LSD: SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT See Editorial Page dh4 r i~an 7Iat4b FAIR High-93 Low-70 Continued warm; chance of showers Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No. 45S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1966 SEVEN CENTS FOUR PAGES Tuskegee Institute: The Effects of Pate rnalis m EDITOR'S NOTE: Daily reporter Carole Kaplan spent last semester at Tuskegee Institute, with which the University has an exchange pro- gram. This series is a collection of her observations and impressions while there. By CAROLE KAPLAN Special To The Daily First of a Four-Part Series TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, Ala.- At first glance, Tuskegee Insti- tute fits perfectly the ideal of a small college: gracefully arching trees, winding roads, the fresh odor of woods and grass, red- brick-and-white-frame buildings and a fountain in the center of campus all add to the appearance of a place where students and faculty can live, learn and work together. But behind this attractive set- ting, the Institute has an at- mosphere less than conducive to the fulfillment of a dream--not the personal development of its the dream of liberal education- students. and that dream is still a dominant At this predominantly Negro force in the school's operation. school, located 43 miles east of Washington believed that the Montgomery, Ala., most of the Negro in the United States could students -- nearly 3000 - live in best solve the problems of preju- school housing. All eat in one dice and discrimination by prov- large cafeteria at the center of ing himself able to take a place campus, whose building also hous- in the white world. es the Student Union and offices He must not upset the status of student organizations. quo, for this would only cause In other words, Tuskegee is, ex- resentment and increased oppres- ternally at least, a small, intimate Fioin. On the contrary, he should community with room for each be cooperative, respectful and re- person to make the contribution, spectable, diligent, devout, respon- and receive the type of attention, sible and eager to help. He should best suited to his individual abili- make every possible effort to train ties and interests. himself for useful, practical oc- This is not the actual situation, cupations which would, Washing- however, and neither is it the goal ton felt, make him acceptable in of the Institute's administration. American society. The Institute was founded by The Institute was established as Booker T. Washington in 1881 as a technical and vocational school which would provide Negro youth Now only freshmen are requir- with an opportunity to learn use- ed to attend, although many fac- ful skills, in the hope of accom- ulty members look with nostalgia plishing this goal. Although the on past days. majority of its Board of Trus- Rules governing the behavior of tees was and still is white, the women have been abundant. Until school has always been run by Ne- a few years ago, all women were groes. Its policies are conserva- required to be in their residence tive, with a strong emphasis on halls by 10 p.m.; now, the hours religion, strict rules governing so- are 10 p.m. for freshmen, and cial behavior of students and dis- one-half hour later respectively for couragement of radical actionso-homourslatirsrese iors and attitudes. sophomores, juniors and seniors, Although the rules have been with later hours on weekends. liberalized considerably in the Girls still are not officially al- past 10 years, this conservative lowed to ride in cars without the spirit is still dominant in the ad- written permission of their par- ministration. ents, but this rule is no longer Until a few years ago, all stu- enforced. dents were required to attend the Until this spring, girls were not Institute chapel each week. The allowed to wear slacks or shorts entire student body marched in on campus. Now, however, slacksI formation each Sunday morning can be worn except to class and to the chapel. on Sunday. These rules are only indications of a general attitude of paternal- ism on the part of the adminis- tration. Students can be expelled -and each year several are-for non-academic reasons without trial or hearing, and the dean of women is present at all meet- ings of the student judiciary. This paternalistic attitude car- ries over into academics, where the course of studies is completely pre-planned for the student in many fields and departments, with very little room for individual de- cisions. In the classroom itself, paper topics are usually assigned rather than developed by students, al- though there is often a choice of several topics. Examinations are most often short-answer or ob- jective. Students at the Institute are resentful of their lack of control over their own lives and educa- tions, but this resentment seldom appears as. anything more than, general discontent, boredom and; listlessness. Although there are small groups of students who are trying to effect change, the feel- ing of most is a strong reluctance, to risk the disfavor of the admin- istration and faculty. They come to get a degree they say, and an education--often in that order- and they just want to be left alone so they can graduate and get out. There seems to be a general feeling that "something is wrong, and someone should do something about it," but questions concern-, ing what the trouble actually is and what should be done are rare-, ly asked. There are quite a few young faculty members with new ideas and new outlooks, but their sug- gestions go unnoticed. At the end of last semester, nearly 25 per cent of the faculty of the school of arts and sciences left the In- stitute and, according to a promi- nent faculty member there, by the end of the next school year the Institute will have lost two of its most popular and liberal admin- istrators, the dean of students and the dean of the school of arts and sciences. The Institute, because of ad- ministrative resistance to change and student apathy, faces the loss of its youngest and most qualified educators and a decreasing power to draw qualified students. Change comes slowly, however, and at Tus- kegee recent changes seem to be of degree rather than kind. 