INFLATED PRICES AND DEFLATED VALUES See Editorial Page Y L 131kt i an &utIV CLOUDY Hligh-SO Lows-62 Showers likely today and tomorrow Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No. 3 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1966 SEVEN CENTS L ack of Undesignated Drive Funds larms Oi SIX PAGES Cf icials By NEIL SHISTER The University's massive fund drive, scheduled for completion this coming spring, is over 80 per cent of the way towards its $55 million goal, but it is still un- certain whether or not the drive will really give the University what it wants. Almost all the major gifts, which constitute the bulk of the $48.6 million thus far received have been earmarked for specific projcts. In fact, according to Jack Hamilton, assistant to the vice-prsident for University-relations, only about $2 million has been donated without spcific usage outlined. It is this, general fund which many feel is the heart of the fund drive, for this is money given to the University "carte blanche" to do with as it likes, not as the donor dictates. Much of the do- SDS Attacks' Class Ranks For Draft Petition for End of Compiling Standings; Seeks Student Vote By MICHAEL DOVER and PHILIP BLOCK Protest against the University's compiling o cumulative class rankings will be !presented by Voice political party, the local chapter of the Students, for a Democratic Society, in the form of a petition to Student Govern- ment Council, according to Voice member Gary Rothberger, '67. The petition calls for a referen- dum on the proposal that, "The University should cease the com- pilation of ranks which can be used to decide which students can be drafted." It also stated that the ' referendum be binding and that it "should be immediately heeded by the administration." The petition, which has been circulating since the beginning of registration, contains 1100 signa- tures. Over 100 of these were col- lected at the Voice rally yesterday afternoon on the Diag. Deals with Students SGC President Edward Robin- son, '67, who originally suggested the referendum, feels that "the draft question is a problem deal- ing with the students and should be decided by the students alone." Robinson also agrees with Voice's wish to have the referendum bind- ing on the administration. Mark Simons, '67, SGC admin- istrative vice-president, believes that a referendum would be the beginning of an increase in all- campus expressions of opinion. Along with SGC members Mar- garet Asman and Ruth Baumann, Simons also said he thinks that the referendum is the least that students can do to convey their feelings to the administration. According to SGC member Rob- ert Bodkin, SGC may adopt a res- olution on the subject with or without electing to hold a refer- endum. Bodkin also feels that if a referendum is held, it would have to be carefully worded in order to let the students express specifically what the administra- tion should or should not do. nated money has been channled into projects suggested by the University at the outset of the campaign, however the $10 million Highway Safety Research Insti- tute and the University Events Building, which is getting dona- tions, were not on the original guide to objectives, the fund drive "shopping list." Provide Attractive Projects In soliciting funds from poten- tial contributors, the University must present attractive ways for the money to be spent, according to Regent Paul Goebel, national director of the campaign. Often the contributor himself suggests projects, as was the case when Ford, General Motors and the Au- tomobile Manufacturers Associa- tion gave $10 million for the Highway Institute. "We'd like to get as much un- designated money as possible, thus letting administrators here decidet on the most productive projects to1 undertake rather than outside4 contributors who are often un- aware of changing priorities," says Goebel.I However, it is difficult to inter- est a major contributor in giving the University complete freedom1 with his money.1 Directing Spending But Goebel emphasizes that1 "we're not just taking money andl spnding it for what. everybody wants. We're directing it,"t There have been instances when major contributors wanted to givet money for inadvisable projects and Univsity officials, including Presi-i dent Harlan Hatcher, dissuadedl them from using the contributions instead for University sponsored objectives.I It has, however, been difficult tributors for donating chairs. He , says he feels very confident that At present the top o to attract donations for either feels it is very likely endowed the fund drive will far exceed its for which the University: the Residential College or en- chairs may have to come from $55 million goal. "It's like the ing funds are: dowed chairs. the general fund. United Fund, if you only get what -Endowed professorshi Residential College Small Contributions you shoot for, you consider it a the University claims. President Hatcher has made the Most of the general, unspecified