NEW FORMATS FOR TERM PAPERS See Editorial Page £t Ua Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom ~~E~aitP FLURRIES High 29 Low--23 Partly cloudy and colder VOL. LXXV, No. 78 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1964 SEVEN CENTS, SIX PAGES Heyns Classi f ies Enrollment Hike To Include 400 New Freshmen No Large Facility Expansion Seen In spite of a record enrollment of 30,900 planned for next fall, the freshman class in Ann Arbor will increase by only. 400, Vice- President for Academic Affairs Roger W. Heyns said yesterday. An additional 200 freshmen in Flint plus 1200 upperclass and graduate students will account for the University's 1800 extra students over this year's 29,103. The number of freshmen has particular bearing on the housing problem as all freshmen must live in the dormitory system. Director of Housing Eugene Haun said last night that he has not yet received this enrollment figure from the Office of Academic Affairs. To Require Greek Recommendation Forms Group Asks Submitting of Alumni Data By PHYLLIS KOCH The Student Government Coun- cil Membership Committee is now requiring fraternities and sorori- ties to submit their alumni recom- mendation forms as part of their membership selection statements. No deadline has been set for the forms. The requirement was disclosed yesterday when William Burns, '65, chairman of the committee, told a meeting of Panhellenic As- sociation that, the committee wanted the form itself, or acom- plete literal quotation of the form. Included should be an interpre- tation of how the information on the recommendation forms isr used, he said. * * * * * 1100 'Sit In' * at * * * Administration ACTIVITIES BOARD TAKES ACTION: Oust Roosevelt 'Torch' Editorial U SECRETARY RUSK .n., Russi .a Meet on UN UNITED NATIONS () - The United States and Russia discuss- ed the United Nations financial is- sue in . depth yesterday, then agreed that Secretary-General U Thant should conduct further ne- gotiations among UN members. In reporting this after a three- hour luncheon meeting between Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko, U.S sources showed some optimism about Russian in- terest in solving the deep UN fi- nancial crisis. Rusk declined comment about authoritative reports that the So- viets had offered to pay some money-amount not stated-into a UN fund. However, Rusk said the talks had been along "constructive" lines even though the problem has not yet been solved. He indi- cated Thant would be dealing with it because the UN money question involves many members, not just the United States and Russia. U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stev- enson, who stayed at the Gromyko luncheon an additional half hour, said there had been "preliminary talks on all aspects of the peace- keeping problem and perhaps the secretary-general will take an ini- tiative very soon." Stevenson was reported to have found the session "useful" and the talks with the Russians "good." Rusk said disarmament also was a discussion topic at the aft- ernoon meeting. A spokesman said no further Rusk-Gromyko talks have been scheduled at this time. 4Haun added that the figure io "one of the keys" to housing planning, alongkwith the number of students who will return t the dorms. Concerning other adjustments Heyns said that no new facilities on a large scale will be createC for the new students. "We believe that we will have the facilities tc handle them," he declared. New Classroom Space Heyns added that the three floors of the Administration Building that have been planned as new classroom space will not be available until 1966. While new instructors are being hired, the rate of staff increase is the same as it was last year Heyns said. However, the Univer- sity is trying to increase this rate because there has been a lag in the pupil-teacher ratio in the last few years,. he added. Commenting on this year's bud- get request, Heyns said. that about half of the asked budget increase was caused by the increased en- rollment of the University. In terms of actual components, how- ever, this year's budget -equest is very similar to last year's, he added. Go to Lansing Every year University represen- tatives go to Lansing to present salary, enrollment and research needs here. While in the past Tours Closing The University is still taking reservations for $128 bus pack- age tours to Pasadena and ten- tative reservations for $192 train tours, but air accommo-' -dations are no longer available. An offer which would have provided the University with 750 more air package tours for students, staff and faculty will not be taken, Maurice Rinkel, auditor of student organiza- tions, said last night. years the research image of the University was emphasized in the budget requests, this year the en- rollment problem has been the major aspect, Heyns said. This isunot because the enroll- ment situation at the University has changed drastically in the past year, but because pressure from high schools has become the most important problem of edu- cation in the state, Heyns said. "The statewide need has given greater publicity to the enrollment aspect of the University's budget request," he said. In past years, when research was the theme of the budget re- quest, the state was much more concerned over economic develop- ment