SUBSTANTIVEREVIEW THE NEW AMBIGUITY Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom ~Iziii4 see page 2 CLOUDY, WARMER VOL. LXIX, No. 2S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1959 FIVE CENTS FOUR PAGES Educators Fail To Plan Future Hatcher Cites Need for New Means To Imprgve U.S. Higher Learning By KATHLEEN MOORE "We are making no adequate provisions for the expansion" of education in the near future, University President Harlan Hatcher commented yesterday. As opening speaker for the summer lecture series, "Modern Man Looks Forward," President Hatcher told listeners the increasing complexity of modern life and its emphasis on progress demanded increased quality and quantity the present American educational system was unprepared to cope with properly. The "Oxford and Cambridge tradition" of small numbers of students gathered around a don no longer works, he maintained. QThe rapid expansion of knowl- SE. TE P 1 . SSES B $33.4 UDGET E SURE LLOTTI G ILLIO TO 'U, f edge and its applications calls for a "constant upgrading of the ed- ucational system" with the addi- tion of more graduate programs and increased enrollments in all levels of education. Much Outdated Among the educational patterns which the President called out- dated was the "inharmonious semester system" which wastes teaching ability, student learning power and the efficient use of fa- cilities. He predicted the future adoption of a four-term year throughout the country. The present educational pat- tern in the public schools and colleges also came under Presi- dent Hatcher's fire. He saw "no rhyme, reason or logic" to the present four-year college schedule and said education in the next 10 years would take a "good, hard look at this little dogmatic pat- tern we've fallen into." Moving to constructive sugges- tions, he said one solution to the need for more and better educa- tion has been offered by Beards- ley Ruml who advocates the in- stitution of larger classes. This method, President Hatcher said, is practicable for in many courses a "great professor with a class of. 500 is more effective than another professor with five." Provides for Jobs The Russian system of higher education provides for a two-year lag between high school and col- lege in which students are ex- pected to prove their capabilities in extension and night school courses while holding jobs. The idea is "due to cause much excitement in the world," he pre- dicted, and the University is "do- ing a little bit of it in a different manner in our Dearborn Center" which opens in the fall. The future of the University itself focuses on plans for main- tenance of quality, President Hatcher emphasized, with con- trolled enrollment growth only coming if academic standards and top faculty can be retained. A "strong and distinguished un- dergraduate program" with a rel- atively small freshman class of about 3,000 and the expansion and improvement of graduate and professional schools, which now account for nearly 40 per cent of the student body, are University goals for the foresee- able future, President Hatcher told the audience. ENROLLMENT: First Day Figures Show Lag The opening-day tally showed University summer session enroll- ments slightly lower than last year's, but the final totals are ex- pected to exceed last year's 12,109 by about five per cent. A total of 7,880, as compared to 8,062 last year, attended their first classes Monday, Merlin Miller, as- sistant director of the Office of Registration and Records, revealed. Broken down, the figures show 6,759 enrolled on campus, 176 in Flint College and approximately 945 at other state centers. Similar totals last year showed 6,959 in Ann Arbor, 203 in Flint College and 900 at other centers. Faculty Same The size of' the faculty for the summer will be about the same as in the past, ,necessitating a slight increase in class loads, N. Edd Miller, associate director of the summer session, said. Among the faculty members will be 85 visiting professors teaching classes on campus, 13 teaching at extension centers in Flint, Grand Rapids, Saginaw, Detroit, Traverse City and Alpena and eight at the National Music Camp at Inter- lochen. Graduate education courses will be the most popular, Miller pre- dicted, due to the large number of teachers returning to work on ad- vanced degrees. The University is offering a number of new programs this sum- mer, including a foreign languages institute for approximately 100 students financed through a provi- sion of the National Defense Edu- cation Act of 1958. Mathematics Program Other innovations, pr e sen ted with the aid of grants from the National Science Foundation, in- clude courses for mathematics teachers and teachers of arith- metic. Off-campus programs for Uni- versity students are being offered at the natural resources school's Camp Filibert Roth in Iron County, the Institute for Human Adjustment's Fresh Air Camp for boys and the music school's Inter- lochen Music Camp. Sessions will also be held at the geology camp in Boulder, Colo., the Biological Station in Cheboy-1 gan, Camp Cusino in Shingleton, Camp Davis in Wyoming and the Speech Improvement Camp in Northport.I Hope for In In Employe House Next To Co Substantial Change icreases Salaries nsider Measure; Ps Not Predicted By THOMAS HAYDEN The University's proposed $33.4 million operating appro- priation swept through the state Senate yesterday, and was routed to the House of Representatives where approval is pre- dicted sometime next week. The bill authorizes a three million dollarincrease in Uni- versity operating funds for the 1959 fiscal year - enough to substantially improve faculty salaries. By a 30-2 vote, the Senate okayed the appropriation as part of a $100.9 million