OSA REORGANIZATION: A STEP FORWARD See Editorial Page Y guF 43U :4Ia iti WARM High--8a Low-53 Thundershowers in the afternoon Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 43-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1965 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES Trustees W on't Change OSU Ban Reject Faculty Proposal To Alter Rules, Ignore Plea from Faucett By MICHAEL BADAMO The Ohio Slate University Board of Trustees rejected any pos- sibility of alteration of the OSU speakers' ban rules by a vote of five to three yesterday. The rules had touched off massive student protests last spring in. the wake of a ban on Marxist speaker Herbert Aptheker. OSU President Novice G. Faucett had delivered a lengthy .ddress to the trustees at the meeting yesterday calling for a change in the r outdated and restrictive regulations. om e1 gns u u get "As I see our problem," he JUAN BOSCH Deno Says Dominican Truce Near SANTO DOMINGO (A -- Col Francisco Caamano Deno, the reb- el president, raised hopes last night that a political settlement of the Dominican crisis may be near. Other sources also reflected optimism. In a radio speech, Caamano said "an important and fruitful meet- ing was held yesterday, with the participation of the political par- ties that make up the Constitu- tionalist Front . . . Interesting points were dealt with that star us on the road toward a practi- cal solution to the Dominican cris- is." i Hector Garcia Godoy Reliable rebel sources said th pro-Castro 14th of June Move- ment participated in the meeting and agreed-tentatively at least- to Hector Garcia Godoy as presi- dent of a compromise provisiona government. Under an Organization of Amer- ican States peace plan, the pro- visional government would serve until elections can be held in six to nine months. Garcia Godoy was foreign mm ister under ex-President Juan Bosch, in whose name the Domini can rebellion was launched Apri 24. Close A reliable OAS source said "w are closer than we have ever bee] before to a solution, but until ther is one anything can go wrong." Some OAS officials said Caam ano's radio speech indicated th rebel leadership was in agree ment and the first step was beinb taken to present this agreement t the public. Godoy, a wealthy businessma living in Santiago, is said to be ac cepted to the military junt leaders, who wield the principa power in the five-man junta. said, "this university must be no -K4less free than others to test ideas that flow from the frontiers of thought dispite the fact that at times an idea may be highly con-1 troversial and even repulsive to our keener insights."' Faucett went on to say that he considered the rules definitelyI not in keeping with the tennants1 of academic freedom and that heE did not consider an open forum of ideas subversive., "Historically, ideas have been challenged on the campuses of great universities, and out of thisI quality of confrontation have evolved knowledge and values thatI have been useful to the advance-f ment of our cherished way of life."I Fight Ban The Free Speech Front, the OSU group organized to fight the speaker ban, had no official state-1 ment because the former spokes- men for the group had graduated from the university and was noI longer a member of FSF. Because of a number of other graduations FSF has elected an entirely new steering committee. General FSF feeling, however, appeared to be a determination to continue to fight the rule. Mem- bers said that many more stu- dents will be attracted to the cause because of the trustees de- cision. Sources explained that the tragedy of the situation lay in . the trustees' total disregard for campus feeling. Not only do the t students object to the rule but so t do the faculty and administration. The OSU Faculty Advisory i Committee had submitted an al- ternate plan for speaking regula- i tions which show some liberaliza- - tion of the rules and had received half-hearted FSF support. It was not considered by the trustees. Ohio legislative action on the trustees refusal to be swayed is t also pending. House Minority - Leader A. G. Lancdine, has prom- - ised that action to change the ruling on a state level will be at- tempted at the next legislative e session. He said that the OSU - rules were not in keeping with g other state universities and had no place in a modern university. - Controversy Began 1 The controversy began when a campus organization attempted to - engage Aptheker for a speaking - date and were refused by admin- e istration officials in light of the x speaker ban rules. FSF formed shortly thereafter - and a series of campus protests n erupted in which student leaders - demanded change of the rules. The 1 protests culmininated when Ap- theker was brought on campus in defiance of the rules. He did not e speak but made an appearance n before students. e There was, at the time, discus- sion of a possible "fix" in the - Aptheker appearance. Just prior e to his appearance FSF leader Jef- - rey Schwartz had a short talk g with an administration official o