REPLACING VP KNAUSS See Editorial Page I e Sir D~atF LETHARGIC High-75-s0 Low-mid 50s Fair to partly cloudy Vol. LXXXII, No. 2 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, September 1 1, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages oss reorganization cas POLICE PAYMENTS DISPUTED one year By LINDSAY CHANEY Last September, after three years of debate between admin- istrators, faculty and students, students were, in effect, given decision-making control of the Office of Student Services (OSS). With a student majority on the nine-member OSS policy board, and a vice president who agreed to abide by the policy board's decisions, it appeared that stu- dents would finally have the op- portunity to make the office more responsive to student needs. Now, one year later, the rec- ord is mixed. of student Working along with Vice Pres- ident for Student Services Robert Knauss, the policy board direct- ed a major reorganization of the office, which oversees _Univer- sity housing, Health Service, a job placement office and student counseling services. The reorgan- ization was aimed at providing better services for students. However, as the year progress- ed, it became clear that the policy board's authority in OSS was not as complete as some students had at one time en- visioned. Although Knauss was willing to abide by all policy board decisions, the Regents were not. Last February, for ex- ample, they overturned a a non- discrimination recruiting rule previously, passed by the policy board. The trail to a student-domi- nated policy board for OSS started in the late 1960's when S t u d e n t Government Council (SGC) began to demand "stu- th Se gr cc of te: fi( wi m oll gr pL vi dE st) iz, K ph cli stl th tr vo be sp su th re it op no fic wt th by on Ur po ar za ca re: do ac em po wh -Daily-David Wender FORMER Office of Student Services policy board member Jerry De Grieck debates a recruiting policy established by the office in front of an open meeting of the Regents last February. dent control over student af- fairs." It ended in the summer of 1970 when the Regents ap- proved creation of the OSS policy board, and Knauss - appointed vice president for student serv- ices-pledged to follow all deci- sions of the student-dominated board. The regental bylaw which cre- ated the policy board did not itself specify whether the vice president or the policy board would have ultimate authority in the office, leaving that matter to be worked out between the two. This nebulous relationship was a compromise, intended to satisfy both students, who want- ed a policy board with decision- making power and administra- tors, who prefered that the policy board only have advisory power to the vice president. ontrol e Information and Referral rvice (76-GUIDE); -Special Service and Pro- ams, which is a new office mbining the previous Office Student Organizations, the In- rnational Centei', and the Of- ce of Religious Affairs, along ith some new services; -Career planning and place- ent, which is essentially the d placement office with a eater emphasis on career anning; and -Health Service, which pro- des medical service for stu- nts with principally the same ructure as before the reorgan- ation, but with additional em- asis on the mental health inic. Another accomplishment of the udent - controlled OSS during e past year has been the in- oduction of special interest ad- cates. These are staff mem- rs of OSS who try to represent ecial student interest groups, ch as women and blacks, to e administration. The OSS board faced a major buff last year, however, when ruled that companies ,which erate in South Africa could t use the OSS placement of- e for recruiting. This ruling, hich would have barred 250 ajor U.S. corporations from e office, was later overturned the Regents. The board based its decision a statement sent out by all niversity placement offices to tential recruiters which said, Jniversity placement services e not available to any organi- tion which discriminates be- use of race, clor, creed, sex, ligion or national origin, and es not maintain an affirmative tion program to assure equal ployment opportunities." The OSS board interpreted this licy to mean that companies ich had offices in South Africa which maintains an apartheid cial policy-could not use the S placement service. Their tions sparked a campus-wide bate as corporations found ey could recruit in some cam- s placement offices, but not OSS. The Regents, claiming they .nted to adopt a uniform, mpus-wide policy on the re- uiting issue, overruled the OSS cy and in its place established olicy to only bar corporations were activily seeking em- yes to work in South Africa. See OSS, Page 8 issues' recommended that the Of- t Affairs be renamed the dent Services (OSS), and utive committee" composed udents be involved in mak-. -Associatea rress South Vet drive continues South Vietnamese troops yesterday patrol an area near the Laotian border. It was the fifth day of a drive by about 13,500 troops, supported by U.S. artillery and helicopters, aimed at disrupting North Vietnamese troops and supply movements. (See story, Page 8.) CHESTER CASE: Suit charges 'U'wth political bias in teaching fellow firing By JIM KEVRA But Chester's lawyer, David! City, :0 By ALAN LENHOFF and CARLA RAPOPORT Special To The Daily LANSING - House leaders yesterday disclosed that the University has been directed to pay at least $300,000 to the city of Ann Arbor for police and fire protection -a sum which