A i FREE '' :Y Lw r~igaux ~ai4h FREE ISSUE ISSUE Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1965 XXVI, No. 1 Advice to Incoming reshmen I By ROGER RAPOPORT So 'your high school guidance counselor and wealthy alumni -friends of your parents got you in- to the University of Michigan. Or you were shot down by Harvard; Yale and Princeton, didn't want to disgrace your folks by going to CCNY and picked the University. Anyway you're in the Class of '69. You've read the University PR, scanned the catalogues and been through orientation. Still you probably are a bit apprehensive toward college, even if you don't want to admit it. Fear Probably your biggest fear about college is staying in. You've most likely heard all those horror stories about flunking out of col- lege. Well relax. The admissions department at the University is probably the most astute judge of students at the University, (after all they admitted you and me). They figure that if you got in you can stay in. Usually they are right as is pointed out by the fact that the University's. flunk out rate (about 6%) is on, a par with the best Ivy League schools. The courses are tough but not beyond your abilities. So whydo kids flunk out? Is it poor high school preparation, social adjustment problems, in- ability to concentrate, slow read- ing speed or family problems? Flunking The biggest single reason why students flunk out is that they do not study enough. Sure, they will tell you they had the toughest teachers, most competitive classes and add that grades don't mean' anything anyway. But the truth is that they are just lazy or simply not interested in school. One friend who was a merit scholar in high school flunked out because he didn't feel like opening the books. A guy across the hall. got a 3.75 and he studied seven and eight hours a day. Guidelines There is no sure way of staying out of academic trouble, if you are sensible. Don't take more than 15 hours dour first semester. And if you find that after two weeks of a course you simply can't under- stand it, despite your hardest ef- forts, get out and take 'a course you egn handle. Yeu can't afford to flunk any- thing first semester. Try the course later when you are on more lid ground. The easiest way to stay sane in college is to study each day. Sec- ond semester I neglected a course for four weeks and ended up studying it four and five hours a day the last month-and it was all unnecessary. Mono Next to flunking out, the see- and biggest cause for leaving school appears to. be mononucle- osis. Total abstinance from kiss- ing is not the answer. The most sensible way to avoid mono is rel- atively simple-sleep-eight hours a night. While some people can live on five hours sleep a night, most can't. You are fortunate if you can, but it's not a good habit to get into. If you sleep and study enough chances are you will be around for Chet second semester. Enjoy Life Now what about enjoying the first semester. Generally studying is for weeknights, partying is for weekends. While this may not sound as good as State where partying is for every night, Uni- versity students really have great weekends. Generally Saturday is date night. Dating as a freshman is positively great-if you are a girl. If you aren't just be patient, the girls all need husbands and some- day you'll be an upperclassman. While freshmen girls generally have a better time socially than freshmen boys, sometimes joining a fraternity is a good way for a freshman boy to improve his social life. For a lot of people fraternities serve a valuable function. If you are one of these people you might consider joining. But it would be proudent if you waited until sec- ond semester to rush so that you are established a bit academically. This advice goes for student or- ganizations as well. Even if you were Student Council President, Varsity Club President, and Na- tional Honor Society President and a Merit Scholar besides at your high school, it is smartest to limit your extracurricular activities to one. And kind of go easy on it first semester. You'll undoubtedly get a lot of advice about how to beat the aca- demic system at college. Some of it is useful, a lot is bad. Buying Books Last winter a friend who had just gotten an A in a course I was beginning told me the textbook was worthless and not to buy it. So I didn't, and what a mistake. By the time I got the book in the sixth week of classes I was far be- hind. No matter what anyone tells you, cutting classes is a bad idea. You can borrow someone's notes ' but you will often find another person's shorthand hard to under- stand. Besides section leaders who do. the grading don't smile upon students they never see in class. The temptation to skip classes is sometimes overwhelming. At times your courses will seem dull, listless, unorganized and meaning- less. This is because most intro- ductory courses are dull, listless, unorganized and meaningless. This is attributable to two fac- tors. First introductory courses are mostly covering high school material only a little more deeply and three times as fast. Secondly lecturers in introductory courses are often the worst in the depart- ment. The interesting lecturers. are busy working on federal pro- jects or teaching graduate sem- inars. The only thing worse than in- troductory courses are introduc- tory textbooks. The fact is that most introductory textbook auth- ors would starve if they had to write for a living. Their general, boring, bookish writing sells only because the books are assigned. Testing in college is a hybrid version of what you probaoly had in high school. Many teachers give two essay hour exams at the fifth and tenth week of the course and then a multiple guess final exam. The first question I ever faced on a college exam read See ADVICE Page 3 I .rtments Said Heyns Accepts Berkeley Post To Be Completed 300 Students Who Signed Leases Able To Move In On Schedule By DAVID DUBOFF University Towers, the controversial new 18-story apartment ilding,.has been completed on schedule and rentals are going very 'll according to -the owner, Robert E. Weaver. Weaver estimated that 80 to 85 per cent of the apartments are r occupied. 