THANT'S PREDICTION: PRELUDE TO WW III See editorial page Y Sirr D4aiti PARTLY CLOUDY Hi h--58 Low-32 Chance of thundershowers; little temperature change Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 95 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1967 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PA, Carmichael Gives Up Leadership Brown Takes Over As SNCC Leader; No Policy Changes By The Associated Press ATLANTA, Ga. - Black power leader Stokely Carmichael was re- placed yesterday as national chairman of the Student Non- violent Coordinating Committee by an Alabama staff member, H. Rap Brown. There will be no change in SNCC policy, Brown said at a news conference, climaxing a week-long staff meeting of the militant organization. "We shall seek to build a strong nationwide black anti-draft pro- gram and movement to include high school students, along with college students and other .black men of draft age," said Brown. Victims of Oppression "We see no reason for black men, who are daily murdered phy- sically and mentally in this coun- try, to go and kill yellow people abroad who have done nothing to us and are in fact victims of the same oppression that our brothers in Vietnam suffer," Brown said. Carmichael had said long before the meeting that he would relin- quish the chairmanship a year after defeating' John R. Lewis, the ousted chairman. Lewis later quit the organization after it adopted the black power slogan.F Carmichael, wearing an Army field jacket which he said a cousin had given him after returning from Vietnam, said he would re- turn to the field to organize. He had told associates earlier he wanted to take on the home rule campaign in Washington, D.C. Interrupted Work "I am an organizer," Carmichael said. "That's what I love to do best. I interrupted my year's work by being chairman. Now I am go- in back to the fields." Before taking the top SNCC post, Carmichael organized an all Negro Black Panther . political party in Lowndes County, Ala- bama, but its slate of candidates lost in last year's elections. Brown was. asked what Car- michael's role would be. That will be determined by the organiza- tion's central committee, the new chairman -replied. Brown said also there had been a change in the make up of the committee itself but declined to give details. -------TI.1 A RtkITdP1 Si Of Curricula asn N EWS W~I R E Under Study ANN ARBOR teachers have decided not to return to work in the fall if the proposed salary increases that would be financed by a successful millage election June 12 are not agreed to by the voters. The decision was one of six resolutions adopted at a system- wide meeting of teachers Thursday night in reaction to the defeat Monday of a 51V;2-mill school tax increase proposal designed to raise more money for teachers' salaries. Between 550 and 600 of the Ann Arbor Teachers Association's 950 members attended the meeting. THE SELECTION of a new President for the University of Minnesota was not on the agenda of yesterday's meeting of the Minnesota Regents. Regent Chairman Charles W. Mayo an- nounced that this was because "we're letting the whole thing cool off for a while." Minnesota had offered its Presidency to Robben W. Fleming, Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin's Madison campus. But Fleming chose to come here instead as successor to retiring President Harlan Hatcher. FORDHAM UNIVERSITY, one of the nation's largest Roman Catholic schools, located in New York, will begin a series of coeducational sex discussions next fall dealing "frankly and directly" with premarital intercourse, conception and the meth- ods of contraception. "We know we are establisihng a precedent," Martin J. Meade, dean of students, said yesterday. "But our primary concern is the students. It's apparent that many undergraduates are confused about relationships between men and women." Contraceptives, Meade said, would be discussed without touching on their morality. This approach, he contended, would { not constitute a break with Roman Catholic opposition to the use of artificial birth control devices, GROUNDBREAKING CEREMONIES for the University's Highway Safety Research Institute, originally scheduled for next Wednesday have been postponed , Unexpected circumstances arose which would have prevented the attendance of several of the principals. A new date for the ceremonies has not yet been established. Construction of the building will not be delayed by the post- ponement. CITY COLLEGE OF NEW YORK last week dropped a con- troversial requirement