'TRUTH COVERAGE': PRESS RESPONSIBILITY See Editorial Page L Sir iAa Daii4H CLOUDY High-72 Law--54 Partly cloudy, chance of showers Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No. 30S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1966 SEVEN CENTS FOUR PAGES Higher By SHIRLEY ROSICK fairs Ri Parking fees will increase ef- finally fective July 1, and fines for motor Mrani vehicle violations may also rise the all next fall. However, fees for motor Meter f vehicle permits may be revised be downward. be inc Already, permit fees for the nts p ing lt summer half semester have been for two reduced from $1.75 to $1.00. A revision of the University's vehicle SpecJ code booklet would change, among mitsf other things, charges for violations Thayer and permits. will be Students of the Traffic Advisory to $1.0 Board this past spring suggested whicht the changes, which were then put 50 cent into a code by Tom Brown, as- In a sistant to the director of student- to be a community relations. The proposed this fa new code now awaits approval of such v Vice-President for Student Af- and dr: Motor Vehicle Fines, Fees S ichard L. Cutler and should go into effect this fall. ager of Service Enterprises' C. Shiel has announced terations in parking fees. fees in unrestricted lots will reased from five to ten er hour. Fees in staff park- s will remain at five cents ohours. dal guest and visitor's per- for the Thompson and Street parking structures increased from 50 cents 0 per day. Evening parking begins after 3 p.m., will be ts, up from 25 cents. Lddition to a probable hike, announced more specifically ll, in the standard fines for iolations as illegal parking iving without authorization, the previous $50 fine limit for a past disciplined only by impound- general misdemeanor for a first violation may be raised to coin- cide with the more stringent maxi- mum fine, at least $90, provided for under Michigan state law. Other changes called for by the proposed vehicle code revision are: -a limitation on students al- lowed to operate motorcycles, to exclude freshmen, except those living at home; -the requirement of insurance for both automobiles and cycles, with specified minimum levels of $10 thousand property, $20 thou- sand public liability for autos and $5 thousand property, $10 thou- sand public liability for cycles; -the possible ticketing, with fines not to exceed $5, for viola- tions of bicycle regulations, in the ment and -a change in the composition of the Traffic Advisory board to include six students from Grad- uate Student Council, Student Government Council and Joint Judiciary Council instead of the previous four. This change also empowers the vice-president for student affairs to name an alter- nate for his position as one of the board's two administrators. Brown said the format of the vehicle code has also undergone revision so that it now has a legal rather than informational tone. "If the regulations are to be used as a code, they ought to be written that way," he said. With sections, more uniformly numbered and definitions all listed in one section, instead of the "as you get to them" arrangement of past book- lets, the code booklet can be used for referral more easily, he said. He stressed that the alterations in the vehicle code are only pro- posed but that any further changes will probably be minor and concern wording problems. No changes in substances will be made without the students of the Traf- fic Advisory Board seeing them when they return this fall, Brown said. He explained that the exact amount permit fees will be reduced cannot be determined until data on the present fiscal year is finalized, but that he will recom- mend to the driving board that the fees be reduced as much as possible. Brown said freshmen are being restricted from operating motor cycles for two reasons: -clustering of freshman cycle operators around the campus area has brought about a concern over noise. Constant reving of the cycles often disturbs classes. -a large number of freshmen, not being significantly aware of the popularity of cycles until they reach college, practice with newly- purchased machines on campus streets. Brown said it would con- tribute more to the safety of cam- pus streets if students learned to ride cycles over the summer at home. He pointed out that while about 1300 cycle permits, an increase of about 75 per cent over the .pre- vious year, were issued last year, ~en fo there are only 600 parking spaces for cycles on University property. He added that attempts are be- ing made to evolve a central plan for parking facilities for autos, bicycles and motor cycles. This may include a relocation of and increase in parking facilities, he said. Brown said that the minimum insurance requirements have been placed on both autos and cycles until the University has more experience with the state's new un- -insured motorists' fund. At present, it is not clear which students will be covered by the fund; of particular concern are international and out-of-state stu- dents. If it appears that most students will be covered and the state's requirement is raised, it is all possible the University may do away with its insurance require- ment, he said. The extent of the use of,.fines instead of impoundment for bi- cycle regulations will depend upon the types of violations occuring and space available for storage of impounded bicycles, Brown said. At present, storage facilities are "primitive compared to what was available in the past," he said, since the University remodeled the old storage facilities into office space. He explained that impoundment is usually resorted to if a bicycle looks as though it has been aban- oned or if it doesn't have an Ann Arbor license, but that if a park- ing violation occurs, it would be preferable to ticket the bicycle owner. 