Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THT4 UNTVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Annual Gamesmanship with Lansing Opinion Ar Free. th Will *420 MAYNARD ST- ANN ARBorMC. Ne~ws P1-oN : 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: CLARENCE FANTO IQ C-Assembly Merger: It Must Be Approved . . THE PLANS for a merger between As- sembly Association and Inter-Quad- rangle Council have now been drawn up. It appears that the Inter-House Assem- bly will become a reality in the near fu- ture. As Assembly and IQC work to legis- late themselves out of existence, critics have questioned whether the merger is needed. Indeed it is. The stated purpose for the merger is that the new organization, IHA, will avoid the present duplication of student government in the co-ed dorms and im- prove the overall efficiency of student government. The first reason is debat- able .The second is a fact. The two stu- dent government organizations in the res- idence hall system are not presently noted for either their efficiency, or for their weighty voice in conferences with the administration. The most important duty of a student government is to act as a liaison between its constituents and the administration, who in reality control the students. If such a body is able to attain a state of self-control, such as is enjoyed by Inter- Fraternity Council, so much the better. Unfortunately, neither Assembly, nor IQC is able to do this at present. One reason is a lack of student interest, and therefore lack of students involved in the two organizations. IQC IS NOT the most prestigious body on campus. It often appears disorga- nized, and often is. Its constituents are as often ignorant as cognizant of its existence. It has a nebulous committee system, which is amended whenever the council feels it needs another committee and even then they rarely function. It is not an effective student government. IHA would be different. With the com- bined resources of IQC and Assembly, it could do its job. To be effective, the governing body of an organization must be aware of the. feelings of its constituents. Presently, IQC seems to communicate poorly with the freshmen who make up the bulk of its constituency. One method for establish- ing communication links is a system of effective committees, which also would serve as a training ground for the top positions. IHA will have an effective committee system. The Executive Board, the admin- istrative branch of the body, will be composed, as the present plans state, cf 14 members, five officers and nine com- mittee heads. The constitution states that each of these nine people will be the head of an active committee, and that each house in the system must supply at least one body to serve on a committee. Through this arrangement, the people who know the most about the various areas of activity of IHA will be the people who run it. HOWEVER, these same people could conceivably isolate themselves from student opinion. To counteract this, the new constitution would also form a Presi- dents Assembly, containing representa- tives of each house, plus the executive board, although only the president and executive vice-president of the board council could vote in the assembly; the other people would advise the assembly in their special areas. Large houses like Couzens and Stockwell would be given an extra representative to keep things on a population-vote scheme. The assembly would be the legislative body of IHA and any policy decisions would have to be approved by it. But more important, the assembly would be composed of representatives who know what the fourth quaddie in Room 214 in Cooley House would think. The members of the assembly would have a direct con- tact with the dorm residents. Because of their more knowledgeable status, the assembly is the actual final authority of IHA. This system of government is very sim- ilar to the manner in which IFC now conducts its business. The two bodies provide definite avenues of advancement and training in the system, and therefore give a high quality government, as well as an effective one. The number of top notch people in the dorm system is limited. Recent conditions in the dorm have acted to discourage up- perclassmen from remaining in the sys- tem. Cedar Bend ,I and II are planned to make them attractive for such people. With the expected lessening of over- crowded situations, more upperclassmen will stay in the system. The attraction of participation in an effective student gov- ernment will add to that number. INTER HOUSE ASSEMBLY will be an ef- ficient, effective and representative student government. The quadrangle res- idents will have the choice. They can choose the present, ineffective methods of IQC and Assembly, or -the student government that IHA can be. -ROBERT BENDELOW A CAREFUL analysis of grist in The Daily's efficient rumor mill indicates that Governor Rom- ney's higher education budget re- quest for 1966-67 will total $25 million more than his request of $188 million last year. From this the University, which received $7.2 million of a requested increase of $11.6 million last year and made up something over a third of the difference with a tuition hike, can expect, at best, an increase of about $6-8 million for next year. The University has requested $65.8 million from the Legislature for 1966-67, an increase of $14.6 million over last year's appropria- tion. Given the Legislature's n- chant for playing the nun' ,ers game in handing, out monty to state colleges