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Legislation, court rulings begin to define penalties for violent protesting -see pages 2, 8 Volume 75 Bloomington, Illinois 61701, Friday, March 14, 1969 Nu JC fosters student cour mber 21 ts Bob Aseltine as the Sun God looms in the entrance to his temple in a scene from "The Royal Hunt of the Sun." Play opened at 8 p.m. Thurs-day at McPherson Theatre. Founders' Day convocation will feature a University of Texas professor, a film score composer and a U.S. astronaut. The program is Tuesday, March 18 at 10 a.m. in the Fieldhouse. Attendance is re-quired. GUEST SPEAKER will be Dr. William Arrowsmith, pro-fessor of classics and university professor in arts and letters at the University of Texas. Arrowsmith, according to President Robert Eckley, is "one of the most able speakers in the Judiciary a ters Approval for Judiciary Com- ;mittee's new membership came from President's Cabinet Tues-day. The committee will now con- SCLC Spokesman to address WIWU Executive vice-president of the Southern Christian Leader-ship Conference Rev. Andrew Young will speak to a group of IWU students at a luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday in Memorial Center. Young will speak on creative change in terms of improve-ment of the black community. A question-and-answer period will follow. President's Cabinet approved Tuesday Judiciary Committee's plan for establishing living unit judiciaries. President Ro-bert S. Eckley said Wednesday, "We concurred with JC's plan; we feel they ought to go ahead." The Cabinet suggested that the dean of women and the dean of men should be in-volved in discussion of the plan. It is described in the story be-low. by Dee Ehmke Assistant Managing Editor All-University Judiciary Com-mittee has submitted to the Cabinet a proposal concerning the establishment of living unit judiciary committees. The proposal, which was for-mulated at the Judiciary meet-ing Monday afternoon, must now be reviewed and approved by the Cabinet before steps can be taken to put the plan into effect. IF THE PROPOSAL is ap-proved, All-University Judiciary must first decide what types of infractions will be handled by the living unit judiciaries and which ones will be referred to field of the humanities." Arrowsmith has written many books, articles, poems and re-views. He has received a Wood-row Wilson Fellowship, a Rhodes Scholarship, a Guggen-heim Fellowship and a senior research fellowship at the American Academy in Rome. DURING THE convocation, three honorary degrees will be given. One, a doctor of humane letters, will be awarded to Ulysses Kay. Kay is a member of the fac-ulty at the City University of membership sist of three administrators ap-pointed from the administration at large, three faculty members and five students. Final membership is a corm-bination of JC's -original plan and recommendations made by President's Cabinet after the plan had been referred to it late in February. Under the final arrangement, the president will appoint a chairman from the committee as a whole. Dr. Jerry Stone, as-sistant professor of religion, was appointed chairman effec-tive immediately. James Barbour, registrar, is the new administrator on the committee. The committee will elect its own vice-chairman to serve when the chairman is ab-sent. the all-university committee or civil authorities. The next step will be an orientation meeting for the ap-propriate officers from each liv-ing unit. DURING THE meeting, the methods and structure of the a 1 r e a d y -established Franklin Hall judiciary committee and other possible ways of setting up these living unit judiciaries will probably be presented. Each living unit will then be required to submit a plan for establishing such a committee. These plans will be subject to review, recommendations and action by the All-University Judiciary Committee. DURING MONDAY's meeting, Dean of Men Jerry Jenson opened the discussion with an in-depth description of the structure and procedures of the Franklin Hall committee. Ac-cording to Jensen, the Frank-lin committee is operating on nearly the same principles that were outlined in his proposal for a three-tiered judicial sys-tern. The Franklin committee con-sists of three members under New York and a composer of film scores. Kay was commissioned by IWU in 1955 to write "A New Song," three Psalms for a cap-pella mixed chorus. He was vis-iting guest composer in May, 1956, when Collegiate Choir premiered the composition. HE WAS a member of the first group of American com-posers to visit the Soviet Union on a cultural exchange program. Col. Frank Borman, command pilot of Apollo VIII's December mission to the moon, will re-ceive an honorary doctor of sci-ence degree. The same degree will be awarded to the other two Apollo VIII astronauts in absentia, Lt. Col. William An-ders and Capt. James Lovell.