S 7 ENFORCING RULES ON RECRUITING See Editorial Page Y giltr Bai1V DRIER High--59! Low--36 Cool, partly cloudy Vol. LXXXI, No. 37 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October 15, 1970 Ten Cents Ten Pages 0 Regents fo hold open hearings Groups seek new housing, 24-hour child care center, The Regents will hold their regular open forum tomorrow as a prelude to their monthly meeting. Two student-commu- *fnity groups intend to make. presentations at the 4 p.m. session. The Tenants Union (TU) plans to amplify their previous demand for' the construction of 5000 units 'of low cost housing by the Uni- versity, while the Child Care Cen- ter Action Group plans to present once again their demand for a free 24-hour day care center funded by the University and con- trolled by the parents and center staff members. ' It does not appear' at this time that the Regents plan to make any major decisions at the regular meeting Friday. Regent William C u d 1 i p (R - Detroit) yesterday speculated,' "It looks like a tame session this time." At last month's Regents meet- ing TU members pressed for a commitment to build low cost housing; The ,Regents responded they would welcome any "con- Crete" proposals presented them on the subject. "We have specific plans," said Fred Arnold, a spokpsman for TU, last night. TU will call on the Re- gents to "direct the Resource Al- locations Committee to come up with the funds," he explained. He also said that they' will sug- gest the Regents build on the University-owned Fuller Flatlands near Huron Towers and the Uni- versity golf.course because "these are the only large ", areas we can use without demolition of other buildings." TU will also demand that ten- ants have control of planning and running of new housing accommo- dations, Arnold said. ,Although the Child Care Center Group is currently operating a fa- Anti-war groups to hold strike No local agenda as action builds on East Coast By HANNAH MORRISON "Think peaceful thoughts," during today's anti-war ior- atorium, suggests the National Strike for Peace advertise- ment in this week's New York Times. But the two-hour moratorium, which was backed by the area Stu- dent Mobilization Committee (SMC) has not been organized locally. Although the SMC endorsed the New York-based action by sign- ing the advertisement, chairman Dave Ruhland said, "We're not trying to build this in Ann Ar- bor because it hasn't been well- planned." He predicted that- t h e strike won't "get off much beyond the East coast." Ruhland said he did not pre- sent the National Strike to the local Peace Action Coalition (PAC) because of the lack of na- tional coordination and involve- ment. "This is different from last year's Moratorium," he said. "It's been based mainly in New York." Although there is no structured agenda for the strike, to be held from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m., the ad- vertisement boasts a ten-item list of suggestions for "meaningful activities." Among them are do- nating blood, writing letters to President Nixon, Vice-President Agnew or Congressmen, working for peace candidates for the Nov. 3 elections, holding a teach-in, joining an anti-war organization or petitioning a governing body to pass an anti-war resolution. Future plans of the National Strike group include support of the national PAC mass rallies planned for Oct .31 in 25 cities around the country and organizing activities for Nov. 15, the first anniversary of the March on Washington. The National Strike for Peace formed in September. It presented ideas and received some support at the national PAC meeting held in Chicago later that month. Last year on Oct. 15, the mora- torium was nation-wide, making its presence felt in major cities, as well a on college campuses. The day was marked by well-attended seminars, teach-ins and lectures. About 20,000 persons at the Uni- versity last year attended a rally at the Crisler Arena in protest of the war. Police rearrest A. Davis Action seen as legal procedure to aid extradition NEW YORK () --Angela Davis, the black revolutionist captured Tuesday and accused of flight to avoid murder and kidnap charges in California, was held in $250,000 bail yes- terday, then released by fed- eral authorities and immed- iately rearrested y city police. The action was a .prelude to legal moves to return her to Cali- fornia to answer charges con- nected with a courthouse gunfight in which four persons died. Davis had been soukht for near- ly two months and had been on the FBI's most wanted list. The FBI immediately ~replaced Davis' name with that of Bernadine Rae Dohrn, reputed underground lead- er of the Weatherman faction of the Students for a Democratic Society. Dohrn is wanted on charges of unlawful interstate flight to avoid prosecution for mob action, viola- tion of federal anti-riot laws, and conspirac . Davis, 26-year-old M a r x i s t scholar and former UCLA college professor, has been accused on the West Coast of having bought the guns used in the shootout Aug. 7 in the Marin County Courthouse at San Rafael. She was arrested Tuesday night in Manhattan, and was arraigned before a U.S. commissioner early yesterday. Bond was then set, and she remained in the holding cells of the federal courthouse through the afternoon.G Then, shortly after 8 p.m., bail was canceled and Davis was for- mally discharged from federal cus- tody. Detective Alfred C. Halikias of the New York police came forward and announced: "Miss Davis, you're under arrest." She was taken for booking at an undisclosed city police station. Asst. U.S. Atty. John H. Doyle had moved for Davis' release, declaring that he had received certified