as a major problem, Heyns added. At the same time, Panhel took e action on recommendation forms o in an unrelated move. A meeting between members of Panhel Ex- ecutive Council and invited soror- e ity alumnae of the Ann Arbor a area is scheduled for Dec. 7 at the I Michigan League. t . To Discuss System At this meeting, the present recommendation system will be discussed and Panhel members will present their views and poli- cies to the alumnae. The purpose of the meeting is "to inform," Panhellenic Presi- tdent Ann Wickins, '65, said. "We want to start with a small nucleus of concerned people and work from there," she said. Some sorority women were con- cerned about the influence of their nationals on the membership issue. Sorority women cited the problem that some nationals ob- ject strongly to local chapters submitting their recommendation, forms. Discounts Local Autonomy Burns, however, discounted local autonomy in the recommendation issue. "This concerns an addition to the original membership state- ments previously submitted," he said. Burns feels that these forms are a necessary addition since they are "a binding factor for member- ship qualification in many soror- ities." Some forms include racial and religious information and can,a therefore, be relevant to discrim- mation, he said. In May, 1960, Student Govern- ment Council adopted the regula- tion on membership of student or- ganizations, prohibiting all dis- criminating practices. At this time SGC also established its Member- ship Committee. In December, 1960, SGC re- quired that all student organiza- tions submit membership state- ments. A deadline for the state- ments was set for Jan. 17, 1962. All of the student organizationst complied with the deadline. How- ever, many of the statements weref inadequate because they did nott contain quotes from the constitu- tions, pertaining to membership qualifications.r Thus on Oct. 23, 1963, thev Membership Committee requestedr fraternities and sororities to sub- mit actual quotations of their re-2 spective clausesnconcerning mem-t bership selection. The membership selectionf clauses have been solicited by SGCc under a mandate it received last year to investigate affiliates to9 see that they were not using ra- cial or religious criteria in pledg- ing new members.t By MERLE JACOB The members of the editorial board of the Torch, the newspa- per of Chicago's Roosevelt Uni- versity have been removed from their positions by the Student Activities Board. Their removal was suggested by a committee which had been set up by the SAB to investigate the circumstances under which the Torch had published an article on the "unofficial firing" of President Robert J. Pitchell and a reported $700,000 debt of the university. The article which started the controversy was a bulletin on page three of the Torch's No- vember 16 issue which stated that the president's administrative power had been given to the Ad- ministrative Council which isE made up of all the deans of the. university. Issue Confiscated The issue containing the bulle- tin was confiscated by the ad- ministration and returned four days later when the Torch edi- tors agreed to publish a special insert which would contain the statements of the president, chair- man of the Administrative Coun- cil and chairman of the Board of Trustees. The papers were finally released on Tuesday, November 19; with a special four'page supplement ex- plaining what had happened over the weekend. On Wednesday the six students on the editorial board were noti- fied by Pitchell that they had been suspended from all student activities until the investigating committee made a full report to the SAB. Turn in Report At a meeting of the SAB Mon- day night, the committee turned in its full report, Judi Halprin,, editor-in-chief of the Torch, said in a phone call to The Daily. The report suggested that: -The editor and editorial board be removed from their positions; -Pitchell remove his suspen- sion so that the students could work on other student activities; --Judy Halprin be allowed to keep her scholarship. Violate Canon Their removal from the Torch was centered around the question of violating the Roosevelt canons of journalism. Under the canons, editors of the Torch are not re- quired to reveal their sources ex- cept in a closed session. Miss Halprin has refused to reveal her confidential sources as she feels "that ethics The SAB final ported and u ment. The agree report their media peal t] Faculty Committee Decides T( Residence-College More Land By ROBERT HIPPLER The faculty committee planning the residential college has decided to give the proposed living-learn- ing unit more room to operate, Associate Dean Burton D. Thuma of the literary college, head of the faculty planners, announced last night. Thuma spoke at an open ques- tion-and-answer discussion of the college at the Michigan Union. He explained that in lecent weeks, the faculty committee, which in- cludes the dozen members who will form the nucleus of the col- lege's teaching staff, had decided that the space tentatively allotted to the college was too small. Three weeks ago, when the com- mittee saw the site plans of the college for the first time, it dis- covered the college was allotted only half the space many of them had assumed it would occupy. A second