AUTO CONTRACT MISMANAGEMENT See editorial Page L lflzr i1a ~~Iaitv Little change i$' temperature Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 21 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1964 SEVEN CENTS siX pi ~ w . - :.;_ _ _ _: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . fKx:Il Ve Education c~o Acti-ons.rc:ty .:t ...:....t..# .C'. '?Sk:" '.:?< # .Y.t -r >K.<.3~ u' By KAREN WEINHOUSE The National Council of Accred- itation for Teacher Education re- cently examined the education school and recommended several changes in existing policies. However, NCATE did renew the school's accredation, Dean Willard C. Olson reported. NCATE suggested closer inte- gration of 'the campus teacher education programs with those of the Flint and Dearborn branches. In particular, the letter noted a difference in curriculum require- ments and quality of resources :n the branch schools as compared to the education school here. Academic Records The letter also recommended that the academic records of branch students be kept on file in Ann Arbor. Presently, the educa- tion school on campus does not see a branch student's record un- DEAN WILLARD C. OLSON _Funds ere For WInners Of State Aid Winners of scholarships from the Michigan Higher Education Assistance Authority can now pick up money for the fall term at the cashier's office in the Administra- tion Bldg. The University yesterday re- ceived $65,000 from the state to finance the scholarships, Ivan W. Parker, assistant to the director of financial aids, has announced. Of the 1,292 winners at the state's colleges and universities, the University has 243, Parker said. Awards to students at the University vary from $100 per term to the full $280 tuition fee per term. Students in good aca- demic standing can renew their scholarships ' j This is the first year for the state-financed scholarship pro- gram, in which grants have been awaided to three applicants in each of. the state's legislative dis- tricts. In addition, many scholar- ships have been awarded on an at-large basis. Under the statewide program, students can win grants not over the full cost of the tuition at their schools. The maximum amount is $800. Since freshman tuition at the University is $280, no grants to University freshmen are for over $280. Of the state's winners, 908 have chosen to attend public colleges and universities, 322 have picked private and parochial institutions, and 62 will attend community col- leges. In designing the program to pay tuition fees for many up to a maximum of $800, state legislators hoped to encourage the winners to apply their scholarships against the higher costs of the private schools, thus easing .,the space problem in public schools. The University has a three-man team administering the scholar- ships. Besides Parker, the team includes Prof. Benno Fricke of the psychology department, and Gail Wilson of the admissions of- fice. Parker indicated that fig- ures on how many winners are attending each of the state's schools will be available in about two weeks. The Legislature has authorized a scholarship program for next year the same size as this fall's program. Parker said high school seniors can register for scholar- ship tests for next year's awards between Oct. 12-Nov. 2 at their high schools. The competitive ex- amination will be given on Nov. 21. til it comes to them for certifica- tion. NCATE raised a question as to' the time of identifying applicants for the teaching certificate. The education school requires such applications be made no later than November of the junior year. At times, students are allowed later entry; NCATE, however, prefers early identification of all to pro- vide b e t t e r counseling oppor- tunities. A third area of recommended improvement concerns additional supervisors for coordinating the student teaching program. NCATE advised that more people visit the schools and teachers under whom students are working. "We have long recognized this need," Olson said, "but it's expensive and so we haven't implemented it as much as we'd like." Representatives f r o m NCATE visited the University for several LSA Group' To Discuss Curriculum By JEFFREY GOODMAN About 25 literary college seniors will offer their opinions on courses and professors when the college holds its semi-annual counselling seminar Oct. 12. The seminar will be open to anyone seeking informal counsel- ling from the viewpoint of other students. The seniors present - chosen for their experience with various courses and teachers-will represent nine different depart- ments. According to Edward Mehler, '65, chairman of the literary col- lege steering committee, this will be the third such seminar-one was held each semester last year. Two-Hour Session Basically, the seminar will be a two-hour session in the conference room of the Michigan Union, with the student counsellors seated at tables. The date of the seminar has been set for one week after preliminary time schedules for the winter term will be issued, so that students can ask about spe- cific courses and teachers. Mehler said the seminar will be designed to give the kind of in- formation usually found in course evaluation forms. It is hoped the seminar will supplement regular faculty academic counselling. Mehler also announced that the committee-at its weekly meeting Monday-had decided to investi- gate literary college distribution requirements in its future meet- ings. Accept Philosophy Having accepted the philosophy behind these requirements as stated in the college catalogue, the group will spend a weekly meeting or so on each area of the requirements. Eventually, it hopes to make a recommendation to the curriculum committee. The first area to be investi- gated will be the foreign language requirements. Mehler noted that some of the committee feel there should be no requirement in this field, others that three years