns and operated a wholly-owned subsidiary in apart- heid South Africa. "By this very fact-that a cor- poration owns a company in South Africa and abides by that coun- try's laws-automatically means that they are racist," he claimed. "Here at home the situation is no different," Spears continued. "At present, only four per cent of Dow's 33,000 employes are blacks, and four per cent certainly does not adequately acknowledge the black race." Spears claimed that there are n ,-n nnhlna r'lr wome~YAV~n1 a,,,rny the anti-bombing provisions. These were a d d e d in the House, which approved the bill last week by a 341-26 vote. The Rochester explosions se- verely damaged a federal office building, and the Monroe County office building. Two churches, with largely black memberships, a grocery store and private home had less damage. One man was slightly injured by flying glass. "We are working on the assump- tion that the bombings were done by three separate groups working together," Police Commissioner John A. Mastrella said of the Ro- chester explosions. He said the blasts, within 25 minutes of each other in scatter- ed sections of the city, indicated more than one person was in- volved. The explosions began shortly after 12:30 a.m. The first hit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Clark on the city's North Side. A hole was blasted in the front lawn, the front porch was damaged and windows were shattered. Clark is business agent for Local 832 of the International Union of Operating Engineers. The second wave of bombs then. occurred within a 12-minute span, Besides the federal and county - office buildings in downtown Ro- chester, the New Bethel Christian Methodist E p i s c o p a 1 Church, Chalie Brown's grocery and the G r e a t e r Bethlehem Pentacostal Church were bombed. All are about two miles from the office build- ings. There was no immediate con- nection made between Clark's home, the governmental buildings, churches and grocery and why all six may .have been targets. The grocery was across an alley from the New Bethel church. Except for Mastrella's state- ment, local police have been cau- tious in laying blame for the bombings. Both local and federal officials have refused to speculate whether the radical Weatherman faction of Students for a Democratic So- ciety may have had a hand in the bombings. The Weatherman group has an- nounced a "fall offensive" to "at- Blacks hit policies of ed board By ZACH SCHILLER Members of the Black Educa- tors, an association of black high school teachers in the Ann Arbor area, picketed the Ann Arbor Board of Education building yes- terday to affirm their support for black students attending city schools. About 30 members of. the group were picketing in the late after- noon, but members of the group said this number ranged as high as 75 during the day. The Black Educators released a statement which charged Pioneer High School with mishandling an incident there Sept. 30, and criti- cized suspensions of students from the affair. The school closed at that time after being disrupted and vandal- ized by a group of black students. The students had gathered in the hallway to confer over their grievance that the school's ad- ministration had failed to imple- ment demands accepted last spring for the hiring of additional black teachers and counselors. The school's principal, Theodore Rokicki, then informed the stu- dents that they were violating the trespass law. The students rampaged through the school committing a little over $5,000 in damages, according to a report made to the Ann Arbor Board of education. The statement of the Black Educators said that, "We acknowl- edge our responsibility to all stu- dents in this school system, but are especially aware of the need to provide support to the black students." "Historically, there have been injustices to black students. The Pioneer High School incident is merely a reflection of such in- justices," the statement continued. "Inasm'uch as all the facts per- investigate U' buildings sity is not andicapped gation. building di- will be re- rote A. N. ilding divi- nding to a janitor at hat certain omply with concerned las Sherman, assistant vice president and director of capital planning, said yes- terday, "Since I've been here (July, 1969) every building has been approved through the building division. I don't know what buildings he jis talking about." Languis sent a copy of his letter to Sherman but did not mention the specific complaints. Nevertheless, according to Vice President for Student Services Ro- bert Knauss and Plant Extension Director John Weidenbach, there are many build- ings on campus, not included in the 1966 law, that are not easily accessible to the their advisors, and in part from a staff report issued last May by the Student Services Counseling Office. The report has not been released outside the office. Knauss points out, however that most of the work done on the problem prior to the formation of the committee was done through the efforts of Barbara W. Newell, acting vice president for student affairs until Knauss' appointment in September, who, he said, had a special interest in the project. In the past, the University has only reacted to problems of individual handi-