PAGE VENV FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDY, MRCH11, 966THE,.CHGAN .AI_ n V L %J Cu i', 1-4 SCrimson Fills Void Left by News Strike STUDENTS SUSPENDED: Hunter College Paper Ends Publication; Dean Questions Editor's Qualifications Dine Out CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (P) - Stu- dents who run the Harvard Crim- son are publishing a special edi- tion to fill the gap 'caused by a strike that has closed Boston's newspapers. It's The Boston Crimson, a daily whose first four-page edi- tion appeared Wednesday, com- plete with a racing handicapper. On the first day, 30,000 copies were distributed in downtown Bos- ton and a few suburbs. "We felt if we could perform a' service, we ought to do it," said co-editor Donald Graham. The students plan to publish the pa- per until the strike ends. A special staff was rounded up and took over a room in the of- fices of the Harvard Crimson, which is continuing to publish the college paper. The advertising office consists of Brooke Stevens, 25, a Cam- bridge resident who volunteered to help, sitting on a box near a pile of debris. A lone daisy thrives in a soda pop bottle on her desk. Rewrite men, editors and busi- ness manager share another desk and telephones nearby. Cathleen Cohen, 21, a Radcliffe senior from New York City, typed up atelevision schedule. "Do you have to proofread these?" she ask- ed. "This is awful." R. Andrew Beyer, a senior Eng- lish major from Erie, Pa., is sports editor and self-proclaimed "world's greatest handicapper of thorough- breds." "I've always had a secret desire to be a racing handicapper," Andy said, "and on the Crimson, writ- ing races, well, there's just no audience for it." Andy managed two winners out of nine picks at Lincoln Downs Wednesday. The idea for the publishing ven- ture came from Robert J. Sam- uelson, 20, president of the Crim- son and a government major from New York. Martin Levine, 21, a history ma- jor from Hillsdale, N.J., teams with Graham to direct the oper- ation. Graham is the son of Kath- erine Graham, president of the Washington Post Publishing Co. for Enjoyment Collegiate Press Service Ask Communist Teachers To Speak at North Carolina NEW YORK-The Hunter Col- lege Meridian was suspended from publication and its editor and copy editor suspended from classes last week in a climax to a series of clashes between the student newspaper and the Dean of Stu- dents. On March 2, Meridian editor Roberta Kantor was denied an exemption to run for a second term as editor by a student- administration board which judges grade qualifications for major stu- dent positions. The editorship of the campus newspaper requires a gradepoint average of 2.5; Miss Kantor had a 2.44. The two stu- dents on the board split on wheth- er to allow the exemption in her case, and Dean of Students Glen Nygreen cast the deciding vote against her. Publication of the newspaper was suspended the next day when it came out with signed editorials by the editor and editorial board promising to continue publication under the present leadership. The editor and copy editor were sus- pended from classes for one week pending a hearing when the Dean charged them with breaking into the Meridian office, on which he had installed a new lock. The case is scheduled to be heard this week by a faculty committee appointed by Nygreen to determine whether his suspen- sion ruling should be extended to include the rest of the semester. The New York chapter of the American' Civil Liberties Union is providing the students with an attorney. The Meridan has charged that Nygreen is conducting a "personal vendetta" against Miss Kantor and the newspaper. In the editorial defying the exemptions ruling, the editorial board pointed out that when Miss Kantor's grade average was only 2.25 last semester, "be- fore any Meridians had been pub- lished under (her) editorship," she was granted an exemption. The conflict between the paper and the Dean of Students erupted toward the end of last semester. Nygreen brought the paper before the student-faculty-administration Judicial Board on charges of hav- ing liquor in the office during a Christmas party. In his presentation of the case for "disciplinary action" Nygreen outlined four possible penalties which he thought the Judicial Collegiate Press Service CHAEL HILL, N.C.-Two schol- ars from Communist countries have been invited to speak at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill at the same time an invitation' to American Marxist theorist Herbert Apthpker was again denied. Acting Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson said if they accept, the Communist scholars would appear in "classroom situations." He said their visit would be clearly in line with "the educational purposes of the university" and therefore won his approval. Aptheker's invitation had orig- finally been rejected by' the UNC2 executive committee after com- mittee chairman Gov. Pat K. Moore said he didn't think the speech would serve the "educa- tional purpose" of the school. sity, a private school. The two Communist scholars who were invited 'this, week to speak at UNC are Prof. Vladimir Alexandrov of Moscow University, studying at Indiana University, who was invited by the Political Science Department and the poli- tical science honorary, Chi Sigma Alpha, and Dr. Hanus Pabousek, a Chechoslavakian scientist teaching at the University of Denver. He was invited by the psychology de- partment and the UNC Develop- mental Psychological Training Program. Meanwhile. a law firm at Greensboro, N.C.,. is now working in connection with the UNC stu- dent government to take the re- jection of another speaker, Frank Wilkinson, chairman of a. com- mittee working to abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee, to court. It is expected Board might impose: that it was his "intention" to "ask -denying Meridian the use of Student Council and the Publica- office space on campus; tion Board to review the present -removing the editors from constitution of Meridian and to office; make recommendation for any -dissolving the entire editorial changes in the method of election structure and recommending that of editors, the method of approval the Student Council form a news- of such election, and the length of paper; the term of office of such per- -suspending individual students sons." 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