Ohio State..... Wisconsin ..... 28 Purdue .......19 Illinois ........ 26 Michigan State 24 Notre Dame ... 281 Alabama.....17 1 Arkansas .....17 Indiana (Pa.) 3 3 Iowa..........14 UCLA ........ 7 Northwestern.. 6 Stanford...... 6 Florida .......14 Wichita St..... 0 Slippery Rock Y C COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOR WASHTENAW See Editorial Page Y r e Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Datit MOSTLY SUNNY High-65 Low-40 Gradual warming trend VOL. LXXV, No. 49 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1964 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES :tl1f:. ". tiS.">'b!".'i' ::' '::::tiY."'.'T:Y::" 41J::":'."::{.""t:::'1.S''Ji:L".L::'::^ ": }:?:"f " ?::". tt:"4.1::: 1: 1 T :C: ..}.. 4.. . . ..4. JLV: :.V: ;. Jf: .1y ..f..4 i4:44..h1 ..1 ." ...... ......................tiNO:i..........4.................1.... ................................. .: . i ti N . j:j i~f 11 f:{ NX: ";iti; :lr" y \"ti i tt ati j. h State School Cr By MARCY PELLY When the University recently entered a $55.7 million appro- priation request with the state legislature, it listed salary in- creases and additional staff ac- quisitions as top-priority items. A s u r v e y of department chairmen at, the other nine state-supported schools has re,- vealed that they share with University officials the concern the student enrollment surge in Michigan is outpacing the hir- ing of qualified faculty. These educators echo the statements of officials here that overcrowded' classrooms and overworked teachers are hampering the educational abil- ity of institutions-throughout the state. And like officials here they can supply only one answer: the allocation of state funds in unprecedented quantities. Enrollment Surge The "post war baby boom" strikes Michigan with full force next year when the majority of people born in 1947 will be en- tering college.An increase of 14-17,000 students is expected to hit the state-supported col- lege campuses. This will, raise total enroll- ment in the 10 schools to about 165,000. Total college enroll- ment in Michigan, including religious -and private schools will surpass 229,000. At Eastern Michigan Univer- sity in Ypsilanti, where the present enrollment is 7500, Prof. Hoover :H. Jordan, chair- man of the English department, predicts the freshman class will climb to 2000 students. Faculty Increase Despite this increase, he and other chairmen there foresee few staff additions. Perhaps a few will be made for the entire school. By comparison, the Univer- sity here tries to add one teach- er for every 1 4student increase. Finding qualified problem shared by schools. The educa Prof. Ralph Nash, ac man of the English d at Wayne State Un Detroit to Prof. Prigers, chairman of lish department at Michigan University mazoo, complain of petition for personne dustry and other inst Staff Raidin Jordan pinpoints "serious" competition isis Revealed 'UN May Postpone staff is a offices, small classes, a mixi- y all the mal teaching load with plenty tors, from of research time and a greater Aing chair- salary than the smaller state departnient schools can afford. liversity in Prof. George Reitz,chairman Say Nations To Give U.S., Russia Frederick of the physics department at f the Eng- Ferris S.tate College in Big Time*St e ieover D e t Western Rapids, complains about the I To Settie ispute e r ues in Kala- teaching levels at his' institu- B stiff com- tion. Most state schools have a By The Associated Press el from in- standard 12 hour teaching re- UNITED NATIONS-A majority of United Nations members are tutions. uire nt, but the'rFerris load expected to respond affirmatively to a poll by Secretary-General U Similar Predicament Thant asking whether they think the Nov. 10 meeting of the General n in Cali- The smaller schools all seem Assembly should be postponed. to share this concern, although The purpose of a postponement would be to give Russia and the the larger schools have smaller United States time to work out their dispute over UN peacekeeping teaching loads. dues. Forty-one nations have already requested that the meeting be Prof. C. B. Mead, chairman put off. Thant's poll is in response to their requests. of the English department of The U.S. has called for a showdown on whether the Soviet Union - Michigan StateUcaniverity, say should lose its General Assembly vote for nonpayment of back dues , :'; hertecer aryaniehoi-far UN peacekeeping in the Congo maximum which about parallels an teMdeEast. RushiaColds Th i s he and the Middle East. Russia holds This is also the requirements here. U.- iti h the position that the peacekeeping fered by most California insti- operations are illegal, violating tutions, the educators note. the UN charter. Crisis Noted Withdrawal The extent of the faculty W r b sbrought public Many delegates fear that a U.S.