100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

April 17, 1971 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-04-17

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

4

Twelve

.THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Saturday, April 17, 1971

Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Measures r
U' judiciary plan passed;
minor changes included

n-

eceive
e- ousin
e
zde By MARCIA ZOSLAW I

ne gei

ital

approval

IIUD Agree to tuition increase;
Campaign GM rejected
(Continued from Page 1) 1 ing all securities with corporate
for both in-state and out-of-state management
students. In recent weeks, debate had in-
He said housing rents w o ul1 d While the Regents and Presi- creased over whether the Univer-
support the additional transporta- dent Robben Fleming. all said the sity should vote its stock with the

Daily Official Bulletin
(Continued from Page 7)
bor area jobs and others: come in
and check the book:
Cyphernetics, Statistician, MS/PhD
with some computer knowl.
Cushing-Malloy, two paste up, pub-
lication jobs.
Communicator Link, sales, summer!
or full time.
Potter Instrument, technical sales,
ME or EE plus exper in electronics.
Detroit Free Press, asst. to person-
nel director, any degree, no exper.
Gelman Instruments, secretary, n o t
full time, flexible sched.
Encyclopedia Britannica, mgmt.
trainees, sales ability.
Foundation for co-operative housing,!
Detroit, good jobs for beginning level
women with some acctg. bckrnd; sales
mgmt. trainees with some bus. or

econ courses. and MBA or other with
some acctg. exper, building or construe-
tion e-:per a big plus for these.
Corn-Share, Programmer with knows.
jequivalent to math 673, compiler
tknowl.
Independent Business, distributor
and demonstrator of low-phosphate
products.
Parke Davis. scientific programming,
computer exper and chem-biol back-
ground, 0-4 yrs. out of school depend-
ing on relevant courses.
WNRS, Saline, radio engineer, 1st
State Mutual Life Assurance Co. of
class license, AM & FM maintenance.
Amer., Ins, and Mutual Fund Sales.
ORGANIZATION NOTICES
The Ecology Center, April 21, 7:30
p.m., "wild Plants and. Natural Food"
Dr. Herb Wagner - UM Botanical Gar-
dens, D. J. Konkidre - formerly of
FDA. UGLI Multipurpose room.

(Continued from Page 1)
mental basis for one year, subject
to extension by the Regents.
The Regents' system contains a
few compromises between the pro-
posal drawn up by the Committee
on a Permanent University Judi-
ciary and the Regents' redraft of
that proposal

a vote if the presiding judge d
termines a matter a "question
decorum or other non-legal issu
such as whether or not to exclu
someone from the- courtroom.
In such cases, the matter is d
cided by a majority vote of tl
three judges.

e-
the

. u SGC had advocated the panel
SGC and Senate Assembly-the setup in the judiciary committee's
top faculty body - were among original proposal, which called for
numerous bodies in the University 'a trejdepnldrn h
who suggested changes and three-judge panel during the
modi- first six months of the experi-
fications of the system over the mental year-with each associate
course of the term. . judge and the presiding judge
However, the Re'gents retained having a vote in all matters.
a controversial element of their During the last six months of
draft-one concerning the duties the trial period, the committee's
of the presiding judge and two as- plan had called for three asso-
sociate judges during trials. ciate judges to assist the presid-
The presiding judge, who must ing judge-two students and one
be a lawyer, mares the final deci- faculty member in student trials,
sion on all "questions of law," with and two faculty members and one
the associate judges-one student student in faculty trials. The Re-
and one faculty member-acting gents were then to finally approve
only in an advisory capacity. the method that worked best.
The associate judges only have The Regents never included this
® -plan in their drafts.

