U. OF CHIGAGO RANKING REVISIONS See editorial page C, - r A& tr, :4Ia it PARTLY CLOUDY High-18 Low-9 Continued cold; two inches snow Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 124 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1967 SEVEN CENTS TEN PAGES NEWS WIRE SPRING ELECTION REGISTRATION for campus positions has begun. Elections materials are available inr the Student Government Council offices, first floor of the Student Activities Building. Positions include: 'president and executive vice-president of SOC; six Council seats; eight delegates to the National Student Association; three seats on the Board in Control of Student Publications; a two-year seat on the Board in Control of Stu- dent Athletics; and school officers of the literary and engineer- ing colleges. Registration ends at 5 p.m. March 6; elections will be held March 22. ALL STUDENTS ELIGIBLE to vote in the Ann Arbor City Council elections must register before March 6. Registration takes place *eekdays between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. on the second floor of City Hall, located at 100 Fifth Ave. Student Government Council has strongly urged students to register and vote. If any studen't has difficulty either in getting to City Hall or in registering he is requested to contact Mike Koeneke, '69, member of SGC, at 663-0553. FOUR LEADING EDUCATORS have been selected to in- vestigate the Central Intelligence Agency's penetration of the academic community, the Washington Post reported Wednesday. The four, appointed to a special panel established by Robert A. Dahl, president of the American Political Science Association, are R. Taylor, Cole, provost of. ILuke University; Gabriel Almond, professor at Stanford University; C. Herman Pritchett, professor at the University of California in Santa Barbara; and David B. Truman, dean of Columbia College, Co- lumbia University. In letters to the four scholars, Dahl said that, "The CIA has penetrated academic and cultural circles through foundations and pseudo-foundations to which they channeled funds. There are bound to be evil effects from such practices," the Associated Press reports. Even if no improper CIA influence is proved, he said, the standing of U.S. scholars, their relations with foreign colleagues, and their chances for research, "will suffer grievously." * ' * * . A UNIVERSITY DANCE CONCERT will be presented this, weekend by the physical education department. Performances of this 17th annual presentation are scheduled for 8 p.m. Friday and 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturday in the dance studio of Barbour Gym- nasium. Tickets are available at Barbour Gym. Accompanying this event will be a dance film festival in cooperation .with Cinema Guild. Three different features have been included in the experimental dance film program offering the first presentation in a Saturday matinee, two performances of the second production on Saturday night and two performances of a third program on Sunday night at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Archi- tecture Aud. * * EIGHTY-FOUR DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI of the Univer- sity will receive the Sesquicentennial Award in ceremonies during the Alumni Celebration next week. The Sesquicentennial Award, a medallion and certificate, is presented to alumni and others whose lives haye exemplified the Sesquicentennial theme, "Knowledge, Wisdom, and the Cour- age to Serve." PROF. KENT M. TERWILLIGER of the physics department has been elected to the board of trustees of the Argonne Uni- versities Association. The association was formed in 1965 by 26 Midwestern universities. It establishes the policies and programs for the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago, one of the world's major nuclear energy research installations. PROF. DAVID L. LEWIS of the Graduate School of Business Administration has authored a 10-page article on the automobile industry which appears in the 1967 edition of Collier's En- cyclopedia. CITE WEST COAST SUCCESS: -Ghettos Not IConcern of Universities Hatcher Critical of Ribicoff's Charges; Hits Graduate Policies Public expectations that the uni- versities can act as all-purpose problem solvers may be unrealistic, University President H a r 1 a n Hatcher warned yesterday at the Founders Day convocation of Un- ion College, Schenectady, N.Y. President Hatcher commented specifically on charges by Sen. Abraham Ribicoff (D-Conn) in Ann Arbor that American univer- sities have been "nidifferent to the problems of the urban ghetto." "He ignored the fact that the United States Congress governs Washington, D.C.," President Hatcher observed, "and that it 1has money unlimited, sole respon- sibility, and power unrestrained to make the capital the model city of the age." Don't Have Tools "No university in thew orld has any of the resources or the op- portunity and tools or, I would add, the direct responsibility for providing job