CLASSIFIED SNAFU See Editorial Page iL Swi r i gan :4Ia iti LIGHT SNOW High-20 Low--10 Cold and cloudy today. a little warmer tomorrow Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom No. 97 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1963 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES P tnod DELEGATION OF POWER: To Write Bylaw for SGC I By GLORIA BOWLES / The formulation of a new by-law which would clarify two problems of delegation of powers, and thus make it possible for Student Government Council to renew its demands for membership statements from student organizations is currently being undertaken by Prof. Robert G. Harris of the Law School. Five sororities have not complied with Council demands for presentation of membership statements. The Council may withdraw recognition from those organizations whose charters contain dis- criminatory clauses. If plans proceed as currently outlined, Council should be able to make authori- hU se tative demands for those state- S hools se ments in the early spring. According to Student Govern- ment Council President Steven Lay H eimStockmeyer, '63, the March 22 Board of Regents meeting has been set as the target date for Harris' presentation of the new As Graders by-law. t. Conducting Study Harris is currently conducting NEW YORK-In order to ease a study of the legal problems in- the work load on teachers, a grow- volved in the Board of Regents' ing number of schools are em- decision of authority to the Coun ploying nonprofessional help to cil, and of the Council's rights of handle the more menial tasks, ac- delegation of authority to its cording to the Wall Street Jour- Committee on Membership. nal. Consultations have been held The teacher aides grade compo- with. Harisafubtentsd sitions, take attendance and w Harris, and four students, handle general clerical work. The who are advising him on particu- use of nonprofessional aides has lar problems:of the Council. They been necessitated by the shortage are vice-president Tom Brown, '63, of teachers and the rapid rise in treasurer Russell Epker, '64, Rob- of taches an theert Ross, '63, a nd Kenneth Miller, school enrollment in many areas. s64. This step is favorably viewed The present schedule, although by many educators. Looking at the tentative, shows a presentation by trend toward nonprofessional help, Harris of his proposals to the a Ford Foundation spokesman Council at its Feb. 27 meeting. The noted, "For the first time, schools Council would then have two are beginning to think about the weeks to discuss the proposed new fundamental role of teachers and by-law before March 12, the dead- relieving them of jobs that really line date for submission of agenda aren't theirs." requests to the Board.. Lay Theme Readers' Council to Act Chief of the bureau of secondary Council will probably draft a education of California's Depart- statement of opinion on the by- ment of Education, Frank Linsay law being formulated by Harris, noted that three years ago prac- who will present his suggestions tically none of the secondary to the Regents. schools were using "lay theme In' originally demanding mem- readers. "But in the 1961-62 school bership statements, Council acted year 101 of our 593 senior high er samntCuclced schools and 73 of 357 junior highs on its power to recognize studen't were doing so and the practice is organizations, and on Regents by- wereding"oadte.ract law 2.14 which forbids discrimina- spreading," he added. tion in University organizations. The requirements for the aides Council also has its own non-dis- vary among the school systems. criminatory regulation. There has Most require some sort of College been a question of conflict of the English training; some school latter two provisions. systems give grammar refresher The need for the Harris study courses to theme readers. was cited by William P. Lemmer Schools are finding that it is of the University Attorney's office also economical to use aides. The in a report to SGC, when he noted aides are always paid less than that, although Board of Regents professionally trained teachers. In power is both legislative and ad- Ridgewood High School, Norridge, ministrative, the Board has the Ill., the nine clerical aides are power to delegate only administra- paid between $1.50 and $2 an tive authority. hour. This compares with the average of over $4 an hour for teachers. In some cases house- . a n STEVEN STOCKMEYER SGC revisions NEW HOUSE: Sigma Phi To Move Sigma Phi fraternity has an- nounced its intention to move to a new site on Lincoln within the next 18 months, vacating its pres- ent house on N. Ingalls, where the fraternity has been since 1899. The present site was bought by St. Joseph Mercy Hospital for $180,000, but the fraternity has right of occupancy for another 18 months. Construction of the new house on a three-fourth acre site will begin this summer after the razing of the Phi Kappa Sigma house now located there. "The main considerations in our decision to move is the distance of our present house from campus, and also that the hospital wants our land and house for purposes of expansion," Sigma Phi presi- dent David Schapner, '63, said. William L. Newnan, president of the fraternity's alumni board of directors, declared that the "decision to build a new house means that Sigma Phi is em- phatically reaffirming its belief in the need and value of the col- lege fraternity. "Rather than accepting the tra- ditional