Sevety-Tird Yar EDrrED AND MANAGED BY STUDNS OF THE UNvERsrr OF MiCwmN UNDER AUTHORiTY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 'Wbre Opinions Are FreeSTUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBO, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 TruthbVWII Prevai" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in a reprints. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: MARILYN KORAL U' Inspections Impair Oxford Women's Rights WHILE CONCEIVED as a forward-look- Following up a series of open houses held ing innovation in women's housing, at Oxford last November, Assembly Asso- the University's Oxford apartments have ciation voted to subject Oxford women to come, like Janus, to face in two direc- still another reception of Ann Arbor and tions at once. Looking forward, they have out-of-town guests. abolished sign-out slips and regular house The purpose of these open houses is meetings. Looking backward, they have clearly to further University administra- recently begun gestapo-like practices that tion interests-not those of the women threaten the privacy of women residents. living in the apartments. Some tempers grew frazzled Monday Last summer when the Oxford Project night as women in the Oxford apartments was being built, some members of the learned that University officials had tak- community - particularly those living en a tour of all the apartments over near the Oxford building site-expressed Christmas vacation. They unlocked, en- open hostility and resentment to the Uni- tered and inspected each apartment in versity's extending itself into a zone which order to determine if any health hazard had previously been almost exclusively had been created by the occupants' lack residential. of cleanliness. The differences were ultimately resolv- ,oed, but not to the complete satisfaction But some of the women at Monday's of all parties. In favor of restoring better meeting were more concerned about the relations with the community and pro- dministration's general policy on visi-r tors entering the apartments. The spe- jecting a favorable image of the project, cific infringements on rights and the Oxford women endured the series of open houses last semester. If the November lack of common courtesy for the students hoseies fpen hosresa olished this occurred because of an overall policy. seres o open houses accompihdtis dual purpose, they were sufficient. If they BEIAUSE OXFORD IS NEW, many Uni- did not, any additionally scheduled open RE .A.S' house is clearly superfluous. versity administrators drop In often, ys f and they expect to be permitted to in- spect apartments whether or not the oc- THIS SUNDAY'S open house is, in the cupants want visitors at that particular eyes of many Oxford apartments wom- time. en, superfluous. Assembly has stipulated that all apart- Not only do women have no say about ments will open their doors to visitors who is to inspect their apartments, butm also the rudeness of these uninvited visi- from Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti---most of als terudenesseseappuniin vitForedamvlsiwhom will be total strangers to the Ox- tors is at times appalling. For example, ford women. Even if residents will not be the wife of one administrator opened at home, they have been instructed that drawers and closets in an apartment.a Then she looked inside the cupboard on they must leave their apartments unlock- top of a dresser, and told the women it ed for inspection. toos direeadThis order to expose private property to the public eye is clearly an imposition and HOWEVER, there is a way to defend the intrusion on Oxford woen. right of maintenance men to let them- X selves in the apartments even if nobody ORD APRTENT womnshold is hom, t deendUniversity officials' organize to prevent any University of- is home, to defend Us wersi ents ficials and their guests from letting them- inspection of apartments when residents sleinotearmnsulssihr are on vacation, to justify administrators teesinto the apartments unless either not personally known by residents to drop the residents are at home or have agreed in any time. to an inspection when thy are not home. That defense is simply that Oxford Assembly, even as a representative or- apartments are University property. Thus ganization, has no authority to waive its the University has a legal right to perpe- constituents' rights to privacy. Oxford trate almost any intrusion of privacy, al- apartments officers and counselors ought most any rude or discourteous treatment to be more amenable to suggestions of- to residents that it chooses. fered by residents of the most experimen- But one point this defense seems to tal housing unit on campus, which is, after miss is that women are not just tenants. all, still in its infancy, still able to evolve They are human beings and deserve as and improve. much consideration and respect as the Finally, the University ought to con- sider with more thought how to pre- University expects its property to get. serve the rights of its students while, at