Gromyko Renounces US. Peace Proposals See Page 3 MSU LAW SCHOOL PLAN: DESCENT OF APATHY See Editorial Page Y 1flt: 4an ~E~Adi BRISK. High-4O Low--35 Windy with little chance of rain Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, INo. 20 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1966 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES oua rrssass.ua AFL-CIO Postpones 'U' Boycott , Prepares Resolution Condemning Regents, Speech by Hatcher By ROBERT KLIVANS The Michigan AFL-CIO yester- day postponed any immediate threat of a boycott of the Univer- sity's educational services and also passed a motion authorizing the officers to prepare a resolution condemning P r e s i d e n t Harlan Hatcher's speech in Los Angeles on Thursday and the Regents for continuing their opposition to col- lective bargaining. The formalmdeclaration con- demning President Hatcher's ad- dress and the Regents' stand will probably appear early next week. The boycott plan was - directed as punishment for the University's opposition to PA 379, a state law requiring public employers to bar- gain collectively with employes. ILIR The major facility that was threatened by the boycott is the University-Wayne Institute of La- bor and Industrial Relations. An AFL-CIO spokesman said that the University educational services are "too tied in with Wayne State" to establish a boy- cott which could hurt the Uni- versity but not Wayne. President Hatcher's speech to the California Bar Association questioned the rights of public employes to use collective bar- gaining methods. Old and Weary "The old and weary bitterness of labor-management strife and warfare should not be carried into the public service or into a mod- ern university enviornment," Pres- ident Hatcher said. There was extensive discussion of the speech-at the state meet- ing, and it aroused animosity and opposition, according to an AFL- CIO spokesman. .aUniversity administrators main- tain PA 379 infringes on the Uni- versity's constitutional autonomy. But the University lost a plea for an injunction to stop certification of collective units in the Univer- sity, and its. suit to overturn PA 379 is still pending in the courts. Wrong, Wrong, Wrong In apparent reference to the PA 379 controversy, President Hatcher said in his Los Angeles talk that for legislatures to set a university budget and then allow bargaining "is to require frustrating rituals by the wrong agents, at the wrong time, in the wrong place, over the wrong issues." Injection of industrial union bargaining techniques into public employnent, President Hatcher said, "comes at a time when the model itself and its wider implica- tions are being subject to severe strains, severe misgivings on the part of some thoughtful leaders and particularly by the big, long- suffering but sympathetic general public." S-- __ _- _Improvement 1 4riItrigan Baty Of Rackham NEWS WIRE Is Proposed -' Dean Spurr To Apply i DORMITORY OVERCROWDING has been relieved substan- tially, according to John Feldkamp, director of housing. Feld- kamp reports that the only students presently living in converted rooms are those who do so at their own wish. As of Sept. 1, there were still vacancies at both Baits and Oxford housing. Well over 40 units are, presently vacant due to "no-shows" or people who have broken their contracts, Edward Salowitz, assistant to Feldkamp indicated. 1800 new University-owned housing units will be available in the fall of 1967 with the completion of Bursley Hall and the sec- ond section of the Baits complex. ANN ARBOR'S REPUBLICAN City Organization unanimously endorsed the proposed constitutional amendment for the 18-year- old franchise, approving the State Republican platform. George Thorne, chairman of the Ann Arbor body, said, "The 18-year-old of today is obviously a better educated, more responsible and more sophisticated citizen than his counterpart of a few generations ago. Governmental deciisons having a profound impact on his life are being made almost daily. It seems then only reasonable and fair that the 18-year-old should be permitted to participate in those decisions." THE UNIVERSITY REGENTS agreed Thursday to partici- pate in an Ann Arbor-University study of the Huron River Valley tdevelopment. Guy Larcom, city administrator, and Ray Martin, city plan- ning consultant, were named to represent the city and John McKevitt, assistant to the vice-president, and John Telfer, campus planner, to represent the University in defining objectives of the study. The general purpose of the study will be to survey the present land use in the river valley and determine needed acquisitions by both the city and the University to ensure open space in the area in the future. * UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER will sponsor a discus- sion on "The Draft-Where It Is Going" Oct. 2 at 4 p.m. in Aud. A of Angell Hall..Captain William S. Pascoe, USN public informa- tion officer, will represent the Selective Service along with a mem- ber of the Lansing board. They will be joined by Ed Robinson, '67, president of 'Student Government Council and John DeLa- mater, Grad, president of Graduate Student Council. Open questioning will follow the discussion. * * * * PETITIONS FOR the student position on the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications may be obtained at the Student Activities Building. Petitions must be returned -to the SAB by Oct. 3. * *x* * "THE MARKET," a newly created student