FREE EDITION Sir i~tani P43aitt FREE EDITION Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL LXXVII, No.82 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1967 SEVEN CENTS EIGHTEEN PAGES FREQUENT ABSENCE: Sorenson Resigns: Only Literary Faculty Criticizes a Republican Regents Left Sit-in i By ROERT KLIVANS idemeer of Stockbridge and JohnI for a full eight-year term on ' the Ban, HUAC Allan R. Sorenson, the last re- maining Democrat on the Univer- sity's Board of Regents, has re- signed. The letter of resignation has been accepted by Gov. George Romney, according to Charles Or- lebeke, the governor's education, assistant. Feikens of =Detroit, and Mrs. Mar- cia Strickland who is backed by Regent Alvin Bentley. Orlebeke said yesterday that Democratic nominees had not been ruled out. With seven Republican members now on the Board, Democrats Board of Education. Other possibilities on the Dem- ocratic side include William T. Patrick Jr., a Detroit councilman, and Robert Nederlander a De- troit attorney who unsuccesfully sought a Democratic Regental nomination this year. The appointment of an inexpe- ! ...,...Z ' n.n~ --1 n ci _ o Hearings Probe Costs Sorenson, an engineer with the argue that a Democratic appoint- Dow Chemical Company resides ment would lend variety and a in Midland, but for the last 18 wider overview to the Board. months has been stationed over- Frequently mentioned in pem- seas and has been frequently ab- ocratic circles is Donald M. D. sent from the Regents' meetings, Thurber of Grosse Points, who attending only one since August. served one two-year term on the Orlebeke could not say when Board before he was elected in Gov. Romney would announce 1964 to the State Board of Educa- Sorenson's replacement, though he tion. He was defeated last month indicated that candidates were now being examined and a deci- sion would be made "as soon as L oca l I est possible." The two other Democrats on the Board, Mrs. Irene E. Murphy and Carl Brablec, lost their seats in the November Republican land- To Work 4 slide to Robert J. Brown and Mrs. Trudy Huebner. Brablec and By WALLACE IMMEN Murphy reportedly influenced Sor- enson's decision to resign, stressing Last of a Series the disadvantages of an absentee Even though the Atomic Energy Regent. Commission will build its $375 mil- Possible Candidates lion nuclear accelerator in Wes- Republicans mentioned as pos- ton, Ill., researchers from the Uni- sible candidates for the vacancy versity will be very much involv- include two former Republican ed in its planning and operation, state chairmen, Lawrence B. Lin- according to A. Geoffrey Norman, - - - - - - - - - . t# 2 1 rienced Regent would leave 4 of the Board's 8 seats in relatively new hands. Robert P. Briggs and Frederick C. Matthei have been serving since 1961, Paul G. GoebelInN since 1962, and William B. Cudlip * since 1964. Alvin M. Bentley was I Building Cited By appointed last year to complete the term of Eugene Power. Cutler to Legislators Machr at Weston By HARVEY WASSERMAN In open, all-day hearing held at the end of last semester, Uni- versity administrators testified be- fore a legislative 'subcommit- tee and, in turn, found themselves and Ann Arbor landlords the tar- gets of strong criticism. The hearings were conducted /'1 NEWS WIRE 11 r t ' PROF. SAMUEL R. HEPWORTH of the business adminis- tration school died Tuesday of a heart attack. Hepworth, 46, was in New York to finish plans for two research projects for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. One project dealt with the problems of international accounting and the other with intercoporate investment. * * * MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH, '67, editor of The Daily, has been named one of 32 Rhodes Scholars for 1966. Four Rhodes Scholars are selected in competition in each of eight regions for the awards, which provide for two years of study at Oxford University in England. Killingsworth is the first University stu- dent to receive a Rhodes scholarship in ten years. FIFTY PSYCHOLOGY TEACHERS from small colleges all over the United States are expected to attend a University psy- chology institute next summer. Supported by a $74,820 National Science Foundation grant, the institute will include sections dealing with basic concepts of psychology and with the potential contributions of mathematical psychology. General direction of the summer institute which runs from June 28 to Aug. 18, will be under Prof. John E. Milholland..Prof. Clyde H. Coombs will direct the sessions on mathematical psy- chology. Milholland says the response from last year's institute par- ticipants showed the program to be worthwhile. He plans to consult with those participants in January and tailor the com- ing institute to the needs of psychology departments of five men or less. TWENTY-FOUR RESEARCH fellowships totaling $57,039 have been awarded to University faculty members for the summer of 1967. Presented from research funds of the Rackhain School of Graduate Studies, the fellowships cover research in five areas- biological sciences, physical sciences, languages and literature, social sciences, and fine arts. Projects will range from the com- pilation of a critical biography of George Orwell to a study of morphogenetic substances in crustacea: Two of the fellowships will cover projects in the physical sciences, one