HATCHER SPEECH: DEFENDING FREEDOM See editorial page i1ifrtgt :4Iad1~ FLURRIES lligh-28 Low-12 Continued cloudy; light winds SeventySix Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 120 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY FEBRUARY 19, 1967 SEVEN CENTS TEN PAGES College Viet Parley Nears Resolution Compromise Likely on Blast of War Policy.; I Walkout Averted By DAVID KNOKE Debate continued late into last night on resolutions to be pre- sented in the final session of the first National Student Conference on Vietnam at Cornell University. The session was scheduled to end yesterday. Two main groups among the 45 Eastern college and university delegations represented were back- ing opposing resolutions on gov- ernment policy in Vietnam. As formal presentations bogged down in parliamentary points a con.. promise resolution appeared in- creasingly imminent between the majority favoring censure of the government and a minority de- fending Administration policy. Marcus Raskin, co-director of the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, spoke to the confer- ence yesterday afternoon, calling for the formation of a new na- tional student union to replace the National S t u d e n t Association. M Raskin, a critic of the Vietnam war, pointed out the irony of the deception in a society that sup- ports the war but decries Infiltra- tion of student organizations by the Central Intelligence Agency. Walkout Averted A walkout by approximately 20 of the 140 delegates who were sponsoring the motion to support U.S. policy was averted Friday when the minority group was as- sured of a fair hearing of its reso- lution. The delegations of Ford- ham University and St. John's University, Brooklyn had charged that the conference, advertised as the "first attempt at sober, un- emotional campus dialogue on Southeast Asian policies," was in reality "stacked" by critics hos- tile to American policy. The most probable resolution to be passed at tonight's final session is one calling for peace moves, im- mediate cessation of bombing and a firm commitment of the U.S. to withdraw its military forces from Vietnam. Main supporters of this resolution are Columbia, Pennsyl- vania and Colgate universities, Barnard, Smith Mount Holyoke 4 and Harper colleges. The harassment and jeering of a State Department spokesman. Daniel Davidson, on the opening lecture Wednesday drew com- plaints from some of the students. Fair Speaker Balance Mark Belnick, a Cornell student chairing the conference, said an attempt had been made to obtain a fair balancebofspeakers but that supporters of the Administration position had been "scarce and also expensive." Of the 11 guest speak- ers, only three were considered favorable to the Vietnam policy: M of the government. They were Davidson, Prof. Wesley Fishel of Michigan State University who spoke last night, and Prof. Milton I. Sacks of Brandeis University' The pro-Administration resolu- tion introduced read: "We say with President Kennedy: 'The United States like the Republic of Vietnam, remain devotedto the cause of peace -and our primary! purpose is to help maintain (South Vietnam's) independence.' If the Communist authorities in North Vietnam will stop their campaign to destroy the Republic of Vietnam, the measures we are taking to assist . . . defense efforts will no longer be necessary." m m I . - _ Agencies Aid (I / ItC-4 nW 'atl In Subletting NEWS WIRE For Summer m'u -!'Ww - m u PRINCETON, N.J. (AP)-Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer died yesterday at his home, a spokesman for Princeton hospital said. Oppenheimer was 62. The spokesman said an autopsy probably would be held today. According to the spokesman, Opbenheimer died at his home, but was attended by a member of the hospital staff. Oppenheimer pioneered in the development of the first American atomic bomb. THE SAN DIEGO Evening Tribune said yesterday that the University of California Board of Regents has voted to return Dr. Clark Kerr to the payroll as full professor of economics and industrial relations, the Assodiated Press reported yesterday. In its copyright story, the Tribune said the action was taken Thursday night at a secret meeting in Santa Barbara. Kerr served as president of the University from 1958 until Jan. 20 when he was dismissed by the regents. The Tribune said that Kerr's new salary of $20,800 a year will be retroactive to Jan. 20 and that the regents agreed to continue until July 1 a $4,000-a-year rental subsidy and a $1,000-a-year maintenance allowance on his private home. Kerr had lived .in his own home rather than the home pro- vided for the president on the Berkeley campus. PROF. JOHN WEISS of Wayne State University will speak at 2:30 p.m. in Angell Hall, Aud. A on "Wanted: A Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Undergraduates." Weiss is a well-known critic of multi-versity education. His speech is part of the Challenge Lecture Series put on by the Honors Student Steering Committee and the American Student Culture Association. MARIO SAVIO OF BERKELEY will address University stu- dents tonight via a tape made last week in Berkeley. The tape, made for WCBN, will be broadcast over that station at 7:30. Savio will discuss the specific problems of students at the Uni- versity, and the role of the Presidential Commissions. Accord- ing to WCBN, Savio will tell University students that if the com- missions do not work out they have no right to demonstrate, because they accepted the commissions in the first place. * * * * THE DETROIT COMMITTEE TO END THE WAR in Viet- nam will conduct public hearings at Wayne State University be- tween April 8 and 15 