'U' Officials Make 66-67 Budget Cuts Gut from Supplier To Permit Offering Salary Increases Work on the University's 1966- 67 budget is almost completed. V Administrators have been revising the original estimates to make room for the $7,733,535 in cuts necessitated by a smaller-than-an- ticipated Legislative appropriation. Top priority has been given to salary and wage improvements, so the supplies and equipment por- tion of the budget has been the victim of the greatest proportion of the cuts, according to Vice- President for Academic Affairs Allan F. Smith. The administrators had orig- inally budgeted an 8.14 per cent increase in salary levels. However, they could not accomplish this with the amount they received from the Legislature, said Smith. The new budget allocates about 5.7 per cent of present salary and wage funds for merit increases, plus an additional one per cent for improvement in staff benefits. Merit increases are those re- sulting from promotion and sen- iority. There were no across the board salary increases this year. The policy of giving salary in- creases top priority continues from last year. At that time the ad- b ministration said the relative drop in faculty pay compared to other universities had "become a morale factor." Smith said yesterday that the faculty reaction to this year's improvement has been "fair-ly de- cent," because of increases in the past two years. Altogether the administration has allotted over $7,100,000 for salary adjustments, staff benefits and increased staff. Because of reported serious de- ficiencies in clerical, technical and service staffs, over $900,000 was allocated for extra staff. The re- habilitation of space remains an area in serious shortage of funds. The exact figures on the budget will not be released until they have been approved by the Re- gents Administrators expect to have the budget printed up in time for the next Regents' meet- ing e WitREganail SNEWS WRE r Draft Referendum iosed for Fall Late World News By The Associated Press OMAHA, NEB.-A MASSIVE power failure affected nearly half the state yesterday; measures are being taken to restore fa- cilities as quickly as possible. * DETROIT-EASTERN AIRLINES laid off 12,000 non-striking employes yesterday. MOSCOW-The Soviet Union announced last night that appropriate government organizations have been instructed "to take all necessary measures" to carry out the Warsaw Pact pledge of increased aid for the Communists in Viet Nam. The announcement said this included measures "connected with the rendering of economic and military assistance for the repulsion of American aggression with due account for the requirements arising from the new phase of the war in Viet Nain" WASIINGTON-Senate Demoncatic Leader Mike Mnl sfield of Montana expressed belief yesterday a Senate delegation will visit Cambodia after the November elections. Cambodia, which broke relations with the United States alter leaning toward Peking's orbit, has been accused of serving as a refuge for North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops. GOV. GEORGE ROMNEY, supported by the Legislature, yesterday signed into law a bill making the manufacture and use of LSD a felony. THE MICIIIGAN Education Association advised teachers yesterday to avoid the Warren Consolidated District because, it said. school officials set pay scales without giving the teachers a vote, the Associated Press reported from Lansing. E. Dale Kennedy, MEA executive secretary, said that not submitting contract terms to a ratification vote by a district's teachers amounts to an unfair labor practice. Meanwhile, Lr. Paul Cousing, Warren superintendent, said the district has asked the State Labor Mediation Board to in- vestigate the case. UNIVERSITY LAW STUDENTS will attend class today on schedule, although Prof. Arthur R. Miller of the law schdol is stranded in the West by the nation-wide airline strike. With the cooperation of Ampex Corp. and students of the University of Colorado Law School, Miller will conduct a summer class via video tape. THE STUDENT HOUSING ASSOCIATION last night sub- mitted a City-University Housing Proposal to the Ann Arbor City Council. The proposal asked that a review be made of a recent zoning study recommending the reduction of the density of buildings in the central campus area to provide more open space. :"' Term Students To. AHold Vote on - OAA Action Smith Predicts No Change in 'U' Policy Regardless of Result By LEONARD PRATT Co-Editor Male University students will have a chance to express their opinion of the University's prac- tice of sending men's class ranks to their draft boards in a Student Government Council - sponsored all-campus referendum this fall. The referendum will be held sometime near the end of Septem- ber, SGC President Edward Rob- inson, '67, -said yesterday. The Office of Academic Affairs recently notified all male students that it was complying with a re- quest from Michigan Selective Service officials to provide the class ranks of all enrolled men. Students were given two weeks in which to notify the OAA if they did not want their grades sent to their local boards. ene, But "this is something that af- it to fects only students and it is thus Ledes something that they should decide for themselves," Robinson said. Alan Smith, vice-president for academic affairs, predicted that any such referendum will have no effect on University policies. "The question here is the individual re-' lationship between the University and each student," Smith said, and "it's difficult to formulate a referendum in a way that will make it relevant to this relation- ship." Robinson is now speaking with representatives of various student organizations interested in spon- soring the referendum. So far of- n said ficers of Voice, the local chapter lave an of Students for a Democratic So- espects : ciety, and Interfraternity Council educate