CITY WITHOUT LAW See Page 4._ Y Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom ~E.aitF46 SHIOWERS High-'79 Low--45 Partly cloudy, with late afternoon and evening showers. LXXII, No. 23 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1961 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES rrr Irirr r111 I IIrI Irrr ir rpYrYr 11. LITTLE SUCCESS: Women's Dorms Hit by Raid Peek Sees Narrow Line Between Loyalty Criteria Kennedy Says America Fated for Life of Peril; Approximately 200 men, "mainly from East Quadrangle, ma rche the circuit of women's residence halls in a largely unsuccessful search for panties last night. The raid started between West and South Quadrangles where ap- proximately 50 men left an inter- mittent shouting match between the two quadrangles. Aggression i n Viet "Namt Fe redS'-,, 1b R1, Fared byRuss-i West By The Associated Press Both East and West expressed fear yesterday of open conflict occurring in southeast Asia. Radio Moscow claimed .that the United States was planning to send troops to South Viet Nam. The British Foreign Office endorsed President John F. Kennedy's sending Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor to South Viet Nam while Western sources in Geneva said that the Communists were out to wreck the Gratd Council Investigates Curtailments The Graduate Student Council voted last night to establish a com- mittee to investigate and submit a letter complaining about the curtailment of required graduate language courses. The committee, composed of William Gregg, Robert Rosen, Ronald.Savoy, and Jerome Schuur, will investigate the various facets of the language cutbacks and will submit a draft letter at the next meeting, Nov. 9. The proposed letter will be sent to Dean Ralph Sawyer of the graduate school, Mrs. Leta J. Lew- is, the graduate school's language, examiner, Prof. James C. O'Neil, chairman of the French depart- ment and Prof. Clarence K. Pott, chairman of the German depart- ment. "Over 200 students are not able to take these courses and the sec- tions are vastly overcrowded. The council should call attention to the University's lack of planning and the loss of this instruction," Savoy said. The GSC is also considering the sending of notice for the various department's bulletin boards list- ing all the seminars and collo- quiums offered each month. Citing the need and value of more interdepartmental commu- nication, George Solish, GSC pres- ident, noted, "The council is try- ing to supplement and round out the graduate student's experience here." In the same area the council discussed the possibility of spon- soring a seminar on a topic of general interest to graduate stu- dents. Jasper Reid, GSC treasurer, re- ported. that the council wiped out last spring's $15640 deficit by raising $179.64 in mixers and oth- er activities this summer. The group now has a balance of $23.24. Discontinue Free Football Player Lists conference on Laos. Moscow radio asserted that Washington has "openly aggres- sive" plans to send troops to South Viet Nam-a step that "can seri- ously complicate the situation in that part of the world." While making no threat to send in Soviet troops, the broadcast de- clared any such United States ac- tion would "trample on the Gene- va agreement about Indochina." This prohibits sending foreign troops to South Viet Nam.. The Soviet- Union and Britain hold a special responsibility for maintaining peace in the area, having presided at the 1954 con- ference in Geneva that produced an armistice and laid down a de- marcation line between South Viet Nam and Communist North Viet Nam. President Kennedy announced Wednesday he is sending Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, a top military adviser, to South Viet Nam to de- termine what steps should be tak- en to meet rising Communist at- tacks. In London, the foreign office endorsed Kennedy's decision to send Taylor to South Viet Nam. John Russell, chief foreign office spokesman, said the Communist threat to South Viet Nam is "a serious situation which requires close watching." Official sources said, however, the British government fears any direct United States intervention would bring Red Chinese troops into the conflict, touching off a Korea-type war. The British were reported considering a diplomatic approach to the Soviet Union in an attempt to head off serious trouble over South Viet Nam., SGC Petitions Close Today Today is the deadline for Stu- dent Government Council petition- ing. All petitions must be submitted to the Council administr cive sec- retary by 5 p.m. Orientation ses- sions for candidates-will be held at 2 p.m. and at 4 p.m. Sunday in Rm. 3532 of the Student Activi- ties Bldg. Those taking out petitions yes- terday were Douglas Duhn, '62, and John Spolyar, '63. Few calls for a raid were heard as most of the shouting urged the football team to beat Michigan State University on Saturday. The remnants went to East Quadrangle where they took up the "To the Hill" chant. Some 500 students responded to the cry and milled about East Quad. After shouting, about 200 of them marched off in that direc- tion. Cold Reception Although a few men climbed on the window ledge, they got a cold reception at Markley. The mob 'dispersed after a few minutes when a University patrol car pulled up. The men regrouped around Alice Lloyd Hall where they again received little encouragement from the residents. A few men climbed the terrace over' Lloyd's entrance with some being apprehended by dean John Bingley. Prodded by staffmen from East Quadrangle and the Dean of Men's Office, the group dispersed passing Mosher-Jordan Halls and regroup- ing at Stockwell Hall. Women Taunt A group of women taunted and encouraged the men, throwing