dealing with a study of reflexes and the other with the use of lasers. The two fellowships in the biological sciences will be fore research on crustacea and the role of iron protein in oxidative phosphorylation. The 10 projects in languages and literature will include re- search on Orwell, Shakespeare, Petrarch, Wallace Stevens, Ger- man author, Georg Kaiser, Russian novelist Saltykov-Shchedrin, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Eight projects in social sciences will deal with such areas as the 1936-37 General Motors strike, family structure, the seces- sion crisis in the South, and forces affecting quit rates in American manufacturing. The two fine arts projects will deal with research in 1850- 1900 concert life and the recorders in the Stearns Collection of musical instruments. UNIVERSITY HOUSING DIRECTOR John Feldkamp an- nounced last December 13 that he will enter the February primary for the Republican candidacy in City Council's third ward. The third ward seat is currently held by Robert P. Weeks, a Democrat and a University professor of engineering English. The election will be in April. University vice-president in charge by Rep Jack Faxon (D-Det.) of research, chairman of the higher education The AEC selection committee re- sub-committee of the House com- cently eliminated five of the six mittee on ways and means, and sites under consideration for the sub-committee members George accelerator, including one in F. Montgomery and William A. Northfield Township, a few miles Ryan, also Detroit Democrats. from Ann Arbor. Their final de- In the morning session, devoted cision was unanimous in favor of entirely to the University admin- Weston, a community of about 350 istration Vice-President for Stu- residents, 36 miles from Chicago. dent Affairs Richard L. Cutler told No protest of the committee's the legislators that the University decision has been planned. will open 3,400 more student hous- Norman said University officials ing spaces by 1970. Cutler stressed are disappointed that the accel- the "volume and diversity" of erator didn't come here, but he housing units soon to be built, and was delighted that it will be built said that "we are working to anti- in the Midwest. "With this new cipate and respond to student facility in the Midwest," he said, needs. We're exploring now our "our group of high energy physi- reponse to the changing needs cists can become more involved in of single students, just as we major experiments with highly re- sought - and found - answers to fined equipment." the needs of married students." In the past, University research- Cutler said "the cost of living ers have had to go as far away as in Ann Arbor may serve as a de- the Cern Laboratories in Switzer- terent for some people who want land to do their experiments. : to come. We ask the sub-commit- Norman said University re- tee to do anything it can to break searchers will be closely connect- this image." ed with the planning of the ac- Questioned by Faxon on the celerator because it must be de- high cost of University dorns, signed for the experiments to be Cutler said "the box we're in is I run on it. He said scientists from between differential rates or keep- the nearby Argonne Laboratory ing revenue up to pay for ameni- would probably serve as the base ties. We're not paying the service for the planning of the accelera- people enough now for mainten- tor, ante of halls at the level students The fact that the Argonne Lab- would like." oratory is located near Weston was Cutler emphasized to the sub- an advantage which was noted by commiteee "the role of students the selection committee. Other ad- in planning University housing, a vantages of the Weston site over tradition that dates back to the the Northfield one were: construction of South Quadrangle -It is more centrally located in 1950." He said students have to a city larger than Ann Arbor been on the planning committees and closer to the transportation for all residence halls built since, system of the Chicago area. and that 'students from occupied -The Illinois site is more read- housing units serve as advisers to ily available, only requiring relo- (University Housing Director) cation of a few people. John Feldkamp's office." -It is located near a larger wa- Cutler listed "responsiveness to ter source than the one in Michi- students needs" as a major goal gan, important for cooling the of University housing policy. Feld- equipment. kamp spoke of housing experi- -Bedrock is 200 feet closer to mentation, citing the East Quad the surface of the glacial till re- pilot project, coed housing, and quiring less foundation drilling. the phasing out of housemothers The 200 billion electron volt as examples. research facility will be the world's Criticism came in the after- largest when itis completed about - noon, when the floor was opened 1974, more than six times larger to all who wished to testify. City than any currently in operation. Councilman Robert P. Weeks The accelerator is expected to charged that "both City and Uni- bring about $50 million a year in versity practice a kind of covert local income to Weston and em- social discrimination that keeps ploy 2000 in full operation. rents high and maintains (them) The accelerator will be in the as bastions of white, upper mid- form of a ring and will be used to die-class gentility." The UniversityI