FIRE DRILLS OR BED-CHECKS, See Page 4 Y A& 4hp 4fttr4t ~~IAiti CLOUDY High-73 Low-52 Warmer today, Scattered thundershowers. Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXII, No. 167 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1962 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES Residence Hall Board Passes Fall Freshman Pilot Progm - - - -- - -- -rc~. S ~ * a g High Court -Ms. J - -MLM, -E By BARBARA LAZARUS and JAMES NICHOLS The Board of Governors of Resi- dence Halls approved the recom- mendations of the Newcomb Study for an experimental residence hall program next year aimed at re- ducing the "divorcement" of aca- demic and residence hall living ex- periences. Included in this "divorcement," Asst. Dean of the Literary College James H. Robertson said, are Sawyer Hits Dorm Size, Inflexibil*ity. By BARBARA LAZARUS Sally Jo Sawyer, '62, past pres- ident of Assembly Association, cit- ed size and inflexibility as two ma- jor problems which face dormitory operations. Miss Sawyer gave her report on the woman's dormitories to the Residence Hall Board of Govern- ors yesterday. The reportconsists of various opinions gathered from a residence hall survey and her experience in meeting dormitory problems. The individual girl, living in a large dormitory such as Mary Markley or Alice Lloyd "feels lost in the crowd, with no voice in de- termining policy and with no real sense of identity to a group." Up-' per classmen often feel that ac- tivities in the dorms are for younger students, and they devel- op a poor attitude which makes constructive house programs dif- ficult to institute. Coed Houses Miss Sawyer recommended that coeducational houses might alle- viate problems in the larger dorms. Since coed housing might appeal to a majority of freshmen and sophomores, Markley could be an ideal place to institute such a pro- ject.. "The second large problem fac- ing the residence halls is the be- lief that efficiency of operation is more important than the feelings and wishes of the majority of the girls," she said. Lesser Irritant "The fact that a girl is ex- pected to be in at midnight is not as great a source of irritation as is the treatment she receives if she comes in at 12:01 a.m. Some of the suggestions, which stem from a variety of areas in dorm operations include: 1) Have no compulsory house meetings. 2) Open all doors at curfew time 3) Make it easier for girls to move from dorm to dorm. 4) Do not limit phone conversa- tions. 5) Have earlier fire drills. "Women have set new policies and established new programs within the houses. Add to these improvements the Oxford Proj- ect, coed housing, and apartment permission for senior women and the future looks quite bright," Miss Sawyer said. TO Complete Indian Plans For Exchange Prof. Claude Eggertsen of the education school will travel to In- dia in August and September to complete arrangements for a fac- ulty and graduate student ex- change program between the Uni- versity and an Indian university, yet to be selected.. The exchange program is slated to start in June 1963 when two graduate students in comparative education and one professor from the education school will begin a year of study in India. Five Years The following September, an equal number of Indian education students and professors will come to the University. Prof. Eggertsen, whose trip this fall is being underwritten by a grant from the State Department, said that "plans are well under- way for the support of the Indian students," while living costs for the University representatives will problems such as the lack of "op- portunity to carry on conversa- tions that may have been germin- ated in the classroom." Present plans call for an exper- imental program involving Greene House in East Quadrangle and a "sister house" not yet chosen. Equal numbers of men and women will be enrolled in certain "ear- marked" literary college courses which will be carried over into the residence halls through informal participation of faculty members. "Somehow we must make use of the fact that students are living together," Dean Robertson said. The pilot program will begin by placing entering freshmen with similar courses together in the dormitories and by having a fac- ulty advisor conduct seminars and discussions within the living units. Greene House, which has a ca- pacity for some 90 students, will have 55 new freshmen, of which only two are not in the literary college involved in the program. Dean Robertson felt it was more important to group the freshmen by their courses, rather than by their school, "We will try a pilot group to see what it offers and see the mea- surable benefits from it. Perhaps, in the future, it could involve oth- er schools," said Vice-President of Student Affairs James A. Lewis. Acting Dean of Women Eliza- beth Davenport also said that it is not eefinite whether there will be room for all graduate women in the dormitories. "We may not be able to house them and it will be a first come, first serve basis. We say this re- luctantly because we feel that this is a valuable service to those who want it," she said. .I 'I Voids 6 Convictions t of Congr oess C ases Contemp > Kauper Sees NUCLEAR WAR: CHALLENGE: Jencks. Cites Treatment Of Students, Education By BETSEY KENYON "Too often colleges treat their students like an intellectual pro- letariat, sweating for their daily pittance