FRESHMAN EDITION 1Mwr ~Iai4b FRESHMAN EDITION Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom V, No. 1. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1963 SEVEN SECTIONS SIXTY-FOUR Haun Appointed To HousingPost To Supervise Residence.Halls, Filling Vacancy in OSA Structure 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 n 0 U' 'I 0 ns' Q women's residence halls starting' Aug. 1. He may also teach English "after the first year if his OSA duties permit. Mark G. Noffsinger, formerly co-ordinator of counseling was appointed Haun's assistant. Hale Resigns JAMES A. LEWIS ... OSA changes Set aChanes S InJudiiry By JEAN TENANDER J'oint Judiciary Council's con- stitution underwent several changes last year.- A study made by council mem- bershcalefd forseveral revisions on the old constitution designed to make the judicial process more heedful of due process laws and to clarify the procedure by which } cases are referred to the proper University agencies. Substantive Change Several substantive changes oc- curred in procedure: 1) All information given to council for consideration must now be given with a bona fide signa- ture; S2) Any student brought before the council must be- informed of the composition and authority of the council and the channels of appeal open to him; 3) Council must provide the ac- cuse4 with a written summation of information which the council has received from the Office of Student Affairs. Referral Group A referral committee to act as a screening body for all cases which come up before the council has been established. All cases will pas through this committee be- fore they are sent on to council, mental hygiene department, or other counselling agencies. Previously, there had been an informal system for deciding the disposition of cases. The dirctor for student activities and organ- izations had met with the mem- bers of council and discussedeach case individually in order to de- S cide where it should be referred. The committee is composed of the chairman of the council, a student member of the University Committee on Standards anti Con- duct, and the referring officer of the OSA. Appeal Channel Other changes dealt with the channels of appeal open- to the student dissatisfied with the coun- cil's ruling. ' The University Committee on Standards and Conduct was creat- ed to serve as a final appeal board for all penalties invoked by judicial bodies within its juris- diction. It will also adjudicate violations whiche are waived to it by the council. This committee supercedes the old Committee on Student Conduct whose function was never clearly "x delineated and consequently it acted in many cases where no appeal had been made to it and where it had no specific authority. ' One Sex Panel Other changes include a pro- vision stating that the council , will constitute itself as an all m iale of all female body only at the students request. The feeling in some cases has been that the student may receive a more im- portial hearing if members of both sexes discuss the case. John Hale, currently assistant to the director of housing, re- signed to become director of housing at the University of Delaware. Hale and assistant t the vice- president for student affairs Elizabeth Davenport have been directing the residence halls on an interim basis. Vice-President for Student Af- fairs James A: Lewis told the Re- gents that he had been searching for more than a year "for the right man to head the residence halls. He has the balance between a scholarly attitude and exper- ience in personnel work." Lecturer in English + Haun is a lecturer in English, specializing in Restoration drama. Haun will deal only with resi- dence halls, although thenoriginald OSA organization scheme called+ for one official to supervise all housing. "The job now is too big," Lewis explained. Hopefully, he added, Haun will add affiliated and inde- pendent housing to his jurisdic- tion. But this eventually is many years away, Lewis predicted. Create Academic Spirit Under the re-organization plan, the director of University resi-; dences would attempt to create a more academic atmosphere in the residence halls and would carry out established plans such as o- educational housing. The director's office would cen- tralize authority once diffused in the dean of men's and women's offices. No Preconceptions "I am coming to this job with no preconceived goals," Haun said. "I want to make a study of the residential situation at the Uni- versity-this will take about a year-and then think about goals." The residence halls, he said, are "a big exciting operation." Haun declared that he "was elated at the prospects of participating in it. "The residence halls are a go- ing concern. I am going to help them to continue to go." However, Haun sees himself as more than an administrator. "I love my teaching. I regard myself as essentially a teacher." Keep Teaching He said that he had an under- standing with the University that he can teach as he is able to. "The job is so big that I will not be able to teach at least until the first year here has elapsed," he explained. Declaring that residence halls were "part of the educational ap- paratus, a service of the Univer- sity for students," Haun expressed hope +that "students