NE~W":S:'R,'E,G Published Tuesdays and Fridays' During the Academic Year Except
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/ University NE~W":S:'R,'E,g Published Tuesdays and Fridays' during the Academic Year except VoL 55 No. 46 Chief' UCAdministrators . "- Clarify' Draft Statement In a letter of clarification of student has authorized the Uni- "Dr. Thomas N. Bonner, pro- Friday's News Record report on . versity to 40. so. vost for academic affairs; has ap- Selective Service certification, "Information concerning the pointed a committee to review Registrar John B. Goering made number of academic hours com- Selective Service requirements, to the 'following points: pleted is not, furnished draft boards. The 45'-hout requirement study practices at other univer- "The intention of the, original was indicated only as a basis for sities, and to consider re-view pro- statement was only to advise, determining '''satisfactory'' an- " counsel and assist students in cedures w her e circumstances nual progress and may be re- seem to warrant discretionary planning for summer enrollment, ~ vised. judgment." if necessary. IINo information other than Chairman of the committee is "Information concerning" a stu-' graduation, withdrawal, or sus- Dr; Garland G. Parker, vicepro- dent's academic status is furnish- pension notices will be furnished 'vost for admissions and records. ed to draft boards only after a Selective Service boards before Other members are Dr. H. David the Autumn Quarter, unless re- Lipsich, vice provost for under- quested by the student. graduate studies; Dr. William R. Paulsen Hits "New Selective Service author- Nester, dean of students; John B. ization and information forms will Goering, registrar, .and Joseph be included in all registration Davis, assistant registrar, Ruthless Tag packets for the Autumn Quarter. Mr. Goering said that more de- Information will be 'furnished to tailed information would be avail- Selective Service boards only if able for Friday's edition of the At Huge Rally new forms are signed. NR. SIGMA SIGMA1S CARNIVAL proved to be a real crowd-pleaser again by Bryan Ro~e this year. Highlighting. the evening1s attractions was the tapping of With 'or without the micro- Jim CaliowaYI Barry Klein, Ed Niemannl and Da've Schwain for mem- ,phone the potential president of Freedom Schools set 'bership in Sigma Si'gma. photo by Todd Bardes the United" States, Pat Paulsen, spoke to a swollen crowd of some 1500 UC students gathered For Student :Boycott ,Ad e C "el S " It the bridge, and lawn below the.on :YISory .:,,Q~I(ICI_ . e. University Center last Thursday Over 2000 students and close to qualification. 'The BSU demands I afternoon. 200 teachers are participattng in are: 'Freedom. Schools' and boy-cot- f'u"·:d." ,"~~ponso.r.ed_}~y. wKjk:"",!~,SOfi,. , 1~ The~~~~1;;$tpden&"~'~'~"'~' . -'?~ !erg,;,r ".' jufi.<;ti0Il;" witti the.,',N~,· and' 'the tlng 'CinHhnati' Puhlic' Hig h ·composed .::·u{"tfaek ' representa- . '.:. , ' '" .. ,~, , University Center student board, Schools. The boycott is, the' result: .tives from each of the above ,- , Paulsen earlier appeared on the of dissatisfaction with the public mentioned schools be recognized -An undergraduate a d vis 0 r Y tives will not-exceed, two years Dennis Wholey 12 noon show on school administration's 'failmeto by the administration. Thefunc- council of students and 'faculty and serving two consecutive WKRC-TV.At the station Paul- meet demands of the Black Stu- tion of the Student Union being to dent Union and parents of high serving as a forum for discussion of Arts' and Sciences representa- sen took questions from the realize ana make known the wants .~~ . ' '... ' d ~ crowd gathered there to greet school students. and needs; academically, socially of the academic matters affecting tives WIll serve on a staggere h d the t I' h 11 ' .'.. .'. im an ee ep one ca s. The 'Freedom Schools' follow a and culturally of the Afro- Ameri- " undergraduate education IS being terms wjllbe prohibited. College Paulsen was then rushed to the curriculum very similar to that can Students., ~!" 'established at UC. - basis during' initial terms. UC campus' in a car cavalcade. of the public schools. Class hours 2. Black History be included in The council will report to Dr. Each oaccelaureate college will There he presented his views and are the, same, and _the subjects the present" curriculum of each H. David Lipsich, vice provost have one' studentrepresehtative g a v e a rousing Presidential are those which the students school by the" beginningvof the for undergraduate studies. It to be elected in a manner deter- speech he wrote on a paper bag would normally study. Teachers September, 196Bschopl yea!': . will discuss such matters as grad- mined "by the' appropriate college before coming to campus. include public school teachers, UC a. Courses should be required ing systems and advantage or tribunal. They may serve for one Paulsen' was greeted by a tu- instructors, and graduate stu- by all