Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September,2, .1970-4 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September,2, 1 97O~ HUBER COMMITTEE Report hits campus control By RON LANDSMAN Managing Editor, 1969-70 A report prepared for the Special State Senate Committee on Campus Disorders recoi- mends that no punitive legis- lation be passed to control cam- puses and that communication between college groups be in- creased to help avert major campus unrest. The generally conciliatory tone of the report runs counter to much of the tongue-lashing 3tate Rep. Robert Huber (R- Troy), chairman of the commit- tee, has given campus protesters. And two points of the report that "off-campus agitators or' on-campus activists" are not a major cause of campus violence and that scholarships should be granted and withdrawn only on academic grounds-go directly against much of what Huber, has said in the past. The report was officially re- leased last March at an all-day conference at Nazareth College in Kalamazoo. It additionally states that:. * New laws are not needed either "to enumerate new crimes or to make more serious offenses of existing crimes in order to deal with, campus disorder." * Increased communication should be initiated to avert c A m p u s problems, including physical availability for direct communication with some rec- ognized symbol of authority, preferably the president. * Dissatisfaction in general with college life is the underly- ing reason behind student dem- dnstrations. The report also as- serts that students don't always know why they are protesting. * Colleges should seek to "de- velop ways to really rewarding good teaching," 'saying there is a "far greater need for teaching doctorates today than there is for the highly research-oriented programs which are the back- bone of graduate instruction at the present time," and * Colleges should pay more attention to local problems. "New programs must be devel- oped which will make the uni- versity the urban equivalent of the land-grant colleges," the re- port states. The report has three major, sections. One is an analysis of data gathered from question- naires sent to seven people on each of the 72 state campuses- president, dean of students, fac- ulty chairman, trustee board chairman, public relations di- rector, student newspaper editor and student body president. There is also an analysis of the interviews with students, faculty members and adminis- trators on 51 of the campuses and, the third part is recom- mendations on legislation. Intervention by the Legisla- ture, the report states, "is un- likely to contribute" to chan- neling "the energies which are reflected In student unrest into more productive mechanisms and paths." Huber's committee received from the University little more than a compendium of archaic by-laws, student handbooks, public information bulletins, Student Government Council regulations a n d a complete. guide to the University world of concerts, lectures and movies. The University completely ig- nored the question on radical groups - which seeked infor- mation on "all white political action groups" especially names of radical groups, their size, fI- iancial ties with the- University, and a University assessment of which "seem to be affecting your campus the most." In the prologue to the report, the agency says it does not rec- ommend that "the way to fore- stall student disorder is to bow in advance to student dissent (because) most disorders may be defused if new means or tech- niques of communication are found for determining student needs and student feelings . . ."w A similar attitude is taken' toward young faculty members, who "may be defused harmlessly by more skillful. institutional communication. than has pre- valled in the past."- "Communication f a i1 u r e is often cited as a root of our more complex social problems; college communities represent no ob- vious exception,", the report states.::_ "One of the, most important considerations related to this is that an image be projected of'a. readiness for open -communica- tion, (including) physical avail- ability for direct communication of some recognized symbol of authority, preferably the presi- dent." On the question of campus security, the writers of the re- port strongly place the respon- sibility for policing campus vio- lence on the State Police rather than city police or county sher- iff's departments. .Citing considerable student dissatisfaction with what col- leges now offer, the report sug- gests modification of present undergraduate curricula, and faculty responsibility "to ac- count for the increasing sophis- tication of today's students." . Further, the report postulates that an overall discouragement with classes and colleges, is the major reason for student dem- onstrations. University presidents p 1 a y the most crucial role in all this, the report states. "No single fac- tor may be more significant in coping with student unrest than is the style or stance of the president of the institution." It is not so much what the president says or does, only that he be seen, the report suggests. "Visibility seems to be more im- portant finally than accessibil- ity," it explains. College presidents come in for special scrutiny by the agency, which believes the current cam- laws pus crisis; is giving "a signifi- cance and an importance (to) the president's office that few previous analysis of the institu- tion may have ,conceded." High administrative officials come in for some comments as well, although they are generally of little c o n c e r n. The report notes that trustees are "often called 'absentee landlords' " and n o t e s, parenthetically, "with some justification, judging from this study." Thomas Emmet Jr., who heads the higher Education group that conducted the study, pointed out that the report was aimed not just at the Legislature but at the academic community as well. NOW SHOWING NGC THEATRE CORPORATION A NATIONAL GENERAL COMPANY FOH VILLarE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769-130 Monday-Friday 7:25-9:45 Saturday-Sunday 1:00-3:00-5:10 7:25-4:45 "Elliott Gould is superb!" --William Wolf, cue: ba gazine 4* COA M ,TURES w ELLIOTT GOULD CANpiCfEBERGEN 5 t 'yby ROBERT KAUFMAN S" E ; B~ o~o~oe ' ~+Ot6 S , b rOALOSTS P !o0bed d- 8.cetteby RtCHAR0 RUSH4 f, Y- ..mommol I': - -- ,-T- _ Labor, GLF to provide issues for the fall? STUDLNT BOOK SRVICF £TUDUNT BOOK 9L-RVICQ (Continued from Page 1) enough say in the determining of the curriculum. Summer forced a temporary halt in the tf union recognitions drive, but when it is resumed in the fall, things could happen fast. The confrontation spiral is already in motion for the Gay Liberation Front (GLF). Formed last May, the group was denied their request to hold a midwest conference on homosexuality. In rejecting the conference, Presi- dent Robben Fleming said it would adversely affect the Uni- versity's image and he also said such a conference should be lim- ited to those with a "profession- al interest" in. the subject. But with Student Government Council maintaining that it has the right to organize conferences for organizations which it recog- nizes,and that Fleming, there- fore, has no say in the matter, the GLF conference is tentative- ly scheduled for September. The issue is a relatively minor one, in that GLF actually has only about a dozen active members. But 107 people were arrested a year ago over another seeming- ly minor issue-the student bookstore. Women's Liberation is in much the same "sleeper" posi- tion that the blacks were a year ago-not very unified. Their im- mediate concern is for a perma- nent day care center, supported by the University. From the struggle over an is- sue such as a day care center could come the organization and awareness to create a major conflict over the other issues of discrimination against women in employment and admissions. And then there are the fa- miliar issues which have caused trouble in the past, and, re- maining unchanged, hold po- -tential for the future. The ROTC controversy last fall nev- er really got going, but it could, in the future, still be a topic of student concern. The sit-ins last February over job recruiting by corporations which hold defense contracts only resulted in a number of arrests, but could also happen again. Classified re- search, if anyone can,manage to get enough facts on it, could be a source for confrontation. But no matter what happens, there will undoubtedly be an "aftershock" when new state and University laws and rules are applied to demonstrators C' for the first time. The Regents' interim conduct rules have been severely criti- cized by both faculty and stu- dents. And, under new state laws, a student is subject to expulsion, cutting of scholarship funds, fines and stiffer jail sentences for various demonstration-con- nected offenses. Avoiding com- pliance will be difficult for the University, partly because of the nature of the laws, and partli because of the mood of the public. If they do cause in- creased unrest this year another flock of repressive laws 'over next summer could make things very different for 1971-72. But the concern now is for 1970. Several issues have the po- tential for conflict-only time will tell for certain which ones, if any, will dombine to produce an explosive mixture. C~tLz .) 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