Philosopher: courts shy from meddling with campuses DENVER Courts apparently aren't meddling in the internal workings of the nation's colleges and universities except to protect constitutionally guaranteed freedoms, according to author and philosopher John S. Brubacher. Brubacher addressed participants last weekend at a conference on the campus and the law held at the University of Denver. A former teacher at Harvard and Yale, Brubacher said courts generally have decided to leave solutions to campus problems to university officials. Case after case, Brubacher said, shows the court's reluctance to undermine the authority of administrators and regents. The Circuit Court of Appeals recently affirmed the right of the University of Nebraska Board of Regents to fire former UNL professor Stephen Rozman because of his role in May 1970 campus anti-war activities. Court decisions, Brubacher said, have reflected the opinion that institutions of higher education should remain independent o1 political pressure. Court judges want to avoid putting themselves in the position of running a university by their decisions, he said. At the same time, Brubacher noted that "the courts have had to relax their judicial restraint ... in campus controversies involving the federal bill of rights." He said those decisions have revolved mainly around guarantees of due process and freedom of speech and the press. Brubacher cited one administrative ruling that was after an Alabama student was summarily dismissed without a hearing. In another situation at Wisconsin University, students deemed guilty of "misconduct" had to be reinstated becaUse the courts determined that misconduct was too broad of a violation. In two cases involving campus newspapers, the courts repulsed attempts to indiscriminately censor material before publication and have forced one university to readmit a student editor who had been expelled because of unpopular comment on various state legislators. Brubacher also noted that the Supreme Court had vigorously supported academic freedom in the classroom. He cited one case where legislators had asked administrators to ferret out what they called subversives on trje faculty. But the court upheld the academic rights of a professor who had made statements about socialism in his lectures. -,.,. - ,.,- ,., .,nrm "' Gk) Strut-on-in to the Insite if AuVy WJWW) where you'll find great voh vu Ay cSV uru' rvui fr full '72! W'vff' We've got 'the tW'i "NEWEST (f NOWEST "NOWGirl! Wmtm ' Mw natklsons gateway, IMUM?m I Wf NATELSOIMS WESTItOADS II V ) W'X$y1j OPEN Sunday afternoon pSS II HfSHW and 'till 9:00 p.m. L livlll. serday except Saturday, - THE YELLOW BENCH It's new . . . it's exciting . , . and it'i open now! Today's junior is Involved; she's on the go; she likes variety and value in the clothes she buys. In the brand new Yellow Bench we have a selection that reflects these needs. And we're here to help you. Register for free gifts to be given away Thur.-Sat, Oct 26-28. No obligation and you need not be present to win. Come itt end meet us -- at the Yelbw Bendi,- Miller and Paine second floor downtown mall level Gateway dailv hebraskan page 3 friday, oCtober 27, 1972