INVOLVEMENT IN HOUSING See Editorial Page li: 3a ~Iaitli FREEZING High-40 Low-23 Fair, somewhat warmer tomorrow Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No. 5S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1966 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES Journalism Department Celebrates 75 Years at ' By CLARENCE FANTO Co-Editor Leading journalists from across the nation gathered yesterday to celebrate the seventy-fifth anni- versary of journalism education at the University. In speeches and panel discussions, the most fre- quently-sounded themes dealt with uncertainty over the Viet Nam war and the resilience of the American people. Louis B. Seltzer, retired editor of the Cleveland Press warned that if the "engulfing tide" of a new business depression were to hit the United States, "the American people could not swim quite as well with the same stamina and strength as they did during the Great Depression of the 1930's." Seltzer emphasized that "we have experienced an erosion of ideals, principles and of our moral and spiritual values, as well as an erosion of ruggedness and self reliance." "Our spiritual strength must be brought to parity with our eco- nomic and technological strength," he said. Seltzer reminded his audience gathered at the North Campus Commons that the experience of 1929 serves as a warning against the danger of believing in the perpetuity of prosperity. He pointed to vast technological and economic strides accomplished by the U.S. since that time. "In the past 35 years we have fashioned the most intricate, com- plex scientific civilization the world has ever known. It has elevated the U.S. to the number one position in the world." As for the future, Seltzer said journalists must realize that the changes of the past 35 years are nothing compared to what will take place in the next 35 years. "I visualize within 25 years or less that an individual in his own home will have the ability to flip the pages of newspapers in full color on a screen through remote control." He said the challenges in the future of interpreting unprece- dented scientific events are greater than any we have faced in the past. "We must make Americans aware not only of what we have gained but also what we have lost and must regain," he said. Earlier, keynoting the day of discussions and celebration, retir- ing journalism department chair- man Wesley Maurer pointed to the basic problem of the profession- the miracle that anyone can con- vey meaning to any other person that bears any resemblance to what might be intended. "The science of journalism.. . . is the knowledge of the variables of how meanings get lodged; of the influence of environments and experiences, physical and mental, on the emergence of meanings. Our profession at its best has serious intent to convey meanings, involving the thinking process and involving the skills in the use of language tailored to the correctly assessed mentalities of audiences." "The intellectual resources for journalism lie in the synthesis of knowledge and in reflective think- ing which examines the whole," Maurer said. He pointed to the crisis in edu- cation, caused partly by the em- phasis on specialization rather than synthesis. "Journalism and society in gen- eral has a vested interest in the continuing synthesis of knowl- edge," he said. Maurer characterized the role of journalism in rendering an See JOURNALISTS, Page 2 SEEK BROAD PLAN: 'Freshmen Conference Advocates Changes To Be Given In Selective Service System CEEB Tests Language Department Will Revise Testing Of Orientation Groups By ROGER RAPOPORT Special To The Daily NEW YORK-A broad national service plan that would make the Peace Corps and other forms of non-military service an alternative to service in the armed forces was advocated here Saturday at a con- ference of top education, student, and government leaders. With an eye toward the explora- tion of the current Selective Serv- ice law in July of 1967 the con- ference advocated the use of a lot- tery system to fulfill military manpower needs. Among the 30 representatives present at the conference were John Munro, dean of Harvard i fied for some form of non-mili- College; Phillip Sherburne, presi- dent of the U.S. National Student Association, and Harris Wofford, associate director of the Peace Corps. The conference was organ- ized and chaired by Donald Ese- berly of the Overseas Educational Service. Lottery Proposal Dean Munro, Wofford, and Prof. Leon Gramson of Swarthmore College sketched a lottery proposal that would pave the way for non- military alternatives to service in the armed forces. Nineteen-year-old men, except those who have previously quali- tary service, would be included in the lottery. Men who have demonstrated to their local Selective Service board By MEREDITH EIKER that they have qualified for some The Romance and Germanic form of non-military service would language departments will begin be exempted from the lottery. The using the College Entrance Exam-i non-military alternative must be ination Board placement tests this proposed prior to the lottery to be summer as the means of determin- valid. ing. the language level of entering Numbers Game All men whose numbers are not selected in the lottery will be ex- empted from giving any form of service to the country. These are the only men who would