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February 12, 1971 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-02-12

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, February 12, 19710t

Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 12, 19714

GROUND TROOPS REPORTED:
U.S. intelligence units in Laos

Fleming, some regents oppose
all-stude~nt urv for iciiarv

(Continued from Page 1)
The Laos invasion, is directed at
cutting of fthe Ho Chi Minh trail,
the route used by the N o r t h
Vietnamese to transport troops
and supplies into Cambodia and
South Vietnam.
Before the Laos invasion start-
ed, a related drive of 10,000 South
Vietnamese with full U.S. air sup-
port into Cambodia began, in an
effort to cut off the Ho Chi Minh
trail from the south.
Long-haire
e firin
(Continued from Page 1) l
A&P's renewed assault on longI
hair.
However Rutter said the issue
came up again now because the
local manager had previously fail-
ed to enforce existing rules in the
A&P "Personal Appearance Stand-
ards."
The standards state that male

There were no further reports ' tling to protect the Hi Chi Minh
yesterday on the statement Wed- trail.
nesday by South Vietnamese Vice Saigon spokesmen said yesterday
President Nguyen Cao Ky that an 25 North Vietnamese soldiers hadI
invasion of North Vietnam might been killed.I
be necessary. In addition, no men- No major fighting was reported
tion was made of the special land- by South Vietnamese infantrymen
ing force of 500 marines which is and armored troops who have dri-
anchored just off the southern ven to Sepone, 25 miles west ofI
coast of North Vietnam. the South Vietnamese border.
Meanwhile, pilots reported yes- Meanwhile, Communist dele-
terday heavy antiaircraft fire from gates at the Paris peace talks re-
North Vietnamese gunners bat- peatedly accused the United States
yesterday of invading Laos-nam-
ing military units alleged to have
w ork ers done so. The United States called
the accusations "all nonsense."
Madame Thi Binh, head of the
Viet Cong delegation, started off
the day with a claim that there are
10 battalions of American infantry,
artillery and armor fighting inside
Laos. She said she was stressing

(Continued from Page 1)
with the faculty rule system that
led to the creation of the Presi-
dent's Commission on the Role of
Students in Decision-Making (the
Hatcher Commission), 1967. The
commission's report, released in
March, 1968, proposed that rules
governing conduct outside the aca-
demic setting should be uniform
for all members of the University
community, and be enforced by a
judiciary drawn from all segments
of the community.
Fleming yesterday cited the "uni-
formity" recommendation of the
Hatcher report as a major reason
for forming a University-wide ju-
diciary, adding that the commit-
tee's proposal does not achieve uni-
formity.
Suit asks

L &-J E y7 y.. '7 .EX 3J -U -U--3. XJ-*7
"Both groups (students and fac-! body, the rules must have the ap-
ulty members) have lost sight of proval of the Regents.
the Hatcher commission report," As to the judiciary system, the
Fleming said. Regents have in the past expressed
The Hatcher Commission's re- concern that student juries would
port was the start of what has be too lenient when trying other
become a long, drawn-out dispute students.
between students on the one hand, And Fleming said yesterday that
and faculty members and admin- the Regents would be quick to cite
istrators on the other, over which the discrepancy between the pro-
body should have the power to posed jury system, and the uni-
make and enforce rules governing form procedure specified by the
student conduct outside the aca- Hatcher report.I
demic setting. "It's not going to be an easy
The Regents, meanwhile, have point to answer," the president
in the past year taken a firm said.
stand that they should have final The president said the Regents
purview over rules governing so- would not make a decision on a
called non-academic conduct. final judiciary plan at today's
special meeting, but left open the
Angered by the use of disruptive possibility that final action would
tactics by students several times be taken at their regular monthly
during the 1969-70 academic year, meeting next Friday.
the Regents in April removed the

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DAILY OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
The Daily Official Bulletin is an
2 p.m., rf the day preceding pub-3
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN fo r m to
Room 3528 L.S.A. Bldg., beforej
lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for;
Saturday and Sunday. Items ap-
pear enly once. Student organiza-.
tion notices are not accepted for
publication. For more information,
phone 764-9270.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12
Day Calendar
Hopwood Awards: Presentation of
underclass awards, W. D. Snodgrass
reading his poetry, Rackham Amph., 4
p.m.
Medical Chemistry-College of Phar-
macy: A. Goldin, associate chief f or
laboratory res., Bethesda, "Preclinical
Methodolgy in the Selection of Anti-
cancer Agenlts," Rm. 1300 Chemistry-
Pharmacy Tdg., 4 p.m
Astronomy Colloquium: D. B. Tay-
lor, Princeton, "The Present Status of
Supermetallicity," P&A Colloq. Rm, 4
p.m.
Internaltional Folk Dance: Barbour
Gym, 8 P.m.
Dance Series: Alvin Alley American
Dance Theatre, Till Aud., 8:30 p.m.
International Students Assoc.: Folk
singer Dick Jennings, Rive Gauche,
1024 Hill, 9 p.m.
Placement
Special Announcement: The Bureau
of the Census will be interviewing Feb.
18; need for math, statistics, and com-
puter science majors has been cancelled.
Now interested in soc. science fields,
economics and sociology.
SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICES
212 S.A.B.
Interview: Camp Sea Gull will inter-
view Feb. 15, 9:30 to 5 p.m. openings
include gen. counselors, specialists in
waterfront, sailing, arts & crafts, na-
ture/ecology, photography, wood shop,
camperaft; details and applications are
available; please call or stop in for
an appointment, 764-7460.
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES
UM Graduate Outing Club. Every
Sun., rain or shine, 1:30 p.m. Meet at
Huron St. side of Rackham where cars
will leave for an afternoon of hiking.
Dinner is optional after the hike.
* * * *
The Office of Student Organizations
would like to announce its new office
hours - Mon.-Fri., 8:30-5:30 and 7-9
p.m. Mon.-Thurs.
UM Folk Dance Club. Every Friday,
7:30-11 p.m. Barbour Gym. Teaching
7:30-9:30 .p.m. Open to everyone. For
further information call Nancy John-
ston, 769-3164 after 5 p.m.
Women. New Counseling Service -
coordinating grads and professionals to
talks to undergrads. Call Barb Kurt at
662-4431, ext. 336, or see her in Room
336, Michigan Union. Messages can be
left with the secretary, too.
Michigan Daily Arts Page
is looking for
MOVIE REVIEWERS
Think you might be
interested?
COME TO A MEETING
TUESDAY, FEB. 16
ot 7:00
MICHIGAN DAILY
420 Maynard
For the student body:
FLARES
by
SLevi

Iara
+~Wright

employes must have hair which is that
"trimmed and combed, properly trary
tapered above shirt collar" and are(
"not below half-way down the force
forellead." troop
The standards, which Palid de- La
scribes as "worse than a high Viet
school dress code," also include units
provisions barring body odor, hali- They
tosis, short skirts for women em- talio:
ployes, hosiery not in a "neutral men
shade," "bangly" jewelry and han- from
dlebar mustaches. the 1
Robin Janiszewski said yesterday Ame
he has worked for the A&P for
three and a half years. He de-
scribes his hair as "falling over
my ears and touching the collar of 396
my shirt," and insists he will not
cut it.
Mike O'Connel, another em- at
ploye faced with dismissal, also
said last night he will not cut his
hair. i stud
Employe Donald Mussen has polit
complied with the haircut order, Th
however. "It's a matter of want- clas
ing to keep the job and not being stud
able to lose the money it would secti
cost fighting it," he said. term
"Besides, my hair wasn't that the
long anyway," he added, been
Complaints to the management com
of the A&P store have begun. Bob'A
Harding, grad., said he went to the mee
store yesterday to complain about curr
the anti-long-hair policy but he mar
described the manager as "unin- LSA
terested." gani
"He said he didn't want to get cour
involved and that he felt power- acti
less to do anything," according to M
Harding. exec
The A&P is presently being boy- facu
cotted by the United Farm Work- com
ers of California, which is con- com
ducting a nation-wide campaign late
against non-union picked lettuce. TI
______________lyc
on t
* vers
Blacks ht gro
sus pension
(Continued from Page 1)
The millage proposal will be on
Monday's city primary election
ballot and calls for a renewal of
a three mill operating assessment
that expired December, 1970.
Among the reasons given were:
-"In the past, even passage of
the school millage did not reap
adequate benefits for our bac1
children;"3c
-"We doubt the ability or com--
mitment of the present board and{
administration to use the millage
money to the benefit of all chil-
dren because they have consistent-
ly provided inferior educational
opportunities and services for
black and poor students;"
-"The baseless suspension and
public crucifixion of a black teach-
er last week is indicative of the
treatment received at the hands
of this board and administration
by black students and adults who
genuinely respond to and assist
black students;" and
-"We feel that the money
which black people earn is too
precious and too hard to come by
to give to an agency that continues
to defraud us and our children."(-

U.S. infantry is in Laos, con-
to U.S. statements that there
only South Vietnamese ground
es there and no American

s.
ter, North Vietnamese and eid of G A
Cong spokesmen named U.S.
they said are fighting in Laos. (Continued from Page 1)
were listed as the 7th bat- by John Koza, grad, Michael Day-
n of the 17th Air Cavalry Regi- is, grad, the Law School Student?
t, and "several battatlions" Senate, and the Executive Com-
the 5th Mechanized Division, mittee of Acolytes (the philoso-
01st Airborne Division and the phy department's graduate stu-
rical Division. dent government) charges GA with
jten violations of Student Govern-
ment Council (SGC) Criteria for
Democratically Constituted Gov-
The criteria were established to
"provide standards, of a minimal
prove 'nature, regarding the structure of
student organizations," according
to the SGC document.
(Continued from Page 1) The SGC legislation states thatI
ly concerned with most of the the criteria "shall apply to all;
ical action. non-judicial bodies purporting to
e decision to approve the represent, speak for, or govern aC
ses now permits most of the 80 constituency of students ..."
ents who had enrolled in the However, according to Bom-
ons at the beginning of the mersbach, GA "does not claim nor
to receive college credit for does its constitution state that itC
course. They had previously is a government."
advised by the curriculum Last night was the first read-
mittee to move into any of the ing of the suit and next Thurs-
bout 40 persons attended the day was set as the date for the
ting, including members of the preliminary hearing.
iculum committee, its course The official position of the
t subcommittee, members of Executive Board of G r a d u a t e
Student Government, and or- Assembly was stated in the letter,
zers and teachers of the signed by Bommersbach. It says,
rse mart course in political "might we remind you that since
on. input from Graduate Assembly
embers of the literary college's was neither solicited nor accepted
utive committee, the top LSA in either the formation or mem-
Aty body, were unavailable for bership selection of the C e n t r a 1
ment last night on the out- Student Judiciary, we do not re-
e of the meeting due to the cognize its legitimacy.
hour. Davis said yesterday, "I have
he executive committee recent- nothing against GA but it is in-
-oncluded a week-long hearing capable of representing graduate
he College Course 327 contro- students." Davis also called for
y, hearing testimony from all other graduate departments to
ups involved. join in the suit.
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While the interim rules will ul-
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