FPA ACTS WISELY ON DRAFT REFERENDUM See Editorial Page C, 1 4c Si r41 4Iaitjj SHOWERS High--6 Low-34 Windy; turning much colder late in day Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 38 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY OCTOBER 15 1966 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES UN Meets As Mid-East Tension Rises New Border Raids Spark Israeli Threat Of Armed Retaliation From Wire Service Reports JERUSALEM, Israel-Tensions heightened along the Israeli-Syr- ian border early today in the wake of the most daring raid thus far in the worsening crisis. Three Israelies were wounded when they were attacked by Arab terrorists four miles inside Israel. Israel hinted military retaliation might be imminent. The Syrian government had warned Thursday that any Israeli aggression over the border would lead to an all-out war. U.N. Session (Meanwhile, the United Nations Security Council met in an extra- ordinary night session to consider Israels charge of aggression by Syria in connection with recent border incidents, the Associated Press reported. (Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban opened the council debate with a charge that Syria is train- ing and supporting groups of sabo- teurs, sending them into. Israeli territory and otherwise violating the U.N. charter.) Israeli officials said the terror- ists were members of the fanatical Al Fattah Arab commando organ- ization. They said the commandos entered Israel from Syria via Jor- dan. Last Resort Informants said Israel's appeal to the Security Council probably represented the last peaceful remedy before the situation got out of hand. Premier Levi Eshkol inspected Israeli border patrol bases Thursday, the informants said. The Jerusalem Post, which usu- ally reflects official thinking, also hinted at military retaliation yes- terday. It said the situation raised the question of whether calm could be restored "by diplomatic 4 means directly or by stages, or whether it will be left to Israel to halt aggression by the only means available to her." The situation was complicated by the fact that the United Arab Republic has threatened to inter- vene militarily if there was "ag- gression" against Syria by Israel. The Soviet Union has warned that it would take a grave view of any Israeli military retaliation against the regime in Damascus. A Radio Damascus broadcast monitored here Thursday said the Syrian government had sent notes to foreign missions that any Is- raeli aggression would trigger all- out war. The U.N. meeting adjourned shortly after mignight after Syria denied it was responsible for the border attacks on Israel. Another 4 U.N. meeting on the situation will be held Monday afternoon. NEW ACTIVIST TRENDS: Dissenters Put Down Picket Signs, Shift Emphasis to Political Activity By ROGER RAPOPORT more sympathetic to their views The student protest movement is and working for the 18-year-old shifting gears. Across the country vote. And on campuses like Stan- activists are turning away from ford, activists are taking over the protest demonstrations to get in- student government. volved in politics. To be sure, the trend does not Student dissenters are putting down their picket signs to cam- paign for political candidates, get involved in campus politics and, work for the 18-year-old vote.! Many think protest tactics have reached a point of diminishing returns. "People are bored with demon- staig. says Carl Oglesby. im- 1 mean the end of demonstrations. At the University of Chicago, Stu- dents Against Rank hopes to co- ordinate nationwide anti - draft protests. On Dec. 9 there will be: a nationwide protest of American bank loans to South Africa. And more demonstrations against the war in Viet Nam and various uni- versity administrations are in the offing. But there is little doubt that the demonstration itself is taking on a secondary role among student activists. Groups like the Student Peace Union, that are sticking ex- clusively with demonstrations and ignoring politics are in trouble. SPU membership has plummeted to 1,000 from 6,000 only three' years ago. Cynicism According to Phillip Sherburne, president of the National Student Association students are "growing cynical about demonstrating be- cause they see little impact result. They are getting involved with electroral politics to have direct access to the political process." An equally important reason why students are turning away from protest is that they discover they aren't needed for civil rights demonstrations. "First we had to win the right to organize and vote. through four and a half years of protesting," explains a SNCC leader. "But now we're involved in a political move- ment," she explains in preference to SNCC's all-Negro Black Panth- er party. "Now we don't need to bring j t -Daily-Chuck Soberman CAPT. ROBERT FRIETAG, A KEY N.A.S.A. official, spoke before a meeting of the A.I.A.A. last night on the future of the space program. NASA Official Indicates Spa ce Program To Exand ul 111, Ga a L l g~u , 11 mediate past president of Students for a Democratic Society, the new- left group that has organized hun- dreds of protests during the past! year. Political Protest "How many people do you have to pile up in front of the Wash- ington Monument to see that our demonstrations can't call a halt to the war in Viet Nam or convince anyone that. we are right? The protest has to become political," Oglesby adds. "We're building a political move- ment now," says Stokely Car- michael, chairman of the Student Non - Violent Coordinating Com- mittee. "The demonstrations have served their purpose." The switch involves a multitude of divergent student groups in na- tional, state, local and campus politics., In Detroit, the Committee to End the War -in Viet Nam devoted its summer to campaigning for a Democratic peace candidate. On the state level Young Americans for Freedom are campaigning hard for California gubernatorial can- didate Ronald Reagan. Bank Failure Probed By Attorney General By WARREN M. ZUCKER ? "Landing a person on the moon is not why we are running the space program," Capt. Robert Frietag, director of the manned space field center development program for NASA, said last night. Speaking before a crowded meet- ing of the local branch of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Frietag said the lunar landing program was de- signed to "prove that we have the capability to operate in space." "We no more want to get to the moon than Lindberg wanted to go to Paris. Both Lindberg and NASA desire to demonstrate the abilities of the equipment," he said. Frietag predicted that the first lunar landing would occur before 1970, perhaps as early as late 1968. "The next Gemini flight will finish out that program and theI first three-man Apollo missionI will lift off in late 1966 or early 1970. We are ahead of the schedule laid down in 1963. "It is difficult to predict when the Russians will land on theI moon," he noted, "but it seems that they are on the same sched- ule as we are." Frietag indicatedk that he expected the two coun- tries to make their first successful moon landings within two or three months of each other. A vast and costly space program was envisioned by the director after the excitement of the lunar landing program subsides. "NASA is only spending $31/ billion a year now. After 1970, that figure will be $5 billion a year," Capt. Frietag predicted. This additional money will be spent applying the vast technical knowledge learned during space program to the "benefit of man- kind and the man on the street." Frietag said he believed the field of communication will benefit most strongly from space tech- nology. "Bell Telephone has pre- dicted that through the use of satelites it will eventually cost as little to make a call anywhere in North America as it now does to make a local call in Ann Arbor." Frietag noted that a recent rate reduction to trans-Pacific custom- ers by Western Union is indicative of the new trend. The tremendous propaganda value of communications satelites was also pointed out. "One televi- sion satelite over Africa," Frietag said, "could turn the entire con- tinent into an English speaking area. "Or a Russian speaking conti- nent," he added ominously. Space technology will also aid in the discovery and' better usage of natural and technical resources. "There are many things that one can see from space that cannot be seen by the naked eye or from an airplane. On one Gemini flight, Gordon Cooper, using an infra-red camera, discovered previously un- known oil deposits in Tibit. DETROIT P-) - The Michigan attorney general's office and De- troit police are investigating trans- actions between several construc- tion and home improvement firms and the Public Bank of Detroit, the Detroit Free Press said yes- terday in a copyrighted story. Public Bank was forced into re- ceivership early Wednesday by Charles D. Slay, state banking commissioner. The Federal De- posit Insura-lce Corp., named re- Ann Arbor ceiver by a circuit judge, sold the Students in Ann Arbor are push- bank's assets and liabilities to ing for city council candidates Bank of the Commonwealth. CAPITAL OUTLAY PLANS: Departmental Growth and Development Cause Continuing University Expansion It was one of the largest banks to fail since the depression. The Free Press said about eight attorneys from the attorney gen- eral's office are looking into transactions between Public Bank and the firms, which were. not named. Detroit police said they have launched an intensive investiga- tion into the same transactions, the newspaper said. . Leon Cohan, deputy attorney general, said his office is working with Slay "and other authorities to see if there was any wrong- doing.'' He acknowledged that the attor- ney-eea' general's office has started an inquiry into possible criminal as- pects involved in financial trans- actions that led the bank to its precarious condition. Sgt. Robert Hyatt of the Detroit. police said his investigators are checking with persons who con- tracted with the unnamed con- struction and modernization firms for mortgages from Public Bank. $1.3 Million Slay and Public Bank officials have said the bank's capital ac- count is $1.3 million in the red. They estimated its future losses at $4.8 million. The bank issued a statement Wednesday in which it said "high risk" home modernization loans figured in its problems. A number of lawsuits has been filed and a long legal battle lies ahead in the bank's collapse. A group calling itself the Pub- lic Bank Shareholders Commit- tee called yesterday for a meet- ing of stockholders next Tuesday night. The committee asserted it represents more than half of the bank's 462,000 shares. Public Bank shareholders will not know whether they will re- ceive a return on their stock un- til the transaction between the FDIC and the Commonwealth is closed 18 months from now. thousands of northern students down South as we did in 1964. We're involved in registering Ne- groes to vote. We feel Negroes are better at getting Negroes to vote than whites." The shift helps explain why David Harris, a 20-year-old former Mississippi civil rights worker, spent his summer in balmy Palo Alto, Calif., instea dof the swelter- ing South this year. "We don't fit in there any more," says Harris, a student at Stanford University. "The storm- trooping job is over; it's not a movement any more. Most of us who went to Mississippi feel we have to deal with our own prob- lems." Jeans and Sandals Harris campaigned for student