and universities, it is quite possible that we will do well to come away with a $5 million increase as enrollments in the rest of the state continue to soar much faster than here. IN ANY CASE, the annual ex- change of everything from pleas- antries to charges of gross negli- gence is about to begin between the University's administrative of- ficers and assorted legislators. Most of the questions can be anti- cipated beforehand. Answers should be ready, thus: Legislature: All rglit now. let's be realistic. You've asked for a $14.6 million increase over last year. How much do you really want? U'-$14.6 million. C'mon, you know what I mean. How much do you really need? $14.6 million. Do you think we're lying? But why such a big increase all of a sudden? There's nothing sudden about it. It represents an accumulated def- icit from slashes made in our appropriations requests in past years. Last year we made some of this up with a tuition hike. You don't want us to raise tuition two years in a row do you? What about the other state colleges and universities? Why shouldn't they get gimilar in- creases? They're raising their enrollments much faster than you are. A little faster maybe. But we have been increasing enrollment 7-8 per cent a year recently and are planning to continue to do so. But we won't be able to if we don't get the money. But if you compare your in- creases in appropriations and enrollment with those in other colleges and universities in the state, don't you find that the University of Michigan is costing the state much more per extra student than other schools? That's a crucial question, of course, though we will always contend that there are intangibles at work in such an evaluation that are hard to pin down, but the University is more than willing to look at this as objectively as pos- sible. Actually you're talking about costs, and you have always had the suspicion that the University has been cheating you-less edu- cation per dollar, so to speak- and you've sort of had these suspicions for years. But even more suspicious-and upset, with good reason-than u have been the presidents of other universities and colleges in the state. They have eyed enviously the huge chunk of higher educa- tion money the University has always gotten. Our argument of more "quality" here was a myth, they said, or at least "quality" wasn't worth as much as was be- ing paid for it. The numbers argument began Michigan MAD By ROBERT JOHNSTON to grow on you after a while. so you were responsive when Presi- dent Hannah at Michigan State initiated the numbers game several years ago. He streamlined the edu- cation process there, designed minimum cost, mass production education and living facilities, let enrollments soar, and then went to you and asked for "more money for more students more effi- ciently." The University, of course, had to respond, though it moved more slowly, not being interested in the kind of lockstep undergraduate education MSU offered, nor able to even consider such measures for graduate study, which must be, by definition, an indlividualized process. AS COMPETITION for money intensified you found yourselves caught in the middle of arguments over the relative costs of under- graduate and graduate programs, the value of "quality," and so on. Unable to really answer these questions, you threw them back at the contestents and told them to settle them among themselves. to bring back a "unified higher education budget" for all the col- leges and universities in Michigan. All the schools except this one were delighted at this approach. "Rational" guidelines and cost formulas, when worked out, would surely show how efficient and deserving of more money these other institutions were, they thought. For a while we despaired that our ideals of quality would be lost in such formulas, but we were forced to participate i preparing them for presentation to you. We were really surprised with the re. sults, and so was everyone else. When the cost guidelines had all been worked out and all the fig- ures on enrollments, salaries and costs were plugged into the formulas, it was shown that the state had been getting much more of an education job than it de- served for the money it spent on the University of Michigan. In other words, the figures verified what we had been telling you all along, that we were grossly under- supported. Of course, Hannah and other state presidents quickly decided the whole formula and guideline plan for a unified budget request wasn't such a good thing after all: but now you have what you've always needed, a rational, objec- tive analysis or how much money each institution needs to do its education job. Nothing could be fairer; could it? Most of these extra costs that these formulas show you need really stem from your graduate- professional program, don't they? Yes. We have one of the largest, most diversified and highest qual- ity graduate-professional program in the world, and 40 per cent of our students are in graduate or professional school. Costs per stu- dent are many times what they are at the undergraduate level Well, that may be fine for the world, but does Michigan need it? What do we get out of it? Michigan is and will be reaping broad benefits from maintenance of the University at a high level of quality. Its presence here at- tracts large numbers of well- educated, creative people and fast- growing companies in advanced fields. And those educated in the University will materially con- tribute to the pyramiding of edu- cation, skills