on the complicity of the Dow Chemical Company, the Selective Service System and the Wayne State administration in war crimes. The hearings co-incide with inter- national Vietnam Week. A tribunal will examine subpoenaed witnesses, weigh evidence and present conclusions which will be forwarded to the International War Crimes Tribunal in Paris. PETITIONING IS NOW OPEN for the Literary College Steering Committee. Interested undergraduates in the literary college should fill out their petitions to 1220 Angell Hall before Wednesday, March 11. THE FACULTY LETTER to President Johnson calling for "unconditional halt" to United States bombing raids on North Vietnam will be released on Monday. Publication has been delayed for a week since the draftees failed to obtain from each signer written permission to use their names. ANN ARBOR PUBLIC LIBRARY and the Friends of the Li- brary will present a series of six talks about timely and important books on Wednesdays from 12:13 to 12:48 p.m. in the meeting room of the public library. SIXTEEN PER CENT of the University Law School fresh- man class scored in the top one per cent of a nationwide law school admission test. On the same test the 362 students in the class, as a whole, scored in the top 10 per cent. The current freshman class reflects the highly selective ad- missions policy of the Law School. The number of qualified applicants has increased over the past four years while the num- ber of students admitted has remained approximately the same. PI' KAPPA ALPHA FRATERNITY has just re-established its Beta Tau Chapter on the campus of the University. The Beta Tau Chapter was on campus from 1922 until 1936 when it left campus due to financial consequences. Pi Kappa Alpha is a na- tional social college fraternity with over 70,000 initiates and over 135 chapters throughout the nation. Provide Advertising, Rental Information To Interested Tenants By ROB BEATTIE The game of subletting summer apartments is now being played by many University students. During the next two months severalathou- sand tenants will make an at- tempt to sublet their apartment in a market that is flooded beyond capacity. Several sublet services which try to match apartments with summer tenants are presently ' available to students. The opera- tion of these services follows a simple basic pattern. The winter tenant fills out a card describing his apartment and files it with the sublet service. The prospective summer renter, then searches through a long list- ing of apartments which the serv- ice has compiled in an attemptI to find one which suits his needs. Newest Service The newest service for helping summer subletters is provided byj the Market, the buying and selling' service operated by the University Activities Center. Services of the Market are provided without charge to both the present and prospective tenant. Unfortunately, response to the service has been far greater by those trying toj sublet than by those trying to rent. A spokesman for the Market claims that there are well over 100 apartments listed with the service, and points out that demand for summer sublets will become great- er as the summer draws nearer. There is a similar service run by the Student Rental Service, a privately owned enterprise. This -Daily-Thomas R. Copi BUCKEYES BREEZE PAST CAG1RS, 97-85 Michigan's Craig Dill battles Ohio State's Bill Hosket for an invisible jump ball during the Wolver- ines' 97-85 pasting by OSU yesterday. Dill and Hosket, two of the outstanding centers in the Big Ten, starred for their respective teams, netting 31 and 23 points respectively, including 12 out of 12 free throws for Dill. Mike Swain (42) and Bruce Schnabel (31) look on for the Buckeyes. Loss was the third in four games for the Wolverines and left them with a 2-6 mark in Big Ten play, 8-10 overall. UAC COMMITTEE: Educational Conferen1"Ice Plans AcademTic Reforms NSA Agrees To Inquiry ByCongress Link Newspaper Guild To Philadelphia Fund Called CIA Front J By The Associated Press Top officials of the National Student Association concurred last night with demands for a full- scale investigation of the relation- ship of the Central Intelligence Agency with private groups. Some members of Congress and students associated with NSA have called for such an investigation following disclosures of CIA In- volvement with several founda- tions and student groups. These revelations have led to the questioning of possible CIA involvement with other groups, in particular the American News- paper Guild. Officers of the Guild said yesterday the union has re- ceived over $1 million from various foundations for overseas activi- ties, but to its knowledge, none of it has come from the CIA. Published reports have said that the Guild receives funds from foundations which do not list their incomes. One of the foundations named, the Andrew Hamilton Fund of Philadelphia, was report- ed by the Washington Post as "identified yesterday by govern- ment officials as a CIA front." The Guild said it would investi- ;gate its relationship with all foundations, and "will immediate- ly terminate its relationship with any found' linked to the CIA." Meanwhile, NSA officials .said they will turn over their organi- zation's records to the Senate For- eign Relations Committee, pend- ing an official inquiry. Eugene Groves, president of NSA. announcing the decision of the NSA supervisory board to re- lease the records, said he hoped the Senate Foreign Relations Committee "will be able to con- duct 'a full investigation." At a news conference Friday night, NSA leaders told of an "ethical trap for young men of great integrity" that brought the NSA into a