t THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, April 3, 1960 t TH MICIGANDAIL FrHov ADril ~ 1960 I -, - - u AM STRIKE: Accord 'saves face' U' reports on BAM settlement r1 Profs respond to anti-disruption ad (Continued from Page 1) All charges against students stemminz frnm the strik, mun t Employes covered by union con- Fabre, at Tuesday's BAM meet- tracts are to use their regular ing, said, "We can collect the grievance machinery, according to money ourselves and are setting the statement. Other University the fund up ourselves." (Continued from Page 1) percentage of college-age blacks be filed by April 8 and the choice stressing that the possibility that in the state. of alternatives made within five accused students may be tried be- Of this, and other demands days after a student receives fore faculty disciplinary boards which were rejected or ignored, notice. If an individual charges he was unacceptable. BAM leader Ed Fabre said yes- has been penalized without a' The final agreement with the terday, "We're not satisfied with hearing, he must first pursue the administration gives students the everything" and promised "to keep matter in his own school or col- option of being tried before "hear- pushing for the rest of it." lege, and then may appeal to a ing officer(s)" appointed by Pre- But many BAM supporters will hearing officer. sident Fleming. However; several admit that "pushing for the rest "Conduct unrelated to academic members of the white Coalition to of it" may put the Regents in a performance shall not be taken Support the Black Action Move- position where approval of fur- into consideration in the awarding ment have expressed dissatisfac- ther demands will force them out- of grades," Fleming's statement tion with the agreement, some side the boundary of "face saving" reads. It states that if a student calling it a "sell-out." with the Legislature and the .pub- believes he has been so penalized, "The BAM people seem to have lic. he may be heard before a com- taken the viewpoint that 'we don't And in a situation where the mittee composed of a faculty care aboutanyone else,'" says public eye isoftep of greaten con- member chosen by the student, Harold Rosenthal, '71. "It makes cern than the merit of the issue another faculty member chosen by sense to hold out for amnesty, at. hand, the Regents may not be the accused instructor and the Now the University might try to particularly receptive. dean of the school or college. clear out all the white radicals," Rosenthal adds, referring to a passage In the reental resolution Massachusettsgovernor which lays most of the blame for strike incidents on "white ad icas who seem bent on destruc-n ~anti-w ar measure . Lion for its own sake. sgns Besides the issue of reprisals, many strike participants quostion (Continued from Page 1) the court, however, until the Oc- the fact that the agreement does until action is taken on the Mass- tober session. not address itself to a number of achusetts law. The attorney general said he the original BAM demands-de- He said the case would be does not consider the law as an mands which had been considered brought directly to the Supreme attempt by Massachusetts to in- as "major." Court of the United States be- terpos itself between citizens of For example, the agreement does cause that body has original jur- the state and the federal govern- not mention the ,demand for in- isdiction in cases involving a state. ment. creasing the percentage of black Quinn said he expects the case He said it was true that the enrollment to ultimately equal the would not receive attention from Supreme Court on a previous oc- r- - -casion had refused to rule on the ..:::.... :.........:;; GRADUATIO ANOUNOEMENTS, In-constitutionality of the Vietnam GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS, In- war, but added that never before DAILY OFFICIAL Iqobby, LSA Bldg "was one state a party in the c- COMMENCEMENT PROGRAMS: Dis- tion. He said also that if the court UT*tributed at exercises, upheld the Massachusetts law it DISTRIBUTION OF DIPLOMAS: Di- probably would apply to all citi- :;<%>i:;:::e":<;x:":"a m .....m# plomnas may be called for at Rm. 514, zens ofthUnedtts- - IJ IF"lL a 8- 713d1 eso the United States. LSA, May 26 - June 3. Medical Sch. diplomas distributed Sr. Class Night, Col. Paul F. Feeney, deputy di- FRIDAY, APRIL 3 June 12; Flint Coll, diplomas at con- rector of the Selective Service in vocation June 9; Dearborn Campus dip- 1-assachusetts, said enactment of r omas at Dearborn graduation June the anti-Vietnam bill would have Day Cr oJune 26, Rm. 1518 LSA Bldg. Dental no direct effect on Selective Serv- School diplomas distributed at Dent. ice operations because once the Geology of Industrial Minerals For- Sch, exerciss, Class day, May 9. men are inducted they become the um: Rackham Amph., 8:30 a.m. responsibility of the various serv- Social Work and Linguistics Lecture:sy hs Wm. Labov, Columbia, "Systematically ices. He pointed out that when Misleading Data from Test Questions", C1 men are drafted by the Selective 2065 Frieze Bldg., 1:30 p.m.