)LICE STICKERS: IE IMPLICATIONS See Editorial Page Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom 4Ia1 Z X irVNn_~1'YR.. A tVkY A ~ u nrr vr~wA vrw~ ~ ,.oc. .- - r: . ...._ __ ._ sIN, IN 4A] ,151r I1.110. 14 - AAA AKISUK, DUUHIUAN, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1964 SEVEN CENTS SEVEN CENTS rV~i Y OLD; ATER WINS IN ONE BALLO SCRANTON URGES PARTY TO Miller Gets V-P Bid BULLETIN Republican nominee Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) acknowl- edged early this morning that he "inclines very favorably" to Rep. William E. Miller (R-NY) as his running mate. Goldwater said he would discuss the matter with Miller later this morning. By The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO-Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) has chosen Rep. William E. Miller (R-NY), the Republicans' retiring national chairman, as his vice-presidential running mate, GOP Convention Chairman Sen. Thruston B. Morton of Kentucky said early this morning. Goldwater aides deported, however, that the Presidential nominee had not yet informed Miller of the decision as of 2 a.m. It will be officially announced today, they said. Sidelights of the Convention 883 Delegates G By The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO-Traffic was so thick on the freeway route to the Republican National Con- vention at the Cow Palace yes- terday that the chairman of the Connecticut delegation wasn't on hand when his state's name was called during nominations for president. So Searle Pienney of Brook- field, caught in a traffic jam on the Bayshore Freeway, had to listen on his car radio as an- other delegate announced that Connecticut passed--that it had no nominee. "Let's go!" a Goldwater aide shouted to 150 young women pack- ed into a room just outside Cow Palace. "Now's the time." the I tional Republican Convention Out charged the Goldwater Gals, chanting "we want Barry" and almost bowling over a burly ser- geant-at-arms who tried to block them. Dressed in blue, white and yel- low and waving placards, the girls streamed onto the floor for their climactic foray. For once, however, Goldwater tacticians were off in their tim- ing. Sen. Everett Dirksen of Illi- nois had not finished his nom- inating speech for Goldwater and the girls had to wait self-con- sciously. * * * Police officers licked a thumb and rubbed the tickets of Na- guests yesterday to determine whether they were real or phony, "If it is counterfeit, the ink will rub off," said Lt. Paul Bo- lich of the San Mateo County Sheriff's Department. "There has been a constant stream of officers bringing in the tickets, most of them held by just kids." "We're not just throwing lich said. filing any charges, the kids out," Bo- * * * The convention is Brezhnev In Soviet expected to - endorse Miller as its second -standard bearer tonight. Tradi- tionally, the nominee's selection is accepted unanimously. Parked in Palace was a ed with signs front of the Cow yellow bus plaster saying "justice for Hoffa," "stop illegal surveillance," "end government snooping." and "investigate Bobby Kennedy." ' Power Post: MOSCOW (JP)-Leonid I. Brezh- nev took a long step forward to- day as Premier Nikita S. Khrush- chev's heir apparent. He relin- quished his figurehead role as President of the Soviet Union to concentrate on work An the Com- munist party, the real source of power in Moscow. Anastas I. Mikoyan, a close confidant of the Premier who went on many a delecate mission. Miller, who is not seeking re- electionto, his Congressional seat, is considered a rough-tough cam- paigner and has a family attrac- tive enough to decorate any plat- form. He is a Roman Catholic and comes from a big vote state. Other Names A half dozen or so other names have also been mentioned for sec- ond place on the Goldwater ticket. One of those is Scranton. The governor has said a dozen times he is not interested. And Goldwater has said almost as many times that he doesn't think he and Scranton would feel "com- fortable" as teammates after all the sharp things Scranton has said about him. But, still, they might be brought. together in a unity m o v e. Stranger things have happened. John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson agreed to be paired after their heated competition for the Democratic Presidential nomina- tion in 1960. 'Good Ticket'' Former President Dwight D.' Eisenhower, who is urging unity in the party, thinks Goldwater- Scranton would be a good ticket. + But Richard M: Nixon doesn't. The former Vice-President, also appealing for unity, says he doesn't think they would be "com- patible" after the bitterness of+ their nomination battle. Other names that have been mentioned include Rep. Gerald Ford of Michigan and Sen. Thrus-l ton Morton of Kentucky. Ford is another aggressive cam- paigner An athletic 51-year-old, he is chairman of the House Re-1 publican Conference Committee. I Morton, former Republican na-J tional chairman, is getting plenty of exposure this week as chairman of the GOP convention. OPEN HEARING Citizens Support Jones Closing It is just one of the many mes- sages various people are trying to get across as the crowds stream into the huge cattle pavilion. The hand-lettered ones compete with the printed variety, which carry the "go with Goldwater" and "Scranton for President" type of convention political appeal. * * * Hundreds of college students re- cruited to parade in' the nomi- nation demonstrations at the Re- pblican Na tilonal1 Convention found themselves on the outside looking in wistfully. "They ran out of demonstrator passes after about, 200 had been handed out," said Paul Weaver, a Harvard student in summer school at nearby University of Califor- nia. "Why did they bring 15 bus- loads out if they weren't going to let us in?" asked Ellen Miller of Ithaca, N.Y. These two, plus about 750 oth- ers, signed up two weeks ago at the University of California to pa- rade when Gov. William W. Scran- ton of Pennsylvania was nominat- ed. * * * Barry Goldwater is a man with his own ideas, not only about pres- idential campaigning, but most everything else. "I'm not one of those baby- kissing, hand-shaking, blintz-eat- ing candidates," he said once. "I don't like to insult the American intelligence by thinking that slap- ping people on the back is going to get you votes." Once during the ill-starred New Hampshire primary campaign, Goldwater's state managers de- cided he should shake hands in some restaurants. Goldwater went, but he didn't like the idea a bit. "If someone came up to me and stuck out his hand while I was eating a ham- burger, I'd put the hamburger in it," he said. By JEFFREY GOODMAN About 300 Ann Arbor citizens last night voiced their opinions on the proposed closing of Jones School due to "racial imbalance." Their overwhelming verdict was to discontinue operation of the school and transport its 200 stu- dents by bus to other schools in the city. The open hearing was held at the school, 401 N. Division. Its purpose was to test citizen senti- ment on the recommendation for closing made in June by a citi- zen's group. The group was asked by the Board of Education to look into all the city's schools. 'Incompetent' Teachers Argument favoring the school closing followed two basic lines. The first, voiced mainly by in- dividual citizens, was that children attending the school receive a poor education. Various citizens men- tioned "incompetent" teachers, low academic records achieved by their children, racial prejudice and the rejection of a child termed in- capable of learning by one Jones teacher. The second attack came mainly from spokesmen for local civil rights groups. They stressed the effect of the school's "de facto segregation." A statement by the local chap- ter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People contended that "in a so- ciety dominated by white people, the welfare of Negro children forced to live and learn in a seg- 10 IAJY IN omine regated environment will be ad- versely affected. . . Nothing short of full integration as equals can reach into the hearts and minds of Negro youngsters in a way which will repair the damage seg- regation has already done to their sense of personal dignity and their motivation to succeed and de- velop their capacities." Jones school has a three-to-one ratio of Negroes to whites, ac- cording to the citizen's report. Racial Departure A spokesman for the Washtenaw County Conservatives, George F. Lemble, delivered a statement against closing of the school. He said the closing is "a most radical departure from normal procedure" and would involve "damaging" psychological effects upon chil- dren who would attend schools outside their neighborhoods. Other advocates of closingmen- tioned related economic factors- high- rents in Ann Arbor and the inability of Negroes to move out of the Jones school district. These conditions, they contended, made it even more important that chil- dren in the Jones area be bussed to other city schools if citizens de- sired true integration. And 26 parents with children in the Pattengill school felt that their children were being deprived of the opportunity to attend schooll with Negroes because there are no Negroes at Pattengill. Only at! an early age can children be adequately prepared for life in an integrated society, they