THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. AUGUST 29. 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1967 Ldvis By BETSY TURNER ry Panels Facilitate U' Communication The advisory committees were I the interest of the Univer- nommunity and supportive of eneral educational goals of Iniversity to provide for an' nge of information between nts and the executive officers University" five student ad- boards to the Vice Presi- were set up last April. e President for Student Af- Richard L. Cutler 'originally ived the idea in the spring 66, but a year passed before ommittees were actually for- ;ed and functioning. stated in the introduction .e structural statement, the ory committees are primarily tied to 'facilitate information between the administration he students. set up in response to student de- mands for more voice in the deci- sion making of the University. "Although the students do not have a direct decision-making role as a result of these committees, this system allots the student a tremendous amount of influential power and also gives the student an outlet for his opinions," says George Vance, a member of Vice- President Cutler's committee and a graduate student in community adult education. "Both the faculty and the stu- dents are constantly criticizing the administration. It would be a beneficial and welcomed develop- ment if these two groups, the stu- dent advisory committee and SACUA faculty committees could work together and possibly, in that way, clear up a lot of questions and problems," explains A. Geof- frey Norman, Vice-President for Research. The research advisory commit- tee, chaired by David Knoke, '69, has held several meetings this summer, after which the commit- tee report was submitted concern- ing the area of biological warfare research allegedly going on at the University. Another area of inte- rest to be explored this fall is the availability of research jobs for students in University laboratories. At present, according to Norman, 1800 University students are em- ployed in research departments. "I am well pleased with the in- teraction between myself and the committee," Norman says. "Our main undertaking now is to gain an understanding of students' in- terest in- research. At present, much of our work is done with the applied and graduate schools." Since the committees were of- ficially begun April 1 each has met with the Vice-Presidents about four times. Their concern was primarily in laying the ground work for more intense meetings in the fall. Orientation concerning the workings of each of the respec- tive offices were given to the ad- visory committees and general guidelines for the relationships between the Vice-Presidents and the individual boards were set up. In addition to meeting with the Vice-Presidents, several of the committees have met with sub- committees of the Senate. visory Committee on Univer Affairs, the executive arm of faculty assembly. The advisory board to the v president for academic affairs,. Ian F. Smith, has met with b the vice-president and the SAC education policy committee. In of the preliminary meetings, Abraham Kaplan warned the co mittee that, "in its advisory+ pacity, they cannot expect to m demands, only gather informat express ideas and give advi One of the topics to be discus by this committee in the fal the rising costs of tuition. The advisory committee Vice-President Cutler has met several "informal discussions,"; cording to one committee mem Ad- 'sity the ice- Al- oth rUA Such topics as recreation facili- ties have been discussed but no extensive study has been done. The advisory committee to Vice- President Michael Radock was formed prior to the creation of the other committees and has been functioning for over a year. Other topics to be considered by this group are orientation prac- tices and students' participation in the introduction of the new president, Robben Fleming. Bi-monthly meetings with the vice-presidents are not open to; the public and the reports sub- one "During the year, the commit- mitted to the executive commit- Dr. tee has had periodic meetings with tees are confidential. However, om- various University officials con- public meetings of the committee ca- cerned with topics which were of with representatives of the admin- ake interest at that time. Discussions istration present, will also be held ion, were also held concerning the SGC bi-monthly. ce." break with the Office of Student Members of the board can sed Affairs, and The Daily-Board in only be removed if 20 per cent of l is Control of Student Publications the membership of either GSC or crisis. This group greatly facilitat- SGC presents a written request, for ed the information flow," com- or, if recommendation of a mem- for ments Cleland Wyllie, director of ber of the Presidential Advisory ac- media relations and an assistant 