A Thursday, March 12, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pace Seven Thursday, March 12, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAiLY .P-:I- Seve-n ,4, PROTEST PLANNED: LSA discipline maintained 13,000 attend ENACT rally (Continued from Page 1) At the discussion between the executive committee and the ad hoc delegation of students, Steve Nissen, '70, said several people in- volved in the GE recruiter incident had told him that Parsons was not the demonstrator who struck Young. Young and two engineering stu- dents have filed sworn affidav- its charging that Parsons struck the professor. In maintaining the suspension, the executive committee ignored an order issued yesterday by the Central Student Judiciary that the action be revoked. The University administration has never recogniz- ed the right of CSJ to issue such an order. The organizers o ftoday's rally will urge the group to emphasize demands that the suspension be rescinded. Speakers at the noon rally will include Parsons, Bruce Levine of the International Socialists andj psychology Prof. Richard Mann, a member of the Radical College. A spokesman for the organizers' of. the rally said yesterday that all plans 'involve peaceful actions and that any decisions on remain- ing in Hays' office will be made' democratically by those present. In a related aitcon In a related action yesterday,j representatives of 12 of the 19 member houses of, Panhellenic Association signed a statement as-j serting the belief that Parsons su- spension "is a violation of the due process of the law guaranteed by the SO Bill of Rights and the Regents bylaws." The Panhel statement was sign- ed by representatives of the fol-' lowing sororities: Alpha D e 1 t a Pi, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi, Pi Omega, D e l t a Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Gam- ma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Sigma Delta Tau. Under the SGC Bill of Rights, which is also not recognized by the administration, students are guaranteed "the right to an in- dependent, fair, and impartial ju- diciary in all cases" and "the right to judicial due process, in- cluding a speedy trial, confronta- tion of plaintiff and his witnesses, counsel, presumption of inno- cence, protection against cruel and unusual punishment, and ap- peal." Parsons was not informed of the action being taken against him until he received notification of his suspension last Saturday. He was not given an opportunity to present his owri case to the execu, tive committee or to Hays. Meanwhile yesterday, the Uni-j versity administration circulated a "Report to the University Com- munity" which restated arguments that the action was an appropri- ated response to the alleged as- sault. SDS plans protest of Atlantic Richfield Co. (Continued from.Page 1) ment, followed Milliken with a de- mand that more blacks be admit- ted to the University and a plea that people should consider the entire environment. "To many Americans, pollution is the bigotry, racism and poverty in this country," he said. "The filth is not in our air but in our universities and legislatures. Godfrey, the next speaker, said that even the most advanced tech- nology would not help the en- vironment if population rate is not reduced. "Genesis said 'be fruitful and multiply' but this is getting ridi- culous," he added. "Life as we know it may not see the advent of the 21st century," Godfrey said. "But that's no rea- son for breaking out grass, booze and acid. What we need to do is get together and get moving." Shapiro, who quit Harvard last month to devote himself to polit- ical activism, also called for ac- tion. Shapiro's main target, how- ever, was business corporations that pollute for profit. "We have to insist that the peo- ple who made profits out of pol- lution pay to clean it up," he said. Shapiro gave part of his time to Robert Parsons who accused the University of "being a servant of the corporations and military in this country. Parsons asked an end to University involvement with ROTC, defense department research and recruiters of com- panies that supply war material. "Our goals must be an environ- ment without discrimination, ghet- toes, poverty and war," Nelson said in his keynote speech. "Our goal must be a decent environ- ment in the widest sense of the word." Nelson said the struggle could not be won without long-term I ethical, moral and financial com- mitments. He urged immediately allocating $25 billion a year to fight environmental decay with eventual expenditures of as much as $40 billion a year. "It sounds like a lot, and it is, but it's not more than we've wast- ed on Vietnam or will eventually waste on an ABM