PASS-FAIL SYSTEM: ABOLITION OF GRADES See editorial page Y 5k ,4au &4 ttI VERY COLD H~igh--8 Low-24 Cloudy with chance of afternoo'n showers Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII No. 160 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1967 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES ,,U; T R (X; p Firs Hiandmin-,Hand Recruitment THIS ADVERTISEMENT, which appeared in "Aviation Week and Science Technology," is part of a campaign by the Univer- sity and local firms to attract technically trained personnel to Ann Arbor. NEWSWIRE THE LAST OF NASHVILLE'S rioting Negro students were released from jail yesterday as the city's leaders began to attack the roots of three straight nights of violence, the Associated Press reported last night. Dr. Edwin Mitchell, chairman of the Nashville Metropolitan Human Relations Commission, announced that the last five students arrested since "rioting began Saturday'night had been released. "These students have had their charges dismissed and the jail is now free of students," he said. Although reports of scattered incidents continued last night, the major violence began to abate Monday night, and streets that had been filled with angry young-Negroes for three night were clear. * * * * THE FIRST ANNUAL PRE-LEGAL Institute will be held at Eastern Michigan University on Saturday, April 15. The institute which is sponsored by EMU's vien's Union Board in the College of Arts and Sciences is designed to provide potential law school applicants with information regarding admissions requirements and procedures at numerous law schools. According to Mike Conlin, student advisor to the Men's Union Board, the institute will "also give participants an opportunity to meet and talk with many judges and attorneys from the area who "4 are considered outstanding members of their profession." The principal guest speaker will be Joseph W. Louisell of Detroit who Conlin calls a "nationally renowned trial attorney considered a legal authority in his own right." In addition Uni- versity Prof. Carl S. Hawkins will conduct a sample law school class. The institute will be held at EMU's McKenny Union with representatives of 22 law schools in attendance, among them Northwestern University and the Universities of Wisconsin, Con- necticut and Kentucky. There is no charge for the forum which begins at 9:30 after registration beginning at 8:30. THREE UNIVERSITY LAW professors will discuss "How To Bid for University Property-The Maynard Street Scandal" at 4 p.m. today in the Lawyers Club lounge. The panel is intended to provide a review for law students in "Contracts" and "Corpora- tions" courses who begin their exams May 1. The professors are Beverley Pooley, Stanley Siegel, and Alfred Conard. The discussion was prompted by an April 4 Daily story. RESTRICTIONS DIDN'T HELP: By MARK LEVINr "Moving back could be your fastest way to move ahead. SoI could moving here for the first time, reads one advertisement in a recent issue of "Aviation Week1 and Space Technology." Moving to Ann Arbor, according to this piece of slick recruiting, gives the engineer or researcher the choice of a "wide variety of; jobs" in a "broad range of disci- plines." All this, with "a sociable,. stable residential community" fer1 his family and children, situatedt in "the middle of things."I This full-page ad is part of a $20,000 advertising program spon- sored by the University's InstituteI of Science and Technology in conjunction with six private, com- UAC Plans Rejuvenation Of Facilities Designs Expansion Of Union and League To Attrct Students By KATHY MORGAN Rejuvenation of the Union and League to provide attractive stu- dent areas is the assignment of the recently formed Facilities Committee of the University Ac- tivities Center. An all-night study hall, coedu- cational billiards and a permanent art display are part of the ex- pansion plans designed to draw students to the Union and League for entertainment and study. "The Image of the facilities which UAC now offers are dull in comparison to our activities," ad- mits Donald Tucker, '68A&D, UAC president. The senior officers cre-I ated the committee in February to gain ideas from students on the best way to "revitalize the Union, giving it a student atmos- prere instead of the present dark and dingy look." "We don't want to destroy tra- dition," noted Lee Mary Danielson, '69, committee chairman. "We want to show tradition is young. because the students are young," she said. "We want to find out from students what they want." The committee hopes to convince the 12-man Union Board that they can use space throughout the Un- ion responsibly. When the alumni offices are moved from the sec- ond floor library, UAC hopes to have a hand in remodeling the room. "It's a beautifulr oom, but we1 would like to make it more prac- tical," Tucker explained, "by. keep- ing it open 24 hours a day and providing vending machines." 