role of a college fraternity, we intend to create a new con- cept embodying the modern re- quirements of intellectual develop- ment combined with the time- proven desire to live in smaller housing units, where man's quest for closer brotherhood and privacy can be honored,' Newnan con- tinued. Students and alumni members of Sigma Phi are analyzing the purposes and functions of a mod- ern university fraternity, Newnan said, before submitting require- ments to an architect. This analy- sis is proceeding with "deliberate speed," he added, so that con- struction can be started as soon as the new site is ready. Picketing Causes Party Cancellation SAN FRANCISCO ()-A picket- ing threat by a Negro newspaper publisher who claims the Negro is being bypassed in California political appointments caused the cancellation yesterday of a recep- tion planned by Democrats for a Negro state senator from Georgia. Study Ra Math Loss ByBoredom PITTSBURGH (I)-Boredom in the classroom is costing this coun- try millions of badly needed math- ematicians, a Dartmouth college professor said yesterday. John E. Kemeny told a national meeting of high school principals, "if the new age of science is to flourish in the United States .. . a much larger percentage of math- ematically talented students must be encouraged to pursue this tal- ent." "Many more able students are bored out of" mathematics than frightened out of it,' he said in a speech. He listed the three main causes of losing talented mathe- matics students as "boredom, poor instruction and an outdated cur- riculum." The situation has improved in recent years, Kemeny said, but as recently as 1950 "mathematics in- struction in the United States was about 150 years behind mathema- tical research . .. our high school mathematics programs did not even mention the great discoveries of the 19th century." Grade school teachers, in par- ticular, Kemeny said, are "the product of past sins in mathema- tical education: therefore, more often than not, their weakest sub- ject is arithmetic. It is also true that the mathematical education of grade school teachers has been scandalously neglected." When a good grade school stu- dent finishes his arithmetic in record time, Kemeny said, "the teacher will be slightly annoyed, and will do one of two things: "Either she will give him ten more of the same problems to do, which is sure to bore him to tears, or she will tell him, 'Well, now that you have gotten arithmetic out of the way, you can have some fun. Go do some extra reading'." Kemeny said there should be special classes for talented mathe- matics students, especially at the high school level. In the average classroom, he said, the teacher must spend so much time with poor students he has no time for those with special talents. And, he added, the teacher must expect mathematically tal- ented students to do better work than the teachers half the time and better than the textbook one time out of 10. Name Parsons New Director Of Committee Prof. Thomas S. Parsons of the education department has been appointed director of research of the Joint Youth Development Committee. Prof. Parsons is on an 18 month leave of absence from the Univer- sity. The project is sponsored by the Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Offenses Control Act of 1961. He noted that the committee-is to develop, under the federal act, plans for comprehensive demon- strations within an inter-city area which reflect upon problems of juvenile delinquency. The work will take place and center around the problems of Chicago. Prof. Parsons will be employing exist- ing educational ,and police fa- cilities to develop a more effective attack on this grave problem. Iraq Rebels Eqxecute O Officials Set YTf 2 r f4 4 Evaluations 4 xv ' Of Rebellion yF E Foresee No Threat To U.S. Interests$ WASHINGTON (P) - Although superficially similar to the 1958 upheaval which sent United States Marines into Lebanon, Friday's Iraqi revolution apparently raises no present threat to United States interests serious enough to de- $ mand another show of strength in . the Middle East. State department officials here concede the seizure of power by military men friendly to President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United BUILDING-This is the] Arab Republic poses serious prob- dad which the rebels a lems for Iraq's neighbors. And it recnthicce rebels a is expected to increase instability recent successful revoluti in the Middle East. ernment. Premier Kassem But they point out-major differ- rebellion. ences in the over-all picture now and the one that prevailed in * 1958 when Abdel Karim Kassem S killed King Feisal II and took over the premiership. Sources here say these differences stem from theseC facts: AShahing4f t Pro-Western 1) Feisal's government was CAIRO ()-The revol strongly pro-Western and anti- Abdel Nasser and troubles: communist, as well as being a foe reigns have their roots in th of Nasser. Kassem had been pur- have ir rooty indth suing a policy of non-alignment There is every indicati but his leanings tended recently Karim Kassem boosts Nasse toward the Communist side. the United Arab Republic 2) Friday's coup by nationalist revolution in 1952 routedF forces under Col. Abdel Karim Kassem was one of the Mustafa and the rebels' killing of include King Hussein of J Kassem have not brought an ap- the republican regime in peal for United States help as did Kassem's revolution on July and Mohammed Reza Sha 14. 