University officials say they are neither obligated nor able to pay. According to Rep. Earl Nelson (D - Lansing), House appropria- tions committee member, the pro- jected payment will initiate a two- year program which would phase out the traditional.police-fire sub- sidy. During negotiations last week in a House - Senate conference committee, $300,000 was added to the University's general fund ap- propriation-officially designated as "a restoration of an executive office miscalculation" of enroll- ment figures. Nelson said, however, that the University "is aware" of the com- mittee's real intent - that the money be paid to the city. Nelson's assertion was confirmed by three other House appropria- tions committee members con- tacted yesterday. Yet Allan Smith, vice president for academic affairs, yesterday said that the conferees had not officially asked the University to continue the payments. "I don't t h i n k the conferees have any common purpose or intent on that $300,000," he said. A highly informed, source close to the legislative negotiations, re- ported yesterday that the Univer- sity is "in grievous trouble" if it doesn't appropriate $300,000 to the city. However, Smith said the' pro- posed general fund budget for 1971-72 does not provide for any payment to the city for police and fire service. "We have no capacity built into this budget to pay that money," said Smith, who is the most in- fluential executive officer in draft- ing the University's annual budget. Mayor Robert Harris said yes- terday that he expected at least the full $300,000 from the Univer- sity, and hopefully more. "Although the University has no legal obligation to pay us, it has a moral obligation as we have ar- ranged in the past," said Harris. Last year, the University paid the city $1.1 million for these ser- vices-approximately 16 per cent' of the city's total police and fire budgets. President Robben Fleming said recently that he has entered no agreements with legislators or 'the city officials on this question. Ac- cording to Fleming, whether or not the University makes the pay- ment to the city depends on the probability of an appropriation cut by Milliken. See FATE, Page 8 funding flap Rebecca Schenk VP VPsearch As the search for a new vice president for student services is about to begin, the big question in the mind of student lead- ers is this: Will President Fleming pledge to pick the new vice president from among a list prepared by a student-faculty search committee, or will he reserve the right to go outside the committee's nominations and make his own choice? Furthermore, students are also insist- ing that the new vice president be willing to abide by decisions of the student- ,, dominated Office of Student Services (OSS) policy board. "All nominees selected by the search committee will have to say they will con- sider policy board decisions as binding." said Rebbecca Schenk, Student Govern- ment Council (SGC) president. "Then Fleming must pledge to choose one of the people picked by the search committee." President Robben Fleming, however, has given no indication that he will make such a pledge. The exact composition or a search com- In the one year that students have been in control of OSS the rac major accomplishment has been the reorganization of the office ac structure, accompanied by an in- de crease of services. Eight pre- vious units in OSS were combined pu into five last June. The new in units, each of which is headed T by a unit director who has or wa will have his own policy board, ca are: cru -Housing, which is concerned with all phases of dormitory op- poli eration and off-campus housing; a p -Counseling services, which who supervises all counseling offices ploy P Knauss in the University and operates rekndes old mittee is not yet definite, although policy The reportr board members indicate that it will con- fice of Studen sist of four students chosen by SGC, two Office of Stu faculty members chosen by the Senate that an "execu Advisory Committee on University Affairs primarily of stu (SACUA) -the faculty executive body - ing decisions. and two staff members in OSS chosen by OSS seeme the OSS staff. begin allowing Schenk and SACUA Chairman Warren because the ofg Norman are scheduled to meet with Flem- dealing directly ng next week to discuss the search com- . mittee.service, the resic mitt cc. A definite committment by Fleming to ing, and others. pick the new vice president from among The report' nominees chosen by a search committee extremely vague so constituted would reduce the possibility under considera of controversy such as that which ac- committee whi companied the appointment of present gental bylawi Vice President for Student Services Rob- recommendingt ert Knauss. board set the po That controversy began in March 1968 In JanuaryI when the President's Commission on the their own draft Role of Students in the University Decis- ion-making (Hatcher Commission) made have given the its report. Se Fired from his job as an 'Y}Goldstein of Washtenaw County economics teaching fellow last win- Legal Aid, said that the money ter, Eric Chester has filed a $50,000 really was not an important part l a w s u i t against the University of the lawsuit. charging that the firing stemmed "We're not interested in the from his political beliefs and vio- money," Goldstein said. "The real lated his freedom of speech. {f......issue here is the way the Univer- The suit, filed Sept. 2 in U.S. sity_ can treat its employes. The District