VIET NAM PEACE: THROUGH THE UN? See Editorial Page YI e Ink qjzr n ~Daitj FLURRIES Iligh-24 * Low--17 Partly cloudy with occasional snow Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No. 109 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1966 SEVEN CENTS TEN PAGES McDonald Advocates New City Policy Toward ' By NEAL BRUSS ment of a citizens' Police Review demonstrations, like all other to back claims that the protests in Ann Arbor, a situation he has "The truth of the matter is that grave, womb to tomb existence."s IBoard. demonstrations, have an undesir- were financed and organized by been unable to understand. He the major portion of the Demo- I Ihvolvement in student welfare He feels that the University able effect on the community and|Communist groups in Mexico City.. feels, however, that both in Uni-|cratic Party leadership has only McDonald's fight against Demo- should assume sole responsibility are not reflective of individuals. He feels that such student ac- versity operations and personal a 30-year hold on the party and cratic incumbent LeRoy Cappeart a threat to free enterprise that for student welfare and not the He said that students can be tion irritated citizens and that living, free enterprise alone regu- has adopted new principles that has also been marked by attacl should be avoided, according to municipal government. The city swayed by "agitator personnel" more useful outlets for studentlates basic economics in Ann Ar- would be alien to the principles of and retalliation. He said the political philosophy of Dr. should also avoid financial in- within the student body and "zeal, exhuberance, and idealism" bor. He does not feel that mer- Thomas Jefferson, the founder of "The incumbent councilman, Le- Lawrence McDonald, a University volvement with the University in moved to actions they would not exist in public service. chants have been vindictive to stu- our great party. The party itself Roy Cappeart has stated that one Hospital urologist and teaching its public works, he adds. initiate individually. He felt that Ann Arbor police have treated dents, but that if individuals had, is over 130 years old. The present of the major issues is racism. This assistant whose campaign for the recent demonstrations have acted students fairly, McDonald says. competition would have eliminated leaders are the radicals and ex- is not true.I Fifth Ward Council seat has Students, according to McDon- to heighten racial awareness and He stresses that students, like them. tremists of the left and must be: aroused unusual controversy. ald, have a minimal role in Ann tension. other groups, are responsible to McDonald's claim to candidacy'purged, from the party if a con- "Ann Arbor has long enjoyed: Arbor politics as they are not McDonald says that civil dis- "obey the law." McDonald feels as a Democrat was attacked by stitutional republic with a true good community relations within McDonald advocates the prin- homeowners, and usually not per- obedience should only be employ- that the police force is significant Ann Arbor businessman and Dem- two-party system is to survive. different groups, but under the ciples of "Jeffersonian democ- manent residents. He felt that ed when a revolution is desired. in its "quality and training," and ocratic national committeeman "The present temporary leader- direction of local agents from na- 1 racy," the ideals of which moti- students should be concerned pri- Otherwise, he says it is "lawless- that, except for deviant instances Neil Staebler, who cited McDon- ship of the Democratic Party ... tional organizations, racial ten-; vate his opposition to such student marily with academics, and that ness." He refers to incidents in has "impartially applied the law." ald's Birch Society affiliations as would live to be called progressive sion has grown and race aware- oriented issues as implementation such concern would be important Ithe International Days of Protest As a University faculty member,'a primary interest. but they in fact are retrogressive. ness increased. The City Council1 of building codes to include archi- training for future participation. as "Communist oriented" and cites McDonald says he is personally To this attack, McDonald re- To them progress means moving has taken an ill-fated turn to-! tectural standards and establsh- McDonald felt that student reports by columnist Victor Reisel affected by the high cost of living plied: into a planned society, cradle to wards legislating to the private7 affairs of the citizens and soon an increased racial awareness will be brought into everyday real estate transactions." The third party in the Fifth Ward race is George Lembel, chairman of the Washtenaw County Conservatives whose main opposition in the primaries is F. Dale Boyd who has not made racially -oriented housing ordi- nances an issue. Thus, both major parties could offer conservative candidates in the April City Council election. McDonald, whose party and plat- form appear mutually contradic- tory, states, "The John Birch Society is not running for the Fifth Ward council, I am." What's New at 764-1817 SG C Advocates Student Voice In Choice of Next 'U President Hotline "The Course Evaluation Booklet will not be published in time for preregistration," a Course Evaluation Committee mem- ber said last night. This is due to the lack of personnel to help tabulate the results of the questionnaires. Approximately 9,000 have been returned. Anyone that wishes to help should contact Gary Cunningham, '66, president of Student Government Council. There was no comment as to when the booklet would be published. The Board - of Governors of the Residence Halls voted unanimous approval yesterday for the constitution of the pro- posed Inter-House Assembly, the merged