- REP. LESLIE C. Arends, Re-publican whip in the U.S. House of Representatives, will pre-sent Borman for the degree. After the convocation, Bor-man will place a time capsule in the cornerstone of the Mark Evans Observatory under con-struction. Among the items to be in-cluded in the box are a space-craft survival food package from Beich Candy Co., a tape of the Genesis reading the Ap-pollo VIII astronauts sent on Christmas Eve, items from bus-inesses in the area, materials connected with the observatory building, documents from IWU and other information. the supervision of the vice-president of the hall. The vice-president serves only in an ad-visory capacity and cannot vote on the cases. THE THREE MEN who were chosen for the committee were required to petition for the position, giving their reasons for wanting the post. The candi-dates were then interviewed by the hall's executive committee. The executive committee made recommendations to the hall residents who voted to ac-cept those recommended. ACCORDING TO the proce-dure that the committee has been using, any student can re-port violations of Code Book or hall regulations to the hall vice-president. The vice-president notifies the members of the committee and sets a time and place for a hearing of the case. The stu-dent is then informed of the charges and of the time and place for the hearing. AT THE HEARING, the com-mittee hears the charges and other details of the case. The student is asked to present his side of the case. rsSD a Borman and Lovell were selected as astronauts in Sep-tember, 1962. Anders was chos-en in October, 1963. Borman was also command pilot of the Gemini 7 flight in December, 1965. He established several space "firsts," including the longest manned space flight (330 hours and 35 minutes) and the first rendezvous of two manned maneuverable space-craft. Students will for the first time be able to use advance registration to sign up for next year's classes in late April or early May. Plans are not finalized yet, but tentatively each student will be issued an identification card with his picture in color and his name and number in raised letters. THE SYSTEM will operate on a first come, first serve basis. Several days will be set aside for pictures to be taken. After the student has been photographed, he will obtain his folder from the registrar's of-fice and proceed to an ap-pointment with his advisor. ONCE HIS schedule is made out he will fill out registration After the student has left the room, the committee discusses the case and then votes on the matter. They call the student back into the room and inform him of their decision. THE DECISION may be in the form of a fine, some type of work, or a referral to the dean's office or the All-Univer-sity Judiciary Committee. Reports of the incidences and the committee's decision ex-cluding the student's name are then posted on the hall bulletin board. FROM THIS point the dis-cussion in JC's meeting turned to the establishment of commit-tees such as Franklin's in all the living units. Although all the committee members were in favor of the idea, they agreed that the following three stipu-lations should be placed on all the committees: (1) All - University Judiciary Committee has the right to decide what types of cases will be-under hall committee juris-diction, (2) THE HALL committees will be required to submit re-ports of each case (excluding the name of the violator) to the All-University Judiciary Com-mittee, (3) The hall committees are to be policy-enforcing groups-not policy-determining groups. Another issue that was, dis-cussed was whether the uni-versity has the right to deal with student violation of civil laws. The committee members also considered whether the students in both the Greek and Independent living units would report violations if the hall com-mittees are established. cards. A $50 tuition deposit will be paid at this time. If this is not possible he will re-ceive a financial deferment. Each student will be mailed his bill during the summer, and the balance will be paid atreg-istration check in the fall. This will eliminate long lines in the business office. SHORT term courses from this and other schools will also be listed at advance registra-tion. If a student changes his mind, or if an additional course is available by fall, he may change his schedule at registra-tion check. All freshmen will register during their summer orientation sessions. They will be photo-graphed during registration check. The \;D 1 ILLINOIS WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY 1/isiting .strs sprk Foundk Advane registration prpoal
Object Description
Title | 1969-03-14 |
Publication title | The Argus |
Subject |
Newspapers Universities & colleges Students |
Year | 1969 |
Decade | 1960 |
Publisher | The Argus, Illinois Wesleyan University; printed by The Pantagraph, Bloomington, IL from 1894-2009 and P&P Press, Peoria, IL from 2009-present. |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Contact Information | Please email Tate Archives at archives@iwu.edu or call 309-556-1535 for more information. Permission to reproduce these images must be granted by IWU. |
Collection | Student and Alumni News Periodicals (Illinois Wesleyan University) |
