Saturday, March 13, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY } nnd Ca. 'miri4 THE MICHIGAN DAILY c. rage oevuui 1;;, _-____________--____________ l 1 _ Satyrn Inc. Frye, Texas, and Acme BOOTS t ' 3 3 iE(i I F1 STUDENT, FACULTY OPPOSITION UC conduct rules face opposition (Continued from page 1) :f.. 1L. ... ....t.... i a.1_____ ______. ___. . BELLBOTTOMS by Male, Landlubber, and Levi include expulsion among the sanc- tiarns - an aspect which many F R I NG E JACKETS 20% OFF members of Senate Assembly ap- parently will oppose. Although the UC rules do stipu- late that a person may be sus- pended for a specified period of time for violating certain rules, 215 S. STATE-2nd Floor including the use of physical force against another member of t h e Open Noon till 9:00 Mon.-Fri.; Saturday Noon till 7.00 VUniversity community, sentiment t exists among some faculty mem- bers that expulsion should be a ~~~-- - -- - - - ---- possible sanction. In this regard, disruption cases are especially sensitive to faculty members, for it is here they see announcing ELECT IO N S for the Ithe most obvious threat to their 4 academic freedom. Many students, on t h e other ew R ckha Stdent Gov't.hand, view disruption as a neces- New Rack am Student Go t. sary and effective tactic in pub- licizing issues a n d sensitizing PRESIDENT and VICE-PRESIDENT (a slate) members of the University com- munity to them. 7 SEATS ON EXECU TIVE COUNCIL For them, the question ofe ' ! pulsion, and even suspension, re- sulting from such an act, is de- DEADLINE FOR FILING: MARCH 15, 1971 plorable. The sanctions for disruption, WHO'S ELIGIBLE? Any student enrolled in Rackham interference and forbidden occu- EL E O DAYSMpation of University facilities pro- ECTION DAYS: MARCH 30 and 31 vided by the UC rules are espec- ially considered by many students Get Election Information, Candidacy Forms, proposed Rackham to be entirely out of proportion. Constitution: Room 1546 S.A.B. A person convicted of disruption for the first time would be sub- ject to a "warning, censure, fine of not less than $25 or more than Y_$250, work assignment, or a n y combination of these." Although a violator, could not be suspended for the first convic- tion of disruption, penalties for subsequent conviction would in- The penalties f o r interference and forbidden occupation, while generally less than those for dis- an A IR C NTsanctions except for suspension. for the day SGC V ic e President Jerry de Grieck - a member of UC - says he will suggest that SGC not rat- C\AIIK~~~~kAI&rrrri__ ify the rules in their present state es serious enough to already have for a number of reasons. included temporary suspension He claims the penalty provision and in cases where a violator has for disruption of University func- been f o u n d guilty in a civil orI tions should not include suspen- criminal court for an offense sion, saying "most of the t i m e which clearly violates a UC rule. disruption does not harm anyone, "Expulsion is not something in- it does not usually result in de- tended to keep students away fromI struction of property." campus as some have suggested; In addition, De Grieck criticizes it is simply a denial of the privi- UC for deleting a sentence from lege of an education at the Uni- the original draft which w o u1 d versity," Galler says. have asked the judiciary to "take "You certainly cannot keep at account of the principle that a student away, but you can give person should be excluded (sus- his place to another deserving stu- pended) only when his continued dent," he continues. presence on campus endangers But Galler emphasizes that he other mmbers of the Uversity is not suggesting expulsion be a coHemadds that the right not to mandatory sanction, saying "it susendedsfromtheriUnvrtytoiseshould be a possibility." spendedfrm Unvrst SGC member Bob Nelson aUC Ricti h tdetBilo member, calls the exclusion sanc- Rgta part of the SGC consti- "asaetci"ndds"f tution. The constitution has been tion a scare tactic and adds "if approved by the student body, but a person wants to come back to not by the Regents. the community, he will. The ex- Weinberg agrees that the ' es- elusion rule is simply not going to' sential question"about the disci- be effective." plinary rules is "where you strike Nelson believes some give-and-S a balance between leniency and