_ - gte AWid$tan DaU Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan White on black Amer ica's past alive in Boston Wednesday, February 19, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Regent accounts won't wash IN KEEPING WITH their past be- havior regarding disclosures, University administrators have once again put up a smokescreen and re- fused to release itemized accounts of regental expenses. Although total figures for each Re- gent were revealed, no individual vouchers were made public and con- sequently, it is impossible to deter- mine if the expense accounts were the padded with non-essential items, or in fact, represented justifiable costs. During 1974, the board spent a to- tal of $15,774 in taxpayer money for a variety of expenses, which are iden- tified as either "transportation," "lodging," or "meals." The biggest in- dividual spender was Gertrude Hueb- ner (R-Bloomfield Hills) who retired in January. Her expenses totaled $4,312 - the bulk of which consisted of a $3,150 bill for a driver to trans- port her between Ann, Arbor and Bloomfield Hills. ACCORDING TO HUEBNER, she needed a chauffeur because "I don't like driving a car and I'm a rotten driver." She said that her membership in several campus organ- izations in addition to her board du- ties, necessitated frequent trips to Ann Arbor. James Waters (D-Muskegon) and Paul Brown (D-Petoskey) were the next highest spenders, claiming ex- penses of $2,653 and $1,720 respec- tively. The remaining Regents, with the exception of Dean Baker (R-Ann Arbor) who did not bill the Univer- sity for any individual expenses, all claimed expenses for varying amounts under $800. While the Regent's expenses may have been wholly justified and above- board, it is impossible to tell from the information released by the Uni- versity. The lump sum figures were too vague to be of much value and no individual vouchers were released. In addition, according to University Secretary Richard Kennedy, the ex- pense claims are not audited - a sit- uation which could. lead to padding of accounts. INFORMATION RELEASED earlier this month revealed that Michi- gan State University trustees included such items as out-of-state football games, travel junkets for spouses and other frivolous items on their expenses accounts. Although this wasteful use of tax- payer money may not have taken place at the University, no one can be assured of this until the Univer- sity makes a full and complete dis- closure of all regental expenses and releases vouchers for each individual item. "Bus! That term! Now it's a leash violence scare word rather than a ve- by last fall's hicle for carrying kids with stonings. The freckles through the moun- left Phase One tains of New Hampshire. If we :::: don't bus them across the city, we could shoot them across "The like projectiles. -Jonathan Kozol, author of means p0 Death at an Early Age and tion. Caug speaker at the National Stu- dent Conference Against Ra- the cross, cism. tional let By BILL HEENAN courts, ani LOOMING ABOVE THE com- constituen pact rows of brick flats usetts and. which recede toward frozen arms of Massachusetts Bay is ticians ar( South Boston High School. the path o) Spray painted "Never" and "KKK" adorn the building's ance - ina rampart - like walls, testimony ,a. m to the bitter struggle against court-ordered bussing. Judge W. Arth If nothing else, the pro- and segregation pt antibussing forces in The Hub and the educati agree on one point: winter has 18,000 schoolc cooled tempers for the mom- tion. ent, but spring's thaws will un- While public Police crack By STEPHEN HERSH AT THE END of last semester I was involved in a somewhat bizarre circumstance involving the use of marijuana (a controlled substance). I don't know exactly what lesson is to be learn- ed from my experience, whether it should rein- force or undermine the predominant fearless- ness in this city surrounding the use of pot. But let me share the experience with you, so that you can draw your own conclusions from it. Last semester I attended a party celebrating the completion of finals. The partiers stuffed themselves with ham, rolled cabbage, coleslaw, green beans, beer, and cheese. They also smoked pot. After the get-together had congealed into sev- eral clusters of conversers, two people climbed out onto a window ledge and began throwing snowballs at passing cars. They couldn't h i t anything. While they were throwing their snowballs, I. was walking around from group to group, unable to inveigle my way into an interesting conversa- tion. But when I spotted the snowball throwers, and, thinking that what they were doing looked winter lull litical. mnac- ght between fire of na- raders, t h e d their own is, Massach- Boston poli- e following f least resist- ction." hur Garrity's de- an in shambles ional fate of some children 'in ques- attention focused unparalleled even s stabbings and autumn upheaval of District Court on President Ford's oil tariff plan and the Elden abortion