NEW WOMEN'S RULES: END OF PATERNALISM See Editorial Page IL , ix rig txt i11a111 SUNN'Y High-6S Low-38 Partly cloudy; warmer tomorrow Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIV, No 150 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1964 SEVEN CENTS SIX T urk Troops, Ships Move Near Iyrenia UN Peace Force Tries To Settle Dispute over Key Mountain Pass By The Associated Press NICOSIA-UN officers sought feverishly last night to settle a Greek-Turkish dispute over a strategic hill in northern Cyprus while Turkish'regulars on Cyprus came under fire for the first time and a Turkish battle fleet sailed from Iskendrun on a maneuver like those that raised invasion alarms last winter. The explosive situation in northern Cyprus built up after Turkish Cypriots moved onto a 300-foot League Gets p p Sonlsorship Of Activities By LAUREN BAHR Looking toward the Union League merger, the League Coun oil and the Women's Athletic As sociation both passed resolution yesterday transferring sponsor ship of. Michigras and Sprin, Weekend 'lrom the WAA to th Women's League. At their regular weekly meet ing, the League Council also pass ed a resolution to set one wee] aside in February of 1965 to cele brate the 75th anniversary of th Women's League. "The exhibits and speeches pro posed-for the week will be directe toward implementing the merger, Executive Vice-President of th. League Marjorie Randon, '65, said The activities planned for th week will center on changes th campus has undergone since 1890, when the League was found ed. "The Union-League merge will be better understood if it i presented as one of the, maw changes in student activities ove the year," Miss Randon said. The transfer of Michigras ani Spring Weekend is a major ste] in coordinating activities betwee the. Union and the League. "Thes were the last big weekend activi ties that were not under Leagu and Union jurisdiction," she em phasized. A joint concert sponsored b the League and the five under graduate women's honoraries .ih being planned for -next Septembe: to provide financial support fo: the women's honoraries. Leaders View Organizations Necessary developments to en rich the future of student organi zations on campus were discusse yesterday in a meeting of ex-of ficio members of Student Govern. ment Council. The organization leaders saic that not enough students appl their. classro6m experience . t< extra-curricular activities. "Activities are isolated becaus of the lack of communication be. tween the classroom ,and the out. side and between the faculty an the activities," Ann Wickins, '65 Panhellenic president, said. The committee said that th isolation is not proper, since ac tivities, too, are educational. "Incoming freshmen are taugh that academics are their primary concern and are falsely lead t believe that outside activities wil harm their 'academics," notec Isaac Adelemo, Grad, Internation al Students' Association president Freshman orientation leader and academic counselors ofter have a dampening effect on ne students by advising them to wail at least a year to join an activity "A philosophy of the purpose and meaning of student organi. zations is needed," said H. Nei Berkson, Daily editor. hill overlooking the twin village of -4upper and lower Dhikomo. An estimated battalion of Greek Cyp- riot National Guardsmen awaited orders in a town a mile away on whether to attack the position.. UN officers, tried to talk the Turks into turning the hill over. to UN peacekeeping forces. But the Turks, saying the hill is vital for the defense of the Kyrema Pass and the Kyrenia road a couple of miles to the west, re- fused to budge. Turkish Premier Ismet Inonu warned last week that any attack s on the 650-man Turkish contin- - gent, here by treaty like a 950- g tman battalion from Greece, would e be, interpreted as aggression against Turkey. Turkish naval authorities at Is- . kendrun, 100 miles northeast of k Cyprus, said 21 warships headed - by four destroyers sailed at dawn e for a "routine gunnery exercise" with live ammunition to continue - until Friday. d They said the maneuver area " was 30 miles off the north coast e of Cyprus, near the area where . Greek Cypriots have launched a e drive to root Turkish Cypriots e from strong points in the Kyrenia e Mountains. . A Greek officer said the hill r around which the shooting cen- s tered had no strategic importance y to the Greeks. r d StateOkays p n , e 50,00 IC Sees Modified Rush Plan Committee Considers Liberalized Program By JOHN MEREDITH The executive committee of In- terfraternity Council decided to recommend that the Fraternity Presidents' Assembly adopt a fall rush plan which places substan- tially fewer restrictions on rush- ing than the 'present system en- tails. The recommendations will be accepted or rejected at an FPA meeting next Tuesday. Under the proposed plan, fra- ternities would begin holding open houses on the second Sunday after the first Tuesday of classes. There would be open houses that after- noon, evening and the two fol- lowing