MORE DISCUSSION ON NEW REQUIREMENTS See Editorial Page , iri igan :4i atti FAIR igh--40 Low--t5 Fairly cold without precipitation Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXX VI, No.82 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1965 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT Pc GEEi Students Blast Medical School Administration By CANDIDA EISENSTEIN Many students in the Medical School feel there is a significant lack of communication between themselves and the school's ad- ministration. Those interviewed say that the administration is at best. uninterested and at worst hostile to the student body. Dr. John R. G. Gosling, assis- tant dean of the Medical School, on the other hand, expresses the view that the administration and faculty do their best not only to graduate all who enter the school, but also to help them in their difficult four years of graduate work. The student feeling is best sum- med up by a statement by a newly- married junior from Detroit: "I object to the whole over-all phi-I Slosophy. The administration treats us like donkeys. It sits on our ' backs and whips us while holding carrots in front of our mouths. * Students Irresponsible "Material is spoonfed to us in lectures. The attitude is that stu- dents are basically irresponsible." He gives an example. "During surgery we are required to attend 15 autopsies. We must sign in and out so that the faculty can check probably wouldn't. They have to want it. We don't like to see them unhappy, but the level of per- formance expected is set by the students themselves. Competition is tough. The curve is high because students put it there; it is im- portant to them to do well. The student body tends to be harder on itself than the faculty would be." Specific examples of the dis- parity between the way that the administration, represented by its students with notes covering the lectures for which they are re- sponsible. "They are teaching us to be stenographers and there's no reason for it," he said. As the note-taking situation stands currently, a medical service fraternity, Phi Chi, sends scribes to attend lectures in order to print up notes which the student body may purchase. All students inter- viewed uniformly agreed that the quality of these notes is varied and undependable, with words of lectures on obstetrics and gyn- eocology to sell in paperback form.' We were amused to see that the students went right on taking notes. They were afraid that a specific piece of information might get past them. "This is a heritage from thef basic sciences of their undergrad- uate years. They have about 16,000 new terms to learn just to have a working vocabulary in their field," he says. Gosling gives this explanation: "When the turnout at lecturers is poor, the department may change the lectures for next year or even for next week. Very few courses are taught by one man, so perhaps it is to be expected that the quality will vary." One future surgeon complains that "The administration demands so much from us that we would have no time at all to round out our lives if we were to do every- thing that is expected." Through the junior year, the student is expected to be in at least two places at once. Although l'e has a full time job on his clinical service, he is also given lecturers and examinations. As juniors, students attend classes all year long, studying a different branch of medicine each quarter. Each quarter of the class takes the four basic units at a different time: internal medicine, pediatrics, surgery and a series of lectures known as "shorts," which' cover assorted fields in medicine such as psychiatry and obstetrics. Lectures are given to the entire junior class, irrespective of the order in which the student is ex- posed to the material through his clinical work. Examinations cover both clinical work and lec- tures. "When you are working from 71 a.m. to 11 p.m., it is all you can do to study for your surgery examination. Then they give you a final in the same week whichj covers lectures in internal medi- cine," a junior said. "Furthermore, although I had not had any prac- tical experience in internal medi- cine before our class final last month, I took the same exam as one quarter of the class, which had spent three months on the service earlier in the year. and another quarter which was in the midst of that service." Another junior, thin and soft spoken, elaborates on the diffi- culty of doing two such demanding tasks at once. "It is difficult to become interested in the lectures because hospital work is much more imminent. Conflict of Reason "Reading for this clinical work See STUDENTS, Page 8 up~~~~~ onoratnac.I entAsecond mjr tdntcm up on our attendance. Ifwere not assistant dean, views its role and misspelled and important informa- major student com- given rigid assignments to fill our the way that the students feel it tion sometimes deleted. plaint is that lectures are often evenings, we might run around on fills that role are many. of very poor quality. A slightly the streets." Gosling sees the situation dif- frantic sophomore, speaking before Gosling has an entirely different A junior