- Sproblem Iwas bogtto pbi attention this summer when Russia showdown at the opening .~two instructors at Eastern . cheduledii;session might result in ' a Soviet ichigantUnversity rsign withdrawal from the UN. v because of "intolerable teaching The Russians, the United States conditions." WASHINGTON (P) - Patrick and Thant all had comment on the Faculty at that time criticrzed Gordon Walker, Britain's new for- payments dispute yesterday. the heavy teaching loads, the ein secretary, is deb ee o President Lyndon B. Johnson 1 35teaher-tudnt rtioand for the first meeting between the 1:35 teacher-student ratio and . .reiterated the U.S. position in a the 40-man recitation sections Johnson administration and the statement yesterday in observance his staff was being burdened Labor government. of the UN's 19th anniversary: with. The decision by Prime Minister "The United Nations faces a real One of the resigning instruc- Harold Wilson to send his No. 1 crisis unless all its members can; tors, Stewart R. Mott indicated foreign policy aide to Washington agree to bear a fair share of the: then there was widespread dis- immediately after his narrow elec- costs." satisfaction on the staff. ion victory mdicated that the Pravda One of the big difficulties at Labor government wants to get As Johnson spoke, the Commun-1 tudents- the state schools in holding key down to business on a number of ist Party organ Pravda called UN find the faculty is the comparative de- international issues as soon as peacekeeping operations a "cover! nd teach cline in salary levels, these edu- possible. for colonial aggression." Though cators say. Unwilling Pravda repeated the Soviet re-z Salary Competition Though State Department spe- fusal to pay the $55 million the that many One department head at Cen cialists are unwilling to list all U.S. says it owes, it did not repeat! sting from tal Michigan University n topics, they mentioned the fol- throgh- Mout Peasnt ite anexa loV in man isue whch ndobt-the Russian threat to pull out of f thoug- MuntPlesan cits a exm- owig min isue whch ndobt-the UN if deprived of its vote in Ple of a professor he lost to a edly will be discussed during the the General Assembly for not pay- e offering junior college. Reason: the Monday-Tuesday conferences: ing the assessments. as private See DISCUSS, Page 2 1 -A serious assessment of the In a speech yesterday, Thant .. <. new world situation in the wake warned that a solution to the dis- .of the ouster of Nikita Khrush- pute over peacekeeping assess-! chev as Soviet premier and the ments is necessary if the UN is to, detonation of China's first nuclear avoid returning mankind "to the bomb. same kind of situation which per- -A review of such trouble spots mitted two world wars." l_1 TV as Cyprus, the Malaysia-Indonesia EI &"AA PA LPii \-Associated Press SEN. BARRY GOLDWATER made his fifth campaign swing through President Lyndon B. John- son's home state of Texas yesterday. He plans one more trip here next week before the Nov. 3 elec- tion. Earlier in Washington Goldwater sired the report of his "Space, Science, Atom Task Force," calling for a stepped-up space exploration program. i I - I i GOP Candidates Stress Science 3 - G is at th he th no re m th Goldwater Hits the contributions of our most bril- liant minds in scientific research Space Programs and development." Also, Goldwater said, he will propose "suitable acknowledgment WASHINGTON (M)-Sen. Barry to scientists working in govern- oldwater protested yesterday ment laboratories on classified at the Johnson administration projects and unable to publish the evidencing no enthusiasm for result of their work because the omic-powered space travel which national interest requires secrecy." said "may prove to be the key Goldwater said there are areas at unlocks the way to the stars." in science where government The Republican presidential should take the lead, such as re- minee coupled that with his search directed toward better un- peated demand for abandon- derstanding of disease and im- ent of a U.S. crash man-on- provement of the nation's health. e-moon program. Goldwater Michigan's college s the problem is to: funds to house an them well. fornia. He explains t new colleges are sta scratch, raiding staff out the country. They reportedly ari inducement's such a .: :r- {{i":""y"+"bi:":".CIS"":i:^'sdvi3a-:L"Xfi:":"}:v. .i;{,::-:5?' Y "r:Sii"""";":" f{y,. , ..t..t.. ..r ....................:. .L :,'. i: ti's: . .... .... ........................... ...... ...w .v :..................................a............................... . .. stressed that exploration of space "in the immediate neighborhood of our planet has a much more' direct bearing on our safety" and should come first. He urged that exploration of the moon and the planets be under- taken in cooperation with Ameri- ca's allies rather than the Com- munists. Private Research He called