budget for higher education, $13 million more than last-- REPORTS TO PRESIDENT-Secretary of State Christian Herter reported to President Dwight D. Eisenhower on the Big Four Foreign Ministers Conference before his address to the nation by tele- vision last night.f Berlin Key to Peace-Herter By The Associated Press' WASHINGTON - The House, fiying in the face of a veto threat, yesterday sent President Dwight D. Eisenhower a $1,375,000,000 housing bill his aides call too costly. A 241-177 roll call vote com- pleted congressional action on the compromise measure. CIUDAD TRUJILLO, Dominican Republic-A Cuban-supported in- vasion force on the Dominican north coast has been liquidated, the government announced yester- day. Generalissimo Rafael L. Trujillo, the 68-year-old strong man who has ruled this country for 29 years, personally directed operations in the central part of the country, -' it said. The government thus gave its version for the first time concern- ing reports from Dominican exiles in Cuba and Venezuela that a rebel invasion force was seeking overthrow of the Trujillo regime. These reports said rebels last week captured Constanza, about 180 lmiles northwest of Ciudad Tru- jillo, and then withdrew. * * BATON ROUGE, La.-Attorney Joe Arthur Sims said last night Mrs. Earl Long has left Louisiana and her departure opened the way to freedom for Gov. Earl Long from a mental hospital Friday. a The Governor's wife signed the application, for Long's committal to Southeast Louisiana State Hos- pital at Mandeville. Sims, Long's attorney, filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus demanding the Governor's release. Institute New Library Hours For Summer The summer schedule of hours for the Undergraduate and Gen- eral Libraries went into effect Monday and will continue until Aug. 15. Both libraries.will be open from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Fridays and from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays, Roberta C. Keniston, librarian of the Undergraduate Library., announced. Both librar- ies will be closed on Sundays. The audio room on the second floor of the Undergraduate will open at 2 n m Mnndiays thrmi WASHINGTON (P) - Secretary' of State Christian A. Herter called on Moscow last night to give up its dream of taking over West Ber- lin if it wants to negotiate a peace- ful settlement of the German prob- lem. "The United States 'will never' compromise the freedom of the brave people of West Berlin who have placed their faith in our pro- tection," Herter said in a radio- television report to the nation. Adkins Speech Set Tomorrow At 'U' Institute Bertha S. Adkins, undersecre- tary of health, education and wel- fare, will address the National Leadership Training Institute dinner here tomorrow. She will replace Secretary Ar- thur S. Flemming as the principal speaker at the Institute, which will be held at the University to- day through Friday to prepare for the 1961 White House Con- ference on Aging. About one thousand participants are expected to attend the meet- ing which follows the University's own 12th annual conference on aging. He discussed the diplomatic deadlock with Russia after sixI weeks of Big Four Foreign Minis- ters' talks at Geneva on Germany's future. Will Shun Conference President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Herter said, will continue to shun any summit conference with So- viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev until some degree of progress is recorded in lower-level talks. "Regretfully no such progress has yet been registered at Geneva," Herter said. Aiming his words directly at Moscow, the Secretary said the critical question is wheth- er Russia willpersist in a deter- mination to 'annex West Berlin' with its 21 million free Germans. If so, he said, no agreement is possible with the Kremlin." "However, if the Soviets do not hold to this annexationist design, we should be able to reach agree- ment on Berlin consistent with the honor and interest of all our coun- tries," he said. Made Appeal Herter appealed to Khrushchev to give "serious second thought" to Western proposals for unifying Germany. Moscow has turned these down, he said, with "upside- down talk" without even consider- ing them as a basis for discussion. Herter blamed Khrushchev for turning the Geneva talks into a futile exercise by his frequent speeches reiterating Soviet threats against the West. "While the foreign ministers were negotiating," he said, "the baneful influence of statements outside the conference by Khrush- chev was clearly felt. 'U', R URussian Series Set "The Challenge of Soviet Ex- pansion" will be the theme of a series of six lectures to be pre- sented during the summer ses- sion. Sponsored by the Committee on the Program on Russian Studies and the Summer Session, the series will open with James P. Grant, deputy director for pro- gram and planning of the Inter- national Cooperation Administra- tion. Grant, a former chief of the ICA mission in Ceylon, will talk on "The Impact of Soviet Foreign Aid on United States Policy" on July 2. To Speak Here Joseph S. Berliner of Syracuse University's economic department, will discuss "The Characteristics of the Soviet Aid Program" July 9. He is the author of "Soviet Economic Aid." Robert R. Bowie, director of Harvard's Center for Inter- tional Affairs will speak on "America's Responsibilities to the Soviet Challenge" July 16. He is former chairman of the United States State Department's Policy Planning Staff. "Sense and Nonsense About Dr. Zhivago" will be the subject of a supplementary lecture de- livered by Prof. Gleb Struve of the University of California's Rus- sian department. He is the author of "Soviet Russian Literature, 