'Board is made, and approved by. ber. to Radock. a two-thirds vote of SGC and GSC. Each committee is composed of from five to eight members, se- lected by a six man board -- three members from SGC and three from GSC. The appoint- ments were subject to the approv- al of the two groups. Each per- son applying for a position was re- quired to be a student pursuing an approved course of study, and no person is eligible to serve concur- rently on more than one advisory board. Seventy-two applications were received and 22 persons were finally seated on the boards. The committees are required to meet twice a month with the re- spective vice-presidents and then to submit a written report of the proceedings to the Executive Com- mittees of GSC and SGC. 4 1 oice: Radical Consciences in Action By DAVID KNOKE Voice Political Party represents one of the oldest continuing stu- dent, liberal-radical organizations in the nation. During its seven years in existence, the structure and function of the group has undergone s e v e r a l significant changes. In its latest' phase, Voice has been active in bringing the stu- dent-power concept to the cam- pus and in organizing activities of protest and radical education in conjunction with Students for a Democratic Society, the na- tional leftist political organiza- tion to which Voice is affiliated. Voice is firmly grounded in the belief that "barticipatory democ- racy" must lie at the basis of any viable organization. Meetings are open to the general public and officerships are rotated on short- term bases. However, the decen- tralism of the organization has not prevented the continuing membership from being carried by a small, cohesive group of stu- dents nor has the desire to spread responsibility among as many members as possible prevented much confusion among the gen- eral public-particularly Univer- sity administrators who are often volubly confronted by Voice griev- ances - as to the aims of the party. Actually, the appelation "Po- litical Party" has become some- thing sof a, misnomer; Voice has not availed itself of such formal political chanels .as running can- didates for SGC since affiliating with national SDS five years ago. During that time, having become more attentive to national issues such as civil rights and opposi- tion to war, the picket-line and sit-in have become favorite tac- tics both as political strategy and as publicity devices. During the past year Voice was most noticeably instrumental in sponsoring with SGC the draft referendum and the subsequent sit-in confrontations with the ad- ministration in an attempt to end class-ranking for the Selective S e r v i c e; informational pickets against CIA recruiters on campus. Seven members of Voice were arrested in Toledo, Ohio, in May on charges of "disturbing the peace" when they attempted to disrupt an ,Armed Forces Day pageant which featured a military assault by national guardsmen on a mock Vietnamese village. Voice also played host to the national SDS convention which was quickly routed to Ann Arbor when accommodations for some 150 delegates could not be found at the intended Antioch College site. Key 'decisions at the SDS convention to oppose the draft and the war in Vietnam by form- ing draft resistance unions and agitation both within and outside the armed forces will probably see implementation locally by Voice in the coming months.. Many of Voice's activities are not so dramatically visible. In- dividually, campus radicals may have allied themselves with the Vietnam Summer Project, a sum- mer 'teach-out" program aimed at organizing discussion groups on the war on the neighborhood level. Other Voice members have been actively engaged in the Children's Community, a vigorous radical elementary education experiment. In the past, Voice has supplied talent and hands to the now de- funct Free University of Ann Arbor and many of the several teach-ins (the concept of which first originated among faculty and students at the University two years ago) on such topics as the Vietnam war, South Africa, China and student power. Another en- terprise which has been eclipsed but may be revived is the Stu- dent Economic Union (UMSEU) which, while it was active suc- ceeded in gaining a wage hike for student employes and sending members to testify before state legislators on economic conditions for students at the University. The outlook for Voice does not appear bright. National SDS hiked dues to $10 a year, the de- funct student - power movement has drained energy from further large-scale confrontation for some time to come, and declining mem- bership has been in the offing since the University turned mem- bership lists over to the HUAC in compliance with a subpoena last fall. In Voice's earlier phase, be- tween about 1960 and 1963, a great deal of intellectual activity and idealistic fervor on