UT PERHAPS the most blatant In- the same time, it experiments with wom- fringement upon the privacy of Ox- ens housing' -MARILYN KORAL ford women is scheduled for this Sunday. -LOUISE LIND THE LIAISON: Rusk's Forbidden Fruit Barbara Lazarus, Personnel Director APPROPRIATIONS-WHAT BASIS? Rivalries Mount Between 'U By H. NEIL BERKSON MICHIGAN'S two major univer- sitys are transferring their rivalries from the athletic to the academic arena. The tensions are building be- tween Michigan State University and this university, although they still remain pretty much under the surface; there have already been some indications of future con- flicts. -Various administrators around here virtually seethe when the subject of Merit scholars is brought up. By enrolling 198 Na- tional Merit Scholarship winners last fall, MSU not only replaced the University as the ranking state school nationally in this category, but also it went ahead of any pri- vate school-Harvard, Yale, and Princeton included. As a matter of fact, no other school in the coun- try even approached 100 Merits. The gimmick? MSU decided to hand out its own scholarships through the Merit program. Stu- dents who would normally qualify for the former automatically be- came Merit winners. Of course, the University could go shooting back to the top of the list by dis- tributing its 500 Regents Scholar- ships through the Merit Founda- tion. --ELSEWHERE, MSU President John Hannah is highly responsible for derailing the University's well- thought out plans to establish a four-year, degree-granting branch in the Delta area. Hannah, for lege Presidents vetoed the Delta scheme last March. But while administrators here don't save their kindest words for Hannah, they are more concerned with the effect his overall policies engineer, for instance, far exceeds the cost of producing a Ph.D in English literature. Thus, while MSU has 2000 more students, 49 per cent of its total enrollment is in the least expen- .. . .t ': .. . . . ....... . ....:...... .. . . .......1.:.Y:::.".":. .: n....... "e........ ..." 'r:A Enrollment Fall, 1962 State Appropriation Cost State Appropriation Cost/Student Enrollment Fall, 1962 State Appropriation Cost University Fr-Soph Jr-Sr M.A. Ph.D. Grad-Pro TOTAL 7309 8831 4711 2585 3116 26,552 $ 2,247,663 7,015,434 6,402,553 8,014,329 11,967,182 $35,647,157 5 307.52 794.41 1,359.06 3,100.32 3,840.56 MSU (hypothetical) 13,265 4,079,253 8,937 7,099,642 3,837 5,214,713 1,718 5,326,350 219 841,083 27,916 22,561,041 (actual: $31,170,402) The figures in column 3, above, derive the total dollars allocated from the state appropriation to individual students at the various levels of the University. Taking the cost per student and applying it to MSU's enrollment, produces the number of dollars MSU would need on the University's cost schedule. MSU would have needed $22.6 million on this basis as opposed to the $31.1 million they actually received for the fiscal year 1962-63. The analysis is hypothetical and may not take into ac- count all factors in MSU's budget. ! . {r."'. }:J t :,,Yr ,. ยข}4'"'' :4 "Y .. . . . . . . .. whatever reason, allied himself with the irrational community college lobby against University President Harlan Hatcher when the Michigan State Council of Col- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Reverends Condemn Swastika Incident To the Editor: WE HAVE learned with deep regret of the latest expression of anti-semitism which occurred in our community on Wednesday night, Feb. 5. That was the paint- ing of swastikas at the Beth Israel Center-Hillel Foundation and on the Diagonal and the Economics Bldg., and also the spreading of printed "hate literature" in these areas. We express to the Jewish community our deep sense of sor- row and shame for this incident. From the literature it appears that the motivation for this attack has been the involvement of the Jewish community in the struggle for racial justice. Since Christians are also concerned for racial jus- tice, and have been working to- gether with their Jewish brethren to that end, we feel that we must bear part of the pain of this in- cident. We consider this to be an attack on the Christian commun- ity, also. This renewed example of relig- ious and racial bigotry calls us to a renewed examination of our own hearts to see if we are doing every- thing we can do to eradicate hat- red from our community. The swastika is the symbol of the cruelest period in the history of mankind and its use today should shock us all. A community or na- tion that complacently allows big- otry and hatred to exist stands under the judgment of God. -Rev. Frank Srebernak For the Catholic Interracial Council of Ann Arbor --Rev. Russell M. Fuller For the Ann Arbor- Washtenaw Council of Churches --Rev. George Laurant For the Ann Arbor- Washtenaw Conference on Religion and Race Elections .. . To the Editor: IF RAYMOND Holton's white- wash job of the Ann Arbor City Council had not been so thinly dis- guised, praise for his efforts would certainly be in order. Mr. Holton suggests