COPS AND CAMPUPS: TIME FOR 'U THINKING See Editorial Page Y L Uktian ~~IAit SLUGGISH High-55 Low--32 Frost tonight Rain unlikely Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL LXXVII No. 29 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1966 SEVEN CENTS Stud hows Increase in Rate of Student St EIGHT PAGES icide By DAVID KNOKE Suicides among college students, the number three killer in the 15-19 age group, appear to be on the rise. An estimated 1000 stu- derit suicdies for 1966 are predict- ed by a survey published in the October issue of Moderator, a magazine for top-ranking stu- dents. There were 754 reported suicides for this age group in 1964. The study, based on a survey of colleges, estimated that 90,000 stu- dents will threaten suicide and one in ten of these will actually make an attempt at self-destruc- tion. A "pressure cooker" emotion- al atmosphere on campuses was cited as a contributing factor. Dr. Edwin Schneidman, co-di- rector of the Los Angeles Suicide Prevention Center, said he be- lieved the figure of 1000 ac- tual suicides to be conservative. Schneidman, also a consultant for the National Institute of Health, said the NIH's Public Health Serv- ice estimates the college age group to have the nation's highest sui- cide risk. There are about 21,000 suicides annually for the total population. The Moderator survey grew out of study on student stress held last year. Philip Werdell, editor of the magazine, told a news con- terence that as many as 10 per cent of the nation's 61/2-million college students had emotional problems serious enough to war- rant professional help, but college mental health programs were not extensive enough -to reach more than half the total. Dr Donald L. Schafer, director of the University Health Service's mental health clinic, said the campus policy is to encourage stu- dents who find themselves facing distressing emotional problems to call or come in as soon as possible. Schaefer disputed the Modera- tor's assertion that academic pressures are a fundamental cause of suicidal acts. Conceding that problems encountered on the cam- pus might be a triggering event, he said, "A primary determinant lies in the emotional make-up of the student. This is largely de- termined before he gets to the University. His ability to cope with stress is helped or hindered by the way his family and environment have taught him to deal with similar emotional situations, such as stress in high school." There is a negligible difference in suicide rate among full-time University students when com- pared to the total population, ac- cording to Shaefer. The threat of suicide is often sufficient to relax any impulse to act out the threat, especially if the student receives attention. "The threat of suicide is a way of not dealing realistically with distressing problems," said Schaef- er. "These problems often cross one's mind during the course of a long life. Contemplation of sui- cide fulfills the wish of avoiding difficult situations by not exist- ing." Uncovering the frequency of contemplated or threatened sui- cide is very difficult, Schaefer ob- served. The Moderator's report was a projection from a survey of attitudes by a representative sam- ding of students. Research into the causes and frequency of sui- cides is difficult because of the near-impossibility of detection be- fore the event occurs. A check of various research centers on cam- pus revealed no on-going research into the problem. The University has ways of heading off potential suicides of students in University housing, said Schafer. The inservice pro- grams of the residence halls are run by persons trained in the de- tection of emotional problems among the residents. These people-resident directors, advisors, and housemothers-are instrumental in directing these students to professional help be- fore the stress becomes dangerous. Initiative for referral to help for off campus housing students must come from tle students or their friends. Past experience has shown that academic pressures are not prominent in a majority .of cases of emotional disturbance, accord inn to Schaefer. "are for the students may con- sist withdrawal from school, as well as attempts by the psychia- trist and patient's friends to give him support so that he may better face and cope with the causes of his distress. The University suicide rate ap- proximates the rate for the gen- eral population-6.8 deaths per 100,000 persons annually. Schaefer :zommented. This averages out to only three or four deaths each year among full-time University students, substantially lower than the over-all rate. Schafer refuted the claim that students have the highest suicide risk of any group in the country. Divorced white males in their fifties who drink a great deal are more prone to suicide than college students according to Schaefer. He agreed with the statement by Moderator that accidents and can- cer were currently ahead of sui- cide as a cause of death among the 17-24 group. In a recent study of student patients at Cornell, researchers uncovered no relationship between differences in sex and marital status