take is necessary to get the UC harshness. rules established in place of the "It could be argued that the;interim rules. more limited the penalties are. the "I could live with the rules, al- greater the likelihood most cases though they are not the ones I will be brought before the civil would have designed by any, courts," he says. "This is because means," he says. if a person has a case which he "What critics of the council considers serious, he may be re- rules must keep in mind is that we luctant to bring it to a judiciary have had to reach some common which is empowered to ' do rela- ground among wide - r a n g i n g tively less than the civil courts." groups of interest," says law Prof. "On the other hand," Weinberg Theodore St. Antonie, chairman continues," if you s e t a broad of UC. "We feel that these rules, range of penalties, t h e n people when properly utilized by the new who might be effected by those judiciary, really do constitute a penalties may feel imperiled." fair set of regulations." I 1 j I II I versity to proceed with its normal the Administration Bldg. Feb. 19. operations." he continues. In addition, they were tested one St. Antoine says the council did other time - at a sit-in on the not include permanent exclusion second floor of the Administration in the sanctions because, "in a Bldg. last month when about 100 pragmatic sense, exclusion h a s students heard a representative of rarely been applied in the past for President Robben Fleming inform non-academic reasons." them they were in violation of the He adds that even the interim rules. rules do not call for any exclusion The rules were not invoked longer than one year. when students heeded the warning The interim rules were invoked and left the premises. Thursday for the first time since "People will have to make the their inception last April. T h e judgment whether the UC rules charge was filed by a University are worth a try," says Weinberg. security officer against a student "The real question, however, is for allegedly violating the rules where along the range of sanc- during a demonstration outside tions people want to start." omen find advocate in 'U' administration (Continued from Page 3) . ooivarl ine it+rennn "nf s+rt , n4i.... 4... 41,,. !.. Cn.rm.- -------. .ieu i nsurance retroacuve to ti Rumelhart mentions the increase beginning of her job. in courses on women, counseling Rumelhart, who has been in the services offered by women for position since late October, has women, and work with high school spent most of her time during the women as examples of the positive Past few months organizing con orientation of the movement. tacts and researching problems. One of Rumelhart's major con- "My frustration is a combination cerns is working with women, par- of wanting to do more than time or ticularly undergraduates, to in physical ability allows," she says. e e n Among severai proposals to al- St. Antoine explains the key to ter the UC rules is one by mathe- the successful formulation of the matics P r o f. Bernard Galler, a rules lies in "striking a balance" member of Senate Assembly, con.- among t h e various extremes of cerning the sensitive question of opinion within the University suspension and expulsion, community. Galler proposes that expulsion "We tried hard to find the bal- from the University community ance that would permit construc- be made a possible sanction in the tive dissent to be registered but -rules in cases of repeated offens- at the same time allow the Uni- Orson Welles Film Society: "T r u e song leader, WSI instructors, arts and Grit" and "Cool Hand Luke," Nat. Sci. crafts. Aud., 7 and 9:30 p.m. * * * * i d avv IvIvING OrUUL for the evening Summer Leases now available UNIVE-RSITY TOWERS Daily Official Bulletin The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o rmto Room 352$ L.S.A. Bldg., before. 2 p.m., of 'the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. Placement SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICES 212 S.A.B. Interviews: for appointments and de- tails stop in or call 764-7460. Monday, March 15, Camp Maple-# hurst, Mi., coed. interviewing from 9 to 5: openings include general couns., spec. in scuba, sailing, riding. too sz3: ' : F ' , > > ' . < <. , , >: >:: : ;h\ :? {: :S a. ti y y ^ {' } . ": }x. p' : }} { Gv ,: . x ?";,: R ;; 1> <"o-S