THE MOVEMENT WILL TRIUMPH (See Editorial Page) Lit iguan ~-Iai11 COLDER ilgh-20 Low--7 Variable clouds with possible snow flurries Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 75 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1966 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES Hatcher Has Private Talk With SGC *President Compares- Student Action Here To Left Wing Pattern University P r e s i d e n t Harlan Hatcher told Student Government Council members yesterday that M the movement for greater student participation in campus decision making is part of a left-wing pat- tern, sources reported. Hatcher, in response to a query from an SGC member on how he views the student government in political terms,said "the move- *ment follows the SDS (Students for a Democratic Society) pro- gram and plan of action which has been clearly outlined, campus by campus. There is no conspiracy but the pattern is the same throughout the country." "The national program is to concentrate on large issues such as Viet Nam and the draft which will unify a large number of peo- ple,' Hatcher said. Robinson Walks Out SGC members met with Hatcher in a three-hour meeting after SGC President Ed Robinson, '67, walk- * ed out of the session. Hatcher had demanded that all present who were not SGC mem- bers to leave the room. Robinson said he could not re- main at the session because "it was a closed meeting, a meeting at which interested faculty and * students were not allowed to listen." "Many of the problems on this campus have been caused by mis- understanding, and closed meet- ings b r e e d misunderstanding," Robinson said in a statement. "If things are to improve here, closed M meetings must end. Today I took a difficult step and decided to end my participation in closed meet- ings." Hatcher made it clear that he viewed teach-ins and mass meet- ings as an inappropriate means of reaching democratic decisions. * Appalled by Harshness "Rational decisions cannot be made in that kind of atmosphere," he said. He added that he was "appalled at the harsh things that were said" at theteach-in Nov. 21, which he heard via a radio broadcast. " Hatcher requested the SGC members t submit 12 names of students who would serve as rep- resentatives on the presidential commission he created Monday to deal with the overall question of the student role in decision-mak- ing. From these 12 names, Hatch- * er said he would appoint four stu- dents to the commission. After some debate with SGC members, Hatcher agreed to allow SGC to determine which four stu- dents would serve on the com- mission. The commission will also consist of four faculty members " and four administrators. All three groups will have an equal vote. 'U' Must Compile Ranks But Hatcher reiterated that the University must compile class rankings for the Selective Service system "because we have a com- mitment to more than 6,000 stu- dents who asked that this be done." The findings of the com- mission on the ranking question would apply in May, 1968, when the University must again decide whether to compile class ranks. Some SGC members were dis- appointed by the meeting. * "I feel that the gap between the students and the administra- tion is just as wide as it was be- fore the meeting," Bruce Kahn, '68, said. Council member Neill Hollen- shead, '67, expressed dismay at Hatcher's identification of the t student movement here with the SDS national program. 'A Travesty'{ x , Os 4r Mtr4tgau Batt 'NEWS WIRE Voice Members To Sit-In Today; No Late World News By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ()-U Thant agreed last night to be drafted for a new five-year term as U.N. secretary-general. Security Council sources said the council will meet this morning to approve a recommendation that he be given a new term, and the 121-nation General Assembly will convene later in the day to ratify the council's recommendation. EAST LANSING ()-Michigan State University's chief Academic officer says it is time for the 38,000-student school to decide whether it can afford to keep up its rapid growth pace of the last 15 years. "We're all concerned that unless substantial new resources are made available, quality could decline in the future," Howard Neville, MSU provost, told a newsman Thursday. Enrollment has more than doubled in the last 15 years. In their budget request for 1967-68, MSU trustees said the University of Michigan and Wayne State University receive substantially more than MSU in dollars per fiscal year equated student. "This is of great concern," Neville said. "We feel we have