I THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY.FEBRUARY 9. 1964 - .. s.r-.i ay.w. v . ervv V FOR ATTACKING COLLEGE: Committee Ousts Editor in Brooklyn 47 ACROSS CAMPUS: NEW YORK (UPS) - Brooklyn College became the center of an editorial controversy last month when Kingsman Associate Editor Harvey Fisher was ousted from the newspaper staff for writing a bit- 'ter farewell column attacking the college. In a unanimous vote of the Fac- ulty-Student Committee on Publi- cations on January 13, Fisher was disqualified "from serving the Kingsman in any capacity." The Faculty Committee on Pub- lications, composed of four faculty members and four students, is re- sponsible for the conduct of stu- dent activities, including student publications, under the By-laws of the Board of Higher Education. The action of the Publications Board was nothing more than a censure of Fisher, since the of- fending column was to have been his last connection with the Kingsman anyway. To Receive "Neither the faculty nor any administrative officer of the college is contemplating any further dis- ciplinary action. On February 1, 1960, Harvey Fisher will receive his degree," said Associate Dean of Students Goodhartz in a letter to NSA. Fisher, 22-year-old February- graduating senior, used his fare- well column in the Kingsman as a "washing machine,',' and thanked Brooklyn College for "opening my eyes to the dirt the outside world has in store for me. "Thank you for stomping out any spirit that my fellow students might have had. Thank you for the bruises and the bitterness," Fisher said. He went on to point out that his words may be meaningless to 11 many students because "you have not had the opportunity to realize that BC is run like a political machine. You have not felt the "Iron Fist" pound the self-respect otu of students and faculty alike." Fisher challenged Brooklyn Col- leges "petty bureaucrats" and "minds twisted by red ink and phonyism." He attacked the "fren- zied, underhanded scramble for promotions." "I leave BC without nostalgia - * . I came, I saw, and I was' roughed up." Answers Column In an open letter to the students to be published in a forthcoming issue of Kingsman, Student Exec- utive Council President Arnold Cohen answered Fisher's farewell IOrganization Notices (Use of this column for an- nouncements is available to off - cially recognized and registered or- ganizations only Organizations planning to be active for the spring semester should register by Feb. 29. Forms available, 2011 Student Ac- tivities~.Building.) Ullr Ski Club, meeting, Feb. 10, 7:30 p.m., Rm. 3-S Union, Plans for Trips; movies and refreshments. * * * Young Democrats, coffee hour, Feb. '10, '7:30 p.m., Rmn. 3-B Union. All wel- come. * * * International Folk Dancers, Instruc- tion and dancing. Feb. 10, 8 p.m., Lane Hall. * , . Univ. Riding Club, short organiza- tional meeting of March 13 Horse Show, 'Feb. 10, 7 p.m.. WAB. For information, call Carl, NO 3-7778. DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH column, "not because the state- ments of Mr. Fisher are worthy of answer, but because the institution he degraded, and some of the indi- viduals he maligned, deserve a presentation of the truth.'' Cohen said, "Where Mr. Fisher claims there is dirt, I found in- spiration; where Mr. Fisher's spirit was 'stomped', mine i was elevated." Cohen answered Fisher's scath- ing attack by citing "the many students who were admitted to top graduate schools, or who got first rate jobs because the President had imported men of imagination, character and reputation, to place Brooklyn College on the academic map." "No, Mr. Fisher, I have never been slapped on the wrist by the administration. Maybe I never de- served it," Cohen adds. Gives Farewells Following the publication of Fisher's column, Brooklyn College President Harry T. Gideonse said, "Such farewells are not uncom- mon in Kingsman history." Kingsman Editor Lucille Feld- man, who originally approved pub- lication of the controversial col- umn, has said that since publica- tion she has "realized it was in bad taste and made broad undocu- mented charges." "Although prior to publication I had approved Mr. Fisher's copy, I now realize it was unfair jour- nalism and made sweeping, un- documented statements," she said. "I am prepared to take the conse- quences for what I have done." The censuring of Fisher has brought comment from other New York college newspapers. The Long Island University "Seawanhaka" of January 20 expresses surprise at the "utter velocity with which the Brooklyn College administration has moved to retaliate against Fisher." The Seawanhaka asked, "what gives a student editor the right to use his farewell column as a potshot at the administration while making accusations with only generalizations to back them up?" Apparently something is wrong on both sides, the paper continues, and adds that it is time for both students and administration learn the rule of tolerance by forsaking the blindness of hate. II SCHOOL OF MUSIC Richard Wagner's great opera DASRHEUIGOLD Tues.-Sat., March 1-5 ORDER NOW! 1 Enclosed find $_ for (number) tickets for I I DAS RHEINGOLD at (check 1) $1.75 L, $1.40 L, ! $1.00 TJ. I have noted my 1st and 2nd performanceI preferences below.I Tue., Mar. 1 I Wed., Mar. 2 Thu., Mar. 3 Fri., Mar.4 (sold out)> Sat., Mar. 5 (sold out) I jNAMF ! ADDRESS PHONEN Checks payable to PLAY PRODUCTION. Mail order to I OPERA, Mendelssohn Theatre. Enclose self-addressed, I stamped envelope. ------ - ------------------ English LIBRETTO as translated for the March 1-5 production ----.