J OBITUARY: DEATH OF WJT See editorial page SfIrua :43 ti1 LIGHT RAIN High--55 Low-38 Partly cloudy with intermittent rain Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 4S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1967 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES TO BEGIN IN FALL: Faculty Senate To Establish' Committee on 'U' Mass Media By SUE REDFERN A resolution creating a study of communications media within the University was passed by the Senate Assembly at its regular April 24 meeting. The inquiry will be conducted by a six member committee be- ginning next fall and is to be composed of four faculty mem- bers and two students.. The special panel will study such campus communications me- dia as The Daily; The University Record, a newsletter published weekly by the Office of University Relations, the faculty-sponsored publication, Senate Affairs; WU- OM, the University-owned radio station, and WCBN, the student- operated station. The resolution had been recom- mended to the Assembly by the ~. Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) last semester. The Assembly amended the proposed resolution, which called for a committee of four faculty members, to include two students, one to be appointed by Student Government Council, and one by the Graduate Assembly. The Assembly resolution is a modification of a request made last February to SACUA by the Board in Control of Student Publica- tions to investigate the editorial policies and practices of The Daily. The resolution stated: "Resolved, "That a Committee on Com- munications Media be established as a committee of the Assembly with responsibility for studying the media of communications now employed on this campus; "That the study Include, but need not be limited to, The Mich- t C' NEWS WIRE, igan Daily, WUOM, WCBN, The University Record and Senate Af- fairs; "That the committee consider whether existing media are ade- quate or new channels of com- munication are desirable, and whether the existing organization- al structure of the agencies gov- erning and operating the media of communications and their re- lationships to each other and to the University community are ap- propriate or can be improved; "That the committee be com- posed of four members of the Sen- ate to ba appointed by the As- sembly, and at least two student members, one of whom is to be appointed by the Student Govern- ment Council and one by the Graduate Student Council (now Graduate Assembly), but that the committee would be free tocon- sult with members of the Univer- sity community and of the public without restriction." Prof. Frank Kennedy of the Law School, newly-elected chair- man of SACUA, indicated that a clear majority of the faculty As- sembly voted for the amendment which provides for two student members on the communications committee. "It was quite clear in the meet- ing that the Assembly thought that there should be active stu- dent participation in the study," he said. In other action the Assembly appointed three members to SAC- UA for three-year terms. John Pardach of the School of Natural Resources, Alexander Eckstein of the literary college, and, Joseph N. Payne of the education school will replace outgoing members William Brown (former SACUA chairman) of the dentistry school, John Weller of the Medical School, and Felix Moore of the School of Public Health. On May 1, SACUA elected Ken- nedy, a two-year member of the committee, as its chairman, and Irving Copi, a one-year member, as vice-chairman. -Daily-Andy Sacks -Daily-Andy Sacks Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY) warned yesterday that the Democratic Party is losing the nation's youth to extreme movements of both the right and left. Kennedy told. a Democratic fund raising dinner in Detroit that the party must now begin to shape a fresh set of goals and programs. As Kennedy spoke, members of a local right wing group called Breakthrough and the Detroit chapter of the Young Socialist Alliance picketed outside. enneaDemsustRevioatoeaonsYouth Reconsider House Action On Tax Plan Postpone Second Vote Until Next Week; Passage in Doubt By WALLACE IMMEN After a procedural move yes- terday which technically placed the income tax portion of Gov. George Romney's fiscal reform package in position for another vote, the state House of Represen- tatives postponed action on. the bill until next week. The package was defeated Thursday by a 48- 57 vote. The next round of deliberations is now expected in the Senate next week, which will not meet until Tuesday. Republican leaders not- ed yesterday that negotiations on the 200 bills before the House will take a great deal of the floor time next week. A Senate denial of an extension of the House calendar which ex- pired forced the House to send all outstanding bills to the Ap- propriations Committee, from which they were resubmitted as appropriations bills. Bipartisan Tax Package A vote is likely in the Senate next week, however. Senate Demo- crats have reportedly negotiated a bipartisan tax package, but no details have yet been announced. House action yesterday was lim- ited to the removal of amend- ments which were added to the bill by Republicans Thursday in at- tempts to lure Democratic sup- port. The bill is now, in effect, in the same form as it was on Wed- nesday. It provides for a two and a half per cent flat rate tax. on individuals and a six per cent income tax on industry. In a move which assumed tax reform