The Daily Egyptian, October 02, 1976

The Daily Egyptian, October 02, 1976

Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC October 1976 Daily Egyptian 1976 10-2-1976 The aiD ly Egyptian, October 02, 1976 Daily Egyptian Staff Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_October1976 Volume 58, Issue 31 Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, October 02, 1976." (Oct 1976). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1976 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in October 1976 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CJJwn-{/own~ Brandt says. admissio~ p~an .'Dailjr-'Egyptian. geared to give Sllturdl¥, Odeter 2, 1976-Vot SIt No. 31 ac~demic help By JOIUI Pearlman Dally Egyptian Stan Writer The proposed tightening of SlU's admission policy will enable the ~~~ve~ ~~~~n~~~~i~t~~~~~:' says President Warren Brandt. Brandt and Frank Horton, vice president for academic affairs and research, came to the Student Senate meeting Wednesday to answer questions on the new adm.ission policy to be presented to the Board of Trustees in October. The proposal would not "change the number of people admitted to the University," Brandt explained. It will classify those who need special assistance, he said. In the past, Brandt said, there has been a conflict between what the University has promised students and what it has provided. " We tell students that they are ad­ mitted under norm .. : admission sUm· dards and then turn around and flunk them out within one or two semesters," Brandt said. Some ol the senators expressed concern over the impact the policy would have on minority students in the University. Horton said the effect on minority students was taken into con­ sideration when the proposal was adopted. "The state does not provide funding to Vassar Clements and his fiddle of his Thursday performance deal with students who suffer JV.eck 'n neck work together before a full house appears on Page 10. (Staff photo academically," Horton said. The at Shryock Auditorium. A reveiw by Linda Henson) Continued on page 2) CCHS'smoney troubles to be studied By Jim Santori Sasse. a profess'or in the educational Sasse's subcommittee will also Maha;;: director of pupil personnel for Daily Egyptian Stafr Writer leadership 'department, volunteered his review the spending priorities ' of tht' CCHS. A financial study of Carbondale services to the committee. district. examine s hort·term and long· ~ntel'-institutional cQOperation' to Community High School (CCHS) is The seven-m ember PLIGHTS term district indebtedness. and project study how CCHS. SI U and John A. being undertaken by ' SIU professor (Planning Long-range Intelligent Goals district income and expenses for thl' Logan Jr. College can cooperate to Edward Sasse at no cost to the school to He lp our Troubled School) next five years. better serve the students. chaired by district. said Margare t Stauber. committee was approved Thursday by Stauber said the group is looking for ~~~~~ . Lemming, CCHS social studies secretary of the PLIGHT committee. CC HS Sup!. Reid Martin. The committee is responsible for \'olunteers to serve on five other urricular and extra-curricular preparing a report on ways to combat subcommittees which will be headed by activities: to study ways to cut school problems at the financially·troubled PLIGHT committee members. expenses while s till maintaining a schooL The group was given authority The areas the subcommittee will be positive school spirit. chaired by by Martin to .appoint ubcommillees. looking into include: Stauber. Sasse will chair one of the six - Administration: to s tudy Other committee members include subcommittees appointed by the study administrative cost at CC HS, chaired John Cody. professor of guidance and group which represents the public. by R ic hard Hayes. o'f the -SIU educational psychology at SIU: Ma~ CCHS facultv. stude nts and Affirmative Action Office. Walker, secretary to the Sf -(; Board of administration . -Services: to s tudy costs of Trustees: Carol McDermott. counselor According to Stauber, Sasse's. .(inanc e guidance. special education, and other in the social welfare department at subcommittee will compare the-income special services. chaired by Jane SIU; and Paul Maurath. senior ' at and expenses of CCHS with school Renfro. chairwoman of the CC HS CCHS. districts of s imilar size, appraise creative arts department. Parents, teachers, students and other policies and procedures used in past -Physical plant; to study costs of concerned persons wishing to serve on Gus says at 51 U the plight is too budgets, and examine cash now repairs and maintenance on the three the subcommittee can caU Margaret many committees_ problems. CCHS campuses. chaired by Steve Stauber at 457-6542. Witness says coverage biased SLA trial By Scott Singleton condemning the pair as urder formation linking the Harrises to ac­ Dally E~ptian Starr Writer ra.pists, bombers, and crazies. tivities they were never charged with, The beginning paragraph of a news such as bombiPgs. A journalist who dill an analysis of story in the L.A. Times characterized A good deaT of the biased reporting medIa coverage of the Symbionese the Harrises as " Manson-like mur­ came from out-of-state reporters who derers, high on sex, drugs and violen­ were pressured to manufacture stories, ~:~d:~!