/ THE QUAGMIRE OF VIET WAR, POLITICS See Editorial Page Y Slir iai 4Ia it i COOLER Hligh-78 Low-53 Partly cloudy with chance of showers Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 37-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1965 SEVEN CENTS FOUR PAGES SENATE APPROVAL: Hart Hesitates on Appointment' By MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH Special To The Daily WASHINGTON-Senator Philip Hart (D-Mich), a prominent member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, voiced concern here last night over the nomination of former Mississippi Governor James Plemon Colman to a federal F judgeship. Hart, who observers believe will play a crucial role in the judiciary committee's vote on the nomina- tion of Colman to the fifth ju- dicial circuit, said he was still undecided and would be "uncom- fortable whichever way I vote." The outcome of the committee's vote approving, or disapproving, the nomination is expected to be close. Moderate Speaking informally before a group of University students here for the summer, Hart noted that Colman has a reputation as a racial moderate and had support- ed Sen. John F. Kennedy for president after his nomination. Hart said that "persons whose opinions I respect" had praised Colman. He added that he had been informed that the fifth ju- dicial circuit judges "would wel- come him" and declared that "if W eeks, Cappaert Question R 0 Rghts Plan's Effectiveness By JOHN MEREDITH Two Democratic members of the City Council last night ques- ,tioned the potential effectiveness of Mayor Wendell Hulcher's (R) proposal to incorporate the state constitution's civil fights provision into a local ordinance, but Hulcher staunclily defended his own plan. Councilman LeRoy Cappaert (D), who plans to introduce amend- mentsj'o broaden the scope of the Ann Arbor Fair Housing Ordi- nance, called Huicher's plan meaningless as it now stands. More specifi cdelineation of what would constitute a violation and of enforcement procedures would be needed to make the plan veffective, he said. you want to simplify matters, you could say that Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach selected him." But balanced against this, Hart said, "are statements which, un- less clarified by Colman himself, would make one think he didn't belong on the judicial bench." "A 'no' vote might discourage other moderates who are trying to change the political situation in Mississippi," Hart said. "A 'yes' vote might discourage liberals elsewhere who had read Colman's public statements.". Discussing his activities as Sen- ate floor manager for the 1965 voting rights bill, Hart praised the bill. "By any standards," Hart added, "the administration had accommodated" Senate Minority Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Il- linois. But he added that, in most cases, this had not been detri- mental to the bill, save that of a ban on state and local poll taxes. The administration, reportedly prompted by Dirksen, opposed an amendment introduced that Sen- ator Edward M. Kennedy (D- Mass)-which Hart supported- which would have imposed the poll tax ban It was narrowly defeat- ed in a! 49 to 45 vote. The defeat of the poll tax ban was viewed by most observers as a moral victory for the Kennedy forces, since the forces of the ad- ministration and many other Democrats were aligned against them. The split maong the Demo- crats was the most significant and complete of the Congress and was a blow to the political power of President Johnson. Many sen- ators had to resist very heavy Johnson pressure to support the poll tax ban. Great Advance But despite this defeat,, Hart said, the bill was a great advance particularly for its reliance on automatic "triggering" formulas rather than seemingly endless court action. Turning to Dirksen's proposed constitutional amendment to al- low state referendums to be held on apportioning one house of the legislature on factors other than population, Hart said that despite the administration's lack of public opposition to the measure, we haven't got to the end of the line yet." Last year Senate liberals, in- cluding Hart, Senator Paul Doug- las (D-Ill), Senator Gaylord Nel- son (D-Wis) and others, success- fully filibustered against a similar /Dirksen proposal. Observers here say that the opposition to the Dirksen proposal had no support from the Johnson administration. City Vote On Asia Announced By PETER A. DiLORENZI, JR. Plans, for a city-wide referen- dum on United States policy in Viet Nam were announced last night at a joint meeting of mem- bers of local religious and political action groups, faculty members, students and interested citizens. The proposed referendum is ten- tatively sclheduled for mid-Sep- tember. According to Ruth Schwarz, a spokesman for the group, it will attempt to allow people who are opposed to aspects of U.S. policy but who haven't the time or the inclination to parti- cipate in the more traditional forms of protest to speak out. Widespread Alexander Pollatsek, Grad, an organizer of the National Teach- In, said he