body president in jeans and san- dals at Stanford this spring and won easily. Now he's out working for his campaign causes: abolition of grades, required courses and fraternities and putting students on Stanford's-board of trustees. Because many student radicals are running into aricable univer- sity administrators, many protests never get off the ground. For ex- ample, while colleges across the country were plagued by demon- strations protesting administrative decisions to hand in student class rankings to the draft board, the campus of Wayne State University was noticably placid. The reason: After SDS petition- ed Wayne President William B. Keast not to turn in rankings, he decided the demand was legitimate and agreed not to turn in rank- ings next year. T No Time More important students are often so preoccupied with politics they don't have time to protest. When the University of California at Berkeley expelled an activist last spring for violating demon- stration regulations some of the same students who brought the campus to a standstill in 1964 tried for a repeat performance. Their efforts" flopped. While some credit Berkeley's Chancellor, Roger Heyns, with averting chaos through diplomatic handling ,of the affair, informed observers think there was a more important reason: 1,000 student activists were busy campaigning for con- gressional peace candidate Robert Scheer. Organizations like SDS and the less activist Young Amercians for Freedom find their new political slant a good selling point for high school students. Membership Doubles YAF says its high school mem- bership doubled in the past two years while its over-21 membership declined. "They'll do mundane chores no one else will do-knock- ing on doors and handing out leaf- lets. A smart politician will make use of these kids," says YAF President Tom Houston. Principals aren't happy about their high schools being turned into ideological battlegrounds for the right and left. "SDS is actively organizing on high school cam- puses throughout Southern Cali- fornia," says Herbert Aigner, prin- cipal of Palisades High School in Pacific- Palisades, Calif. Left-wing See ACTIVISTS, Page 2 i _--- NEWS WIRE By NEAL H. BRUSS "A fairly orderly and continuous system" underlies the construction that most affects the academic lives of students and faculty at the University, says one literary college administrator. The "system" is the depart- mental planning of capital outlay requests. While capital outlay budgeting usually is finalized in legislative deliberations, the pro- cess normally begins with plan- ning by the teaching faculty. According to William L. Hays, associate dean of the literary col- lege, "growth and development in a department" provides the major impetus for expansion studies. This growth may be the result of a boom in enrollments in the de- partment, a change in depart- mental teaching methods or the "new life" brought to a depart- ment by technology or a new area of study, Concurrent Plans Hays stresses that many depart- ments may be considering expan- sion at the same time. Such de- partments individually consult with the dean of their college and form a "program study commit- tee" to make plans for expansion and to justify their request for increased space. The faculty members on the pro- gram study committee work with the dean's office to prepare de- tailed requests, with office, class- room and laboratory figures spe- cified. When the departmental pro- gram has been completed, the work of planners in the individual college is temporarily done. Combination At this stage, it is most likely that the space requests of several departments have been combined in a single building drawn to pro- vide facilities for each of the de- partmnents. Thedocument not only letals the plans for the proposed struc- ture but explains the need for the structure and what will be done with existing facilities utilized by the departments requesting the new structure. In Lansing, the document is stu- died by both the Governor's bud- get staff and the Appropriations Sub-Committee of the Legislature. Federal Grants A similar but more specific document is submitted to federal agencies who may have power to appropriate grants for construc- tion of specific types of academic buildings. Plans that are submitted for study to federal offices include schematic drawings prepared by the retained architect. After plans have been submitted to government agencies the Uni- versity's influence in how it is to grow lessens. The .program is then submitted to the staff of the vice president and chief financial officer and from there, to the Plant Extension Committee. Members The Plant Extension Committee is a board of executive officers of the University. Its members are: The University president, the exe- cutive vice president, the vice pres- ident for academic affairs, the vice president for University relations, the vice president and chief finan- cial officer, and the secretary of the University. When the committee meets to consider the request of the in- dividual department, the dean of the college or an associate may be asked to give his recommendation and justification for the expan- sion project. If the committee decides the re-' quest is worthy, it is given more detailed study by the staff of the University architect, Howard Haaken, and the assistant to the *vice president and chief financial officer, John McKevitt. Working with the Dean's office and the fa- culty committee, they make a pre- liminary architectural study based on the department's program. Feasibility Their study details the feasibili- ty of the project: what space could be furnished for the new facil- ities, how large a structure should, be built and how much the project will cost. If the