Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, January 29, 1 Pae enTH MCHGA DiL LSA govt. hits section deletions (Continued from Page 1) of students affected by the delet- ed sections at between 70 and 80 of the approximately 175 in the course. Hefner said last night he had not received any official n o t i c e from the curriculum committee that the sections had been delet- ed. "My position at this time is that they don't havesany legal grounds upon which to take my sections away," he said. "My in- terpretation of their delay in no- tifying me is that they are pos- sibly having second thoughts about their action, in view of the motions passed by the LSA gov- ernment and the general interest which the issue has aroused." Fleming said that through ad- ministrative errors in the course's organization, a number of pro- posed teachers were not associat- ed with the LSA faculty in any respect, and failed to obtain the approval of the dean and the executive committee. Since the term is too far ad- vanced to practically permit ap- proval to be granted now, accord- ing to committee members, the decision to delete the six sections is completely unnegotiable. Bass emphasized that at no point was approval for the sec- tions ever rescinded. He said the curriculum committee never ap- proved the sections in the first place, but rather approved of the course as a whole at a meeting on Jan. 19, while at the same time stipulating thatathe course mart committee would subsequently re- view the sections separately, making them subject to deletion at the committee's discretion. The reason the course was ap- proved at that time but not the individual sections, Bass said, was to guarantee the 175 students en- rolled in the course that they would be receiving three college U S - credits for the course, even though they might be forced to move to another section if theirs was scrapped. The committee members ve- hemently denied that the dele- tions were made for political rea- sons, citing several other courses among the current course mart of- ferings which are "of as much or, more of a radical nature" than College Course 327. Tikofsky said the list of Winter term courses included "Problemsj in Counter Culture" taught by a psychology undergraduate, "Marx- ism and Methodology", taught by a confirmed Marxist and "Viet- nam: "Cultural Perspective", taught by a -Vietnamese woman. "Statements to the effect that we are being politically repressive are simply not true," Tikofsky said. "Our actions came about not because of the political nature of the course but because of sev- eral administrative errors by the sponsor." "If it was political repression, it would have been total," said Bass. "We wouldn't have approved any of the sections. Intellectual repression goes against the very reason the course mart was f ormed." At the start of the afternoon's meeting, Steve Nissen, '71, and Fred Rosen. Research assistant at the Conflict Resolution Center en- tered and asked for reasons why the sections had been deleted. Nissen was to teach one of the deleted sections, while Rosen is presently teaching a section on ideology, which was not deleted. Last night, Nissen told LSA government members that the cur- riculum committee had been pres- sured from "somewhere above" to delete the six sections. He said the committee applied criteria to the course which they had never ap- " :? ' plied to any other course mart courses. "The entire issue of the techm- cal reasons for denial of credit, to the six sections is a red her- ring," Nissen said. "No questions were raised about this course until it got all the publicity that it did, from ads that appeared in the Daily and leaflets passed around campus." "The most important issue in this whole affair is the right of those 80 students to elect thet courses they desire to meet their educational needs, and not cater to the whims of people like Locke Anderson," he continued. Nissen claimed the rule con-' cerning the approval of teachers Jury fails to reach verdict in RAM case By ALAN LENHOFF A Washtenaw County Circuit Court jury adjourned last night without reaching a verdict in the case of a University student charged with assaulting an Ann Arbor policeman during last spring's Black Action Movement (BAM) strike. County Judge William F. Ager asked the jury to resume delibera- tions this morning in the case of Thaddeus (T.R.) Harrison. Harrison is charged with "assault with intent to commit great bodily harm less than murder," stemming from an incident occurring during the strike. Harrison allegedly threw a brick at an Ann Arbor policeman during a scuffle in front of the Administration Bldg. last March 19. Ager said that generally in cases "of this sort", the jury is sent to a hotel where they are locked up to insure that they will not . .