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Vol. 88, No. 99 EVANSTON, ILL. 60201 Fri., May 3,.1968
Black student 1e a d e rJames Turner yesterday released a point-by-point reo.jection of the administration's, reply to a list of grievances submitted by blackstudents 1a s t week. Hewarned the university thathe was speaking on'the grievances "for the last time."
Speaking at a 1:30 p.m. ScottHall press conference , Turner saidthe adm inis tration had until" around dinnertime" to give a"yes or no" answer to each pointof a 15-point list of "minimum demands. "
THE UNIVERSITY gave no re-o sponse to the demands, but askedfor a meet ing with black studentstoday.
The " minimum demands" paralleled the black studen ts' originallist of grievances that was submitted to officials April 19.
At 5 p.m., Vice-President andDean of Students Roland J. Hinzmet with Kathryn Ogletree , aspokesman for For Members Only,in his office.
He gave her a six-line statementthat did not answer any of the demands , but asked for a meetingbetween administration officialsand black students today at 4 p.m.in Parkes Hall 122. The meeting isnot open to the public.
At the press conference at Turner 's request, reporters and whitessat on one side of the aisle andblack students sat on the other.
James F. Stull, assistant dean ofmen, and Sam Saran, director ofpublic relations, were asked toleave the meeting by black students . Both left.
TURNER OPENED the pressconference by telling white students who attended the meetingthat it is "good that they understand there's a role to be playedin informing the rest of the studentbody."
Turner said he had called thepress conference "because of aseries of events on the campusover the past one-and-a-halfyears."
He said these events included thefight -between black and white students Dec. 2 in the Sar gent 0 Hall
(Continued on page 2)
There will be a meeting Mondayat 2 p.m. for all students interested in working on the DailyNorthwestern for the rest of thisyear and next year. The Daily islooking for reporters, wri ters, reviewers, photographers and cartoonists .
tion by black students April 22 wasformulated in an amendment to aresolution that senate take measures to ''' quickly and peacefullytake the initiative in. . .protectingthe educational process from rac ism and disruption ."
A SECOND RESOLUTION proposed by senate treasurer DougBehr and passed near the end ofthe two-and-one-half-hour meeting,asked specifically that universityadministration ass u r e blackstudents :eThat a minimum of 50 per centof the incoming class of black students shall come from Chicago'sinner-city area.eThat at least a corridor in bothmen's and women's living units bereserved for those black 0 studentswho desire to live there .eThat a course in black historybe instituted next fall.eThat continued dialogue be maintained with black students in relation to the remaining demands .
Black Freshman Senator ClydeJeffers , who co-sponsored the firstresolution with Freshman SenatorEva Jefferson and Frank Morris ,president of the Class of '70, saidafter the meeting tha t he was "satisfied that senate had expressedsympathy for the Negro's problemson campus."
THE AMENDMENT, proposedby Freshman Senator Caren Levysupport ing black st u d e n t s' .dema nds, passed 10 to 6.
Both resolutions were turnedover to Barb Caulfield, chairmanof the Senate Human RelationsCommittee , for implementation.
Jeffers left the meeting afterpassage of the two resolutions, returned before the meeting wasover and suggested that senatecall a special meeting today.
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BLACK STUDENTS SPEAK OUTAt Scott Hall meeting yesterday, Michael Smith, left, James Turner;Kathryn Ogletree and Les Harris, said they were issuing a finalset of demands for the university to answer. (Photo by CraigHodson.)
By RICHARD BOUDREAUXStaff Writer
Student Seriate last night gavequalified support to black students'demands' of the university administration and unanimously recommended that at least three agreements on housing, admissionsand curriculum - be reached bythe administration immediately.
Senate called an emergencymeeting for 1 p.m. today to dealwith the racial problems .
