POWER STRUGGLE: SOME SOLUTIONS See Editorial Page Y g1iltiAF :4Ia i1 CLOUDY High--84 Low--52 Warmer and more Humid Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom I VOL LXXV, No. 52-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1965 SEVEN CENTS FOUR P .. :...lvr. . . ..".. . . . . . . . .' .. t : s. ' ;, z :n .,. " .Y {": i 1 ; YY ' %q'r: 1"V M1f 1. }" $$.. yyr f4 'M 'w 4 : 1"w sr y .{ J x:41 , ' ;+: r. 7 ..+: ;: }; y q R°"' . _ An Editorial. SO WHAT IF ROGER HEYNS leaves the University? Is that really so terrible? Aren't there always other competent ad- ministrators around to keep house? Wouldn't Heyns, in fact, be more useful to Berkeley than to the University, in whatever position? And why, after all, is it of any importance to the students anyway? One at a time. -Yes, it is terrible. Faculty have declared en masse that it would be a disaster. The University's corps of seven vice-presidents is extremely strong and effective. But the vital link, the link to faculty throughout the University, would be lost without Heyns. -Yes, there are probably some other competent administra- tors around to keep the academic affairs house in order. But we need more. We need a planner, an innovator, a persuader and a sympathizer. We have one who is the envy of every institution in the country. Let's not lose him. -No, Berkeley doesn't need him any more than the Univer- sity does. Berkeley has already got the man they need to do the job: Meyerson. They should let him do it. This university has a long way to go yet before it can really call itself what it pre- tends to be-a great institution. -It is important to the students for two reasons: Heyns is the person most responsible for the quality of education they get at the University; and he has shown the same sympathy and concern and thoughtfulness about student academic affairs that he has about faculty academic affairs. He is willing to align him- self on the side of students interested in getting an education here. YES, IT WOULD BE A DISASTER if Roger Heyns left the University. -Judith Warren, Co-Editor -Robert Johnston, Editor, 1965-66 -Jeffrey Goodman, Editorial Director, 1965-66 -Edward Herstein, Sports Editor Greeks Rioting over Papandreou Ouster ATHENS, Greece (P)-More than 10,000 screaming demonstrators fought club-wielding police last night in wild street fighting that saw dozens of foreign tourists felled by tear gas hurled against the fighters. At least one person was killed and 150 were injured as the vio- lence over the king-versus-parliament crisis turned Athens into a battleground. The man killed was a 25-year-old Athens student. Police Police patrolled the littered and blood-stained streets during the worst night of rioting to shake the capital of this Atlantic Alliance nation in years. For nearly three hours, almost up to midnight, police using clubs, half-track trucks, fire engines and tear gas fought running battles Conference Group 0K Final Medicare 'FacUlty Give Regents Statements on Heyns Expressions .of concern over the possible resignation of Vice- President for Academic Affairs Roger W. Heyns to accept the chancellorship at California's Berkeley campus reached a peak yes- terday as the Regents were inundated with letters and other state- ments from the faculty.. Tuesday afternoon the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs held an unprecedented summer meeting and unanimously passed a statement assuring the Regents of support in whatever1 moves they might take to retain Heyns. Similar statements have been prepared and passed by: the aca- demic advisory council, consisting of the college deans and the head; of the library; the executive com- mittee of the literary college; and, a group of department chairmen and institute directors.; The Detroit News said yester- day, "What some faculty members have talked about - for many" years actually-is an administra- tive reorganization that would create a. position between the presidency and the seven second- echelon vice-presidents." The Regents will hold their reg- ular monthly meeting tonight and tomorrow. Only the afternoon ses- sion tomorrow is public. Heyns told the News that he would re- turn from vacation for the public session. Prof. Clarence K. Pott, chair- man of the German department, commenting on- the faculty reso- lution, said, "Our only motive is to let the Regents know that they have the full support of the fac- ulty in any steps they think might be necessary to keep Heyns-to strengthen their hand, so to{ speak." Heyns has been mentioned fre- quently to replace President Har- lan Hatcher when he reaches mandatory retirement age in 1967. News of the Berkeley offer came out last week when two California regents said that Heyns was be- ing "carefully considered' for the job." 