100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

January 11, 1966 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1966-01-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE SIX

TILE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tl1TEl9Y)AV. IAVTTA T.V 7y 1499

PAGE SIX TIlE MICHIGAN I)AILY TT'1~"~flAv TAATTTADIY II

UZiZ5UA At JAIN UAlt I II. lytib

i,

{

Professors Discuss

Michigan State Readmits Schiff

Am

k,

jW FASHION GUIDE
FOR MEN
1209 So. University
STORE-WIDE SALE

Danger to Autonomy To Register for Winter Classes

(Continued from Page 1) Kelly looked at the Board with (Continued from Page 1)
education by contrasting it to that a much more favorable opinion tribution of the group's anti-ad-
used in California. and emphasized that it does not ministration newsletter, Lngis.d
Political Aura represent an added burden that He applied for readmission to
He nrincipaly nbjectepd to the the University must carry. He the n n afto

The court ruled on Oct. 14 that
MSU had acted unlawfully in de-
nying Schiff readmission without
first granting him a hearing. The
court ordered MSU to give Schifl
5fat i a rnr01 ,11i n m

20 to 50% OFF
Save on SUITS

$6500
$5995
$4995

...now
nOw
". now

$5400
$4995
$4100

fact that in Michigan the Board's thought that it could be a great
members were chosen in a general aid in allowing the Legislature and
statewide election rather than be- the schools themselves to more
ing appointed by the governor. He effectively maintain an accurate
felt that this method of selection perspective of their own roles in
would give them a partisan politi- relationship to others in the state.
cal aura, and might also tend to He also made the point that,
keep the Board's level of expertise were the Board not created, it is
lower than it might be. very likely that the appropria-1
He was also afraid that the tions committees of the Legisla-I
members' relatively short terms ture would take it upon themselves
and the necessity for them to go to act as de-facto educational co-
back to the electorate for re-ap- ordinators, and that this would be
pointment might lead to a high immensely undesirable both to the
rate of turnover and serious lackIUniversity and to the entire sys-1
of continuity in the Board's tem of higher education within,
policies, the state.
FADED?{
No one enjoys driving a car whose paint has faded. Put!
a new car look to your car with a fresh sparkling paint
job from Zindell. Many colors to select from, including
two-tone. Ask for a free, no obligation estimate.

deciding to switch his major in a lair ing aiuLulea to mai-
the spring of '65. He was admit- tain jurisdiction over the case for
ted to the economics department's 94 days while the hearing was
masters program on June 3. On being conducted.
June 18 he was informed in a Ernest Mazey, executive dir %tor
two sentence letter from the reg- of the ACLU of Michigan, called
istrar's office that his application the court's action at that time a
for readmission had been submit- landmark. Mazey pointed out that.
ted to the university's readmission "for the first time, a Michigan
board and that acceptance had college or university has been ju-
been denied. dicially required to give a student

MOHAIR-WORSTED-SILK
SHARKSKIN
ONE-TWO-THREE BUTTON

MSU Vice-President John Fuzak'
explained in an article in the July
1 issue of the Michigan State News
that Schiff had been denied read-
mission on the basis of his pre-,
vious activist behavior on cam-
pus. Fuzak stated that, "Schiff
acted to disrupt the organization7
of the university. He urged the,
violation of university regulations,
in Logos. The decision against re-1
admitting Schiff was not based on.
any single incident but upon a}
pattern of disruptive behavior."
Schiff responded to MSU's ac-
tion by initiating a suit against the
university in the United States1
District Court in Grand Rapidsl
charging that he had been denied1
his First Amendment rights toc
press, assembly, and speech, and
that he had been denied read-
mission without the protection of f
due process of the law. He was
supported in his suit by the Eastt
Lansing branch of the ACLU. I

