EDUCATION PROSPECTS FOR THE FALL See Editorial Page Sw 43U :43a1:1 MUSHROOM CLOUDS High-76 Low--5$ Fair and cool, with chances of rain later Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No. 69S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1966 SEVEN CENTS Ann Arbor:Here s What's Been Haening FOUR PAGES Baby By MEREDITH EIKER pre-registered for summer courses Daily News Analysis and departments wrongly feared Another week or two and this vast student shortages as 10,034 will be the summer that was. enrolled for the spring and spring- Contrar to a lot of popular summer terms. With more and a , tay aa v v jjua opinion, Ann Arbor doesn't die or even lie dormant during May, June, July and August. Those who stayed for half or all of the sum- mer trimester saw a University community without its armor on 1 -buildings with their shirts off, resting and vacationing with the people who chose to stay or came to visit. Summer in Ann Arbor - this summer - was four months of watching, a period of observing the in-between stages of change. The West Physics building is gone; those who were here saw it in the process of becoming gone. Thursday, May 5th classes be- gan with an enrollment increase of 21.3 per cent from that of a year ago. Only about 3000 students greater diversity of courses of- fered, the University took its first giant step toward an effective trimester program. The same day the University's 73rd annual May Festival began as well. Conductor Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra again graced Hill Auditorium - Ormandy for perhaps the last time as rumors of his impending retire- ment spread during intermissions. And that same Thursday Health Service almost slid into the exca- vation for the University's new dental school building. Striking construction workers were called to the scene to install supports and shore up the building's foun- dation. On Friday the Office of Aca- demic Affairs announced the ap- pointment of a 15-member faculty steering committee to work with+ the OAA in coordinating Univer- sity programs on "the development of academic opportunities"-con- centrating on programs which bring Negroes in contact with the; University,; The following week saw the journalism department's celebra- tion of its 75th year of journalistic education at the University. Lead- ing journalists from across the country gathered in Ann Arbor+ for speeches and panel discussions1 and to hear the announcement of Prof. William Porter as the new department chairman to succeed retiring Wesley Maurer.+ The Selective Service draft de- ferment examination was given at the University on Saturday, May 14th, midst cries of protest and a: "counter draft test" drawn up by the Students for a Democratic So- ciety. The repercussions of the ing of a certificate to graduate exam-and of the University's de- students who have completed all cision to furnish local boards with doctoral rcquirements except the the grades and class rank of male dissertation. The University has students-are not yet over, pioneered in the establishment of Student Government Council such an intermediary degree and President Edward Robinson, '67, is expected to fully institute the announced in July that he will ask program next spring. SGC to hold a draft referendum At the same meeting, the teach- on the University's draft practices ing fellows got their equal library in September. privileges. But they were equal to The Teaching Fellows Organiza- less now, as the Regents simultan- tion, born late last spring, contin- eously passed new faculty library ued meeting during the first week regulations restricting such facul- of spring classes. Lack of num- ty rights as unlimited withdrawal bers prevented any action, though time. plans for the fall were begun' Ann Arbor's very own "Hunt" Representatives of the TFO pre- continued through the summer sented their grievances in a panel with ingenious kills occurring all discussion before the local chapter over campus. A good time was had of the American Association of by all. University Professors and sought President H a r 1 a n Hatcher increased privileges from the ad- gave general approval for a Stu- ministration, dent Advisory Board to the Presi- Towards the end of the month dent of the University, the Uni- the Regents approved the grant- versity was found to be among the top 10 graduate schools by an' American Council on Education survey, the Student ' Housing As- sociation began a summer drive to register student voters and May turned the corner into June. By Friday, June 3rd, the Resi- dential College faculty and plan- ning committee and the executive committee of the literary college had agreed on a final plan for revisions in college blueprints which restored $350,000 in cuts proposed earlier. The plans then went to the Regents for their fin- al approval. And then on June 10th,, the University's legislative appropria- tion