that student organizations submit the names of their members to the college authorities. Under new regulations, a studept group will still have to submit the name of its faculty adviser, the number of members, its purpose and any outside affiliation. The requirement of submitting names of all members has been under attack from both activist students and professors. The students claimed that the names were made available to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The professors maintained that the lists posed a threat to academic freedom. Committee Attempts To Evaluate Courses, Credit Hour System By PAT O'DONOHUE Students, faculty members and the admnistration have reached an agreement on one point. The curriculum of the departments within the Literary Collegd need reviewing. "Our records and bookkeeping are scattered, we want to see where we're going," commented William Hays, associate dean of the Literary College. "We want to see what the curricular patterns and changes are and have been in the variojus departments," he added. Hays is in charge of the curri- culum review which is essentially a "fact-finding mission" aimed at finding out such matters as how many courses with two, three and four credit hours are offered in a deparment and how often they are offered. Hays and an intern from the Center for Higher Education have studied the curricular patterns and changes in three departments overl the past year. Hays indicated that some faculty committees may be established in the future to facili- tate the task. According to one source, the fate of various proposals to adjust the allotment of credit hours in vari- ous courses, such as the proposal* to give all courses four creditI hours, depends on the result of the curriculum review. The report of the curriculum committee on the alteration of- credit hours went to the execu- tive committee although "there was a considerable amount of sentiment in favor of adopting it," according to a faculty mem- ber. However, the faculty thought it would be best to adopt "a wait and see attitude" until the results of the calendar committee report anc the curriculum review were available, before making changes in the present program, he added. One result of the calendar com- mittee's report was a poll of the literary college faculty on the1 value of the trimester over the oldl two-semester system. The calen- dar committee recommended a re- tention of the present trimestera system with modifications. Arrest 23 Protesters At Pentagon Action Taken After Attempt To Enter Secret War Room By The Associated Press WASHINGTON--A group of 2 antiwar protesters were arreste yesterday in the fourth day of demonstration at the Pentagon. The demonstrators, making a attempt to enter the buildini were carried bodily onto a U.; marshal's bus to be taken to fed eral court in nearby AlexandriE Va. The demonstrators had bee told shortly before they would b subject to arrest if they continue their protests on the building grounds. Agreed to Remain The young men and women mostly in their late teens an early 20s, agreed among them selves to remain and continu their attempts to enter the buld ing and get into the super-secri War Room. As they walked across a parkir lot toward the entrance, a soli line of uniformed guards waite for them. The protesters then sa down in the road. Marshals an guards moved in and began carry -Associated Press ing them on to a bus. Earlier in a football like spec tagon yesterday as their arrest tacle, the antiwar protesters mac n Tuesday morning, and tried to repeated attempts to b r e a but were allowed to remain with- through or run around guards ar ted but allowed to return Thurs- enter the Pentagon today. come back. Yesterday morning Protesters Evicted park, were finally arrested by After being allowed to sper Tuesday night in the building, tI protesters were evicted Wednesda at closing time, allowed to retur Thursday morning but evicte shortly before noon with orde: not to come back. At dawn today, the demonsta tors were carried by governmer guards from the entrance of tl Pentagon and deposited on a gra: sy parade area. The final -onfrontatiop begs when William Henschel, a securit officer, told the giour seated v the grass: "Ladies and gentlemei TWENTY-THREE ANTI-WAR protsters were carried from the Pen ended their four day demonstration. They arrived at the Pentagon work their way into the top-secret War Room. Th ey didn't succeed, b in the building that night. At closing time Wednesday, they were evic day morning. By noon they