GuC Gl:VtlVilllt. UC icL14211C11L d1GCL I

I

Faculty Committee Hearing

"I am confident," Schiff went
on, "that the federal courts will
ultimately uphold my position and
find that the university has fail-
ed to give me a fair hearing and
has punished me for exercising
the rights of an American citiz-n."
Prof. Frederick Williams of the
history department, chairman of
the committee which h e a r d
Schiff's case, denied that the hear-
ings had been unfair. He stated
that his committee had "spent
hours of work providing for a
full, fair, and impartial hearing."
He also denied that the closed
hearings were unfair in spite of
Schiff's requests to keep them
open. He explained that the de-

Across
TUESDAY. JAN. 11
8 m. - Th Profes-ional
'h atre 7 om am 1llnlre nnt the
A- rican Conservatory Theatre
V ninv in T1dwar Albpc's "Tiny
Fire" at the L-dia M-nd-l!sohn
Th atr'.
1V1fNFSDAY. JAN. 12
Noon-Robert Durgy of the Eng-
lish department will discuss Franz
Kafka's "The Castle" as the first
of the Wednesday Noon Book
Discussions sponsored by the Of-
fice of Religious Affairs in Roam
2 of the Michigan League.
7 and 9 p.m.-The Cinema Guild
will present a special free show-
ing of Marlene Dietrich in "The
Devil is a Woman" in the Archi-
tecture Aud.

MSU complied with the court's cision to hold closed hearings was
order to give Schiff a fair hear- made "in accord with established
ing and instructed the Faculty university procedure to protect all
Committee on Student Affairs to parties involved."

SKI PANTS
$12.12
All Sizes, Colors

S PO RTS S HI1RTS
1 $2.22
All Sizes, Colors
All Styles, Plaids, etc.

Save on PANTS
20% OFF.
I I
, JI.
Save on SWEATERS,
* i
1 i
* I
F 1
COLORS: -STYLES: ;
* BURGUNDY V NECK;
* t
* BLUE SADDLE i
* BLACK , SHOULDER'i
CAMEL WOOL ;
GREEN . ORLON
* I
* BROWN ALPACA
. jMOHAIR
1 I
* I
Were $11.98 nOW
* ,
* .===========0.. .======1
Save on SPORT COATS

a hearing before denying the right
to continue his education."

I

I

0-L-D-S-M-O-B-I-1-E
0 . VA U't
ant nnr" MARK 3
i- USED CARS
GENERAL STAFF MEETING
Only four more days 'til deadline.
Quality of the Mag depends on your
bod being there . .!
7:30, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 12

hear the case. After listening to
lengthy testimony from Schiff. 1
sympathetic faculty members and
opposing administrators, the com-
mittee ruled on Nov. 23 to uphold
the administration's decision not
to readmit Schiff.
Schiff met the faculty com-
mittee's decision with the claim
that the hearings accorded him'
had not been fair. "It is my belief
that the decision of the faculty
committee was wrong. They have
upheld the right of MSU to deny
me or any student the right to an
education because he exercises his
constitutional rights in a manner
distasteful to the university ad-
ministration."

...._ .,..,, .,w., .,_ w.,.

i

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

I

SDS VOICE
Membership Meeting-Tuesday, 8:00 P.M.
3rd Floor Conference Room, Michigan Union
Program Discussion, Nominations

'No Feelings' 8 p.m.-The Professional Thea-
The court has not set a date tre Program will present the
to hold hearings on the ACLU mo- American Conservatory Theatre
tion demanding readmission when Company in Edward Albee's "Tiny
Nonnamaker announced yesterday Alice" at the Lydia Mendelssohn
that Schiff would be readmitted. Theatre.
Nonnamaker described the action 8 p.m.-Robert 0. Tilman, of
as simply a review of the earlier Yale Univercity. will speak on
decision not to readmit S'hiff. He "Political and Social Change in
stated that, "we simply took the Malaysia" in the Lane Hail Aud.
appropriate action in both cases.
When asked if he were happy to 8:30 p.m..-Opera scenes from
see Schiff back in the MSU stu- Mozart's "Corsi fan tutte," Sme-
dent body, he replied that, "I tana's "Bartered Bride," and
have no feelings one way or the Strauss' "Der Rosenkavalier" at
other about that." thQ School of Music Recital Hall.

