Fall Supplement Freshman Issue Y Sf4hpr~igau. &titiJ Fall Supplement Freshman Issue Section One-General 1 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 7, 1972 Fifty-Eight Pages .1 Grass grows greener Liberal pot law L approved by city By ROBERT BARKIN City Council last May passed what may be the most liberal marijuana ordinance in the country. By a vote of six-five, council approved a fine of five dollars for the possession or sale of pot. The ordinance, which be- came effective early in June, sets the minimum penalty under that of state law. The fine of five dollars includes judgement fee and court costs. Four dol- lars will go to the state - as with all fines - and one dol- lar to the city. The new ordinance also calls for a summons procedure rath- er than arrest for violators of the new law. The procedure will be similar to that used for park- ing tickets and building code violations. The new ordinance also sets a five-dollar fine for the sale of marijuana. The city attorney will have the discretion to turn the case over to county offic- ials if the sale is considered as "commercial distribution." The definition of the term is ex- pected to be handled on a case- by-case basis.' The new ordinance is an amendment to the old law. Pre- viously, the city penalty allowed for a maximum $500 fine and up to 90 days in jail for pos- session and non-profit distribu- tion. It had no provision for r sale. The state law has a maxi- mum penalty of a 90-day jail sentence and $100 fine for "use" and one year sentence, and a $1,000 fine for possession." The penalty for sale of marijuana under the- state law is a maxi- mum four years in jail and $2,000 fine. Both City Attorney Jerry Lax and Police Chief Walter Krasny have agreed that the "police will come to the city attorney first" to decide under which law a case will be prosecuted. The council room was crowd- See $5, Page 11 f Anti-war activists di cra By DIANE LEVICK and PAUL TRAVIS To the sounds of rock music and anti-war speeches, four symbolic "bomb craters" were dug on the diag last May dur- ing a party in celebration of the birthdays of Malcolm X and Ho Chi Minh. During that day's Regents meeting, other anti-war pro- testers symbolically "mined" the Administration Bldg. with balloons while four unknown youths flooded the lobby with tomato juice representing "the blood of the Vietnamese people." The demonstrators were pro- testing what they called the University's involvement in war research. The University had previous- ly offered an alternative site for a bomb crater, but the dem- onstrators rejected the site in favor of the Diag because "we want it (the hole) to be a visi- ble daily reminder of what the countryside of Vietnam looks like," said protest leader Genie Plamondon. ters l on diag The University objected to the Diag sites primarily be- cause of the danger of cutting power lines and water pipes. The first two craters - in front of the Economics Bldg. and at the corner of State and North University - reached a size of about 15 feet in diam- eter and four feet deep. No wires or pipes were encountered. When protesters began dig- ging the Diag crater, Rolland Gainsley, the University's chief security officer, informed the diggers that they were violating the law and were subject to prosecution. - In a statement issued late that night, the University said every effort would be made to identify the crater diggers and to "prosecute those individuals who defied the warning." The University's suggested alternative site, on the mall between Hill Aud. and the Michigan League, was the site of the third crater. A pipe be- lieved to be encasing electrical wiring was found two feet un- der. Back pay won in U 1 sex bias case Outside City Hall... after the diag dig in LOAN GUARANTEED: WIillo w Run finally running By RALPH VARTABEDIAN A $2 million loan guarantee from the state has become the first step toward the Univer- sity's avowed goal of disengag- ing itself officially from large scale classified research. Under a pian adopted in prin- ciple by the Regents in Febru- ary, the University is attempt- ing to divest itself of its Wil- low Run Laboratories, recently renamed "The Environmental Research Center of Michigan," which perform about 90 per cent of the classified research done on campus. The loan guarantee, approved by the State Legislature as part of the Higher Education Bill, will provide Willow Run with funds to weather a transition- al period during which it will leave the auspices of the Uni- versity to become a 'non-profit corporation. Specifically, the loan will al- low the labs to meet their fi- nancial commitments during the first year. This is essential because all government classi- fied research work is done on a reimbursement basis - with payment often coming following the completion of the project. Previously, the University had paid the Willow Run bills until the federal funds arrived. The plan under which the University will dispose of its controversial role in secret war research dates back to last February. At that time the Re- gents rejected proposals by the Senate Assembly and the Stu- dent Government Council to end all research, "the results of which would not be published after one year." The Regents in a 7-1 vote called for the separation from Willow Run Laboratories as an alternative to an out-right ban on such research. Several issues involved in what is officially termed "the orderly total separation" cloud the ultimate relationship be- tween the University and the Laboratories. Specifically, five