Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 25, 1970 Justice comes to Kent? (Continued from Page 1) In concluding, the jury found the Kent administration guilty of "laxity. over-indulgence and per- missiveness," called the local Yip- pies a group "of intellectual and social misfits," and called for in- creased effeorts "to remove all the troublemakers ..." Currently, Kent has its own campus police force. This force uses a former health building as its headquarters. Because Kent is a state-supported school, the city police, the Portage County sher- iffs department and other agencies may come on campus without the university's permission. There are also said to be several FBI agents. assigned to the campus who stay in a motel across the street from the campus. However, the presence of these and other "security measures" don't seem to bother the vast ma- jority of students who appear to be largely apathetic. For those who participated in last May's demonstrations it was their first involvement in protest. Most are afraid of injunctions which pro- hibit "marches" under the new state law passed last summer. In the words of student senate member TIC Butz, the law "makes it a felony for conspiracy to com- mit a misdemeanor." At any "risk of dirsuption," students may be expelled after a hearing before a state-appointed referee. The referee for Kent is Seabury Ford, the Portage county Repub- lican chairman. Ford is also the state-appointed assistant prosecu- tor who has been working with the jury in handling the indictments. Ford recently commented that during last May's demonstrations the Guard "should have shot them all (the students protesting). Any rally students have on the Commons now must be approved by the Administration. In the midst of it all, is Robert White, president of the university At 62, he is in poor health and refuses to meet with students or the press. He has reportedly pur- chased a new home in a neigh- boring community and is rumored to be planning to resign. In the meantime, the police have been able to arrest barely a majority of those indicted-on- ly 13 out of the 25. Two ex-stu- dents were already in jail, one serving a 20-40 year sentence for selling drugs. i 1 HIRING FEUD: Grad in dispute with 'U' of Neb. regents (Continued from Page 1) was "reliably reported" that a re- There remain some unanswered; ception after the inauguration of questions in the Davis case con- President Fleming, Davis had said cerning who transmitted what in- that the word from "Wisconsin formatign to whom. But some people" was that Fleming could points seem clear. not always be trusted, and that if Vanwas hmc ellrFleming acted as students "guided Varner was chancellor of Oak- o eortclydrce i, land University until February or democratically directed him," 19nd UnichesaitynamFerwaryhis presidency would be accept- 1978. "Michael Davis name was able, and that otherwise it would not unfamiliar to me, Varner , said last night, and he added he was present at Fleming's inaugu- ration when Davis spoke as the SGC representative.' According to the Regents' state- ment, when Davis' appointment by the philosophy department came to Varner's attention during the summer, the chancellor had some doubts as to whether it should be approved. The Nebraska Regents then sent a university attorney to Ann Ar- bor to investigate Davis' back- ground. The attorney spoke to Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith on Aug. 12, but Smith said he gave the attorney no new information. Less than a week later, Davis was informed that the Regents had rejected his appointment. "I was really surprised that it .:ran into this problem," said Smith. i r s ,i a s y z s 1 T C t E C f t nOL Davis denies that he attended such a reception after Fleming's inauguration. But Davis, speaking at Fleming's inauguration as the student representative, urged in very strong terms that students be given a greater voice in Uni- versity government. The Regents cite Davis' fast and sit-in at the Administration Bldg. last March in support of what the Regents call "a student proposed revision of Regents bylaws." The bylaws which Davis was demonstrating for, which would have delegated to students juris- diction over the enactment and enforcement of non-academic stu- dent rules, had been drawn up by a student-faculty committee, and had been approved by Senate As- sembly, the University-wide facul- ty representative body. The Re- gents statement also fails to note that Davis was a primary author of the proposed bylaws. STUDENT RATES 4c to 2c Econocopy 1217 S. Univ. 761-0087 For the student body: FLARES by { Levi SFarah A Wright $ Tads A Sebring State Street at Liberty 9 Ar * -Daily-Jim Judkis MICHAEL DAVIS sits in the Administration Bldg. during his three-day fast over revisions in the University's bylaws. This in- cident was one of the four cited by University of Nebraska Regents as reasons for vetoing Davis' teaching appointment there. PULITZER WINNER: Richard Hoftstadter, historian, dies at 54 NEW YORK (R) - Historian Richard Hofstadter, winner of two Pulitzer Prizes for his live- ly and often controversial writ- ings on American history, died yesterday of leukemia. He was 54. Hofstadter, a professor at Columbia University, was the author of 13 books including two Pulitzer winners - "The Age of Reform" in 1955, and "Anti- Intellectualism in American Life" in 1964. In the latter book, Hofstadter developed a much-disputed theory that throughout most of America's political history "the intellect has been for the most part either an outsider, a ser- vant or a scapegoat." Admirers and critics alike ack- nowledge Hofstadter's brilliance in interpreting large themes in American history and his hand- ling of such contemporary phe- nomena as the New Deal, Mc- Carthyism and the conservatism of Sen. Barry Goldwater. He once said of the work, "I function more as a historical critic. I offer trial models of historical interpretation." Hofstadter was born in Buf- falo, N.Y., the son of a Polish- born furrier, and graduate from the University of Buffalo. He took his PhD at Columbia Uni- versity in 1942 and joined i t s faculty in 1946. Survivors include his widow, a son and a daughter. A-memor- ial service was planned for Fri- day at Columbia University Chapel. He said the Nebraska attorneyt asked him about Davis' sit-in overo proposed bylaw changes and his testimony before the state legis- lature appropriations comm~ittee. Smith said he told the attorney the demonstration was "as peace- ful a one as we had ever seen," and that Davis had testified before the committee as an "invited par- ticipant." Referring to the reasons cited by the Regents for vetoing Davis' appointment, Smith said, "I would not support stopping an appoint- ment recommended by a depart- ment because of information of this kind." The Faculty Liason Committee at Nebraska and the local chapter; of the American Association of University P r o f e s~s o r s (AAUP)j have urged the 'university to pro- vide restitution to Davis which would probably be the difference between his promised $9,500 salary as an instructor at Nebraska and; his current salary as a teaching fellow here. There is substantial dispute be- tween the Nebraska Regents and. Davis on the four incidents cited in the Regents' statement. The Nebraska Regents claim it p for CAN-CAN Nov. 5-8 p.m. Nov. 6-7 & 10p.m. Nov. 7-7 & 10p.m. will be on sale Tuesday, Oct. 27 ONLY, in the Soph Show office in the Union BLOCK TICKET SALES (10 or more) "I Try Daily Classifieds PANASONIC H &~s5 A A When Quality's a Must- j PAN -SONIC RF- 7270 *4 : 0 1 ARM 'II a I wow, RQ-209s I PANASONIC Portable Cassette Tape Recorder Bate ndrive co stnspeed, AC/ B t e Y . C a s s e t t O - p f a t o r ward, rewind, t oPuatifove. trol. automatic ev on. AC/Battery PANASONIC AM/FM Radio widr Casette Recorder PANASONIC FM/AM/FM Stereo Radio/8-Track Player Two 612" speakers in each enclosure; 1 95 AFC on FM; push-button selectors, ' jacks! 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