of a language should be necessary. He also reported that two or three positions on the committee will be open to petitioners begin- ning today. Anyone in the literary college may obtain forms in Rm. 1220 in Angell Hall. Petitioning will close at noon Wednesday, Oct. 7. days last March to validate the education school's report concern- ing its objectives, administrative structure, academic standing of education school students, faculty qualifications, curriculum and stu- dent teaching opportunities and facilities. "M o s t .NCATE requirements were met before their representa- tives arrived at the University as we knew what they wanted," Ol- son said. NCATE is recognized as the ap- proved accrediting agent for schools of teacher education by the National Commission on Ac- creditation-itself the answer of institutions to the mushrooming of accrediting agencies. Dissatisfaction Dissatisfaction w i t h NCATE from professional quarters has been raised on several points, Ol- son commented. Some circles are worried over state school systems accepting teachers certified by NCATE ac- credited institutions with less scrutiny than teachers of non- accredited institutions. Others argue that NCATE is not broadly representative of enough academic specialties. To this end Olson plans to attend a meeting in Washington of the American As- sociation of Colleges for Teacher Education where the reorganiza- tion of NCATE along more rep- resentative lines will be under consideration. While NCATE is actually' an autonomous body, the AACTE was influential in assisting* it into be- ing and supplies a significant proportion of its funds. Some quarters are leery of the AACTE, Olson noted, because of the pres- sure its money may exert on NCATE's policies. 'U'Facultyl To Give Aid To Niehuss A faculty advisory committee to University Executive Vice-Presi- dent Marvin L. Niehuss was for- mally established Monday by the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs. Formation of the committee wa omitted from yesterday's report of the monthly SACUA meeting, at which an advisory committee to Vice-President for Business ane Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont wa also set up. The group which is to work with Niehuss-the Subcommittee on the Role of the University in Statewide Education -- will be chaired by Prof. W. J. Pierce of the Law School. Prior to Mon- day's SACUA decision, it was F subcommittee of another broad- er group, the Subcommittee on Educational Policies. Prof. Richard Wellman of the Law School, chairman of SACUA revealed the formation of both advisory groups. He also noted that SACUA is in the process of making two other existing com- mittees into formal advisory com- mittees to the vice-presidents fo research and University relations Naming these committees as ac- tual advisory groups Is merely a formal matter, Wellman said, since they already perform most of the functions of advisory groups. These functions center around providing a regular channel through which faculty and ad- ministrators can communicate their ideas on a wide range of problems. -Daily-Ed Langs APA COMPANY PREMIERES THE PREMIERE PERFORMANCE of the 1964-65 season of the University's Professional Theatre Program featuring the Association of Producing Artists, was greeted by many University dignitaries. Above, left to right, University President Harlan Hatcher, his daughter Ann, and Mrs. Hatcher are greeted by PTP director Prof. Robert Schnitzer. The opening night featured the APA in the first American performance of Edwin Piscator's adaptation of "War and Peace," Leo Tolstoy's classic novel. DORMITORIES: Lewis Gives.HoustigFigures. By ROBERT HIPPLER As of a week ago, 832 dormi- tory residents occupied rooms to which the University has added an extra man this fall, Vice- President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis said in a report released yesterday. One hundred forty-eight of the residents were in single rooms which the University has con- verted into doubles, while 684 were in double rooms which the Uni- versity has converted into triples. The converted rooms bave re- sulted from the University's re- cent relocation of 450 students r ho were in temporary housing at the start of the semester. The University accommodated about 350 of those in temporary housing by converting dormitory singles into doubles and doubles into triples. It relocated the re- maining 110 by placing them in rooms which students had reserv- ed but failed to claim. Temporary housing usually ac- commodates about 200 students at r the beginning of the fall semes- ter. Under ordinary circumstances the University is able to relocate almost all of them in rooms which go unclaimed. But this fall, the University admitted about 250 ex- tra freshmen without opening any more housing. As a result, 460 students wound up in temporary housing, and the University was forced to convert - rooms in order to accommodate - them. Earlier this month, Resi- dence Halls Director Eugene Haun revealed that the University, is adjusting rates for those in converted doubles to $10 under the ordinary double rate, and for those in converted triples to $15 below the ordinary triple rate. Lewis' report indicated that P policy the University established this fall-that of not admitting e new graduate students into the dorms-saved the residence hal: from further crowding this fall. Last spring, 212 graduate stu- dents had lived in Prescott-Ty- ler House in East Quadrangle. The University let no new gradu- ate students into the /quadrangle. this fall, though renewing the con- tracts of those who wished to ren.ain. One hundred seventy-five of the 212 graduates elected tc extra men to 135 rooms - 20 singles and 115 doubles. Administration officials do not see any substantial relief of the crowding next year. 