FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE NINE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 5,1968 iHE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE NINE Doxiadis Urges 'U' Graduates To Construct Improved Cities Over 200 students graduated from the University in December. In his commencement address, city planner Constantinos Doxia- dis told the graduates that man must mold the city of the future for his own benefit. "This megalopolis will be a con- tinuous 'Urban area which should not crush man as it threatens to do at present; but, built in a human scale, it should preserve all human values and help man to develop further and better," he said. Doxiadis, who is at present working on defining the future of the Detroit area, received an hon- orary doctor of laws degree. Re- tiring University President Harlan Hatcher also presented that de- gree to new University President Robben W. Fleming. 'Monument' Doxiadis said that when the University celebrates its 300th an- niversary, the present Detroit and 00 Ann Arbor will linger only as a monument. While only 60 per cent or less of the city of the year 2000 has not been built or com- mitted yet, man can still build afresh 80 per cent ofnthe city his children will inherit and 90 per cent of his grandchildren's city. "Our generation has inherited a world which was still thinking as the Homeric man, looking at the past, walking with his back turned to the future," Doxiadis said. "For this it has paid with two world wars, and for this it lives in bad cities which are the result of uninformed and unwise action of all generations since the be- ginning of the scientific and technological revolutions." "Great progress was made in many directions, but not in a uni- fied way leading to a better city and to a better life for every individual. Many Changes "But, unlike the previous gen- eration, ours begins anew, under the pressures of many changes, torecognize a crisis in human affairs, to open its, eyes, to turn to the future, and to try to create a better city for man." "Our generation begins to turn around, to turn its own steering wheel, and to look into the future. It does not have, though, the time to complete the full turn. "Humanity has been moving for such a long time turned to the past that it now has a stiff neck. It cannot complete the turn." Doxiadis concluded that to complete the turn is the task of the "young generation." GA Surveys Fleming Stresses Building, Grad Draft Redefining of Student Role (Continued from Page 1) E majority--or of a minority." right" to be interested in Univer- "I think there is really no ef- sity affairs and to exert pressure fective censorship of the campus By JENNY STILLER on administrators. press-even if you wanted it," he A referendum on graduate draft, But he felt the legitimate said. "There are times when you policies was distributed by Gradu- framework for student pressure is won't agree with the campus ate Assembly (GA) during regis- University rules which may be re- paper-and this is true of the tration in response to a request } vised according to the forthcom- press at large." by Dean Stephen Spurr of the ing report of the President's Com- Classified Research Rackham School of Graduate mission on Decision-Making. Fleming said that he will con- Studies. New Framework sider the role of classified mili- As of last night, an estimated "Students may feel frustrated tary research in the University 5,000 graduate students had filled because they may not get the following the submission to the out the questionaires, which ask I gains they desire" he added. "I Regents of a report by a faculty for student opinion on deferments hope to persuade them that stu-'committee studying the hotly-de- and alternative service. ! dent can exert pressure within bated issue of last semester. Stuart Katz, Grad, chairman of the framework we will modify." Selective Service procedures, the ad-hoc committee of GA Fleming said there can be no Fleming feels, will not jeopardize which drafted the questionaire, I simple answers to what should be graduate school enrollments next explained that implementation of j done to remedy basic social prob- fall. "Only one sixth of the grad- any changes indicated by the lems-and basic freedoms are in- uate students are in the draft referendum has purposely been volved in the right to protest. 'pool," he said, "and how many left vague. "We can't have a tyranny of the will go is still a question." Supplies of SLATER'S Book Store 336 So. State Ph. 662-4543 OPENINGS FOR CHILD CARE WORKERS -HAWTHORN CENTER Work-Experience Opportunity with Emotionally Disturbed Children. Hawthorn Center offers mature students a unique opportunity to work directly with disturbed children in a creative, well-supervised, in-patient treatment setting - a particularly rewarding experience for potential professional workers in Education, Psy- chology, Social Work, Medicine and related Be- havioral Sciences, Hours: 32 to 40 hours per week; flexible schedul- ing to include weekends is possible. Age Requirement: Minimum-20 years. Education: Minimum-Two credit years completed and good academic standing in third year. Salary: With Bachelor's degree-$6200-$6500 per year. Without Bachelor's degree-$5600-$6350 per year. Last month GA indicated that ---- - they wanted the University grad- uate schools to make a public ' policy statement, exert "informal r a Protesters Spend HARLAN HATCHER presided ov ident of the University last month Across A physician, an engineer, and a historian were named Dec. 15 as distinguished University profes- sors. The Regents confirmed the ap- pointments of Jerome W. Conn as the Louis Harry Newburg Uni- versity professor of internal medi- cine, Chia-Shun Yih as the Stephen P. Timoshenko University professor of engineering, and John Higham as the Moses Coit Tyler University professor of history. Regents 'have limited distin- guished University professorships to nine, and the three appoint- ments fill that allotment. Each title, which is held throughout a