TIRUDEAUU AND THE WAR MEASURES ACT See Editorial Page Y 5k A E it4J INCOMPREHENSIBLE High-64 Low--33 Cloudy, chance of rain Vol. LXXXI, No. 41 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, October 20, 1970 Ten Cents Eight Pages RIOT CHARGES: 4 indictments m ade atKn RAVENNA, Ohio (fl)-The Kent State University student body president and an associate professor were among the first persons booked yesterday as officers began serving 25 indictments stemming from a special probe of the Kent State riot last May. Two young men already in jail on drug charges also were served with indictments. Meanwhile, the school's faculty senate held a special meeting and unanimously endorsed Kent State President Canadian forces seal off Quebec kidnapers to Ifind Robert i. White. The senate issued a stat university were to fashion it Students added to ement asserting that "if any self along the lines suggested 'for it by many of its critics, it would cease to exist as a uni- versity.". The student senate later met and endorsed White and ;the statement by the faculty group. Attorney William Kunstler, who has agreed to coordinate the de- fense of those indicted, spoke to students in Kent late last night 9U' ane S Wd an;;s .h ii n n~i~"Society had to resort to the use of law to condone murder and the use of the courts to condone By HESTER PULLING silence," Kunstler, defense at- Senate Assembly approved two torney for the 'Chicago T, told a measures yesterday which will crowd of more than 1,000 students substantially increase student re- ativntlr d. presentation on two academic ad- Kunstler presented a plan of pirynt comittees action to students and called for visory committees. Assembly - the faculty repre- un e want to put on a defense sentative body - also modified that is an offense," Kunstler told 'several aspects of the pay policy the chanting, applauding students, concerning strikes by faculty adding that he plans to coor- members. dinate a common defense for any The first measure adopted was or all of the 25 persons indicted a proposal for the establishment of who wish it. an academic services committee Craig Morgan, a senior and stu- "to work with the Vice President dent body president, was arrested in his areas of responsibility." in student government offices on Stephen Spurr, vice president the campus. He was charged with and dean of the graduate school, second-degree 'riot during dis- said the general duties of the com- turbances on the campus May 1-4. mittee will be to advise him in the Details of the charge were not areas of academic services, in- given. cluding admissions, registrations, Dr. Thomas S. Lough, 42, an records, financial aids and orien- associate professor of sociology tation.mand anthropology, surrendered on The committee will be composed a count of inciting to riot. of five faculty members and five Morgan and Lough were named students. A motion to increase the in secret indictments handed down number of faculty representatives Friday by a special state grand from five to seven was defeated jury that investigated the campus by Assembly. rioting. The grand Jury, in a re- "It is exceedingly important port issued Friday, also exonerated that any administrative officer the guard with regard to the have direct association with stu- deaths and said a major cause of dent and faculty input," Spurr the campus disorders was admin- said. Spurr said he was "very istrtion permissieveness and laxity pleased" by the adoption of the in discipline. proposal. Portage County, officers began An increase in student member- serving papers yesterday. Names. ship from two to five in the aca-of those indicted were not releasedI demic affairs committee - an advisory group to Allan Smith, before their arrest. vice president for academic af- fairs - was also approved by As- ' c Th omiteis now compos- Goi, '. ' C ed of 10 faculty and two student members. " Assembly was also given a re- -sioIfn1we port by members of a commit- tee charged with finding a newI University judicial system. Law By TAMMY JACOBS Prof. Theodore St. Antoine de- Controversy and confusion con- scribed proposed structural and C procedural aspects. tinue behind the scenes as the Gay The final action of Assembly Liberation Front (GLF) presses involved changes in the faculty its six-month long struggle for pay policy during strikes. The the right to hold a Midwest con- changes approved primarily invol- ference on homosexuality in Uni- ved "taking out the threats," said versity facilities. Albert Feuerwerker, chairman of The group was told by the Re- the academic advisory affairs gents at their September meeting committee. that GLF must present an agenda One of the cuts included t h e and list of speakers to show that omission of disciplinary action - the conference would be "edu- other than suspension of salary cational." payments - taken against facul- According to GLF member Jim ty members participating in Toy, it is doubtful that the group strikes. will do so, because it feels it However, the no-work, no-pay should be given the same treat- policy adopted by Assembly last ment as other student organiza- June essentially remains the sam'. tions. i L C t l l l . I MONTREAL (IP - Canadian security forces sealed off es- cape routes from Quebec Prov- ince yesterday and mounted a massive search for the ter- rorists who killed Labor Min-4{ ister Pierre Laporte. Police confirmed they found the kidnapers' bloodstained