among 81 of 134 patients with suicidal thoughts. There did appear to be a definite trend to- wards more suicides among under- graduates than graduates and among the better academic stu- dents. r Commission Discusses City Zoning Ordinance Revision Proposals Presented By SHA Members By ROBERT K. BENDELOW The Ann Arbor City Planning Commission last night heard dis- cussion of a proposed zoning o. dinance revision, the R 4C/Dp Zoning, which the Student Hous- ing Association said would lead to higher rents in the Central Cam- pus area. SHA spokesman Tom Van Lente presented the commission with several proposals to change the revised ordinance. Van Lente said that the purpose of their revisions would be to encourage a higher 'density of student apartments in the campus area. This would, Van Lente continued, produce a com- petitive situation in the apartment market in which rents would re- main stable, if not be slightly re- duced.e Robert Bodkin, speaking as an alternative spokesman for SHA, projected that 7500 more people will be in the apartment market by 1970. Bodkin stressed for the Commission that this figure in- luded only students, not added faculty, University staff, or Ann Arbor residents. SHA's main contention, support- ed, they said, by a number of Ann Arbor architects and developers, was that the proposed zoning or- dinance would compound the pres- ent apartment situation. Enact- ment of this ordinance would, Van Lente maintains result in a less- ened density of student apart- ments in the immediate campus area, and cause most new apart- ment buildings to be constructed away from the campus Trhe' proposed zoning would -limit high-rise apartments to a maximum of 10 stories. SHA proposed that this be raised to 12, where,:Bodkin said, a price plateau exists. It cost little more to build the extra two floors, but much more to build floor 13; -establish a minimum usable floor space of 10-14 per cent. 4 BHA's proposal would increase this to 40-60 per cent; '-require that the builder pur- chase 32,000 sq. feet before he could build in the campus area. SHA felt that of an acre was not practical around the campus and recommended a cut to 16,000; ' -establish a minimum of 700 sq. ft. of usable floor space per two bedroom dwelling. SHA raised this to 800 sq. ft; and -require that high-rise build- ings have at least 800 feet between them. 200 feet was considered more reasonable by SHA, because ! it would increase the density. Mlw Eician Bai&1 NEWS WIRE INTERFRATERNITY Council last night planned for the establishment of a Judicial Subcommittee which will have "juris- diction over all matters of fraternity conduct in accordance with University policy." In addition, IFC read cases against 13 fra- ternities accused of violating IFC regulations. ONE-HUNDRED-FIFTY alumni of the University are set to depart for SanPrancisco Oct. 12 on an around-the-world cruise to open the University's observance of its 150th birthday. The cruise will put in to 23 ports and return to San Francisco Jan. 9, 1967. University alumni groups at several of the ports of call are reportedly planning receptions, home visits, and other social events for the touring group. Retired professors from the Uni- versity's faculty will present aboard-the-ship lectures and semi- nars covering the politics, geography and history of many of the nations to be visited. University football films will also be flown to the ship for viewing during the cruise. Approximately 8,700 graduates live in countries other than the United States, many of whom hold high governmental positions. THE STATE BOARD of Education announced recently a public hearing on proposed changes in state regulations govern- ing distribution of federal funds for higher education. The hear- ing, which will deal with the equipment-purchase section of the Higher Education Act passed by Congress in 1965, will be held at 10 a.m. on Monday, Oct. 10, in the Court of Appeals in Lansing. The proposed changes involve a minor adjustment in the scoring standards used by the State Department of Education to determine the award of grants and the addition of a new stand- ard to assure broader distribution of funds. Eighty-eight Mich- igan public and non-public institutions of higher education are eligible for the funds, which are used on a matching basis for purchase of equipment and closed-circuit television for under- graduate study. It is estimated that Michigan's allocation this year will be approximately the same as last year, slightly more than $650,000. IN A UNANIMOUS vote of the Ann Arbor city councilmen, Walter E. Krashy was named police chief Monday night to suc- ceed Rolland J. Gainsley, who retired after 31 years with the police department. THE STATE BOARD of Education sought alternatives last week to the "tight money problem" which is affecting bank loans to college students, even though the loans are guaranteed by state and federal funds. The Board proposed a meeting with government and bank officials after hearing a report that "some Michigan banks par- ticipating in the loan program have indicated they no longer can make guaranteed loans to