SELECTIVE SERVICE: YOU COULD BE NEXT See Editorial Page \:Y L , irl igaxt :43att CLOUDY High-85 Lw--62 Little change, chance of showers Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No. 57S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1966 SEVEN CENTS ClevelandClean-up Gangs and More Resei FOUR PAGES itment By MEREDITH EIKER The National Guardsmen have begun to leave Cleveland - by Sunday they should all be gone. 4 But community resentment will not be so quick to dissipate in the city's Hough and Glenville districts, nor will Mayor Locher's administration find it easy to ap- pease the residents with Grand Jury investigations. Bill Ayers, '68, who is current- ly working for Cleveland's East Side Community Union, told yes- terday of efforts by Glenville youths to assist the city in clean- ing up the neighborhood-efforts aimed at clearing slums which ur-! ban renewal projects have not as yet touched. "About 25 gang leaders - kids between the ages of 15 and 21-- met to organize themselves and their fellow members into a mas- sive clean-up unit along Lakeview Ave.," Ayers related. By yesterday they had cleared alleys and back- yards on Lakeview of furniture and other debris which had been collecting for years. After piling the junk along the curb they call- ed the city's sanitation department and requested that the refuse be picked up before it can accumu- late further. "Right now they're waiting to see what happens," said Ayers. "If the city doesn't take care of it pretty quickly the kids intend to call Mayor Locher personally, tell him of the delay, and demand that it be collected within a given time period-like 24 hours. After that they'll probably move it into the streets . .." The Glenville youths-as those in Hough-are now testing Cleve- land's administration, hoping per- haps that for once it will act in a manner deserving of the residents' confidence. "We-that is representatives of the Glenville neighborhood-pre- sented a list of eight demands to Mayor Locher on Saturday," con- tinued Ayers. "He said he'd read them and then get in touch with us after he's considered them. We've made an appointment with him for Tuesday." Ayers added that the Glenville representatives will be at the may- or's office to keep the appoint- ment, though no one was willing to vouch for Locher's appearance. For the most part the Glen- ville demands are reasonable: more supervised playgrounds, ex- termination of the city's rat pop- ulation, more traffic lights on Lakeview and better safety patrols, more police respect of the people, more Negro police who understand the people and their problems, the establishment of a police review board, and the resignation of Po- lice Chief Wagner and Safety Commissioner McCormick. And in the aftermath of what one Negro resident termed "viol- ent demonstrations" in Cleveland, Mayor Locher has ordered grand jury investigations which Ayers fears will bring "only conclusions and no solutions." One 17 year old Negro youth has reportedly identified key peo- ple in last week's rioting-people who organized the violence and gave instruction in the making of firebombs. Many feel that outside agitation was partially responsi- ble for the racial disturbances. Conclusions such as these, how- ever, can only add more resent- ment. One Negro spoke indignant- ly in a telephone interview, say- ing that Cleveland Negroes were smart enough to organize the riots themselves: "We don't need out- side 'help of any kind. . . no one has to teach us how to make fire- bombs or how to distract police and firemen while we burn the stores of the whites that are ex- ploiting us." No one, Ayers observed, has to tell these people that they're liv- ing in poverty and that they're not getting a decent education. He felt that the Negro youth cur- rently acting as informant actual- ly has no real information to give. "He's only telling the Grand Jury what they want to hear and try- ing to keep himself out of trou- ble.,' Negro leadership in Cleveland is admittedly poor--there were no radical or dynamic leaders be- fore the riots and none seems to have come with the violence. Ayers commented that neither he nor any of his fellow workers at the Community Union want to provide the Negro leadership and it seems doubtful that the resi- dents would accept them even if they did. Said one Negro, "It's an insult to the intelligence of the residents of Hough and Glenville to think that we're notcap able of formulating long-range plans our- selves." Said Ayers, "We're only here to bring the people together and of- fer them alternatives when we can." And it's up to the administra- tion to act upon these plans and alternatives. Senate Okays Foreign AidK Bill with Cuts Legislators Decide Against Measure Asking Deeper Slash WASHINGTON (PW-The Senate cut $100 million from President Johnson's $892-million military foreign aid program last night and then passed it. Before wrapping up its work on the measure, the Senate beat back efforts to make a deeper slash in the program-$250 million - and '~to require President Johnson to dip into the defense appropriation in order to pay for the military- aid spending. Sen. J. W. Fubright (D-Ark ,:. chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and thus nominal manager of the bill on the floor, voted against the mill- tary-aid authorization on the final passage. The measure was acted on after a day of debate that began with Democratic Leader Mike Mans- field of Montana stressing the senators' concern with the size and cost of the U.S. troop force in Europe and urging a cutback. Underscoring the obvious Sen- ate mood to cut back on aid spend- ing were the votes cast for the reduction by two of the commit- tee chairmen most involved in the 'program - Fulbright of Foreign Relations and Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Ga) of Armed Services. The action on the military-aid program came a day after the Senate had completed action on the economic-aid program, cutting it a total of $409 million below President Johnson's $2.47-billion request. The 82-7 roll-call vote sent the military aid authorization for thel fiscal year that began July 1 to a Senate-House conference along with the economic aid measure. The House had lumped the two programs together but the Senate, while separating them as the ad- ministration asked, came out with an aid program far different from what the House voted or President Johnson asked. Judging from past perform- ances, the final result will be a compromise softening some of the buffeting given the program by the Senate. Those who voted against the military aid on final passage were Sens. Fulbright, Quentin N. Bur- dick (D-ND), Allen J. Ellender (D-La), Ernest Gruening (D-Alas- ka), Vance Hartke (D-Ind, George McGovern (D-SD) and Wayne Morse (D-Ore). After the move by McGovern to cut the military aid by $250 mil- lion was rejected, 71 to 23, Morse withdrew his amendment to get a $200 million slash, saying he was throwing his support .behind the effort of Sen. Frank Church (D- Idaho) for a $100 million reduc- tion. Church's cut won 55 to 37 - supported by 43 Democrats and 12 Republicans, while it was opposed by 20 Democrats and 17 Republi- cans. I md igau Daily NEWS WIRE Late World News By The Associated Press DETROIT-Ford Motor Co. reported yesterday, as General Motors did Tuesday, that profits for the second quarter and first six months of 1966 ran behind 1965 figures. SAIGON-A terrorist grenade injured one American and three Vietnamese today in Gia Dinh City adjoining Saigon. Police sources said the terrorist tossed the grenade into a U.S. military Jeep and it exploded just after an American service- man threw it out of the vehicle. A mine exploded last night in a classroom at a girls high school at Hue, but no one was injured, a government spokesman said. He said the building was empty when the mine exploded. Authorities theorized the timing device was faulty and that the explosion occurred earlier or later than terrorists had intended. ATTORNEY-GENERAL FRANK KELLEY said he would try to develop a program based on law and voluntary cooperation to halt the "frightening rise in the accident rate" for motor- cycles, the Associated Press reported from Lansing. From 1964 to 1965, he said, the number of motorcycle and motor scooter registrations climbed by 66 per cent and the acci- dent rate jumped by 91 per cent. Kelley scheduled a series of meetings with law enforcement officers, motorcycle manufacturers, dealers and renters and representatives of motorcycle organizations to receive suggestions. To meet the problem. he recommended a combination of voluntary action by motorcycle riders. tightened law enforcement, new laws and cooperation by the motorcycle industry to assist in safe use of the cycles. Kelley said, "The vast majority of motorcycle, motor scooter and motorbike users are obeying the laws and acting properly. "We must also observe that these vehicles have a poper and legitimate place in the total recreational activities of our population. DRAFT BOARDS shouldn't give mathematics teachers pref- erence over art teachers when granting deferments, the State Board of Education said yesterday, according to the Associated Press. The board adopted a resolution urging local boards to treat all teachers equally when classifying them for the draft, regardless of the subject they teach. "One cannot justify in terms of the educational value a distinction among different categories of teachers and their impact upon the student," the resolution said. Col. Arthur Holmes, State