of grades and credits," Christopher Jencks, associate editor of the New Republic said Sunday in the closing lecture of Challenge's series on higher education. He said that the University must consider the theoretical prob- lem of its purpose and function as an educational institution. In the May Take Tax Decision' LANSING tAP) - The first major decision on taxes and spending; were expected this week as law- makers returned to Lansing, hope-1 ful of heading down the home- stretch to adjournment. They will resume tax-writing; and budget-making chores tomor- row. A major barrier to tax agree- ment was lifted last week when, Gov. John B. Swainson reluctant-, ly gave up his drive for a fiscal; reform program based on a state income tax. That cleared the way for Democrats to let up in their, drive for an income tax package against opposition of majority Republicans.- GOP Impetus It also added impetus to a 9OP move to pass a packag of "nui- sance" taxes on beer, cigarettes,; telephone and telegraph service, liquor and possibly other items. Some Republicans have report-+ ed a new spurt in a move for a one per cent tax on goods sold at wholesale - in place of a pack-, age of nuisance taxes. The levy would yield more than $100 mil- lion annually, they said. Budget bills are expected to emerge from the House Ways and Means committee and the Senate Appropriations committee early this week. Add Up They are expected to add up to slightly more than $500 million- or more than $20 million above this year's spending. One important measure still be- ing studied closely is the school aid bill. It went from the House Education Committee to the Ways+ and Means Committee carrying a $19 increase in the $205-per-pupil formula, and boosting a deduct- able millage factor from 3% to 3%, thus equalizing payments to+ poor and rich districts. solution of this problem will lie solutions to the practical problems of faculty salaries and legislature relations. He saw an opportunity for col- leges to institute a program of truly liberal education. He sug- gest breaking up the university into smaller colleges and institut- ing a plan involving fewer lectures and class hours a week, with those hours devoted to small discussion groups with professors, as changes that might result in higher facul- ty salaries and better legislature relations. Since 1945 there has been a rev- olutionary change in that there are now over 100 colleges that send at least 50 per cent of their stu- dents to graduate school. For these institutions the major question is, "What can the undergraduate col- lege do better than the graduate school?" Jencks said. He suggested that this question involves a distinction between edu- cation and instruction. "Education is the leading out of the mind," the stimulation of curi- osity and imagination which cre- ates receptiveness to learning, and it should be the province of the undergraduate college. Instruction imposes discipline and specialized knowledge, and should be the province of graduate schools, he explained. The University is an elite insti- tution because it chooses its fac- ulty on the basis of standing in a professiopal field without regard to teaching ability, Jencks said. Meader Plans House Protest Rep. George Meader (R-Ann Arbor) is organizing a House pro- test against the appropriation committee's 15 per cent lid on in- direct research expenses of uni- versities. Meader says in 1901 the Univer- sity spent 17.3 dollars directly onI Federal research and 5.9 million on overhead connected with proj- ects. Legal Issues As Dominant Braden, Mazey Note Constiutional Aspects By RUTH HETMANSKI and KENNETH WINTER Prof. Paul G. Kauper of the Law School characterized yesterday's Supreme Court decision as a ques- tion of criminal procedure rather than First Amendment rights. The Court reversed the convic- tion of six men under a Federal contempt statute which makes it an offense to refuse to answer a pertinent question asked by a Congressional committee. At indictment under the con- tempt statute, the prosecutor must state the subject which had been under subcommittee inquiry. Yes- terday's reversal hinges on the failure of the prosecutor to do this, Prof. Kauper said. Not Effect Units Prof. Kauper believes that the decision will not affect Congres- sional committees as such, but the Justice Department will have to state in greater detail the sub- stance of the offense when a per- son is charged under the contempt statute for refusal to testify. Others, however, interpreted the court's decision in different terms. Carl Braden, an integrationist leader who spent 12 months in prison for contempt of Congress after he refused to answer ques- tions of the House Un-American Activities Committee, felt the de- cision has deeper significance. Legal Technicalities "The court decided this case on legal technicalities, but I feel it is a victory for the First Amend- ment and a defeat for HUAC," Braden said. He saw yesterday's decision as a result of a change - "more liber- tarian"-atmosphere in this coun- try. "The Supreme Court does not operate in a vacuum. Whether consciously or unconsciously, the court feels and reflects the atti- tudes of society," Braden com- mented. He spoke of a similar decision last week in the case of singer Pete Seeger. "A United States cir- cuit court threw out Seeger's cita- tion for contempt of HUAC," Bra- den