will be approved this year, State Democratic Chairman Zol- ton Ferency said yesterday he is preparing for a "massive petition drive" to place the question of a gradated income tax, currently forbidden in the state constitu- tion, on the ballot. In its present form, the equity of the tax structure is the major point of deliberation. The bill would provide $579 million a year in new revenues for the state, but when -added to the other six bills in the package which reduce or repea. other taxes, the measure would net $294 million annually. Education Appropriations Another major consideration in the voting on the bill yesterday was its effect on the state's ap- propriations for education. Edu- cation allocations could be rais- ed as much as $180 million over Romney's recently announced "austerity" budget, which college administrators have claimed repre- sents a "crisis" budget. See HOUSE, Page 2 THE ANN ARBOR POLICE department expects to have a police relations officer at the University in the near future. The man designated for the job is Sgt. Kenneth Klinge, police Com- munity Relations Officer. Conference are currently being held with the Office of Stu- dent Affairs to determine specifically what role Klinge will play in the University community. It is thought that he will serve as a liason between student groups and the police department on matters of mutual concern. A NEW LAW JOURNAL will begin publication in the 1967-68 academic year. Focusing on the practical problems of law reform, it will encourage student contributions and will probably make the University the first to have two student-edited law reviews. The journal will be financed by a gift from Jason Honigman, J.D. '24, and it's first editor will be Prof. Frank E. Cooper. Unlike the Law Review and other journals published at law schools, the new journal will eventually be open for participation by all law school students, rather than limited to those with the highest class ranking, Francis. A. Allen Dean of the Law School, explained. WILLIAM SLOANE COFFIN, JR. Chaplain at Yale Univer- sity, will speak on "Viet Nam: A Time to Speak and, Act" at a meeting sponsored by the Interfaith Committee for a Conference.. on Religion and Peace next Tuesday. The meeting will be held at the First Methodist Church from 11:30 to 1:15. Sloane will be recruiting participants for "Vietnam Summer," a program sponsored by Martin Luther King calling for 10,000 volunteers to spend the summer in 500 communities organizing and educating against the war in Vietnam. * * '** MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY members of Students for a Democratic Society (SUS) anc sympathizers attempted to pass out anti-war leaflets at Lansing's Eastern High School yesterday but were greeted by over 100 student protesters. Witnesses said the high schoolers burned some of the leaflets on the sidewalk in front of the school and attempted to tip over a car containing SDS members. One college student had a fire- cracker set off in his back pocket. By MARK LEVINt Special To The Daily DETROIT - Senator Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY) warned yes- terday that the Democratic Party is losing the nation's youth "to extreme movements or to public indifference-for their fears and expectations have no answers in the politics of the past." Kennedy said that the Demo- cratic Party must "now begin to; shape a fresh set of goals and programs for the American na- tion-or be discarded as an in- strument of national leadership." "The future of this nation and its politics rest now with the most active and idealistic younger gen- eration since the American Revo-: lution. They look to us for a na-' tion and a party in which they can all take pride-a nation and a party vigorous in purpose, thoughtful in action, generous and compassionate in the use of its might and riches," Kennedy ex- plained. Kennedy spoke before over 3000 people at the Michigan Demo- cratic Party's annual Jefferson- Jackson Day dinner at Detroit's Cobo Hall. As the senator deliv- ered his address, members of the Detroit chapter of the Young So- cialist Alliance and a local right wing extremist group called Breakthrough picketed outside. Inside, bumper stickers and but- tons urging a Kennedy-Fulbright national Democratic ticket in 1968 were being sold at a rapid pace. "Radicalism and reaction," Ken- nedy continued, "the New Right and the New Left, reflect a com- mon theme-the desire of indi- viduals to find some sense of in- ner significance by sharing in a large common purpose." "They reveal what danger there is in feelings of impotence and lack of direction - polarizing groups and individuals, creating a nation of strangers; until even those with whom we sympathize glare at us across an impassable barrier of hostility," he comment- ed. "We cannot run on a platform of more of the same," Kennedy emphasized, "for that is not enough to conquer the conditions which now scar and cripple our national life. Kennedy outlined four direc- tions in which he felt a "new politics" must move: * "To find ways to liberate and enhance the importance of indi- vidual lives and actions; to pro- tect ourselves against the giant organizations, huge impersonal corporations, and .universities as big as cities-which threaten to overwhelm and obliterate the im- portance and value of individual man.- * "To extend and deepen gov- ernment protection of our people, and understand the new meaning of justice-ending the dependency which pervades our social pro- grams, and which is the antithesis of democracy." 0 "To rebuild our sense of com- munity, of human dialogue and of the thousand invisible strands of common experience and purpose, affection and respect, which tie men to their fellows. I envision a group of concerned and active people, working not every four years but every year, not at elec- tions one day in the year but every day, rewarded not with money but with the knowledge that their community and their country are better for their having lived; they will have made a difference." O "Fourth and most important, arching over all else, must be our quest for world peace: not the quiet of desolation nor the stabil- ity of tyranny; but a world of diversity and progress in which armaments and violence give way to the force of reason and com- promise which are man's only hope for survival on earth." Kenedy said that the challenge facing American foreign relations was whether "the heirs of the world's great revolution can iden- tify not with the potentates in their palaces or generals in their army camps, but with peasants and villagers in their huts and slums; whether we will refuse to be cast as the protectors of privi- lege and guarantors or the bank- rupt and dictatorial governments of the world." WSU Agrees to File-Burning; Protesters Ask Voice in Policy By MARCY ABRAMSON Approximately 500 Wayne State University s t u d e n t s continued demonstrations for a third day with a rally yesterday afternoon in the campus mall. Although the confidential stu- dent files on non-academic affairs which caused the original protest were burned Thursday night, stu- dents have now shifted emphasis to demands for a voice in aca- demic policy and selection of uni- versity administrators. Disappointed by what they call- ed a bad turnout yesterday, stu- dent leaders planned a second rally for next Thursday in the mall. Students and faculty who spoke yesterday will then explain the student demands to what they hope will be a larger aud- ience. Charles Larson, president of the WSU Student-Faculty Council and one of three students present at the burning of the files Thursday night, said the records included i n f o r m a t i o n on homosexuals, picketing at WSU, students with criminal records or mental dis- turbances and publications spon- sored by student groups. Charging intellectual dishonesty, Larson said WSU President Wil- liam R. Keast denied the existence of the files until Wednesday, Major Speakers of Conference Discuss Issues of Higher Education in Future By AVIVA KEMPNER I that are needed to prepare for the wall around the campus." But; the future: Ashby continued that although First of a two-part series -Clearing the "university cur- "the campus could no longer be; An international group of top ricula of the lumber of traditional an ivory tower, there must still be educators were in Ann Arbor last subjects of instruction which are ivory towers on the campus." He week participating in the second by no means necessary to a com- also supported the need for in Sesquicentennial conference en- mand of contemporary knowl- 'loco parentis' which is not "in-, titled, "Higher Education in To- edge." stitutionalized paternalism but a morrow's World." -"Overcoming the disintegra- personal parent-son relationship Representing five continents and tion of knowledge" by instituting on the campus." 35 countries, the 509 participants changes in curricula. Most important, challenges to attended panel discussions and -"Creating all kinds of inter- the university's inner logic must speechesdealing with the various disciplinary studies which break be defended, Ashby contended, or aspects of the conference topic. through the traditional barriers else "the equilibrium between between particular areas of re- heredity and environment will be At the conference's opening search." destroyed." general session two major address- 'Full Human Personality' To train the students of the es were given on the overall Schaff emphasized the "integra- future Ashby outlined the "need theme. The speakers were Adm tion of knowledge and the de- to learn only four things." The; Schaff, professor of philosophy velopment by the university of a fortig r:samseyo at the Warsaw University and Sir full human personality." This four things are: "a mastery of Eric Ashby Master of Clare Col- ne sflildoc h nvr words as symbols of ideas, an un- , leeashby, Mastners of Cr need is fulfilled once the univer- derstanding (and, for some stu- lege at Oxford University.I sity again becomes a 'universities dents a mastery) of the concepts Emphasis on Creativity litterarum.' This goal, he con- of mathematics as symbols of; Dealing with "The Future of the cluded might be accomplished in measurement, a sufficient equip-, University" Schaff's speech was the future. ment of orthodox ideas in, at any read for him since sickness pre- Ashby, who felt 'it is not pos- rate, one field to be able to use vented him from attending the sible to make useful predictions the ideas with confidence, and a conference. In the future, with its about the social environment" of mastery of the acepted procedures increased denendence upon auto- thefuture preferred to make some for dissenting from orthodox and address of the conference at a luncheon attended by all the dele- gates. His emphasis was "on the role of higher education in the making; or rather the constant remaking, of the world of tomorrow." From studying certain trends of the present, Zurayk predicted the features of the future. 