much catching up to do in the amount of resources available." His own view, he said, is that based on what resources are in sight, enrollment probably should be stabilized at 40,000 to 42,000 by 1970. BERKELEY, Calif. University of California students have voted by almost 4-1 in favor of distribution of birth pills in the campus clinic to unmarried co-eds 18 or over. MRS. JOSEPH MHOON took over yesterday as Ann Arbor Housing Commission Director. She accepted the position on November 20th. Before coming to Ann Arbor she was Assistant Director of the Ingster Housing Commission. * * * * THE ENGINEERING SCHOOL FACULTY yesterday passed a resolution affirming "the role of reasoned and responsible activity by all members of the University community in the resolution of University problems." The resolution deplored "the use of disruptive tactics which infringe on the freedom of individuals within the academic com- munity"' and supported "constructive steps such as proposed by President Hatcher in his statement to the Faculty Senate" last Monday. The resolution was passed by a near-unanimous vote. HARVARD UNIVERSITY is considering whether or not to surrender membership lists of student anti-war groups to the government. The school is responding to an American Civil Liberties Union letter sent to 900 university presidents on Nov. 13. The ACLU letter was prompted by the surrender of member- ship lists by the University and the University of California at Berkeley when they were subpoenaed by HUAC last August. The letter urges non-compliance with such government sub- poenas. At present Harvard does not require organizations which are under political pressure, like SDS, to file membership lists with the administration. However, they must allow the College to inspect the lists periodically to control the number of non- Harvard persons in Harvard-chartered organizations. SDS does file a list of officers, which could be subpoenaed. A UNIVERSITY medical student was announced Tuesday as the first-place winner in the Norman A. Welch, M.D., Medical Ethics Essay Contest sponsored by the Judicial Council of the American Medical Association. "On the Profession of Medicine," was the title of the winning essay submitted by Glen W. Geel- hoed, Ann Arbor, a third-year medical student. Elmer G. Shelley, M.D., North East, Pa.. chairman of the Judicial Council, made the announcement and presented Geelhoed with a check for $500.00 Tuesday afternoon during the bi-annual session of AMA's House of Delegates here. REV. DAVID C. BAYNE, S.J. will present a special course on "Conscience, Obligation and the Law" next semester at the Uni- versity Law School. Father Bayne, who will serve as a visiting professor, is an instructor in law at St. Louis University and former dean of the University of Detroit School of Law. He has written extensively on the relationship of morality to law. The seminar, limited to 15 students, will explore the nature of the obligations of civil law. A book by him on the moral binding power of the civil law has recently been published by Loyola University Press. The Jesuit priest will also teach two sections of corporation law as well as the seminar. THE DAILY wishes to appologize for a personal advertise- ment running in yesterday's paper which falsely advertised the sale of automatic weapons. The advertisement was somebody's idea of a joke, it was a pretty bad one. To all involved parties we appologize. Pro fs Urge 'Students Act Res onsibly Reject Mililant Stand; Ask Students to Join Hatcher Committees { S S k t! t By CAROLYN MIEGEL "The surest way for the students to alienate the faculty is to insist> on the continuation of sit-ins," Prof. Alexander Eckstein, econo- mies dept. stated after an informal} I round-table discussion between student leaders and some faculty members yesterday. Faculty members urged students to take a realistic look at the stu- dent-administration dispute and. takedefinite action to end the Iconflict. Prof. Arthur Eastman, English dept. called the delay of the sit-in STUDENTS DISCUSS PROPOSALS in a workshop session in M ban "a real concession to students. motions were presented by the original meeting in Auditorum A, I While the class ranking and draft shops, they proceeded to Hill Auditorium where all students debated proposals put forth by President manship of Ed Robinson. Hatcher on Monday were not con- -- __- cessions to student demands, there was a willingness to cooperate." Eastman went on to call theNo re' ledgers Hatcher proposals a "de-escala- tion" in the student-administra- tion conflict, and