The BG News May 16, 1969

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The BG News May 16, 1969 Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 5-16-1969 The BG News May 16, 1969 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News May 16, 1969" (1969). BG News (Student Newspaper). 2337. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/2337 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. Council duties to be decided in referendum By RICH BERGEMAN tatlve Eric Furry at ths first meet- Assistant Editorial Editor powers of Student Council. cratic student government the pow- In an advisory capacity, thus mak- ing of the 1969-70 Student Coun- The referendum will put last A bill calling for a referendum cil, provided that within ten days er to Insure these rights for the ing Its decisions binding on no one. which will define the role Univer- year's Student Council BUI No. individual students. Should the students support B1U of passage of the bill, a referen- 22 up for vote of confidence before sity students want Student Council dum will be held Intended to be a If the bUl Is defeated In the No. 22, Student Council will then to play next year was passed 12-5 the student body. BUI No. 22 Is a referendum, then Student Council proceed next year to act as a leg- "declaration of the students' posi- 12-point declarationof specific stu- last night by Council. tion" In respect to the governing will take that as the will of the itimate voice in defending and prac- The bill, proposed by represen- dent rights, which gives to demo- students to have Council act only Ucing these rights the students have declared theirs by voting "yes" In the referendum. The basic arguments against the Nixon takes bill passed last night were that this was not the time to bring the issue up. The reasons were that Abe Fortas it was too late in the year and that the incoming freshmen would not have anything to say on the matter. resignation It was felt by the majority however, that Student Council should know WASHINGTON (AP) - Pleading to before next year just what role ;he end that "there has been no the student l»dy wanted them to wrongdoing on my part," Associate perform. Justice Abe Fortas has yielded to The bill provides for open for- mounting pressure and resigned ums within a week, designed to In- from 'he U.S. Supreme Court. form the students of the importance He Is the first justice to quit of the Issue. the Court under fire In the history A resolution condemning the sus- of the Republic. pensions of Hoi Nye and David President Nixon accepted For- Drum right made by President Will- tas' resignation, effective Wednes- iam T. Jerome was also passed, day, In a 20-wjrd letter lacking by a vote of 14-5. any expression of regret. The The resolution was proposed by Court and the White House an- representative Dan Warfield, and it nounced the dramatic climax of the Included the adoption of a paper Fortas affair yesterday morning. on Judicial Process and Appeal, The brief exchange of letters was Which with the bUl, Is to be cir- made public hours later. culated among the student body Demands for an Investigation of In the form of a petition. Fortas' extra-judicial relations The petition Is designed to amass with Jailed financier Louis E. Wolf- student opinion to be presented to son persisted In Congress, despite the administration. a White House statement that Nix- The paper. Judicial Process and on considers the case closed. Appeal, drafted by representatives The historic Incident also could Warfield, Rich Schager, and Barb have major Impact on the future Baker states that the suspension of of the Supreme Court, very likely the two students "was both legally shifting the balance from a pro- and morally wrong." gressive to a more conservative The paper concludes that the line. Fortas' resignation means decision of the University Appeals Nixon must fill two vacancies on the Board, which voted 4-1 to over- Court this year, with Chief Jus- rule the suspensions, should have tice Earl Warren retiring In June. Friday, May 16 , 1969-The last issue of the BG News for the been adhered to. It goes on to state: The 58-year old Fortas, whom 1968-69 staff. We close at the end of a year and the beginning, "...any disciplinary action taken his old friend President Lyndon B. we hope, of on era In the name of "the best interests Johnson had nominated to be Chief of the University' should be subject Justice less than a year ago, lele- to appeal to the groups that com- (Contlnued on Page 6) Friday, May 16, 1969 Volume 53, Number 104 (Contlnued on Page 3) Higher education appropriations in doubt By BRUCE LARRICK From this It Is possible to as- For Bowling Green, the appro- raised cannot be predicted until the Editorial Editor universities have some Idea about sum: that the total education (el- priations blU provides for a budget state legislature passes an edu- their appropriations for the next Columbus, O. — No one knows ementary, secondary, and higher) of $26.7 million, with a capital exactly what form appropriations cation budget, Dr. Mlllett said. two years, he said. appropriations wlU be about $2 Improvements grant of $4 million The fee celling, which was placed Dr. Mlllett then quickly added that for higher education in the state billion, since the non-educaUon for an Industrial technology build- at $600 per year two years ago, wlU take, how much the approprl- the Board of Regents may only rec- appropriations will total $4,175 ing. has been eliminated, and no celling commend a fee ceUlng, that It had aUons will be, or how large a stu- billion. How much student fees will be will be relnstltuted untU the state dent fee Increase wlU be necessary, Because the total education bud- John D. Mlllett, chancellor of the get Is contained in one bill (H.B. Board of Regents said here Wed- 531), the Board of Regents Is being nesday In an exclusive Interview forced to fight with the school with the BG News. foundations (elementary and sec- 'Poetry of '70V presented Dr. Mlllett expressed the same ondary educaUon; for funds, Dr. kind of doubt about higher education Mlllett said. appropriations that most state of- He added that the $110 million by American, Canadian poets ficials, ranging from the governor "found" last week In the state on down, have expressed in the last treasury department will also have A group of young American tally's poems have appear- peared in "Kayak," "Cloud few weeks. to be divided between the univer- and Canadian poets wUl pre- ed or will soon appear In Marauder," "The World," The only indications anyone has sities and the school foundations. sent their work today at 4 "The Massachusetts Re- and In many other magazines. had stems from a vague comment This means total higher edu- p.m. In the Forum of the Stu- view", "Trace," "Trl Quar- In 1968 he won the Academy made by a state admlnlstraUon cations appropriations of between dent Services Building. They terly," and "The World." His of American Poets Prize at official that the total budget for the $400 miUlon and $500 mlUlon, de- are Michael I ally, Stephan chapbook, "May 25, 1942," the University of Iowa. state of Ohio will total about $6 pending on the mood of the state Shrader, Darrell Gray, and will be soon published by the He Is represented in the billion legislature. Wayne Clifford. Island City Press. authology "Quickly Aging These poets, soon to be Shrader, with Ray DlPal- Here: Some Poets of the graduates of the Creative Wr- ma of Bowling Green, has re- 1970's," to be published by iting Program at the Univer- cently co-authored a collec- Doubleday-Anchor In Decem- Students volunteer to aid sity of Iowa, represent the tion of poems entitled "Mac- ber. voice of poetry In the 1870' s aroons." His poems have ap- Gray is currenUy editor o* the lnfuentlal poetry mag- azine "Suction." His pamph- Findlay migrant workers let of poems "The Excuses," By SUSIE McCULLOUGH was recenUy published by the Staff Reporter Abraxas Press. A book-length The conception that Bowling Green students are apathetic is often collection of his poems a misconception. "Something Swims Out" Is Six. students, under the direction of Wesley Harris, freshman In being considered by the Salt educaUon, are currenUy serving as volunteer teachers for migrant Mound Press. workers In an adult educaUon program known as the "Findlay Project," His poem- 'iave appeared In Harris, self-appointed director of the program, had spent three years more than a score of literary leaching basic adult literacy classes, and wanted to start a similar magazines; among them are program in Bowling Green. Training six friends In the Laubach method, "Kayak," 'The Manhattan a word-association process of teaching English, Harris' efforts materi- Review, " "The Poetry Re- alized Into the Findlay Project this spring. view," and "Poetry North-1 The Project then affiliated with the Findlay Neighborhood Center west." run by the Community AcUon Committee (CAC), the local branch of Clifford, from Toronto, the Office of Economic Opportunity.
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