KASHMIR WAR REVEALS MISTAKEN U.S. POLICIES See Editorial Page Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom 74Ia~bit CLOUDY High-77 Low-57 Threat of thundershowers, clearing in afternoon VOL. LXXVI, No. 15 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1965 SEVEN CENTS ashington: Fickle or aithful, Awas SIX PAGES ditical EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last in a series of articles on impressions of Washington, D.C., this summer, where Daily reporter Killingsworth served asa congressional legisla- tive assistant and as The Daily's Washington bureau. By MARK R. KILLINGS WORTH Special To The Daily WASHINGTON - George Ber- nard Shaw once said that there are two kinds of women: those who loved him, who were eternally faithful-and those whom he lov- ed, who were infernally fickle. If Washington were a woman, it would fall into Shaw's second ca- tegory. No other city has such an in- stinct for power-or such a har- lot's ability to go where power is. But at the moment, Washington is Lyndon B. Johnson's city-so, in a sense, Washington is now eternally constant. The President is a different man seen in his elenient than he appears to the rest of the nation, however. To most of the country, accustomed to the presidential visage only through photographs or television, Johnson seems pale, flat and slightly drab.. Stomping around the White House with reporters and photog- raphers, or plunging himself-and his wife-into a howling crowd of summer government interns, how- ever, the President is a much dif- ferent man. Television and photographs do not convey a ruddy complexion, gnarled hands or a deeply-lined, deeply-tanned face, however, and they only imperfectly convey phy- sical presence-and so the sheer physical dominance of the Presi- dent is lost to all but White House habitues. Sometimes, however, this comes through for the benefit of the cameras. As, for example, when Johnson was signing the extension of the Peace Corps into law. Overcome by the heat and the excitement of standing beside the President of the United States, Andrea Hays. the young daughter of Congressman Wayne Hays (D- Ohio), fainted smack in the middle of some presidential remarks about how the flower of our dauntless youth has helped work wonders in steaming foreign jungles. But little Andrea revived in time to get a pen and a presiden- tial kiss, after which Johnson added, "Don't you mind, honey- I've fallen down a good many times since I got to the White House."j Despite the charm of this little cameo, most Washington observers are inclined to view this last Johnson statement as containing considerably more hyperbole than accuracy. But some would also dispute the charges of "the Johnson treat- ment" and "arm-twisting" so often leveled against the President. True, Johnson is a smart opera- tor-as when he nearly inveigled former Senator Barry Goldwater to come to the White House "for a cup of coffee to talk over the steel situation." Goldwater doesn't drink coffee, and, when he realized Johnson was trying to upstage a top-level Republican m eting by crowding if off the front page with a tete- a-tete with him, he discussed the steel situation over the phone in- stead. But apart from such flourishes, Johnson has not exerted himself unduly to get what he wants. He doesn't need to-nor would anybody with a greater than two- thirds margin in both houses of Congress and with a nearly two- thirds electoral margin like his. In fact, politics here is almost boring, jarred from its somewhat somnolent nature now and they by a performance by someone like the irrepressible Everett Dirksen. Congressional offices are enliv- ened only occasionally by the whip calls of administration leaders, and the calls themselves are us- ually made more out of habit than necessity. And while there has been con- siderable talk about Johnsonian "arm-twisting" producing a "rub- ber-stamp" Congress, the most popular political pastime here for many congressmen has become the "power of negative thinking" gam- bit. In this ploy, freshman Demo- cratic congressmen beginning to get sensitive to the essentially meaningless charges or "rubber stamp" call up the White House to ask if their vote will be needed on an administration measure for which they've concocted a plaus- ible reason for opposing. The office of Larry O'Brien, Johnson's legislative liason man (and now postmaster general- designate) hastbuzzed with such requests in the past several months. And, almost invariably, he is glad to help out, releasing the congressmen to vote against their target bill. He knows, as do the congress- men, that "negative voting" on some administration bills is not only harmless-thanks to the huge Democratic majorities in Con- gress-but also useful in counter- acting the "rubber-stamp" charge. And if negative voting will keep the heavy Democratic advantage, more power to it. Politics thus has taken on a somewhat dull tinge here. Not even the Viet Nam crisis has pro- duced much public interest, al- though most congressmen are concerned about it anyway. "We got only six letters on'Viet Nam in ten weeks," one congressional aide said scornfully. "That's less than we got on motor truck taxa- tion." But like the "flat" Johnson per- sonality, which mass media unin- tentially convey, the impression of Washington politics in 1965 as "boring" is superficial-because it conceals a revolution in process. In eight months, the country has seen more legislation pro- duced than has occurred in the preceding eight years. During the ceremonies preceding the President's trip to the Capitol to sign the 1965 Voting Rights Act, a visitor from Uruguay asked one Congressman's aide if Negroes had been legally allowed to vote before the act became law. I And this striking example of foreign mis-impressions about the United States is matched-or per- See WASHINGTON, Page 2 4 I i See WA1hINGTON, Page What's New At 764-1817 Shastri, 71 Truce for hant Discuss Possible Indian-Pakistani Hotline The University is one of 11 Midwestern universities partici- pating in a feasibility study of an electronic communications network to provide education with everything from computer conversations to educational broadcasting. Such a network could transmit programmed broadcast material among the universities on a round-robin basis, and also could provide for closed circuit communication of instructional and research material. Bids on the Medical Science Building, phase II, have gone out and must be in by Oct. 21, John McKevitt, assistant to the vice president in charge of business and finance, said yesterday. The Medical Science Building will cost approximately $11,945,000 with the state appropriating $9,400,000 and the federal govern- ment giving $2,500,000 for a research wing. When the building is completed in either the spring or summer of 1968, the East Medical Building will be turned over to the literary college..The pharmacy and geology departments will probably move in after the building has been renovated. This will allow the chemistry department to expand in the chemistry building and the botony and zoology departments in the natural science building. s " " University students may be able within ten years to study, write, listen to music, poetry and instructors, and even watch filmstrips in study booths linked to computers. The University may have 1000 of these booths in libraries and classroom build- ings by 1975, according to Prof. Stanford Ericksen, director of the Center for Research in Learning and Teaching. "We are now developing the prototype of automated study booths at the Center," Ericksen said. The student will use equipment attached to a computer with stored information, such as already exists to search for bibliographic references. The computer will be used as a master teaching machine and will supply the student with whatever subject matter the teacher has entered into the system. ** * * James McEvoy; Grad, president of Graduate Student Coun- cil, said yesterday that the housing committee of GSC was acting independently when it endorsed the VOICE housing stand. Mc- Evoy said, "The Housing Committee has acted without the ap- proval of GSC and is on its own so far." He added that debate on this issue would be handled at today's GSC meeting. Five of the 11 executive board members chosen last spring for. Assembly Association have reopened their positions for petitioning. Two of the members were forced to drop because the director of their residence hall decided that their staff jobs presented conflicts of interest with their positions. 160 letters were sent' out for a meeting held recently to encourage partici- pation in Assembly Association. However, only 10 to 15 girls attended. Assembly Association is holding its annual conclave Sept. 19 to discuss the problems of dorm life. The keynote speaker is Alice Haddix, previously director of the dormitory system at Oakland University in Michigan, and presently a graduate student at Wayne State University. The Gilbert & Sullivan Society has announced the cast for its fall production of "Pirates of Penzance or The Slave of Duty." Morton Achter, Grad, will direct the show's music, and Allan Schreiber, Grad, the dramatics. The singing leads are Nicholas Batch, '66, Frederick; Gersh Morningstar, Major-General; Law- rence Zee, '66, Samuel; John Allen, Grad, Sergeant of Police; Susan Morris, Grad, Mabel; Lynn Hansher, '69, Edith; Hen- rietta Montgomery, '69, Kate; Cecily Simon, '67, Isabel; and Kathleen Kimmel, Grad, Ruth. "Once Again 1965," sponsored by the Dramatic Arts Center of Ann Arbor, will open Sept. 17 with a concert entitled "Un- marked Interchange." The program, held on the top level of the Maynard Street Parking Structure, will be repeated Sept. 17. The following day the group will present "A Concert for Ann Arbor." Tickets may be obtained from Marshall's Book Shop, the Music Center, or the Dramatic Arts Center. The General Library is displaying the Annual Exhibit of Ohicago and Midwestern Bookmaking in its lobby for the next two - : Reveal Date For 'Opening New College MSU Defies Romney Committee in Setting Up School of Medicine By NEAL BRUSS Michigan State University op- posed the recommendations of Gov. George Romney's Blue Rib- bon Committee on Higher Edu- cation when it announced yester- day that it will open a two-year College of Human Medicine in September, 1966. The move, unsuspected by state officials, formally established the school, although it had been plan- ned several years ago. The school's opening had been delayed by a recommendation of the Association of American Medical Colleges, a body accrediting American medi- cal schools. The group had said it would withhold approval until physical facility and staff shortages were filled. Suggestion Romney's Blue Ribbon Commit- tee suggested that a medical school at Michigan State should not be opened until increases were made in enrollments at Wayne and Michigan medical schools. How- ever, the Michigan Medical So- ciety praised Michigan State ad- ministrators in 1964 for foresight in making preparations for a med- ical college. The school will be an outgrowth of the Institute of Biology and Screvane Concedes NEW YORK (A')-Abraham D. Beame won the Democratic nomination for mayor last night. City Council President Paul R. Screvane, who was retiring Mayor Robert Wagner's choice, conceded just before midnight, two hours after the polls closed. Beame, backed by party lead- ers Wagner had tried to purge, will go up against Republican- Liberal nominee John V. Lind- say in a battle of opposites. -Daily-Robert Wilimarth BROTHER DTVID STEINDL-RAST of the Mount Savior Benedictine Monastery in Elmira, N.Y., addressing the International Con- ference on Alternative Perspectives in Viet Nam, suggested that a peaceful solution could be attained through the perspective of the com- mon bond of the monastic world. Intellects Seek To Reco-mmend Progra ms To En ie Nam War War Soviet Union United States Suport Halt Report Air Losses, Relative Stanstill of Battlefront on Land NEW DELHI () - Prime Min- ister Lal Bahadur Shastri told political leaders yesterday India will work for an "honorable and just" halt in the war with Paki- stan, informed sources reported. Shastri conferred with U.N. Secretary-General U Thant on details of a possible cessation of hostilities. A government spokes- man said Shastri will announce his decision to Parliament Wednesday. There was no assurance that Shastri and Thant would reach agreement or that Pakistan would join in if one were reached. But it appeared the great powers, es- pecially the Soviet Union and the' United States, had thrown their weight behind Thant's mission in an effort to get peace talks started. Marking Time The U.S. marked time on eco- nomic aid decisions concerning India and Pakistan in hopes that Thant would make headway in arranging the cease-fire. Officials were reported. banking on Thant. But they believed the next few days could be critically important in determining the course of the conflict. They feared Red China might intervene on a limited scale with military inci- dents on the Indian border. Relative quiet was reported on the battlefront. Objectives Achieved A. M. Thomas, minister of de- fense production, told Parliament India had "well-achieved" its ob- jective in two sectors. He described these as the sector in southwestern Pakistan, where an Indian force struck across the border Wednesday in an attack in the direction of Karachi, Paki- stan's major seaport; and about 600 miles to the north between the Pakistani cities of Lahore and Sialkot. In the air war, however, scores of casualties were reported in strikes by Indian bombers on two Pakistan towns. 64 Dead A spokesman in Rawalpindi, Pakistan's capital, said at least 64 persons were killed and 100 wounded when the planes attacked Peshawar and Kohat, 100 miles west of Rawalpindi. The spokesman said four bomb- ers attacked and were intercepted by the Pakistan air force. One Indian plane was said to have been downed, the spokesman said. Reliable sources have renorted By BRUCE WASSERSTEIN and MARK GUDWIN The concern of the international community in the formulation of foreign policy was documented again yesterday by a gathering here of 50 social scientists, theo- logians and writers from six countries seeking to recommend programs to end the war in Viet Nam. Emphasizing policies for the fu- ture rather than criticizing past American policies, the conference on "Alternative Perspectives on Viet Nam" is a follow-up on the Viet Nam teach-ins which were held across the nation last spring. According to the statement of assumptions which were issued when the conference was called,' "The teach-ins and discussions so' far have been extremely effec- tive in raising fundamental issues and in analyzing the weaknesses and dangers of current policy; they have been less effective, how- to develop new perspectives on the problem, out of which alternative solutions are more likely to emerge." With this motif, the conference was opened with speeches on the psychological, political, and relig- iovs perspectives of the war in Viet Nam. Prof. Herbert Kelman of the ever, in identifying alternatives to psychology department and the current policy. Center for Conflict Resolution Search said that the immorality of the "It is to the search for alter- United States' bombing and kill- natives that we, the conferees, ing people we are supposed to be must now devote our primary at- defending and the fact that the tention. This in turn requires us Saigon government is not support- ed by the South Vietnamese peo- ple has led to serious consequences on the American domestic front. One manifestation of the grave ramifications of the U.S. position has been news management and the issuance of misleading reports such as the "white paper," Kel- man said. Jules Roy French writer Jules Roy, win- ner of the Grand Prix de Litera- ture de l'Academie Francaise and a former member of France's armed forces, compared the posi- tion the U.S. finds itself in to that of France in the '50's with the ex- ception that "your imperialism is probably more deeply rooted than ours." Brother David Steindl-Rast of the Mount Savior Benedictine Monastery in Elmira, N.Y., said that a peaceful solution of Viet Nam could be attained by using the perspective of the common bond of the monastic world. He said that there currently were overt differences between the monks of the oriental world and the monks of the western world, but these divisions between the Medicine, established in 1961 by Michigan State's Board of Trus- tees. The board planned the school with the intent of developing a more encompassing medical school from it. The school is planned to pre- pare students for the third and fourth years of study at institu- tions granting MD degrees. $5 Million Studies at the MSU Medical School will be correlated with clin- ical training at Sparrow Hospital in Lansing. In developing its own Charges U.S. Aim in Viet Nam To Be Confrontation with China EDITOR'S NOTE: In an interview with several Daily staff members, Jules Roy, distinguished French author, winner of the Grand Prix de Literature de l'Academie Fran- caise and author of several books including "The Algerian War" and "Dien Bien Phu," expressed someof his views on the viet Nam situa- atomic bomb and I had a feeling that this would mark the begin- ning of a plan to destroy and pre- vent further development of the Chinese," Roy said. Roy emphasized this point when he added. "It is a fact that the is glad that someone else is do- ing it for them, Roy added. In comparing the Algerian war with the Viet Nam .war, Roy em- phasized that the former concern- ed only France whereas the lat- ter interests the world at large. I I E