Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, December 12, 1971 Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, December 12, 1 971 Heyn s: (Continued from Page 1) In addition to educational re- forms, Heyns sees that Council will strive toward more clearly de- fining its role in respect to wom- en. Such areas as appointment of women to university faculties and improving the educational oppor-. tuniiies of both professional and, undergraduate women will be studied by a committee which Heyns hopes to set up. "This is a7 Examining new post high priority of mine," he says. Recently, the Council has come under criticism by local and na- tional women's groups for its ap- pointments to an ACE committee which will speak with the Secre- tary of Health, Education and Welfare on problems of adminis- tering affirmative action programs for equal hiring. Because all of the five people appointed by Tenants file suit with IRS (Continued from Page 1) The tenants subsequently filed suit against Hall Management with IRS. After consulting with IRS, the tenants went back to Hall Man- agement, and according to Dewey St. tenant Steve Reiber, "They offered to give back the increase." Reiber added that no back pay- ment has been received at this time. *cording to John Lavelle, a tenant 'of 939 Dewey St., "it all started about a month -ago, when the rates increased, and the serv- ices decreased." 'Reiber added that the role of a permanent building manager was eliminated and replaced by a "travelling manager" who com- muted from the various Hall Man- agement buildings and "didn't ful- fill his job." Reiber added, "The garbage area was not kept up-a rat was spotted-and the parking lot was not controlled." Film unit hit bY rival group (Continued from Page 1) In October, Student Govern- ment Council, (SGC), forced an agreement with Orson Welles,- re- scinding its student organization status and stipulating that: -SGC appoint a committee to jointly administer the film group's financial records and accounts; -Any remaining funds of Or- son Welles be passed on to SGC to be used for the purchase of movie equipment to be used by and for University students. At the time of the agreement, Victor Gutman had withdrawn charges he had made against Or- son Welles claiming it had used an auditorium under a false name, and advertised without identification of the sponsoring organization. Now Gutman says that "If Cinema II wins its case, I will file breach of contract charges against Orson Welles." For the student body: Genuine * Authentic Navy PEA COATS $25 Sizes 34 to S0 CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty With no permanent manager around to take care of the units the situation worsened, Lavelle said and the people of the apart- ment building began to organize. When they had met several times, the Dewey tenants discov- ered the rent discrepency. "We found out throughaa long and tor- tuous process that Hall Manage- ment was in direct violation of the freeze," Reiber said, after ex- plaining the many steps his group went through to lower their rents. Council head universities that were charged by HEW with dis- criminating against women - the women's groups contend that the sex guidelines might possibly be watered down. Although Heyns feels the people appointed to the committee will do a good job, he suggests sup- plementing the body with extra women as well as expanding its role to include studying issues as increased women professorships. "I think some of the criticism will be met if this is done," Heyns adds. Another area Heyn hopes to key in on involves the field of in- ternational education. "The for- eign exchange programs need to be coordinated," Heyns stresses. "There are a lot of scholars in a number of exchange programs just drifting about and, some cen- tral unit should be formed to or- ganize them." On the federal level, one of the major tasks facing Heyns will in- volve the dispensing of federal aid to higher education. "Educational costs have risen so fast that a great many schools are in danger of going under," Heyns says. "Federal aid is obviously needed, but questions about how it is to be distributed and what controls may be imposed have to be answered." Although Heyns plans to take "strong stances" on issues relat- ing to Council and education, he will limit his public comments to this area. Current issues on cam- puses across the nation such as university-funded child care cen- ters and military classified re- search do not directly concern his office, Heyns says and Council will not concern itself in such areas. - Stressing a need to retain an un- prejudiced identity as ACE presi- dent, Heyns says, "If a person holds an office, he capnot distin- guish between speaking for that officeranddspeaking independently." Heyns earned his master's and doctor's degrees here at the Uni- versity, staying on to teach for 13 years in the psychology depart- ment. In 1958 he became the young- est dean of the literary college at 40, and four years later Heyns was appointed vice president for aca- demic affairs. Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 Daily Classifieds Bring Results STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF . of M. HAWAII 12-26-1-2 NASSAU 12-26-1-2 1-2-1-9 . ... $269 $199 $169 OPEN MON.-FRI. 'til 9 P.M. 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