THE ADC PROBLEM: MONEY - INFORMATION See Editorial Page , t C igan ~~aitV SNOW & WINDY High-34 Low-25 Snow changing to flurries in afternoon with high winds Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 54 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1966 SEVEN CENTS MSU Offers Accelerated Medical rogr By DAVID KNOKE Education in July to approve an their progress toward a medical entering class, beginning ii the proach to introducing prospective grind of the first year student; biolo extension of the curriculum to a degree there. fall of 1969, from 130 to 200, pro- M.D. candiates to the profession. they will spend only about 24 cours Second of a two-part series four year medical college. A lay- The students will probably try vided the necessary operating and hours a week in class compared The new medical school pro- man committee is studying the is- to transfer for their junior year construction funds are available. to the average 30 or 40 hours at gram at Michigan State Univer- sue and will soon make its recom- to one of the state's four-year Associate Dean Morton Levitt said a three-year sequence of zourses most schools. Th sity has started at a time when mendations to the board, which schools, at Wayne State and the that Wayne has indicated to the extending down into the senior The heart of the MSU curri- has 1 m e d i c a 1 educators across the will then decide whether or not to University, or elsewhere in the Legislature many times that it year of undergraduate college. culum is a two-year sequence ly th country are clamoring for more draft a proposal to the Legislature nation. could accommodate most or all Dean Andrew D. Hunt, Jr., said designated as "human biology." not b and better facilities. for appropriate action. The University Medical School the applicants from MSU who that a few applicants might even Any given section of human b- man MSU's two-year College of is expanding its entering class might apply after finishing the be admitted at an earlier time, al- ology will be covered from al until Human Medicine is designeBoth the Legislature and the from 200 to 210 next year, o be- two-year school at that time. N though the future normal process angles, theorti and clinical and chair chimno h orsmdclwill be to admit non-B.A. degree willgosSt- wl reach down into the undergrad- chairman of the board's medical come eligible for a Federal grant "This would be a sort of a tacit hold at thedout yea. es will include pa nt diagnosis. Stu-schoc ue eetoccertth u- education commitee sem teager to upgrade its teaching. However, ragmn ewe w tr, holders at the fourth year dents will be exposed to clinical fromn uate level to accelerate the stu-tougaeisechn.Hwvr arrangement between two sister dent's program toward a medical to expand the MSU facilities as Alexander Barry, assistant dean, institutions. MSU is "one of a half- Next year, some of the students work much earlier than is usual se degree. part of the board's proposed Mas- said there has been no formal dozen two-year medical schools in in the new entering class may in medical curricula. Ot] It began this fall with 26 stu- ter Plan for Higher Education. agreement with MSU to take its the country," said Levitt, "nd I enter in the second year if the Lansing's Sparrow Hospital has distin dents after eight years of struggle Yet a source at MSU involved graduates and he doubted the do not know of any graduate from medical school, which they can agreed to provide a 44-bed clinical pecia and controversy to add this third in the creation of the new school, University would have room at then who cannot get into a four- gain through a study program of teaching unit in addition to MSU's scien medical school to the two four- doubts that passage and imple- that time to take a proportional year school." basic physiology, biochemistry and health center facilities. - ly fr year schools existing at Wayne mentation of the extension will share. anatomy as undergraduates. The last two years of the three- M. B State and the University. come in time for the 26 medical Wayne State's medical college The MSU medical school curri- The net result will be to free year sequence will include work in Phili] MSU asked the State Board of students now at MSU to continue will undergo a huge increase li its culum represents a radical ap- the students from the traditional pathology, pharmacology, micro- ology EIGHT PAGES 'am gy, anatomy, and b a s ic es in genetics, psychology, ropology and sociology. e College of Human Medicine 3 academic departments; cri- e department of medicine has een staffed because the 'hu- biology courses won't begin next year. The department man, Prof. Scott N. Fisher, come to MSU next spring Rochester University medical d. her departments have landed iguished faculty members, es- lly those involved in the basic ces. Included are two former- om the University: Theodore 3rody of pharmacology and pp Gerhardt of the microbi- department. Landlord, Students in 1 Agreement Rights Commission Aids Wagner, Tenants In Dispute Settlement By SUE REDFERN A settlement was reached yes- terday between Carol Sue OakesI and Sharon Johnstone and land- lord Martin Wagner over the ques- tion of Wagner's eviction of the two University students from a; home owned by him. The agreement, reached in a closed meeting of