said. Ernest Mazey, Executive Direc- tor of the Michigan Branch of the American Civil Liberties Union, viewed the decision in a similar light. "This is a heartening develop- ment," he said. He expressed the opinion that the attitude of the Court has swung more toward civil liber- ties, and that a new climate has come. He noted that formerly the opinions have run 5-4 against gains in civil liberties, while yes- terday's decisions were reached by 5-2 and 4-2 votes in favor of civil liberties. He suggested that the real is- sue in the decision is constitution- al, and that the technicalities are merely a hook from which it hangs. By EDWARD HERSTEIN That the threat of an all-out nuclear war at present is not as great as many people hypothesize, was the principal point of Herman Kahn, speaking last night at the final Voice symposium on the arms race. Author of the best-selling book "On ThermonucleareWar," .Kahn explained that there' are many factors of logic and reasoning which tend to make the threat of such a conflict less likely than one might guess. Hypothetical Situations He illustrated several hypotheti- cal situations which might de- scribe the state of the arms race. He explained the degree of safety each system offered both sides in his "two unit" model, and ex- plained the reasons why. He said that a weapons system in which each side had invulner- able missiles of sufficient power to destroy th other nation ten times over would result in "nearly ab- solute safety." Such a system would mean suicide for both par- ties in the event of general war. Admits Arguments Kahn was quick to admit that there are arguments against con- tinuation of the arms race. Ie pointed to the fear of irrational action by one side, the ambiguity of actions and statements on the part of either side, the possibility of better alternatives, and the in- stability of an extended so-called "balance of terror s ituation. He said, though, that some of the possible alternatives to the arms race are worse than the race itself. He did acknowledge, how- ever, that an arms race policy could become much more danger- ous ir the future. Commenting on Kahn's remarks at the conclusion of his speech, Prof. Kenneth Boulding, of the economics department said, "What Kahn did with the threat system is what Freud did with the human system." Livant Attacks Kahn Ideas On Armament "Don't be surprised at the mor- al repugnance" of the ideas that Herman Kahn expresses. - With this, William Livant of the Mental Health Research Institute discussed Kahn at yesterday's Voice forum on the Diag. Livant called the theory which favors the continugation of the arms race "in- admissable." "Any policy that has nuclear war as its strategy should be ruled out," he said. "If the policy con- flicts with some of the deepest desires of the human heart, then that policy is wrong." Livant also said that Kahn's division of the world into two camps, the "we" and the "they." is artificial. We often feel a clos- er kinship, he said, with someone whose activities cannot be analyz- ed in "we-they" terms. -Daily-Larry vanice DISCUSSES THREAT - Herman Kahn, author of the book "On Thermonuclear War" told a Voice symposium audience at the Multi-purpose Rm. of the UGLI last night that the dangers of all- out war had been exaggerated. PROTESTS: Speaker Ban Controversy Stirs MSU Campus Groups BULLETIN' Frank Wilkenson and Carl Braden, convicted of contempt of Congress as a result of their appearance before the House Un- American Committee, were barred from speaking at Wayne State University, President Clarence Hilberry announced last night. Wilkenson and Braden, who will speak here today and tomor- row, were to address a meeting of the Civil Liberties Committee. The cancellation came on appeal of a decision of the Forum Committee of the WSU Student-Faculty Council which super- vises the presentation of speakers in WSU facilities. Kahn Views Threat Vote Acquits Committee Witnesses Ruling Draws Dissent From Harlan, Clark WASHINGTON (P)-The Su- preme Court reversed yesterday the convictions of six men sen- tenced to prison and fined for re- fusing to answer questions asked by congressional Red hunters. The decision was based on a legal technicality and brought strong dissents from Justices John M. Harlan and Tom C. Clark. They expressed concern that the ruling would hamper legitimate congres- sional inquiry. Each case was decided on one question, said Justice Potter Ste- wart, speaking for the majority: Identify Subject "The grand jury failed to iden- tify the subject under congres- sional subcommittee inquiry at the time the witness had been inter- rogated." Thus, the court for th' first time, he said, has laid down such a specific requirement fOr con- tempt of Congress prose-utions. The high tribunal previovsly had declared that Congress hs broad powers to investigate sbversion and to cite balky witnesses for contempt. But the court did hot rule on a broad constitutional question rais- ed in the appeals: whether quiz- zing into the personal affairs of the six defendants violated their guarantee of freedom of speech and press. Concurring Opinion However, a concurring opinion by Justice William O. Douglas, said "the theory of our free so-- ciety is that government must be neutral when it comes to the. press .. ." In the dissents, Harlan and Clark both said the decision would encourage balking at