opportunities for all. "Urban renewal, neighborhood development and reorganization of the executive branch of the fed- eral government all fall outside university scope. This does not mean that the university does not share in such ideals nor that it has no role to play in achieving them."f However, a university, according to President Hatcher, "is not an agency like the Department of Ag- riculture or social security. Its job through individual faculty members is to identify, toan- alyze, to research and experiment,1 and to train those who in turn per- form service and give intelligent_ direction" to the forces of social change. Criticizes Grad Education President Hatcher was also cri- tical of the "rigid mold and the "status values" of graduate edu- cation.l Graduate education, as found in most American universities, oper- ates by a system, he said, that "was not rationally planned. It has' simply grown up. It is partly an extension of work begun in the undergraduate years in exactly the same way much of the present col- lege program is an extension, and1 sometimes a repetition, of whatf was done in the high schools." University departments are oft- en guilty of being more concern-j ed with the question, "What willb our academic colleaguesthink?"'a than with what is right and prop-?a er for graduate training in a! particular field. President Hatchere said. Daily Editor Appointments Accepted Without Changes IIaopotakes New Editorship' f ,e jtmiors Give Board Seven Points Showiig Intentions for Next Year BY NEAL BRUSS The Board in Control of Student Publications last night accepted without change the recommendations for senior editors of The Daily for 1967-68 submitted by the senior editors of 1966-67. The action came three nights after the board turned down the same slate because they found Roger Rapoport, IAoIssuePolicy -Ascitd rss :O n . P rotests SMOKEY BURNS AT HILL At Wisconsinl Smokey Robinson (right) and his world-famous Miracles performed last night in the Motown Revue, which was sponsored by- the Sesquigras Committee. Also appearing in the revue were the Spinners, Martha m dila anuannv Term; T....11i.-A imm- VVIF'i U 0illa 9 marina ana the vandenlas, Tammi Terrell, and .jimmy nuttin. (fee TO CHANGE STATE NEWS: MS/il'U Co un c il A1 Ac'Qade m__ic Righ By CAROLYN MIEGEL and elected representatives of the The Academic Council of Mich- faculty, and is presided over by igan State University recently the university president. approved a report on academic Formulated Report freedom that will both liberalize 'Ihe report was formulated by and clarify student rights at MSU. the Faculty Committee on Student Before becoming "the basic law Affairs, a standing committee of' of the university," the report must the Faculty Senate, after 147 be approved by the Faculty Sen- months of discussion. ate, MSU President John Hannah, The report attempts to clearly and the Board of Trustees. Piof define the regulations binding the Charles C. Killingsworth of the MSU students. It offers guidelines economics department terms the frsrcua hne ntewi for structural changes in the um)- report "not just an expression of .: review, r ). (geBy DAVID KNOKE The student senate of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin last night passed a reconsider motion to hold hearings next week to determine if punitive action should be taken against organizations whose mem- bers were arrested in protests on proves Wednesday. The motion, passed by a 21-3 vote, came on the heels of action by the Wisconsin faculty assem-' rI bly which passed two resolutions aimed at the principles involved in the incid nt which led to the arrests of 1 persons on the Mad- ison campus. make or retain records of a stu- The student senate voted ear- dent's religious or political beliefs Her against taking immediate pun- without his knowledge and con- itive action towards removing reg- sent. istration of Students for a Demo- --"The competency of profes- cratic Society, members of which sionals (faculty and administra- were involved in arrests for "dis- tors) can be rightly judged only orderly conduct" while protesting by professionals." campus recruiters of Dow Chemi- Student Paper cal Corp. Special Meeting One of the changes in univer- One of the faculty resolutions sity structure which the report called for a special meeting of the recommends is the reorganization assembly March 8 to consider the "role of the placement service" the of university controls over the stu- offices of which 'were the scene dent newspaper, the State~ News. of Wednesday's incident. The present Board of Student The other resolution asked for Publications is to be replaced, un- implementation of the so-called der the new plan, by an advisory "Kennedy policy," passed after the board consisting of four students, heckling of Sen. Edward Kennedy four faculty members, and a fi-' (D-Mass) several weeks ago, which nancial advisor. See FLARE-UP, Page 2. U.S. Amity- Possible, French Consul