trial, undercurrents of violence threatened to hasten that thaw last weekend: -Last Thursday, police broke up a brawl between fifty Hyde Park High School students. Meanwhile, a Roxbury High School pupil and his mother were arrested for allegedly kicking a police officer. -ON FRIDAY, fifty Hyde Park students forced their bus driver to chauffeur them to McDonalds. Also that day the BostonSchool Committee ap- proved issuing high school stu- dents ID cards. -Saturday saw area anti- bussing groups shout down their senator (Edward Kenne- dy) at an airline fares hearing. -Last Sunday, riot-equipped police prevented fifty college student picketers from boarding buses bound for antibussing leader Louise Hicks' residence, where 430 of her supporters lie in wait. Beantown bigotry prevails ONCE CONSIDERED the nation's center of intellectual enlighten- ment, Boston can no longer lay claim to that title. If the raging confronta- tion over busing has not completely corroded that sterling reputation, last weekend's conviction of a Boston doc- tor on manslaughter charges in con- nection with an abortion he perform- ed certainly did. On Saturday a dozen Bostonians- nine men and three women - found Dr. Kenneth Edelin guilty of killing a fetusnafter he completed a legal abortion. The prosecution argued and the jury agreed that the six-month fetus would have survived outside the mother's body had the doctor acted in a competent, thorough manner. IN ESSENCE, the jury's decision casts a dark cloud over doctors who now perform abortions - they may be held accountable for the "life" of the fetus. The Boston jury arbitrarily decided that the fetus aborted by Edelin did indeed consti- TODAY'S STAFF: News: Dan Blugerman, Stephen Hersh, Jay Levin, Cheryl Pilate, Cathy Reutter, Sara Rimer, J e f f Sorenson, Wendy Stalo, Nathalie Walker Editorial Page: Alan Gitles, Paul Has- kins, Debra Hurwitz, Karen O'Con- nell, Cheryl Pilate, Steve Stojic Arts Page: George Lobsenz Photo Technician: Sue Shiner tute human life. But what seemed to sway the jur- ors was a grisly picture of the fetus introduced in the case by Prosecutor Newman Flanagan. Although the conviction will be appealed, it still represents a grave step backward in the fight to insure women the right to control their own bodies and the freedom to have safe, legal abortions on request. JUSTIFIABLY, THE decision has elicited a strong, angry outcry from the medical profession and other groups. Nonetheless, it has re-opened the entire abortion controversy touching the sensitive, murkey issues of medi- cal ethic, personal freedom, and life itself. The necessity for doctors to per- form abortions without fear of legal prosecution and the innocence of Edelin cannot be too strongly empha- sized. As he himself said after the ver- dict was in: "I did nothing which was illegal, immoral or bad medical practice. Everything I did was in ac- cordance with law and with good medical practice." Unfortunately a few short-sighted people have made the doctor a mar- tyr to cause which should no longer demand such sacrifices and which should be accepted by any clear- thinking person. "One of them pointed at me and said, "That's the one," and a goodly-sized county cop ap- proached me, took hold of my bicep, gently but firmly pushed me against a wall, and pushed the lens of his flashlight against my chest." like fun, I joined them. WE COULDN'T hit anything. After five min- utes the others gave up and climbed back through the window. But I wouldn't budge with- out scoring, and soon my perseverence was re- warded. I struck the hood of a little orange BMW. About ten minutes later there was a knock at the front door. Someone said, "Come in," and the door opened. Five uniformed officers enter- ed. One of them pointed at me and said, "That's the one," and a goodly-sized county cop ap- proached me, took hold of my biceps, gently but firmly pushed me against a wall, and pushed the lens of his flashlight against my chest. In a Dragnetesque voice he asked me, "Did you throw snowballs out the window? Were you the one?" I thought, "Can snowball throwing be against the law? If it is, and if I don't cooperate with them, maybe they'll throw the book at me and bust me for conspiracy to throw snow- balls. Well, if they try to do that I'll fight it to the Supreme Court. "BUT THEY haven't informed me of my rights," I further ratiocinated. "If I say yes snowt ball ri~ng they can't hold it against me." So I said, "Yes, it was me." The cop moved on to the next room, because he detected the smell of pot diffusing from there. He rounded up a bag of weed, some pipes, and a couple of grams of hash. A policewoman then approached me and ask- ed, "were you aware that it's a violation of state and local ordinances to throw snowballs in this city?" "No," I replied. She asked me my name and address, and although I was tempted to identify myself as Joseph K., I answered truthfully. When she had collected all the other partiers' names, she radioed them in to