hoped that the ref- erendum, if taken up by groups in communities across the nation, would show the administration that dissatisfaction with U.S. Viet Nam policy is not confined to the college campuses "The government has consistent- ly assumed that because the loud- est protests have ,come from fac- ulty and students, the rest of American society is lined up sol- idly behind the war," Pollatsek said. "This open and eminently necessary forum for registering active support or disagreement with the unexamined adminis- tration policy will serve as a means for the people to perform the duty which Congress has fail- ed to carry out. If the U.S. is to commit itself to a massive land war and continued bombings in Viet Nam, someone ought to both- er to find out if the country ac- tually wants a war," Pollatsek added. 18-Year-Olds Mrs. Nancy Gendell, a mem- ber of Ann Arbor Women for Peace said that 18-year-olds will be urged to, participate in the ref- erendum. "They will have to fight the war, and there is every reason for allowing them a voice in de- ciding on its value and morality." Miss Schwarz said that there will be polling places set up at various locations on campus. Spokesmen stressed that the referendum was to be conducted completely independently of mu- nicipal election facilities. The referendum is one of two major activities planned for the early fall in the Ann Arbor area. The other is a proposed inter- national gathering of concerned intellectuals to discuss the moral implications of the war in Viet Nam: U-S-Vietnamese For Rebels UnSU USSR Head-:. Says Rebels Near Victory Demands U.S. Exit As Basis of Peace MOSCOW (M)-Premier Alexei Kosygin boasted yesterday that Communist forces are closer to victory in Viet Nam than ever before. The Soviet leader repeated stiff" Communist demands, including an American withdrawal, as the only~ basis for peace in Viet Nam. bai o ec nVe a.Addressing a Kremlin rally, he ridiculed American peace propo- sals as maneuvers designed to de- ;. lude world public opinion. "For about four months Ameri- can aircraft have attacked the Democratic Republic of (North) Viet Nam," Kosygin said. "But the imperialists of the United States failed and they will continue to fail to break the heroic spirit of the Vietnamese -people.; "Never before have the Viet- namese partisans reached such successes. Large troops of South These American soldiers were injured in the massive jr Vietnamese guerrillas are more of U.S., Vietnamese and Australian troops yesterday and more successfully attacking o U ie, tnese ans Autrain tos estay. the punitive troops, even in the some fire, these forces never cae in visual contact suburbs of Saigon." Viet Cong. Kosygin pledged further military aid to North Viet Nam if the war HEAVY TRADING: expands, but did not spell out what kind of aid. He said: Stocks Mak "The American military will tsB est have to reckon with the increased aid and support the Vietnamese- people get from the entire social- Ao nei Wild Fhtctuat ist commonwealth m different fKosygin reiterated the Co."- NEW YORK ( P)-The Stock Market went into puz unist position that a Vietnamese tions yesterday, one of the busiest days in the history of th peace settlement must include Stock Exchange. these terms: Shortly after the opening bell, a tremendous wave of1 -An endsto American raids in prices soaring. The market then abruptly somersaulted North Viet Nam. heavy trading only to come roaring back to close with th -Strict adherence to the Ge- of the year. neva agreements of 1954. "This has got most of us flummoxed," said Robert Stc -Withdrawal of all forcesof president of E. F. Hutton & Co. brokerage firm. "It was the UnitedrStates andisallies. a day as I can remember." -Withdrawal of all U.S.weap- Both on the way up and down the furious pace of t ons. -A political settlement reached speeded the exchange's new highspeed ticker, which reco: by the Vietnamese people them- abbreviated form, as much as six selves without outside interfer- minutes at one point. sars ed ence. Nearly 10.5 million share s School OK's Cigarette Warning Label ALBANY, N.Y. ())-Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller yesterday signed a bill to require that packages of cigarettes sold in New York state carry this label - "Warning. Ex- cessive use is dangerous to health." The law, passed by the legisla- ture, which adjourned last Wednesday, will go into effect June 1, 1966. In signing the bill, the Republi- can governor sail: "The state . . has a responsi- bility to make the public aware of health measures, and this bill would serve especially as a cau- tion to our youngsters." Rockefeller said that many "sincere persons" had urged him to veto the bill because Congress now has under consideration a similar. warning-label measure. In a memorandum with yester- day's approval the governor noted: "In view of the delayed effec- htive date of the bill, the legisla- ture can take whatever action is appropriate after similar federal legislation, if any, is enacted." Under terms of the law, ciga- rette manufacturers will be re- quired to imprint the warning- label op each package for sale in New York state. Violations of the law will be a misdemeanor. Offenders will be subject up to a year in jail and a $500 fine. The law was partly a result of the- public attention given to the health hazards of smoking after U.S. Surgeon General Luther Ter- ry released a report in early 1964 detailing alleged dangers of smok- ing. The report, which had a great initial impact, has had little ef- fect on overall cigarette sales, which are now as high as when it was issued. Search icces sful Hulcher's Plan Hulcher's proposal, presented at Monday night's council meeting, requests passage of a local or- dinance identicle with the word- ing of Article I, Section 2 of the state constitution, which states: "No person shall be denied the equal protection of the laws; nor shall any person be denied the enjoyment of his civil or political rights or be discriminated against in the exercise thereof because of religion, race, color, or national origin." Although he said he will vote for Hulcher's proposal, Council- man Robert Weeks remarked that he "doesn't think the solution to the local problem is for us to adopt a section of the state con- stitution. We need specific or- dinances." Amendment 14 He pointed out that the Amend- ment 14, section 1 of the United StateshConstitution-the section on which the state's civil rights provision is based-has outlawed such discrimination since 1868, but that specific federal civil rights legislation in the last dec- ade was needed to make it effec- tive. Hulcher, however, defended his plan,N saying that it is enforceable until such time as the courts might restrict its coverage. "Therstate Civil Rights Com- mission is presently operating on the assumption that the constitu- tion's broad provision can be en- forced,"he said, "and so far the courts have not acted to curtail the CRC's power." Hulcher added that he will be glad to discuss Cappaert's sug- gestions for broadening the Fair Housing Ordinance, but that adop- tion of the section from the state constitution would "supplant the need for any amendments." He explained that the con- stitution's provision is all-inclu- sive and that incorporating it into a local ordinance would smipl3 offer citizens another avenue for redress of grievances movement Despite with the First Joint Operation in Asian War Historic Offensive Fails To Discover Viet Cong Troops SAIGON, Viet Nam (AP)-A task force of Americans, Vietnamese and Australians-more than 2,000 strong-probed for Viet Cong in the D-zone jungle yesterday with as little apparent success as in past actions where Vietnamese battalions hunted alone. The international offensive made history as the first such joint operation by U.S. paratroop- ers, Vietnamese airborne soldiers and Australian infantrymen, ar- tillery boomednand aerial bombs exploded on suspected guerrilla positions in the zone, 30 miles north of Saigon. But visual contact with the enemy was slight. No Viet Cong Troops No masses of Viet Cong troops were uncovered and the opposi- tion, as in past strikes into that stronghold, was limited largely to sniper fire: Some Communist stores were found and destroyed. In the air war, the U.S. Air Force made its deepest announced strike into North Viet Nam. An American military spokesman said a fighter-bomber fleet dumped 27 tons of bombs on a barracks and supply depot at Thuan Chau, 150 miles west northwest of Hanoi and 75 miles south of Red China's frontier. Pilots said they destroyed 32 buildings and damaged 20. The spokesman said all return- ed. Plane Shot Down He reported, however, that an- other American plane was shot down during an attack on the previously raided military center at Son La, 15 miles southeast of Thuan Chau, and the pilot was presumed killed. Two planes were lost in the war south of the border Briefings of- ficers gave these details: Guerrilla fire hit a U.S. Air Force 557 jet as it supported a ground operation 15 miles from Saigon and set its left wing afire. The two crewmen ejected. The iparachute of one failed to open 1 and he fell-'to death. The second man parachuted into a river and disappeared. A hunt was started for him. 1 s aln ions zling gyra- e New York buying sent in equally le best gain ovall, a vice as volatile rading out- rds sales in May i r _) e, a Y r JOHNSON'S RENT PROGRAM: Housing Bill May Be Slashed Special To The Daily WASHINGTON - The will meet today to amend ly controversial section of dent Lyndon B. Johnson housing b il1, highly sources said yesterday. The House leadership is ed to move to alter the bill private housing rent sup proposal - which Johns called "the heart" of the\ bill-to combat mounting cism of the idea. Sources were silent on the SHousenature of the amendment how- a high- ever. f Presi- As the rent supplement proposal 's 1965 now stands, the Federal Housing reliable Agency would survey localities and determine the minimum rent expect- required for decent housing in the 's novel area. Families earning less than plement four times that amount per on has month, the "income cut-off point" housing -and who would thus have to g criti- pay more than 25 per cent of their income for standard hous- SUMMER FARE: 'U' Players To Give Threepenny Opera' ing-could receive subsidies. The rent subsidies would go to such families living in sub-stand- ard housing or with poor, handi- capped, or elderly members; it would make up the difference be- tween 25 per cent of the f-amily's income and the actual rent re- quired to move into the standard, 'decent' private housing. Thus, in an area where mini- mum standard housing costs $100 per month, families in those three categories-poor, handicapped, or elderly-with incomes less than $400 per month would receive sub- sidies. A qualifying family with a monthly income of $300 could enter a standard private housing project, pay $75 (25 per cent of its income) in rent, and the gov- ernment would pay the $25 dif- ference to the landlord in a rental subsidy. The Republican minority on the House Housing Subcommittee began criticism of the proposal- which yesterday became intense- by charging in its minority re- port that families with incomes well over the national average would be able to participate un- der the plan. The bill's supporters, however, said that a preliminary survey by the Federal Housing Agency indi- cated that this would not happen. Other opponents of the bill' charged that it would destroy in- centive to raise income or to buy private homes; some opponents charged it a "collectivist" measure. k But the bill's backers argued that it would stimulate private rental housing and that it would provide decent housing for 500,000 families now awaiting public changed hands, and the first-hour Ater Grade Flan volume of 2.63 million shares was the biggest since the exchange The medical school is consider- began keeping hourly records in Thmeiascolicnidr 1933. ing changes in its grading sys- tem, but no administrative deci- The advance camehafter fou esuccessive days of losses, including so has been made as yet, Dean the biggest one-day loss of the William Hubbard of the medical year Monday, the sharpest decline school said yesterday. since Nov. 22, 1963, when Presi- It may use a "high pass, pass dent Kennedy was assassinated. or fail system," sources indicated. Most of the gains yesterday were scored by the blue chip stocks of the big, established corpora- tions. Despite the big gain in the pop- ular averages, not a single stock hit a 1965 high and 452 stocks dropped to their lowest prices of the year-28 more than during Monday's sell-off. Through much of the day, es- pecially during the lunch hour, brokers' offices were thronged with traders and observers watch- ing the rapidly changing prices and averages. :; By KAY EMERICK The University Players' summer playbill gets off to a rollicking start tonight with the presentation of "The Threepenny Opera." The musical, with libretto by Bertolt Brecht and music by Kurt Weill, concerns the story of the universal villain, Mack he Knife, played by Roger Wertenberger, '66M. Other leads are performed by Karen Emens, '65M, as Polly, Mack's "bride," and Sandra Goetz, Grad, as Jenny, the jealous prostitute. Others include members of Mack's gang and professional sisters of Jenny. Based on John Gay's "The Beggar's Opera," written in the 1700's, "The Threepenny Opera" is just that-an opera for and about beggars. "The Threepenny Opera" satirizes everything from public corrup- tion to moral values in a libretto following the saga of Machaeth from his "marriage" to Polly to his betrayal for Jenny and subse- quent sojourn in Newgate Prison. He is saved from hanging finally by the benevolent but corrupt prison keeper. The score, directed by Prof. William P. Halstead of the speech department, combines traditional German beer-hall music with American jazz, representing the dissonance of a disoriented world. John Gay's original "Beggar's Opera" was little more than an .i i i i 1 Rann of Kutch Shooting Ends NEW DELHI, India (A) - With prompting from Britain, India and Pakistan will put a cease-fire into effect Thursday in the Rann of Kutch, a desolate region on India's western frontier. An official spokesman, announc- ing this yesterday, said an agree- ment will be signed today, but declined to go into detail. It was reliably reported, however, that both sides had agreed to give up some outposts. Both sides charged the other with aggression after heavy fight- ing erupted in Kutch in April. Each side claimed it had inflicted 600 casualties on the other. When it became apparent that war was possible, both India and Pakistan began backing down. -Daily-Thomas R. Cops YOU MAY NOT DRINK as many nickel cokes as this Daily re- porter. In any case, join The Daily and you'll certainly have the opportunity to do so. You'll also be able to write for one of the nation's finest college newspapers. NICKEL COKE-ILLEGAL? We the people of the Michigan Daily, in order to form a more perfect newspaper, establish a Student Publications Building at 420 Maynard. There you will be ordained and established as a ;I ,. . I