Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, November 26, 1969 Pag Eiht HEMICIGA DILYWedesayNovmbr 2, 196 _ ._. JOIN US FOR TWO WEEKS SKIING IN INNSBRUCK AUSTRIA $419 Inc ludes 0 2 Meals Daily * Hotel Accommodations 0 Round Trip Jet Air Fare 0 50% Discount on Ski Tows 4 Opportunity to Go to Neighboring Countries Round trig air fore to Munich also available CONTACT' Ronno Bobcock-483-7803 Ruth Ellis-483-7803 Kim Mabley-483-2992 Cycles sell in Classifieds Students use courts to (EDITOWS NOTE: The following article is reprinted from the mid- western edition of the WVall Street Jo"n"a".) MAGNOLIA, Ark. -- When a movement began at Southern State College here last year to set up a biracial human rights group, officials wondered whether the school was ready. Dean of Students Donald Haef- ner was openly concerned. T h e proposed group called itself Stu- dents United for Rights and Equality (SURE). "In this day of the SDS," says Haefner, "you ask what t h ey mean by 'rights'aand 'equality.' School President I m o n E. Bruce was upset because SDS lit- erature appeared on campus last fall when SURE was organizing, along with strangers on campus "whose appearance is what we'd normally call hippy." But SURE was approved after long discus- sion. It was soon put on probation by Bruce for criticizing a white Bap- tist church near campus t h a t turned away black students.In March, the group was suspended after inviting two controversial speakers to campus in defiance of Mr. Bruce's order to withdraw the invitation. At m a n y colleges, the battle would have ended there - or an- gry students might have taken to the streets. But here students chose another course. They hired: a Little Rock lawyer -and are su- ing Bruce, Haefner and all the school's trustees. The Federal suit alleges violations of various Con- stitutional rights, including free, speech. The SURE c a s e points up a striking new development in stu- dent dissent. Throughout the where are urged to do as an al-, wiii be able to keep track of all country, college and even h i g h ternative to violence." the cases." school students are testing wheth- er the courts offer an alternative to disruption as a remedy for their' asserted grievances. T h e result is an explosion of student - rights litigation t h a t{ alarms many school officials andI heartens many civil libertarians. The Southern State case is one, Not surprisingly, Southern State officials see the case in a different light. "The question is whether the students are going to run the school," says a college spokesman. The college won the first round in Federal district court in El Do- rado, but the students are appeal- ing to the circuit court. Experts see various reasons for the trend. "Students are more ac- ticist and don't accept the idea that the dean of students is chief and that students don't have rights," says Prof. Steele. "Also, there's been a tremen- dous increase in free or cheap le- gal counsel. If you or I had marched as students 10 years ago, we couldn't have found a f r e e! lawyer. Students are losing most of their cases, but lawyers say that's not unusual in an embryonic area of wind der a vague charge of "miscon- duct." The case may be appealed to the Supreme Court, although Wiscon- sin officials now are leaning against any appeal. But even if it isn't appealed,' the Supreme Court may soon face squarely the issue of vague pro- hibitions of misconduct as dis- ciplinary weapons. It has agreed to review a circuit court case in- volving students of Tennessee e galti pus party where marijuana was found. The legal victories being won by students reflect a change in the attitude of the courts toward stu- dents. Traditionally, the law has given to school administrators some of the status of parents, thus allowing them broad powers to dis- cipline and regulate students. But most lawyers say the con- cept of "in loco parentis" is crumbling. Doyle, in striking down 0S far greater legal protection than their counterparts in private schools. This is because the Con- stitution protects citizens against arbitrary action by their govern- ment (in this case, state-financed schools> but not against the same actions by private citizens or _or- ganizations. "We're light years away from progress in private schools," says Miss Norton of the ACLU. "First we must establish a foothold in the public schools." But some courts are siding with private-school students, ruling that a private school may become public in some sense by such acts as accepting Federal aid. A state court this year ordered a 19-year-old student reinstated at Boston University, a private col- lege, after he was expelled for al- It's a two-way street University