riday, June 1, 1973 THE SUMMER DALY Page Thirteen I1ioJn ,17 H SM E AL aeTite SDS leader may have been spy (Ocutinued from Page 1) around Jim Mellen; one Ann Arbor source said, "If Grathwohl las the lieutenant pig, Mellen was the general." AFTER COMING to Ann Arbor out of nowhere" in the fall of 96, Mellen almost immediately moved to the top of a split group ithin the local SDS chapter. hile most local radicals con inued to support much or all of hS' complex ideological line, ellen's faction called for vague- t defined "militant street action' nd repeatedly attempted to creak up SDS meetings here. intft Mlten was one of severl SDS -oders who founded Weather- san in the snring of 1969. In the fall of that year, he as one of more than a dozen rn-level "Weathermen" arrest- in Chicago. According to The laily's sources, the entire group ent several days in jail and uderwent intense police ques- oning. BUT MELLEN was released nmsediately. Detroit sources sav Mellen in- iated a series of Weatherman 'tins aimed at disrupting class- s and social gatherings at Mc- omh County Community Col- ee. In one incident, nine Weatherwomen" were arrested i disrupting an exam at Mc- omb and beating a student and n instructor Susoicion again was raised >it Mellen, whose actions, 'rces claim, "totally destroy- earlier successful SDS ef- rts to "radicalize" working- ass young people in the Mc- omb area. SOURCES SAY s supicion o'nd Mellen intensified when e local office of the Rairal duition Project (REP) was rvalarized in early 1969. REP. an nmretlt, groi in- "ding ter'hers and stdents, -red its office with Ann Arbor DS. The hirglars removed an tensie list of SDS regional rnwats sod an entire documen- ition of REP's people. A REP source says the break- was "clearly an inside job," d that susnicion immediately >inted to Mellen, who was 'ne only a handful of peole wh ere highly familiar with the fice layout. "WHOEVER BROKE in knew actly where they were gig,' e source continues. "They must ve gone over the place care- Ily beforehand; they only made vague attempt to smear around >me papers to make it look for 1. "No one could think of any in- der who had appeared to be asing' the place, except for elen." REP fired Mellen without ex- anation several weeks after the eak-n. DETROIT SOURCES say Mel- n mysteriously reappeared af- r other "Weatherpeople" had anished in 1970 and 71. H i s reappearance coincided recisely with a Detroit secret and jury hearing where rathwohl testified. One source ates that he saw Mellen in De- it with a large man closely embling Grathwohl at the me of the hearings. Mellen apparently made a sim- ar coincidental reappearance veral months later in Cleve- d during another secret fed- ral probe of Weatherman's ac- 'vities. A CHECK into Congressional arings on SDS in early 1969 ay add credibility to some barges of agent provocateur imed at Mellen: the House Com- 'ttee on Internal Security out- ned a massive list of persons volved at every level of the adical group. Sources here and elsewhere ay that Mellen's name was the ly important one omitted. In early 1970 a long list of reatherman leadership figures received federal indictments for conspiracy to destroy public buildings and attack police. Mel- len, who was by then widely known for his Weatherman ac- tivities in Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, New York, and oth-r states, is described by sources as the only "leader" who was not indicted. BY THAT TIME Weatherman was largely an underground o'- ganization. Its key figures hive since been jailed or have sib- merged themselves sufficentl, to elude the FBI. And several have died. An ex- plosion in a Greenwich Village townhouse killed Diana Oughtsn, Ted Gold, and a third uniJenfi- fied man who is thosght by roo- cal circles to have been Terry Robbins of Weatherinas' E"toe- land collective. Ted Gold had been active in forming a Weatherman contm- gent in New York City. Diana Oughton, a now-legendar- radi- cal figure, .spent several years in Ann Arbor and joined with Mel- len's group prior -o the ncep ion of Weathermn. HER BOYFRIEND, Bill Ayers, also sone'Yng of a legend, has disappeared. Ayers and Oughton were once both active in Xnn Arbor's (hil- dren's Communi'y School, a la!e- 60's expe.iiment in alternative education. One teach:r here de- scribed them as "warm human beings; the last people on earth you would expect to get in'o bomb-throwing t .nything like that." Antioch strikers to leave 1,G Ibuildings Continued from Page 3) It has already been announced that the boycott of classes and administrative services will con- tinue. "We want to show the nation that Antioch has become a re- pressive school," said White. The strike was declared on April 20 by financial aid and minority "New Directions" stu- dents who demanded that Antioch give them a guarantee that their present financial aid package would be continued until gradu- ation-in some cases, a time period of four years to complete Antioch's five year program. COLLEGE OFFICIALS main- rained they can offer only a two year contract and are unwilling to guarantee funds they might not be able to deliver. The "New Directions" students were recruited under a program designed to achieve "cultural pluralism" by accepting aca- demically "high risk" students. Chaining and barricading dors of classroom and administration buildings, an estimated 250 to 300 strikers, including faculty, blocked all entrances to occu- pied buildings. , an activist in Ann Arbor SDS and SEVERAL INSTANCES of sus- from the far upper lefthand corner pected arson have hit the Antioch . One source holds Jim Mellen "at campus within t'he last few or Diana's death in a Greenwich weeks, but no suspects have yet r later, been found. BORED') later in Weatherman, looks on at a 1969 meeting of SDS here least indirectly responsible" f Village explosion nearly a yeai Nothing's happening, right? Just a lot of useless reading to do. Well DO something! Frinstance, truck on down to 420 Maynard (that's the Daily) and say hi. You don't have to be a journalism major or anything like that to join the staff. If you're sports-minded, interested in advertising, or like to write, come to the r i, I\ * Business Staff Edit Staff Sports Staff . 'l+.wrw'Aw ~ ... .......... waw**-'**-*r . . R' r Fr M" #" M" Hw~ MV. w'..N#w1 " in'* w r+ -r w .Mw" :-r --b V--- -- - -- i f- - -.r f f , fyr f "N " M " f "w" sM + 1f "_ " "sw 4 f N .1;"i+f MI ffl" ,""wM fM ""1 I s fi two : s s M. f s " " "j fw