Student-Faculty Cooperation Attempt Flou nue By MARY LOU BUTCHER A Student Government Council effort at bridge-building between students and faculty has proved largely ineffective- so far, at least. Last spring, SGC endorsed student participation without vote on subcommittees of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA). Each of these faculty subcommittees is concerned with a particular area of University policy, and submits proposals through SACUA to the University Senate- the faculty's official voice. In seeking to get students on them, SGC discarded an earlier proposal to initiate some form of student-faculty govern- ment. Own Structure At the same time, Council decided to create its own parallel nine-subcommittee structure to facilitate the seating of students, pending each subcommittee's consent. In response to the request, several subcommittees agreed last fall to seat students and to allow them to participate freely in discussions. However, a recent poll of subcommittee chairmen revealed that only seven of 15 students named as representatives by SGC have participated in meetings. Two chairmen noted that they had never received acknowl- edgment from Council or from individual students. Prof. George M. McEwen of the engineering English depart- ment, chairman of the bylaws subcommittee, indicated that an invitation to seat students was extended to Council even though SGC never had requested one. Willing, But No Reply He commented that subcommittee members had "indicated that they would be willing to have student participants" but that "no students replied to my letter." He said that he didn't know whether the faculty members felt that students could contribute to the meetings but noted there was a feeling that "if the students wanted to see what we were doing, we didn't mind having them." The chairman of the student relations subcommittee, Prof. Richard L. Cutler of the psychology department, also pointed out that he had not been contacted by SGC after sending two letters welcoming student participation on his subcommittee. Two other chairmen interviewed revealed that their subcom- mittees decided against seating students after considering the Council request, because of the possible inhibiting effect of their presence. According to Prof. Claude A. Eggertsen of the education school, chairman of the University freedom and responsibility subcommittee, students have not yet met with his group. Expected No Students "We are now taking up an issue that we hadn't anticipated having students participate in discussing. It would be extremely difficult to take them in now and inform them about. the deliberations," he explained. One subcommittee has not yet seated students simply because it has not held any meetings this year. Prof. Stuart W. Churchill of the chemical engineering department, chairman of the year- round operations 'subcommittee noted that the group did not meet last fall "because the University had not yet developed its plans and there was not much point in meeting." On the reverse side of the coin, there was a generally favorable reaction to student participants from those five chair- men whose subcommittees had agreed to seat them. Most, however, felt that one student representative per subcommittee was sufficient. In naming students to the faculty groups, SGC attempted to place two students on each. Currently, only two subcommittees are operating in the presence of two students. The three chairmen of the groups having only one student delegate felt io need for an increase in representation. Not Much To Do "Actually, there is very little he can do but be a participating observer," Prof. Merle Waterman of the business administration school said of the student representative to his Campus Planning and Development subcommittee. He noted that the presence of one student at meetings has worked out well and that he saw "no reason for more in the future." A deterrent to active participation on the part of students cited by Prof. Waterman is the "problem of continuity." He noted that to be actively involved in the discussions a member must be on the subcommittee for a while. Regarding continued student participation with the planning subcommittee, he said, "If SGC wants to send us someone as good as the student we have now, we'll be glad to have him." See EVALUATE, Page 2 WARM High--46 I tLow-28, Mild temperatures and partly cloudy skies UNION ELIMINATES STUDENT VOICE See Editorial Page Ii, Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom _ r VOL. LXXIVNo. 