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February 05, 1971 - Image 8

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-02-05

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, February 5, 1971

Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 5, 197 1~'

COLLEGE COURSE 327:
LSA curriculum unit decides
to reconsider deleted sections

Hunter says political Prof

1

(Continued from Page 1)
tion was subject to review by the
course mart committee and could
possibly be denied approval.
Economics Prof.Locke Ander-
son, chairman of the curriculum
committee, explained the commit-
tee subsequently acted on the
recommendation of. the course
mart committee and approved only
nine of the 15 sections Jan. 26.
AFSCME
releases
contract
(Continued from Page 1)
--Vacation pay may be made in
advance if requested seven days
in advance;
-No work done by University
employes will be contracted out t
other companies;
-An employe laid off or removed
from his classification due to sup-
ervision working will be paid loss
of time at his hourly rate, plu
shift or special premium, if any;
-All tools and equipment will b
furnished for employes;
-Stewards will not be moved ou
of the district they represent an
c h i e f stewards will represen
classifications instead of geo
graphic areas.
The tentative settlement follow
ed 11 days of sessions with state
appointed fact-finder W i 1 i a m
Ellmann. Both sides agreed to sub
mit to fact-finding following t h
University's unsuccessful attemp
to secure an injunction agains
the striking union.
Settlement, however, was ach
ieved not through fact-finding bu
through negotiating sessions Mon
day.
Earlier in the week, Ellmann de
scribed the settlement as "an
equitable agreement for b o t]
parties." '
However, some union members
after reading the tentative settle
ment expressed the belief that th
union had "sold out."
"The lack of a cost of living
clause, no movement on longevity
retirement and life insurance, an
the failure to get a day care cente
show negligence on the part o
the leadership on implementin
the demands of the rank and file,
said one member.
Two weeks after negotiations be
gan, state mediator Richard Tere
pin entered the negotiations an
helped reduce the number of dis
puted issues from 60 to approxi
mately six. However, Terepin wa
unable to stave off a University.
wide strike when the second con
tract extension ran out.
Food and maintenance servic
to the dorms was cut off durin
the strike, while operations a
University Hospital were curtaile

I Anderson cited a failure by Hef-
ner to see that all proposed teach-
ers. were approved by the literary
college executive committee and
dean as the primary reason fos
Snot granting approval to the six
sections.
Hefner then blasted the com-
mittee for its "ambiguous" course
rmart rules and its failure to in-
form the course coordinators of
the proper procedure to follow.
Hefner called the curriculum
committee's decision to delete the
six sections after three weeks of
the term had passed "An educa-
tionally indefensible move" while
a teacher of a section in labor re-
lations, approved by the commit-
tee, said the blanket guarantee of
college credit for the course was
"a high handed solution that
theoretically dealt with the prob-
lem, but did not salve the question
of overcrowding" in the approved
sections, after the displaced stu-
dents entered.
The committee members coun-
y tered that the action was the only
o possible solution in view of the
lateness of the term. Several mem-
d bers pointed out that even with
the addition of the 80 students,
s the nine approved sections would
s still be less crowded than most
LSA classes.
e
it oard backs
d
3~ GLF rights
- (Continued from Page 1)
n : Although the statement explain-
- ed at one point that the Univer-
e sity is not obliged to take posi-
t tions unnecessary to its own func-
t tioning, it later concluded that "if
the rules governing use of facili-
- ties be reasonably framed in terms
t of educational purpose, we think
- i the proposed meeting of the Gay
Liberation Front clearly qualifies."
- The board called the denial of
n University facilities to the confer-
ence "an act of discrimination,"
, but did not see it as necessarily
- deliberate.
e The statement concluded that
the "denial of the request of the
g Gay Liberation Front for a mid-
;y western conference is a denial of
d freedom of assembly."
' Another statement by the Civi
f Liberties Board yesterday dealt
g with the events of November 17
" 1970, when an entire audience was
searched prior to a speech in Hill
- Auditorium by Huey Newton,
- Black Panther minister of defense.
d
s- The board, although stating the
- searching was "contrary to - th
s kind of climate that we would lkik
to see prevail at the University,'
- said that as the meeting w a
voluntary, civil liberties were not
e violated.
ig The Civil Liberties Board is E
at committee of the Senate Assembly,
d. the faculty representative body

Steve Nissen, '71, one of thel
teachers in a deleted section, ac-
cused the committee of "acting
irregularly in taking extraordi-
nary measures against this par-
ticular course." He said the com-
mittee has never before been so
stringent in its requirements for
teacher approval.
"The teachers of every course
approved for the Course Mart
program have always had their
qualifications carefully reviewed
by the committee," replied psy-
chology Prof. Ronald Tikofsky,
curriculum committee secretary.
With the meeting time almost
expired, course cooordinator John
Cumbler asked if the committee
would reconsider approval of -the
six sections if full information
could be provided about each one.
After some debate among the
committee, a motion to that effect
was approved, and it was decided
that Hefner and the teachers for
the six sections in question should
be present to answer questions
about their class formats.

-t-t-i-out
mots behindfirtingy
(Cant
(Continued from Page 1) -The officer's record: "the man when all1
in November between Hunter and has served a number of years on world con
Harris when the mayor announced the force and he has never been you?"
the city would not press charges disciplined for anything before The coun
against a policeman charged withI . . (and he) was in many prior this conque
misconduct during last year's confrontations and never before delayed gra
Black Action Movement (BAM) lost his cool." and there v
class strike. Hunter, who served on a three- when they f
The officer, Patrolman Jo0h nI man investigation of the incident, do somethin
Pear, allegedly swung his night- raised a number of objections to wasted tha
stick at T. R. Harrison, '73, after ; Harris' conclusions. withdrawing
Harrison had already been de- Hunter charged that "prior to Mendel re
tamed by another officer. the BAM incident, thesame offi culture as
Harrison, a black, was con- cer had two formal complaints of <utuhasb
victed on a charge of felonious mistreatment filed against him. It has be
assault last Friday stemming from It just so happens that the com- they go fro:
police allegations that he threw a plaintants in all the incidents are attempt to
brick at a city policeman during black." other wo
the incident. "This certainly does not mean other words
In a statement which appeared that the officer was guilty of where ple
in The Daily Nov. 6, Harris gave charges made," he continued. reached th
his reasons for not pressing charg- "However, it does suggest that the "The ima
es against the officer. officer has established a ques- a few year
The reasons included: tionable performance pattern in he said, "b
- "The state of mind of the relating to black citizens." militance, h
officer who swung and missed - Hunter first joined the HRD counter cull
he had no racist or sadistic or I staff in August, 1966, when it was counter cul
unitive motives, and (erroneous- known as the Human R i g h ts 1967, the so
ly) thought he was doing some- Commission. He became assistant gression, ar
thing necessary to help make a director in 1967 and subsequently "No," he
fast arrest in a difficult situa- served as acting director on two counter cu
tion"; and occasions. Americanisr

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