SGC DROPS CLEAR POWER See Editorial Page W- --,--Nmcmmw Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom 41P ,43 a t I# PARTLY CLOUDY High-50 Low-30 Warmer today with chance of showers in the evening ) VOL. LXXIV, No. 79 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1963 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES Haber To Permit Classes on Friday' Letter to Department Heads Allows Instructors to Make Up Own Minds By JEFFREY GOODMANj I * 4 4 While classes are officially cancelled for next Friday, some meet- ings will be held in the University's four largest colleges-literary, education, engineering and music-though largely at individual in- structors' discretion. A letter was sent yesterday by Dean William Haber to all literary college department heads giving them a "local option" on the holding of classes. According to Associate Dean Charles Lehmann of the education school, classes ~p meeting on Saturdays only will be held next week. While Dean Leh- . mann anticipates that some classes may be held on Friday, he {$ said that the school has taken :.;no other official action except to recognize the University policy. Some Will Anyway The engineering school has taken no special action except to announce the study dates. Assist- ant Dean Arlen Hellwarth feels, however, that the great dissatis- faction expressed by faculty mem- bers will undoubtedly lead some to hold Friday meetings. The music school will not can- cel various individual organ ex- aminations which it had scheduled on the Hill Aud. organ mainly be-9 cause of the difficulty of resched- uling, Associate Dean John Flower1 said. Various other classes or in-i DEAN WILLIAM HABER dividual performance examina- . permits Friday classes tions may also be held, but they1 will not have the official sanction CONGRESS SPLIT:* of the school.l * The letter sent to literary col-f lege departments states that "be- Powell Hits cause of the widespread impres-c sion that classes would be heldf 'Se jous' Stall through Friday, some departmentsr and individual instructors have al-I ready made plans to use this dayE Scho 1"'1ifor class meetings or examinations. On ~c o Bill Chacun A Son Gout "The Vice-President for Aca- Collegiate Press Service demic Affairs supports my recoi- WASHINGTON - A stalemate mendation that departments bet between House and Senate educa- given a local option to proceedC tion leaders-with both sides ac- with these plans, if they so wish."r cusing each other of congressional The letter was the result of aa blackmail-has apparently killed "fairly general concern" voiced by hopes for any aid to education faculty at Monday's faculty meet-a legislation this year. ing over the sudden announce-x In an interview this week, Rep. went that Friday and Saturdayr Adam Clayton Powell (D-NY), were to be reserved for study,t chairman of the House Education Associate Dean James H. Robert-f and Labor Committee, said the son said. feud "is creating a crisis in edu- Due to an oversight,dthe first cation." announcement of the dates ap-s At the heart of the controversy peared in the academic calendarr s a split between House-Senate on the inside rear cover of the fac-t conferees over a compromise ver- ulty directory. sion of the Vocational Aid Edu- Dean Haber's letter concludes:g cation Bill. "Strong representations have al- Bill Killers ready been made that in the fu- Powell said the delay over the ture all teaching units participated Pocational aid bill "is very ser- fully in calendar decisions whichn ious. This delaying action is killing affect teaching and examiningg aus education bills." time. In addition, I have urged c Il educ caio is lders rthat such decisions be published t Senate education leaders are early, accurately and approp-c eeping the $1.2 billion college aid riately" u yr bill from reac in a the floor and IJIL L. ~~.L L~~.IALL5 ILL~LL~U d riatly." Hatcher Requests, New Plan By LOUISE LIND University President H a r 1 a n Hatcher will head a University delegation appearing before a committee of the National Aero- nautics and Space Administration on Dec. 17 to recommend that a proposed $50 million electronics research center be located in southeastern Michigan. Robert Burroughs, director of the University Office of Research Administration, commented yes- terday that "while we cannot pre- dict the outcome of the commit- tee's decision, we're hoping for a favorable reaction." The NASA hearing was arrang- ed by Sen. Philip A. Hart (D- Mich) and Rep. Neil Staebler (D- Mich) on Hart's insistence that the administration make a study of the feasibility of locating the center in Michigan. University Places Bid After the Wall Street Journal wrote an article saying private re- search industry in the Boston area was urhappy with the pro- ject, the University put in a bid for the center last