Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 15, 197L Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 15, 1 97L Suit over funds to print coopt go befre- CSJ By REBECCA WARNER A suit by Student Government Council seeking to regain a $1,500 allocation made to the Student Print Co-op will be heard Monday night by the Central Student Judiciary. SGC claims in its suit that actions taken by the print co-op's board have violated an agreement on the use of the funds. The money is presently held in a student print co-op fund under joint receivership of CSJ vice-chairman Mark Goldsmith and former print co-op board and former SGC member Barbara Goldman. Sig- natures of both Goldsmith and Goldman are required for with- UNPUBLISHED TEXT Excerpts from Assembly committee research report PESC to continue programs (Continued from Page 1) would affect their quality and/or close them to regular students was countered by PESC's assertion that students registering for PESC courses are fully aware of their access to community members. PESC pointed to the University's "terrible relationship" with the community and the expansion of University curriculum, brought about by the new PESC courses, as further justifications for its ac- ceptance. CharlestThomas, who is presi- dent of the Black Economic De- velopment League and plans to in- struct a PESC course entitled "'The Socio-Economic and Politicall Foundations of County Politics," said that the qualifications of non- professors in PESC should not be challenged by the University. His statement apparently antici- pated a debate over whether courses such as . his could grant credit hours to University students. drawal of funds from the ac- count. Goldman was an SGC member who initiated the print co-op board's request for the money to buy printing equipment for the co-op. When the board later allocated the funds to the Washtenaw County Black Economic Develop- ment League (WCBEDL), SGC objected. SGC claimed thq agreement ac- companying the grant of $1,500 specified . that the print co-op should provide for student as well as community involvement and include students on its governing body. The agreement stated that printing equipment must be pur- chased with the SGC grant by "winter '71". Goldsmith said that this dead- line was too vague to terminate the joint receivership account at present. CSJ has yet to rule on the meaning of "winter '71". Goldsmith added that the court is still unclear as to what SGC is contending and what its original agreement with the print co-op board was. "I'm as confused as anybody," Goldsmith said. "A lot of members of the court are really up in the air. The case hasn't been presented in the most orderly way." (Continued from Page 4) University community who pro- pose or plan to carry out the re- search. For the purpose of administer- ing this policy, the term "limits" shall not be construed as apply- ing to the following types of agreements, contracts, or grants: (a) Those classified or other- wise restricted solely for purposes of providing access for the re- searcher to classified or other re- stricted documents, equipment, or facilities. (b) Those which restrict only the publication of certain items of information, such as numerical constants or equipment paramet- ers or settings, that are identified Sheriff to institute new instruction The program will be previewed' by Sheriff Doug Harvey and other top aids in the Sheriff's Depart- ment, but according to those de- signing the program, the program will not be altered in any way. The main emphasis of the' training is the interaction of the' police with "the 97 per cent of us who are not hardened criminals and have very little contact with the police", says Braden. "Those are the people we don't want to alienate." The same training program was turned down by the Ann Arbor Police Department, which recently has come under attack for alleged misconduct in the stopping and frisking of a black Washtenaw County Commissioner. Commissioner D a v i d Byrd charges that during the search and questioning, the officer con- ducted himself in a way that could have served to provoke black people. "I've never been so humiliated in my life," Byrd said. Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny explains that lack of funds blocked the Ann Arbor Po- lice Department from joining in on the training program. According to Krasny it would cost over $5,000 to send the de- partment's street officers to at- tend the sessions. by the researcher in the course of his investigations but are ines- sential for open publication of the results. (c) Those which -merely require a review of reports of the research prior to open publication to insure that (i) classified or otherwise re- stricted information to which the researcher has access as in (a) above, and/or (ii) items of infor- mation as specified in* (b) above will not be compromised by the publication of such reports. The clarity of Policy II would benefit from certain interpretive comments, as follows: II. The University will not enter into or renew any agreement or contract or accept any grant the specific purpose or clearly foresee- able results of which are to de- stroy human life or to incapaci- tate human beings. There are two additional sec- tions in the resolution adopted by Senate Assembly. Since these two sections of the resolution are brief descriptions of the procedures pre- ferred by Senate Assembly for im- plementing the four policies, this Committee recommends that Sec- tions V and VI be stated more fully and precisely in instructions from the Assembly to its Classified Research Committee rather than be submitted for Regental ap- proval. Until