____ Service there is no determination Astronomy Collo xium: Dr. W. H. Today last day for Peace Corps, head- on whether they will be assigned Absorbed Synchrotron Sources," P&A quarters, 3529 SAB. to Vietnam. I mpiayes may eitner use their normal procedures or appeal to Fleming for a hearing officer. Final agreements reached on the various BAM demands, sum- marized f r o m Fleming's state-' ment, a BAM press release from yesterday and the Regents' reso- lution are as follows: 9-10 per cent black enrollment k y fall 1973. The Regents' original resolution committed the Univer- sity to spend by 1973 $3 million a n n u a 11 y on the Opportunity Awards Program (OAP) over 80 per cent of whose recipients are black. This, plus an anticipated $1.5 million in federal funds, would virtually guarantee a seven per cent black enrollment. Last Friday the literary college committed itself to finding the ad- ditional m hey to guarantee 10 per cent black enrollment in the school by 1973-74 and several other schools have indicated they v'ould take similar action. -The admission of 900 new black students in fall 1971. "That was agreed to with the adminis- tration's statement that the re- cruiters will get those students," BAM negotiator Ed Fabre said. -Adequate supportive services, including financial aid, tutoring and counselling. This is provived for in the money committed for the 10 per cent goal. -Nine undergraduate and an unspecified number of graduate recruiters. Seven new recruiters in the OAP and two more recruit- ers and or financial aid officers in the Financial Aids office have been committed at the undergrad- uate level. Three graduate recruiters and additional funding to finance part-time . recruiters, including such efforts by students, has been committed. -Martin Luther King Scholar- ship Fund. The Regents prohibited a compulsory $3 fee for students, rejecting the results of a referen- dum on that question which pass- ed in last week's SGC election. ~-Tuition waivers. The Regents and the administration rejected the concept from the start and it was not included in the final agreement. -Black Community Center. "We'll do the damn thing our- selves," Fabre told the crowd Tues- day night, after the Regents re- jected the idea of a Center based on race. By PAT MEARS A group of faculty members sponsored an ad in yesterday's' Daily in response to an ad con- deming disruptions and violence in the University community which ran in the Daily and Ann Arbor News March 22, sponsored by another group of faculty. The ad that appeared yesterday declared that the violence cannot sponsible for much more violence -A halt on the Afro-American be examined in "isolation," but Studies Program for reappraisal, must be viewed in the context of $315,000 for supportive services "the profoundly tragic conflicts of and the Afro-American Center, our age that have driven some in-{ which includes the Program, has dividuals and groups to perform been committed for next year. such acts." While BAM said the agreement on This ad claimed that the state-j this was not entirely satisfactory, 'nent of March 22 ignored "the, they said they could work with the difficult and complex settings anti agreement. issues which are their ultimate -Creation of a University-wide causes" and that "a more adequate financial aids appeal board and response than the mere condem-l revamping of the parents' confi- nation of violence is required." dential statement. Such a board Prof. Sylvan Kornblum of thej has been recommended and the Mental Health Research Center, statement is currently being work- organized the support of yester-1 ed on by students and financial day's ad. Kornblum said that since aids officers, the number of faculty who signed -A Chicano recruiter and 50 the previous ad was "quite sizable,c Chicano students by fall 1970. a group of faculty members were; Fabre said Vice President and concerned that they were being1 Dean of the Graduate School misrepresented by the size of re-c Stephen Spurr, who oversees ad- sponse. We tried to remedy this' missions and financial aid, would by running our ad." hire a Chicano recruiter. Zoology Prof. Robert Beyer, a Admin'istrators have said that Radical College member, agreed any admissions goal for next fall with Kornblum that he along with woud be largely futile at this late other faculty members, felt that date, although Fabre said that they were being misrepresented by BAM had been told that the goal the earlier ad. He said it "avoided of 50 Chicano students was with- the questions 'of why there was in possibility. violence and why the admitiistra- -Recruitment of black faculty. tion and the Regents oppose Fleming will issue a departmental change of the status quo." directive urging the faculty "to Beyer said the statement "was pursue vigorously the matter," his focusing on the problem in a very statement said. A half-time posi- narrow viewpoint. They did not tion will be created to help in the consider that the corporations effort. that came to the campus were re-, than the student protesters, The only faculty member to sign both advertisements was Political Science Prof. J. David Singer. Singer said he signed the first statement that condemned the violence because "violence and coercion have no place in the Uni- versity except in extremities and were far away from that now." However, he said he signed the second statement because he be- lieved that the first "didn't pay attention to legitimate griev- ances." He said he "wished the statement condemning the vio- lence said more about the griev- ances but I feel that a man has a moral obligation to commit him- self when he is in agreement with the basic principle." He says that, other than vio- lence, the students "should appeal to the ethical considerations of the faculty and then have the faculty bring pressure on the administra- tion. This, I believe, would have much effect on policy-making." A signer of the first statement, economics Prof. Daniel Fusfeld, said that he "agreed with both positions." However, he says he does not agree "with violence in any form." If You Haven't Seen Ganesh, Natraja, Lak shmi, Krishna, Sarasvati, or the Buddha recently=: try The India Art Shop 330 Maynard Street ' s l i y: F { t r ?' .{ 1 i .# I I k 3 C . j ; I - r * .4 U-M CONCERT DANCE ORGANIZATION DANCE, CONCERT Fri., April 3, 8:00 P.M. Sat., Apr. 4, 2:30 & 8 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN Evenings--$2.50 Matinee--$2.00 U-M students 50c discount On sale Mendelssohn Box Office +. '6 ' They also refused to collect a vol- untary fee. Colloq. Rm.. 4:00 p.m. Lingtistics Lect.: Wm. Labov, Colum bia U., "Variation, 'A Fundamental Problem of Linguistics": Aud, A, An- gell Hall, 4:10 p.m. Degree Recital: Frances Shelly, flute, Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. University Men's Glee Club: Willis Patterson, director, Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. General Notices --lva -y-- --- i.::.:":::.'-::;:r:. .: N.; ._.... y }..f ' ;: :;"f:yY~ l'i:"~rv:.:vS.:4:r S~i~i: r{Jyyr::::;,w: ......... ,; v .; , .. r\ .. n : .. :.. .. { ~ r: x . .. ... ..: {Y ... .... .:: :: .} . . r r. ... ... r v: : r -. ::. : -v : . . .. ... .... .. :: : v :. : r : . . v ." : .: " n : . .. ... ... .. . ... ... ... ::..:N....:.:...bun .:n':::h rk:y.u :.n:.......... Association of American Students for Israel presents TRAVELOGUE FRIDAY 121 Noon to 3 P.M.; 6 P.M.-9 P.M. UGLI MULTIPURPOSE ROOM COME LEARN ABOUT "THE LAND" Music, Movies, Slides, Information on travel programs FINAL INTERVIEWS FOR SUMMER & FALL PROGRAM k.. . . . . ....,......}..|....|... ...... ... ... nt ...:...hi ,.,... v . r.: ...... ...... < ......x:.. .. ;,:> ..4 ... ... . :. . s . . . r h.. . } ____I A SPRING COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Try our unbelievably LOW PRICE 10:30 a.m., May 2, Crisier Arena: TICKETS : Max. four to each grad T~on i BUY or L EASE uat e, distributed April 13, to 5:00 p.m.B Y rLE S Friday, May 1, diploma, 1518 LSA Bldg Remaining tickets distributed from Crisler Arena ticket office after 9:15 a. m., May 2. Academic Costume : Rented it o etn o1 p "id" "*7 *"urgopeaut Motor Ser'viceg at Moe Sport Shop, 711 N. Univ., orders t._Vsol eplc eoeAr 5 should be placd beforeApr. 15.E ASSEMBLY FOR GRADUATES: 9:30 331 S. Fourth Ave. Ann Arbor 663-0110 a.m., area east of Stadium, marshals di-Forh.-VC, Abro,- rect graduates to proper stations. If inclement weather, graduates go direct , ly to bldg. ______ - J:, . 4 1' I Subscribe to The Michigan Daily NOW 2 XEROX MACHINES 4c A COPY OPEN WEEKDAYS 9-11 WOW A three-piece Treosjre Chest chicken dinrer, plus french fries for only /91 Lorger take home orders also. Try a box soon!! fMISTERG (MILNG PEEDY @ERVICE West of Arborland - _ - a _.___. - _ - EVERYONE ENJOYS A GOOD MEAL... AI M"M-,y "M 0 it I DeLong's Pit FEATURES THESE Bar-B-0Ribs DINE OUT! SINN lunches, dinners, snacks Barbecue 512 E. WILLIAM ST. DINNERS: 5 P.M.-2 A.M NO 3-3379 or NO 3-5902 Shrimp Bar-#-Q Chicken Scallops Bar-B-Q Beef Fried Chicken Bar-B-Q Pork Fried Fish Fried Oysters All Dinners Include Fries, Slaw, and Bread CARRY OUT FREE DELIVERY OPEN: Mon., Wed., Thurs., Sun.-1 1 a.m. to 2 a m. Fri., Sat.-1 I1a.m. to 3 a.m. I 314 De 7*A /v' J X Located in Scenic Northern Ann Arbor Area (Dixboro) BEST SELECTION OF SEAFOOD IN ANN ARBOR AREA )0etroit St. 665-2266 Old Heidelber 31 1-213 N. Main St. 668-9753 ~ S. .-j A . - - : : : :: : . .. . . . .. :::: « :. ..-::- -::.-:::-::::::.-x-,..- - - - --,c