merchandise ex- change, will open Monday. Combining the efforts of UAC and SGC, "The Market is designed as a go-between for students wishing to buy or sell anything from motorcycles to books. UAC members will run "The Market," but no merchandise will actually be handled' by the exchange. Offices for "The Market" will be in the Union near the UAC headquarters. Offers to buy or sell can be placed by calling 665- 3303 between 3-5 p.m. THE MUSKET CENTRAL COMMITTEE was announced re- cently by General Chairman Richard Rattner. The committee includes Rebecca Rapport, assistant chairman; Steve Goldman, publicity; Jim Heisler, promotion; Mark Rosenberg, communica- tion; Bruce Hillman, set design; Nancy Fox, costume design; Richard Miller, lighting design; Toby Feldman, costumer; Jeff Davidson, technical director; Bruce Anderson, program design; Ken Krone and Allan Sweet, program advertising; James Dunn and Robert Lander, tickets and ushers; Kate Siegel, props; Phil Doolittle, stage manager; Chuck Robinson, treasurer; Peggy Morgenstern and Donna Farnum, secretaries; Merle Jacobs, make-up; and Maureen Anderman, assistant to the director. Liberal New Concepts To Graduate School By BOBBI SCHEAR Dean Steiuhen . Spurr of the R-kham School of Graduate Studies discussed "Graduate Edu- cation in the United States" yes- xtrday afternoon at the first of a ;series of informnal colloquia spon- sored by the Graduate School Council. As the representative of the graduate students in the Rackham School, which comprises 25 per cent of the student body, Spurr's major concern is attracting the best graduate students and gradu- ating them expediently and with the best education possible. Spurr said the University is leading the effort in the national development of an intermediate major degree between the Mast- er's degree and the Doctor of Philosophy. This degree, the Can- didate in Philosophy, would for-' mally recognize the student who has successfully completed his for- Imat study, but has not yet written his dissertation. He also wants the Faculty Exe- cutive Board to review "the wealthj of regulations that are not direct- ly pertinent" and to simplify the procedures. Spurr is especially interested in changing the often circumvented: requirement of a reading knowl- edge of two foreign languages. In- stead, he wants to "establish mini-1 mum standards that all graduate students must meet." "Well aware that graduate stu- dents do not live by knowledgea alone," Spurr said that he is try-} ing to develop "package plans". t These would enable graduate stu-a dents to live at a reasonable stan- dard of living while gaining maxi- !h mum work and educational ex-I perience. SHe said the American Council of Education rated the Universityr distinguished in 8 fields and strong in the other 20 areas. Thed University and the University oft California at Berkeley were theC only two state supported institu-h tions ranked in the top ten. b -Daily-Chuck Soberman AMPHIBIAN LABORATORY. TO OPEN The zoology department opens its new Amphibian Laboratory today. The guest of honor for the opening will be University of Hiroshima President Dr. Toshijiro Kawamura, a world authority on amphibians. Dr. Kawamura, pictured here (left) with a member of the zoology department, has been working closely with University Prof. George W. Nace on the new amphibian project. The Amphibian Laboratory will be an extension of the work that Dr. Kawamura has done in Hiroshima. To co- ordinate research, a member of the Japanese staff will remain in Ann Arbor. SURVEY FINDINGS: Pr'o fess tonal uccess Not Related to Grade By CLARENCE FANTO pleted their fellowships. Managing Editor The findings showed students Research teams in New York who had graduated from college and Utah have recently come up with honors, who had won scho- with findings which should prove'lastic medals or who had been to be of great comfort to many elected to Phi Beta Kappa were anxious students. more likely to be in the "lower There seems to be no direct re- professional performance levels" lationship between high grades in than students who had not dis- college and professional success in tinguished themselves while in later life college. Dr. Eli Ginzberg, a New York: Med Grades researcher, studied a group of Co- In another survey, a team of lumbia University graduate stu- University of Utah professors dents who had won fellowships to found there is almost no relation- the school between 1944 and 1950. ship between the grades a medical Ginzberg's task was to find out student gets and his later per- how sucessful the 342 students had formance. become 14 years after they com- This finding startled the leader Student Participants Accord Knauss Report 'Qualified Yes' of the research team, Dr. Phillip B. Price. He called it a "shocking finding to a medical educator like myself who has spent his profes- sional life selecting applicants for admission to medical school." He added that the study caused him to question the adequacy of grades not only in selecting those who should be admitted to medical school but also in measuring a student'sprogress. There are numerous theories attempting to explain these sur- prising findings. The most com- mon one affirms that the over- emphasis on grades which begins when a student is in junior high school and continues throughout his academic career tends to de- stroy interest in learning for its own sake. Love of Learning John Holt, an educator and au- thor of "Why Children