CHINA TEACH-IN: A REEVALUATION See Editorial Page Lileti Yigan Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom -A6F 743 4F at ly, CLOUDY Trigh--52 Low 35 Temperature remaining steady VOL. LXXVI, No. 137 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 13, 1966 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES entucky Speed Spells Wolverine Defeat, 84-77 'M' Shoots * * * * * * * 71 * Cold 37.6% From Floor Damnpier, Riley Lead Hot Wildcats Into NCAA Finals Play By GIL SAMBERG Acting Associate Sports Editor Special To The Daily IOWA CITY-These two schools -Michigan and Kentucky-pro- bably never really wanted to meet. Their respective fans certainly were not in favor of it. On Friday night the Wolverines conscientiously plugged for Day- ton in the opener, while the Wild- cats' femme fatales stood up and rah-rahed it for Western Ken- tucky. Well, the question now is: Can Pat Riley shoot a basketball across the Potomac? He is a long shot to do it. The 84-77 game that was lost here last night was hard-fought and harder won. But, though they give A's for effort, the NCAA has not yet come up with a point system for it. If a 51.4 per cent shooting blaze from the floor doesn't tell the story, then nothing will. Michigan could only pull out with 37.6 per cent last night. In the end, rebounding was too big a factor also. The Blue didn't have the edge there that they needed. A tie was all they could manage. Pat Riley was, beyond r4 any doubt, the biggest'of the long rifles among Kentucky's Dan'l Boones. The Cats could look for him whenever they got into trou- ble under the pressure of a tight man-to-man defense which was tough to get by in the final per- iod. In spite of Kentucky's effi- 0 ciency on the floor-their offense was a perpetual motion machine of cuts down the lane and picks on the side-the Blue stayed lose with them at every turn. But the screens at the top of the key gave Riley his chances time after time, and the boy { bounder came through royally, finishing with a team high of 29 points. Moving out from under the bur- den of a 10-point deficit from the first half the Wolverines moved and rebounded with overwhelming effect for eight sharp minutes. This was no streaking Michigan. team, mind you, but the ball start- ed bouncing evenly for a time, and the Blue had control of the boards. Cazzie Russell came on strong in the second half and quickly open- ed things up with a perfect jump- er from 10 feet out. It was only then that it appeared as if the atmosphere was getting a little friendlier .... well, at least it was quieter. Russell came back with a' pair off the charity stripe and Darden slammed the boards and came up with a pretty tip-in. Adding these new-found phe- nomena was the up-to-this-point inconceivable fact that the Wild- cats were missing. But Louie Dam- pier clamped down hard when it became clear that the Blue were storming back hot on their heels, and hit with a big set shot from the top of the key. tad f M1 After that there was a trade of baskets, and Russell returned to the limelight again with another jumper from the outside. With a lot of swarming on the boards Michigan was finally get- ting back into the game and it surged ahead at 53-52 on a jump- See WILDCAT, Page 7 l7Ae 1MJi43tZn Pilove NEWS WIRE Resignation Sparks =1 Community Hotline Vice-President for Academic Affairs Allan F. Smith has reiterated his support for the new Selective Service policy of class ranking for determination of student deferments. In an interview with the Detroit News he took issue with Howard R. Neville provost of Michigan State University who had been quoted as supporting random selection of college students as opposed to drafting from the lower 25 per cent. Smith said that while Neville's arguments are plausible, they represent "a social objective, not an educational one. You have to go back and rediscover the rationale behind student defer- ments. that there is more than one way to serve your country. It has been determined that we need skilled manpower and trained leadership as well as soldiers, and that those in the top half of their class are the best able to provide it. Grades do mean a great deal; I just can't subscribe to the idea that they are meaningless and completely arbitrary. A group of students from the University of Kansas visited the University recently to find out about the Residential College ,and pilot project. The Kansas group met with the faculty and student Residential College planning committees to get ideas for a similar project at Kansas, Burton D. Thuma, director of the Residential College, said yesterday, "I think it is good that we have enough fame that students at another university are interested in coming to observe our operations." Dr. Myron Wegman, dean of the School of Public Health, left Friday for the first leg of a trip to Viet Nam. He is one of a 15-member presidential task force which will survey the edu- cational and health needs of the Vietnamese people. The group, headed by Welfare Secretary John W. Gardner, will divide up into health and education to help plan an intensi- fied attack on hunger, ignorance, and disease. Dr. Wegman said before his departure that although the one- week trip seemed too short for such a survey, he was anxious to go because "I have reached the conclusion that health work is the best way to break down the language and cultural barriers to achieve peace and understanding." Petitioning for five one-year terms on Joint Judiciary Council will open Monday, March 14 and end Monday, March 21 at 5 p.m., John Weiler, '67, secretary of Joint Judiciary, said yester- day. To qualify for a position on the council, a student must have junior standing or have been in residence at the University three semesters. He must also be a student in good standing and should have a broad interest in University affairs. A group of representatives from Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) will hold recruiting