SGC ATTITUDES THREATEN SOCIETY a See Page 4 Ij Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom ~Ea iti I VOL. LXXII, No. 80 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 9,196Z SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGC OSA Committee rTo Hold 'Forum' Campus Community May Present Recommendations at Open Meeting By MICHAEL OLINICK Local Man Arrested In Union By DAVID MARCUS ADC Vote Recommends Apartments for Se Pr-onrsioa Pre Students and faculty will have their chance to meet publicly with the Office of Student Affairs Study Committee today and sug- gest changes in the OSA's structure. Hoping "to gather data and ideas" which may have been by- passed in previous considerations, the committee will sponsor an "open forum" from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Third Floor Conference Rm. of the Union. Prof. John Reed of the law school, committee chairman, will summarize the topics the student-faculty group has probed and list some of the alternatives its report could recommend. Today's meeting will mark an end to five months of information gathering and expresions of individual opinion. Next week, the entire ,1 GILBERT BURSLEY ... more funds PROF. JOHN W. REED . OSA study JEFFREY: Procedure. By PAT GOLDEN Associate City Editor Student Government Council member Sharon Jeffrey, '63, charged yesterday the selection procedure for Joint Judiciary Council stifles opportunity for the group to improve itself. Miss Jeffrey is a member of the committee which met Jan. 6 to interview and recommend stu- dents for five open Joint Judic positions. The committee's recom- mendations will be considered to- morrow by Student Government Council, which makes the final ap- pointments. . "I am not just trying to sub- stitute my values on Joint Judic for the present ones My concern is to have the council flexible enough to permit change when it seems desired," she explained., According to its constitution,. Joint Judic itself initiates any change in operating procedures. However, Miss Jeffrey reported that an argument used against one candidate was that since he was concerned about changes in Joint Judic he should work through some other organization. "Some of the members seemed more interested in whether a per- son 'fit in' than in what he could contribute to the council," she added. Retiring Joint Judic Chairman William Phelps, '62BAd., who serv- ed as chairman of the interview- ing committee without vote, said he thought the issue was just a difference of opinion about which candidates should have been rec- ommended. "She was just looking for dif- ferent qualities in a Joint Judic member than we were. I think suggestions for change are fine, but I am more concerned with how well the person can contribute .to the primary functions of the council, the consideration of par- ticular cases and the counseling part," he added. N eplese Re el Against Kingr An armed uprising has started in Nepal against the regime of King Mahendra according to the New York Times. Latest reports reaching the In- dian city of Darjeeling state that three Nepali police posts have been captured by the rebels. Fighting was reported going on in the east- 'committee will begin to tie togeth- er each member's written state- ments about philosophy and struc- ture of the OSA and 'produce a preliminary "consensus" draft. To Be Forwarded The first draft will be forward- ed to the Faculty Senate Student' Relations Committee and Student Government Council for discussion and further suggestions. The re- vised, public report will then go to Vice-President for Student Af- fairs James A. Lewis. Lewis and other administration officials will review the report and present their recommendations to the Regents. Prof. Reed said the University's governing body would probably not have the report on its formal agenda until March. "We originally hoped to finish by the end of this semester, but because of final examinations, the commit ee's work may well carry over into February before our re- port is -completed," he explained y esterd~ay., Reality By Fall Any restructuring which the committee recommends and the Regents . adopt will come early enough, however, so they can be put into operation by next fall, he stressed. I The committee began with a general analysis of the philosophy and aims of a student affairs of- fice, continued with specific stud- ies of the two deans' offices, res- idence halls an i campus judiciar- ies, then moved back to more gen- eral discussion. Action to es I-?Lh i tie commit- tee come in th'iwake of a faculty report to Lewis last spring urgiIg "sweering structural changes and reas:ignment of iPreccn personnel in the OSA." Lengthy Study The student relations committee report came after a three month study of the OSA, which laid particular emphasis on the Office of the Dean of Women. Under the direction of Prof. Charles F. Lehmann of the edu- cation school, the faculty commit- tee initiated its study after re- ceiving a documented protest from a group of students about the pol- icies and practices of former Dean of Women Deborah Bacon and her assistants. The study committee used a similar approach to the faculty committee's report. Lewis told the Reed group to take as its charge the first sentence of the recom- mendation: "The Office of Stu- dent Affairs should be changed," but was not bound to its particular findings. To Request More Funds For Science A bill providing state funds for "basic research" at state colleges and universities will be introduced in the State Legislature, which convenes tomorrow. Rep. Gilbert E. Bursley (R-Ann Arbor), chairman of the Joint Legislative Committee on Econom- ic Growth, plans to ask that $500,- 000 be divided among research organizations, such as the Institute of Science and Technology, whose