MY LAI TRIALS See Editorial Page Y aibr :E3aii4o WET AND WINDY High-50 Low-30 Occasional rain, windy and cool Vol. LXXXI, No.68 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, November 20, 1970 Ten Cents Ten Pages ' resists FlEW order, Four will radicals SGC seats *article sas The text of the article in Science magazine is printed on today's editorial page. By LYNN WEINER University officials have described the Department of Health, Education and Welfare's demands for equal employ- ment of women at the University as "totally unreasonable," according to today's issue of Science Magazine. The magazine says that the criticism accompanied the University's circulation of the HEW demands to the admin- istrations of several other universities, in an attempt to gain support for University resistance to the demands. The magazine also summarizes HEW's requirements for an affirmative action plan to end alleged sex discrimination at the University. Both University and HEW spokesmen re- fused to confirm or deny the validity of the magazine's sum- mary of those demands, which have not yet been officially Summary *Of HEW demands The following is a summary of Science Magazine's description of the demands by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare concerning equal employment of women at the University: The achievement of equal salaries for men and women in the same category; The payment of back wages to each female employe who has received lower pay than males in comparable jobs over the last two years; 0 The achievement of a ratio of female employment in academic positions equivalent to availability of qualified female applicants; * The assurance that female applicants for non-academic em- ployment r e c e i v e consideration comensuate with their qualifica- tions; t The assurance that the Uni- versity will eliminate separate male and female job classifica- tions; *0The achievement of a higher ratio of women in doctoral pro- grams; 0 The increase of female par- ticipation on committees dealing with the selection and treatment of employes; 0 The assurance that all female employes occupying clerical or other non-academic positions and who possess qualifications equal to or exceeding those of male em- *ployes occupying higher level po- sitions be given primary consider- ation for promotion to those po- sitions; 0 The development of a written policy on nepotism which will in- sure correct treatment of husband- wife teams and; * The analysis of past effects of nepotism and the payment of back wages to those discriminated in this area over the last two years. The University was asked Oct. * to submit an affirmative action plan for equal employment of women which would incorporate the HEW demands. The proposal submitted by the University, how- ever,dwas rejected by HEW last Tuesday. released by the University. The demands, according to the magazine, include: -The payment of back wages to female employes who have re- ceived lower pay than men in comparable job categories over the last two years; -The achievement of a ratio of female employment in academic positions at least equivalent to the availability of women employes as determined by the number of qualified female applicants; -The institution of equal sal- aries for men and women in every job category in the University; and -The insurance that the con- cept of separate male and female job classifications is eliminated through changes in recruitment procedures. The federal government is cur- rently withholding the awarding of contracts to the University pending agreement between HEW and the University on the HEW demands. However, according to the maga- zine, the University has chosen to resist the demands. University officials, the maga- zine reports, have argued that "the bookwork involved in determining who had suffered discrimination would be monumental." )Roy McKinney, deputy director of HEW's Contract Compliance Division,' explained, that there- quirement for supplying such in- formation is clearly spelled out in See 'U,' Page 10 -Associatedi Press NEW ORLEANS POLICE attempt yesterday to evict a group of Black Panthers who have taken over an apartment in a city housing project. In the upper picture, the heavily armed officers confront a group of blacks in front of the project. Below, the police huddle behind an armored vehicle as it moves toward the housing project. Police In Ne wOrleans, delay Panther eviction inlight By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN and JIM McFERSON Students elected a primarily . radical slate of candidates to Student Government Council, and overwhelmingly approv- ed a referendum calling for the seating of two faculty members and two students as non-voting Regents, in the elections which ended yester- day. The results released last night showed that only 11 per cent of the student population had voted during three days of balloting. Seven students were elected to SGC from a field of fifteen candi- dates. Chosen to full-year terms were Paul Teich, '71, incumbent admin- istrative vice-president, J e a n n e Lenzer, '74, and Marnie Heyn, '71, all members of the "New Coali- tion," a radical alliance; the "For- ward Party" of Al Ackerman, '72L, an incumbent, and J e f f Lewin, '73; and incumbent Andre Hunt, '74. Brian Spears, '71, also