Committee By LINDSAY CHANEY A drastic restructuring of the curriculum a n d organization of the natural r e s o u r c e s school, including abolition of departments and possibly the school itself, was recommended by an ad hoc com- mittee appointed to s t u d y en- vironmental programs within the University. In a report issued last month, the Natural Resources n Review Committee recommended t h a t greater flexibility be allowed in the undergraduate program - which could be achieved through eliminating departmental designa- tions - that mode financing be provided f o r graduate students, that programs be oriented more toward environmental studies and that the University s t u d y the feasibility of creating a new Col- lege of' Environmental Studies. The ad hoc committee was ap- pointed by Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith on July 25 of last year. The purpose of the committee was "to review the program of t h e School of Natural Resources, its relationship to other programs of the Univer- sity, and its future growth and de- velopment." When Smith appointed the com- mittee members, he urged them "not to be bound by convention or hampered by tradition, but to be free-ranging in ideas ..." In accordance with this direc- tive, the committee, under t h e chairmanship of Stephen Spurr, vice president and dean of the graduate school, has suggested a variety of measures to upgrade environmental programs at the University, with emphasis on the School of -Natural Resources. At the undergraduate level, the committee recommends t h a t a liberal arts program in environ- mental affairs be developed which would lead to a baccalaureate de- gree (either B.A. or B.S.). calls This liberal arts program is en- visioned as providing a wide va- riety of courses in humanities, social science, and natural science which are broadly related to en- vironmental concerns. C o u r s e s would embrace areas such as ur- ban planning, human ecology and noise pollution as opposed- to the agriculturally oriented programs like forestry and land conserva- tion now offered by the school. At the present time, there is no liberal arts program available within the School of Nat- ural Resources. Rather, each of three departments has its o w n separate curriculum leading to a degree. The three departments are Forestry, Wildlife and Fisheries and Resource Planning and Con- servation. The committee further recom- mends that the present curricula from each department be com- bined into one program leading to a B.S. degree. This one program or environmental would have core distribution re- quirements and allow a wide range of options for concentra- tion at the upper undergraduate levels. The committee found that most people at the graduate as well as undergraduate levels, within each department had a major field of interest which was not specifical- ly related to the department in which they were studying. In ad- dition, members of the school, in- cluding the faculty, tended, for the most part, to identify with or- ganizations or groups other than their, departments. For this rea- son the committee felt that de- partments w e r e an unnecessary and artificial division within the school, and recommends thatI they be abolished. In place of the present depart- ments, the committee would have either a single administrative unit, or a limited number of new group- ings according to the interests of the faculty and students. The re- port goes on to say, however, that no new system can be definitely abolished until it is determined how large the school or its suc- cessor will be. At the graduate level, the com- mittee recommends that more fi- nancial aid be given to graduate students in the form of fellow- ships, grants and teaching posi- tions. The report points out that in comparison to other schools, the School of Natural Resources offers little guaranteed financial support, and could thus have dif- ficulty attracting topr a te stu- dents. The committee cites two sources of financial aid which could be expanded - teaching fellowships and advisor positions., The report suggests that large enrollment courses in environ- mental quality topics could pro- vide jobs for graduate students as well as be of benefit to large seg- ments of the University. Advisor positions - counseling incoming students on course se- lections and available programs, are normally assumed by faculty members with volunteer help from graduate students. The commit- tee recommends that these posi- tions be given to graduate stu- dents - with a salary - thus freeing the faculty members for other duties. Another recommendation f o r the graduate program is for it to be more flexible "to permit both the introduction of specializations relevant to society's needs and the phasing out of non-viable pro- grams." At the present time, the grad- uate program offers a large num- ber of strictly defined and limited programs. The committee recom- mends that this plethora of often irrelevant degrees be replaced by one or two general programs which sollege could be flexible enough to ac- comodate themselves to any area of student interest. The committee's report empha- sizes that the broad area of en- vironmental studies is a growing