POLITICAL LABELS OFTEN MEANINGLESS See Page 4 Y Sir A :4Iaaity CLOUDY, WARMER High-85 Los--6O Chance of thundershowers late tonight or tomorrow. Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXII, No. 168 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1962 SEVEN CENTS Boar in Control Fills acancies on Senior SIX PAGES Staff Daily as Force Agrees to Decision Publications Authority Rearranges Three Posts in Paper's Editorships By GAIL EVANS The. Board in Control of Student Publications announced new appointments to senior editorial positions last night. After deliberating for six hours the Board named Michael Olin- ick, '63, editor; Judith Oppenheim, '63, editorial director; Caroline Dow, '63, personnel director; Judith Bleier, '63, associate city editor; Fred Russell Kramer, '63, associate editorial director; and Cynthia Neu, '64, and Harry Perlstadt, '63, co-magazine editors. Michael Harrah, '64BAd, retained his position as city editor. The new appointments will not become official until September. Task Force The Board's action came a month after the junior staff, with the exception of Harrah, had refused to accept the appointments and s r . II * * * * * * * * * * * * T S M i 1 A Dean Assails Red 'Fetish' About Spies GENEVA (R) - United States Ambassador Arthur Dean called on the Soviet Union yesterday to drop an "unwarranted fetish" about espionage in opposing effec- tive nuclear test ban controls. In a heated exchange at the three-power, test ban talks, Dean said the Soviet Union obviously wanted to avoid what he called any shadow of control of its ter-' ritory. "Anything the Soviet Union says is dominated by preoccupation with espionage, however unfound- ed," Dean declared. He said it is time to give up attempts to saddle the conference with "preoccupa- tions such as an unwarranted fet- ish with state security and espion- age." Thorough Examination He urged the committee to turn to a thorough examination of a compromise memorandum of eight neutral nations on which east and west have offered opposing inter- pretations. The West argues it provides for obligatory on-site in- spections while the Soviets con- tend it means only that a country, suspected -of clandestine testing may invite control teams. Supporting Dean's stand, Brit- ain's Joseph Godber said the So- viets were still taking negotiations on a backward course. "They talk of compromise," he said. "But where is the comprom- ise?" Soviet test ban negotiator Sem- yon K. Tsarapkin said in accept- ing the neutrals' proposal for cre- ation of an international organiza- tion and agreeing to "inspection by invitation" that the Soviets had moved from their original position toward a compromise. SGC To Air Extensions Of Deadlines Student Government Council will hear requests for extensions of deadlines on membership selec- tion practice statements at to- night's meeting. Delta Sigma Phi social fraternity will ask for more time. Delta Phi 11Epsilon sorority will also ask for special consideration for an ex- tension, since its deadline fell in May. Council policy states that only organizations with June dead- lines are eligible to request ex- tensions at this meeting. Council President Steven Stock- meyer, '63, will inform SGC of the four sororities who failed to meet their deadlines and, are, therefore, in violation of Council's procedure to insure adequacy of statements. Those in violation are Alpha Ep- silon Phi, Kappa Delta, Phi Mu and Gamma Phi Beta sororities. Stockmeyer says that he expects b action on these violations at this time. He announced his in- tention to work over the summer with legal council to plan possible hearings to set penalties. The committee on membership will present a two-part report on action during the past two years ">took over duties as a task force. The juniors had declined their previous appointments because they believed the Board's shuffling of the senior editors' recommen- dations violated freedom of the press by attempting to control the paper's internal policies and in- terpreted the action as a form of pre-censorship of the editorial page. Issues Statement After new appointments were announced, the Board issued this statement: "Today's appointments to The Daily Senior Editorial staff differ in some respects from those rec- ommended by the former senior staff. They also differ from the previous appointments made by the Board which were not accept- ed. "In other words these appoint- ments are a response to a new situation. "Neither in these appointments nor in the earlier appointments of the Board was there any thought of exerting an improper influence upon The Daily editorial policy. We find the idea of cen- sorship as repugnant as do any of the members of The Daily edi- torial staff.. The Board however in its new'appointments reaffirms its responsibility to exercise its independent judgment in the mak- ing of appointments. Prime Factor "We also recognize that the rec- ommendations of a senior staff are a prime factor in forming the official judgments of the Board." Speaking for the new editors, Olinick said: "In making new appointments to the senior staff of The Daily, the Board has demonstrated that it had no intention to pre-censor the publication of editorial com- ment in any way. This was the main concern of the juniors and the prime motivation behind their protest of the Board's first set of appointments last month. Save Face "The Board did not make last night's appointments on the basis of what was best for the publica- tion, but to save face and reaffirm its legal power to take such action. -"During the coming year, the new senior staff wil bend every effort to the task of clarifying the presently ambiguous situation of the appointments process. We in- tend to ask the Board for a new definition of its functions and to enunciate, once and for all, the students' right to control The Daily unhampered by the Board except in highly unusual and extreme cases. The new appointments came after the Board reinterviewed the petitioners. Although petitioning was opened to the entire campus, only the seven junior staff mem- bers repetitioned. Award Prize To Oppenheim Judith Oppenheim, '63, editorial director of The Michigan Daily, received the Alice Bogdonoff Sil- ver Editorial Award yesterday. The award is given to any mem- ber of The Daily editorial staff who has most notably and consist- ently shown qualities of courage, .,responsibility, thoroughness, ma- turity of interpretation and con- cern for justice in editorials and interpretive writing. Con-Con Sues Suspected Reds Talk At Wayne By PHILIP SUTIN Frank Wilkinson and Carl Braden, convicted of contempt of Congress as a result of their ap- pearance before the House Un- American Activities Committee, spoke to Wayne State University students after the university had barred the use of its facilities to them. The two were scheduled to speak i nthe Kresge Science Library un- der the auspices of the Civil Lib- erties Committee, but they spoke at a hastily called meeting in St., Andrews Episcopal Church, locat- ed two blocks from the WSU cam- pus. The talk, attended by approx- imately 160 students, was spon- sored by Robert Smith, the presi- dent of the committee, who was acting as an individual. If the talk had been sponsored by the committee, Smith expla in- ed, it would have been unauthor- ized and the group could lose its university recognition. Smith said the committee had invited Wilkinson and Braden in an effort to gain all points of view about the House Un-American Activities Committee. Council Forum The talk had been approved by WSU Student - Faculty Council Forum Committee, the university calendaring agency, but President Clarence Hilberry overruled the group Monday night. "I do not find .. . sufficient evi- dence-of their compentency to con- tribute to scholarly inquiry or that they will contribute to the univer- sity's program. On the contrary, there is much evidence that they will use the university as a sound- ing board for propaganda and theirj personal interest," Hilberry said. Right of Student "I am as much concerned withI the right of students to hear as I am with the rights of the speak- ers," Ernest Mazey, executive di- rector of the Michigan AmericanI Civil Liberties Union, a speaker at; the St. Andrews Church gathering,i said. He added that the ACLU's for- um committee will meet today to+ consider this incident as well as+ the case of Donald Lobsinger, a major organizer of last year's drive to ban Communist speakers at WSU, who was barred from ad- dressing a Young Americans for Freedom meeting in March. WASHINGTON (/P) - Sen. John L. McClellan, (D-Ark.), proposed last night that Congress use its own power to arrest and imprison contemptuous witnesses because, he said, it "cannot rely upon the courts." McClellan, in a statement, said the Supreme Court decision Mon- day reversing contempt of Con- gress convictions of six men who had been balky witnesses before the House Committee on Un- American Activities made this clear. "The action of the Supreme Court . . . seems to make it crys- tal clear that the Congress can- not rely upon the courts to punish contumacious witnesses who ap- pearbefore its committees," the Senator said. These Circumstances "Thus, it appears that in these circumstances the only recourse left to Congress, if it is to have any protection at all, is for it to exercise the inherent power of each house to uphold its own preroga- Legislature To0Consider New Wholesale Goods Tax LANSING (P)-With the income tax virtually dead for the year, state lawmakers came up with a batch of new tax ideas yesterday. Rapidly gaining favor among a good number of legislators is a bill to raise upward of $100 million a year by taxing goods at the wholesale level as they pass into the hands of retailers. Rep. Roy Spencer (R-Attica) offered it as a substitute to a $69 million package of "nuisance" taxes ready for a vote in the house. Rep. Harvey Beadle (D-Detroit) proposed to raise $63 million CONTEMPT WITNESSES: McClellan Asks Arrest by Congress r. f i R tives and to punish directly con- tempt or contumacy of witnesses appearing before it." Congress has power to arrest and detain witnesses for the dura- tion of a Congress session. McClellan said that the court decision, if it were consistently ob- served, would "further undo and unnecessarily burden the processes of criminal law enforcement, aside from being an invitation to witnesses to flout the authority and jurisdiction of the Congress." Billie Sol Estes McClellan is chairman of the Senate Investigations subcommit- tee now investigating the Billie