Senate's support of seven of thedemands issued to the administra-
Senators supportblack proposals
housing proble ms w ith E. Martin' Jehn, assist antdean of me n and d ire ctor of men's housing. Storyon page 6 . (Photo by Barry Frank)
By BOB GREENEAssociate Editor
Blacks list 15 'minimum demands;officials seek to meet today
Turner setsdeadline forNU response
NO VACANCY?Two so phomores feel the housing squeeze wh ichis afflicting north campus. Bob Diebel, Tech, andSkip Eiland, an arts and sciences student, discuss
NUBlack press meeting:-integration rejection
The black students, about 30 of them, walked into 0 Scott 215.Chairs were neatly arr-anged with an aisle down the middle.White students sat On both sides."Could everyone sit on one side?" a black student said. It was
not a question."We've got this side reserved for other people," he sa id. The
whites moved over , and the blacks sat down.TillS was the tone of the whole press conference yesterday : a
complete rejection of the idea of integration.A representative of the/ nuhlic relati ons department walked in
and sat down."I' m sorry," a black student sa id. "This is strictly for press.
You'll have to leave ."Director of Public .Relations Sam Saran, standing at the back of
the room, registered an objection to this. He, too was asked to leave.Assistant Dean of Men Ja mes Stull stood outside the door. Before
he could come in he, too, was told that he was not welcome.JAMES TURNER, spokesman for the Afro-American Student Union,
sat at a front table and talked into a pair of microphones: He worea dark gray sport coat over an open-necked orange wool shirt, and apair of sunglasses.
"We're not asking for any control of this univers ity outside thethings that affect only us," he said.
What about the demands for black housing, he was asked. Howcould the university allow such a thing , after securing pledges fromsororities and fraternities not to discriminate?
Members in the audience snickered loudly."The response you just heard was from white students," he sa id.
" That should tell you something. We're not asking for a restructuringof the university. If we want to live together, that affects only us.
" I TffiNK the brothers at Columbia said the same things that we. ...are saying ," Turner said . "I should hope that (University President
Dr. J. Roscoe) Miller and .(Vice-President and Dean of StudentsRoland J .) Hinz are -more enlightened men than they have there ."
And was there any chance to avoid a conflict at Northwestern?Turner looked down. He spoke sharply.
- " We have listed our demands item by item," he said . "We wantthem answered that way, simply in the negative or the affirmati~e .
If the response is positive, then we can see the way to affirmatIvetalks .
"We want to hold down an explosion on this campus ," he said." But we also have to look out for the rights of our black students ."
NUwhites react to demands
'WE ROB BANKS'David Newman, screen write~ of "Bonnie and Clyde" listens toJack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America,blast censorship in a press conference yesterday at the OrringtonHotel. .
AINU, film writerdiscusses his art
Friday, ,.._. __,
Page 2
Senior Tr ygve Sletteland sat down on the sandbeside the girls . Sletteland sa id he had noticed hisblack friends were missing from class lately butotherwise .knew littl e about the threatened black"co nfrontation."
White students' ignorance about yeste rday's pressconfere nce apparently did not mean indifference. " Idisagree with the gripe for their own studsnt union,"freshmen Br ian McCartney said, " and their demandthat the universi ty accept more blacks."
A friend of McCartney, with him at the wat er 'sedge, added that the 120 NU black students seemto be getting too much racial recognition. " Peoplehere are trying to treat them the same," the affiliated freshman said. " I see no prejudice in dormsor classes or anything for that matter ."
ANOTHER WHITE st udent , Kip Stacy, disagreed . The white racism that exists on this campus, he said, is subtle : " where you sit , how youtalk and your ' manner isms towards black students ."
Educ ation sophomore Pat Briley sat in the shadeof a tree by Centennial Hall . He adm itted he hadnot really ta lked about the current black situationwith white friends. " Anyhow, the three black guysin my dorm don't act like they're persecuted," hesaid .
And no matter what pressure blacks bring onadm inistrators , the university "cannot pass a rulingfor a 'Be kind to colored week," Br iley noted.
Sophomore Bill Levin, epitomized the views ofmany NU white students . " I sympathize generallywith the black position ," Levin said. " But they don'thave any right to do what they're doing. They're notrunning the university."
By JOANN LUBLINCampus Editor
The frisbee sailed through the air on Deer ingMeadow. A white Northwestern student in blue jeancut-offs caught it. On the south beach an NU coedin a bikini ran along the shore, pursued by her bareches ted boy friend.
NU whites yesterday afternoon vaguely recalledthat black stud ents were hav ing a press conferenceabout their grievances at Scott Hall .
But the sunshine was so warm and the lakelooked so enticing that not too many white studentsbothered to discuss the ' implications of the blackdemands.
WHEN QUESTIONED, white stud ents generallyreplied that the clash was a good thing but not reallytheir business.
