r FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 196'7 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE NINE New Bus Ad Degree Receives Faculty OK Thus' there came to MICHIGAMUA 4JSES LEGAL QUESTION: Court Overrules Police Attempts To Confiscate Cornell Magazine WHEN from out the paleface wigwam From behind the staring moonf ace Came the slow and solemn five booms Telling that the evening spirit Wanders over woods and meadows. Lights the campfires of the heavens Then the Michigamiua warriors In their feathers and their warpaint Soon will gather 'round the oak tree 'Round the oak tree called the Tappan There to greet the trembling paleface Who in number wait the bidding Of the loud rejoicing redskins; But, before they take the long trail To the home of Michigamnua Many Trials and ma'ny tortures First must prove their strength and courage Ere the redman bids them welcome Ere he calls each palef ace "Indian" Ere the peace pipe smoke goes skyward. LISTEN to this tale of romance Tale of Indian warriors bold- In the early moon of green leaves Came they forth, the stoics valiant; Forth they romped to paleface wigwam Wigwam one of friendly Great Chief, Came they forth to take their token, Then to the mighty oak of Tappan Dashed the screaming yelling redmen; To the tree of Indian legend Where the white men pale and trembling Stood around the mighty oak tree Warriors choice of paleface nation Choice of tribe to run the gauntlet. Down the warriors, painted demons Swooped and caught their prey like eagles Loud the war cry stirred the stillness As they seized their hapless captives Forth they bore them to their wigwaw There to torture at their pleasure. There they are aoun d the glowing bonfires Heard the words of mighty wisdom, Smoked the pipe of peace and friendship. Thus there came to Michigamiua... A new program for the Master of Business Administration degree has been approved by the faculty of the University Graduate School of Business Administration, Dean Floyd A. Bond has announced. Stewart H. Rewoldt, professor of marketing, has been named to direct it. . The new MBA program em- phasizes basic foundation courses in various disciplines, followed by advanced courses in the student's field of special competence. The new requirements will be effective with students entering the pro- gram in tloe fall term of 1968. These students will take re- quired "core" courses in a prede- termined sequence, thus making it possible for each course to build directly on others previously, taken. Required coursework in the 60- hour program will be reduced from 33 to 30 hours under the new plan. Students will be required to take six four-hour courses-in account- ing, marketing, finance, statistics, human behavior and organization, and analysis, planning and control. They will be required to take two three~hour course =in business, the economy, and public policy and in business policy. In addi- tion, each MBA degree candidate will be required to complete at least one master's seminar. Requirements for admission to the new program remain the same as in the present program except that incoming students will be re- quired to possess an ability to use programs available on the Univer- sity's computer. Students deficient in this respect will be expected to take - a non-credit course in the computer and its use. Three of the MBA program's re-' quired will be new: the four-hour "Analysis, Planning, and Control," and the three-hour "Business, the Economy and Public Policy"' and "Business Policy." "Analysis, Planning, and Con- trol" will deal with the decision- making process in business organ- izations, utilizing concepts and techniques of logic, micro-econ- omics, and the quantitative areas of mathematics, statistics, ac- counting, and finaficial analysis. The course will include the use of computers. "Business, the Economy, and Public Policy" will focus on the inter-relationships between the business firm and the economic- political-social-legal 'environment within which it must operate. "Business Policy" is a capstone course required of all students in their last term. It will integrate work previously taken. In addi- tion, it will consider top-level business decisions in the light of public policy. The international setting of modern business will bel emphasized.; The new required courses are+ designed to provide graduate stu- dents with exposure to subject material that has recently become increasingly important to their careers as businessmen, Bond said.