residential college, it was explained, would be located on the other half of the site. Land Available The committee met with ad- minsitrarors, who told it that more land was available if needed. After conferring further with site planners, the architect and mem- bers of the University's plant de- partment, the committee decided in a special meeting Tuesday night to plan only one residential col- lege for the entire site origin- ally designated for two colleges. Thus there is now available for the 1200-student college about twice the space allotted before. The planners do not, however, in- tend to use the entire space for the college as presently planned, Thuma said. They will probably choose either of two alternatives: -Reserve any space not needed for th sion o -E from studer ating tire d Dur ldenti severa favor ings o the cu --ET than ulty h Englis the cui ma s course by giv compo course -T they a ty pla becaus commi Berkeley Building Instructors Board Plan Strike there is a higher code ofInS mpathy involved than Roosevelt's." report was adopted by the Students Singt, d and was sent to Pitchell for tudnt Sud d tapproval. Pitchell was re- Teachers Hold Class dly out of town yesterday nable to be reached for com- By ROBERT BENDELOW Torch editorial board dis- Some 1100 students took over d with the findings of the the administration building of the 'and issued a statement of University of California at Berke- views to the Chicago news ley last night in a sit-in demon- . They have no plans to ap- stration against the threatened Their removal. aexpulsion of four of their leaders. Berkeley teaching assistants have mapped plans for a sympa- thy strike; to take place in the oGive "T'a near future. They threatened to strike immediately if any disci- plinary action was taken against the demonstrators. Protest leader Mario Savio told a rally which preceded the sit-in, le college for future expan- "We're not going to break this up r recreation space; until we get what we want." nlarge the size of the college Set Up Classes the presently planned 1200 Inside the locked building, pro- its to 15-1800 students, cre- testors set up classes in such sub- sufficient need for the en- jects as literature and Spanish. )ubled area. . The classes were conducted by Details Ideas sympathetic teaching assistants. ing the discussion of the res- The fourth floor of the adnminis- al college, Thuma detailed tration building, Sproul Hall, was .1 ideas which have gained set up as a study hall. For those during the first few meet- who did not wish to study, a mo f faculty membersplanning vie.projector was in opera oto .rriculum of the. college: Folk singer Joan Baez, who help- nphasis on English in other ed lead the protestors into the English courses. Some fac- building, led singing in another ave favored elimination of room. Sympathizers sent food In h as a separate subject from to the students in the building. rriculum of the college, Thu- A protest leader told ThemDaily aid. Instructors in other by telephone ,that e~en full pro- s would compensate, for this fessors were inside the building, ing increased attention to teaching impromptu sessions In sition and grammar in "constitutional law, civil disobed- work. "ence and non-violence." he elimination of lectures as Follows Noon Rally re now constituted. Facul The sit-in, following a noon nners are against lectures rally, occupied the first four floors ;e they limit student-faculty of Sproul Hall. The protestors did unication, Thuma explained, not obstruct traffic while the building was open, and left door- S.v ways and corridors open. y .., Campus police locked the doors '** at 10 p.m. Ann Arbor time and gave students, one hour to clear :T the building. But at 12:45 a.m., t . {Ann Arbor time, leaders inside the r' tbuilding said "only a couple" of students had left and the police University officials warned the protestors early this morning that all were subject to arrest. De- u ,>'"'. .,::>'' r.Na'fclaring themselves to be "the - Free University of California in Ssession," the protestors replied by vowing that they would have to be carried out of the building. The teaching assistants have planned a strike for Friday. How- - - ;ever, the date of the strike may be extended to Monday dependent upon administration reaction to '.' .- the demonstration, and other, as yet unnamed, issues. Economics department teaching assistants said they would affili- ate with the American Federation sidential college decided )f Teachers to put more force be- , room to operate. Under hind their demands. mmodate the college now The demonstration was orga- odat he college wnized by the Free Speech Move- second residential college ment (FSM), a coalition of polI- first college will occupy tical groups formed to protest re- 1 and 2. Area 3 will be strictions on Berkeley political ac. area depicted is between tivity. It was held to force the ad- ministration to accede to three demands placed before it by the FSM: -"Arbitrary and vengeful charg- es against leaders and organiza- tions must be dropped; 00 ra m -"There must be no new pun- ishments for protesting adminis- tration policies; - "Immediate and substantial countries that participate improvements in the regulations ast. The group is presently must be made." n. Savio and the three others were notified