work may result in new products, more jobs, and economic growth in Michigan. The funds would be "seed money, without a lot of strings attached," Bursley said. The money would be in addition to the regular operating budget of the state-sup- ported schools. Chiefs Seek Berlin Policy BONN (M-Prime Minister Har- old Macmillan is to present new British-American ideas to Chan- cellor Konrad Adenauer here today for a sort of standstill agreement between East and West in Central Europe. British officials reported the es- sence of tentative London-Wash- ington thinking as Macmillan took off from London for Boni. Foreign Secretary Lord Home accompanied him aboard a Royal Air Force Comet. United States and British au- thorities were said to believe that, if current attempts fail to settle the Berlin dispute, then there should be: 1. An implicit or explicit agree- ment with the Russians not to use force over Berlin. 2. An implicit or explicit recog- nition of the division of Berlin, Germany and Europe for the fore- seeable future. 3. An implicit or explicit under- taking by each side to avoid pro- vocative actions in the two parts of Berlin. London informants stressed that1 these ideas are intended to pre-w serve things mole or less as theyc are, even if the Russians go through with their plans to signc a peace treaty with Communist1 East Germany. An Ann Arbor bookstore em- ploye, James Mays, was arrested yesterday in the Michigan Union Grill, pleaded guilty and was fined $20 in municipal court on a charge of trespassing. Mays was arrested as he was eating lunch in the MUG on a warrant sworn out last November by Union manager Frank Keunzel. He has been asked to leave the MUG on several occasions since last October fbut claims that "I was told that Iucould come back to the Union to eat so long as I didn't lounge around for three or four hours." Former EMU Student Mays, a former student at East- ern Michigan University, said he had never been told unequivocally not to use Union facilities and that he had eaten many times in the MUG in the interval between the issuing and implementation of the warrant. Keunzel said that Mays had continued-to lounge in the Union after he had received initial warn- ings and that, after he had refused to leave the MUG when asked, he was told no longer to return to the building. He added that he did not know why there was a two-month delay between the warrant being issued and implemented. "That is the responsibility of the Ann Arbor police," Kuenzel said. Mays Denies Mays denied having lounged in the MUG recently. He claimed that since he was first asked to leave, last October, he has only gone to the Union to eat and has not stayed for long periods. He was later asked to leave a Little Club dance because it was a student activity and he is not a student, Kuenzel said. On one oc- casion he was told to speak to the prosecuting attorney who told him that-it would be trespassing if he did not leave the Union when asked. Mays claimed that he pleaded guilty to "avoid trouble" and fur- ther envolvement with the courts. Cites Race He added that he felt he was asked to leave the Union originally and more recently "because I am a Negro and because I associate with others in the MUG without regard to race." Union President Paul Carder, '62, discounted the accusation as "ridiculous." "The Union has never discrimi- nated racially, never well, and cer- tainly in this case did not," Carder added. 'UJ' Geologists Reported Safe By The Associated Press CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand -Five members of the University's glaciological expedition in the Antarctic reported by radio to. their New Zealand headquarters Saturday that they were in good condition. Prof. Charles W. M. Swithinbank of the geology department re- ported things were normal at the4 team's base on the Ross Ice Shelf.i RARE UNITY-President John F. Kennedy met with Democratic and Republican congressional lead- ers for the last time before the body convenes tomorrow. Senate GOP leader Everett Dirksen (R- I11) (left) called the meeting, a briefing session on international affairs, "definitely worthwhile." In the same vein, Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) (right) said the discussion showed that the international situation remains critical. The President's domestic program was passed over with nary a mention, an amount of noise inversely proportional, to the amount it will raise during the next session. BATTLE CREEK ADDRESS: Hatcher Urges More Classrooms BATTLE CREEK - University President Harlan Hatcher urged the state to move "vigorously and rapidly" to provide enough class- room space for the record college enrollment expected in the mid- '60's. Addressing the assembly at the dedication of the new Lakeview High School, he lauded 'the "steady progress" made at local levels across the nation to provide for the post-World War II "baby boom." But he warned that the nation must now turn its attention to the construction of college facilities, "so that we will be ready for young men and women after they graduate" from high school. Population Increase President Hatcher pointed out that Michigan's college-age popu- lation will. increase some 320,000 to about 1 million persons by 1970, with the percentage enrolling in college expected to rise from 24 per cent to possibly 40 per cent.. "We have no time to lose," he said. "This rising tide of young people throughout America is our trump card in the competition with Soviet Russia if we can train thgm properly. Students Petition For Council Seat Howard Abrams, '62, Stanley Lubin, '63E, and James Walker, Grad, took out petitions for the' vacant Student Government Coun- cil seat yesterday. Petitioning will continue until Friday. We must awaken to the fact profit even