LBJ LEARNS CAUTION PRECEDES ESCALATION See editorial page a Sil r igan 113ai4 CLOUDY High-75 Low--50 Clearing trend; warmer over weekend Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 47S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1967 SEVEN CENTS FOUR PAGES MORE YOUTH MEMBERS: NAACP 'Young Turks' Demand Overhaul of Governing Body MSU ouFI Trustees Disagree BOSTON (M)-About half the a chair, those remaining adopted delegates to the National Associa- an emergency resolution prepar- tion for the Advancement of Col- ed by the New York delegation ored People convention staged a calling for closer contact with rebellion yesterday, staying in a the people. darkened .ballroom after adjourn- Impassioned Speech ment to call for an overhaul of The impromptu action came its governing body. shortly after an impassioned The militant New York state speech by a 23-year-old member conference, largest single state of the board brought the working delegation at the convention, fol- session to its feet to recommend lowed its "Young Turk" presi- I'more youth on the board of direc- dent Donald Lee of Buffalo in re- tors. fusing to move after Chairman "We believe in the NAACP and Matthew Perry called for adjourn- are tired of seeing other organi- ment. zations steal the angry young Ne- "If you adjourn, we will not groes, steal the militants," shout- leave," they shouted. Perry ad- ed Alfred Williams, of East Lans- journed. The lights and micro- ing, Mich. phones were turned off. But about Williams, a prime mover be- 500 delegates, including most of hind some of the more militant the younger members, stayed in youths at the convention, persuad- their seats, chanting "we shall ed delegates to adopt a resolution not be moved." calling on the board to increase By the light of a single televi- youth members from three to 17. sion camera, with Lee standing on "We'll make you a new organ- NEWS WIRE Late World News By The Associated Press NEWARK, N.J.-The death toll rose to seven in three straight nights yesterday in this riot-torn city. Three Negroes and a white policeman were killed as a curfew originally called for at midnight was moved up to 10 p.m., without apparent effect. Democratic Gov. RichardJ. Hughes said a third of the city was under seige, cordoned off by police and National Guardsmen in the grip of what he termed "criminal insurrection." Over 700 arrests have failed to quell sniper duels between police and rioting residents. Street mobs built up in size before sundown after day-long looting. Bullets whizzed around the heads of firemen battling fire in a four-story brick building near a housing project.. THE FIRST MEETING of the International Atomic Energy Agency ever to be held at a U.S. university begins Monday, July 17 at the University. More than 70 papers will be presented at the three-day meeting by nuclear scientists and engineers from 25 countries, including the United States, the Soviet Union, Yugo slavia, Poland, Israel, Japan, and Germany. The talks in the symposium on neutron thermalization and reactor spectra will be simultaneously translated into French, Spanish, Russian, and English. Prof. M. V. Kazarnowski of the Gosudestvenii Institut in Lebedeva, Moscow, is one of eight Russian participants in the program. The other Russian scientists are from the I. V. Kurchatov Atomic Energy Institute in Moscow. At the conclusion of the meeting, Prof. Paul F. Zweifel of nuclear engineering department will present a summary and some suggestions for future research. VIETNAM SUMMER PROJECT will hold a second community workshop on Monday, July 17. Canvassing of the Pittsfield Village area will follow an orientation session at the Unitarian Church, 1917 Washtenaw, at 7:00 p.m. Open House will be held at Viet- nam Summer headquarters at 516 Oswego on Sunday, July 16, from 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. ization if you can't do it your- self," he said. "There are new trends in civil rights . . . these sentiments are not peculiar to youth, but are particularly felt by youth." Williams' speech made before the convention officially adjourn- ed, amended a proposed resolution which had merely called for a study on whether more young peo- ple should be onthe board, and a report to the 1968 convention. The two actions came in a day of swift maneuvering in which executive director Roy Wilkins suspended P]iiladelphia branch President Cecil Moore, and the "Young Turks" formally charged United Auto Workers with using union money to pay delegate ex- penses in an attempt to take over the convention. Moore's suspensionwas' asked Thursday by five Philadelphia delegates on