and changing field in which the University should be a leader. The committee also believes that this area of environmental studies will involve both scientific and social sciences, as t h e y apply to the study of the environment, to such an extent as to justify establish- ing a n e w College of Environ- mental Studies. The proposed College of Envir- onmental Studies would either use the present School of Natural Re- sources as .a core, or be a com- pletely new unit. Whatever its be- ginning, the new school would be professional in nature in that it would bring the resources of the natural and social sciences to bear See COMMITTEE, Page 2 MAO ® SPEAKS iaI See Editorial Page Ft s Vol LXXX, No. 13-S Ann Arbor, Michigan--Friday, May 22, 1970 Ten Cents J COOLER High--8o Low--53 Partly sunny, chance of showers Six Pages Guardsmen State Senate adds to recalled to firearms ban Ohio State higher ed fund bill I COLUMBUS, Ohio {M-Militant students blocked a main street at Ohio State University last night, prompting a call- out of 1,100 National Guardsmen to the campus only two days after it was reopened. Until Tuesday, the university had been closed for 12 days because of student riots. OSU President Novice G. Fawcett vowed at a news con- ference last night to keep the university open this time and said 5,000 troops are available to help him do it. "We cannot tolerate violence on this campus," Fawcett said. "Any student who engages in violence will be dismissed immediately." Fawcett said Guardsmen would cordon off the entire "campus to block outsiders, whom he blamed for most of Group offers the trouble. Columbus Safety Director James Hughes said he recognized many ch ldof the demonstrators from "othe c contacts." The city imposed a 10 p.m. tc 6 a.m. curfew on a two-square- The new demonstrations ap- peared to be a continuation of The Child Care Action Group dissidence from last month wher of Women's Liberation has sub- students called for a strike be- mitted a proposal to Dean Wilbur cause of what they termed in- Cohen of the education school, adequate administration response head of the University's child care to their demands, such as in- center study committee, calling creased black enrollment, student for the establishment of a facility power and women's rights. to provide low-cost short-term Two hundred police, patrolmen day care for the eight week sum- and sheriff's deputies broke up a met~ program, band of several hundred militant The proposed site of the child students that had blocked Hig care center would be the nursery Street, a main city thoroughfare and kindergarten r o o m s of the adjacent to the campus, for two University School. It would be op- hours. en five days a week from 7:30- The High Street blockade capped 5:30. an afternoon of campus rallies The staff for the facility would and demonstrations. It marked the be a combination of volunteers first time during the day the dem- and participating parents. T h e onstrators had moved off univer- University would pay the sayaries sity property. of two co-ordinators and also pay Police were armed with riot guns the cost of establishing the fa- and bayonets and used a gas gun cility. Total budget is estimated at to lob some tear gas canisters at $2000. ; students. Control of the "Drop-In Cen- Students threw rocks at police- ter" would be a parent board se- men, but the demonstrators were lected by the parents. Decision- one to two blocks ahead of law making would include the vote of officers and neither the gas nor the volunteers. the rocks were effective. _ __ . See NATIONAL, Page 2 1 -Associated Press Police protect East German premier WEST GERMAN POLICE battle right-wing demonstrators yesterday as East German Premier Willi Stoph visits a memorial to people killed while fighting fascism in Nazi Germany. Stoph was in West Germany for a summer conference with West German Chancellor Willy Brandt. (See story on page 3.) STOCKHOLDERS MEET TODAY: By CARLA RAPOPORT The state Senate approved, 22-12, a higher education spending bill early this morn- ing which included a $73.2 mil- lion appropriation to the Uni- versity for the 1970-71 fiscal year and a provision requiring the expulsion of any student convicted of interfering, with normal university operations. Late last night senators added an amendment requiring expulsion for any student carrying a non- registered firearm on university property. Another amendment added to the bill last night, would require state higher educ~ational institu- tions to make a full report to the state within 30 days of any violent, destructive, or disruptive incidents occurring on campus. Two other amendments to the bill, both apparently aimed in part at leasthat this University, failed to obtain a majority. The first apparently aimed at the University's recent agreement to greatly increase black admis- sions, would have barred the use of racial identification on college applications or in admissions de- cisions. After a debate in which the University's law school was men- tioned specifically, the Senate also rejected an amendment that would have required schools to accept all qualified in-state applicants before accepting any new out-of- state candidates. Both expulsion Provisions