failure." institution a distinct adva Residential College top priority fund is expected to come from Goebel himself seems confident, attracting and holding o and yet has been unsuccessful in smaller contributions. The general although he qualifies this confi- ing academic figures. getting any kind of large dona- contribution campaign is begin- dence by saying "I don't like to Events Building tions for it. Goebel says drive of- ning; there are target projects talk success until it's been achiev- -The $900,000 Universi ficials have been trying to inter- now underway in seven cities. ed." Building, which will be est contributors in donating en- An official for a consulting firm But it is evident that if the principally through self- tire buildings for the college, but that has helped colleges in under- general fund is to be sizably in- ing funds. hav failed, taking fund drives says "he is creased, it will have to come -Improvements to H; At present there have been no not surprised by the pattern of from the smaller contributions, the torium, including air con donations for endowed professor- donations to the $55 M campaign." $7 million plus that is still to and a more flexible stage. ships. It takes $500,000 to endow "In many large campaigns cur- come. -Additions to the Ce a chair, and Goebel says there rently going on. donors see fit to, 'Vital Margin' Research on Learning an are two solicitations currently be- earmark gifts. However, there And there are some who argue ing and, hopefully, the ing made for chairs for which he have been many cases when large that "the vital margin" for which pf a $2 million building. hopes soon to get final commit- gifts are made undesignated to a the campaign was begun, can -Building of a $2.milli ments. general fund," the official adds. come only from a general fund national center to provide But he reports there has been Confident of Success which the University itself deter- and dining facilities for no great interest by potential con- One University administrator { mines how to spend. students. NEWS WIRE Late World News Hy The Associated Press MONTGOMERY, ALA.-GOV. GEORGE C. WALLACE signed a bill Friday defying federal school integration guidelines in Alabama and set the stage for another possible confrontation with the federal government. In a prepared statement, Wallace said the new Alabama law "rips the veil of secrecy from the web of intrigue, bribery and blackmail by which the Health, Education and Welfare Depart- ment has invaded and destroyed the local autonomy of our school boards." The new law's main provisions prohibit Alabama school boards from signing agreement to comply with the guidelines and appropriate state funds to reimburse schools for part of the federal money they may lose for failure to abide by the stepped- up requirements. * * * * * PHILADELPHIA - A FEDERAL JUDGE ruled Friday that under Pennsylvania law, Negroes cannot be denied admission to Girard College, a private school established 100 years ago for "poor, white male orphans." The judge said the school was not in its nature private. But U.S. Dist. Judge Joseph S. Lord 3rd didn't order Negroes be admitted immediately. He said that seven Negro boys, whose applications were rejected, must first prove they were turned down solely because of race. The decision rejected a motion to dismiss a lawsuit by the City of Philadelphia and the state attacking segregation at Girard. FERDINAND E. MARCOS, president of the Philippines, will receive an honorary Doctor of Civil Law degree from the Univer- sity at a convocation in Clements Library, September 19. Following the convocation, Marcos will attend a luncheon in the Michigan League where he and his wife, Mrs. Imelda Ro- mualdez Marcos, will be the guests of the Regents and President and Mrs. Harlan Hatcher. Philippine students attending the University will be invited to attend the luncheon. * * * , ARJAY +MILLER, PRESIDENT of Ford Motor Co. is scheduled to present the first annual McInally Lecture September 15, inaugurating a series sponsored by the University Graduate School of Business Administration. The series will be presented in honor of William K. McInally, formerly chairman of the National Bank of Jackson. McInally served the University as a regent from 1960 until his death in 1964. The lecture is being financed by an endowment contributed by his friends. CONGRESSMAN WESTON VIVIAN (D-Ann Arbor) an- nounced yesterday the awarding of a research grant to James. Murray of the University engineering mechanics department. The two year grant, from the division of Air Pollution of the Depart- ment of Health, Education, and Welfare, has a rst year award of $32,254. bjectives -Building of 1000 seat Univer- is solicit- sity Concert Hall on North Cam- pus at a cost of $2.5 million. ps, which -Additions to the Chrysler Cen- "give an ter, for Continuing Engineering antage in Education. outstand- Fair Lane Conference Center -Creation of a Fair Lane Con- ty Events ference Center on the grounds