grounds that he used the Philadelphia office for per- sonal gain, was careless with branch finances, and made "ra- cist attacks on people." At a news conference Dr. Eu- gene Reed of New York state, a spokesman for the "Young Turks," disassociated his group from Moore, and said they support Roy Wilkins but not the board of di- rectors. UAW Hit A flyer circulated by his group among the delegates said the Unit- ed Auto Workers were paying the expenses "of a large numbr of dlegates" to "prevent NAACP from taking a strong position on cer- tain key issues, particularly . discriminatory practices of seg- ments in organized labor." The flyers suggested that the UAW go on record opposing dis- crimination in the building trades unions, eliminate "its lily-white policy of selecting regional direc- tors," and name more Negroes to its executive boards. The resolution, sponsored by New York's delegation, asked for a convention committee to recom- mend ways of 'giving the member- ship a greater voice in the policy making' and to get more local area representation on the board. EXTRA EDITION The Daily will publish an ex- tra edition this afternoon fol- lowing the Regents' decision on a tuition hike. The free edi- tion may be picked up at var- ious places on campus. It was also asked a battery of attorneys be named to revise the constitution "to correct the above mentioned deficiencies." "Non-functioning members must be removed from the national board," it said, "the void which exists between the association and the grass root masses must be removed." ni-State FORMER WEST-GERMAN Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, center was conferred of civil law by University President Harlan Hatcher yesterday. Edhrdgas Univei Need Bri~dge with P Tuition Boostl iWould Support, SAbility-To- Pay U' Regents Meet on Tuition Today; Wayne State To Consider Hike Also BULLETIN 4 Vice President for Academic Affairs Allen Smith last night told WXYZ-TV that the University would raise tuition costs as much as $300 for the year starting in September. Smith said due to the budget cut there is "no alternative but to raise the tuition sharply." By JOHN GRAY Two members of Michigan State University's Board of Trustees have indicated that they will "wholeheartedly oppose" any tuition increase for in-state students at MSU. C. Allan Harlan and Don Stevens, both Democrats, said that despite the inadequacy of the Legislature's MSU appropriation, they would oppose any such increase unless it was tied to an ability-td-pay system. -Daily-Robert Sheffield Both said, however, they would "reluctantly" favor an out-of-state an honorary doctor tuition increase. The University Board of Regents is meeting this morning to con- sider the budget and a substantial tuition hike is expected. Regents were not available last .night to comment on the possibility of an Q 1 "ability-to-pay" tuition increase at the University. ) ltics By WALLACE IMMEN A polarity will always exist be- tween the universities and gov- ernment, but bridges of under- standing must be 'cultivated, ac- cording to Ludwig Erhard, former Chancellor of West Germany. He said conflicts will continue to arise because of the tension between the realms of thought and those of power. Erhard spoke as an educator at he convocation which ended the three-day sesquicentennial conference on "the University and the Body Politic." His speech was in German, and was translated by Prof. 'James K. Pollock, of the Political Science department, who worked with Erhard shortly! after the wvar. Demonstrations Warning that mass demonstra- tions must not be considered in every case a stronger weapon against the compulsion of author- ity, Erhard said "the actual situ- ation implies at least a readiness, if not a necessity, to come to a mutual understanding" between government and the universities. He described a "gulf that sepa- rates intellectual grasp and po- litical decision," which has dis- rupted century-old democracies (the United States and Great Britain). He said that ideas are about to penetrate from the Com- munist world and developing na- tions which "if brought to their logical conclusion would disrupt our political, social and economic order." The danger with accepting these policies, said Erhard, is that totalitarian states "have a sad reputation that while they are generous in supporting science, learning and research in a finan- cial way, they do this just as long as and only in those fields where intellectual activity does not disturb or endanger the aims of the state and political pur- poses of the group in power." But the university must not try to become "institutionalized power in itself," he explained, "in other words the service of truth means more and something better than domination or material gains." It should Erhard concluded, be the task of the university to give new and original thought to Keep Tuit Fle-miung 1A By DAVID KNOKE "Those of us who believe the cause of democracy is best served by maintaining tuition and fees in public institutions at as low a level as possible must pin our hopes on convincing state legisla- tors of the validity of our posi- tion," said 'Robben W. Fleming, President-elect of the University, at yesterday's Sesquicentennial conference "The Support of High- er Education." He explained that the answer to the tuition problem must be found between the extremes of free tuition and full cost reim- bursement. "The opportunity for an educa- tion is so valuable to the nation that the cost to the student must never be placed beyond the reach of the common man," said Flem- ing. However, Fleming, chancellor at the University of Wisconsin who becomes President-designate in September, did not relate his topic to the Legislature's cut in the University's requested budget which may force a tuition hike. He said his policy is to decline to *WHERE ARE FUGS?: Newport Mistakes Traditional Folksingers as Representative the relationship and to enhance its standing beyond mere techni- cal knowledge. Ehard was conferred an honor- ary doctor of civil laws degree. by University President Harlan Hat- cher. Honorary doctor of law de- grees were given to Michigan's Gov. George Romney and John Gardner, secretary of Health, Ed- ucation and Welfare at the con- vocation as well. 1on- Low dvoeates answer questions in public about the University until he knows' more about the University's situa- tion. Fleming suggested that one means of keeping the cost of edu- cation down to the level o. the common man might be a gradu- ated tuition system that would "remit or scale down the tuition for students who come from low- income families." "It would not be an invasion of privacy to ask students for figures on their families' ability to pay," said Fleming, "and the benefits of such a system to the state would outweigh costs which would not be too great." Fleming also attacked the im- balance of federal financial aid which he said have gone to the physical sciences "with the con- sequence that the social and eco- nomic problems of man are re- ceiving very modest research at- tention." He pointed out that in the decade 1953-63 federal support to state schools grew by seven per cent, the identical amount that state support to the same institu- tions declined., Since state financial aid is used largely for undergraduate study, he said additional sources of funds are needed in order to avoid un- due reliance on teaching assist- ants for undegraduate courses. Holgar Johnson, president of the Council of Financial Aid to Education, concurred with Flem- ing in this last point. "There is still a great impact to be made upon the business community for support of higher education, pro- vided a good case can be made," he- said. "This is especially true among alumni." Paul Miller, assistant to the secretary of education, HEW, the second speaker in the session, commented on the new education acts which he said are creating MSU officials have called the legislature's appropriation about $5.5 million short of their needs for the next academic year. Ability-To-Pay. Unider an ability-to-pay system, students would be charged tuition according to their family income. Students from families with less than a $5,000 annual income would pay the current rate of tuition. $358.50 per year. Students from higher income families would be forced to pay tuitions of up to $1,000 yearly. MSU administrators have voiced opposition to such a system on the grounds that it would "drain off superior students from higher in- come families" if MSU alone adop- ed it. The Board of Trustees were In a 4-4 deadlock at their last meet- ing on June 30 over approval of a budget which incorporated a straight tuition hike for in-state students. Four of the board's five Democratic members voted against the proposal, favoring the "abil- ity-to-pay" system. According to Harlan, "there will be no retreat by the Democratic members of the board" at their meeting next Fri- day, when they will try to reach agreement on the MSU budget. Refused Comment Wayne State University Gover- nor E. J. Forsythe refused to com- ment on the possibility of a tui- tion hike for WSU. The Board of Governors is holding private meetings this week to try to work out an agreement on the budget before their official meeting next Wednesday. Forsythe said that the WSU ap- propriation, $33.5 million instead of the requested $33.8 million, was "going to hamper our operation." Forsythe added that his feelings about the Legislature's freeze on out-of-state enrollment were "am- bivalent." Mostly Local "Most-90 per cent-of our stu- dents are from the local area. However, we have hoped to at- tract more national and inter- national students in the years ahead." WSU's Student-Faculty Council has passed a resolution "strong- ly rejecting" any "proposal to im- pose further financial demands" on the student body. In Lansing, Edwin Novak, presi- dent of the State Board of Edu- cation, called the Legislature's ap- propriations for the state's univer- sities "severely below essential lev- els." Novak said that any resultant tuition increases "are actually in- creases in taxes-consumer type taxes." WSU Faces Shortage of Vital. Funds' President Keast Lap, Blame on Legislature; Tuition Hike Nears By TRACY BAKER Wayne State 'University is faced with "an extremely serious prob- lem," said WSU President William R. Keast last night. He deemed the 1967-68 appropriation "so far be- low Wayne's needs to operate at curent levels, let alone to assume extra responsibilities, that strong measures are needed to align the university's resources and respon- sibilities." "In my, personal opinion," Keast continued "tax reform in Michigan is essential. But if the legislature had acted so that the taxes could be collected in June rather than October then at, least Governor Romney's budget could ,have been enacted." WSU was allocated $33.56 mil- lion, a $1.2 million increase over last year. Romney had recom- mended a $1.5 million increase. Keast felt that the only accept- able aproach to the problem of low appropriations was a tuition increase. He said that he felt any other actions would be either un- fair to the students or would de- feat the goal of a tiniversity. Keast was unable to discuss spe- cific figures until after the WSU Board of Governors meeting next Wednesday and. Thursday, but he stated that there were several al- ternative schemes prepared for submission to them. He did say that all present plans call for stif- fer increases for out-of-state, stu- dents. "My greatest single concern," said Keast "is to ensure education- al opportunities at Wayne will not be reduced for those whose finan- cial condition is marginal. The tuition hike must be accompanied by commensurate student-aid pro- grams." Keast declined to comment on the affects the out-of-state stu- dent freeze would have on WSU, but said "it would be dreadful if this resulted in a set of parochial institutions with no one but Mich- igan residents as students." Only 4 per cent of the WSU student body are non-Michigan residents. By ANDY SACKS NEWPORT, R. I. - This year the directors of the Newport Fes- tival decided to emphasize the traditional,. rather than popular, contemporary performers because contemporary artists receive more exposure through television and records than the traditional artists. The Chung Minh Kun group followed the gospel singers. Com- posed of native New Yorkers of Chinese descent, the four players were upstaged by a female vo- calist who was probably the sex- iest girl yet to appear on the Newport stage. It is hard for me to offer any critique of the Chinese music it- self, because I lack background knowledge of the subject. But George Wein, the official emcee of the festival said the group pos- sessed "impeccable musicianship." But he's not an expert either. Direct from the Lower East Side of Yesteryear came Theodore Bikel. He sang about the Mid East crisis with a Zionist slant, did a song "Hard Times" that blasted the war-mongering gen- erals and finished with an up- tempo Hebrew love song, accom- panied by Ralph Rizner, a Festival director, on mandolin. Though his jokes were stale, Bikel is a good performer and received enthusiastic response from the audience which clapped in rhythm with his numbers. on- the big names for the Festi- val's success. This year they have obviously omitted a number of contempor- ary folk artists. They did not have Phil Ochs, Eric Anderson. Patrick Sky, Tom Rush or any other sec- ond-generation balladeers on the program. COMPARATIVE TUITION LEVELS The following figures represent a view of the University's undergraduate fees as compared to current levels at other col- leges and universities in the state. The Regents will take action this morning on raising tuition for next year. Increases at many of the other schools are also expected . 1 i ,:, .: , :>: : ".":: " :o-:4:;: :>:";":";:" is :;,.<%:.:..."a:": x,::":: .:;a