students. " ""'" disadvantages of large versus year and ma!.succeed themsel~es .mulutous crowd chanting "We dents. Discipline in the' schools is b. Coursesehouldbe taught by , to be the responsibility of the small classes. , for one additional term. want Pat!" Introduced- by Dennis black teachers," not ' neces- : ,< • students. Dr. Lipsich describes the coun- Dr. Lipsich will chair the Wholey Paulsen commenced with sadly theoneswho have (iri:' cil as "a free-wheeling kind of council. Initial membership will an elongated introduction. He Parents of students at Withrow, the eyes' of the adrninistras committee; encouraged to roam, be-vbased on a" medianism de- confessed that "it, -was difficult Hughes, Walnut-Httts, Woodward,' tion) an educational: ~:~~~" over__the widest possible range of signed to stagger terms so that doing a speech without a micro- and Courter Tech have demand- 3. The present, security'~~~p()liC~ topics. It would serve on aca- continuity wiH 'be guaranteed in phone." ed that the Board of Education (Teacher's aid) be removed, from, demic matters as t~e much, need- the council's work. Explaining .why he declined to end immediately all' suspensions the school l?refuisesa t }onee,a~d " ed, and much desired, VOIce of Explaining the establishment enter the race, he stated that 'In and return the students to class, in its place an active program be ; the undergraduate." of the 'council, Dr. Lipsich said the ~past, several months a great and that the four students trans- instituted w h i c h emphasizes Each baccalaureate c o II e g e, "The University as' a 'whole is ground swell of popular support ferred from Withrow to Guilford parental guidance, with the exception of the College making a genuine; understand- has. risen throughout this land' be re-instated at Withrow. In ad- 4. Lunchroom, facilities an d of Arts and Sciences, will have able thrust toward greater excel- and the .U. S."demanding my can- dition, the parents urged the workers adhere to regulations' ,by ~,' one faculty representative elect- lence in ,'the graduate area. It is -~ - Board -to accept' the demands of ed by the faculty. Because, of its necessary, however, while we are 'the 'Black Student Union without- ;;:c'(Con~~d,ariPage 2) size and magnitude' of its "ser- , 'going forward in. graduater.edu- , VIces, the College of Arts '/and cation that we makeva 'similar" Sciences will be represented by thrust in undergraduatereduca- three faculty members. 'tion in order to maintain and im-,' Terms of faculty representa- prove excellence' .in thisarea, ' "As a result of many', y,ears 'of continuing 'effort wecanpoint to our position as a genuine Xlni- 0... • varsity rather than a collection of autonomous colleges" espe- cially on the undergraduate, lev- ~;,'.s ~- ~l el. Students may' now cross' col- ~ lege lines fairly freely in choice of courses, and frequently sit in classes' made up of fellow stu- dents in 'many colleges other (.) c than their' own. u. "Here, as in other institutions, ~ there is .a growing desire. on the = part of students to participate in (:)•....• ,....-'.~'......• the making of academic decisions )-(1)1-::1: 2 Q\ 'which directly affect them. This/ > can be looked upon as mani- (tt,- (.) la i.1~__ u..<t- festation of the health of the or- ..J-thO% ganism and a desire to- maintain .. ;..{ ~ the essential unity of the Uni- II 4< II - 0'-::-- (,.» versity as' an institution." .uJz-~ -.% It is expected that the council :;::> (() ::;, Cl will be in: operation before the end of the current academic Here candidate Paulsen fa shes his colors· red, white, and blue· for all the doubting Thomases. ~r" year. , photo by John'Sedgwick , r'" (, '" I' 1~' ,J.. ,1* 't , !- ;"-"..~, Ii"':.' i ~'" I: U,'l ..<~ ] Page Two U'NIVERSITY~OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Tuesdoy, May. 7~-1'%8 . Black. Student' .Union,D'em'andsln·cILlde: ~ News Briefs Black History, Administrators, Holidays May~O: The End? by AIPorkolab (Cont'd from Page 1) of food should also be immediate- in the advancement of Black. ly dealt with. studeats. Peace T.llis te aewin the Board of Health. Improve- Washington- President. Johnson announced that the US aDd North 5. Recognition of Black holidays. 7. More black involvement in ments in the quality and selection 6. Counselors who are interested Vietnam would begin .'peace talks' May 10. The site of the meeting will schools which are not predomi- be Paris. The Communists are expected to demand firstly that there natly black. be a halt to the bombing and an end of. information gathering flights ,8. No restrictions on the wearing over North Vietnam. The US is expected to press for a simultaneous of clothing that denates cultural reduction of hostilities and infiltration into South Vietnam. pride. Rockefeller in Rac~ CLIFTON TYPEWRITE,R S·ERYICE 9. Elimination or' prejudiced New York- Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York an- Rentals - Sole» - Repairs teachers and administrators. nounced last Thursday at a formal press conference that he would 10.