relationship with the CIA. They claimed the CIA used money; draft deferments and the threat of jail forced them to ac- cept and not reveal CIA involve- ment. "You should know the .agony this caused. That is the real hor- ror of the CIA," said one NSA executive. In other developments, Internal Revnue Service offices in Wash- Iington and Austin, Texas, have offered conflicting stories about the existence of a fund named as a money pipeline from the CIA to the NSA. Ramparts magazine list- ed the San Jacinto fund of Hous- ton as one of five foundations that dispensed CIA money. IRS officials in Washington were reported as denying the existence of the fund, but the district of- fice in Austin said the Washington office had declared it tax-exempt two years ago. Also, an official at the Univer- 1sity of Oregon said yesterday the CIA was the largest employerof graduates from his school last year. Eugene Dils, director of Ore- gon's placement service, said he gets notes from the CIA recruiter on students he should stop trying to place in jobs. He estimated the CIA hires 20 or more Oregon grad- uates a year. service operates in essentially the By NANCY SHAW port the attitude of 'Let the ad- cess of active engagement, he said. same manner as the Market, but A group of about 50 students ministrators decide and execute,'" Felheim claimed that notes that' charges a graduated fee depending and faculty met yesterday in the Paper said. He expressed hope for another takes for you are usually on the number of tenants trying second annual University Activi- action going beyond the con-?an oversimplification of t h e to sublet an apartment. The mini- ties Center Academic Conference ference. thoughts behind them, and also mum fee is $25. to discuss current educational Areas considered at the confer- ignore the professor's personality. According to Archie Allen, man- issues. ence were: He suggested as alternatives: ager of the operation, the service The conference intends to im- 0 "Phi Bet Notes," a plan for ' taping the lectures for later usel was highly successful in subletting plement serious consideration of selling lecture notes taken by ex- by groups of students, more semi- apartments last year. He claims four specific areas of academic cellent students in order to relieve nays, with or without instructors, his office was successful in sublet- reform. Last year's conference the burden of factual note-tak-'and greater use of handout mate- ting almost all of the 400 apart- helped bring about the pass-fail ing: rials as lecture aids. These could ments that were listed with them. option which was enacted. this 0 Possible revision of the for- 'be outlines of the material, topics Allen expects to handle a larger year. eign language requirement; for possible papers, or questions number of apartments this year. The conference, headed by Lew 0 Revision of the credit hourIthe instructor feels the student Off-Campus Housing Bureau Paper, '68, academic chairman of ,system for more equity with work'should be able to answer as a re- UAC, and Kathie DeMare, '68, demands; sult of the lecture. } Students can also list their consisted of four discussion groups 9 Extension of the "Outreach" Tu e ofoteg lecture. apartments with the Off-Campuswhc covndatrakyoepoiaofilwi'tousdef The foreign language commit- Housing Bureau for summer sub- which convened after a keynote program of ieldwork to oute tee, headed by Prof. James W. letting. The bureau recommendsadrsbyPp.Heskdfrhesyhogdprmn. Shaw, chairman of Junior-senior lettng.The ureu reommndscompletely accounting for all opin- At the meeting after the discus-Sh.caimn fjuorsir that tenants check with their counseling, recommended not only landord befre ttemtin toions, so that the proposals to be sions, Prof. Marvin Felheim of the!cuslnrcmeddntol landlords before attempting to made would merit serious official English department, chairman of that the present requirement be sublet their apartments to see if consideration. the "Phi Bet" committee, called kept, but that two years of lan- there areanyrestrictions on sub- "We cannot cry for absolute the proposed system unsatisfac- guage in highschoo] be made an leasing the particular apartment. student power, nor can we sup- tory. Note-taking should be a pro- entrance requirement. If the stu- ffThe apartment should be checked dent could not meet this, he would for any damages before subletting take non-credit remedial courses. to protect the tenants from a The committee felt that foreign damage deposit loss for which they anaislanguage proficiency and familiar- trr rrnnibla ity with other cultures is impor- 'were not respospe Sublet leases are available in the 0 ff-Campus Housing Bureau of- fice. The Student Rental Service will prepare a lease for people using their office, but other serv- System Gains Pride ices do no other work than just. By LUCY KENNEDY to drink in the residence halls-- matching apartments and tenants. "Probably my biggest objective sorority girls would also be allow- According to the Off-Campus this year has been to get Panhel- ed the privilege unless it was of- HousingBureau, students gen- lenic President's Council to take fensive to other girls in the erally take a five or ten dollar per pr'ide in itself-and I think I've house. month loss in rent when they succeeded," says Martha Cook, '67, "Another big criticism of soror- sublet, but the office recommends retiring president of Panhel. New ities that I think we've at least that students try to get the full Panhel officers will be elected to- admitted and tried to solve is the amount of rent and then try to morrow. status problem. There is a great negotiate. A