5


               To date forty cases have been tried. Of those cases there
        have been thirteen who pleaded guilty, sixteen found guilty, and
        eleven found not guilty. Of those found guilty two have appealed.
        There are six cases remaining to be tried.

               Last Wednesday, June 3, 1970, thirty-one students were
       notified that they had been formally charged under the "Code of
       Student Conduct.'" A total of one hundred eight charges were made
       against the thirty-one students. They have been made aware of
       the counseling process available to them and to date twenty have
       availed themselves of this process with four accepting the discipline
       outlined by the Dean of Students and sixteen choosing to be heard by
       the University Judicial Board. Three students have formally re-
       quested that their hearings be postponed until a later time. Their
       requests have been forwarded to the Judicial Board.

              The University is also considering action against seven
       non-students whose presence on the campus during the week of
       May I through May 8 contributed substantially to the unrest and
       disruption that occurred.

                                               Respectfully submitted,




                                               Jack B. Hall


       Mr. Clay thanked Dean Hall for his report and ordered it filed.


       P. Committee Appointed

       Mr. Clay, as Chairman of the Executive Committee, said he would like to
make a brief statement and recommendation. He continued, "As members of the
Board of Trustees we are in a position of trusteeship of this University. As a
Trustee and under our trusteeship, it is necessary to have well defined regulations,
which we have adopted. Th:.s puts the authority of those regulations under this
Board of Trustees. Unless w;ve, as Trustees, exercise this trusteeship in a re-
sponsible manner, we are not worthy of being members of this Board and. the public
will not tolerate anything less than our best efforts. The public will not put up with
the loss of property and the disruption of the academic process.

       "At the last meeting of the Board on May 5, the Board approved various
revisions and codifications of the University's Governing Regulations and the Code
of Student Conduct. Since that time, there have been rather serious disturbances
on the campus which have afforded an opportunity to analyze certain of the relation-
ships codified in those documents in the context of an emergency situation.