was announced: $57.9 million, a figure $1 million above Gover- nor Romney's recommendation but still substantially below the orig- inal University request of $65 mil- lion. The House of Representatives gave $4 million for tuition grants to first year students at private and parochial schools at that time as well. University officials labeled the allocation "insufficient" and1 the administration remains faced with the difficult task of decid- ing where to cut down. The University's Activities Cen- ter's Summer Uprising got under way that weekend with a "hatchet hunt" on the Diag and a dance contest. Events included as well a canoe race and a car rally. Regent Carl Brablec announced his retirement that month. Brab- lec's eight-year term was due to end this year along with the term of Regent Irene Murphy and it is up to the voters now to elect their successors. Mrs. Murphy later an- nounced that she would run for re-election. The University hosted the June meeting of the National Council of Students for a Democratic So- ciety as well as participants in the SDS School for New Politics. At their June meeting the Re- gents maintained current tuition levels and approved the Residen- tial College building plan in addi- tion to naming John C. Feldkamp as director of University housing. Throughout July the Regents continued to prepare for the selec- tion of a new University president to succeed Hatcher when he re- tires in 1967. And on July 17th the partially torn down West Physics building burned to the ground, the annual Ann Arbor Street Fair shuttled July into August and a good time was had by all. So far this month the Union pool has been closed, SDS has had a bit of a problem with the plant department, classes are ending, The Summer Daily is ending and everyone who hasn't been here to see what's been happening is com- ing back .. . OSIT Plans Pilot Projectf ;iWtIgaiUn ail Like 'U's' Fall Program To Take . 200-300 Freshmen, Selected Randomly By MICHAEL DOVER This fall 200 to 300 Ohio State University freshmen will enter a program similar to the University's Pilot Project. "The program is designed to create for the students the best of both worlds," said John W. Gustad, associate dean of the Col- lege of Arts and Sciences which sponsors the program. The experiment will combine the intimate student-faculty and intra-student relationships of a private liberal arts college with the research facilities of a large university. Separated The students will live separated from the rest of the university and have frequent discussion ses- sions like those in the University's, program. Gustad stressed that the proj- ect was not an honors program. He said the students were chosen at random from a cross section of the freshmen, unlike Pilot Proj - ect students who volunteer for the experiment. Three Criteria Three criteria were used for the final selection of the fresh- men for the project: -The capability of the student to earn a predicted grade point average of 1.7 for the first year, -Candidacy for the bachelor of arts degree, and -Campus residence - all OSU freshmen do not live in dorms. Four Courses The students will take four fresh- man courses separate from the rest of the university's freshmen: English, philosophy, arts survey and history. Individual student consultation will be offered in the history course. Gustad pointed out that the pro- gram-like the University's - will last only through the freshman year because by the sophomore year the students' interests will be too diverse to permit 'common course selections. Gustad plans to visit the Uni- versity and Michigan State Uni- versity to study the Pilot Project and the two Residential Colleges-; MSU plans a Residential College for non-agricultural students. Gustad said many students "realize the program's advan- tages." He said one student who had been accepted at a private eastern college decided to enroll at Ohio State - her alternate choice--when she was invited to participate in the experiment. Late World News By The Associated Press PASADENA, CALIF-A DELICATE pirouette in space, fol- lowed by a gentle "kick," put America's Lunar Orbiter spacecraft on a near-perfect path to the moon last night, with no more corrections needed. All it needs for a perfect path, scientists said, is one more tiny nudge, but they decided to let the shiny craft glide toward the moon without further acrobatics. Orbiter is designed to make low-altitude photos of terrain on the moon-where American astronauts may land-as it swings low over the lunar surface in an egg-shaped orbit. * * * * CHICAGO-A RAGGED LINE of more than 500 civil rights demonstrators marched through an all-white Southwest Side neighborhood of Chicago last night while about 1,000 white onlookers chanted, "nigger, nigger, nigger." About 600 policemen protected the demonstrators, and there' was little violence as the marchers moved into the Bogan area for the first time. On girl, who said she had been hit with a rock, was bleeding badly. The march was another step in a civil rights campaign against alleged housing discrimination. MONTGOMERY. ALA.