said. One citizen lauded the neighbor- hood school concept and claimed that closing Jones school would destroy the identification and loyalty which close-by schools af- ford. But a second citizen thought it would be beneficial to break down neighborhood lines in order to achieve city-wide integration. By MICHAEL HARRAH Special To The Daily SAN FRANCISCO--Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R-Ar yesterday was nominated on the first ballot as the Repub can Party's twentieth nominee for president of the Unil States amid the screaming cheers of his partisans who pack the house. The vote total was 883 of the 1308. After the last vote was cast, Gov. William Scranton Pennsylvania came to the rostrum to move that the vote unanimous. He commended the senator on his race, and he ma a firm plea for unity behind the Goldwater ticket: "I must now be about the busi- , . . ... . . ness of defeating Democrats." "The platform is broad enough for all of us to stand on, and I shall put whatever campaign tal- ent I have to the job of winning this fall."j{ Romney Goes First Gov. George Romney was the first to switch his delegation's sup- port to Goldwater and he saidV "It is perfectly evident that we have dedicated ourselves to a re- birth of individualism in Amer- ica." Others nominated and their vote totals were Scranton,,214; Gov. Nelson Rockefeller ?of New York, 114; former ambassador to Viet Nam Henry Cabot Lodge of Massa- chusetts, 2; Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine, 27; Romney, 41; Sen. Hiram Fong of fHawaii, 51 and former Rep. Walter Judd of SEN. BARRY GOLDWATER Minnesota, 21. The convention greeted Sen Everett Dirksen of Illinois with ~ wild enthusiasm as he rose to make Goldwater's nomination. The e n s u i n g demonstration raged on unstoppable for 35 min utes, while Sen. Thruston B. Mor- ton of Kentucky, the convention chairman, gavelled in vain for or- Ford.Y Romney was offered in nomi- . nation by Rep. Gerald R. Ford (R-Mich) of Grand Rapids. Rom- ney told the Michigan delegation earlier that his nomination would not violate his pledge not to be- ... come a serious candidate. He said he was only allowing his nomina- tion as a means of demonstrat- ing Michigan's progress under his administration. Johns Hopkins University Presi- REP. WILLIAM E. MILLER dent Milton Eisenhower offered the name of Gov. Scranton. Civil r i g h t s demonstrators blocked the exits from the CowBritish Talks Palace again yesterday and early this morning, physically~ jamming mh Ba y the turnstiles and forcing police to carry them away.ai IAC CORE l Age Organized by the Congress on Racial Equality, ,some 150 dem- LONDON (AP)-Statesmen of onstrators joined hands in a hu- B r i t is h Commonwealth natic man chain to prevent the depart- wound up their weeklong sumi ing crowds from reaching the talks last night in a blaze of v parking lots. Many engaged in lence, recrimination and discord acts of civil disobedience and were Jomo Kenyatta, bearded pri arrested. minister of Kenya, was assault WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP Viet Cong Victors in Battle abroad for Khrushchev, became the new President. At 68, he is reported to have asked for the easier job of President after re- cent illness. Brezhnev is 57, Khrushchev 70. Khrushchev proposed the moves in tjie clearest public indication yet that he considers Brezhnev to be his successor to Soviet power.. Unanimous The Supreme Soviet, or Parlia- ment, gave unanimous approval and long applause to the changes after Khrushchev had explained the reason. The premier said Brezhnev had done "fruitful work" as President for the last four years, but now he is needed for full-time work as a Secretary of the Communist Party's Central Committee. Khrushchev is First Secretary. The stocky, heavy-browed Brezh- nev is known to Western diplomats as a man with a sharp mind and, a friendly, but reserved, manner. Gave Up Post Brezhnev gave up his post as one of about a dozen party sec- retaries after,he succeeded Mar- shal Kliment Voroshilov as presi- dent on May 7, 1960. At that time, Frol Kozlov was generally regard- ed as Khrushchev's political heir. But two heart attacks and a stroke beginning in April 1963 removed Kozlov from the picture, although he still retains top posts. In June 1963, Brezhnev re- turned to a secretaryship and lately he has been too busy for most protocol demands of the Presidency. Khrushchev said the party's Central Committee recommended Administrators, Academic Heads Confer on Protest By ROBERT HIPPLER The North Campus parking protest was the subject of a meeting Tuesday of high administration officials and department heads, it was reported yesterday. The protestors are hoping that a settlement will emerge from these discussions within the next few days. Because of the meeting, the protestors have cancelled the meet- ing they had planned with Francis Shiel, in charge of parking on North Campus. Shiel was present at the meeting Tuesday. The protestors had planned to draw up a "position paper" to present to Shiel at the meeting, but that too has been cancelled. The protestors have reportedly with-" By The Associated Press SAIGON - Hit-and-run Com- munist Viet Cong pounced once again on a Vietnamese military convoy yesterday, boosting gov- ernment losses to 223 dead, 401 wounded and a number missing within a week. Reports reaching Saigon said 17 Vietnamese died and 21 were wounded when a Viet Cong bat- talion ambushed a truck convoy lumbering along a winding foot- hills road 8 miles inland from Tam Ky, on the South China Sea coast nearly 350 miles northeast of Saigon. In an ambush Monday near Chon Thanh, 80 miles north of Saigon, the Vietnamese suffered' 16 dead and 20 wounded. * * * HONG KONG - Communist China, flashing danger signals warning, the United States to watch its step in Southeast Asia is believed to have initiated sev- eral diplomatic moves aimed at rallying the support of some of its neighbors. This is the evaluation of many Western experts who weigh every word that comes out of Peking and chart every Chinese Com- munist move visible from this listening post alongside the Bam- boo Curtain. The few Communist sources available to Westerners here con- cur with this analysis. There is general agreement here that Pe- king does not want to tangle with the United States in a hot war over Southeast Asia at this point. * * * WASHINGTON-The long rise in the nation's economy continued during June, the Federal Reserve Board reported yesterday. Its index of industrial produc- tion, the measure of the output of factories, mines and utilities, went up for the 10th consecutive month. The rise was from 131.2 to 131.8. This means that production for . - the month was 131.8 per cent of the 1957-59 average. LEOPOLDVILLE-Antoine Gi- zenga,, of the 1961 Stanleyville separatist government, has been freed after 2% years of "adminis- trative detention" on Bula-Bumba island in the mouth of the Congo River. The liberation was announced last night in a statement issued by the office of the new Prime Min- ister Moise Tshombe. Tshombe also announced he and the Congo President, Joseph Kasa- vubu, would boycott the summit meeting of African heads of state and government opening Friday in Cairo. * * * NEW YORK-The stock market closed slightly higher in active trading yesterday. 65 stocks were up .39; 15 utilities were down .11; 20 railroads were up .52; and 30 industrials were up 1.17, closing at 844.80. drawn their request for a one- or two-month moratorium before any negotiations can begin. The parking protest rolled into its eleventh day yesterday, with the usual 150 cars parking on the vacant lot next to the Phoenix Project. The leaders have scheduled no further meetings, but "we're sit- ting here with our fingers crossed and hoping for a solution," one of them commented. "Our main problem-lack of contact between the administra- tion and the personnel-is being solved through members of the several academic departments out here," he added. At the meeting ELDERSVELD India: A Democracy with Problems By DICK WINGFIELD The new chairman of the poli- tical science department said last night that Americans must con- sider several important perspec- tives when they attempt to an- alyze and understand India. Among these perspectives Prof. Samuel J. Eldersveld considered the followng: O4- ditional system lacks a centraliz- ed political movement, and in- volves a localized relationship be- tween society and government, ty- pified by the lineage groups and castes. The Indians are now mov- ing away from the caste system," he said. The basic problem is to inte- optimist who is a constructive realist is the position which we Americans should support. "India is the only bastion of democracy in Southeast Asia," he emphasized. "It is our best rep- resentative of universal suffer- age, of competitive political par- ties and of freedom of speech. It is tniup that, TvAip.nnfiizalh, fnl1 duction has doubled, and electric production has quadrupled in the last 10 years. Agriculture produc- tion has increased about 40 per cent, according to one estimate in the last 10 years. "Certainly, there are health problems. But think of it in relativist terms," Prof. Eldersveld said. "Life expec- nnis4.,A tpar~n. An't, i . :. I gav~te the class,, ica oial gvstn, I