co- pies of a warrant from Marin County, Calif., which he was turn- ing over to city authorities. It. was not clear immediately why this procedure of handling Davis was being used) She could have' been subject to removal procedures under either federal or state laws. -Associated Press High, Mr. President He hasn't smoked it yet or actually even looked at the real thing, but President Nixon came close to the world of drugs yesterday as he sniffs a package of marijuana. The package was selected by trained dogs who sniffed out the nefarious bag from among several other similar items during a White House demon- stration of new Customs Bureau techniques. HEARING TONIGHT: oar to hear case on recuitn -Daily-Tom Stanton Panel debates roles of women (above) as others look on (below) Cente na discussion centers on role of wo'Men on crampus By DEBRA THAL awaiting her doctorate in sociol-, Over 200 women yesterday con- ; ogy, summed up the feeling of fronted the problem of "Women discrimination against women who on Campus" in an all-day sym- are in graduate school.r '" it Aw cility in a former cafeteria inV Mary Markley Hall, the group By GERI SPRUNG does not believe that their de- mands have been adequately met. The Office of Student Services (OSS) is holding a hearig Sue Erlich, a member of the 'tonight on the issue of corporate recruiting. group, explained last night that The hearing, at 7:30 p.m. in the Student Activities Bldg., the center is currently run by a is in answer to a petition from the Brain Mistrust (BMT), small paid staff financed by the a radical research organization, calling for the enforcement center's income and a number of of the University policy governing the use of University facil- non-paid volunteers. ities for corporate recruiting. The Univei'sity policy for campus recruiters states that the University of Michigan Placement Services "are not avail- S GC ma able to any organization or individual which discriminates against any person because of racle, color, creed, sex, religion, posium sponsored by the Center' for Continuing E d u c a t i o n of Women. The symposium was an activity of the University's celebration of the centennial anniversary of the admission of the first woman stu- dent. The program consisted of panels in the areas of female psychol- ogy, the problems of women grad- uate students, and the future of women at the university. The most enthusiastically re- ceived panel followed a noon luncheon in the Michigan League Ballroom. Five graduate students discussed the various problems of the woman in graduate school. Greer Litton Fox, . currently sue Re ents or national origin." .. "If women get into graduate{ school, the assumption is that she won't finish. If she does, she won't make any contribution to her field. If she does, then it won't be any good. And if it is, then she is abnormal," she said. The next two speakers debated the future of advanced education for women. Sybil Stokes, of the Inktitute of Public Policy Studies,. voiced op- timism that more women would. be receiving doctorates and going in'o graduate work. Noel Kramer, a third year law student, was more pessimistic. She told the tale of the woman law student. "She enters with the naive idea that she has a perfect right to be there. She is likely to believe she has a duty to use the intelligence that she has. She believes that hard work will conquer what ob- stacles exist," she said. "At first, she has the pleasant experience of much attention from male law students. She soon learns that this is inspection-and not intellectual or personality traits either. She is caught on the horns of a dilemma. If she is quiet, then she is labelled passive and unable to succeed. If she is more assert- ive. then she is a castrating fe- male," Kramer added. However, she said, getting jobs is even worse. Grace Mack of the psychology department said that black w6men had a different priority. - "We don't have the option of dealing with women's liberation," she said, "I'm not saying it doesn't have merit. But black females cannot put their femaleness before their blackness. We are discrimi- nated against first because we are black." The concluding panel dealt with the University of the 1980's and how women fit into that picture. Sociology Prof. Charles Tilly discussed the possibilities. He believed that in the future a new university structure which eliminated most degrees would be helpful for women because it would be more difficult for anx- ious parents to send their daugh- ters to become certified as mar- riagable by the university. # BMT charges that this policy Student Government Council has not been enforced since many last night decided to investigate of the companies recruiting on suing the Board of Regents in an campus operate in the Union of effort to open Regents meetings South Africa. "It is well known to the public. that these companies pctic to th pubic. blatant discrimination through Meeting as SGC, Inc., since unequal wage scales based entirely SGC itself cannot originate legal upon race, through segregated fa- action, they passed a motion re- cili ies in their plants, throughl questing the state Attorney Gen- discriminatory promotion practices eral to rule on "whether the Board and through adhering to other of Regents' policy of closed meet- apartheid laws and policies,"' ings violates the constitution or states the petition. the laws of the state of Michigan." The corporations' defense is It was also decided that SGC that in South Africa discrimina- member Al Ackerman will notify tion is legal and they must abide the Regents of "their right, o' by the law of the land. liabilities regarding