THE REVISED HOUSE PLAN See Page 4 Y Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom ~EJait MOSTLY SUNNY High-68 Low-44 Partly Cloudy, cooler tonight. VOL. LXXI, No. 162 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1961 FIVE CENTS SIX PAGES To Revise Quad Plan On Houses The University plans to rewrite the Michigan House Plan Assis- tant Dean of Men for Residence Halls John Hale said yesterday. Hale said the revision of the document, which has served as o statement of the basic philosophy of the residence -halls since 1941, was necessitated "largely because of outdated language and means of expression." He noted that the plan, formu- lated by Prof. Karl Litzenberg of 4 the English department, refers to staff men as "faculty members,"' views student government as being weak. Better Fulfill In addition to a greater role for student government and revised wording; Hale said the rewriting would consider "ways in which the residence halls can better fulfill their educational funciton." While no method of revision has as yet been announced, Hale said that "students will be involved in rewriting the plan." Interquadrangle Council Presi- dent Thomas Moch, '62E, com- mented that the plan "gives the impression of being 20 years old." "The nature of the residence halls have changed since it was written." Ideas Circulating He noted that recently "there have been many ideas going around about the residence halls of which most people are not aware and that could be brought to light in such a rewriting." - "Many of the ideas in the orig- final plan are still quite valid. An example is viewing the houses as social and athletic units with in- tegrated living." "However, the houses right now are just going on. There really doesn't seem to be an ultimate goal in the residence halls." Minor Points He noted that in addition to con- sidering new ideas there are "many minor points, little things, I would like to see changed." Moch suggested that a scnd conference on the quadrangles next fall could discuss the probem y of "an ideal house." Senators Drop Church School Aid Provisions WASHINGTON (P) - Senate Democratic leaders late yesterday decided to drop any idea of tying aid for church schools into the general school grant bill but to try to provide such aid in a later sep- arate measure. The decision was announced 'by Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, after a two-hour session at the Capitol with high offlicials of the John F. Kennedy administration. Mansfield said, however, that the decision was made by the Democratic Congressional chief- tains. He said the administration executives were present only to receive the word. Proceed Rapidly The majority leader said the Senate would proceed as rapidly as possible to try to pass the $2.55 billion general school aid measure. It reached the Senate yesterday. Debate on the bill started an hour and a half before the session in the majority leader's office. For several days Democratic Senate leaders had been toying with the idea of trying to join together the general bill with an- other measure extending and broadening the 1958 National De- fense Education Act. Some Help This act contains some help for private schools, and the Demo- cratic leaders have been discussing a plan to broaden it to include some construction funds for such institutions. The idea was that joining the two bills would give Roman Cath- olics and other church groups deft- nite assurance they would not be overlooked in school legislation and would ease disappointment of Catholics at not being given loans in the general bill as they had asked. Asked why the decision finally wrs reahed vnt ton or Av. a - Change Psychology Introductory Course By CAROLYN WINTER The psychology department is changing its introductory course next year by eliminating the present psychology 31 and replacing it with two new courses, psychology 100 and psychology 101, Prof. R. L. Isaacson said yesterday. Psychology 100 will be an introduction to psychology as a natural science and will give credit toward fulfilling the natural science Odistribution requirement. The Joint Judic Penalizes Students Motion Set By Hanson By BARBARA PASH At tonight's Student Govern- ment Council meeting, the Daily motion originally proposed by James Yost, '62, will be reintro- duced by Per Hanson, '62. Hanson said he is reintroducing the motion "to provide a basis for discussion at the Daily meet- ing." The meeting between the Daily senior staff and night edi- tors and SGC members was held yesterday. This meeting resulted from a substitute to Yost's mo- tion proposed by Acting Daily Edi- tor John Roberts, '62, and passed by SGC last week. "I am not going into the Daily meeting with any prejudices," Hanson said. However, he explain- ed that he thought Roberts' mo- tion "avoided the issue." Roberts' motion was to try to delay action," Hanson said. Kenneth McEldowney, '62, dis- approved reintroduction of Yost's motion before the Council-Daily meeting had taken place as "against the spirit of last week's motion that was passed." "If Council members still thought it necessary to introduce a motion on the Daily, they should have wait- ed till after the meeting," he said. Soviet Chief May Parley With Kennedy WASHINGTON (Mn - President John F. Kennedy received a per- sonal message from Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev yesterday amid maneuvering for a possible meetin.; between the two chiefs early next month. Soviet Ambassador Mikhail A. Menshikov brought Khrushchev's letter to Kennedy and remained at th~e White House for more than half an hour. Although official secrecy shroud- ed the session, informed sources said the Khrushchev message and the Kennedy -Menshikov conver- sation did nothing to hinder the possibility of a get-together Hannah To Run. For Con-Con Post EAST LANSING ()') - John A. Hannah, president of Michigan State University, has announced{ he will be a Republican candidate for election to the constitutional convention from Ingham and Livingston Counties 14th senator- ial district. other course, psychology 101, will introduce psychology as a social science and will give credit that can be applied toward fulfilling the social science requirement. Content Different The content covered in these courses will be different. In gen- eral, behavorial correlates of changes in physical stimuli will be studied in 100. Behavorial cor- relates of changes in social stim- uli will be the central feature of the social science course. The present introductory honors course psychology 32 will be elim- inated, but there will be honor sections of both 100 and 101, he said. A non-major can take either of these courses or both of them. The psychology major will be re- quired to take both as well as an introductory laboratory course to be offered for the first time next fall. This course, psychology 110, will be a two-credit course and can be elected with either of the intro- ductory courses. Tentative Steps These new courses are tentative first steps toward a change in the department's undergraduate pro- gram. The purpose is to make more courses available for majors at the intermediate level by strengthening in the integrative courses at the senior level, Prof. Isaacson said. At present, the basic courses, the core of the psychology major, are at the intermediate level. For this reason, majors find it difficult to elect specialized courses which are taught by some of the top men in the department. By strengthening the introduc- tory courses and the senior cour- ses, the psychology department hopes to provide more freedom in the middle to elect these specializ- ed courses. Biggest Change The biggest change in the new introductory courses willbe in the way that they are taught. Much more responsibility will be placed on the student. There will be no required !ec- tures in either course. However, starting about the sixth week of the semester there will be col- loquium-type lectures by special- ists who will talk about their re- spective fields. These lectures will be optional and will serve as ad- ditional resource material The recitation groups will be small and will be oriented toward the mastering of the minimal con- cepts of the course and the study "in depth" of some parts of the field. In this, the teacher will be more of a guide than a lecturer, Prof. Isaacson explained. The grade for the course will be most dependent on a depth study of some individual topics. Con-+ nected with this phase of the course will be a new movement to- ward tutorial systems. Each stu- dent will be guided by his teacher in his individual studies, he said. Group Gets Suspended Suspension Sentences Include Fines, Probation By DAVID MARCUS Seven students received sus- pended suspension for participa- tion in the May 3 panty raid, Joint Judiciary Council announced yes- terday. The suspension, effective for the 1961-62 academic year, could be invoked if any of the seven re- appear before Joint Judic in the coming year. In addition, six of the students were fined $40 each and one $25. Disciplinary Probation The six were also placed on dis- ciplinary probation, which forbids participation in rushing, all cam- pus extracurricular activities, or the holding of house offices. The hearing took place at Joint Judic's regular meeting last Thursday. The penalties were then approved by the Faculty Subcom- mittee on Discipline. The -students were notified by mail yesterday. They have 24 hours to appeal to the Faculty Sub- Committee for reversal or modifi- cation of the decision if they so desire. Active Participation Four of the students