down a few panties, but the mob dispersed quickly. About 100 of the original dem- onstrators marched across the Diag to Barbour and Newberry Halls where they shouted and re- ceived a few pants. The University Patrol and staff of the Dean of Men's Office quickly dispersed the raiders. A number of ID cards were taken by staffmen, Bingley noted. Bing- ley himself took two from men who had climbed the ledge at Lloyd. A full accounting would be made today, he added. Anti-Hoffa Split Brews COLUMBUS (/)-An anti-Hoffa revolt is brewing here within Teamsters Union Local 413, which represents some 4,600 persons' in 22 Ohio counties. More than 20 past or present members of the local met here Thursday to form a new union. The splinter group has applied for a charter with the AFL-CIO., It is similar to the recent re- volt by 4,000 teamsters in Cin- cinnati, led by James Luken. Four locals there voted to disaffiliate with the Teamsters Union, head- ed by James Hoffa, and join the AFL-CIO.+ Paul L. Thompson, Columbus attorney who is general counsel for the newly formed Drivers and Warehousemen's Union, said dis- satisfaction with the Hoffa regime led to the bolting here. He said petitions are being dis- tributed to several hundred mem- bers of Local 413, asking for their support of the new union. By Monday, he said, enough pe- tition signatures are expected to file with the National Labor Re- lations Board in Cincinnati a re- quest to hold collective bargain- ing elections among the firms in- volved. PROF. GEORGE PEEK ... draws line UN: Turn Down Secretariat Proposals UNITED NATIONS W - The United States was reported to have turned down yesterday a So- viet proposal that any temporary United Nations secretary-general should have six undersecretaries for principal advisers.' Diplomatic sources said it did so with the argument that the six would be too much like a doubling of the troika, the three-man board the Russians want to run the UN Secretariat on a permanent basis. The two big powers agreed in direct talks Monday night, the informants said, that the interim successor to the late Dag Ham- marskjold should choose five un- dersecretaries to consult as to his principal advisers. They agreed that four of these should be an American, a Rus- sian, an African and a Latin American-on the assumption that the interim secretary-general him- self would be an Asian. But they disagreed on whether the fifth adviser should be a Western Eu- ropean or an Eastern European. Wednesday, t h e diplomatic sources said, Soviet Deputy For- eigq Minister Valerian A. Zorin sent a proposal to United States Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson that there should be both an East- ern European and a Western Eu- ropean. Diplomatic sources reported U Thant proposes to name five of the 29 present UN undersecre- taries to be among his principal advisers. They said he was not committed to having only five and had left the final number to the big powers. Groups Set Conferences The joint fall meeting of the University Development Council and the Alumni Association Ex- ecutive Boards will be held here today and tomorrow. The Board meeting will convene at 2 p.m. in the Regents Room of the Administration Building. The agenda will include reports on the establishment of the Presidents Club and the increasing returns on the Alumni Fund. Following the meeting, a recep- tion will be held at the Washtenaw Country Club and then the dinner honoring President Harlan Hatcher will be held in the Union. The weekend will conclude with a panel discussion on "Meeting the Challenge" of the University at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the Union. By MICHAEL OLINICK The difficulty in drawing the line between "academic" and "non-academic" evaluations of stu- dents makes the issue of whether or not to employ appraisals a "very complete one;" Prof. George A. Peek of the political science department said yesterday. Prof. Peek-chairman of the University chapter of the Ameri- can Association of University Pro- fessors, a group particularly con- cerned with academic freedom- found himself in "general sym- pathy" with an American Civil Liberties Union statement point- ing out the dangers of such evalu- ations. Faculty men who fill out ques- tionnaires about a student's loy- alty do not necessarily abridge academic freedom or the teacher- student relationship, he said. Must Know Loyalty While Prof. Peek believes that government security agents and employers "have no business" ask- ing about a student's political or social beliefs, he feels "sensitive" government agencies must know about the loyalty of job-seekers. "Professors have a respbnsibility as citizens to see that govern- mental posts are manned by com- petent personnel and, in sensitive positions, loyalty is a necessary requisite." ACLU's Academic Freedom Committee warned that answer- ing questions related to a stu- dent's loyalty and patriotism, his political, religious, moral and so- cial beliefs or his general outlook could destroy the relation between a professor and his student. Threaten Process "If education requires uninhib- ited expression and thinking out loud, disclosure of expressed opin- ion . . . can become a threat to the educational process because the student does not expect his views to be reported outside the classroom," the report, issued Tuesday, stated. "If he knew that anything he said or wrote may be revealed in- discriminately, the kind of rela- tion in which he originally felt free to make his pronouncements wonld to all intents and purposes cease to. exist." Prof. Peek would like to see the discontinuance of queries about loyalty, but he doesn't think that present "disclosures" would cause a student