Hatcher promises ' Says Living Units Will Offset Bigness President Tells Graduate Schools To Review Their Curricula By BRUCE WASSERSTEIN , 'University President Harlan Hatcher last night reassured the faculty that the University will seek to extract the bene- fits of bigness while avoiding the hazards of overpopulation. His speech, delivered before the University Senate, ap- peared to ask their help in making trimester the controlling element of growth. Trimester is a valid solution to the problems of cramped facilities, he said. "The wisdom of this move will become in- creasingly apparent as the years unfold." Assurance However, the President went to great ler.gths to assure the faculty that they will not' be harmed by the new calendar. He noted that the trimester U ' r plan would give professors "in- f rese nl S creased flexibility to plan their professional careers and to do Professors their research." Furthermore, Hatcher pointed r out that a faculty member who w I w arr wished-although not expected-to teach all three semesters would "receive extra compensation." The University honored 11 'of its Some faculty members have re- faculty members yesterday for portedly expressed dissatisfaction their achievement and service to with the current pay schedule. the University. President Hatcher also pointed Distinguished Faculty Achieve- i to other measures the University ment Awards of $1,000 each went is taking to alleviate overcrowd- to, five faculty members. They ing. were Professors Kenneth Boulding He noted that the University's of the economics department and branch colleges have been success- director of the Center for Re- ful, and that they can also be used search on Conflict Resolution; for expansion purposes. Ferrel Heady of 'the' political FlnCoegxpcst!xed science department and director Flint College expects to extend of the Institute of Public Adminis- its operations to the freshman and tration; Donald L. Katz of the sophomore levels next fall. engineering college's chemical en- Good Approach gineering department; Reed M. He saw in this move as "another Nesbit of the Medical Scho l's imaginative and effective ap- surgery department; and Theodore proach to the solution of the prob- M. Newcomb of the sociology and lem of extending opportunities for psychology departments. higher education to an increasing Awads number of gifted young people." Swards ' As another step to offset over- Distinguished Service Awards of crowding, the President said that $500 each went to six: Professors University offices are being clear- Caesar R. Blake of the English ed from the central campus area department; L. A. Peter Gosling to make room for literary college of the geography department; expansion. Nora Norman Thomas of the poli- He reported the' announcement tical science department; Paul A. made yesterday by Vice-President Rondell of the physiology depart-:'for Business and Finance Wilbur ment; Martin Sichel of the en- K. Pierpont that three floors in gineering college's aeronautical en- the administration building are gineering department; and Ross J. being moved to two new struc- Wilhem of the business economics tures. department of the business admin- The 65,000 square feet, will be istration school. turned over to the literary college The Distinguished Faculty for faculty offices, classrooms and Achievement Awvards were ,pre-" research in the humanities. entedm for the ninth time. They President Hatcher noted, how- were sponsored by the Alumni ever, that these expansion moves Fund of the University Develop- must not be done in such a way as ment Council. The University Club to give the individual student a of Chicago provided funds for the sense of alienation. Distinguished Service Awards, Rather he stipulated that the which were being presented for University would attempt to coun- the fifth time. ter the overpowering psychological S t effect of bigness by experimenting At Address with projects such as the residence The awards were made at Uni- colleges. versity President Harlan Hatcher's Self-Contained "State of the University" address The self-contained college will to faculty and staff members. give students an opportunity to The awards totalled $8000. identify with a group of students They were presented for -neri- and faculty members hence off- torious service in teaching, re- setting the adverse effects of a search and administration. big school. Its establishment demonstrates the University's deep interest in HT undergraduate education, he said. H aber, a s "Nothing in the experience of the United States in higher edu- cation nor in the experience of the leading nations of Europe" can } show "that we would be better As Accurate off without lour traditional intake of undergraduates in this Univer- sity," the President said. By" JEREMY RAVEN Tx.a , (ZIP Si1rtai Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No.32 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6,1964 SEVEN CENTS EJi1 C LSA To Three Of Admij-.nistration i r :i ' I . 