'SOFT' MOON LANDING: Low Budge ts hay Bring Fee ike Russians Launch Luna 6 By JOHN MEREDITH MOSCOW (M)-The Soviet Un- ion rocketed an unmanned satel- lite toward the moon yesterday, apparently shooting for history's first soft landing of the kind need- ed to put a man on the moon. The launch of the key experi- ment in the race for the moon came less than 24 hours after America's two latest space men returned safely-to earth. It also came less than a month after Luna 5, the first Soviet at- tempt at a soft landing on the moon, crashed May 12 into the Sea of Clouds area near the lun- ar South Pole. If all goes well the Luna 6 "automatic station" will land on the moon late Friday night, Mos- cow time." Race Lead A successful soft landing would put - the Russians possibly six months ahead of the United States which has yet to try a soft land- ing on the moon. Such a landing is expected to permit better photographs of the moon's surface than were possible in all earlier moon shots. They either missed the moon or crashed into it. The photographs could help pick a landing site for a manned flight to the moon. The successful testing of a soft landing system could show that a manned moon flight is possible with existing equipment. And it could permit analysis of the moon's surface by devices that would radio back their findings. First Failure When Luna 5 crashed into the moon and the first attempted soft landing failed, the official Soviet news agency Tass said: "During the flight and the ap- proach of the station to the moon a great deal of information was obtained which is necessary for the further elaboration of a sys- tem for soft landing on the moon's' surface." Luna 6 is believed to be the next step in that "further elaboration." The announcement of its launch- ing made no mention of soft- landing equipment. However, nei- ther did the launch announcement of Luna 5. Bad Prediction The first official word that Luna 5 would attempt a soft landing came about 20 hours before the satellite' hit the moon. It was the first time the Russians had called their shots in advance and they failed. This time they might return to their traditional practice of wait- Summer Enrollment Reported ear 6000 Registrar Edward Groesbeck reported yesterday that close to 6000 students are attending classes in the Spring-Summer and Summer trimester terms. Six thousand was the attendence target announced by trimester planners earlier this year. Groesbeck said he was pleased that attendence is approaching the hoped-for mark. The Spring-Summer students bring total University enrollment at the moment to about 8700. This figure includes students at units ~ . still on the old semester system. Of these, about 1200 are at the ing for results before announcing the goals of the flight. Adjustments may have to be made during the course of the 312- day flight. The Russians may be waiting until they are sure Luna 6 will hit the moon before they announce plans for attempting a soft landing. Says Aid Supports Apartheid By JAMES TURBETT "Withdrawal of United States and British investments from South Africa would bring down the South African government immediately," Eric Krystall as- serted at the first meeting of the Michigan Committee Against Apartheid last night. Krystall, research advisor at the Center for Conflict Resolution and unofficial advisor to the commit- tee, a South African, reviewed the South African situation and sum- marized the argument for with- drawing U.S. investments. South Africa's economy is booming. U.S. investors get 26 per cent dividends on investments,; partially because of exploitation of cheap Negro labor and repres- sion. He reasoned that the with- drawal . of foreign investments would bring on collapse of the economy. He rejected the view that pros- perity would bring about modera- tion in government policy. Negro South Africans are economically' better off than any other Afri- cans, but the division between white and black is too great and there are no political freedoms, he said. The committee's goal is to get the University to sell its stock in companies which have branches in South Africa. It suggested that one problem for the University might be that it has stock in Ford, General Motors and other com- panies which are powerful politi- cally in Michigan. Members of the committee have tried to get the University to take a definite stand, including invit- ing President Harlan Hatcher to speak on the subject, but these efforts have failed. The only re- sponse has been an expression of sympathy with the goal of elim- inating apartheid the committee reported. The committee said it wants to get the University to admit that it should be an instru- ment of social change. University officials have not yet indicated whether there will be a tuition hike next fall. No definite plans will be made for either raising tuition or cutting back proposed