March. The center was originally slated for a Boston location. However, congressmen objected s v ral months ago to NASA locating it there in deference to the Ken- nedy family - particularly Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass), who campaigned in 1962 on the promise that he could "do more for Massachusetts." "The NASA committee has been charged with studying the avail- able locations for the project and making its report to James E. Webb, NASA director," Burroughs explained. Congress Ultimately "Webb and NASA will select the site; Congress will issue the ulti- mate approval. NASA may go through the entire legislative pro- cess and still come up with a recommendation for the Boston area," Burroughs said. University, business, research and public utility leaders have been asked by Gov. George Rom- ney to give their full support to the campaign to win the project for Michigan. "This facility would conduct re- search in electronics, physics and related fields, and its location here would be important to the indus- trial, economic and scientific pro- gress of our state," Romney wrote. Ask Serious Consideration Burroughs explained that Presi- dent Hatcher and leaders of busi- ness, research, public utilities and government leaders are asking the committee to seriously consider the Michigan location. The next choice for the project would be the Great Lakes area. To Attract Honors < Group Considers Posthumous Medal Give 'To Kennedy WASHINGTON OP) - Presiden1 Lyndon B. Johnson wrestled yes- terday with problems centering around NATO and military spend- ing and awarded the Medal o Freedom to the late President John F. Kennedy as a "pioneer for peace." Johnson made another unan- nounced posthumous award of the medal, the nation's highest civil- ian honor for peacetime service. This one went to the lats Pope John XXIII. Johnson covered NATO, a pro- jected allied nuclear force and military spending in a single hour- long conference with defense and state department advisers, includ- ing the two secretaries. Notable Achievements The medal ceremony, at noon in the White House, was a follow- through on Kennedy's selection of 31 American citizens and foreign nations who have marked up not- able achievements in many fields. They included persons such as singer Marian Anderson, French statesman Jean Monnet, Navajo Indian health worker Annie Wau- naka, educator James B. Connant, and Felix Frankfurter, former Su- preme Court justice. White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger saidthat certainly it was by no means a letup day for the man who became the President just two weeks ago upon Kennedy's assassination. Briefing for Rusk Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara will be heading for Paris and a semi-annual meeting of NATO foreign, defense and fi- nance ministers that starts Dec. 16. The meeting is expected to go into such matters as long range NATO strategy, so Johnson want- ed to catch up in this and other areas. He was brought up to date as well on talks that have been Lin- der way in Paris on a multilat- eral force. For the United States, special ambassador Livingston Merchant has been the chief participant. Standing in for him yesterday, to bring Johnson up to date on the attitudes of the various govern- ments, was Walt W. Rostow, head of the State Department's policy planning staff. WAY BACK WHEN-The University's latest movie about itself, "Perspective Michigan," shows the campus as it looked around 1900. State St. looking south from East William St. in the horse and buggy era was a broad, but unpaved boulevard. The Congregational Church (far right) still stands, but the picket fence, built when the University was located in the rural east end of town, has long since disappeared. So has University Hall, one of the earliest campus buildings, which appears through the trees. Ways Top Students to New 'U' Film Depict. ' t ,1 11 By MICHAEL HARRAH At the request of the Regents, University Television Center has produced a 25-minute newsreel in color and black and white, cover- ing the events of 1962-63. Originally intended for use by the Alumni Association at various alumni gatherings about the coun- try, the film is now also to be pressed into service by the Uni- versity relations office for show- ing before service groups in Mich- igan. Entitled "Perspective Michigan," the film opens with a shot of the late poet Robert Frost receiving an honorary degree from Univer- sity President Harlan Hatcher, followed by a shot of former Wol- verine football great Tom Harmon being honored at half-time. Do You Remember... The film then skips through the highlights of 1962-63, picking up shots of the Michigras floats, the Glee Club's triumphant return from their European tour, the education of the Peace Corps trainees for Thailand and Michi- gan's