+ They also will serve to integrate materials taught in the traditional subject matter areas. U' To Issue New Student~ IUD's in, Fall The student identification sys- tem at the Universitywill be changed with the fall term. All students will get new ID+ cards and new numbers, said Har- ris Olson, assistant registrar. Each+ wallet-size maize and blue plastic1 card will be punched with several+ holes, like an IBM card. Electronic equipment will be able to record+ the number from the holes as the student checks, out a library book or pays his fees or gets his foot- ball tickets. The card wil bear the student's signature, along with his name and number in embossed letters. Thus existing equipment will be able to print a name and num- ber, charge-plate fashion.d n The punched-hole system will; first be put into use this fall in the library's overnight reserve; section. Source-data collectionj equipment, which can read ID; numbers directly from the hole,; will be installed later in other parts of the campus, Olson said. A special embossed character will validate a card for each term when, the student registers. Each student's new number willi consist of his nine-digit Sociali Security number plus a 10th digit. The last digit, determined by ap- plying a mathematical formula toi the first nine, is a check digit i which will indicate an error ina recording the first nine. By JOYCE WINSLOW The Trojan Horse, Cornell's literary magazine, contained one surprise article that rocked city courts in Ithaca and later in Syra- cuse, New York. The magazine confronted the campus adminis- tration and the city government with the question of whether either body had the right to cen- sor alledgedly obscene campus literature. The literature under question was written by David Murry, a resident of San Francisco who passed through Ithaca and sub- mitted some selections to the Trojan Horse editors. The selections include some im- pressionistic poetry with candid sexual imagery. The editors print- ed it and started to routinely sell the magazine in the student union Jan. 17. At 9:30 a.m., Jan. 19, James ' Herson, supervisor of the safety division of campus patrol confis- cated the 130 magazines at the sales booth. At the same time, he charged the two editors selling the magazine with violating a student code regulation forbidding the dis- tribution of obscene materials on campus. Richard Hoffman, managing editor of the Cornell Daily Sun analyzed the move in a special, interview with The Daily: "Herson said he confiscated the magazines to protect the students from pos- sible trouble with sec. 1141 of the N.Y. Penal Code's obscenity laws," Hoffman explained. "Herson said he acted on a complaint from an 'ethical resident.' He later told us that two campus policemen on his force had told him the magazine article was obscene." "Herson did not notify Cornell administrators that he was con- fiscating the magazine," Hoffman said. "At the time, most of the administrators were in New York City for a Board meeting. The highest .official on campus was Dean Donald Cooke of the grad- uate school. "Cooke learned what happened and met with several, other offi- cials. It was decided to return the magazines to the faculty advisor of the Trojan Horse, but with a cease and desist order not to sell it pending clearance by the Sched- ule Co-ordination Activities Re- view Board, which is under the auspices of student government," Hoffman continued, "and is com- posed of students. SCARB's deci- sion was to be reviewed by the Executive Board of student gov- ernment. If both organizations passed it the magazine could be sold." Rally "Meanwhile," Hoffman said, "students planned a rally for the next day to protest campus police interference with student activ- ities. The editors of the Trojan Horse decided to ignore the cease and desist order and resume sales of the magazine." "Before the rally," Hoffman said, "District Attorney Richard Thaler told administrators of the university that he would not al- low violations of the law. He was asked by the president over the phone not to intervene, but Thaler came at 12:30 p.m. with two cars of plainclothesmen." "Pushing and shoving that threatened to erupt into a riot of 1500 students flared yesterday" the Cornell Daily Sun reported, "when Thaler att'empted to arrest 5 stu- dents selling copies of the Trojan Horse. Thaler's physical confron- tation with the crowd occurred as he tried to lead the five to his car. The students blocked his way.", "Thaler, speaking through a bullhorn," the paper reported, AT BERKELEY: "proposed to let the five be set free if he be allowed to get a court injunction against the sale of the Horse, and that all students in- volved in the sale of the Horse sign a list of those willing to be prose- cuted for selling the 'obscene' is- sue." Thaler got the injunction," Hoffman said. "Two days later the injunction was revoked. The judge ruled that the article wasn't prurient." Perkins Acts "University President James A. Perkins returned to campus the day after the rally," Hoffman continued. "He immediately re- voked the cease and desist order against selling the 'Horse.' He said he was against censorship by the University. SCARB and the executive board had both passed the magazine as O.K., to be sold anyway." " "The University did not make a judgment on the magazine." Hoffman said, "but many profes- sors in the English Department issued a statement saying they did not think the article obscene. In current developments, Her- son, the head of campus patrol resigned. The university formed a commission to set standards for literature. This commission is comprised of students, professors of English, and administrators. - Another commission was formed to investigate the role of the Sa- fety Division of Campus Police. And, the university has offered the advice of the university at- torney to the students who signed Thaler's list as willing to be prose- cuted for selling the "Obscene" issue. The Court ruled that though the article by