evenings during specified time periods. For the remainder of the first week, fraternities would be free to conduct rush ac- tivities as they chose between the hours of 8 a.m. and 10. p.m., with thie exception that women could not asist in their rush program. The rest of the semester would be a completely open rush period. First Week Fraternities could offer bids be- ginning on Wednesday of'the first week of rush. The system used this spring was much more restrictive. It set up a specific schedule, which es- tablished times for smokers, lunches and diners, for the first 12 days of rush and did not per- mit bidding until the first Thurs- day of the rush period. "The more permissive schedul- ing is in line with a policy toward liberalizing r u s h regulations," commented Lawrence Lossing, '65, IFC president. Defeat Elimination The executive committee, how- ever, tuined down other proposals that would have even further lib- eralized rush procedure. A plan to eliminate rush registration, was defeated. "Many fraternities depend on information provided by rush sign-up for guidance in contact- ing prospective pledges to invite them to rush programs," Lossing said. "Moreover, rush registration serves a vital function in provid- ing us with statistics that reveal a greathdeal about the success of our rush program." Reject Women A proposal to permit women to assist in rush after the initial three day period was also re- jected. In addition, the committee de- cided to continue its sponsorship, both in name and with financial support, of open houses at several State Street fraternities on -the' weekend before classes begin in the fall. France Stands Alone on Asia' MANILA (N)') - France stood alone yesterday in advocating neutralization of South Viet Namj after its seven partners in the Southeast Asia Treaty Organiza-j tion voiced strong objections. . As the tenth anniversary minis-E terial meeting of the anti-Com- munist alliance prepared to wind up, informants said France made no effort to defend the plan when four other SEATO members lev-I eled their criticism yesterday. < After the United States, repre-4 sented by Secretary of State DeanI Iusk, opened the criticism of President Charles de Gaulle's plan Monday, the other members quick-] ly lined up alongside. Johnson To Address ' U' G raduatio SMITH SECOND: Goldwvater Winning-~ In Iiois Primiry By The Associated Press CHICAGO-Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) won the, Illinois presidential preference test last night, but Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R-Me) scooped up a sizable share of the votes. Charles H. Percy, business executive, making his first bid for public office, took the Republican nomination for governor by de- BARRY GOLDWATER Accepts SReques Student Aids By ROBERT HIPPLEi The State Senate Monday night approved 29-0 a $500,000 student scholarship program which could aid up to 1000 Michigan students this fall. The bill provides for scholar- ships to be awarded on a compe- titive basis and administered by the Michigan Higher Education Assistance Authority. The scholar- ships would be awarded to Mich- igan students and would be us- able at any private or public Michigan college or university. .The bill, a modification of a $1.2 million proposed program which was introduced into the Senate last week, will now go to the House for committee consider- ation. It has solid support in the House, members say. "I will sup- port the Senate-passed bill," noted Rep. ~Gilbert R-. Bursley (R-Ann Arbor), 'who had intorduced a similar bill in the House last week. His bill,. which proposed $300,000 in scholarships, is now in a House committee' and will stay there as support forms for its Senate counterpart. The scholarships would be re- newable by the students through their entire college careers as.long as they maintain acceptable scho- lastic standards. Thus, the total program could grow to over $2 million after four years of opera- tion, noted Bursley. "The basic -object of the legis- lation," Bursley said last night, "is to help private colleges share in educating the college students of the' next decade." i . To Diiscuss Constituent Unit, Study By DAVID BLOCK Student Government Council will consider motions concerning a constituent assembly and a stu- dent government study committee at tonight's meeting, to be held at East Quadrangle. The motions both originated in the recent SGC election campaign, where they were part of the Stu- dent Government Reform Union's platform. Direct Link The constituent assembly, pro- posed by Carl J. Cohen, '66, as chairman of the SGC Constituent Assembly Committee, would serve' as a direct link between students and the Council. According to Cohen, students will be able to submit ideas -to SGC by means of the assembly. This will represent a significant improvement in communications between Cuncil and its constitu- ency, he said. At present, these communications are "woefully in- adequate," Cohen added. The study committee motion, jointly submitted by Cohen and Barry Bluestone, '66, is to provide for a broad, unrestricted investiga- tion of the process of student gov- ernment on this campus. 