were kicked out again, with orders not to they returned, and after having once been car ried to a nearby U.S marshals. FEAR CONTRACT LOSS: Busilnes im Recruit ent of;n CALL FOR UNITY: Negroes March Peacefully in Jackson To Protest Death of Youth During Riots r , ,t 't t 1 i : t , ' ,,r: _ , i iy The Associate-t Pre s NEW YORK--This year's most sought after college graduate may not be the class president but a3 Negro engineer. The emphasis on Negro recruiting by the nation's business firms is intense. One reason is the threat of loss of defense contracts if the gov- ernment thinks a firm is discrim- inating against Negroes. "A good Negro graduate with a technical background is more in demand than anyone I can think of." said Bob Millikan, senior em- ployment representative at Pacif- ic Gas & Electrical Co. in Sari Francisco. Negro Recruiting As a result, companies are step- ping up their recruiting on Negro college campuses and offering big- ger salaries. "A few years ago, big firms be- gan to hire more Negroes. Then smaller companies figured they ought to do something too," said William C. Gutman, placement di- "Ten years ago you just didn't have this kind of offer for mi- nority group members," said Wil- liam M. Nix, placement director. Some students are skeptical, however. Companies are looking for a window-dresser, someone to take pictures of or to show they're employing -a Negro," said a NegroI senior at Morehouse. "It'll be token 'integration in companies for awhile at least," said another Morehouse student. But at the University of Cali- fornia at Los Angeles, Joseph Scul- ly, placement director, said indus- try is no longer trying for the "show" Negro. "We're seeing very little dis- crimination against Negroes," he said. we would like you to leave." The protesters then stood sil in a circle for 10 minutes v headed for the entrance and waiting U.S. marshals. Bradford Lyttle, a spokesn for the group, protested as he N taken abroard that he had volt Leered to leave of his own voliti Nevertheless, he was hustled i the bus with an officer at e; arm.I 'Realist' Krassner Withholds By The Associated Press JACKSON, Miss.-Several hun- dred Negroes marched peacefully' into downtown Jackson on last' night protesting the death of a Negro man felled by police gun- fire during the Jackson State Col- lege riot the night before. Police closely guarded the group as it proceeded into the business district, picking up in numbers as it went along. Charles Evers, state field sec- retary for the Nationaly Associa- tion for the Advancement of Colored People told the crowd, "I came here to march and show our resentment to another mur- der." He called for Negro unity and said whites want "you to start aiguing and bickering among yourselves." Police permitted the march after Negro leaders agreed to stage it of rioting at least partially on "in- before darkness fell. Under day-' truders-people who have come in light time, Jackson stays light I and distorted the movement." until past 8 p.m. Dr. John Peoples, Jackson State Several hours earlier, 19 white president, attributed the violence students from Millsaps College marched from their campus to' City Hall carrying signs reading "White Students Protest the Mur- der of Benjamin Brown." Earlier Friday, black power' forces threatened retaliation Fri- day over the death of a Negro youth felled by police gunfire Thursday night's rioting. Willie Ricks, an aide to Stokely Carmichael, moved through the' area vowing "an eye for an eye, arm for arm, head for head and life for a life." Student leaders at Jackson State, Mississippi's largest Negro; school, blamed the wild two nights' to "unscrupulous outsiders." He said 90 per cent of the rioters were not students. Mayor Allen Thompson. who called in the National Guard on Thursday night to aid police in restoring order, blamed the tur- bulence on "those agitators like Stokely Carmichael and his black power movement, 'which is not only antiwhite but almost all that is anti American." The mayor said police were in- vestigating the cause of the rioting and had conferred by telephone with John Doar, head of the Jus- tice Department's Civil Rights Division. He said police, highway patrol and National Guardsmen "will see to it that law and order rre maintained." Lynch Street ,a major thorough- fare which runs through the heart of the campus, became a littered battleground Thursday. Hundreds of students hurled rocks, tree limbs and bricks at cars that at- tempted to pass. At night, the rioters assaulted- police barricades in an effort to march into the business district of this Mississip- pi capital city. One such assault by some 100 shouting Negroes was turned back when police fired a shot gun charge that appeared intended to go over the rioters' heads. One youth, Benjamin Brown, 22, fell mortally wounded. Brown, a Negro truck driver, formerly was employed by the Del- ta Ministry, a civil rights arm of the National Council of Churches. A Delta Ministry spokesman said the Justice Department would be asked to investigate his death. Two students at Jackson State suffered minor shotgun pellet wounds, and a Mississippi High- way Patrol investigator was cut on the neck by a flying object Carification of Dalk By NEAL BRUSS the price of the issue 15 cents. Special To The Daily The excerpts stated among DETROIT - Paul Krassner's other things that President John- "annual paranoid orgy"-his trip son had performed sexual acts to Detroit - climaxed last night on the body of the late President with messages like "don't ignore John F. Kennedy on the plane to toes" rn "an thing after na um I1 Washington following the Ken- i ;rector at, TempleUniversity ing'-"-'UI t19"' '-'l p Philadelphia. is in bad taste,' before an aud- "It is considered a feather in ience of 450 at Wayne State Uni- the hat of a recruiter to recruit a versity. ra Negro," said Maurice Mayberry, Toes were the central stimulant placement director at the Univer- of an orgy. Krassner said, he re- sity of Florida in Gainesville. "The cently attended in California. reason is simple - government "Is there anything wrong with pressure. Contracts m alienation," K r a s s n e r asked, se.eneCntrc"What could be more healthy than Negroes nave it made with com estrangement?" nedy assassination. No Mail Problems is Parody viewer Joe Pyne, "If Joe is ob- noxious, I respect him for a gen- uine lack of warmth. He certainly isn't phony." He said that General William Westmoreland said, "Of course we must keep up our bombing of North Vietnam. They're still using anti-air craft." Krassner admitted, "I'm paraphrasing." The first psychedelic lynch mob occured, according to Krassner, when a gang of Hippies surround- ed police in New Yorks Central Park and shouted "Love, love," as they moved in. "I was unimpressed with mari- juana until Ismoked some especi- ally pure stuff from Thailand," he concluded. "Now I'm beginning to understand what the war in Vietnam is all about." i , 3 z S "We haven't had trouble getting' this issue through the mail to our subscribers," Krassner said, "but I hear it isn't available on Chicago news stands." ? Krassner said he had no more stories on President Johnson. But he said that folk-rock singer Bob Dylan might cut his hair and put on a suit to change his image when he ends his recuperation from his motorcycle accident. He said of radio-television inter- panries which have defense con- tracts, whaidVirginia Blankenhorn, a placement officer at Occidental College in Los Angeles. In Kansas City, Mo., Ron Erwin, corporate employment manager for Hallmark Cards, Inc., said some Negroes may be receiving premium offers from companies. He added that the degrees of ag- gressiveness displayed by compan- ies in recruiting Negroes may lie in the defense contracts they have. Aetna LU e & Casualty in Hart- ford, Cinn., recruited 30 Negro colleges this year, five times as many as last year. Playboy on..LSDE Krassneratold of another trip, a trip to Chicago. It began withV a night in the home of Hugh Hef-f ner, editor of Playboy magazine. "Hefner never takes LSD: He has no time, he says." The trip ended with an appear- ance at the University of Chicago. Krassner said he was "high on LSD" and watched an auditorium stage shimmer before he spoke. "How can you follow an act like that?" Krassnre asked. "But once I started talking, the audience be- gan to flow," he said. Krassner refused to tell whether or not he had fictionalized the so- called excerpts from William Manchester's book, "Death of a President," which appeared in the durrent issue of the Realist, an off-beat publication he edits. Controversy But, he said, -There will be an explanation of the excerpts in the next issue; Look magazine ordered 200 ex- tra copies. "I think they're going Electroncs Expert Outlines Use of Computer asTeacher "There is no such thing as a Bright. a former electronics failing student-there are only teacher at Carnegie Tech, cited failing teachers," a U.S. Office of three basic principles to guide Edneation official asserted here the use of computers in readying .x:-.' :.'..:: u