:U' Growth: Expands the Status Quo 1964 Enrollment and Projected Increases (Graduate Students Included) Percent of Increase By ROBERT rIPPLER and WILLIAM BENOIT While increasing in size be- Whl nraigi ieb-,tween now and 1975, the Univer- sityplans to maintain the status quo in the characteristics of its student body, the proportions of its faculty and the emphases of its operations, a report released yesterday by the Office of Aca- demic Affairs indicates. Subject to review and evaluation by the faculty and the adminis- tration, the report charts "desired growth"--i.e. increases commen- surate with present facilities, ex- pected funds and population pres- sures - for all 17 University schools. Included in the report are plans to maintain the following ratios the same as at present in spite of growth: in-state to out-state stu- dents, students to faculty, grad- uates to undergraduates. In ad- dition, the report foresees neglig- ible changes in the rate of re- search to nonresearch operations. Outlined If the University achieves the desired growth outlined in the report total enrollment will jump from the present level' of 29,103 to 41,797 in 1970 and 50,186 by 1975. That is a total increase from 1964 to 1975 of 72 per cent. The report noted that its esti- mates -and projections may be al- tered if Michigan follows through with its plan to submit a joint budget increase with other schools in the near future. However, in growing at this rate, the University would merely do its share in educating the booming student population of Michigan, the report's figures in- dicate. Present University enroll- ment equals 14.3 per cent of all students enrolled in Michigan col- leges and universities. Projected figures indicate that the 1975 enrollment will equal 13.9 per cent of all students en- rolled in Michigan's colleges and universities. Present Levels According to the report, the University intends to maintain at roughly present levels, at least until 1975, three ratios: --The ratio of in-state to out- of-state students. The report lists the maintenance of this ratio as a "basic assumption." This year, the student body is composed of 73 per cent "Michigandresidents and 27 per cent nonresidents. -The ratio of students to fac- ulty. It is now one teacher for every 14.8 students. By 1975, the University expects it to be one teacher for every 15.8 students. -The ratio of graduates to un- dergraduates. "According to pres- ent conceptions, there will not be a marked change in 'student mix'," the report states. "Emphasis will continue on the enrollment of graduate and graduate-profession- al students along with strong un- dergraduate programs." Review A review of a breakdown of projected enrollment increases in schools and colleges shows a pro- portionally much higher increase for non-Ann Arbor University cen- ters than for Ann Arbor proper between now and 1975. Ann Arbor enrollment is ex- pected to rise from 26,050 to 42,- 471 (63 per cent) while enroll- ment at Dearborn, Flint and Graduate Study Centers is ex- pected to rise from 3,053 to 7,- 715 (153 per cent). The largest increase is slated for the University Flint College, an enrollment rise from the pres- ent 636 to 4000 in 1975, over 500 per cent. Second The second largest increase is for Dearborn, a jump from the present 677 to 1900 in 1975, an in- crease of 180 per cent. The pharmacy college (97.9 per cent), the architecture and design school (96.1 per cent) and the nursing school (76.1 per cent) have the three next largest ex- pected increases. The expected in- crease for the literary college (from 12,927 to 19,796, or 53 per cent) is 10 per cent below the 63 per cent anticipated increase by 1975 for the Ann Arbor campus as a whole. The report explains that the es- tablishment of future residential colleges may replace to an extent growth in the literary college. "The projected enrollment (of the literary college) indicates the need for growth in liberal arts. To the extent that these can be met via the residential colleges, growth of the literary college can be pro- portionately reduced." Mention of the absolute im- portance of state funds in carry- ing out these growth plans is made three times in the slim, 17-page report. "If support (for expansion) is not forthcoming, it will be nec- essary for downward adjustments to be made in the plans for growth," the report emphasizes. The report is the result of two year's work by personnel of each of the University's schools and col- leges. President Harlan Hatcher in the spring of 1962 asked each of the schools and colleges to describe its program and direction of future growth. Each unit was asked to indi- cate its "desired enrollment" for 1970 and 1975-a figure taking into account revenues anticipated, present facilities and population, pressures. The reports of the schools were submitted to the Advisory Council on Academic Affairs-an advisory gioup to Vice-President for Aca- demic Affairs Roger W. Heyns composed of deans, research direc- tors, and Office of Academic Af- fairs staff-and discussions of the plans of each unit were held. Further discussions on the plans are yet to be held among facul- ties of the schools and colleges and University Senate commit- tees. Final plans will be present- ed to President Hatcher and his staff for evaluation, revision and eventual presentation to the Re- gents. 1964 1970 1975 Architecture and Design Business Administration Dearborn Dentistry Education Engineering Flint Law L. S. & A. Medicine Music Natural Resources Nursing Pharmacy Public Health Social Work Unclassified-Graduate Net Total excluding duplicates 844 1071 677 511 2814 4259 636 1075 12927 1573 770 287 760 192 331 409 69 29103 1484 1465 1364 708 4175 6153 3286 - 1321 16155 1625 1062 351 1152 298 371 520 307 41797 1655 1730 1900 870 5019 7100 4000- 1500 19796 1838 1265 400 1343 380 425 640 325 50186 1964 to 1970 75.8% 36.8 101.5 38.6 48.4 446 416.7 22.9 25.0 3.3 37.9 22.3 51.6 55.2 12.1 27.1- 1970 to 1975 11.5% 18.1 39.3 22.9 20.2 15.4 21.7 13.6 22.5 13.1 19.1 14.0 16.6 27.5 14.6 23.1 1964 to 1975 96.1% 61.5 180.6 70.3 78.4 66.7 528.9 39.5 53.1 16.8 64.3 39.4. 76.7 97.9 28.4 56.5 43.6% 20.1% 72.4% Centers for Graduate study Ann Arbor 1753 26050 2832 35551 3515 42471 Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom P3aji VOL. LXXV, No. 79 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1964 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES EIGHT PAGES NATO POW ERS: ti01 Wilson Asks 'Nuclear Cabinet' & Arrest LONDON {P) - Prime Minister chance to hear the views of his Harold Wilson flies to Washington allies up to the moment, if it ever Sunday with a plan for a per- comes, when he would have to manent American-European cab- decide whether to trigger nuclear inet to shape nuclear policy mak- war. ing around the world. Wilson is expected to submit Political aides reported Britain's this and other far-reaching pro- Labor prime minister hopes such posals to President Lyndon B. a group of allied countries, along- Johnson Monday and Tuesday side the National Security Coun- when the two leaders discuss ways cil in Washington, would supple- of ipproving the West's global ment his project for an Atlantic military, political and economic nuclear force. arrangements. The cabinet, as the British see In outlining the Labor govern- it, would consist of the ambassa- ment's approach to the Johnson dors or special envoys of Britain, administration, Wilson's associates West Germany, Italy, Holland or stressed he will not be advancing some other small Atlantic Al- firm and inflexible proposition on liance nation and France if Presi- a take-it-or-leave-it basis. dent Charles de Gaulle or his suc- His intention is to offer an in- cessor cared to joi. itiative which already, in its It would have rights to consult sketcy details, seems to have been with, and be consulted by, the accepted. U.S. President or his delegates in Among Wilson's chief aims in all emergencies inside and outside Washington are: the NATO area. -He wants Johnson to aban- The American chief executive don the American scheme for a thus would reportedly have every multilateral nuclear force in its Johnson Calls for Closer Ties Am ong NATO Ns present form. The force was to consist of 25 surface ships armed with Polaris rockets, manned by mixed NATO crews and owned jointly by the six or seven coun- tries interested in it. Wilson sees it as a $2 billion political gimmick which might win the 1965 election for West German Chancellor Lud- wig Erhard but which might also lose the chance of a disarmament agreement with Russia. -He wants Johnson instead to accept his own plan for an At- lantic nuclear force of perhaps eight or ten ships. It also would include all Britain's H-bombers and three Polaris-firing nuclear submarines this country is build- ing. Wilson would abandon all rights to withdraw Britain's nu- clear strike-force except in the event that NATO should collapse. -Wilson would like the allies to follow up any move creating a force with an approach to the Russians for an agreement in arms control. He thinks agreements may be possible to stop the spread of nuclear weapons to countries which do not now have them. -He wants to switch the em- phasis of Britain's overseas mili- tary commitments from Europe to points east of Suez and he thinks U.S. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara backs him in this. Wilson is thinking of renegoti- ating the 1954 BrusselsTreaty that binds Britain to keep 55,000 men in West Germany. Advisers have convinced Wilson that a smaller, better - balanced Rhine army could pack quite as much fire-power as Britain's 51,000 effectives posses now. -Wilson is hoping Johnson will; recognize in a material way that3 much of Britain's billion-dollar yearly bill for her overseas garri- sons serves the over-all allied in- terest. At a time of financial crisis for Britain he would be glad if the Americans could find ways of contributing toward the upkeep of some of those positions.1 ed at from Berkeley Governor On Ordr IN MODERN FICTION: SPolice Surround Hall Teachers on Strike Fei~heim and Haun gh,.Censure of Actions; Students Picket tJ Bly ROBERT BENDELObW 7 Lecture on S atire WASHINGTON (W) --President Lyndoh B. Johnson called yester- day for closer ties with Western allies but said the United States is prepared to discuss with the Soviet Union any proposal that might strengthen the chances of peace'. He stressed, however, that any negotiations with Moscow would be in full consultation with this country's allies. In a speech at Georgetown University, Johnson made what seemed to be a conciliatory ges- ture toward French President Charles de Gaulle, saying this country seeks to reason with, not to dominate, its Western allies. "We do not seek to have our way, but to find a common way," Johnson said. In a reference to the proposed North Atlantic Treaty Nuclear Naval Force, which de Gaulle op- poses, Johnson said any new plan for handling'of weapons so power- ful deserves careful discussion. "No solution will be perfect in the eyes of everyone," he added. "But the problem is there. It must be solved. And we will continue to work for its solution." Johnson received an honorary GOP Meeting Condemns Split DENVER (YP)-The chairman of the Republican governors, Robert A. Smylie of Idaho, called yester- day for a change in the party's leadership before there is a "splin- tering situation" from which there might be no retreat. "The image has to be changed", and the party put in the middle of the American road, declared Sfylie at a news conference. The Idaho governor made clear that in insisting that a change of leadership is needed that he was referring to the Republican Na- tional Committee and its chair- man and protege of Barry Gold- degree of Doctor of Laws, the same honorary degree which was awarded posthumously to Presi- dent John F. Kennedy. Johnson also said efforts must be made to increase the unity of Europe "as a key to western strength and a barrier to resur- gent and erosive nationalism." His speech drew applause at several points, the first time when he said, "We must all make sure that the Federal Republic of Ger- many is treated as an honorable partner in the affairs of the West." He said no one seeks to end by force the "grim and dan- gerous injustice" of a divided Germany. I By JULIE FITZGERALD Satire as a literary form is only possible in a society where a consensus of -values is common to the majority of the people. A deterministic, mobile society generally doesn't engender satire ic literature. This conclusion was reached by' Prof. Marvin Felheim and Prof. Robert Haugh, both of the Eng- lish department, at a lecture spon- sored by the Union Cultural Af- fairs Committee last night. GSC Calls .for Housing Action At its meeting last night, the Graduate Student Council passed a motion concerning housing for graduate students. As a result of the motion, GSC will urge the University to build both dormitories and co-ed apart- ments. GSC will encourage the con- struction of modest apartments so that rents can be lowered. The lecture, entitled "Satire and Modern Fiction," was begun by Felheim who defined satire as a literary form which explores and exposes situations for the purpose of amendment. "The satirist has a moral purpose," he said. Felheim said satire is concern- ed with manners and morals of society rather than of the individ- ual, unless the individual is rep- resentative of a type. "Accentuation and exaggeration are the methods of satire," he said. He cited Jonathan Swift's "Gulliver's Travels" where Swift advocated solving the overpopula- tion problem in Ireland by eating all the children as an example. Felheim said the satirist starts with the assumption that the peo- ple in his society are materially well-off but are intellectually frus- trated because there appears te, be no meaning in the surface val- ues of society. Passive Society "This passive society is' at- tacked by the satirist who as- sumes that by seeing its faults, a society is capable of reforming itself and therefore he offers no solution," Felheim added. Felheim and sex and bureauc- racy are two areas where Ameri- can society is vulnerable. "Every- one is interested in sex and no one can live without bureaucracy," hg said. There may be a girl in Stock- well who has never been found," he said. History of Satire Haugh continued the discussion by tracing the history of satire in 20th Century American and English literature. He cited J. P. Marquand who he termed "a determinist who would have liked to be a satirist," as a writer whose works reflect- ed the mobility and determinism of the 'first third of the century. "The satirist needs a consensus on which people agree and a rela- tive stability in society. Determ- inism and mobility are not con- ducive to satire," he said., Consensuses He noted that as more areas of agreement appear, there are more fields of satire. "We have only, recently reached the point where the satirist could attack FreudianI jargon," he said. Tennessee Williams'."Baby Doll" and Joseph Heller's "Catch 22" were examples he gave of sexual and military satire. Haugh cited the growing knowl- Californiastate troopers yester- day arrested 801 student demon- strators who Wednesday invaded the University of California at Berkeley administration building and staged an all-night sit-in. The students were arrested amidst cries of police brutality, for what University of California President