Says 68, unacceptable for editor, as recommended. The Board's final vote was 7-4. Rapoport said after the Board decision, "I think tonight's Board action preserves The Daily's tra- ditional freedom and lays the ground for what I expect to be one of The Daily's best years." The juniors will assume their offices tomorrow. Also appointed were: William Krauss, business man- ager; Meredith Eiker, managing editor; Michael Heffer, city editor; Robert Klivans, editorial director; Neil Shister, magazine editor; Su- san Schnepp, personnel director; Associate managing editors, Su- san Elan and Laurence Medow; associate editorial directors, Ste- phen Firshein and Ronald Klemp- ner; associate magazine editors, Carole Kaplan and Lissa Matross. .Others appointed to the enior business staff were : Erica Keeps, associate business manager; Steve Wechsler, advertising manager; Jeanne 1iosinski, personnel direc- tor; Dianne Smaller, finance man- ager; Sam Offen, circulation and summer business manager; and Phyliss Levinson, freshman sup- plement. Appointed to the senior sports staff were Clark Norton, editor; Bob McFarland, executive sports editor; and Grayle Howlett and Rick S t e r n, associate sports editors. During the Board meeting a ma- jority of the recommended juniors announced seven points which they said they hope "to Imple- ment ... to the best of our abil- ity in the following year." Prof. Luke K. Cooperrider of the Law School, chairman of the Board, said the seven points are "a mechanism by which to im- prove The Daily's performance." The proposal said: "As the staff of The Michigan Daily we hope to implement the following to the best of our abil- ity in the following year : "-That the Michigan Daily add the American Society of Newspa- per Editors to the existing code;- "-That the Board in Control set iside a Aspecif ic time period at :meeting to openly discuss with Daily senior editors newspaper edi- torial practices; "-That The Daily contract with either a professional newspaper 'nan or a professional service out- ide Ann Arbor' to criticize the paper on a regular basis in writ- E 1G.1V1 11V ,ua a== N Eversity, as well as broadly defining; Outmoded Methods pious hopes, but an effective the nature of academic freedom. Much of the insistence' upon piece of legislation.,then reportaaderts thaed"mhes "blocks of growth and develop- Killingsworth called passage by The report asserts that "the ment" is outmoded, Hatcher said. Academic Council "the biggest th basic purposes of the univerAty Many juniors and seniors in col- hurdle" and sees the final enact- are the enlargement, dissemination lege are ready in motivation and ment of the report "more than and application of knowledge. The! capacity to begin what is called 'likely." The Academic Council in- mmost basic necessity for the j graduate work. 3cludes the deans, vice-presidents, achievement of these purposes is afreedom of expression and con- munication. 'Free University' Movements Plagued "The university must strive to strike that balance between maxi-j mum freedom and necessary order which best promotes its basic pur'-' poses by providing the environ- ment most conductive to the many - faceted activities of re- By Lack of Funds, Student Interest r By HENRY GRIX Talcott of the Experimental Col- College is achieving its educational ed on the draft-ranking issue, de- lege. end of "building an institution tracting from the free university The free university movement, The curriculum has grown from parallel to the regular college in organizational attempts. pessimists insist, is "pretty much a few seminars to more than 70 order to bring change." The free university concept at- dead." 'courses, with 30 more courses At Princeton University, in- tempts the imposing task of "ask- Lack of organization, funds and planned. A student enrollment of novator Daniel Altman found that ing people to switch their ways of student interest now plague the a thousand is usually attracted the free university was "not ex- thinking and of looking at course "anti-universities" which were at the beginning of the year from actly the best road to get change material," according to Livant. founded in protest to the bureau- the 15.700 student body at the in the University," and it was For this reason, courses offered on search, teaching, and learning." Among the structural guidelines recommended are: . -"Regulation relating to com- munication of ideas shall encour- age the competition of ideas. --"The student has a right to protection against improper dis- closure of information concerning his grades, views, beliefs, political; By REBECCA McARTOR The consul-general of France in Detroit, M. Jean LeDireach, main- tained last night that friendship between France and the United States is not incomptaible with American disagreement or disap- proval of de Gaulle's policies. Speaking in French to Le Cer- cle Francais, a University club, he difficulties France experienced from the Roosevelt