who was busily re- refently because of a personal ex- he rushed off to study, complain- opinion about the problems of pairing a broken telephone during perience he has had. "About eight ed, "They give us useless trivia medical school. his interview criticized the ad years ago one of my colleagues presented in a dull, encyclopedic! "If we could make it easy we ministration for not providing the and myself printed up a collection fashion." REACTION TO 'THE DEPUTY': Vatican Allows Publication Of World War II Documents For Broader ive PleadR to I 1 Citizens Ask Five More P edGuiltyt Housing Law Critics Say Proposal Dra Board Trespassing By Balzhiser Weak, VATICAN CITY (A)-The Vati- can announced last night that Pope Paul VI has allowed publi- cation of all documents in the Vatican arc h i ves'concerning World War II in response to re-' quests from many nations. The de- cisions stemmed from controversy over the role of Pope Pius XII during the War. Requests to make the documents available began to arrive at the Vatican in the wake of turmoil stirred by the play "The Deputy" by Rolf Hochhuth of Germany that questions whether Pius XII did enough to avoid Nazi extermi- nation of Jews. Hochhuth, admits that the Pope' did make efforts to organize Cath- olic aid in helping a great number of Jews flee Nazi tyranny. He criticizes him, however, for not making an open proclamation condemning antisemitism and Hitler., Hochhuth indictes Pius XII for not offering a moral guide for his Catholic followers. Archbishop Antonio S a m o r e, secretary for extraordinary affairs of the Vatican Secretariat, said publication is aimed at sheeding Not Comprehensive By BOB CARNEY -29 To Appeal Sentence of What's New At 764-1817 Hot Line According to Dr. Morley Becket, director of Health Service, the dispensation of stay-awake pills and drugs during examina- tions will be made on the same basis as any other time. Each doctor will make his own interpretation for the needs of his individual patients. "The doctor usually finds that what the student needs is more sleep, not to stay awake longer" said Becket. The incidence of psychosomatic illness usually increases during this time due to the tensions of studying for finals, but since there is normally no epidemic of upper respiratory diseases, the Health Service is able to cope with this prablem without increasing its staff. The Defense Department announced Friday that 38,280 men -1920 less than the December draft-will be drafted in January. The reduction was attributed mainly to increased voluntary enlistments. The January draft was higher than any month-except December-since 1953, during the Korean War. The Student Sesquicentennial Committee and MUSKET re- cently announced a contest for the production of an original play to be given in 1967 in connection wth the University's 150th anniversary. Up to $1500 in prizes are being offered, $500 for script, $500 for music, and $500 for lyrics. Entry blanks and information are at the Sesquicentennial Office on the first floor of the Union. The final edition of the winter-time schedule will not be available until Dec. 15, Douglas Woolly, director of registration announced yesterday. It was originally supposed to be ready Dec. 9, but the printers will not be able to meet that deadline, he said. Representatives of the Washtenaw County Planned Parent- hood Clinic have asked Assembly Association's permission to speak at the women's dorms. One of. the topics to be discussed would be the University's distribution of birth control pillsto unmarried co-eds. The women's house council will decide this week if permission is to be granted to the clinic. WICHITA NEXT: E I ' E ' , I _, 1 "the just light" on Vatican activ- City Council last night heard ity during the war. over two hours of citizen views on He said that often in historical the proposed fair housing legisla- publications on the war the Vati- tion. with the overwhelming ma- can either is not mentioned or is jority of the speakers supporting wrongly judged on the basis of in a law with complete coverage and complete documents.criminal sanctions. Pius XII and the Vatican have The hearing was called last week been attackedby some historians when council passed at first read- as viewing favorably the German ing an extension to the present attack on Communist Russia. law which still provides, however. Publication of the World War IIless than complete coverage. material is an exception to a After rejecting the full cover- Vatican rule that no archive pa- age proposal of Councilwoman 'per may be published before it is Eunice Burns (D) at that time at least 50 years old. the council passed a substitute A first volume will be put on proposal by Councilman Richard sale today containing documents E. Balzhiser (R) which extended Ion diplomatic action of the Holy present coverage from any five- See from March 1939 to August unit dwelling to any two-unit x 1940. dwelling but exempted 1) a pri-k Three Jesuit priests did the re- vate home sold by the ownerewith- search work on the document col- out services of a real estate AErl lection, Pierre Blet of France ,agent. 