Rule barring
females lifted
Upon recommendation of Allan
Smith, vice-president for academic
affairs, a regental by-law was
changed yesterday that paves the
way for the seating of the first fe-
male member of the University
Board in Control of Intercollegiate
Athletics.
Rose Sue Berstein, '73, won elec-
tion to the two-year membership on
the board in the recetit campus-
wide elections. However, a provi-
sion in subsection four of Regental
bylaw section 29.08 allowing only
males on the board threatened at
first to jeopardize Berstein's seat-
ing.
Berstein's supporters charged
that excludingrfemales from the
board was inconsistent with other
University policy barring discrimi-
nation according to sex.
With the approval of the board,
Smith brought the proposed change
to the Regents yesterday and they
subsequently deleted the word'
"male" from the bylaw.
Now any undergraduate with four
semesters behind him-male or fe-
male-can seek the post.

An agreement by five out of six
jury members in determination of
guilt and punishment, as required
under the new system in jury
trials, represents a compromise
between students and faculty.
Students had sought fir unani-
mous verdicts in both cases, while
the faculty had asked for only
simple majorities.
Fleming stressed that an effort
was made to come up with a plan
that would be acceptable to every-.
one concerned. -
The new system also includes a
I complaint referee, who must be a
lawyer from outside the Univer-
sity community. He will receive
complaints concerning rule viola-
tions and determine whether the
case should be tried.
If the parties do not agree to
arbitration, the referee will refer
the case to the trial ^ourt. Unless
waived by both the complainant
and defendant, trial will always be
by jury. Verdicts may be appealed
to the University Court of Appeals,
composed of six students and six
faculty members.
The new system will have jur-
isdiction only in cases which al-
lege a violation of University-wide
rules. The faculties of the Uni-
versity's schools and colleges will
retain authority to act on matters
involving professional and ethical
standards, such as cheating.

The Regents yesterday approv-
ed a plan to build 200 low-rent
housing units on North Campus
by the fall of 1972.
The housing units will be fin-
anced by the College Housing Pro-
gram (CHP) of the Department
of Housing and Urban Develop-
ment (HUD).
The CHP is an interest subsidy
program under which the Univer-
sity would obtain a commercial
loan and the federal government
would pay all interest except three
per cent.
In order to meet HUD's May 1
filing deadline, the approval had
to come yesterday.
In addition to approving t h e
over-all plan, the Regents auth-
orized the University to seek ar-
chitectural and engineering con-
sultation services for the project.
Apartment rents will reimburse
the loan and the remaining three
per cent of the interest. According
to Chip Downs, a Housing Pol-
icy Board member, the apartments
would rent at two-thirds t h e
market rate.
A total of 87'2 per centof the
units will be open to students, with
the remaining 12% per cent avail-
able for staff. Families with child-
ren in school will not be allowed
in the apartments, but up to 15
per cent of the units could be oc-
cupied by families with children
younger than school age.
Until recently, the cost of bus-
sing from the apartments to Cen-
tral Campus has been cited as the
main' problem of the plan. How-
ever, the proposed site was chang-
ed last week from north of Hur-
on High School to the area of
the Northwood Apartments site,
which is closer to existing bus
routes.
The revised site "has advant-
ages in terms of reduced utility,
site development, and transporta-
tion costs," according to Robert
Knauss, vice president for stu-
dent services.
In addition, "the site selected
does not involve additional load-
ing and unloading points to the
fpresent bussing system but will
require additional bussing lines,"
Knauss said.