the part of founders like Tom Hayden, Alan Haber and Robert Ross built Voice and SDS into a broadly- based, wide-ranging organization such as it has not been since the departure of these charismatic individuals. Perhaps the most spectacular demonstration in which Voice has participated was the October, 1965, sit-in at the Ann Arbor draft board in conjunction with the International Days of Protest, in 'which 38 students and faculty were arrested. About two-thirds of the persons accused of tres- passing chose not to plead guilty and the case is currently being appealed through the higher courts. More important recrimi- nations from the protest were the changing of draft deferments by the boards of several of the men under orders from the Selective Service headquarters. The subse- quent outcry by civil libertarians resulted in the restoration of de- ferments in most cases. Coming to a conclusion about the probable future of Voice is difficult because of the protean nature of the organization. At times the group appears to be fighting a rear-guard action for the simple right to survive against declining memberships, an un- friendly administration and cops on campus. But should an issue arise in which radical consciences are roused to action-such as the eviction of students from their apartment on the basis of race- the durable Voice membership is sure to be on hand to draw atten- tion to injustices. LARGEST COLLEGE FACILITY: Radio 640 Beams Signal To 12, 000 Listeners I By DAVID BERSON The student operated radio station WBCN is the largest col- lege broadcasting facility in the nation. Housed in the basement of the Student Activities Building, the station reaches a large group of undergraduates with a varied program schedule. Although its broadcast signal can only be picked up in the dormitories and a few scattered housing units, the station in re- cent years has accumulated some 12,000 listeners, making it one of the major stations in the area. The station is completely man- ned and governed by students with one of the largest staffs of any student organization, and each year it takes on new stu- dents in announcing, engineering, advertising, and news capacities. WCBN moved to the SAB two years ago from its offices in dormitories, and its present stu- dios are superior to most profes- sional radio stations. There are three fully equipped broadcast studios, a large newsroom with United Press International facili- greatly enlarged its coverage of ties, a record library, executive local and campus events. For the offices, and a conference room past two years it has received the often used as a studio for inter- UPI award for news excellence. view and panel programs. Almost It has become one of the best the entire studio complex was opportunities on campus for stu- constructed by the station's own dents to gain professional on-the- engineering staff. job experience, and several WCBN The station's varied format has alumni are now pursuing careers attracted a wide range of per- in broadcasting. sonalities. On a normal broadcast; WCBN is self-supporting, draw- day, the station programs about ing funds from local and national five hours of rock, an hour of advertising. jazz, several hours of easy listen- The station is governed by a ing music, and two hours of clas- board of directors, students elect- sical music, all interspersed with ed each year by the staff and is newscasts. assisted by urofein n in- Station manager Joe Quass- rano emphasizes that not every- one need be a polished radio per- sonality to join the station's staff, as there are so many differ- ent activities which make up the station's productions. In recent years, news has been the largest growing department. The station has sent its reporters as far as the University of Cali- fornia at Berkeley for documen- taries and news reports and has terested faculty members. Programs produced by the sta- tion have been aired on the Canadian Broadcasting Corpora- tion, and stations WJR, WKNR, and WXYZ in Detroit, and over the Uni v e r s it y Broadcasting Service. The station's staff looks for- ward to the near future when the Federal Communications Com- mission may grant them a com- mercial broadcasting license. Tonight we dance, my dear, on the money I saved . ".. ,,by buying uied texibooks How about a haircut 'mss fist? Student Power Movement Fails; Grievances Remain Unresolved (Continued from Page 1) sit-in which seemed to threaten many of them. SGC began to wav- At the meeting Vice Presidents the functioning of the University er on its pledge to make the rank- Cutler and Pierpont were present. by tying up the office of a key ing referendum binding (a last- Vice-President Cutler spoke for Vice-President, and rumblings minute walk-out had prevented Vice-President Pierpont, who re- from above materialized Novem- them from formally