for a vigoroust ub- CONTRACT PLEDGE: Congress Initiates N( By BRUCE WASSERSTEIN I enrolls in the program in good! faith," because students remain Each student in advanced Re- unaffected by the provision un- serve Officer Training Corps less a direct violation of terms is courses here must now sign a involved. contract pledging that he will The ROTC bill passed by Con-I be called to active duty if he re- gress includes three other provi- fuses his commission upon grad- sions which affect students here. uation or if he wilfully evades' other terms of his ROTC contract. It increases monthly retainer Lt. Col. Donald C. McNair, pay for all upperclass ROTC stu- chairman of the military science dents from $27 to $40-50. ROTC department, announced this yes- students have been entitled to re- terday, explaining that Congress sive the higher pay starting Oc- inserted a provision for such a tober 13 when President Lyndon insrte a rovsio fo suh aB.Johnson signed the bill into contract into the ROTC Vitaliza- law tion Act of 1964 to insure that law. the ROTC program would not be The bill initiates a scholarship abused through students violat- program for Army and Air Force ing provisions without sufficient students. To be launched next fall, reason. , 0 the program is similar to one now being used in the Navy. Under If a student leaves the program the program, 4000 Army and 4000 due to circumstances beyond his Air Force ROTC cadets will get control such as academic or fi- monthly retainer pay and pay- nancial difficulties, he will not be ment of tuition, book costs and bound to the new provision, Mc- laboratory fees. Recipients must Nair added, commit themselves to a minimum He said that the new provision of four years of active duty serv- "does not affect the man who ice. dispute, Southeast Asia, the Con- go, and perhaps others. The bill also introduced a two _Anderhanseoere.s. o year ROTC program primarily de- trade problems, ranging from signed for transfer students who trade with Communist nations to have never had ROTC, McNair the slow progress being made in said. Students in the two year pro- tariff - cutting negotiations. The gram will have to substitute a six future of the Common Market will to eight week period of summer certainly come up in the talks. training for the first two years of Complex basic ROTC training. -The entire complex of nuclear armament, including the multi- lateral force project, the 1961 Displa Prize Nassau agreement and the pros- pects on the on-again-off-again disarmament talks in Geneva. Grand Prize-Delta Upsilon The Labor Party has never been Fraternities-Delta Upsilon enthusiastic toward the mixed- Second--Theta Chi manned fleet and is now under- Third-Chi Phi stood to prefer that the fleet con- Sororities-Alpha Gamma Delta sist of less than the 25 ships the So ndies-AGma Delta United States proposed. London Second--Sigma Delta Tau also suggests that land-based Third-Kappa Delta nuclear weapons and airplanes Men's Halls-Huber House (SQ) carrying such weapons should be Second-Gomberg (SQ) added to the project. Third-Wenley (WQ) Labor also announced prior to Women's Halls- the elections that it would rene- Oxford-Cheever gotiate the Nassau pact in which Second-Oxford Co-ops the United States agreed to sell to Third-Mosher Hall Britain Polaris missiles for its nuclear submarines. 1 i { t 1 KI.C. .aA..,1..t ,, u ,u'b'ip, a- lic-private partnership in scien- 0 Q To Vat tific' research and development to Inpursue peaceful uses of the atom Oto assure America "fi'eedom in 'On n Nlaspace." Goldwater said too often federal government has neglect- WASHINGTON MP)-The Fed- ed the technological capabilities eral Mediation Service said yes- of "our own great industrial en- terday a new settlement offer it terprises." considers "sound and equitable" Goldwater gave these views in will be submitted to a vote today a report prepared in consultation of one of the two unions involv- with his "space, science and atom ed in the 104-day-old Detroit task force" headed by Adm. Lew- newspaper strike. is L. Strauss, former chairman of Printing Pressmen's Local 13 will the Atomic Energy Commission. vote on the offer at 1:30 p.m. in While Goldwater stressed a need Detroit. for more attention to the poten- Negotiations between the pub- I tials of the atom in space explora- lishers of the two newspapers in- tion, he did not detail how he volved-the Detroit Free Press and considers the Johnson adminis- the Detroit News-and Paper Han- tration is showing lack of en- dlers Union Local 10 are continu- thusiasm in this aspect. ing, the mediation service said. Restore Inpetus The announcement made by Goldwater said the American William E. Simkin, director of the patent system has hamstrung in- service, said details are being dustry by depriving it and research withheld pending results of the laboratories of their deserved