9 . ROSS BARNETT: SYMBOL OF DEFEAT Y Sit i!3garn 74IaitA SUNNY ia High-69 Low-48 Cloudy in morning, warmer tonight See Page 4 Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIII, No. 10 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1962 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES Presidents Approve Report Procedures To Provide Data for Legislature On College Incomes from Students By KENNETH WINTER The Michigan Council of State College Presidents approved a formula yesterday which sets up uniform procedures for reporting each institutions' income from students to the Legislature. The Presidents agreed that each of the 10 state schools would use the same procedure and report the same items to Lansing. The items include the institution's income from (a) appropriations, (b) freshman-sophomore fees, (c) junior-senior fees and (d) gradu- I I f i r t FRENCH: Curb Hits Enrollment In Courses About 55 students were unable to enroll in French 111 and 112 this semester, thus highlighting problems that continue to exist in the special language courses pro- vided for graduate and doctoral degree students. Due to budget difficulties last year, these courses had to be cur- tailed somewhat, while an increas- ingly large number of students de- sired to enroll in them. Masters and doctoral degree candidates must have a reading knowledge of two languages - usually French, German or Rus- sian. These courses 'are not re- quired, but many students find it necessary to take them. Slightly Better Prof. James C. O'Neill, chair- man of the Romance languages department, noted that the situa- tion last year was a serious one, "and this year it is only slightly better." He explained that the entire French department was hit by a very sharp increase in enrollment, as 275 more students dnirolled than last year, and an extra 17 sec- tions in the overall curriculum had to be established during registra- tion. As a result, the department was able to add only one more section for French 111 to attempt handl- ing the overflow. Normally, there are three sections of about 30 students each in the special lan- guage courses. No Rejects Prof. Clarence Pott, chairman of the German department, and Prof. John Mersereau, acting chairman of the Slavic languages department, reported that no graduate students had to be turned away from German and Russian 111 and 112, although classes are very large. The German department had to add a fourth section to the 111 class, but Prof. Pott said there would be no decline in quality of course content. He and Prof. Mersereau ex- plained that a language course de- signed to impart a reading knowl- edge only "can be streamlined to handle large enrollments without lowering achievement." Compiles Figures Graduate School Council Presi- dent Edward Sasaki, whose organ- ization compiled the figures on the overcrowding, said the council would continue to discuss the sit- uation with the executive board for the graduate school, which controls the graduate student lan- guage requirements. The literary college executive committee, however, oversees the finances for these courses. Vice-President for Academic Af- >ate fees, (where applicable). The income per student in eachclassi- fication will also be reported. University Executive Vice-Pres- ident Marvin L. Niehuss, who at- tended the meeting, explained that state-supported colleges and uni- versities have been required to file these reports for several years, and this new procedure was imple- mented simply to insure uniform- ity in their content. No Use The effect of the new procedure, once its reports reach Lansing, is not yet clear. "Not much use has been made of the reports in the past, and we don't know what will happen now," Niehuss commented. In other actions, the presidents took the first step in a plan to in- crease efforts to increase the availability of cross-enrollment and credit transfers between the state schools. They approved "in principle," a plan worked out by the schools' extension directors "to allow freer change of credit," Niehuss said. Implementation of the cross- enrollment principle, applying mainly to master's degree candi- dates, will be at the option of each school's governing board. Cut Duplication Presidents' Council Chairman, President James Miller of Western Michigan University, noted that this is one way to eliminate un- necessary duplication of courses. Niehuss reported "nothing but informal discussion" by the con- ference of the issue of controver- sial speakers on state-supported campuses. He said he passed out copies of the University's new pol- icy on off-campus speakers to the members present, but added that the group was not in a position to take a stand on the question, at least until the Michigan Coordin- ating Council for Higher Educa- tion, presently debating the prob- lem, has come to a decision. LSA Receives Federal Aid For Honors The literary college has been awarded a $69,595 federal grant to help hbnors students do a greater quantity and better quality inde- pendent research and study. The grant was awarded to the literary college honors program y the National Science Foundation, and is intended for use by honors students in science, mathematics, and interdisciplinary areas. ,' Prof. Otto Graf of the German department, head of the honors program, will direct the NSF grant distribution and the direction of the independent research program. Nazi Party Head Arrives To Speak BUFFALO ()-Sir Oswald Mos- ley, self-styled leader of England's Nazi party, arrived here last night amid mounting protests over his scheduled appearance at a stu- dent-sponsored forum at the State University of New York at Buffalo. Argentine Problems Unsettled BUENOS AIRES (A') - Spread- ing dissension among the armed forces set up new roadblocks yes- terday to President Jose Maria Guido's efforts to impose his fresh- ly won civilian authority on the military. 