'To Argue 'White-Only' Girard Case By ROBERT MOORE A hundred-year-old dispute in- volving civil rights, education and law will come one step closer to an end today when federal and state officials meet with trustees of Philadelphia's Girard College to arrange a judicial test for a white-only clause in Girard's rules. The white-only clause was en- tered about 117 years' ago when Stephen Girard left $5 million for a school for "white male orphans"; long standing controversy erupted into violence on July 12 when pickets of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) clashed with police during a hearing. Court Test The officials.are meeting to de- cide on a mutually acceptable method of bringing the case to court. Girard College's 13 trustees have agreed to abide by a decision of the courts-although they may appeal an unfavorable decision all the way to the Supreme Court. NAACP pickets have been parad- ing around the building day and night since May 1. There has been no reported violence since the July 12 outbreak. Controversial Clause The first court involved in a question would probably be the Philadelphia Orphans C o u r t, which handles wills. Earlier, one court ruling had allowed the college to keep the white-only clause of Girard's will, but had caused the governing body of the college, the trustees, to change to a body of private in- dividuals from its previous com- position of city officials. The July 12 rioting occurred as Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton and Philadelphia Mayor James Tate were meeting with school representatives. Arrests At least five persons were ar- rested outside the 20-story build- ing where the hearing was being held, just four blocks from City Hall. Two policemen were taken to Philadelphia General Hospital af- ter being kicked during the melee. The fighting lasted less than ten minutes; state employees sealed off the building's eight elevators to prevent anyone from trying to reach the penthouse meeting room where the hearing was being held. The white-only condition is now held unconstitutional. The ques- tion is whether Girard's will can be broken. This case is similar to one at Sweet Briar College in Virginia. The school is endowed in a will stipulating that only white wom- en be admitted. with the rioters demonstrating for ousted Premier George Pa- pandreou., Broken glass from store win- dows glistened in the streets, splotched here and there by blood. Appeal In the midst of the rioting, as the city resounded to the crash and screams of fighting, new Premier George Athanasiadis No- vas went on the air to appeal for peace. Papandreou, at the same time, vowed to continue his fight to re- turn to'the job from which King Constantine ousted him in a royal power struggle over control of the armed forces. Papandreou said the basic ques- tion was whether the king or the parliamentary cabinet had the real power in Greece. Constantine Many of his followers want to get rid of Constantine. In a country where three kings have been exiled in similar fights, the crisis held crucial significance for 25-year-old Constantine and his Danish queen, Anne Marie. Greece was in its worst crisis since the Communist civil war of 1947-49. Injuries Police reported 40 of their men were among the injured. Fifty persons were arrested. The battle raged for nearly three hours before a degree of calm was restored. Rioters, coughing and weeping from the gas, trampled one an- other trying to flee the club- swinging gas-masked police.. Ambulances criss - crossed the heart of the city, bringing first- aide teams and carrying injured to hospitals. The streets were littered with casualties. In Salonika, Greece's second largest city, 20,000 demonstra- tors attended a mass rally for Papandreou in the football sta- dium. They burned an effigy of the new premier while shouting "traitor." Athanasiadis Novas said he would ask Parliament for a vote of confidence July 30. If he loses it, under Greek parliamentary rules he is supposed to quit. Say Viet Cong Weant To Talk By CHARLOTTE WOLTER Two members of the teach-in novement returned yesterday from! Viet Nam and said they had news :f a major new peace proposal irom the National Liberation Front )f South Viet Nam. The two are Robert S. Browne, economics professor at Farleigh Dickenson University, Teaneck, thew Jersey, and Carl Ogesby pres- ident of Students for a Demo- ,ratic Society. A third member, Jonathan Mirsky, professor of hinese at Pennsylvania State University, remained in Viet Nam to tour the countryside. The three Made up a fact find- ing mission whose purpose was to sound out Vietnamese opinion on all questions associated with the intensifying war. The group talk- sd with former and present gov- arnment officials, religious lead- ers, students, businessmen, intel- lectuals, and other citizens. Contacts The group made contact with spokesmen for the National Lib- aration Front first in Paris on July 5, then in Saigon on July 7, and in Hue, Viet Nam on July 14. It was in Saigon, from Eric Wolfe, a German doctor who has been in Viet Nam for many years and who Terms * Two Houses Wil Approv Compro mise To Increase Benefits, Establish Insurance, Hospital Programs WASHINGTON UP)-A confer ence committee of the House an Senate agreed yesterday on tern of a historic bill to provide hos pitalization and other medic services for all Americans over 6 It provides also for higher soci was security pension payments., nedy Of highest priority to Presider aedy Lyndon B. Johnson and his legit ap- ,lative lieutenants, the bill will 1 put to the House and then to n Senate for final approval begi ning Tuesday. That approval ar Johnson's signature are considere a cinch. rias contacts with the NLF, that they first learned of the specific four-point proposal of the Front. According to Browne and Ogles- by, the NLF apparently