that Ann Arbor city voters should approve the proposal to eliminate spring elections. He then proceeds to treat the subject much like an ex- ercise in political science, using for support selected quotations from Councilmen Laird and Bandemer. The full consequences of this proposal are disastrous. For many years, the spring elections, with their coffee hours and discussion groups (which Councilman Laird apparently does not like) have served to inform the community about local issues. It is the closest thing to pure democracy that we have. Without this responsible ac- tivity of the political parties, it would be almost impossible to cast an intelligent vote. Discussion leads to thought, and thought leads to intelligent voting. One wonders why Councilman Laird feels this aspect of politics so ridiculous. THE EFFECT of this proposal will be to establish a bedsheet bal- lot of confusing length and com- plexity. Councilman Laird dreams of such a ballot attracting 80-90 per cent of registered voters. When he wakes up, he may find the lengthened ballot instead repuls- ing voters. Mr. Holton attempts to prove that a large number of issues draws more voters to the polls. subdue, subordinate and sublimin- ate local issues. On practical political grounds, we must disagree with Mr. Holto . The Ann Arbor City Council hAs taken a wrong step which could have ruinous konsequences. What little political controversy we now have in Ann Arbor must not be lost. The Young Democrats will fight for defeat of this pro- posal., -Young Democrats Executive Committee: Michael Grondin, '66 Chairman Chris Cohen, '64 Marty Baum, '64 Carole Crumley, '66 Alan Jones, '66 Steve Adamini, '65 Debby Gould, '64 James Hanley, '65 Richard Katzman, '67 David Vaughn, '66 Elmer White, '64L Parking . To the Editor: IN HOPE of receiving an answer from those responsible, we write this letter. We would like to know why the Church Street parking structure is being closed to public use at night. Until now, this has served as a convenient parking place for students with legitimate business on the campus in the evenings. Since even the lowest level is not filled in the evenings, surely public parking does not in- convenience holders of staff per- mits. We suggest that the driving stu- dents be considered in this matter and that the University reconsider its action. -Thomas C. English, Grad. Michael Bass, Grad. William H. Wing, Grad. Fraternities . . To the Editor: A S TWO recently initiated mem- bers of the Michigan fraternity system, we take exception to Lloyd Graff's editorial, "It Takes a Man to Quit Fraternity Pledge Follies." Has Mr. Graff ever heard of the adage-Don't knock it, 'till you've tried it? It seems rather ironical to us that the persons criticizing the fraternity system are not members of that system. -Bruce Anderson, '67 -Bob Thompson, '67 (EDITOR'S NOTE: I was a pledge during the spring semester last year.-L.G.) have on the distribution of the state higher education appropria- tion. The University runs a much more costly program than MSU but the budgets of the two schools have been getting closer and closer. * * * FOR THE fiscal year 1964-65 the University requested $9.3 mil- lion over last year's budget of $38.2 million. MSU requested an $8.3 million increase over its last year's' budget of $32.6 million. Gov. George Romney has recommended to the Legislature that the Univer- sity receive an added $5.9 million, or 63 per cent of the requested in- crease. He has recommended that State receive $7.3 million - 85.6 per cent of its request. The governor's office has not said exactly what criteria it used in determining these recommen- dations, but there ,is great cause to believe that the base was en- rollment. On the surface it would appear that MSU, with 29,000 students i as opposed to the University's 27,000, needs the extra money. Adminis- trators from President Hatcher on down are assuming a missionary zeal in trying to dispel this myth. * * * THE COST of education cannot be determined on a simple gross enrollment figure, or "head count." For every dollar spent to educate freshmen and sophomores, $3-4 is spent on juniors and seniors, $5 is spent on an M.A. candidate and $6 is spent at the graduate-pro- fessional level. Even within the categories there are vast differences. The cost of producing a doctor or a nuclear sive, freshman-sophomore cate- gory. Thirty per cent is in the junior-senior category. (This fig- ure is doubly interesting for it in- dicates the high attrition rate at MSU. While the school gets an appropriation based on its fall en- rollment, a significant part of that enrollment has departed by the time the money arrives.) Twenty- one per cent are graduate stu- dents. Thirty per cent of the Univer- sity's enrollment is freshman- sophomore, another 30 per cent is junior-senior and 40 per cent lies in the graduate category. More- over, the University runs many exclusive, highly expensive gradu- ate programs. When an educational institution has to spend $6 at the graduate level for every dollar at the fresh- man