recently, we did not charge U-M students buying books and supplies the four per cent Michigan sales tax because of a loophole in the State law. But while you were home for the holidays, eating the Christmas goose and just generally whooping it up, the Michigan Legislature CHANGED THE LAW. Now we are REQUIRED to charge everyone the four per cent. We wish we didn't have to, and we felt you deserved an explana- tion . But we still discount school supplies a phenomenal FIFTEEN PER CENT, and we knock five per cent off all new, books, plus we have thousands of used course books, cheap. -the U CELLAR IN THE UNION Prof. Withe named as new dean of curriculum l Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 764-0558 (Continued from Page 1) at the University. On this campus, while praising' experiments like Course Mart and1 Pilot Programs, he finds fault with standardized departmental structure. "I would encourage criticism of the departments," says the spe- cialist in Latin. "The advantage of Course mart is that it doesn't float a course within any depart- ment and can create a 'micro- climate'-areas which may not fit in any department. "It often seems that as soon as you get a (departmental) course, it stays there regardless of its merit," says Witke. "If students have had an interesting exchange of ideas and the course has been profitable it is automatically thought it should be kept. Still head of the Comparative Languages program, Witke sees Uof M Riding Club MASS MEETING MON., JAN. 17 7:30 UNION BALLROOM Everyone Welcome Questions-call Don, 769-3369 particular promise in expanding inter - departmental programs. "The exciting things now are be- tween the old majors - things like religious studies." Beyond trying to find new ideas for courses from students and faculty, Witke offers no for- mulated plans for his loosely-de- fined post. But he willingly admits that he is "still learning"-which complements what he sees as his basic problem. "Our problem is that we have a very bad record in predicting- we respond to crises in education, but don"t forsee them very well." It's about time! A calendar of men for women. Start the New Year with the most un- usual calendar you've ever seen. The 1972 Calendar of Men for Women. A photographic, not pornographic study of 12 unique men. This is a large hanging calendar (13" x 19"), 13 pages (including cover). It's the first of its kind and will surely become a collector's item. Isn't it about time men became objects for hanging? Special student price $2.50. Nationally advertised at $3.95. Calendar, P.O. Box 827 Farmingdale, N.Y.11735 Please rush-calendars at $2.50 ea. (plus 50 cents postage and handling). Enclosed is my check/money order for I I Vets spark war protests EVERYTHING WE DON'T HAVE, BUT, WHO COMES CLOSER THAN ULICH'S?0 (Continued from Page 1) "The air war is escalating," explains Mike Lewis. "In the Air Force I was involved in tar- get selection and I'm aware of what the air war does. It's the mass killer. It's more important to drop a certain amount of bomb than to find out that you're firing on Laotians who live in caves and who could care less about the war." Lewis says he feels that the withdrawal -of ground troops by the President is relatively un- important. "It will be interest- ing to see how much of the Air Force, which is mostly stationed in Thailand, is brought home. It only takes a few men to drop alot of bombs." In Ann Arbor, the VVAW has CORRECTION The Daily incorrectly report- ed yesterday that the 13 Uni- versity professors that are di- recting the Program for Edu- cational and Social Change (PESC) "represent" the Pilot Program, the residential col- lege, and the literary college. The 13 professors are affiliated with these units, but the units themselves are not involved in PESC. The Daily regrets the error. TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 For the Student Body: *.Jeans * Bells * Flares off t, kI/IWiATV expressed anger that the anti- war halftime was not allowed at the Rose Bowl. Reade was suspicious saying that the band's 215-0 vote against the show "looked fishy, kind of like Gen- eral Thieu's mandate." The veterans plan mostly edu- cational action for the winter, with speaking engagements and perhaps some guerrilla theatre. One member discussed the pos- sibility that they would join the Detroit group's' 'Tet offensive" against local corporations. The "offensive" began late last month with a demonstration against GM war production and a mock trial and execution of the chairman of the board, Rich- ard Gerstenberg, for war crimes. 1 - -- -- - - w w W W W W 11 I HAl RCUTS and THINGS Michigan Union ARMY-NAVY BIVOUAC SURPLUS 10:10-5:30 514 E. William 761-6207 -JUST IN- REGULATION FIELD JACKETS X24.00 print name address- (make c 1q. ,eck/M.O. payable to Calendar) I K Program for Educational& Social Change PESC- "A community of students, teachers and workers within and outside the University of Michigan. We invite others to join our efforts to study social and educational change and provide flexible opportunities to facilitate that study." t PESC- makes it possible for you to: e define your major interest as educational and social change * create an interdisciplinary problem-oriented course of study * form a group within a course to work on specific topics * through talking to an instructor, create an independent reading course for yourself " expand the scope of learning to encompass community action STUDY: COMMUNITY CONTROL in Washtenaw County, course led by Charles Thomas and Hank Bryant of Black Economic De- velopment League, and other community leaders Community Control of Prisons led by John Sinclair-or any of 50 4" I I 0