headquarters. Luckily, no one at the party had been on the wanted list. But it was fortunate that the two other snowball throwers were upstairs in the attic at the time of the bust, exploring, as one of them had previously been arested for selling ice cream without a license. DURING THE past summer a friend of his who drove an ice cream truck decided one day not to work, and asked the snowball thrower if he wanted to work the truck. The snowballer said okay. Later that day, a policeman, suspicious of the new salesman in the neighborhood, asked to see his license. He didn't have one, so the cop hauled him downtown and he was thrown into jail. After he had been in his cell for a few hours, the cops decided to let him go. Since charges weren't pressed, there shouldn't have been any record of his arrest. But with Sy Hersh's recent CIA revelations, it doesn't seem too far-fetched to imagine that his name and crime may have been on a secret list somewhere. If his name had been radioed in identifying him as a snowball offender, the cops may have figured, "Hmm, he has a history of of- fenses relation to frozen matter. Maybe he needs some rehabilitation." THE COPS left with the dope, telling us that they had been lenient in not hauling us all in for being present where weed was being smoked. On his way out, one of the cops wagged his finger at me and noted, "None of this would have happened if you hadn't thrown those snowballs." Fortunately for my sanity, nobody at the party held it against me. No one should be arrested for using or deal- ing in marijuana, and no one should have their marijuana confiscated by the police. But it's for- tunate that the vast majority of people who have run-ins here with the man over pot are only thrust into surreal predicaments, while in other parts of the country, they could be thrown head first into the legal system. Now maybe somebody should work on making snowball throwing an offense punishable by only a five dollar fine. At least for amounts of snow under a pound. Stephen Hersh is a staff writer who moon- lights as a snowballer. "It's frightening," remarks Mary, a housewvife who lives across the street from Southie High: "The hatred is not as rabid as before, but this cold is just a breathing spell." Her children attend a parochial school. Kim O'Brien, a white bus driver, who claims the South Boston High track team assault- ed him as he tried to prevent their catcalls in a black neigh- borhood, is equally pessimis- tic: "Louise May Hicks (leader of Return Our Alienated Rights, an umbrella group for Boston's bussing foes) is beginning to lose control of the racist mobs -they're gonna be out for blood," he warns. As a political hot potato, O'Brien lost his job after the incident. YOU'LL SEE a great white flight from Boston because we're stuck with a judge (Gar- rity) who won't be content until all Boston is black," explains Hicks. Seeing no light at the end of the bussing tunnel, she is organizing a march on Wash- ington March 18 to demand a constitutional amendment pro- hibiting forced busing. The winter lull means politi- cal inaction. Caught between the crossfire of national leaders, the courts, and their own con- stituents, Massachusetts and Boston politicians are follow- ing the path of least resistance -inaction. President Ford and American Federation of Teachers Presi- dent Albert Shankar have con- demned the court-ordered buss- ing plan, thus co-opting local efforts to enforce it. On the other hand, Governor Michael Dukakis is preoccupied with the latecoming 1976 fiscal budget while Boston Mayor Kev- in White must raise ten million more to finance this year's buss- ing program. THEY ARE FACED with a choice between inaction and alienating a large segment of the electorate. The school children bear the brunt of such inaction. The lucky ones are attend over- crowded parochial schools. The less fortunate attend "free" neighborhood schools of dubious quality or kill time in the stagnant public schools. Ac- cording to the Associated Press, 400 whites and 130 blacks trick- le into Southie High facilities intended for 1500 pupils. On "bad" days, the police guards outnumber students, AP says. Boston School Superintendent William Leary warns that the city may be forced to shut schools beforesJune unless the mayor can raise $10 million to cover the cost of this year's bussing. Cynthia Wade, a black stu- dent leader at South Boston High sees a hopeless situation: "We have no books to work with, no lockers, and we eat lunch in a dirty basement," she complains. BUT MARY STRESSES - and many South Boston parents agree - community ties are more important than quality of education: "They(students) really love Southie, even if the pipes leak." Boston's school authorities sympathize with their chil- dren's plight,, but as long as the bussing issue divides them, they can offer little help. "Segregation withstanding, the whole school system rots," admits Steve Glickel of the Bos- ton Teachers Union. As if things were