level, the head count method of doling out appropriations soon becomes inadequate. THE OFFICE of Institutional Research here has attacked the problem from another angle. Through a complicated process, it can take the University's total ap- propriation and break it down in terms of how much is spent at each class level. Dividing by the number of students at each level, the office can derive the cost per student. Taking the cost per .student at the University, and multiplying by the number of students at MSU, provides the amounts MSU would need to run their programs at the University's costs. The sum of these amounts shows the budget MSU would need to run its pro- gram at our costs. ' MSU The box (center) shows these figures for the year 1962-63. MSU received $31.1 million from the state for that year-it only need- ed $22.6 million on the University's cost basis. Here is a strong indi- cation that, in terms of the money available, MSU is receiving far more than its share. OF COURSE, there's hardly an educational institution in the country that has all the money it needs. But if the Legislature would not put funds for higher education on a competitive basis, there would be no problem. As long as they are on this basis, the legislators and the governor must be willing to examine care- fully the needs of each Institution as a separate entity. Since the University has a medical school and MSU does not, the Univer- sity's costs will tend to be higher. There are countless other ex- amples. ADMINISTRATORS here are bothered by the fact that the bud- geting agencies have no standard method of determining appropria- tions. There is a feeling that the University would fare better un- der an accurate formula than un- der the current slip-shod methods. The state of Indiana has such a formula, one which is attracting much interest. The four state-supported schools in Indiana have a coordinating council which submits a joint bud- get recommendation to the legis- lature. Each school's budget is worked out according to the' fol- lowing three guidlines: -University costs at all levels of education-freshman through graduate-are derived and divided by enrollment at each level. -Current costs are projected to the following fiscal year by pro- jecting anticipated enrollment at each level. -Additional amounts are deter- mined and allocated for such items as faculty and non-faculty salary increases, possible price increases in operating costs and new pro- grams. The Indiana formula accounts for the nuances of individual in- stitutions and eliminates the bit- ter competition for funds. Thus, there is no rivalry between Indi- ana University and Purdue. The M i c h i g a n Coordinating Council for Public Higher Educa- tion is currently trying to derive some formula. The University would like to see the group come up with an equitable scheme. Needs here were never greater, and the University cannot afford, in coming years, to get embroiled in bitter budget battles with MSU where the issues are completely confused. SIDELINE ON SGC: SRC Hits Council Inaction- By MARY LOU BUTCHER STUDENT Government Council threw open its closet door to members of the University Sen- ate's Student Relations Committee- Wednesday night, dragged out its skeleton-the anemic Council Plan -and asked the faculty to suggest some pep-up pills. ' The SRC did more than pre- scribe drugs; it diagnosed the ail- ment which SGC itself has so long failed to recognize-Council inac- tion, recommended careful treat- ment-a definite plan and ra- tionale for student rule-making authority and, best of all, left the responsibility for recovery in the hands of Council members. SGC HAD invited the SRC to the meeting to enlist sympathy for its proposal to transfer the initia- tive for making all non-academic student rules and regulations from the Office of Student Affairs to Council. Actually, the SRC members were more than sympathetic with Council's philosophy of greater student responsibility. But they COLLEGE NEWSPAPER editors are a rather idealistic lot, and over 400 of them had their illusions shattered Mon- day as they ran head on into managed news at a State Department briefing in Washington as a part of the Overseas Press Club conference., At this brief Secretary of State Dean Rusk addressed the group on foreign af- fairs. After his welcome to the editors, a large sign went up which said "back- ground material - not for attribution." Editors, prepared to glean a news story from Rusk's words, sat back annoyed and found that an administrator, whether he works for a university or the govern- ment, uses the same modus operandi. Rusk did not give away any state se- crets; nor did he say anything that might shock a rather well-informed group of editors. Yet his entire speech was for- bidden fruit-the information was ours, but it had to be attributed vaguely to "a high Washington official." The Washington Post noted that one distressed editor, not accustomed to "the art of diplomatic evasion," protested that "any question asked of a State Depart- ment