more in this way if we that it is equally important to will look upon coming recdrd. en- educate our youth at ever-higher rollments as what they really are levels as it is to build tho d -a blessing to be welcomed rather of miles of superhighways. than a burden to be dreaded." Suicide r o . He added that failure to recog- nize this fact would "not only be Japan folly, it would be suicide." President Hatcher also noted Io'st-W ar J.eJJL that the "Gi Bill," which made it possible for thousands of war vet- TOKYO (M-The United States erans to attend college at govern- and Japan agreed today on the ment cost, as been one of the most settlement of this country's huge productive investments ever made post-war debt to the United States. by this country. The agreement, signed by Unit- More than $1 billion a year is ed States Ambassador Edwin 0. regained through taxes alone on Reischauer and Foreign Minister the increased incomes these vet- Zentaro Kosaka, provides for re- erans are now receiving, he said, payment of $490 million-less than not to mention the benefits of their a fourth of the amount of aid increased productivity. Japan received from the United "Michigan and the nation can States. Pers Clsfr EXplanatio For Unspent Appropriation By MICHAEL HARRIAH Special To The Daily LANSING-Speaker of the House Don R. Pears (R-Buchanan) has questioned why the State Department of Mental Health has failed to spend some $4.69 million of its appropriation over the past five years, and Gov. John B. Swainson is upset over it. In a recent letter to Mental Health Director Charles F. Wagg, Pears said he was "curious to learn about the department's failure to utilize funds designed fto ease situations which the Governor persists in accusing the Legislature of ignoring." Swainson accused Pears yesterday of "knowingly dispensing distorted information - with total disregard for its pos- sible effect on the program for the mentally ill and mentally retard- ed." Sets Blame Sge, 6-1 Pears'had stated earlier that l the blame for any difficulty in the mental health program rested iLORENZI with the Swainson administration, key team scored four goals in the since the Legislature had increased koy lasightrad,fromtheonthe appropriation by almost $2 od last night and, 'from then on, million last year. 'Even that, he ver Colorado College before some said, was not all used. n. He criticized the mental health ke it two in a row over the Tigers department for only belatedly rec- ognizing the importance of after- led Berenson got the Wolverines care centers established in com- spree with a picture-perfect goal munities away from mental hos- began the play when he got con- pitals. "The department was in no net. great hurry to pursue this program Goal after the Legislature authorized it f several Tiger forwards, Rodgers in 1960. don Wilkie, who skated up to the "We don't recall that either the who had skated behind the Tiger present governor, or his predeces- who ad katd beindthesor (Under-Cecretary of State for perfectly, and the big left-winger African Affairs G. Mennan Wil- nd Laurence. ' liams) pushed for this. They do, ner upset Laurence's guarding of however, blame the Legislature for o was poke the puck into the left the fact that the state has 2200 , 1-0. persons awaiting admission to es later, at 13:23, the Wolverines mental institutions. H"w Held Back ek Home I"ow we are . told by the gov- KEEP WCHA LEAD: Wolverines Skate Past Colorado Colic Semester of Work The women who planned the recommendation worked on it since the start of the semester. "In our discussions, we realized the many problems of implemen- tation, but we felt that by carry- ing out this proposal we were catering to a definite need felt by the senior women at this campus," Deborah Cowles, '62, chairman of Women's Judiciary said. Shortly before Christmas vaca- tion the recommendation was sent to the Office of Student Affairs Study Committee, currently inves- tigating University housing. A copy was also sent to Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. Sent to Groups- ' Prof. John Reed of the law school, chairman of the OSA com- mittee, said that its findings will be sent to various other groups concerned with women's housing. "The Study Committee, will probably incorporate specific rec- ommendations or else a general statement of policy advancing greater opportunity for choice of living conditions for women in the original proposals," Regents or Dean Ultimately the proposal must reach the Regents (or the Dean of Women) with whom the power of rejection or acceptance lies. The Dean of Women has the power to grant apartment permission to individuals in accordance with Regents Bylaw 8.0802. The pro- posal of allowing all senior women to live in apartments requires a change in these bylaws. In regard to this, Acting Dean of Women Elizabeth Davenport stated that "although It is correct that in the Bylaws the power lies with the Dean of Women, we have since added a vice-president of student affairs to the- staff-and the matter is being cleared through Mr. Lewis' office." Announce New By PETE D Michigan's WCHA-leading hoc final ten minutes of the first perm coasted to an easy 6-1 victory ov 1,100 scattered fans at the Coliseur The Wolverines will try to ma] tonight at 8 p.m. Captain and leading scorer R started on their first-period scoring at 9:47. Defenseman Don Rodgers trol of the puck near the Michigan Team Avoiding the sweeping sticks o got off a short pass to center Gor red line and passed to Berenson,t defense. Wilkie's pass led Berenson drove straight in on goalie Norma: A sharp fake to the right cor the net, and all Berenson had to d corner to put the Wolverines ahead Slightly less than three minut tallied again. 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