~:rsA::~~St~~~f~h!r!a~!~ ce." Webb said. Webb said. "They have to file stories "no WflY to develop a snappy headline Using the scripts from television and every day, even if nothing was going without working 'rapist' in somewhere." radio broadcasts, Webb testified that the on." Joseph M. Webb, an SIU journalism Harrises were compared with John The police recognized the plight of the professor who testifled at a pre-trial Dillin~r, Charles Manson and Sirhan reporters, Webb said, and staged events hearing of SLA members WiUiam and Sirtui to help them. Emily Harris, spoke Thursday night Webb said the only chance the pair He said an example of an event staged before Alpha Epsilon Rho. a national had to tell their side of the story was for the media was the transferring of the radio and television fraternity. tough a two-part interview in New Harrises from one prison to another. The Webb testified on behalf of defense Times magazine, but he said the articles police labeled it as the largest P-Qlice motions to have the Harrises' trial could not begin to counteract the flood of protection of criminals ever. moved out of Los Angeles or delayed for propaganda in other media. The maximum security atmosphere a year. The defense argued the move Part of the campaign against the continued in the courtroom where the was needed b'ecause of the massive Harrises came from media cooperation Harrises were tried. he said. There was amount of adverse publicity prior to the in spreading FBI fabricated st.ries, an eight-foot high bullet proof glass trial. Webb said. " You don't evade the ~I for partition' with heavy mesh wire on top Webb analyzed some 1,200 pages of 19 months without malting them .apgry." separating the spectators from the news reports and commentaries and found that most contained descriptions he~:bt said the FBI relels'ed in- (Ccntlnued on page 3) UA W ,trike, Deere Co., no settlement for Ford DETROIT (AP) -The United Auto Workers faced labor troubles on two fronts Friday, as a nationwide strike against Ford Mo.tor Co. dragged into its 17th day and 27.000 workers struck Deere and Co. m a ~cond contract (Contiooed from page 1) be described as a recognition by the University of its responsibility to the dispute. At Ford. bargainers spent much of the day huddlmg separately proposed policy would bring sru's ad­ and had no firm plans to resume negotiations. Bargainers .also wo~ld . not students. mission re!luirements in line with "It will drop the probability of failure say if talks would continue through the weekend. At the Deere negotiations Northern Illinois University. Chicago in Moline, discussions continued throughout the day. State University. Northeastern and The Deere workers struck the company in six states at midnight ~~~?::~e ~~!~~~'s~~~ :1dba~~ Chicago Circle campus. two semesters to achieve a C average. Thursday after UAW and company bargainers failed to reach agreement Referring to a study based on fresh­ on a new three-year accord. Prior to the walkout, union sources had If the proposed poUcy had been in men admitted to SIU in fall. 1975, Horton effect in the fall of 1975, 440 of the 3,327 expressed great optimism of !lvoiding a work .stoppage an~ those sa~e said 33 per cent. or 162, of the entering freshmen admitted to ·sm would have sources said Friday they remained hopeful of bringing the strike to a rap~d minor-ity freshmen would have been been placed in the special admission conclusion. No such optimism has surfaced from Union sources In placed in the special admissions category. Horton said. • Dearborn. category if the proposed admission Horton :;aid that 226 of these students policy were in effect. failed to obtain a C average by the end of Medicaid specialist may face contempt charge By the end of the spring semester, the fall semester. Eighty of the 226 Horton said. about 85 per cent of the dropped out before the beginning of the minority freshmen whose academic WASHINGTON ( AP) - The chairman of a Senate investigating paner spring semester; and of the 360 that records indicated a ~eed for extra said Friday he will recommentl contempt of Congress proceedings against stayed, 50 per cent failed to maintain a C assistance were "either gone from the average at the end of the spring term.

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