Page.Two-Academics THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 2, 1970 , Pa g e T o A a e mc:H.I C I A A L Campus recruting emerges as a ma or By ANITA WETTERSTROEM The eruption of campus dem- onstrations against large cor- poration job recruiters early this year illustrates an increased stu- dent awareness and concern re- garding- the U.S. role in world- wide industrial pollution and military aggression. Previously, recruiter demon- strations - had been directed against armed forces' recruiters. But this past year, large in- dustries suddenly were the focus of accusations concerning im- perialism, exploitation and pol- lution. Students and faculty mem- bers began to research little- known activities of large cor- porations-and then began to act on their findings. Working on the premise that any assistance to firms alleged- ly involved in war, pollution, or imperialism means complicity in their "crimes," the protesters attacked the University's pro- vision of offices to the accused firms for purposes of interview- ing job applicants. Protesters also demanded that if the University-would not com- pletely dissolve its stockholdings in such firms, it should at least turn over its voting power to student-faculty boards. They al- so worked to inform the campus community, especially the po- tential employes for the cor- porations, of the reasons certain industries were under fire. On the administration's side, the argument centered on two beliefs: That it is in the tradi- tion of the University to aid in the placement of its graduates, and that it is not the role of the University to pass judgment on corporate activities. The.most dramatic of the pro- test action was "recruiter con- frontation," and foremost under attack were recruiters from the SDuPont Cop., General Motors, the Dow Chemical Corp., Gen- eral .Electric, Atlantic Richfield Co., and Lockheed Aircraft Corp. The term's first such demon- stration occurred Jan. 21 when Students for a Democratic So- ciety (SDS), sponsored a con- frontation with an Allied Chem- ical recruiter as well as with Marine. and Navy recruiters. About 15 demonstrators dumped dead fish on the Allied Chemical recruiter's desk and sprayed his office with pesticides in protest of the company's distribution of, DDT. Later that day another group of . the same size confronted fmilitary recruiters, destroying papers and drenching the Navy recruiter with black paint. Demonstrations followed in rapid -succession with General Electric next in line. Charged organization of a new student- faculty group called Radical College which initially formed in direct response to announced University plans of a c t i o n against SDS. The SDS "winter offensive" gained momentum in the days following with "guerrilla thea- tre" skits conducted in the Fish- bowl, in a North Hall ROTC class and in scattered LSA classes. * Reactions to the initial SDS tactics were mixed. In some disrupted classes, students re- sponded to the skits with ap- plause. In one economics class. however, a student ripped a copy of the skit from an ac- tor's hand while others booed the group off the stage. Some students were angered at the hostile action the class levelled at the protesters. Oth-' ers expressed sympathy with the actor's views but were alienated by the "infringement of our rights to education" by the interrupting of class. In response to the recruiter disruption, one professor said, "The protesters should b e thrown out on their fannies. A guy's right are really deprived if he's prevented from, inter- views with the guy who may give him lifetime career." In the demonstration against the DuPont-recruiter, according to Engineering Placement Di- rector John Young, only two students were prevented from keeping their appointments. But out of the incident came the first organized effort to end re- cruiting with a six-point pro- gram formulated by SDS, which included: -Presentation of guerrilla theatre in the Fishbowl; -Distribution of leaflets; -Continual showing of sev- eral Newsreel movies; -Setting up display boards in the Fishbowl; -Addressing classes at the beginning and end of each hour; and -Disrupting recruiter inter- viewing around the campus. With more corporation repre- sentatives arriving on campus throughout the early part of the term, protesters declared open season on job recruiters. A "car- nival" demonstration was staged in the lobby of the Student Placement Office where a re- cruiter from the Chase Manhat- tan Bank was scheduled to in- terview students. On orders from his New York office, the recruiter left an hour before the demonstration began, but the protesters, under the impression that he was in the office, pro- ceeded to spread o 4t a giant monopoly board, break ballons, play with toys and sing through- out the morning. Although the demonstrators had been unable to confront the recruiter, an SDS spokesman later claimed victory based on the presumption that Chase Manhattan had been "intimi- dated enough to recall their re- cruiter." The repeated and publicized anti-recruiter activities, attract- ed attention from several diverse campus bodies. The Senate As- sembly's S t u d e n ts Relations Committee (SRC), requested a University-wide moratorium to discuss the recruiting issue and urged suspension of recruiting pending passage of a resolution to permit "widespread involve- ment and a. conducive atmos- phere for a forum." The Senate Assembly, the representative faculty body, un- animously opposed the Mora- torium proposal but agreed to call on a newly-created Com- mittee on Communications to conduct a series of forums on the issue. Meanwhile, a number of local groups formed an ad hoc coali- tion also calling for a discus- sion moratorium on the campus recruiting problem. Charging that the University recruiting policies indicate complicity weth corporations involved in war production and environmental pollution were: The Student Mobilization Committee, SDS, Radical College, ENACT, Stu- dents for Effective Action, Ten- ants' Union, Women's Libera- tion, Anarchist Coalition, Union of Radical Political Economists, Students Organized against ra- cism, White Panthers, a n d Black Berets. Countering such movements, the student engineering council called for continuation of re- cruiting. Their motion contend- ed that "any discontinuation, no matter how temporary, of the activities of the Placement Service would be a serious breakage of faith on the part of the University." Noting that the demonstration u t 1 i z e d "force and repression," the council asked the University to "reject the use of violence at this early stage." The motion declared support for further dis- cusion on the subject, but op- posed a campus wide suspen- sion of classes tq hold a forum. A forum was scheduled by the ad hoc coalition and demonstra- tions continued with peaceful picketing of recruiters from Lockheed Aircraft Corp. and Dow Chemical Corp. The forum, made up of rep- resentatives from the Dow Chemical Corp and members of Radical College, focused on "the role of the chemical company in social and political problems of the day." Fifty people filled the Union Ballroom and listened to faculty members' descriptions of Dow products such as napalm, and herbicides used as defoliants. Students on the panel levelled charges of third world exploita- tion and domestic pollution. In turn the Dow representatives re- sponded to these charges with facts and figures of Dow's pol- lution control work and read statements by foreign govern- ments praising Dow's invest- ments in their economies. And the protest demonstra- tions continued. Last to be con- fronted, was the Atlantic Rich- field Co. recruiter, whose visit on March 12 was marked by the dumping of oil and feathers on the floor and steps of the W. Engineering Bldg. where inter- views were being held. An SDS leaflet accused Atlantic Richfield of promoting conditions that could "scar Alaska's tundra and permanent- ly destroy the ecological balance of a massive region of Alaska." The leaflet explained that the dumping of oil and feathers symbolized "what A t 1 a n t i c Richfield stands for--oil and a" destroyed economy." The summer has brought an end to campus recruiting and, recruiting demonstration. 'The issue, however, remains very much alive and some say it will be rekindled to full blaze in the fall. Various student and faculty members are continuing their investigation of corporate-mili- tary inviolvements. One self-or- ganized group, called the "Brain issue Mistrust," is doing in-depth re- search of the activities of Gen- eral Motors, Dow, Atlantic Rich- field, Ford and Chrysler, in pre- paration for a fall campaign agains campus job recruiting. On the placement personnel side, interviewing procedures will remain much the same as in the past. The staff at the Student Placement Office, the scene of two protest demonstrations, will continue to arrange meetings between students and prospec- tive employers. According to William Audas, assistant director of the place- ment office, no judgment is made of the military associa- tions companies who request of- fice facilities. "It is not our place to do so," Audas ,explains. "We are\trying to move ahead to make ,sure companies pursue affirmative action in regard to equal opportunities in employ- ment," Audus adds. "We'll try to continueto stress that as- Pect." At the placement office in W. Engineering Bldg. operations and policies will also remain basically unchanged. "Students are becoming more interested in broader communi- cations with, employers," Young explains. "We are going to try to increase that kind of com- munication rather than just emphasize technical aspects. Young also mentions that the administration has assured con- cerned corporations that pre- cautions will be taken to assure the safety of their represent- ative's. He adds, however, that to his knowledge no specific commitment to security meas- ures has yet been taken. -Daily-Richard Lee Dow representative defends recruiting with exploiting labor all over the world and (being) an "integral part of the war machine," GE's five recruiters remained in their W. Engineering Bldg. offices and continued with scheduled interviews while police, office staff and protesters clashed out- side. Twenty arrests resulted from that incident. According to an SDS leaflet erplaining the motive behind tl e protests GE is the second largest defense contractor in the U.S., and 20 per cent of GE's sales go to the military. Jan. 29, the DuPont Corp. was the target of protest when 150 demonstrators I e d by SDS blocked a DuPont recruiter in the W. Engineering Bldg. for about three hours. Five demonstrators had in- vited the recruiter to debate with them and to watch a News- reel film on DuPont's alleged racism and political control of its home city, Wilminton, De.. The .,recruiter declined and a short scuffle broke out. 'Two plain clothesmen, two University men, and two students barred the office door as the demon- strators -rushed the office. Re- buffed, the protesters milled around in the hallway, blocking the passageway and shouting. "DuPont gets rich, GI's die." They accused the nation's largest chemical firm of racism, imperialism and environmental pollution, citing DuPont's prac- tices in Wilmington, its contri- bution to the, Vietnamn war ef- fort and its production of chem- icals which have contributed to pollution. -President Robben Fle m i n g anounced a 'three-pronged at- tack against SDS following the DuPont protest. Fleming said the University would seek re- moval of SDS's status as a stu- dent organization under Student Government C o u n c i 1 Rules through Central Student Judi- ciary. Also action would be sought against members through administrative boards of the colleges and schools, and the University would seek prosecu- tion of some demonstrators through civil courts. However, also at this time other groups began to make stands for and against the re- cruiter issue and SDS. The most significant development was the' 'U' community strike for BAM demands successful (Continued from Page 1) faculty and staff formed a support issued a statement demands. me m be r s group and backing the The March 18 open hearing with the Regents was tense. Vice Presidents Allan Smith and Stephen Spurr presented the ad- ministration plan. BAM leaders and 'their supporters repeated their demands and their objec- tions to the administration's proposal. At their regulars public meet- ing the next day, the Regents ated. They adopted a minority en- rollment program which set a goal of 10 per cent black enroll- ment by fall, 1973, but commit- ted only enough fonds to assure an enrollment of seven per cent. While the University would at- tempt to meet the 10 per cent goal, enrolling the additional three per cent was contingent on securing additional funds from the budgets of the indi- vidual schools and colleges, as well as from the state and fed- eral governments, and private donors. The funds committed by the University would provide for a $2 million increase in the Op- portunity Awards P r o g r a m (OAP) by the 1973-74 fiscal year. The OAP allots financial aid to disadvantaged students, who are primarily black. The regental plan also allocated $100,000 in 1970-71 for;,recruit- ers and supportive services. The Regents felt they had been magnanimous in their ac- tion. Regent William Cudlip (R- Grosse Pointe Shores) spoke of "bringing these people into the mainstream of American life." But outside the locked , and guarded doors of the Regents' Room, an entirely different at- mosphere prevailed. A public address system had broadcast the proceedings to the crowd gathered in Regents Plaza, and most were dissatis- fied thattthe Regents had set a goal of 10 per cent, rather than a commitment, as BAM had de- manded. A large number believed that .v " v v::: ": " :". v.y: ln v.:1 . ". ". "::: " :v .. ... n":... 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"."rff 74MN "X.....4J Yf:t1 11 4W 1:t:t'}}:":.1.1,.,}....J..AvvA.,,rt Y.'JJr J:,Y:J:rf~rJer.:rr,::L"JJ }}'r'XJNAI}:,..,v1..,.41, 1,Vr:~AY}{A"C. t' :"}.,,. 1't' W1E LCOME Class of '74 WELCOME your visitor at a beautiful ... Ki IN its *1 i* fn i 1: si the Regents had rejected the demands completely. During a subsequent march around cam- pus, some of the protesters ran into classrooms crying, "The Re- gents screwed BAM," and soon an angry crowd gathered outside the Administration Bldg. The police showed up in riot gear, and suddenly someone threw a rock through a window. After a few brief clashes and a few more rocks, the crowd dispersed, four of them, all black, having been arrested. While the Regents had "con- curred" in the establishment of a minority enrollment program and committed the administra- tion to "intensified efforts" to raise the, money necessary to " enroll 10 per cent black stu- dents, there was a severe lack of faith among students in the administration's dedication to meeting the goal as set by the Regents. At 10:00 that night a class strike was called by the BAM leadership, and the next day, Friday, it began. On Monday, picket lines were deployed at all the major class- room buildings. Sporadic inci- dents of picketers preventing students,, f r o m entering the buildings occurred. In the eve- ning, three more groups came out in support of the demands, with the Pilot Project voting $575 for BAM's use. That set the general pattern for the week, as the strike rap- iedly g a in e d momentum. On Tuesday, members of Womens' Liberation blocked the entrance to a parking structure and ex- plained the strike to people who came to get their cars. The Res- idential College voted to cancel a 11 its classes. Attendance in the literary college was cut nearly in half. On Wednesday morning some of the vice presidents, the deans and members of Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs (SACUA), met in closed session. Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Wil- bur Pierpont asked the deans if they would be willing to for- go some part of their budgets in order to guarantee enough funds to meet the 10 per cent black enrollment goal, and the deansy expressed g e n e r a l agreement with the idea. Over lunch, SACUA met and called- a meeting of Senate As- sembly, the faculty representa- tive body, for that night. At the meeting, Assembly adopted a resolution urging the faculty in each school and college to use their budgets to help fund the 10 per cent goal. Meanwhile, the strike had be- come more militant. Despite re- peated statements by BAM leaders that strike participants must avoid violence, a group of students went through t h e Chemistry Bldg., breaking win- dows and causing other damage. Some classes were disrupted when professors refused to al- low strike supporters time to ad- dress their classes. Attendance in the literary college on' Wed- nesday was estimated at 40 per cent, with 60 per cent given as the figure for the entire Uni- versity. The first break came on Thursday when Fleming invit- ed BAM to begin negotiations with the administration. The next morning at 4:45 a.m., picketing was extended to the University's power plant,' the residence h a 11 s and the Michigan League. Many food. service employes refused to cross the lines, causing the Lea- gue and several dorms to oper- ate on a limited basis. At 1 p.m., negotiations b e g a n between BAM and t h e administration. According to BAM, "agreement, was reached on several major points" but there was no reso- lution of the major issues. At 6 p.m., Fleming announced that funding for the admissions . goal "was assured," citing pledg- es from the faculties in several schools and colleges to use their budgets to fund the black en- rollment program. A moratorium on picketing was declared for the weekend and negotiations continued for six and a half hours on Satur- day, focusing primarily around the location, funding and con- trol of the black student center. Talks resumed again on Sun- day and a settlement appeared near until a status report on the negotiations was read by Jack Hamilton, director of Univer- sity relations, over radio station WUOM. The action violated a "gentle- man's agreement" between BAM and the administration not to release any information on the negotiations unless both sides agreed. When BAM discovered the action, they broke off nego- tiations, charging a "breach of faith." A half-hour later, Fleming is- sued an explanation, saying he had been informed that BAM had announced the status of the negotiations at a mass meeting. Since it appeared that BAM was releasing information, Fleming said, he authorized Hamilton to do the same. BAM said the explanation was not enough. They demanded an apology and for a time it seem- ed that negotiations w e r e in serious trouble. On Monday afternoon, a let- ter, the contents of which was never disclosed, was s e n t by Fleming to BAM. At 8:45 p.m. negotiations resumed. When they recessed around three in the morning, BAM de- clared a moratorium on picket- ing. That night Ed Fabre told a rally "the decision now is not in the hands of the president, but of the Regents." On Tuesday, Fleming, the vice presidents and the Regents met for over six hours at In- glis, House, a University-owned mansion on the outskirts of Ann Arbor. Talks resumed the next day at Fairlane, Henry Ford's old estate in Dearborn. Finally, after ten more hours, the t talks with the Regents ended. Back in Ann Arbor, at 8:30 p.m. in the Regents Room, Fleming announced the settle- ment. Funding for the 10 per cent goal was indeed guaran- teed. N i n e undergraduate re- cruiters would be added and a number of graduate recruiters. Most of the lesser demands were granted, as well. However, t h e black student center had been rejected com- pletely by the Regents and ad- ditional Aupport for the Mar- tin Luther King Scholarship Fund was also turned down. But more importantly, far from granting amnesty for strikers, ,the Regents had set up a spec- ial disciplinary procedure f o r dealing with strike participants charged with disruption. White supporters immediately charged that BAM had betrayed them by agreeing to an enrollment plan which included the disciplinary procedure.. The black students had made all the gains, they said, while t h e only tangible thing left for the whites was the threat of prosecution. And since the settlement, a number of students have been charged with disruption of class- es during the striker. . Reaction to the other aspects of the settlement has been var- ied. Inside the University com- munity, the majority of the fac- ulty and student body appear to back the agreement, al- though many faculty members have deplored the conditions under which it was arrived at. Beyond the Ann Arbor scene are the often negative reactions of public officials, such as Vice President Spiro Agnew. There is the considerable outpouring of public opposition which ex- pressed itself in a number of ways. Although subsequent events must be judged in the larger context of the campus reaction to the U.S. intervention in Cam- bodia,'and the killings at Kent State University and Jackson State College, some results of the BAM strike are becoming clear. It undoubtably led the Re- gents in April to adopt stringent student conduct rules, aimed specifically at dealing with cam- pus disruptions. The proposed policy of docking the pay of faculty members who join class boycotts (which is being con- sidered by the Regents as this supplement goes to press) was an obvious outgrowth of the BAM strike. At the state level, an increasing amount of legis- lation aimed at curbing campus disorders has been proposed, and some of it passed. And although it may still be too soon to view the events in any kind of perspective, a few definite conclusions can be drax The BAM strike marked Ut w LA '1t)A. lfi. 1}; ti'/. i.? 5:; :} {:$ .v: . f of ANN ARBOR AND DINE AT EITHER OF OUR TWO FINE RESTAURANTS EAST: WEST: 3750 Washtenaw 2900 Jackson Road 971-2000 665-4444 The Flaming Pit Holly's at the Inn *t ~'