lavits, Keating Reject ,OP Ticket; Goldwaterj Chances Mixed for Federal Funds Iits Poverty Terms Bill Misleading, Pooly Done Comments as Senate Prepares for Debate WASHINGTON (M)-Sen. Barr Goldwater (R - Ariz) yesterda termed President Lyndon B. John son's anti-poverty legislation misleading and poorly constructe program that seems designed pr marily to secure votes. The presidential nominee wa joined by Sen. John G. Tower (R Tex) in filing a minority repor on the $962.5 million bill approv ed by the Senate Labor Commit tee two weeks ago. The measure is to be brough up in the Senate today and wi] provide a first test of Goldwater influence with his colleagues sinc his nomination by the Republi can national convention last week Goldwater and Tower called th measure a "hodgepodge of pro grams treating only the results, no the causes of poverty. "Whatever its professed pur poses," they declared, "it seems de signed to achieve the single objec tive of securing votes." The majority report by the la bor committee, sugmitted I b Chairman Lister Hill (D-Ala), sai the bill marks "a commitment b3 the Congress and the nation t( dedicate themselves to the elimi nation of deprivation and depend ency in this land. "The war on poverty is not ar effort simply to support people; to make them dependent upon the generosity of others," the report said. "It is designed to give them a chance to help themselves." S'en. Jacob K. Javits (R-NY), who yesterday said he could not at present support Goldwater, said there is a genuine need for a war an poverty. But he added, "it calls for a defined and selective approach with practical objectives rather than an inadequate, omni- bus attack." In opposing the bill, Goldwater and Tower said they consider it "an attempt to reap political re- wards from the American people's natural and humane desire to im- prove the lot of our less fortunate citizens." World News Roundup ry .- a d i- s t I- xt SEN. JACOB JAVITS Premier e Lambasts ke )Candidate WARSAW (P)-Soviet Premier - Nikita S. Khrushchev accused Sen. - Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) yester- day of campaigning for the White - House "under the slogan of fran- y tic anti-Communism and military d threats. Y "We are not afraid of threats, o but we cannot be indifferent to- - ward threats," the Soviet leader - declared. "Therefore we should, as the saying goes, clean our a weapons and stay on full alert." ' Goldwater also came under vio- e lent attack' by Polish Communist t leader Wladyslaw Gomulka at a SWarsawgathering of Red chiefs. Gomulka said Goldwater's policies 'are "directed toward a world nu- t clear catastrophe." A denunciation by Gomulka of the United States as "pushing the world to the brink of war" prompted a walkout by U.S. Am- bassador John M. Cabot and the British ambassador. Cabot had left when Gomulka launched into his attack against Goldwater. Khrushchev said "the Americans themselves say that one should not take everything said during a presidential campaign seriously," but added "the election of a Pres- ident and the laying down of foreign policy for several years cannot help but absorb our at-9 tention."I He said the Republican plat- form, "reflecting the views of thef most reactionary circles, was adopted with the full approval of a whistling, stomping crowd ina an atmosphere reminiscent of the fascist gatherings in Nuernberg." The Soviet news agency Tass quoted Khrushchev as saying the American electorate must decide whether they are willing to adopt the Republican party platform "and thus approve the coursej dangerous to the whole world, in- cluding the people of the U.S." House Passes Censor Billa WASHINGTON (P-The House,1 ignoring charges it was creating a nation of censors, yesterday passed a bill designed to let home- owners block "morally offensive" i mail. A 325-19 roll call vote sent the bill to the Senate. Under the bill, a person receiv- ing mail he considers morally of-P fensive could ask the postmaster general to halt future mailings from that source. The sender z would get 30 days to comply with : the postmaster general's order. p rogram Senators Rap Conservative Associations Say Support Hinges On Clarification of Candidate's Positions NEW YORK () - New York' two Republican senators said yes- terday they could not at this time support Arizona Sen. Barry Gold- water, the party's nominee foi president. Sen. Jacob K. Javits coupled his statement with a rap at what he called "ultra-conservative forc- es." Sen. Kenneth B. Keating said Goldwater should disassociate himself from all extremist groups "likethe John Birch Society." Clarification Both Javits and Keating ex- pressed hope they could support the GOP national ticket before the campaign is over, but Javits indicated his decision would hinge on restatement or clarification of Goldwater's position. Keating, up for reelection this year, said again he hasn't de- cided whether he will run. He al- so has indicated that, if he does, it would be as an independent Re- publican. Goldwater's office in Washing- ton said he would have no com- ment. Most other Republican senators who commented generally con- cerning Javits, prior to the Keat- ing announcement later in the day, said his position was his privilege. 'Abiding Conviction' "I'm sure he made the state- mnent out of an abiding convic- tion," Senate minority leader Ev- erett M. Dirksen (R-Ill) said. Javits said he was not bolting the party-that he would remain a Republican and would not sup- port President Lyndon B. Johnson in November. He urged "all pro- ,ressive Republicans" to remain in the party and said: "We must n)t surrender our party for all time to the ultra-con- servative forces." He also accused Goldwater of making no move to unify the par- ty. Javits said his decision was the most difficult of his career. Willing to Reconsider But he left open the possibil- ity that "as the campaign devel- ops and issues are raised and opin- ions restated or clarified, I must always be willing to reconsider this position. "I will maintain the hope that I shall be able to support my par- ;y's national ticket in the course of the campaign, but this will call for some actions by Goldwater." Keating said he would examine 3losely Goldwater's legislative rec- ord on human and foreign needs Turing the remaining days of the 88th Congress. Silent on Votingt Asked whether he might vote1 for Johnson this fall, Keating said, I don't want to talk about vot- ing at this time." Rep. John V. Lindsay (R-NY),f also up for reelection this fall, saidr after the convenbion that he would have to search his conscience be-r ore deciding whether to supporte Goldwater. Meanwhile, Maryland's two lead-t ng Republicans also withheld any1 mmediate endorsement of Gold-e water. Sen. J. Glenn Beall saidI ie was withholding his supportt "for the time being, at least," andI Baltimore Mayor Theodore R. Mc- Keldin said he would be unable tot upport Goldwater unless the Ari- i ona senator modified his stand( in the civil rights and extremism e planks of the Republican party. f By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM The University's hopes to receive several million dollars in federal grants for construction were alter- nately boosted and jolted by events yesterday. The boost came as the Office of Education out- lined its long-awaited rules for dispensing $230 million this year for undergraduate facilities. This is the sum contained in a House-passed authorization bill (H.R. 10809). The state of Michigan is eligible to distribute over $10 million this year. The jolt came as the office of Sen. Phillip Hart (D-Mich) reported "its great disappointment" that the Senate Appropriations Committee has been unable to report H.R. 10809 out of committee, thus halting release of the actual funds. HEW Budget The bill makes appropriations for the Department of Health Education and Welfare for the 1964-65 fiscal year. In addition to allocating some $463 million overall for educational construction, the measure con- tains a specific $2.5 million authorization to the Uni- versity to build a water pollution laboratory. Coupled with the criteria set yesterday, the bill's expected passage through the committee and the Senate would set the following wheels in motion: Yl Sitr itrna Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom &tit -The Office of Education would begin receiving bids on a state-wide basis for the $230 million in undergraduate facilities. These would come from Michigan through a nine-man Higher Education Facilities Commission which was set up last spring by the state Legislature. The grants go directly to the schools. The University has not determined what it would request. Graduate Library -As a second feature of H.R. 10809, the Univer- sity could apply directly to the Office of Education for $1.3 million to fund one-third of an addition to the Graduate Library. The criteria for distributing these funds have not been set. Both undergraduate and graduate funds are being made available under a program set up by the higher education facilities act which Congress passed last December to span a three-year period. However, the actual dispending of funds will be done on an annual basis through the Department of Health Edu- cation and Welfare. H.R. 10809 is the request for this year. -The Senate bill, under separate provisions, would give the go-ahead to the HEW to give the University $2.5 million for its water pollution lab. An unspecified Midwest laboratory was authorized in principle in 1956 and aagin in 1961 under a Federal Water Pollu- tion Control Act. Two Years Old Two years ago Ann Arbor was officially selected as the site for the Midwestern laboratory-one of 10 nationwide--and preliminary planning on it began last year. The Office of Education criteria released yesterday reiterated what was emphasized in the facilities act last year: enrollment is the major criteria for funds. In addition to enrollment, projects will be assigned point values in terms of location, program and type of facility which the funds would help. The criteria are needed so that the state facilities commission can give the Office of Education a priority list of how its $10 million should be spent. This is the first attempt in a federal education bill to let the states assign building priorities which will cover public, private and community college institutions. The usual procedure has been to let the institution apply directly to the office for federal funds-as they must do to obtain the graduate facilities funds. VOL. LXXIV. No. 21-5- - ---- i1 ' ~~~ --~~~~~''T) IN ~' Fill - ANN ARBU, MICIUAN, WEDNESDAY. JULY 22. 196 VAMI I:' ~, UR I UA'iUN TROUBLE AT HOTEL Pickets Keep Regents in Town By ROBERT HIPPLER Rather than cross a union pick- et line, the Regents have decided not to hold their Friday meeting in Traverse City. Regent Eugene B. Power, who owns a Traverse City hotel cur- rently being picketed, decided he did not want to ask fellow Regents to cross the picket lines, high ad- ministration sources revealed yes- terday. The pickets are protesting ac- tions Power took three months ago when he bought majority owner- ship in the Park Place Motor Inn. He terminated the contract of the union with the old majority own- ers, made several job changes in the operation of the motel, but left the way open for his employes to form a new union. Power won a court decision last' month against the union; it is planning to appeal the case to the state Supreme Court. i r 0 REGENT EUGENE B. POWER By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-A bill to in- crease social security retirement benefits and extend coverage ti some 500,000 additional retired persons was cleared yesterday for House debate next week. . The rules committee approved the legislation which, if it reaches the Senate, may revive the fight over a health plan for the aged under sociay security. * * * PHILADELPHIA, Miss. - The search for three missing civil rights workers continued in the Philadelphia area without change yesterday-with some 400 sailors still taking part in the hunt. Since sailors from the Nava. Auxiliary Air Station at Meridiar finished a foot-by-foot search of the hilly area and found no trace of the three, the hunt has spread over a wider area. SAIGON - Communist guer- rillas ambushed a big government convoy in Viet Nam's deep south yesterday and set off a series of battles that raged into the night, ISTANBUL -- Top leaders of Iran, Pakistan and Turkey met twice yesterday to write an agree- inent leading to closer economic, cultural and technical ties among the three countries. A final communique is expected today. A Turkish spokesman denied the summit conference was political in nature, but officials of all three countries admitted there was some feeling of disenchantment with the Western alliance and that a new cooperation agreement was meant' to draw them together in regional friendship. WASHINGTON - A bill that would create a 14-member com- mission to study the impact of automation on the economy was Johnson Asks FBI To Study Harlem Events NEW "YORK UP) - An air of uneasy calm settled over riot- wracked Harlem yesterday as President Lyndon B. Johnson or- dered an FBI probe of racial vio- lence in the city. Johnson entered the picture with a call for a full FBI investi- gation of the violence which claimed one life and resulted in the injury of more than 100 other persons over the weekend. He said that the FBI is "con- ducting a complete investigation of the possibility of violation of federal laws in connection with recent disturbances. "Violence and lawlessness can- not, must not and will not be tol- erated," he said. Meanwhile, p o Ii c e continued their patrol of the streets of Har- lem where bloody encounters; erupted after the shooting of a 15-year-old Negro boy last Tues- day by an off-duty white police- man. Extra police patrols also roamed the streets across the East River n the predominantly Negro area of Brooklyn where brief encount- ers between police and Negroes flared early yesterday morning. Power sent a letter to the oth- er Regents last week indicating that "he would think himself a poor host if he invited the Re- gents to a meeting at his hotel and then asked them to cross a picket line," Erich A. Walter, sec- retary to the University,-said yes- terday. Power commented that though the desirenot to cross the union pickets was not the only reason for switching the site of the meet- ing, "it was a factor." Power has spent over $1 mil- lion in improving the motel since he bought it in March. He ter- minated the contract of the union, which had operated under the old owners, on the ground that he was buying just the physical assets of the establishment and starting an entirely new corporation. Instructional The picketing has been going on since termination of the con- tract. From two to four pickets are on duty in what is called an 'instructional" picket. Its purpose is to inform the public of union ,omplaints, not to block access or motel operations. After terminating the old 'con- tract, Power decided to dismiss several employes of the motel be- cause of their age. Most were over 65. Power in addition termed four employes of the old owners as "ab- solutely unemployable." There is an unofficial tradition among the Regents that one monthly public meeting a year is held away from the University's Snn Arbor home base. The meet- ing in Traverse City was to be this ,ear's "away" meeting. Instead, the meeting will be held in theI .sual place-the Regents' room in the Administration Bldg. There was on announcement of another meeting being planned away from1 jhnn Arbor to compensate for the switch of sites for the Friday ses- lion. Exiles Protest Against Castro WASHINGTON (P)-Thousands3 of Cuban exiles, chanting "Cubat si, Russia no," fought yesterday with police trying to keep theml from demonstrating in front of the Pan American Union Building in demands for action against Fidel Castro. Representatives of 20 American republics were meeting in the building considering the questiont of sanctions against the Havana1 government because of its allegedr attempt to overthrow the govern-t ment of Venezuela. The Cuban exiles, here from At-i lantic coastal areas and from as far west as Chicago, carried ban-x ners down Constitution Ave. I outset last February. .He also put in a plug for pro- posed legislation to extend the present time and one half pay required under federal labor law to industries previously exempt, par- ticularly laundries, hotels and res- taurants. "In all, about one and a half million hours of overtime were worked per week in these three industries," Wirtz said. "It is our contention that employers in these industries, when confronted with the choice of paying premium pay for overtime or hiring more people, will hire more people. And these industries, will be able to absorb youths and unskilled workers- that segment of the unemployed whichdhas worried us the most," he said. It doesn't make sense to have "4.7 million men and women un- able to find the work they seek when extensive overtime is being worked," Wirtz added. Hesaid a recent "business- oriented" survey, showing that only 17 per cent of the nation's plants indicated they would hire more workers if they had to pay double for overtime, was "ob- viously self-serving, and it does not make sense." He rejected contentions that most overtime is seasonal or of an emergency nature. I w Wirtz Alsks Double Overtune Pay Plan WASHINGTON (IP)-Secretary of Labor Willard Wirtz to: Congress yesterday that millions of hours of overtime work cou be translated into new jobs for the unemployed. Testifying in support of legislation that has roused vigorou business opposition, Wirtz urged expanding and increasing overtim pay in many industries. His proposal would require double pay for overtime, rather tha time and a half, in some industries. This, he said, would make more expensive for employers to schedule overtime work on a regul basis than to hire new workers. It was Wirtz' second appearanc before a House labor subcommittee whose Republican membe made a strong but unsuccessful - bid to kill the proposal at the A V 'EXPERIMENTAL' Lemble Lashes at Jones School Plans 4. The proposed plan to bus chil- dren from Jones school to other schools in Ann Arbor is not ad- visable because "it involves the use of Ann Arbor children in an experiment whose success is far from insured," George Lemble said last night. 'FEMININE MYSTIQUE' Women Suffer Identity Crisis Lemble, chairman of the Wash- tenaw County Conservatives, noted that no information presented "by either the Citizens' Committee which studied Ann Arbor's schools or the Congress of Racial Equality or any other organization has proved that this experiment would work." In this light, "it is discrimina- tory toward the children of Ann Arbor to enlist them in an experi- ment which might well fail."' Buses Daily The Ann Arbor Board of Educa- tion is at present considering the proposal to which Lemble referred. It involves closing down Jones school and bussing its students on a daily basis to other schools in Ann Arbor. The plan was proposed by a Citi- zens' Committee appointed by the school board to study racial im- balance in Ann Arbor's schools, and was backed by local chapters of CORE and the National Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Colored People. Lemble cited a progress report SECRETARY WIRTZ Approve Bill To Release Information WASHINGTON 4A')-A freedom of information bill that would buttress the public's access to news of the federal government's affairs was approved yesterday by a Senate committee. The measure now goes to the full Senate as part of the first major effort in 18 years to over- haul operating procedures for some 100 federal departments and agencies. Sen. Edward V. Long (D-Mo), co-sponsor of the bill with Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, said it would "go a long way toward correcting the current miserable situation under which bureaucrats can and do hide any and all embarrassing information." The Senate Judiciary Commit- tee cleared the bill after endorse- ment by Sam Ragan, president of the Associated Press Managing Editors Association, as an effort to "make more accessible public information which the public has a right to know." Regan told a judiciary subcom- mittee earlier in the day that the bill "can go far toward clearing some of the channels of informa- tion that have too long been clog- ged by whim or deliberate abuse of authority." The measure would require all federal agencies to make public how, where and when they oper- ate and clearly identify the means of public access to information about decisions, ruling and state- I By CHRISTINE LINDER The feminine mystique is only one of many myths in today's so- ciety that are preventing human beings from achieving full poten- tial, Mrs. Elizabeth Sumner de- clared in a discussion of Betty Friedan's "Feminine Mystique" yesterday. Miss Friedan's book describes the identity crisis experienced by wlnnan nyknm o1hPa hal iaC ac ranf said. People can no longer find an identity in a job which may be meaningless to them and may soon be nonexistent. Quoting a recent article which said automation will eliminate the necessity for work and free men to do more meaningful things with their lives, Mrs. Sumner said that this search for meaning is a necessary part of life. Shp jdicenri ta, he iy., rof ci,. W~rs. Sumner said, has until re- cently prevented the Negro from realizing his identity. False Choice' The feminine mystique has made women victims of a mistaken choice, since women think they have to make a choice between being a wife and mother or a career woman. Mrs. Sumner believes that wom- en have shied away from the op- Theologian Derrik Baily be- lieves that it is only by discard- :ng the notion of male headship of a family that a responsible and zreative marital relationship can be attained, Mrs. Sumner noted. The male-female relationship has been degraded, she said, because women have sold out to men, be- coming "respectable whores." Women have become creatures who either use sex to exploit men GEORGE F. LEMBLE volved. This is not evident in the report," Lemble noted. He also cited several legal pre- cedents which he said put in doubt the legality of school bussing to correct racial imbalance. His claims in this area were disputed in several questions from the floor.