were penal- ized because they "actively partici- pated i i a panty raid during which demonstrations they entered a women's residence hall," Joint Ju- dic stated. Two others "actively partici- pated in a panty raid during which demonstrations they blatantly re- sisted authority." Another was accused because he "remained on the premises after being asked to leave" during the raid. In all cases, the formal charge was "conduct unbecoming a student." Stiff Discipline Charles Gessner, '63E, Joint Ju- die chairman, commented that suspended suspension "is as close as we go to suspension in order to use this stiff discipline hanging over their heads." It makes a stu- dent more conscious of his behav- ior in the future. Kennedy Tries To Aid 'Riders' By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Attorney Gen- eral Robert F. Kennedy made a personal effort yesterday to assist a group of white and Negro "Free- dom Riders." Kennedy aides -report that the Attorney General had asked the state of Alabama to provide local police protection for the group. The Justice Department has directed the Federal Bureau of Investigation to start an inquiry, to determine whether Federal law was violated when a bomb was tossed into a bus carrying Freedom, Riders at Anniston.r * * * * * * * Pears Asks Standardized Budget Evaluation Mode * * --AP wirephoto KOREA--Lt. Gen. Chang Do Young, chairman of the revolutionary committee, is shown as he leaves the presidential mansion after a secret meeting with President Yun Po-Sun. Korean Ambassador Requests U.S. Backing of Premier Chang WASHINGTON P)-Korean Ambassador Lee Wook Chang pleaded yesterday for the United States to back up the overthrown government of Premier John C. Chang by endorsing the moral backing expressed by top American officials in South Korea. The ambassador told a news conference only "moral support"1 of the United States is needed, not military help, and he is confident the coup will fail soon. He said officials here should repeat what the two Americans said in Seoul. No Official Comment But in an atmosphere of sur- prise and confusion over the situa- tion, officials here were saying al- most nothing about the turn of events. "The situation there is so fluid and unclear that I am unable to make any substantive comments on i ," Lincoln White, State De- STATUS SYSTEM: Slobodkin Talks on Jewish Peck Order' partment press officer, told news- men. Officials at the Pentagon de- clined any comment at all. And members of Congress were waiting to lear. more before saying any- thing, although some-like some officials-said they had been aware AADAC Plans Two Protests At Bus Depot By BEATRICE TEODORO Two demonstrations, one urg- ing enforcement of the recent Su- preme Court decision on desegre- gation in inter-state travel, and the other commemorating the seventh anniversary of the Su- preme Court decision on school in- tegration, will be staged from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today before the Ann Arbor bus terminal. The Ann Arbor Direct Action Committee is protesting the treat- ment of members of the "Freedom Ride" who met with violence in Alabama, Anna Holden, AADAC spokesman, said. The members of the Congress of Racial Equality were testing the desegregation law in bus station waiting rooms, rest rooms and restaurants. The National Students Associa- tion is also encouraging demon- strations concerning both the "Freedom Ride" and the school integration decision, Kenneth Mc- Eldowney, '61, co-spokesman of Voice said last night. "Though the Supreme Court as- pect is not the function of any single student organization, I be- lieve that all students should take this opportunity to express both their support of the decision and their objections to the way the freedom riders were handled," Mc- Eldowney said. Marvin Rich, human relations director of CORE said that picket- that all was not well politically in Korea. Pressed Repeatedly White and Pentagon officials were pressed repeatedly about statements issued in South Korea by Gen. Carter M. Magruder, com- mander of UN and United States forces in Korea and United States' Charge d'Affairs Marshall Green, expressing support for the Chang government. White said the statements were made "in the scope of their au- thority in their posts." He would not say whether the statements were cleared here in advance. The State Department spokes- man said it is not clear to what extent the Korean armed forces' under Magruder's UN command participated in the coup "The coup is against the will of the people, therefore it will fail," Ambassador Chang said. Senate Picks New President For Next Year The Faculty Senate yesterday elected Prof. Charles Sawyer of the history of art department as chair- man of the Senate Advisory Com- mittee on University Affairs for next