ex- penditures until the adminis- tration has a clearer, idea of legislative appropriations for the University's general funds budget, according to Executive Vice-President Marvin Niehuss. The general funds or oper- ating budget appropriation is presently being considered by the House Ways and Means Committee. Rep. Einar Earl- andson (D-Escanaba), said that in the coming week he did not expect significant al- terations in the $51.2 million operating funds appropriation passed by the Senate May 18. Short Funds While $1.1 million larger than the figure recommended by Gov. George Romney in Febru- ary, the $51.2 million figure is still $4.6 million short of the amount requested by the Re- gents. President Harlan Hatcher has attacked Romney's recom- mendation, implying that a substantial portion of the gov- ernor's reduction would have to be restored by the Legislature before he would consider the appropriation adequate. How- ever, he gave no indications as to whether the Senate's $1.1 million increase would be enough to avoid the "serious consequences" for the Univer- sity. The Senate figure is not nec- essarily final: It is possible-though most observers feel unlikely - that the House will further increase the University's appropriation; and, of course, a House cutback is also conceivable. The latter possibility is increased some- what by the outside chance that Romney may veto the higher education appropriation bill of which the University's budget is a part. Statement The governor indicated last week that since the Legislature has not acted on fiscal reform during this session, he may not sign appropriations bills in ex- cess of his own recommenda- tions. The higher education bill is $4.9 million over the amount asked by Romney in his Febru- ary budget message. The matter is still up in the air, however, and University administrators have said they plan to wait until it is closer to being settled before taking steps toward adjustment of tui- tion and expenditures. If the $51.2 million appro- priation is finally passed, how will the administration adjust to the $4.7 million cutback? The last tuition hike was in 1962 when the legislative ap- propriation was $7 million short of the Regents' budget request. No one has officially admitted that increasing tuition is likely this year. One important possibility is that reduction in expenditures would be borne by the faculty -a group that has been hurt by low legislative appropria- tions in the past and is becom- ing increasingly sensitive both to inadequate salaries and to what some feel is a decline in educational quality due to leg- islative penny-pinching. Increase This year's University budget request is about $11 million higher than its general funds budget for last year. More than half of the $11 million was lab- eled for faculty salary increases and addition of new staff members needed to meet in- creased enrollment. In submitting the budget re- quest, administrators noted that $4.5 million was to go for merit faculty pay hikes in an attempt to move the University a little closer to the number position in faculty pay scale rankings that it held a decade ago. Another $6.6 million was scheduled for additional staff and supplies, with which Vice- President for Academic Affairs Roger W. Heyns hoped to meet enrollment pressure while at the same time reducing the present 1-14.6 faculty-student ratio. Hence, if the Legislature does not further increase the Univer- sity operating budget, admin- istrators will be faced with the difficult choice of raising tui- tion in the same year as an unofficial but expected resi- dence hall fee hike or econo- mizing at the expense of a sensitive part of the University community. _ ,,_, C I 4 S1ir CtAa Pa t't Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 25-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1965 FOUR PAGES Senate Body Hears CMU Com aints By SJSAN MORGAN A state Senate committee held a hearing yesterday to investi- gate charges by Central Michigan University professors that low sal- aries and scant academic 'oppor- tunity have forced their resigna- tions. For three hours seven faculty members, six of whom are leav- ing for new universities, criticiz- ed CMU administration and de- partmental procedures. All six witnesses voiced distress with internal conditions as the in- ducement for leaving. They said they wanted: -Better research opportunities, which they charge are restricted or non-existant at CMU; -Better salaries, and -Opportunities to direct gradu- ate training programs. Resignations Prof. Bernard Meltzer, head of the sociology department, said that five of the 11 members of the de- partment, all holding PhD's, had resigned. He added, "This loss is great and owill have a serious impact on the department program and on the students." He described efforts to refill the department openings as being "almost