10

-

0( Pr

Yeo

Ur Daily Now-

Phone 764-0558

Garg Office, Stud.

Pub.

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan, for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no editor-
ial responsibility. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be-
fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding
publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday
for Saturday and Sunday. General
Notices may be published a maxi-
mum of two times on request; Day
Calendar items appear once only.
Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 11
Day Calendar
Programmed Learning for Business
Workshop-Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m.
Management Development Seminar-
"Disciplinary Process and Grievance
Handling": University Medical Center,
8:30 a.m.
Dept. of Zoology Seminar - Alan
Wohlman, Dept. of Biology, Princeton
University, "Structural Organization
Associated with Pseudopod Formation
and Cell Locomotion": 2054 Natural
Science Bldg., 4 p.m.
Professional Theatre Program Per-
formance-American Conservatory The-
atre Company in Edward Albee's "Tiny
Alice": Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8
p.m.
General Notices
Engineering' Placement Meeting: "En-
gineering Opportunities." Discussion of
opportunities for current engineering
graduates, demand, salaries, etc. Pri-
marily for seniors and graduate stu-
dents, but open to all interested. Prof.
J. G. Young, Jan. 11, 4 p.m., 311 W.
Engrg. Bldg.
Ushering Positions: Applications for
ushering positions, for the remaining
concerts and Special events, to be
held in Hill Aud. and Rackham Aud.
during the current semester, will be
accepted from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the
Box Office of Hill Aud. on Tues., Jan.
11.
The positions mentioned will 'in-
clude ushering for the Chamber Music
Festival and for the Special Concert
Series which includes Stan Getz on
Sat., Jan. 15.
Foreign Visitors
The following are the foreign visi-
tors programmed through the Interna-
tional Center who will be on campus
this week on the dates indicated. Pro-
gram arrangements are being made by
Mrs. Clifford R. Miller, International
Center, 764-2148.
Mohammed Ablud Kadir, adult edu-
cation officer, Yala Province, Thailand,
Jan. 5-12.
Felix Lee Wu, senior editor, USIS,
Hong Kong, Jan. 9-12.
Chau Kim Dinh, information spe-
cialist in charge of press analysis.
press relations and assistant to the
press officer, USIS, American Embassy,
Saigon, Jan. 9-13.
Miss Kazuko Naito, public affairs as-
sistant (cultural), Tokyo American Cul-
tural Center, USIS, American Embassy,
Tokyo, Jan. 9-16.
Tsutomu Suzuki, public affairs ad-
visor, Sendai American Cultural Cen-

W ear the Mof Mead
At the Mead Corporation there are many opportunities for
those about to graduate. From Bachelors through Doctor-
ates it will pay you to investigate challenging openings in
the Mead organization. Contact your placement office
now. Not all good graduates go to Mead. But you would
be amazed at how many do!