'There was obvious dissension in all three services over Guido's new military appointments. A flood of unconfirmed reports said a large number of anti-Guido officers had been arrested. It was just such a shakeup in the military high com- mandstlast August which touched off last week's brief but bloody re- bellion. Brig. Gen. Cayo Antonio Alsina, air force commander, and Gen; Juan Carlos Ongania, the rebel- lion leader and now army com- mander in chief, called on dissi- dent elements within their own forces and on the navy to pledge support of Guido. Alsina placed the air force on alert, declaring: "There are oth- er armed forces which at this time have not defined their allegiance." The navy, which took no part in the fight last week that gave Guido a victory over one set of military bosses, said it had not re- ceived an army-air force demand to clarify its position. CUBA, MEDICARE: ': II ini u tp IDrhqm it Prah1 pm c Governor Faees By PHILIP SUTIN The three candidates for con- gressman-at-large debated federal aid to education, medicare, and' the Cuban crisis before the Lea- gue of Women Voters yesterday. GOP candidate Alvin Bentley said that this country should ,not waste another opportunity as it did in the Bay of Pigs invasion. He suggested a blockade of Cuba modelled after the World War II blockade of Germany. "A blockade is not an act of- war unless the other sides see the ac- tion this way," Bentley noted. Staebler's Views His Democratic rival Neil Staeb- ler said that Bentley was more moderate than he was in a sim- ilar session last Friday in Flint. "On Friday Bentley was for shooting at ships, now he is for action under the Organization of American States-something that will take a long time," he noted. Staebler called Republican talk' about blockades "a grandstand plan" and said that the United Statesshould remember that Cuba is part of a larger Latin American' problem, that action must be taken in concert with other South American nations. The United States, he said, is using and should continue to exer- cize its great world advantage. Both Staebler and Bentley in- dicated their support for federal aid to education on the primary, i t l i s with the five sororities that have submitted inadequate membership statements at its meeting onigh. SGC will also discuss the desirability and method of filling -the five student seats on the Advisory Committee for the Office of Stu- dent Affairs. In addition, Vice-President of Students Affairs James A. Lewis and John Bingley, director of Student Organizations and Discipline, will speak on the recent restructuring ' __________________ _- -ontemptOrer secondary and higher education He claimed the Republican levels. party has taken an "anti-property Limited Aid owners attitude" in the debate "It should be limited to ;hose over Medicare. "The Repuolican Meredith To Make Third Attempt states unable to provide a decent approach to health care under the minimum level of education," Kerr-Mills Act is to make charity To Enter 'Ole Miss' Registration Bentley commented. cases out of our old people. Ard He also advocated a federally this means only one thing-more financed loan fund to aid students taxes on property owners." JACKSON 2--Gov. Ross Barnett defied federal court or- who could not otherwise pay for Socialist Labor Party candidate ders for the second time yesterday and refused to allow Negro college. Ralph Muncy discussed generally James H. Meredith to enroll at the University of Mississippi. Staebler saved his fire for an "the insidious erosion of American Four hours later the Fifth United States Circuit Court of attack on the GOP refusal to en- courage and independence which Appeals at New Orleans ordered Barnett to appear at a con- act a medical care program for the arises out of the economic condi- aged under social security. tions under which we live." tempt hearing Friday. Meredith, a 29-year-old Korean war veteran, is expected T oE. to go to the Oxford campus today to make a third attempt at registering. A source close to Barnett said the governor would also go * * to Oxford today and would again block Meredith's attempt to For Hearing Sorority Case endh114 years of segregation at the University of Mississip- By RICHARD KRAUT p1. Barnett was in seclusion late last night and not avail- Student Government Council will consider procedure for hearings able for comment. Extension Service Meets New Trend By GERALD STORCH. Year-round operations, mushrooming enrollments, new community colleges: these are some of the most important edu- cational patterns emerging in Michigan. These "new factors" are currently undergoing close scrutiny from the University's Extension Service to determine what ad- justments it might have to make in order to continue provid- ing special education programs for individuals outside the Ann Arbor campus, Extension Service Director Everett J. Soop noted recently. His organization will have to