iinanced adjacent to the Dearborn Campus liquidat- donated to the University by as- sociates of the late Henry Ford. ill Audi- -A faculty club and alumni ditioning center at a cost of $1.7 million. -Additional student support. nter for -$2 million for the Phoenix d Teach- Project. creation -An Institute in Foreign and Comparative Law to extend the on inter- original grant to the University housing Law School from the Ford Foun- foreign dation for the teaching of foreign law. Plan Action To Push Vote Referendum State Student Heads To Support Ballot For 18-Year-Olds By PATRICIA Q DONOHUE The presidents of college and university student bodies through- out the state will meet at Wayne " State University September 18 to plan collective action on the 18- year-old-vote referendum on the state's November 8 ballot. ticipation The Legislature voted in June dy sacks to place the resolution giving 18- ly pro- year-olds the right to vote on the mittee, ballot. If passed, the resolution would become an amendment to ' the 18-month-old constitution and Michigan would become the fifth state to lower the voting age. The resolution originally passed thirds majority last April and it passed the House with more than the necessary two-thirds majority required to pass a prospective amendment to the state constitu- Michael tion. depart- Congressional Campaigns Jack Faxon (D-Detroit) said d declare the leading elements in both par- iate way ties were in favor of the resolu- o should tion and that the principle of the he said. 18-year-old vote is on both party versation platforms. He added however, that (D-Ann it may not be advocated in present weig said congressional campaigns because appeal to each candidate will appeal to his rings be- own district's whims in order to ection, in be elected. ed to be He is pessimistic, however, g his seat about the success of the referen- Marvin dum in the fall, saying that vot- ing approval would come only aft- dent for er a concerted effort on the part of mith and the 18-year-olds to "wage a con- dent Af- vincing campaign of responsibil- the prin- ity," which is the aim of SOC. He decision said that the public, at the present to HUAC, time, is wary of lowering the figures," franchise because of the recent picketing and increased delin- try is it quency, Faxon said the young tions act people should begin "educating" vhen the the adults to respect the extension of the franchise. -Daily-An STANLEY NADEL, 66, answers questions from the audience at a Voice political party rally held yesterday on the diag. The ral tested the University's submission of membership lists of three campus organizations to the House Un-American Activities Com DiagRally Se r Charge ' Sacrificed Individuals to HUAi By CLARENCE FANTO Managing Editor Speakers at a Voice political party rally on the diag yesterday charged the University sacrificed individuals to sareguard the insti- tution when it sent membership lists of three campus political or- ganizations to the House Un- American Affairs Committee last month. Stanley Nadel, '66, chairman of the now-defunct Committee to Aid the Vietnamese accused the Uni- versity of sacrificing individuals and principles for material con- siderations. Nadel's committee col- lected funds to aid Vietnamese Dayton Quiet After Sporadic Violence I I i I I I i I civilians injured in the war, in- cluding those in Viet Cong-con- trolled areas. Nadel, who was served with a subpoena to appear before HUAC, said the committee exists "solely for the perpetration of unconstitu- tional acts," primarily the sup- pression of political dissent and freedom of speech. HUAC later subpoenaed membership lists of Voice, the local chapter of Stu- dents for a Democratic Society, the W.E.B. DuBois clubs, a left- wing organization with an inactive local chapter, and Nadel's com- mittee. The HUAC subpoena forced a "moment of truth" at the Uni- versity, Prof. Julius Gendell of the chemistry department said at the two-hour rally, which was attend- ed by at least 300 persons. "HUAC forced the University into a public act of compliance," Gendell charged. The University's decision to sub- mit class rankings of male stu- dents to the Selective Service sys- tem was criticized by Zweig of the economics ment. "The University shoul ranking is an inappropr of helping determine wh live and who should die,' He also reported a con with Rep. Weston Vivian Arbor) in Washington. Z that Vivian refused his a condemn-the HUAC hear cause of the November el which Vivian is consider in some jeopardy of losinE to Republican candidate Esch. Describing Vice-Presi Academic Affairs Allan S Vice-President for Stud fairs Richard L. Cutler, t cipal participants in the to send membership lists t and Vivian as "tragic Zweig asked: "What kind of count when people and institu against their principles v chips are down?" By The Associated Press Calm prevailed last night in Dayton, Ohio, where 1,000 Na- tional Guardsmen put an end to IMPLICATIONS FOR MICHIGAN: Await Supreme