officials as well as students are turning to the courts for help in the disputes raging on campuses. The administrators mainly have sought injunctions against demonstrating students. Columbia University, for example, got court orders last year forcing students to disperse or face con- tempt-of-court penalties. Earlier this month Wesleyan University in Middletown, Conn., got a court order restraining an all-black campus group from dis- rupting "athletic, social or academic events." The order came af- ter wide student unrest over suspension of a Negro student. Among the sternest court actions instigated by a university was one that took place last May at Dartmouth. Officials obtain- ed an injunction against students and others who had seized the administration building in an attempt to pressure the college to drop ROTC. State police then arrested the sit-in demonstrators when they refused to obey the injunction. Fifty of these, including 40 Dart- mouth students, were sentenced to 30-day jail terms and fined $100 each for contempt of court. A&I State University who passed the misconduct rule at Wisconsin, out leaflets criticizing the school criticized the "parent" concept and administration, noted that the mean age of Amer- They were expelled under what ican college students is more than th" t~ra~tc-mmiaiori t~n ,,21 andi that "nmonx them are mmor law. "Winning isn't as impo right now as educating the c to the problem," says Fred C a professor of criminal justi the State University of New in Albany. "You win a half here and a foot there." But students have already ieved some notable victories. eral judges have granted stu in state-supported colleges right to hear controversial sr ers, to demonstrate peaceably to be disciplined only accordi strict rules of "due process" U the 14th Amendment. The procedural rights firmly established include r to a written notice of charge impartial hearing a n d a1 script of the hearing as we the right to testify and pr witnesses and to hear all ad evidence. One of the most far-rear student victories came only a weeks ago. The U.S. circuits in Chicago upheld a decisio district Judge James Doyle makes it unconstitutional f university to punish a studen rtantUthe suaents compiained was an ourts unconstitutionally vague rule for- ohen, bidding "disrespect" and "any ce at other infractions . . . that require York severe disciplinary action." The -inch circuit court upheld the school rule as well as its procedures. 1' 61 a. lu L.,.. A1A. AL flf L e1A* flife !hi re over 30 years than under 18." Changing court attitudes have encouraged the National Student Association (NSA), which repre- sents some 400 student govern- ments, to launch a major legal riahte III-ml-am A nnsr iic i The Supreme Court's decision in;ii5IU program. Among sunL legedly cheating on a biology test. ach- the Tennessee-and possibly the has entered is one challenging th The c id the expulsion as Fed- Wisconsin-case could have broad 1968 law that cuts off Federal aid "neither fair nor just" because, dents impact. One attorney notes the to students taking part in disrup- among other reasons,sthe student the Tennessee case will be the first tive demonstrations. NSA claims wasn't present when his professor vean- ruling by the court on discipline the law is unconstitutionally testified against him. adthat results in the severest aca-' vague. ng to demic penalty, expulsion. Scores of student governments More sweeping victories have under If the court upholds the stu- recently have hired attorneys to been won at public schools, how- dents' view, administrators fear it advise them on everything from ever. In the area of free speech, most could mean all public colleges marijuana arrests to demonstra- Auburn University students con- 'ights would have to draft highly specific tions. When Indiana State Uni- vinced a Federal court that their s, an "criminal codes" of prohibited versity students encountered an president had no right to bar a tran- activity. administration veto of a new campus speech by William Sloane ll as "It's expecting too much of a school constitution passed by stu- 1 Coffin Jr., the Yale chaplain con- esent university to force it to spell out dent referendum, they hired Nuss- victed of conspiracy to counsel verse what it menas by misconduct," baum, a Washington lawyer, to draft evasion. says Robert Moore, dean of stu- negotiate the impasse. The biggest free-speech victory ching dents at Arkansas State Univer- "My presence, I think, had a for students came this year in the a few sity. tremendous psychological impact," first student-rights case that the court Moore is being sued by a student he says-a view confirmed by U.S. Supreme Court