KENN EDY:AESMAN, See Editorial Page Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedo ii ~Iait~ Chance of snow flurries changing to rain VOL. LtXVI, No. 81 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1965 SEVEN CENTS THIRTY-Two PAGES What's New Ht Line Gemini Capsule Lifts into Orbit; Rendezvous Attempt Readied Uns dergraduates will have a.chance to evaluate their profes- At that time, addressed and stamped envelopes containing four questionnaires each will be distributed during registration in Wat- erma G m i u Te y ae t be retu red du ig the fi st w e the project, financed and staffed by the major student organiza- *tions, hopes to cover 150-200 courses in the booklet. The Student. Legal Defense Committee, formed several days ago to raise money for the defense of the four students who lost their draft deferment because they participated fn a Selective tn&JmsMvygapeietof the Graduate Student Cucl oaeH aka col of Graduate Studies, Ann Arbor, Michigan,. * Long Distance There have been no repercussions to the recent election of Bettina Aptheker, a professed member of the United States Communist Party, to the Campus Rules Committee at the edior of the Daily Californian said last nigt. Basn aaig According to Branson, there was no cause for opposition since the election in which 6,008 (out of 27,000) students par- ticipated was considered an above average turn out and expressed the opinion of the student body. In an Oakland Tribune editorial after the election, the students were criticized as being "apathetic in allowing a Communist to be elected," but Branson said he did not believe this to be a valid statement. * * * * Central Michigan University President Judson D. Foust, in response to Governor Romney's veto of a $1.2 million supple- mental appropriation .for the state's smaller colleges, said that he had agreed to admit more students this year only because thet Senat fAppropriations Committee had agreed to allocate "We thought we were being great 'guys, cooperating and * all that." "We doubled up our dormitory space-put five people in four-man sui s and had to transfer some money from our new equipment fund, which is now $10Q,0O short." "But TIl tell you, we aren't going to get into that kind of asituation again. If we can't count on this kind of thing, we'll just forget about it." * Western Michigan University President John W. Miller explained that Western had admitted more students than it intended. "We did not indicate that we were going to take more students," he explained. "But these were the natural pressures of admissions." * * * * Sanford S. Elberg, dean of the graduate school at the University of California at Berkeley, suggested Friday that universities are themselves to blame for the sympathy that young faculty members have been giving recent student protests. "On the faculty side we heard the criticism for many years at the assistant professor level of the emphasis on publication as a criterion .for promotion to a tenure rank," he noted. "Thus, the student protest movement, and certainly that segment of the student body in the graduate school, has found a sympathetic ear in the group of nontenure faculty whose own disappointments and frustrations welled to the surface in one major assault on the administrative and even on some faculty segments of the institutions." SCA GERS NOW TWO FOR TWO: Proce dures Studlent Seeks Court Order; Faculty Panel Hearings Defended Astatem befor th Mchi " ulty committee on student affairs defending the panel's procedures in unanimously deciding not to readmit Paul M. Schiff was made available Friday, while on Thurs- day, Schiff, a former graduate atu- e dent at MSU, charged he did not - get a fair hearing under those .. procedures and added he would seekr na federal court injunction or- Sources attending the Wednes- a day academic sei'ate meeting, open x- only to members-tenure fculty ticized the fact that the hearing a was closed and that its procedures afforded no opportunity for cross- examination. Twelve MSU facul- ty repeated the charges in a let- ter to the MSU News. The faculty panel chairman, Prof.* Fredrick Williams noted, however, at the senate meeting tha theg feea ndistrict cour, ASTRONAUTS FRANK BORMAN and James A. Lovell, Jr., studying flight p1 duct a hearing on the Schiff case, - - -- - - - - dir ecteduthe heari sdhould fol- CON S TI TU TION AL F R A M E RS R ECON VE NE: *v&, Alabama. The court in this case declared that while both sides in such a i controversy should be heard and o f r eAfi m1 the "rudiments of an adversary proceeding" should be followed, "a -Associated Press an prior to the Gemini 7 blastoff yesterday. If , Au to nomy full-dress judi the right to nesses," was "diturbane oft "ithrbthe atte it could prov "detrimental ti cational atmos Prof. James ber of the con terday that a "the normal r involving stude ing for Schiff been making a In other dev of MSU grad professors has a petition atta action as deni graduate schoo grounds. icial hearing, with