a coalition member, won election to a half-year term. Meanwhile, students in the lit- erary college elected eight stu- dents to full one year terms on the executive council of the LSA stu- dent government. Elected to the eight-month old body were Ed Roberts, '73, (613 votes); Fran Hymen, '73, (603); p0 Pete Prahar, '72, (598); B a r b A (S Rackes, '73, (592); Rick Ratner, '73, (532); James Bridges, '72, (529); Paula Fried, '73, (513); and Bob Schwartz, '72, (417). Students approved by an eight to one margin the referendum on expansion of the University's Re- gents. The campaign appeared to be characterized by general student apathy. With no outstanding is- "No, no sues, fewer than 3,500 students anti-draftp voted, down sharply from 1 a s t spring's elections when over 5,000 tors who pi students voted. During last No- This wa vember's balloting, some 9,000 during thei students voted.hloated at E The total vote of 1,275 in th e Yesterd literary college represented onlyC YesteR 14 per cent of the college's en- Council to rollment of nearly 12,000. the Selecti All the votes in the LSA stu- signatures dent government elections were tabulated by 8:30 last night in against the what LSA election co-director Re- send the si becca Schenk termed "a much the state's quicker count than we had ex- gressmen i pected." Ray Karpinski is the The petitio other co-director. -"Conscri Commenting on the election, Jer- miitary is i ry De Grieck, executive vice presi- dent of SGC, said last night, " aims of a f am very disappointed at the turn- -The dra out. However I am very pleased tuted only w that the entire new caucus ticket is directly th won, and New SGC members Teich, Lenz- -it shoul en, and Heyn ran on a platform declaration o condemning the University for its act of Cong "complicity with the military, its temporary dr sexist and elitist policies." They The petiti plan to "work towards a com- T munity-wide governing body com- people yester posed of students, faculty, work- Meanwhile, ers, and administration." board appear Leading the vote were Acker- protest. "It v man, Hunt and Lewin, with 1341, all," commen 1306 and 1304 votes respectively. Although The other winners garnered these chairman of totals: Teich, 1287; Heyn, 1199; told the boa See RADICAL, Page 10 demonstratio . See PROT turnout NEW ORLEANS WP) - Heavily court after they were unable to armed police postponed efforts to pursuade the militants to leave forcibly evict a group of Black the building, even wtih a show of Panthers from their barricaded force including the department's headquarters here yesterday after tank-like armored car. a relatively quiet day-long con- The heavily armed law officers 'frontation. moved into the project to evict Before police withdrew, one members of the National Com- black teenager was shot three mittee to Combat Fascist (NCCF), blocks away by an unknown as- a recruiting arm of the Black sailant. This was the only shoot- Panthers, from their headquarters ing incident all day. after three weeks of futile efforts Police agreed to give blacks time to persuade them to leave. to test the state's trespass law in Announced aims of the NCCF First two jurors seated in Seale, Huggins trial; one black chosen ranged from improvement of liv- ing conditions in the. project to freeing all black prisoners, ex- empting blacks from the draft and organizing a rent strike. Spokesmen said they operated a free breakfast program for chil- dren in the project. After the police withdrew, Police Supt. Clarence Giarusso said in mid-afternoon that they would re- turn in 24 hours unless there was some change. Officials later said, however, they would wait until the courts disposed of the matter even if it took more than a day. No figures were released, but apparently more than 280 officers were involved in the case. Black leaders and police agreed neither law officers nor militants in the building had shot the youth. Police said the shot black youth, Tyrone Curtis, was hit in the stomach by shotgun pellets fired from a building three blocks away from the barricaded headquarters. He was hospitalized for surgery. About 1,000 blacks, most of them teenagers swirled around the De- sire 'Street Housing Project in the area of the tense showdown. Black leaders, working for a peaceful settlement, shuttled back and forth between police and the NCCF. The militants shifted to the v a c a n t apartment building a month ago, leaving their old head- quarters-scene of a shootout with police in September. Giarrusso ordered a tank-like armored car to the scene after somer20 blacks blocked the first See POLICE, Page 10 -Daily-Jim Judkis er-by stops to sign anti-draft petition 1 draft protesters ket local board, By LINDA DREEBEN t today," said the passer-by, pushing aside the petition offered to her by one of nine demonstra- cketed in front of the local draft board yesterday. is a typical reaction received by the demonstrators r hour-long protest in front of Draft Board No. 85, Liberty and S. Main Sts. ay's action was the first of what the Michigan Repeal the Draft plans as a weekly protest against Ne Service System. The picketers are seeking on a petition By JIM NEUBACHER pective jur Special To The Daily told the cc NEW HAVEN, Conn. - T h e familiar wi first two jurors were seated here