Court Ruling on Legality Of Maryland Aid to Parochial Schools By DAN OKRENT As the date draws nearer for the U.S. Supreme Court ruling on the Maryland State Supreme Court's decision voiding a legisla- tive act which empowers that state to render financial aid to private and parochial schools, opponents of a similar Michigan act, Senate Bill 780, are pondering the impli- cations of a possible favorable judgment. The Michigan law, passed and signed in June, specifically allo- cates $4.3 million from the state general fund to private and paro- chial schools throughout the state for tuition grants. schools, the Michigan bill met its' stiffest opposition from the Ameri-f can Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Spokesmen for the ACLU havef indicated that, in the case oft Supreme Court action upholding1 the Maryland court's decision, the ACLU will attempt to apply the Maryland case to Senate Bill 780. Private School Aidz The bill, introduced and spon-{ sored by Senate Majorty Leader1 Raymond Dzendzel and Rep. Wil- liam Ryan, both Detroit. Demo- crats, was meant to aid Mich- igan's private colleges, which have experienced severe enrollment cut- backs within the past few years hnn- -lon ^f hich 11i AT 'n -ar - the $348 paid by instate students at the University. Ryan, former editor of the lib- eral Catholic Worker, also points out that the bill not only helps the colleges, but will aid the stu- dents themselves by lowering costs. Rep. Jack Faxon (D-Detroit), chairman of the House Subcom- mittee on Higher Education Ap- propriations and a leading critic of the bill when it was debated in the Legislature, cites the fact that, regardless of the constitutional implications of the law, the $4.3 million for private schools cut into his recommendations for state-run institutions. 'One or the Other' gone unsigned, it is completely possible that the money could have been added to the budgets for the state universities." Regardless of whether or not the Maryland decision is upheld, there are many who believe that the Michigan case may still be contested. 'In Maryland, the funds were part of a matching grant pro- gram," pointed out one Detroit attorney, "while here it is an out- right gift to the schools involved." In this light, it is felt, there are more grounds for unconstitution- ality. The constitutional reference for the Maryland decision was the Fir'v+ Ameniment nrohihition on racial violence that left one per- son dead, about 25 injured and 134 arrested. "As far as I'm concerned, I don't think we're going to have any more serious trouble," said Mayor Dave Hall, sounding an optimistic note. OAlthough this outwardly ap- peared to be the case, other offi- cers and civil rights leaders said it was more of an "enforced truce" by rioters than a final surrender. Maj. Gen. Erwin Hostetler, the Ohio adjutant general, said he hopes to begin pulling the troops out as early as possible. "The situation appears to be normal," he said, "but it may change in two hours." The sporadic rioting and looting began after Lester Mitchell, 40, a Negro, was shot Thursday from a passing car. He died a fewa hours later. Major industrial plants located on the West Side operated nor- mally yesterday with "some ad- senteeism in excess of normal." Thousands of workers moved through the riot area with no in- cidents reporters, where Thursday Imany cars and buses carrying them to their jobs had been stoned. IMeanwhile, plans icontinued for AAUP Head Offers Defense To Charges of 'No Standards' By KATHIE GLEBE Charges that the American As- sociation of University Professors is "inept and inadequate" in set- ting standards for university in- structors were dismissed as un- justifid yesterday by state AAUP President Ralph Loomis, associate professor of English in the engi- neering college. His remarks came in response to charges by United Federation of College Teachers President Is- rael Kugler that the AAUP ". . has set no enforceable standards -C . .a ,..., -U _ _ + - e uniform work loads in college teachers' contracts, the AAUP feels that this would result in even less freedom for professors than they now have. "Kugler sees professors as em- ployes who would bargain with administrators and work in a clock punching set-up," Loomis said. "The AAUP, on the other hand, sees professors and administrators as men who cooperate in a com- mon endeavor-education and re- sarch. Each professor thus has considerable autonomy in his courses, research and other aca- . . . . .. ].. ea2, ~ t ^ a program to double professors' salaries in ten years. This goal was based on the findings of a White House conference on edu- cation. A scale was set up rating professors salaries at colleges throughout the nation from A to F. Administrators have been ex- tremely conscious of the-scale and a large number of salary increases have been effected. The Univer- sity currently has a plus-A rating, a rise over last year's B rating. Average compensation, including salary and fringe benefits at the I I