and immediately thereafter he announced that a threat had been n made on Aptheker's life and that - he would not speak. Aptheker was a then escorted off campus by a 11 delegation of FSF members and administration officials. To Present Open Letter To Regents By NEAL BRUSS Attempting to convey student opposition to a proposed increase in tuition, the Student Employees' Union drafted an open letter to University Regents at a meeting last night. The letter was written for presentation at the special Re- gents' meeting slated for 1:30 p.m. today. At this session, the University budget will be consid- ered by the Regents. While the union realized a need for increased educational funds, it objected to the means used to obtain such funds. The letter ex- pressed concern over "the Uni- versity's failure to implement possible alternatives which would alleviate the increasing financial pressure on the student." In addi- tion, the union members felt "students have not been given the opportunity to participate in mak- ing decisions which directly affect them." Union members voted to attend the Regents' meeting in order to reinforce their statement. Rich- ard Cutler, vice-president for stu- dent affairs, agreed to present the letter to the Regents, although it was not on the agenda. The letter followed a longer statement of policy and financial proposals. 'Although we have pre-I sented what we consider viable alternatives to the present admin- istration policies, the administra- tion and Regents have failed to give serious consideration to these proposals," the letter stated. The union's interest in tuition' and residence fee increases moti- vated other measures approved at last night's meeting. A job survey booklet, a student consumer price index, and a fall retreat for dis- cussion of issues concerning stu- dents were accepted by the mem- bership. GOV. GEORGE ROMNEY SIGNED the higher education bill yesterday. This provides the University with a $51.2 million provision for its general funds budget. Another bill adds a $4.3 million in cap- ital outlay funds to University budget. The budget however is $4.5 million short of the amount re- quested by the University. It is expected that the University will discuss means for making up the deficiency at their meeting today. It is probable that one means will be a tuition hike. The source said that the tui- tion increase would be about $50 per year for residents and $100 for out-of-state students. This UNCERTAINTY ON FUNDS: College May Be Built in Steps By ROBERT MOORE Construction of the new Resi- dential College may have to be undertaken in s t e p s, adding buildings group by group to a b a s i c housing - classroom plan, Dean Burton Thuma of the Resi- dential College said yesterday. Residential College planners are setting up this plan for step-by- step construction because they are not certain whether they will have enough money to complete the whole college at one, time, Thuma explained. "But we'll end up with what we had originally planned," Thuma be egulu pJU Uy Wl raise tuition charges at today's meeting. Tuition Increase Appropriation Remains Intact Goveruor Signs Capital Outlay Bill; Regents To Decide Tuition Hike By JOHN MEREDITH Gov. George Romney signed the higher education appro- priations bill yesterday, leaving the $51.2 million provision for the University's general funds budget intact. Another bill, containing a $4.3 million capital outlay appropriation for the University, was also signed by the gov- ernor. With the question of state support thus settled, the Re- gents will hold a special meeting today to complete action on the 1965-66 University budget. High administration sources have indicated that, since the $51.2 million figure is $4.5 million short of the amount requested by the University, the R.P ents robablh will said. The uncertainty of available If the Residential College must funds, he said, would not change be finished in steps, Thuma said, the fall, 1967, date set for begin- it would start with some of the ning of construction. residence halls already planned. Hopeful Completion Date "Hopefully," he said, "it will be completed in 1971." Funds for the Residential Col- lege can come from four main sources, Thuma explained. They come from government grants, gifts, self-liquidating housing, and state funds, through the Univer- sity. The latter two sources are un- certain, Thuma said, and as yet there have not been any gifts or government grant applications. expectations of the Mariner 4 In these would be built temporary libraries and classrooms. Present plans call for libraries and class-' rooms inside the residence halls, but these would have to be ex- panded. The appropriations bill signed yesterday by Gov. George Romney includes funds for the Residential College, Thuma said, under its capital outlay provisions. But Thuma did not know exactly how much the capital outlay provisions would mean the Residential Col- lege could get. The Residential College is a '"first" for a large, established university: a small, self-contained