not be required to give some kind of mil- itary, or non-military, service. This feature was proposed to en- courage participation in the lot- tery. freshmen. The decision to use both the CEEB written and listening (oral) sections was made two years ago' by faculty and an admissions com- mittee for the Literary .College Professor Pott, chairman of the Germanic Languages department,. explained yesterday that language placement tests were given to freshmen students during summer and early fall orientation in the NEWS WIRE WASHINGTON (JP)-THE PEACE CORPS will begin scouring college campuses next week for volunteers who would like to spend two years in "paradise." The corps announced that beginning this fall about 750 volunteers will be sent to the islands of Micronesia in the Trust territory of the western Pacific. But even paradise has its drawbacks, a Peace Corps promo- tion booklet makes clear: "Tropical islands. Enchanted evenings. Swaying palms and sun-kissed maidens. Understaffed schools. Bad roads. Insuffi- cient medical facilities. Inadequate water and sanitary systems. An island territory that has to import its seafood." The booklet is called "The Peace Corps goes to paradise." LANSING (AP)-MICHIGAN DRAFT BOARDS are receiving hundreds of phone calls from unhappy college students who were told to report as far away as Mississippi to take their draft deferment examinations. "It was a madhouse today," Col. Arthur Holmes, state Selec- tive Service director, said yesterday. "We probably had a good 250 calls." Holmes is telling all the students that Selective Service- which is not administering the tests-will do everything it can to correct the situation. The calls began Thursday, and the total to local boards and state headquarters in Lansing probably is well above 1,000, he estimated. Science Research Associates of Chicago has the contract to administer the tests, which are intended to help draft boards decide which college students to defer from the draft, Holmes said. While Michigan students are being sent everywhere from Mississippi to Massachusetts for exams May 14, May 24 or June 3, Holmes said, other states are having similar problems, too. He advised students sent more than 30 or 40 miles from their home or campus to write to Science Research Associates and re- quest a change. "Every opportunity will be given to students who have tried and failed to have the location of the examination changed to be granted a new date to compete," Holmes declared. What may have happened, he said, was that as local testing centers filled up, students were sent to the next closest center which still had an opening. FBI DIRECTOR J. EDGAR HOOVER says the FBI made no attempt to intimidate any student or official at Wesleyan University in its investigation of a national student organization. Hoover said that such contentions by student critics of the FBI at Wesleyan were "a misrepresentation of the truth of the matter." The FBI chief said any charge that the organization was hostile to the goals of academic freedom was "not only utterly false but also is so irresponsible as to cast serious doubt on the quality of academic reason or the motivation behind it." Students for a Democratic Society, a national left-wing group claiming 5,000 members on many college campuses, has been the target of an FBI investigation. The FBI is hunting for subversive Communist infiltration in SDS. The students at Wesleyan protested to Hoover after a college official was quoted by the college newspaper as saying FBI agents asked him for a list of Wesleyan students in the local RlSDS chanter The colleg dean sid he had informed the FBI Other incentives to encourage| past. Scores from these were then men to join the lottery were an sent to the counseling offices to! increase in military pay; expan- facilitate registration. sion of the G.I. Bill; and a time T.s adjustment-two years of service "nuisance and an expense." Now might be required in the army students can take the tests during while three years of non-military their senior year in high school service would be required in thel as part of the three achievement Peace Corps,1tests required for admission to the "The advantage to this plan is Univ ersity. that it eliminatestuncertainty," He and Professor James O'Neill, contended Dean Munro. He said chairman of the Romance Lan- that through this system all men guage department, explained fur- would know where they are going ther that the CEEB's were chosen 1 )# C ,! i RETIRING JOURNALISM DEPARTMENT CHAIRMAN Wesley Maurer (left) congratulates his successor, Prof. William Porter of the department. Maurer is retiring after 42 years of service in the journalism department, 18 of them as chairman. Name Porter To Succeed M A r at 19. Students would still be al- lowed to continue their education at 19, but they would have to commit themselves to some form of service at a specified time-such as after graduation. Alternative Service Another proposal at the confer-j ence was an alternate form of military service suggested by Rev. William S. Coffin, chaplain of Yale University. Under this plan men willing to servie a standing ! United Nations' army might be exempted from American military service. The conference advocated a wide variety of non-military alterna- tives beyond service in the Peace Corps and the various federal gov- ernment anti-poverty programs. Among those suggested were the community organization of Stu- dents for a Democratic Society; voter registration of the Student Non-Violent Co-ordinating Com- mittee; the social service work of church affiliated groups such as the Friend's, or Quaker's servie committees. 