ANN ARBOR SYSTEM PASSES THE BUCK See editorial page YI [ InkHt 43iau ~aii~j FAIR AND WARMER ligh-7aIn Low-44 Partly cloudy, chance of raini Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 125 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1967 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES TO BEGIN NEXT YEAR: OSU Faculty Approves, College Reorganization State Senate Votes Today1 0U On Tax BillSt d Passage Predicted; Would Clear Waiv u Panel Favors Lit Deferments i 1 By JUDITH KOMISHANE first proposed in 1962 by the Pres- plan over a number of months. Toohe Faculty Council of Ohio ident's Permanent Planning Com- Students would continue to ap- For Budget Action State University last week approv- mittee, which since then has been ply to the individual colleges for s ed a sweeping academic reorga- renamed the Office of the Vice- (admission as freshmen, as is the By WALLACE IMMEN nization plan creating four new President for Academic Affairs. current policy. However, under the , Gov. George Romney's tax re- colleges. Pooling Departments plan, admission requirements form bill was placed in line yes- The new colleges-Arts. Physi- The reorganization plan consists would be standarized and once terday for a Senate vote today. cal Sciences and Mathematics, Hu- of pooling departments which cur- admitted students in all colleges| An amended tax package was manities, and Social and Behav- rently exist within other colleges would meet the same distribution reported out of the Senate Tax- ioral Sciences - would form the and regrouping them into the four requirements. ation Committtee late yesterday new Colleges of Arts and Sciences, new colleges. Sociology and Poli-a A foreign language proficiency fternoon. under the ,authority of a dean of ' tical Science, which are presently would be required of all students. Cen. Harry DeMaso t R-Bartle undergraduate studies. The dean in two separate colleges would, for Presently it is at the discretion would act as chairman of a Coun- example, both be placed within of the individual college. said the bill has more than enough cil of Coordinating Deans of the the newly formed College of Social Duplication of courses offered suport; he claimed he wouldn't newly created colleges. Under the I and Behavioral Sciences. by the different colleges would be have reported it out otherwise. college plan, the four colleges "The purpose of the plan is to eliminated and inter-disciplinary As a hedge against defeat of the newoe billnte Romneyeyestrday delaye will have autonomous administra- create a .more effective and uni- studies facilitated. Under the olddelayed tions, but coordination on curric- form program for undergraduate system it was difficult for a stu- bid-taking for nearly $10 million ulum and degree requirements will education by establishing uniform dent to elect courses in both so- in construction at four state col- be stressed. admission standards and distribu- ciology and political science for leges because he wants to con- The new program will be insti- tion requirements among the sev- instance because each was in a serve the advance funds in the tuted as of January 1968. It was eral colleges," explained John Ben- different college dwindling treasury surplus.{ originally scheduled for July, 1967. der, chairman of the student panel A centralized student counsel- Senate passage today will send The reorganization plan was -which studied the reorganization ling system is also provided for in the Senate free to begin work the natereetthe new plan. ;<.kn -_ new .the appropriations budget. Rom-> -We would hope that with a ney's haste to pass the fiscal pack- - centralized counselling system and r 'Ilh cetino aanwoe age has pushed back work on the primaryconcern is dealing itbudget, whose major constituents are higher education appropria- 4 s undergraduate concerns, to de- tions. velop a solid, more unified pro- Roneyd Bgramfor stdes , commn vances from the $130 million gen- Prof.hCharles Babck, chairmaeral fund would be financially ir- ofigheafaculty committee whichpro- responsible unless the Legislature takes affirmative action on fiscal Sev.reform, POLICE FORCED all male students at zat Sveral aspects of the reorgn Romney warned that more ap- tories after a four-hour sniper siege dui AN ANTI-WAR DEMONSTRATOR, fasting in the District zaon g memars otro- propriations delays could be an- Rioting began Tuesday morning when of Columbia jail while awaiting trial, is being fed intravenously sd among members of both the - nounced shortly. "This is a no- was hit by a watermelon while they we ofClubajalwil witn ril i engfdinrvnosy student bodyand university fac- tc otesho epeta e__ after going four days without food and liquid. ulty. ice to the school people that we Doctors found that Miss Suzanne Williams, 19, of Leverett. Profesisonal Emphasis to face it" ensaid ANN ARBOR OFFICE: Mass., was suffering from dehydration. They said she would be Former Student Senate Presi- Sen. Garland Lane (D-Flint) f force fed today if she keeps up. the fast, dent Timothy Neustadt has at- charged Romney with "putting a{ Twenty pacifists, eight of them women, are in jail awaiting tacked the plan as creating an pistol to the heaa of our educa- F o trial oi charges of unwarranted loitering in the Pentagon, sleep- additionalism as a result of increased an income tax program. ing and assembling on federal property. They have declined to specialization among colleges. Attorney General Frank Kelley postbail of $250 each and are to appear before a U.S. commis- Babcock, however, sees the pre- then rebuffed Romney by ruVcng sy'rto..professional status of undergrad- that Ira Polley, state superinten- I oIM * *uates as being protected by the dant of public instruction, has the NINE PERSONS WERE INJURED slightly as hundreds of new dean of undergraduate stud- power to advance the funids, and By HELEN JOHNSON ilies an students fought over the U.N. flag yesterday at the University of ies, who will be responsible for co- not the governor. Recommends Veto Power Over Lottery Rivers Committee Also Proposes National Deferment Standards WASHINGTON MP-The House Armed Services Committee voted yesterday to insure continued draft deferments for college stu- dents by writing them into the law. -Associated Press SEARCH DORMS Texas Southern University in Iouston to leave their dormi- ring which one patrolman was killed and two others injured. surveillance officers arrested a TSU student after their car ere patrolling a campus rally. Meets Problems 4Schizophrenia d their relationship with; better be used by well-established "1., .,+ .; p + n n o rrm lirs+ m W in a c ri _ I ok California at Los Angeles. The riot broke out as members of a group supporting Rho- desian independence attempted to carry out a ceremonial burn- ing of the U.N, Nazi and Soviet flags. None was burned, but all three were torn. CHARGES AGAINST TIMOTHY LEARY for leaving the United States without registering as a narcotics violator were dropped by U.S. Atty. Lawrence Gubow. Federal authorities lodged the complaint in February when Leary took a bus from Detroit to Windsor, Ont., to deliver a recording of a lecture, before a speech here. Gubow said the complaint was dropped because of similar charges lodged against Leary in New York. THE STATE BOARD of Canvassers yesterday issued a state- ment explaining its failure to act May 10 on controversial peti- tions for a referendum. on Daylight Saving Time. "Contrary to common publik expression in recent days, peti- tions fol' referendum are not t, be rubber stamped," the state- ment said, ordinating and directing under- Polley said he will take the graduate curriculum, matter to the State Board of Another question raised by both Education for deliberation at their student and faculty leaders is the regular meeting next Tuesday. possible competition for budget The colleges involved are Cen- allocations and research grants tral and Northern Michigan Uni- between the various colleges. versities, Ferris Institute and which could result from the new Grand Valley College. system of autonomous colleges. Iomney has said he is willing However, supporters claim direct to compromise to obtain a tax and efficient budgeting would re- package. Sources indicated he has sult under the new plan by elimi- agreed with all provisions of the 4 nating present duplication in Senate's tax bill. course offerings and equipment. Approval of 20 of the 38 sen- Despite the reservation express- ators is necessary to pass the bill, ed by certain campus elements which is only altered in terms from there is, acording to Bender, a Romney's original plan. general feeling of optimism among The taxes for new revenue in- faculty, students and administra- elude a 2%' per cent personal in- tors about the success of the new come tax (with a $600 exemption plan. per person and dependents), a "There is good logic and poten- 15 ' per cent corporate income tax tial in the plan and we'll try hard and increase of taxes on finan- to make it work," Babcock con- cial institutions from 50 cents per cluded. $1,000 to $1 per $1,000. AND RAPIDS SPEECH:. the public" is the aim of its 1000 leagues like the National Associa- n One per cent of the U.S. popula- ;- PDC1 n iii0 SIU U~L~idiI~ one ptential victms of lay, scientific, and schizophrenic tion for Mental Health. tio are potential victims ofe don't consider ourselves schizophrenia, according to Kahlil mbs." competitive with anybody," main- Samra, president of the American Too Much Secrecy Schizophrenia Foundation (ASF) "Our major function is to dra- tains Samra. whose headquarters are located in matize the problem of schizophre- Furthermore, he states, "Criti- Ann Arbor. te nia to the people," tells Samra. cism doesn't bother us; we are "TnnhAbbtrh growing so rapidly. If we can bring Schizophrenia, a form of mental There has been too much se- ow ing so c brin illness, accounts for one half the crecy in, the psychiatric profes- out the differences, so