Clark Kerr termed "ir- responsible and illegal action." Under orders from California Gov. Edmund G. Brown, the state troopers, augmented by local po- lice, moved into the administration building at 3:45 a.m. yesterday and started to haul the limp dem- onstrators off to jail. Students who left voluntarily were not taken into custody. Evacuation was completed by 3:15 p.m. yesterday afternodn. At one point, the number of sympa- thetic students climbing into the building was greater than the number police were remoying. In related actions, teaching assistants have gone on strike, and astudents are picketing all en- trances to the campus and all ma- jor buildings. The teaching assist- ants not on strike refused to cross picket lines. The action of the teaching assistants has thrown the campus into chaos, the Daily Californian, the Berkeley student newspaper, reported last night by telephone. "With the graduates on strike, more than 50 per cent of the classes have been cancelled, and mid-terms have likewise been can- celled," a spokesman for the paper said. "Delirious as the non-demon- strating students are over this, the general consensus is that the Free Speech Movement has gone FIdentity with Death: Studies of Hiroshima By THOMAS FRIEDMAN "For the explosion-affected populace of Hiroshima the strong identity with death paradoxically was enough to maintain life," Robert Lifton, professor of psychoanalysis at 'Yale University, said yesterday. Lifton spoke in Lane Hall on the "Atomic Bomb Experience in Hiroshima." "For those explosion-affected victims within the city limits there was the feeling of the whole word ending. There was no panic, but a ghastly stillness. I was not alive' said one victim." Lifton interviewed survival vic- tims in a recent study of the psychological ramifications of the A-bomb explosion. "The more articulate victims in- terviewed Spoke of the helpless:<>; abandonment. Yet with all of this it would appear that the populace would be unable to avoid mass psychosis;" Lifton said. The mechanism which accounts for the small number of psycho- logical disturbances was a "psyche closing-off," he said. "The people ceased to feel. Emotional reaction was just turned off. 'A paralysis overcame my mind,' another vic- tim said. "Beyond this immediate reaction to the horror, there followed self- condemnation. The survivors felt .'' shame and guilt. 'Why did I survive?' was the question which plagued the victims who were not immediately affected." Lifton asked the explosion-affected victims a series of questions pertaining to their reaction weeks following the blast. The survivors who were not immediately affected usually'developed the radiation symptoms," he said. These symptoms are such things as loss of hair, blood abnormalities and general body deterioration. "The continuous devastation resulted in a strong identification i too far, and both the FSM and the administration are in the wrong," the spokesman claimed. Senate The faculty Academic Senate met in an ad hoc session, with over 700 of the 1200 faculty mem- bers present. They strongly con- demned Brown's action, declaring they adhor "the presence of the California Highway Patrol on campus." They issued a three-point state- ment after yesterday's massive arrests. "We recommend," the faculty statement read: -"That the new and liberalized rules for campus political action be declared in effect and enforced, pending their improvement; -"That all pending campus ac- tion against students for acts oc- curing before the present date be dropped; -"That a committee, selected by and responsible to the Aca- demic Senate, be established, to which students may appeal deci- sions of the administration re- garding penalties for violations re- lating to offenses arising from political action, and that deci- sions of this committee be final." Jailed The protestors were jailed, with bail set at $250 to $3200 each. Mario Savio, the leader of the FSM and yesterday's demonstra- tion was reportedly placed in soli- tary confinement. Prominent faculty members are reportedly raising money for the students' bail. Previous to' yesterday's arrests, the teaching assistants, equivalent to University teaching fellows .here, said they would strike for several days if police action was taken. Brown acted independently of the university, Berkeley sources told The Daily. He ordered the Highway Patrol to the campus when he thought the situation had gotten out of hand. Both the Daily Californian and the administration spokesman said they heard reports that the Academic Senate passed a resolu- tion asking for the resignation of Chancellor Edward W. Strong, Berkeley's chief administrator. AAUP Prof. John H. Reynolds, Berke- ley chapter chairman of the American Association of Univer- sity Professors, issued a statement demanding removal of Strong. "The present crisis cannot be stilled unless there is a complete amnesty and a new chief campus official appointed who has the complete confidence of the uni- vei'sity," said the statement ap- proved by the chapter's board of directors. In Sacramento late yesterday Brown said he assumed "full re- 'Oliver.' 'Luther' in PTP Series I