'the Univer- sity plans to open the 600-man Cedar Bend housing project on North Campus in the fall of 1965 But administrators do not believe leave Prescott-Tyler. this can accommodate an expect- There are now only 37 graduate ed further increase in freshmen a HOUSINGDATA Number of students in converted rooms 832... ... Set Convocatiro For Later in Fal Advisory Committee Decides To Use Rackham Amphitheatre By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM University President Harlan Hatcher will hold the first of convocations with students in early November. But a student advi committee, helping him with the planning, has not yet finalized format. The advisory group conferred yesterday with the President picked Nov. 5 as a tentative date for the assembly. It will conv for the first time in 40 years, a president and interested students to discuss the role of the University. The assembly will be held in the Rackham Amphitheater, a 1200-student capacity.. Audio, and possibly visual, portions of meeting will be carried into Rack-i Men ...........370 Total number of singles Number converted ............. . 20 Total number of doubles....... 1111 Women 662 54 1260 113 832 Total 1032 74 2371 228 3,975 .4,200 . 212 37 ham Aud, which has an additional 600 seats. The possibilities of closed-circuit television are being investigated although the com- mittee rejected a larger site, Hill Aud to create a more intimate setting, Inter - Fraternity Council President Lawrence Lossing, '65, reported. He chairs the advisory committee. Members The, group includes: Susan Beasley, '65; Mary Spencer, '65; Richard Kraut, '65; Robert Pike, '65; Student Government Council President Thomas Smithson, '65; Sherry Miller, '65 and Lossing. Lossing said the tentative for- mat calls for an opening address by President Hatcher to be fol- lowed by an open-end question. and answer period. Students, with the aid of roving microphones, will be able to throw out questions without topic restriction. However, to give structure to the gathering this year, President Hatcher will confine his . speech to one general area, Lossing said. Three Possibilities The committee is considering three possible orientations which the President might take:' -As a distinguished educator, President Hatcher might view "the role of the university com- munity in the face of social change," touching upon such fields as civil rights activity; -As a "pragmatic administra- tor," he might delve into specific University problems, such as dor- mitory crowding or enrollmeni 'prospects, Lossing said; -As a "moral leader" President Hatcher could view student "aloof-' ness" which he feels is far too widespread a m o n g adolescents today. Undergraduate All three topics will be geared to the undergraduate. President Hatcher said when he announced the convocations last spring that redefinition of the role of under- graduate education is necessary. The idea of a president address- ing the students on school issues is not new. President Hatcher re- portedly told the committee that heads of higher education institu- tions sponsored these gatherings in the early 1900s. At the University, the last president to lead a convocation of this type was Marion Leroy Bur- tofi (1920-25) who spoke at the beginning of each year and a couple times during each term. President Hatcher annually wel- comes freshmen at Hill Aud, ,but, except for special events, rarely' addresses students on other occa- sions. He did present a report of his world trip in 1902 and presided at the University's memorial service' for the late John F. 'Kennedy last fall. The closest precedent to the up- coming student convocation was in the early 1950s. At that time, his n e w administration sponsored convocations to help returning veterans adjust to their new academic life. VietNam Situation 1 rtens SAIGON (M)-Premier Nguyen Khanh's political situation bright- ened somewhat yesterday. A com- promise agreement ended a gen- eral strike in Saigon, the threat of a new antigovernment demonstra- tion faded and provincial hotspots had no fresh eruptions. "Of course we have won,' said Vo Van Tai, secretary-general of the Vietnamese Labor Confedera- tion's Saigon council, in calling off the strike launched by 20,000 workers Monday. "The govern- ment has' been. forced to give in. If they don't keep their word, they know we can turn more thousands into the street." Government negotiators appar- ently held the line against'a labor demand for repeal of a state of emergency regulation officially barring strikes, but yielded on other points. No Lockouts The government announced de- crees banning lockouts and pro- hibiting employers from firing workers while the state of emer- gency prevails. Communications were restored and electric power and water came on Monday n i g h t. Petroleum plants, tobacco and textile factor- ies, dock facilities and municipal buses are expected to be back in normal operation today. Some labor leaders conceded the Communist Viet Cong apparently sought to manipulate the strikers, Trouble Spots Tension was evident at three northern centers, but the , day passed without trouble. Reports persisted that there may be disturbances at Nha Trang, on the South China Sea 190 miles northeast of Saigon. A demonstration said to have been planned for yesterday failed to materialize. Crowds still milled in the streets of Qui Nhon, sa coastal city 260 miles northeast of Saigon, where youths took over the radio station and demanded for the ouster of all ements of the defunct Ngo Dinh Diem's government from Khanh's regime. Army Efforts U.S. army officers sought to cool down several hundred. auto- nomy-minded mountain tribes- men, specially trained for guer- rilla fighting, who slaughtered 17 of their, lowland Vietnamese offi- cers Sunday and temporarily' seized the radio station of Ban Me Thout, 150 miles north of Sai- gon. Government authorities re- claimed the station and several companies of Vietnamese troops held the town by nightfall. Number converted . .. 