organization of IQC and Assembly. The constitution, written by a joint committee of the two existing residence halls systems, was reveiwed at a house presidents' meeting last Tuesday. Mandates are being taken this week in the housing units on the merger, and voting on final ratification is scheduled for a presidents' meeting on Feb. 10. The constitution provides for a presidents' council as the legislative body and an executive board of committee chairmen. The free university, contrary to previous report, will be registering new applicants in the Fishbowl from 8-5:30 today. Information and supplementary course booklets will also be available for anyone interested in the program. The plan to move literary college offices and classroom facili- ties into the Administration Bldg. is a permanent proposition, according to Dean William Haber of the literary college. Specific dates are not available for stages in the move, but one floor of the Administration Bldg. is being vacated this term, After the entire building has been vacated, Haber said, two more departments will be moved in. However, he stressed that current plans are con- jectural since this space will not be available for at least another year. Some administrative departments which have been housed in the Administration Bldg. are now being moved to a structure located in the area of the athletic campus. Eventually, the Uni- versity plans to construct a new administartion building on central campus. Greene House of East Quadrangle has voted to withdraw from Inter-Quadrangle Council, Green House president Stu Adler told The Daily yesterday. "We have deliberated on the matter since last semester, and have failed to see where IQC has been of any value to our house or to the University," he commented. Lee Hornberger, IQC president, said that an IQC and Assem- bly are presently considering a merger, time would be better spent considering the merger than on considering withdrawing from IQC. Although the deadline for turning in applications for junior year in France and Germany was Feb. 1 the Office for Study Abroad. (1223 Angell Hall) has announced it will still accept late applications. Wire tap Informed sources have indicated that the recently passed State Senate's resolution that the University or Wayne State University establish a branch of their law schools in Lansing may be just another one of those "funny little things" the Legislature occasionally passes in jest. Attempts are being made to determine if the resolution was passed in all seriousness or if it is similar to those resolutions that all legislators be made members of the bar which the Legislature has sometimes jokingly proposed in the past. Judd Sees Many* Protestors Receive Jail Sentences Reclassification of Truax May Affect, Draft Board Actions By MARSHALL LASSER' Circuit Court Judge James R. Breakey yesterday sentenced six Viet Nam protestors who had pleaded guilty to the charge of trespassing incurred by their par- ticipation in the Oct. 15 sit-in at the Ann Arbor. draft board office. Five of the six received 10%/ day jail sentences, and the sixth received a 15 day jail sentence. All were fined $50 and were re- quired to pay $20 in court costs and fees. Judge Breakey allowed the pro- , testors the choice of serving aX slightly lengthened sentence on weekends only in place of the reg- ular sentence all at one time. Three of the six took this option and will begin serving their sen-; tences at 7 p.m. Saturday night.r First Student Participating in last nigh The first student to come up Laura Fitch, '6 for sentencing, Raymond Lauzza- na, was given the 14 day sentence, as a result of having committed ILIR REPORT: a minor crime previously (in De-j troit several years ago). He was given and took the weekend ex- tended sentence option; Breakey evtended the term to 16 days. Jeffreyiial Goodman, who was i a y origmally given a 10 day sentence in Municipal Court, was sentenced to 10/2 days. He chose to serve the By DICK WINGFIELD sentence at one time and will en- ter the county jail this morning. Hy Kornbluh of the Unive Milton E. Taube and Edward P. Institute of Labor-Industria Sabin also did not take the op- lations and director of the M tion and will begin serving their Village Program released a sentences with Goodman. ment' yesterday outlining wh Taking the extended sentence considered "significant pro along with Lauzzana were Robert in the poverty project. M. Sklar and Douglas W. Truax. "Currently," he said, "neig Truax Reclassified 2-S 1 hood groups are meeting in Truax yesterday received no- ious housing areas to worko tice that he had, been reclassified problems and programs idea 2-S; he was the first protestor in the community self-survey to have his draft status changed ducted by community residen See JAIL, Page 9 The survey referred to wa -Daily-Thomas R. Copi t's SGC meeting, which proposed student participation in the selection of a new President, are (left to right) 66, Panhel President, Ed Robinson, '67, SGC member, and Georgia Berland, '67, Assembly President. LND Su-Afrv~tey Completed. rCalls for Joint Panel Students Must Work Closely with Faculty To Exert Influence By JANE DREYFUSS Student Government C o u n c i l last night passed a motion calling for a joint committee to help se- lect the next president of the University. The motion urged that "the stu- dent body should have a voice in selecting the next president of the University. . . . We believe this participation should be a selection process from evaluation of the. University's needs and interview- ing of potential candidates to a final recommendation of candi- dates . ." Earlier in the meeting, John C. Feldkamp, assistant to the vice- president for student affairs said, 'Students should certainly have a role in