college students at six per cent." Dr. John W. Porter, chief of the State Department of Edu- cation's Higher Education Bureau, said "many hundreds of needy Michigan youngsters are being turned down for guaranteed loans (administered by the Michigan Higher Education Assistance Authority) even though there are sufficient guarantee funds to provide for $10 million in such loans." * * * * A MEETING of international experts comparing voting be- havior in at least a dozen European countries and the United States will be held at the University this April. The Survey Research Center of the Institute for Social Research will host the conference, Philip Converse of the political science and sociology departments will serve as general chairman. -Daily-Roger Rapoport -Daily-Roger Rapoport EXPATRIATE AND SUPAman at their respective bases. Bob (left) moved to Toronto this summer to avoid the draft. He reads here at his rented home In a Toronto working class neighborhood. Tony Hyde (right), a leader of Toronto's Student Union for Peace Action has helped to settle Bob and other draft dodgers. Exatriate in Draft-FreCanada. Know He Can't Go Ho.me Again By ROGER RAPOPORT Special To The Daily First of a Two Part Series TORONTO-This month 49,200 men will be inducted into the U.S. armed forces. Expatriate Bob Thomas will not be among them. It's not that Bob isn't eligible- he's been 1-A for the past five months. Rather, he has left his native Indiana to live here in Canada where American draft laws do not apply. Bob (not his real name) is one of a growing number of Americans emigrating to Canada to escape the draft.- An estimated 2,000 Americans have moved to Canada in the past two years for the same' reason. About 400 to 500 have set- tled in this modern Ontario pro- vinical capital of nearly 2 million. Bob, a soft-spoken 22-year-old, introduces himself as "your friend- ly neighborhood draft dodger," to preserve anoymity. A cum laude English graduate of a top Ivy League school last June, he returned home to find 1-A greetings from his local draft board. Bob had no intention of follow- ing in the footsteps of his 18- year-old brother who joined the Air Force in April. ("My brother and I gave up discussing Viet Nam, it's useless.") He carefully weighed the alter- native methods of avoiding the draft. To begin with, Bob is not a pacifist or conscientious objector. "Besides," he explains, "I wouldn't take C.O. status because it's de- meaning. I have no intention of cooperating with the military sys- tem in any way." The other route was jail-up to five years and $10,000 for failing to report for induction. "But that wouldn't do anyone any good. And SGC PARTICIPATION: Voice Members Vote To Stage Friday Rally To explain Sit-In BIPARTISAN: State Youth Work To Get Vote By PHILIP BLOCK Voice political party last night: voted to hold a rally Friday to explain the facts surrounding their sit-in last week at Vice-Presi- dent and Chief Financial Officer Wilbur Pierpont's office. The decision, which came dur- ing a general meeting, was prompted by the concern of sev- eral Voice members over the or- ganization's image on campus. Gary Rothberger, '67, believes the organization's poor image is due to student feeling that Voice has not attempted to use the "proper channels of communica- tion." Hoping to demonstrate a willingness to cooperate, Voice is seeking the participation of Stu- dent Government Council mem- bers at the forthcoming afternoon rally. SGC President Ed Robinson is among those Voice will invite to speak at the rally. Robinson is currently working toward holding an SGC inquiry into the issue of police on campus. Such an in- After compiling a report on the inquiry, Robinson hopes that it would be presented to a vice-presi- dential meeting so that the Uni- versity could act accordingly. By presenting factual evidence of po- lice activity on campus and by of- fering the legal channels which the administration can take, a proper relation among the students, the University, and the police may be reached. Voice member Peter Steinberger proposed that Voice take some le- gal action on their own. This ac- tion could be in the form of a suit, against both the University and the Ann Arbor police department claiming that the picture-taking of students at rallies violates their right to assembly., Steinberger feels that even if the suit was not successful, it would still bring attention to the issue and thus bring about some action by the University. I see no reason to make a martyrt of myself." So he decided the only way out was North. He told his father who was dismayed and his mother who "cried alot." When he arrived here in June, Tony Hyde of the Student Union for Peace Action, a Canadian affiliate of StudentsI for a Democratic Society foundj him a place to stay. To qualify for landed immigrant status and leg- ally remain in Canada he took a job at the University of Toronto library.' Bob finds Canada "far more re- laxed and less hysterical," than the U.S. Canada has no draft. "Any government that tried to start the draft again would get thrown out of office," explains, Tony Hyde. He