official here is answered either very vaguely or not at all." But officials merely answered him in a patient, fatherly and condescending way Chn itia forthif ur.v strued or a desire to use the press for the official's own advantage encourage them to withhold their names. Each day numerous Associated Press stories, for ex- ample, originate from nameless and face- less issuers of well planned facts. In some situations this probably is a valuable technique. If a world hot spot is having trouble, a high official might be willing to divulge an opinion or predic- tion provided that he remains anony- mous. Even reporters encourage this type of anonymity in order to get comments. HOWEVER, it is more likely that this technique is and has been overused by government officials who are afraid to have anything attached to their name or are just using the press to their own advantage.Such a system encourages ir- responsibility; it becomes difficult to af- fix responsibility for important state.- ments. The high official is doubly pro- tected because the Washington press corps is very willing to protect helpful sources. . The news function of the government has the potential and, perhaps already, the distinction of being the greatest pub- lic relations firm in the business. Fur- thermore, it looks as though managed news has produced news blandness and a lack of pinpointing the source that despoils any concept of an honest and found SGC members lacking in definite alternatives to existing rules and unclear about possible administrative difficulties should this authority be suddenly en- dowed upon them. The SRC also was amazed and appalled at Council's past reluc- tance to pass any motion which seemed likely to incur the veto of either the vice-president for stu- dent affairs or the Regents. THE TWO-HOUR discussion was probably the best purge SGC has ever experienced. Council members found themselves having to reconcile their record of past inertia with their present avowed desire for responsibility. They also found their motives for desir- ing this authority under close scrutiny. SRC Chairman Prof. Richard Cutler pointed out that to be ac- ceptable, Council's proposals must be given a context or rationale which denotes the "educational utility" of the non-academic na- ture of a student's life. He also said he was coming to the conclusion that one reason for SGC gaining this rule-making power is that "Council must gain some authority to salvage itself as a meaningful body." * * AFFIRMING the need for Coun- cil to move forward, Prof. Marvin Felheim asserted that students should be given the responsibility for rule-making just as they are given responsibility in the class- room. He noted however that "I have seen SGC over and over again refuse to use the power" given it. He further commented that the basic issue "is not the context which you present to us, but the need for agreement as to what you want and a willingness to stand up for it." *~ * * COUNCIL'S reaction in general was that it is imperative to gain the initiative in rule-making: merely sending recommendations for rule changes to the OSA has proven ineffective. Past sugges- tions for revisions in women's hours, key permissions and the re- (Under the proposal Council members are considering, the vice- president for student affairs would still retain his veto with no way for SGC to override it.) TREASURER Douglas Brook also insisted that SGC should have this authority because "often when we bring proposals to the vice-president, there are other pressures brought to bear on him which we don't know about-we don't know what the effect of our effort is."' A penetrating look into Council members' arguments came when Prof. Patricia Rabinovitz asked whether Council was asking for responsibility to make rules "to get what you want" or because "you want to assume the respon- sibility for making these deci- sions." International Students Associa- tion President Isaac Adalemo ex- pressed the view that SGC has no continuity because rule-making decisions go to the OSA. "The only way in which the problem can be solved is if the power over student regulations lies with Council and not with the administration. "SGC loses a lot of influence over students as well as their con- fidence because they feel they can't get anything done through it." Other Council members argued that since students must live un- der the rules, they should be able to formulate them. THROUGHOUT the discussion, SRC members interspersed several questions which the Council had obviously not considered previous- ly. What happens when the ad- ministration, which must enforce the rules, wants to make a new one? Does it come knocking on SGC's door? What if SGC doesn't consider the administration's pro- posal a "good rule"? SGC wants authority to make all non-academic rules - what about whether or not,. students must live in dormitories? What about other unforseen contingen- cies of student rule-making? Council members' responses were alternately bright and naive "Honest--I Think I Can See Daylight"