Y *fr 1g1u 74D L it EREE EDITION Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom YY~TT WT- 1 0 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1962 FOUTEEN PA i tl/ j-jra asj'.,. a ASa. NEW FACES-Stephen Spurr (left), formerly professor of silvi- culture, becomes the new dean of the natural resources college. During their June meeting, the Regents also appointed William R. Mann (right) to head the dental school. Regents Name Mann Spurr To Succeed RetiringDeans By GERALD STORCH With little ado at their June meeting, the Regents appointed Dr. William R. Mann as the new dean of the dental school, and Prof. Stephen H. Spurr dean of the natural resources school. Executive Vice-President Marvin L. Niehuss lauded both choices. He said that Dean Mann, with his "national and international reputation," can "exert the influence and stimulation" necessary Denounced. By The Associated Press LANSING - Governor John B. Swainson yesterday denounced the proposed new state constitution as a step backward and offered his own nine-point program to make the document acceptable to Demo- crats. Swainson's statement criticized: 1) Provisions calling for the election of some members of the State Administrative Board and appointment of others, calling it a hodge-podge. He urged election of all Board members- 2) A selection under which in- terim legislative committees could suspend rules and regulations of administrative agencies. 3) A proposed Civil Service ar- ticle which he said allows the Leg- islature to "interfere in job place- ment and salary adjustment." 4) Several finance and taxa- tion proposals. 5) The fact that self-executing home rule is denied in the pro- posed document. 6) A judicial article provision which removes the governor's right to fill judicial vacancies, turning it over to the Supreme Court and limiting appointment to retired judges. 7) The proposed article on leg- islative apportionment, which he called "obscure and unclear," 8) Lack of specific mention of civil and political rights to be. guaranteed in the constitution, in- cluding removal of public sanction for discrimination in employment, education, housing and public ac- commodation. 9) Proposed language on search and seizure, which he said raises grave doubts about its legality un- der a United States Supreme Court ruling. Swainson called upon George Romney, Republican gubernator- ial candidate, for support of the program when the convention re- convenes August 1 for final ad- journment. Whether or not Romney accepts, the prograni, the goverior said, "I offer an alternative course of ac- tion-separation of the contro- versial articles from those on which there is agreement to allow the people freedom of choice." Romney said here yesterday that Swainson's proposals were "a fee- ble attempt to fake a positive ap- proach." State Senate Ousts Scholle LANSING (AP)-The state Sen- ate voted last night to remove August ,Scholle, president of the Michigan AFL-CIO, from his post as a member of the state Conserva- tion Commission. The vote-on straight party lines - was 18 to 8. Republicans cast all the votes to reject his ap- t nniv% p 4. "for the post, and pointed to "the respect and enthuiastic support" for Dean Spurr "from faculty members in all five departments of the natural resources school." Both men were selected by fac- ulty committees within their schools. Prospective appointees at other universities, a review of the- school's strengths and weaknesses, and. comments from deans of the University's 16 schools and col- leges were considered, before the decision was reached by the com- mittee, and then approved by Niehuss, University President Har- lan Hatcher and, finally, the Re- gents. Succeed Retirees Deans Mann and Spurr succeed former Deans Paul Jeserich and Stanley Fontanna respectively. Both retired effective July 1. Dean Mann, 46 years old, takes over supervision of a school whose major problem, as Niehuss pointed out, is the "shocking" state of physical facilities. President Hatcher added that "I saw two dental schools ontmy trip in 'underdeveloped' South America that were better than anything we have here." Dean Mann has been a member of the faculty since 1940. He also serves as associate director of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation In- stitute and is on the executive committee of the Office of Re- search Administration. The new dean formerly was a member of an advisory panel for dentistry for, the World Health Organization. He belongs to seven professional and honorary dental organizations. Dean Spurr is 44 years old. He is recognized as one of the world's foremost authorities on photo- grammetry and aerial mapping.I Expanding SchoolI He will assume direction of at school which, in Niehuss' words, is attempting to define and in- tegrate its ever-expanding field. In addition to his new post, Dean Spurr serves the campus in two other areas: he is the \specialj liaision between the faculty andt the administration on the up-j coming year-round operation, and is a member of the Board in1 Control of Intercollegiate Athletics.I Fee Hike Approved By Board Increased Funds To Raise Pay At a special June meeting, the Residence Halls Board of Gover- nors approved a tentative three to four per cent increase in room and board rates. The hike will average out to $20-30 per resident. Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis said Friday that the larger in- come would be used to raise the salaries of residence halls em- ployees and for new facilities which will be necessary when co- educational housing is instituted in fall of 1963. Salaries of both maintainance and other service employes as well as that of the student staff will be raised, Lewis said. The board of governors'had raised the floor counselor salaries from 40 to 60 per cent of room and board at an earlier meeting. The exact rate for room and board will not be determined until the state Legislature passes the budget appropriation for the Uni- versity, Lewis said. To Set Role Of Official A special Residence Halls Board of Governors committee will study and make recommendations for the responsibilities of a Director of Housing. The group's particular charge will be to look into what structural relationships should be established between the director, his advisory board (a new one which would re- place the board of governors) and the Vice-President for Student Affairs. The post, approved by the Re- gents at their May meeting, has been the only revision so far in the much-discussed Office of Stu- dent Affairs, although the man to fill it has not yet been found. "It is a whole new directorship in a whole new area," Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs James A. Lewis said in explaining the need for a further clarification of the new housing position. Not Appointed The committee members have not been appointed, but Lewis said he would do so "definitely by fall." At present he is also viewing pros- pective administrators and faculty men, both inside and outside the University, from which to make the final choice for the director- ship. This post was originally pro- posed by the OSA Study Commit- tee, which made its report last February. The report asked that the hous- ing director be "an outstanding person with academic orientation and experience and demonstrated qualities of leadership." "Unequivocal" Supervision a According to the study commit- tee, he should have "unequivocal" supervision of residence halls poli- cies. He would oversee the busi- ness office, as well as lay specialI emphasis on "infusing educational purposes" into the halls. The Director of Housing would! be directly responsible to the Vice- President for Student Affairs. - On tExtra Education Funds FOLLOW UNIVERSITY: W SU, MSU Up Tuition To Meet Cost Squeeze Caught between rising costs and slower-rising state appropria- tions, Wayne State and Michigan State Universities announced last week their decision to follow the University in ordering tuition raises. WSU's Board of Governors chairman Leonard Woodcock called his school's action "a down payment in' good faith" toward the Legisla- ture, which, he hoped, would respond to the hike with increases of its 'own. The total increase in funds Pears Cites Debate Value OfMSU Unit By CYNTHIA NEU The controversy over the Mich- igan State University Labor and Industrial Relations Center gained momentum last week with the res- ignation of Prof. Charles A. Rog- ers, former associate director of the Center, who was removed from that position last year. The issue will reach a climax this week when the House con- siders the budget bill for higher education, already passed by the Senate. The Senate version included an amendment which would in effect disband the center by prohibiting the use of funds "to maintain or continue the industries and labor relations center or any center or school of a similar nature." Constitutionally, the trustees of MSU have full control of their school's expenditures. Although the Legislature cannot legally desig- nate how funds are spent, MSU presumably would be reluctant to oppose a legislative ruling, thereby risking future budget cuts. The removal of Prof. Rogers, who according to the resolution es- tablishing the investigating com- mittee was the only remairing management specialist at the Cen- ter, touched off the investigation of charges that the center was pro-labor by a legislative com- mittee headed by Sen. Lynn Fran- cis (R-Midland). Francis explained that sugges- tions that the Center be organized under the regular curriculum or reorganized in other ways were ig- nored by MSU. Honor Hatcher At Japan Fete President Harlan H. Hatcher and President of Columbia Uni- versity, Grayson L. Kirk will be awarded Honorable Degrees from Waseda University in Toyko, Ja- pan, next fall. The degree is given them for both distinguished achievements and friendships between Waseda and the two universities. President and Mrs. Hatcher will attend the granting ceremony to be held on Oct. 20 in Toyko. House from the new fees will be $450,000 next year. WSU, which is moving from the semester to the quarters system, has announced instate rates of $104 a quarter, or $312 for a full year, for students carrying a full academic load. The equivalent fig- ure this past year, for two semes- ters' work, was $280. Full Load The out-of-state tuition cost for a student with a full load has been $580; the equivalent figure for next year will be $666. Woodcock expressed the hope that the Legislature would match the added funds by a 4-to-1 ratio, awarding the school $1.8 million above its anticipated allotment. MSU's President Hannah called tuition rises "inevitable," but said a decision on how much of a raise there is to be will wait until the July 19 meeting of the MSU Board of Trustees, or possibly even later. 