says his fellow employes, unanimously support his reasons for moving to Canada. In his spare time he reads, writes poetry, does watercolors, and generally leads a; tranquil existence. Except for the fact that he can never return to the United States+ again (where he would face that $10,000 fine and five years in jail)+ his life is free of restrictions. A+ long-standing pact between the American and Canadian govern- ments prohibits his extradition. "From up here," says Bob, "America really looks like it's go- ing nuts." In fact he goes so far as to claim that America is "on its way to a collective nervous breakdown." An armchair analyst, he gives half a dozen reasons for project- ing a national crackup. "For one thing the right-wing militaristic en that got us Into Viet Nam is going to take control of the country. Sheer race hatred will result in constant premeditated violence between the races within three years. "Viet Nam is going to get worse, and in three or four years he will be doing the same thing some place else-there are four or five major candidates. Inflation will Report Greater Demand' For Business Graduates Cutler May Use Veto on SGC Action Calls on Committee To Review Requirement Of Membership Lists By SUSAN SCHNEPP Vice-President for Student Af- fairs Richard L. Cutler announced yesterday that he is "contemplat- ing a veto",of the recent Student Government Council action abol- ishing the requirement that stu- dent organizations submit mem- bership lists to gain recognition. Cutler has asked the Committee on Referral, which serves in an advisory capacity to him, as de- fined in the SGC Plan, to review the issues and inplications in- volved in SGC's decision and to present its findings to him. In a letter to the committee, Cutler explained that he has asked the committee to act because he has not had time to thoroughly consider the revision in the 96- hour period allowed him to review SGC actions. He attributed the lack of time to the sit-in at Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer Wilbur Pierpont's office last week. Mem- bers of Voice political party staged an all-night sit-in Thursday pro- testing the University's policy of requesting the Ann Arbor police force to send plainclothesmen to political demonstrations on cam- pus. Officer Signatures The revised policy on the recog- nition of student organizations, passed by SGC last Thursday, re- quires each organization to sub- mit the signatures of at least two officers in order to register as a recognized student organization. According to the new policy, mem- bership lists will no longer be re- quired, though the organizations may choose to submit lists for the purpose of supplementing personal records. These revisions were made be- cause of the Univeristy's release of membership lists to the House Un- American Activities Committee last August. The lists were sub- poenaed from the University for use in a HUAC investigation on anti-Viet Nam war activities. In indicating the possibility of a veto, Cutler emphasized that calling on the Committee on Re- ferral "does not imply any antag- onism toward SGC's efforts to clarify an area of great concern to the entire University com- munity." However, Cutler feels it is im- perative that time be made avail- able for "more extensive consulta- tion" on SGC's plan .and that pro- cedures with such broad implica- tions "should not be approved without a review of the total pic- ture." Thorough Scrutiny Cutler's letter states that "it is imperative, considering r e c e n t events, that lines of authority and responsibility for the regulation, not only of student organizations, but of individual students, be sub- jected to thorough scrutiny." This will mark the second time Cutler has made use of the Com- mittee on Referral. Last April he submitted SGC's approval of Pan- hellenic's fall rush plan to the committee for review. Cutler sub- seauently anroved fall rush after Winning the 18-year-old vote is going to take considerable 18- year-old work, a bipartisan group of Michigan teenagers decided re- cently, the Associated Press re- ported from Lansing. * Nine Democrats, two Republic- demonstrate bipartisan support for the proposition, coordinate ac- tivities, and disseminate literature. The organization also will con- centrate efforts in those parts of the state not already covered by other groups. An nthor noanniatinnc al led Democrat said the Detroit-based group is building support and recruiting volunteers on all Mich- igan campuses. It is backed by the National Students Association, and includes college Republicans and Democrats on its board. . Snna f +h vonncters, sain Fall term graduates of the Uni- versity's business administration graduate school are in greater de- mand than ever, reports A. S. Hann, director of placement. Approximately 75 candidates for the Master of Business Admini- stratinn rdegee will be interviewed According to Hann, during the winter term more than 375 com- panies will interview approximate- ly 210 business school students for spring and summer placement. About 275 students will receive MBA degrees at that time. I I