Huff Foresees ew Increase in College Enrollment Special To The Daily EAST LANSING-Michigan col- lege enrollment will increase by over 43,000 students in 1965, Chair- man of the Michigan Co-ordinat- ing Council for Public Higher Education Warren M. Huff said yesterday. In presenting the results of a council study to five members of Gov. George Romney's 'Citizen Committee for Higher Education, Huff, a trustee of Michigan State University, covered enrollment prospects, needs for additional fac- ulty members and capital improve- ment requirements for all colleges and universities in Michigan. Of the 43,000 additional stu- dents, the report stated that 37,000 will be absorbed by public educa- tional institutions.' Equals Combined Enrollments Huff noted that the 43,000 figure equals the 1962 combined enroll- ments of Albion College, Flint Junior College, Port Huron Junior College, Western Michigan Univer- sity and the University. In 1965, the majority of World War II "war babies" will be en- rolling in college, he said. However, this is only part of the reason for the growing numbers of college applicants. More people now than ever be- fore want to go to college. While in 1900, only three per cent sought higher education, a quarter of Michigan's college age youth at- tended college in 1960. By 1970, 30 per cent will be attending an institution of higher learning, Huff said. Necessity of College Huff stressed the necessity of a college education in today's com- plex world. Institutions of higher education provide trained profes- sional people, people to fill places in industry and better citizens for the state. In order to prepare for the stu- dent bulge in 1965, Michigan will need 24 per cent more teachers. More books, instructional equip- ment and teaching materials will also be necessary to handle in- creased enrollment, Huff said. Must Expand But the most expensive need will be in the area of expanded physi- cal plants. Huff noted that since 1945, Michigan has invested over $1.7 billion in new building for elementary and secondary schools. In order to build the classrooms, laboratories and libraries to ac- commodate the student onrush, over $361 million will be needed in the next five years to build new buildings and to replace and ren- ovate old ones. During a discussion period Huff was asked whether Michigan schools were running as efficiently as possible. The question was de- signed to determine if present space and teacher time are being put to the best use. Space Problems Executive Vice-President Marvin Niehuss called the question "one" that is everpresent and conse- quently being explored." The big problem in this area is the use of office and laboratory space. "It is possible to stretch class space by enlarging the number of stu- dents in a class, but this is im- possible to do with office and laboratories," he said. Niehuss also noted that year- round operation will allow for more efficient use of space and the physical plant. But he said the University would need a "lead time" of at least six to seven months to prepare for full opera- tions. During this "lead time," addi- tional teachers would be hired, schedules established and the physical plant made ready. "We would have to know by Thanks- giving 1963 if we were going on full operation to start by Septem- ber 1964," he said. Interim Report The five persons from the blue ribbon committee are all members of the subcommittee now working on an interim report to be sub- mitted to the governor by October 1. GOING UP-Enrollment projections estimate that there will be about a 20 per cent increase in enrollment at Michigan colleges between now and 1965. By 1970 it Is expected that almost twice as many students will be' enrolled in Mich- igan's institutions of higher learning. In absolute figures, this will lead to a 43,000 enrollment increase by 1965 and a 135,000 increase by 1970. COLLEGE BOUND--This chart depicts the great increase in the number of Michigan students de- siring to go to college. The percentage has climbed from under five in 1900 to nearly 30 today. :,F: CIA IN VIET NAM: A COSTLY OPERATION See Editorial Page Y Senit isau Seventy-Three Years of Editorial, Freedom :1Iatj SUNNY High--82 Low--50 Turning cloudy with chance of rain VOL. LXXIV, No. 9 SEVEN CENTS ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1963 TWO SECTIONS FOURTEEN PAGES Murphy Cites Intent Of Activities Report Hatcher, Regent Defend Lack Of Bylaw for OSA Vice-President By GERALD S'ORCH City Editor Further light was shed last night on the origins, intent and scope of an administrative look into the status of non-academic student activities on;the campus. In a related matter, Regent Irene E. Murphy of Birmingham and University President Harlan Hatcher defended the lack of a writ- ~ten, formalized outline of author- ' U, Of Plans To Maintam Number Students from Out of State AFFECTS 340,000 MEN- Order Halts Draft of Husbands Senator Cites Tax Dislike By STEVEN HALLER Sen. Clyde H. Geerlings (R- Hollahd), chairman of the Senate taxation committee, y e s t e r d a y came away from an executive briefing on Gov. George Romney's, new tax reform program noting that he was not opposed to the plan as a whole and that parts of it were acceptable. However, he declined to say whether the income tax he oppos- es is a part of the plan, as yet not officially released to the ress. Meanwhile, Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski -predicted defeat of Rom- ney's tax program. The top rank- ing IDemocratic officeholder said the Romney presentation of the plan in "bits and pieces" and GOP opposition to a statewide income tax will bring its demise. Cites Own Plan Geerlings noted that his own plan, which he Qlso has not yet given out in full, depends on local option taxes rather than a state- wide income tax. He denied criti- cism of the local options as a "hodgepodge," saying that if such a plan were a hodgepodge in Mich- igan, "then it is just as much as one in the other 49 states. He added that if one were to try to pick