600 Join in Mississippi Voter Drive Leaders of SNCC, CORE Speak, Urge Negroes To Register By HARVEY WASSERMAN Special To The Daily GRANADA, Miss. - Two hun- dred marchers were joined by 400 Negro citizens of the small town of Granada yesterday in a dra- matic drive to register eligible Negro voters.According to CORE national executive chairman Floyd McKissick, it was the first such demonstration ever attempted in a deep south town. The core of the "Meredith march" was shuttled in the morn- ing from their camp-site at Enid dam to the spot on Route 51 where their march had concluded the day before. Singing and beckoning to observers, the group marched through the Negro section of town to the Bell Flower Baptist Church and then to the town square in the heart of Granada. All along the way Negroes streamed into the procession swelling its ranks to well over 600. With a memorial to Jefferson Davis in the background, the marchers circled the town square and then poured into it. Pointing across the square to the Granada County court house, McKissick' told the crowd, "There are two men's toilets in there-one mark- ed men's No. 1 and one marked men's No. 2. Before the day is over colored people are going to use both of them." Robert Green, SNCC's regional director followed McKissick. He said, 'We aren't in Mississippi for any picnic - we've been serving white folks picnics for too long." Two Purposes He stated the march's purpose as two-fold. The first is to help Mississippi Negroes register to vote. The second, he said, climb- ing on the Davis monument, is to "overcome the fear this Jefferson Davis represents - this is what we're here for." "You see those confederate flags all over the place. I say, it's about time we began to live under the American flag." Saying this, he stuck a small American flag be- hind the Davis picture in the monument. Tuition Bill f 1tirIigai u Daily Veto Asked NEWS WIRE Of Romney Protestant, Jewish T Late World News IN LATE ELECTION RETURNS last night, former Gov. Ernest F. Hollings swept to an unexpectedly easy victory over Sen. Donald S. Russell in the South Carolina Democratic primary. Unofficial returns from 682 of the state's 1,615 precincts gave Hollings, a close personal friend of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, 65,538 votes to 39,026 for Russell. In Illinois, Rep. William L. Dawson, leader among Chicago's south side Negroes, won Democratic renomination for a 13th term, defeating two other Negroes. Rep. Barratt O'Hara defeated State Rep. Abner Mikva in his bid for Democratic renomination, Charles H. Percy, the Chicago industrialist who lost a try for governor in 1964, breezed to the Republican nomination for U.S. senator over two token opponents. STANFORD (q)--A STANFORD faculty group has criticized the use nationally of college grades for student draft deferment and asked other universities to take similar action. But the Academic Council said the university should con- tinue to make its facilities available for Selective Service exam- inations and provide class standings to local draft boards at a student's request. About 250 of Stanford's 800 faculty members attended a secret, four-hour meeting of the council. They declined to report the vote by which the resolution regarding grades was passed. The council said the national draft system, in relying on academic criteria for deferment, "raises serious problems of con- science and of practice affecting the conduct of higher education. THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION has announced a $144,404 grant to the University to help strengthen science programs. A COLLEGE NEWSPAPER EDITOR who has been ordered by a Eugene, Ore., judge to reveal the names of students using marijuana said yesterday she would take her case as high as the U.S. Supreme Court, if necessary. Annette Buchanan, managing editor of the University of Oregon Daily Emerald, has refused to reveal the names of stu- dents she reported about in an article on campus addiction last month. She said it would be a violation of journalistic ethics to reveal the names. Circuit Judge Edward Leavy ordered Miss Buchanan to reveal the names or face fines and a possible jail sentence. * * * * NORTH DARTMOUTH, MASS. (UP)-DEAN John U. Monro of Harvard College says Harvard acted presumptuously in giving student grades to Selective Service boards. He said the action in connection with students deferments "was an administrative assumption that probably should not have been made without a dialogue between the students and the faculty." Monro said Harvard will turn the issue into a public debate when classes resume in the fall. Leaders Oppose Aid To Private Colleges LANSING (1P) -Protestant and Jewish leaders yesterday asked Gov. George Romney to veto a bill which would help pay the tuition of needy students attending pri- vate colleges and universities, in- cluding schools with religious af- filiations. Romney, who fuses to say in he will sign or bill, said at a yesterday: traditionally re- advance whether veto a particular news conference "I will give consideration of the viewpoints of all involved." He said he has been contated "by several groups-on both sides of the issue." He has not met with any since the ball was passed, he said. Sympathetic Attitude -Associated Press OVERTURNED ,JEEP Youthful demonstrators overturned a Vietnamese military jeep in Saigon yesterday during an anti- government protest led by Buddhist monks. The jeep was set afire along with an American military jeep. (See related story, Page 3.) Romney met with presidents of AFTER FULL YEAR: the private schools last fall-in- dicating a sympathetic attitude toward such legislation at the time. Already approved by the Sen- ate, it won 87-14 House passage this week. In its original form, the bill would have applied only to those students choosing private over public schools. But a House amendment provides that the same grants be given students attending public colleges. The amendment, along with several others tacked on by the House, now has gone back to the Senate for concurrence. $16 Million Annual Cost The plan would cost an esti- mated $3.3 million the first year; $16 million annually when a four- year phase-in is completed. Spokesmen for the Jewish Com- munity Council of Metropolitan I Detroit and the Metropolitan De- troit Council of Churches backed a previous statement of the Mich- igan Council of Churches in con- Deans Hail Trimester System As Permanent, 'A Success' After a full year of three-term, not to teach in Ann Arbor during to say that the new term was the continuous operation of the Uni- the summer so they could pursue long-run solution," but that for versity, most deans of the schools research or outside work. The the 25 per cent of his regular en- and colleges regard the trimester problem can be compounded by rollment that is attending the system as a permanent fixture andI the fact that most other schools spring-summer term, "it is ob- a success. I are on a different schedule, mak- viously satisfactory." Fears that students would be re- ing the hiring of outside faculty The School of Public Health will luctant to take summer courses very difficult. go on complete year-round pro- unless forced to by a deferred ad- Nevertheless, he said, he has gramming next year, Dean Myron missions program have proved un- been able to find enough faculty E. Wegman reported. At the founded as spring-summer regis- and "deliberate action to get more School of Social Work, Dean trations increased by more than teachers would be necessary only Fedele Fauri expressed support for 20 per cent this year over last if there was considerable expan- the new schedule and reported year's figures. sion." excellent results with it in his Problems created by continuous He added that "it was too early school. NSA Reveals New Campus Study Plan Program Will Involve Causes, Solutions of Student Unrest, Revolt The National Student Associa- tion has announced plans for a campus action program" over the next two years involving more than 100 schools .in an effort to study the causes and solutions of student unrest and revolt. The program was announced at the conclusion of a four-day "Na- tional Conference on Student Stress" in Warrenton, Va., in which 60 students and more than 30 faculty members from 33 col- leges and universities participated. NSA, a national union of stu- dents and student governments, hias about 300 member schools with a total enrollment of 1,250,- 000 students. Report Released A report which will be sent to all college presidents in the United States as well as deans of st- dents, student body presidents, college newspaper editors and about 4000 professors was releas- ed at the Warrenton meeting. It indicated that the American college student is far more trou- bled about whether his education is relevant to the "outside world" than he is by drugs, sex, Viet Nam or the atomic bomb. Recommendations for Reality The report suggested some ways of bringing a greater sense of' reality to the ivory tower world. Recommendations included the following: -Students should be more re- sponsibly involved in the man- agement of college affairs, such as in helping to identify effective teachers and rewarding themn with tenure. -Pass-fail judgments should be substituted for grades, at least in the freshman year. -Credit should be offered for off-campus experiences in hospi- tals, the Peace Corps, the civil rights movement, theantipoverty program, or other jobs. rIndependent study should be increasedin all college years, pref- erably in an exploratory course designed by the student with a professor's help. Unknown Cause of Anxiety The military draft is als con- tributing to the anxieties of al- most all male college students, they said, not so much because of the fear of death, or of the ted- iousness of such chores as "peel- ing potatoes," but rather because "we don't know what's going to happen to us." They expressed resentment that the only existing alternative to the draft for college males seemed to be continuing their education in graduate school, bringing a fur- ther alienation from "the real world." The Warrenton, report.concluded that besides an education more relevant to the modern world, there should be "more authentic and personalized relationships be- tween students and faculty." It called for the revision ofthe cam- pus community from a "nest of adversaries" to a "group of col- laborators" of the teachers and students. Project Will Discuss Problems The campus action project, which NSA calls the "campus self- studies program" would involve about 100 college students on each campus. Student-faculty teams .-.. operation could be solved by addi- tional funds for full operation during the summer, most of the deans indicated.