1958. levi of Iran. At that time President Camille Nasser scored an import Chamoun of Lebanon appealed to lesser success in the tiny ki President Dwight D. Eisenhower, of Yemen last September charging the Iraqi coup was engi- an army coup upset the mo: neered by Nasser and the Egyp- and installed a Republican tian leader was planning similar friendly to Arab unity. moves in other Middle Eastern "Yemen yesterday, Iraq countries, including Lebanon. and Syria's turn will ine Montezuma come about tomorrow," sa In response to Chamoun's ap- pro-Nasser Arab diplomat. peal, Eisenhower on July 15 order- The mass circulation new ed Marines into Lebanon in a Akhbar El Yom claimed o show of strength. The force ul- in Jordan, Saudi Arabia, timately reached more than 14,000 Iran and Israel were scare men before it was withdrawn in In Jordan, Premier Was October, 1958. issued a warning against an 3) The 1958 Iraqi outburst came sible foreign intervention i at a time when Nasser was riding -clearly meaning Nasser. high after failure of the British- The belief in Cairo is th French thrust at the Suez Canal. Iraqi coup will set off a More significantly, the Egyptian of pro-Nasser undertakin leader then was working closely with Soviet Premier Nikita Khru- shchev. Nasser since is regarded as having drifted well out of the Mosowmrit Moscow orbit. 4) While Mustafa'sfollow=r T o Start E pated that this will lead to any quick union of Iraq with the U.A.R. PARIS ()-PresidentT 5) While pro-Nasser, the Mus- yesterday and denied report tafa government is basically anti- in exile. communist. Stepping off a plane 6) The over-all situation in the assured newsmen the only Middle East, due to a combina- tion of circumstances which does not prevail today, was much more He said his eyes had explosive in 1958 than it is now. recent sand storm. He pla ighten Hold, isted Premier Iraqi defense ministry building in Bagh- ttacked with planes and tanks in the on against Abdel Karim Kassem's gov- was executed by the rebels during the 'ast Revolution, 1mb Stability t in Iraq means new glory for Gamal for Middle East kings and sultans whose e beginning of history. on the overthrow of Iraqi Premier Abdel er's dream of Arab unity. The President of has preached unity ever since his own King Faroyk from Egypt. stumbling blocks to Nasser's idea. Others ordan, King Ibn Saud of Saudia Arabia, Syria*' h Pah- ant but ngdom when narchy regime today, vitably id one spaper' fficials Syria, dI fi Tell ny pos- n Iraq at the string ngs Will Respect All Treaties UNITED NATIONS OP) - Iraqi chief delegate Adnan M. Pachachi told United Nations Secretary- General U Thant yesterday Ir'q's new government controls the country and will respect estab- lished treaties. "I gotsin touch with the Secre- tary-General," Ambassador Pac- hachi announced, "and informed him that the situation is com- pletely quiet "I also informed him of the declaration made by the new gov- ernment saying that they intend to abide by the charter of the in its policy and Iraq treaties. Rebels KIl Three Other Ex-Leaders Order Annihilation Of Red Conspirators; Loosen Full Curfew BEIRUT (IP-Iraq's rebel lead- ers executed fallen Premier Abdel Karim Kassem by firing squad yesterday, Baghdad radio an- nounced, and appeared to be con- solidating their grip on the oil- rich Middle East nation. Communist agents were ordered annihilated. "The mad dictator has been trampled beneath the feet of the people," screamed a woman over the radio after the official an- nouncement. The broadcast said Kassem, who boasted two months ago of having escaped 38 attempts on his life, was tried by a military tribunal and then executed with three of his lieutenants, one of them a notorious Communist agent. Borders Still Sealed Iraq's borders remained sealed, but indications mounted that the pro-Nasser young army officers who toppled Kassem's four and a half year-old regime Friday were masters of the situation. Baghdad radio announced the lifting from 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily of the 'round-the-clock curfew imposed Friday, and said Iraqi airports and trains would resume operations during daylight hours Sunday. Schools were scheduled to open Monday. Arab nations' lined up to ex- tend diplomatic recognition of the provisional regime of President Abdel Salam Mohammed Aref, a staunch admirer of -President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic. Syria on Bandwagon Curiously, Syria was among the first. Its leaders had been reported deeply concerned that the Iraqi coup could bring only trouble to their anti-Nasser government. Jordan, too, was among those giving early recognition, even though the boost the Iraqui re- volt gives tobNasser's Arab unity dreams could work against King Hussein and other monarchies, sheikdoms and sultans in the oil- rich Middle East. These include Saudi Arabia and Iran, where the United States has millions invest- ed in oil and air bases. Others recognizing the rebels in- cluded Algeria, the United Arab Republic, Yemen and Kuwait. The little sheikdom of Kuwait, with one of the largest oil reserves in the world, was claimed by Kassem. What actually was going on in side Iraq could not be independ- entlydetermined. Its borderswere sealed and the world was told of' developments through Baghdad radio. The leaders of the revolt appear to be a combination of anti-Com- munist Arab Ba'ath Socialists 'and Nationalists. Although admirers of Nasser, they