CAMPUS JUDICIARY: THE WRONG APPROACH See Editorial Page Y 4hp 411 t r4t gan A& :43atl CHANGEABLE High-65 Low-50 Partly cloudy, chance of showers Vol. LXXXI, No. 44 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, October 23, 1970 Ten Cents Ten Pages SETS OWN GUIDELINES: - Engli oss t Council rejects recruiter policy -Associated press Capote in the clink Arthur Truman Capote talks to newsmen yesterday as he enters Orange County, Calif. jail to surrender himself to sheriff's of- ficers. Capote began a three-day jail sentence on a contempt of court charge stemming from his failure to testify at a June murder trial against a convict he had interviewed. IN NEW YORK: Davis plans to fight extradition to Calif. NEW YORK (N) - Angela Davis will fight her extradition to California to face charges of murder and kidnaping, her lawyer said yesterday. Davis, the black militant accused of purchasing four guns used in a courthouse escape attempt in which four persons 'including a judge were killed in San Rafael, Calif., Aug. 7, was arraigned before Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Thomas Dickens, who gave her the choice of waiving or refusing extra- dition. The basis for the rearraignment was an extradition order signed by Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller Wednesday night. "I refuse to consent to the State of California," was the only comment Davis made at the proceedings. By GERI SPRUNG The Engineering Placement Committee yesterday brushed aside a ruling on campus re- cruiters set by the Office of Student Services (O S S) Policy Board. The new policy would bar the use of O S S placement facilities to c o m- panies that operate in South Africa or in any other country where discrimination is legal- ly enforced. Instead, the Engineering Place- ment Committee unanimously E adopted a proposal which would only bar any employer "which practices discriminatory selection of candidates for interviewing" from using the Engineering Place- ment Services. "Employers are free to inter- view provided they are not under coonviction of violating the anti- discrimination laws" and do not. discriminate on campus, the pol- icy state. The policy was adopted, thej committee said, because "the En- gineering College does not have the facilities to adequately sit in judgment on possible discrimina- tory actions" which occur outside the University by corporations us- ing the Placement Off ice. They added that because State and, Federal laws cover this issue, legal discrimination is for the courts to deal with. The committee also stated the OSS policy was unenforceable. j The engineering college policyI was adopted in accordance with the Regents' by-law which statesf in part that the "University shallF work for the elimination of dis- crimination by non-University sources where students and em- ployes of the University are in- volved." If there is evidence of any dis- criminatory practices under the approved policy,the procedures indicate itshouldtbe reported to the director of the Placement" Service. The director, along with the engineering dean and t h e chairman of the Engineering' Placement Committee, will con-f sider the evidence. If the evidence is valid, t h e employer will be asked to respond, and recommendations for actionE will be submitted by the Engi- neering Placement Committee. All sanctions will be subject to final approval by the Executive Com-f mittee.1 The new guidelines and proced- ures will provide a mechanism in case any discrimination occurs on campus. Before the vote on the engineer-t See ENGIN, Page 10r "Today's Civil Liberties Action Day" will include workshops on student rights and the legal prob- lems currently facing those indict- ed. Planned and coordinated by the Student Senate, which has stres- sed a non-violent approach, it will be the first such event since four. students were killed and n i n e Plan rally, workshops Sinjured by National Guardsmen o n i% en t Speaking at the rally will be H HI E R -Daily-Jim Judkis Homecoming kickoff Steve Miller of the Steve Miler Band leads his group during last night's concert which opened Homecoming events. Appearing with the band was another musical group, Bread. See review on Page 2. SECOND ACTION THIS WEEK: Chicanos picket social work school over admissions policy By BOB SCHREINER Chicano students in the social work school yesterday picketed for the second time this week to protest the school's handling of Chicano admissions. About 15 persons, including sev-" eral members of Trabajadores de La Raza - a Mexican-American+ student organization within the social work school - picketed from 10-12 a.m. in front of the+ Frieze Bldg., site of the social work school. rhe Chicanos had held a similar action Monday.+ After the picketing, representa- tives of the Chicano organization met with Assistant Dean Philip; Kent protest draws support of 30 schools By MARK DILLEN Special To The Daily KENT, Ohio - A rally at noon today will climax a quiet yet tense week following the indictments of 25 Kent State University students and faculty for their alleged role in last May's disorders here. Over 30 colleges and universities have indicated support for today's activities, which were discussed at a meeting yesterday by some 3,000 of the school's 22,000 students. The class moratorium originally planned here will not take place because of a state law passed this summer which prohibits the interruption of classes, and because of a faculty directive that scheduled classes must be held all day. Fellin to discuss policy concerning' Chicano admissions. In a letter sent last week to Robert Vinter, acting dean of the social work school, the Chicanos had charged that Sheldon Siegel, the school's admissions director, withheld the names of prospective Chicano applicants for the winter term which Bernardo Eureste and Arturo Ranguel, the top officers of the group, had sought to ob- tain. 