0 t h e r s suggested conservation work such as fight- ing against water pollution and land reclamation. The conferees agreed that it would be in the national interest to let persons who fail the armed forces mental test take educational and vocational training to fulfill their national service require- ment. For example, a man might spend two years in the Jobs Corps as his contribution to the national service. The conference claimed that by making up educational deficiencies a young person would be serving the best interests of his country. Another suggestion was that women be given an opportunity to serve voluntarily in a non-mili- tary program. The conference suggested that opportunities for women to serve be expanded. It was noted that currently Bel- gium, Norway, Switzerland, and Germany all allowed full substitu- tion of non-military service for military service. France and Israel currently offer partial substitu- tion. John S. Stillman, chairman of7 from tests made available by the W Educational Testing Se'vice t __Ifla ur r 1 Princeton. - They were then run on a trial basis during the past two years in By CLARENCE FANTO , the 231 and 232 level courses. The Co-Editor departments were thus able to arrive at a table of equivalents to roj.liam orter a the be used. in placing students. lJournalism department was ap- O'Nedi comentd tat the pointed chairman last night at a O'Neill commented that thedinner honoring retiring chairman CEEB's will be advantageous to the Wesley Maurer who has been language departments because chairman of the department for they are "standard, refined, and 18 years and on the journalisn> meaningful all over the country." faculty for 42 years. Ernest Zimmerman, assistant to Th di r a lebrated the the Vice President of Academic 75The anniversay o journalism Affairs, said that during the next t hth e Universt.imol few years the University will be teaching at the University. It fol- administering the tests primarily lowed a day-long series of speech- adinst" r i "t t t s prir i es and panel discussions by dis- n Journalislm Post ure in journalism education as is media. Journalism education can indicated by his recent presidency thus become the most liberal of of the Association for Education the social science undergraduate in Journalism," Haber said. "He programs." is a journalist of considerable pro- Porter indicated that technical fessional achievement. He is a courses would not be expanded but challenging teacher and a counse- that major content areas would los to students of rare insight and be enlarged, with subject matter warmth." increasingly provided by social re- Haber reported that the jour- search. nalism curriculum had been sub- He pointed to "staggering pre- jected to a thorough examination conceptions about the mass me- by himself, the journalism facul- dia, particularly among intellec- ty and the literary college exec- tuals." Ford Cuts Cause Stock Market Drop Automobile Maker Second To Announce Production Cutbacks NEW YORK R) - The stock market took another dive yester- day as a rallying movement failed on news that Ford was trimming production. The closely-watched Dow Jones industrial average toppled to a loss of 16.03 at 886.80, greater than any of the big daily losses last week and the worst since Nov. 22, 1963, when President Kennedy was assassinated. After a mixed and cautious opening, prices skidded badly and trading snowballed until the ticker tape was 11 minutes late around midday. GM News The market's continued weak- ness was attributed by brokers to the weekend news that General Motors would reduce work weeks during the rest of May. Some recovery followed but it was only temporary. The market sank to its lows of the day follow- ing news that Ford Motor Co. was cutting its production schedule by 7 per cent in May. Ford slowed its red-hot auto production pace and blamed the move in part on harassment on the auto safety issue. GM Lead Ford followed the lead of Gen- eral Motors in saying that the production cutbacks were to get output in line with dealer inven- tory. General Motors had four plants on short-work time last week and said Saturday eight other plants would be idled one to three days during the rest of May. Ford reduction from the plan- ned 261,000 cars to a new target of 242,000 will be made without any plants going on short time, Instead, Ford said, some planned overtime work at various plants will be eliminated. Biggest May Ford said its 242,000 goal, if attainedsstill would be the big- gest May in Ford history. The current mark of 236,839 cars was set last May. Chrysler Corp., the other mem- ber of the automotive Big Three, and American Motors said they had no plans to-cut their May production schedules. Ford spokesmen, pressed for an explanation of Ford's cutback, pointed to a weekend interview in which Arjay Miller, Ford pres- ident, told the Detroit Free Press: "There is some downturn in sales. What caused it is hard to say. It's my personal opinion that the undue attention on the safety of autos has had some effect. The