U' TOWERS, DORMS MAY BRING PROTESTS See Editorial Page C, 4c ir~igaux 41IaitF CLOUDY High--73 Low-44 Chance of showers, warmer Sunday Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 14-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY MAY 22, 196 SEVEN CENTS TFT (l Z T" - U'EN FOUR PAGES f U.S. Viet forces Anti-HUAC Leader Urges Protest of Hearings To Grow Steadily Use of New Troops To Defend Aircraft Perimeter Called Realistic WASHINGTON 03) - There will be a steady increase in the! number of American troops, including combat forces, sent to Viet Nam, authoritative sources said yesterday. The additional troops may amount to a 50 per cent increase over the approximately 50,000 now in Viet Nam, it was learned. Officials said that if a decision is made for the American troops to take a more active combat role, the manpower will be in position to carry out such orders. For the present, it is planned that additional forces will be used to extend the defensive perimeters around areas from which U.S. Frank Wilkinson, executive director and field representative of the National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee, last night urged that students hold dem- onstrations in protest of upcoming HUAC hearings in Chicago. Wilkinson spoke in the Unitarian Church under the auspices of the Friends of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, the Social Action Committee of the Unitarian Church and the American Civil Liberties Union. In an earlier interview, he said that the hearings in Chicago were a preparation for a full-scale investigation of integrationists' activities in the South. He pointed out that Rep. Prentiss Walker (R-Miss) has introduced a bill to the House which, if passed, would finance a HUAC investigation of the integration activities of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the Southern Christian Educa- tion Fund, SNCC, the Conference of Federated Organizations and the Congress of Racial Equality. L~n AA- +1, T-TT~f 1^no nn +. ,..,,.L;".. gating the integration activities, Wilkinson said. The subcommittee consists of ardent segregationists who led the fight against the 1964 Civil Right Bill, Wilkinson said. He added that the purpose of the HUAC investigation was to weaken the civil rights movement. "Their next move will be an all out attack on the civil rights movement under an alleged investi- gation of the Ku Klux Klan." In Chicago, civil rights leaders are urging students and other interested members of the community to demonstrate against the coming HUAC hearings. The committee to abolish HUAC is also setting up other protest demonstrations all over the country. Wilk- inson said. If the hearings are not cancelled, students and civil rights leaders in Chicago plan to hold a massive picket in front of the Federal Bldg. where the hearings are to be held. Wilkinson said the leaders are hoping for a turnout of thou- sands of demonstrators. He charged that HUAC gains its power by putting the "red" label on persons working for integration and other areas of social concern. "Until two years ago, a vote against anything HUAC favored was political suicide," Wilkinson pointed out. "Now the public's attitude has changed." Every congressman who voted against HUAC was reelected by an overwhelming majority, while three of the nine members on HUAC were defeated, he said. The committee to abolish HUAC is currently working for more widespread support. Already, Wilkinson said, the Democratic party has 70 representatives on record as opposed to HUAC. Ten are from Michigan. "We are working to build congressional district committees to carry on educational programs designed to enlist support for the abolshment of HUAC by putting pressure on the House," he said. LYNDON B. JOHNSON Marxist Fails To Address- cHe added the HUAC has a and Vietnamese a i r c r a f t are the Ku Klux Klan, but not operating o F opposed to this investigation c No Figure the constitutional rights of all No one has set an absolete fig- ure on what the total requirement Rev. Martin Luther King] may be in the future. But for the asking that investigations be1 immediate period ahead, a total of acts of the Klan, Wilkinson sai 75,000 American troops in South King also asked that a Viet Nam is called "not unreal- vestigation instead of a come istic." such as HUAC. King is suppoi The question of a more direct saSH. combat role will "speak for itself and SCEF.r as time and circumstances evolve," Another indication of the a well-placed source said. "We ex- may be held in the South ar pect a more direct combat role." Edwin Willis (D-La), head of F As a result of the increased manpower demands in Viet Nam, the Los Angeles Times reported yesterday, the formation of a new flfltn fl Marine Corps division through a UE/.E/ callup of Reserves is being ser- iously considered by the Defense ti l F exi The newspaper said this may become necessary because of the dispatch of the 1st Marine divi- By BRUCE IN sion from Camp Pendleton, Calif., to Okinawa to repface 3rd Marine The State Board of Educati