'Exercise in Civics' The proposed committee would be composed of three faculty members, three students to be appointed by the Graduate Stu- dent Council and three students to be named by SGC. Cohen said that the study was necessary because Council should be more than just the "exercise in civics which it is at present." Qfeating State Treasurer William J. Scott. Write-in votes also came in for Henry Cabot Lodge, the New Hampshire victor last month, for Richard 'M. Nixon and others. Returns at 1 a.m. from 5600 of the 10,256 precincts gave Gold- water 201,411, Smith 85,622, Lodge. 7,865, Nixon 3,888, New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller 208, Gov. George Romney 36 and Pennsyl- vania Gov. William Scranton 139. Charles Percy led Scott 242430 to 137,000. Only the names of Goldwater and Mrs. Smith were printed on the Republican ballot. Write-in tallies came in from others from areas scattered across the state, including Cook County. Through the evening Gold- water's share of the Republican preference vote hovered around 67 per cent and Mrs. Smith's around 29 per cent. Returns from 562 of the pre- cincts gave President Lyndon B. Johnson 6152 and Atty. Gen. Rob- ert F. Kennedy 99 for Vice Presi- dent. Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama received 32. Goldwater, who received the re- turns at his Washington head- quarters, stated that "Illinois has provided the momentum that will be decisive in forging a great Republican victory in 1964." He predicted party members will continue to work for the election of Republican candidates in No- vember "from the state house to the White House." House Raises Member Pay The House approved a 43 per cent pay raise for- the 144 mem- bers of the State Legislature in a surprise move last night, the Detroit Free Press reported. At the same time, it doubled their expense allowances., The proposal was a last-minute amendment to a general approp- riations bill. It would raise salaries from $7000 to $10,000 a year. Expense allowances would go up from $1250 to $2500, but the two-times-a-month allowance for travel home--10 ents a mile- would go unchanged. Romney Map] Awaits Dem-o By The Asso LANSING-Gov. George Ron plan was headed yesterday for tl awaited an indication of Demdcrati Rep. Henry Hogan (R-Birmi Apportionment Committee, which would be reported out today and pc HARLAN HATCHER LYNDON B. JOHNSON missiles. "'The fact is, our superiority has been increasing, and we intend that it shall continue to increase," the statement said. It came a few hours after pub- lication of Congressional testimony in which Gen. Curtis E. LeMay,- Air Force Chief of Staff, said he thinks the Soviet Union has nar- rowed the gap of U.S. superiority. While it clearly was prompted by LeMay's comments, a Pentagon spokesman said the statement was in reply to a number of charges about U.S.- defense policies, in- cluding statements by Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz). The Arizona senator said he has voiced concern because no new weapons systems are being de- veloped now, and he fears the United States could lose its mili- tary margin in the next decade. The Pentagon statement includ- ed these figures: -The United States has 540 strategic bombers on constant alert, in contrast to 270 Soviet heavy and medium bombers.' -The Air Force has about 750 intercontinental ballistic missiles on launchers, while the Russians have fewer than one fourth that number. -"We have 192 Polaris missiles deployed. The, Soviets have sub- stantially fewer submarine- launched ballistic missiles in oper- ation." ping Plan cratie Support ciated Press mney's Congressional redistricting she House floor while Republicans c support. ngham) chairman of the House approved the ,plan, said the bill ssibly come to a; vote by Thursday. Sam Explams, Disadvantag e Of Poor Youths By JEROME HINIKER The man who directs the Uni- versity's program to bring a col- lege education to underprivileged youth recently explained some of the problems which are unique to. them. Leonard F. Sain, special assist- ant to the director of admissions, spoke in Chicago at a North Cen- tral Association meeting about the educational disadvantages faced by youth raised in a poor socio-eco- nomic environment. "I feel that 'disadvantaged; stu- dents do -give us some special concerns in our schools and col- leges and that the effectiveness of the programming that results from WASHINGTON DEBATE U.S. Missiles Superior, Pentagon Paper Says WASHINGTON (p)-Pentagon policies and presidential politics boiled up a storm of debate over United States military might yester- day as the defense department said the U.S. holds an increasing margin of missile superiority over the Soviet Union.. "Questions have been raised . . . regarding the magnitude ot our. superiority and whether it is continuing to grow," the Pentagon said in an unusual