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WEATHER lacwsoratea IMI iiMiarr mt Kala sfeesberelTW &ije Hi l»«i A.PaadDPl Cornell ©atlp &un "Ithaem't Omlg MormUg JVeeraawawr" OL LXXXVII— NO.f* ITHACA NX* VOKK.Thi-HSDAV. DKCKMBKH», 1971 MPAG& FacultyStudies Pakistani Proposed Senate, Student Trustees Unit Argue Over Their Roles Hostilities InEnvironment By BKTSV BRKNNKR ByPAULA GA.NTZ Kej I'mversMy Senator* and Escalate** A proposalfor a broadly rw iimimjn>M based institute that will some of the student trustees yesterday cut '. ill » 1 i ]. IiL L India claimed across college boundaries in sew tv v eviSM^^ii.Vt'fWfis mhlilt skmi|wsn.f order to mrtnvi Hum In coordinate all environmentalactivities at Cornell of their working relationship the East is now being considered by an ad Peter I ian had crumbled and hoc faculty »rad army was committee created by request of the I'mversitv Chairman of thr Senate the Pakistani in Faculty Council ofRepresents!i. nMsN. during a confused retreat. but The three page proposal for an Institute for privatr interview, expressed conc«d«il it-- own torc-es wen* Knvironmentdi %as submitted a couple of disappointment that none of the ."ii fee wavi. months ago b> I mv. rsity Vice Provost W Keith student tru T9 present in Ka*hmit I Kennedy according to Prof Norman Penney law Tueadav lor th«- tv K-iin^ m Kast deanofthe faculty. dtacussion of the campux tii< Pakistan The institute, as proposed by Kennedy will budget In another development a coordinateenvironmentalactivities, insure better The iun.ti.il o( trustee tense ufticlal asserted use of research funds and work toavoidduplication act as our man in ON planesof a activities, Ixlhithat according to Prof eepeciaih artta ih«- rampu i Frederick T Bent 1 otMintrv he refused to business administration, chairman of the ad hoc budget, he said According to landing committee. the seaate constitution ataanal military supplies rinancial support for the trustees areex-officio members at institute would be of the senate andhave I'ukistan Karachi rtvtl obtained from outside sources,such as allrifMi foundations of senatorsearept voting and the federal government In addition to these The oilmil vjmlfee was iMUinc sources, money will be available Thnhiuh II through the power a general warning again various programs and senate lias the to ai centers affiliated with the money flights institute, according to Bent within the area* el the wherevei lie U>W campus hie budget, such the cap hti as new»nirn t> -■ (irobabK Prof Lisle C Carter intercollegiate at hi, > housing Jr . business and public "~~ guessing' ceewtry of the originators counseling, subject to the already ertrieh administrationand one of the C*mC,ZE StNATE and involved nn>um| idea, somebody FormfTr^." approval of was The institute said that Kennedy or like Senators the Board of (tuna on provost's Robert 0 Go,tlieb ,2, 2 ,^ Trustees wouldbe Hni a IV.' him the level would be appointed Gordon G trucesO institute : Robert r director. Ptjrcell w Trustee Ciottlieh"71 32 said "I'm very concerned We don't expect about ■ to have a the ttft»ert> t» an* fatuity for the environmental aai nit he wilhtli institute, does not feel it i* the i- but interested faculty Arts,Engineering area* in Hangl. members could participate" on a Handle heart of the m- full or part-time senate decisions "The in (or basis. Bent iiould Desh is the rebelname Ka»t said. deal in .. Paki»tan MostInternal separate."he contends be According to Penney, the UNKNOWNTransfers Another student truitee. lans <lalined to committee is now toward theend Shelley within »» mile* southeast of Louise I 72 Dacca, the 1 .istam nt it* considerations and will be If you.m- "Student trusteesareasm> transferring fn lege to ar, r „„ " <apiui. rupturing making its report to the Faculty dnotht. CMnpm , Inmuc h with the senate Since after Jeeaore Cornell Da.lv Sun In the southwent, in the Committee of Representatives m ,llege "students are losing iium vmti Cotnfila February shows that you are probably in moving out of the senate." they are also lta*9| Han, very trust in the itudrnt trustees,she Committee members are Engineeringand Ukrlv matriculating in tht. of A, currently CMum said "Stadent trusteesarebeing talking to directors of Scietv iata of the various environmental doomedby the senai■ greatest number of are fanla»tlr,' centers on campus to ascertain The internal transfers to the arts college This relationship grew out of f^ ot tndbaseless the feasibility of an Institute for With th. exception of one year, the arts the demands Rawalpindi tollege has accepted Assembly, which i..r A report from Environmental Studies, as approximately . .ill.d Pakistan, 190 tansfer students from othe Cornell divisions student trustees KM Weit said proposedby Kennedy r for and a h*i yen However, thelast four years. spring.l?70 In April of that year forcr* back in some questionshave Hi. llilli region i raised the Boardof Trusteesrecognised been as to the need for The arts college' policy toward internal U- We are defrt institute, anfers Yuts tended to (ontinurd.. such an and several oscillate the ".!'»«. M < onllnuri)onI'agr I alternatives and changes in the over last <ie<ade. original proposal are being In the two years between 19(4 and 1966 considered, th«. according toBent earliest figures Course Credit Other possibilities include available the college adm)UwJ broadening the already existing only about 100 students each year This nur,,^., environmental centers in order rosein1967-68 toaplateau of 190 to accomplish the Allocation Vexes Students However, interdepartmental activities or in 1969-70. acceptances shot up to a ByKI.I.KNTHMI»<>SKY Continuedon Page 1( highof267 According toBarbara B Hirshfeld Despite studf-ni assistant dean of the disgruntlement about the drls | college, this increase re .Huong Reps. Appropriate from auniversity admims' differed miieget' methods of i to the college to lessen no $3 its pohcv seems to be BillionFor Aid The college found this ch upcoming, though the idea of a Washington API — passedyesterday angr lour i The House unacceptable and the quantify | four-credit course tysti a $3-billion foreign aid money bearing MOO is regularly bandied bill acceptances wasreturned t t,the about million for— Israelandnone for India. Pakistanand 190level the followingyear among Cornell educational Equador with Senate still saving they makers leaders Hirshfeld stated that sbe will refuse toconsiderit fcrsees no change in the present Presently. among The vote was214to 179 policy She noted that tlw undergraduate colleges,only Uk- With present for foreign aid Arts College four spending authority been a small decrease ir, the run* on a and defense expiring at midnight. House and number of transfer applu* course tyttern und that lyiKni tlons applies mainly Senate leadersconsulted on putting out a stopgap which she attributed to greying in i.miors and interim extension— possibly year— but flexibility seniors, since most 100 into next in the d<a<l,.mi( and 200 cametonoearly agreement programs ofthe other divi level courses are for v Senate of 300 and 480 |. Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield Transfers from engine&riß g credit* while Montana, whose six-month Indochina wardeadline applying either direct; courses ofI. Art* < has the House and Senate deadlocked over through the Diviiion f nil. give up o Kahn college renewing foreign aid. refused to the Unclassified Students. have shk! thai .irii deadline consistently accounted for over course credits are allorat. The $3 billionforeign aidmoney bill was passed one-halfof the ad" the departi by the House after worriedleaders appealedto it Approximatel not to kill the bill and a bloc of foreign aid transferscome from the < tb^ir tlcclatton i« Uwn tubif supporters who had threatened to vote against it of Agriculture ai '■noes, ■''LITV StuO- approval * * * because of cuts announced they would reluctantly with the remaining *<cept arKev ">iieges find thai ■■ iiiiii,ic« . accept it equally distr oftenirrfjgijlar < obiIrmrd on PageU Continued to Page» Continued onPace It DailySun Thursday, 9, 1971 The Cornell 2 Dec — Laird Offers Assistance J Forces To NATONaval— alliance, m Brussels, Belgium (AP) permeating the that the United States U.S. Secretary of Defense Pressed any unilateral R calledyesterday would regard Melvin Laird defense spending as for a major redeployment of cutback of (Italian Hat allied navies to counter a Soviet reckless . Qn The West Germans joined the buildup in the Atlantic and stressing that songs Mediterranean United States in A Frenchfarce with three-point any BigFour deal onBerlinmust Laird submitted a and delivered by EugeneLabiche proposalto the defense planning be signed sealed before the West goes into committee of the North Atlantic talks withthe P.M Treaty Organization. Europeansecurity 9-11 8:15 Communistpowers. December His plan envisioned formation to of a permanent international The developmentamounted and rejection of Tuesday's call by University Theatre fleet in the Mediterranean I.Brezhnev an expanded NATO naval SovietleaderLeonid for early Western moves toward Straight Hall neein the Atlantic. long-projected security Willard It also incorporatedanoffer to the OP provideEuropeancountrieswith parley. American weapons systems, $2.00 electronic warfare help and other highly sophisticated gear Allende Orders TheatreBoxOffice being withdrawnfrom 12-3:00PM,Mon.-Sat. Indochina. Food Allocation Details of Laird'sproposal as Santiago, Chile (AP) relayed by U.S. officials: President Salvador Allende standingnaval force announced yesterday his leftist —NATO's taking over i r? in the Atlantic, should be government is cinema \ £*\ augmented by countries, like distribution of food in Chile to & sew* West Germany, with fleets help overcome a shortage. f meat, currently are not Foodstuffs such as DS! which macaroni have * I participants sugar, coffee and WiNNER-OF 6 —NATO's on-call naval force been in short supply in recent AC^^fAR in the Mediterranean should be months.