Selective Service Director, told local draft boards last month to review occupational deferments, including those for teachers. He said boards should give special consideration to granting deferments to teachers of mathematics and science and other skills considered critical. The State Board's resolution also urged draft boards to keep in mind the importance of teachers to the national interest and security, and "the difficulty of recruiting and retraining teachers" if many are drafted along lines of the new policy. A GENERAL FUND BUDGET of $12,889,401 for 1966-67 was approved recently by the Eastern Michigan University Board of Regents. The figure is $2,360,130 more than that for the previous year. Tuition and fee hikes are provided for in the budget. The EMU regents also retained architects to begin development of the university's third residence hall complex, estimated to cost $6,950,000. The new general fund budget provides for an enrollment in- crease of 2,000 to an anticipated 12,000 students for the coming fall term. -Daily-Thomas R. Copi UNION POOL... DOWN THE DRAIN The swimming pool at the Union will be open today for the last time. The space the pool occupies will be taken over by the Alumni Association offices which have moved out of Alumni Memorial Hall to make room for enlargement of the art museum. FOR BEGINNING PSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS: Mrs. Murphy To Run for : Regent Post Incumbent Expected To Soon Announce Bid for Re-Election By PATRICIA O'DONOHUE Regent Irene Murphy will run for re-election to the Board of Regents, informed sources dls- losed yesterday. She is not expected to make a public statement to this effect until Aug 1, when she will outline her plans for the future. Regent Murphy's term expires this year, and there was some doubt as to whether or not she would seek re-election to the ight-year term. Brablec's Term Regent Carl Brablec's term also expires this year, however, he is not going to seek re-election to the post because of his pressing duties as superintendent of Rose- ville schools. This means that there is still one vacancy on the Board. At the moment it appears that John Collings, a Democrat will fill it. Collins is president of Wayne. National Life and was formerly Democratic State chairman In 1962-63. Other Possibilities The remaining possibilities in the Democratic camp are Norman Krandall, an executive with the Ford Motor Company; Theodore Sachs, the lawyer primarily re- sponsible for the court ruling re- directing the apportionment to a one-man, one-vote basis, and Robert Nederlander, executive of the Nederlander Co. which owns several theatres, including the Fisher Theatre. The Republican camp has ex- perlenced no "Regent rumblings" yet, according to Charles orle- beke, special advisor to the gov- ernor. He said that "things are fluid at the moment" and that there has not been much activity. Lawrence Lindemer and Ink White have been mentioned as possible Republican candidates be- cause they had been considered for the appointment to the vacancy left by Eugene Power's resignation, but there was no official con- firmation of this. 'Looking It Over' Krandall, while not committing himself said that he would most likely seek the nomination. He in- diected that he would like to look "over the field" and assess his chances before making a final decision. Sachs said that he has not yet made a final decision to seek the nomination and will decide some- time next week. Nederlander said that h is fairly sure that he will seek the nomination but has not made a final decision. He said that he has been approached by many people and indicated that a committee has been formed to get him to run. 'Project Outreach Introduces Integrative Teaching Approach By SHIRLEY ROSICK A psychology department sym- posium to be presented today in Rackham Amphitheater, between 7.30 p.m. and 9:30, will deal with the new approach to teaching in- troductory psychology put into operation last fall. "Project Outreach," an idea de- veloped in the summer of 1965 by graduate students in a pre-teach- ing seminar on "Dynamics of Group Process," attempts to offer beginning psychology students a chance to apply "textbook knowl- edge" in field situations. Eliminate Lecture Beginning last fall, students en- rolled in psychology 101 and its Honors counterpart - 191 - were relieved of sitting in on the mam- moth lectures in Hill Aud, that were a traditional butt of com- plaints levied against the Univer- sity's "mass and depersonalized educational system." In place of the fourth weekly hour of class previously occupied by the lecture, about one-third' of the students were given the chance to participate in field proj- ects such as work with the men- tally disturbed at Northville