and opportunities needed to sustain and advance prosperity in the state. The federal government is quite likely to locate a $350 million atomic accelerator, or a similar installation yet unplanned, near Ann Arbor. This is worth several General Motors plants, and in ad- dition, pays much higher salaries for people that demand much more in the way of good homes, quality services, culture and so on. so that the benefits multiply and spread. Other types of companies and projects taking advantage of edu- cational and manpower resources associated with the University are also going to be more and more important in Ann Arbor and throughout the state. This is all fine, but you have been getting along on less money than you've said you needed for this long, why should you get it now? Several years ago the baby boom hit the colleges in the state, and we've been scrambling ever since to keep up with it. When it hits the graduate level over the next two or three years, only this uni- versity has anywhere near the re- sources to cope with it, and it will take years to create new ones at. other institutions. Unless present pressures are alleviated we won't even begin to be able to handle this new load, ,nd if it can't behandled, Michi- gan will fall seriously behind in the provision of graduate and pro- increasingly complex, sophisticated fessional level skills needed for an increasingly complex, sophisticat- ed andsknowledge-oriented society. Looked at in the most objective terms, there is no better invest- ment the state could make right now than in the University 4' p SGC H.ousing Union A New Approach By DICK WINGFIELD . But the Constitution Must Be Rejected A*MEROER of Interquadrangle Council and Assembly Association is now seri- ously being considered. There are many arguments favoring such a merger and few against. However, there is another matter that is being obscured by the idea of the merger itself-the structure of the merger constitution proposed by a joint IQC-Assembly committee. The constitution that was submitted by the committee to IQC last Monday is noteworthy in its defects. It is notorious- ly lacking in democratic protections for the residents. It proposes a legislative body which has more members than the Senate of Michigan. It would either be- come an ineffective body, acting only as a rubber stamp for a 14 member Executive Board, or it would become bogged down in a system of committees. The fact that the Presidents' Assem- bly would never work is virtually admit- ted by the authors in the inclusion of a compulsory attendance for house presi- dents clause, tucked away in the bylaws. The proposed constitution grants the Assembly the right to enact bylaws which may be equivalent to or may even take precedence over the constitution. The constitution states "IHA shall have those powers which are necessary for enact- ment of the functions enumerated in this constitution and bylaws." The Exec- utive Board is a self-perpetuating, ap- pointive board with no provision cur- rently being made for removal or control by the Assembly over the appointment of members. These two considerations, taken napharwith,. ithp? liin +itmh, ti pfnm ,- large houses and eight small houses spe- cifically. It fails to make any provisions for future expansion. An automatic ap- portionment plan to give each house pres- ident a weighted vote based on the num- ber of his constituents would solve part of the problem. ONE CAN SEARCHthe proposed consti- tution in vain for any mention of an election date. Something this important should be included as an automatic pro- cedure while allowing a certain amount of leeway for the Assembly to allow for difficulties that may be encountered from time to time. The proposed bylaws give the Assem- bly the power to approve or block every single piece of literature which concerns house or quad elections and newsletters, clearly a matter of concern only to the affected houses. Better provisions need to be made for referendums. A three-quarter vote of the Assembly to initiate a referendum is un- justifiably large. The proposal complete- ly ignores such basic protections as a ju- diciary for review and appeal of cases heard in lower jurisdictions. Joint Judi- ciary, the only apparent method of ap- peal, is not bound to follow the consti- tution. The proposal also makes no mention whatever of a means of recall of officers or of initiative or petition by the resi- dents. The proposed constitution makes no provision for repeal of the constitu- tions of IQC or Assembly. In effect they are merely adding a complicated fourth THE PROPOSED Student Hous- ing Association, if it is au- thorized by Student Government Council this Thursday, will begin to match its assets against chal- lenges which have confronted and defeated student housing com- mittees in the past. If the SHA is to succeed where others have failed, it must differ significantly from the defunct or functionally useless housing com- mittees on three basic features: -The SHA must have a con- spicuously complete structure which bears a strong relationship to the goals of the student housing movement. -There must be workable pro- visions for student participation. Brain trusts and elitism in the solution of housing problems have been grossly ineffective-pointing up the need for representation on the campus as a whole and more force through interest and par- ticipation in the housing area by more students. -The SHA must offer the cam- pus community an accurate as- sessment of problems and