year, current president Wes- ley H. Maurer of the journalism department said. The Senate also heard a report from the Educational Policies Committee, headed by Prof. Arthur Eastman of the English depart- ment. Senate Secretary Ferrel Heady of the political science de- partment said no details on the report would be released. In its last meeting of the semes- ter, the Senate named Prof. Stuart Churchill of the engineering school to be vice-president of the SAC and Prof. Merwin H. Waterman of the business administration school as secretary. Legislators Blast Wayne For Cutback Porter, Engstrom Criticize Reductions In Education Fields By MICHAEL HARRAH Speaker of the House Don R. Pears (R-Buchanan) last night reasserted his joint plan with -Sen. Frank D. Beadle (R-St. Clair) to investigate the individual budget evaluation processes of the state college and universities with a eye toward their standardization. And the chairmen of the legis- lative finance committees, Sen. Elmer R. Porter (R-Blssfield) and Rep. Arnell Engstrom (R-Trav- erse City), advised the Wayne State University Board of Gov- ernors. to reconsider their decision on the curtailment of admissions and activities next year to adjust to the state appropriation. "This is a time to judge the value of specific programs rather- than take a hatchet approach on all operations," they said in a joint statement. Committee Chairme . Porter is the chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee and Engstrom heads the House Committee on Ways and Means. In explaining his investigatory plans, Pears said that "the various colleges and universities obviously use different criteria and methods for arriving at the budget the submit to the Legislature. "This is evidenced by the fact that their per capita estimates vary. It has gotten to the point where we will have to make them uniform. The present situation is confusing to the committees, and thus equitable and fair allotments don't result." Bills Introduced Bills have been introduced sev- eral times in the Legislature to appoint a co-ordinator for higer education, who would have the power to standardize universities- budget requests, particularly through making their methods of presenting and evaluating statis- tical information more uniform. He emphasized that the diverse methods were not a new problem, but that "this has been going on for years." He said that the investigation would be "informal, sometime be- fore the next legislative sesi on (in January)." Minority Floor Leader Rep. Joseph D. Kowalski (D-Detrot) said that the Democrats did not plan to concur in any such inves- tigation. "These institutions are constitutional bodies. There's not much we can do about them," he said. Better Plan Beadle said that the investiga- tion would be mainly "to come up with some better plan. We did the best we could with the money available. The colleges and mAver- sities refused to raise their tuition. We'll have to work something out" Porter and Engstrom took WSU to task for the curricula they chose to curtail. "It is significant that two of the areas mentioned speci ically for cuts are teacher education and medical education," they said. "These are fields in which the cuts are intended to hurt the most. 'Nothing is said about courses offered in badminton, archery. bowling, trampolining, tumbling, fly-casting, bait-casting, square dancing and folk dancing. All of them are listed as courses for credit in the Wayne program." By STEVEN SHAW "Statements about Judaism seem more authoritative coming from an 'ignorant zoologist,' " Prof. Lawrence Slobodkin of the zoology department said yesterday in a "parochial talk"-"Some Observations on the Peck Order (status-system) Aniong Jews" at the annual instal- lation of Hillel officers. Prof. Slobodkin, recent recipient of the University's Henry Rus- sell Award, said half-jokingly "it has long been fashionable for any Jew who has read four issues of 'Commentary,' a book by Buber, and an anthology of Talmudic sayings, to set himself up as a spokesman to the Jews.. . " This person, continued Slobodkin said in his semi- serious manner, particularly if he were "uncontaminated" by a tra- ditional Jewish education, and had gained respect in the Gentile world, would be listened to with rapt attention by the Jewish Com- munity. Yet if this same individual "has no sense of shame" and be- comes a rabbi, his Jewish audience suddenly dwindles and he ceases to be a "Jewish authority." In a humorous vein, the professor pointed out that "any Harvard Ph.D. will receive more attention than any non-Harvard Ph.D., ex- cept if his field is Semitics . . . " "A social scientist, still 'above' a linguist or philosopher suddenly has less status among Jews if someone finds out that his specialty happens to be the Jewish community. A