contend with upcoming year- round operations, at other colleges within the state as well as the University. Rearrange Courses For just as classes on central campus must be inserted into the shortened-semester scheme of things, so must Extension Service rearrange its courses, Soop points out. At present, many of the students taking extension programs are high school teachers desiring further education. Courses for these individuals must begin past the middle of September, after the secondary schools have begun their year. But with the University's fall term under year-round oper- ations ending before Christmas instead of at the end of January, the extension programs must either be curtailed in content or the class hour lengthened. The latter alternative will probably be taken, Soop says. Coordination A more difficult problem appears, however, in coordinating extension programs between two colleges with differing semester terms. Formulation of cooperative courses between the University's 14-week trimester, Wayne State University 11-week quarter and Michigan State University's 12-week quarter system, for example, poses knotty questions of faculty men'f schedules and adminis- istrative facility.'- These questions are part of the larger aspect of field service coordination among state institutions. At present, the Michigan Coordinating Council of State College Field Services (of which See SOOP, Page 2 of the Office of Student Affairs and its relations to Council. Council President Steven Stock-= meyer, '63, will submit for SGC's approval the procedure for hear- ings with the five delinquent sor- orities. Stockmeyer will propose that hearings be held in executive session, unless the sorority re- quests an open hearing. During the hearing, three ques- tions would be asked: Is the Coun- cil's report concerning the failure of this sorority to submit an ade- quate membership statement com- plete and true? Is the sorority in violation of the procedures to in- sure adequate membership selec- tice statmeents? And if so, what action, if any, should be taken? Raid Season Starts Anew A small group of about 300 men charged up the Hill for the year's first panty-raid last night. The yelling throng picked off a couple dozen souvenirs along with frilly pieces of tissue paper. The raid started at East Quad- rangle, where a group of Hinsdale House men ran through corridors of Strauss House shouting the traditional "To the Hill!" About 80 collected in front of East Quad, then went to South and West r Federal Troops Meanwhile in New Orleans, a source close to the United States Circuit Court said it "now ap- pears there is no other way to en- force the court's orders than to use federal troops. The court has gone as far as it can go." The federal government used troops of the 101st Airborne to enforce court-ordered public school desegregation at Little Rock in 1957. In Washington, Justice Depart- ment officials declined to forecast future moves in the clash between federat and state authorities over adnmi sn of Meredith. Court Obedience However,a department source said the government may have to use troops to see to it that the, courts are obeyed. Ole Miss registrar Robert B. El-i lis said in, Jackson he would re- turn to Oxford and would accept Meredith under orders from the State Coege Board if Meredith appears. GOV. ROSS BARNETT ... disobeys court 1 t i 1 t l t t s Council's ultimate decision would Quads,. returned to East, and, now Friday Hearings be announced after the hearing 300 strong, ran to the hill. The circuit court ordered Bar-' and the various opinions of Coun- Inspired, the mob spearheaded nett 'o appear at 10 a.m. (CST) c ; members would be made public. toward Stockwell, was rebuffed Friday in New Orleans. Signing cne Council will also consider a mo- with a cold reception and few order vcre Circuit Judges John tion from the executive committee panties there, then charged to Minor Wisdom of New Orleans; to fill the five student positions on Mary Markley for a few more. Walter P Gewin of Tuscaloosa, the OSA Advisory Committee. Most of the action, however, Ala., and Richard T. Rives of Postponed from last week's meet- came at Alace Lloyd where red Montgomery, Ala. ng, this would give the executive lights blinked on and screens and All nine members of the court committee the power to recomn- out over them. One student k- will conduct the hearing but a mend five Council members for the rou nderth.Onirudntwalk- source said not all may appear. Advisory Committee. ed around with a pair on his head. Meredith returned by plane to HoweerDaiy EdtorMicael The mob broke up. Some went New Orleans after his futile meet- However, Daily Editor Michael to Couzens Hall. Some stopped offNe resatrhsft eme- Olinick, '63, and Robert Ross, '63, at Co ns Halloe s pe of withBarnett in Jackson. atwindows along the way. The atre ecie eeiha plan to introduce a motion that rest went back to Stockwell for "reyescribed Merdithuag SGC not appoint members to the a second try. Relatively unsuccess- relaxed now, and not discourag- proposed committee. ful at Couzens, the men there ed." Their motion notes that it is trailed back to Stockwell where Meredith flew into Jackson in already one of the functions of the one man had managed to climb a government plane late yester- entire body of SGC to serve in an two stories up a scaffolding near day, making the trip from Ned adviory apacty.the uildng.Orleans