needs, as well as a realistic appraisal of what students can do toward solv- ing housing problems. -Leadership and creative ini- tiative must be found somewhere, to implement the structure. This will entail the job of persuading the student body that housing problems are important and at the same time selling the SHA as the appropriate organization for solv- ing the problems. WHAT ARE the housing prob- lems? Briefly, the University is in crisis. If provisions are not made for more quality housing both by private owners and the University in the near future, students should expect: -Private housing prices to rise significantly, -University housing to be in- creasingly inadequate in terms of both quality and quantity, and -A resulting curtailment of student enrollment, both at the discretion of the University which will simply. "not have enough room" and according to the fi- nancial limitations students' fam- ilies who will "not have enough money." IF THE DANGERS of inaction are clear, the needs for student housing are more so: -More housing is necessary, both to accommodate the increas- ing enrollment and to lower pri- vate housing rental rates. -There is a need for quality in planning both University and pri- vate housing to appeal to stu- dent tastes (as the Oxford Hous- ing Project apparently has not done) and to avoid slum housing. This need for quality stems from a seller's market in housing, which is, prevelant here, prompting in- vstnrs to realize their nrofits on boundaries of their individual powers and responsibilities. . THE DISCUSSION of these and other associated problems regard- ing housing needsin Ann Arbor have been made trite because of past and current student leaders who have been eloquent in their dialogues, on this crisis, but have in reality done nothing to solve the problem. How does the SHA motion re- late to these thoughts on the housing problem? Why is there an effort now to establish yet another housing committee when there are already five nominally in exist- ence? The answers to these questions are interrelated because, in effect, the SHA is attempting to accom- plish what the other committees have not dealt with-a detailed structure and provision for stu- dent involvement. These features, incidentally, are apparently cru- cial to the success of a student housing committee and therefore lend legitimacy to the SHA. The SHA structure includes three subcommittees: rental and complaints, University planning and city planning. THE RENTAL and complaints subcommittee will publish a model eight-month lease, establish rat- ing systems for housing-both University and private-and pro- vide legal advice to students in housing disputes. The University planning sub- committee is designed to repre- sent the SHA to the University ad- ministration as an official student advisory group, to seek out ways of sponsoring low-cost housing and to form a cooperative housing project. The'city planning subcommittee will establish a list of recom- mendations for improving building codes and work for more land space for high-rise developments. In addition, this subcommittee will be charged with mobilizing a con- stituency to lobby for the election of Ann Arbor city councilmen favorable to the reform of local regulations and codes. This past week the Ann Arbor City Council passed the city's first major code on high-rise develop- ments. This code can only be considered a first step in the right direction. THE CODE includes provisions for rezoning the South University- East University area to make this land "available for high-risekbuild- ing." This whole controversy of rezoning is of central importance to the housing problem and, as mentioned above, is carefully con- sidered in the SHA motion. Why? The SHA motion includes the high-rise developments as a par- tial answer to the housing problem because: --To lower private housing ren- tal rates in Ann Arbor, the supply of housing must not only maintain its present relationship to housing demand, but must rise above the present demand, as the coordi- nates of supply and demand University is necessary, it is not the key.to the reduction of prices. High-rise structures conserve land space, an expensive com- modity in Ann Arbor. Students are centralized so that proximity to campus, transportation. facilities and other conveniences can be dealt with collectively. -Finally, the difficulties of at- taining financial appropriations for University housing in such quantities can be avoided by en- couraging privatehinvestment.In essence, private housing is free from the legislative and admin- istrative red tape that the Uni- versity inevitably faces on new housing construction. THESE ARE apparently the reasons behind the SHA motion which concentrates on rezoning for high-rise developments and for political activity to encourage the election of Ann Arbor coun- cilmen favorable to the reform of local regulations and codes. The proposed SHA offers an- swers to housing problems, if in-" deed it works according to the plans before SGC. It seems to be structured along economically and politically appropriate guidelines. If the SHA motion is passed by' SGC and succeeds either quickly and dramatically or through long tedious hours of planning, barter- ing, and small infrequent victories, then the University community will be indebted to SGC. It will be, to a greater or lesser extent, relief from the housing crisis the campus faces. It will also provide significant support for the now popular theory that students can