By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM versity President Harlan Hatcher, They disagreed strongly with plex and controversial issues, in- cross-examine wit- Managing Editor Executive Vice-President Marvin an opinion by the attorney gen- cluding the University's expansion not required, since. Seven of the men who framed Niehuss and Vice-President for eral in October that gave the of Flint College, MSU's creation nding publicity and teeuainatceoth194IAcademic Affairs Allan Smith. state board of education a very oatw-er Medical School and college activities," R o m n eny There loose definition of power and the Legislature's consideration of e impractical and here tconsvaluate theitrdworkmon Gov. George Romney, 'one of the iauthority, a plan to establish a new osteo- o the college's edu- therebasis of hindsightrwro major forces in the creation of a~ * They criticized the state pathic college. phere" to do so. new constiution, atternded part of board for its inability to establish The osteopathic college proposal B. McKee, a mem- In the course of the frank and the afternoon session, but did not a full-time working staff and resulted in Attorney General tmittee, added yes- private all-day discussion at Inglis confer with officials here. superintendent and for its failure Frank Kelley's informal opinion closed hearing is House, the seven delegates, who Specifically, the delegates here to develop an over-all pattern for that such a college would need rocedure for cases formed part of a 20-man consti- yesterday were characterized as educational development in Michi- state board approval before the ~nts. A public hear- tutional drafting committee, were practically unanimous in express- gan. Legislature could establish it. In 's case would have able to arrive at some conclu- ing these sentiments: 0They agreed that only the a flash of anger, the state Senate ni exception." sions relevant to the current 0 They reaffirmed their inten- cooperation and good faith among quickly passed the plan the next 'elopments, a group cloudy relationships between the tion during .the 1961-62 drafting the relevant state agencies and day. However, the. proposal died in uate students and schools and colleges, te Legis- of the educafion article to preserve institutions can fulfill the inten- the house. begun circulating lature, the governor and the state the autonomy of the Univer'sity tion of the constitution to permit At the conference yesterday, the cking MSU's Schiff board of education, and Wayne State and Michigan orderly institutional growth, delegates questioned the basis of aofadmission to The observers at the conference, State Universities by keeping these . Fudeainsthe opinion, since they felt it ex- 1 on non-academic sponsored by the Institute of Pub- institutions free from unnecessary "Despite our efforts, the fluidity pne the tentios oebynd telnug lic Administration, included Uni- state and political controls. fheratnsisbwe hehirntnisadthlngge -__ .__ ____the____ofthereltinshpsieteenth -.____.---- I ~~various state agencies and in- o h osiuin "ero"gayaras 'in which"""i The newiconstt ution also very not clear where the authority of estalisingt state h bard sthant wling Green, 108-70 (Haogwt h teswot uevs heresectv n c~mmented, declined to be identi- stitu'tions . . . shall not be limited fied.) by this section." CK VETZNER types of teams," he noted. "We was marked by fouls, ball control Part of the criticism for cloud- Later, the document grants the had to be more deliberate against errors, and Bowling Green's in- mig these relationships was laid samhe institutional autonomy en- how many times Tennessee. We wanted to run, and ability to score on several tip-in, to the state board, an eight-man joyed by the big three to the "out- before, there's still this game gave us a chance. I was tries, body established by the 1964 con- er seven," the other state-support- perverted pleasure very pleased with the respilts." Then, with 12 minutes and two stitution, elected the following ed institutions including the for- team go out and Dill Impressive seconds left to go in the half, Dill November and installed last Jan- mer teachers colleges that had opposition. Even Especially pleasing was the play took the ball at the post and Rus- nary. Its ambiguous responsibility been administered by the old .e begins, you know of Dill who was far from spec- sell darted toward the basket. as a general "planning and co- state board. win, but you still tacular in the opening. He never The Russell Dunk ordinating body" for all state "It was never our intention to nd shreik when the will be the over-powering center Everyone knew what was com- schooling, including public higher limit the powers of the big three," ens. that wsasCzBuntin wabut yesterday he ing asDill slipped Czthe ball. education, has been a major source one delegate declared yesterday. :an sadism was in snagged nine rebounds and block- He went in all alone for a dunk of controversy inspired by the I"Rather, our decision was to bring ~rday at Yost Field ed a couple of shots. One time he making the score 19-10. During new constitution. the outer seven up to the same ood thirsty basket- batted the ball straight up into the next three minutes Russell In First Year autonomous status so fundamental e the thumbs down the air, and when it came down he scored seven more and Michigan In its first year, the board has to the successful development of ed the shellacking. cradled it in slender arms with outscored the Falcons 13-3 in that rushed rapidly into the most com- the big three." 