Sol Estes case, and may get a chance to try the direct action approach if any of his witnesses prove balky. He said he would de- cide that only if the matter arose. . McClellan said the Senate or House then could order the person held for contempt until he purged himself by answering the ques- tions. Labor Strikes Cause Delays on 'u Pro.ects Strikes have delayed work on three University construction proj- ects. Building has not progressed since May 1on the Institute of Scienceand Technology Building on North Campus. This month's work on the Phys- ics-Astronomy Building on East University has been slowed by a strike of the masonry and plaster- ing trades and the reinforcing steel crew. A steel workers strike has held up construction on the Thompson Street Parking Structure, on Thompson near Jefferson. However, as Vice-President for Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont told the Regents, work is progressing satisfactorily on the University's three other major projects. Uon revent Scheduled Talks Legislator Rebuffed in Bid To Bar Symposium with Wilkinson, Braden By DAVID MARCUS University President Harlan Hatcher has reiterated a Regental decision to Sen. Joseph P. Smeekens (R-Coldwater), whom the Presi- dent informed last night he would be unable to prohibit two speakers from using University facilities. Frank Wilkinson and Carl Braden, both convicted of contempt of Congress for refusal to answer questions before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, will not be deterred from speaking at the University tonight in a symposium sponsored by Voice Political Party and the Democratic Socialist Club. Smeekens asked the President to prevent the two from speaking, annually in new revenue by near Police. Seek. OAS Killer PARIS (MP-Fiv; captured secret army terrorists were charged today with plotting to assassinate Pres- ident Charles de Gaulle and a manhunt spread across France for a sixth member of the gang. The fugitive, a Polish former paratroop captain named Slebodia was known to the others as "Slim," escaped a police net that bagged the five. His picture was sent to all police district stations and bor- der posts. Newspapers reported that all five captured members of the gang, including the leader Jean-Loup Blanchy, confessed to the plot to kill de Gaulle. Few details of their plans have leaked through a police wall of secrecy. But authorities apparently got first wind of the plot last week and tracked the participants when they moved into France from Al- geria. Documents seized by police in- dicated that the gang was un- decided on the plan and means to be used in the desperate assas- sination attempt. A first plan seemed to have been to carry out the attack in thencathedral at Limoges Sunday morning when de Gaulle visited there on a tour. ly doubling the business activities tax. The 734 mill rate, which now produces $69 million, would be raised to 15 mills. A third tax measure put up for consideration would help out local governments by permitting coun- ties to levy any tax but a property tax. The bill, authored by Rep. Robert E. Waldron (R-Grosse Pointe) would leave the way open for nuisance or income levies or any taxes that did not hit per- sonal or real property. ' The drive for new tax proposals gained impetus when Gov. John Swainson announced Friday that he believed there was no longer any hope for fiscal reform this year. His stand killed off almost the last remaining chance for en- actment of a state income tax and freed Democratic lawmakers to look elsewhere for tax revenue. With tongue in cheek, Rep. E. D. O'Brien (D-Detroit) proposed a package of "nuisance" taxes for Republican farmers. and he cited the controversy last volving Wayne State University. (WSU was threatened with retri- bution by a legislator at that time.) Told Smeekens The President told Smeekens that the application to use Uni- versity facilities had, in this case, been properly 'requested. He said that the symposium had to be sponsored by a recognized student organization, must comply with Regent's Bylaw 8.11 (which pro- hibits any speaker from Univer- sity facilities if he advocates the violent overthrow of the govern- ment or defies the accepted moral standards of society), and must receive the approval of the faculty lecture committee. The President informed Smeek- ens that the symposium in ques- tion met all three requirements, and it also had the approval of a majority of the Regents. Not Able To Prevent In the light of this, President Hatcher said, he would not be able to prevent the appearance of Wil- kinson and Braden on campus. Both Wilkinson and Braden had their convictions upheld by the Supreme Court and served nine months in jail. Wayne State University Presi- dent Clarence Hilberry barred them from speaking on the WSU campus last Monday. Both of them addressed a meet- ing of the Civil Liberties Commit- tee here last night but the meet- ing was not held on University facilities. Spearheaded Drive Ann Byerlein, a Deroit nurse who spearheaded the drive against the lifting of the WSU speaker ban a year and a half ago, was also in ann Arbor to hear Wilkin- son and Braden and to protest. She said that she has seen Uni-! versity administrators and intends to register a protest today against the pair using University