the Housing Committee of the Ann Arbor Hu- man Relations Commission, pro- vides for a written lease which will extend to the end of the academic year. David Crowley, chairman of the Human Relations Commission, said he was not at liberty to dis- close the terms of the agreement. The question of the students' occupancy of the residence start- ed in September, when neighbors complained to Wagner that Misses Oakes and Johnstone were enter- taining Negroes in the house. This,; coupled with a misunderstanding as to the terms of tenancy (there was no written lease), led to a series of incidents which culmi- nated in the eviction notice. Wagner's rejection of a subse- quent negotiated settlement led Action for Human Rights, an ad hoc committee formed in the women's behalf, to picket Wagner's home Oct. 23-25, charging racial discrimination. The W a g n e r s countered the picketers' charges by maintaining that the issue wasj not one of race but of agreeable' terms of occupancy. The demonstration was halted: on Oct. 25 by an injunction served' by Judge James R. Breakey of the Washtenaw County Circuit Court.. Damage charges pressed by the Wagners at that time will be con- sidered in a hearing on Nov. 9 unless dropped in the face of the settlement. Miss Oakes saidlast night, "I'm very pleased by the outcome of the, situation.sThe agreement which was reached today was the same agreement which was rejected by Wagner, giving rise to the neces- sity of the picket." Arthur Carpenter, Wagner's at- torney, .said, "I think that the. matter has been amicably settled to the satisfaction of everyone." _Delay Action j 14 ilpga Bn Ba 9On Proposed NEWS WIRE Police Board MORE THAN 250 Eastern Michigan University students staged a four-hour sit-in yesterday protesting food prices in the university's McKenny Union snackbar, the Associated Press reported Officials of McKenny Union agreed to compare its prices to those at other state-supported schools; The demonstration in the union followed adoption Tuesday of a resolution by the school's Student Council protesting the union's prices. MEMBERS OF THE TUSKEGEE Institute committee of the University-Tuskegee exchange program will visit the University today and tomorrow. The committee is responsible for implementing the exchange program between the two schools. Its members will meet with faculty and administrators in the literary college, College ofI Engineering, School of Education, School of Social Work, Audio Visual Education Center and the Television Center. Initiated in 1963 by President Luther Foster of Tuskegee and President Harlan Hatcher, the exchange program aims to pro- vide students and faculty with an opportunity to explore the3 differing cultural patterns of the respective institutions through a semester's residence. University students have until Nov. 15 to return application blanks for the spring 1967 semester at Tuskegee. The exchange is open to all University students. Information on the program may be obtained from John Chavis or Mrs. Jean Potter in the Tuskegee Exchange Office, 1223 Angell Hall. Visitors from Tuskegee are Dean John Welch, Prof. Donna L. Brook, and Drs. Howard S. Greenlee, Edward L. Jackson and William P. Smith. STATE FARM MUTUAL Automobile Insurance Co. is widen- ing its "good student" discount from 20 to 25 per cent. State Farm explains that students who get high grades spend more time behind books and less time behind the wheel, reducing the prob- ability of accidents. To qualify for the discount, approved by 34 states, the stu- dent must have achieved the grade average required by his school for academic merit the semester preceding his application. The discount applies to males under 25 in high school or college, who normallyehave to pay two to four times standard rates for auto insurance. FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY recently did a study on the type of freshman who join fraternities and sororities. According to Gary Widmar who ran the study, girls entering sororities tended to come from higher socio-economic groups, were more. active in high school extra-curricular activities, dated more fre- quently, and wanted to be remembered as leaders, while inde- pendents would rather be remembered as outstanding students. Among the boys few such discrepencies existed in their back- grounds. Most fraternity men, however, were chiefly concerned over financial situations of future jobs, and planned to do more graduate study and careers associated with business or engi- neering. Independents were more concerned with educational fields and the performing arts. Talks To Continue On Police-Community Relations Committee By GREG ZIEREN Action on the proposed police community relations committee - was deferred for further study Monday night at the Ann Arbor City Council meeting. The proposal, which was sched- uled for. discussion at Monday's meeting, will be discussed at length in, a council working session later this month. City Administrator Guy Larcom said he would pre- sent the proposal in detail at this meeting. The idea of a police advisoryj board was conceived at meetings held with Larcom, Police Chief Walter Krasny, several police offi- SN O W J cers and leaders of the Negro com- munity. These meetings, called to Yesterday's unexpected bli discuss community-race relations, happy-go-lucky