this week that they would each country on a one to be summoned before the faculty e companies in the United committee on student conduct for the program, so that one violation of university regulations. r each one that leaves. All participated in an Oct. 1-2 Congo Rebel Head Says Belgians Killed Hostages KHARTOUM, Sudan (A)-The self-styled defense minister of the Congolese rebels, Gaston Soumialot, yesterday disputed eyewitness accounts of the murder of white hostages in Stanleyville. He claimed that Belgian paratroopers actually massacred the victims they were sent to save. Soumialot, on the run from his Chinese Communist-sponsored revolt, also charged at a news conference here that the United States was committing genocide in his, WU StCouncil To Vote O n Possibility of USNSA Referendum t: c a i R homeland. Although Soumialot and about 200 other Congolese rebels have turned up in Sudan, this country's foreign minister Mohammed Ah- med Mahgoub said during the day that his government has no plans to permit establishment of Con- golese rebel bases. He commented in a separate in- terview on widespread reports that this northern neighbor of the Congo would become a logistics and training center for Chris- tophe Gbenye's so-called Congo- lese People's Republic. "I don't think it is the inten- tion of my government to use part of its territory for military opera- tions in the Congo," he said. The bearded Congo rebel leader, addressed Sudanese and foreign newsmen in a smoke-filled Khar- toum hotel room. He said he was ust passing through Sudan en route to Europe and the United Nations to "enlighten public opinion about American crimes." Steelworkers Ask More Pay security, increased wages and greater employment loom as key demands of the United Steel- workers, AFL-CIO, in forthcom- ing contract talks with the basic steel industry. The' 33-man executive board of the USW drafted these and other recommendations during a pri- vate two-hour meeting yesterday, the Associated Press learned. Other recommendations included: -Earlier retirement (now set at 65); -Improved grievance proced- ures with local unions given the right to strike should there be no improvement; -Provisions against "arbitrary disciplinary action in the name of safety," and improved medical and life insurance plans. By JUDITH WARREN Wayne University's Student - Faculty Council tomorrow night will consider a motion for a ref- erendum vote on whether or not Wayne should continue its mem- bership in the United States Na- tional Student Association. The motion, having been tabled at the last meeting of the Student- Faculty Council in October, for lack of specific information about the referendum, is being sponsored by the School of Business Admin- istration Student Council.. "The chances of the motion 1. Grant Program HIs Unlaw a RICHMOND O)A federal ap- passing are limited because many of the students on the Student- Faculty Council are directly in- volved in the activities of USNSA," Sue Orrin, '65, chairman of Stu- dent Government Council's US- NSA committee, said yesterday. 'Open Question' However, representatives from Wayne say that it is an "open question." "The reason that we are not really sure if the Student-Faculty Council will decide to hold the referendum is that we don't really know what the final proposal will be," Larry Glazer, member of the Student-Faculty Council, said. The Student Council of Mon- teith College, a branch of Wayne, is expected to offer a substitute proposal, asking that 15 per cent of the student body at Wayne sign a petition saying that they sup- port withdrawal from USNSA, servative" member of Wayne's Young Republican group, Miss Orrin added. The controversy now raging at Wayne is quite similar to the one that occurred here in the winter of 1962-63 when BOO fought a loosing battle in the campaign to have the University disaffiliate from USNSA. Statewide Attempt At that time, there were rum- ors that the referendum here was a manifestation of a statewide attempt, including Wayne and Michigan State University, to withdraw from USNSA. But, due to the defeat of BOO, any plans that had been made for a mass Michigan withdrawal were drop- ped, Miss Orrin said. "I think that one of the rea- sons for the defeat of BOO was that the students here did not feel that there was a suitable alterna- THE FACULTY PLANNERS of the re Tuesday night to give the college more previous plans, area 1 above was to acco being planned, while 2 was to hold as not yet in the planning stage. Now, the most or all of the combined space of7 allotted for recreational facilities. The North and Central campus. SCIENCES, ENGINEERING: IAESTE Promotes Exchange Pr By MARK GUDWIN The International Association for the Exchange of Students for Technical Experience (IAESTE) is a group that arranges to have students trained in foreign countries in the natural and physical sciences and in engineering. IAESTE organizes a summer exchange for students with back- grounds in these sciences each year. The students travel to another IAESTE for each student they train. The are primarily from Europe and the Near E trying to expand its Latin America program IAESTE sends students to and from one basis. This means that there must be States that are willing to participate in student can train in the United States fo