1, I I , i, , r ! i r I I ' Goldwater Would Use VICE-PRESIDENT LEWIS Hall Board Inspections To ,Discuss Proposals,-.' By ROBERT HIPPLER When the PRPlYei . HallB R~d WASHINGTON (JP)-Sen. Barry Goldwater announced last night that if elected President he will ask former President Dwight D. Eisenhower to head a group of experts to visit South Viet Nam and report back on the situation in Southeast Asia. Goldwater's statement, released vv maun nswen n an nara ofby the Republican National Com- discuss a plan allowing this fall's mittee headquarters, topped off upperclass pledges to move into a day spent by most of the ma-i their fraternity,. houses without jor candidates in taking stock and delay, Vice-President for Student checking political ammunition. Affairs James A. Lewis said re- Only Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,' cently. the Democratic vice-presidential nominee. was outsi-de Washington The propc'-al would be aimed at 3lleviating the current residence hall crowding. It was forwarded to housing .officials . three weeks ago by Interfraternity Council President Lawrence Lossing, '65. Lossing's proposal would let pledges above the freshman level out of their residence hall con- tracts. They could then move into theirhfraternity houses as soon as the board gave them permis- sion. Such pledges usually have to honor their year-long contracts and thus cannot move into their houses until the next fall. Ac- cording to the Regents' bylaws, the board has the power to release them from the contracts. Housing officials have speculat-] ed that the vacancies left by these pledges would help relieve the dor- mitory squeeze. At present, the dormitories are holding about 200 more residents than their normal capacity. 111!l11GG w~bVU4JrUGvv a1111,w actively foraging for votes. Convinced Goldwater said he is convinced* that only "through a careful study by the best qualified experts this country has to offer can we meet the situation in South Viet Nam." The Republican candidate said that he would hope that Eisen- hower would be aided on such a fact-finding mission by such men as former Rep. Walter Judd of Minnesota, a key foreign policy man for the GOP; by Adn. Ar- leigh Burke, former chief of naval Ceura.tions and by Gen. Mark WORK CONTINUES ON THE RENOVATION of the area behind the administration building. The Jefferson apartments were torn down here this summer to make way for a new administration build- ing on Thompson St. It will free 65,000 square feet in the current administration building for the use of the literary college. TOTAL OF TEN: At least one other plan could come up for discussion at the board meeting, officials have indi- cated. It would require freshmen with homes in Ann Arbor to live in their homes. Such freshmen currently have a choice between home and the residence halls. This plan would probably not go into effect until next year if approved by the board. The University used a plan similar to this during the crowding following World War II. The board has also invited rep-, resentatives of both Inter-Quad- rangle Council and Assembly House Council to its meeting. The representatives plan to offer the board a joint recommendation on l w fc r c it fo in w ge or by ci so tr s of ne ha 3e lark, ne uofthe top military McCOMB, Miss. () -- Federal at the Hinds County Jail pending aders of World War Ii. Bureau of Investigation agents transfer to the Pike County Jail The Goldwater announcement arrested six men and uncovered at nearby Magnolia. The Goldwtet annoueentra secret arsenal yesterday in a Five More as reminiscent of an Eisenhower concentrated federal-state drive to Moore identified the five ar- xedge, as Republican candidatestpbmigththvrckd Moednifd'heiea- stop bombings that have rocked rested along with Lee as Hilton or President in 1952, to go to Ko- Negro areas of McComb necetDnwy 6 onPu et ea to seek a solution of the Nerra fM~m nrcn Dunaway, 36; John Paul West- onflict then raging in that con- weeks. brook, 20; Charles Avery Wom- nc e g ih u The agents struck as Circuit ack, 26; Gerald Lawrence, 21, and Goldwater said it is "an un- Judge W. H. Watkins, Jr. order- Sterling L. Gilles, 35, all of Mc- ortunate fact that we are at war ed a Pike County grand jury to Comb. n South Viet Nam." make a sweeping inquiry into the Evidence against all 10 men Quiet Day 16 bombings since June. The blasts will be turned over to the Pike Quie Dayhave led Negroes to appeal to County grand jury. Although it was a quiet dayvPresident Lyndon B. Johnson for The FBI said Lee formerly work- enerally, some political sharp- protection. ed at the Army's Aberdeen Prov- hooting ensued over the issue of The arrest of the six brought ing Ground in Maryland. ho should control nuclear weap- to 10 the number taken into cus- Moore said Dunaway, Lawrence ins. tody on federal and state charges and two men arrested last Friday A Republican task force named since last Friday. -Paul Wilson and Billy Earl Wil- y Goldwater issued a report criti- All were charged with illegal son-all were charged with throw- zing President Lyndon B. John- use of explosives under a Missis- ing a bomb into the front yard on for "overextending" his con- sippi law that fixes the maximum of Charles A. Bryant last July 26. 