115 Proposed number in freshman class (June, 1964)....... Actual number in freshman class (August, 1964)........ Graduate students in Prescott-Tyler (1963-4)........ Graduate students in Prescott-Tyler (1964-5)........ students in the house. If the! University had admitted new graduate students, the level would have stayed around 200, officialE have indicated.This probably. would have displaced about 15C more students into temporary. housing this fall, they said. The report reflected the ar. rival of the more than 200 extra freshmen into the residence half in its statistics on freshman class totals. The University had pro- posed a freshman class for thiE fall of 3,975, it said. It finally admitted 4200, and converted dor- mitory rooms to accommodate the extra 225. More women than men are oc- cupying converted rooms, the re- port said. In the women's resi- dence halls, the University has added an extra resident to 167 rooms-54 singles and 113 doubles. In the men's halls, it has added well as relieve the crowding in the present residence halls. Administrators had known that there would be some crowding this fall as early as last spring. But they had not expected it to be as extensive as it was. The University, sticking to its policy of admitting all in-state freshmen it thinks can do the work, found more qualified applicants from Michigan than it had expected. MeN amara Defends U.S., Arms Position DALLAS (P)-Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara said yester- day the United States can now and will in the future be able to "insure the destruction of ')oth the Soviet Union and Communist China, under the worst imagin- able circumstances accompanying the outbreak of war." McNamara answered criticism of American defense capabilities in a prepared speech keynoting the national convention of the American Legion. I CORNELL PSYCHOLOGIST: 'MacLeod Praises Honors Program, IFC Disciplines Member By JEREMY RAVEN the Superior Student, which he describes as a' "clearing house for "The University's psychology de- the exchange of information about partment is without any question honors programs throughout the one of the best in the world," country." according to Prof. Robert MacLeod Such programs, he feels, are of Cornell University, visiting hon- "designed to provoke an oppor- ors }professor at the University tunity for able and well-motivated this year. students to assume a large meas- MacLeod, professor of psychology ure of responsibility for their own and director of the honors pro- education. This involves giving gram at Cornell, is leading an in- students the opportunity to de- terdepartmental honors seminar velop their own interests, with the on "Man's Conception of Him- instructor serving as a guide rath- self" and a graduate course in er than a taskmaster. "Psychological Phenomenology." "Ideally, a good honors student Unlike most professors, Mac- does not need examinations and Leod will require no final exam- grades except as indicators of his ination in his course. "I am op-grdsecp smcarsf nati n is e "I am O own progress. While we have tc posed to examinations," he com- conform to some extent with the ments. "They are pernicious. Theexisting system, our hope in hon- focus the student on preparation ors is always to de-emphasize for the exam rather than on ors is alay says. the subject matter. They have grades as goals," he says. - - -___.=___--' -1- -U- apTeodd oles 'not believe tha' ticn. The University has been willing to undertake adventures ir education. Usually we find that the small colleges take the lead in educational experimentation, but this is one large university which is facing the challenge of mass education in a most constructive way," he says. So far in his stay here, Mac- Leod has had contact only with honors students, and his impres- sion is that they are "top-notch." He feels that laboratory facili- ties are "excellent but terribly crowded" and that the Under- graduate Library is "one of the best I've seen." Finishing a Book In his spare time, MacLeod is trying to finish a book to be titled "Persistent Problems of Psy- chology." He hopes to go back to Africa to work on some cross- Republicanpresidential'cand For dlate Barry Goldwater, who has F orSocial Rule Violations been critical of McNamara's de- fense policies, will address that group tomorrow. The Interfraternity Council Executive Committee disciplined Eight Times Sigma Alpha Mu last night for two violations involving "conduct un- McNamara told Legionnaires the becoming to a fraternity." new Minuteman II ballistic mis- The first violation took place on Sept. 4 when one member of the sile will be more than eight times fraternity was observed with a girl in his room, a "non-communal" as effective as the first model of area where women are not allowed. the weapon. The boy, a sophomore, claimed ignorance of this regulation and He also said present strategicsaid that he was only showing his girlfriend around the house. The forces now include 1,100 bombers - _ with over 500 of them on 15-min- ute alert, and more than 800 readied ICBM's deployed. He also noted that the U.S. navy has 256 Polaris missiles de- ployed in 16 submarines with 25 more subs under construction. Manned Bomber? In regard to charges that the administration plans to phase out the manned bomber as a strategic weannn McNamara said the nres- committee ruled, however, the house was responsible keeping its members informer regulations and gave Sigma pha Mu a suspended fine of The second incident took i Sept. 5, and concerned a p that was registered late and properly chaperoned. IFC dec that the violation was causes confusion o nthe part of a n annointed social chairman rnrar, " Drive _To Alumni, H A nation-wide p r strengthen alumni un and support of the Un announced yesterday PlZnV R.nRF.R.T Mari FOD I