121 SEVEN CENTS ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 1964 TWO SECTIONS TWENTY-TWO PA HATCHER OUTLINES PLANS: 'U' Halts Dearborn Expansion By JEFFREY GOODMAN Special To The Daily DEARBORN-University Presi- dent Harlan Hatcher assuaged the fears of Dearbornites yesterday when he announced to a meeting of Dearborn alumni that the Uni- versity has no plans to expand the two-year school in that city to four years. - President Hatcher, along with Executive Vice-President Marvin L. Niehuss and Vice-President for Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont spoke to- the alumni on the University's general. develop- ment, students, faculty and build- ing program. He told the meeting that the University "has never limited it- self to a specific geographical to- NCA TE To Begin Probe Of 'U' Education School By MARILYN KORAL A team of professional educators from the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) will begin inter- views Monday with education school students, teachers and admin- istrators. They will attempt to determine the accuracy of information recently submitted by the school to NCATE to aid it in evaluating 'World's New. cation; it is a concept, a mission. "The questions in regard to expansion to meet increasing de- mands for undergraduate educa- tion are where, how and how fast to spend. The capacity of the Ann Arbor campus and the needs of those in other cities must be examined,'! he said. But the Flint community, where the University's other junior- -senior college is located, "will overwhelmingly demand expansion to include freshmen and sopho- mores, and Flint has the priority next year. "There are no limits, however, to the curricular expansion at Dearborn," President Hatcher not- Top Aireraf ed. These announcements were line with the policy desired in by Arena Go-Ahead Starts Athletic Plant Renaissance By CHARLIE TOWLE The green light that was flashed to the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics by the Regents for a new basketball arena marks the first step of a concerted program to elevate tide University's athletic campus back on a par with those of other major American universities. The Committee of Plant Expansion, headed by Dean Stephen H. Spurr of the Natural Resources School, has evolved a plan to update University Vice-President and Di- rector of the Dearborn Center William E. Stirton. According to Stirton, there is a desire to keep the Dearborn school limited to the last two years. Fills Needs The Ford Community College, an industry-supported school lo- cated adjacent to the Dearborn \Center and serving freshmen and sophomores only, has both the ca- pacity and desire to fulfill the needs for education during these two years, Stirton said. "Ford has three functions: of-' fering a terminal occupational or vocational education; offering adult education and providing a college parallel for freshmen and sophomores who cannot afford to go to school away from home. No Third Function "If the Dearborn Center were to expand to four years, it would rob the Ford College of this third function. There is great concern at that college that this would leave only a trade school," Stirto said. Earlier in the session, Vice- President Pierpont presented an outline of the University's build- ing program, complete with sdes of buildings under construction or in the planning stage. he listed three consideatio:s behind any decision to construct new facilities: - There must be no unused or inefficiently used capacity in exist- ing structures. In this regard be mentioned the Architecture and Ocs gr Bldg, constructed in the 1930's for 350-400 students and now housing over 700. Remodeling Impossible j -There must be no possihility of remodeling existing structures. "A building will be torn down only if it is completely obsolete, in the wrong location or impossible to renovate," he said. --There must be complete pro- gr.m planning of just what is to be done with a new building be- fore it will even be considered. When asked by. an alumnus whether the lack of central plan- ning in construction among the state's 10 institutions isn't di;as- trous, Pierpont replied that 'the new constitution reaffirms the re- sponsibility of the Regents to operate the University's building program autonomously. There must be something behind this decision. "Any other state that has at- tempted to control its state educa- 'tional system under one body has not done a very good job," he said. Africa Motif St for eek African Affairs is the theme of the University's annual Interna- tional Week beginning today. Students will have an oppor- tunity to hear authorities on Af- rican lecture and to participate in discussions led by students from the African and Asian coun- tries. Today a supper will be held at the League from 5:30-8:30 p.m. Gregory Gallo from the United States National Students Associa- tion will speak. G. Mennen Williams, assistant secretary of state for African af- fairs, and Chief S. 0. Adebo, head of the Nigerian Mission to the United Nations will give a joint address at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Aud. Prof. Henry Bretton of the po- litical science department will lead a lecture-discussion Tuesday in the Multipurpose Rm. of the UGLI. On Thursday at 4 p.m. an international tea will be held in Jordan Hall. From 8-10:30, p.m. there 'will. be a seminar at the Michigan Union and the Interna- tional Center led by students from southeast Asia with nine Univer- sity professors participating. A Monte Carlo Ball will be held Saturday in the Union Ballroom from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Beadle Warns, Of Fee Boost' State universities "face the prospect of a $50 tuition increase fnr in-state students" if they will the athletic campus in a series of priority steps, governed by the rate of income from student foot- ball coupons. The basketball arena had A-1 priority over any other construction, though not without opposition. Participation, Too The opposition