L 1w43U 434&ItiF MOSTLY SUNNY High-42 Humid and partly cloudy with a chance of thundershowers Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1964 SEVEN CENTS FOUR PA c.yFs..fr.te'ak s"s VictoryFree Lots for te'akI'Prokc stors By ROBERT HIPPLER The North Campus "park-in" protestors are victorious. The University capitulated to their three principal demands yesterday. First, it gave the protestors the one-month moratorium on park- irig regulations sought since they parked 200 cars on a lawn three weeks ago. Thel regulations had converted 800 free parking spaces into metered and stickered park- ing. Second, the University agreed that the moratorium period would be used as a time to study the parking needs and demands of North Campus personnel. This too had been a consistent demand of the protestors. And third, the University agreed to build two new free lots for North Campus personnel, closer to the Phoenix Project than the less than 100 free spaces are now. Only the most optimistic of the protestors had expected the Uni- versity to acquiesce to all of their demands so completely. Until August The one-month moratorium will extend until Aug. 26. "By then, we will know just what arrange- ments are appropriate," Francis G. Shiel, manager of Service En- terprises and in immediate charge of the North Campus parking sit- uation, explained last night. He said that one of the new lots will be near the Food Service Building now under construction on North Campus. It is located near the Phoenix Project. The other free lot will be con- structed near the Fluids Engineer- ings Bldg., west of the Phoenix Project. New Contact A spokesman for the protestors, commenting on ! the moratorium settlement, said that "we hope that the new arrangements will be beneficial to all involved." An underlying complaint of the protestors has been the lack of communication with the adminis- tration. The protestors pointed out that they received "only a month's notice" on the parking regulations, though the date was set several months in advance. The University has said that the regulations were approved in April by the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, and the proceedings published in the Senate minutes later that month. This, it was believed, pro- vided sufficient notice. Extension The parking regulations were an extension of the parking plan concept which was initiated on Central Campus in 1955. The Uni- versity installed parking and "paid staff parking" on Central Campus. meters spaces There was a protest at that time also, but without success. Several groups of workers, in- furiated by the then-new regula- tions, staged sit-down protests on the job. But the regulations on Central Campus stayed intact. The parking plans of the Uni- versity include all three campuses -the Central Campus, the North Campus, and the Athletic Campus. They are part of a long-range ex- pansion planning program which h a s tentatively planned new buildings, new walks, streets and parking facilities a decade into the future. Before the North Campus seg- ment of the over-all parking plan went into effect July 1, 900 park- ing places there had been free. This had been the case since the establishment of North Campus in 1952. Under the new plans, 650 of the places were made "paid staff parking" requiring permits at a cost of $25 yearly. Parking meters, costing over two cents an hour, were installed in another 150. One-hundred remained free. Until yesterday, the protestors flooded the lawn with cars every See PROTESTORS, Page 3 JERRY KENDZIORSKI >. Launch Drive To Unionize University Personnel Begin Educational, Promotional Effort Many Join at Meeting; Criticize Advancement System, Job Security In a mass meeting last night, University Employe Local 1583 launched a drive to organize a majority of the University's 4000 non- teaching and non-management employes. Immediate plans for the drive are to sign as many employes as possible, form I committees and subcommittees to deal with specific problems and grievances and start union educational programs with the aid of a' larger state organization. The union office at 400 E. Liberty is slated to be open until 9 p.m. each night this week so University employes can sign up. Many Sign Many of the 100 employes attending the meeting joined the union 4 Seniiate 62-33, OK's Sends Anti- Poverty Bill Measure to House * * * * * * * * * last night. Local 1583 has been OAS Ready To Impose Cuba Curbs WASHINGTON (J)-The Amer can foreign ministers conferenc appeared ready yesterday to sla diplomatic and trade sanctions o Cuba. After intense closed door nego tiations on the wording of a pro posed resolution calling for sane tions, at least 13 nations, the re quired two-thirds majority of th 19. voting nations, were reporte ready to vote for the Venezuelan requested sanctions. Final voting, however, wa not expected until today or to morrow. Sweeping Majority Some conference delegates sai the final vote for sanctions coul, go as high as,15, depending upo: the final wording of the resole tion. , The proposed resolution now un ier consideration would make th sanctions mandatory if approve by the two-thirds majority. Mexico and Chile oppose th sanctions and the positions of Ur uguay and Bolivia were uncer tain. These nations still have dip lomatic relations with Cuba. Uncertain The stand of Argentina, one the largest of Latin American na tions, was also uncertain. But is believed Argentina will suppo the majority. Argentina told the conferenc yesterday morning that the pro See OAS, Page 3 on campus for three years, but had - not started an intensive organ- izing drive until last night. At present it has a membership of about 400. It is affiliated with the Ameri- can Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes and the American Federation of Labor- Congress of Industrial Organiza- tions, Ben Moore, chairman of the i- meeting and a staff representa- ee tive of the union, said that xp "many employes" are "dissatis- )n fied with working conditions." 'Criticism at the meeting centered on the University's merit raise - policy, lack of job security, and - recent parking fees which went e- into effect on North Campus. e- They were the cause of a "park- le in" protest which won conces- d sions from the University yester- - day. Main Speaker as Main speaker at the meeting a- was Jerry Kendziorski, another union representative. In his speech' he emphasized that "the union must be organized and unified" before much thought can be given lto specific alleviation of griev- >ances. The immediate goal is to a organize a majority of the 4,000 eligible University employes. - There is precedent for organiz- ie ing employes of state universities d -but only in other states. Among Midwestern Conference state uni- versities, non - teaching employes ie unions have won contracts at the - Universities of Minnesota and - Wisconsin. - None of the state's 10 state- supported universities yet have such unions. But an organizing drive at Michigan Technological of Institute has signed up a large - majority of employes.. it Ask Decision rt The union there has asked State Attorney General Frank Kelley :e for a legal ruling on whether, as o- a publicly-employed union, it can- See EMPLOYES, Page 3 Johnsoi Racial Front:' Legal Action, Street Riots By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Law and viol- ence contrasted sharply on the racial front yesterday as federal agencies movel to enforce the na- tion's new civil rights law while rioting continued in Brooklyn. Civil rights moved a h e a d through legalschannels in Missis- sippi as FBI agents charged three white men with obstructing a Negro's freedom. And in Jackson- ville a federal court enjoined a restaurant owner from discrim- inating against Negroes. But the night also Drougnt 600 Negroes racing through Brook- lyn's Bedford-Stuyvesant area, shouting "Kill or be killed," as Negro leaders in the city brushed off 'a blueprint for peace issued by Mayor Robert F. Wagner. They said it was "too little, too late." LAW The FBI charged three Green- wood men with a conspiracy de- signed to keep a Negro from go- ing to a downtown movie theatre. The arrests were the first in- volving a public accommodation as defined in the civil rights law. The Negro, Silas McGhee, stag- gered into the Greenwood FBI of- fice, bleeding from head wounds and suffering from shock. Federal agents charged the three men with "unlawfully con- spiring to injure, oppress, threat- en and intimidate" the Negro "in See LAW, Page 3 Goldwater to Meet v- tTo Consider PRESS CONFERENCE oldwater Votes No, Calls It 'orthess Program Would Create Job Corps, Bolster Housing, Farms, Health Care WASHINGTON (-The Senate passed a $947.5 million anti-poverty bill last night, in a major victory for President Lyndon B. Johnson. The vote was 62 to 33. The bill now goes to the House. Passage came after the adoption of two "states rights" amendments geared to make the measure more palatable for Southern legislators. De Gaulle Minimnizes I .S. Rolei West U e in PARIS ()-President Charles de Gaulle yesterday challenged American leadership in the Western world and at the same time called for withdrawal of all foreign elements from Viet Nam. He urged an international conference to settle woes in what used to be French Indochina with guarantees by four nations-Russia, Red China, the United States and France-with past or present in- volvements in the long fighting. He did not mention Britain, but said the parley could be held in the framework of the 1954 Geneva con- ference of which Britain is a co-chairman. De Gaulle spoke at a formal news conference, one of two he holds each year. He declared that there seemed to be no possibility of either 'side winning a military victory in 1 , South Viet Nam and that the solution must come from the con- ference table. CfaHe said some people think the war could be carried tohNorth Americans have the resources to do WASHINGTON (P) - United States officials brushed aside as wholly unacceptable de Gaulle's new call for an international con- ference, including the United States, Russia and Red China, to make peace in Southeast Asia. Rejecting de Gaulle's argument that a military solution in South Viet Nam is impossible, officials said a conference is beyond seri- ous} U.S. consideration until at least a new military balance is created in South Viet Nam. De Gaulle's news conference at- tack produced no surprise here. U.S. policy calls for a strong Europe, including Britain, to be organized in some kind of partner- ship with the United States. this. "But it is difficult to admit that they would want to take on the enormous danger of a gener- alized conflict," he said. Recalling that a 14-nation con- ference in Geneva in 1954 had reached an agreement intended to bring peace to Indochina after France lost it, de Gaulle said this accord had never been respected. Now, he declared, it is time to go back to the conference table. He said the same type of con- ference, with roughly the same countries represented, could again be held to decide on the means of assuring peace for Laos, Cam- bodia and North and South Viet Nam. He said that in advance it would be agreed that this would lead to their neutrality. "Another route that could lead Southeast Asia to peace cannot be seen," he said. He added that JDownplayii19g Civil Rights Negroes Say Issue Should Be Stressed WASHINGTON () President Lyndon B. Johnson yesterday agreed toBa meeting with Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) today to discuss ways of keeping civil rights from becoming a presiden- tial campaign issue. But in Jackson, Miss., the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and two, other Negro civil rights leaders re- torted that they wanted civil rights issues kept in the campaign. King, who was in Mississippi to plan strategy aimed at sending a "freedom" delegation to the Rising WASHINGTON (P)-A sharp upswing of voter support in the South has boosted Goldwater's popularity but he still trails Johnson nationally by 64 per cent to 36, according to the latest Louis Harris poll. Goldwater swept into a clear lead in the South, with the sup- port of 55 per cent of those polled. The same voters preferred Johnson 74-26 before the con- vention to 64-36 afterward. Democratic national convention in August, called civil rights a "great moral issue." He msaid he hoped the meeting between GOP presidential nomi- nee Barry Goldwater and Presi- dent Johnson would not end with the civil rights issue "knocked out" of the public eye. James Farmer, national direc- tor of the Congress of Racial Equality, said it was "utterly im- possible to keep civil rights out of the campaign." John Lewis, chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, said the rights issue should go before the voters. The trio of civil rights leaders, who met newsmen after a five- hour strategy session at TougalooI College here, said Goldwater was an aunacceptable candidate be- cause of his civil rights stand. In Wa.shington, Goldwater told newsmen "we have talked to one Goldwater Vetoes Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz),. the Republican presi dential.nominee, tagged the bill as politically inspired an called its approaches to the problems of poverty "worthles and misleading." Voting against the bill with Goldwater or final passage were 21 other" Republicans and 11 Demo- crats. Supporting it were 52 Democrats and 10 Republicans. } Provisions Here's what it would do: --Establish a job corps for un- employed youth with the accent on education, work experience and vocational training at camps and, centers. It would also set up high school work training programs, and part-time jobs for needy col- lege students. Cost: about $412 million. -Pay up to 90 per cent of the cost of community programs in states with the aim of encour- aging local action in health, wel- fare, job training, rehabilitation, housing and basic education. Cost: SENATOR GOLDWATER about $340 million. --Combat rural poverty with farm improvement loans up to $1,-Grad Released 500 and loans of up to $2500 for low income farm families to help Fro a1 finance non-farm enterprises. It1rm Jal in would also aid housing, education and child day-care for migrant IP farm workers. Cost: about $35 mil- lion. Provide funds to set up work Special To The Daily experience programs and demon- HATTIESBURG-Peter Wer stration projects to encourage er, Grad, a teacher at onec state action in programs for un- Mississippi's Freedom Schoo employed fathers and others. Cost: was released from custody yeste about $150 million. day after being beaten and jail Modifications in Hattiesburg, Miss., Monday, Before the measure was passed, spokesman for Northern ciN two states rights amendments were rights volunteers said. adopted and other modifications Werner was assailed by Hou were made that helped to rally ton R. Hartfield as he and tv Southern Democrats to its sup- other civil rights workers - o port. of them a Negro-were walkii along Main St. Hartfield 1 Sen. George A. Smathers (D- Werner from, behind and kick( Fla) was the author of both states him in the faceand ribs after rights amendments that won had fallen to the ground. adoption. Both men were arrested on a One, approved 80-7, bars fed- saulthand battery charges so eral assistance to private institu- after the incident. Hattiesbu tions, other than colleges and uni- Judge Frank Montagu found Har versities, in states where the gov- field guilty and fined him $4 ernor disapproves. The other, He then suspended $20 of t i adopted two days ago by voice sentence. The charges agaix I WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP Bill Would Nullify One Man One Vote' By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Senate Minor- ity Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois yesterday introduced a proposed constitutional amend- ment that would nullify the Su- preme Court decision that seats in both branches of state legisla- tures must be apportioned on a population basis. In offering it, Dirksen told the Senate he was counteracting "a long step by the court" to rewrite the constitution. .w - - - - NEW YORK - General Motors Corp., the nation's No. 1 auto- maker, reported yesterday record sales and earnings for the second quarter and first half of 1964. It was the third automobile in- dustry company to announce higest ever sales and profits for the periods. HOUSTON - The ConstitutionI Party adopted a 15-plank plat- form yesterday urging every level of government to "restore to all nif mha th+fll-miri to Amri_- ports spread that mobs were still on the prowl in some areas. In Washington, visiting Malay- sia's Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahaman blamed Indonesia for the ethnic strife in his country. He called it part of new tactics to crush Malaysia. * ' = two conditions should be added: -Each of the powers which car- ries a direct responsibility in the fate of Viet Nam-France, China, the Soviet Union and America - should resolve to disengage from there, he said. This would envisage, mutual contact and agreement among the four. -Massive technical and eco- nomic aid should be furnished to the whole of Indochina "in such M- of Is, r- ed a vil as- Mo one ing hii irg rt- 40 the nst WASHINGTON - The Defense a way that development should and State Departments have set replace destruction. France, for out to facilitate more coverage by its part, is ready to observe these American reporters of the war in two conditions," de Gaulle said. Southiet Nam.r hn At his last news conference, Jan. South Viet Nam. s 31 he called for neutralization of A decision to sponsor trips to ! 1 ecle o etaiaino ommemammememan I