administration and during World War II. However, he said, this doesn't prevent France from desiring in- dependence to govern herself free- ly, to maintain an independent policy and to express her opinions without pressure from Britain or the U.S. association, health, or character. declared that de Gaulle's bitter-1 -"The university shall not, ness towards the U.S. arose from cratic stifling of learning in for- state college; about 600 usually abandoned. extracurricular topics such as mal university education. complete the courses they take. To Altman, the issue was less films provoked greater student The free university concept grew University Take-Over one of educational than of waking participation than more academicC EmuFer out of the Free Speech Movement Despite some recent financial up a "sleepy university." Altman courses taught in an unconven- Berkeley in 1964-65 when faculty difficulties, Foyd rers coord- based Pristhils ree universit tioa vantrefusest to label theFd r ,I-s ic ' e vF iol ySeizure members were invited to lecture on nator of the Experimental College, they won't give us a college, we'll free university as a "success" ori civil liberties and disobedience. asserts "Atho I ha my start our own." "failure." Rather, Livant feels, the . Lst Ltwinter termr,'the Free Uni- tdoubtssanshtheepastdthedeExperi- mental College will last until the Condescension free university is part of a process By DAVID S. HOORNSTRA Robb and Goodman cited sev- versity of Ann Arbor attracted er He says he received condescen- of change, and is a means of af- Defense attorneys for four Cine-,eral U.S. Supreme Court cases to over 300 University enthusiasts, u niveythcollege takes doingver sion and "slightly deprecating re- fecting change. ma Guild board members charged support their contention. Quoting although probably half that num- But that will not be for two or marks" fron the administration. Medieval Squire with showing an "obscene" film from Roth vs. United States, the ber eventually dropped out of theB tha But a more significant cause The merit of the free university' yesterday filed a brief in thebi'ief maintained that "ideas of the program. ree more years. . of the failure of the free univer- is that it "can move into other municipal hearing, contending il- slightest social importance" have Nationwide The osmosis by the regular uni- sity was the attitude of Princeton things more fluidly than the es- legal search and seizure. Attor- full First Amendment protection. A string of free universities also versity has already begun at San students. Altman explained, "Col- tablished University" which is neys Dean Robb and William , Further, they declared that im- appeared on campuses in New Francisco State. A student who lege is often a play world where "the recipient of established ten- Goodman had contended in a pre- proper use of search and seizure York, Los Angeles, Austin, Chicago wishes to teach an experimental it is difficult to organize anything ures and land, like a medieval liminary hearing that the film had always been involved in the and San Francisco. They offered subject may introduce his plan to on an informal basis without the squire." was improperly seized and could struggle for freedom and that it courses in everything from "Sar- a faculty member and obtain un- prospect of an immediate payoff." "The existing University is the not therefore be entered as evi- had always been "an adjunct to a ti " tnmmit e oarammin oversity credit for his course. Prof. William P. Livant. of the brittle part of the potential free dence. system for suppression of objec- Not Dreaming ing: Such criticism should be dis- France does not dream of "im- tributed by The Daily editor to possible greatness" at the head of the entire staff on a regular basis, a United States of Europe, he said. gut would not be open to Board This is unrealistic; the other discussion; Common Market nations would not "-That The Daily make use of tolerate domination by France In internal daily criticism sheet to He said Britain would be ad- properly evaluate each day's pa- mitted to the Common Market per; when she "puts order in their ag- "-That all specific complaints ricultural policies" and reestab- ibout news stories be immediately lishes the stability of her cur- lirected to the attention of the rency. These improvements are re- managing editor, who controls the quired under the Treaty 'of Rome general news operation and there- which created the six-nation Eu- 'ore in the most acceptable posi- ropean Economic Community. ;ion needed to make corrections," Le Direach has been consul in and Detroit for two years. Part of his: "-That The Daily establish a previous service for the French orum on the editorial page where government was with the informa-administrators and faculty mem- tion service in South Vietnam from aers may contribute signed opin- m1947-53.aeon." Share Goals The Board issued the following He said that France has the j c n atr , ,,,,n.