HOUSING 'MILITANTS' ON WRONG TRACK See Editorial Page IE A6F A& 4.11 1 tr tgan 47IaiIti CLOUDY High--75 Low-55 Chance of light showers Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No.10 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9,.1965 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES What's New At 764-1817 Hotine F Nationalist feelings seem to be running high among the University's Indian and Pakistani students. Groups of students from both countries have met and pledged support for their governments' policies. Though exact figures are not available from the International Center, it is estimated that there are 200 students and staff from India and about 25 from Pakistan. Nine out of twelve Midwestern states exceed Michigan in the percentage of non-resident students enrolled in tax-supported colleges and universities, according to a study by the Midwestern Council of State Governments. The report revealed that 12.5 per cent of the state's total 146,000 enrollment comes from out- side the state. Other states in the survey had out-of-state per- centages as high as 23 per cent. Prof. Ross J. Wilhelm, of the graduate school of business education, has suggested that a military pay raise of $300 a month would elimin'ate the necessity for the peacetime draft. Wilhelm labelled the present conscription act as a "slave labor law" and predicted that with a monthly wage of $388 "you would get as many men as you would need." Approximately 350 women are participating in upperclass rush, the Panhellenic Rushing office announced yesterday. The first set of rush parties will continue through Friday night. hTo ate 1124 men have signed up for the fall '65 Rush. "This is going to be the biggest Rush in many years," said Richard Van House, '67, IFC Rush Chairman. Sign-up for Rush will remain open until Saturday. The crowding of the language lab, reports its director, E. M. Hamson, is not caused by non-working machines, but rather by increased enrollment-in language courses and teachers' "increased insistence that students use the tapes for drilling." Hamson said the lab is attempting to ease the situation by adding 14 hours to the weekly schedule. Effective yesterday, the lab will be open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. weekdays, 2 p.m. to 10 p.n. Sunday and 8 a.m. to noon Saturday. In addition, work on a new 12 booth lab in South Quad should be completed by the end of September. * , * * Student Government Council will hold its meeting at Couzens Hall at 7:30 p.m. tonight. Howie Abrams of the National Supervisory Board of the United States National Student Associa- tion will discuss what changes in USNSA mean for student governments. The proposed change -in electian rules and three items of the housing proposals will be voted on. * ~* Roger Heyns, newly-appointed chancellor of the University of California's Berkeley campus, will leave Ann Arbor Sept. 15. Heyns plans to return to the University for the Sept. 24 Regents' meeting. Long Distance Prof. Richard B. Couch, chairman of the department of naval architecture and marine engineering, is chairing a meeting of the American Towing Tank Conference at the Webb Institute of Naval Architecture. Following this meeting, Couch will attend a meeting in Washington, D.C., to review national shipbuilding problems. Prof. Yale Kaminar of the Law School will participate in the Annual Judicial Conference of the Third Judicial Circuit of ii United States, to take place in Atlantic City, N.J., today. Dis- cussion will be on the topic: "The Supreme Court's Decision of Defendant's Rights and Criminal Procedures." * * * * Prof. Samuel J. Eidersveld, chairman of the Political Science department, was honored last night at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. He received the Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award for 1965, which included a cash award of $500, for his book "Political Parties: A Behavioral ' * Analysis." Four city council members expressed great concern Tuesday night over the wisdom of last week's action granting permission for the construction of a 26-story high-rise apartment building. The members voiced their opposition in discussion of a substitute proposal, which later passed, that modified last week's decision only slightly. OSAI By MEREDITH EIKER A new Office of Student Affairs policy concerning off-campus housing rental may provide Uni- versity students with the option of signing either an eight-month or 12-month lease Mrs. Eliza- beth Leslie, director of off'campus housing, said recently. The effec- tiveness of the policy will depend, however, on the cooperation of local property owners and mana- gers. She explained ,that in the pastI xhen a student signed a twelve-1 Ponders month lease and then moved out means before its term expired the owner Withou could send a request to the Office Univers of Academic Affairs recommend- ers will ing that the student be prevented into sh from graduating or re-registering student until he had complied with the Mrs. LE provisions of the contract. Furth Under the new policy, which will sonally not affect existing leases, the Uni- he sign versity will no longer make such a stude recommendations. lease w While the earlier requests did might 1 not necessarily have to be honor- where k ed, they gave the landlord a versity 8-Month of enforcing the contract. t this assistance from the ity perhaps property own.- 1 be more willing to enter orter leases with which the s can more easily comply, eslie said. her, a student will be per- responsible for any lease as, Mrs. Leslie said that if nt enters into a 12-month ,hen an eight-month one be available for him else- he cannot expect the Uni- to be sympathetic to com- plaints which may arise from his having to sub-let his apartment for four months at a considerable financial loss. However, she also said that stu- dent housing demands must con- sider the property owner's posi- tion. Eight-month leases are far less desirable from their stand- point because under these terms apartments must be cleaned and damages repaired twice a year and this may involve heavy expenses in time and labor. Further, she mentioned, the! 1ease: owners must be assured of 12- months rent so that they can meet mortgage and loan obliga- tions. If summer enrollment is not high enough many landlords will be faced with a financial burden which has always been partially assumed by the renting student. One Ann Arbor property owner pointed out that while eight- month leases may be practical for older dwellings where mortgages are low or paid off, those who have financed the building and Leslie management of newer apart- ments on campus cannot "realis- tically" consider granting shorter rental terms. Mrs. Leslie also said that those students who expect the rents under eight-month leases to be the same or less than under 12- month' leases will be greatly dis- appointed. Property owners are not making the great profits cited in many instances and some are already in financial trouble or will be if they cannot be assured of twelve-month occupancy, she said. Indian F Infantry 'aratroops IF I t Kaachi, RawalIprndi, Drives on EQC Drops Hornberger IQC T Ask Contract Releases Soon for Upperclass Pledges By ROBERT BENDELOW In a special meeting last night, East Quadrangle Council voted to drop a case before Joint Judi- ciary Council contesting the right of Lee Hornberger, '65, to occu- py the office of president of In- terquadrangle Council. The decision was needed by IQC to see that the problem of presi- dential succession was cleared up for all possible future cases. The matters considered were definitions of the qualifications for the presidency, succession to the; presidency and when the presi- dent vacates office.I Reversal This action was a reversal of last year's EQC policy which would have blocked Hornberger from be- coming president of IQC. IQC also passed a motion ask- ing that upperclass pledgesbe allowed to move into their affiliat- ed houses. However, Director of Residence Halls Eugene Haun had; earlier told Hornberger that such action could not be considered be- fore October 1, and that by that time, the number of people in the residence halls would haveI dwindled to somewhat below the normal occupancy limit of theI quads. Last year, upperclass pledges were allowed to break their con- tracts. Kosher MealsI In addition, it was announced that all students who wish to re- ceive refunds for kosher meals eaten at HilleI must register with Dr. Herman Jacob. Because of meal capacities there, only some 70 students may register for a particular meal. -Associated Press U THANT, UNITED NATIONS SECRETARY GENERAL, is greeted by Michael Stewart, British Foreign Secretary, following his arrival at London airport yesterday. Thant is en route for peace talks between India and Pakistan. STILL HERE THIS FALL: APA Eliminates Brooadway Run; Rabb Blames Ford Grant Lack Pakistanis Say Lahore Strike Halted China Charges Shastri Government with 'Expansionist Action' By The Associated Press NEW DELHI-Parachute troop spread the India-Pakistan conflict across the breadth of the sub- continent early this morning. There were reported comman- do missions of sabotage and ter- ror at scattered points stretching more than 1000 miles from Ka- rachi to Calcutta. Anti ircraft batteries opened up in blacked-out Karachi last night and the Pakistani radio said In- dian chutists had dropped in the area. The broadcast appealed to the people to seize the. raiders and turn them in to police. Also Hit Sargodha Indian paratroopers were also dropped last night in the Sar- godha area of West Pakistan, 170 miles south of Rawalpindi, a Paki- stan government spokesman said. Air battls still were being fought, but apparently on a reduced scale. Pakistan claimed two Indian planes shot down, and India claimed a transport plane was shot down in an attempted air raid on New Delhi. A Pakistani spokesman denied there was any air raid on New Delhi. The intense airborne action by both nations followed the open- ing of two new fronts in West Pakistan by Indian assault units yesterday. The twin drives osed threats to Rawalpindi, the Paki- stani capital, and the major nav- al and air base at Karachi. the former capital. Indians Claimed Slowed Pakistan claimed to have blunt- ed an earlier Indian drive, launch- ed Monday towardnLahore, and to have thrust a' spearhead of its own into Indian territory. Fixing this action around Ka- sur, 34 miles southeast of Lahore, a Pakistani army officer said the Pakistani army has pushed "a lot of miles" into India. Naval power came into play for the first time with a Pakistani bombardment of the west coast port of Dwarka, sacred to all In- dia's Hindus. In Rawalpindi, Pakistan's Pres- ident Mohammed Ayub Kahn charged that. 75 Indian battalions are poised for new "aggression" against Pakistani Kashmir and Pakistan itself. Without mentioning the new in- vasions, a source in Rawalpindi said all Indian soldiers had been driven from Pakistani soil on the Lahore front between the two new crossing points. Later a Pakistanian source said that many of yesterday's para- troopers had been captured, On Diplomatic Front On the diplomatic front, Red China fired off a note to New Delhi claiming Indian troops were guilty of crossing the Chinese bor- der four times in July and five By JOYCE WINSLOW The Association of Producing Artists and the Phoenix Theatre have cancelled a projected move to Broadway this winter, T. Ed- ward Hambleton, managing direc- tor of the Phoenix Theatre and Ellis Rabb, APA artistic director, announced yesterday. Explaining the decision to sus- pend New York production after the coming ' Michigan Fall Fes- tival, Rabb, in a recent New York Herald Tribune article, said, "With the collapse of the foundation subsidy for which we had hoped, we are forced to cancel plans for a move to Broadway." Rabb was referring to a Ford Foundation grant. Despite the fact that the APA wound up its most successful New York sea- son at the Phoenix Theatre on Labor Day with "War and Peace," and "Man and Superman," plays created for the University's 1964 Fall Festival, the liimted seating capacity and subscription of the theatre were not enough to off- set production costs. '65 VERSION OF '59: Lightning-Minded Gargoyle Staff Strikes Twice The Phoenix had a seating ca- pacity of 299 and 7500 subscribers. It wound up with a $100,000 defi- cit despite sell-out crowds and unanimous critical approval. If the Ford Foundation grant had been forthcoming the APA- Phoenix would have moved to Broadway's Lyceum Theatre after the APA's fall production here. The Lyceum seats 1100, and "APA- Phoenix would have aimed for 25,000 subscribers," Marcella Cis-. ney, associate director of the Pro- fessional Theatre Program, said. The Ford Foundation did not state its reason for refusing the grant, but in a recent Tribune article W. McNeill Lowry, vice- president in charge of performing arts for the Ford Foundation, said that the foundation was no longer supporting regional theatres as it had for the last five years. Here for One Year New York's loss is not neces- sarily the University's loss. The APA is a repertory company.which has been under contract to the University's Professional Theatre Program for three years. - The University fully subsidizes the APA in the fall, has developed a large audience for it and under- writes the losses that naturally befall repertory companies. The APA signed a one-year con- tract with the University last year when its three-year contract ex- By ROGER RAPOPORT "Any college humor magazine can copy our stuff for nothing provided we get credit. Remem- ber: .he who steals trash steals trash." -from the masthead of a 1959 Gargoyle. Gargoyle stole its own trash.- Few of those who chortled over the latest Gargoyle yesterday, realized that they were reading an updated version of a piece from a 1959 Gargolye.- The highlight of the latest is- sue of the campus humor maga- ,,i1n wa , i'-nny"A a 0I.kA-ff Gargoyle has come on hard times. The 1959 version is far funnier than the one sold yesterday for 25 cents. .The 1959 version, pre- pared under editor Dick Pollinger was subtler and far more effective. In one sense the current version was an improvement. The board, a large insert, as opposed to the smaller fold-out version in 1959. But the 1959 version included play money for the game. The 1965, "Michiopoly" didn't. Now how can you play "Oligopoly" or "Michiopoly" or Monopoly with- out money? Unable to come up with some- thing new the Garg has returned t' - { i I