much the patients in today's psychiatric sion. Psychiatrists have lost con- better." wards. Its targets, usually 16 to 35 fact with the needs of patients ASP contributions to research years old, suffer perceptual dis- that must be communicated to the have amounted to $56,000 in the tortion and often total loss of con- public," he explained, past two years. tortion ad often ttASElgoals care ftwo-foldheinplrena- tact with reality. A second goal of the group is tiASF goals are two-fold inrela- One-third of the 250 people af- to amass funds to be used inandotpsychologists, psychiatrists, flicted by schizophrenia weekly supporting the work of men like andm other members of the field, can be expected to recover. An- O.bram Hoffer of Canada and Samra x phins. The organization othr tir wil e rtunedtoHumphrey Osmond of New Jer- bringste together in nation- other third will be returned _ to Hmhe sodsfle wide conventions, which stress the society in a "twilight zone," as sey who have successfully exper- t t Samra , puts it. The other one- imented with the vitamin niacin exchange of ideas to eliminate third are incurable in treating schizophrenia. confusion in treatment prescribed ASF, housed in a small, local Faces Criticism or the patient. office, was founded in 1964 to help "We see research as the most " Unity of Views these victims. The "betterment of effective means to therapy and "We want him to be able to schizophrenia patients, their fam- channel more funds into the bio- visit a doctor and get one or two or three views icnstead of 5D0f" The committee, working toward final action on a bill extending the Selective Service System for four more years, also decided to recommend giving Congress veto power over any presidential deci- sion to institute a lottery style draft. The committee actions were an- nounced by Chairman L. Mendel Rivers (D-SC). Rivers said college deferments would be written into the law un- der the committee bill, instead of leaving the issue to the president. Rivers said another innovation in his committee's bill would be the establishment of a non-gov- ernmental advisory board on man~- power resources that would work with the National Security Coun- cil to set up -occupational defer- ments and other manPower poli- cies. The Senate has passed a four- year extension of Selective Serv- ice, but its bill would leave the~ final decisions on college defer- ments and a lottery system to President Johpson. Another provision adopted by the House committee would es tablish national standards to be used by local draft boards in clas- sifying men as available, deferred or exempt. Proposed by Rep. Richard S. Schweiker (R-Pa), it is designed to end the practice whereby a youth is deferred while another youth in the same circumstances may be drafted by a different board. "More public criticism has been leveled at this point than at any other," said Schweiker. He said his amendment. would provide specific, tightly drawn na- tional standards but still leave local boards with some discretion in considering individual cases. Last week, the Senate gave over- whelming approval to a four-year extension of the draft.tThe vote on the passage was 7~0 to 2. Several of President Johnson's proposed alterations in the draft system would be possible under the senate measure which would.per- mit the draft director to make various changes at the request of the President. Thesesincludeinduction of 19- and 20-year olds first instead of the present system of calling first the older registrants in the 18-26 age bracket. The Senate also recommended a continuation of deferments for college students until they attain, a degree, reach 24 years or fail to maintain college standing. They then would be placed in draft pools along with the younger men most liable for induction. i t Carmichael Terms Hoover's Charges 'Infantile' chemical aspect than into others," Samra explained. Since its founding, ASF has faced criticism on several counts. Most objections come from those who advocate psychoanalysis as the best treatment for schizopren- ia. Psychoanalysts claim, as well, Ithat ASPF is n. a P e-mind.d on r- By DAVID BERSON ! cret testimony before the House group as "dedicated to the over- "Sixty-eight per cent of the pop- ick Douglas, W.E.B. DuBois, and ation. Special To The Daily appropriations subcommittee in throw of the capitalist system in ulation is black and 98 per cent Brother Malcolm. We gotta define "We don't deny that there can GRAND RAPIDS - SNCC's February, calling the RAM a the United States, by violence if of the kids in the public schools our own heroes." be psychological causes of the dis- Stokely Carmichael said last night "highly secret, all-Negro, Marxist- necessary, and its replacement by are black," he said. "We're going "You ever seen a dark-skinned, ease," the full-time ASF executive that he would have to be "neu- Leninist, Chinese-Communist ori- a socialist system oriented toward to have Washington lock, stock dark-eyed Italian?" he asked. acknowledges. He says that Freud rotic" to answer FBI Director J. ented 'organization which advo- Chinese Communist interpretation 1 and barrel." "Hannibal did that. And then himself found such treatment suc- Edgar Hoover's charges that he cates guerrilla warfare to obtain of Marxism-Leninism." After the press conference, .he they go get some hunky named cessful with his schizophrenic "has been in frequent contact" its goals. 