all-sports championship in the Big Ten conference. One of the highlights of the film is the sequence covering the birth- day in honor of University Presi- dent Emeritus Alexander G. Ruth- ven, held in the Michigan Union ayear ago last June. Candid glimpses of President Ruthven and his famous Morgan horses, testi- monials by former Regent Harry Kipke and Prof. William D. Re- velli of the music school, and a description of the alumni gifts for "the past, the present and the future" to President Ruthven pay tribute to the University's for- mer chief executive. Flashback photos gleaned from The Michigan Historical Collec- sCampus tions of the University campus 75 years ago compared to the new buildings springing up now are a striking description of how the University is progressing. .. That Wonderful Year? The film also shows glimpses of the coming of the University's theatre-in-residence, The Associa- tion of Producing Artists, the new Ann Arbor Research Park on North Campus, and explanation of the year-round calendar by Vice-President for Academic Af- fairs Roger W. Heyns. Also in- cluded are views of the new alumni family camp at Boyne City. Public showing is scheduled for 4:10 p.m. Thursday in Aud B. Views Role Of Publicity, Scholarships Gordus Foresees No All-Out Drive To Recruit Scholars By KENNETH WINTER A new faculty group is seeking ways to improve the University's ability to attract top-notch stu- dents to Ann Arbor. Headed by Prof. Adon A. Gordus of the chemistry department, this subcommittee of the Honors Coun- cil is comparing the University's publicity and scholarship programs for highly qualified students with those at other institutions. Prof. Gordus emphasized that the establishment of the sub- committee "is not the first step toward a mass recruitment cam- paign. We are interested in explor- ing means of giving potential Uni- versity students a more complete picture of the University before they select a college." Look Again The study, initiated about a month ago, was one of a series launched after various discus- sions of ways to improve the Honors program. "The program had grown to the point where it was felt that a new look could now be taken at the procedures for contacting and attracting high-quality students," Prof. Gor- dus explained. One of its chief objects of com- parison is Michigan State Univer- sity, where an intensive recruit- ment campaign has attracted many top-ranking high ' school students. MSU is being studied" closely because it is nearby and offers a good comparison, he explained. "Our concern is not exclusively with what MSU is doing. We are trying to figure out in what ways information about the University can be disseminated. The Univer- sity offers top high-school stu- dents many distinct opportunities -yet perhaps we've taken them for granted, not realizing that po- tential students are unaware of them. Concern Here However, reports from East Lan- sing claiming that 198 winners of Merit Scholarships entered MSU as freshmen this fall have raised some concern among faculty mem- bers and were discussed at the No- vember literary oallege faculty meeting. The Office of Academic Affairs reportedly also has studied the situation. The University, with 29 Merit scholars in its entering class this fall, had for the past decade shared first place among state institutions with the University of California at Berkeley. The num- ber of Merit scholars an institu- tion has is considered an impor- tant indicator of the quality of its student body: consequently, it is a factor in its academic reputa- tion. Prof. Gordus commented that same University faculty members see Michigan State's recruitment program as a "commendable at- tempt" to improve standards, while others see it as luring top students away from the University. MSU Scholars He cited several reasons for the high MSU Merit-scholar statistics: -"It's partially a question of semantics," he said. Of the 198 reported Merit scholars, about 160, he estimated, actually received MSU-financed scholarships which were simply administered by the Merit Scholarship Corp. This would leave only 30-40 actual Merit scholars in the MSU fresh- man class. All 29 University Merit scholars, on the other hand, received their Merit money from non-University sources. The University doesn't give scholarships through the Merit Corporation, Prof. Gordus explained. -Another factor is the litera- ture which MSU sends out to high school students and counselors, For instance, Michigan State sends out numerous public-relations cir- culars to counselors and potential students, "while the University sends out little more than its gen- eral-information catalogue." Prof. Carr Orders Cancellation Of Probe into Assassination WASHINGTON VP)-Texas Attorney General Waggoner Carr announced yesterday that he has called off