Fail," ob- serves that current school methods destroy love of learning by en- couraging students to work for petty rewards -names on honor rolls ,gold stars, for the "ignoble satisfaction of feeling they are better than someone else." Among the by-products of grade pressure are cheating and suicide. A research project by a Columbia University researcher, William J. Bowers, established that a major- ity of college students cheat on examinations at some point in their academic career. The project was based on a two-year investi- gation at 99 colleges and uni- versities. Bowers interviewed 6,000 stu- dents and 600 deans. He found' cheating prevalent at every one of the 99 schools and, statistically, it turned out to be three times a* common as the deans believed. Haber Sees Delay in LSA Committees Student Advisory Groups Planned at Departmental Levels By MEREDITH EIKER Student academic advisory com- mittees, organized at the depart- mental level within the literary college, will not be established on a full scale basis at this time, Literary College Dean William Haber and Robert Golden, '67, of the college's Steering Committee said yesterday. Haber explained that while there is "much merit" in the concept of such advisory committees, they will be difficult to implement at first. Consequently great care must be taken in planning and setting them up to avoid involv- ing students and department chairmen in unnecessary meetings or other unproductive sessions. In discussing the organization of the advisory committees yes- terday, Haber and Golden decided that the best approach toward their successful realization would be the immediate establishment of the committees in only two or three departments. These would provide an experienced base from which other departments could benefit. Size Haber pointed out that prob- lems of size, frequency of meetings, and agenda planning could be worked out by these few depart- ments, facilitating the process for the others. "We can learn," he said, "how fast to expand and in what ways.". Varying forms of student aca- demic advisory committees cur- rently exist within the University structure, although most of these are concerned primarily with graduaate education. Most, as well, are organized on a school or col- lege level rather than on a de- partmental level. Within the literary college itself, the psychology department has experimented with an essentially undergraduate academic advisory committee. Golden hopes to re- vitalize this committee as one of the three starting groups and mentioned the anthropology and sociology departments as other possibilities because of the interest they have already shown in insti- tuting similar committees. Beginnings More specific plans for begin- ning advisory committee organi- zation have not yet been com- pletely formulated by the Steering Committee. The program has thus far, at least in theory, received the active support of Student Government Council. SGC President Ed Robin- son, '67, explained that the phi- losophy behind the student aca- demic advisory committees is ba- sically sound: they will not at- tempt to effect administrative changes, but instead will seek to improve the way courses are run in each particular department through co-operative student and faculty evaluation. The recently published Knauss Report on student participation has also recognized the need for student academic advisory com- mittees. Effectiveness of already existing advisory groups was found to be contingent upon active sup- port by the chairman of the school or department and participation by the faculty. Effectiveness The report indicated as well that the "effectiveness of the organi- zation depends upon the degree of their involvement in departmental affairs, and on the amount of re- sponsibility they are given by the department." The committee which prepared the Knauss Report found 92 or- ganizations' at the department or school level with the University intended to serve in some aca- demic advisory capacity. Of these, only 26 were registered with SGC as officially recognized student organizations. The report stated that "student participation in the schools, col- leges, and other academic- units has not been widely recognized within the University. By SUSAN SCHNEPP ' "Good as tar as it goes" is the overall judgment of the studentsj who worked on the Knauss report on student participation. After a year and a half of weekly meetings, hours of debate and discussion and consideration of numerous interim reports, the nine students who wrote the re- port with four professors, are gen- ing them to take a longer time to erally satisfied with it, but have complete college with no penalties. doubts on the extent to which it: The students are very much in will be implemented. They think favor of the recommendations on f that in some areas it should have restructuring Student Government gone further or have made more Council and the Joint Advisory concrete recommendations. Council. One area of particular concern Golden called the recommenda to the students is that of student tion on SGC "perhaps the strong- participation in academic affairs, est part of the report" and "one though opinion varies on method solution to making the University and extent of participation. a real community of all the stu- SACUA ANALYSIS: Clarify Procedures for 'U' Influence By PATRICIA O'DONOHUE The Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs was estab- Slished to give members