stems from the feeling that additions to the in- tramural facilities require equal, if not greater, attention than those for spectator sports. "We must consider the need of participating sports as well as spectator sports," Regent Eugene Power said during the Regents' meeting. "It's more important to students at this age to get some exercise than to just sit -tand watch," he emphasized. Regent Allan Sorenson support- ed his colleague, saying, "I was happy to see in the Athletic Board's annual report that it rec- ognized the need for participant sports, and I don't agree with the priority of building a field house first." In spito of the opposition, it was all silent when the vote was taken, See REVEAL, Page 9 See Spending On Research Leveling Off By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Government- now running at about $15 billion sponsored research expenditures, a year, apparently are leveling off after years of rapid increase, a House report said yesterday. The report, by a House science subcommittee, said both basic re- search and applied research have increased manyfold in recent years, but that applied research has grown faster. In connection with the report, subcommittee chairman Emilio O. Daddario (D-Conn) noted that it relies on research and develop- ment figures provided by the gov- ernment agencies themselves and which may be interpreted in var- ious ways. "I believe that this report will nonetheless be very useful to mem- bers of Congress and others in- terested in a concise summary of how much money the government is putting into scientific research and development, what agencies are spending it and how it is be- ing divided among the various scientific disciplines." Greeks Protest Cyprus Policy ATHENS ()-Greek students in Athens yesterday clashed with po- lice in demonstrations against Britain and the United States on the explosive Cyprus issue. The demonstrators, estimated at 4000, shouted "Bravo Russia" and fought with police in front of the United States embassy. In a meeting with United States Ambassador Henry Labouisse, Prime Minister George Papan- dreou lodged an oral protest against America's stand in the United Nations on Cyprus- A11l Intercepto Unveiled by Presidei -teacher education at the Uni- versity. The education school is cur- rently up for evaluation by NC- ATE, a process which takes place approximately every ten years. The team, which will remain at the University until Thursday, report their findings to NCATE. Then in July a separate com- mittee within NCATE considers both the professional educator's f in d ing s and the education school's report in deciding wheth- er to continue accreditation. Prof. Lowell Beacn, who chairs the education school's undergrad- uate committee, named seven' standards for Judgment included in the information sent to NCATE by the school 60 days ago. The fourteen-man team on campus this week will try to establish the accuracy of the school's report in the seven areas: -Objectives of teacher educa- tion, including its scope at the University. -The administrative structure of the school. "What NCATE wants to know is, who is respon- sible for developing policy," Prof. Beach explained. -Student personnel programs and services. In this area NCATE is concerned about comparisons of education school students with liberal arts students. Evaluation of admissions procedures also falls here. --Faculty in professional educa- tion. NCATE reviews the qualifi- cations of the faculty in regard to college preparation and exper- ience. Two scalesrof evaluation are involved, according to Prof. Beach. The first deals with the percentage of professors in the education school possessing doc- torates compared to the all-Uni- versity average and national per- centages. The team also considers L the years of teaching experience of the individual faculty memebrs. -Specifics of curricula includ- ing all programs. -Laboratory experience and student teaching. NCATE wants to know how much of this students get, the ratio of supervisors to students, and where the experi- ence is given, Prof. Beach said. -The facilities and instruction- al materials. Says Tactics In Viet Nam Unprofitable LANSING (RP)-Outgoing Assist- ant Secretary of State Roger Hilsman last night said the Com- munistss' guerrilla tactics in South Viet Nam ultimately will become as unprofitable for them as their aggression against South Korea in 1950 and the offshore is- lands in 1958.k In a speech to a conference of the United States National Stu- dents' Association, he said the winds of change are blowing full gale in Southeast Asia and the task ahead will not be easy. He called for a "full orchestra- tion" of the United States mili- tary, economic and diplomatic ef- forts in South Viet Nam to meet the Communist challenge. "I am confident that the atten- tion now ;devoted to combatting the type of warfare we now face in Viet Nam will ultimately make terrorist activity and guerrilla warfare as unprofitable for the Communists as was their frontal aggression against Korea in 1950 and against the offshore islands in 1958," he said. Hilsman said he spoke as a government official, but one who had recently decided to return to academic life. He made no other reference tc his resignation "an- nounced by the White House Tues- day. But he said: "The frustrations are many,, both in the field and in Washing- ton, "There have been temporary set- backs such as the uncertainty and slowdown of military activity which accompanied the military coups" in.South Viet Nam. Hilsman said despite such frus- trations the United States is per- fecting its ability to use resources' to best advantage in Viet Nam. 'The tools are in Vietnamese hards," he added. "Their nerves are steady and their determina- tion remains high." LYNDON B. JOHNSON STATE YR'S: Set Warner As.Leader By MICHAEL HARRAH Special To The Daily DETROIT-Dale Warner, '65L, vice-chairman of the University Young Republicans, was elected chairman of the Michigan Feder- ation of College Republicans at its annual convention yesterday., Warner was chosen on the first ballot over James DeFrancis of Albion College, the current vice- chairman, and James Broad of the University of Detroit. Warner re- ceived 288 votes, his opposition 174, and there were eight absten- tions., Also chosen was Gerald Plas of Delta College, as vice-chairman, over Denne Osgood of Western Michigan University. The vote was close, 230-219, with three absten- tions. Linda Shannon of Michigan State University was named cor- responding secretary, Margaret Ward of Marygrove College was made recording secretary,,and James Bradford of Northwestern Michigan College was elected treasurer. The convention adopted several resolutions including those de- nouncing the deterrent war in Vietnam and calling for no trade with Communist bloc nations; a resolution ,was also' adopted call- ing upon the federal government to use its full power for the en- forcement of the civil rights clauses of the federal constitution and calling upon . Congress to withdraw representationgfrr o m those states which deny Negroes the right to vote. Defeated was a resolution which would have called upon the United States to withdraw from the United Nations if Red China should be admitted. Viet" Invasioi Plans Denie By Johnson Claims No Accord In Panama Dispute But Hints at Thaw WASHINGTON (')-Preside Lyndon B. Johnson took the wra off a five-year-old military sec yesterday, disclosing that t United States has developed high-flying interceptor that a slice through the air at more th- 2000 miles an hour. Johnson said this plane is ca able of a performance that exceeds that of any other aircr in the world today." Development of the hithe super-secret plane -was announ at Johnson's first news conferee to be carried live to the nation radio and television The conference, with the ch: executive facing 305 report from the head of a u-shaped ta in a State Departmentlconferer room, coincided with the end his first 100 days in office-da which Johnson said have produe real accomplishments. Needle-Shaped Surprise Clearly, the biggest surprise i word that the nation now has needle-shaped plane called All, perfected, under a ptogr that was, amazingly, kept sect since the effort was launched 1959. Other conference highlights: -Johnson passed up a cha: to deny a report that his Thu - day trip to Florida was cloal in stringent secrecy because o: tip that a Cuban suicide p might try to ram his plane. --The President said he r neither discussed nor appro- plans to carry South Viet Na: guerrilla war into Commun North Viet Nam. -William B. Bundy, now, assistant secretary of defense, v succeed the recently resigned R er Hilsman as assistant secret of state for Far Eastern affairs No Accord -"There has been no meeti of the minds" in resolvingt dispute with Panama, Johns said. But he said the United StE realizes that. the 1903 treaty gc erning the status of the Pana Canal Zone must be modified fr time to' time "and perhaps woi require adjustment in .:..1964 1965." This could mean a ma break in the United States-Pa manian standoff. But Johnson peated,'that diplomatic relatic must be restored before talks p ceed. Johnson said he suspects t rumors he might be wiling to cc promise the key public accomr ela"_inc aofinn o Ya iilrl4 I __- BOTH LEAD LEAGUE: M' Cagers Snuff Illinois, 89-83; Icers Edge Tech Special To The Daily HOUGHTON-Michigan's hock- ey squad took awful revenge for their Friday night's loss to Michi- gan Tech an beat the Huskies last night, 4-3 in a game full of sur- prises. The win strengthened the Wol- verines' lead in the WOHA, boost- ing their league record to 10-2, and jeopardized the Huskies' chances for a playoff berth. Similar to Friday night's contest, fho .,ca . m,,a,.A uA' b nyighting Clutch performances by Bob Cantrell and Cazzie Russell helped Michigan hoopsters to their record-setting nineteenth win yesterday, as the cagers downed a spirited Illinois team, 89-83 at Yost field house. The win pushed the Wolverines season record to 19-3. The pre- vious high Michigan record belonged to the 1918-19 edition of the roundball men who compiled an 18-7 season mark. Russell also broke the individual season scoring record set by Bill Buntin last year. He netted 28 points to bring his season total to 539, four more than Buntin's record. Illinois, vastly improved over its performance against Michigan at Champaign, pushed the Wolverine quintet all the way to the wire. With ten minutes left in the game the Wolverines could only boast .;:>::: <:: .,Y. .