'Continuing Process' First he felt that the "present expansion of higher education will continue and will accelerate," be- cause of the democratization of higher education and the increas- ing complexity of modern life. This last influence will lead to the second feature which Zurayk sees as a radical increase in size and diversity of higher education. Thus, education will become a "continuing process," and also more costly in the future. The university will also be under morc pressure from the government and the taxpayers. And a gap between the universities in the more de- veloped countries and those in the less developed ones will still exist. when protesters led WSU Vice- President James P. McCormick to the drawer in the safety and se- curity department where they were kept. Although Keast origi- nally refused to turn over the records, Dean of Students Duncan Sells burned the files after 1,000 students held a 24-hour sit-in Wednesday. The decision to continue the movement followed a 90-minute meeting Thursday night between Wayne administrators, including Keast, and 12 demonstrators led by Larson. Six demands were presented. "We weren't satisfied with the way Keast answered any of the six points," Larson said. Six Demands Student demands were: " Placement of a voting stu- dent member on all advisory com- mittees appointed by Keast, and on the university's budget com- mittee. " A state constitutional amend- ment allowing a voting student member on the university Board of Governors. Until the change is made, students are asking for a non-voting member who would have a voice in administration. " Binding referendums among students, faculty members and administrators on u n I v e r s i t y policies. * Increased powers for the Stu- dent-Faculty Council so that the S-FC would have full access to all information of administrative con- cern. Student election of the vice- president of student affairs, dean of students and associate dean of students. * Student and faculty decision- making power over curriculum, the university quarter system and hiring, firing and promotion of faculty. Binding Referendum As evidence of the administra- tion's good faith in meeting the demands, protestors also sought an immediate binding referendum on the question of non-graded credits. By ROGER RAPOPORT Editor Special To The Daily MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Ala- bama Gov. Lurleen Wallace has recommended cutting off the state's annual appropriation to the famed private Negro college, Tuskegee Institute. The University and Tuskegee have been working together for the past few years on an ex- change program involving students and faculty. While the governor declined to explain her decision, she did ask the legislature to continue sup- port to three other privately en- dowed white colleges in the state as part of her biennial budget re- quest. The state appropriation was $670,000, or about five per cent of the $13 million budget this year. Special Instruction Tuskegee has been getting state funds since 1943 to subsidize spe- cial instruction. The money has been used for graduate programs in agriculture, engineering, home economics and veterinary med- icine. Under Mrs. Wallace's budget recommendations for the next two years, the $1.3 million that would have gone to Tuskegee would be used to meet building needs at two state-owned Negro Alabama Governor Recommends Ending State Aid to Tuskegee line with the overall 3.6 per cent cutback. Tuskegee President L. H. Foster said he was shocked at the dis- closures. "We had the usual con- tacts with the committee and the executive offices and there was no indication of anything along this line." The governor's office declined comment on the cut and suggested that reporters "check on how much federal aid Tuskegee gets before" they "ask about the state budget cut. The whole thing will be brought out in public hearings in due time. That's our only state- ment." Six state officials have been sit- ting on the 25-man Tuskegee board of trustees since the state began giving the school aid in 1943. Former Alabama governor George Wallace sat on the Tus- kegee board' and frequently boast- ed of the state's aid of Tuskegee as evidence of its deep concern for the welfare of Negroes. There was some speculation that the budget cuts reflected dis- enchantment with students at the Negro school who have broken windows in downtown Tuskegee in recent months. One of the inci- dents came after a Negro student was killed by a white man and the other came after the same man was acquitted on a self-defense plea. Across the state Alabama edu- cators were scheduling emergency meetings to discuss the general budget cut. "We've never had a shock like this," said one college spokesman. "We can't operate on the governor's proposed alloca- tions, and we refuse to accept it." Laymen To Replace Priests As Notre Dame Trustees SOUTH BEND, Ind. (R) - The University of Notre Dame, guided for 125 years by the Fathers of Holy Cross, departs from religious dominated administration today in a historic change of command. Administration of the Catholic school will be vested in the hands university 'the advantages of hu- man talent not available in the order." The change is also in keeping with the spirit of the Second Va- tican Council, the source said. The council promoted greater church flexibility and installing of lay-