urged student leaders to likewise alter their posi Lcuypov tion, so that some constructivel action might take place. Prof. Kenneth Boulding, eco- NEIL SHISTER The Registrar's Office, accord- nomics dept., cautioned students Daily News Analysis ing to one of its officials, serves not to destroy the University com- The signers of the Gamson solely in a service capacity and munity through a display of Pledge and one similar to it, irked formulates no policy. They record pseudo-power. "The students don't by the closed agenda in this grades as instructed to by the in- have a lot of bargaining power," week's Faculty Senate meeting and thelitea colleges. Thus it is up to Boulding said, "Their position is' what they considered University the literary college how and what too temporary. They cannot really President Hatcher's arrogant posi- form it wants its grades recorded. take large responsibility for the tion there, are mobilizing their i Need for Approval future of the University. Decisions admittedly limited forces for Mon- It is critical importance, then must be made by the people who day's literary college faculty meet- thatcolleg. 'Ths acctace d stick around." ing. teclee hsacpac ol snot mean that all professors sub- Boulding said that students The goal of the signers is to get scribe to the action, merely that "have some power, and they should the substance of the Pledge, ands exercise it, but they should realize perhaps a proposal advocating a they approve of those who want to that this power is significant, but stronger position, accepted by their take the step and will thus instruct is not dominant." literary colleagues. the Registrar to record Pass grad- j Th Pldge;siged y a~pro- 'es on transcripts. Eckstein complained that the The Pledge, signed by approx- his is not accepted by the "students say they seek a partici- imately 25 faculty members and faculty, the signers will likely con- pant democracy, but the mass 35 teaching fellows, says signers front a crisis of sorts, for not all meeting is not democratic, it re- will not give formal letter grades are willing to place their students sembles a fascist form. A rep- to male undergradua'tes unless in potential jeopardy. Some are. resentative form of government is specifically requested to do so by Moral Question the only way to achieve democracy the individual student. To some the Pledge has assumed and the students must use some Protest Ranking the stature of a moral protests structure of government to achieve They are refusing to give grades against the entire system-mean- their demands. in order to make the compilation ing not so much the University ' "It was a serious blunder for of class ranking impossible. It is as the whole society. Arguing this the administration not to have their feeling, expressed in the idea, one of its advocates says waited for the results of the draft Pledge, that compiling class rank- "whenever a power structure is referendum, to consider class ing to be used by draft boards as challenged it must be realized that ranking. But that is in the p1st a criteria for deferment is "an il- there are chances for reprisals and now everyone, students, fac- legitimate use of grades." being taken against the protestors. ulty, and the administration, must At a meeting Wednesday night This fact must be recognized and start over again to examine the of the signers, however, it was accepted, but must not deter our s t u d e n t government structure, evident that attitudes concerning action." through committee and commis- the rationale for the Pledge and Implicit in this stand is the idea sion system." the extent to which students and that even if the students and fac- Disagreeing with the advice for-|teaching fellows should be placed ulty who subscribed to the Pledge mulated at the round-table dis- in jeopardy by the Pledge are not were threatened, any punitive ac- cussion, Prof. Robert Sklar, history uniformly held. tion taken by the administration dept., reiterated his observations 'Passes' May Become 'E's' would trigger such universal dis- made at the sit-in Tuesday, "Stu- The chief fear among many of approval that it would have to be dents are on the verge of achiev- the signers is that if the literary There were others at the meet- ing a real victory. For the first college refuses to approve their , hwee ohers at time they are leading the way to- I action, the Passes they submit to the administration lately has been ward new structures for a deci- the Registrar's Office instead of -Da ason Hall las B, and C. Fo d the proposal qeall' acting in "i