college located close enough to the campus so that it would have all the benefits of the large, complex university. It would be built near North Campus, close to the University Hospital. Administratively, the Residen- tial College would be a part of the literary college, although it would probably be autonomous in prac- tice. The college would also have a new curriculum. Possible changes include comprehensive exams, no grades, and inter - disciplinary majors. By RALPH DIGHTON Associated Press Staff Writer PASADENA, Calif. - The pic- tures Mariner 4 is expected to take of Mars on Wednesday may prove to be historic-but they will be inferior to those taken of the moon by the Rangers 7, 8 and 9. The edge - of - the - seat excite- ment generated last March 24 when the Ranger 9 televised live as it plunged into the moon will be missing. The Mariner 4 will not transmit its pictures as they are taken. It will be a week or more before they all have been received and days before the first picture is released. Pictures Inferior The best Mariner 4 is expected to show is whether there really is a network of canals on Mars and perhaps whether there are any cities or ruins of cities. Scientists are asking only for some clue as to whether any kind of life could exist on Mars - not whether it does or ever has. There are many reasons for the difference in performance of the two spacecraft. At 575 pounds, Mariner 4 is more than 200 pounds lighter than the Ranger and carries much less elaborate equipment. It has to be-it must travel 325 million curving miles to intercept Mars at point 134 million miles from Earth. Ranger 9 traveled just a quaiter million miles to the moon. Mariner's route to Mars will take 228 days, which means its in- struments had to be made simple and rugged. Unprecedented Distance The unprecedented distance-a signal from Mariner 4 will take 12 minutes, traveling at 186,000 miles a second, to reach Earth- forced engineers to design the spacecraft's radio to send very slowly. Ranger 4 transmitted more than 5,800 pictures in 18 minutes while Mariner 4 will take 81/2 hours to send eac hof its 18 to 21 pictures. Finally, Ranger 9 took pictures down to within a few feet of the surface of the moon. Mariner 4's photographs will be snapped at altitudes of 6,000 miles or higher as it curves around Mars. Jet Pro- pulsion Laboratory scientists did not aim Mariner 4 directly at Mars for fear of contaminating it with germs from Earth. But, crude though the pictures will be by Ranger 9 standards, they will still be 100 times better than any taken with the largest Earth-based telescopes. would yield approximately $1.6 million in additional revenue, leaving the University with a $2.9 million shortage to make up by cutting back expenditures. Romney's action yesterday end- ed a brief period of confusion about his intentions on the mat- ter. Thinking that the bill would be signed yesterday, it was an- nounced Wednesday that a spe- cial Regents meeting had been scheduled for today. However, Charles Orlebeke, Romney's special assistant for ed- ucation, said Wednesday night that the measure was not on the governor's schedule for this week and probably would not be acted on for 10 more days. Without Romney's signature ,the Regents could not announce a final deci- sion on the budget today. Clarification The mixup was clarified yester- day morning when Romney called University President H a r 1 a n Hatcher assuring him that the bill would be signed in the afternoon in plenty of time for today's Re- gents meeting. The $51.2 million appropriation for the general funds budget, which finances the basic costs of instruction, marks a $7 million increase from last year's state sup- port figure. However, the Regents had re- quested a hike of roughly $11.6 million. This, in combination with student fees (at 1964-65 rates) would have given the University a $71 million general funds budget for 1965-66-$12 million higher than that for the academic year1 which ended July 1. Faculty Increases Roughly 90 per cent of the ex- tra money was labeled for merit faculty salary increases and addi- tional staff and supplies. Also included is an extra $285,000 to finance a freshman class at the University's Flint College branch; the branch has been operating as a two-year upperclassman institu- tion, and, because of controversy surrounding plans to add fresh- men in the fall, there had initially been some fear that funds for Flint would not be approved. The Flint money was included in the higher education bill with a sup- porting expression of legislative intent. The $4.1 million capital outlay appropriation includes $1.1 mil- lion for remodeling and additions and roughly $3 million for new construction. In the latter cate- gory, $2 million is designated for a new medical science building and $1 million for a dental build- Ing. Miscellaneous items account for another $200,000. The University's state capital fund request was $14.2 million- $10 million more than the amount allocated by the state yesterday. Capital outlay