professors currently working at Willow Run might want to transfer their projects to the Engineer- ing College labs in order to re- tain their University teaching appointments. Vice President for Research A. Geoffr y Norman emphatically claims such project transfers "will not be allowed if they in- volve a classified project." Norman is adamant in disa- vowing any suggestion that the separation is a symbolic ges- ture. "If this is to be a separation then it will have to be a real separation. Our relation to Wil- low Run will be no different than ou' relation with Bendix, Parke Davis or other local re- search corporations." he says. According to Norman, Uni- versity professors will not be allowed to hold major respon- sibilities at Willow Run and still retain their tenure. The disengagement of Willow Run Laboratories will not elimi- nate all classified research at the University. Both the Cooley a n d Radiation Laboratories conduct secret research under contract by the Defense Der partment. Most of the work at the Ra- diation Laboratory is being done on perfecting radar and other tracking systems, while the Cooley installation is heavily in- volved in devising electronic countermeasures, which help missiles and planes evade the electronic tracking systems of opponents on the ground. In February, during the time See WILLOW, Page 11 By JAN BENEDETTI Cheryl Clark, the first woman in the nation to demand back pay from a university on grounds of sex discrimination, won her request last July, in the test case of the University's new complaint appeal procedure.. "This is a terrific step for- ward. It indicates that if women persist in their complaints they will be vindicated," says Vir- ginia Nordin, chairwoman of the University's Commission f o r Women. The decision represents a ma- jor victory for women seeking to end sexism in campus em- ployment policies, according to spokespersons of University wo- men's groups. Clark, a research associate in the University's Highway Safety R e s e a r c h Institute, will be .......... ... ......... ?..' ..... . .. . . . . .. "This is a terrific step for-. ward. It indicates that if women persist in their complaints they will be vindicated." Virginia Nordin Commission for Women awarded a minimum increase of $1,320 yearly, retroactive to Jan. 26, 1971. "I'm very pleased. It was al- most anticlimatic. I thought we would lose," said Clark. "This shows that the com- plaint appeal procedure is dif- ferent than the regular proced- ure. I. hope that its essential fairness will encourage more women to come forward with complaints," said Zena Zumeta, former University Women's Rep- resentative. "If salaries are made public, that will give women a better idea of their relative salary po- sitions and they can decide w h e t h e r to complain," said Zumeta. Clark filed an original com- plaint in' January, 1971, charg- ing that she was receiving a lesser salary than a man with the same job. After this complaint, heard through the standard procedure, was denied, law Prof. Harry Ed- wards,tClark's lawyer,charged that the procedure denied a complainant due process of law. As a result, the Commission for Women and the University's executive officers drew up the new complaint appeal proced- ure. For each case, the Univer- sity and the complainant each select one member of a three- person board. And an impartial chairperson is chosen from a list submitted by President Robben Fleming to the two members. The board, after hearing the case, formulates a recommenda- tion and submits it to Fleming. Several points of the Clark de- cision upheld key arguments put forward by Edwards. The unanimous ruling by the board shifts the "burden of proof" to the University in cases of salary inequity between men and women. "Once a disparity is shown, it's up to the University to show that it's based on criteria other than sex. The University has not developed a clear set of cri- teria for establishment of sala- ries. Women were always paid less," says Edwards. Another major outcome of the case is the board's reaffirma- tion of state law which rules that discrimination need not be intentional to be unlawful. University lawyers claimed in the case that any discrimination against Clark was unintentional. Therefore, they argued, it did not constitute discrimination. "It was frustrating" to prove intent in such cases, according to Nordin. The procedure, whose trial period ran out on Sept. 1, will undergo evaluation. "The procedure should be maintained or else there will be no neutral hearing at all. But the procedure is so timhe-consum- ing, I can't imagine there'll be an enormous number of women to go through it," says Univer- sity. Women's Representative Kathy Shortridge. "Women are often reluctant to come forward with complaints. They're some- times afraid of losing their job," she adds, The Clark case also provides more evidence of sex discrim- ination in University employ- ment practices. The Department of Health, Ed- ucation and Welfare (HEW) charged the University with sex- ism in its employment practices two years ago. The University submitted an affirmative action plan which has not yet been approved by HEW. The Clark decision, however, according to Shortridge, "doesn't The hot, sunny day was filled with rock music and speeches, wine and crater-digging. Mayor Robert Harris, along with the Democratic and Hu- man Rights Party City Coun- cil members, People Against the Air War, Tribal Council, Viet- nam Veterans Against the War's local branch and many other community groups co-sponsor- ed the birthday party. Almost two weeks later, war- rants were issued for the ar- rests, of four local anti-war ac- tivists charged with malicious destruction of University pro- perty. Charged were Genie Plamon- don, member of the Rainbow Peoples Party, Jay Hack, for- mer administrative vice-presi- dent of Student Government Council, John Goldman, '73, and Richard England, Grad. Police also sought a warrant for an unnamed juvenile. The warrants were signed by Frederick Davids, head of the University's Safety Dept. The University pressed for police action after the craters were dug. "We are not doing this to make an example," Davids said, "but to prove that we meant what we said when we warned them not to dig on these Diag sites." The four sought people turn- ed themselves in to authorities early the next week. A crowd of over 100 supporters accom- panied them to City Hall where the four were placed under ar- rest. The 'Crater Four' pleaded not guilty and were released on a $50 personal bond. Their trial was set for July 20 and later postponed until August. During their arraignment, they presented District Judge Sandorf Elden with a testimonial signed by over 280 people which asserted that "t h e signers of this statement ack- knowledge organizing 'and dig- ging those craters . . . We de- mand that. charges. be dropped and the University confess to its war crimes." Among the signers were City Councilman Jerry DeGrieck, John Sinclair of the Rainbow Peoples Party and a large num- ber of University students. One month following the first crater dig, an anti-war group re-enacted the digging of simu- lated bomb craters on the Diag. Thirty-six persons were ar- rested on that June evening, most of them charged with ma- licious destruction of proper- ty and released on $25 bond. Several others were charged with assault and battery on po- lice, throwing firecrackers, and the use of firecrackers. At press time, the original date of the 'Crater Four' trial had just ben postponed to al- low time for a pre-trial session. Chief defense counsel Thomas Bentley called the prosecution's request for the pretrial "a pret- ty clear admission that the de- fendants are-not guilty of ma- liciou§ destruction of proper- ty. " "I think they (the prosecu- tion) are now looking for some new charge because they know the original one won't hold," Bentley said in an' interview. "They may present some new allegation at the pretrial based on .some old 1888 statute about illegal trampling of hay." Bentley has subpoenaed Uni- versity President Robben Flem- ing, A. Geoffrey Norman, Vice President for Research, Richard. Kennedy, Secretary of the Uni- versity, and University Attor- p)ey Roderick Daane 'to appear as witnesses t the trial. l Willow Run . .. siteof classified research Soviet poet takes 'U'post By JIM KENTCH Exiled poet Iosif Br o d s k y arrived in Ann Arbor last July to assume the University's posi- tion of poet-in-residence. Brodsky's journey here was marked by a strange sequence of events that began when So- viet 'officials "invited" him to leave the country, even though Brodsky had made no previous application to do so. They offer- ed to arrange the necessary papers for him to emigrate to Israel. University Prof. of 'Slavic Lan- guages Carl Proffer, who is a friend of Brodsky's and his main American publisher, was visit- ing Brodlsky in Russia when the Soviet authorities issued their Brodsky had to pay the equi- valent of $1000 to leave, $500 to forfeit his Soviet citizenship and $500 to cover paperwork. He was permitted to carry only $104 and two suitcases out of the country. Brodsky arrived here on July 10 after attending the London Poetry Festival with poet W.H. Auden. It is believed that Brodsky is the first Russian poet to be ac- tively encouraged to emigrate to Israel. Brodsky had long been con- sidered an irritant by the Soviet government. In 1964 he was con- victed for being an "idler and parasite" and sentenced to five years at hard labor. He never xxon to nlnh r m hit. npn though some of his poetry cir- culated in the underground. All his manuscripts were confiscated by Soviet authorities when he left the country. This will probably be his most difficult task reconstructing his manuscripts from memory. Brodsky, who was born in 1942 in Leningrad during the Nazi seige, is a short man who is rapidly losing his hair. His dark brown penetrating eyes re- flect his problematic, question- ing soul, and his voice is reso- nant with the pessimistic fatal- ism with which Russian people confront life. It is easy to imagine his stocky build wranned in a full-length "He has no animosity toward the Soviet Union," Proffer said. "And he hopes that his n a m e remains in Russian literature." According to Proffer, Brod- sky's "culture is English, wes- tern and he wanted to come somewhere where Slavis studies were developed. The University has an excellent department. We also publish the Russian Tri- quarterly, which has printed a great deal of Brodsky's poetry over the past few years." "He will be a tremendous campus resource," said Literary College Dean Frank Rhodes. "He'll be able to give all of us a unique perspective on Soviet society." Brodsky's duties as poet-in- CONTENTS FRONT SECTION: Summary of summer news. CULTURE: Films, drama, liter- ature, music, art galleries, res- taurants and bars. SPORTS: Football, basketball, wrestling, swimming, baseball, hockey, lacrosse, tennis. STUDENT LIFE: The season of the student, local housing, stu- dent organizations, health ser- vice, campus security, Student Cellar. I