out Michigan's pro- posed local option from those used by other states, he would find it impossible. "The idea of a hodgepodge is just a. smoke screen erected by those who favor an income tax," he went on. He also scored the idea that local options would result in a migratory trend away from areas that chose to use such a tax, say- ing that "you won't get a local option unless property taxes there are lowered," which would cancel out the revenue boost from the local option taxes. Anti-Tax Sentiment Geerlings noted that he had once favored an income tax him- self, but changed his mind be- cause public sentiment seemed so strongly against it. "I've never seen a poll by any large-scale source which showed strong public acceptance of such a plan. Of the many letters I've received, not one has been in favor of an income tax," he said. Geerlings noted -that he did not see how a proposed county auto tax (to be collected by the state for dispersal to any county gov- ernment that levied, it) would help matters any. "Such a tax could only be used for roads and would not help the other areas of ity for Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. Mrs. Murphy sketched two matn concerns which gave rise to the activities. study, now being con- ducted by Lewis and Vice-Presi- dent for Businessnand Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont. Handling Financial Details The first point is to determine whether student organizations might be better run if certain financial details, such as building maintenance, could be handled on a "horizontal" basis. This would mean that such serv- ices would be arranged on alloca- tions from a common source--such as Pierpont's office-instead of each organization supervising these details as they affect its own needs. Secondly, the Regents simply wanted to know "what students need in student activities and how activities should be administered," Mrs. Murphy said. To Maintain Autonomy She stressed, however, that the Regents were not intending to re- duce the autonomy currently held by student groups. "The financial details should be handled by pro- fessionals, but they should not interfere with the basic function of a given organization," she said. The report was urged by the Re- gents "at the request of the ad- ministration," when the question of a Union-League merger first came up, she added. President Hatcher said that this request did not stem from his own office. He couldn't recall any spe- cifics about the Regents then ask- ing for such a report, but com- mented that "we're all interested in student activities and'whatever reorganization has to take place." Scope of Study The scope of study is up to Lew- is and Pierpont, although Mrs. Murphy expected that it would in- clude informal campus activities as well as organized ones. The two vice-presidents have declined to See UNVEIL, Page 2 WASHINGTON (R) - President John; F. Kennedy stopped the drafting of childless married men yesterday. About 340,000 young men were freed of draft status immediately. Married men with children have not been inducted into the military services since 1956, Selective Ser- vice officials said. To Examine Delta Credits As a proposed educational cor- poration, Delta Senior University is now being investigated for cert- ification by the State Board of, Education, Superintendent f o r Public Instruction Lynn Bartlett said yesterday. Under the laws of Michigan,I proposed educational corporations must be certified in five areas by the State Board of Education be- fore they can receive a charter by the Corporation and Securities Commission. On Sept. 18, members of the board will go to Delta to get a first hand look at the proposed school. Action may be taken at the board's meeting the next day, Bartlett said.j The five areas that must be certified are: 1) Whether there are adequate{ housing and administrative facili- ties. 2) Whether there is an adequate program of instruction. 3) Whether the physical plant is adequate. 4) Whether there is a trained staff. 5) Whether the incorporators have at least 50 per cent of the necessary $500,000 capital assets required by state law for private institutions. An order signed by Kennedy stipulates that married men may not be drafted while there are single men available between the ages of 19 and 26. But those who claim exemption as husbands must "have have a wife with whom they maintain bona fide family relationship in their homes." More Single Men This will mean, among other things, that more single men younger than the present 23-year. average will be tapped, the White House said. The President's order was made effective immediately-and for some it came in the nick of time. Selective Service authorities said state draft officials had been told to release married men due to be inducted yesterday. Adequate Pool A service spokesman told a re- porter the pool of single men classified 1A, and thus eligible to be drafted, is entirely adequate for foreseeable needs. State draft board officials re- port that the new order will not affect the granting of 2-S classi- fications to students. The exten- sion of this draft status is re- served by the state Selective Ser- vice headquarters at the discre- tion of the local draft boards. When a student is summoned by his local board, he may apply for 2-S classification. If, in the opin- ion of the local Selective Service officer, the student has the serious intention to complete his studies and possibly to enter graduate work, the temporary classification will be granted. Reclassification When the student graduates, or when some other condition related to his 2-S classification is altered, he must go before his local board to be reclassified. The officials said they expect no great rush to the altar to dodge the draft. Should this occur, they said, and the pool of eligible single men dry up to any great extent, yesterday's order made clear that the drafting of married men could be resumed without, any further presidential action. For some years now, draft quo- tas