THE MICHIGAN DAILY cial Textbook Service PRE-REGISTERED STUDENTS Student 'G overnment' See (No Cash Required) : By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM The' term Student Government Council is a misnomer. Its elected members are chosen by less than a quarter of the stu- dents. The eight ex-officios rep- resent no one. Its powers pre-1 scribed by the Regents are hard- ly governmental. And it does not directly advise anyone, hence its functions are rarely conciliar. Yet the 10-year-old body man- ages, if only through the inde- pendent efforts of its members, to provide "an agency for meaning- ful student participation" in the University as stated in its pur- pose. This purpose, along with com- position, officers, functions and procedures, have all been record- ed in a constitution. Called the SGC Plan, it was adopted by the Regents in 1954 as a succes- sor to a larger but weaker Stu- dent Legislature which had exist- ed since the mid-1940's. The Plan The Council; plan was and is a good basic description of what SGC is-and what it isn't. The 19 members (the plan tells us) are to be drawn from two student sources. Eleven of them are chosen in semi-annual elec- Every year --without fail - the Bookstores or the Publishers run short of certain titles at school opening-and many students are without a text for 2 or 3 weeks. -BE SAFE- Reserve. Books T his EASY Wa- FILL IN THIS BOOK RESERVATION BLANK, DROP IN MAIL, THEN FORGET ABOUT YOUR BOOK RE- QUIREMENTS UNTIL YOU PICK THEM UP DURING THE ORIENTATION PERIOD. WE GUARANTEE We will select GOOD USED or NEW re- quired books, as you specify, sack 'em, and have them ready for you to pick up at your convenience. GUARANTEED--THE RIGHT BOOK FOR THE RIGHT COURSE! BOOK RESERVATION BLANK (All Books Fully Returnable) tions by all ID card-carrying stu- dents. The remaining eight come from the largest student organi- zations: Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic Association, the Mich- igan Union, the Women's League, Assembly Association, Inter-Quad- rangle Council, the International Students Association and The Daily. The ISA representative was placed on the Council after the Regents placed his organization in the membership section last Jan- uary. This elected and selected body names its own officers and sits down on Wednesday nights to exercise the prescribed functions.' These range from recognizing new student organizations to discuss- ing University policy-making. Power Grabbing In line with its mis-name, how- ever, Council spends lots of its time trying to change these func- tions and get in on some of the decision-making. Numerous Council members have wrestled with student-affairs ad- ministrators, trying to win real power over students. Some ex- amples from the past year: -Council formulated a motion seeking control over student con- duct. The body wanted the rule- making and enforcing authority which currently resides in the Of- fice of Student Affairs. -Following up a decision by the Regents in May of 1963, the Wed- nesday night deliberators attempt- ed more vigorous enforcement of its right to withdraw recognition of student groups. At the Univer- sity, non-recognition is tanta- mount to non-existenice. The stu- dent group could not use Uni- versity facilities, could not solicit members, could not make use of University billboards to proclaim its activities. Greeks In the rcase of the fraternity and sorority system, amnon-recognized Igroup could not rush or hold par- ties. SGC capitalized on this fact to create a series, of regulations on "membership selection." Like the civil rights. bill, the regulations aren't aimed at say- ing who must be accepted in of-. filiate houses. They only ask selections not be "discrimina --that is, that they be wi regard to race, color, rel creed, national origin or a try. Council has created a fact- ing body to report alleged crimination in University-r nized groups. And it has set tribunal to try such cases. dicts of discrimination could to withdrawal of recognition. far in the year that the re tions have been in effect, no have been tried. Observers r, 9 -SGC initiated its first year placing students as observers on faculty committees concerned with pertinent campus issues. Some Council members hope this parti- cipation will be the precursor to a full - fledged student - faculty government. It's a