Ed School
Students and faculty members of the School of Education are meeting in the Loeb Drama Center at 10 a.m. today.
The group will pass resolutions relating to such issues as the occupation of University Hall and the police raid, Harvard expansions, and restructuring the Ed School.
The school's Student Cabinet adopted unanimously last night a resolution which "repudiated the implied threat of the Corporation to close down our University" and "calls for the dissolution of the Corporation in its present form and its replacement by a body representative of the Harvard community."
The Cabinet also voted to "condemn both the sending of police onto the campus and the manner in which the decision was taken and the action conducted." Both resolutions, along with a Cabinet recommendation that the current moratorium on classes be extended through Friday, will be up for consideration at today's general meeting.
The five men who represented the school at yesterday morning's conference with President Pusey were C. T. W. (Adam) Curie, professor of Education and Development; Thomas Parker, assistant to the Dean; Christopher S. Jencks, lecturer; and Wilton Anderson and Phillip M. Whitten, students.
Business School
Subject to Student Association Executive Board approval this morning, Business School students will vote this afternoon on whether to strike.
Divinity School
Members of the student body, faculty, administration, and staff of the Divinity School met for discussion again yesterday. A committee on restructuring the University presented its proposals for change. The Divinity School will meet at 9:30 this morning to decide whether to continue the strike and to take stands on some of the issues of the past week.
Medical School
About 130 Medical students accompanied by several faculty members and deans marched in white coats for three miles yesterday from the Medical School to the Stadium.
Most of the students voted against the strike, arousing call of "AMA finks" and some verbal lashing from a few Afro students.
Earlier in the morning the first-year students roundly defeated a resolution to condemn the administration and to restructure the University.
The marchers were primarily from the first and second-year classes, since charge of current courses and laboratories have announced that they will continue to conduct classes.
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SECURITY PRECAUTIONS