--- ---------------- Enclosed find $ for libretti, at 50c each Mail to: I NAME ADDRESS / Checks payable to PLAY PRODUCTION. Mail libret- to orders to LIBRETTO, Speech Dept., U-M, Annj I Arbor. I To Open Petitions For Aitd Applications for the general un- dergraduate University scholar- ships for 1960-61 will be available tomorrow. Assistant Dean of Men Ivan W. Parker announced that applica- tions can be picked up in Rm. 2011 of the Student Activities Building, and must be returned by March 1. Those applying for the general scholarships are considered for any one of the 20 scholarships. Parker also noted that present award winners will have to re-apply if they desire the scholarship to con- tinue, for the aid is non-renew- able. Applications are still being ac- cepted for the LaVei'ne Noyes scholarships. These awards are given to blood descendants of vet- erans of World War I. These ap- plications are due by Feb. 15 for this semester and by Aug. 1 for the fall semester next year. MUSKET . r " An organizational meeting for 1960 MUSKET will be held in the Michigan Union in the third floor conference room at 7 p.m. today, Richard Asch announced. Requirements and procedure will be explained for petitioning for MUSKET'S Central Committee, A higlihtof the meeting will be colored slides from this year's pro- duction of "Carousel." Petitions will be available at the Union Student offices February 10 through 12 from 2-5 p.m. Disarmnament .. . "Is Disarmament Possible?" will be the subject of a speech by R. P. Kimzey, Executive Director of the Mid-Lakes Region of the United World Federalists, at the next meeting of the Ann Arbor-Wash- tenaw Committee for Nuclear Sur- vival. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the Wesley Lounge of the Methodist Church. Research projects administered through the University's research Institute (UMRI) totaled $15.8 million in 1959, Director Robert E. Burroughs said in the Insittute's 38th annual report. The total represents an increase of almost $3.5 million over the previous year, the report said. UMRI administers over half of all research projects handled by the University. Last year projects ranged from instrumentation of an astronomi- cal satellite to research on powered ,prosthetic devices. UMRI administered 423 grants and contracts. The research was conducted for some 120 private and governmental sponsors. The area of "communications, electronics and plasmas" received the largest amount of money, $6,683,490. During the year over 1,000 stu- dents-half of them graduate stu- dents-were given employment in UMRI projects, working under the direction of University faculty and research staffs. To Visit .. . There are still openings for in- ternational students to visit a Dearborn school thishThursday, Mrs. Pat Pooley of the Interna- tional Center announced yester- day. Mrs. Pooley said there are 16 openings for students to view classes in J. P. Howard School in Dearborn with a representative of the International Center. After- wards the students will participate in a symposium evaluating what they had seen. The participants will be given free rides, leaving the Internation- al Center at 1 p.m. and will arrive back in Ann Arbor at 10:30 p.m., Mrs. Pooley said. After viewing classes until 3:30 p.m. they will be the guests of student members of the sponsoring Parent-Teachers Association. At 7:30 p.m. they will return to the school for the symposium. The University's Stanley Quartet left Sunday on a ten-day concert- clinic tour of four colleges in Ala- bama and Mississippi. The members of the quartet are music school Profs. Gilbert Ross and Gustave Rosseels playing the violin, Robert Courte playing the viola, and Oliver Edel on the cello. These concerts and music clinic services are being sponsored by the Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Foun- dation of the Library of Congress and the American Colleges arts program. On Feb. 23 the Stanley Quartet will give its next Michigan per- formances in the Wayne State University Community Arts Audi- torium in Detroit. Then at the Rackham Lecture Hall in Ann Arbor they will again perform on Feb. 24, assisted by pianist Benning Dexter. The Quartet will perform next on Feb. 25 at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, again assisted by Dexter. Then they will return to Ann Arbor where the Quartet will appear in a recital by Prof. Fran- ces Greer of the music school on March 9 in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Their next concert will be given on April 19 in the Rackham Me- morial Building in Detroit. ISA To Hold Valentine Fete The International Students As- sociation is sponsoring a Valen- tine Dance Feb. 13 in the Hillel Foundational Hall, 1429 Hill. Admission to the dance is free. PROF. GILBERT ROSS violinist WEATHER 4 3 t N0 548611 46 o 7 i 9. SPONSOR LISTEN FRIDAYS for WEEK-END WEATHER MORRI LL'S" U Stanley Quartet Makes Tour of Southern Colleges I I ; Ending Wednesday DIAL NO 2-6264 MURDER MOVIE EVERI GLEnn DEBBIE *GAZEBO" CARL REINER iJOHN McGIER cNEMAscoPE ,. fI PAMA presents THE KINGSTON TRIO I THIS PICTURE IS BEING DISTRIBUTED BY WARNER BROS. AT THE REQUEST -OF THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE IN CONNECTION WITH ITS CULTURAL EKCHANGE AGREEMENT WITH THE SOVIET UNION. I I FOR ONE NIGHT ONLY J I _[ SUN., FEB. 21 -- 8:15 P.M. MASONIC AUDITORIUM Detroit, Mich. t tickets at Bob Marshall's Book Store $4.40-$3.30-$2.20 Phone NO 2-4786 for Classified Advertising I THE MICHIGAN UNION AJUFLIGHT -to EUROPE Mass Meeting Wednesday, Feb. 10 8:00 P.M. in UNION BALLROOM United States Steel Research Center MONROEVILLE, PA. has outstanding opportunities for graduates in ELECTRICAL, MECHANICAL, AND CHEMICAL ENGINEERING METALLURGY, CHEMISTRY, AND MATHEMATICS to undertake research and development work, particularly in the areas of AUTOMATION ORE REDUCTION ALLOY DEVELOPMENT RAW MATERIAL PROCESSING MECHANICAL AND PROCESSED METALLURGY CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Friday, February 12, 1960 PETITIONS for MUSKET '60 CENTRAL COMMITTEE k I El I I