~FREE ,ISSUE ( Y Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom 47IAttl FREE ISSUE _ uv, so. 1 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1963 SEVEN SECTIONS SIXTY-FOUR: , t ?E M, IAIIJI JMI ;{ uit Initial Budget Request ' Approves Blueprints i A DnREW ORLIN , Jniyprsity has submitted toj te 'gomptroller's office its req est"' for funds to con- resei t services at 'the same ring,) the next fiscal year- Unversity has' sent in a fo" $41 million based oh ec d additional income of li n from student fees and 1 million from other he $41 million figure in- n estim~ated price increase asent services and slight increases, Executive Vice-' nt Marvin Niehuss said. Like other state agencies which were asked to submit an "initial request," the University has been asked to send another budget showing the cost of increased ser- vices by Sept. 20. Reluctant Request Niehuss stressed that 'the Uni- versity is not asking for the "ini- tial request." That figure is the bare minimum needed by the University to carry on its present program. The comptroller's office is trying to obtain "the bedrock cost of carrying the state forward ith no increase of services," he said audent Congress CoUsiders eformls in NSA Structure By DAVID MARCUS Editorial Director Special To The Daily BLOOMINGTON-The National Student Congress of the United tes National Student Association will consider major reforms in association as the second week of its annual sessions begins at iana University, The association's National Executive Committee has suggested amping USNSA's basic structure, eliminating its 22 regions and limiting the power of the NEC. The NEC wishes to consolidate the 22 regions into five, each with a program vice-president. The scrapping of the regional struc- ture is designed to carry out more effectively national programs and to eliminate non-functioning parts of the association. Active Regions" Several of the more active ~e- gions-particularly Michigan and New England--have jbjected to. their demise, claiming that the proposal would break up some of the most effective organization units. A second proposal calls for cut- ting the NEC's legislative power. In the past, NSC committees could submit an unlimited number of items to the plenary session. The plenary would consider as many as it could, and the NEC would act on the remainder. To meet criticism that the NEC PROF. £AMES T. WILSON had too much legislative power ... Hawaii project and the plenary could not prop- erly act on all the legislation be- fore it, the number of items to be O perate considered at this year's congress was limited to 51. -- Cut Number observator The NEC proposal would cut bsery this number to 31, limiting each committee to four items each. The 'e Institute of Science and NEC would no longer have the rnology was awarded in Jule power to enact legislation after .early $5 million contract to the congress. d and operate an infrared "ob- Tho NSC will consider several aatory on Mt. Haleakala in Ha- knotty international problems in- cluding a resolution on Cuba and i y"USNSA policy toward the troubled in the International Student Conference. iethe world to make exten- In other action, the congress uise of infrared sensing, meas- I last Friday voiced its support for g and recording. devices to tomorrow's"Jobs. and Freedom" k midcourse missiles and satel- civil rights march on Washing- It will also be the first astro- ton. The $41 million does not in- clude the cost of year round operation that the University is now trying to' institute, for in- stance, In the budget submitted last year to the Legislature, the Uni- versity asked for $44.2 million which included the cost of in- creased services. It received $38.2 Million. Romney's First .Plan Under Gov. George Romney's original 196465 estimate of $610 million foe the general fund budget, an increase of $10 million was allotted for higher education. This budget was $60 million above the operating budget for the cur- rent year. Revised estimates by the governor cut this figure in half and added an additional $17 million for "funding" required by the new state constitution. Consequently, the $10 million increase will most likely be cut along with other added expendi- tures.- Additional funds are needed by the University dtoswitch to year round operation. A cutback in the Free Issue Today's Daily is free. The next issue, coming out Friday morning, also will be free. Regular publication will then begin, on Wednesday, Sept. 5. budget would seriously jeoparcze this action. In fact, Regent Eu- gene B. Power of Ann Arbor said "without an increase in the Uni- versity's budget we can't operate year round." Five Austere Years Citing Romney's attempts to make state agencies run more ef- ficiently, Power noted that the University "has been through five years of austerity. I am certain that the University has introduced all possible economies." Construction Plans Cited Declaring that the University will grow "in all its functions,£ parts and areas," Vice-President for Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont reviewed plans for $17 million in Central Campus build- ings within the next three to four years. The largest is a $10 million den-1 tal school building, to be located adjacently north and west of the current facility. It will house ex- panded teaching, research and of- fice facilities of the school. An 800-car parking structure will be built near the new dental school building, Pierpont added. The $1.2 million structure will serve dental school faculty, pa-I tients and students as well as thoset of other nearby buildings. A $3.3 million library annex will be built on the site of the West Physics Bldg. connecting the Gen-t eral and Undergraduate Libraries, Pierpont announced. Preliminary1 planning for this library annex is already underway, he added. The fourth new Central Campus building is the Institute for Social Research Bldg. to be located on Thompson St. Preliminary plans are complete for the $2.5 millionI structure and bids will be soughtc next spring.c For Campus of Haber Warns Of Growing Cll eoe Load' Taking office July 1, Dean Wil- liam Haber of the literary college sees the maintainance of educa- tional quality against increasing enrollment pressures as the main challenge the college faces in the next few years. "This is not an easy task in a world whichis increasingly re- quired to deal with ever larger numbers of people, machines and ideas," he notes. Dean, Haber explains that the college, like the rest of American higher education, is under pres- sure from three sources-the in- creasing number of high school graduates, the relatively greater capacity of American families to finance the education of their children and the growing demand of employers for college graduates. Growth Problem He sees the proposed small resi- dential colleges within the literary college as a means of dealing "with the problem of growth and would make it possible for a larger num- ber of students to take advantage of high quality education without engulfing the present structure of the college." The small residential college will combine classroom and living arrangements to give an inte- grated curricular, extra-curricular life. Classrooms will be located within the residential units and younger faculty members are ex- pected to reside within the college. Dean Haber stresses the neces- sity of maintaining the human side of the liberal arts. "Educauon1 must be preserved and strengthen- ed. More attention should be focus-. ed on training good and creative teachers, who inspire the student to explore the mysteries of both our society and human relations," he declares. "In a. time unequaled in the history of the world for its chang- ing patterns in all fields from political science to economics, only the broadly educated person is in a position to adjust himself to these changes." Technological Revolution He points to the technological revolution and the current civil rights on the domestic scene and the rise of the underdeveloped na- tions on the international scene as examples of such change. Dean Haber was selected last May to fill the nearly year and a half-vacant post. He had previous- ly served as chairman of the economics department. An expert on labor economics, Dean Haber has participated in studies of Michigan's economy and on national welfare studies. Dean Haber replaces Roger W. Heyns who moved to the newly- created post of vice-president for academic affairs in February, 1962. I Oxford Rd. Housing To Open -Daily-Kamalakar Rao NEW RESIDENCE HALLS-Four hundred women students will be housed in new co-operatives, suites and apartments located on Oxfqrd Rd. The co-op units will be named after the former Adelia Cheever and Geddes League Houses, Pamela Noble and Julia Esther Emanuel, two women who served University students. The suite buildings will honor Mary Allice and Lilliam Emma Roswarne Goddard and the late Sen. and Mrs. Arthur Vandenburg. The apartment units will be named Lurel Harper Seeley Hall formerly in Mary Markley Hall. FUTURE NEEDS: Two Groups SuyClee Futur Long-Range Plan Backed By Regents Walkways, Complex Designed To Beauti Central Campus Are By PHILIP SUTIN National Concerns Editor A green Central Campus, hig lighted by building complexes a lc:.a walkways, is envisioned inI long-range Central Campus p0 approved by the Regents in It July. The report, drawn up by a 16 architectural firm after cons tation with University admin trators, professors and students designed as a general guide it main campus expansion and be tification. Some ot the plan's main effe upon students in the distant f ture include the proposed bannj of automobile traffic on stre surrounding the main camp limiting bicycles to the perimet and functional arranging of hoi ing and academic buildings alo three major walkways. Vice-President for Business a Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont vealed the campus plan to 10 civic leaders