" I heard something about a press conferencefrom the Daily," sophomore Steve Englander sa id.Englander lay on the sand, reading a book. " ButI wasn't sure what it was," he went on. " White students are aware of it (the black crisis ) but it hasn' taffected them firsth and."
Deena Breed, a sunba thing journ alism junior,seriously .doubted that whites at NU were aware ofrecent events between blacks and administrators." But they should talk about it more," she said." White kids are prejudiced but they won' t admit it ."
Senior Kay Krieghbaum sha red Miss Breed'sblanket. She agreed no One knew too much aboutwhat was going on.
BOTH COEDS backed the black studen ts ' demands but worried about what the consequenceswould be if demands were not met.
Blacks want response to grievances
a film about the bank robbers because " We loved 'em. What attracted us to Bonnie and Clydewas their styl e and their great desire to become celebrities."
Newma n expla ined that thepa ir 's appeal now is based on thesame sort of things that appealedto the public and the press in the'30's - . the girl who wrote poetryas well as robbed banks andsmoked ciga rs .
HE SAID the least re levarit criticism of the film came from cri ticswho attacked the movie for notbeing histor ica lly accurate.
Jack Valenti, Motion PictureAsociation president and formerspecia l asis tant to P resident Johnson, pra ised the movie industry for"coming to gri ps with the volatileissues of our time."
Valenti gav e an unqualified " no"to the question of film censorsh ip.He said the way to control ob-~scenity was not through the administrative decisions of a censorship board ' but in a cour t of law," I' m for the use of criminal statutes to drive the criminally offensive stuff off the screen, " Valentisaid.
He pointed to the new motionpicture code tha t he said asks filmmakers to inform the public abouta movie's contents but lets the individual decide if he wants himself or his child to view it.
structed not to pull their guns unless it is to protect a life."
Senate nominated eight studentsfor membership on the Council on
, Undergraduate Life. Univer sityPresi dent Dr . J . Roscoe Miller andVice-President and Dean of Students Roland J . Hinz will selectfour to serve on next vear 's CULbeginning next fall. •
NOMINATED from a list of thir- (teen considered were Miss Caul- I
field, Behr , Will Ris, Victor Goode,B.J . Anderson, Mike Pl ace, SteveNisenb aum and Clark Sole.
In other acti on, senate voted to continue its cornmittment LO theAdlai Stevenson lectu res and toapprove const itutions for Studentsfor Nelson Rockefeller , Studentsfor a Better Society ,and StudentChapter of the Society of Professional Engineer s.
(Continued from page 1)
" We must look at this not as aproblem of the Negroes looking forseparation," Miss Caulfield toldthe group, " but as a plea by students of our constituency whoneed help with their problems."
MISS CAULFIE LD sa id aft er themeeting that she would meet alternately with the university admi nistrators and black students " ultimately to get rid of conjecturesand come up with some concreteprograms."
Earlier in the meeting, TedArndt , univer sity secur ity chief,told senate that four campus securit y police are carrying sidearms, but that " the guns are notfor students.
"The quali ficiat ions of thes e fourofficers are very high in my opinion," Arndt sai d. "They are in-
Student senate urges NUto respond to demands
By DONNA ROSENECampus Editor
The president of the Motion Picture Associati on of America discussed censorship, pornography and President John son's poor televisionimage and the co-author of " Bonnie and Clyde" talk ed about violence,social comment and the Barrow gang's bravado.
The occasio n was a press con- - - - - - --- --- -ference yesterday in the Orr ington
I Hotel, the opening of a two daycampus film seminar sponsoredjointly by the Motion Picture Association, the Northwestern Film Society and the department of radiotelevision and film.
BEFORE last night' s freescreening of " Bonnie and Clyde"for NU stud ents and faculty,David Newman, co-screenwriter ,discussed the violence in themovie, specifically, the final ambush that killed Bonnie and Clyde.
" I don't really defend it. It wasthe way we wanted to do it," Newman sa id of the scene . "When abullet went in we wanted it to looklike it hurt. 'Cause that' s what itdoes," he said. ~
"We were looking a t these people from the inside. When theylaughed you were supposed tolaugh and be happy too. Consequentl y.when they were hur t, ithur t you a little too."