division units recently moved from decision that the University adm the island toSouth Viet Nam. branch in Flint, Chairman Thorr. No Plans Brennan explained that altho A Defense Department spokes- in the Flint case was to establish man said "there are no plans at does not want to create a a "gap this time to call Marine Corps Reserves." The Pentagon refused to comment on the reported plan to move the 1st Marine division ove To Get from California. On May 7, the U.S. military ad- l uV ote visory command in Viet Nam said there were 42,200 American troops including 18,000 Army; 1,800 Navy; 9,300 Air Force and 12,300 WASHINGTON (AR) - Senate Marines. The figure now is re- leaders moved yesterday to choke ported to have reached a total of off debate on President Lyndon B. 48,000. Johnson's Negro voting rights bill. The hardening U.S. attitude re- A survey of senators bolstered Re- sulted from the rebuff to Presi- publican leader Everett M. Dirk- dent Lyndon B. Johnson's offer sen's forecast of success in the of April 7 for unconditional dis- showdown next Tuesday. cussions with North Viet Nam. But a band of uncommitted or The latest Chinese Communist unannounced senators, most of expression on the Southeast Asian them Republicans, appeared to situation was directed by Premier hold the balance in the cloture Chou En-lai to Cambodia's chief vote that will come one hour after of state, Prince Norodom Siha- the Senate begins its 24th day of nouk. debate on the measure. Chou said that "should U.S. imperialism dare to spread the If the two-thirds vote needed flames of aggressive war to the to halt the debate is mustered, Kingdom of Cambodia, the Chi- it will be the second time the Sen- nese people absolutely will not ate has invoked its cloture rule stand idly by." on a civil rights bill. While attacking the United Among senators who have made States, the Chinese Communist their positions known, in an Asso- leader also sharply rebuked the ciated Press survey or through Soviet Union, saying in the Cam- their public stands on the action, bodia message monitored here there were 25 votes against clot- yesterday: .ure. OAS Force To Replace U.S. Dominican Troons 7alls Board Regents Boost Planning Role ble on Flint ASSElSTEIN of Natural Resources School on will be flexible in applying its nit only one freshman class to its ugh Brennan disclosed yesterday. RADIOLOGY ouhthe primary goal of the board a new four year college, the board 1 " in the area's educational system. 117 DEPARTMENT: SShifting of ahairran Major Unit Uready received $50,000 to investigate ed that liberal integrationists are on the grounds that HUAC violates -both on the right and on the left. has sent a petition to the President limited to probing the overt violent .d. Presidential Committee do the in- mittee from the legislative branch rted in his request by CORE, SNCC type of HUAC investigation which re the appointments mad6 by Rep. HUAC, for the subcommittee investi- FRANK WILKINSON, executive director of the National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American Activities Com- mittee, yesterday urged students to protest the upcoming HUAC hearings to be held in Chicago. iL!17 -< OSU Crowd By MICHAEL BADAMO Marxist speaker Herbert Ap- theker made a previously an- nounced appearance at Ohio State University yesterday, but did not speak because of an alleg- ed threat to his life. About 2000 OSU students mass- ed on that university's oval in the center of campus, where Aptheker was scheduled to speak. A down- pour forced them to retire to OSU's University Hall where they waited impatiently for Aptheker to appear. OSU rules prohibit speeches on campus inimical to "the best in- terests of the university." The administration had predicted that Aptheker and his sponsors would be sanctioned if he spoke on cam- pus yesterday. OSU could have de- tained him by using both state and university police. Arrives At 4:20 p.m. Aptheker arrived at the hall, escorted by OSU's Free Speech Front leaders Jeffrey Schwartz and Dennis Knepley, and members of FSF's coordinat- ing committee. Upon the group's arrival at the hall it immediately retired backstage. Sanford Weinberg, an instruc- tor of romance languages at OSU, spoke to the packed hall and told the crowd of Aptheker's qualifica- tions for speaking on a university campus. While Weinberg was speaking OSU Vice-President John Corbally went backstage amid numerous plainclothes FBI agents, Ohio State Police, Columbus City Po- lice, and OSU campus security police and conferred privately with Schwartz. Immediately after, Schwartz emerged from behind the curtain and interrupted Weinberg. He said that a threat had been made on Aptheker's life but that Apthe- ker would make an appearance and not speak. *hTherefore, Brennan predicted, I FIV/ 1 t4 L ltf" I the board Would seriously con-. sider recommending the Univer- sity admit another freshman class The Regents announced the ap- to its Flint branch, if work on the pointment of Dr. Walter M. new college is not advanced Whitehouse as chairman of the enough