'Infantile Charge' ambled into the restaurant, picked Victor Mature to play him in the cases. with a key figure in the Revo- Hoover identified the RAM offi Carmichael refused to confirm out some records on the juke box movies." Others fear that ASF will lutionary Movement (RAM), ; cial as Max Sanford, the group's r y and sat down with some of the "Hunky" is currently one of his "siphon off" funds that might Hoover made the charges in se- field chairman, and described his fantile" and saying "so is 'J. Ed- men from the neighborhood-"'R- favorite labels, and Carmichael's gar Note-taker'." When we were E-S-P-E-C-T!' You dig that, history of America included fre- getting our heads beat down baby?" quent references to the American ou h en etkignt SNCC Worker Indian. "The white man calls gen-' r a u e The best thing he could do is re- In the evening, he was greeted ocide 'Winning the West," he sign." by a standing-room crowd for his said. "And to say that Columbus "Do you know that he called speech in a downtown Unitarian stupid a msin camsaNk Tsk the beautiful Dr. Martin LutherC was Cleveland Seers, a pulpit mah (a beautiful cat if the CIA Kirg a liar?" said Carmichael. worker who said he was going to would leave him alone') discovered "Now, Dr. King is a preacher, and jail on Friday rather than be in- England when he went there in By HELEN JOHNSON a 1964 " It s a cold fact: we need a lot l ~~~~~~~~we all know that preachers don't ducted into the Army. "Better fed 1964" "tsacl at ene o le than dead," Sellers told the au- d'Meet Violept Man' more money," says Sam Sherman, dience. The crowd shouted approval- 68, treasurer of Student Govern- Carmichael was brought to . ment Council Grand Rapids by a trade union Grand Rapids is known as one "Uh-huh, tell it like it is, brother. That is the initial reason the group and spoke in the afternoon of the most conservative cities in The black man is the most Council is planning to make a to reporters in a room adjacent to the North. "Fifteen Stokely Car- violent man i America, h formal request in June to the a restaurant in the heart of the michaels wouldn't have any effect shouted. "Every Friday and Sat- Board of Regents for a 25-cent per citys Negro ghetto. , whatsoever," claims one native. urday night he is shoutin' and cut- Bastudent sem increase in funds No Policy Change But Carmichael got a standing tin' up his brothers. And the white a d11 ovation when he was introduced man dont care none about that. crease amounts to twice what the t Dressed in levis, white shirt to the predominantly Negro and But let a brother move to get the Crease amounts tortwdy habt sleeves, and Beatle boots. he said hnywosbe nhsbc l oni eevsarayo bu mostly teenage group. The ap-hunky w be on is ba all $1C.unc. "':-- theire will not be any change inpastrwaoCrihe se his life and the shooting staits." 1$16,000. the SNCC black power philosophy television cameramen to turn off By this time Carmichael's tie Sherman says that although the - a rf ult nf channrs in thpI , ca - --a weoc lnci onA th hio-h .hnn rir- . 1965-66 SGC left a surplus of he explains. Members aim at assuring fami- lies of schizophrenics that they are "allies of the patient" rather than causes of their diseases. They work closely with religious leaders. For Samra notes that a troubled schizophrenic often goes to them first for help. Samra reports a rapid growth of local chapters throughout the country. He boasts that ASF's growth rate is about 200 members per month. Publications of the ASP -include a newsletter and a professional journal whose first issue will appear this month. Says SGC Plans ire Funds from 'U' xvill oriVra therm I haL i r pV t tJ- imnncIaJ S I t wil givetnem the power to impose a 50-cent per semester levy on students. C'Half-Way Step' "The request for more money is a half-way step," Sherman ex-' plains. "We want financial inde- pendence." I If the Regents do approve of the levy, -SGC will refer the issue to the students before it charges them anything, he continues. "It's important that students -To set up a draft counselini service. -To enlarge the SGC renta service. Under the present systen SGC, only source of funds come from the Regents, who allocate 2 cents per student per semeste from tuition fees. These nione are granted to' SGC through th Office of Student Affairs. Going It Alone "We're not working with th OSA on this thing," says Sher man. "We're tired of going t them and whining 'Could yo irealize that SGC does not engage in "'goblin spending,' and that I they don't take a cynical attitude