speed protons, the nuclei of hy- and the city of Ann Arbor have drogen atoms, to the speed of light virtually abrogated their respon- , in order to break it down into its sibility to provide housing for1 constituent parts which are re- those with modest incomes. corded on instrumented targets. See CHARGES, Page 7 l 'l , ,; -Dary "EXASPERATING, exhausting, yet provocative" critic Leslie Fiedler arrived on campus for a month of lectures, seminars, receptions and personal consultation. .Wild' Critic Fiedler Arrives Begins Writer Pro gram o By LISA MATROSS' Leslie Fiedler, "wild mate American literary criticism" arrived for his month-long as the University's writer-in- dence. Tonight he will launc program of three formal lect and a multitude of seminars,. cussions and personal consv tions. Fiedler, currently a professo English at New York State1 versity at Buffalo is both a lite and a social critic. His most n works are "Love and Death in American Novel," "Waiting for End," and "No! In Thunder.' his books he covers topics ran from homosexuality in "Huc berry Finn" to the rise of "Gentile-Jew" and "White-Neg 'School's Out' Fiedler is currently writin based on the material in this ly subversive whereu of book. pear?" has Tonight's 'lecture is entitled, Young people, says stay "Youth Culture and the End of in the enviable posit rnsn-fdisengaged and ate, rhs a Western Man" and is concerned out of power. Similar uaes, with youth as a sub-culture as tion of the intellect di,- separate from the larger culture !.utside of the strum, ulta- throughout the world. Fiedler will In future lectures d a l r u h o th e w orl Fi d"A r w lle discuss academ ic free r with the question "Are the of the American won SofI values of this youth culture equal- uses of the university n - ,raxy oted T the UthantToAddr the lgui onors Coiivoe i Ifn 1t Ruling Bill Passed By Record Attendance Advocates Work In Tri-Partite Groups; Consider Rank Next By PAT O'DONOHUE The literary college faculty at its meeting last month criticized {k . the University administration for its ban on sit-ins and its submis- sion of names to the House Un- American Activities Committee last summer. In a formal resolution over- whelmingly passedgat a meeting of 720 "literary college faculty mem- bers, the faculty formally regret- ted, what they called -"the break- down in communication and con- fidence which has occurred In re- cent months since HUAC sub- y-Andy sacks poenaed the membership lists of ,s yesterdaythree students organizations." The faculty further charged the administration with "less respon- sibility and less fidelity to the democratic process than the Uni- versity community had every right to expect.''iThe resolution was sent to University President SHarlanHatcher and the Regents. a Dean William Haber of the lit- erary college described the faculty resolution as "a mild way of say- ver they ap- ing we don't like what you did on HUAC'and the sit-in ban." s Fiedler, Are Haber said' the attendance of tion of being 720 professors turnout at the by definition, meeting was the largest for any rly, the posi- meeting in memory. "I don't re- ual is to be call such an outpouring of faculty ure as critic. interest in my 30 years at t Fiedler will University," Haber said. dom, the role The resolution reiterated t1 nan, and the faculty's support for the proposals . of Hatcher given at the Nov. 29 - ---- meeting of the literary college faculty. It "welcomed" Hatchers proposals because they "represent an important and constructive change in the University's ap- proach to the basic Issue of the role of the students and faculty O il in the decision-making process." The resolution urged students to end any efforts to disrupt activi- s at the ad- ties of the University. in November The resolution expressed the faculty opinion that the "most been inform- important requisites" t o w a r d s and other achieving the goal of greater stu- ident Hatch- dent-faculty participation In the ent demands decision-making process are "good greater role faith and mutual trust among all ecision-mak- parties concerned, a chance for the tripartite commissions and At the events committees recommended by Pres- 'reeing up of ident Hatcher to be constituted mmunication and a chance for these bodies to ed." He add- concentrate on the task before dministration them as expeditiously as possible." ve action to Administrators were unavall, have caused able for comment. A resolution proposing an al- i th iga By ROGER RAPOPORT. United Nations Secretary-Gen- eral U Thant will speak at the i 's i t t I f t 3 3 i t i i x i p1 { 1 book to be titled "School's Out," University's Honors Convocation which will pose the question "Is March 31, President Harlan Hatch- the university an obsolete insti- er announced at the December tution?" The three formal lectures 17th Regents meeting. that Fiedler will deliver, the first I In their official business, the of which is tonight in Rackhan Regents took no public action in Lecture Hall at 8:00 p.m. are 1 the wake of three student protest Voie. Leader Urges Student 'Direct Action' sit-in demonstrations ministration building and December. "The Regents have ed of events on thi campuses," said Pres er, referring to stud last semester for a in the university's d ing process. Hatcher said he fe had resulted in "a f some channels of co that have been clogg ed that he