to let it take in students. radiology department and the res- 'Misunderstanding' ignation of Steven Attwood as Saying that some people had dean of the engineering college at misunderstood the board's de- their monthly meeting yesterday. cisions on Flint, Brennan said Also discussed at the meeting that he elaborated on the board's were academic issues such as resi- thoughts and their flexibility dence tuition, academic appoint- is MadeC ments, faculty salaries and new degree programs. Whitehouse replaces Dr. Fred J. Hodges who served as chair- man of the radiology department for 31 years; Atwood, at 67, is retiring two years before he reach- es the mandatory retirement age. A native of Millersburg, Ohio, Whitehouse attended secondary school in Ypsilanti and received an A.B. at Eastern Michigan Uni- versity in 1936. He attained from the University an M.S. degree in physics in 1937 and an M.D. in 1941. Dean Since 1958 nr v t. v s A V v{l m y Significant in a position paper which wasj sent to the Regents this week. The Regents had no comments on the position paper in their monthly meeting yesterday. Originally the University had intended to make its two year senior college at Flint into a permanent four year institution. The Flint branch has already ad- mitted a freshman class, and money had been pledged for the expansion of the branch by the Charles Stewart Mott foundation. Requested The opinion of the State Board of Education on the Flint ques- tion was requested by the Michi- gan Senate Appropriations Com- mittee after the diametrically op- posed viewpoints of Gov. George Romney and University President Harlan Hatcher captured banner headlines across the state this spring. Romney did not include money for the branch expansion in his budget while President Hatcher insisted that in spite of Romney the University would enter a freshman class at Flint next fall. Sen. Garland Lane (D-Flint), chairman of the Senate Appro- priations Committee, said at the time of the board's decision he "will not favor an autonomous four year school as long as the city of Flint remains happy with the University." Arab Leader Blasts Nasser TUNIS P) -- President Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia .yesterday Attwood has been dean of the formally rejected Arab national- engineering college since 1958. His ism sweeping the Middle East and chief field of interest is the ap- warned that his withdrawal from plication of the electromagnetic the Arab League might follow., I field theory to problems in elec- Bourguiba thus seems to have trical engineering. given up Arab ties in favor of in- The Regents also approved a creased cooperation with the West motion by Vice-President for Aca- and particularly the United States demic Affairs Roger W. Heyns to amidst indications of U.S. aid. establish an undergraduate pro- gram in nuclear engineering. President Gamal Abdel Nasser According to Heyns, the pro- of the United Arab Republic was gram makes possible specialiation the main reason for Bourguiba's at the undergraduate level in the position, outlined in a major poli- release, control and utilization of cy speech before officials of the energy from nuclear sources. ruling Socialist Destour party. He said that the skills learn- The speech followed an earlier ed in such a program can be ap- feud with most Middle East coun- plied in the expanding nuclear tries over Bourguiba's proposal to power industry as well as for de- negotiate with Israel. velopment work in controlled fu- Attacking Nasser during his sion, nuclear desalting of water speech, Bourguiba made it clear and the use of nuclear explosives he follows an independent policy, for large scale excavations and earth moving. "These gentlemen in the Mid- The University already offers dle East," he said, "have formed a degrees in nuclear engineering at habit of considering themselves as the graduate level. tutors o fthe Arabs.. . They think Reaction they can uproot all regimes which Reacting to the number of fac- refuse to be subjugated." ulty resignations which were sub- WALTER WHITEHOUSE mitted this month, Regent Fred- erick Mattaei inquired if this was a reflection on the salary paid by the University. Heyns explained that most pro- fessors were leaving because of special opportunities offered by the other institutions. He said that a large number were on this month's list because this was the season when professors usually submit their resignations. The Regents also inquired about the lack of publication by some of the faculty members recom- mended for promotions. Heyns explained that promo- tions are based upon teaching, re- search and service. Excellence in one area as well as substantial contributions in the remaining two areas are prerequisite to pro- motion, he said. Landscape Section Transferred from Architecture College By BARBARA SEYFRIED New directions in the natural resources school appeared to be taking shape yesterday as the Regents approved the transfer of the landscape architecture depart- ment to that school from' the architecture