statement that made public hitherto classified figures on U.S. and Soviet bombers and To Be First President At Exercise 'U' To Award Him Law Doctorate, Hold Fete After Ceremony By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM The nation's ;36th chief execu tive will be the first President t deliver a commencement addres at the University. President Lyndon B. Johnso: will be the speaker at the 120 Commencement and will receive a honorary doctor of laws degree s the rescheduled graduation cere mony, May 22, University Presl dent Harlan Hatcher announce yesterday. The exercises, orignall set for May 23, were advanced or day to accommodate Johnson schedule. The commencement will b at 10 a.m. in the Michigan Sta dium and feature an afternoo lunch honoring Johnson and t other recipients of honorary de grees. Unknown Whether Johnson will give. "major policy" speech is n known, White House sources sa last night. Other events -of commencemer week displaced by the new da will be re-arranged and their ne scheduling announced later, Se retary of the University Orc Walter said yesterday. President Hatcher said the Uni versity was "deeply honored" t have Johnson keynote the grad ation festivities and promised gala occasion" in his honor. - . 'Delighted' "We at the University are d lighted that Johnson will honor t with his presence," he said. "i student friends ,have assured nA that they understand and will a just to the inconvenience of t1 new date." President Hatcher's announce ment of Johnson'sacceptance fo lowed a final conversation wit the White House-one of a seri of letters and phone calls whic University and Presidential offi cials exchanged in an effort t assure Johnson's. attendance i the ceremony. Walter reported that Johrit was unable to accept the origi invitation for May 23 because c his pledge to uphold a commi ment for that date made by tb late John F. Kennedy. - 'Most Regretful' However, in turning downtl invitation, Johnson was "most re gretful" and instructed his aide to try to work out another speam inj arrangement with the Unve sity, the White House source di closed.' Presidential aide Kenneth 0 Donnell set the final plans writ Walter and President Hatcher. Bi the specific details of the day am yet to be arranged by the' Whil House and the Unvesity, Walti said. Security precautions for Johi son's visit will be arranged t Washington and Detroit official When Johnson will arrive - I Ann Arbor has yet to be dete mined, but White House aIdt said that the President will prol ably stay in Detroit the night prig to the speech. The President is also slated make speaking stps 'in -etro twice'in September, ohcein- Labor Day rally and once befoi the. Detroit Economics dub. First Visit'" Although his appearance in Ati Arbor will mark the first visit i a President to the campus, d1g nitaries such as the late Williaz Howard Taft came here while onl a Senator, Walter's office said. The University has hosted number of top cabinet officia within the past few years, includ ing Secretary of Defense Robei LEONARD SAIN COOK LECTURER: Ohlin Discusses.Research in Solving De Still to be determined was the extent of Democratic support-if any-forRomney's "one man, one vote" scheme. "If Democratic support is not n u en cforthcoming, we will report out n q I~5IUA.,V Plan B'," said Hogan, referring to a GOP plan that would probably be rougher on Democrats than the gical techniques created confusion Romney proposal. e." At the same time, atttacking nmates were those of testing by Romney's congressional redistrict- it was important to the juveniles ing plan as designed to give Re- L. publicans a disproportionate adge -offishness'" by the boys towards in Congress, Democratic Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski submitted a re- ro , mw nh vised version of his own plan. our concerns is closely inter-relat- ed with the number of students, especially those who, are 'disad- vantaged,' who will be fortunate enough to finish our schools and enter colleges,"' Sainsaid. Unpredictability Sain feels that "ego deficien- cies" caused by inferior caste and" poverty, parental absence or neg- lect and unpredictable times of eating and sleeping damage the self concept of the individual, which affects "the way he per- ceives his characteristics and abil- ities, the way he relates to oth- ers, 'the values he holds and the goals and ideals he sees as im- portant." "When the school population is By FOREST FORD In order to solve the problem of delinquency, several present research needs must be met, Prof. Lloyd Ohlin of Columbia University said in his first Cook lecture yesterday.. He cited specifically a clarification of knowledge for the formu- lation of concrete principles. In the study of delinquency, Prof. Ohlin explained, recent re- upon entrance. The use of psycholo and "an indeterminacy about releas -Systems for inducting new i other inmates, especially physical;: to define those who could be trusted -There was a "relative 'stand- their officials. MEM M lll.-T 11."-., ;5;,.- '