'p A. q 4 4 4 * t I- lw aA j W Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 13, 1970 Saturday, June 13, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Low enlistments may increase draft calls WASHINGTON ym) -- An unexpected drop in Army enlistments last month could herald trouble for Pentagon hopes of cutting the draft to as low as 150,000 men this year. The Army said enlistments in May to- taled 7,629 - nearly 3,500 below the month's objective. listments this month and next-when the Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird end of school traditionally brings more has said draft inductions this year hope- volunteers-in hopes the situation rights fully will fall as low as 150,000 men, com- itself. pared with nearly double that, 290,000. in Any deficit in enlistments is made up 1969. by increasing draft calls in future 1 months. Defense authorities are now saying the The Pentagon Thursday announced a 1970 draft total probably will not drop on the predicted track, draft calls could go down significantly in the last five months of 1970. Quotas already announced for the first seven months of the year total 114,500. This leaves a balance of less than 36.000 to reach the 150.000 mark and nearly 66.000 if total inductions for the year climb to 180,000. This would work out to monthly draft quotas as low as 7.000 plus from August through December-unless voluntary en- listments fail to recover their momentum. Officials were unable to explain the July draft call of 15,000 young men for that low and the Pentagon has started drop, except to note a sharp upturn in the Army. Sources said this call would hedging somewhat on Laird's forecast, antiwrar demonstration during May as a- result of the U.S. drive into Cambodia. have been lower were it not for the un- using an expected range of between 150,- Defense officials indicated they will anticipated fall' off in last month's en- 000 and-180,000. pay close attention to the trend in en- listments. If the enlistment situation gets back Anti-war conference to Ie heldmin Cleveland WASHINGTON (CPS) -- The first major anti-war conference since the Cambodian invasion will take place in Cleveland next week- end. June 19-21. The conference comes at a time when tensions within the movement are high, following a May 24 fistfight at a National Steering Com- mittee meeting of the Student Mobilization Committee (SMC). The fight was between members of Students for a Democratic Society and1 SMC. Ann Arbor SMC is planning to send a contingent to next week- endsconference and will provide transportation where possible to Cleveland. SDS, which is now the Progressive Labor Party (PLP) dominated1 faction, has long had fundamental differences with SMC over tacticsj to be used in the antiwar movement. SDS rejects alliances with lib- erals, while SMC believes in forging as broadly based a coalition as' possible. These differences have always been present, and have been aired at past anti-war- conferences, but the bitterness between the twoj groups is now more intense than ever. It is possible that both groups will attempt to pack the Cleveland meeting, where every person at- tending will be able to vote. At the May 24 meeting, the first fight began when SDS member Nat Goodman tried to enter the meeting. He was stopped by ushers, who told him he had to register. Here the stories diverge, with both groups blaming the other. SMC claims he refused, and tried to push into the meeting, while SDS says he asked where he should register and was jumped by four guards. The 12 other SDS members in the meeting came back, and a fistfight ensued. SDS member Rita Hollum claims she was kicked in the face, and SDS National Secretary John Pennington says he was kicked in the head. SDS withdrew to caucus, and came back after lunch with a total of about 50 people. In the meantime, the SMC meeting had decided to bar all but two delegates on the grounds that "We felt large numbers of people from SDS would physically endanger the meeting," ac- cording to Danny Rosenshine of the SMC. The rest of the SDS-PLP delegation attempted to enter, and a melee in which both sides claim injuries ensued. SDS withdrew, and both sides settled down to denouncing the other. The SMC meeting voted to call on SDS and PL members to "repudiate the attack" and launched a campaign "against the use of violence within the movement." SDS also denounced violence within the movement, contending it was they who were attacked, and stated the SMC leadership "has consisently allied with the government and built the reputation of. liberal politicians who smile sweetly while keeping the U.S. in Vietnam and extolling the use of troops against black working people and students." 