STATES MUST FIGHT CRIME See Editorial Page Y giltA6 M4 att FAIR High-4p Low-22 Sunny and warmer today Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No.53 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1965 SEVEN CENTS TEN PAGES Graduate Students Across Nation Reclassified I-A By CLARENCE FANTO Reports from colleges through- out the. nation indicate that some graduate students are being re- classified 1-A by their local draft boards. Two graduate students at the University have been classified 1-A, Selective Service counselor Thomas Clark reported ;yesterday. He urged any other students who receive 1-A status from their local boards to report to his office for assistance. Each draft board sets its own standards for deferment. Selective Service officials assert that local being encouraged students in good greatly increased in Washington boards are still to defer college standing despite draft calls. Local boards have the preroga- tive of drafting full-time graduate students, however. Some draft boards have reclassified students whom they feel are pursuing stud- ies over a longer time period than necessary. Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, di- rector of the Selective Service Sys- tem, has advocated the continued deferment of college students. But, in a newsletter distributed to local boards throughout the country, Hershey reiterated thatl the determination of a student'sX right to deferment must be madet by the individual board. Col. Paul Akst, director of thel New York City Selective ServiceI System, said yesterday that somet draft boards in the city have re-x classified some graduate students. A first-year graduate student ats Columbia University carrying 15 credits, three more than the mini-c mum suggested by the city's cen-v tral Selective Service office, wase reclassified 1-A.s The student appealed to his, local board, which then asked him how his "studies and future plans" were relevant to the na- tional interest, health and safety. Although the student told the board that he had worked for Bronx Democratic Representative Jonathan Bingham and was plan- ning to work for the government after he graduated, he was clas- sified 1-A. Col. Akst said that, in most cases, a social science student would be reclassified 1-A before an engineering or natural science student. In Los Angeles, an official at the University of California re- ported that several county boards had reclassified all graduate stu- dents 1-A. They will be allowed to finish the academic year but will most likely be inducted next fall, the official reported. At Harvard University, several dozen graduate students have been reclassified 1-A, Russell S. Beech- er, a Selective Service counselor reported. "Many students fear that a new trend of drafting graduate stu- dents may be spreading," Beecher said yesterday. "Harvard officials are quite con- cerned by the reports of students being classified 1-A," Beecher added, but he did not reveal whether Harvard would be able to offer any substantial assistance to students who were reclassified. Some graduate students at Yale University 'have been classified 1-A, including two studying chem- ical engineering, Robert A. Camp- bell, Yale military adviser report- ed. Yale officials are urging these students to appeal their cases to their local boards, Cahnpbell said. At Princeton University, most of the students whose classification has been revised are graduates. But one of six students who re- ceived a 1-A rating was a senior honors student from Battle Creek, Mich., who is enrolled in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International A f f a i r s at Princeton. Most universities send student requests for deferments to their local boards by-late September. The boards consider the requests during October and send word to the students of their current classification by the beginning of November. However, some boards delay consideration of the requests and many students will not receive their current notices of classifi- cation until next spring. At Columbia University, Wesley First, director of university rela- tions, said that if any full-time Columbia graduate student is re- classified as 1-A by his draft board, the university would do "everything possible" to make sure the reclassification was proper. He added that Columbia would send a representative with reclas- sified students making appeals to their draft boards "if necessary, so as to ensure that the home town draft board had all the facts before it." 3 before it." OSA Witldrat Rule onChap By LAURENCE MEDOW notr have a resident director or "Tshousemother was required to have "The University rule applying two married couples 26 years old to chaperonage of socialevents or over or members of the faculty has herewith been dropped," of instructor rank or higher pres- Charles Judge, assistant to the di- ent at all social functions as chap- rector of student organizations and erones. counselor to fraternities, an- nounced last night to a meeting New Stipulation of the Fraternity Presidents As- Last Tuesday night the IFC ex- sembly. ecutive committee passed a mo- Judge read a memo from Dun- tion recommending that the Of- can Sells, director of student 'or- fice of Student Affairs lift the ganizations, which stated that chaperone requirement and re- Sells had discussed the recommen- place it with the stipulation that dation of the IFC executive com- two undergraduate chapter offi- mittee with Vice-President for cers be present at every registered Student Affairs Richard L. Cutler fraternity social function. OSA ac- and that the recommendation was cepted the recommendation and accepted. added. a requirement that the two The 4rule on chaperones stated officers be named at the time the that any housing unit which does event is registered. DUNBAR LECTURE: scribes, raises, Nations Liberalism 'U F BI Begins Investigation I Ck p Ll Yl P.. Q F. "I should like to point out that the University and this office spe- cifically will follow and enforce the laws of the state of Michi- gan and the rules of the institu- tion," Sells' memo continued. "No set of criteria can give any orga- - nization any guarantee that a so- cial event will not be visited by a SU V Y member of my staff." "I assure you at the same time changing the policy presently fol-ld h f'p lowed by this office for inspection:O of parties. "I believe that the house offi- cers and the house memberships are capable of 'recognizing and m a ll L1 meeting the responsibility we have placed before them," the memo concluded. Student Conduct WASHINGTON (A') - A new The recommendation made by backfire against Viet Nam protest the IFC executive committee was movements on college campuses included in a resolution concern- was started yesterday by student ing student conduct in fraterni- leaders who said "the radicals do ties. The resolution suggested that not speak for our generation."' major offenders at a social func- Officials of 85 colleges and uni- tion, where the distinction is versities told the Associated Press prominent to the investigator, be the protests against U.S. policy referred to Joint Judiciary Council in Viet Nam or against the draft for further punitive action. At involve only a smal1 core of dis- etnamese Aid tesors [inorit The AP poll of college adminis- trators turned up such comments as these: Yale University enrollment 8000: fewer than 100 students are in- volved in protest movements con- cerning Viet Nam Harvard, enrollment 15,000: a few are protesting. "We always had such activities, we expect them, but most of our students are too busy with studies," said a spokesman for the president. "The rank and file of Ameri- can college students are pretty conservative," said Dr. Hurst R. Anderson, president of American University in Washington, D.C. Conservative Parents "Some like to shock their con- servative parents by going home and saying things like 'I've turned Socialist'," he said. "They are sin- cere about it, but maybe the sin- cerity is pretty thin." Three organizations promoting protests at Michigan State Uni- versity at East Lansing are the See EDUCATORS, Page 7 By MARSHALL LASSER The meaning of modern Ameri- can liberalism was the subject yesterday of Leslie W. Dunbar's fourth lecture of the 1965 William W. Cook lecture series. Dunbar, executive director of the Field Foundation, began by asserting "the words liberal and liberalism are in a pathetic state," because so many meanings, are at- tached to it that it often appears a shadowy, undefinable thing. He believed, though, that a "workable description of modern American liberalism" was possible, and list- ed four convictions as being at the heart of this description. First, liberalism takes the eco- nomic reforms of the New Deal "as givens"-but is cautious of going beyond them; second lib- eralism accepts the fact that the United States has international responsibilities. Shuns Ideologies Third, it shuns political and economic ideologies, and fourth, it supports the fourteenth and fif- teenth amendments. In describing the liberal, Dun- bar provided a host of adjectives. First, the liberal tends to be not especially religious; he has a deep resepect for the value of intel- ligence; he is "determinedly prag- matic," and refuses to accept dog- mas yet he can claim idealism as a characteristic too. "He is unconsciously idealistic yet consciously aware of illusion," Dunbar said. The modern Ameri- can liberal is analytical and scep- tical, and remains cool under pressure. Liberal Now Rules Dunbar pointed out that the liberal, so long in the minority now rules the country, and has ruled it continuously, despite "heretical" tendencies displayed by President Eisenhower, for thirty years. But, he noted, "We may be at the end of an era"; two prin- cipal reasons are that what the American liberal has traditionally wanted he has obtained, thus los- ing initiative, and that Negroes may form a dissident block within the Democratic party (not likely within the Republican, unless al- legiance switches) comparable to that headed by Adam Clayton Powell. But counterbalancing this, he said the conservative, who is now "the true rebel," has had little chance to gain power unless a disaster of the magnitude of the Great Depression-which threw them out of power-occurs again. Changing perspective" from lib- eralism to American democracy, Dunbar praised this country's ac- complishments. In massive efforts like the poverty program and the civil rights acts America has done things that almost no other land has ever done. This country, he said, possesses "the greatest and loveliest work of man-American democracy." present, the executive committee dealsonly with group violations in fraternitiess and no action is tak- en against individuals. The executive committee fur- ther resolved to "adopt a more rig- orous approach to social violations and commit itself to levying more severe penalties in cases where such is deemed appropriate." The resolution also asked that "the affiliated man, as an individual and as a member of a fraternity, likewise commit himself to social standards commensurate with those of his chapter, the IFC, and the University." Cutler'Calls Dissenters Small Core The extent of involvement by University students in antiwar protest activity is believed to be limited to a group of only 100 to 150 students, Vice-President for Student Affairs Richard L. Cutler said yesterday. Cutler contended that many participants in recent demonstra- tions protesting American involve- ment in the Viet Nam war belong to more than one organization. Thus, adding together the mem- bership figures of all the groups participating in the protests does not give an accurate count of the number of students involved, he added. Asked if he thought the move- ment is Communist-inspired, Cut- ler replied: "I think not. However, hard core Communists - profes- sional Communists - are always attracted to centers of disorder. They are eager to assist in the disruption of order. I do not be- lieve these movements are Com- munist-dominated, but I dare say there are a few Communists par- ticipating in this." Stanley Nadel, '66, a member of Voice political party, Students for a Democratic Society, and his own Committee to Aid the Vietnamese, disputed the figures cited by Cutler. "There are at least 400 or 500 students who have actively par- ticipated in Viet Nam protest dem- onstrations during the Interna- senters. In some universities, these move- ments have enlisted as few as 25 students among enrollments of 12,000 or more, educational admin- istrators told AP. Bipartisan Group The newest backfire took the form here of a bipartisan "Stu- dent Committee for the Defense of Viet Nam." Its leaders, at a news conference at Georgetown University, said they hope to rally nationwide student support for U.S. policy- in Viet Nam to coun- teract the "anti" dem'onstrations, which have included some draft card burnings. One of the leaders, Tom Pauken, 21, of Dallas, Tex., national chair- man of College Young Republi- cans, said: "It disturbs me greatly as a young person to see irresponsible campus elements gaining such widespread public attention." He said these elements "represent nothg more than a small, noisy minority." 'Gross Misrepresentation' Thomas J. Kane Jr. of New York, a Georgetown student lead- er and a Democrat, said the new movement will seek to create awareness "of the gross misrep- resentation by a small few of the American college conscience." Statements supporting the new effort were read from student leaders at Yale, Brigham Young University in Utah, and Johns Hopkins University. Wednesday night a group of military veterans at Michigan State University presented peti- tions signed by 15,937 supporters of U.S. policy in Viet Nam. 'Proper Perspective' The petitions were given to Rep. Charles E. Chamberlain (R-Mich) for forwarding to President John- son. An accompanying letter to the President said an aim of the petition drive is "to place the minority groups on our campus# in the proper perspective." Collectors of the signatures said they were entirely those of stu- dents and faculty members of the 35,580-student university. In Washington, Rep. Joe Pool (D-Tex) called for a full investi- gation by the House Committee on Un-American Activities of move- ments which he said give aid andf comfort to the Viet Cong.I May 2nd Movement Pool, a member of the commit- tee, wrote a letter to Chairman STANLEY NADEL and his Committee to Aid the Vietna have come under scrutiny by the Federal Bureau of Investiga the Ann Arbor city attorney and the County Prosect Attorney. Group S tate Police City Attorney . . Participate, Committee Raising Funds for Civilian Medical Supplies By DAVID DUBOFF Officials of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Michigan State Police are investigating the Committee to Aid the Vietnamese, a group of about 25 University students who are raising money to aid Vietnamese civilians living in Viet Cong-controlled areas. Stanley Nadel, '66, chairman of the committee, said his group is sympathetic to the aims of the Viet Cong but that the purpose of the money the group is raising is to help supply medical aid for civilians wounded in Viet Nam fighting. Three-Day Drive At least $70 was also raised in a three-day drive this semester through the sale of Viet Cong postage stamps and pins, he said. mese The medical supplies and money tion, obtained by the committee will be uting used to aid victims of the war in South Viet Nam, he added. The money is earmarked for non-mil- itary use only, but Nadel acknowl- edged that his group has no con- trol over'the funds once they are forwarded to the Viet Cong rep- resentatives in Algiers. Detective Gordon Hurley of the State Police says "all possibilities" are being explored to determine whether there is any law which Os could prevent the group from aid- i ing the Viet Cong. FBI Investigation , plans Agents of the FBI in Detroit te Uni- said "an investigation is being ital to launched," but declined to reveal on and whether any violations of federal rogram statutes might be involved in the at the case. Ann Arbor city attorney Jacob mmittee F. Fahrner said last night that he estigate had decided against investigating osteo- the committee. He had announced be the earlier in the day that he would tes, in launch a probe on the grounds that the city's charitable solicita- Tupper tion ordinance might be involved School in the students' activities. support t MSU However, last night Fahrner're- ility of ported, that he had learned the ar pro- University had given the group at em- permission to operate a table in ced on the Fishbowl. A city permit for ing ex- solicitation activities would thus n's two be unnecessary and no prosecution lose of could take place, he said. Federal Laws C o u n t y Prosecuting Attorney he Uni- William F. Delhey said that he is ith 777 "concerned" by the activities of largest the student group. Although there titution are no applicable county statutes, alent to the group may be violating federal ns. The laws, Delhey said. an en- The o.ffice of the United States ng ex- attorney in Detroit is also plan- e aver- ning an investigation of the group. Tupper Their activity was sparked by a support TTnivrs'it.v reoit t +n A ieerma STATE BOARD: Controversy over Neu ' MS U1Ved School Wanc By NEAL BRUSS Controversy over the proposed Michigan State University medical school appeared to be waning yes- terday as state officials came to realize the extent of preparations completed for the program. Members of the State Board of' Education, although refusing to make a formal statement at Tues- day's public hearings in Lansing, found that the MSU program had been given legislative approval even before the creation of the State Board of Education. However, the board's approval definitely did not imply support for the establishment of a four- year institution at State. Investigating Committee An investigating committee ap- pointed by the board will suggest sites for a third four-year medical What's New at 764-1817' Hot Line Student Government Council voted last night to prohibit the use of the Fishbowl as a place for campaigning during SGC elections. It also voted to "prohibit the use of the Fishbowl during the SGC election campaign to any student organization whose name will appear on the, official SGC ballot. II another motion SGC voted to restrict all campaigning on the diag to "three official SGC diag tables" to which all candidates will have free access. The tables will be supervised by' the SGC elections committee. A -+ - Proposes Broader Housing Ordinance school for Michigan. Also for expansion of Wayne Sta versity were considered v increasing medical educati it was felt that the MSU p would implement expansion University and WSU. t The board and the cor it will appoint will also inve the value of opening an pathic college, which would first in the' United Sta Michigan. Associate Dean C. John of the University Medical said that he was fully ins of the MSU plan, and tha "has the ability and capab producing a superb two-ye gram." He felt however, th phasis should still be pla expanding and implement isting facilities at Michiga four-year institutions, th WSU and the University..- Largest Institution Dean Tupper said that t versity Medical School, w students enrolled, is the undergraduate medical ins in the United States, equiva two average size institutior WSU medical school, with rollment of over 125 bei paned to near 200 has abov age capacity. Thus, Dean' said, Michigan taxpayers By BOB CARNEY The Ann Arbor Human Rela- tions Commission adopted a set of proposed amendments to the city Fair Housing Ordinance last night which would broaden the power of that law significantly. The revisions will be presentedI to the council Monday as recom- mendations to the council in amending the ordinance. Type of Discrimination { The most significant change called for b the enmmiccin -n_ number of dwelling units, includ- ing private homeowners. Arbitrary Distinction The proponents of the change pointed out that any numerical distinction made by the commis- sion in this respect is arbitrary, and that it could be struck down as discriminating by the courts. They stated their belief that the sale of private property, for example a house by the homeown- er, is in fact a public business transaction, and should be subject