$3995

"."now
" . Ow
...nOw
". "now

$16,6
$2121
$2121

ter, USIS, Japan, Jan. 9-16.
Placenent
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Federal Service Entrance Exam -
FSEE exam will be held Sat. morn-
ing, Jan. 15, in Angell Hall, Aud. C.
Application deadline for last mgmt.
intern exam this esemester is Jan. 19
for exam on Feb. 19. Applications avail-
able at Bureau of Appointments, 3200
SAB.
U.S. Civil Service Comm., Wash., D.C.
-Summer Employment: Office & Sci-
ence Assistant positions exam will be
held on Sat., Feb. 5. Students will be
notified individually.
Univ. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
-Announces Grad Program leading
to PhD in Econ. Financial aid in-
cludes fellowships, research & instruc-
tor positions
Tobe-Coburn School for Fashion Ca-
reers, N.Y.C.-Announces fellowship for
Senior women for 1966-67. Contestants
interested in advertising, buying, co-
ordinating & display. Apply before Jan.
28 for Fashion Fellowship materials.
Details at Bureau of Appointments.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Bureau
of Appointments-Seniors & grad stu-
dents, please call 764-7460 for appoint-
ments with the following:
FRI., JAN. 14-
U.S. Information Agency, Wash., D.C.
-1. Cultural Affairs Officer. Extensive
exper. in educ. or cultural institution,
possibly ass't. prof., prof., or chairman
of dept. Fluent knowl. of foreign
lang. 2. Ass't. Cultural Affairs Officer.
Linguists or specialists in teaching
English as foreign lang. MA or PhD
pref. 3 yrs. secondary or college teach-
ing exper. 3. 'Education Specialist. BS
plus 3 yrs. lang. teaching exper. Trng.
in linguistics .or teaching English as
foreign lang. Details at Bureau. Note:
This program not open to BA or MA
grads with no exper.
POSITION OPENINGS:
U.S. Plywood Corp., Gaylord, Mich. -
Forester. Degree, bkgd. in game biol.
or wild life mgmt. desirable. Exper.
pref. Assist in contacting & assisting
private land owners in forest land
mgmt.
C. S. Mott Foundation Children'c
Health Center, Flint, Mich. - Social
Service position. M.S.W., mature woman
pref. Social case work exper.
Juvenile Court, Howell, Mich.-Chil-
dren's Worker/Probation Officer. Im-
mediate opening. Pref. Man. BA Lib.
Arts,, some psych, or pre-soc-work.' No
exper. req. Supv. children, investigate
complaints prior to hearings, etc.
For further information, please call
764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap-
pointments, 3200 SAB.
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES
USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN-
NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially
recognized and registered student or-
ganizations only. Organizations who are
planning to be active for the Spring
Term must be registered in the Office
of Student Organizations by Jan. 27,
1966. Forms are available in Room 1011
Israeli Students Association, Open
meetlUg to inform U. of M. students
of program of year of studies at the
Hebrew University, Jerusalem. Tues.,
Jan. 11, 7:30 p.m., Recreation Room,
International Center.
Le Cercle Francais, French movie:
"Les 7 Peches Capitaux," Tues., Jan.
11, 8 p.m., Multipurpose Room, Under-
graduate Library.
University Activities Center, Academic
Affairs Committee, Last Chance Lecture
by Prof. Shaw Livermore, Jr., Thurs.,
Jan. 13, 4:15 p.m., UGLI Multipurpose
Room.
* * *
University Physical Therapy Club,
Monthly meeting, Jan. 11, 7:30 p.m.,
3rd Floor Conference Room, University
Hospital.

0

I

I

4

a m~ai

$3500

ALL COLORS
SIZES from 35 to 46
LONG-SHORT-REGULARS
ALL STYLES

=w=rrrr==r====i=r==sr=r===r===r=arr===s=warrwr4
* I
I I
I I
Save on JACKETS
SUE DE-MELTON--WOOL

R
i

LEATHER-NYLON-KNIT WOOL
SIZES S-M-L-XL

5 I
$19.98 . . now $12.12
$14.98... now $11.11
Am mm /Ai"m A.". i 1.. " "7. ARI. w [A . .. ..'..
BENCH WARMERS
Regular to $19.98
88
NOW
RI 6JANAV----------F
RI 1Y kwnW AND SAVE,

We come
Students!
. DISTINCTIVE
COLLEGIATE
For MEN-
HAIRSTYLNG
And Women-
.*7Hairstylists
THE DASCOLA BARBER S
Near Michigan Theatre

4

THE MEAD CORPORATION, P.O. BOX 2500, CHILLICOTHE, OHIO 45601
Fpapers , 1ck(al ng containiers hoar pulp

NEW shipments of
out of stock

{I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan