BIAS PROTESTERS NEAR HOME GROUND , t C igan ~E~ait1 FAIR High-82 Low-60 Sunny today, cooler tonight See Editorial Page Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIII, No. 32- ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1963 SEVEN CENTS FOUR PAGES Haiti Claims Loyalists Crush Rebel Invasion; Chase Insurgent Chief Education Unit Expands To Six Program Areas By JEAN TENANDER There are now six areas available for research proposals within the Cooperative Research Program of the United States office of education. At present the six programs are basic and, applied research, curriculum improvement, development activities, demonstration, small contact and the research and development centers. The six programs within the CRP fill nearly every category a person wishing to do research in the field of education might want, Robert C. Fitzpatrick, project' representative of Office of Re-I' search Administration, said yes- terday. - FACES HAZARDS: Foresee Changes in Rights Bill THRUSTS-Arrows mark troop movements of Haitian loyalist and rebel troops. The rebels are reported moving inland, cutting off Cap Haitien while the government claims that its troops, airlifted from the south, have checked the rebel advance. PREPARE REPORT: Smih Tlor To Work SrOn 'Blue Ribbon' Pro ect By ANDREW ORLIN Harold Smith will work full time if necessary and Harold Tay- lor, newly appointed staff director of the "blue ribbon" committee, will work as much as is needed on the "blue ribbon" committee, Tay- lor said recently. Both Smith and Taylor oxe associated with the W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research. Taylor, director of the institute, Exiles Report Opponents. Still Advance Contradictions Cloud Position of Troops Throughout Country PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti (A)P..- President Francois Duvalier's re- gime claimed yesterday its troops crushed a rebel invading force and drove it across the border into the Dominican Republic after several hours of fighting in North Haiti Monday. Private sources in the Haitian capital tended to confirm the gov- ernment's claim, but insisted the rebel leader. Gen. Leon Cantave, was still inside Haitian territory pursuing his drive to bring down Duvalier's regime. Exile sources in Santo Domin- go, capital of the neighboring Dominican Republic, continued to claim rebel gains. These sources insisted two Haitian rebel columns had speared down past Cap Hai- tien and a third was moving across the northwest peninsula in an apparent princers action on Gonaives, a west coast fort and Haiti's third largest city. Swelled Rebel informants and exile sources claimed the original force of 500 invaders was swelled in the last two days by soldiers who de- serted Duvalier's forces to Join the insurgents, under Cantave, the former commander. However, a Haitian government communique issued by Informa- tion Minister George J. Figaro contradicted rebel claims of ad- vances deep inside North Haiti after seaborne landings Sunday and Monday. Figaro insisted rebels wearing Dominican army uniforms crossed into Haiti from the neighboring Dominican Republic Sunday night and captured the frontier post of Meillac by surprise. Drive on Fort Liberte The communique said the rebels led by Cantave then moved through the area around Ouana- minthe, a town on the Haitian side of the river border with the Dominican Republic, and pushed toward Derac in a drive on Fort Liberte, midway on the road to Cap Haitien, Haiti's second city, about 35 miles to the west of the Dominican border. The communique said the rebels never reached Fort Lberte as they claimed but were driven back across the Dominican border after several hours of fighting. Claude Raymond, foreign office undersecretary, t o 1 d newsmen some rebels were killed or cap- tured, but gave no figures. The communique said only that three government soldiers were wounded. Not Dead He acknowledged, however, that Cantave was not among the dead or captured. The communique listed a num- ber of former Haitian army offi- cers with Cantave but there was no immediate indication of their fate. The communique placed the size of the invading force at about 100, about a fifth of what the rebels claimed. All Schools Proposals come from all schools and colleges, Fitzpatrick said. The money for the grants awarded to the proposals is supplied by the office of education from its fed- eral research program. The basic and applied research studies include controlled experi- mental research; surveys; corre- lational, methodological and case studies; developmental and histor- ical studies in such subjects as mental retardation, aptitudes and abilities and the roles of teachers and school administrators. The curriculum improvement program provides support for curriculum improvement that it feels are significant to education at one or more grade levels. General Purpose The development activities pro- gram has as its general purpose to increase the high quantity of high quality research and develop- ment projects in particular areas of education and to enhance the competenpe of those engaged in educational research. T h e demonstration program, which is new this year, has been set up to disseminate, through demonstrations, applications of new, educational techniques and materials that have been develop- ed by research. The small contract program and the research and development