to speak less freely. Stock Question The questions about loyalty-_ most usually asked by the Foreign Service, armed forces and medi- cal schools - are usually in the form: "Have you any indication that this student is not loyal to the United States?" The question is a tough one to answer, if not an impossible one, Prof. Peek said. "Just what are indications of disloyalty is not clear. Certainly, belief in the writ- ings of Marx or Trotsky does not in itself constitute disloyalty." The chemistry department, fac- ed with the same question on countless recommendation forms, answers by what amounts to be a blanket "No." Department Chair- man Prof. Leigh Anderson says he does not know of any evalua- tion which has carried a different reply. Continues Evaluations The chemistry department this fall continued its filing of non- academic evaluation for all stu- dents in the beginning general courses despite protests by Stu- dent Government Council. Prof. Robert C. Parry-who heads this section of the department-refers to the evaluations as "private professorial notes" on students. "The notes are necessary be- cause we have so many students in our beginning courses that it would be impossible to remember See PEEK, Page 2I -AP wirephoto SHAKES HANDS--President John F. Kennedy visits Ft. Bragg after speaking at the University of North Carolina yesterday. He. shakes hands with the unit commander of the 101st Airborne Di- vision, after witnessing a combat readiness demonstration. SGC .Discussion Group. Debates 'Myth of Marx By MARJORIE BRAHMS "The myth of Marx as the great social prophet" highlighted the Student Government Council seminar last night-on Edmund Wilson's "To the Finland Station." Leading a discussion on the validity of Marxist theory were Prof. Stephen Tonsor of the history department, Prof. Frank Grace of the political science department and Prof. Arnold Kaufman of .the philosophy department. Prof. Tonsor maintains "Marx failed as w a sociologist" because of his "fail- ure to discern the implications of P n G the signs of the times. Marx fore- saw the withering away of the T_ state and the consequent freeing of the individual from responsi- By The Associated Press bility. Must Undertake Risks Toward Authoritarian "However, the movement of the century was not toward this liberty but toward totalitarianism," he said. Other political philosophers such as Alexis de Toqueville understood the times more fully. Marx's poli- tics were "out of line with nine- teenth century society." He be- lieved in liberty, but in the nine- teenth century "liberty would have been a bad basis for free- dom," Prof. Tonsor said. Agree on Myth Prof. Grace agrees with author Wilson that "Marx's dialectic is myth. Marx assumed a dialectic process would deliver man from his problems to a land of perfect freedom. "If one dissects Socialistic thought, absolutely none of it holds water. He included the economics, the withering away of the state and the incorrect inter- pretation of nineteenth century events," Prof. Grace said. fears and wants," he said. Conceals Problems Prof. Kaufman, disagreeing with the two previous speakers, believes Marx to be "one of the great so- ciologists of the nineteenth cen- tury." Defending Marx, Prof. Kaufman challenged Wilson's criticism of Marx's theory of economic deter- minism and of surplus labor. Wil- son believes Marx never really re- solves these problems but simply conceals them in dialectic think- ing. The University's discontinuance of issuing free programs at football games was prompted by a survey showing it to be the only major school doing so, Athletic Director H. 0. (Fritz) Crisler said yester- day. The Board in Control of Inter- collegiate Athletics annually re-, views the expenditures involved in such a service but last spring de- cided to suspend the operation., This decision j was arrived at after the board had surveyed all other major national colleges and found that none of them were dis- tributing "gratis" the slips giving the names and numbers of the players to their students. A second factor Crisler cited for the decision to end the service was "abuses" which had occurred. "People were going through the student portals and using up all the pamph lets, or students would grab a handful and give them to non-students," he explained. The program rosters were sup- posed to be distributed on the basis of one per student. Athletics Publicity Director Les Etter explained another reason for discontinuance was the large num- ber of programs that were never ed. "There was not too great an Challen ge Seminar Probes Democratic F orei gn Policy By DENISE WACKER "There has had to be a change in the nature of diplomacy in the 20th Century which makes a truly democratic foreign policy difficult to maintain," Ronald Huxley of the political science de- partment said last night at a Challenge seminar. The seminar was concerned primarily with the question of whether United States foreign policy- could be democratic or whether it has to be directed and carriedf Constitutional Convention dele- gates received 12 more proposals for constitutional changes Thurs- day, including control by the Legis- lature of state civil service pay raises. The action came in a brief ses- sion after which delegates ad- journed until Monday night. D. Hale Brake (R-Stanton), for- mer state senator and state treas- urer, proposed the civil service changes. Fix Rates The Civil Service Commission now has sole power to fix pay rates for State employees under the merit system. Brake's proposal would require that any pay raises must be ap- proved by both houses of the Legislature. He also proposed that the four- member commission be composed of two members from each major party. The bipartisan requirement at present is that not more than two may be from one party. Republicans have complained that former Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liams followed a policy of appoint- ing independents and Democrats, or subservient' Republicans who are really Democrats in disguise. Home Rule Brake also offered a proposal to grant home rule charters to town- ships when the people vote for them. The convention also received a suggestion that it wind up its busi- ness by Dec. 31 so the proposed new constitution can be put before the voters next April. Henry Woolfenden (R-Bloom- field Hills) proposed the timetable which drew a two-sentence fire from Melvin Nord (D-Detroit). Other Proposals Other proposals received Thurs- day included: Two suggestions for a civil rights section in the constitution's dec- laration of rights to prohibit any discrimination because of race, color, creed or religion. Changing the April elections for state officials to an "off-year bi- ennial election" to be' held the Tuesday after the first Monday of November in odd-numbered years. This would give Michigan a state- wide election every November. Cites ]Duties Of Scholars To Country Addresses Student Group in Chapel Hill CHAPEL HILL, N.C. ()-Presi- dent John F. Kennedy said yes- terday that present-day Ameri- cans are destined to live most of their lives in peril. He said scholars have a special obligation to their country, He told a throng of thousands at the University of North Caro- lina that the nation must be pur- poseful, willing to face risks, de- termined to live up to its words and ready to do its duty "unde- terred by fanatics of frenzy at home or abroad." Give Service "I ask you to give to the service of our country the critical facul- ties which society has helped to develop in you here . . . We are destined, all of us here today, to live most, if not all, of our lives in uncertainty, challenge and per- He promised in these days of "cold peace"to make every effort to prevent the world from being destroyed in a nuclear holocaust. At the same time, Kennedy cau- tioned Americans against expect- ing that the free world "shall soon meet total victory or total defeat." The chief executive declared that for the first time in history twq opposing powers confront each other with the capacity to destroy each other. "W/hile we do no hitend to see the free world give up, we shall make every, effort to prevent the world from being blown up," he said. Views Military Minutes' after receiving his 21st honorary degree, the President was whisked to nearby Raleigh-Dur- ham airport for the short hop to Ft. Bragg,' N.C., and a look at some of the nation's military might. Kennedy inspected this crack division-which is trained, to move overseas almost instantly-and to witness demonstration' of fire- power. He saw prime examples of the kind of conventional military strength he is seeking to build against a background of crises in Berlin and Southeast Asia. In a brief talk, the President paid tribute to the all-volunteer outfit as men who did in peace- time what others do in war-"live hazardously in defense of their country." Pi Kappa Phi, Alumni Feud; In Bias Case LOUISVILLE (A) - Members of the Pi Kappa Phi social fraternity. at the University of Louisville called police yesterday to remove from their chapter house a na- tional representative of the fra- ternity.' Harry Porter, president of. the chapter, said the representative, Ted Scharfenstein, had locked members out of the house and de- activated the chapter in what Porter called an action initiated by Louisville alumni "who want us to discriminate." Alumni Preadiced Porter said "several alumni are very prejudiced" and object to the chapter -accepting Jewish mem- bers. He said the chapter has two Jewish pledges apd that other Jewish persons have belonged in the past. James Webb, an alumnus of the fraternity and a former chapter adviser, denied the accusation. He said, "I hate to see us ruined on this racial discrimination kick be- cause that is not the heart of the matter at all. I would have no out *by a small group of govern- ment workers. Huxley cited an uninformed and disinterested public and the nature of ,totalitarian propaganda and diplomacy as two factors which prevent foreign policy from being' controlled by the people. "We must realize that authori- tarian personalities may control great power and endanger the whole of any democratic society when the foreign policy is wholly removed from the hands of the people," he continued, citing Roosevelt as a case in point. He also mentioned the problem of a society such as the United ASKS 'INDOCTRINATION': Buckley Raps Academic Freedom Lashing out against "the mys- tique of academic freedom as all promises and no deliveries," Amer- ica's most pungent conservative, William F. Buckley, yesterday called for "indoctrination" of stu- dents by their professors. "We are told that the modern university is supposed to be neu- tral on all the issues discussed in its halls," the founder and edi- verifiable truths, "They are claim- ing they will never know what right conduct is." Buckley, a 10 year alumnus of Yale University, claimed that cer-. tain truths had been discovered and accepted by the major phil- osophers of the past. "It is the duty of the university to pass on the intellectual and moral patri- monv f eat zeerato ,,. first battle went to the classical educators who succeeded in get- ting criticism of the "cheerful, mindless adjustment" of progres- sive education accepted by "think- ing people." "Thepfight remaining consists of actually taking power. It is one thing to make criticisms and an- other to step in and dispossess the zealous administrators of non-