-GOV. George C. Wallace, reportedly seeking another major showdown with the federal government over school integration, said last night he may ask for a state law "to protect the integrity of the school system." He called members of the legislature in for closed-door con- ferences. NEW YORK-A DECISION on the future of the New York Herald Tribune-one of three metropolitan dailies which have been shut down for 110 days in disputes with unions over merger details-may be made on Monday. Matt Meyer, president of the World Journal Tribune, said last night that no decision had been made as yet on whether the morning daily would be retained as part of the newspaper merger. "I think we will be decided as to where we are going by the first of the week," Meyer said. The Washington Post said yesterday in a New York dis- patch that serious consideration was being given to a final burial of the Herald Tribune. STANLEY NADEL, '66, RECEIVED a Congressional summons yesterday requiring his appearance and testimony before the House Committee on Un-American Activities. A majority of the 13 others supeonaed to appear with him are members of the Viet Nam Day Committee which has been sending aid to the Viet Cong. The hearings will be held Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of next week and will extend into the following week. The Fifth Avenue Parade Committee Against the War in Viet Nam and Students for a Democratic Society have called for demonstrations in Washington next week. The American Civil Liberties Union is providing lawyers for the witnesses. A group of those supoenaed are attempting to ob- tain a court order enjoining the House Committee from prying into the beliefs and associations of American citizens. The ACLU will continue this process through the courts in an attempt to obtain a mandate declaring the House Committee for Un- American Activities unconstitutional. -Associated Press DEMOCRATIC SENATORIAL NOMINEE G. MENNEN WILLIAMS confers with Vice-President Hubert Humphrey in Washington yesterday. Republican nominee Robert Griffin has been trying to attract the previous supporters of Detroit mayor Jerome Cavanagh to counteract Williams' national backing, GrifinClims Supportfom Defeated Cavanagh Partisants Penn Faculty Demand End To Project Threaten To Resign; Say Research Institute Aids Viet Nam War By PATRICIA O'DONOHUE A group of faculty members at the University of Pennsylvania have threatened to resign if the school's Institute for Cooperative Research is not abolished. They charge the institute with being involved with Department of Defense projects dealing with chemical and biological warfare in a way that "threatens the uni- versity's integrity as an institution of learning." This month's issue of Ramparts Magazine charges Penn with using the institute to. aid the war in Viet Nam. For this reason the faculty sen- ate of the university voted last December to abolish classified re- search at the university. Prof. Gabriel Kolko, spokesman for the group, said yesterday that the public report of the institute indicates that chemical warfare information researched there is still being used "in a military con- text in Viet Nam." He said this is the reason for his group's decision. Correct Facts Kolko said, "Despite the ar- ticle's style, which we object to, the facts are correct. I regret to state that this is the case." Ramparts made a similar charge against Michigan StateUniversity last spring. As a result of that article the Legislature conducted an investigation of the school's activities in Viet Nam which was subsequently dropped and two members of MSU's faculty resign- ed. Kolko said he foresees a similar reaction at Penn. He said the mat- ter "will inevitably be brought to the attention of the legislature and half a dozen faculty members have indicated that their resigna- tions are in the cards unless the university clears up this business." He added that the university has been unable to hire faculty as a result of the incident. Similar re- sults have been unofficially re- ported from MSU. Tight Spot He said, "the university has got- ten itself into a tight spot; it has ruptured faculty relations, stu- dents are demonstrating against the adiministration and it is losing its rapport with the university body. This is a position which most universities try to avoid." The Ramparts article charged that the main reason for continu- ing the ICR is the university's poor financial situation. Kolko said discontinuing the ICR and its defensive contracts would indeed create a financial problem for the university. He said last year the legislature cut Penn's budget re- quest by "$5 or 6 million and the university stopped paying many of its