on July 29 after I Regents' meeting on the 26 Public exhibits of drawings a charts of the future Cent Campus were held for three da and may be repeated this fall there is sufficient demand. In his speech, Pierpont 91 lined five purposes of the repo 1) To analyze the physical chi acteristics of Central Campus a its potential for growth; 2) To provide for an prde processes of growth, retaining I pleasing characteristics of Ce tral Campus and enhancing the 3) To minimize conflicts w: the city that result from Unive sity growth; 4) To set forth alternative pc sibilities for growth; and 5) To serve as a framework guideline for Central Cam growth. "Hopefully, the 'plan concel offered in this report will provi a lasting resource of stimulat. and direction ?n the effective a justment of campus plan~, a educational goals," the plan sa Walkways and integrated bul ing complexesnare the main f tures of the plan. "If exploit a walkway with such proper dq tination points along the way i become a major stroke of ord identity and vitality to an a demic environment," the p declares. "These natural movements students and faculty could be more dominant force in the cc cept of architecture, function a physical order of the Cent: Campus." The plan notes that the Cent Campus is divided into a pent: "quad" area and five sub-cam: zones-entertainment, around 11 Aud. and the League; acadenr around the Dental School Bld North Hall and the Computi Center; academic, aroundt Physics-Astronomy and ast BK gmneering Buildings; acadeni around the Law Quadrangle; a See CAMPUS, Page 7 Two high-level studies of Mich- igan higher education will be completed tnis fall. A 13-man committee of Gov. George Romney's "blue ribbon" Citizen's Committee on Higher Ed- ucation will submit in October an interim report of its survey of the state's colleges and universities to Romney and the Legislature for use in preparing next year's budget. Also, the Michigan Council of State College Presidents and the Michigan Co-ordinating Council for Higher Education will release its study of enrollment, faculty and capital outlay needs for the next five years in September. 'Crucial Years' This study, begun in June will center around "the crucial years" of 1964-65, executive director of both organizations Ira Polley ex- plains. The results may be used in pub- lic presentations to inform the state's citizenry of the needs of higher education, Polley says. Although the two co-ordinating groups fully endorsed the work ot the "blue ribbon" committee, "they did not believe that pubic policy decisions could be delayed for the great period of time that the committee would need to handle the problem," Polley ex- plains. No Blunting Polley denies that this study is designed to head off or blunt the work of the "blue ribbon" group. The "blue ribbon" committee's 1fy f nical observat~ory t~o concluct -scale astrophysical and geo- sical studies in the infrared tion of the electromagnetic :trum," IST acting-director '. James T. Wilson of the geol- department explained. . Others Helpful he Observatory will be operat-, in co-operation with the Uni- ities of Arizona and Hawaii. stronomers at those two uni- sities have made preliminary lies for the Hawaii site and luse the facilities once built. he Defense. Department's Ad- ed Research Projects Agency give IST $4.35 million over next three years for the proj- ARPA will also spend more n $500,000 for construction of dings, dome foundations and ,rument pedestals. he agency will spend $2.2 mil- in the first year for building developing the laboratory, ect director Robert L. Boggess .ST's infrared laboratory said. opefully, construction will be pleted within a year and the rvatory be fully staffed with- year and a half, he added. he observatory will contain 60-inch reflector telescope and 48-inch ones. It will also house ared sensing equipment and .eras. Unified Look he equipment wi, be designed >rovide comprehensive, on-the- Sinformation about missiles satellites as they are being ,ked, Prof. Wilson said. It will igged so that all equipment- scopes, infrared detectors and anted high-resolution cameras ,n focus in unison on a missile Support Effort By a vote of 347-61 with 20 ab- stentions, the delegates approved a resolution indicating t h a t "USNSA strongly supports this effort to center public attention on the related problems of dis- crimination and economic depri- vation." Passage came after a two-hour floor battle in which all proposed amendments met defeat. Most of the defeated amendments were designed to make the resolution take a more militant stand in See NSC, Page 2 Haun To Run 'U' Residences As New Director of Housing Eugene Haun, formerly associate dean of students at Cornell University, was appointed director of University residences in late July. Filling a year-long vacancy in the revised Office of Student Affairs structure, Haun will direct the operations of the men's and women's residence halls starting Aug. 1. He may also teach English