have been quite low. Through this month, Selective Service will have summoned only 72,000 men' during 1963. All are ticketed for' the Army. The other services have not resorted to the draft for some time. National Draft Headquarters said there are 1.7 million men in the 19-26 age bracket. Lunt Ay Inreases To State Residents Niehuss Sees Need To Recognize 'National' Problem for Education By ANDREW ORLIN The University will maintain the present number of out- of state students next year with any increase in enrollment coming from in-state students, Executive Vice-President Marvin Niehuss said yesterday. While this has not been fixed as the set policy of the University, it is the general consensus, he explained. "I feel certain that with the increasing number of quali- fied students applying from within the state, it will be more and more difficult to increase TROOPERS TURN BACK STUDENTS-President John F. Ken- nedy's nationalizing of Alabama State Troopers prevented the ' repeat of scenes like this, as 20 students yesterday entered Alabama schools. 20 Negroes Enter Schools As President Shows Power, BIRMINGHAM (R)--Twenty Negro children entered white schools in three Alabama cities yesterday in a historic move that came only after another showdown between President John F. Kennedy and Ala- bama Gov. George C. Wallace. Kennedy put the 17,000 Alabama National Guardsmen into fed- eral service, thereby removing them from the control of Wallace, who - had ordered some units on active duty a few hours earlier. And then the 20 Negroes came into the schools, with no agents of Wallace to stop them. Federal court orders had kept state troop- ers away and Kennedy's orders had kept guardsmen from replac- ing troopers at the school. "SNCC people are real. They Orderly in Mobile are not just sick people or neurot- ics. They are artists, intellectuals, At Tuskegee, a city where Ne- journalists, workers, high school groes far outnumber the whites, kids and very ordinary people," 13 Negroes entered school with Potter said vwhite pupils without incident. No Religious Phenomenon The reception was orderly - but not necessarily friendly-at Mobile "One cannot type the SNCC and at two other Birmingham movement. It is not a religious schools, Ramsay High and Gray- the number of out-of-state students," Vice-President Niehuss noted. 'No Drastic Change' He did not think that there would be any drastic change in the cosmopolitan composition of the University since the increases next year will be relatively minor in comparison with total enroll- ment. With the increasing number of in-state students applying for ad- mission to the University and other state schools, the problem of out of state students becomes con- tinually more acute. The decision to admit a higher number of out of state students will be made on a yearly basis. There will not be an "inflexible policy" in this decision, Vice- President Niehuss asserted. 'Pretty Liberal View' "Michigan has a pretty liberal view in regard to the admission of otof state students," he added. However, with the student bulge now hitting the state, careful con- sideration will have to be given to the problem. Vice-President Niehuss noted that since the student bulge is a national problem, the situation might be eased if all states agreed not to raise barriers to out of state students. This point was also raised at the meeting of the Michigan Co- ordinating Council for Public Higher Education at which a re- port on short range needs of state higher education was presented. Increased Student Bulge By raising barriers to out of state students in a state, prospec- tive non-resident students will be forced to remain in their own state and hence increase that state's student bulge. Michigan is one of the few states that receives more out of state students at its institutions of higher learning than she sends' out.E Right now there are around 8,000 non-resident students at the Pastore Takes Kennedy Side On Test Ban WASHINGTON (P)-Sen. John O. Pastore (D-RI) told the Senate yesterday that if opponents of the limited nuclear test ban "have the votes to destroy this treaty, then God help the United States." And with rising tones, Pastore, chairman of the Senate-House Atomic Energy Committee, declar- ed: '11f anyone in this room thinks that (President) John V.- Ken- nedy is selling out to the enemy, then he should vote against this treaty." Not Partisan Debate Pastore took sharp issue with Sen. Jack Miller (R-Iowa) break- ing the somewhat leisurely pace of the second day of debate on ratifi- cation of the pact. Miller replied that partisan poli- tics are not involved in the debate. He said supporters of the treaty to ban all except underground nu- clear testing have no monopoly "on patriotism, the desire for world peace, nor integrity." See related story, Page 5 Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D)- Minn), whose speech was inter- rupted for the exchange, agreed with Miller. He noted that Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois was being very helpful in supporting the treaty. Road Block The drive toward a vote on rati- fication, possibly next week, was slowed a bit by a roadblock- seemingly not a serious one- thrown up by Sen. Richard B. Rus- sell (D-Ga) chairman of the Sen- ate Armed Services Committee, an opponent of the treaty. A 1 lmrvrm -3 Ci a* 'REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT': Potter Scores Complexity of By MARGARET LOWE j "The civil rights movement has! gone beyond lunch counters into deeper and underlying issues," Paul Potter, former national af- fairs vice-president of the United States National Student Associa- tion, said last night. Speaking about the Student Non-violent Coordinating Com- Noi'thern urban centers is a real threat to the attempt to build a While the migrators may find em- political majority in Mississippi. ployment in the North, they will help little in the fight to abolish racism in the South. SNCC must therefore initiate reforms such as agricultural co- i 1 wll"eman