roge Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY" Thursday, September 1], 1969 ~'g~ T~n THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 11, 1 969 Belt Midrash of Ann Arbor, PRE-REGISTRATION FORM Na me Campus Address Phone Number Check those courses which are of interest to you, fill- out the above farm, andJ mail to Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St., Ann Arbor FOR MORE DETAILS CALL 663-4129 1. HEBREW FOR BEGINNERS-Mrs. Ilana Mueller. j 2. HEBREW FOR GRADUATES OF BEGINNER'S HE-, BREW--Mr. Alan Krashny. .3. READINGS AND CONVERSATION IN PROGRAM- MATIC THOUGHT IN HEBREW-Mr. Krashny and staff. 4. BASIC JUDAISM-JEWISH ETHICS-Rabbi Gerald! Goldman, 5. READINGS IN THE OLD TESTAMENT-Rabbi Mer- vin Tomsky. 6. AN ADVANCED SEMINAR IN JEWISH HISTORY AND SOCIAL EVOLUTION: PALESTINE 1926- 1956-Mr. Joseph Katan and staff. 7. A SURVEY OF JEWISH COMMUNITIES IN EUROPE AND AMERICA: A MODERN HISTORICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF THE DIASPORA-w Mr. Michael Harrison and staff. 8. PERSONAL WORTH AND COLLECTIVE IDENTITY -Mr Jos ph D Ben-Dak. 9. INTRODUCTION TO MODERN LITERARY YIDDISHj -Dr. Charles Krahmalkov.I 10. INTERMEDIATE MODERN LITERARY YIDDISH Lecturer and time to be announced. 11. INTRODUCTION TO JEWISH MUSICOLOGY Lecturer and time to be announced. ..12. INTRODUCTION TO JEWISH ART--Lecturer andI timne to be announced. 13. RESEARCH AND READING: individual prepara- tion of Research papers with individual guidance and availability of Beit-Midrash staff. 14. HEBREW SPEAKING CLUB-For those who can converse in Hebrew there will be a Hebrew con- versational group. Thbe in t ato re UM faculty and doctoral students who brir I to the Be!;"itMid'rash both academic expertise and personal Jewish orientati nrotable for their depth and variety. The Beit Midrash i operated in cooperation with the Detroit Midrash, and some cources are applicable there toward the Hebrew teachers certifi- c Inst ue t mm btam UM credit OFFICIAL REGISTRATION and ORIENTATION SEPT. _-10-11, 7:30-9:30 DISRUPTION: 300 plan SGC to (liscUss ipIlicationis of U' girds forprotest;fall peace disruptig Reeints on bookstore ROTC officers calm -oagayndauds to a ase there Regenbers contend a Irt' n u m c (i .e itoacii e in erby 1yii 111 i k(H t , to tmembem cntend (C mtuani m l : L I conferred constantly over the dis- ruption question. ROTC officers maintained a complete calm and made no special preparations for the protests. "We'll wait and see it it hap- pens." said Navy ROTC stall member Lon Nickols. "We don't even know if there's going to be a disruption." He said no specific plans were made in anticipation of trouble today. "We intend to conduct classes as normal," added Col. Antonio Criscuolo of the Air Force. He said disrupters would be prose- cuted "through normal channels-- just like in any other school." He declined to specify what action would be taken. Although no specific prepara- tions were announced, Sanford Security guards at North Hall, where ROTC offices and classes are located. v e r e reportedly checking for student identifica- tion cards of all people who en- tered the building yesterday. However. University Security Officer Rolland Gainsley said he did not order the guards to check the identification and did not know why it was being done. He noted that the guards had been stationed there since a bomb rocked the building this sumner. Rod Roberts. ,'70 chairman of Dily Classifieds B ritt, Results the University Services Commit- tee of the University Activities Center, told the ROTC meeting UAC would sponsor an open forum on the ROTC issue if this was desired. Roberts compared the forum to a similar meeting which took place after the student power protests in 1966. "After the forum three years ago, the movement completely dissolved.' he said. "The Univer- sity officials seem to be hoping this could happen again.'' Whistle Stop truck burned vandals set fire to a vehicle owned by two Whistle Stop Res- taurant employes about 9:00 p.m. last night destroying the interior. Rick Oliver who identified him- self and Bruce Gilbert as the owners said that they left the '59 El Camino Chevy pick-up truck parked behind the Forest St. park- ing structure briefly while making a phone call and returned to find it in flames. 'There was garbage and oil cans piled in the back of the truck" re- ported Oliver who said -vitnesses to the incident had been question- ed by Ann Arbor police. Police re- fused to confirm the investigation. Continued from Page 1 plans call for a march from Mich- igan Stadium to the Diag follow- ing the football game on Sept. 20. In addition, Mobe leaders ex- pect, several prominent spokes- men of the anti-war movement to deliver speeches at the teach-in. University President Robben W. Fleming has also indicated plans to participate in the teach- in and will deliver a speech on the evening of Sept. 19. According to Mobe leaders, how- ever, the major purpose of the meeting will be to conduct several workshops to finalize plans for the fall demonstrations. The first protest will be a class strike Oct. 15. to coincide with similar action at other campuses. According to Gladstone, the Oc- tober protest will be followed by demonstrations one day longer each month for the duration of the war. "We will strike for one day in October, two days in November, three days in December, and so until the soldiers are brought home." Gladstone said. The culmination of the nation- wide anti-war protests will be a march in Washington on Nov. 15, similar to previous demonstrations there. According to Gladstone, N:w Mobe is a coalition of some 115 national anti-war organizations. including the old Mobilization to End the War in Vietnam. The peace groups merged at a planning session in Cleveland dur- ing the Fourh of July weekend, Gladstone said. The coalition's first action was an anti-war protest outside Pre- sident Nixon's summer home