will feel at liberty to offer their advice.' "I believe students living in residence halls have a legitimate interest in the administration of the halls.", Haun, a native of Little Rock, received his bachelor's degree from Hendrix College and his master's at Vanderbilt University. H e earned his doctorate in English at the University of Pennsylvania where he remained for 11 years. His last post there was assistant dean -of men (director of men's residences). - Haber Warns Of Growing Collegre 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 which is 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- dentialcolleges within the literary college as 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. "Education 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. "The only stability is the stabil- ity of change. This can be applied to our country and to our individ- ual worlds as well," he declares. Dean Haber has warned recently that a new underprivileged class is forming in the United States-the uneducated-and has urged that something must be done by high school dropouts. In the face of continued great adjustments societies and its in- dividuals will be forced to make, the University must help prepare its students to adapt to such con- tinual change, Dean Haber says. See Reasons Students, he warns, "must be helped to understand the reason and the nature of change and how to adapt themselvesto it." 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. -Daily-Kamalakar Rao NEW RESIDENCE HALLS-Four hundred women-students will be housed in new co-operatives, suites and apartments located on Oxford 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: T wo Groups Study Colleges Two high-level studies of Mich- igan higher education will be completed this 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. Heyns Places Kadish, Peek, on Committee Professors Sanford H. Kadish of the Law School and George- Peek of the political science depart- ment have been named to the Committee on* Public Discussion, Vice-President for Academic Af- fairs Roger W. Heyns, its chair- man, announced in late July. The. seven-man committee, created last September Ain a re- vision of the University's outside speaker policy, also includes Vice- President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis, as its secretary, and three students to be named this fall by Student Government Council. The group will have a two-fold role. It will attempt to determine what the major issues of the day are and promote their discussion on campus, inviting outside speak- ers itself, if necessary. Its second task is to explain and educate the public about the University's role as a forum. The committee is expected to prepare a statement describing the Uni- versity's speaker policy and prac- tices. T h e revision in University speaker policies followed years of controversy against its alleged limitations of free speech. Prev- See PUBLIC, Page 2 Oxford Rd. Housing To Open 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 of the "blue ribbon" committee,. "they did not believe that public 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 interim study will be headed by Alvin Bentley, a former Owosso Congressman and chairman of the constitutional convention's educa- tion committee. He will be assisted by 12nother members of the "blue ribbon" group. This task force will give the gov- Tooa oCampus Unil Program Aims at Improvement Of Walkways, Building Comple: By PHILIP SUTIN National Concerns Editor A green Central Campus, highlighted by building plexes and walkways is envisioned in the Central Ca plan, released in late July. The plan, which does not detail specific building jects, is designed as a general guide to University expa on Central Campus. Explaining the plan to local civic leaders at a luncheon at the League, Vice-President for Business ernor and Legislature a report in October and the full "blue ribbon" committee another report next January. Legislators are looking toward. the "blue-ribbon" committee re- port as a "master-plan" to guide future higher education appro- priations. With such a scheme,. they assert they can betterhbud- get state education spending. Final Report The "blue ribbon" committee time-table calls for its final report on the needs, problems and co- ordination of Michigan higher ed- ucation to give to Romney in September, 1964., The 61-member committee has only met four times since its for- mation last April and has been hamstrung by a lack of funds. In late July, the W. K. Kellogg Foundation granted the group $50,000 to pay its expenses. While a state-supported group, the com- mittee has received no money from the Legislature. Full-Time Aide "Blue ribbon" committee chair- man Dan Karn says that the money will be used to pay a full- time staff director and enlist con- sultant help. The state's colleges and univer- sities have pledged full co-opera- tion with the "blue ribbon" group and has promised staff and study help. Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont9 said that it had five purposes: 1) To analyze tle physical char- acteristics of Central Campus and its potential for growth; 2) To provide for an orderly processes of growth, retaining the pleasing characteristics of Cen- tral Campus and enhancing them; 3) To minimize conflicts with the city that result from Univer- sity growth; 4) To set forth alternative pos- sibilities for growth; and 5) To serve as a framework or guideline for Central Campus growth. "Hopefully, the plan concepts offered in this report will provide a lasting resource of stimulaton and direction in the effective ad- justment of campus plans and educational goals," the plan says. Walkways and integrated build- ing complexes are the main fea- tures of the plan. "If exploited, a walkway with such proper des- tination points along the way can become a major stroke of orde, identity and vitality to an ac- demic environment," the plan declares. "These natural movements of students and faculty could be a more dominant force in the con- cept of architecture, function and physical order of the Central Campus." The plan notes that the Central Campus is divided into a central "quad" area and five sub-campus zones-entertainment, around Hill Aud, and the League; academic, around the Dental School Bldg., North Hall and the Computing Center; academic, around the Physics-Astronomy and East En- gineering Buildings; academic, around the Law Quadrangle; and See CAMPUS, Page 7 Pierpont Cites Building Goals, Of Next Years 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- 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 ifaculty, pa- tients and students as well as those of other nearby buildings. A $3.3 million library annex will be built on the site of the West Physics Bldg. connecting the Gen- eral and Undergraduate Libraries, Pierpont announced. Preliminary 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 million structure and bids will be sought next spring. Pierpoint cited the $2.5 million second unit of the Fluids Engi- neering Bldg. and the $1.75 mil- lion National Aeronautics and Space Administration Bldg. as ex- :, :f .. PROF. JAMES T. ... Hawaii pro To Constri Observator The Institute of Sciene Technology was awarded i a nearly $5 million contr build and operate an infrar servatory on Mt. Haleakala wai. The observatory "will first in the world to make sive use of infrared sensing uring and recording dev track midcourse missiles an lites. It will also be the firs nomical observatory to full-scale astrophysical an physical studies in the i portion of the electrom spectrum," IST acting- Prof. James T. Wilson of th ogy department explained. The Observatory will be ed in co-operation with th versities of Arizona and Ha Astronomers at those tw versities have made prel: studies for the Hawaii sil will use the facilities once The Defense Department vanced Research Projects will give IST $4.35 milll( the next three years for th, ect. ARPA will also spen than $500,000 for construe buildings, dome foundatioi instrument pedestals. Developing Laboratoi The agency will spend $2 lion in the first year for b and developing the lab project director Robert L. of IST's infrared laborato Hopefully, construction completed within a year a observatory be fully staffe in a year and a half, he adi The observatory willc one 60-inch reflector telesc two 48-inch ones. It will als infrared sensing equipme cameras. The equipment will be d to provide comprehensive, spot information about and satellites as they ar tracked," Prof. Wilson said. be rigged so that all equip telescopes, infrared detects advanced high-resolution -can focus in unison on a or satellite. Divided into Two NSC Session To Feature Civil Rights, U.S. Policy NICKEL COKES, ATMOSPHERE: Daily Offers Unique Fringe I By RUTH HE Wehaven't got a Blue Cro0 - -accident insurance but we like t mood things of life: nickle Cokes, a term paper writing and the tickin ;" "":;>, ;. company contractions of the rain - ~ Plenty a By VAUGHN WALKER Civil rights and foreign policy questions, particularly Cuba were expected to highlight the 15th annual National Student Congress of the United States National Student Association held through August 30 at the University of Indiana in Bloomington. Student delegates from nearly 400-member colleges and univer- sities are considering a diverse range of subject in workshops and "egislative committee sessions that began August 19. The delegates will consider leg- islation specifically implementing the organization's goals, noted in its constitution: Ien ef its 1) Maintenance of academic freedom and responsibility; 2) Support of student rights and ETMAN SKI - 3) Strengthening of democratic ss plan,retirement benefits or student governments. give Daily staffers all the other To carry out these goals USNSA late study room for atmospheric engages in many varied activities. ig o naionl nws ire toac-It gathers and distributes rele- .g o naionl nws ire toac-vant information for student gov- produced during creative fits. ernent members, cooperates with f Rain several international student or- writers, news writers, and business ganizations, holds conferences and affer gets the additional privilege seminars for campus leaders at o. where nnt-in exasnerations various levels, conducts charity The Daily has room for sportsN staff members. Any opinionated stE rn --nfif, to the+.ditnrialnA The instruments will b into two sets-one for a andpne for satellite ar Knomrsimm If