system," Nelson explained. "Our object ought to be to make both the Red Army and the Pentagon as obsolete as soon as possible." He called for new national poli- cies on land use, pesticides and herbicides, the ocean, resources management, air and water qual- ity and population control, "It's time that we put gross na- tional quality above gross na-, tional product," he concluded. Commoner, the final speaker of the evening, emphasized the role technology has played in produ- cing pollution as well as the war issue. "There are strong links between the environmental crisis and the evils of war in general, and the Vietnam war in particular," he said. "Our industrial system is heavily sustained by the military diversion of human and natural resources." Commoner added that blacks are the special victims of pollu- tion, unable to escape city dirt and smog for the suburbs. "We have to learn from each other," Commoner said, and that was what the whole evening was about. The Continuing Education Serv- ices of nursing school is present- ing a workshop entitled "New Perspectives for Nurse Coordina- tors of Continuing Education in Community Hospitals" through March 13 in the Towsley Center .or Continuing Medical Education. A repeat workshop will be held April 6 through 17. 7 days and nights on the beach at the Hotel Acapulco. A welcome in cocktail party. Moonlight cruise includ- ing free parties, floor shows, sailing, swim- ming, riding, fishing. 1 days-and nights at the Freeport Inn Free h a p py hours with rock bands every night. Free services to beach- es and casinos. Scuba diving, snorkling, fishing RUN FOR THE SUN FROM APRIL 29 TO MAY 6 and stay in ACAPULCO or the BAHAMAS either one is ONLY $189 and includes (Continued from Page 1) The existence of the tundra of wildlife, their feeding and migra- tion patterns, will be endangered.. The string of roads, railways, pumping stations and settlements planned by the pipeliners will further disturb the arctic eco- system."- Miller also alleges that a break in the pipeline Could "spill 500,000 gallons of oil for each mile of line onto the Alaskan tundra, smoth- ering the sparse vegetation in a sea of oil."- The arguments dealing with eco- logical damage arising from the pipeline were disputed by John Nation, the manager of public re- lations for the Trans-Alaska Pipe Line System, the company con- structing the pipeline. "We are going to build this pipe- line with minimum disturbance to the environment and that which we have to disturb we will have to restore to the very best of our abilities," Nation said in a tele- phone interview yesterday from Anchorage. He added that the company has undertaken a number of surveys to assess where potential ecological dangers would take place and how best to avoid them. He contended that much of the permafrost is solid rock and con- sequently too thick and dry to be melted by the heated oil. The pipeline, is said, would only fall if the permafrost was icy, but "where there is high ice content we can either go around it or we'll go above it. If it is icy per- mafrost, we will not bury the pipe- lines." Dispute on discipline looms (Continued from Page 1) proposed bylaws which would clarify the student role in Univer- sity decision and rule-making. Part of their assignment was to draft bylaws defining the judicial structure at the Universty. By fall, 1968, the ad hoc com- mttee had reached agreement on the general nature of the new judicial structure, which in non-, academic cases, would center around Central Student Judiciary. CSJ would be similar to JJC. ex- cept that its decisions would be final subject only to reversal by the president of the University. In the fall, SGC voted to amend the Council Plan to define a ju- dicial structure at the Universityj which paralleled the bylaw drafts -and CSJ was created. Meanwhile, in summer, 1968, President Robben Fleming asked the faculty in each of the schools and colleges to adopt regulations governing student conduct and mechanisms for their enforce- ment, which would remain in ef- fect until the Regents adopted the bylaws then being drafted. In the literary college, a facul- ty code was established, and the administrative board was granted jurisdiction in all cases involving' violation of the code. The dean, however, was given the power to make summary judgments in ex- treme circumstances. or, just get away from it all. (either place has miles of beach) Along with your jet airfare and baggage handling, you get the vacation of a lifetime. . ' for information BARRY BOYER, 761-6359 STUDENT TOURS - 886-0822 Reservations ' '! --v _: j ., ... .. ,........, ww.vvv. treme circumstances. 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