completely fruit- less." During his 40 minutes on the witness stand, Meltzer admitted that he was testifying "with some reluctance" because "my testimony can only further impair the rela- tionship between the sociology de- partment and the administration." Pity Prof. Henry Rosenquist, head of the psychology department, is leaving CMU. He said that three other members of the department are leaving and added that "they are all first rate men. It is a pity CMU is losing them." Prof. Robert Minick, head of the geography department, said that within two years only four of the present 12-man department will still be at Central. The Senate committee, headed by Edward J. Robinson (D-Dear- born), has, received 100 letters' from faculty members who support the CMU policies and will testify if asked. Subpoenas However, for the next hearing, scheduled in the fall, Robinson may issue subpoenas to certain faculty members who refuse to tes- tify voluntarily "because of fear of reprisal." He concluded the hearing saying, "we'll look fur- ther" into better communication and testimony in the fall. The first of the committee hear- ings took place in Lansing, May 17, at which CMU President Jedson Foust testified. At this time Melt- Flint and Dearborn campuses. Earlier this year, officials had expressed concern that summer enrollment would fall far short of the planned figure. Few students participated in the early phases of the new pre- registration system, which allowed students to complete the regis- tration process during the winter term. On April 15, only 3400 un- dergraduates had enrolled. However, in the final days of registration, enrollment picked up quickly, and the administration's fears were allayed. At the time, some officials at- tributed the final spurt of en- rollment to the fact that a num- ber of prominent faculty mem- bers had agreed to stay and teach in the Spring-Summer term. Viet Protest Rally Meets In New York By The Associated Press NEW YORK-A rally protesting U.S. policy in Viet Nam filled Madison Square Garden almost to its 17,500-seat capacity last night. The sponsors - the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy and 29 other groujps - called for a halt to bombing of North Viet Nam, a cease-fire and pressure for negotiations. The other sponsoring groups included religious, professional, student, peace, civil rights and reform Democratic organizations. Speakers included Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore), Prof. Hans Mor- genthau of the University of Chi- cago, Norman Thomas, veteran socialist leader, and Bayard Rus- tin, civil rights leader. About 100 pickets, some for the rally and some against, marched outside the hall. They represented such various organizations as Young Americans for Freedom, the Cuban Workers Revolutionary Front and an American Legion post. Morse said he was not calling for the United States to with- draw from Viet Nam, but that he believes a United Nations or in- ternational conference is the only hope for peace. Morgenthau told a prerally news conference that an international agreement unifying Viet Nam un- der President Ho Chi Minh of North Viet Nam is the only solu- tion. He called Ho and "indepen- dent"' Communist. Rustin urged negotiations with all parties, including the Viet Cong. By KAY EMERICK The University will be one of 117 colleges throughout the coun- try training teachers for Project Head Start, a part of President Lyndon B. Johnson's "War on Poverty," University officials an- nounced recently. Project Head Start will enroll some half-million children in pre- school development centers this summer. About 41,000 teachers, most of them from regular school systems, are being sought to staff these centers. The University will present a one-week training program for 75 teachers from June 28 to July 3. The program is being organized by the University Extension Serv- ice, with Lawrence Berlin, super- visor of course programs, as the training officer. Faculty from the education, social work, psychology, sociology, pediatrics and public health departments will partici- pate. Provide Instruction "Although the teachers selected for Project Head Start will be al- ready trained as teachers, few of them will have had direct exper- ience with the deprived pre- school child," Berlin explains. "The purpose of the training pro- gram which the universities are giving is to provide specific help to the teachers in working with children from economically and culturally deprived backgrounds. Instruction will also be given in working with volunteer staffs and the parents of the children.' Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti are but two of the communities participat- ing in the Head Start Program which will be ninety per cent sub- sidized by the federal government.' Each training session will con- sist of six days of concentrated study, six to eight class hours a day, plus associated outside read- ings. These six days will be cen- tered on a prepared "core cur- riculum" which is designed to: Curriculum Aims -Orient more fully the pro- fessional staffs of Child Develop- ment Centers to the aims and activities of thl Centers; Hails Gemini 4 Flight As Unqualified Success* By BARBARA SEYFRIED Prof. Wilbur C. Nelson of the aeronautical and astronautical engineering department, who was in the Gemini control room in Houston, Texas, as "unqualified success." The failure of the astro- nauts to rendezvous with the booster and the failure of the computer were minor problems, he added. According to Nelson, if the computer had been working it would have allowed the astronauts to pilot the ship themselves instead of following a predetermined course coming down. The astronaut's goal was to land within four miles of the Wasp's deck. The next Gemini shot will attempt to study. 'U' To Train Poverty, Workers Says Bundy U.S. Poverty Grant Deemed Insult' by Willow Villagers By RUTH FEUERSTEIN A government poverty grant to Willow Village has caused heated controversy among some residents who charge the grant is an "insult." The Office of Economic Opportunity had granted $188,252 to Willow Run, a small town near Ann Arbor, to be administered by the Willow Run Association for Neighborhood Development (WRAND). Many residents now claim the grant is an "insult," because there was no real need for it. This opinion was expressed yesterday f by Arthur Amelsch, a junior high -Give special focus to the physical development and typical health problems of economically disadvantaged children; -Explore some of the charac- teristics of the disadvantaged child; particularly the influences of poverty on family relation- ships, on socialization of the child and on the development of his self image; -Study the role of the pro- fessional teacher and adminis- trator in Child Development Cen- ter 'activities, and -Help the professional staff of the centers to cope with the con- crete problems they are likely to encounter. Prime the Pump Project Head Start is a sort of "economic pump priming," said Berlin. It will aim, first of all, to reduce the school-failure rate of the disadvantaged children. Sec- ondly, it hopes to integrate poor families into the social and edu- cational context of modern so- ciety. Finally, it hopes to give educa- tional and social agencies an in- sight into the problems of the dis- advantaged in general, and to aid all the federally-supported pro- grams which are attempting to break the "poverty cycle," Ber- lin explained. Ira Walsh, special assistant to Sargent Shriver, director of the Office of Economic Opportunity, had forecast Project Headstart earlier in one of a series of Uni- versity Lectures on Journalism. He had also explained another administration anti-poverty pro- gram-VISTA (Volunteer in Serv- ice to America). VISTA is a volunteer program aimed at relieving the poor, Walsh explained. People at least 18- although the present range is from 21 to 81-serve one year for $600 working with the poor. The volunteers put in six weeks .of special training and 10 /2 months in the field, he explain- ed. He said it was a good oppor- tunity for college students. Walsh had worked in radio, tel- evision and newspapers, and is presently on leave from the Hearst Consolidated and Publications. Walsh had been asked by Shriv- er to be his special assistant in April, 1964. Undecided on TV Debate. By CHARLOTTE WOLTER A meeting yesterday between representatives of the Inter-Uni- versity Committee for Public De- bate on Foreign Policy and Mc- George Bundy, special assistant to the President on foreign af- fairs, proved to be inconclusive, Prof. Richard Mann of the psy- chology department reported last night. Mann and Prof. Jonthan Mir- sky of the University of Penn- sylvannia, an authority on jnod- ern China, met with Bundy at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the White House to discuss arrangements for a televised confrontation between Bundy and members of the aca- demic community." The discussion of the television debate, which will take place in approximately two to three weeks, centered on the details of the form of the debate and the time of the speeches. Since a final de- cision was not reached, the pro- fessors will return to Washington on Thursday to complete the ar- rangements. Mann described their reception by Bundy as "cordial" although the presidential advisor was also "insistent." He said that there' were "no disagreements but there were no agreements either." Because of the indecision about the details of the confrontation Mann said, the Inter-University Committee representatives had not been able to present their choices for speakers. Therefore they did not receive any indication of Bundy's opinion on their accep- tability. When questioned on Bundy's failure to appear