appropriations have Varied widely in the past, how- ever, and are largely dependent on approval of plans to start con- struction. Remaining Bills To Get Minor Cuts LANSING (3) - Gov. George Romney signed five budget bills yesterday and said he will sign the remaining money bills approv- ed by the legislature with only minor vetoes. Before signing the higher edu- cation bill yesterday, however, the governor did veto one of its sig- nificant provisions: a $1.2 million enrollment contingency f un d which would have been available to the seven smaller state colleges and universities if their enroll- ments exceeded current estimates. Romney commented that the fund would merely "be an incen- tive for schools to build enroll- ment," adding that, if enroll- ments rise faster than predicted, the' legislature can follow its tra- ditional procedure of appropriat- ing additional money next winter or spring. Three Other Bills In addition to the $186.7 millior. higher education bill, Romney ap- proved the following three meas- ures: -Two capital outlay bills, total- ing $63.5 million; -A $20.5 million public health bill, and -A $101.7 million m e n t a l health appropriation. The higher education bill is $37.5 million higher than last year's provision. It includes $11.2 million for faculty pay hikes and $11.5 million for community col- leges-a 65 per cent hike in state support for these institutions. The capital outlay appropria- tion is $3.8 million less than rec- ommended, but this amount is apt to be appropriated next spring. The public health budget repre- sents an increase of $2.7 million over last year, and the mental health appropriation is $10.7 mil- lion higher than that for the 1964-65 fiscal year. Total Budget The total budget approved by the legislature was $820.4 million -$31.9 million above the gover- nor's recommendation. However, Romney said, the end r e s u 1 t of legislative changes "coupled with revised revenue es- timates left us in pretty much the same position I had recom- mended." He estimated that the budget will total about $819 million when he has signed all of the bills with minor revisions. Romney offered no new figures as to what the state surplus will be either at the start or at the end of the 1965-66 fiscal year. His most recent prediction was at least $22 million as of June 30, 1965, but the exact figures won't be totaled until near the end of the summer. To Withdraw Mace Missiles By The Associated Press Pentagon Cancels Proj ect Camelot; Calls It Impractical By The Associated Press Because of th transmission, the lines-horizontal and dark spots each picture-ha Mariner 4 pictur 200 lines each; tures had up to Mariner's picture, visible details.' is slow rate of I WASHINGTON-The Pentagon cancelled Project Camelot-a number of scan study of how Communists capitalize on revolutionary change in de- strips of light veloping nations-yesterday on the grounds that it was "impractical which make up and not worthwhile." s been reduced. A defense department spokesman explained that "one of the most es will have only difficult problems in the research plan was that of conducting re- Ranger 9's Pic- search in foreign countries." s will have fewer A furor had flared up several weeks ago when a scientist con- nected with the project appeared in Chile. The spokesman said no tresearch was actually started EDUCATIONAL FILMS: Center Sponsors Summer Showings Forty-nine different areas summer by the By JULIE PUFFER film, representing 20 well-known producers and ten of study, are being presented at the University this University's Audio-Visual Education Center. The films are selected on the basis of quality, approach and the diversity of subject matter. Their purpose, Hessler explained, is "to acquaint the public, teachers and students with the types of pro- ductions being produced by educational film companies." Educational Significance The program, originated by Ford Lemler, director of the center, aims to show that the films have valid educational significance in the hands of a skilled teacher. "They open up new realms of direct experience," Hessler added. Tn the University film lihrarv which is one of the largest in the there but "the sensitivity of the problem" was demonstrated by the reaction in Chile to the possibility that a study might be conducted there. According to the defense de- partment statement, the project was halted because "it has been concluded that the project as cur- rently designed would not produce the desired information." Thebcancellationwas termed wise by Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D-Minn), who had questioned whether the military was intrud- ing without authority in the state department's domain of foreign policy. But he said an inquiry still is needed by the Senate For- The six-week program, now in its second week, provides free showings every day at 1:30 p.m. in the Undergraduate Library Multi- purpose Rm. The films run from approximately 20 to 30 minutes, allowing time within the class hour for adequate introduction and iem. i..o I