They conclud istration cann act in any days, thus th ting their stu fellows out or Precar "What both the five origi students who teaching felloi jobs are vulne does not gets lege." His se be shared by ing, 'who arei will adhere tc colleagues do Moreover, t the Pledge is The GamsonI ally related to dum or the q Power," but o draft deferme thing academ But there a circulated ac their refusal issue of the sponsibility a those whom i ing. To them ocratic proceQ a subsequent approve rank compile grade Thus the st pledgers is i right now. Ti their pledge, foundly awar and conseque ity of their co ary college no fighting for v Pro posals, i Procedure Bogs Down' eetin Noon Rally on Diag Followed by Sit-in Of Indefinite Length By SUSAN ELAN, STEVE WILDSTROM and DEBORAH REAVEN At an impromptu meeting last *T night, members of Voice political party voted to stage a sit-in of In- definite length in the Administra- tion Bldg. today. The meeting was held in the ..lobby of Hill Aud, early this morn- ing while the SGC teach-in was in progress. Voice leaders called a hasty caucus after about half of the approximately 700students re maining at the teach-in straw ily-Thomas R. Copi voted to support the tactic of a t~ night, after the "Free University Sit-in." llowing the work- The formal proposal of a sit-in never came before the body of stu- s under the chair- dents at the teach-in. A rally will be held at noon to- day on the Diag. The rally will then move to the Administration [ze. Bldg. Michael Zweig, grad, chair- X1,7 man of Voice, said that those at the sit-in will decide whether the l istudents will occupy offices or re- ,mainin hallways and lobbies. The ~tal length of the sit-in is indefinite; how long to remain in the build- lfashions."ing will be. a matter of individual rrational ahn choice e that the admin- Teaching fellows from several ot be counted on to departments will be present at the expected way these sit-in to help students prepare for ey are leary of put- final exams. The sit-in is desgned dents and teaching to be "constructive as well as dis- n a limb ruptive." Discussions of student ious Position power and its implications and im- iers me," says one of plementation will also be held. nal signers "is that Regarding concern over possible can get E's, and arrests, Zweg,said that "warning ws who can lose their is given before arrests are rr.ade. rable if the measure People are free to leave before accepted by the col- police move in." ntiments seemed to Zweig cited two reasons for the those at the meet- scheduled sit-in: the immediate unsure whether they cessation of ranking by the Uni- o the Pledge if their versity and dissatisfaction with not approve it. President Hatcher's statement on he rationale behind student participation in declison not the same for all. making. He added that the rank- Pledge is not specific- ing issue will be used to mobilize the student referen- students for the larger issue of uestion of "Student student power. bjects to ranking for The teach-in adjourned at 12:45 nt purposes as some- a.m. withoutnever coming to a vote ically indefensible. on a substantive issue. A number re others who have of proposals were put forth for second pledge, tying formation of a new student gov- to grade with the ernment. However, after about two administration's re- hours of debate, it was decided ndmmrsceptiensrtothat the students prsent did not nd receptiveness to have time to properly consider the the question of dem- complex proposals and all moion .s is critical, and if were tabled. referendum should The proposals, which included a ingheyrinlmagaindnew Student Union and the for- ing they will again mation of tripartite commissions s. similar- to those suggested by atus of the no-grade Hatcher, will be printed and dis- n a kind of limbo tributed to the student body for hey are dedicated to consideration. A meeting will be yet they are pro- held at an undetermined date to e of its implications vote on the proposals. nces should a major- lleagues in the liter- Prof. Abraham Kaplan of the t honor it. So they're philosophy department spoke on a otes. resolution passed by the Educa- _ ___ tion Policy Committee of the Fac- ulty Senate which he chairs. He presented the resolution Ivanc s which said, "The committee strongly urger that SGC and h0 Graduate Student Council op- Snows =tlsa= "tp" aerate to take immediate steps to Icooperate with the President's pro- posals for tripartite commissions." re not crackpots. He added that it was their "con- e of Pleasure viction that good faith can be r is by far the source promoted only by acting in good st pleasure and se- faith." According to the commit- ldhood. It is an all tee the commissions would have endency to envy, to full weight with the Regents. es for oneself, that About 800 people attended the aluable. first part of the teach-in held in contempt for women Auds. A, B, and C. The long ses- surface. Underneath sion began at 7:15 and broke up - envy and repressed into discussion groups at 8:45. fear. This has grown The groups reconvened in plen ve become more lib- ery session at Hill Aud. at 10:1,5. more powerful. All The general meeting was chaired s play a role in the by Student Government Council exual apathy among President Ed Robinson. 