have expressed interest in the pro- ire not ject. re od Plans now call for general or- ebroad ganizational discussions as soon as tocracy, the fall semester begins. Robinson plans. to bring the proposal for so edu- the referendum to the Sept. 8 SGC em that meeting. SGC will thus vote Sept. ondemn 15 on whether to hold the referen- wrong." dum. THE HANDWRITING'S ON THE WALL AGAIN "'Then from His presence the hand was sent, and this writing was inscribed. And this is the writing that was inscribed: mene, m tekel, and upharsin. This is the interpretation of the matter: mene, God has numbered the days of your kingdom and brought an end; tekel, you have been weighed in the balances and found wanting; upharsin, your kingdom is divided and given to the M and Persians." Thus did Daniel the Hebrew interpret the original "handwriting on the wall" to Belshazzar, king of Babylon. NEW SEMINAR PROGRAM: Voce'Revolution'Series Speak Consilders Spanish Civil Conf liec 4 PER CENT: More Jobs for Youth Leave Employment Rate Unchanged By PAT O'DONOHUE . In last night's installation of Voice political party's "20th Cen- tury Revolutions" lecture series, Johnny Weeks, Grad, called the Spanish Civil War a military ef- fort calculated to seize power, as differentiated from the Spanish Revolution-an effort to seize pow- er in social terms, by revamp- ing the social and economic order within Spain. Weeks explained the failure of the Republican party, which was more reform minded under the oonservative-supported Nationalist r party led by Franco, as an in- ability to draw massive support from the peasants and to receive raid on the scale that the Nation- alists did. Russian Support He pointed out that Russia did , ot give all out support to the Republicans because at that time they did not want to alienate the the knowledge acquired in the by the revolution in Viet Nam, we seminars. We must keep demon- will become involved in the future strating to express our viewpoint revolutions of the underdeveloped to the American public in order to prevent a consensus of apathy." Revolutions' Effects She said that the seminars fo- cus on the 20th century revolu- tions in order to determine their effect on the lives of American citizens. If the U.S. continues to follow the precedent established nations. By analyzing the elements of past revolutions we can better understand the elements of to- day's and discern their effect on American foreign policy, she said. Thus, while the Voice seminars "prick intellectual curiosity" the demonstrations also play an im- portant part in the education of its memberVs. Miss Lipso that the demonstrations h educational value in two r -The demonstrationsi the participants. They a mindless but "fit into th national perspective of dem of radicalizing people." -The demonstrations al cate the public and tell the "we have the courage to c our government when it is WASHINGTON W)-The coun- try's unemployment rate remained i unchanged at 4 per cent in June, although two million teen-agers, most of them fresh out of school, succeeded in landing jobs. Their success brought the total of Americans at work to 75.7 mil- lion, a record. The fact that the over-all un- employment rate stayed at 4 per cent, instead of declining, was taken as a new indication that the rate of economic growth has been slowing up. Tax Increase Unlikely And this, in turn, is regarded as another reason President Johnson Arthur M. Ross, who is known as: a statistician with a heart, found cause for happiness and sadness in the figures: * The two millioni youths aged 14 through 19 who went to work won't experience the ills bred "of idleness and boredom." 0 But Negro youth did not share in the dramatic increase in teen-age employment. To be sure, they had 60,000 more jobs than in June 1965, but this was about the same as previous annual increases. On this score, the commissioner noted in a special study he coin- piled over the weekend: "So far as unemployment rates are con- Employment of such teen-agers rose by 2 million, 550,000 more than seasonal to a record high of 8.3 million. This reflected both economic conditions and the effectiveness of government campaigns to provide summer jobs for youths, officials said. Becau-e o the record number of teen-agers entering the summer Spurr Gives Graduate School Favorable Analysis, But Sees Need for Improvement job market, teen-age unemploy- French and English whom they ment at about 1.9 million was were depending on for anti-Ger- roughly the same in June 1966 as man support. Thus the German- in June 1965. Italian support added to the well I organized efforts of the National- Rat ist party and resulted in victory, he While the number of unemploy- said. ed teen-avrers h edArp the 1i usual I ryi f 17 .. ,,, merernm By MEREDITH EIKER Stephen H. Spurr, dean of Rackham School of Graduate Studies, yesterday commented that in spite of "obvious deficiencies" within a few graduate depart- ments, the University is "holding its own" in the realm of graduate programs' departments surveyed as to the accuracy of their ranking. "Basically," Spurr said, "the sta- tistical evaluations were pretty good." According to a recent article in the New York Times, the nation's graduate schools are now facing a flood of applications and a crisis of shortages in staff and facilities. gn,-,.i rna mnPm.that Dlnse graduates make applications for admission to four or often more colleges and universities. Spurr noted too that while most graduate schools can expect a 25 per cent return on the accept- ances they make, the University has about a 50 per cent return.' "In other words," said Spurr, "in order to fill our 3000 places over three terms we need only to ac- "to attract people who would pre- fer to teach graduates and to ex- pand our facilities at the same time." He commented, however, that the Universityhas experi- enced some minor setbacks in comn- pleting new buildings on time to meet the increased pressures. Spurr said as well that he would prefer not to call the graduate school a "school" as such, but . I .: .I i ,I