Source | Record Group 11-12: Student Publications |
Type | Image |
Format | Text |
Language | eng |
Digitization Specifications | Argus issues published from 1894-Spring 2003 were scanned at 600 dpi on a NM1000-SS scanner by Northern Micrographics, La Crosse, Wisconsin. Fulltext OCR was accomplished by the same company in Summer 2009. Issues published from the fall of 2003-present are born-digital. |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Contact Information | Please email Tate Archives at archives@iwu.edu or call 309-556-1535 for more information. Permission to reproduce these images must be granted by IWU. |
Full Text | Legislation, court rulings begin to define penalties for violent protesting -see pages 2, 8 Volume 75 Bloomington, Illinois 61701, Friday, March 14, 1969 Nu JC fosters student cour mber 21 ts Bob Aseltine as the Sun God looms in the entrance to his temple in a scene from "The Royal Hunt of the Sun." Play opened at 8 p.m. Thurs-day at McPherson Theatre. Founders' Day convocation will feature a University of Texas professor, a film score composer and a U.S. astronaut. The program is Tuesday, March 18 at 10 a.m. in the Fieldhouse. Attendance is re-quired. GUEST SPEAKER will be Dr. William Arrowsmith, pro-fessor of classics and university professor in arts and letters at the University of Texas. Arrowsmith, according to President Robert Eckley, is "one of the most able speakers in the Judiciary a ters Approval for Judiciary Com- ;mittee's new membership came from President's Cabinet Tues-day. The committee will now con- SCLC Spokesman to address WIWU Executive vice-president of the Southern Christian Leader-ship Conference Rev. Andrew Young will speak to a group of IWU students at a luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday in Memorial Center. Young will speak on creative change in terms of improve-ment of the black community. A question-and-answer period will follow. President's Cabinet approved Tuesday Judiciary Committee's plan for establishing living unit judiciaries. President Ro-bert S. Eckley said Wednesday, "We concurred with JC's plan; we feel they ought to go ahead." The Cabinet suggested that the dean of women and the dean of men should be in-volved in discussion of the plan. It is described in the story be-low. by Dee Ehmke Assistant Managing Editor All-University Judiciary Com-mittee has submitted to the Cabinet a proposal concerning the establishment of living unit judiciary committees. The proposal, which was for-mulated at the Judiciary meet-ing Monday afternoon, must now be reviewed and approved by the Cabinet before steps can be taken to put the plan into effect. IF THE PROPOSAL is ap-proved, All-University Judiciary must first decide what types of infractions will be handled by the living unit judiciaries and which ones will be referred to field of the humanities." Arrowsmith has written many books, articles, poems and re-views. He has received a Wood-row Wilson Fellowship, a Rhodes Scholarship, a Guggen-heim Fellowship and a senior research fellowship at the American Academy in Rome. DURING THE convocation, three honorary degrees will be given. One, a doctor of humane letters, will be awarded to Ulysses Kay. Kay is a member of the fac-ulty at the City University of membership sist of three administrators ap-pointed from the administration at large, three faculty members and five students. Final membership is a corm-bination of JC's -original plan and recommendations made by President's Cabinet after the plan had been referred to it late in February. Under the final arrangement, the president will appoint a chairman from the committee as a whole. Dr. Jerry Stone, as-sistant professor of religion, was appointed chairman effec-tive immediately. James Barbour, registrar, is the new administrator on the committee. The committee will elect its own vice-chairman to serve when the chairman is ab-sent. the all-university committee or civil authorities. The next step will be an orientation meeting for the ap-propriate officers from each liv-ing unit. DURING THE meeting, the methods and structure of the a 1 r e a d y -established Franklin Hall judiciary committee and other possible ways of setting up these living unit judiciaries will probably be presented. Each living unit will then be required to submit a plan for establishing such a committee. These plans will be subject to review, recommendations and action by the All-University Judiciary Committee. DURING MONDAY's meeting, Dean of Men Jerry Jenson opened the discussion with an in-depth description of the structure and procedures of the Franklin Hall committee. Ac-cording to Jensen, the Frank-lin committee is operating on nearly the same principles that were outlined in his proposal for a three-tiered judicial sys-tern. The Franklin committee con-sists of three members under New York and a composer of film scores. Kay was commissioned by IWU in 1955 to write "A New Song," three Psalms for a cap-pella mixed chorus. He was vis-iting guest composer in May, 1956, when Collegiate Choir premiered the composition. HE WAS a member of the first group of American com-posers to visit the Soviet Union on a cultural exchange program. Col. Frank Borman, command pilot of Apollo VIII's December mission to the moon, will re-ceive an honorary doctor of sci-ence degree. The same degree will be awarded to the other two Apollo VIII astronauts in absentia, Lt. Col. William An-ders and Capt. James Lovell.