1Oi n 10 Bowiping' ,nhraw nninta' nitwm', npvinri -_-- - - -- - - --_- Mission of0i Planned Rendezvous omain and h Jam s A.Lel Jr.g rockted Titon ori esterdayckon the startown inegne 14-hdy euance0 ~. mission uckly trol said it ticked right along all the way with no problems .Nine days from now, on Dec. 13, if there aea no tuls Gemini 6 blast off in pursuit of Gemini 7. Fly Togthe Hopefully, the two spaceships will fly close together, perhaps within a few inches, in what would be one of the most significant feats of the space age and a major step toward the moon. Prospects of firing a second Gemini spacecraft into orbit Dec. 13 brightened after a review of the launch pad showed It received only mnrdamag eunder hetfury of The National Aeronautics and mental taskof" pr'earing'the Gem- mni 6 hardware for firing from the same .pad in such a short time, Normally, It takes 29 days. Most officials felt they had a better than 50-50 chance of launching Gemini 6 in time to conduct the rendezvous mission. Major pad damage was the first of several big "ifs" which space officials said must be overcome before astronat Wae M Schirra Jr. and Thomas P. Staf- ford ride their Gen~ini 6 capsule into space in time to rendezvous with Gemini 7. Optimistic Response An immediate survey of the pad brought optimistic response from the officials. G. Merritt Preston, deputy mis- sion director for launch opera- tions, said the launch pad receiv- ed "less than normal damage" after Gemini 7 blasted into orbit. Three more "ifs" still stand inl the way of a successful Gemini 6 launch, however, said the flight director Christopher Kraft, at Houston. 7 operates, h o w ell e he kou of Gemini 6 progresses, and with much the same problem that almost forced an early end to the eight-day Gemini 5 mission--a balky power system. This time the astronauts were prepared and whipped the prob- lem with a simple flip of a switch. Fuel Cells Two fuel cells, weighing 68 pounds each, link hydrogen and oxygen atoms .to create electrical power necessary to run equipment and some experiments aboard the spacecraft, Minutes after Air Force Lt. Col. Frank Borman and Navy Cmdr. James A. Lovell Jr. rocketed into space son their 14-day mission, they noticed a sharp loss of pres- sure in the oxygen tank that feeds the cell. At about the same time, a light a pressure change flicked on. Pressure Drops The pressure dropped to 100 pounds, but the crew merely switched on a new cross-feed valve that fed the system pressure from the oxygen supply used for Abroathi the instant that com- - 'M' Obliterates Bo . By CHUC No matter you've seen it some kind of in seeing your annihilate the before the gamn who's going to stomp, roar, ar expected happ Well, Michig full glory yeste House as . a bli ball crowd gay sign and savor It ended Mich g , fl~J jJ~J~L~ t,~... ~,.JtAt. fl tAt 1.4. Green 70. He scored 16 of his points in the That was explosion number one, Although the score was not first half before the pressure had .and the type of quick scoring spurt'HG E L YA T ': markedly ' different from similar icompletely worn away. that has characterized national slaughters of the Bill Buntin-Caz- "I never lost any faith in him," champion UCLA during the past I sie l en zie Russell era, the style has beamed Strack. "Bowling Green two years. $ $ w changed. The Wolverines no long- was big and strong, but Craig Explosion number two came only er slowly and deliberately bully held his own. He's a fine shot and some two minutes later, and on the victim. Instead they just run he's much faster than Buntin this one the Wolverines really him down. was." looked like the dazzling Bruins. '. ilS U" This season is supposed to be "He sure surprised us," added Uncharacteristically for Michigan, all Cazzie, but the supporting cast Scholler. the spurt was not led by Cazzie. By BOB SHILLER The first issue of the tabloid- sized paper features a front page nt editorial by Kindman explaining its the aims of the new publication. n- '"T have ai loyalty higher than was brilliant. John Clawson tied Russell with 22 points and Craig Dill was only one behind. The team looked like one, fast break- Clawson Scores Z2 It. was led by a full court zone Another big help for the Wol- press defense which is the trade- verines was Clawson who is now mark of the Uclans. scoring at an average of 21 points UCLA Take Note pu fir Micehigan State's new stude blication-The Paper-made st appearance Friday since co