hideout_ k and possible scene of Laporte's execution. A hunt continued for the other hostage, British diplomat James R. Cross, despite a letter in his handwriting that said he would be killed if police closed in on the French-Canadian separatists who Early reports that Cross had been killed were denied by police Sunday. At least 336 people have been arrested in Montreal under the War Measures Act, police reported. The act was invoked by Prime"- Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau to combat the Quebec separatist movement. Montreal, Canada's largest city, appeared on a war footing with military helicopters clattering ov- QUEBEC POLICE search a young w erhead and police and troops stop- treal courthouse where murdered Qu ping cars for identification checks. Security checks were also step- Lo e s ped up at the U.S. border, espec- -Daily-Denny Gainer Chicanos and supporters picket the Frieze Bldg. -Associated Press oman as she enters a Mon- uebec Labor Minister Pierre Chicano students hit SW school admissions By BOB SCHREINER Chicano students in the social work school picketed yesterday to protest the school's handling of chicano admissions. Several members of Trabaja- dores de La Raza, a Mexican- American student organization within the social work school, picketed with supporters from 10- 12 a.m. in front of the Frieze Bldg., site of the social work school. They urged all social work stu- dents to show their support by boycotting classes during that time. The boycott was about 10 per cent effective. In a letter sent to Robert Vin- ter, acting dean of the social work school, the chicanos charged that Sheldon Siegel, the school's ad- missions director, withheld thel names of prospective chicano ap- plicants for the winter term which Bernardo Eureste and Arturo Ranguel, the top officers of the group, had sought to obtain. Eureste said the group wanted the names of the applicants in order to contact them and make sure they had submitted all the necessary forms required for ad- ute over ntinue disj 1ng on homosexuality mittance in the Winter term. Eureste said Siegel told him he would have the names available at the meeting of the Admissions and Scholarships Committee on Oct. 28. Ranguel then attempted to'see Siegel, but was informed that he was out of town, Eureste said. Ranguel then asked for and re- ceived the information from a secretary. He discovered that two of the four chicano applicants did not have complete applications. The Chicanos, finding out that winter term application deadline was Nov. 1, notified the prospec- tive applicants their applications were completed. "We realize that what happened last week is something which can- not be rectified, but we also real- ize that incidents of this type have occurred too often, and such in- cidents have always been explain- ed away as administrative or bureaucratic mistakes and entan- glements," the letter to Vinter said. "We don't want to erase what happened," Eureste said. "Siegel was going to give us the names of the applicants two days before the deadline. You can't erase that." "There are a lot of problems, and the school just makes it so much more difficult. The picket- ing is just meant as a protest ac- tion. We have no present demands nor do we want to meet with any- one, as of now," he said. "Apparently we misunderstood each other," Siegel said of his meeting with Eureste. "I assumed that he wanted numbers and not personal information on the ap- plicants." "I have since been advised that we are not permitted to release See CHICANOS, Page 8 ially at New York, Vermont and New Hampshire points. Quebec's borders with other provinces were checked and close watches were posted at large and small airports. In Ottawa, the federal Parlia- ment gave overwhelming approv- al to Trudeau's use of the wartime security measures against the ter- rorists, members of the Quebec Liberation Front-the FLQ. The House of Commons met with echoing applause Trudeau's vow that the FLQ would not suc- ceed. The prime minister, his cabinet and about 100 members of parlia- ment are to attend Laporte's fun- eral today in Montreal, traveling under tight security wraps. University students in Montreal staged meetings and sit-ins to protest invocation of the War Measures Act. The University of Quebec campus remained closed and about 50 students continued occupying administration offices at the Montreal School of 'Fine Arts. The 25,000-member United Elec- trical, Radio and Machine Work- ers Union said Monday it wired Trudeau in protest against impo- sition of the War Measures Act. The union said it opposed terror- ism, but that failure of the pro- vincial and federal governments to solve social and economic prob- lems "is the root cause for what has happened." Acting under the wartime meas- ures in effect since Friday, army troops and provincial and Royal Canadian Mounted Police fanned out across Quebec hunting two men named in warrants as wanted in connection with the kidnap- pings of Laporte and Cross, Brit- ish trade commissioner in Mon- treal. Police said they found the hide- out where Laporte was kept-a frame bungalow in the suburb of St. Hubert. The house is three quarters of a mile from where La- porte's body, a bullet hole in the See POLICE, Page 8 S 1 f k ' 't t r HOFFMAN R ULING Conspiracy charges against Seale lifted CHICAGO (R) - Judge Julius J. Hoffman of U.S. District Court yesterday dismissed, at the, request