99 per cent of the occupants are students. Although there were setbacks during the summer from steel :ers strikes and bad weather, the building was completed and Fy for occupancy on Aug. 21, the proposed deadline, Weaver said. Several four-student apartments are still available. Weaver .in- a:....+.,s i' .- -, rii~ A n a o nns %a nt4, ., n ri4 .ia n r dica that each stuent leases o tact with other interested student apartment. Many architectural experts Weaver's claim that the building City Couneil To Look into igh-Rises By NEAL BRUSS limaxing a' study of intensive d usage in Ann Arbor, the City '~cil passed a formal resolu- to receive the final report of Joint Committee on Central .siness District High-Rise De- .lopments and Parking.. The vote came at the Council's !gularMonday session, July 19. made legal action suggested in e study possible. ~In an attempt to forewarn and ucate land owners and develop- s of possible legislation resulting ..om the report, the Council also gassed an ordinance forbidding ity officials to issue building per- nits for any structures over 18 cor es, except with-approval of ,ouncil. The ordinance; entailing the ommittee's suggested ceiling for sigh rises, was passed with. the inderstanding that further study if the report would yield morej omprehensive legislation. To this end, a special meeting of -ouncil was slated for August 2, it which councilmen would con-! >ider the first draft of ordinances repared by the City Attorney. As- >ects of the report not covered in: he then current ordinance would e included. The Joint Comnittee, composed t representatives from the Uni- sity, Ann Arbor Council, sham- of:Commerce, and related or- 'izations, was organized in Oc- er, 1964. Its members planned consider "large-scale housing' nand in relation to Ann Ar- ''s responsibilities," according to eter Ostafin, committee secre- ary and assistant to the vice- .resident for student affairs. Major proposals presented in he report published by Johnson, rohnson, and Roy, an'Ann- Arbor )niy is iouri -and is put in con- s with whom he might share the at the University had disputedI would be completed by Aug. 21, abut Weaver explained that theyt are not familiar with his "criticalj path" method of construction. Prefabrication1 Weaver explained that thist method uses as much prefabricat-. ed construction material as possi-1 ble and the progress of the workI is worked out on computers.. r He added that the method isI more familiar and more com-f monly used in large cities, where the construction of high buildingsI is commonplace. I The owner of the largest apart- ment house in Ann Arbor, with at capacity of 800 occupants, com- mented that many people are not familiar with the method in thist city because most of the build-; ing projects are too small to jus- tify its use.t - When it appeared severalE months ago that the apartmentI house, located at the corner of South 'University and Forest Ave., might not be completed on time,I Weaver indicated that he wouldf be willing to have his men work 24 hours a day. Striking local steel workers in early May held construction up several weeks. Federal mediators' were called in to handle the dis- pute. Second Factor° The second factor in the set- back in construction was that theI American Bridge Co., which is con-A structing the inner steel frames for the building, was put two months behind because of badt weather. Three hundred students had signed leases for apartments last' spring. Concern was expressed by1 the University as to where these1 students would live if the' building was not finished on schedule. Mrs. Norma F. Kraker, supervis- or of off-campus housing in the Office of Student Affairs, said in1 May that "the 300 students whot have signed leases are taking quite a chance by signing." However, at a summer Regents meeting Vice-President for Stu- dent Affairs Richard L. Cutler in-9 dicated that he felt the building would be completed on time. r A great many of the occupants are senior and graduate women, Weaver said. Junior women will Regents Hikek Dorm Fees, TUition Rates Blame Rising Costs, Shortage of Funds For Added Charges By JOHN MEREDITH This summer the Regents raised both residence hall fees and tu- ition rates in a move that will add $1184150 to the average fresh- man 's bill for his first year at the University. 'A $50 per year residence hall fee hike was unanimously passed by the Regents in June, making this the second straight year that residence hall charges have been increased during t h e sumfner. This action was quickly followed by approval of the tuition hike at a special Regents meeting July 9. The vote on tuition was 5-2, with Regents Carl Brablec and Irene Murphy dissenting. Regent Allan Sorenson was absent from the: meeting. Hint At Hikes Several University administra- tors had dropped unofficial hints about the possibility of fee in- creases which were published in the Daily as early as March; how-1 ever, no formal announcements, had been made before tlie two Ree~ents meetings.i Executive Vice-President MarvinI Niehuss said that an additionala $250,000 has been set aside for student financial aid to! enable needy students to pay the higher fees.J Rationale for Hikes Presenting a rationale for the ate hike, administrators cited rising costs in the resi ence hall system as the reason, fcr the $501 increase. According to John Feld- kamp, assistant to the vice-presi- eident for student affairis, approx- imately 80 per cent of tljie increase is needed to finance pad raises for both counseling and noii-academic staff. The other 20 per cent, he said, will be divided betleen wage hikes for student employees and the increasing costs of foods and services.a The tuition increase was at-. tributed to a shortage of fundsc from the Legislature. Presidente Harlan Hatcher poi ted out thatt the University was 4llotted only $51.2 million of a 1$55.7 millionx 1965-66 appropriations request. He said this shortage, i' combination with the backlog o needs whichc have accumulated fsince 1957- when Michigan's financial crisise resulted in the first)of several con-I secutive low appropriations-made raising tuition a n cessity. Others disagree&, however. Ona Y JJ~ry it .r' s at ,'f.Sf vt t : '.r .4- What's a Four-Letter Word Meanng Welcome?" santa Barbara News A BUSINESS, A BALL: Join The MiChigan Daily- A Cance for Fn, Edcation , s,:." r i:'? ;1 r a. .fin rj ."