Miller was "worthless, vile and filthy; it was not pruri- ent." Herson is currently waiting to be appointed a deputy police chief, a position rumored to have been created for him. During the Cornell controversy, editors of the Promethean, rival paper to the Syracuse "Daily Orange," spotted articles on Cor- nell's problem. "We have a censorship problem at Syracuse," isaid Promethean editor T. J. McCarthy. "We de- cided to reprint Miller's article with an editorial condemning cen- sorship. We wanted people to have the opportunity to read Miller's work themselves and form their. own opinions on its literary merit." "Well, we reprinted it in Febru- ary and the next day the district attorney, who is running for re- election in November, issued a statement to the local papers that he would present the copy of the Pro containing Miller's article to the Onandaga Grand Jury to 'educate parents on obscene litera' ture. IF Attempts To Extend Tenure Of Popular Professor Fail By CYNTHIA MILLS Students at the University of ,California at Berkeley have lost the battle in their effort to obtain extension of the tenure of a pop- ular visiting lecturer, E r n e s t Becker. The student senate voted ap- proval last February of a $13,000 one-year rotating, student fi- nanced chair, and nominated Becker to fill the position. However, last week, when stu- dents had not yet found an ap- - The Detroit News THE UOFM YEARS credited position for Becker, he announced that he "will go on the national job market as a free agent. I would like to express my deep thanks at the genuine honor. the students have conferred on me." The controversy began after the anthropology department failed to ask Becker to return at the end of his one-year tenure. The Asso- ciated Students of the University of California then decided to fi- nance him themselves. However, the anthropology department de- cided they would not give Becker a position, even if his salary was paid by the students. The depart- ment claimed it could not create a position for another tenured fac- ulty member. Thus followed a long series of attempts by the ASUC to find a department that would take Beck- er as instructor of an accredited course. An ASUC spokesman said, "we wil keep pressuring the uni- versity until we can find a depart- ment that will take him." Last week the student senate met, facing only two alternatives. They had either remove Becker's. name as nominee for the student chair or to appoint him. The" latter proposal was defeated by a tie vote, as the motion needed a majority to pass. The senate then approved a recommendation that Becker would have to teach an accredited course before he could be appointed to the student chair. The senate redoubled it efforts to find a department. After serious consideration last week, the philosophy department decided against taking Becker. This led Becker to announce pub- licly that if a position were not found for him by last Friday, he would have to break ties with the University at the end of his tenur. Becker, who has a doctorate in cultural anthropology, taught at a State University in New York for three years after serving as a staff member at the U.S. Embassy in Paris. He has four books to his credit, including a study called "Tlie Revolution in Psychiatry," a primer on Zen, and a controver- sial critique of U.S. education. Currently teaching a course on anthropology and religion, Beck- er's approach appeared to be suf- ficiently interdisciplinary to allow a number of departments to con- sider him for a faculty position. Students sit in the aisles as he lectures in a 900-seat auditorium. In February, 150 student march- ed to the chancellor's office to show 2,0000 signatures they had obtained on petitions advocating Becker's retention, but William B. Body, vice-chancellor of student affairs told them that by long 'standing tradition, "faculty mem- bers initiate appointments using the procedures of the depart- ments." ORDER THE Q OF RS YEE A 56-pag with The .. I MAILED BACK HOME OR TO FRIENDS .. . 25c PER COPY POSTPAID e rotogravure section Detroit News, Sunday, April 23 "TrHtE U of M YEARS"-a special 56-page souvenir section to be pub- lished in The Detroit News Sunday, April 23 will feature full-color litho- graphs of familiar campus scenes created by Prof. Emil Weddige espe- cially for- Michigan's sesquicentennial. 9 Sports Standouts Through the Years 0 Medical School Beginnings Fred R. Brown R. Dean Cummins Joseph D. Dayton Bruce D. Getzan Walter W. Heiser Richard G. Hunt Harold E. Kaplan William L. Krauss William M. Lord C. Lee Marttila Alexander McDonald Robert E. McFarland Wayne A. Miller Clark R. Norton Raymond Ph'illips David S. Porter William C. Sage Ernest M. Sharpe Donald F. Tucker Ronald K. Ullyot Richard F. Vidmer Howard B. Weinblatt §§ §§ §EN § § 4!II § §lnkCni & History of The Michigan Daily 9 " Speaking of Professsors" 0 U. of M. Grads in Washington 0 The Hatcher Era @150 Years of "Delicious Absurdities" Words and Music at U. of M. Order copies of "THE U OF M YEARS" Enclosed is $ Please send "THE U OF M ' mailed back home postpaid to the address below. (Write additional addresses o or to friends, 3a ate paper and attach). I nrI Kenneth A. Wiebeck I= mt m am mW mn -a YEARS" on a. separ., I I e