- REP. LESLIE C. Arends, Re-publican whip in the U.S. House of Representatives, will pre-sent Borman for the degree. After the convocation, Bor-man will place a time capsule in the cornerstone of the Mark Evans Observatory under con-struction. Among the items to be in-cluded in the box are a space-craft survival food package from Beich Candy Co., a tape of the Genesis reading the Ap-pollo VIII astronauts sent on Christmas Eve, items from bus-inesses in the area, materials connected with the observatory building, documents from IWU and other information. the supervision of the vice-president of the hall. The vice-president serves only in an ad-visory capacity and cannot vote on the cases. THE THREE MEN who were chosen for the committee were required to petition for the position, giving their reasons for wanting the post. The candi-dates were then interviewed by the hall's executive committee. The executive committee made recommendations to the hall residents who voted to ac-cept those recommended. ACCORDING TO the proce-dure that the committee has been using, any student can re-port violations of Code Book or hall regulations to the hall vice-president. The vice-president notifies the members of the committee and sets a time and place for a hearing of the case. The stu-dent is then informed of the charges and of the time and place for the hearing. AT THE HEARING, the com-mittee hears the charges and other details of the case. The student is asked to present his side of the case. rsSD a Borman and Lovell were selected as astronauts in Sep-tember, 1962. Anders was chos-en in October, 1963. Borman was also command pilot of the Gemini 7 flight in December, 1965. He established several space "firsts," including the longest manned space flight (330 hours and 35 minutes) and the first rendezvous of two manned maneuverable space-craft. Students will for the first time be able to use advance registration to sign up for next year's classes in late April or early May. Plans are not finalized yet, but tentatively each student will be issued an identification card with his picture in color and his name and number in raised letters. THE SYSTEM will operate on a first come, first serve basis. Several days will be set aside for pictures to be taken. After the student has been photographed, he will obtain his folder from the registrar's of-fice and proceed to an ap-pointment with his advisor. ONCE HIS schedule is made out he will fill out registration After the student has left the room, the committee discusses the case and then votes on the matter. They call the student back into the room and inform him of their decision. THE DECISION may be in the form of a fine, some type of work, or a referral to the dean's office or the All-Univer-sity Judiciary Committee. Reports of the incidences and the committee's decision ex-cluding the student's name are then posted on the hall bulletin board. FROM THIS point the dis-cussion in JC's meeting turned to the establishment of commit-tees such as Franklin's in all the living units. Although all the committee members were in favor of the idea, they agreed that the following three stipu-lations should be placed on all the committees: (1) All - University Judiciary Committee has the right to decide what types of cases will be-under hall committee juris-diction, (2) THE HALL committees will be required to submit re-ports of each case (excluding the name of the violator) to the All-University Judiciary Com-mittee, (3) The hall committees are to be policy-enforcing groups-not policy-determining groups. Another issue that was, dis-cussed was whether the uni-versity has the right to deal with student violation of civil laws. The committee members also considered whether the students in both the Greek and Independent living units would report violations if the hall com-mittees are established. cards. A $50 tuition deposit will be paid at this time. If this is not possible he will re-ceive a financial deferment. Each student will be mailed his bill during the summer, and the balance will be paid atreg-istration check in the fall. This will eliminate long lines in the business office. SHORT term courses from this and other schools will also be listed at advance registra-tion. If a student changes his mind, or if an additional course is available by fall, he may change his schedule at registra-tion check. All freshmen will register during their summer orientation sessions. They will be photo-graphed during registration check. The \;D 1 ILLINOIS WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY 1/isiting .strs sprk Foundk Advane registration prpoal |
Collection | Student and Alumni News Periodicals (Illinois Wesleyan University) |