the discussio Since last winter Students for a' of University business -at secret *Democratic Society (SDS) has sessions." See 0SS, Page 10 Biological warf are stockpiles remain despite Nixon claims I- By SEYMOUR M. HERSH Dispatch News Service WASHINGTON - Despite a presidential renunciation of bio- logical warfare more than 10 months ago, the United States is still maintaining a vast stockpile of lethal biological agents. Approximately 10,000 gallons of some of the most deadly killers known to man - including the dreaded disease Anthrax - are now stored at the Army's biolo- gical production center at Pine Bluff, Ark. President Nixon announced Nov. 25, 1969, that the United States would get out of the biological warfare field, except for a small program of defensive research. Yet it can now be reported that four biological warfare agents are currently in t h e U.S. stockpile. The existence of the agents and BUJILDING INCOMPLETE *Residents By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN Valhalla, Walden III, and Karma sound like idyllic names for equally idyllic living situations. Some members of the North Campus Co-op (NCC), however, believe their houses have been misnamed. "My biggest gripe is that we have no home. We feel like nomads, having lived out of suitcases for six weeks," says one co-op resident. "It really gets you down. Instead of eating on the run it's living on the run. Our co-op spirit is mildewing along with all our belongings." "No-one enjoys waiting in long lines to eat tiny portions of miserable food in an .tr. crarir 1na 1,kirha htilt n a ro mmn_- hit N. Campus Co-op their codenames is still regarded as classified information by the Pentagon, although President Nix- on has specifically renounced their use, even in retaliation. In addition, the military h a s developed a dozen sophisticated biological warfare spray tanks, bombs, a nd other delivery sys- tems capable of disseminating dry or wet biological agents from most of the attack planes now in the U.S. arsenal. The continued existence of the large stockpiles and delivery sys- tems underlies the contradictions and inconsistencies among various Administration agencies as the government ~s e e k s to implement the Presidential declaration. For example, public health of- ficials announced in June t h a t they were "fully satisfied" with an Army plan to dispose of the biological materials at Pine Bluff by rendering them harmless and spreading them about the base. Bois Osheroff, special assistant to the surgeon. general, t o l d a newsman in June that "There is absolutely no chance of living or- ganisms coming through intact" after the Army disposal. Yet no disposal hastbeen made Osheroff now refuses to talk, and other public health service offi- cials will only say that the dump- ing plan is still under review. have b ee n' completed by, mid-summer.. When it became apparent that contract- ing difficulties would delay the completion of the NCC buildings, explains Rex Chis- olm, '73, ICC's North Campus Division Chairman, ICC began negotiations to try - to accommodate the 216 co-op members. ICC aranged to lease from Zeta Beta Tau (ZBT) their former fraternity house. adjacent to Gilbert Court, at $3,000 per month, for two months. If ZBT agrees to renew the lease when it expires on Oct. 23, the rent will go up to $4,000 per month. The ZBT house is a modern structure built to accommodate about 50 fraternity mnn All 91R en-on pmemhers lived and ate gt Federal court in COnn. overrules parolehiaid. HARTFORD, Conn. (N-A three-judge federal court 19 Hartford ruled yesterday that state aid to, nonpublic schools is unconstitutional and issued an injunction immediately affecting some $6 million earmarked for 203 schools in Con- necticut. That number of schools had contracted with the state to receive aid at the time of the hearings last June. Of those schools, 217. or more are operated by religious bodies and about 210 of those are Roman Catholic. The Very Rev. Msgr. James A. Connelly, superintendent of schools for the Archdiocese of Hartford, said that "without some state assistance, many Catholic schools will definitely have to curtail facilities and some schools may even have _ _----------- -to close." dismayed many members. "The converted triple in South Quad wasn't this bad," lamented one.girl. Until the first houses moved out of ZBT, life there was hectic. According to an irate resident, "216 persons simply cannot co- exist in space designed for 50." People were living in large basement rooms, as well as in the" dormitory style rooms which ZBT members formerly occupied. Since the new co-op complex is incom- plete, ICC has a, provisional certificate of occupancy-the Gilbert House Court houses may be occupied, but only at less than full residency, according to the city. If the final 24 members move in. they i E t r i Prior to yesterday's ruling, U.S. Circuit Judge Robert P. Anderson already had issued a temporary injunction stopping" the flow of money on Aug. 26. The financial setback to schools is not yet final, however, because it is expected that the educational institutions and the state twill ap- peal the ruling to the U.S. Su- preme Court. The original suit was filed by six Connecticut taxpayers, repre- "sented by the Connecticut Civil Liberties Union, challenging Pub- lic Act 791, the law granting state assistance to nonpublic schools for secular education. Some time later, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People joined the suit. The Civil Liberties Union argued such state aid is "socially destruc- tive" because it supports schools which "inherently discriminate" -acrsain h lrl rr h.tn