college. Vice-President for Academic Affairs Roger W. Heyns, in rec- ommending the transfer, noted the increasing emphasis in the Uni- versity on urban and regional de- velopment and planning. The transfer seems to indicate that this new total planning con- cept will be given increasing at- tention as academic involvement in area developmental theory and planning increases throughout the country and as American cities become larger, more diffuse and more complex-modeled after the East Coast Megalopolis. Committee A University-wide committee in- cludingrepresentatives from the literary college, the public health school, the natural resources school and the architecture col- lege is working to develop pro- grams in planning here, Dean Stephen Spurr of the natural re- sources school and the graduate school said yesterday. Apparently the transfer of land- scape architecture will strengthen the involvement of the natural re- sources school in such planning programs. Prof. Walter Chambers, head of the landscape architecture depart- ment, explained that the trend in landscape architecture started over 100 years ago. Chambers said that the depart- ment would not sever ties with the architecture. college and a planning department which is an- ticipated there. The interrelation- ship of the fields necessitates a constant collaboration of the architecture school and the na- tural resource school, he said. Brings Concepts According to Dean Stephen Spurr of the natural resources school, this change would bring the concepts of design into the natural resource school. These can be combined with the knowledge and skills of the, resource school in dealing with effective planning and utilization of natural re- sources, he said. Spurr predicted that the trans- - -I-- WASHINGTON ()--The United States announced last night that it will soon withdraw about 1700 troops from the Dominican Repub- lic. About 23,000 Americ'an Marines and paratroopers are in the strife- torn Caribbean country. The first of them were sent in April 28. The U.S. has said previously that it will yield the peace-keeping chores to an international force authorized by the Organization of American states. Last night Am- bassador Ellsworth Bunker told a ' COULD W N 1 special OAS conference that the T 9 COULD S IN T U.S. withdrawal will start with the arrival of a Brazilian contingent" t e Hp of 1250 troops in the Dominican BrTitle Hop go by ship, they may not get there for another week or so. By The Asso I ?HREE CROWNS: es Disappear in Baseball, Grow in Tennis ociated Press No Figures Bunker did not give any fig- ures on the size of the U.S .with- Waves, But Silent drawal in his statement to the At this point Aptheker cane OAS, but said it would be equiv- from behind the curtain and alent to the number of Latin waved to the applauding students. American soldiers in the Domini- He retired immediately behind the can Republic. curtain again. There are now in Santo Domin- He was then led down the cen- go 250 soldiers from Honduras, 158 ter aisle of the hall, shielded by a from Nicaragua, and 20 policemen large number of FSF personnel from Costa Rica. and a few members of the OSU Send Men administration. The party, which At the opening of the OAS spe- numbered about 100-half news- cial conference called to appoint a COLUMBUS, Ohio-Michigan's 1965 baseball team was a Cin- derella whose clock struck midnight 24 hours too soon. Not highly regarded at the season's start and winning just one of their first eight games, the Wolverines went on to take eight Big Ten contests in a row and would have been in an excellent position to grab the conference crown if they could have beaten league-leading Ohio State yesterday. But the Buckeyes had Steve Arlin, and he pitched 16 innings and set a Big Ten strikeout record as he beat Michigan 4-3 in the longest conference game of the season. Coupled with Michigan State's 6-1 defeat of Indiana, the loss eliminated any Wolverine title hopes, Arlin gave up 10 hits and struck out 13 to surpass by one Jack l Bruner's conference record of 67 strikeouts in one season. Bruner I ±ctah1k.,1,i t V1mnrii,1r1n1nvin frT fn, Tra in 19 4 Special To The Daily BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-Michigan took a long step toward re- gaining the tennis title it has narrowly missed the last two seasons by winning eight of nine matches in yesterday's Big Ten semi-finals to take a three-point lead over favored Indiana in the Big Ten conference meet. The Wolverines now have the upper hand going into today's final round. They have five singles players and all three doubles squads in the finals while the Hoosiers will be in only seven tilts. Michigan's lone loss yesterday came as Indiana's second-seeded; Dave Powers bested a strong effort by Karl Hedrick in number one singles, 8-6, 10-8. Indiana was beaten by Michigan State in number five singles and Michigan's top-seeded John Fraser and Hal Lowel defeated Hoosiers Charlie Kane and Mike Baer in a very close num- hbr twod ineh match .4-6 .8- 6.6-4 T.nwe and Fraser were down K { {{;}:.