Hos- pital, with delinquent boys at a training school near Whitmore Lake, with a foster children's re- ceiving home, the Children's In- stitute, at the newly-set-up experi- mental nursery school, the Chil- dren's Community, with tutorial groups and in work with lawyers and in courtroom observations. Recitations Teaching fellows, traditionally given considerable autonomy by the psychology department, or- ganize recitation sections in a variety of ways, with individually prepared reading lists, according to their own and their students' pref- erences. Several have broken down large sections into several groups of a size more ameanable to in-depth discussion. Each would meet fewer times a week for longer periods of time than the usual one hour. Two teaching fellows pooled the students in their recitation sec- tions and rotated as lecturers to the combined group for the first several weeks. The students were then allowed to opt for one of three different programs for the remainder of the semester Acon- tinuation of the lectures was of- fered. Or, students could choose to attend seminar-style classes or pursue independent reading and study, having weekly discussions with the instructor-options rare- ly offered to undergraduates, espe- cially at an introductory course a thrice-weekly basis, and apply and test out the concepts in their, research projects. Some of the research projects1 have worked out; some haven't. But, the idea itself-involving be- ginning psychology students in field work-definitely has proven viable in the view of those involved in the operation of "Project Out- reach." Favorable Reaction Response from institutes where Outreach students have worked has been extremely complemen- tary; the undergraduate research- ers have been called "dependable, competent, spontaneous."'Students themselves have also been pleased with the field work they were in- volved in. Many who participated in the project last fall returned to work at various agencies-espe- cially at Northville and the Chil- dren's Institute-the following se- mester, on a non-credit basis. Some field projects slow in get- ting students involved because of transportation problems or be- cause, as in the case of the Psy- chology and the Law project, not being on the same yearly time-, table as the University's academic year, are being revamped or drop- ped after further study of the project this summer, with new projects being devised. According to Outreach's orga- nizers, the project is also being "looked at from a new angle" dur- ing the summer, with some em- phasis on the ethical considera- tions concerning students involv- ed in the field work. According to one Outreach teaching fellow, an example of the types of issues the prpject's organizers might consider is that of student, becoming more than the "participant observer" the psy- chology department asks him to be, perhaps participating in pick- eting organized by researchers he works with, attempting to use a "Oh, it's for my Psych 101 course" line of defense if arrested, AUG. 2 PRIMARY: Many To Bid for Legislative Nominations Musical Society To Sponsor Internationally Known Dancers By CAROLE KAPLAN Third of a Four-Part Series The most important phase of Tuesday's primary election, aside from the much-publicized Wil- liams-Cavanagh race for the U.S. Senate nomination, are the elec- a 23-15 seat lead in the Senate and a majority of 73-37 in the House. The Republicans, as might be expected, are attempting to reduce this lead, and are running strong candidates in districts which, though traditionally Re- districts where the party is strong. Twelve former representatives are running once again, and some of them will be strong challengers. One such race, which involves the 1966 Civil Rights Bill, is be- tween Rep. Lucien Nedzi and for- paign against him would do con- siderable damage. Nedzi has ac- cused Ryan's aides of spreading rumors that Nedzi has sold his Detroit home to Negroes. Ryan advertises himself as the protector of the rights of, iome- The University Musical Society will open its 88th fall concert season on Oct. 24, United Na- tions Day, with the Hosho Noh Troupe from Tokyo's Suidobashi Noh Theatre. In the United States for the first time, the troupe is being co-sponsored by the Uni- sical festival will also include the Robert Joffery Ballet on Oct. 26. The group specializes in both classical and modern ballets. Founded in 1956, its first seven tours of the United States touch- ed 400 cities. In 1962-63, the U.S. State Department sponsored Kirstein and George Balanchine, directors of the New York City Ballet, the Joffrey Ballet has been appointed a "permanent resident company" for the center. To climax Dance Festival events on Oct. 29, the Fiesta Mexicana will offer Mayan and Aztec dances