CARTER See editorial page hie Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom ai g INVIAORATING See Today for details F Vol. XC, No. 00 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, February 1, 1980 Ten Cents Twelve Pages SEC files suit against Textron Inc. 0 Daily Photo by CYRENA CHANG SHOUTING "NO DRAFT, no way! " approximately 200 people participated in and ended at the Federal Building. Above, protesters march past the corner an anti-draft registration rally yesterday that began at Community High School of Liberty and Maynard. WASHINGTON (AP) - Treasury Secretary G. William Miller knew when he headed Textron Inc. that the com- pany failed to disclose that it had spent $600,000 to wine and dine Pentagon of- ficials, the Securities and Exchange Commission said yesterday. In a federal court civil suit filed yesterday against Textron, the SEC said the spending, mostly for meals, occurred between 1971 and July 1978. The suit also said Textron and its sub- sidiaries had made $5.4 million in payments to foreign officials to secure military contracts. THE SEC suit filed in U.S. District Court after a two-year investigation of alleged overseas payoffs by the com- pany, said the Providence, R.I.-based company failed to disclose the foreign payments and entertainment expenses as required by law. Miller was not named in the SEC suit, but the action refers to "chairmen" of the company. Miller was chairman of Textron from 1974 through 1978, when President Carter appointed him to head the Federal Reserve Board. He became treasury secretary last July. When the alleged payments were made, they were not illegal under existing U.S. law. TEXTRON AGREED to a settlement of the complaint without admitting or denying guilt. MIller declined to comment directly SECOND DAY IN A ROW: 200. rally against registration By CATHY BROWN For the second day in a row yester- day, anti-draft sentiment was displayed on placards and shouted in slogans in Ann Arbor. Beginning at Community High School on N. Division Street, crossing the Diag, and ending up at the Federal Building downtown, an ever-expanding roup of high school and University students and area residents waved banners criticizing the draft and promoting pacifism. THE DEMONSTRATION was organized by the Washtenaw County Commmittee Against Registration and the Draft (CARD) and supported by the ''tT-UO 1 Spartacus Youth League and the Revolutionary Worker's Group. The crowd reached 200 at the Federal Building on E. Liberty Street. Eleven speakers and one singer aroused the protesters with pleas to make their cause heard. Ann Coleman, a campus minister at Guild House, said, "We've got to write letters-booing won't do it." She advocated opposition to Car- ter's proposed $19 million appropriation tto implement draft registration. Sandy Silverstein, a lecturer in the University's Women's Studies Depar- tment, warned that the "draft is a weapon." When someone has a weapon, he's likely to use it, she warned. HISTORY, PROF. John Broomfield 1 7u urged resistance to war and a draft now, before the country reaches a point of no return. The signs read: "We won't kill for Capitol Hill," "Draft Beer Not People." The demonstrators chanted: "Money for jobs and education, not devastation," and "One, Two, Three, Four, We won't fight Exxon's war." ' Probably the youngest of the demon- strators, four-year-old Bicky, seemed unwillingly to comment. His mother, however, said she was sure that he was See PROTESTERS, Page 6 Miller ... may be included in suit on the SEC's allegations. He said in a statement he was "pleased to learn" that the SEC and Textron had reached a settlement and See SEC, Page 6 Campuses nationwide see draft protests SVI canidate search down to 'less than 6' By the Associated Press President Carter's call for draft registration is prompting old anti-war hands to join in protests with students who were grade schoolers when the nation's campuses erupted in opposition to the Vietnam War. "Suddenly this is very personal," said an uniden- tified woman at a protest rally that drew a thousand people at Harvard University. "My brother burned his draft card in 1968 and now it's my turn." AROUND THE NATION, ad hoc groups were set up-many with roots in Quaker organizations or in anti-war organizations of the 1960s-to stage protest marches and rallies. Demonstrations began after Carter's State of the Union address on Jan. 23, and more are scheduled in California, Michigan, Texas and Missouri. At Columbia University, about 50 pro-draft