students wi were held during the summer. Albert Wheeler of the medical " school, state head of the National F Irst Sno Association for the Advancementr of Colored People, was a major participant in these discussions. " He said he envisioned that such aW board would create new under- i- tdws standing between the police de- partment and civil rights groups." Houses were fixed in glad Both Wheeler and Larcom not- ial combat from white am ed the absence in Ann Arbor of tion, trays were taken fror the racial violence which plagued dorms, little round white Michigan cities of comparable popped up around the ca size, such as Benton Harbor, Jack- and in many places traffics son and Hamtramck this summer. ed to a halt as the first sn Wheeler said that he felt that ra- the season graced the terrain cial violence was avoided in Ann rounding Ann Arbor, mucho Arbor as a direct result of these Midwest and part of the S summer meetings. east. Two-Fold Purpose The United States Weathe -Daily-Thomas R. Copi FLIES STUDENTS FROLIC izzard may have tied up traffic for miles around, but it didn't bother these who took a little time off from their studies to go sledding in the Arboretum. )w o Season Blankets Reaches Into South LSA Faculty To Review Credit Policy To Consider Making All Courses Worth Four Credit Hours By PAT O'DONOHUE The faculty assembly of the literary college will discuss a pro- posal that all courses carry four hours of credit at their meeting on Monday.. The proposal was initiated by Prof. Albert Feuerwerker of the history department at a previous meeting. It was not embodied in any formal proposal but was given to the college's curriculum com- mittee for study. The unit will pre- sent its suggestions along with the proposal at Monday's meeting. Feuerwerker said that he would like to see upperclassmen taking four courses a semester as fresh- men and sophomores normally do now. His proposal would require 128 credit hours for graduation rather than the. present 120 credit hour requirement. There have been many other suggestions along this line, accord- ing to a member of the curriculum committee. He said that the com- mittee will most likely use Feuer- weker's proposal as a springboard for more specific guidelines. The proposal was presented to the executive committee of the literary college at its meeting last night but Willam HFaber, dean of the college, said the meeting ad- journed before the matter was discussed. Haber added that the college "is constantly exploring ways and means to make the best use of the student's energy." Feuerweker's proposal "merits careful consider- ation" although there "are some practical problems with it," he concluded. James Robertson, assistant dean of the college, said he would like to see "some re-thinking" in this area because there is general con- cern with students at the junior- senior level taking five to six courses in order to meet the credit hour requirement for graduation. There are some faculty who are interested in abandoning the no- tion of credits altogether, accord- ing to one faculty member. This was done at Harvard where a course is defined as one year's work in a subject while a semes- ter's work constitutes one-half of a course. liator- imuni- m the men mpus, snarl- ow of' a sur- of the outh- r Bu- 'reau at Willow Run recorded al- most four and a half inches yes- terday afternoon. Flurries started last night, and turned into con- tinuous precipitation all day yes- terday. The snow is expected to continue to fall today, diminish- ing to flurries this afternoon and evening. It is predicted that up to four more inches will fall by to- night. Larcom and Wheeler saw thea purpose of such a committee as4 two-fold: 1) it would aid both the Negro community and the police department in resolving problems. of mutual concern, and 2) it might aid in the recruitment of police officers by familiarizing the community with their procedures and responsibilities. Mos her Housemother Submits Resignation Visibility was down to zero as icy roads made driving conditions hazardous. State Police reported tieups on I-94 west, and 23 was tied up going both north and south. For the next few days tempera- tures will average about eight de- grees below normal, with today's low going down to the mid twen- ties. The snowfall that blankets much of the nation is caused by a large low pressure center coming up from the South, with a cold air ridge extending from West On- tario to the Eastern Plains States. Such air patterns are not uncom- mon for heavy snowfalls, but they rarely occur this early in the sea- son. Another offshoot of the storm were tornadoes that hit North Carolina and Virgina. One tornado in the Raleigh area caused exten- sive damage to a trailer camp and several buildings, while two others struck near Richmond, Va. Rain fell on the rest of the Atlantic coast, which was spared from the snow and twisters. This board would receive com- By MICHAEL DOVER plaints and make recommenda- Mosher Hall's housemother Mrs. tions to Larcom after due con- Edith Frymier has resigned, Her sideration of the problem. Larcom actonled-consigdeai by noted that the board. would re- action followed consideration by ceive only complaints which had John Feldkamp, director of Un- not been resolved at the depart- versity housing, and John Pearson, maaar o Afnha nlnad ever. "We are not in position to discuss publicly our dissatisfac- tion," he explained- "but our in- vestigation shows that the Kap- lowitz incident was exaggerated in the petition and in The Daily story. "The true facts did not give us basis for terminating Mrs. Fry- mier's contract." ment 1 such c A te board Attorni wHuman Crowle; whitet SEMINAR ON GOVERNMENT: 'U' Delegates Attend Princeton r would compos Crowle onference on World Order tentati more i would By STEVE FIRSHEIN cil, Dick Wingfield, '67, member- viable world government that and th . at-large of SGC and Warren Phil- I would keep order and, equally lems a Three students from the Uni-'lips, a graduate student in politi- important, protect human rights. city em versity attended an intercollegiate;cal science. The University dele- There was division of opinion on ties of; forum on "The Future of the gates were sent on a grant from whether the United Nations would City World Order: Prospects for a the Office of Student Affairs. be the vehicle -to implement these Weeks Peaceful Change," held at Prince- Wingfield said "the most im- goals. Some delegates felt that nounce ton University last weekend. pressive element was the strong present efforts to admit Red receive Composed primarily of dele- adherence to academic reasoning China for membership may prove basis o gates from Eastern universities, in a field of great controversy and less vital than people suppose, tion re the second annual conference con- strong emotion. since world order may be attained sisted of lectures and seminars. It The tone of the conference was through other agencies. The dele- Hec was held under the auspices of theoretical, and political models gates, however, were unanimous looking the .Woodrow Wilson School of were frequently referred to, as in recognizing the need to involve details International Affairs, and was di- those present sought, in Benton's the most populous nation in a Weeks rected by a half-dozen experts on words. "to determine what type world scheme. "trial1 evel and that the number of omplaints would be few. ntative composition of the would include Krasny, City By Jacob F. Fahrner, City n Relations Director David y, three Negro citizens, two citizens and another police advisory board of this type replace a similar group sed of Larcom, Fahrner and y. Wheeler commented that ve advisory board could be representative in that it include civilian members at it would eliminate prob- arising from one group of nployes reviewing the activi- another. Councilman Robert P. said, "The tentatively an- ed committee was favorably d by the council on the f the preliminary informa- garding it." More Details commented that he was forward to receiving more concerning such a board. regarded the proposal as a balloon" released to testI manger or msner, Jordan, anda Stockwell Halls, of a petition signed by 95 per cent of Mosher's residents that voiced discontent with relations with the house- mother, Mrs. Frymier, housemother at Mosher since last year, will be re- placed next year, but until then the Jordan housemother, Mrs. Ann Coller, will handle the twin dorms. Feldkamp said last night that although sections of the petition were "grossly exaggerated" by the ALL 'U' BIRTHDAY PARTY: Alice in Wonderland To Set Mood of Sesquigras Weekend girls, it was auely considered. Feldkamp would not comment By DEBORAH REAVEN mile, each tenth runner being a took as a result of the review. Alice came back from Wonder- girld. ("The tenth goes to Michi- Pearson would not comment on land last night long enough to gan, you know," said Miss Ness, anything surrounding the events start plans for sequigras rolling who appeared as Alice.) leading up to the resignation. with the theme, "A Very Merry The last runner will reach the The precipitating factor in the UM Birthday." Diag in time to start an all-cam- dispute was an incident which oc- At a mass meeting held in the pus birthday which will, if the curred early in the morning of Union Ballroom, Sue Ness, W-hEd graphics committee is able to car- Sept. 27, when Shelley Kaplowitz, and Danny Syme, '67, co-chair- ry out its plans, include a birthday '70, was found on the floor of her men of the weekend, set for Feb. cake large enough to feed the en- corridor. Miss Kapiowitz, it was 24, 25, announced the plans, all tire campus. This would mean later learned, had two dislocated still tentative, with an original about 1370 cubic feet of cake vertebrae. skit based on Lewis Carroll's novel. weighing seven tons and requiring According to Miss Kaplowitz, The 34 central committee mem- among other ingredients, 430 gal- Mrs. Frymier would not let her bers, each presented their plans lons of milk. call an ambulance to get to Uni- and pleas for help dressed as char- Other plans for the weekend in- as well; two double concerts; a booth night, to be held in some "unusual" location; a faculty chit; and various games. Musical Chairs Special Events committee has been planning games that may possibly includegan all-campus musical chairs with chairs stretch- ed from the corner of Solith U!"- versity and East University across the Diag to the corner of North University and State Streets. Other possibilities being conmider- ed include a TO in the UOLl with a band on every floor, an alumni