of the government, charges of conspiracy to riot against Bobby Seale, chairman of the Black Panther party. Seale is being held in Connecticut and is expected to go on trial soon on charges of conspiring to murder a former Panther member. Seale was one of eight men charged with conspiring to cross state lines with the intent to incite rioting at the time of the Democratic National Convention in 1968. In the past, organizations have' been able to hold conferences whenever they could rent the space or have space donated, without having to present agendas. Robert Knauss, vice president for student services, has told the group to present its plans for the conference to him before the Of- fice of Student Services (OSS) makes, a decision on whether the conference can be held on Uni- versity property. Toy says that "my personal opinion is that we will not go through Mr. Knauss's channels-at least I hope we won't," but adds that he is speaking for himself and not for the group as a whole. In a letter from Knauss to Toy, dated yesterday, Knauss says. "I am unable to tell you if the policy established for .the Gay Liberation Front will be contin- ued for all groups," and adds that the question will be examined by the Regents "in their general re- view of recognition and use of facilities." Toy believes that if GLF "goes the route" requested by Knauss, it will set a precedent for all groups to have to prove "educational val- ue" before being allowed Univer- sity facilities for conferences. "In all conscience, I cannot see GLF doing that," Toy adds. The conference was banned by President Robben Fleming 1 a s t April on the grounds it would not be "clearly educational in na- ture and directed primarily to- wards those people who have pro- fessional interest in the field." Fleming re-emphasized the ban in June, and in September, the Regents upheld his criteria that the conference be judged "educa- and GLF should be treated like "any other group." Knauss's letter to Toy statesI that "it is my understanding there is no current policy that would deny any recognized student or- ganization use of facilities for local or state-wide conferences for other than financial reasons." He says, however, that in this case GLF has a responsibility to prove the "educational value" of its proposed conference. "We can't make a decision until we have more data on the confer- ence," he says. Toy feels no such obligation and says that the group should work through Student Government Council, the official channel for student organizations, which has already supported GLF. See GLF, Page 8 He was separated from th weeks after the trial began in 1 Protest today over Quebec Several campus groups are spon- soring a noon rally today on' the Diag to support demands for im- mediate restoration of full civil liberties in Canada, release of all political prisoners, and reopening of all schools closed in Quebec. The demands were first for- mulated by the United Front for Liberty, an ad-hoc coalition of trade unionists, students and separatists in Quebec., Speakers on the Quebecois in- dependence movement, the current situation in Quebec, and the im- plications of the situation for the United States will be heard at the rally. Civil liberties in Canada were suspended by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau following the kid- naping of a British diplomat and the Quebec labor minister. le other seven defendants six September, 1969 as Hoffman >sentenced him to four years in jail for contempt. He also ordered that Seale be tried on the conspiracy charge again at a later date. Prior to the severance, Hoff man had ordered Seale bound and gagged in the courtroom to pre- vent Seale from continuing to dis- rupt the trial. Seale maintained throughout the stormy court sessions that he was deprived of his right to rep- resent himself. Hoffman ruled that Seale was represented by counsel and did not have the right to speak out in the courtroom. William J. Bauer, U.S. district attorney for northern Illinois, told Hoffman "It is thought that it would be inappropriate to try Seale alone on a conspiracy charge." "Moreover, he stands. convicted of direct contempt of the court in the presence of the court, and a sentence aggregating 48 months has been imposed against him... in the government's v i e w, it is proper to dismiss the indictment as to the substantive count." NEW COUNTY PROGRAM Alcoholism: An end through drug use By CARLA RAPOPORT Drugs can make you high, fertile, ster- ile, sleepy, calm or beautiful. And now Ann Arbor has a drug that can keep you sober. Use of the drug, antabuse, is part of a program developed by the Washtenaw County Council on Alcoholism (WCCA). Results have shown that the program can effectively arrest alcoholism. An estimated 12,000 people in Wash- tenaw County now suffer from alcoholism - a fluorishing disease the WCCA calls incurable, but controllable. and nausea following any consumption of alcohol. The two-year old program is offered on a volunteer basis to all persons pleading guilty to misdemeanor charges resulting from alcohol abuse. A defendant may choose WCCA's program in lieu of up to 90 days in jail and loss of driver's license. Those who choose the program are re- quired to take periodic blood tests to prove they have taken antabuse. The blood check-up stipulation made the pro- gram acceptable to Ann Arbor courts as a punitive measure for the abuses. ~' {, >< { £ .;k