doing so) and fused to speak throughout the ber 12, when Cutler announced the on the viability of the Movement meeting. The event created more enactment of a sit-in ban. itself. bad feeling on all sides, but it was Student Government Council The next teach-in, on Thursday, hardly necessary-the "Pierpont (SGC), which had been assured drew fewer participants than the sit-in" had done the damage. the Thursday before that no such four thousand that had attended I Th Reent tok ntic atthelegislation w a s f o r t hcoming, the first one, and it ultimately The Regents took notice at the theatened to break its ties with dissolved into disorder, passing no Cutler's office if the ban were not motions and neither accepting nor lifted. That was at a special meet- rejecting the Hatcher proposals. ing on Monday, November 14. Concurrently the faculty was Meanwhile, on Wednesday, the considering the question of rank- 17th, SGC elections took place, in ing. Many expressed the feeling which 10,000 students voted 2-1 that to rank was contrary to their against the continuation of the consciences and that they would University policy of ranking stu- not give grades to students who dents for the Selective Service. On didn't want them. Over thirty fa- Thursday, the administration had culty members signed a pledge to not yet retracted the ban and SGC that effect. Inn e us .T VM , d DIv W -h A Sit-In by Voice Members Sparked Last Fall's Student Power Movement Save 50%0 : n yo That's mighty friendly of them." _m. nm..m m mm m m - m - - me m 5 CUT ON DOTTED UNE AND MAIL TODAY Unitedir'Lines 1221 ll[ %uth'Fare Application I MAIL TO: 12-21 Club, United Air Lines, P.O. Box 56100. Cheago iUmois I (PRINT NAME) FIRSTMIDDELASTBIRTH DATE PERMANENT ADDRESS STREET PROOF OF AGE (SPECIFY) (Attach photostat of Birth Certifi- cate, Drivers License, Draft Card. STATEZPDo not send original.) 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If you can't find the specific book you need just ask one of our friendly experienced clerks -- they'll be glad taihelp you. referendum. _ On Friday a meeting occurred which had been called by Voice, but which most of the student body had been led to believe was to be a meeting under the leader- ship of SGC. The meeting called for a teach-in the following Mon- day. Over the weekend a "special committee" met to draw up an agenda. The meeting was chaired by SGC president Ed Robinson and attended by leaders of various campus organizations. Monday their slate of possible actions was presented to over 4,000 students at Hill Auditorium. A motion to open that list of alternatives to other suggestions was defeated. The course of action to be taken in order to force the administra- tion to discontinue ranking and to retract the sit-in ban was a sit-in of one hour (at lunch) in the lob- by of the administration building. Another teach-in would follow. Thanksgiving vacation interced- ed, but on Tuesday, November 29, 1500 students sat-in, despite Hat- cher's offer to delay implementa- tion of the sit-in ban and to es- tablish commissions on the sit-in ban, on ranking, and to study the. University decision- making pro- cess. At this point, however, moderate elements which had been drawn into the movement began to drop off. Hatcher's concessions satisfied culty members wishing to withhold grades. The administration soon made clear that students who did not receive letter grades would, after one month's time, be counted as having failed. Dissident faculty members then offered the choice to their students, and there were no takers. Early in March SGC appointed members to sit on the Hatcher commissions. The Movement thus officially ended. IN APRIL the Hatcher commis- sion on ranking reported that the University should continue ito rank. The Hatcher commission on University decision-making has only begun to outline its objec- tives. So, there it was. The University administration acted throughout the year with but one purpose in mind - the preservation of their own power. At no point was there an effort to understand what was behind the grievances other than finding ways to stop the Movement. It was then and it remains now enough to say that the adminis- tration feels administrators should ' exclusively run a University, and that students feel students should have an active if not decisive voice in matters of student concern. The resulting power struggle lasted as long as the students who cared could keep things going. I1 Even though we have everything for tbe student, you'll have to find your own date for the "; r Fast Friendly Service Art & Drafting Supplies All Your School Supply Needs Big Savings By Buying Used Textbooks e- tiutp rftn$ -+t %n hit, anA hrnwra amitritl - . . dance. So wny ots topy a"o 'r"am"u"..""" ** u Who knows, you may buysomething... 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