Word: campus
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Student Courts. While coed dormitory hours and visiting rights in men's dorms still stir violent arguments on many campuses, Penn has assigned all such decisions to a ten-student, ten-teacher committee. This group recently extended women's curfews to 1:30 a.m. on weekdays and 2:15 a.m. on weekends, gave men the right to entertain girls in their rooms until 2 a.m. on weekends. Infractions of undergraduate regulations are handled by separate men's and women's courts composed of students. There is also a student-run traffic court and a student board...
...campus courts are so firmly established that when a faculty committee tried to discipline eleven students accused of interfering with Dow Chemical recruiters last November, the student outcry persuaded the university to hand the cases back to the student judiciary. As a result, the university created a special commission to draft policy on demonstrations; typically, it includes six student members...
...into Lake Michigan. Steeped in administration as a top aide to Lucius Clay during the occupation of Germany, Litchfield was dean of Cornell's business school in 1955 when Pitt chose him as chancellor; in no time, he had kicked off a $126 million program to expand the campus, nearly double the faculty, and vastly improve the school's academic reputation. Such dynamism-though it left Pitt with a $19.5 million deficit by the time Litchfield departed-spilled over into industry, where he was a director of Avco and Studebaker Corp. and, from 1956 on, head of S.C.M...
...statement by the Yale group said "for too long we have...seemingly given our approval to the slow but steady castation of the black community in New Haven." Within the University the students charged campus police with harassment of black students and alleged that the Yale admissions committee discriminates against blacks...
...America's land war in Asia enters its fourth year, what was once merely strange now becomes somehow menacing. To many anti-war students, the quiet presence of ROTC on the Harvard campus appears as a recent and insidious intrusion of the warmakers, an ill-conceived alliance between the University and the war in Vietnam. Thus even when the students in Mallinckrodt began to compose a list of demands one night last October, someone suggested that they include the abolition of ROTC at Harvard. But although the suggestion seemed in keeping with the theme...