bills as a result." Kolko said "it appears as if the university is willing to keep its defensive funds and ignore the fa- culty." He added that "the faculty should determine university func- tions, direct its actions and should therefore be heeded." Committee Donald Sheean, vice-president for public relations at Penn, said By DANIAL OKRENT Special To The Daily{ DETROIT - Speaking at a downtown Detroit press confer- ence yesterday, U.S. Senator Ro- : bert P. Griffin claimed that his overt drive to capture the primary supporters of Detroit Mayor Jer- ome P. Cavanagh has yielded "very good" results. Griffin, who employed an inten- sified two-day newspaper and ra- dio advertising campaign to woo Cavanagh supporters following his loss to G. Mennen Williams in the Aug. 2 primary, refused, however, to name any prominent Cavanagh people who have come to his camp. He did mention he would wel- come such supporters as Ford Mo- tor Co. chairman Henry Ford II and Detroit Edison chairman Wal- ter L. Sisler, but added he has not formally approached either. Sisler, who is also an ardent fol- lower of Republican George Rom- ney's bid for reelection to the gov- ernorship, served as finance chair- man for the Cavanagh campaign. Cavanagh, who rebuffed Griffin when the latter visited him elec- tion night in search of support, has remained silent about Grif- fin's hunt for aid and comfort from the mayor's partisans. Williams Hit Griffin criticized Williams, whc he will face in the general election Nov. 4, for his opponent's insis- tence that Romney appear on a" debate platform with his Demo- cratic adversary, state chairman Zolton Ferency, before the ex- governor will accept Griffin's own challenge for a debate. Griffin wrote off the Williams demand, asserting that the two situations are "not parallel." He said that "Romney has been gov- ernor for four years and the peo- ple know his position on the is- sues." Relatively New "Williams and I are relatively new on the scene and the voters are not so familiar with our posi- ard M. Nixon; Senate minority1 whip Thomal R. Kuchel, also of Calif., and Sen. Roman Haruska of Nebraska to come to Michigan and campaign in his behalf. He has received definite com- mitments from Murphy and Jav- its and said the others will "prob- ably" come. Concurrently, in Washington, Williams has issued invitations to President Johnson, Vice-President Humphrey and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy of New York in order to help in his campaign, his first venture in the politics since he stepped down from the governor- ship in 1960. REVOLT: Editors Say College Reforms Required MONEY GOES TO 'CONSERVATIVES': Black Radicals Alienate White Backers, By JOAN O'BOYLE Last of a Three-Part Series "Black power is as American as Mom's apple pie-it's the idea of an ethnic group banding to- gether to engage in bloc voting and bloc competition," says one CORE member, disturbed at the recent "white liberal" outcry against the rallying cry. "CORE is nn the right track he- In the eyes of many Jews, CORE fafled to make a thorough and immediate disavowal of Brown's statement. Several major Jewish contributors resigned from the ad- visory board before CORE expell- ed Brown and suspended the chap- er. One of those who resigned was Will Maslow. executive director of decided not to be an inter-racial group any longer, "and the oppo- site of that is racist." He speaks of a Negro attack 'on their neighbors, the Jews'." Willen continues, "Jews are dis- turbed about what they fear is growing anti-Semitism among Ne- groes," noting the many Jewish stores attacked by Negroes in the aid is limited to that of organiza- tion. The Urban League reports an over-all budget of $2,870,000. The NAACP Legal Defense fund, cor- porately separate from the NAA- CP, reports income from contri- butions tripled in five years - reaching $1,705,000 in 1965. But the contributions were down to; . Christopher Jencks, contribut- ing editor for the New Republic, says colleges impose needless re- quirements on students, both aca- demically and. socially. Joseph Rossin, educational edi- tor of Newsweek, agrees with him, but calls radical change nothing but "violent fantasy" and suggests that students try to work within the "establishment." Speaking at a journalism con- ference at Annapolis, Maryland, recently, Jencks said, "Colleges as a whole tend to define their re still within the university power structure and they should get out- side of it entirely. Rossin agreed with Jencks in part, saying that students could work through faculty committees to achieve their goals, but that this method is "slow, tedious and a bad joke, generally." "The first step of student revolt is knowledge of ways to change rules. If you can't change or evade or ignore them, you may have to revolt," Rossin said. Specifically mentioned was a curfew at Mt. Holyoke College, where "the administration couldn't