long way off, especiallynsince: the experiment hasn't been wholly successful and a bumper crop of committee par- ticipants has been lost by grad- uation. Student-faculty relations will have to begin anew this year. Despite these exciting moments, the formulation of policy can be a tedious process. The procedures section of the Council Plan makes all meetings open to the public. But few students venture up to the Council's chambers on the third floor of the Student Activi- , " At this sedate and orderly table, once a week . . FAIRER THAN EVER: Students Try Students on JJC -Se Best of the COIN-OPERATED DRYCLEANERS Dept, Course Sa Number -- -------- - - ---- ---- - -- ------- Date Name Home ASddress Street City State Local Address (if available) 1 Prefer Q Good Used O New Books Sgner If you steal a bike, fracture the University'sdriving code or keel over drunk in front of the Michi- gan Union-cheer up. You will undergo a much fairer University disciplining process than ever be- fore. The disciplinarian, the 10-stu- dent Joint Judiciary Council, has, been around a long time. But its mode of operation has been re- vised in a new constitution which just went into effect last year. This document's emphasis is youth: students notify you, inves- tigate you, listen to your argu- ments and punish you for any misdemeanor. They even sit on a referral group which hears your appeal in suspension cases. Student Product The new Joint Judic constitu- tion was written by students. Un- der the guidance of Director of Student Activities and Organi- zations John Bingley, the consti- tution was shaped to give "due process" rights in possible dis- ciplining cases. Nonetheless, it is still not com- pletely administrator-free. Joint Judie is designated by the Regents as the body under the vice-president for student af- fairs which provides "all mem- bers of the student body with the facilities for adjudication and counselling by their peers." The judiciary body is instruct- ed to determine if a student has violated University conduct regu- lations both inside and outside the classroom. It has original juris- Bi-Sexual The 10 council members, all at least juniors, represent both sexes -intentionally. Joint Judic, which absorbed the functions of the old Women's Judiciary Council, prohibits its membership to con- tain more than six students of one sex. For the student accused of vio- lating a rule, here's what hap- pens: -The Council gathers original material on the case in addition to checking up on the original complaint which brought the stu- dent to its attention. -It calls the student to a hearing and presents him with a written summation of the charg- es. It accepts only signed testi- mony when deliberating on the case later. -He is informed in writing of the case's outcome. -A copy of this letter goes to the student's college and his par- ents. He may appeal to have the letter to his parents withheld. In most cases, he is responsible for a fine. Often, a major portion of the fine is suspended, subject to a year without further trouble. Referral Group In cases involving suspension or dismissal, Joint Judic issues only a recommendation. This is sent to a five-man referral group (two students, three faculty members) for the final decision. Joint Judic serves also as a diction in snations. I making these determ- clearinghouse for disciplining cases which may not come within its jurisdiction. Its own subcommittee refers cases back to residence hall judiciaries, to the Mental Health Institute or other appropriate agencies. The Council also heads cases in- volving violations of rules by groups. These follow a procedure similar to the dispensing of in, dividual cases. MICHIGAN BOOK STORE State St. at North University Ann Arbor, Michigan I I l+U'se Daily Classifieds + I11 H I W E LCOME TO MICHIGAN.. i AND CAMPUS FAVORITES IN SHOES KAYSER HOSIERY and INGER! SABURY FLOBERT ROGERS ARTEMIS y1 BALI MAIDENFORI GOSSARD NEMO T REO ,1 P I3 E For the Coeds . ;^< , . YM ) '' : r - _ ;S": f j # :£;< ; Vt 1 r s ; i ;# 5 3 ' f S' # # f j 7 t >. #, t { Sfy ;; A i ,: '2. S : ? S :z x ". ? . . z a 'J 4 r i SCHRANK ROGERS ARTEMIS I, I' s " "K E Del 499 Popular Colors 95 es 4s plas ee Flans CHAMPION 'a is clasi KA YSER E , K c r sx I i BOSTONIAN MOCS $1595 $169 .S I Loafers $6.95 to $8.95 I 4- T , t 1 a t Y' / I I. $5.95 to $10.95 , ~el -1VIMMEEIME I I