'Interns' begin D.C. program By ANITA WETTERSTROEM Twenty-four University students are enroute to Washington, D.C. this week where they will work as "interns" in offices of Congress- men and government agencies. Through the efforts of the Uni- versity Placement Office, the stu- dents were given jobs in 17 con- I gressional offices-and' eight agen- cies where they will work for eight weeks. Some of the interns will be do- ing pollution investigation and re- search for congressional reform, Assistant Director of the Place- ment Office William Audas said.: The exact jobs the students will be doing, in most cases has not been defined, however. "We asked the offices to make the experience as educational as, possible," Audas said, "although some may end up licking stamps some of the time." The students will be living in residence halls at George Wash- ington University. Their housing fees as well as a small stipend are being provided by the University Alumni Association which com- pletely subsidized the program for one year with a donation of $9,000. The students will not be paid by the offices 'in which they are employed. In Washington, the students will take part in a Washington Intern Seminar which will ar- range for them to be given time off from work to attend sessions of Congress and committee meetings. The University group hopes to! hold evening seminars in their residence halls, inviting speakers from their various offices of em- ployment to "address the entire group. "These students are interested in getting a first hand look at what goes on in Washington," Au-. das said. "I think most of them are trying to find out if they might be interested in govern- ment work as a career.! The students were selected out# of 200 applicants by a committeel appointed by Vice-President Bar- bara Newell. The students were judged on the basis of interest, academic excellence, and need. Because this is the first group from the University to take part in a Washington intern program Audas said the future of the pro- gram will depend on their success. Daily Official Bulletin Day Calendar 'i I I i I I i I i I i k 1 1 G I Graduation in Harlem Harlem Preparatory School's moga logo dancers perform during graduation ceremonies in a New Yorl City Street. The school reclaims high school dropouts and high school graduates with non- academic diplomas to prepare them for college. MINNESOTA CASE: ROTC officer may face court arta for a arm testimony I .. 'I i I I I i I V i Ali 1 I I I '. u 'Ij i ',, i I'', i i i I I I I I i i I I I I I . I k I k I I f I 1 I - MICHIGAN- REPERTORY "THIS COMPANY HAS DISTINGUISHED "EMP ITSELF"-Michigan Daily PAI shakespeare THE MERCHANT OF VENICE stei nbeck OF MICE AND MEN garson kanin ( BORN YESTERDAYr HASIS ON ENSEMBLE D OFF ROYALLY"- In Repertory J July 28-Augus- peter nichols JOE EGG August 4-8 OFFICE AVOID BOX ORDER TICKETS N The University Players' 2nd Exciting Summer Reperto ALL PERFORMANCES IN THE AIR CONDITIONED LYDIA MENDELSSOHN July 14-18 July 21-2s July 28-Aug. 1 Aug. 4-8 Tuesday J14 MER. J21 MICE J28 BORN A4 EGG Wednesday J15 MICE J22 MER. J29 BORN A5 EGG Thursday Friday JJ 6 MER. J17 MICE J23 MICE J24 MER. J30 BORN J31 BORN A6 EGG A7 EGG SEASON SUBSCRIBERS PLEASE NOTE: By ordering the same day for all four weel cally see all four plays. When you have completed your order below check your performance schedule and keep it for your own record. MINNEAPOLIS (CPS) - An ROTC officer doing graduate work at the University of Min- nesota was threatened with court-martial f o r testifying against ROTC at university hearings on the future of mili- tary training at the school. Professor Frederick J. Adel- man, head of the Department of Aerospace Scineces, and an Air Force officer, was censured by the local chapter of the the armed forces) of the Uni- versity Professors (AAUP) for making the threats. Jerome F. Winzig, graduate student in English and recently commissioned Second Lieutenant in the Air Force Reserve, was called into Adelman's office after testifying at the hearings. . -1 4 The future plan ~''landscape -makes a treat for the feet By NADINE COHODAS It pays to be a pedestrian at the University these days with many campus improvements designed to make walking easy, comfortable and safe. The newest improvements for legs of all ages is the walkway and "plaza" connecting the Undergraduate and new Harlan Hatcher Grad- uate Library. Scheduled for final completion sometime in October, the area includes an 18-foot wide walkway leading from South University into the UGLI which branches to the left in front of the new library and then swings around the west wall of the Clements Library and back to South U. Director of Plant Extension Jack Weidenbach says that the plaza area, between the back of the Clements Library and the Hatcher addition will include a "large lawn with trees scattered around." "We just received bids Tuesday for the landscaping, but we can't finish it till.fall because we'll have to wait to plant the trees." Weidenbach explains. Some of the lawn may be put in later this summer, however. The soon-to-be-plazaed area has