at the national teach-in, Mann said, "There is no question in my mind that his absence was valid." Mann, asked about the possibil- ity that Bundy would include other officials of the government in the debate, said that it was unlikely that other government officials would be included. How- ever, the format of the May 15 teach-in, which had members of the academic community present to defend as well as attack the government position, would be fol- lowed, he added. At the May 15 teach-in, Bundy was scheduled to appear on a panel with two other professors to debate against another panel, on American Vietnamese polices. Bundy's team was to be in favor of the policies, the other panel against. But Bundy was unable to appear because of an unexpected call for his services in the Do- minican Republic crisis. The debate went on as sched- uled without Bundy, as another professor took his place. There was criticism of Bundy's failure to appear at the debate, though a written opening debating state- ment from him was read at the outset of the session. The television arrangements of the debate have been finalized. A scheduled Monday night "prime time" position with the possible telecast over Early -Bird satellite to Europe will carry the debate. Generally Mann was pleased with the afternoon metin with Bundy at the White House and man's ability to function in space while doing more complex ac- tivities than Edward White did. The astronaut will carry a jet filled with hot gases which will be more efficient than the fuel used in the jet this trip. One astronaut on the Gemini 5 will leave the capsule, do some service work on the ship and return. The Gemini 6, will at- tempt a complicated rendezvous. A ship will attempt to lock onto a second capsule. There will be electrical connections made be- tween ships and exchange of fuel, among other exchanges, is plan- ned. This will initiate the first "all out" attempt at rendezvous, Nelson said. "The results Of the attempted Gemini 4 rendezvous will be of invaluable aid in this attempt, he added. The information will help us accelerate our space program." The astronauts were reported in good condition after they landed at approximately noon yesterday. White was reported to have high heart beat and high blood pres- sure. However, Dr. Charles A. Berry, astronaut flight surgeon, attributed it to the excitement of the splashdown and of the space walk. Berry explained that- both as- tronauts had lost some weight, but that the amount of loss was proportionately less for the 98- hour flight than for a 34-hour Mercury flight. Most weight loss is due to sweating, Berry said. The only medical problem ap- school teacher from Ypsilanti Township, who said that Willow Village is not an impoverished area and did not need the grant. According to Amelsch, the grant was offered under false pretenses. Not Poverty Center "Willow Village is not a center of hard-core poverty, is not a depressed community, and is not an urban-fringe area, whatever that is. The people who live there are not socially isolated," Amelsch said. Additional opposition came from Gordon Mattson, chairman of REPLY (Return Every Penny, Leave Ypsilanti) the organization opposing the grant, who said that the report which culminated in the grant was "nothing more than a pack of lies." This report had been prepared by the Institute of Labor and In- dustrial Relations, an organiza- tion combining the efforts of Uni- versity and Wayne State Univer- sity faculty. The grant has been declined by the township, nevertheless, the money is currently being used, George Fields, acting chairman of WRAND, said. WRAND WRAND is a nonprofit organ- ization which will give assistance to needy persons regardless of whether they are from the Willow Run area, he said. According to Fields, a rumor which said that $120,000 of the grant would be used for Univer- sity salaries is not true. He added +th nt the m nc v i s; nP'anty heinn -Associated Press r i r UNDER THE FOCUS OF CAMERAS mounted on the capsule, Maj. Edward White took his famous space walk during the third orbit of the Gemini 4. His golden "umbilical cord" hangs from his suit above as White soars above a cloud-covered Texas. Gemini 4: Facts and Forecasts WASHINGTON (IP) - Edward C. Welsh, executive director of the National Aeronautics and Space Council, said yesterday the United States now has a more powerful operational b o o s t e r rnlif fhn n 1cein Pickup-Monday, 12:47 p.m. On Carrier - Monday, 1:09 p.m. Orbits - 62, covering 1,609,684 miles. Flight Time-97 hours, 57 min- utes. Ttnir Anhiavas rt--+ _. T nn the pilot inside remains in unal- tered comfort and equipment in- side the ship does not have to be adapted to operate in a vacuum. "The American scientists picked another way because in the small IGemini cahin there was simplv nn ATT WOOD DIES Dean Stephen S. Attwood of the enzineerinz collee died in