the interviewing for the next University president and in developing a screening process which would lead toward nomi- nating." The motion was passed with only one objection. Implementation To implement this, SGC moved that at the next Regents meeting, Feb. 11: " A Presidential Selection Ad- visory Committee be formed by the Regents, as a body of 12-1 members. " Regents, faculty, alumni and students be equally represented on this committee. * SGC submit a list of poten- tial student members to the Re- gents who, with the advice of Vice- President Richard Cutler, will make the final choice. " The Presidential Selection Advisory Committee submit final recommendation of at least ten candidates in preferential order to the Regents. Access to Information Feldkamp, in his address to SGC, stressed both his and Cut- ler's opinions that students should have access to information on Uni- versity decisions. They should have a voice in this information. "Stu- dents are the greatest instrument for change in this University," he said. In a comment afterward, how- ever, Feldkamp stressed the fact that students alone were not suf- ficient to exert much influence. "They should work closely with the faculty," he said, "in setting this precedent in presidential selection. Distinct Authority "I doubt however, that students will be able to work as closely with the Regents. Their authority must be distinct from faculty and stu- dent opinions." SGC passed the proposal in- cluding Regent participation on the committee to form a link on that level. Said Pat McCarty, '67 "How can we expect any success layed until early this year because of a controversy surrounding the rsity's project upon its inception early al Re- last year. The survey was intended Willow to "find out what the people state- want," according to a spokesman hat he in the Willow Village program. gress". Area of Progress ghbor- A Ministerial Association of n var- # some 15 ministers with congrega- thvar tions in the area was cited as an- n the other area of progress.iKornbluh i said that the ministers are work- y con- ing cooperatively on the area's ts" ' problems and held a Thanksgiving doc ut- Recreational and community stitute of Labor-Industrial Rela- activities were also cited by Korn-. tions 'of the University and Wayne bluh as areas in which the Wil- State University in January, 1965. The grant was "subcontracted" to low Village has progressed. A the Wollow Run Association for community chorus and a commun- Neighborhood Developmentl ity newsletter were his examples (WRAND) for continuation and at point. expansion of the community action projects against poverty which it Nursery had already begun in the Willow The day care center at the com- Village area. munity center in Willow Village Location has been converted to a pre-school nursery "with a curriculum de- WRAND is located in Superior signed to prepare the children for Township. Willow Village strad- entrance into public school," ac- dles the borders of Superior and cording to Kornbluh. Parents are Ypsilanti Townships. Since Jan- encouraged to participate in the uary of 1965 a heated dispute has school's program and the staff raged over the need of a federal below the professional level is poverty grant in the area. made up of community residents who are being trained in pre- On Jan. 25, 1966, the University school education, he said. released an official statement that as ae- service lase ian. I Threats to Foreign Policy r By MERLE JACOB The opposition to making our foreign policy more realistic and up-to-date comes from the so- called liberals, not from the true individualists, Walter Judd, for- mer United States congressman, said last night. Judd, speaking on "The Impact of Individualism on Our Foreign Policy," opened the second lecture of the University Activities Cen- ter symposium on "The Future of American Individualism." True Individualist eign policy," he added. "Our own geography is holding us back." America, because of the vast- ness of her country and the isola- tion from foreign invasion, has had as her main concern the de- velopment of her own country and has never developed a world feel- ing until the last 30 years, Destroy Isolation Now that America has destroyed her barrier of isolation and be- come dependent on products and allies, she must learn to handle foreign policy more successfully if she is to survive, he emphasized. Greece's regime was "not demo- cratic."I Kornbluh commented on the The U.S. engineered the Diem Job Opportunities Center program downfall in 1963 because Diem of last summer: "Fifteen teen- refused to knuckle under when we agers in need of work were taught pulled out of Laos. Diem and all skills and work habits in a 10- our generals maintained that the week training program. Counsel- key to victory was Laos. By pull-;ing and remedial education were ing out we opened up the Ho Chin also part of the program." Minh trails which we're now fight- He said that the community ing to close, center is serving as a facility for "If we had persisted in our church groups, the women's group policy that we won't let the Com- in the area and other organiza-: munists into the government, as tions conducting their own pro- we did in France, Italy and Greece, grams. we could have held Laos," he ex-; -1New to All its ILIR would withdraw from the poverty project inrAprilrof this year. Spokesmen said that the University's two objectives in the project will have been fulfill- ed by April: (1) To help estab- lish a "grass roots" vehicle for combating poverty in the Willow Village area and (2) To complete research on the feasibility of this type of effort. Wayne State Uni- versity has not indicated, whether it will continue for another year. Resignation Monday, Henry Atling, former