been a favorite parking spot for nighttime studiers, but with the new arrangement, this will be im- possible. Although the driveway leading to the UGLI is wide enough to handle cars, Weidenbach says it will be used only for University service vehicles. Weidenbach admits there may have been some confusion about the intent of the walkway because It looks like a driveway. But he says the walkway is wide "because there is'a large volume of people who use this area and we hope they'll use the sidewalk, not the grass." Winzig had told the committee that "if an ROTC officer were really liberally educated, he'd refuse to go into the service." He added that ROTC is "anti- thetical to education" because "one cannot think and act on his own opinions in the mili- tary." According to the AAUP report on the incident, Adelman told Winzig that hisdstatements could be held to be court mar- tial offenses under Article 133 (conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman) and Article 134 (conduct to the prejudice of good order and discipline in the armed forces or conduct of a nature to bring discredit upon American Association of Uni- versal Code- of Military Justice. Adelman told Winzig that no action will be taken now, but that newspaper accounts of his testimony will be kept on file with memorandum of their con- versation, to be destroyed after a year if Winzig made no similar statements in that period. rf Winzig insists on speaking after being warned, however, delman said his comments will be recorded and forwarded to "proper military authorities" for consideration of possible action. Adelman was censured for "un- professional conduct in his capac- ity as a professor at this univer- sity" by the AAUP. The Michigan :Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- .gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sundaymorning Univer- sity year. Subscription. rates: $10. by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mall, Season Subscriptions: Individual Tickets: REGULAR: (Tues., Wed., Thurs.)--$6.50, $5.00 WEEKEND (Fri.-Sat.)--$8.50, $7.00 MIXED: (weekdays and weekends mixed)-add 50c for each Friday-or Saturday ticket ordered to regular price above. TUES., WED., THURS.-$2.00, $1.50 FRI., SAT.-$2.50, $2.00 TICKET INFORMATION PRICES: (SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS OFFER SAVINGS AND PREFERRED LOCATIONS) Saturday, June 13 Cinema' Guild: Kenneth Tobey and James Arness in "The Thing" an dj "Bad Boy" (short): Architecture Aud., 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. Sunday, June 14 International Center Film Series "Cosmopolis" (Congestion, pollution, traffic; the multiple ills of urban liv- ing; what urban planners and archi- tects are doing; what we can expect the big city to be like in the year 2000), International Center, 7:30 p.m. Monday, June 15 Senate Assembly mtg.: Assembly Hall, Rackham, 3:15 p.m. Plaeniitm wIService General Divisionr 320S S.A.B. Saturday, June 13 CURRENT OPENINGS MOSTLY IN S.E. MICH. AREA, OTHERS NATIONWIDE: Department of HEW, Soc. Security. Admin., Ohio and Mich. openings for new BA as Claims Representatives. Mt. Pleasant State Home and Trang.; School, Med. Lab Supv., BA in Med.i Tech or bacteriol, or chem/zool w/1 yr. mued. lab work. Detroit Civil Service, Sanitary Chem-j 1st, and Sr. Psychiatric Soc. Worker. IBM Corp., Detroit area customer re- lations and computer applications rep-S resentatives to the distribution indus- tries, BA/MA pref. in math/engrg. area, 1 yr. training prog. new grads welcome. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE 212 S.A.B. Lower Level City of Birmingham, Mich. Personnel j Technician, Jr. or above in areas such as Pers. Mgmt., Publ. Admin., Poll.Sci.,, Bus. Ad. Note: The higher priced tickets are the first 17 rows of orchestra and first 4 ,ows of balcc The Box Office will open June 22. From June 22 until July 10 it will be op'n 12:30-5:00, to August 8 it will be open 12:30-8:00 on performance days. Mail orders will be filled pr Box Office. Phone 668-6300. ---- ----------------- -------------------------------- ---------------- Season Subscr NAME Individual Tic ADDRESS- PREFER: Orch I Please CITY _-STATE Bak I Print PHONE _ _ ZIP Are you on ot Mail orders to: UNIVERSITY PLAYERS st I DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH Faculty UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN[ac Arb ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48104E] Ann Arbo Play Performance (day and date) No: Price I C MERCHANTj MICE -i-- BORNa JOE EGG TOTAL (Season price or individual tickets) _ (for mixed season add 50 Sat. to regular season) CHECK ONE: I enclose stomped, self-addressed envelope. Please mail my tickets July 6. I 1I enclose no envelope. Hold my tickets at the box office. I will pick them up. (See box office hours above) -.--. _- - . - . - . -..-.....- -.---- ...-....------ ..- ..,..- -. 'a The present look