tion costs. decision was unfortunate, they reform group, Campaign GM. InHY
Construction costs will deter- contended the state's failure to in- a' repeat of their similar request HAVE YOUR OWN
mine the exact number of apart- sure more funds to the University last year, Campaign GM was ask-
ments built, Knauss said. next year made a tuition increase ing University support to change SPRINGTIME FROLIC
In a letter to the Regents, the inevitable. the structure of General Motors Relax with Broadway listening all summer long. Whether it's
Ann Arbor Board of Realtors ac- Allan Smith, vice president for rough votig University stock Hair, 1776, old or new:
cused the University of infringing academic affairs, in presenting the proxies with them at the upeom- You'll find them all at
on the private financing of low- increase, referred to Gov. William
rent housing. They said it was Milliken's proposed $2.8 million The University currently owns
unfair competition for the Uni- increase in state aid to the Uni- close to 29,000 shares of General "J
versity to build apartments on versity as the determining factor Motors stock which, critics charge, Phone 417
tax-free land, in the tuition hike and said even is a violation of University poli- NO 2-0675 E Libert
Regent Robert Brown (R-De- with an increased state appropria- ces againt discrimmation since
troit) argued at yesterday's Re- tion above $2.8 million, the tuition enera Moors has holdings i
troit) m e d a t t e y s R e- h ik e w as n eed ed . a p a rt e S o u th A frica . ....#..' . #="v r..--4... :::: :
ments would siphon people away "These new fees are necessary
from the city property tax rolls evential incre were to aget substan-
and consequently hurt the city's erno irecseynd Smithe gov-
finaces "Wearecompundngernor recommended," Smith said.
finances. "We are compounding "Though we assume increases be-
the problem by providing a new- yond the governor's request, this
tuition increase is still EXAVIWEEssTaAry."NZ
er type of housing," he said. tuioinraessil necessary." E A , E K E T AAAZ
Brown added that the on- Part of the reason the tuition
slaught of apartments would also increase was over the governor's
siphon students away from the proposed seven per cent hike,PEN
dorimtories and so threaten resi- Smith said, was the limitations
dent hall solvency. Milliken's request would place on
President Robben Fleming h as faculty salary increases.
questioned whether the Housing "For all three campuses the -
Policy Board would be willing to tentative fee schedules and the in-
make it mandatory for University dicated appropriations would not
freshmen to live in dormitories support a salary and wage pro-
should this crisis occur. gram exceeding the governor's
recommendation, including, staff
benefits," Smith said.
The National Science Foundation However, tuition at the Univer-
has awarded a $35,500 research sity's Flint and Dearborn campus-
grant to the University political es was not raised. Suggested ap-
science department and a $7,200 propriations ,increases for these R IP a n d N U C
grant to the mathematics depart- schools were more in line with the
ment. University's request and Smith
The political science grant is in said these campuses "could oper- PRESEN T
support of a project entitled "Cor- ate without an increase beyond
relates of International War." Po. the governor's request." TUESDAY
litical science Prof. J. David Sir.g- Preceeding the tuition hike, theGU S.O F NA DA NEA I
er will direct the project which goes Regents quickly reaffirmed their APRIL 20th
into effect May 1. present investment policy of vot- 7:00, 10:00
DAII~IE. WEDNESDAY
CAT BALAPRIL 21st
"OLD-TIME and BLUEGRASS MUSIC" 7:00, 9:00, 11:00
straight from the Diag THURSDAY
REQUIEM FOR A APRIL 22nd
THe stoney Lone Boys HEAVYWEIGHT:7$00,900,1$:00
CANTERBURY HOUSE Sunday, April 18th
8:3p1m $1.00 I 1OCONTRIBUTION Natural Sciences Auditorium
"Hillbilly music with counterpoint .. ." Fate Norris

'

'y: ::Y."::::.1Y."5.1.":::1'. ". . L.. . ..t:'f::"::':"": titi i':"::" ::""::5.:":":^at'^. .:.y:1:::: ":":ti:::}1 : ::" :Rtiti:: ": 5S{i^ :' ':{ ": 1 " *
_ ..........0.:......,...":."LhY; :":t:.":. h:;... :1.::::.s:.":+.h........r:":ti':":::":":":ti:'.h":."::.".1::::".'.::^::":::'."}.".".:':".:'f.:':,".. .}}1:..:::'Y.::'.k}sVe? ::Y "' h + +:,

. . . ... ... . ..... .. ... . .. ..

*

W'~"~0.~ ~JT MLA M I ±' ''f t,: .1'mJI *..5o k1L A T'T .s o1R

I

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan