j ILI CCOMMO do n tso SA'A 1 i.e By JEFFREY GOODMAN The literary college has made numerous adjustments to accommo- date its unexpectedly large fall enrollment. But there is still some disagreement on whether the quality of education will be affected. According to college Dean William Haber, adjustments in addi- tional and enlarged recitation sections have "perhaps involved some strains, but without any adverse effect on the educational objectives of the college and without too much distortion in students' programs." Some' department chairmen and professors, however, claimed yesterday that sections of introductory courses have grown too large for effective discussion. While this contention was not universal, most, of these men agreed that pressures from this semester would OSA Shuttles, i Them' Into New Quarters By ROBERT HIPPLER and ROGER RAPOPORT Administration sources promised yesterday that all students in temporary housing will be placed into residence hall rooms by Friday, Sept. 11. The solution to the housing shortage will be the addition of a second student to many single roonis and a third to some double rooms. r Of the 469 students in temporary housing, about 300 are being moved into these already occupied rooms. The remainder will take the rooms left empty by students who did not show up this fall. "Every residence hall, with the* exception of Markley, is affected," Director -of Housing Eugene Haun commented. Most affected will be South Quad, where students yes - terday began' moving from tem- u u porary housing into rooms. Bunk Beds Haun added that bunk beds and additional chests of drawers are an being installed in the rooms in- IEaW 1 an volved. As of yet no desks have been added." Haun said that double and 0 P 'Oyide single room fees will be lowered to hetriple or double rate respec- 01e tively for rooms thus converted. M illion The first sign of the housing shortage was an increase in ad- missiins last spring. Foreseeing To Finance Addition :the possibility of overcrowding, administration officials imple- To General Library, mented emergency housing plans. Pollution Laboratory Haun said the "doubling up" plans were established during the By JUDITH WARREN 50s when the University faced a similar crisis. At that time the A House - Senate conference larger singles and doubles were committee yesterday released a designated as those which could bill that will give the University receive extra occupants. more than $4 million for construc- Later, the construction of new tion of campus buildings - in- dormitory facilities, notably Mary eluding the propgsed addition to Markley, alleviated the overflow. the General Library. Serve Notice The bill' also released funds fo After selecting possible over- the construction of a laboratory flow rooms, the University sent a for the prevention and control of notice in August to all students water pollution. scheduled to occupy these rooms. Under title I of the act, sup- The notice stated the possibility ported by the Department of that an. extra student would be Health, Education and Welfare added. $46, million will be available for All students affected were given the construction of college facili- final notice of the "doubling up" ties. Of this amount $10 million decision Tuesday evening. will be available to the state of The housing crisis is due to Michigan for the constrution of several factors. First, the Regents' undergraduate buildings. blwstate that all freshmen jA state commission will divideI men and all women with less than the $10 million among private, 84 semester hours or under 21 public and junior colleges. years of age must live in dormi- "The University will not file a tories. specific application, but will file it Second, the admissions office, capital outlay projections, which adhering to its policy of admitting will serve as the application," John ,all in-state students seen as cap- G. McKevitt, assistant to the vice- able of succeeding in University president for business and finance. studies, increased enrollment by said yesterday. about 500 over last year. 'fnder title II of, the bill, $60 Third, there has been no new million in grants will be avail- dormitory construction since the able for the construction of grad- completion of Markley in 1958. uate school buildings. This money Present Plans will be distributed directly by the Plans now call for the opening federal government. However, the of a residence hall on North Cam- regulations concerning its distri-. pus next fall, and the construe- Ibution have not yet been drawr tion of at least one other dormi- up. tory there to open in 1966. In "I presume that the regulations addition, living facilities are now concerning the grant application, in the planning stage for' the will be drawn up-by the end of the residential college, slated to open fiscal year 1965. If so, the funds' in 1968. will be available during fiscal year The biggest blow dealt in 'the 1966," McKevitt said. administrative decision was to . a South Quad residents. There 18 h niversity illthnpl g otafr~a Livrnment fr i students are being added to each 'n 61 r ltuu ub i 1, hous-a ttal f 14 refgeesfunds for the construction of the house-a total of 144 refugees addition to the General Library from makeshift quarters. This will amount to about $1.5 Some students in the quad met m ill. the decision with anger. .rilion. South Quadrangle President The $463 million of title I war James Sheridan said yesterday in to be allocated during the fiscal a letter to all residents, "Last year 1964, which ended last June spring when the first word got However, the appropriations bill out about the possibilities of trip- was not passed in time. Thus ling some of the rooms of South HEW asked Congress to double Quad, a tremendous wave of pro- the money for the fiscal year 1965 test developed from both the quad Congress refused to pass this mo-J oouncil anad staff. The administra- tion. r tion met these complaints by com- Also in the bill released by the forting us that there was only a House-Senate conference commit- chance in a million that even a tee was a measure allocating $2.5 few South Quad rooms would be billion for the construction of the converted." Midwest Water Pollution Control Laboratory in Ann Arbor. The federal Water Pollutior K hanh B aek, Control Act states that the lab- tr+r nill ha dr "~fn the nI continue to be felt as the new students crowd higher-level courses. Haber noted that 17 or 18 new sections have been added to pro- vide space for the college's 2760 freshmen-about 250 more than had been expected last spring. "We are prepared The students are in class," he emphasized. While a large number of students still have program difficulties- because many courses were closed early-Haber said "it has never been our intention to accommodate every freshman in the exact courses he desires during the first semester.. "The impositions we must impose aren't so much asking someone to do some ungodly thing as asking him, perhaps, to take a class at eight in the morning. We are utilizing our available space and faculty to the fullest," he said. Haber expressed considerable concern over the fact that many faculty have had to double up in office space. He felt space problems in general were a limiting factor on the college's ability to adjust to size. According to Need The precise situation in number and size of classes, nevertheless,' differed from department to department. While the distribution of 17-18 new sections went roughly -according to need for the nine departments involved, some sections are reported manageable and others too large. Most faculty and chairmen contacted, however, seemed to share Haber's confidence that education will not necessarily be diluted. Perhaps the largest freshman course, English 123, has been relatively unaffected by the enrollments, Prof. Hubert M. English, in charge of the freshman courses, said last night. Because English 124 is no longer required in the second semester, "a good fraction of the freshmen will be able to take 123 at that time," he explained. The department did not add new sections, but instead closed 123 early last week. English noted, however, that a large number of students had been turned away and that it is difficult to tell if the department will be able to handle all of them in the spring. In mathematics, Prof. George Hay, department chairman, re- ported an addition of five sections for Math 115, with about four more students per section than last year. But he felt this semester's enrollments would not seriously affect the value of class time. Sitting in Aisles E. Thomas Chapman, instructor for Political Science 100, indi- cated that an enrollment of 850 in his course has students sitting, in the aisles of one of the two lectures. Sections have risen to 28 or 30, but the department plans to add no new sections-for lack of funds.' Chapman felt, however, that 30 students in one section could still be handled adequately. Prof. J. David Birch, who lectures in Psychology 100, said that the course has around 100 more students than can be seated in the lecture hall and that sections have risen as high as 30. "These sections are intended as discussion groups. Ideally they should have about 15 students," he said. Just Enough The zoology department will face its greatest difficulties in the future, Prof. Dugald Brown, chairman of the department, said. Though the present 100-student increase in Zoology 101 is what the department had expected, three years from now, the laboratory space has been just sufficient. But this means that zoology is expanding much faster than it had planned, and the squeeze will come when the extra 100 students go on to the second semester, Brown explained. Two additional sections have been added to the history depart- ment's introductory European history courses. Average section size has thus been held to about the same level-25-as last year, Prof. John Bowditch, department chairman, said. Extra funds from the dean's office have financed an ex sections in Sociology 100, Prof. Robert Blood reported, but the "is in a very tight situation." This is primarily because of a seating for -the lecture, though section sizes have also been i from 20 to 23 students. Nevertheless, Blood felt the section sizes in the course w manageable. While other regular courses in other departments faced r the same problems, most honors courses have experienced oni ,increases per section. r "We have not turned people away from honors, but w made our selection standards more severe. Thus we have a about as many students to honors this year as last," Prof. Oti director of the honors council, said. 'U'e Lars EXpaii How They. ot Her By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM The fall semester will be remembered as the point in histor population simply overwhelmed the computer. Admissions officials, usually accurate forecasters of enro have watched the increases exceed all expectations-computer human. Last spring officials had predicted 28,600 students. The Un schools and colleges today hold more than 29,000. The center 'increase, the literary colle year projected an enrolln 9,250. Its classes now Snearly 9500. Frees Funds for ~JD-0 -DN I U 1u)ULLLg 4) _________________ YI e 5k~t Y Iaitj Seventy-Four Years of Editorial -Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 5 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1964 FOUR PAGES Senate Includes MVedicare InSocial Scurity Proposal f c Y t r 'r c 1 t r Is if id t ''s a r Y ATHLETIC BOARD: SGC Asks Bylaw Change, On Eligibility in Elections Student Government Council last night accepted Athletic Direc- tor H. O. Crisler's version of a proposal to change the Regents' bylaw on the election of student representatives to the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics. The meeting, Council's first of the fall term, was held in the Michigan League because the SAB, where the SGC meeting room is located, was darkened by a power failure. Last spring Council "approved a motion recommending to the Regents certain changes in A fla eIQ j the criteria by which students are eligible to run for the athletic File Statements board, and to vote for those who -run. Crisler agreed to the all the On selection . SGC proposals but one. It recom- mended that any student on cam- A vast majority of fraternities pus be eligible to run for the and sororities at the University board. Crisler contended that since have failed thus far to re-file the student posts were i two-year their individual statements on terms it was necessary, to en- membership, according to William sure continuity, that the students Burns, '65, chairman of Student eligible for election be in their Government Council's Committee fourth term at the University. on Membership. , Furthermore, because of the na- ture of the position, Crisler sug- He said yesterday that the new gested that only male students be membership statements were re- eligible. Council agreed. quired because many of the orig- In other action, a motion to al- inal statements issued last year by ter the Council plan by eliminat- the various houses were brief ing the ex-officio seat of The vague and insufficient in content. Daily editor was postponed. The committee made its most Council approved the presidei- recent request May 11, 1964, and tial appointment of four of its since that time only four of the members to the SGC study com- fraternities, sororities and other mittee. They are: Carl Cohen, '66; organizations under the jurisdic- Barry Bluestone, '66; Sherry Mil- tion of the membership group have ler, '65, and Panhellenic Associa- submitted their completed state- tion President Ann Wickins, '65. ments. Burns noted that the four' all fell within that group of orga- nizations whose earlier statement had been the most satisfactory. a r e, FHe said that1- although the dead- $$$ ,v IU ,-Daily-James Keson Powser, Line Break Leaves U: in Dark,.. By JOHN KENNY Assistant Managing Editor A main campus power line broke yesterday afternoon, left ad- ministrators without electricity and sent The Daily on a frantic search for a way to publish this morning's edition. The failure occurred when a concrete tube containing the major, power lines for the southwest campus area broke and fell into a 20-foot excavation. The excavation is part of a steam tunnel extension designed to connect the Institute for Social Research, now under construction on Thompson St., with the University's central heating system . Universityplant department manager A. B. Ueker said the break occurred about 1 p.m. when workers were removing concrete at the southwest corner? of a parking lot at the former site of the Jefferson Apartments. Electricity was cut off to the Administration Bldg., the SAB, Kelsey Museum, Student Publications Bldg., the Michigan Union West and South Quadrangles and the athletic campus. Power was restored to the Union, the quids and the athletic facilities an hour after the break by re-routing the 2400-volt lines through an emer- gency line. A wooden trough was constructed to carry the power lines at, ground level around the excavation area. Ueker said he expected the temporary re-routing to be in effect for about two weeks until the stam tinnelo nstrcItion is finished .- enrv de Konning Con- Plan Tacked To Expanded Aged Fun'ds Proposal a 'Must' For Johnson Forces, Passes in 49-44 Vote WASHINGTON (WP)-The Sen- ate gave President Lyndon B. Johnson a dramatic legislative vic- tory yesterday when it . added health care for the aged to a House bill expanding Social Se- curity cash benefits. The vote was 49-44 in a sus- penseful "roll call. Administration forces in the Senate had fought long and hard for the health care plan, high on Johnson's 1i s t of legislative "musts." His Republican opponent for the presidency, Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz), interrupted his campaign planning in Cali- fornia to fly back here and join most Republicans in voting against it. First Timer IThis was the first time the ,health care proposal, the King- A derson plan, had passed either branch of Congress. It was the third Senate vote on the question in four years. The health care plan faces pow- erful opposition in the House and it is ques ionable whether it can, be enacte into law this year. But Johnson described the Sen- ate vote as "a victory not only for older Americans but for all Amer- icans." "In a free and prosperous so- ciety there is no need for any person-especially the elderly-to suffer personal economic disaster and become a tragic burden upon loved ones or the state through, major illness when, by prudently setting aside the employers' and employe's contributions, this can be avoided," Johnson said. Three Hours After a three-hour debate the Senate adopted by voice vote a second amendment that included financing of the health plan, wrap- ping up the administration's health care package. As ;registration week ge to the opening of classe,'ad sions officers re-examined calculations. The errors nur only in the hundreds, but t figures alarm officials who k housing facilities are scarce classes jammed. They had foreseen increase this fall. But these surplu especially in the literary col were increasing the institut student body nearly twice as in one year as it had ever I before in the same period. Long after the tide of applic for next year comes in, offli at all levels will still be won ing: Where did the surPluses c from? Byron Groesbeck, associate rector of admissions, has a tentative answers. He point an increase in student aid fi -an increase "which gave dents who otherwise could have afforded, to come -here opportunity to do so." 2.2 Million The funds were made avail to help more of the 2.2 m graduating high-school senior the country get to college. On national level, they came i the signing of an expanded tional Defense Education Act. gram. On a state level, the fi came from a newly-cre $500,000 scholarship F4md tc administered by the Higher E cation Assistance Authority. The availablity of these I did not become kinon util summer. That's what donfou2# the projections. "LiteraryXco: students who had been acce here in the spring, submitted I enrollment deposits during - summer once these funds were nounced," Groesbeck explains until then, the Univerity di know they were coming. Nearly 100 students, mostly staters, submitted their dep inl July-a record quantity. - This, plus other late sui admittances, c on s t itu t ed flurry of summer admissions" closed recently by University cials as explanations for c crowding. Therewere also other facto The number of "contnu students, those passing routi from one class-level to the also 'showed +an unexpected ward'trend.Estimates for'h erary college show that per 100 less students than expe are flunking out or leaving year.4~ The number of transfer ind admission students in the co -700-remained constant thi compared with past totals. The University's other sci and colleges also advanced , enrollments on schedule, with minor deviations from exp tions. Expected Base ' Under the unanticipated creases was a base of expe students, a record forecast in i of 28,600. That was the fi sent to the governor and leg ture last year in a request for year's University operating bu The University wrote in request: "Enrollment objec have been established at a which it is believed would deny admission to any qual Michigan resident" but woul sufficiently restrictive to a diluting education. This philosophy "is the i principle we have been follo for years," reports Executive President Marvin L. Niehuss. Despite its poliy of ,accet of all in-state students itt can succeed, this institution comes under fire from irate zens for its admission policy. complaints range, however, 'much over general policy asi specific rejections. Other state schools were flo with -applications for this Increases ranged from 55 per mnr at Wavnp .tatP Tnivoi Say Govern SAIGON (P)-Vaj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh returned to Saigon early this morning forconferences that may lead to resumption of his duties as head of government. Khanh made no comment on his arrival at Saigon airport from the mountain resort of Dalat where he retired temporarily late last week after violent antigov- ernment demonstrations. A government spokesman said Khanh would resume his duties as oratory wi oe usea or tri con- duct of research, investigations. experiments, field demonstrations and studies and training relating to the prevention and control of water pollution." According to the report issues' by the House Appropriations Com- mittee, "The proponents of this laboratory sought to have funds appropriated for 1964." This war not done because the Public Health Service reported that the money would not come in time for construction in 1964. With the bill's release by the House-Senate conference commit- 1 i 4 r t f t f line is not until Oct. 30, he did not expect many of the houses to j submit their statements until the last minute because of difficultie, that local chapters often experi-; ence with their national organiza- tions concerning the topic of re- leasing confidential information! on membership. Burns cautioned, however, that "because of the long period of no- tification, the committee will not accept delays beyond the deadlin( for any reason, and that any or- MOBILE, Ala. (I)-The Unit- ed States Justice Department sued agroup of Dallas County, Ala., officials yesterday, charging them with using their positions to main- tain racial segregation in public facilities and accommodations. The government, in a separate suit, also requested that the court enjoin five restaurants and eight cafe owners and operators in Sel- ma, the Dallas County seat, from refusing to serve Negroes. 'I i i