centers are also new this year. The first is designed to support small-scale research on educa- tional problems. Based at Colleges The second, the research and development centers, are to be established and based at colleges, state departments of education and local school systems where researchers, administrators and teachers can work toward the im- provement of educational pro- cesses. Anyone seeking to do work in education submits a proposal to the office of education, Fitzpat- rick said. Six panels, broken down into the six disciplines the CRP deals with, review the proposal and de- cide whether to accept it or not. The panels are composed of ex- perts in the various fields. Romney Seeks Bipartisanship In Districting Gov. George Romney called on the Democratic party to cooperate in drawing up the legislative dis- tricts for the 1964 elections. The Republicans, chief authors of the new constitution, have al- ready named their four members to the eight-man apportionment board, while Democrats have in- dicated that they may appoint only temporary members who could be replaced at a later date. jAtty. Gen. Frank Kelley, a Democrat, has ruled that the members to the apportionment cannot be named after the con- stitution takes effect next Jan. 1. He ruled that the commission will not have any legal status after the constitution becomes effective. Zolton F e r e n c y, Democratic State Central Committee chair- man, has indicated that his party is willing to cooperate with the Republicans on the terms set forth by Kelley. OutlinesSplit, In Theology By VAUGHN WALKER Catholics place- their primary reliance upon the teaching of the Apostles while Protestants place their greatest emphasis upon the l Biblical Scriptures, Msgr. John F. Bradley said last night at the Newman Club summer series con- I cluding presentation. Msgr. Bradley, leading a discus- sion on Catholic-Protestant theol- ogy, pointed out that today Roman Catholics place primary import- ance upon the "content" of their religion. Persons entering the Ro- man Church must profess belief in the doctrines of the Church, he said. Protestants, on the other hand, need not necessarily rely so heav- ily on content. Instead, they tend toward a reliance upon faith. Protestant Origins Msgr. Bradley pointed to the origin of the Protestant churches, by labeling them primarily as "protest movements." Early Protestants rejected basic features of the Roman Church, such as the supreme authority of the Church, which led to placing the laws of the Church upon an individualistic basis and substi- tuting universal priesthood for the infallability of the pope, bishops and priests. Msgr. Bradley noted that be- cause of the fact that Protestants no longer accepted the placing of infallability in the conscience of human beings, Protestants were able to dispose of all those sacra- ments of the Church which de- pended upon the pronouncements of an infallable representative of Christ. No References Protestants also dropped all ref- erences to what he called media tors, such as the saints and the Virgin Mary, and complete empha- sis on Christ. Further, Msgr. Brad- ley pointed out, Protestants dis- pensed with blessings of a priest and with all symbols relating to said that additional personnel from the organization would be enlisted to work on the project if it were necessary. Work with Committee They will be working with the interim subcommittee which is preparing a short range report to be presented to the Legislature in October. "We are dropping everything at the Upjohn Institute until Oc- tober," Taylor said. After October, the "blue rib- bon" committee will again have to search for staff assistance, Tay- lor indicated. Finish Report Smith has just finished a re- port for the institute entitled "Training for the World of Work," dealing with vocational education. "We will be getting into differ- ent areas but his report will be helpful," Taylor noted. Most of the organizational work will be done this Saturday when the interim committee meets Make Outlineh "However, we have been mak- ing up an outline of the things we will have to know," he ex- plained. Taylor said the outline included a forecast of college enrollment in the coming years as well as a fore- cast of state personal income. The forecast of college enroll- ments translated into terms of college budgets and capital out- lays will be an integral part of the study, he indicated. A forecast of state personal in- come will show whether or not the state can finance a type of edu- cational program that might come out of the study. HENRIK VERWOERD ... apartheid U N Approves Arms Block UNITED NATIONS VP)-The United Nations Security Council yesterday voted a worldwide arms embargo against South Africa but turned down an Asian-African de- mand for a boycott of South Af- rican goods. The measures were aimed at South Africa's policy of apartheid, administered by South Africa's segregation-strict Prime Minister Henrik Verwoerd. African leaders had denounced apartheid as a threat to peace. The economic boycott was killed by a separate vote before the wat- ered-down resolution was approv- ed 9-0 with Britain and France abstaining. The resolution was sponsoredgby Ghana, Morocco and the Philippines and was consider- ably more moderate than some Africans had wanted. Ask Expulsion Some had insisted that South Africa should be expelled or at least suspended from the UN, but