CONFERENCE PLAN: IS IT OBJECTIVE? See Editorial Pace Y Sirp A 443att WARMER High--46 Low-32 Sunny to partly cloudy skies Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIV, No.86 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1964 SEVEN CENTS TEN PAGES BRITISH REACT: Tanganyikan Troops Mutiny LONDON (P - Britain early this morning sped 2000 troops and warships-including a com- mando-laden aircraft carrier-to East Africa to keep a bloody troop mutiny in Tangainyika from ex- plodding into revolutionary tur- moil The carrier Centaur steamed down from Aden with 500 com- D ean Attacks Stor on Sex, Sits Writer By JOHN MEREDITH The Daily Pennsylvanian, stu- dent newspaper at the University of Pennsylvania, faces possible disciplinary action because of an article which the school's Dean of Men recently called "one of the worst examples of what I would say borders on pornography I've ever seen." The article's inspiration was a proposal by the Women's Student Government Association favoring the abolishment of the present 2:00 a.m. curfew for senior women. The article, a personal views column titled 'Sex and the Single Dean' and signed by one of the paper's city editors, Roger Tauss, expressed support for the WSGA proposal " and went on to attack the manner in which the Dean of Women's Office exercises its au- thority. 'Several Comments' Tauss also included several comments about virginity, dating, and extramarital intercourse. The tone . of these remarks has been called into question and is in a large part responsible for the pa- per's difficulties with the admin- istration. What action, if any, the admin- istrataion will take is not certain. The matter will be considered Wednesday at a meeting of The Undergraduate P u blic a to ns Board, a newly formed body re-] sponsible to some extent for the newspaper. The Wednesday meet- ing was scheduled prior to the Tauss article. This board has the authority to establish an Ad Hoc jDisciplinary Committee that would investigate the matter and take action that it deems appropriate. This action could include the removal of Tauss from his position on the paper. Marc Ross, Manag- ing Editor of The Daily Pennsyl- vanian, said that such a step would infringe on the rights of a free press. Ross expressed hope that no committee will be established at the Wednesday meeting. However, he said that if a committee is formed, it will indicate faculty sentiment against the paper and that severe action against Tauss would then become a stron pos- sibility. He emphasized that the paper itself could not be suspended un- der present regulations. The Daily Pennsylvanian was forced to cease publication for four days in 1962 by faculty order. This suspension was criticized at the time, and policy has since been changed to prevent a recurrence. Against Article General campus opinion has been against the Tauss article. Letters printed in The Daily Penn- sylvanian have accused Tauss of misinterpreting the motives of the WSGA proposal, unwarrentedly attacking the Dean of Women, and using extreme and unneces- sary vulgarity. Ross said, however, that letters received by the paper have for the most part, opposed disciplinary action. ac Commentin on the decision to print the article, he remarked that the Daily Pennsylvanian staff felt that the column was an honest criticism of administrative policy and was in no way personally slanderous against the Dean of Women. West Tax Bill May Exempt Organizatios A bill to exempt fraternities, sororities and co-operative housing from personal property taxation on a local level will be introduced "this week or the beginning of mandos and helicopters and oth- er aircraft aboard. Troops also were flown from Aden and mustered in neighbor- ing Kenya and on ships off the coast of Tanganyika. Alerts were sounded in all British bases inj the area. Remained Cut Off The British acted as Tangan- yika's capital, Dar Es Salaam, seized by mutinous soldiers yes- terday, remained virtually cut off from world communications. Fourteen persons were reported' killed in the fighting. The fate of President Julius Nyerere's moderate government' was uncertain although various reports said he was still in con- trol. Follows Coup Britons were shocked at the T'anganyika mutiny, following only a week after the lightning leftist coup in nearby Zanzibar. Fears were expressed that Com- munists were behind both upris- ings and that they might strike elsewhere in African countries re- cently given their independence by Britain and France. Moscow, Peking and Havana agents were suspected involved in what some newspaper editorials called "the new darkness over Af- rica." Diplomatic reports reaching London said the Tanganyika cap- ital was under strict military cur- few. Control Police These reports added that the situation was calm and that the troops in charge-the rebellious first battalion of the Tanganyika rifles-appeared to have control of the civilian police. In Lusaka, Northern Rhodesia, United Nations sources said that Nyerere was believed still in con- trol following the mutiny. British monitoring stations pick- ed up a Dar Es Salaam broadcast naming an African, Lt. Elisha JULIUS NYERERE Kavana, as the new revolutionary commander in chief of the young republic's army. Detached Officers The army had been trained and congmanded by officers detached from the British Army. The mutiny raised questions in Parliament of Communist subver- sion in East Africa. Tanganyika had long been considered an is- land of moderation in a turbulent sea of African nationalism. Commonwealth Secretary Dun- can Sandys told the House of Commons the British destroyer Rhyl with a company of riflemen had been ordered to Tanganyika to protect the 5000 British citi- zens in the former colony. The destroyer had been standing. off Zanzibar. Under Orders Nairobi radio civil police seem- ed to be operating under orders from the military. Nyerere first announced in a broadcast from Dar Es Salaam that a morning mutiny had been stifled. W Y O0 By We Kalar riding to the lion t scale Johi assist W. M the F had systen -if adeqi The legisla move lators sity's Be finali summ ter o any curre plain Hov we're been gardi sity w Sen zoo) sity t year are m dollar ceptiv He trime Weste stron benef Ife succe will b suffic pleme gin tr In a red' trime the plan, more toa a per ui MU Plans ear-Round perat ions, LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM stern Michigan University in mazoo will have its own hopes g in the University's request e Legislature for over $1 mil- to start the moveinto a full- trimester operation. in P r u I s, administrative ant to WMU President James iller, recently announced that Faculty Senate at Western voted to adopt a trimester m starting in the fall of 1965 the Legislature will provide iate funds. e most accurate harbinger of ative sentiment toward the ,Pruis and Kalamazoo legis- s agree, will be the Univer- success this year. No Requests cause WMU only recently zed its plans to bolster its aer session into a full semes- peration, it did not request funds for this purpose in its nt bdget request, Pruis ex- ed. wever, he noted that "since plowing ground that's never plowed before, we'll be re- ng the success of the Univer- with rapt eyes." n. Garry Brown (R-Kalama- cautioned that the Univer- this year and Western next "must demonstrate that they naking better use of the tax r if the Senate is to be re- ve to the trimester program." Support Trimester voiced his support for the ster plan and indicated that ern will begin to launch a g attack to "put across the its of the trimester system." would not predict what the ss of the University this year e. The University was denied ient funds last year to im- ent its $500,000 plan to be- rimester operations. its budget request this year, ort notes that "the entire 3ster concept is predicted on ground that, with such a the University can provide economical accommodtion larger number of students nit time." Also Applicable uis agreed that this analysis also applicable to the Western ster scheme in that the plan create more student places, er use of facilities and more d course opportunities in less deciding upon the trimester fits, Western consulted- With ersity officials but did not op any joint plan with the ersity to implement its third ster. e WMU proposal calls for plit trimester plan" which d provide a regular semester nurse offerings while main- .g the current eight-week ner session. e University implimented a ar plan this year. It calls for mester calendar with six and -week summer sessions in ad- n. e University adopted the plan rder to make more efficient f its facilities. Eventually it ped that as many students attend the summer trimester ow attend those in the fall spring. chigan State University and ne State University are on a ter system. Their academic der is divided into four units, most students going three each year. Capital Provides for Medical Unit Outlay Hart To Talk At Arnms Use By LOUISE LIND Sen. Phillip A. Hart (D-Mich), a United Nations official and other experts oft the problems of dis- armament will give major ad- dresses at the Second Internation- al Arms Control and Disarmament Symposium beginning tonight and continuing through Friday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Initiating the four-day sympo- sium centered around the prob- lems of implementing arms con- trol and disarmament decisions will be Archibald S. Alexander, As- sistant director of the United States Arms Control and Disarm- ament Agency, (ACDA). Alexander will deliver the key- note speech, "Future Prospects for Arms Control and Disarmament," at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. .Emphasize International The symposium, co-sponsored by the University and the Bendix Corporation, will emphasize the international aspects of arms con- trol and disarmament Joseph Coffey, chief of arms control activities for the Bendix Systems Division, will moderate a panel discussion about "Arms Control, Disarmament and Na- tional Security" at 1 p.m. tomor- row. Included on the panel will be Prof. Elton McNeil of the psychol- ogy department, George Pugh, deputy director of the weapons evaluation and control bureau at ACDA and Leonard Beaton, 'direc- tor of research at the Institute for Strategic Studies in London. 'Realities' of Disarmament Senator Hart will give an ad- dress on "Political and Economic Realities of' Disarmament" at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Yuli M. Verontsov, counselor and advisor on political affairs, of the Soviet Union's mission to the United Nations, will speak on "The Soviet Interest in Arms Control and Disarmament" - at 1 p.m. Thursday. "Arms Control and Disarma- ment" will be the topic of M. A. Vellodi, director of the department of political and security council affairs of the United Nations At 1 p.m. Friday, Howard Si- mons, science writer for the Wash- inton Post, will moderate a panel discussion on "Communicating with the Public on Arms Control MONEY FOR MEDICAL BUILDING - Gov. George Romney (left) announced a $51 million construction program that will include funds for the $10 million Medical Science Bldg., Unit II.. He also downgraded the use of bonding for state construction,: a move Vice-President for Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pier- pont (right) said should not affect University construction plans. SENIOR RESEARCH: SACUA Asks Tenure IFor Added Personnel By KENNETH WINTER Machinery is now in motion to establish a tenure position for a few senior research personnel at the University. This proposed policy change, which will require Regental ap- proval, was announced yesterday at the monthly meeting of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, chaired by Prof. William Kerr, chairman of the nuclear engineering department. Tenure, a privilege presently extended only to teaching faculty of associate professor or higher rank, was first recommended by a Pro gram AAUP Group 'Deplores' Romney's. Board Choices The state conference of the American Association of University Professors Saturday "deplored" Gov. George Romney's failure to ap- Pru point faculty members to the governing boards of state universities, was a Under the new state constitution, the overnor appoints the gov- trime erning boards of seven of the 10 state universities. Last October, the willt AAUP "urged that he appoint to each governing board at least one great person from the ranks of the' varie gan college or university. In teaching faculty of another Michi- U o i t time. "While the governor acknowl- Soviet benei edged the request, his appoint- Univ ments so far have not included ac- ,"devel tive members of teaching facul- Unive ties," the AAUP statement points semes out. Th It cites two reasons for the in- WASHINGTON (RP) -President a "s clusion of faculty on governing Lyndon B. Johnson has invited would boards: :Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrush- of c " and universities taini need the particular help that only chev to wk with him hard and sum collee teachers can give," and persistently" on a variety of world Th ,--'Our universities, unless their problems instead of "confining simila direction takes special professional ourselves to vague declarations of a tri] problems into account, will not be principle that oppose some wars eight able to compete with colleges of but not all." dition other states in recruiting compe- Accordingly Johnson in three Th tent faculties." t e r s e sentences disposed of in on Explains Stand Khrushchev's three grievances. use c Prof. ;Wilfred Kaplan of the The United States, the President is hc mathematics department said the said, remains committed to the willa AAUP's primary complaint was peaceful unification of Germany. as no negative - that no faculty had Johnson told Khrushchev he ands been appointed - but said the has not quarrel with the Rus- Mic group was "somewhat disturbed sian's proposalrto outlaw theuse Way! at the appointments themselves, of force in settling frontier dis- quart in that we don't feel they include putes, but he suggested "broader calan enough people with an under- and stronger" guidelines in this with standing of universities' prob- direction. units lems." The group is considering a vTEAT V to the governor to discuss thisand YOUR CUP OF TEA?. other educational issues, To date Romney has appointedp peope -none of them teachers and Northern Michigan Universi- ties. Five boards yet to be named are those at Central Michigan. University, Western Michigan University, Ferris Institute, Grand Valley State College and Michigan Technological University. Govern- ors of the other three schools - Michigan State University, Wayne - State University and the Univer- sity - are elected by the public. Statewide Education Prof. Kaplan also announced that the AAUP has set up a new committee on the organization of Michigan's college system, which is studying the possibility of es- tablishing "a single state authority for all public higher education." He explained that there is "in- creasin concern" among faculty special committee on "prequisites" and titles of research personnel" set up by SACUA and the vice- president for research. Having b e e n approved by SACUA's research policies com- mittee, the proposal is "at .the point now where a recommenda- tion will be made to the Regents that this policy be put into effect. SACUA also heard a presenta- tion of the proposed residential college to be connected with the literary college. Speaking against the college, Prof. Warner G, Rice, chairman of the English department, said the national trend was against small liberal-arts colleges, which are having trouble attracting and holding students. He suggested that students are more concerned with professional training, which they can best receive- in large universities. Council Hires HRC Head, Wants Fair Housing Change By RAYMOND HOLTON Ann Arbor's Human Relations Commission received approval from city council last night to appoint a Detroit social worker as Human Relations Director. Also at last night's council meeting, a proposed amendment to Ann Arbor's controversial fair housing ordinance was referred to the HRC. David Cowley, '54, assistant director of Detroit's Commission on Community Realtions, will begin his directorship of the, HRC on QFeb. 10. The position offers a year- Group Plans Amendmnetst By THOMAS COPI A 24-man bipartisan committee in the House is busy drafting amendments to the new Constitu- tion, (in an attempt to get them on an April 28 ballot.) Co-chairman Rep. Gail Handy (R-Eau Claire) said that, the group's