." ... + 2. $: M \J' nT\ i:\\D_..... '+ :1 x"4.4' S A.:t', q :' ty' i r i2n, . r.4 'L tJ t ;;may.,: \ t.'" ,re.". ., . .. ' y' y ... >. F taken to fill Smith's present position. News of the California offer first came from members of the California board of regents, which two conservative governs all nine of the campuses which make upC the University of California. That university has been in a state of crisis since last winter, when student demonstrations vir- tually brought the Berkeley cam- pus to a standstill. The Berkeley chancellor at the time', Edward Strong, was blamed for incompetent handling of the events and was replaced by Mar- tin Meyerson, then dean of Berke- Sley's college of environmental de- sign. Unacceptable Meyerson, however, was unac- ceptable to the conservative mem- bers of the board of regents, and never got beyond the title of "act- ing chancellor." Heyns is report- edly the first candidate to be ac- ceptable to all factions in the politics-ridden California system. The offer spurred faculty lead- ers here to call for Regental action aimed at keeping Heyns here. The Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA), the faculty's most active representa- tive group, met in an unprecedent- ed summer session to draft a reso- lution, as did some of the Univer- sity's most powerful deans. No one, however, was sure quite what to do. A key question was Heyns' possibility of becoming President here (University Presi- dent Harlan Hatcher retires in 1967), but it was generally con- ceded that no -promise-formal or tacit-could be made now. But short of the presidency, Heyns could not advance much farther in the University hierarchy than he already has.; A Detroit News editorial, and; many faculty here, advocated he be made explicitly the number two official at the University, Judge Rules In Favor Of fair Housing' By ROBERT MOORE The question of who has juris- diction over civil rights matters, the state or the city, was answer- ed-and argued-this summer, as a circuit judge here ruled directly against' the state attorney gen- eral's expressed opinion about the controversial Ann Arbor F a i r Housing Ordinance. Circuit Court Judge J a m e s Breakey on June 18 overrode At- torney General Frank Kelley's opinion and declared the city's ordinance constitutional Kelley had previously said that power in matters concerning civil rights in housing is lodged in the state's Civil Rights Commission. Fair housing was not a local con- co-cern, Kelley said. Opinion However, Breakey, in his opin- ion said, "the mere fact that the state has made certain regula- tions does not prohibit munici- palities from enacting additional requirements. As long as there is no conflict between the two, then both will stand," The only difference between the city ordinance and the state sta- tute, Breakey explained, "is that the ordinance goes further in its prohibitions." The difference concerned the case of Ann Arbor vs. Hubble. The lawsuit, begun over a year ago, involves a Negro graduate stuelnt. Bnunan rvant. who Smith Replaces V-P September1 Joiner To Temporarily Head Law School-New Dean Expected Soon By KENNETH WINTER The University's upper administration was jolted in mid-July when Vice-President for Academic Affairs Roger W. Heyns accepted a bid to become chancellor of the University of California's Berkeley campus. Law School Dean Allan F. Smith was named to succeed Heyns at a special meeting of the Academic Advisory Council, the Senate Ad- visory Committee on University affairs and administrative officers of the University early in August. Smith Appointment The appointment of Smith will be effective September 1 and Heyns will leave the University October 1. Associate Law School Dean Charles Joiner will serve as acting dean of the school until action is Six days a week, at about three Quad-a lot of people that have a a.m., a sound like a railroad train I lot of fun. going uphill on greased wheels- But most important the Daily or like water going down a giant is an educational experience. drain-spreads around the block Offers Enlightenment behind the Administration Bldg. On all the Daily staffs-busi- It is the Michigan Daily being ness, editorial, reviewing, sports- printed. students can take part in the en- The Daily is a business-it has lightening function of the intelli- $200,000 in annual revenues, $17,- gent person: to take responsibility, 000 in student payrolls, all exist- to observe, to record, and to com- ing in complete financial-and ment. They can learn about the editorial-independence of t h e way the University-and other University. businesses-works and what the Daily Serves 'U' issues of the modern school and The Daily is a service-it has the society are. an estimated readership of 25,000, They can come to face their its seventy-fifth anniversary. A' gala weekend is planned for Sep- tember to bring together such Daily alumni as Arthur Miller and Thgmas Dewey. Some of the most successful American journalists will be back in Ann Arbor to re- live their Daily careers, to put out a special anniversary supplement and to put out Sunday morning's paper. Known nationally as the "New York Times of college news- papers," The Daily has won ma- jor competitions for the quality of its newspages and editorial page. Just recently The Daily was I