of the fac- ulty a voice in University deci- sions. It has operated on a fluc- tuating basis in the past but with reorganization it may become a powerful organ. SACUA, prior to reorganization, was made up of 19 members elect- ed at large by the faculty com- munity. They were chosen by a nominating body of the various colleges but not by the schools; themselves. In the spring of 1965, a pro- posal of reorganization w a s brought up before SACUA for ap- proval but was referred to the Subcommittee on University Free- dom and Responsibility to iron out difficulties. This subcommittee was formed in 1961 to probe "the effect of the size of the University on the fac- ulty's ability to formulate a con- sensus and communicate it in time stronger voice than it had in the past. ! There was an addition of a third policy body, a legislative as- sembly. Its 65 members are nomi- nated and elected within the schools themselves. The numbers of members within the Assembly are proportionate to the size of the college. ! The Assembly can initiate binding action which can only be rebuked by a called meeting of the Senate. Assembly The Assembly elects the nine- man SACUA, the executive body, which controls the agenda of the various subcommittees which it heads. A proposed action is given to the appropriate subcommittee for study. The subcommittee will pre- sent its report to SACUA which will bring it up before the Assem- committee meets with A. Geoffrey1 Norman, vice-president for re- search; the campus planning sub- committee meets with Wilbur Pierpont, vice-president and chief financial officer, etc. Theoretically the vice-presidents will consult with these subcommit- tees on policy questions. However, this hasn't always worked in the past. Last spring the Assembly was in an uproar because one of the vice-presidents had not consulted his advisory subcommittee before accepting a new institute. Voting eligibility is a hazy pro- cess. Only full professors and assistant professors may be mem- bers, and therefore vote in the Assembly, although the literary college allows people who have only been here a year to vote for that college's Assembly members.' Non-Teachers Morgan said that although largej numbers of faculty members are involved in research, most have at least one class which they lecture. The Universityuadministrators usually come through the ranks of the faculty and most hold the title of professor and can theoretically vote. Faculty members admit that while SACUA gives the faculty representation and a voice in Uni- versity decisions several difficul- ties still remain, -There is the possibility of dup- lication of efforts; the various schools may pass similar resolu- tions such as the education school and the literary college did onM HUAC, or possibly different ones. "Curricula should never be left entirely to faculty," said Barry Bluestone, grad. "Students should sit on faculty academic commit- tees and have a proportionate vote on curriculums," he added. Voice "If students are not given a voice," Bluestone said, "they go outside the system to get what they want, as in the free univer- sity." Robert Golden, '67, thinks that student, advisory c o m mi t t e e s should be set up in each depart- ment to advise department chair- men and faculty in their specific areas. However, he said that a student voting voice would only be feas- ible if the committee members could claim representative status among students, ideally through M the election process. John Tropman, grad., on the dents." James McEvoy, grad., sees a re- organized SGC as a "strong base for student participation." Golden puts the burden of re- sponsibility for implementation on the writers of the report, and feels it is up to the committee to see that the report is not shelved. Revolutionary Data System Facilitates Job Placement By DAVID S. HOORNSTRA companies to schedule interviews Computerization, that perennial this year. invadofuan, hAmong the additions to last invader of human relations, prom- year's 1,238 graduate- seeking ises to be the hottest thing in companies are Inland Steel, Wey- ices, according' to recent state erhauser Co., American Optical, American college placement serv- Winkelman Brothers, and the New ices, according tto recent kstate- York Daily News. ments by Dr. Evart W. Ardis of More than 640 school districts the University's Bureau of Ap- are expected to send recruiters to pointments. Michigan to interview School of The new "GRAD" (Graduate Education grads. Resume Accumulation and Dis- Full-Time Staff tribution) system enables gradu- Dr. Ardis heads up a full-time ates of Michigan and other Col- staff of over twenty people with lege Placement Council schools to 14 air-conditioned interview rooms enter resumes in an electronic and what Dr. Ardis calls "the data center at Bethlehem, Pa. largest career counseling library In either case, neither has the other hand, feels that students weight of a formal faculty state- should not be allowed to sit on ment. faculty committees and that aca- Admission demic and curriculum problems --Certain policy questions, such and changes should be left to the as admission policies, the pros- faculty. Tbly for a vote. 'There is also a problem with pective size and growth of aC Ultimate power lies with the representation of non-teaching school occur within the adminis- Conduct Regents but as one SACUA mem- faculty. Technically members must trative structure of each college j Student conduct was an area