'ol of nuclear weapons and as- punishment for violation at death. ertedly impairing the confidence One More e NATO allies in U.S. willing- At least one more arrest is ex- T ur ey pen ess to defend Europe. pected. Former President Eisenhower, A former army demolitions ex- owever, neither accepted nor re- pert, Emery Allen Lee, 35, was eted the report and said he was one of those picked up in the urns O ver orry the issue of nuclear weapons early morning raids. ontrol had been injected into the Roy K. Moore, special agent in ampaign. charge of the Jackson FBI office, ANKARA 641) - Turkey has A Goldwater aide said later that said Lee was charged, with ille- Kyrenia road on Cyprus to civill isenhower had not been apprised gal possession of explosives, con- Turkish contingent on the island f the statement. But in the past, spiracy and with furnishing and said yesterday. he aide said, Goldwater had dis- arming explosives used in recent These sources said the decisic ussed with Eisenhower what the blasts. a meeting of the National Securit eneral could do in the matter Lee and the other five were Ismet Inol f developing GOP foreign policy, whisked from McComb; to Jack- The Cyprus government of articularly concerning South Viet son, the state capital. Moore saida theCrusaon eTuofi am and NATO. ; they would be held without bond allow the rotation of the Turkish whole Area On the the' hsmd Prefi- id 'Clc . ' 'IXTlli i 'T +ahc+r f ti'F "thy ijean winiam ai aeror e - wome rnan, , resioent literary college and Associate Hatcher remarked, "I believe that the housing situation, with the s Dean William Hays yesterday de- the whole area of graduate work main provision requesting an al- c fended the accuracy of the tri- and training is now due in the teration in residence hall con- c term survey they released last country' as a whole and in this tracts. At present, the contracts Monday. University for a new and search- have a provision stating that rates E Haber and Hays had been asked ing look." .are subject to change during the o to respond to claims by various . The Graduate Schooi "has not contract period. Both IQC and t faculty members that the survey been subjected to the careful an- AHC have passed motions request- c was taken in a haphazard way alytical reappraisal which has ing that this be removed.-g and was not very representative been given to other egments of This summer's $34 dormitory of of students' plans. the educational str cture," he rate increase came after most stu- pa The survey consisted of a ques- said. dents had signed their contracts. N tionnaire given to 6,542 literary college students, of whom roughly SE S E D OR R FO M 25 per cent indicated they intend- SEES NEED FREFORM: ed to enroll for one or both half sessions of the newly-instituted .' third term this sum m er. Q lVLW t ,3 s u e t n t e c l With studesin the col- rkslen Calls for L lege, the response was about two- thirds. By HAROLD WOLMAN Hays said that while the college had intended to reach as many' Senator Everett Dirksen (R-Ill) called for a constitutional con- students as could be sampled in vention to amend the United Nations Charter in an interview with the two days the survey was con- ducted, difficulties or distribution the Daily yesterday. had accounted for the less-than- Dirksen, at the University for a speech 'sponsored by the! full response. Michigan League, criticized the refusal of France, the Soviet Union,! Nevertheless, he said, the sur- and Eastern Europe to pay their share of the UN's bills. Recallingf iderasbly better than.w"It we us- that he had aided the late President Kennedy to p5ass a bond ually have to work with in pro- issue proividing needed funds for the international organization, the jecting enrollments." minority leader noted that the UN was nearly broke again and Haber agreed with Hays, term- something must be done." Facultsmbey "repr ad eitized. Dirk.sen did not propose any solutions. but he did list several the amount of time wasted in the items which should be on the agenda at such a conference. The administration of the survey. One Illinois Republican suggested that the one-nation one-vote principle professor said that "the class be reconsidered, commenting, "I dislike the application of Earl War- IN Constitutional Convention tion in the domestic affairs of sovereign nations, and the nature of the veto power in the Security Council. Dirksen also discussed his party, remarking, "The Republican Party is still basically a conservative party, though I might modify that by saying that it is a moderately conservative party in the sense that we take account of changes." The Illinois Senator observed that "if a voter does not like centralization of power, if he is frugal with respect to public funds, and if he believes in following a firm line with respect to various ideologies such as Communism, then he ought to be a Republican." He then added that he felt Barry Goldwater stood for all these principles. Hails Switch' Dirksen hailed the switch of allegiance of Strom Thurmond to the GOP, calling the South Carolina Senator "a redoubtable Ameri- can, a fellow of great ability." Asked whether Thurmond's image as. a segregationist would hurt his party, the Illinois Senator replied, w .. ^SrrJi>,, ve. ..:.:. v.:.:.: