PROFESSIONAL BOXING MUST BE OUTLAWED See Editorial Page i[17,4 C SirA6 ~~E*aitF WARM, SHOWERS High-S Low-63 Hot, humid today possibility of thundershowers Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 16-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1965 SEVEN CENT S FOUR PAGES Senate Limits Rights Bill b Debate on Voting Invoking Cloturc 'U' To Send TEACH-IN. MORATORIUM: Leaders Say -Associated Press MISS LOLA BELL HOLMES, above center, testified yesterday in Chicago before the House Commit- tee on Un-American Activities, asserting that the Communist Party does not have economic ad- vancement for Negroes as an aim. The hearings were picketed by over 800 people. Pickets Greet HUAC Hearings By The Associated Press CHICAGO-In a building here surrounded by picketers number- ing over 800, the House Commit- tee on Un-American Activities yesterday opened a three-day probe of the Communist Party of Illinois. The only witness the committee heard before adjourning until 9 a.m. this morning was Miss Lola Bell Holmes, who testified she had spied for the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a member of the Communist Party. The pickets, more numerous than expected, blockaded a police patrol wagon by lying under its wheels during a luncheon break. During the day, police and fed- eral marshals arrested 17 persons and charged them with resisting arrest, interfering with police and disorderly conduct. 100 Police A detail of 100 policeman guard- ed the front and rear entrances of the building, former site of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Lake Shore Drive in Chicago's Gold Coasts neighborhood. Opponents of the hearings said that demonstrations will continue for the three days of committee sessions. The sessions are slated to end tomorrow. The local demonstrations have been largely organized by the+ Chicago Committee to Defend the Bill of Rights. Thirty to forty church, civil rights, student and labor groups contributed pickets yesterday. In 1960, hearings in San Fran- cisco similar to the current ones sparked student demonstrations in which 64 persons were arrested. Testifies Testifying before the committee, Miss Holmes said Communists are attempting to sabotage the civil rights movement. She told the committee Communists want the "depression among Negroes" to continue "so they (Communists' will have something to work on." She related that the 1959 Com- munist Party convention featured a split in the party between those favoring nationalism and those desiring integration for Negroes. Miss Holmes said that Com- munists tried to infiltrate several leading civil rights organizations and some churches, but said that the attempted infiltration was done without the knowledge of the leadership of the organizations. More To Come? During a recess yesterday, the chairman of the investigating committee, Rep. Edwin Willis (D- La) was asked if the committee plans to look into the civil rights movement. He replied that the committee is aware of alleged Communist efforts in the civil rights movement and added, "We're not losing sight of our jurisdiction in that area." A federal judge rejected Monday a suit attempting to stop the hear- ings on the ground that the com- mittee is unconstitutional. The suit was brought by two of the 11 Chicago area residents who have been subpoenaed by the commit- tee. Lawyers for the two-Dr. Jere- miah Stamler and Mrs. Yolanda Hall-said they will ask the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals today to reverse the ruling. Specialist Stamler is a heart disease spe- cialist on the Chicago Board of Health and Mrs. Hall is his assis- tant. The suit said he has been called as a witness because of Mrs. Hall's activity in behalf of racially integrating the West Side Austin neighborhood. Stamler said yesterday, "I take this serious and important legal step-on advice of counsel-in the belief that as a professional man, scientist and public servant I have special responsibilities to my fel- low citizens." It is not known on which day Stamler and Miss Hall will be asked to testify. The hearings are open to the public, but committee members are not revealing what time various witnesses will be call- ed. 'No Purpose' Richard Criley, secretary to the Chicago Committee to Defend the Bill of Rights, charged that "There is no legislative purpose to these hearings whatsoever. It is the old HUAC game to try and find a headline." In opening the hearings, Chair- man Willis said the presence of the committee in Chicago should not be considered as an affront: "Rather," he said, "the hearings are a tribute (to Chicago), a rec- ognition of the tremendous im- portance the enemies of this coun- try, both here and abroad, attach to Illinois and its great city, Chi- cago." Answer To Board Stand, The University will probably send a letter to State Board of Education President Thomas Brennan this week to "acknowl- edge" his explanation of the board's recent Flint ruling, ac- cording to Prof. Erich Walter, secretary to the University. Brennan submitted a complete rationale for the board's stand on expansion of the University's Flint branch at the Regents meet- ing last Friday. Walter did not indicate whether the acknowledgement will be a simple reply or a full statement of University policy on the con- troversial Flint issue. More Controversy In Lansing, reports implying that the state board would soon become involved in another con- troversy were discounted yesterday by Brennan and Rep. J. Bob Traxler (D-Saginaw). The question arose when the House passed a bill to permit es- tablishment of a new state college in the Saginaw Valley area. Trax- ler added an amendment to the bill, stipulating that the legisla- ture must approve the site for the school-a move interpreted by; some as a "slap" at the state board. Originally, the bill entrust- ed the board alone with the final decision on location of the campus. Brennan has stated that the board intended to leave the deci- sion up to local authorities as long as no attempt is made to locate the new school on the present campus of Delta College. STraxler has expressed a prefer- ence for the Delta College loca- tion. However, Traxler denied last night that he will fight the board on this issue. Amendment's Intention "While the Delta College site is my first choice," he said, "it now appears unlikely that this will be the eventual selection. The inten- tion of my amendment is merely to insure that private interests in the Saginaw Valley area don't lo- cate the school on a site not easily accessible to either Bay City, Sag- inaw or Midland." Private groups raising funds for the school have suggested locat-. ing it on the campus of a private school, Saginaw Valley College- a site Traxler considers unaccept- able. Presumably these are the lo- cal authorities that the state board would rely on. However, Brennan said he had talked with Traxler yesterday aft- ernoon and that he anticipated no conflict between the Legislature and the board. In addition to the Saginaw Col- lege bill, the House also passed a $505 million school aid bill for elementary and secondary schools. The appropriation is $71 million over the present allocation of $434 million. The ethics of faculty involve- ment in political protestsalike the recent Viet Nam teach-in and pro- posed class cancellation were ar- gued last night at a meeting of the American Association of Uni- versity Professors. Prof. Anatol Rapoport of the Mental Health Research Institute and Prof. Arthur Eastman of the English department presented op-j posing views on the protest ques- tion at the discussion meeting. Rapoport defended the teach- in movement. Imagine, he asked the 25 professors at the meeting,, if a group of professors in the Soviet Union held a work mora- torium or teach-in to protest im- moral acts by the Communist government: would it be wrong then? Or would it be courageous and fitting to their duties as edu- cators? Defends Policies "To us," recalled Rapoport, "the first signers of the class mora- torium statement, it appeared just that way. We felt government pol- icy in Viet Nam was both unwise and illegal." He held it was part of the edu- cator's duty. "Professors are not employes; they are in a position of trust. They are meant to in- troduce students to an under- standing of life." Eastman, however ,argued that a teach-in is often mainly politi- cal propagandizing and is "con- cerned with public noise." The very term "teach-in" is unfitting, he added. He said a moratorium was a clear breach of contract to both student and administration, and that, although in some cases it was justified, as in Rapoport's Russian example, it was usually a Commission To Hold Hearings The Michigan Civil Rights Com- mission has announced that pub- lic hearings on four local civil rights cases have been scheduled for 10 a.m., June 14. The hearings. will be held in Rm. 311, the Boule- vard Building, 310 Woodward Ave., Detroit. They include Bunyan Bryant, Jr. versus Cutler Hubble Company, L. Daniel Gray versus Cutler Hub- ble, Allan H. Jones versus Cutler Hubble and Arnold Galloway ver- sus Cutler Hubble. The complaints arose out of the alleged refusal of Cutler Hub- ble Company to rent its Ann Ar- bor apartments to Negroes. "The public hearings have been sched- uled by the commission after sat- isfactory resolution of the com- plaints was not achieved through conciliation," Burton R. Gordon, executive director of the commis- sion, commented. lof embarrassment; it goes against the "sanity of democratic insti-- tutions to move slowly and care- fully," he added. Attacks Movement What, asked Eastman, will the teach-in and classmoratorium be ,used for in the future? He said he foresaw grave abuses of it. He suggested to the administration: that they institute an open-forum plan to allow groups to discuss both sides of important questions and make holding of a teach-in or moratorium grounds for dis- missal from the faculty. A group of faculty and stu- dents, one of them Rapoport, an- nounced on March 12 a plan to cancel classes one day and to hold political discussion on U.S. Viet Nam policy instead. A UP Debates Protest EthicsP.as BOasy ROk d By ROBERT MOORE covert knof academic lakmailass.,Tday I PROF. EASTMAN Linguistics Institute Plans Rare Courses Second -term The University's Linguistic Institute will offer many rarely taught courses the second half of the summer session. The institute, sponsored jointly by the University and the Lin- guistic Society of America, will bring outstanding professors to the University for the summer session of IIIB, in order to teach "the most extensive variety of courses offered in the field of linguistics in a single university or college," Prof. Herbert. Paper, chairman of the linguistics department and di-t- rector of the institute this year, Mse . said recently. I vu er U nion The Linguistics Institute will- also sponsor a series of lectures PactlM ay E nd by noted linguists from all over Walsh Asserts the Solutions To Poverty Slow, omleX The world of the poor is an alien world and solutions to its problems are slow and complex, Ira Walsh, special assistant to Sargent Shriver, director of the Office of Economic Opportunity, said yester- day. Walsh, speaking at one of a series of University Lectures in Journalism, spoke both as a journalist and as an administrator about the "35 million Americans who are not members of the American community-the poor." Their destitute condition, Walsh said, is difficult to communicate: some average 21 cents per meal every day; they receive top average salaries of $12 per month; theirT children have never heard of nur- sery rhymes; many don't take baths because water is too valu- . able. "The poverty prison these peo-' ple are locked in is devastating," Walsh said. "But the most diffi- man-who would rather steal than t i y1 the world during the IIIB term. Paper said the lectures will be given three times a week, but ex- plained that the. list of speakers is not completed yet. Courses offered under the pro- gran this summer will include topics on the theoretical and structural aspects of linguistics. One course will deal with the theory behind language transla- tion. This is the first time such a course has ever been offered, Paper said. Another course will concentrate on Caucasian Lin- guistics. A course in the structure of Georgian tongues will be taught by Prof. Hans Vogt of the Uni- versity of Oslo. Another course being offered is Comparative Tai. Paper explained that while this type of course is not completely new, Prof. William Gedney of the linguistics depart- ment has been in Thailand recent- ly gathering new data on the different Thai dialects. The institute will also sponsor courses dealing with problems of teaching as well as hold three courses in three different lan- guages designed to teach the lin- guist how to elicit different re- sponses in a language with which he is unacquainted. 3 olivian Riots LA PAZ, Bolivia (M-Leaders of the Central Bolivian Workers Un- ion formally signed an agreement yesterday to end the eight-day-old civil warfare that killed 70 per- sons, according to government es- timates. But there was still some ques- tion whether individual leaders of the.leftist Tin Miners Union, part of the COB, will honor the pact signed Monday. The miners had asserted earlier that their union leaders would have to sign the pact for the cease-fire to be effective, although a miners union official said the miners accepted the cease-fire in principle. The miners fought government troops sent by the ruling military junta to occupy the nationalized mines after a COB general strike pulled the miners and factory workers in La Paz off the job. The strike was called to protest the government banishment into exile of the tin miners leader, Juan Lechin, a former vice presi- dent of Bolivia. After rioting in La Paz, the junta sent 17 more labor leaders to exile in Paraguay. C Three-V ote Margin Eliminates Chance Of Long Filibuster WASHINGTON (AP)-With three votes to spare, the Senate decided yesterday to stop talking about President Lyndon B. Johnson's Ne- gro voting rights bill and clear the way for swift passage. For the seventh time in its history-and only the second time |on civil rights legislation -- the ' Senate voted to invoke its de- bate-curbing cloture rule. The roll call was 70 to 30, three votes over the required two-thirds. SThe action limits each senator to one more hour of taLk on the bill that Johnson 10 weeks ago label- ed No. 1 on his congressional pri- ority list. New Guarantees Johnson's bill would impose new voting rights guarantees in states or counties which have popula- tions that are 20 per cent Negro, use literacy tests, and where voter turnouts fell below 50 per cent last November. That means Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, South Caro- lina and parts of North Carolin and Virginia. Senate Version In addition, the Senate version would authorize voter registration in any county where less than 25 per cent of the adult Negroes are registered to vote. This latter feature is not in- cluded in the bill recommended by the House Judiciary Committee. House action is due after the Sen- ate acts on the bill. Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois advised sena- tors to stick close to the cham- ber. "I think we can expedite this action," he said. Predict Passage Today Dirksen and Democratic lead- er Mike Mansfield of Montana both predicted the bill will be passed today. During the long debate, the av- erage floor turnout has been but a handful of senators. All but a few were at their desks before the cloture vote be- gan. The galleries were crowded- although not full-and Senate aides ringed the rear of the cham- ber. Cloture Vice-President Hubert H. Hum- phrey put the question: ~Is it the senseof4the Senate that debate on S1564 ,to enforce the 1th Amendment of the Constitution-of the United States, should be brought to a close?" Forty-seven Democrats and 23 Republicans said yes. Twenty-one Democrats and nine Republicans said no. "The motion to'bring the debate to a close is agreed to," Humphrey said. It was the third time in three years that the Senate had clamped down on its tradition of unlimited debate. 24th Day The vote came on the 24th day of debate about Johnson's call for legislation that would suspend state literacy and similar tests and send federal officials to reg- ister.Negroes in much of the South. And it came with no last-min- ute outcry from the Southern sen- ators who insist the bill is uncon- stitutional. There was no debate about the cloture move-and in the minutes before the showdown vote, nobody had anything to say. So the Senate passed its time call- ing the roll to take attendance. With cloture in effect, out came the stop watch to keep track of the minutes and seconds each senator talks. Parliamentarian Floyd M. Riddick held the watch. Sen. Sam J. Ervin, Jr. (D-NC) had it in mind when he popped TION AID: labor leaders to exile in Paraguay. roduces New Solution to - ask." He also presented an economic argument for increased aid to the poor. A high school graduate costs the state about $500 in assorted costs every year, he said. A high school dropout, however, one of the main sources of the poor, costs the state about $2,000 per year, and people in prison cost the state $4,000 per year, he added. He spoke briefly of the 11-point general administration p o v e r t y plan, but concentrated on the VISTAprogram, the "domestic peace corps." VISTA is a volunteer program aimed at relieving the poor, Walsh' explained. People at .least 18-al- though the present range is from By BARBARA SEYFRIED If the assumption that one way to avoid accidents is to produce good drivers is true, then Prof. Bruce Greenshields of the engineering school may have found part of the answer to traffic mishaps. Greenshields and Fletcher N. Platt, manager of the Traffic Safety and Highway Improvement department in Ford Motor Co., have developed a new device to help driver education teachers spot weaknesses in student driving. Recent studies on driving have shown that a driver is faced with numerous events. These are anything from traffic signals to other vehicles or pedestrians on the road. According to recent studies these occur at an average of 10 or more per second. Driver's Observations The driver observes these events, but only at a rate of about two per second, according to these studies. Based on observations a driver will make a decision at a rate of 1 to 3 per second and respond to a decision at a rate of 30 to 120 per minute. Driving Problem versals and the stopped versus moving time. It is these characteristics that the new device attempts to measure. Steering Reversals= According to Greenshields' report, the number of steering re- versals is an indice of when a new driver has mastered a driving technique. Greenshields pointed out that once a student has mastered a driving skill the rate of steering wheel reversals is at a relatively constant level. In other words a driver becomes accustomed to a certain number of steering reversals per minute. The number varies widely but when the driver is "at ease" the number is relatively constant. The new device will show a driving instructor when a student has mastered one technique and is ready to move on to the next. Change in Rate The change in the rate of steering wheel reversals can also in-I dicate the physical and psychological condition of the driver and whether he is in any condition to learn. ::::::::::::::: w :: ":. ..... ::::. . :. :::::. {: i :._ .... ... .::::::v.v ....::. :.:. : ... ..r: iY .. '.. :"i: i: ::":v::ivii: f:. 4Ytr{" r {}. :: ..:. ......:::.:+. :;>:jY is}-i:::,:tj::::j::._:ti'