- Commends Efficiency Ex-Marine Admits Shooting Friendly Viets Under Drugs AID PROJECT: r'U' Student Chosen To Work In Viet Nam for the Summer demning the measure. The dissenting groups issued a statement sent to Romney saying "historic experience impresses up- on us the lesson that involvement of government with religion is good for neither." Necessary for Education However, leaders of private Michigan colleges, both Catholic and Protestant, are on record as saying the legislation is essential to preserve a dual system of high- er education in Michigan. They argue the proposed law would prevent a monopoly of state schools. Without the law, some have said, some private schools would be forced to close. The Rev. Laurence V. Britt, SJ, president of the University 'of De- troit, was not immediately avail- able for comment. He is chief opponent of the bill. A U of D spokesman said he was in Lans- ing Monday urging Senate leaders to go along with the House amendment extending the grants to public colleges. Rabbi Leon Fram, spiritual leader of Temple Israel, and a ranking Jewish spokesman in De- troit, said the legislation "follows a pattern that is becoming evident Dean William Haber of the lit- erary college commended the ef- ficiency of the trimester system, noting that from 4,000 to 5,000 more students were being edu- cated during the summer. This, he said, was comparable to suddenly creating a new school the size of Princeton. Haber attributed the continua- tion of spring-summer enrollment at only one-third the levels of normal fall and winter term lit- erary college enrollments to the lack of a well-rounded program due to insufficient funds. At the education school, where enrollment is up 65 per cent over last summer, Dean William C. Olson agreed with Haber that the inability to offer a complete pro- gram constituted the only major problem created by the trimester system. He saw the expansion of enrollment as very satisfactory considering the limited course offerings. Staff Pressures Dean Floyd A. Bond of the busi- ness school reported "tremendous pressures which must be relieved" because of continuous operation with no expansion of the admin- istrative staff. But, in general, By MIKE DITKOWSKY Ronald Bauer, Grad, is one of 40 students selected to work in Viet Nam and Laos this summer under a grant provided by the Agency for International Develop- ment. Bauer's home town is Hast- ings, Mich. Modeled on a similar project last year in which 19 students served in the rural areas of Viet Nam, the program will place 30 volun- teers in Viet Nam and 10 in Laos to assist local officials in carry- ing out development programs. The Institute of International gee relief and resettlement, andk assist in the development of health, education, public works, and agriculture. Final selection was made by a three-man panel of university pro- fessors and AID personnel with Viet Nam experience. Preference was given to volun- teers with demonstrated leader- ship and community service exper- ience who are studying Southeast Asian affairs or social sciences and who are interested in future overseas employment, possibly with AID. AID is now concentrating 23 AID resident representatives are stationed in each of the 43 main- land provinces. These provincial representatives oversee the use of AID funds and commodities, plan and execute projects and pro- grams, and together with military advisers, counsel province chiefs on all aspects of the counterin- surgency program. Officials speaking for AID feel that once security against Viet Cong military action is obtained, as they put it, the real work of pacification and rural construction begins. Spearheading this effort n p cp.rin.1no 114inV ic.na nw..m'iP WASHINGTON (AP")-A former Marine Corps crew chief and ma- chine gunner told Senators yester- day of shooting friendly Viet Nam forces while under the influence of drugs. The husky, honorably discharged Marine, identified only as Frank, testified at a Senate judiciary subcommittee hearing that pep pills, barbituates and even heroin are readily available to service- men in this country and overseas. Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-NY) ask- ed for a Defense Department re- port on that, Frank, 23, accompanied by his young wife, identified only as Dorothy, was introduced by Dr. Robert W. Baird, director of a narcotics treatment center in Harlem. Many 'Users' Baird testified on the basis of his personal experience that there are "a minimum of 10,000 to 15,000 heroin and barbituate ad- dicts in the service and easily 100,000 marijuana smokers." Frank said he flew some 125 combat missions in Viet Nam and was crew chief and gunner aboard but the Marine sergeant was not disciplined because no one was aware he was drugged. The ex-Marine said he joined when he was 17 and soon learned it was regarded as clever to try pep pills and goof balls along with beer and wine. Baird Helps Many Baird said many former service- men come to his drug treatment clinic for help. The doctor listed numerous Marine and Navy stations in this country and around the world where Frank told of obtaining drugs and narcotics. Frank said he has been on a cure treatment and expects to shake his use of narcotics. Chance for Treatment The hearing was before the Senate subcommittee to investi- gate juvenile delinquency, on an administration -bill which would offer certain drug addicts a chance at treatment and rehabilitation instead of prison. Similar legislation already has been passed by the House. The subcommittee also heard Henry L. Giordano, federal com- mi -in" $. f t 9'l n'7/C f+zf.V + '