- .CLIP AND SAVE.............. LOW COST, SAFE, LEGAL ABORIN IN NEW YORK SCHEDULED IMMEDIATELY (212) 490.3600 I PROFESSIONAL SCHEDULING SERVICE, Inc.! ! 545 Fifth Ave., New York City 10017 I There is a fee for our servgce._ Daily Classifieds Bring Results DO IT!" . . . Come on down to Little Professor and browse through our vast collection of hardcovers and paper- backs. It's a "right-on" move to make 1 LITTLE PROFESSOR BOOK CENTER Maple Village Shopping Center (next to Fox Village Theatre) Open every night till 9:00 662-4110 0 for the course has not lowed in any course ma: he is aware of. "I have been teachin course 309 (Planned Chf two semesters, and as know I was never approv dean or executive comm said, "but now they won teach in College Course which I am probably m fied." Tikofsky said the c would not permit Nissen a section of 327 becaus agreed that an unde would not be able to t courses in the same term tion to his class load. Speaking of the motio by the LSA government, said "considering all t about the issue that I kn ISA student governmen know, I think they've g torted. Their action sad angers me, and frustrate At a policy board m the course Wednesday motion was approved toe a mass delegation of stu a small group of the te. the deleted sections to ne: day's curriculum commit ing to demand reasons fo letion of the sections. Anderson s a i d yester riculum committee mee open and there would n attempt to prevent the c from attending. He add ever, that the issue wo nitely not be on the agen "The whole matter closed," Anderson said. been fol- discuss the case with other people. rt courses *He said, however, he was making courses radicals an exception in this trial. g college The jury has four alternatives. ange) for soIt can convict Harrison of the fas as I f ar'' ll"' charge of "assault with intent to ed by the (Continued from do great bodily harm less t h a n ittee," he ( Page 1) murder," which carries a maxi- 't let me Recent troop reductions in mum penalty of ten years in pri- 327, for (Continued from Page 1) soni; re quali- South Vietnam actually increas- ed "the murder factory of Viet- It can lower the charge to felon- ommittee nam," Lane charged. "With the ious assault if it is determined to teach bombing seven times greater now that there was no intent to do se it was than when Nixon was elected - great bodily harm. This charge rgraduate the equivalent of 2%/2 Hiroshimas has a maximum penalty of four each two every single week - American years; in addi- soldiers are only in the way." It can lower the charge to as- The program started with many sault and battery if it judges that ns passed in the audience taking part in the assault was the result of a Fleming singing and dancing on the audi- moment of anger. This charge is a the facts torium's stage. Calling the stage misdemeanor; ow which "liberated", the group was led ,in t doesn't the signing by several young musi- It can reach a verdict of not ot it dis- cians. After the speeches, Rubin guilty. dens me, suggested that discussions con- Fourteen jurors listened to the es me." tinue at the Umon because the three days of evidence in the trial. eeting of auditorium was being rented by Two were eliminated from the night, a the hour. jury in a random selection pro- send both There, Rubin elaborated on his cess yesterday before deliberation dents and view that "the jails are going to began in order to reach the num- sachers of have to be torn down." ber of 12 jurors required by law.a xt Thurs- "Everything in this country is rf j e tee meet- built around its jail system," said r the de- Rubin. "I'm for doing anything Q}u , o 0 ilty . against it." Lt day cur- R u b i n characterized Timothy. G.E tings are Leary's escape from jail last year1 Inl in. n cident ot be any as the "biggest victory" recently