67. on said that among Approximately 1200 people were were girls who com- present when the Hill Aud. session boys were not very began, but the number gradually sex. dwindled as the .meeting became willing and anxious deeply bogged down in procedural i I 1 fi I I t ocratically-run university. formal letter grades will be rec- "Faculty members should not orded initially as Incompletes and try to stop students from exer- ultimately as Failures. cising their rights and using their Dean William Haber of the liter- minds. Rather they should put, ary college said yesterday that he their intellect and energy to work I "has been told" that such reports on the basic questions of demo- of Pass instead of letter grades cratic procedures in the Univer- will be treated by the Registrar as sity." no grade reported. Femes Sexual Ad Repel Males, Study "The meeting was a travesty," Ruth Baumann, '67, said. "Hatch- er wouldn't even let us finish what we were saying. He"d interrupt as someone was speaking and then refuse to give that individual a chance to respond and clarify." Hatcher termed the student de- mand to make last month's draft 'eferendum binding upon the ad-I ministration a result of demandsI by Voice political party. "These demands constitute domination of the minority," Hatcher said. Also attending the meeting was Prof. William E. Brown of the dentistry school, chairman of the Senate Advisory Committee on: University Affairs. He said there is strong faculty support behind SGC's attempts to retain control o-f the student move~ment. He als i I RALLY DRAWS 10,000: LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)-American males are growing indifferent to sex - and a "shocking" number want to change their gender, a psychiatrist told the American M e d i c a l Association's clinical meeting Wednesday. d~ -V" - -AltAl 7:7-- l ."I - - u tDr.Ralph renson, f Beverly Hills, Calif., said women at the same time are becoming more as- sertive and demanding in sexual BERKELEY, Calif. (/)-A boy- reminiscent of the 1964 December mission to the university, is cur- eration of Teachers, mostly teach- relationships, and this repulses cott of classes at the University of Free Speech Movement sit-in was rently a bartender. ing assistants, voted 111 to 20 in some males. California met with disputed suc- touched off Wednesday night byI Pickets walked in the rain at all favor of a strike in support of the "It's horrifying - a danger to cess Thursday as university of- the arrest of four students and six entrances to the campus. They boycott. the future of the human race," ficials confronted a new crisis nonstudents among a crowd of carried signs reading "Strike for As the teaching assistants voted, said Dr. Greenson, clinical pro- sparked by foes of a Navy recruit- protesting a Navy recruiting drive. Due Process," "When Are Stu- the Navy again set up its recruit- fessor of psychiatry at the Uni- ing program. Unlike the 1964 sit-in however, dents Going to Say No?" and, ing table for the Navy's aviation versity of California at Los An- There was a slight reduction in the boycott had the backing of "Keep Cops Off Campus." program. Hundreds of students- geles. attendance at the 27,500-student both the student senate of the as- Picket leaders said thousands of some carrying protest sings-gath- Sex Be Fun Berkeley campus,' but some may sociated students of the university j students had boycotted classes. ered around the table outside the our only hope is that basic t_ __ .-- 3 ..« 1. . -, .. V - ,..a ,. .L:....... -,-4.-1' ---4+ ----" nl 1~-...'.nc~ratn-,oirl. '+TtlOur only hope is that basic- flli~ chotic, they a Soure "The mothe of the greate curity in chit too human to want to poss which is so vE "Men have only on the is a repressed envy arousesI as women ha' erated andi these element increase 'in se men." Dr. Greens his patients v plained that interested ins "The more