had agreed to n by suspended for "conduct unbecom- school officials. The administra- hear in several decades. Three Des that ing to a student." The student, tion recently approved the new Moines high school students, all or a who is attacking the vagueness of constitution, containing a student members of a family named Tin- t un- the charge, attended an off-cam- "bill of rights" and most provisions kei, were sent home from school originally sought by students. for wearing black armbands pro- * Many universities, fearful of testing the Vietnam war of dozens of suits that could set important precedents. "The case involves the right of a student to participate in stu- dent life," says Walter Steele, a young law professor at Southern Methodist University. SURE's at- torney, Burl Rotenberry, argues: "These students are being pun- ished for doing what students else- Whatever happens, it's c le a r that students have found a new weapon to discomfit their elders. "Student rights litigation h a s grown overnight," s a y s Eleanor Norton, a legal staff member of the American Civil Liberties Un- ion in New York. "And it's going to burgeon the way civil rights cases did. By next year, no one ...... 1. 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Charles Bleck, an assistant at- torney general of Wisconin recalls a recent University of Wisconsin, attempt to discipline a student{ who allegedly threw a desk in a! classroom during extensive dis- orders there in February.E "He showed up with a lawyer at his hearing who promptly filed 15 technical objections," says Mr. Bleck. After two weeks was spent resolving them, the student's at- torney then moved for a recess to produce more witnesses. "At this point the regents were just worn out," he says. "They dismissed the case and let the kid go back to class." Attorneys stress that students in state-supported colleges have A t{ Wonderland of SBeautiful stuffed animals; tremendous selection Stocking-stuffer boat kits and new car kits Adult jigsaw puzzles BROWSE FOR THE HOLIDAYS!!{ "Friendly student store" SCAMPUS BIKE ~ & TOY 514 E. William " Ann Arbor NO 2-0035 L~n The High Court ruled the school's action unconstitutional, declaring, "In our system, state- operated schools may not be en- claves of totalitarianism." But the case left major questions unanswered. The Supreme Court noted that violence or disruption caused by protest wasn't an issue in the case. It implied that a strong threat of violence might be ground for a school ban on such "symbolic speech." But it added, "Undifferentiated fear or appre- hension of disturbance (on the part of school officials) is not enough to overcome the right to freedom of expression." A further test of how far the court will permit dissent in schools may come as a result of a Dallas School Board decision to send home any student who wears an armband during the current Mora- torium protests Superintendent Nolan Estes claims he has evidence the arm- bands threaten "disruption and violence" and thus don't come un- der the Supreme Court ruling in the Tinker case. The school board is being sued in Federal court by the Dallas ACLU over the deci- sion. But college newspapers editors got a big boost from a Federal court in Alabama that sided with Garey Dickey, editor of the Troy State College newspaper. When Dickey proposed to criti- cize Alabama legislators in an editorial, his faculty adviser re- jected the article and suggested a substitute editorial on "raising dogs in North Carolina." Dickey refused the substitute and printed only a blank space crossed by the word "censored." The editor was expelled from school for "insubordination," but the court ordered him readmitted. It said that a school can't punish free speech that "does not mate- rially and substantially interfere with requirements of appropriate disciplne in the operation of the school. Copyright 1969 Dow Jones Co. The University will offer game tickets for approx. $7.00.. . OPTIONAL TOURS: Disneyland .. - Knotts Berry Farm. . . Universal Studios ... ACCOMMODATIONS: ALL PRICES BASED ON 2 PER ROOM ACCOMMODATIONS... if you prefer sharing a room with 3 or 4 others, we will arrange it at lower cost NED'S$ BOOKSTORE YPSILANTI This new store carries more trade (non-text> books than any other in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area. Unusual 1970 calendars, thousands of paperbacks, lots of them used, some hardbacks. GIFT BOOKS AND CALENDARS FROM $375 (DALI ALICE) DOWN Mon.-Thurs.-9-9; Fri.-9-6; Sat.-12:5:30 COMPARE!!! No taxes, hidden costs, service fees or omitted services Open only to U of M Students, Faculty, Staff and immediate families We think we're interesting- A/. Ln&% n. ... c.ll U I