summer damage de- "For a long time girls within the feeling that girls pledge .a sorority posit should be included in the system have had complaints-they forastatus and I think fall rush sublet lease to protect those sub- haven't been able to take real has done a lot to solve this letting the apartment. pride in being part of the sorority'problem." - system," Miss Cook says. She points to the membership tin ste be innn f ahl' Ies earch ~er committee (to prevent discrimina battempts to face problems. "This v es L.att fn 0 willingness to look our problemsst ' in the eye" is exemplified by "the M ostj Ii I~ r T____7 resolution on recommends we tant to a liberal education. The committee is also recommending better training for language in- structors. Sam Chafetz, '68, who chaired the committee on credit revision, urged that each department re- consider the relation between work demands and credits given. Re- vision from three to four hours per course should especially be considered, he said. Curricular de- mands of non-majors should be given serious consideration. Most importantly, each school and col- lege is urged to reconsider its ground rules for assignment of credits. FEARS CENSORSHIP: NU Administrator Says No In' rs Prove Sugar Pill ble 'Memory' Drug I waAd-, EIY passed two weeks ago." ratwor t( By JIM HECK Associate Dean Richard J. Don- ey of Northwestern University's College of Arts and Sciences de- nied last night the Daily North- western's charge that he was lead- ing an investigation of the stu- dent newspaper. Doney said after a week of si- lence following the passage of a faculty resolution calling for the probe that, "There is no investi- gation of the Daily Northwest- ern." Doney was reported to have been placed in charge of an in- I. jI. I/ I..r I I'rl ro ue -I r ci cti if yI v (u 'That resolution invoved min By RICHARD HERSTEIN another drug, dextroamphetamine crossing the path of the powerful In a recently completed study, (Dexedrine), a stimulant, learned sorority nationals, for it question- University researchers found that slower than those who had been Dean J. Lyndon Shanley, brought Daily Northwestern editor Joan have done nothing." He said there ed "how much nationals should a sugar pill packs just as much given a pill containing only sugar. immediate concern to Daily North- Schumann appeared Thursday on was no investigation or study, control membership selection." learning power as magnesium For many years, scientists have western editors who were worried Chicago television and reinterated that he was very annoyed over the "I don't think the fact that penoline, a member of the new sought to unlock the secrets of about the wording of the resolu- her concern that the administra- situation and the constant attempt Panhellenic Council resolved they 'breed of "memory' drugs. memory learning. Recent studies tion. Although not speaking with tive move may have been an at- by reporters to see him. He said wanted less national control is as Although the drug reportedly centered on whether memory or Doney, the student editors spoke tempt to indirectly censor the that the "whole story is complete- significant as the fact that the aids learning and memory in the learning could be improved by in- with professors who had voted in paper. ly blown up!" resolution was entirely initiated by rat, this appeared not to be true creasing the brain's production of favor of the resolution. After Miss Schumann in recent editor- When asked about the claim President's Council," Miss Cook for human subjects. RNA (ribonucleic acid). RNA and stating their position and discuss- ials cited the fact that the author- that Daily Northwestern editors added. The experiments with the drug, a related nucleotide, DNA (deoxy- ing the issue several of the pro- ship of the resolution, the moving feared censorship, he replied,. This year Panhel has also pass-- conducted by a research team at ribonucleic acid), are responsible fessors reversed their positions say- and seconding of it during the fac- "God no! Who in this day and ed resolutions supporting the 18- the Mental Health Research In- for coding the heredity patterns ing the resolution was a "mistake" ulty meeting, and the initiating age would consider censorship!" year-old vote, the writer-in-resi- stitute, indicated that the memo- of living oranisms. and should have been given more of the "investigation" were all Criticize Administration dence, the draft referendum, a ries of young male college students In the University study, psycho- scrutiny than had been given it done by administrative deans or For the past several weeks paper fairly autonomous sorority judic, were not improved after the ad- logists used 30 male student volun- initially. assistants. She said that at no editorials have criticized severely and has made a stand on sopho- ministration of the drug. In fact, teers, all 'intellectually above av- Irresponsible Action : time did faculty members take administration positions on liquor 'more hours. Panhel resolved last it was found that those subjects erage." The subjects faced a row Dexedrine; three groups were given pills with 25, 12%/, or 6/2 milligrams of Cylert, and one group was given pills containing only sugar. The results of the experiment showed the following: * The learning rate was fastest under the' sugar pill. * The learning rate decreased under Cylert as doses increased. 0 The learning rate was slight- ly but significantly slower under Dexedrine than under Cylert. "Our results are in agreement with what is known to date about the behavioral effects of Cylert in animals," said Dr. Burns. "Higher Ia I t s :. f " i. x1 " (z !7