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- mittance in the winter term. NY student .charged in le-1 , Immediately after Davis an- swered, her lawyer, John J. Abt, approached the bench and told Dickens he had prepared a peti- tion for a writ of habeas corpus and requested a 30-day postpone- ment on the matter to prepare his case. 1 unct m isuse Asst. Dist. Atty. Thomas An- drews objected to a .30-day post- ponement and asked that the case Special To The Daily be set down for Oct. 29. Abt. coun- I.. O_ i g tl ( BUFFALO, N.Y. - The former tered that he could not go ahead treasurer of the Graduate Student with his case so quickly because, 'Association (GSA), John Case, at he had received no papers in sup- the State University of New York port of the California governor's treatliriet)ws ees-wrrn orDvi nth hags at Buffalo (SUNYAB) was releas- warrant for Davis on the charges. ed yesterday morning on $5,000 "I don' d t h By HANNAH MORRISON bail following his arraignment on hatet understan t i s un- a charges stemming from the ve of seemly haste y the State of New Religious practices are van- student money for "radical" pro- York, Abt told the court. ishing because of lack of Jewish ejects. Dickens set the case down for education. The only rabbinicalI Case was charged on 13 counts Nov. 5 after a short discussion and seminary in the Soviet Union was of grand larceny and one count, an assurance by Andrews that closed a few years ago. The pray- of petty larceny. The ch a r g e s Abt would be able to see the re- erbooks and other ritual items are made against Case resulted from quested papers tomorrow. fIng apr e woa had to a sealed indictment handed down Davis. a Marxist a n d former I by the March holdover grand jury University of California at L o s Karen Gorin, who spent a sum- investigating the misuse of funds Angeles professor, had been sought mer in Russia, characterized t h e ,t SUNYAB. Additional persons, by the FBI for two months follow- current situation of Jews there in See STUDENT, Page 10 ing the jailbreak attempt. this manner as she addressed a :.crowd of about 100 gathered at er at Hillel to protest 0 U 0 0 After Monday's protest, Siegel said he had misunderstood the re- quest for information. But, he said, "We are not permitted to re- lease the names of school appli- cants to outside organizations." When the names of the prospec-' tive applicants were obtained' through a secretary, Eureste said, it was discovered that two of the, four did not have complete ap-, plications. The Chicanos then notified the applicants, who live in Texas, and their applications were completed. "What the school doesn't un- derstand is that these bureau- cratic entanglements can be the cause of whether a prospective student comes here or not," Eur- este said. "The school told us last year to seek out and recruit prospective Chicano applicants," he added. "We would just like them to take as much itneerest in following-up the applications as we do in re- cruiting." Eureste termed the meeting with Fellin "very satisfactory," and said those present were concerned with "developing a mechanism to facil- itate obtaining access to certain information concerning students aplying for admission to the so- cial work school." Fellin said last night he will convey the concerns of the Chi- canos to Dean Vinter and said the dean had expressed his desire to meet with the Chicanos at their convenience. "I think we had a very good meeting and I think we are going to be able to work things out," Fellin said. Aryeh Neiei, National Director of the American Civil Liberties Un- ion, David Ifshin, President of the National Student Association, and ,Eva Jefferson, President of North- western University Student' body. Students here are divided and apprehensive, some advocating a six mile march to Ravenna, the county seat where the indictments were issued.j Such a march would violate the court order prohibiting "demon- strations".. At an emotion-charged student body meeting yesterday in t h e school's auditorium, some 3000 of the schools 22,000 students listen- ed, questioned, and argued amidst pleas for unity. "We need active non-violence, not passive non-violence," said Yippie leader Jerry Persky. "Mar- tin Luther King defied over 30 in- junctions. It means commitment and sacrifice. We can't use non- violence as a cop-out." Most students rejected the idea of a march, saying it would cause "a lot more 'dead people." They argued, though, that "we have to do something." "There's a gut feeling that some- thing is needed," said s t u d e n t body President Craig Morgan. "But that doesn't necessarily mean marching to Ravenna. We (the Student Senate) will not advo- cate this." After arguments saying "th e student government isn't on the See CIVIL, Page 10 Montreal police free 48 suspects MONTREAL UP) - Police yes- terday released 48 persons picked up in a roundup of suspected Que- bec Liberation Front members, but pressed their hunt for the ter- rorist kidnap-killers. The fate of James Richard Cross, British trade