felt the a is taking "constructi resolve actions that disruption." By SUSAN SCHNEPP ? Students must exchange with Regents a promise of "peace and quiet" for the power to make ma- jor decisions in the University, Michael Zweig, Grad, chairman of Voice political party said yester- day. Zweig pointed out that such an exchange must be the next step in the move begun last semester by students working toward a stronger v o i c e in University affairs. RESER FISTS TRAIN: Induction Rate Continues Low The Pentagon yesterday an- day Michigan local boards will call students entering graduate school nounced a Maich draft call for 529 men for induction into the have been required to score at 11,900 men, keeping its induction Army during February, the lowest least 80 on the Selective Service I rate at a reduced level for 1967. call assigned to Michigan since Deferment Examination or rank in The draftees will all go to tne the early months of 1965. the top one-quarter both a high Army. Holmes said local boards also score on the draft exani and a The March call is 1,000 higher will be asked to deliver approxi- ranking in the top quarter of the than February's but is short of mately 400 former Class 1-Y reg- class. the 15,600 men being summoned istrants who now qualify under -The President's Commission for duty this month. new lower mental standards estab- on Selective Service which is stu- Selective Service . Director Lt. lished by the Defense Department. dying revisions in the current Gen. Lewis Hershey has said that Special calls will be issued for 1-Y draft law, is expected to make its college students would not be registrants starting in February report public late this month. Con- . drafted as long as monthly induc- and continuing through Septem- gress is required to pass a new Zweig explained that because' the Regents have the power to make any structural changes nec- essary to institutionalize student decision making, student efforts should be directed to them spe- cifically.I He said that the only way to "put the Regents and adminis- trators in the mood to give us ultimate power in certain areas is for students to.promise them what they want most: peace and quiet." He continued, however, that the Regents and administrators will be reluctant to give up their ulti- mate power in areas affecting only students. The method, said Zweig, would be to focus attention on certain key people who have power, such as the Regents and the various vice-presidents, and promise peace and quiet if they will give students ultimate decision-making power in affairs that concern only students. Zweig said he thinks little pro- gress will be made through just talking with administrators and the Regents. If they refuse to give students such power in areas con- cerning students, he said, the re- sult must be "direct action." Sit-ins are just one of a variety of things that can be included in "direct action," Zweig said. Another major possibility for action is the Sesauicentennial. he He added that the three tri- partite committees he has estab- lished in an effort to resolve the student power dispute "will re- sult in development of proposals that can be brought to the Re- gents." In other action, the Regents changed the name of the Center for Southern Asian Studies to the Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies. When President Harlan Hatch- er asked Vice-President for Aca- demic Affairs Allan Smith why the name should be changed Smith re- plied, "You asked me that (last) Tuesday and we agreed not to bring it up at the Regents meet- ing. The Regents also approved a name change for the Center for Russian Studies to the Center for Russian and East European Stud- ies. "I hope this name change has no obvious political connotations,"- said Regent Alvin Bentley (R- Owosso). "A lot of the East Eu- ropean nations object to the im- plication that they are under the thumb of the Russians," Bentley explained. Vice-President for Student Af- fairs Richard Cutler gave a de- tailed report on the French lan- guage housing unit, Maison Fran- cats, located in the Oxford Co- ternative to class ranking will be presented to the literary college faculty at its regular monthly meeting on Monday. The resolution, submitted by Prof. E. Lowell Klley of the psy- chology department, recommends 'that, if selective service is con- tinued, the present program of 2-S deferment be retained on the books for use, if and when the needs for military manpower should in- crease to the point where a policy of no student deferment would seriously threaten the nation's supply of specialized, college- trained personnel." However, it urges that any changes in Selective Service policy "be made applicable only to young men becoming 18 (or 19) years old, thus permitting college stu- dents who meet the criteria for deferment to complete their de- grees." The resolution also recommends that draft-eligible males "be ad- vised as soon as possible after reaching the age of 18 whether or not he will be required to serve in the armed forces so that they can make more definite plans for the future. The resolution was submitted "because of widespread and in- tense- debates" at the University on the issue of partially basing student deferments "on academic S y , .. ^ . . . ' ' } S : i L -. ^.. . I tion calls remain below 30.000. ber. Holmes said. draft law before the current oneI