interviews on campus March 14 through March 18. VISTA volunteers perform services on Indian reservations, among migrant farm workers, in urban slums and in rural poverty pockets. Applicants may request work in specific geo- graphical areas of the United States and indicate their preference of assignments. Long Distance "The Paper" became an authorized student publication at Michigan State University Thursday afternoon after a chaotic series of events on the East Lansing campus. official recognition for the dissident student newspaper started last fall by former Michigan State News editorial director Michael Kindman was granted by the University's Board of Student Publications. An open meeting of the Board of Student Publications was adjourned by members less than five minutes after it began when a graduate student Richard Trilling interrupted Board Chairman Frank Senger by reading a three minute statement. At Kindman's appeal a second closed meeting was held on the Union sun porch. Three student photographers reportedly climbed out a window on the second floor stairwell attempting to get a picture of the private meeting. They were unsuccessful. Emerging victoriously from the meeting Kindman told the crowd of his success and then pointed to the demonstrators who had inter- rupted the meeting saying, "Those clods out there had nothing to do with it. In fact they almost messed up the whole deal." Controversy THE ASCETIC IMAGE of religion is a thing of the past at the Canterbury House, a favorite spot for weekend entertainment on cam- pus. Here folk-singer Pat Reynolds entertains the crowd. Where Liberals Find Conservatism And Religion Are Not Synonymous By HARRIET DEUTCH rector and Congregational minis- afternoon. ter, the Rev. J. Edgar Edwards open from Are you frantically s el11i ng feels that the Guild "is an exple- 1kI~ everything you own to buy a tick- rience of growth and tolerance, Edwards et to Florida, New York or Ypsi- broad-mindedness and as a per- dents for lanti? You needn't; there are two son." The Guild offers a "multi- feels that places on this campus where you faceted" program including dis- "where the angawayfromitllwithoutcussions, entertainment and facil- servatism spending a penny. Behind both ities where one may study, hold a necessarily doors lie the challenge of discus- conversation or listen to hi-fi. courages e The Guild House 8 p.m.-1 a.m. is sion or the relief of solude in an atmosphere of friendly coziness. One door leads to the Canterbury House, the other to the Guild House. The Guild is an organization sponsored by the Congregation, the Disciple, the Evangelical and the Reform churches. Guild di- Every Monday, Tuesday and Fri- day, luncheons are held followed by a discussion. The Tuesday lunch deals with a matter of cur- rent concern and the Friday lunch picks one specific area of this problem for discussion. Informal discussions are also held every other Friday evening and Sunday to come a open forum of conflicts Edwards is increasi world, notT in the late verbalizing the pulpit. aven for Liberals sa member of the Stu- Democratic Society, the Guild is a place e liberal finds that con- and religion are not synonymous." He en- everybody and anybody 'nd make the Guild "an m forthe presentation ing ideas." feels that the ministry ngly interested "in the merely reading about it st theological essays or about it from behind As a faculty advisor to Student Loan Campaign Rolls Despite Government Opposition GRADELESS: Stanford Considering P GradingS Syste onPr WASHINGTON (-P)-A drive to committees, told a reporter there continue the government's direct will be an all-out fight to restore college student loan, program in every penny of the funds for the full force gathered momentum in loans. Congress during the week despite "This attempt to end the Na- Johnson administration opposi- tional, Defense Education Act loan tion. !,program is a dagger in the back Sen. Ralph W. Yarboroguh (D- of higher education in this coun- Tex), a member of the Senate try," he declared. Education a n d Appropriations "Does the 'Great Society' mean that we talk about education but falter when it comes time to pay the bills?" President Johnson's budget, sent to Congress in January, proposed to kill the defense education loan Ss or Failpiogram and shift to a federally guaranteed and subsidized loan plan included in the 1965 Higher Education Act. But, in the face of an outcry in Congress and many protests from colleges and universities, the ad- ministration reversed itself and cause his own paper will probably announced $150 million would be not be as good as that of an Eng- made available for the direct loans lish major?" in the next year. Skepticism was reflected by It said this would make it cer- Robert A. Walker, chairman of tain a student could get a loan Stanford's general studies, who for the college year starting next asserted that grades are "inevit- September if none of the new able and unavoidable." One stu- guaranteed loans was available Anf yininari fthnnninn f __ - 1.]- +- - Long-time supporters of the de- fense education program at the Capitol note that these loans mostly went to families with in- comes under $6,000. They say there is no assurance that private lenders would be able to fill the gap left by termination of the loans and some positive evidence they will not. Rep. Edith Green - (D-Ore), chairman of the House Education subcommittee on higher education, told Welfare Department officials last week she opposes the plan to kill the loans. "What is the purpose of this proposal, to make the budget look good for next year or to let kids go to college?" she demanded. Rep. John Brademas (D-Ind), a subcommittee member, said he will not "be a rubber stamp for the administration" on its plan. Yarborough said he has been told already that students are hav- ing troubles getting the guaran- teed loans. One, he said, was asked by a bank to open an account be- fore it would advance him