ontingent against the system. Some helpful (Continued from Page 1) led, how- tactics could be similar to Rubin's berg would attempt to assault s. uld defi- disruption of the David Frost tele- 6'2" police officer. Ida. vision show last year, which Rubin is quite said was useful because of the The defense also cited what Els- publicity it generated. enberg's attorney called "discrep - _____________ __________ancies" between the accounts of ) I I ,3 C r , , u l G I. 1 r jjj } } . $ i3 f a 3 AV 14 Kent jury report 1 4 i . f (Continued from Page 1) that the report endangered their jobs. He said the jury violated its oath of secrecy in asserting in the re- port that witnesses before it had "fairly represented" events at Kent and that the witnesses "indicted an effort at complete impartiality.' Thomas said the jury further violated the oath by asserting that it had examined various reports and "all pertinent information and Air raidshi Indochina (Continued from Page 1) positions across the Mekong River from Phnom Penh yesterday, but most battlefields near the capital were quiet after three days of sharp fighting. Although the attacks have been stepped up and there is fear among many senators that more increases may exceed the limits of the Cooper-Church amendment, there was general agreement that the administration has ,up till now kept within the technical , limits of the amendment. When asked about fears on the part of Congressmen that the U.S. could become involved in a new Vietnam in Cambodia, Rogers re- plied, "I don't think that is pos- sible". Senate Foreign Relations com- mittee member George Aiken tR- Ver) also cited the likelihood of a strong public reaction in stating that while apprehensive, he doubts there will be an expanded U.S. in- volvement in Cambodia. "The uproar in this country would make last May seem like a Sunday school picnic," Aiken told reporters yesterday. g Meanwhile, the Italian govern- ment has notified Washington of its "anxiety" over an increase of U.S. bombing in North Vietnam, Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Angelo Salizzoni told the Chamber of Deputies yesterday. He said the U.S. government had been informed "in the most opportune manner and way" of Italian anxiety. Salizzoni added that Italy believed the bombing would not help a negotiated set- tlement of the Vietnam war. *i evidence . . . in detail" when. some reports were not introduced as evidence and some were not read in their entirety by the jury. He ruled that the assertions of the report might have an adverse effect on prospective P o r t a g e County jurors and that the con- tinued official existence of the re- port could "irreparably damage" the right of the 25 indicted to a fair trial. No trial date has been set for those indicted. "It was my opinion we were to issue a report," said Robert Hast- ings, the Ravenna insurance brok- er who was the jury foreman. "Frankly, I didn't think that report was prejudicial to any trials and I still feel that way. We sim- ply were trying to evaluate what we thought went on there." Thomas noted that former Gov. Rhodes' call for the jury appeared to have instructed the panel to determine the causes of unrest at Kent, but "the scope of a gover- nor's call cannot enlarge the, power of a special grand jury." Thomas said he found no evi- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLE TIN FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 1971 DayCalendar International World's Fair: Residen- tial College, noon to midnight, Var- iety Show, 2, 3:30, 7 and 9 p.m. Astronomy Colloquium: Dr. E. Upton, UCLA, "Fundamental Determinations of Absolute Magnitudes on the Zero-age Main sequence," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 p.m. Rive Gauche: :Internat'l Folk Dance, Barbour Gym, 8 p.m. Hockey: Mich. vs. Duluth, M i c h. Coliseum, 8 p.m. Sch. of Music: University Woodwind Quintet, School of Music Recital Hali, 8 p.m. University Players: "Timon of Ath- ens," Trueblood, 8 p.m. Literature, Science & Arts: P. Teller, Univ. of Ill., "Epistemic Possibility," W. Conf. Rm., Rackham, 8 p.m. Placement } exper. preferred, but not nec. (Taylor), Harper Row Publishers, college trav- eler for Ann Arbor area, degree w it h good g.p.a., no exper. nee. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICES 212 S.B.A. (lower level) Interviews at SPS, register for inter- views by phone or in person. FEB. 1 Good Humor Co., Detroit, interview- ing 9 to 5, a job with good pay. FEB. 3 Camp Tamarack, Detroit Fresh A i r Society, interivewing 9 to 5; c a b i n counselors, specialists in watrfront, arts and crafts, nature campcraft, tripping, dramatics, dance, puppetry, counselors for pioneer and outpost camping, unit and assistant unit supervisors, c a s e- workers, nurses, truck-bus drivers, cooks assts. FEB. 4 Camp Tamarack. Announcements: for further info. check with Summer Placement Serv- ices. Final exam on Summer Jobs in Fed. Agencies, Mar. 13; application must be in Washington by Feb. 3; applications available at SPS. Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village. Interview Schedule available for working as guides. in Food Service, as cashiers or groundsman. General Notices Third Annual Mich. Conference on A p p i i e d Linguistics: Angell Hall, through Jan. 30. Attention Freshmen & Sophomores "in LSA (fewer than 55 hrs by May '71): Make advanced classification appoint- ments starting Feb. 3; no forms will be turned in before Mar. 8; have one or two alternative course selections ready; time schedules will be available sometime in first week of March. I officers testifying for the prose- cution. Prosecuting Attorney John Huss said however that the details of the police accounts were not "as important as the fact"that Eisen- berg had attempted to block th(; camera and had subsequently jumped on the back of the police- man. The jury of four women and two men deliberated for two and a half hours before bringing in the verdict of guilty. No date for sentencing has been set pending a decision by Eison- berg whether to appeal. we pinpoint the dotted dress shirt as big fashion news for men. . . Creighton Shirtmakers' crisp Avril rayon/cotton blend shirt with a 4-inch Calcutta collar and 2-button cuffs. Brown, burgundy or navy with white dots. $10. Jhcob-onl - ---- ----- ri m" OVER 25,000 LP'S, OVER 300 LABELS IN STOCK WATCH FOR SPECIAL SALE ITEMS CHANGING WEEKLY i scount 1records + a STORE HOURS: Both Stores Mon.-Fri.-9:30-9 Saturday-9:30-6 Sunday-Noon-5 dence of bad faith prosecution by 1 3200 S.A.B. the state in the Kent cases, as had These Ann Arbor area jobs listed with us this week. Other listings from many been alleged by the plaintiffs. part of country on file in our office; Portage County Common Peace further info. at Placement Services. Judge Edwin Jones, under whose Battle Creek Community Hosp., staff authority the jury operated, re- pharmacist, new grad is fine, comple- fusedcommet ontion of intership preferred. fused comment on yesterday's+ General Cable Corp., cost and bud- action. get supervisor, BBA acctg. major. 3-5 Craig Morgan, Kent State stu- yrs exper in manufacturing acctg., dent body president and one of the supv. exper. required. (Cass City). Carriage Galley, interior decorator, 25 indicted, said the report's dis- missal "doesn't make any differ-- ence," "You're not going to tell Portage County people to forget the report. The report did its damage al- ready," said Morgan who was in- dicted on second degree riot charges. : Dr. Thomas Lough, a Kent State ,k faculty member indicted on a". charge of inciting to riot, said the * decision was "a substantial vic-- tory, but I think it's too early to' tell what the implications of the decision are in my case and the other 24." 1235 S. UNIVERSITY 668-9866 * 300 S. STATE 665-3679 " ANN ARBOR, MICH. BEVERLY SILLS-LIVE and RECORDED BEVERLY SILLS Live at Hill Auditorium Saturday, January 30, 8:30 p.m. i He Iz Dminlg Soon* (Al Kooper) (and so are they) BEVERLY SILLS ON RECORDS NOW SALE PRICED ONLY 67 39 6. FANTASTIC per LP For the student body: LEVI'S RECORD ALE TWO WEEKS ONLY SAVE up to $00 a Record DDIII AD 1is A77 1I V L 1 A SlfA I FOR ANY OF BEVERLY SILLS FINE RECORDINGS ON AUDIO TREASURY 1. LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR (3 L.P.'s) 2. BELLINI & DONIZETTI HEROINES 3. ROBERTO DEVEREAUX (3 L.P.'s) 4. FRENCH OPERA ARIAS 5. MOZART & STRAUSS SONGS Thru Monda), Feb. 1, 1971 CORDUROY Slim Fits .... (All Colors) Bells ........ i 4/ DENIM Bush Jeans Rlls $6.98 $8.50 $10.00 $8.00 OVER 25,000 LP'S, OVER 300 LABELS IN STOCK I mn .. -.R- t7: a eapxK.S: :. + i I