1 The committee will push for women's rights in the billiard hallc or the new coeducational ha. 1 Plans also include the main- tenance of a permanent room for student art displays. Running two or three weeks, each show will feature one or more students, de- pendingx on the amount of space each artist requires, Also under consideration will bec uses of the new Union conferencec room and 250 seat multi-purposec rtoom to be opened in the fall. mercial research and development corporations in the Ann Arbor: area. The purpose of this ad cam-! paign is to attract personnel to Ann Arbor to fill vacant technical positions in local industry and University research operations. "Our Industrial Development Program is one way the University can fill its public service function to the industrial public of the state," explained Joseph Martin, Technology," both monthly pub- lications. The total cost o' the program, called A2/U-M R&D, ran over $20,000 with the Univer- sity paying $5,000 or 25 per cent of the bill, according to Martin, Bendiy Aerospace Systems Divi- sion, Lear-Siegler, Inc., Conduc- tron Corp., Veda, Inc., Extrater- restrial Research Center, and G-C Optronics, Inc., paid the balance of the cost of the campaign. Each At this point, the University has hired no new personnel as a result of the ad. According to Martin, he rie- sponse so far has been excellent, with over 200 requests being re-+ ceived since the program's incep- tion last October. When a reply is received a copy of the person'i resume is sent to the University and each of the personnel diree- tors of the six participating cor- porations. Offers are then sent out independently to these per- sonnel whom the individual coi - porations want. l A person responding to the ad may receive as many as seven competing job offers, including one from the University. The Uni- versity is thus forced to compete directly for a particular individual with local firms, who in general have higher pay scales. "In terms of response, the pro- gram has been successful," Mar- tin said. "But, in terms-of getLTig people to Ann Arbor we just aren't sure yet. A survey will have to be conducted soon to see if the pro- gram was really successful." Mar- tin said he knows of one possible faculty appointment so far as a result of the program. As to whether the program will be renewed this summer when it expires, Martin said that "If the corporations push for it, we'll de- cide then. It all depends on the shifting economic climate. Re- search money is tight and the war is taking a large chunk out of our associate director of the IST. corporation's share was based on "We're interested most of all in their number of employes with helping local industry and we felt Bendix, the largest employer, pay- this might be a successful way," ing an amount equal to that of the he continued. University. Besides appearing in "Aviation Bendix, which took the initia- Week," the ads (two different dis- tive in forming the cooperative plays are being used) were placed program, is directing placement in "Engineering Opportunities" of the ads which will run through and "International Science and the summer. Picket Wisconsin CIA Recruitment 400 Demnonstrators Heckle Students Arriving for Interviews on Camiptis By URBAN LEHNER Nearly 400 demonstrators at the University of Wisconsin's Madison, campus picketed yesterday in front of the law building there to protest interviews by recruiters for the Central Intelligence Agency being conducted in a law school classroom. Although picketers lined thu halls around the classroom where the interviews were being held, the more than 50 students scheduled for then} were allowed to pass through the lines and no incident occurred. '"The students going in for interviews were heckled, photographed and questioned by the picketers ir: the halls but they were allowed to enter the interview room," Bob Zwicker, a past officer of the Wisconsin chapter of Students fo" a Democratic Society who parti- cipated in yesterday's demonstration, told The Daily last night. funds." According to one Bendix offi- cial. "There has been an excep- tional response from technical people all over the country." John Lewis, a Bendix public re- lations officer, said that presently there are not enough Ann Arbor research and development com- panies chipping in to helo to fi- nance the program. But, those who have' participated have received excellent return on their invest- ment. Lewis predicted that, based on the initial response. Bendix would try to participate in the program again. if the University is willing. He said he hoped to see the pro- gram soon expand into more and different media with greater exposure. / -Associated Press SEVERAL HUNDRED STUDENTS at the University of Wisconsin's Madison campus picketed CIA interviews hell in the law building on Bascom Hill yesterday. The demonstration, which was Wis- consin's third in the last 12 months, proceeded peacefully and no arrests were made. PROJECTED FIGURES: Enrollment Shows Increase For Spring, Summ'ter Terms By WALTER SHAPIRO Projected figures released yes- terday by University Registrar Edward G. Groesbeck indicate that enrollment will be an es- timated 9,614 students for the spring half term and 12,186 stu-1 dents for the summer half