2) a duplex occupied by Burkhart Schneider of Germany, the owner and his family, and 3 -- - both professors at the Gregorian rooms rented in an owner occu- . ..o :::::.;>;>:><2; :::{ght:s:.t::::.:..:::::..::d;mean:.<:TU D E N T::UD G E ;FA>U L T Y : University in Rome, and Angelo pied dwelling unit. .. Martini of Italy, an expert in' hAll but one of the speakers last papal activities, night--including a line of aboutXi 25 pickets from the Congress of ;:l;:"g:r.s.ns: H U R Racial Equality outside city hall- HOURS Surged the council to pass a law DAVID COWLEY, A MEMBER of the city's Human Rel, During the scheduled exam 'covering every type of real estate last night about the proposed Fair Housi period the UGLI will be open transaction and which would pun--- - - - - from 8 a.m. till 12 midnight scoffenders with the cmina Saturday and Sunday included, isanction fullnmisdemeanor STUDENTS JUDGE FACULTY: The General Library will main- Reasoning fain its regularly scheduled They based their belief on the hours with the exception of following reasons: from 8 a.m. until midnight. ± as well as the state-had gone on or e Fvl ________________________record as opposing any housing discrimination and t h e r e f o r e -Daify-Robert WilImarth ations Commission, speaking before council ing Ordinance amendment. a (ion Book Father Martini said ne attaches special importance to what will be the second volume in the series. This will contain the letters ad- dressed by Pius XII to the Ger- I man ,hichbnrcf'rrm ', n109 ,lAn should put that view into law- with enforceable penalties. ( -That to cover some transac-! tion and not others wasdiscrim-1 inatory, arbitrary, and confusing! To Appear in February Local Court Pretrial , Sentencings Set To Avoid Conflict With Exam Schedule .. By SHIRLEY ROSICK( and ROBERT MOORE -Five more students, yesterday pleaded guilty in Circuit Court to charges of trespassing at 'the Ann Arbor Selective Service Board on Oct. 15. However, 29 of the original 39 students and faculty involved in the draft board sit in still plan to appeal their Municipal Court convictions. Pretrial hearings for the 29 are scheduled for 2 p.m. Thursday, Jeffrey Goodman, '66, Raymond Lauzzana, '65, Milton Taube, '69, and Edward Sabin, Grad, pleaded guilty before Circuit Judge, James R. Breakey yesterday morning. Breakey granted the request of the students' attorney, Peter Dar- row, that the students be sen- tenced Dec. 16, when most will have completed final examina- tions. Douglas Truax; '66, entered his plea of guilty yesterday afternoon. Breakey set his date for sentenc- ing at Dec. 23. The group of 29 students and; faculty entering "not guilty" pleas are represented by 'Detroit at- torney Ernest Goodman. Position. "Their position," Goodman said, "is that they not only have the right to protest; they also have the duty, since the United States' policy in Viet Nam is illegal un- der principles laid down at Nurem- burg, Goodman said. Goodman has been involved in frequent .civil liberties and civil rights cases, some of them in con- junction with the American Civil Liberties Union. He will model his defense, he said, on Southern civil rights demonstration cases. 'More Basic Right' "While technically guilty of trespassing, the courts held that the demonstrators were bound by a more basic right," Goodman said in explaining the Southern cases. Two of the draft board pro- testors, Ronald Miller, '68, and Robert Sklar, '68, pleaded guilty to the trespassing charge on Nov. 18 and are awaiting sentencing. Three others - Laurie Wender, Grad, April Allison, '67, and Mrs. Linda N. Rosenwein, '66-pleaded nolo contendere (no contest) the night of the sit in and were sentenced to pay fines and court costs. Sentences The total of seven students who have now pleaded guilty may face jail sentences of 30 days in ad- dition to fines. The Municipal Court sentence given the students was 10 days in jail and a $65 dollar fine (in- { 1 s I r I 4 1 { I 1 {jy S i 'lil} O uu o lio. to courts in respect to interpreta- By ROBERT BENDELOW booklet. Assembly House Associa- The first volume will take up: tion. tion has already allocated funds' -Efforts made by Pope Pius Opposition The second course evaluation for the booklet, and Interfrater- XII to get Germany, Italy, Poland, The councilmen who opposed book-let will be published early in nity Council, Interquadrangle France and Britain around a con- the Burns complete coverage pro-I February, prior to the- opening Council, and Panhellenic Associa- ference table in May 1939; posal last week, based their op- of preregistration. tion have indicated that they will --Joint efforts by the Vatican position on either of three views. The first booklet, published last take similar action. Student Gov- and Britain to have Germany and 1) Support of full coverage, but spring, contained descriptions of ernment Council has also helped Poland resume diplomatic rela- feeling that a more gradual legis- 50 courses. It is hoped that this the booklet. Other groups involved tions and thus avoid the fatal lative process would do more to year's booklet will have descrip- are the Literary College Steering' clash in August and September