1917-1950." Connecticut congressman Ches- ter Bowles, former governor of Connecticut and former ambassa- dor to India will speak on "The Future of the East-West Conflict" July 23. He is author of "Am- bassador's Report." "The Political and Economic Strength of the Soviet Union," a speech by Harry Schwartz, will conclude the series July 29. Schwartz is Soviet affairs special- ist for The New York Times and author of "Russia's Soviet Econ- omy." year. Lansing observers and corres- pondents forecast similar action in the House next week. Aid to Salaries Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Niehuss said the appropriation would be a "shot in the arm" for faculty sal- aries. "Substantial adjustments for teaching faculty and also non- academic salary areas" would be. provided, he predicted. Staff salaries had been labelled "high priority" by University offi- cials, particularly since job offers to faculty from industry and oth- er schools have mounted steadily over the past months. Request Cut The proposed sum would con- tribute little or no improvement in non-salary areas, Niehuss said. The University had originally re- quested a total budget of $39.2 million. Restrictions in plant, equip- ment, and grounds maintenance would have to be continued, Nie- huss said, as under the Univer- sity's present austerity budget of $30 million. Niehuss praised the Senate's "recognition of the need" for an Institute of Science and Tech-1 nology. for which $500,000 would be appropriated. One other University segment tentatively benefitted by $130,000 yesterday as the Senate sent on Bonus LANSING (A) -- Cash crisis or no cash crisis, House mem- bers voted themselves a 50 per cent pay increase yester- day. If the Senate approves, law- makers will collect $6,000 a yearstarting in January, 1961, "We're not adequately paid for the services we render," Rep. Joseph 1. Jackson (D- Highland Park), who led the move, said. to the House a mental health. ap- propriation of $70.8 million and a public health appropriation of $16.1 million. Add to Bill Grouped as a line item in the mental health bill which passed the Senate 29-2 were the Neuro- psychiatric Institute, Children's Hospital, and Mental Health Re- search. In floor action the three units received a budget raise to $2,000,- 000 compared to the $1,870,000 listed in the bill. T h e S e n a t e Appropriations committee is still considering the sum to be distributed for capital outlay to the state's schools and colleges. The group may report out an appropriation of between $10-15 million, observers speculate with the University receiving perhaps $2-5 million for new building. AT LYDIA MENDELSSOHN: 'Boy Friend' To Open Playbill Tonight The speech department's play- :> 'bill, Summer '59, opens at 8 p.m. today with a production of "The Boy Friend." Sandy Wilson's spoof on the cliches and boop-boop-a-doop r x spirit of musical comedies in the roaring twenties will be produced each evening through Saturday at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. In contrast to the light-hearted gaiety of "The Boy Friend," the speech department's second play will be John Osborne's "Look Back in Anger," a portrayal of youth's disillusionment with the ugliness of the world today. It is scheduled for presentation at 8 p.m. July 8 to 11. "The Rivals," Richard Brinsley Sheridan's comedy of manners and double identity, will appear next in the series of four plays and an opera, going before audi- ences July 15 to 18. Jean Anou- hilh's cynical farce, "Waltz of the }.Toreadors," follows on July 29 to Aug. 1. Completing the summer playbill will be a production of Verdi's "Rigoletto," presented jointly by _. +~n nn nnh 14nnear~m 4- - 4 t -. PROF. JOHN BRUBACHER ... discusses liberal arts Liberal Arts Study Urged, Practical studies and a liberal education should go "hand in hand" in universities, Prof. John Brubacher of the Center of High- er Education said yesterday. Speaking at the first annual Institute on College and Univer- sity Administration, Prof. Bru- bacher rejected the idea that liberal and practical studies be sealed from each other to prevent one from contaminating the other. "Each can benefit the other," he asserted. He suggested practical studies should be taught in as liberal a spirit as possible, adding that professional and technological studies might have a great deal to gain from this approach. Asks Emphasis "Liberal studies, too, can be enriched by being given concrete and specific emphasis," he ex- plained. "It is doubtful that con- cepts can be learned meaning- fully' withoutreference to the concrete realities of life." He stressed that a student learns the liberal arts "not only by example but by exercise," the exercise giving a feeling for the subject matter involved. Prof. Brubacher pointed out that a student -need not become .expert in the practice of an art ,to enrich his liberal education. Narrowness Bad "He should aim at becoming a good artist, but not too good. To become expert is too likely to lead to narrow specialization which endangers general or lib- eral education." However, this is no justifica- tion for the "gentleman's C," Prof. Brubacher said. "For one thing, it contradicts Aristotle's claim that the good life is the intellectual life. While there are limits at which the stu- dent should stop in building com- petence in the fine technological arts, there are none in developing excellence in the liberal arts. Prof. Brubacher argued that specialization in the liberal arts. ! " . For your convenience, clip out this coupon and mail today to ! * THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard St. ! I " ! ! ! Please start my subscription to the summer Daily and bill me at a " ! d" ! later date. ! ! " I I I