now included in the bill stipulate that no part of the state appropriation may be used for the salary of ed- ucational costs of any students or staff members convicted of spe- cific actions involving campus dis- orders or of any person found See STATE, Page 2 t Campaign ols meetin t gets ready for fight on prox By HESTER PULLING lags so far behind in its treatment they are ignored," Mrs. , and BILL DINNER of people." charged. g Special To The Daily Channing also noted. "The gen-' Last April, the Regent DETROIT - The Campaign to ius of the campaign was the at- the University's GM share Make General Motors Responsible tempt to work within the system, management despite sul yesterday held its first convention rather than to use violent means." oposition from students a on corporate responsibility, in the Not all Campaign GM spokes- ulty. last leg of its fight for "share- men were satisfied on that score. "Michigan was the first holders' democracy." Press Secretary Susan Gross said sity to have an enviro: t T d u tshe was disillusioned with "work- teach-in and we were ovel The drive culminate today at ! the annual GM stockholders meet- + ing within the system." ed by the support it create ing Cobo Hall in downtown De- "University presidents all over Geoffrey Cowan. troit. the country are calling for con- "We fell an aura of o The basic stat of the m -structive channels of dissent, but and were greatly disa] ing eill be to create the debate- when students use these channels ; with the Regents' decisio. over the proposal, said Phillip Moore, executive secretary of OBSERV Campaign GM. "We intend to have some serious and substantial discussions." C iy The proposals of Campaign GM, c ou 0C which the GM management has recommended shareholders vote against, are : .By -An increase in GM's board of ;BF directors by three members with The City C new members who will "insist that on a propose the board take account on the which has many social consequences of its decisions"; city plannin -Establishment of an indepen- which has b dent committee to study past GM director of t decisions and to recommend struc- on the grou tural changes and substantial "integrity of goals for the future. The resole Campaign GM leaders have ac- \Tersl knowledged that they have no proposes to chance of winning the fight over presently st the proposals, but, said campaign through a re coordinator, John Esposito, "The nect with a major success of Campaign GM is ,secting the Secretary of the Interior Walter Hickel tells a National Press Club audience yesterday that the recent anti-war demonstrations in Washington opened up new lines of communications between young people and the government. Woodcock succeeds Reuther in UAW DETROIT (M)- Leonard Woodcock's selection to the presidency of the United Auto Workers, succeeding the 'late Walter P. Reuther, w a s as- sured yesterday with the with- drawal of Douglas A. Fraser, the only other candidate. Woodcock, 59, is not expected to change the UAW's policies or TATORY STREET o vote on extension the demands it will make later this year in contract negotiations with the automotive .and agricul- tural implement industries. Fraser, like Woodcock a UAW vice president, said in withdraw- ing: 'There is no division in ranks. We will go to the bargain- ing table united as never before. The difference will be in style, not philosophy." The 25-member International Executive Board will name Reu- ther's successor today to serve un- til the union's 1972 convention. Fraser said 13 executive board members had expressed favor for Woodcock in private conferences with Secretary - Treasurer Emil Mazey, who has been acting pres- ident since Reuther's death in an airplane crash May 9. Fraser said 12 had favored him. Woodcock has led the 1.6 mil- lion member union's bargaining team in several tangles with the world's largest manufacturing cor- poration, General Motors, In addition to being chief of the UAW's GM Department, Wood- cock also is head of its Aerospace Department, where contracts ex- pire next year. Between them, the two departments contain almost one-third of the union's mem ers. Fraser said he "certainly will not challenge" Woodcock's re- HARVARD VALLANCE Council will vote Monday night d extension of Observatory St. been termed "an atrocity in g" by an SGC member and een strongly criticized by the the city planning department rnds that it would violate the the neighborhood." ation before council next week extend Observatory St., which ops at Geddes (see map), sidential neighborhood to con- and cross Washtenaw, inter- corner of Forest Ave. and oppose the resolution at the 7:30 p.m. Monday meeting at City Hall. Opponents to the extension have urged all interested residents of the area to appear at the meeting. The primary purpose of the extension, explains Michael Prochaska, director of the city planning department, is to facili- tate the flow of traffic to the University Hospital complex from the southern area of Ann Arbor. The high volume of traffic resulting from direct connection between Forest and Observatory, he says, would disrupt the "cohesive nature" of the pre- dominantly student residential area which is characterized hv high nedestrian use. I Wzid. MW