harassment the industry is going through is probably causing some people not to buy cars." All-Time High Weekend reports indicated that an all-time high of 1,582,444 new cars were in dealer hands or en route to them May 1. This was about 230,000 cars higher than at this point last year and at current selling rates represented about a 53/2-day supply. Ford said the elimination of the 19,000 cars from its projected out- put would be reflected In decreas- ed schedules for all car lines ex cept Mustang, which would re- main at its planned level. Indicating the complexity of the production picture, Ford said eight of its plants would be on overtime this Saturday with five car lines and eight truck lines. Output Trimmed Ward's automotive reports said utive committee. '.Ati re U n L xi~trrrluua Le rurn*a I~ to pick up the pieces" and insure1 that all students have taken them. The written part of the examina- tion will be given in a classroom as placement tests in the past have been, while the listening section will be given in the language laboratories on campus. O'Neill said that the tests will j tngushd nwsmn.A core undergradauate program tinguished newsmen. will be continued and strengthen- Noted professional figures, de- ed and vigorous efforts will be partment alumni, current students made to enlarge the graduate cur- and top University officials at- riculum at the earliest possible tended the dinner for Maurer. moment, Haber said. University Executive Vice-Presi- P dent Marvin Niehuss, Regent orte paiiau te to hemp asizd Emeritus Eugene Power, Umver- that the objectives of the depart- sity Secretary Erich Walter, for-m be adi ianstrec to university'men' University President Alexan- Students in language courses der Ruthven (1926-1951) and Dean periodically to re-establish norms William Haber of the literary col- and determine where a C-student lege, all saluted Maurer's accom- here stands in relation to incom- plishments and dedication to jour- ing freshmen and students else- nalism and a free society. where. Porter's appointment as the Scores from CEEB tests are bas- fourth chairman in the depart- ed on a scale with a range from ment's history resulted from ex- 200 to 800 possible perfect score. tensive consultation with profes- While they will be used in the sional journalists and university Romance and Germanic languages officials throughout the country now, as well as in Russian, the as well as with members of the Latin and classical language de- University's journalism faculty partments will probably not be Haber said. using them yet, O'Neill concluded. "Prof. Porter is a national fig- ment as formuiated by the retiring chairman will not change. He in- dicated, however, that new forms and methods of achieving those goals would be developed. In a recent interview, Porter ex- pressed the hope that "an under- graduate journalism major will come to be recognized as the best. most broad liberal arts education in the literary college. He sees the role of journalism education as "taking apart Amer- ican society and examining it from the point of view of its most per- vasive social institution-the mass In order to attract quality stu- dents, he envisions the depart- ment as an increasingly exciting place to be intellectually." Porter sees the expanding honors pro- gram in journalism as a major contributing factor to intellectual excitement and creativity among journalism students. Although no firm decisions have been made, Porter foresaw the pos- sibility of a dual master's degree program in journalism - one for students who were undergradu- ate journalism majors, the other for students with no previous ex- perience in the field. Both pro- grams will continue to combine in-depth study in a social science or area study with intensive prob- ing of the mass media and its problems in special seminars. Porter emphasized that a gen- eral liberal arts background is of paramount importance for the, prospective journalist, especially in a time of increasing academic spe- cialization both on the graduate and undergraduate levels. He thus envisions an undergraduate major consisting of about 22 hodrs of journalism courses with the re- maining credits obtained in the humanities, social and natural sci- ences. He cited the role of the mass media in political decision-making as one of the major issues to be tackled by journalism students in a more formal version of a new CollegeHonors course he taught during the past year. Porter, a 47-year-old native of Kansas, joined the University journalism faculty in 1962 after 18 years at Iowa State Universi- ty. He earned his bachelor of arts . CABALISTIC CONDUCTOR: Ormandy's Performances Re veal Modesty, Refinement By BETSY COHN It is unfortunate that conduc- tors cannot face their, audiences during performances; especially in the case of Eugene Ormandy. The modest and refined way Mr. Or- mandy conducts himself and his Copland's "Music for A Great City," a lively piece which seemed to be written for a conductor1 twice the size of Mr. Ormandy. Yet as the "Skyline" theme began to become more intense and powerful, Mr. Ormandy's precises pressions of the sounds as he feels them. There is nothing unauthen- tic or mechanical about the man- ner in which he conducts. Back stage he speaks with the same restraint and sincerity, and a slight European accent. He is a