in Sani Clemente. Cal. last month. If the quiet of a University func- tion is disturbed in the process SGC could then be intentionally violating its ovn rules. If SGC does abolish the rule, according to Central Student Judi- cia ry Chairman Marc Wohl. the case cannot be tried before the student court. "It's the function of CSJ to en- force regulations set by Student, Government Council," Wohl ex- plained. "If they rescind the rule there is no regulation on which an aggrieved party, like the Regents, can bring a complaint." In such a case, it would have to be heard before the administra- tive boards of the respective schools and colleges or before a civil authority. Although the University also has fthe same ban on disruption. CSJ" does not recognize that regulation or the authority of the administra- tive boards to make decisions on students' non-academic conduct. SGC President Marty McLaugh- lin sidesteps the issue of violating Council's disruption ban by con- tending that those at the rally should decide how to proceed. He says SGC has little business de- termining the position of the peo- ple who will be doing the disrupt- ing. Van Der Hout says he favors taking a chance in violating the rule if it stands in the way of dis- rupting the meeting. He hopes disruption will bring about posi- tive action on the bookstore. But many SGC members fear such a violation of the rule might be construed in some circles as a tacit abridgement of SGC's legiti- macy. Administrators, they say, could argue that Council has dis- obeyed -its own rules and could raise serious questions about the legitimacy of SGC as a responsible vehicle for student representation. As a result, if the University de- cides to discipline students for possible disruption of the meeting, the administration might very wellr hand the case over to the faculty administrative boards in the schools and colleges for a judicial1 decision. SGC member Bob Nelson saysI "To take out the rule would givel Fleming an excuse to give it to the1 faculty." And. Nelson argues. theK faculty would impose a -stiffer< punishment than would Central Student Judiciary.t In addition, several councilI members believe CSJ would taker a larger view of the issue and take1 note of the philosophical issues which prompted a disruption. c But McLaughlin says he thinks cases would go to the faculty any- It a sUUeiL Zsit L.LpLLi..U .D, LIIU iu is not 4I *, LUO Voe satrisiactor. LSA facuity administrative ooardm without. sending the case to CSJ. Other Council members see a possible compromise. Roger Keats suggests amending the rule to allow disruptions, but only after all legitimate means of finding a solution have been ex- hausted. SGC member Mary Livingston has drawn up a clarification of the rule that would modify the clause. It now reads "Intentional ,disrup- tion of 'University functions by de- priving others of needed quiet, light heat or other physical con- ditions of work is prohibited.". Miss Livingston says it should read "disruption by depriving students and faculty . ., is pro- hibited." She purposefully excludes administrators because she does not see them as a constituency of the University. This, quite clearly, leaves SGC an escape valve to dis- rupt next week's Regents meeting. Miss Livingstin also recommends undertaking an evalution of the rule. SGC member Joan Shemel, on the other hand. favors withdrawal of the rule. but she-like other SGC members - admits she may change her mind. Most Council members do seem to be decided on accepting Presi- dent Fleming's offer, made Tues- day, to arrange a meeting be- tween SGC and the Regents over the bookstore issue. But, by the same token. the students are skeptical of the value it will have.t If any solution to the bookstore question is agreed upon by the t oest. tney say. the Regents would agree on an administration proposal- -which adtvocates fumld- ing the bookstore through volun- tary student contributions and outside gift,. "The administtation proposal." says Nelson bluntly "is no pro- posal at all." He and others do not believe that students can raise the funds without a fee assessment. SGC members are groping for a possible compromise, an alter- native to the administration plan. "Maybe we can organize some- thing with registration to raise the money," says Miss Shemel. But she is not sure. And there is some hesitation about disrupting the meeting Keats says that talks with stu- dents this week have convinced him that there is overwhelming sentiment for the idea. of a Uni- versity bookstore, but that few persons are willing to disrupt the meeting. Miss Shemel says she is just not sure how effective disrupting the meeting would be. One Coun- cil member said she favors a tui- tion withholding as a more potent weapon. But disruption is not ruled out. Few SGC members seem to want to let the Regents postpone a vote until their October meeting. Even Keats-considered one of the most conservative Council members - said "We had this bookstore plan ready for the Re- gents in March. They better have a legitimate reason for stalling and it better not be needing more time to think about it." 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We cannot run from our Beyer said he arrived at the sworn duty and turn our society office the following morning and over to Revolutionaries." "the place was a mess." Members of RECALL maintain He said the incident occurred that Hunter never attempted to miore than a week after the war- resist arrest but offered to go rant had been issued and Hunter along with the officers if they had made no att mpt to flee or would step back from the office hide. and let him walk out the front "If the police had really wanted door, but they refused to do so. to just pick Hunter up, they could Furthermore. RECALL sources have done it at any time," he feel the whole incident was added. 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