main purpose is to amend those parts of the Constitution which are in conflict with the present political set-up in the state. Amon the changes proposed by the group are removal of prohibi- tion of a graduated income tax, and several election, procedures. No Income Tax One of the major changes the unofficial committee proposes is the elimination of the Constitu- tion's prohibition of a raduated in- come tax by striking all reference to an income tax from the docu- ment. A two-thirds vote is necessary in both houses for an amendment to be presented to the people. Handy said that bipartisan sup- port is therefore necessary, but that there would be "no prob- lems involved" in getting it. Although there is not a compar- able committee in the Senate, Handy said that "the Senate knows what we're doing and is ready to cooperate with us." The bills containing the amend- ments will have to be passed by Feb. 28 in order to be placed on an April 28 ballot. See LEGISLATURE, Page 7 Romney Asks crSHIn Request Governor To Detail Recommendations To State Legislature By EDWARD HERSTEIN LANSING-Funds to begin con.. struction of Unit II of the Medical Science Bldg. were included in a record $51 million state' capital outlay budget fiscal 1964-65 rec- ommended by Gov. George Rom- ney Friday. The $12 million facility is ex- pected. to eventually receive $10 million in appropriations from the Legislature with the remaining $2 million coming from the federal government. Romney's building program also included a planning program for 25 additional college and univer- sity structures, as well as 10 other buildings, with a total .value of about $61 million. Doesn't Know University Vice-President for Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont said he did not know now what projects requested by the University would be included in the list. Romney will detail the program in his budget message to the Legislature tomorrow. The $51 million construction program is $15 million more than ever spent before in a single year for construction. If the entire Romney program is carried out by the Legislature, it wl total $ 9 milion ove se' ears. The entire. program would b financed on a pay-as-you-go basis as opposed to a bonding program long advocated by capital Demo- crats and. many top state edu- cators. Not Bonding Pierpont said that bonding was never planned for library or class- room buildings anyway, and that dormitory facilities and other con- struction would not be affected by the plan. Romney said that using the pay- as-you-go approach saves well over $100 million in bonding osts for his entire construction plan. "Michigan's program assures a dollar's worth of building for every dollar spent," he said. "I know of no state doing more for fewer taxpayer dollars in this vital area than Michigan under our pay-as-you-go program." Levy, Gerard, DeWeese Take New Positionis The University has lost three members of its faculty to the staffs of other institutions, it was an- nounced yesterday. A larger salary and higher po- sition has led Stanley R. Levy of the literary college, administrative assistant to Associate Dean James H. Robertson to accept a post at Cornell University. As associate dean of students there, Levy will be primarily concerned with the student government. He leaves the University at the end of this se- mester. Dr. Ralph W. Gerard, professor of neurophysiology in the Univ er- sity's Medical School and senior neurophysiologist and director of laboratories in the U-M Mental Health Research Institute, has been appointed professor of bio- logical science and director of special studies at the University of California at Irvine. In 1962, Dr. Gerard became the second person in the 400 year his- tory of the University of Leyden, The Netherlands, to receive an honorarydegree of medicine from that institution. Another member of the Medical School faculty, Dr. Marion De- Weese, associate professor of sur- gery and on the staff since 1948, has been appointed professor of surgery and chairman of the sur- gery department at the University of Missouri School of Medicine. ef- I I j. kAlone;' Join Staff .Y The Daily has come out against almost everything in the past, but there is one thing in life that is still sacred. Dailyites live a fast life-scur- rying around campus after ads, pestering administrators for stor- ies or running after athletes for personal interviews. The photog- raphy staff records all the excite- ment in living color. Today at 4:30 p.m. is your chance to join this raucous group (with no I.D. card necessary) and to get an exciting tour of The Daily by any editors that are sober enough. When you join The Daily, you will find it replete with tradition. Af~a haio nn af.. r f'h h,,ina ly salary of $10,036 and is Ann Arbor's first full-time paid posi- tion of its kind on the HRC. Clarification Also at last night's council meet- ing, Councilwoman Eunice L. Burns proposed a "clarifying" amendment to the city's fair hous- ing ordinance. The amendment, although not in final draft form, Mrs. Burns said, would define "commercial space," and "make it illegal to discriminate in leasing, renting or selling of such space." However, Councilman John R. Laird moved that the amendment be referred to the HRC for further study. The motion was unanim- ously approved. In other action, the Ann Arbor Police Department addressed it- self to complaints from the American Civil Liberties Union re- garding the use of microphones in the police interrogation rooms. The Polic. Dnartment's renlv to I I I I ~