the sponsors decided such pro- posals had no chance of approval. The vote came after a week- long debate which was boycotted by South Africa. The South Afri- can government contended that its racial policies were purely an internal matter and therefore riot subject to UN action. As approved, the resolution specifically: Hit Policies 1) Deprecated South African ra- cial policies; 2) Called on the South African government to abandon sucn pol- icies and to release all persons im- prisoned in connection with the policy of apartheid; 3) Called upon all countries to cease forthwith the scale of arms, ammunition of all types and mili- tary vehicles to South Africa; 4) Requested Secretary-General U Thant to report back to the Security Council on developments by Oct. 30. The United States already has announced it was ending all arms sales to South Africa by the end of the year, but its support of the resolution was given only after a change in wording eliminated a reference to a threat to peace. In its final form, the draft sub- stituted the word "disturbing" for threatening. WASHINGTON - Substantial modification of the key public ac- commodations section of President John F. Kennedy's civil rights bill could be the price of Congressional passage of the measure, the Wash- ington Post said recently. Preliminary checks on both sides of the Capitol found that support for the bill with its present flat ban on discrimination in privately owned public facilities was lacking and that a search was under way in both houses for some new guide- line or cutoff point that could swing the needed votes. In the Senate, a survey made for the leadership showed that at present only 55 votes could be mustered for cloture with the bill in its present form. Shy That count would be 12 votes shy of the two-thirds Senate ma- jority required to break a South- ern filibuster on the controversial section, if all 100 senators turn out for the vote. In addition to seeking Demo- cratic votes from doubtful border states, strategists for the bill say they need a public accommoda- tions formula acceptable to such influential Republicans as Sens. Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill), George D. Aiken (R-Vt), and Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R-Iowa). An unofficial House tally sim- ilarly has turned up a shortage of Republican votes for the accom- modations section. Own Side Democratic tacticians said that at present they can count only 145 votes for the provision on their own side of the aisle. That means they need more than 70 House GOP votes to win. At present they only feel sure of about 40. The House judiciary Subcom- mittee, headed by Rep, Emanuel Celler (D-NY), last week complet- ed hearings on the omnibus civil rights bill. Next week it is expect- ed to begin the markup in execu- tive session. What comes out of this commit- tee will be a bellweather measure that must buck the House Rules Committee and other hazards be- ore- it reaches the House floor. Rep. Celler nonetheless is hopeful Tho Begins Peace Talks. SAIGON, Viet Nam (IP) - Vice President Nguyen Ngoc Tho, the ranking Buddhist in the govern- ment of President Ngo Dinh Diem, a Roman Catholic, began new peace-making moves yesterday to calm his embattled co-religionists. He acted in the wake of a police raid on the Saigon suburb of Tan Son Hoa. Buddhist leaders re- ported 365 persons, including women, were arrested when found in possession of Buddhist hand- bills. Government sources said only 40 were picked up. Informed sources said, however, that national police stationed in Saigon have received high prior- ity mobilization orders for today and trouble is expected. Tho also called in representa- tives of several minor Buddhist sects for consultations. Some ob- servers saw this as an effort to split the Buddhist intersect front. of getting it before the House by one method or another by mid- September. Last Major Bill However, some highly placed parliamentarians believe c itv i rights will be the last major bill to . pass this session of Congress, tailing even the President's tax bill. In whatever form the bill passes the House, the Senate probably will use it as a vehicle for putting together its own civil rights bill. Senate Commerce Committee hearings on a bill dealing solely with the public accommodations section were completed last Fri- day. This Senate committee will go into executive session next week in an effort to work out a block- ade-running formula. building trades. He said a progress review would be made in three months. Three-Month Period Later in the day, leaders of the demonstrations at the Brooklyn state-financed medical center site said they would stop the demon- strations for the three-month period. The picketing at the site had drawn as many as 1000 demon- strators in a single day and led to hundreds of arrests. Meantime, in Washington, of- ficials of New York building firms and construction unions told the department of labor that discrim- ination against Negroes and Puerto Ricans was not practiced by either employersor unions. Strategy Conference Also in Washington, officials of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored people held a strategy conference and sought out senators and represen- tatives in their, offices to urge support of President John F. Ken- nedy's bill to ban discrimination in public accommodations. They reported some