where the Fifth United advisory capacity. the building. - States Circuit Court of Appeals had given him two new weapons eiA vfor his battle against a century of tradition at Ole Miss. Restraining Order One was sweeping restraining Communist Speaker Banorder aimed at the governor and virtually all of the state's peace officers, prohibiting them from in- By DENISE WACKER terfering with the registration of Meredith. Ann Byerlein, who from time to time has traveled throughout The other was a State College the state urging that Communists be refused permission to speak be- Board order to university officials fore public gatherings, has indicated that she may visit the University to admit Meredith. later this semester. In addition, the Appeals Court She would come here if Soviet Ambassador to the United States overturned the last outstanding Anatoly F. Dobrynin decides to accept an invitation, from the Michi- state court injunction barring the gan League, to address students admission of Meredith. here on some topic probably relat- Meredith and the Justice Depart- ed to students in the Soviet Union. Met and he Jutic epart- Miss Byerlein feels that any ment attorney, flatly refused to Communist represents a threat to accept the process on the appeals the internal security of the Coun- court's orders. He said he was act- try since those people are out to ing on the advice of the state at- destroy us - they'd use torture, torney general. subversion, even murder, if it were Passing Notice necessary, because for them any When Beredith arrived at the make compromises we would be means at all is legitimate." Jackson Municipal Airport, and like this man. Some of the differ- Her formal protest against Do- again when he stopped for an hour' ence between us and this man lie brynin would be lodged as a tax- at the Federal Building, there was simply in our dishonesty and cow- payer. She intends to ask that he scarcely more than passing notice ardice, he added. It is not incon- be refused the right to use facili- paid him. ceivable that "the stranger" is ties paid for, at least in party, by But the real crowd waited at the murdered for his sincerity, state funds. State Office Building, where Bar- Prof. Bergmann said he did not Miss Byerlein added that it did nett was huddled with the board. b e 1 i e v e "The Stranger" was not matter if the Communist It grew rapidly after Meredith Camus' attempt to portray the speaker were Dobrynin, or some walked into the building with innate aloneness of man. This is other Russian Communist, or a plainclothesmen escorting him. too romantic for him, Camus, he member of the American Com Also reported in the board's said. munist party. "A Red is a Red, no meeting room was Robert B. Ellis, u¢ mP n.riu nots withcomulete matter where chance has put him registrar of the university. He, like STUDENTS: Lewis, SGC Discuss Role By EDWARD HERSTEIN We all have "something to learn from students," said Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis at the first Student Government Council orientation meeting yes- terday. The vice-president outlined his views on the subject "Philosophy of Student Government and its Role in the Educational Process" before approximately 30 freshmen interested in student government at the University. He explained that it was impor- tant people develop "strong ego involvements" on campus, and that student government was one way in which they could do this. Student Power Council member Robert Ross, '63. argued that student government was a part of the educational proc- ess for citizenship, and therefore "students should not be just ad- visors, but have authority." SGC President Steven Stock- meyer, '63, emphasized student government as one unit "working on overall education at the Uni- versity." The meeting was the first of five as part of the new SGC orien- tation program. SGC Administra- tive Vice-President Ken Miller, '64, who developed the program, ex- plained that its purpose is "to give information necessary for mean- ingful participation in student government." Opportunity Upon completion of the pro- gram, those interested will have an opportunity to work for one of SGC's standing committees or re- lated boards. Miller acted as moderator at erday's meeting. Stockmeyer and Ross debated the question of to whom the Coun- cil was responsible. Ross argued that it had a duty to stir controversy and arouse student interest while Stockmeyer emphasized the obligation of the University to the state of Michi- gan and that Student Government Council must realize this obliga- tion whenever it acts. i 'THE STRANGER': Bergmann Analyzes Cam By JEAN TENANDER losophy, Prof. Bergmann said.i '"The thesis of the novel is not a1 "terso thestranr,'hmgatphilosophy at all but a rejectionc matters to 'the stranger,' what itself of the philosophy that does matters to him is the immediate, not have a philosophy. It rejects< what doesn't matter to him is the the whole abstract sphere ofc past and the future." thought." Most important, Prof. Speaking of Albert Camus' novel Bergmann said, was that it stops "The Stranger," Prof. Frithjof at this rejection. It does not make Bergmann of the philosophy de- a philosophy out of rejection partment denied the current as- which is all too easy to do, he sumption that "the stranger" is continued. unfeeling, immoral, and unemo- Doesn't Care Enough tional.. nn 1' fan that th1 I E c R r J _ ::