e Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 2, 1970* LSA to discuss new legislative council (Continued from Page 1) budgetary policies governing the charge to the panel stipulated that overall allocation of the, College's the ultimate governance proposal funds, . . . the manner in which call for establishment of a "stu- budgetary cuts or increases are to dent-faculty courcil" which would be applied, and priorities of finan- "exist as a standing committee of cial need among various consti- the governing faculty, to which tuencies." the council shall report." The o t h e r two alternatives The committee's delegation of would seat either three or four legislative powers to the body has students on the executive commit- apparpntly upset many faculty tee, which would have a total of members active in college affairs. ten members. However, the stu- "The proposal has no bearing on dents would remain barred from what the committee was asked to participating in, personnel deci- do," says history Prof. Gerhard sions involving faculty. Weinberg, chairman of the Senate The LSA student government's Advisory Committee on University Executive Council is tentatively Afairs, the top University-wide planning a campaign to convince faculty body. faculty members to accept the pro- Weinberg calls the proposal a' posal. "kamikaze operation"-doomed to - defeat because it is not in line with the limits the faculty had set in March. "I would hope that one of these days the committee would start working on its charge," 1 1 1 Weinberg adds. leader's death According to Assistant Dean Shaw, the committee will hold at (Continued from Page 1) least one public he'aring on the (pontinedtfom Pagngt propsalbefre ringng t u atgroup of spectators clinging to a proposal before brigng it up at roof top. Hundreds of others an LSA faculty meeting. However, were injured in falls or when members of the committee say it (sulkl httepooa vl struck by armored cars that is unlikely that the proposal willth charged into the crowds. objections voiced at such hearings. The pandemonium reached its In its current form, the pro- i height at the'end of the three- posal suggests three alternate ways hour procession as Nasser's body of increasing student participation was moved from the coffin and in decisions currently made by the laid to rest in the garden of the LSA executive committee. One al- rece'ntly completed mosque. ternative calls for the creation of Masses of screaming mourners, an Academic Policy Committee surged through barbed-wire bar- composed of three students and riers and cordons of troops into three faculty members, which the garden and all but seized the would oversee all academic mat- plain wooden coffin. ters except those dealing with the Early in the parade, crowds had appointment, promotion, and dis- ripped the black, white and r e d missal of faculty members. Egyptian flag from the coffin as In addition, the committee would it moved erratically through the "with the Dean, establish general masses. -8 %p Associated Press Hijack conference U.S. delegates Jack Stevenson and Charles Butler listen to an International Civil Aviation Organization meeting yesterday, where they proposed that air services to countries involved in hijackings be terminated. CRITICIZES FLEMING: Seriff1;.discus s e s student disrutons (Continued from Page 1) come up with ideas to bring down the establishment, to change the establishment and this type of thing," Harvey says. "This is what I theorize as part of our problem." Harvey thinks that only a small group of students is involved in campus disturbances. He also wishes he knew what causes cam- pus unrest so that he could deal with the core of the problem and stop it. "Every situation is different," the sheriff believes. "You cannot judge one situation like another. The sheriff disclosed that h i s men do not load their shotguns while they are on campus, saying he is afraid one niay be discharged by accident. He points out, how- ever, that they can be loaded, "in a matter of seconds," if the need arose. ,Harvey also admits the existence of a new "secret weapon", rumors of which have circulated for some time in press cirdles. "I have got a new method com- ing. up, which I'm not gong to disclose, but. I have something new which I think will help in campus diorders, or any kind of disorder," he explains. "I'm always scared of a police officer or a student getting ser- iously hurt, possibly killed," Har- vey adds. "I certainly don't want a Kent State or a Jackson State to happen here at the University, or at Edstern Michigan or in my county. The sheriff says he always ac- companies his men to camjius dis- orders so that he can personally supervise operations "to try to en- sure that nothing serious hap- pens." Harvey is at a loss, however, to explain his apparent unpopu- larity. "I don't know - its your radical groups that started this and I can't give' you an honest answer. I have my job to do. as the chief law enforcement officer and I do it. to the best of my ability," he says. "As far as mybeing a 'racist', I don't have any prejudice 'against students, hippies, negroes or any- body else. We try to treat every- body alike." Harvey denies rumors that he was thinking of running for' a higher political office. "As far as I'm concerned this is as far as I'm going to go. I'm very happy. being sheriff of the county," he says. "I'm a police- man and I like being a police- Man.," Famous PIZZA & CHICKEN .4 from THOMPSON'S PIZZA 211 E. ANN ST. (Next to Armory) CALL 761-0001 FREE DELIVERY-7 Days a Week-FREE DELIVERY .f 3 The (enter for Afro-American and African Studies rivites you to its Lecture Series BLACK PERSPECTIVES IN THE SEVENTIES Tuesday, October 6,1970 at 1:30 PM. IN RACKHAM AUDITORIUM Speaker: MINISTER LOUIS FARRAKHAN Minister, Mosque No. 7, Harlem, New York Topic: BLACK LIFE AND COMMUNITY UPLIFT - Admission FREE - I 1 ,.: t_ SHOP JACOBSON'S THURS. AND FRI. 'TIL 9:00 P.M. MON.-TUES.-WED.-SAT. 9:30 A.M. 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