State tries to buck Blue ave toa Forline-ups, Tea 1.tl 0 oda VSee Page9 FOOTBALL SPECIAL :Y L S1ir igau~ E it FOOTBALL SPECIAL Vol. LXXXIII, No. 33 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 14, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages if you see news happen call 76-DAILY Kenneth Klinge, Super Sleuth What were Ann Arbor Police Captain Kenneth Klinge and friend doing in Room 435 Mason Hall yesterday noon, peering out over the Diag with a concerned look on their faces? Well, it seems that Klinge and his buddy were the only people who showed up for the marijuana smoke-in to protest Judge Sandorf Elden's ruling striking down the city's $5 pot fine. Ann Arbor, 5-0, you goofed. A man for all voices If the recorded voice of University News Briefs (763-1300) sounds like the narrator of the notorious NARMIC anti-war slide show, it's because they're the same person. Both voices belong to Tom Riecke, assistant director of University informa- tion services. The female voice in the slide show is Patty Riecke, Tom's wife. Riecke says he did the show last spring on his own time, not the University's. Duck! Watch out during the National Anthem at today's game. A formation of U.S. Air Force jets will zoom over the stadium as a reminder of the servicemen held captive or missing in action in Indochina. One of the jets will pull out of the group to form the "missing man" formation. Lucky there aren't any embassies in Ann Arbor. Fuller Street Bridge open The North Campus buses won't have to take a detour any- more. The Fuller Street Bridge opened for traffic last night for the first time since July. The pedestrian walkway on the bridge, however, will not be open until the middle of next week. Quote of the day A quote for today's game with Michigan State: "Politics is like coaching football. You have to be smart enough to under- stand the game and dumb enough to think it is important." The author? Eugene McCarthy, in an October, 1971, issue of News- week, Hapening$... ... are diversified today and tonight. Jean Luc Godard and Jean Pierre Gorin will be at Power Center at 8 p.m. to discuss their film "Tout Va Bien" . . . the North Central Pro-Life Work- shop and Regional Conference will meet today and tomorrow all day at the Modern Languages Bldg. . . . It's Alumni Days for the School of Public Health . . . Go biking with the Ann Arbor Bicycle League to Hayes State Park in the Irish Hills. Meet at Ann Arbor Pioneer High with bike and if possible other trans- portation at 8:00 a.m. Call 663-1150 for further information. What's in a name? LOS ANGELES - Some students at James Monroe High School are concerned about lagging school spirit. So they're trying to change the school's name to Marilyn Monroe High. "We have no way of relating to James Monroe," a student leader explained, "while Marilyn is constantly on the cover of magazines. And now with the nostalgia coming back in, we think the kids would really be proud to have the school named after her." Senate passes revenue sharing WASHINGTON - The Senate sent to President Nixon yesterday the landmark $30.2 billion revenue sharing bill, clear- ing away another piece of major legislation before final adjourn- ment. The bill will inaugurate - within days of the President's signing - a program of grants to states, cities and counties. Pravda endorses Nixon Right on the heels of The Detroit News, Pravda, the Com- munist Party's newspaper, yesterday praised President Nixon's foreign policy and said he looked like a sure bet for re-election. At the same time, it pictured Sen. George McGovern as a man who constantly shifted his positions. With friends like this, Dick, who needs enemies? Vietnam ship fight HONOLULU-A fight involving black and white sailors aboard the attack carrier Kitty Hawk off Vietnam Thursday left 33 men injured, three seriously, the Pacific Fleet Command reported yesterday. The Navy said "order has been fully restored" but would give no further details on the incident. Dope note HUNTINGTON, W. Va. -- A drug raid near the Marshall University campus touched off a rock and bottle throwing demonstration late, Thursday night during which five persons were arrested. Limited property damage was reported, but a police officer was slightly injured. Twenty-nine persons had been arrested in the drug raid. On the inside ... . More football madness on Page 2 . . . Conservative State Representative Candidate Alan Harris will have a piece on the Editorial Page today (in case you missed him yesterday) . . . Don Sosin comments on the Stanley fti.art. -nn-r nn tha Artc Pr L nt of fnn Ttme 'S PROF. ( "REE TO TEACH PE DI G By RE IE CO ITTEE. I REVIEW GROUP ADDS ONE PROF, ENDING PARITY By ERIC SCHOCH and BETH EGNATER Acting Chemistry Department Chairman Thomas Dunn yesterday reversed his own order and reinstated Prof. Mark Green to teaching Chemistry 227 "effective immediately." Although Dunn indicated Thursday to The Daily that it was "purely speculative" whether or not Green might be reinstated soon, he said last night he had intended all along to reinstate him when the student-faculty committee had been formed. AP Photo What me worry? Is it Duffy Daugherty? Is it Brad Van Pelt? No, it's Old Bob, patriarch of the orangutans at the San Diego Zoo. He's just settled down with a little Boone's Farm to listen on the radio to another boring Aichigan victory today. SUITS THREA TENED: Filing for sGC races closes Dunn informed Green of his sur- prise decision in a letter late yes-. terday afternoon. He stated in the letter that since the chemistry de- partment faculty had established a committee to "review the cir-' cumstances" under which Green was relieved, it was "only proper" that Green resume his normal teaching responsibilities. Green was relieved of his teach- ing duties on Oct. 9 after showing an anti-war slide show to his or- ganic chemistry class. Meanwhile, the hopes of students for parity on the review committee received a blow yesterday, as that committee announced that a fourth faculty member would be added- probably to act as chairman. When asked if the addition of another faculty member destroyed the concept of student parity on the committee, Chemistry Prof. David Curtis - who along with Chemistry Profs. Peter Smith and John Groves make up the commit- tee-asserted that parity was an "idea of The Daily." . "We never used the word parity m our discussions," said Curtis. "We just wanted good representa- tion on the committee." Curtis added that the committee was looking for an "experienced professor who knows his way around the University." The committee has not decided yet whether the fourth member will have a vote on the committee. The suspension of Green has stirred considerable comment and - protest on campus. t Ninety per cent of Green's class- es have signed a strongly-worded - petition condemning the suspension. - Calling the action "an arbitrary and misguided use of power," the petition describes the suspension as "a blatant violation of academic s See GREEN, Page 10 Nix Nixon conclave to be held An "Emergency Elections Con- ference to Dump Nixon" will be held in the Union Ballroom tomor- row at 2:00 p.m. Various local groups opposed to the policies of the President are sponsoring the conference. A rally at 2:00 p.m. featuring several speakers will be followed by two-hour workshops at 3:30 p.m. andl at 7:00 p.m. Speakers at the rally will in- clude chemistry Prof. Mark Green, who was suspended last week and reinstated yesterday after show- ing an anti-war slide show to his classes, Barbara Halpert, Human Rights Party candidate for the U. S. Senate, and Dave Martinez, a United Farm Workers lettuce boy- cott organizer. The workshops will cover such topics as "The Fight to Free All Political Prisoners", "McGovern '72: A Public Plan for Peace", "Nixon and the Environment: Politics of Devastation" and "So- cialist Response to Nixon's Rout of Labor." Spokespersons' for the confer- ence said that the idea was to al- low various groups involved to choose their own methods for "fighting Nixon." They can then teach those meth- ods in the workshops, the organi- zers said. The spokespersons estimate that six to eight hundred people will at- tend the conference. i By CINDY HILL Student Government C o u n c i l (SGC) election campaigns opened last night amid fighting, threatened suits, challenges to the authority of the SGC election code and new campus political parties that vir- tually "emerged from the wood- work," according to one member. Candidate Robert Black spon- sored two appeals to Central Stu- dent Judiciary (CSJ) last night for what he termed "unfair" prac- tices. Both Black, an Action Mandate, member, and Dave Hornstein, can- didate, chairperson, and so far; only member of the Bullshit Party, claimed discriminatory treatment in the election code stipulation re- quiring two members of a party to run in an election before theyj can register as a party ticket. Both claim their parties are registered student organizations: and that the rule "denied rights to use the names of respective party affiliations." Black, who claims he has per-' mission from the party's president now for a case they already know to run under the Action Mandate about," said Black. "It's against name, said he was "using a party their own rules and it's not fair." name that has appeared in the "They change their rules so often last three elections." nobody knows what they are. It's Hornstein added, "The platform Byzantine." I'm running on could only be sym- bolized by the name "Bullshit Responsible Alternative Party Party." (RAP) Member Howard Victor hit BlackHornstein and other can- the late committee selection as a Blac, Hrnsein andothr cn- blatant violation o tdn didates protested an SGC announce- .of studen -a~ttha a (raiantik ad Rrlacrights-. i ment that a C.redentias ana NRes Committee (C&R) had not yet been selected for the election. "They are going to pick a C & R A look at the ol' football daze By GORDON ATCHESON Listen my children, and you ::shall hear Of the rivalry of yesteryear. T'was way, way back in nine- ty-eight That "U"tfirst trounced Michi- gan State. Michigan still regularly trounces Michigan State, but snake dances, street riots and panty raids just aren't what they used to be in the good ol' days. The golden era of such hijinks f was the late thirties. In 1938, the night before the State game, 5,000 zcrazed University students "ter- rorized" Ann Arbor. After the traditional pep rally, the students charged up State St., demanding a free show at the - ::Michigan Theater. The manage- ment anticipated the request and - had locked the theater and split. Undaunted, the students de- cided to quench their collective thirsts by descending on the Pret- 'zel Bell in search of free brew. The reception was no warmer there than the one they received at the Michigan. The students suddenly became an unruly mob and started a large bonfire on the corner of Main and Liberty. Soon, from out of nowhere, came the resounding cry, "Here come the cops!" Several dozen constables using tear gas and fire hoses forced the :: . _>rinters dAwn State St tn Ferrv Victor blamed SGC Election Di- rector Victor Gutman, President Bill Jacobs and Council for an action that would be "very unfor- tunate for the independent candi- dates." Later in the evening, Black and Community Coalition candidates Sanford Green andThom Gillis again filed suit against C & R "having a judicial function in this election." Black cited SGC Treasurer Dave Schaper and Jacobs as "having an interest in keeping us out of their hair." Jacobs defended the delay in making committee appointments saying that the election code amended Sept. 27, was approve too late to provide the required 5( days between appointments an elections. "As a general rule, we want th committee to be appointed wel before the election," Jacobs said. The CSJ hearing is scheduled for 7 p.m. Sunday, according to Black, a half-hour before the rescheduled regular SGC meeting when C & R appointments are expected to be made. T h e Responsible Alternative Party, whomever the party name may now be considered to repre sent, is also having problems o its own. RAP founder Bill Thee and in cumbent RAP Council membe Matt Dunaskiss, presently listed a an independent candidate, hav challenged the right of Curt Stein hauer, another incumbent candi date, to use the RAP party name Thee c l a i m s Steinhauer wa unanimously voted out of the RAP party after the spring election -1-l ..- = . 4. A s r , n a 0 d] e1 l r. d e e f I- r is e 1- i- Is P Is if Slides not the only issue in chem case, By CHRIS PARKS Earlier this week, chemistry Prof. Mark Green was relieved from his teaching duties after presenting to his class a slide show on the uses of technology in Indochina. But while Green has been re- instated for the time being, his conflict with the chemistry de- partment is likely to linger on. For it did not stem merely from the slide show presentation, but from a very basic conflict in academic outlook. By the standards of most chemistry department members, Green is a highly unorthodox teacher. He makes no secret of his dis- dain for traditional grading sys- tems or teaching "by the book." "It's not just this slide-show thing," chemistry teaching fel- low Roman Davis says. "There is a feeling in the department ... that Green has not been dis- charging his duties. His sections meet and discuss things that are not pertinent. This is done to the exclusion of the chemistry he was supposed to teach." "I think he could have gotten more across," says William Mesbergen, one of Green's teaching fellows. The complaint is echoed by some of Green's former students who say he expected them to ab- sorb too much of the material by themselves, while spending class time to discuss broad topics which lacked direct rele- vance. James Samanen - another of Green's teaching fellows-views him from a slightly different perspective. 'Dr. Green has a style of teaching that is different - a more relaxed approach. He gets across the things he intends to get across. He feels it is more important to arouse his student's momi .__.. _