ratification vote. fruits. The GOP presidential nom- The mediation talks with both inee said he would "propose leg- sides have been underway here islation and regulations which will since Thursday. stimulate rather than discourage Humphrey Hits GOP Position DETROIT ()--The Democratic party deployed one of its biggest guns yesterday to help the Michi- gan gubernatorial campaign of Rep. Neil Staebler. Democratic vice presidential candidate Hubert Humphrey barn- stormed across Detroit and inta Hamtramck, plugging for Stae- bler, Sen. Philip Hart and a whole slate of national and state Dem- ocrats. Humphrey repeatedly praised Staebler as one of the chief en- gineers of the present Michigan Democratic party. Humphrey concentrated on the social legislation of the Kennedy- Johnson administration. On a television taping session in Detroit, he revealed that a task force of economists is loo:ing into the possibility of linking Social Security payments to the cost of living. Calling Sen. Barry Goldwater's philosophy outmoded, Humphrey declared that the Arizonan voted against the three "great issues of conscience" to come before the U.S. Senate in the past decade. These issues, he said, were the censure of the late Republican Sen. Joseph McCarthy of Wiscon- sin, the ratification of the lim- ited nuclear test ban treaty and the civil rights bill. Roiimey Views Help of Research SAULT STE. MARIE (M)-Gov. George Romney told northern Michiganders yesterday their area is improving economically under his administration and has new industrial potential. The governor whipped through seven cities on a day-long flying tour that included his only re- election campaign stops in the Upper Peninsula. House Speaker Allison Green and Meyer Warshawsky, Republi- can candidates for secretary of state and attorney general, re- spectively, accompanied him. Spur Industry The governor told residents that $333,000 in research projects had produced many results: -'-"We've got enough red pine out here to start a telephone pole and guard rail industry instead of importing them from the southern states;" -"Enough pulp is available to support a paper mill in the eastern Upper Peninsula;" --"'New processes developed at Michigan Tech for producing iron ore pelletts and new tax advant- ages, can aid the sagging mining industry;" --"Test firings indicate a rocket-launching station would be practical for the Keweenaw Penin- sula." Romney said the state hopes to bolster the winter sports business with a "Water Winter Wonder- land" slogan on Michigan license plates. Toll Question He also announced that a five- man commission headed by former Atty. Gen. Frank Millard of Flint will study re-financing and lower- ing of tolls on the Mackinac Bridge. Questioned several times about legislative reapportionment, Rom- ney declared that suits are being pressed which have as one aim re- storing more representation to the sparsely-populated Upper Penin- sula. WINS LITTLE BROWN JUG: -~ ,'Michigan Checks Minnesota Rall y, 19-12 By TOM ROWLANDE Associate Sports Editorj Michigan held off a kicking-till-the-end Minnesota offensive' rally in the closing minutes and brought home the Little Brown Jug for the first time in five years here yesterday-but it took all the defensive effort the Wolverines could muster to pull out a 19-12 victory. The Wolverines struck for an early touchdown and field goal while completely dominating the first half but then had to cope with a revitalized Gopher attack after the intermission. After relinquishing a safety and seeing the Wolverines tally again in the third period to set the score at 19-0, Minnesota marched 80 yards for one six-pointer and then chalked up another on a 91-yard pass interception. With the closing minutes ticking off, the Gophers once again knocked at Michigan's goal line door, but the Wolverine defense jelled on a fourth and goal to go from the three with just over, three minutess to play.t Winning Trail The win was a jump back onto the victory trail for the Wol-, verines, who ended up on the losing end of a 21-20 decision to Purdue last week. Michigan is now 4-1 for the season with a 2-1 By CHARLIE TOWLE Contributing Sports Editor "Whew!f" Football Coach Bump Elliott mopped his face with a towel as he greeted reporters in the dressing room following yesterday's win over Minnesota; "We were really fortunate to win that one." Elliott's relief over winning the game was genuine, because up to the five minute, two second mark of the fourth quarter Michigan and NBC-TV had dominated to the point of dullness. In a Jam "We really got ourselves into a jam," he said, referring to the 10-minute stretch of cliff-hanging, football which . followed the 91- yard TD interception by the Goph- ers' senior halfback Kraig Lof- quist. Michigan only ran six more plays from scrimmage in two se- ries of 'downs as the fired up .:; S..in.