project is determined feasible by the preliminary archi- tectural study, the University re- tains an architect to draw the schematic plans of the new struc- ture. This "retained architect" meets' with a committee from the Uni- versity architect's staff, individual department and the dean or his staff to determine the character of the proposed structure. They decide what activities are to be held in specific building locations and what sizes specific facilities should be. Document The plans of the architect and the college committee are speci- fied in a document submitted first to the Regents and then to the state Legislature. As Hays says, "the faculty gets3 involved in every step of planning so that they have a say in what kind of building should be con- structed and what should go in it." But once the faculty has com- pleted its planning, its involve- own. These priorities have the highest power of all. They deter- mine whether a University con- struction project is to be financed or not, and if so, when. The College of Architecture and f Design has a $6.2 million capital outlay project pending state ap- proval. The modern language de- partments and the psychology, mathematics, and chemistry de- partments are requesting buildings of their own, and if their requests are granted, the classics, philo- sophy and other departments will gain requested space.' The engineering college is re- questing a North Campus struc- ture. } All these requests have begun with faculty studies of teaching needs. After planning and deci- sions, these academic problems are channeled into the problem-solv- ing agencies of state and national government-where they may or may not be solved. c ALTHOUGH ANN ARBOR school board members were ex- pected to arrange a meeting sometime this week, nothing has yet occurred charges of maintaining racial bias in favor of Negroes leveled against the Ann Arbor school system. The charges were made by School Trustee William C. Godfrey. Alleging the school system is yielding to civil rights pressure groups, Godfrey specified, among those influencing policy, the city's human relations commission, the local chapter of the Na- tional Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Civil Rights Coordinating Council, and "radical elements of both political parties." * *, * * HAROLD KAPLAN, '68E, president of Triangles Junior En- gineering Honorary, announced yesterday the fall neophytes tapped this week. They are: Robert Dunford, Jim Myers, Robert Fidelman, John Bonds, James McDowell, Stuart Edwards, Walter Rhines, Alan Winkley, and David Hass. All are juniors in the College of Engineering who have shown outstanding achievement in athletics or extra-curricular activities. The new members were tapped Monday night and were in- formally initiated on the Diag yesterday at noon. Formal induc- tion into the society will take place Sunday evening in the Tri- angle Room at the Union. DR. REED M. NESBIT of the Medical School was elected president of the American College of Surgeons yesterday. He is a professor of surgery and head of the urology section of the Med- ical Center. The College of Surgeons with about 28,000 fellows, is the world's largest organization of surgeons. FRESHMAN ENGLISH: Possibilities Remote for S pecial Writing Courses By CATHY PERMUT 'Vivian Offers New Measure As Substitute for HUAC Bill Rep. Weston E. Vivian (D-Ann I amendment which makes it clear Arbor) has introduced a separate i that it .does ont apply to labor bill which he hopes will avoid disputes, strikes or picketing. CORRECTION Due to a typographical er- ror, the word "not" was omitted from the following in yester- day's story on the State Board of Education candidates: Thurber said that he did not see the board as a "superboard" controlling the individual gov- erning boards of the state's ed- ucational institutions, such as the University's Board of Re- gents. The possibility of instituting specialized writing courses for ad- vanced placement freshman at the University seems remote, ac- cording to Prof. Earl Schulze, chairman of the freshman division of the English dept. This fall Harvard University is' offering five new composition courses so that qualified students may write about an academic field such as history, science or litera- ture which interests them. Edward Wilcox, head of the 20- year-old general education pro- gram of interdisciplinary studies there, sees this as a substitute for freshman English for advanced placement students or upnerclass- teach rhetoric to 2350 students this semester, is using the Norton Reader, of which six of the editors teach at the University. Teaching fellows are permitted to structure the course in any way they choose. So, as Schulze points out, Univer- sity freshmen are offered essays in various fields, to the extent that their instructors diversify the course readings. Not Always Successful The purpose of the course is to teach many kinds of writing skills. But some freshmen do leave the course without the ability to ex- press themselves clearly. "The de- velopment of a writer is not con- venient to 15-week sessions," Schulze noted. at Harvard emphasizes the fact that the new courses would only be offered to those who already write well. Need Qualified Teachers Turlish also points out 'that there is the problem of finding qualified personnel to teach spe- cialized courses. The instructor must have a command of a sub- ject and the ability to teach and evaluate expository prose in the field as well. William Schang, another Uni- versity teaching fellow, said, "The focus of 123 is writing, and the reading of people who write well-" But Judith Johnson, an English 123 teacher, mentions as the ma- jor freshman criticism of the course the fact that students can- I I , I I if i