are believed to favor Arab unity through a federation of states. Nevertheless, the turn of Iraq toward Nasser is expected to en- courage Nasser supporters inside Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.. Radio Baghdad's announcement og Kassem's execution was the most specific of several previous claims that he had been killed. Renew Efforts To End Strike In New York NEW YORK (I)-A member of 'the Presidential board that helped settle the recent longshoremen's strike joined yesterday in talks aimed at ending the city's 64-day newspaper blackout. The board member, Theodore W. Kheel, not acting as a board member on this occasion, con- ferred separately at city hall with publishers and striking printers in their contract dispute. Kheel's presence coincided with a visit here by President John F. Kennedy, but there was no indi- wives work part time without pay. Surplus Population The schools usually have very little trouble with finding non- professional help. For example, the Detroit school board had its choice of 610 qualified persons for 16 positions. In Bound Brook, N.J., 49 persons applied to fill eight positions. Wider use of these aides is some- what hindered by states laws such as the one in Illinois. It states that a teacher must be present in every class. This includes such classes as study halls. With the increasing numbers entering the schools each year, there seems to be little basis be- hind this fear. The total number of public school attendance (sec- ondary and below) is expected to reach 45 million by 1970. NEA Report This figure is 6.9 million above the present school attendance ss reported by the National Educa- tion Association. The Association predicts that it will take 150,000 more teachers annually to meet the rising demands. This latter figure is 20,000 teachers above the number that is graduating an- nually from college. Some teachers object to use of nonprofessional help. They claim that the aides interfere with the traditional rapport between teach- er and student. A number add that they had 'to go over the work of these aides anyway. Supporters argue that the pres- ent shortcomings' can be over- come. through the cooperation and help of the teachers themselves. ,Predicts Vote On Statehood WASHINGTON (P)-Gov. Luis Munoz-Marin of Puerto Rico pre- dicted yesterday Puerto Ricans will vote overwhelmiing in favor of continued commonwealth status when they get the opportunity. Munoz discussed the forthcom- ing Puerto Rican plebiscite with President John F. Kennedy at the White House yesterday. He told newsmen that Kennedy feels very strongly that the Puerto Rican people should have an op- portunity to express their views as to whether to retain common- wealth status, or seek starehood or independence. The vote might not take place for about a year. )enies NwPlans' wxle Government Moise Tshombe of katanga flew to Paris s that he intended totset up a government from Salisbury, Southern Rhodesia, he reason he had come to Europe was for bothered him since he was caught in a ns to see an eye specialist in the French OFF AND RUNNING: Fraternity Rush Opens at 43 Campus I By MICHAEL ZWEIG Fraternity rush opens at 2 p.m. today when over 600 men will begin visiting all of the 43 active houses on the campus hoping to be bid for pledging within two weeks. All fraternities will have open houses from 2-5 p.m. and 7-10 p.m. today, and 7-10 p.m. tomorrow and Tuesday. To be eligible for a bid, a man must have visited no fewer than eight houses, by Tuesday when open houses end one in each of five area districts and any three others. The districts are defined in the rush manual and appear on all rushee cards, Interfraternity Council president John Meyer- holz, '63, explained. Meyerholz also emphasized the value of the rushing counselors, and said, "I sincerely. hope that the rushees will use the counselor to whom he has been assigned. The counselor will have information' on the fraternity system as a whole and on any particular house as well. Any rushee who seeks information or wants to double-check statistics should consult his rush counselor." The counselors are all members of the fraternity system on this campus. Even though sign-up for rush is "informally" over, any man who still plans to rush can register by calling IFC rush chairman Frank Lude, Meyerholz said. " Capital, he said, and then he may Sgo to Switzerland for treatment of a stomach disorder. Tshombe, who- arrived with three aides, including a Belgian woman life" when asked if he would set up an exile government. Rumors which had proceeded Tshombe to Paris said he was coming to sound out European public and government opinion on the idea. Tshombe, who has often chang- ed his mind in the past, also in- dicated that his dispute with the . United Nations is over. Mention- ng the plan of UN Secretary- General U Thant for Congo unity, Tshombe said he had been asked to implement the plan "and sinceI that is finished I consider that I have done my job." The controversial African poli- tician said he would have nothing to do with politics in the French capital, nor would he be making any public statements. Although Katanga province is now in the process of being inte- grated into the Congo remnents of the crisis still remain. Yester- Who Else But Nels? CHICAGO (P) - A reporter 1d New York Gov. Nelson A. ockefeller yesterday that Sen. arry Goldwater (R-Ariz) had ld him the other day he was onvinced you would be a I } I