term this year. Both figures include those en- rolled in the spring-summer term. This represents an increase of five to six per cent over last year's levels. The projection depicts a stu- dent body which will be composedI of 57 per cent undergraduates during the spring term and 49 per cent undergraduates during the summer term. A striking feature is that 87 per cent of the under- tural growth of the University and graduates enrolled during the the growing popularity of the spring and summer terms will be spring and summer programs." juniors and seniors. He indicated that previous enroll- This high proportion of juniors ment estimates "have been very and seniors was partially explained accurate despite the fact that the by the fact that at the end of the spring-summer projections can on- winter semester almost two thirds ly be based on the history of the of the University's undergraduates past three years." have junior standing with 55 hours Final figures relased by Direc- or more. Other explanations of- tor of Registration Don E. Beach fered for this phenomenon are show that 3,414 students com- that upperclassmen are more like- pleted advance classification for ly to spend the summer away from the spring and spring-summer home and have a specific educa- terms. This represents an increase tional goal for summer study. of 8.8 per cent over the final fig- Natural Growth ures for 1966. LSA students, rep- Groesbeck stated that the pro- resenting 52 per cent of those who 'ected increase in spring and sum- frerigstered accounted for almost emer enrollment reflected "the na- all of this increase with 17.2 pm -- --- cent more students classifying than did last year. India Leader To Address Convocation The vice-president of India who has just been named a candidate for his country's presidency by the ruling Congress Party will de- liver the. commencement address at the University, April 29. Zakir Husain; vice-president of India since 1962, was announced as a presidential nominee by In- dia's Prime Minister Indira Ghan- di. The commencehent convocation will conclude the second major ceremony of the Sesquicentennial celebration, "Higher Education in Tomorrow's World," which is at- tracting several hundred educators from all over the world. More than 4700 diplomas will be awarded in the exercises in Mich- igan Stadium-or Yost Field House in case of bad weather. Of those, about 2000 will be master's or doc- tor's degree. Husain, who will take part in the four-day conference preceding commencement, is an author and educator as well as public servant. He was governor of India's pop- ulous Bihar State, appointed by the president, from 1957 until he became the nation's vice-president five years ago. Husain, a Muslim like 10 per cent of his countrymen, has been chairman of World University Ser- vice in Geneva and a member of the executive board of the United Nation s Economic, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in Paris. 'Picketers included a broad coa- lition of students. Groups repre- sented at the demonstration and officially supporting the protest were Wisconsin chapters of SDS, Young Democrats, the Committee to End the War in Vietnam and several local groups , Concerned Law Students, Concerned Black Students and United Campus Ac- tion. The picketers held their rally on Bascom Hill in front of the law school building from noon to 3:30 and later sponsored two "learn- ins" on the role CIA should be allowed on campus. A "learn-in," something like a teach-in but not quite the same according to Wis- consin students, was also held Monday night, before yesterday's rally. Eighteen university protection police were present at the rally and city and county police were "on reserve" in case they were needed, according to a spokes- man of the Daily Cardinal, Wis- consin's student hewspaper. No arrests were made in what turned out to be ,a relatively peaceful demonstration. However, according to Hank Haslach, past president of Wis- consin's SDS chapter, at least 10 Madison policemen were on hand at the .demonstration in ' addition to the university police. Haslack called the presence of city police to support the univer- sity protection police a "signifi- cant break in past university pol- icy." "After the Dow sit-in," Has- lach continued, "Chancellor Flem- ing proposed to the faculty and administration that the university permit the use of whatever force is necessary to handle the situa- tion. "Presumably," Haslach said, "that includes the national guard since Wisconsin doesn't have any state police except traffic police." See WISCONSIN, Page 2 t Parking on Campus: A History of Headaches i By. JIM HECK First of Two Parts Editor's Note: This two-part feature on parking on campus is to be included in a series on college parking which is being compiled by the University of Wisconsin (Milwaukee) Post. Back in 1827 when Simon Petu- lak drove his two-toned, one-seat- er Nevada Pinto onto the Detroit campus, no University officials, were very concerned with the problems of student parking. Si- mon just hitched him up to the flag pole. But 100 