'Fee Hike in Mind' This past year MSU received $29.6 million from the Legislature; the tentative appropriations bill for next year awards the school $30.9 million. Hannah said this would be insufficient to cover the expected increase in costs, and so "we are building a budget for next year. with a fee hike in mind." But the state board of educa- tion, which controls Western, East- ern and Central Michigan Univer- sities, and Northern Michigan Col- lege, has not yet taken a stand on the- issue. Lynn O. Bartlett, super- intendent of public education and a member of the board, has said that "we will make no decision' while the Legislature is in session." Ask Increase Earlier this month, the presi- dents of the four institutions un- der the board's control asked for increases-in the neighborhood of $50 for Eastern, Western and Cen- tral Michigan Universities and $70 for Northern Michigan College. But the board members, all Democrats, viewed the lean ap- propriation as an attempt to "bull- doze" the group into approving a tuition hike. So, for a while at least, the board has refused to change present fee rates, which are $215 for instate, $445 for out-of- state students. Gov. John B. Swainson has an- nounced an effort to add $5.1 mil- lion to the higher education ap- propriation this week, thus en- abling the institutions to cancel the announced (or unannounced) fee raises. College officials are now waiting to see whether any of this prom- ised money will in fact materialize. UMPIRE SAYS SAFE-Michigan's baseball squad has been called safe a number of times during the past three 'weeks, as they won Regional and National collegiate titles and now are playing in the International Collegiate World Series in Hawaii. Michigan Baseball Team Seeks International Title By The Associated Press HONOLULU-Michigan's NCAA-championship baseball team en- tered the show-down match in its five-game series with Hosei Uni- versity of Japan for the International Collegiate World Series title here late last night. The game started at 8 p.m. Monday Hawaii time (1 a.m. today EST) with junior. left-hander Fritz Fisher on the mound for Speaker Michigan. The Wolverines and the Japanese team are tied in the se- ries two and two. Fisher Wins for 'M' Coach Don Lund's 'M' diamond- men won the first contest last Fri- day, when Fisher shut out Hosei, 3-0. The Japanese outfit took Sat- urday's game, 6-1, and the teams split -a Sunday doubleheader, with Michigan winning the opener,.4-3, and losing the night-cap by the same score. The Michigan crew has been playing tournament baseball since the first of the month. After end- ing the Big Ten season with a. heart-breaking double defeat to Wisconsin in the final doublehead- er of the Conference schedule-the losses dropping the Wolverines in- to a second-place finish behind Il- linois-Lund's boys still received a bid to the Regional NCAA playoff See BASEBALL, Page 6 Expect Fight To Continue VRC Facility Democrats and Republican mod- erates are expected to attempt to amend the appropriations bill in the House this week so that the Veterans Readjustment Center (VRC). at the University will not be forced to close down. After receiving a $346,000 sum last year, the center is slated to get only a final $50,000 so that it can be "phased out" in favor of a soldier's home in Grand Rapids taking over its psychiatric treat- ment function-if Rep. James F. Warner (R-Ypsilanti) continues to have his way. But concerned University offi- cials and veterans organizations are starting to campaign to save the VRC. Earlier this month, when no par- ticular attention was being placed on the center, an amendment in the House to restore its normal appropriation was defeated by six votes. The second try for an amend- ment will be made when the bill for the state mental health budget Optimistic Retain Upgren In Dorm Post After Protest An Alice Lloyd Dormitory house- mother, fired during the last week of the spring semester, has been rehired for a similar position next fall, Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis said Fri- day. Marion Upgren, housemother for Hinsdale House, had been inform- ed by Acting Dean of Women Elizabeth Davenport that her con- tract would not be renewed. But Lewis reported that "she will have a job next fall." Mrs. Upgren may be assigned to an- other house, however. Decline Comment Lewis declined to make public comment on either the firing or the rehiring. During the three-week interim, he met with the University Senate Committee on Student Relations, which requested the consultation after receiving complaints about the move by Hinsdale House resi- dents. Committee chairman Prof. Mar- vin Felheim of the English depart- ment commented that the only meaningful result of the meeting was a promise by Lewis to review the matter with Mrs. Upgren and Mrs. Davenport. Prof. Felheim said the situation was still somewhat unclear, but that at least part,'of the reason for the firing was that the house- mother may have not "gone through channels" in performing some of her duties. Hierarchial Crux He added that, in his opinion, the crux of the affair probably lies in the long hierarchy within the women's deanship. An indivi- dual housemother is responsible to the .dormitory housemother,' then the Assistant Dean of Wo- men for Residence Halls, the Act- ing Dean of Women, and finally the Vice-President for Student Af- fairs. Aside from the one meeting, there was no further contact be- tween Lewis and the Student Re- lations Committee, whose role is, to advise the Vice-President for Student Affairs. 'Prof. Felheim Universities' Cooperationl Increases in Tuition Promise "Reward" In Lansing Today. By MICHAEL HARRAH City Edit: special To The Daily LANSING-The House is ex- pected to consider all appropria- tions for the coming fiscal year to- day, including the Senate-passed higher education bill, which would give the University approximately $35 million. Speaker of the House Don R. Pears (R-Buchanan) said he ex- pected the House to pass the bill in one form or another in today's session. The necessary funds will be available for a slight increase for higher education, since Goy John B. Swainson yesterday al- lowed the nuisance tax package to become effective without his sig- nature. Republican leaders are optimis- tic about finishing their business quickly. The Speaker said many members were looking more favor- ably towards additional funds for higher education, since most of the nine state-supported colleges and universities have raised their tui- tion rates. Cautious Estimator He, was cautious about estimat- ing the actual boost that might finally be approved, but he said that GOP leaders would "scrape up every dime for education, since university administrators have in- dicated their willingness to meet the Legislature halfway." He was referring to the tuition boosts of which the University, an- nounced last month, will net just under $2 million in extra funds. But House leaders hesitated to say that the Legislature would be able to match that amount on a paral- lel basis, as had been hinted earlier in the year. The higher education bill, orig- inally introduced by Senators Phil- lip O. Rahoi (D-Iron Mt.), Garland Lane (D-Flint) in the amount pro- posed by the governor in January, was amended to its present form by the Republican majority in the Senate two weeks ago. Meet Briefly Both the House and Senate met only briefly last night in formal session and spent the bulk of time in caucus, preparing for the formal debate of bills on third reading to- day. Neither side could muster the necessary 56 votes in the House since the GOP had 2 members absent. Meanwhile, the Republican leg- islators heard a blistering attack on "the vast amount of unfinished work, responsibilities d u c k e d, dodged and ignored since last Jan- uary' by Swainson. Glib Talk "The Republican leadership in January talked glibly of new poli- cies and new programs it would produce. It has produced nothing except new excuses for blockig progress," Swainson said. The governor cited education and mental health as two such areas of failure. Cooperrider Joins Board Prof. Luke Cooperrider of the Law School was appointed to the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications at the June meeting. Also at the meeting, the Board approved a third Associated Press Wire for The Daily on a trial basis. The wire will be on from 2 a.m. to 1 p.m. and in addition will transmit any special news that may come across during the afternoon.. Daily Editor Michael Olinick, '63, presented to the Board the JOIN THE DAILY: A Summer. Treat That Refreshes What a wonderful place to spend the summer, is The Daily. Naturally air-conditioned, with windows on all four sides; Great location, right near the Administration Bldg., the MUG and Kelsey Museum; Pretty Wonderful Things Excellent facilities, including $250,000 worth of linotypes and printing presses, a five-cent soft drink machine and free restrooms. Fascinating personalities, viz. several winners of the Form Letter Scholarship Award (for two consecutive semesters below a 2.0) and wiffle ball experts. But The Daily needs some people to help fill up this alluring building. Why Not? If you're interested in working on the editorial staff of the world's best college newspaper, come to the Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard St., and contact Peter Steinberger (recently Ireturned from Spain) or Freddie Kramer (recently returned from 1 4 I :#