"wft-lE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 SDAY, JUNE 22, ]954 TEIE MICHIGAN I)A.L .TU.SDAY,.JUNE U,,1.. Regents Accept $240,800 in Grants HEARINGS REVIEW: rsw~rd 2' tl V (Continued from Page 1) Ernest N. May, Wilmington, Del- aware, has given $500 for the Isola Denman Robinson scholarship fund. The Regents accepted the offer of Harold M. Sapero and Samuel Shapero, 2515 Cadillac Tower, De- troit, that $500 will be provided by the Samuel and Harold M. Shapero Foundatio to establish an annual scholarship of that amount in the Law School. The dean of the Law School will designate the recipient or recipients from students enter- ing the freshman, junior or senior law classes who demonstrate sup- erior scholarship by the grades re- ce' =d are serious scholars and are in real financial need. Parke, Davis and Company, De- troit, has given $450 for the com- pany's fellowship in pharmaceuti- cal chemistry.' From the University Club of De- troit, the Regents accepted $258.94 for the club's endowment fund and $228.79. for the Union Opera As- sistance fund. The Erie and Kalamazoo Rail- road Company, Pontiac, has given $200 "for the preparation of a his- tory of the railroad by a student of t3 Univer-"y under the direc- tion of Prof. Lewis G. Vander Wilde," director of the Michigan Historical Collections. Cooley Foundation From F. Charlton Mills, Jr., 965 Wayside Road, Cleveland, the Re- gents accepted $200 for the Morti- mer E. Cooley Foundation r" En- gineering fund. Dr. Carl J. Her'-elmann, Lin- coln, Nebraska, has given $200 to assist in the expenses of the Uni- versity's Aleutian expedition this summer. The fund will be admin- istered by Theodore P. Bank, II, field director of the expedition, and is to be used for dental sur- veys and research. Several members of the Medical School have donated services which have been credited to departmen- tal funds as they have designated: $150 has been, credited to the Oph- thalmological Research fund with Dr. Harold F. Falls contributing $25, Dr. F. Bruce Fralick, $100, and Dr. John W. Henderson, $25; the Pathology Department Travel Fund-Expendable Account has been credited ,vith $50 for services do- nated by Dr. Carl V. Weller; and the Department of Internal Medi- cine, Contingent Fund, has been credited with $156.25 for services donated by Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis. The Detroit Alumni Chapter of Alpha Omega fraternity, Detroit, has given $100 for the chapter's loan fund. Leaves of Absence Ten leaves of absence were also approved by the Regents for the 1954-55 term. Prof. Paul Henle of the philoso- phy department was granted a sab- batical to go to the University of Paris under a Fulbright research fellowship. Prof. Cyrus Levinthal of the phy- sics department was given leave for the year to accept a fellowship from the National Foundation of Infantile Paralysis to work in the Pasteur Institute in Paris on virus research. The U. S. Public Health Service has awarded Prof. Robert Mc- Cleary of the psychology depart- ment a special research fellowship for research on the neural mech- anisms involved in the learning process. Prof. Haller Jones of the College of Architecture and Design will study art education programs in the New York area. A Fulbright grant will enable Prof. Wiley Hitchcock of the School of Music to do research in Italy. Other leaves were granted for part time periods. Prof. H. R. Crane of the physics department will supervise a Naval Ordinance Research project. Prof. Robert Thrall of the mathematics department will conduct opera- tions research for the U. S. Army and Prof. Charles Dolph of the mathematics department will serve as a research mathematician. . Prof. Richard Blackwell of the medical school will direct the Vi- sion and Optics Division of Project Michigan. The National Science Founda- tion has awarded a grant to Prof. Leonard Tornheim of the mathe- matics department for research on the geometry of numbers. Botany Expedition A leave for the fall semester was given to Prof. Pierre Dansereau of the botany department. He will take part in a botanical expedition to the Ivory Coast. Henry Smith Carhart Professor of physics, George Uhlenbeck will be -a visiting professor of theoreti- cal physics at the University of Leiden. A leave for the second semester was granted to Prof. John Carow of tlhe forestry school. Prof. Preston Slosson of the his- tory department will be the Haynes Foundation Visiting Professor at the University of Redlands. The appointment of two visiting professors was also made at the Regents meeting. Prof. Daniel Wit of the Univer- sity of Cincinnati will join the po- litical science department for the 1954-55 term. Prof. Howard Wilensky of the University of Chicago was appoint- ed assistant professor of sociology. Emeritus Titles Emeritus titles weie conferred on five members of the University faculty. They are: Jose Maria Albaladejo, assistant professor emeritus of Spanish; Al- fred Lynn Ferguson, professor em- eritus of chemistry; Arthur Hack- ett, professor emeritus of voice; Al- bert Easton White, professor emer- itus of metallurgical engineering and director emeritus of the Engi- neering Research Institute, and Alvalyn Eunice Woodward, assist-E ant professor emeritus of zoology.I No Final Action Taken On Faculty Suspensions (Continued from Page 1) do not feel that the invocation of a right guaranteed every citizen by the Constitution is grounds for firing," the statement added. As soon as the suspensions were announced the carefully planned machinery of the procedures set up to handle such cases began to move. The procedures were established in May, 1953 by a joint faculty- administrative group. The proce- dures were then approved by the Faculty Senate, a body composed of all University faculty members with the rank of assistant pro- fessor and up. Special Sub-Committee Under the new procedures the Senate Advisory Committee, the executive body of the Faculty Senate, appointed a special Sub- committee on Intellectual Freedom and Integrity. This committee is the final ap- peal board for faculty members However, their cases will not go to this committee unless the President recommends dismissal. If dismissal is recommended the faculty members have five days in which to request a hearing be- fore the Sub-committee. This com- mittee then makes its recommen- dations to the Board of Regents which will take the final action. According to a report from the Senate Advisory Committee, that committee has not "attempted to define or recommend in advance the specific criteria by which the suspended faculty members should be judged." Meanwhile, to assist him in making a recommendation to the Senate Advisory Committee, the President has asked three com- mittees to investigate the cases of the three suspenaed men. Two of these committees have finished their investigation. They are the executive committee of the literary college and the exec- utive committee of the medical school. The committee which is now meeting and discussing the case with the President is an ad hoc committee appointed by the Sen- ate Advisory Committee. This committee consists of five faculty members chosen from the entire faculty. 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