facilities. Smeekens is also the co-author with Rep. William Marshall (R- Allen) of a resolution declaring that Communist speakers using Michigan college and university facilities to give talks is against state policy. Peronists Riot In Argentina year over the same principle in- Alleged Communist To Tall To MSU Young Socialists The Michigan State University Young Socialists club will have alleged Communist Robert G. Thompson speak tonight, club president Jan Garrett told The Daily early this morning. Garrett said Thompson will speak in the back yard of Delta Sigma Phi, a MSU fraternity that earlier this week offered to host the speech. "Thompson is absolutely forbidden to use University property," Garrett commented. This is a decision of the Board of Trustees of MSU. The decision seems to have set a precedent," Garrett said. "Some people have urged us to try again this fall to sponsor a Communist speaker on 2 iC o nw tro l campus, but I don't think that the trustees would approve then either. The decision appears to be hard- ened." Garrett said the fraternity's back yard is large enough to ac- commodate several hundred stu- dents. i NUTRITIONAL PROBLEMS: Cites Need for flirtI FRANK WILKINSON civil liberties Asks HUAC Be, Abolished By ROBERT SELWA Frank Wilkinson, the man whose civil liberties case went to the Su- preme Court 15 months ago, last night called for the abolition of the House Committee on Un- American Activities. Speaking to a group of students and Ann Arbor citizens at the Uni- tarian Church, 1917 Washtenaw, Wilkinson discussed his case in de- tail and declared:. "It is time to work harder to keep open the marketplace of ideas." Long-Time Opponent A long-time opponent of the HUAC, he was subpoenaed by it in July of 1958. He said last night that he stuck to his strategy for testing the First Amendment is- sues involved: he gave his name to the Committee but refused to answer any. other questions by Committee members, pleading the First Amendment. "I made use of that year by reading more than I had ever read before in my life," he continued last night. "I read the Greek philosophers, Rousseau, Payne, Jef- ferson, Madison Thoreau, Emer- son, Gandhi, and Nehru, among others. And I am now indebted to HUAC for making me a bet- ter informed foe of it." Wilkinson said President Clar- ence Hilberry of Wayne State Uni- versity has prevented him from speaking there on the grounds that Hilberry feels he is "not sufficient- ly scholarly" to talk about the First Amendment.' Sows Suspicion Wilkinson said HUAC sows sus- picion and creates confusion. He read aloud the Committee's man- date to investigate un-American and subversive propaganda activi- ties and commented that "un- American" and "subversive" are words that have "no real mean- By JOAN SIMPSON "At the moment the world is getting the equivalent of a new United States in population growth every four years," Prof. George Borgstrom of the MSU Department of Food Science said last night in his talk on "Problems of World Nutrition on a Global Scale." Prof. Borgstrom went on to say that the world needs strict popu- lation control to hold an absolute maximum of six billion which at present growth rates will be reached by the year 2000. "Even with birth control South Amer- ica will be the size of China by the turn of the century." World Nutrition One of the problems of world nutrition is the fact that "Russia and the U. S. dispose of 40 per cent of the world's resources. Now the people in the "have not" coun- tries want their own share. is pushing Japan out of her fish- ling grounds in the. North Pacific." Prof.uBorgstrum said that in Africa the problem of nutrition centers around the fact that there is more livestock than population. In the country of Char, there is 14 times as much livestock as peo- ple. This means that total food consumption of human population does not tell the whole story. The amount of food consumed by the livestock must also be accounted for. This would meanthat in the U.S., we are feeding 1.5 billion aniuials and people. Another Problem Another problem of world nu- trition is the growth of "cash crops" in excessive amounts when deficiencies occur in other nutri- tionally important crops. Prof. Borgstrum mentioned the casevof Guatemala where there is an over- abundance of sugar grown while 1'. i- 2- i In r.. n.a I, BUENOS AIRES (P - A group M arg n losof Peronists defied the government yesterday and dashed through In Oklahoma teargas and streams of colored water to reach the House of Dep- uties. OKLAHOMA CITY (,)-W. P. Aspolice captain said 10 made "Bill" Atkinson held a 167 vote it inside. A crowd of thousands lead over former Gov. Raymond witnessed . other deputies-elect leadove fomer ov.Rayondchanting freedom songs as police Gary in Oklahoma's. Democratic threw tear gas grenades and primary runoff for governor-a sprayed streams of red-tinted race that may not be final until water to drive them back and mark the official vote is tabulated Satur- them for police recognition pur- day. poses. President Jose Maria Guido, who With all but two of the state'shad ordered Congress recessed for 3,143 precincts counted, Atkinson a year, immediately meet with had 231,587 votes, Gary hadY 231,- I secretaries of the army, navy and GEORGE BORGSTROM . nuitrition problems i