no longer insists on the withdrawal of U.S. forces as a precondition for ne- ;otiations. The four points of the plan are -Immediate cessation of all mil- itary action in both South and North Viet Nam -A temporary freeze of both sides' zones of occupation in South Viet Nam. -Negotiations between all in- terested parties, including North and South Viet Nam, the USSR, China, the United States, and the NLF. -Withdrawal from the South of all non-Vietnamese interests when the -basis for a coalition government had been achieved. Obstacles Oglesby said, "The two major obstacles to peace so far have been the NLF's requirement that the U.S. withdraw before talks can be- gin and Washington's refusal to recognize the NLF as a separate voice in negotiations. The first ob- stacle now seems to be removed. If the U.S. will remove the sec- onli, there may be a distinct op- EDUCA TION CONFERENCE: Urge Federal Participation. ALTHOUGH MEDICARE LEGISLATION was proposed in Harry Truman's administration, it labeled a "socialistic" measure and was defeated. Similar legislation supported by John Kenn was bogged down in Congress, but yesterday the conference committee of the House and Senate proved a medicare bill backed by President Lyndon B. Johnson. TEACH-IN MISSION: PROF. CLARENCE K. POTT portunity for an honorable cessa- tion of conflict." Browne pointed out further that "the new NLF proposal does not oblige the U.S. to agree to an unacceptable downgrading of the South Vietnamese government. It is now possible for the U.S. to test the sincerity of the other side by calling for a temporary and unconditional cease-fire during which time all movement of men and arms would be frozen and opportunities for negotiation could be explored." Proposal The new NLF proposal, which was also presented to the Ameri- can delegation of ministers to Viet Nam, a group of church of-' ficals who sponsored their own fact-finding mission, was report- ed to offilcals at the U.S. embassy in Saigon, the two said. According to Browne, the group found strong support for an im- mediate cease-fire among the vast majority of the Vietnamese to whom it spoke. Oglesby noted one official of the present regime of Gen. Kao Ky as saying, "This war is murdering Viet Nam." The trip to Viet Nam was made by Browne, Mirksy, and Oglesby under the sponsorship of the In- ter-University Committee for Oe- bate on Foreign Policy, a group which represents a continuation of the teach-in movement on a national level. The results of the trip were aired at a meeting of members of the teach-in group last night, at which Oglesby spoke in detail of the trip. The mission to Viet Nam war was made by Browne Mirsky, and Oglesby under the sponsorship of the Inter-University Committee for Debate on Foreign policy, a group which represents a contin- uation o fthe teach-in movement on a national level. Similar mis- sions are being considered forsthe near future. Information. Booth To Open A new information center will begin operation next Monday on the diag. The center, valued at nearly $3000, was the gift of the Class of 1964. It will be used for adver- tising signs by student and Uni- versity organizations. "It is hoped the center will con- trol the haphazard display of big board signs around the diag and serve as an attractive and func- tional improvement to the main campus area," Lauren Bowler, president of the Senior Board for 1964, told President Harlan Hatch- er in presenting the gift. The nine-foot center has ver- tical alumnium pillars, topped with decorative four-foot plastic squares and globe lights. Four - foot - square signboards, with burlap coverings to, allow' pins. will be placed between the Breakthrough This majorkbreakthrough in social legislation will attempt to strike at the burdens of old age in three major ways: * Establish a comprehensivi hospitalization, nursing home and home nursing program for every- one over 65. * Set up a voluntary insurance system providing payment for some doctor and dental surgeon bills. * Increase by 7 per cent al cash benefits under the already established old age, survivors an disability insurance program. Benefits Retroactive The increase in benefits is retro active to last Jan. 1. If the bil becomes law before the end o July, the social security admin istration plans to mail checks fo nearly $1 billion in-retroactive in crease along with the regula September checks. This broadest expansion of th social security system since it waE established 30 years ago will bring with it higher social security taxes A worker earning $6,600 or mor will pay $277.20 next year and hi employer a like amount. This yea the tax on each was $174. Final agreement was reached a a sixth meeting of the conferees They began last Wednesday th arduous business of resolving th 513 changes the Senate made it the House-passed bill. Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La exulted when the conferees wor was done: "The many provision: of the bill that, provide for tb aged, the poor people, the children the blind and the disabled mak me want to cheer." Senate Version As the bill cleared the Hous April 8 it carried about $6 billio in benefits. The Senate was mor liberal, and when it was done wit the bill July 9 it carried about $7. billion for America's pensioners. At the same time, the Senat( wrote in a larger tax bite than tb House had. In general, the conferees fol lowed the Senate's course with on( especially significant exception:. : junked a Senate amendment t allow workers to retire at 60 an receive two-thirds of the benefil that normally would come to ther at 65. Talks Continue To Ban Latin Nuclear Arms, UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ())- Latin American sources said yes- terday that the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union had agreed in principle to support a proposal to keep Latin America free of nuclear weapons. They said France was reserved. The informants told reporters the United States was agreeable provided there was proper verifi- cation of the agreement and proper delimitation of the zone to be covered. They said the Soviet Union de- clared it favored nuclear-free zones in general and would support one for Latin America provided Cuba was included. Cuba Declines However, they explained, Cuba declined to enter into such an agreement unless the United States wolud abandon its bases on Cuba's Guantanamo Bay and in Puerto Rico and Panama. Brazil first proposed in 1962 that the general assembly endorse the idea of a nuclear-free Latin Amer- ica. Mexico took up the idea in 1963, and sponsored a resolution with Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecua- dor and Uruguay. The resolution, which the assem- bly adopted, approved the idea that Tatin American countries By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - A group of about 1000 leaders in education, business, labor and government submitted a report to President Lyndon B. Johnson yesterday urg- ing the federal government to ex- pand its participation in educa- tional matters from the pre-school to the graduate levels. Presentation of the report mark- ed the end of a two-day White House conference on education, attended by several University representatives, including Presi- dent Harlan Hatcher and Regent Eugene B. Power. Johnson ad- dressed the conferees shortly after receiving the report. The conference pressed for ex- pansion of Operation Head Start, a program started last summer to aid culturally deprived children who will enter the first grade in the fall. More Preparation Eight weeps of pre-school prep- aration as now provided by Oper- ation Head Start isn't enough, the conferees contended; help should begin no later than age three for youngsters who otherwise would begin first grade with no vocabu- lary and no incentive to learn. ARTIFICIAL TOOTH: Dentistry Research Grains New Impoetus, A panel agreed that the pro- gram should be expanded to help children earlier and continue giv- ing them help through the second and third grades. Several speak- ers also noted the value of getting parents of slum children involved in the program. Dr. Benjamin. Spock, noted authority on child care, warned, however, that it is important to think in terms not of educating the parents, but of accepting them. The parents too often feel despised by the schools, he said. Desegregation During discussions on desegre- gation Tuesday, the conferees blamed Congress, the federal gov- ernment, parents, clergymen andl educators for slowing the pace of integration. Also on Wednesday, Gov. John Reed of Maine and President- Emeritus James B. Conant of Harvard both asserted that the states must take the lead in guid- ing education with the federal government serving only when asked. However, Reed said that he was happy because the federal government has been active in the educational sphere. Summarizing the position of a panel, Reed said: "I'm delighted to see the federal government take an increasing role in education, but the states should remain prime movers." Conferees Praised Johnson praised the conferees vYsterdav. saying we are "busy By BARBARA SEYFRIED In an effort to determine guidelines for restoring damaged or destroyed teeth, scientists at the dentistry school have constructed what may be the world's most elaborate tooth. The purpose of the development of the 'tooth' is to provide a delicate measuring system which can measure muscle forces in human teeth. Scientists have crammed six miniature radio "stations," which have 28 electronic components with special bondings and two re- chargeable batteries into an artificial tooth. Planning More than two years of planning and assembly as well as a number of refinements in miniaturization, telemetry and solid state physics were needed before the 'tooth' could be created. rrl..6+n+ ,vv- f; a-- Ato n . n o l +hp nl53. of r mP Provisions Otherwise, the conferees agre with the Senate that the fi: $6,600 of income should be subje to social security taxes. The Hou had chosen $5,600 for 1966 throu 1970 and $6,600 afterward. And, although social securi statisticians are still counting the dollars and cents, they es mate the benefits will approach billion. A health care program for olc Americans was first advanced, a limited scale, in the Truman a ministration two decades ago. ran into charges of socialized me icine and never got off the grour Opposition These cries were no less stride when the late President John Kennedy advanced a broaden program and when Lyndon Johnson embraced it upon acce ing to thepresidency. They ha largely subsided of late, thou ".:, . ..":".. ... &s.: . " k . L . .... i