a state court of inquiry into circumstances surrounding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The Texas state official; making the announcement from the justice department, said he acted in compliance with a suggestion by Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren, who heads the com- mission appointed by Presidente Mill from reacning neoraa final approval until House mem- bers compromise along Senate lines on the vocational aid bill, which also contains extension of student loans and grants under the National Defense Education Act-. tThe joint conferees have ham- ered out a compromise version of a bill to aid colleges and uni- versities with loans and grants over a five-year period to build campus facilities. Senate Approval Needed The "bricks and mortar" bill sailed through the House Nov. 6 and needs only quick Senate ap- proval. But the education conferees of both Houses haven't met since Nov. 8 to mold a compromise ver- sion of House and Senate voca- tional aid legislation. While they are at odds on many points of the vocational bill, the chief roadblock is the formula to be used in distributing program funds. The Senate wants a form- ula based on per capita income, while the House prefers one based on population. The Senate formula would favor poorer states in the South, while the House plan would help Northern states with large populations. Bomb Victims Sue in Japan TOYKO (M)-A Japanese civil court declared yesterday the United States violated interna- tional law by dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Naga- saki in World War II. The opinion by Judge Toshimasa bf Toyko District Civil Court- nn Paal' a. na- o , i. fh I Wolverines Continue Win Streak, 8- By TOM ROWLAND Without much of a fuss, Michigan went about its winning basketball ways last night, rolling past Nebraska in decisive 80-55 style. With 11 players in the scoring column, Michigan was never threatened. The Blue jumped into a 7-0 lead before the Cornhuskers even got a shot at the basket and ran the margin to 15 points before the end of the half. In the second stanza, Coach Dave Strack's crew never let up the scoring pace, leading by as much as 27 points near the end of the game. The victory kept alive an undefeated winter for the highly- rated Wolverines, with three victories in as many starts. Strack's men travel to Indianapolis Wednesday to face Butler, a team that's won three straight over the Wolverines. Lyndon B. Johnson to conduct a similar inquiry. This turn in the investigative' aftermath of the Nov. 22 assassi- nation came some hours after a repoi't that Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused killer, told his wife he tried to shoot Gen. Edwin A. Walker eight months ago. Narrow Escape A bullet fired through a window into the right-wing general's Dal- las home on April 10 narrowly missed Walker and he was slightly cut by flying glass. Government sources said Mrs. Marina Oswald, Russian-born wife of the Marxist-ex-Marine, has told federal agents that Oswald came home and boasted excitely of his exploit on the night of the attempt on Walker's life. Carr said he has been invited to participate with the Presiden- tial commission in its study and will do so, standing ready at all times to call a court of inquiry into session in Texas if it can be useful in questioning of witnesses1 in his state. May Still Convene He also made it plain to news- men that a court of inquiry still may be convened in his state after; the Presidential commission con- cludes its work if he feels any; good purpose would be served in convening the state investigating body. The episode reportedly is part' of the FBI's massive report on the assassination, delivered yesterday to the Justice Department and shortly to gn to the White Huse. USNSA Stops. Support, Local Co-op Forms The former United States Na- tional Student Association Coop- erative Bookstore has been re-or- ganized into a new, local organi- zation which will attempt to main- tain a co-op bookstore on this campus. The new group, the Friends of the Ann Arbor Cooperative Book- store Association, was formed when USNSA withdrew its sup- port of the campus store. The in- itial capital for the enterprise is being provided by the Continen- tal Student Cooperative, which had operated a successful co-op bookstore at the University of Chi- cago for several years, but funds for stock in the future are in- tended to come from member- ships bought by the students and faculty of the University. At present, control of the book- store is in the hands of a tempor- ary committee headed by. Peter Roosen-Runge, '65 Grad, but it will come under the control of the people who buy $5 memberships in the co-op. Non-voting member- ships for $3 are also being sold. All policies will be decided by the voting members. I nn avrenti