actually, throuigh, widespread participation, influence the Ann Arbor economy. This may be the stepping stone to more' intensive student effort to in- fluence the pricing of clothing, food and merchandise. Likewise a success in dealing with, the housing problem could yield more sympathy, from the University administration toward such student projects as the Uni- versity Bookstore. In reality, it will depend upon how Valuable an example the SHA can be. Will it offer exemplary leadership and popular student support? Will it realize its goals even if leadership and support are acquired. THERE IS a legitimate scep- ticism shrouding the future of the SHA because there have been many sporadic attempts to define U.S. Must Rebuild Urba'n Life and defeat the housing problen, while the chronic result has been failure, At present there are five com- mittees working on the housing problem: The Graduate Student Council Advisory Committee, the Voice Housing Committee, the Student Advisory Committee to the Vice-President for Student Affairs, the Joint Committee on Low Cost Housing and SEC's Off- Campus Housing Advisory Board. Although the SHA offers a de- tailed structure and hope for stu- dent involvement, it may fail. for reasons beyond remedy. If this is the result, students may have to resolve themselves to the conclu- sion that student effort in housing problems and pricing in general is futile. THE UNIVERSITY community has an expansive "wait and see" file administered by persons hav- ing little sympathy and energy for interests they rei.ard as paro- chial or meaningless to them- selves. For the time being, the SHA and the future of organized student influence, on the Ann Arbor economy must be assigned to this file and placed at the disposal of these people. *6 THE ALMOST inveterate ten- dency to refight the battles of the last war has shown itself again in the guns-versus-butter comment on the President's message. In the two world wars each bel- ligerent, including even the United States, had to reduce and ration civilian consumption in order to have the materials and the labor to produce the munitions of war. This is not, at least not yet, the U.S. problem in the Vietnamese war. For the American economy is so enormously big, and relative to it the war is still so small, that the war can be conducted without any reduction in the existing stan- dard of living. What is not currently possible is any significant improvement in the general standard of living. Otherwise there is every prospect of an inflationary boom. BUT THIS IS NOT the crux of the problem which confronts us. The problem today is not whether the standard of life goes up or down a bit. Ourproblem is to rebuild and remake the environ- ment of our increasingly urban- ized society. The solution of that problem cannot be suspended as we su- spended reform and development in all the other wars of this cen- tury. And that is why the old guns-versus-butter s t e r e o t y p e masks the real problem of our day. As I read the President's ad- dress it seemed to me that he was oversimplifying and masking the real issue by referring to the in- ternal develonment and reform as Today and Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN THIS WILL TAKE a great deal, of money. But it will also demand a vast application of brains and a passionate concentration of at- tention and interest in the un- solved problems of the new Ameri- can society. New York City has just had several ominous signs of how vulnerable existing society is--the water shortage, the newspaper strike, the power failure, the tran- sit strike, Los Angeles has had the Watts riots, and in so many places the pollution of water and air are reminders that we are confronted with something greater and es- sentially different' than we were in the other wars. On paper and with a certain amount of financial finagling it can be made to appear that the war in Viet Nam and the renewal at home can be carried on simul- taneously. But in truth, as men are actually made, it is impossible for a people to keep two such vastly different operations going at the same time. WAR, with its horror and its fascination, is to internal reform and development what a public OV0 11 -nn s t a - u nf. aii war in 1965 is now doing that to Johnson's Great Society. The guns-versus-butter stereo- type masks, I repeat, the reality as we confront it today. Most of us could easily give up some butter, and perhaps be better for it. But what we cannot give up is the modernization of the edifice in which an ever-increasing part of the nation dwells. For the edifice is bursting at the seams and is falling apart. 'nWhat we need, I submit, is an anti-stereotype. We should re- member the cavalry generals who did not like the tanks; we should remember the builders of the Maginot Line and the brass who would not believe in airplanes and their successors who can believe in nothing else. FOR THE CONDUCT of war and diplomacy, it is most impor- tant to cultivate anti-stereotypes to protect us from resorting to de- caying and dead patterns of con- duct. The appeasement of Hitler which culminated at Munich was the work of Englishmen and Frenchmen who could not believe that the chancellor of Germany was a monster like Hitler. The frightful consequences of appeasing Hitler left behind them in the minds of men the great Munich stereotype. In the grip of this stereotype a British prime minister felt compelled to think that the Suez was the Rhineland and Nasser was Hitler. Dean, Rusk is the current user wI