professors's teaching life, recog- nizes outstanding achievement in his field. Dr. Conn has established an in- ternational reputation in meta- bolism and endocrinology. Yih is an authority on flows, fluids, waves and propogation, and magnetohydrodynamics. Higham, an authority on Amer- ican intellectual history, has au- thored "Strangers in the Land," a study of the movement to restrict U.S. immigration, and "History" an examination of the writing of American history since 1865 in re- political pressure." "If a change er his last convocation as presi- is dictated, GA suggested a policy rer hi lastof non-cooperation with the pres- ent draft laws" to implement the results of the referendum. The exact meaning of "a policy' of non-cooperation" was left Cam pus vague, Katz explained, in orderE to allow GA and the graduate school to formulate a workablet policy.c lation to the broader field of Members of GA completed the American intellectual history, questionnaire for the referendum * * last month. At that time, GA, Prof. Robert M. Howe has been members indicated that they appointed chairman of the Uni- wanted the present draft systemj versity department of aerospace abolished and military needs pro- engineering. vided for "by other means." GA Prof. Howe's five-year appoint- members were strongly in favort ment, effective with the fall term of allowing all graduate studentsN of 1968, was approved by the Re- to receive II-S deferments, shouldI gents Dec. 15. the present draft system be con-# Prof. Howe will replace Prof. tinued. Wilbur Nelson, whose third term How soon the results will bet as chairman ends in the fall. available depends chiefly on GA's * * success in locating a keypunch1 The Regents appointed Morton operator and in finding the moneyt S. Hilbert on Dec. 15 to be the new to pay for transferring the raw Their Christmas in Jail (Continued from Page 1) ,T Court is always uncertain," point- ed out Goodman. The principle of the appeal t contends that sitting-in, under certain circumstances, is a form' of "speech" and therefore coniesE under the protection of tne First Amendment. The Supreme Courtl has ruled that picketing is so! classified. He does not believe that thef state can "constitutionally findi them guilty of criminal trespasst when they are exercising their right to dissent." The protesters were originally t granted a stay of execution by the Circuit Court of Appeals last September. This action prevents Delhey from jailing them until1 their case is reviewed by the, Supreme Court. Although thirty-nine protesters were arrested for sitting-i, 10 pleaded guilty at their arraign- ment in January, 1966, and one, a civil-rights worker from the South, forfeited his bond and left the state. The 1965 sit-in has had far- reaching repercussions. A C L U state chairman Rolland O'Hare said that the draft had never before been considered for use "as a device to punish dissent." Twelve students were reclassi- fied 1-A as a result, of their sit- in before their case was brought to trial. At least three of them still have those classifications and are engaged in appeals to regain their 2-S status. In addition some leaders of' Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) contend that the Ann Arbor sit-in sparked a nation-wide series of draft protests. Call or Write: Director of Nursing Hawthorn Center Northville, Michigan Telephone; Area Code 313- Fl 9-3000 chairman of the department of environmental health. He suc- ceeds Dr. Clarence J. Velz, who retired. The department with 43 faculty and staff members, is one of the major units of the School of Pub- lic Health, and the largest depart- ment of its kind in the nation's 15 public health schools. Hilbert, 50, joined the Univer- sity faculty in 1962 after 18 years with the Wayne County Health Department. He was head of its division of engineering and sani- tation and, later, assistant direc- tor. data to IBM cards, Katz said. He added that the soonest results. can be expected will be sometime next week. Current policy at the Rackham School is to release no informa- tion about any student to draft boards, Roy Ashmall, president of GA said. The poll's impact will be "substantial," he said, no matter what the results are because so many graduate students have filled out the questionnaire. The referendum questionnaire will be available to graduate stu- dents during late registration in the Administration Building. I ':l ISRAE L CHOSEN OF GOD? New Styles First atWild's THIS WEEK'S ARRIVALS What does the Bible say about Israel and the Middle East? Free book on this age-old conflict available to Jewish readers. New Testamenfan d other literature also available without charge. Write CHRISTIAN INFORMATION SERVICE P. O. Box 1048, Rochester, N. Y. 14603 I BATES FLOATERS (Fur-lined shoes) WHITE TURTLE NECK SWEATERS FARAH SLACKS LEVI SLACKS 1968 Spring-SU ITS-SPORTCOATS E WILD CS State 'Street on the Camipus WILD N Read and Use Daily Classifieds Open: Mon., Wed., and Thurs. 4 P.M.-2 A.M. Open: Fri., Sat., Sun. Noon to 3 A.M. (Closed Tues.) DeLONG'S PIT BARBECUE 314 Detroit St. Phone 665-2266 CARRY OUT ONLY FREE DELIVERY Bar-B-Q Beef Dinner ...........$1.95 1/2 Fried Chicken ..............$1.55 Fried Shrimp .................$1.60 All Dinners include French Fries and Slaw zThe VIRGININ RESTAURANT BAR-B-Q SPARE RIBS or '1 Enjoy Yourseff I OUT' I I STUDENTS Now's your chance td'get the THE "GREATEST PIZZA" at South U. Restaurant 1121 S. University-Telephone 662-4171 Breakfasts-Lunches-Dinners j/2 BAR-B-Q CHICKEN Both with Bar-B-Q Sauce, French Fries and Creamy Cole Slaw, Bread and Butter Open 7 Days a Week 8 A . . . $1.55I A.M.-8 P.M. .1 i 'the /ad x Located in Scenic Northern Ann Arbor Area (Dixboro) BEST SELECTION OF SEAFOOD IN ANN ARBOR AREA the fish you eat today played yesterday in Gloucester Bay" STEAK and SHAKE 1313 South University CHAR-BROILED RIB EYE STEAK & EGGS Potatoes and Toast..................$1.55 CHAR-BROILED HAMBURGER .............40 Old0 Hed e 211 -213 N. Mai, St. 668-9753 Specializina in German and American Food