NEWMAN was am used at thevarious interpre tations of the filmas social commentary. " Weweren't deliberately out to make asocial comment other than thebuilt-in one about the Depressionand this incred ible styl e and br avado that the real Bonnie and Clydehad," Newman sa id.
He said he and his partner, Robert Benton, (who did not appear asscheduled-because of illness ) ma de
re ached the point where we find. that the university is more concerned with eloquent sta tementsthan with solving the problemsthat affect us ," he sa id.
Turner then distributed a sixpage statement to ' the press thatoutlined the black students' rejection of the university 's re ply to theirdemands and listed the 15 " minimum demands."
THE STATEMENT BEGAN:" Having rejected the basic prin
ciples on which our demands werebased , the administration hasforced us to spea k for the last timeon' those matters discussed at themeeting of Wedneda y, April 24,1968. We demand that such actionbe taken to meet this , our final listof demands."
The statement continued :"The univer sity must show itself
flexible enough to take in the'peculia r ities ' of our culture andbackg round . The only way, we feel,the universi ty can display its understanding and flexibility is by theimmediate app rova l and implementation of those demands submitted by the black student body .on April 22, 1968."
The list of 15 " minimum demands" outlined in fur ther detailthe list of grie vances submitted byblack students April 22.
Turner said the " legitimacy ofthese dem ands can not be debated.
"This is a call for autonomy forblack st udents , for self-determination on matters that concern us,"Turner said.
" All we can say is that if our demands are impossible, then peac ebetween us is impossible too," thesta tement concluded .
Following the press conference, aspokesman for the black studentspresented their st atement to Hinz.
UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT Dr.J . Roscoe Miller met For more thanthree hours with the universityvice-presidents yesterday afte rnoonbefore Hinz emerged with the request for today 's scheduledmeeting.
" Because of the seriousness ofour concern for the issues involvedin the discussion with the blackstudent organizat ions," Hinz said," the pres ident has ask ed me to calla meeting In which he and otherofficers will Join at 4 p.m. Fridayin Pa rkes Hail 122, for all blackmembers of the Northwestern University community, including students, faculty, and staff."
Dr . Miller and the vice-presidentswill meet at 11 :30 this morning withthe deans of all the schools on theEvanston campus to discuss ' thesituation .
Turner said blacks had "takenthese grievances to the administ rati on," but that they " have notbeen pleased with the outcome ofthese negotia itions.
"We have persisted, but we have
J Continued from page 1)parking lot, the " frequent" throwing of full cans of beer at blackstudents from some houses onnorth campus, and ver bal att ac tson black women.
EDITORIAL
A Crucial DayA s th is day , perhaps the most mome ntous in Nor th
western 's momentous years, begins, we feel a littl e likea good prizefighter must every time he steps into thering: we are worried, but we are confident.
. Yesterday's events brought to a head the crisis between black and white on this campus.
The unive rsity response to the original black demands ,which seemed so eminently reasonable to so many whites ,was completely scorned by the black leaders.
r .
The total black response is not yet known.James Turner , the black leader who is spe arheading
the drive for black self-rule, is a most articulate and th oughtful spokesman. We do not doubt his sincerity in procur ingfor Northwestern blacks every right enjoyed by all st udents.
Mr. Turner is not a rabble-rouser , looking for violenceand destructi?n ; he is out to solve some very real , veryurgent problems.
On the other hand, as we stated in an editorial yesterday , we are equally convinced that the university is actingin good fai th . Perhaps the adm inist rators , removed byyears and skin color from the black students, cannot seethe poin ts being advanced. But this does not mean thattheir intentions are not just or that they do not wish tobring racial peace to the campus.
Dean Hinz 's statement of yesterday afternoon was notone of cowardice. The dinner-time deadline set for un iversityresponse was impossible: Th is is not the kind of issue thatshould be decided in a few hours.
We hope black leaders can meet today with Presiden tMiller and other administrative leaders . We emphatic allyfeel that th e black demands cannot and should not be
. answered with one-word acceptances or rejections.Mr. Turner, at yesterday's press conference, said th at
he felt Dr . Miller and Dean Hinz are "enlightened, intelligent" men . We agree .
We also think these terms apply to Mr. Turner and hisfollowers. / I
And that is why we are confident that th is universitycan corn- • 0 this cris is with new hopes and new under-standing \' ust not panic .