Court in Detroit, also University must find out that it names President Robben Fleming, can't just break a valid contract." Vice President for Academic Af- Goldstein likened the case to that fairs Allan Smith, economics Prof. of the three Eastern Michigan Uni- Warren Smith, chairman of the versity (EMU) professors who department at the time of the fir- were not rehired this fall, pro- ing and economics Prof. Harold portedly because of their political Shapiro as co-defendants. activities. In that case, the three "His contract was terminated," Eric Chester professors received a $38,000 out the suit states, "because he has of court settlement from EMU. despite his academic deficiencies, long been active in political activi- he was still fired for "political" But he added that he would ties in and around the campus of reasons. He pointed out that in the rather not settle out of court in the University of Michigan and past several other teaching fellows Chester's case. Instead, he said, he he is well known to the defendants with similar academic deficiencies would like to see the case tried so in that capacity." were allowed to continue teaching, that it could be used as a test In addition, the defendants are The board disagreed, however, case for future University-faculty charged with violating Chester's and refused to reinstate him. relations. constitutional rights by meting out Chester is suing the University Roderick Daane, general coun- "cruel and unusual punishment" and each of the other four defend- sel for the University, said last and by invading his privacy. ants for $10,000. In addition, he is night that, to the best of his As part of his complaint, Chester asking for $1500 back pay from the knowledge, no summons had been charges that he was offered in the economics department. served against the University. form of a letter a teaching fellow- ---- ----- ----- - ------ - ship for the academic year 1970- 71 in June, 1970 by William Shep- herd, then chairman of the eco- nomics department. Chester accepted the offer, but after he had been teaching for six weeks, he received a notice0[om in ed S sch olen ding Smith "altering the original agree- ment so as to reduce the term of the agreement from academic year By GERI SPRUNG 1970-71 to Fall term, 1970." The University's day care center In a hearing before the Gradu- has opened at its new location in ate School Executive Board last the education school its fourth February, Shapiro, chairman of home in the last 14 months. the Graduate Program Committee And even now the center, which of the economics department, said A opened Thursday, cannot become that Chester was not reappointed attachedtouis nurroundings because of his "failure to meet since it was only granted the pres- academic requirements." ent site for one year. "Like all other teaching fellow contracts," Shapiro added, "Ches- For one reason or anothe the ters ws cndiionl uon deqatecenter has periodically been forced ter's was conditional upon adequate to find new sites on campus and Chester contended, however, that each time, coordinators of the cen- It.r a thir ha r ain nl t t a . t t t 1 J J d to this iffice with dence be a good place to student involvement is involved in areas students-the health hall system, counsel- new home iong search s wording, however, was e, so the matter was taken ation by a student-faculty ch drafted a proposed re- in the summer of 1969 that a student-dominated licies for OSS. 1970, the Regents released of the bylaws which would OSS policy board only an e NEW, Page 8 RECYCLING PROJECT City, ecologists join to save trash By BETH OBERFELDER No one likes garbage, but the Ecology Center is currently work- ing with the city to save mounds of solid waste from burial in a gi- gantic hole outside Au n Arbor. For as long as anyone can re- member, the city's solid waste has been collected by the Depart- ment of Public Works' sanitation trucks and dumped in a "landfill" area - to the tune of 17,000 cubic yards of refuse weekly. way than to of the refuse cycle it? not dispose of some at all, but rather re- About one year ago, the Ecol- ogy Center initiated a recycling program in Ann Arbor aimed at alleviating the landfill area of re- cyclable glass, cans and paper. Since then, over 2 million pounds of glass have been brought in by local citizens for recycling, an average of 10 to 12,000 pounds per day. tor of the Ecology Center, strongly advocates a continued move to- ward recycling and away from dis- posal in the landfill area. "The landfill system is not only hurting Ann Arbor's environment -we are burying valuable re- sources within it," he says. Schectman foresees a time in the not-so-distant future - after the landfill area has been long filled and the region's metal sup- ply drastically depleted, when it ter say, e~y nave received only minimal cooperation from the University. Marsha Remsen, teacher and co-director of the center, asserts that the constant moving has hurt the functioning of the center. "It takes permanance to set up any kind cf learning environment for the children and this cannot be done if we have to move every four months," Remsen says. "To set up the center decently takes at least two weeks and we have never even had that luxury. We had to set this up while the chil- dren were already here." Presently the center, which is open nine hours a day, handles children of University students and staff from ages 212 to 6 and is filled to its capacity of 50 children. 01''.a _ _o u