years later when Henry LaSworth drove his '20 Ford onto campus. Bikes had gone "out" and sity. "There just isn't enough to have cars. In 1932 the age was fines. Laws were passed to dis- cars had come "in." room," one Regent said. down to 26. courage student driving - some The rather uncomfortable sit- But the students didn't care Rea's progressive ideas died that still exist, today. One law for- uation forced then University about room. They wanted their quickly, however, and for the next bade parking on State street from President. M. S. Burton in October cars, and the Regents' statement 20 years nothing happened. The 3 a.m. to noon on Tuesdays, of 1922 to write home to parents: made them mad. As a protest. stu- Daily fought a magnificant battle, Thursdays, and Saturdays, S".. .your son or daughter would dents began roller skating to class- but it, too, gave up the fight when Ban.Removed be much better off without the es, and the injury rate on Ann The Daily editors, who had follow- On Sept. 23, 1952 the Office of use of an automobile." Burton Arbor surged the highest it had ed the police late one night to in- Student Affairs made a complete contended that it "too often leads ever been. Medical records labeled vestigate the quality of traffic en- study and recommended complete to a waste of time," the injuries "roller skate colli- forcement, were thrown into the removal of the ban. They pre- Moral Risk sions." Ann Arbor jail. sented it to the students for a President Burton, too, realized Some students employed chauf- Good for Soul vote. j the greatest danger of the smoke feurs to drive them around, and Everyone, then, just sat around But something very strange had{ spurting, gear cranking, four- told the chauffeurs to just "drive the ice cream parlors and wished occurred. The '50's marked a wheeled horses. He said automo- around all day" if you couldn't that they could have a car. The change in the composition of the biles lead "to an increase in prac- find a place to park. One student Medical School announced that student body and most students tices which . . . involve a serious brought an airplane to campus. walking was good "for the soul" didn't have cars, looking upon moral risk." No Airplanes and to ban walking-(i.e. allow them as a "sign of bourgeoise Be that as it may, students pro- Bs cars) - would seriously endanger luxury," tested. Led by The Daily, stu- But the Regents were not ouit- medical health.Sosuetdfaedher- tesed Ld y heDaly surwitted by those sneaky actions. But the uber f students in-- So students defeated 'he ref- dents presented the administra- They issued a statement b .Brrtgth n er o bf stu erendum asking that the baa be tion with a letter informing them The isued a amen b'i. creased. Thus, the number ofkStu- lifted by a vote of 2840 to 2792. thatc annoing w "ut" n that allchauffeurs and airplanes, toodents over 26 increased and park- ' Th w3. a. "'j Ut. but.it ki"led .L Higher than Anticipated Beach admitted that these ad- vanced classifications were "high- er than anticipaated," but refused to consider them an accurate i- dication of an increase in enroll- ment. He noted that these figures may only reflect the increasing popularity of the advanced clas- sification program. The increase in advanced clas- sification in the literary college has not had a visible strain on course offering for the spring and spring-summer terms since Beach indicated that only, three course, are closed. A survey of several academi departments revealed that clas, sizes are expected to be about th same or smaller than during the regular fall and winter semesters Prof. Wilfred M. Kincaid wh is in charge of setting up course schedules for the Mathematic Department explained, "In genera the size of introductory course will be the same as they are norm- ally. However, intermediate an advanced courses with only on e z s 4 e e s. 0 e :s Ll ,s d e Restructured IHA Plans Stress 'Quality' for Fall By KATHY PERMUT Plagued by lack of a quorum in its first year of operation, Inter- house Assembly's new administra- tion hopes to cover a great deal of ground in the coming year. IHA, a committee of Student Government Council, has the pow- er to recommend changes to the Office of University Housing and to discipline its members. It was created last year to end the d'ap- lination of noers hetwen Tnter- cently heard John Feldkamp, di- rector of University Housing. He could not give a definite answer to the question of a raise in room and board rates for next year, but said the current price structure will definitely contiue. An increase is tied to allocations from the state legislature, wages for labor and the number of con- ferences and summer-school stu- dents attracted to supplement the eight-month revenue of the dorm- # tn' aP.' the campus, administrators began biting their lips. They were mainly afraid that it would pollute the, air, and that poor Henry would have to take the thing back to Daddy. But Henry insisted that 1 blia1, UallVUlll6 + i Zk VUU all" vliau :rr_ u ..1.. ..aa,....,n ..,.a. .. ...t.., r,,. " " lilt YULt Wdb Ulv UL iu IwIlu