Wednesday, June 4, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Doge Three New groups By GLEN ALLERHAND "It seems we Second of a two-part series years ago. We One of'the ironies of the crime struc- percentage asf tare in any city is that the better the the FBI crime police work done, the more criminal He sees a b offenses are reported. manpower or t The explanation lies in the very es- main reason f sence of any successful crime - that with new look it never goes detected. For every the crime are criminal thatris' apprehended, there apprehensions. must be several' who get away. apeesos IT IS THEREFORE ppossible to have BUT SUCCE a drop in the overall crime structure in is not strictlyc a community while the number of peo- The recently ple charged with criminal acts goes Anti-Rape Effo up. is aiding. the p teal assaults. Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Kras- iv believes that crime in the city is In addition,a ctually on the decline. Says Krasny, ty reporting s assist crime prevention hit a peak about two 're going down a small far as the major crimes index is based on." better utilization of our he street patrols as the or the decrease, along s at fighting some of as, particularly in the ries and an increase in SSFUL iaw enforcement dependent on the police. established Community rt, located in City Hall, olice in combating sex- in anonymous third par- ystem has been set up so that a rape victim not wishing to be identified can still report details about the assailant. The police record this information in order to keep tabs on an attacker should another assault be committeed. These two practical measures, the anti-rape effort and the anonymous re- porting system, reflect an evolving at- titude of frankness towards rape that is also apparent in Michigan's new rape law. THE STATUTE, which became ef- fective on April 1, is unique in the na- tion. It divides sevual assault into four varying degrees of severity, depend- ing on the manner in which the as- sault was conducted. The new code attaches no gender to either the "attacker" or the "victim," thus. making it possible for males to prosecute under the law. Furthermore, it does not require evi- dence that the victim resisted attack, to establish the occurrence of a rape, as the old law did. OF COURSE, one element necessary to the smooth operation of a criminal justice system are the courts. But, with the huge volume of cases brought to trial every year, court dockets are backlogged. Particularly sensitive to the situa- tion are, the people who charge the crimes. Washtenaw County Prosecu- tor William Delhey remarks, "There See NEW, Page 9 School board candidates offer a wide spectrum of s olutions to student issues By JEFF RISTINE Second of a three-part series An alarming number of stu- dents in the public school system today are "turned off" to the whole educational process. In- stead of enjoying their daily lessons in reading, writing and mathematics, m a n y simply count the weeks until the school year is over.' Despite these seemingly in- herent problems, the ten can- didates in next Monday's school board election hardly agree on the precise needs of students in the 70's. The seven men and three women seeking the three available board seats look at the student in several different ways. TO SOME, the students are "future adults," and should be given meaningful responsibili- ties as a matter of course. But other candidates suggest the pupils are confused, helpless children who must be tightly directed by more mature ele- ments-their parents. D. Stephen McCargar, a bus driver for the Ann Arbor Trans- portation Authority, criticizes the current school discipline policy and looks at it from a student's point of view. "There are some students in the school system that have very little respect for the people who are meting out the disci- pline because they view them as either elitist or racist or re- moved from the needs and sen- sitivities of young people," he says. McCARGAR goes on to rec- ommend development of a school staff that is more at- tuned to students' needs - re- moving, he says, the necessity for a sat-r i n g e n t discipline policy. He also feels the board should put more weight on ad- visory opinions from students in their decision-making. "A community has to listen to the people that the education sys- tem is supposed to be serving," McCargar says. Another candidate censures See BOARD, Page 6 As part of the annual effort to spruce up the lobby of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, tihese two MIT workmen mounted scaffolding to shine and polish the window glass - and per- haps sneak a bird's eye view peek at the Charles River as well. Photographer recalls scene before Kent State shootings C L E V E L A N D, Ohio Kent streets. The protest was tified in legal papers filed in - Students were laughing sparked by U. S military ac- connection with the trial as and running from Ohio Nation- tion in Cambodia. Sgt. Myron C. Pryor. In ear- al Guardsmen "like on Hollow- John Filo, who was a pho- lier proceedings that also. een" moments before an out- tographer for the Kent State stemmed from the shootings, burst of gunfire felled 13 stu- University yearbook in 1970, Pryor repeatedly, has denied dents on May 4, 1970 at Kent also testifiel that it appeared a firing and has said his gun State University, a. Pulitzer shot was triggered by one wasn't loaded. Prize - winning photographer Guardsmen seen kneeling with Filo, now a staff photograph- testified yesterday, a handgun slightly ahead of er for The Associated Press The nine who were wounded other Guardsmen when the gun- in Kansas City, said he thought and the parents of the four who fire erupted. he saw smoke come from the died are seeking $46 million in The first shot came from a weapon. damages from Gov. Jomes A. Guardsman carrying the pistol Another photographer, John Rhodes, three former state of- who tapped other troops with Darnell of the Youngstown area, ficials and 40 former Guards- his hand to hurry them up a a high school classmate of one ten, hill, Harry Montgomery of San- of the four students slain in T H HS H O O T I N G dusky, a student at the time of the 1970 shooting incident, be- Capped three days - of demon- the shootings, testified later came the first witness so far to strations that included the fiery yesterday. testify he had seen notices destruction of the Army Reserve HE SAID the Guardsman from Kent State University pro- Oicers Trainin Cocarrying a .45-caliber automa- hibiting the rally during which o the Coru s buld- tic pistol "was the first to turn, the shootings occurred. Others 1f 'an the campus and window- and he fired. I saw the recoil." were questioned about the point smashing sessions on downtown The Guardsman was iden- earlier. ''Medical School.:. admissions steady By BILL TURQUE The barren economic condition of the state and a de- creasing federal committent to medical education are some of the reasons why the University's Medical School will be accepting only 202 new students next fall, 35 less than last year. r; c"Those figures are, in all probability, essentially cor- rect," said Dr. Colin Campbell, director of admissions "u for the Medical School. CAMPBELL SAID, however, that the classification of 35 fourth-year Inteflex students as first year medical students will bring the number back to 237, so that the Medical School class of 1979 will have no fewer graduates than in'; previous years. Inteflex, an abbreviation for Integrated, Flexible, Medical Program, is a special six-year curriculum combining pre- medical and medical courses. Six years after graduating from high school, Inteflex students acquire medical de- greeny The program's first class of students, who have com- pleted three years as of this spring, will be designated first- year medical students so that they may qualify for certain federal scholarship funding, according to Medical School Dean John Gronvall. See ADMISSIONS, Page 1