hasten that goal, i.e. the Balzhiser tions of about 200 courses. Work Committee, the Honors Council, 1939; proposal. on the booklet has been progress-- and the University Activities Cen- Joint efforts of the Vatican 2) Support of full coverage ing since the beginning of the se- ter. and the United States in 1940 to without the criminal sanctions. mester. StatisticsI dissuade Mussolini from taking 3) Opposition to any legislation The final timetable for the eval- Statistics concerning . courses Italy into the war. The contacts in this area, believing that for the uation booklet includes: will be tabulated from the return- between the Holy See and U.S. first time a law would condemn -Distribution of questionnaires ed questionnaires, and from these President Franklin D. Roosevelt a man or motive on action. Coun- at registration to sophomores, jun- students will write the individual took place through Myron Taylor, cilman Paul H. Johnson has said iors and seniors. The question- evaluations. These will be exam- Roosevelt's personal representative that this would set a dangerous naires will be enclosed in a busi- ined by a group of grad students, to the Pope. precedent. ness reply envelope, four to an who will comment on the evalua- envelope. tions. After a third check for er- -Tabulation of the question- rors, the evaluation will be print- naires. This will take most of the ed by the Daily. next four weeks as results are The questionnaire was designed compiled. wTh he ausistacea degudne ardnas, 107- -Final assembly of the booklet, 'ofiProf.eJamsistaMceachgidncar- z ~ ~ s - 7 i printing and distribution. The m .JmsM~ahe hi; booklet is planned to appear in'mno h schlg eat the first week of February. It ment. The model for the question- Jim Hinga, Ball State mentor, basket. Clawson turned in another will be a special supplement of the nawhich was onjudged by useMcKeaornhie termed the Wolverines "better f i n e performance, scoring 15 Daily. and associates to be the best in than Michigan Big Ten cham- markers, mostly behind Cardinals Associate Dean James Robertson the country They changed it pions of last season." The Russell- backs.of the literary college said that th ty. hey chansedis pions f lasdsethat slightly to meet school specifics, Buntin combination gave the Switching to a man-to-man the course evaluations are in prm and improved upon it. According Cardinals a 92-70 drubbing in the press against the Cardinals, the ciple a good move. He felt that to McKeachie, a return of four last campaign. Wolverines managed to hold Ball to the extent that the evaluations questionnaires for a course is suf- State to a meager 35 per cent can be informed opinion, they may ficient to give an accurate pic- p"I must admit Michigan Sur- accuracy from the field. The fam- improve the quality of the courses ture of the course. prised me,"' Hinga added. "They'repous Uclan zone press, which Mich- and instructors.t much faster than last season and igan had employed successfully Booklet A spokesman for the evaluating appear to be stronger on offense. against Tennessee and Bowling Students writing the booklet committee said that it is hoped "Dave had the boys pretty fired Green, was used only one time in have said that it will not be con- that the distribution in a postage are to be distributed by the stu- dent government. Yale, which has had a booklet for six years, is now allowing students to voice an opinion in the selection of mem- bers of the tenure committee. Berkeley has a course evaluation printed by the student newspaper, the Daily Californian. At Michi- gan State, a Student Instructional Rating Report has been introduc- ed which will privately give in- structors student criticism of their course. Iowa State will also pub- lish a booklet this year. At Bowling Green, students are being prepared for a professor evaluation program. The Univer- sities of Minnesota and Washing- ton have adopted such programs, and St. Bonaventure is consider- ing one. Tufts University will, this year, begin such a course evaluat- ing program. Many of these eval- uation schemes are supported and financed by the 'schols. The course evaluation bookle hei'e is financed and produced by students. 'Court Speeds Desegregation By The Associated Pressj WASHINGTON-The Supreme Court called anew yesterday for a stepped-up timetable of school desegregation, warning again that delays "are no longer tolerable." 'M' Squashes C By BOB McFARLAND ups with John Thompson adding a free throw. As the buzzer sounded ending After that initial Wolverine the first half of the freshman spurt, the only advantage allowed game last night, Ken Maxey, 60 Ball State for the remainder of feet from the basket, roared back the game was the second half tip. and heaved the roundball toward Miehiga'n coach Dave Strack, the basket, the ball dropping commenting on Michigan's third crisply through the net. straight win, said, "We. played as Although the basket didn't well as I expected, which was well count, that was the highlight of enough for us to win easily." an evening of activity for Wolver- All's Fair ine cagers, as Michigan's varsity Win easily the Wolverines did, I I