not tense enough, Judge Garrity's 1965 desegregation ruling provides for a second phase - involv- ing 30,000 pupils - to be im- plemented next fall. Yet a four- man committee appointed by Mayor White remains undecid- ed on how to enforce the rul- ing. A plan must be presented to the district court by April 15. Thomas Atkins, pres- ident of the Boston NAACP stressed t h a t busing must continue: "We must get at the little racists in schools before they be- come big racists." The mosttattractive strategy to date is the "magnet plan" submitted by the Boston School Committee. The plan is based on the academic attractiveness of 60 "magnet" schools located in black neighborhoods. Stu- dents, however, would only be required to attend once a week if they attended a racially iso- lated school. YET EDWARD McCormick, a committee member and former state attorney general, argues the School Committee proposal is too similar to those already rejected by the U. S. Supreme Court and will be dumped by the mayor's committee. Where is Boston going? Sev- eral speakers at the Student Conference Against Racism (held at Boston University last weekend) expressed t h e i r views: Rev. Vernon Carter, pas- tor of the All Saints Lutheran Church depicted the city as a "hunched over, drooling Nean- derthal Man:" "This city isn't going any- where until Caucasians cease pseudo - scientifically classify- ing blacks into inferior cate- gories." Thomas Atkins, president of the Boston NAACP stressed that busing must continue: "We must get at the little racists in the schools before they become big racists." Bill Heenan is an LSA senior who tutors at the Kingston Center in Ypsilanti. the * y I 1; .. I-M N 1~ Jf~iLNot ~I V L E i Letters to* Th defense To The Daily: NOW THAT the strike is rn, there will be many classro m buildings with picket lines around them. GEO hopes teat both students and faculty, real- izing the validity of the unioni's grievances, will choose to hoi- or those picket lines. Students in particular may become the target of certain kinds of aca- demic reprisals, such as the intentional scheduling of tests during the strike or other acts designed to force them to cross picket lines. GEO views this essentially as an issue of academic freedom. Each member of the University should be allowed to make a personal evaluation of tha legi- tim a the G1n ni';+ mp,- tions, than it would be justif- iable for GEO mem'ers to give blanket A's to students w h o choose to support the strik:. Specifically, we b?!eve it is improper for instructors to re- quire attendance at classes, or to hold exams wiea't making arrangements for students who feel unable to attend. The situa- tion is very much like that iac- ing a faculty members w i t h unpopular political or religious views. They should n)- be pen- alized in the academic commun- ity where such high values are placed on freedom of opimon. Exams held during the strike should include proviions for make-ups after the strike, take- homesubstitutes, or other mea- sures, and no student who fails to appear in class during the will discuss the rniatter with faculty members anA try to make them aware of tnt prob- lem. If this matter fails, a member of the Defense Com- mittee will bring the isoue .o the attention of the approtriate de- partment chairperson or u r i t head. Finally, the Defens Com- mittee maintains close working relationships with the Organ;.- ing Committee (pu'lishers of the Picket Line) and we will use all publicity channels available to publicize the details of the conflict and the ensuing nego- tiations to the entire academc community. We anticiate that no mem- ber of the University of Micoi- gan staff will wish to be widely identified with a break of the principle of academic freedom. Daily uation concerning the GEO strike. Motions directing t h e board to get information from both sides so all members could make wise choices, and to issue a policy statement concerning the strike both failed for lack of a second. However, during the whole meeting it was stated that the Rackham Graduate School does represent the grad- uate student body. Rackham Student Govern- ment has two student members on the board. They are allowed to issue agenda items, and con- tribute to the perspectives ex- pressed at the meetings, but the student members are not allowed to vote. Hence it was not even possible for them to f second the motion made by a faculty member. How then does gays To The Daily: ACADEMICS come out now! The Ann Arbor Gay Academic Union (GAU) urges all gay fa- culty members and graduate employees to unite behind GEO's demand for inclusion of sexual preference in the non- discrimination clause of its contract. GEO was found and develop- ed with the active participation of Gays and Feminists at every level. Take- pride in your vay- ness. Protect your rights. Pro- mote Gay Studies. Participate in the Gay Academic Union Mid- west Spring Conference, A call to action, to be held at Rack- ham on March 7, 8, 9. " F- t MOA