any money. The Texan pointed out that the Treasury will pay a subsidy to the the Student Committee Against Apartheid, he, joined in a picket line protest of Chrysler Corpora- tion's heavy financial investment in South Africa last year. He also maintains a close relationship with The Student Nonviolent Coordin- ating Committee and Ann Arbor Friends of SNCC. The philosophy and also the reasons for successful motivation in Guild House are met in Rev. Edward's words: "This campus ministry is an open association of students and faculty where the individual search is. respecte and encouraged. We acknowledge a' Christian orientation, endeavor seriously to examine and question the assumptions of society, and seek to make the Christian mes- sage relevant to the campus 'and the wider community through participation in social action." Helpful and Needed The popularity of the Canter- bury House, sponsored by the Episcopalian Church is proof that it is a very helpful and needed enterprise. Started by Rev. Dan Burke and Rev. Martin Bell, the Canterbury House was conceived on a Tuesday in September and opened the same Friday. It also is open all day for stu- dents to use its study and recre- atio nal facilities. Its success can be measured however by the tre- mendous number of people that jam into it each Friday and Sat- urday night to relax in its friend- ly atmosphere of intimate discus- sions, twangy guitar music and humorous poetry readings. "We vary the program to get a variety of people to come," says Bell. As for the part that religion plays in the functioning of the Canterbury House-, Burke says "What isn't religion? Whenever people come together to freely dis- cuss ideas, religion is present. At the Canterbury House, we just don't try to push it in any mold." Growing Role Burke and Bell forsee a growing role for the ministry to play in relating the student to the uni- versity and the world. The re- ligious leaders must always be searching for new ways to express what must be expressed, they said. As for the future of the Canter- 'Legislators Give Praise And Censure Faxon Conniends Regent's Integrity; Others Hit Dual Role By MARK LEVIN The resignation of Eugene Power from the Board of Regents Friday prompted praise yesterday for his educational accomplish- ments and criticism of his business dealings with the University over the past years. Power resigned shortly after the release of Michigan Attorney Gen- eral Frank Kelley's legal opinion that he was in a substantial con- flict of interest in his business dealings with the University. Rep. Jack Faxon (D-Detroit), whose House subcommittee on higher education asked for the at- torney general's opinion, praised Power as a man of high moral in- tegrity and personal courage with "a distinguished record of service to the people of this state." George F. Montgomery (D-De- troit), a member of Faxon's com- mittee, said "the only real solu- tion for Power is to resign proper- ly, unless he is willing to sell his interest in Xerox Corp. (UMI is a subsidiary of Xerox) or relin- quish his position as a director, which I doubt." Regent Carl Brablee described Power's resignation as a result of being a victim of circumstance. "What really bothers me," said Regent Irene Murphy, "is that we are now engaged in the process of selecting a new president, our most crucial task. "This only comes along ever 10 or 15 years, and it takes a major part of one term to understand the University and the kind of leader- ship it needs," Mrs. Murphy added. Senate Majority Leader Ray- mond Dzendzel (D-Detroit) ex- pressed 'disappointment at "the loss to the state of a man who as regent has done so much for higher education." Sen. Roger Craig (D-Dearborn) a member of the appropriations committee, blasted Power, saying that "if there is any worry about losing the democratic majority on the board, any individual who has voted for tuition increases is no great loss." Power voted for last summer's tuition increase. Sen. Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann Arbor) said, "I have greatest per- sonal liking and respect for Mr. Power. I feel he did the correct thing considering what seems to be a irreconciable conflict." As faculty and student efforts to attempt to retain Power con- tinued, a spokesman for the At- torney General's office said yes- terday that Sec. 291 of the Michi- gan Election Code says that when a Regent chooses to resign the Governor and Secretary of State "shall be notified." Power's letter, however, was sent to University Secretary Erich A. Walter with instructions that a copy be sent to each Regent. Nothing has been sent to the Governor or Secretary of State, it was learned. The letter was understood to have been written to the Regents on advice of coun- sel. Regent Irene Murphy said last night of Power's letter of resigna- tion, "I hope to receive a request for consultation with his regental colleagues about his intention to resign from the board." University legal sources said that, at present, the legal status of the letter might not preclude the Regents from studying the attorney general's renort and con- By HELEN KRONENBERG Stanford University may soon institute a partial pass or fail grading system on an optional basis. The move would parallel the elimination of the tradition letter grade system for all courses, recently inititated by other uni- Two advantages to the pass or fail system are that students will be encouraged to take courses out- side of their major field of study and that students with high grade averages will no longer have their averages jeopardized by courses for which they may not have much ha ,.mrnA hnf h xImnh hn A _ in- A sample of student opinion re- vealed what teachers at Stanford had expected: most students and faculty would prefer to have a pass or fail system. Funk remarked that "students have always complained about -pressure" and admitted that grade ann,,r onn coo"a n.,.nn 4' Anal n'o . l l] l C > A i ' t I