Party, he h yesterday in the trial of Bobby to whether Seale. One of them Dennis Adams, bad influen is a 64-year-old black man. Adams to He joined Franklin J. Diljer of old Markle Wolcott, Conn., the forty-forth to consider' prospective juror to be examined, necessary ii who had become the first select- Diljer is' ed for the jury earlier in the day. who works' Seale, national chairman of the guard. Black Panther Party, is on trial After sea along with Connecticut Panther who will wE leader Ericka Huggins. Both a r e jury selecti charged with murder, kidnapping arate room, resulting in death, and conspiracy Harold M. N to commit both of these crimes. not to discL The charges stem from the slay- one. ing of New York Panther A 1 e x In his e: Rackley in May, 1969. Markle for I Adams, the fifty-ninth p r os- questions cc or to be interviewed, ishment, surprising nearly every- ourt that while he is one in the courtroom. "I forgot," th the Black Panther he said later. lad "no impression" as It has appeared that Markle is they were a good or seeking a jury that will not be ce on societyn afraid to impose the death sen- Id state attorney Arn- tence. he would be "willing Aloce.r " the death penalty if Also yesterday morning, the n this case. first black prospective juror, Lloyd a 42-year-old mailman Seals, was examined. He was ex- weekends as a security cused following objections f r o m Markle when Seals told the court ting the two jurors, he did not believe Bobby Seale ait out the rest of the could get a fair trial from the on process in a sep- state. Superior Court Judge The attorneys examined 35 more lulvey instructed them perspective jurors yesterday, bring- uss the case with any- ing the total number of prospec- tive jurors examined to 72. xamination of Diljer, The average age of the 72 pro- the first time asked no spective jurors has been about 50, incerning capital pun- according to calculations made by the defense staff. Three of these persons have been black. Defense attorneys used another "pre-emptory challenge" yesterday to remove a juror. They have now used three out of an allowed 60. ~ r teThe challenge permits the at- torneys to dismiss a prospective a "rebound" in cor- juror without stating their reason. an increase of nearly The courtroom has remained 1. orderly as the jury selection pro- the unemployment cess settles into a routine. It it still n" the rate of wage expected that itewill take at least at this effect should four weeks to select the 12 jurors erns of wage increase and four alternates. ons in the auto in- There was one small disruption in the courtroom yesterday. Mary Clulee, a matronly woman from' ming year and a half' Wallingford, Conn., told prosecut- f sustained and sub- ing attorney Markle that she felt eimposition of policyv -,p rlimnote rv acn iirn ha draft, and plan to igned petitions to senators and con- n Washington. n maintains that: ption of men for the nconsistent with the ree society; ft should be insti- hen the United States reatened with attack; .d be preceded by a f war and a specific ress establishing the aft. on was signed by 34 day. employes of draft ed to be ignoring the will not affect us at ted one employe. Sandy Miller, co- the anti-draft group, rd's employes that a in would take place, 'ESTERS, Page 10 Panel seeks to end college extremism NEW YORK W) - Deploring pressures from the political left and right to get universities to embrace their causes, 100 promi- nent scholars formed a committee yesterday which will seek to in- sure that universities' central con- cerrs is "to advance and trans- mit knowledge." The scholars, who are from nine nations, include six Nobel prize winners. The formation of the new panel, which will be called the International committee on the University Emergency, was an- nounced in a news conference in New York, Berlin and Rome, link- ed by telephone. "The obvious dangers are acts of terror," the committee said in a statement released in the three cities and also distributed in Lon- don and Paris. "But the deeper danger, not visible in the daily headlines, is the steady erosion of morale and the retreat from that ordered free- dom that makes possible compe- tition in ideas and cooperation in inquiry," the committee added. "The intrinsic interests of aca- demia are now being sacrificed to considerations foreign to its cen- tral concern to advance and transmit knowledge." Speaking in New York, Prof. Charles Frankel of Columbia Uni- 6.1 PER CENT Profs see rise in jobles University economists have p r e d i c t e d an increase in the gross national product (GNP), a decline in the rate of inflation and an increase in unemployment for 1971. Economics Profs. Saul Hymans and Harold Shapiro presented details of the 1971 economic forecast yesterday at the opening of the Univer- sity's two-day annual Conference of the Economic Outlook. Prepared by the Research Seminar in Quan- titative Economics, the report forecasts an overall The report also predicts porate profits amounting to a six per cent over the 1970 leve Stating that increases in rate, would normally "dampe increases, the report said tha be offset by the recent patter established by the negotiati( dustries and others. "We forecast that the con will mark the first period o1 stantial real growth since the m - -