commissioner for Montreal, remained unknown. He was kidnaped Oct. 5, five days before the front abducted Pierre Laporte, Quebec labor minister, who was murdered later. Police arrested more than 300 persons throughout Quebec Pro- vince after the federal government invoked the War Measures A c t last Friday to deal with the out- break of terrorism by the front, which s e e k s the' separation of Quebec from the rest of Canada. By ZAUH ILL Student Government Council is sponsoring a rally and workshops today as a part of the morator- ium of classes planned in support of the recently indicted faculty and students at Kent State Uni- versity. The rally will be on the Diag at noon, and the workshops in the Undergraduate Library Multi-Pur- pose room at 1 p.m. Various campus groups, includ- ing the Residential College, which is suspending classes for the day, support the action. SGC President Marty Scott, said that the two major aims of the rally and workshops are "to ex- press solidarity with those in- dicted," and to "encourage think- ing and discussion about the im- plications" of the arrests of the Kent State 25. SKC members last night went to Kent State to bring in a speak- er who "really knows something," Scott said. "It's a bad time for a morator- ium, but we didn't plan that," he added. "If a people can't sacrifice going to class, we hope they'll come to the rally and discussion." Scott hopes to have people come from the Diag to the UGLI for informal discussions with the speakers about the situation at Kent State and the condition of civil liberties in the United States. He stated, however, that any sub- ject is open for discussion. New Mobe Coordinator David Gordon issued a statement yes- terday supporting the morator- ium. "We ask that the university community respond to the call for a moratorium today to support the students at Kent State. We ask that not only the case of repres- sion and murder at Kent State be discussed today, but that o t h e r government repression be discus- sed as well." "We don't have anything speci- fic planned, but we are supporting the action of the SGC," Gordon said. Students who said they would participate in the moratorium be- lieved it hadn't been publicized enough. One student, while stat- ing his support for the boycott of classes, said that, "There j u s t hasn't been enough time to pub- licize it." Scott, however, said that "the rally and discussions are more im- portant than the moratorium." He hoped to organize the discussions under group leaders, but said that "all we have organized right now are informal discussions w i t h the speakers from the rally. 1 it 01 Jews 1 Hillel to protest treatment of Sov- iet Jews. The program, organized by the Committee for Soviet Jews, was designed to create "a feeling of oneness with the Jews of Russia," committee chairman Judy Krohn said. In continuing her address Gorin said the three main goals of Amer- icans supporting Soviet Jews should be "to save Jewish youth, to be sure religious objects reach them and to make our support evi- dent." "Of the 700.000 Jews in Moscow only 400 were present the Satur- day morning I was there," Gorin continued. 'The average age of the members was 65. Of the t h r e e synagogues only one has a rabbi -he is 80 years old. "Judaism is about to die in Rus- sia once the old people pass away," she added. Gorin cited examples of the lack of religious equality in the Soviet Union. "Although everyone must carry an I.D., Jews and gypsies are the only people whose cards' bear a special stamp - they are considered people without a home- land." "No other religious group in Russia has been persecuted as severely and consistently as the Jews," she maintained. Gorin also mentioned speaking to men who had spent 10 years in prison for applying to the gov- t1 Jussia ten by Yevgeny Yevtushenko, were read, stressing Russian inertia about marking the ,site at which thousands of Jews were executed during the two-year occupation. Rabbi Gerald Goldman conclud- ed the rally with a prayer for Soviet Jewry, after which the par- ticipants marched by candlelight to the Diag. People joined the rally until close to 300 people were dancing around the Diag to the accom- paniment of Israeli music. This was part of a celebration of the Jewish holiday, Simhas Torah, which commemorates the begin- ning of a new cycle of reading the Jewish laws and history. RESULTS DISPUTED 'U' releo By DAVID EGNER A University committee re- leased the results of a survey which claims that 75 per cent of the teaching fellows here are "satisfied" with their work. But Alison Hayford, chairman of the approximately 100-mem- ber Teaching Fellows Union and one. of the first teaching fellows to learn of the results, says the survey is "useless and invalid." uses TF Because only 620 of the teach- ing fellows who received the survey answered it, Hayford says there may "be an inherent bias in those who returned it." She also contends that many questions in the survey "were of poor quality and were ambig- uous." "The offered alternatives of 'satisfied' or 'dissatisfied', were too narrow," she adds. "No survey ndings fairs Committee voted to "sug- 9 gest the possibility that a fully ..o staffed and funded study of the role of teaching fellows" be undertaken. The committee also voted to prepare a full report of the sur- vey findings to be completed next month. Eighty-seven per cent of the teaching fellows participating in the survey said they believed EELCCS4:..