disappoint- ing conversations, even with Northern congressmen, but some cheering visits, including one to a senator from Massachusetts- Edward Kennedy. Danville, Va., started the trial of the first of 328 demonstrators accused of defying a state court injunction against mass demon- strations, but the trial ended in a mistrial after an assistant prosecu- tor referred in closing arguments; to the fact the defendant had not taken the stand. Negroes picketed the United Auto Workers' headquarters and the General Motors Corp. in De-, troit yesterday, urging an end to, alleged discrimination in a Chev- rolet Corvair plant at Willow Run. Promise by Rockefeller' May End Demonstrations By The Associated Press NEW YORK-A promise from New York's Gov. Nelson A. Rocke- feller ended a month of mass Negro demonstrations at a New York City construction site, and Negro leaders lobbied in Washington for proposed civil rights legislation as the attack on racial discrimination moved forward yesterday. However, a Congress of Racial Equality spokesman said, last night that civil rights picketing will resume at a hospital construc- tion site "until we see constructive evidence of more employment opportunities," in defiance of the Rockefeller agreement. Rockefeller's promise was that enforcement of New York's anti- discrimination laws would be tightened, especially union membership and apprenticeship training in thet Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy has indicated a willingness to ex- clude some privately owned facili- ties, such as most barber shops, beauty salons, and private swim- ming pools and the so-called Mrs. Murphy-type small tourist homes, from the requirement that they provide service to all races. But up until now, the Adminis- tration-proposed exemptions ap- parently have not been sufficient to swing the votes needed to hold the accommodations section of the bill. Supporters of the Administra- tion regard the accommodations section as the "heart" of the bill. To strike it out, or substantially nullify it, would worsen the pres- ent uneasy racial crisis, they be- lieve. World News Roundup By The Associated Press BOGOTA, Colombia - The armed forces thwarted a plot by former dictator Gustavo Rojas Pinilla to seize control of Colombia yesterday while President Guillermo Leon Valancia was absent from the capital, the national news service reported. The usually well-informed private news agency said President, Valancia had ordered the arrest of Rojas, Colombian president from T1953 until his ouster in 1957, but NELSON A. ROCKEFELLER ..defied TREATY- Ask World. Signatures WASHINGTON -VP)-The new nuclear test ban treaty is thrown open to all nations tomorrow and 19-led by Australia-are sched- uled to sign here during the day. President John F. Kennedy also will send the treaty to the Sen- ate for ratification, accompanied by a special message today, the White House announced. Hear- ings begin Monday. Administration sources appeared confident that the Senate would okay the treaty by the required two-thirds majority. Start Early Signing of the treaty by other nations was slated to start at the State Department at the undip- lomatic hour of 8:45 a.m. with Australian Ambassador Howard Beale affixing his signature. United States officials predict- ed virtually all nations on earth will eventually join the pact, the notable exceptions being France' and Red China-both pushing their own independent atomic de- velopment. Washington's global survey has found that between 102 and 105 countries out of a total ofp114 have indicated they favor the pact, and 56 to date have indicated they will sign. Open to All The treaty is open to all states. The three atomic powers that framed it-Britain, the Soviet Un- ion and the United States-want the maximum number to join, on grounds it will be of maximum effect that way. Those wishing to join can do so at Washington, London or Mos cow. With the treaty opening for universal joining today, envoys were lining up to pledge their countries to the ban in London and CONSENT OF GOVERNED: Handlin Cites American Need for Order, Balance By MARILYN KORAL "The constant problem of freedom in American life is how to establish order and yet keep the rules necessary to establish order from becomng oppressive, from unduly restricting the lives of the people they govern," Prof. Oscar Handlin of Harvard University said yesterday. The noted historian and Pulitzer-prize winning author delivered the concluding lecture in the summer series, "Where We Stand-A Review of the American Position on Critical Issues." By PHILIP SUTIN Co-Editor While skin color will be a less important factor in American life in future decades, Negroes will voluntarily maintain their group identity, Prof. Oscar Handlin of Harvard University predicted yes- terday. "Skin color, while more noticeable, is not as important people think," Prof. Handlin declared. He said that 30 years ago people considered Jews, Irish and he had not been found. JACKSON, Miss.-Lt. Gov. Paul Johnson and former governor J. P. Coleman planned segregation- centered strategy yesterday for a Democratic primary runoff for governor - their second in eight years. Steadily mounting returns from the first primary voting kept the two political veterans well ahead in the four-man race. Sources close to both men predicted the runoff campaign would make the uneasy racial situation the prime topic. AIRmem