questions. Harlan called the ruling a "sudden holding" based on "novel and un- convincing" reasoning. Four of the six cases involved contempt citations by the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee of: Robert - Shelton and Alden Whitman, New York Times copy- readers; William A. Price, former New York Daily News reporter, and. Herman Liverigst, former program director of New Orleans television station WDST. The other two cases involved contempt citations by the House Committee on Un-American Ac- tivities of :Norton Anthony Rus- sell, an engineer at Yellow Springs, Ohio; and John T. Gojack, trade unionist at Columbus, Ohio, who formerly was general vice-presi- dent of the United Electrical Worker Union. Quillen Warns Of Pressures In Education PORTLAND () - Public pres- sure and state legislatures must not be allowed to force unwise changes in public school programs, Dean I. James Quillen of Stanford University said yesterday. Quillen told the National Con- gress of Parents and Teachers con- vening here that leadership in educational change must come from scholars in the academic fields who have brought such new developments as the "new" mathe- matics ,and revised programs in science, English and foreign lan- guages. Quillen said that the quality of public education depends on the quality of the teacher, and that this country needs more and bet- ter teachers than ever before. The best way to attract good teachers into the profession, he said, is to set very high standards. The higher the standards, he said, the higher the quality of teachers. Quillen said that by 1970, most I talentedru1nsters will be finish-. By PHILIP SUTIN <" The Michigan State University Young Socialists continued plan- ning for the speech of Communist Robert G. Thompson yesterday while his presence stirred contro- versy on the campus. The club received permission last night from the East Lansing City Council to stage the speech in Valley Court Park, three blocks from the MSU campus, but are undecided whether to hold the talk there or at a nearby fraternity house which offered to host the speech, Jan Garrett, president of the Young Socialists said. The MSU chapter of the Amer- ican Association of University Professors (AAUP) issued a state- ment, addressed to MSU President John Hannah, denouncing the ac- tions of the board of trustees. Bear Brunt "The AAUP is well aware that students and faculty will have tol bear the brunt of any punitive .ac- i tion, but freedom of thought must apply equally inside and outside the University Community," the statement said. It cited the strength derived from the clash of opposing ideol- ogies, and said that suppressing speakers opposed to community beliefs is the way of totalitarian- ism. In a similar vane, the Lansing branch of the American Civil Lib- erties Union . issued a statement Saturday proposing a three-point; speaker policy. It said that students should have the right to assembly, select a- speaker and discuss any topic, but if they are to schedule a speaker. they should provide enough time to allow the administration to ex- press its views. Not Representative Thirdly, any sponsoring groupI would make it clear that the; speaker does not necessarily rep- McCracken Cites Trends DETROIT - Prof. Paul W. Mc- Cracken of the business adminis- tration school described the busi- ness outlook as "reassuring" in a speech before the 15th annual con- vention of the Financial Analysts Federation meeting yesterday. However, he cautioned that the long-term prospect looks less op- timistic unless basic steps are tak- en to strengthen the economy. Government, business and the public rmust join hands to promote a more profitable economy. We need an "incentive-promot- ing tax policy, imcluding a lower- ing of the Federal tax structure," on the government's part. Business has a responsibility to see that research develops new products, that capital budget pro- cedures be sharpened, and that "pri cing for volume must continue to be a creed of faith," he added. Our great need, however, Prof. McCracken said, "is a national state of mind that views with less hostility the successful market- place performance that gives rise! to enlarged profits. "So long as society views with' suspicion successful business per- formance, the more profitable economy required by our domes- tic and our international situation will not easily be attained," he said. Listing minus factors in the economic outlook, Prof. McCrack- en mentioned that a dozen major "leading indicators" had gained only five per cent since February last year which was the low month of tie last recession. Water Simply JAPANESE ENSEMBLE: By ELIZABETH ROEDIGER Japanese Kabuki music consists of a melody, played by the string section, rhythm, played by the percussion section, and a contrast which serves as a type of harmony, played by the woodwind section, Prof. William P. Malm said in a concert demonstration last night. Five shamisen, stringed instruments; a ko tsuzumi, an o tsuzumi, and taiko, all percussion instruments; and a bamboo flute and noh flute, woodwind instruments, made up the ensemble, directed by Prof. Malma. Kabuki music has "no conductor or leader," but is limited in- stead by the naturalness of the music and by "drum calls," shouted at set intervals by those playing any of the three percussion instruments. Prof. Malm said. i i , ,; 'u~~ in~