and an- ti-draft protesters scuffled over the American flag during an anti-draft rally that drew 500 people. At some campuses, support for the president ran high. Sixty-seven per cent of those questioned in a random telephone survey by the Ohio State Univer- sity student government said they backed draft registration. And 63 per cent said women should be required to register. But at the University of California at Berkeley, a similar survey showed 68 per cent of those questioned opposed reinstatement of the draft. Carter has not suggest reinstituting the draft, however. "IT'S KIND OF a deja vu for me," said the Rev. Richard Dannenfelser, Brown University's assistant chaplain, as about 300 students packed a campus auditorium Wednesday for a discussion set up by an- ti-draft activists. The "characters have changed but war is still brought to you by the same people-the military," said Dannenfelser, a veteran of the 1960s anti-war, movement. "The military trains you and teaches you to kill and be violent. I'm completely opposed to this thing." Counter-demonstrators turned out in some areas, but there were no violent confrontations. "I'm definitely pro-peace. But I'm pro-draft registration. If the United States had a crisis today, what would we do?" said Dave Adelson at the Colum- bia rally. "I'm afraid for the rest of the world and for my country," said an unidentified woman at the Brown meeting. "You 'can't ignore what's hap- pening." In Iowa, rallies that organizers saidwould be held each Wednesday drew a total of about 500 people to campuses in Des Moines, Ames and Iowa City. "I think we all know registration is the first step toward the draft. Once they get that information, you can be sure they're going to use it," Steve Brown of the Iowa Civil Liberties Union told about I50 students at the Drake University campus in Des Moines. By ALISON HIRSCHEL A list of "less than six" finalists for the job of University vice-president for academic affairs was handed to President Harold Shapiro yesterday, q ccording to Richard Corpron, chair- an of the search committee. Shapiro is expected to make a final decision after personally interviewing each of the remaining candidates for the post. The choice must then be ap- proved by the Regents. CORPRON, CHAIRMAN of the Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs (SACUA), the 10-member faculty group which, along with two tudents, was responsible for screening andidates for the chief academic af- fairs job, said the search committee has already interviewed each of the finalists, but would notsay if additional candidates were contacted. The original list of roughly 150 can- didates included both minorities and women, but Corpron refused to say whether any of the finalists fell into ther of these two groups. - The search committee did not rank the list of candidates they submitted to Shapiro. THE SECRECY surrounding the nice-presidential search process parallels that of last year's presidential search, which resulted inrthe selection of Shapiro as University president. "There ate many candidates who are in sensitive positions in other schools," Corpron explained as one of the reasons for the closed search process. "They, for one reason or another, do not want it to be known that they are in the running for this position. "A certain amount of privacy is necessary, and several candidates have indicated that if they can't remain con- fidential, they don't want to be in the running," Corpron said. AFTER HIS selection, Shapiro said he would not have been considered for the presidency if the search had been run any differently. The presidential search involved in- dividual faculty, student, and alumni advisory groups working with the Regents, who made the final decision in July, after a ten and a half month .nationwide search. The gears for the vice-presidential search were put into motion almost immedia tely after the selection of Shapiro, who at times served as vice- president for academic affairs. I Alfred Sussman, dean of the graduate school, has been serving as acting vice- president for academic affairs since Nov. 1, when Shapiro took a two-month leave of absence before assuming the presidency. Sussman will return to his job in the graduate school once the new vice-president takes office. .............1.....f...... ....,.................... .. ............... ..........,,....,.,........v.U:.. .ti.. . .t :.. r , v..s..t .. ...... ...,.t..., :: ",: rte. ... 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W ..............1...y......................... ........ .r. ................ ...... ......r..........+.s....{..{.}.....r...r....n.....k..+ i: ::"Y.".\+...vr.: ::}r::'$C :. }. .rfi.:.'/$,x$. .; n... .r$Y. xS".f!i:.s4..... ..v.:{.v.f...... };..... r:{".vi" . ::": e:'. JDL founder Kahane speaks B Rabbi M Jewish De troversial. night as pa ture series came amid presence a volving a threatened was allowe Kahane1 Israel-Pale Union last was conta California kill persons indicationc planned to( KAHAN] protested organizatio hardline p< pose an3 Palestinian he would cc of Nazis in In his s current Ai despite controversy Y DAVID MEYER for not doing all that was possible 'to eir Kahane, founder of the prevent the Holocaust of World War II Ae Kagune, fander on-heand for creating a pervading sense of ewish Lativis, s e as- apathy among American Jews today. Jewish activist, spoke last ON THE Palestinian issue, Kahane rt of the UAC Viewpoint lec- addressed the problem as "the un- . Kahane's hardline speech willingness of Arabs to recognize a 1st mild protests against his Jewish state in any size or form." Yet, ifter a bizarre mcident in Kahane said he was opposed to even the California man who had slightest concession to the Palestinians. to kill two persons unless he "The next myth is that there is a d to speak to Kahane. Palestine. There is no Palestine!" presented his views on the Kahane said. stinian issue in the Michigan Kahane advocated the complete an night only one day after he nexation of all lands currently under acted by the anonymous dispute in Israel. Kahane said that the man who had threatened to Arabs already living in all those areas , possibly Nazis, but gave no could continue living there if they f his identity or whether he agreed to live in a Jewish state with carry out his death threatss only limitedvoting rights. E'S SPEECH was also Kahane also condemned current by other Jewis h Israeli leadership for making too many ins that objected to Kahane ' concessions to the Egyptians during recent peace treaty negotiations. "The yr concessions to the peace treaty is a sham," Kahane said, s. Kahane had earlier said "The peace treaty will not last long. If ndone the threatened killing Egypt thought it could win a war, there California. would be a war. There will not be peace .nnhh nnpn mie Doily Photo by CYRENA CHANG RABBI MEIR KAHANE, founder of the Jewish Defense League, advocates no Israeli concessions to the Palestinians in a speech before approximately 200 in the Anderson Room in the Michigan Union last night. pec an ane enounce See KAHANE, Page 9 ...."...v.....:.:.......... ......:........................... v..: ,.::?:.:::..v.:.: ::................................v:... ......1....... ..' :: v'"..t.A. }v:: Iki, ---r- professors there pay an exorbitant sum to reserve a parking place. "Yeah," cracked Jesse Gordon, a SACUA member and professor in the School of Social Work, "but at Harvard, they're prolbably endowed." Gordon then brain- stormed about increasing research incentives at the 'U'. "Talk about research incentives - promise someone their own parking space, and they'll do anything!" But SACUA members were not unsympathetic to students who wait in freezing weather at the Washtenaw bus stop. Math Prof. Morton Brown noted, "Every time I go by, I see a field of red noses waiting for the bus." Sniff, sniff. QI work of Peter Fletcher, former chairman of the state Highway Commission. But the head of the commission's map committee, Tom Shawver, deleted the "cities" this year. A Shawver staffer who asked not to be identified said his boss thought the joke was "a one-time shot." C A farewell to arms? It was only a week ago that President Carter mentioned the idea of registering people for the draft in his State of the Union message. In no time, students were out on the Diag, chanting timeworn slogans such as "Hell no, we won't go." nuclear war) are not recognized by federal law, the questionnaire said.-The questions NISBCO says we should all ask ourselves: 1) Describe the beliefs which are the basis for your claim for classification as a conscientious o- jector, and whether those beliefs would permit you to serve- in a noncombatant position in the armed forces; 2) Describe how you acquired these beliefs; 3) Describe hoW- your beliefs affect the way you live, and the type of wore- you do or plan to do. Further info is available from NISB CO, 550 Washington Bldg., 15th and New York Ave, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20005. sompopp- A y M t. : ' E i I i