SGC PROTEST: FACTIONS UNITE ! See Editorial Page Y gu rr Aa D3a it CLOUDY Nigh--36 Low--30 Possible light rain or snow tonight Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 99 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, 22 JANUARY 1965 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES Students To Stage 'Stay-In' Tonight at Local Theatre, Walker Loses in Bid Monks Fast in Protest I By MICHAEL JULIAR Students will hold a "stay-in" atthe Michigan Theatre tonight toiprotest the recent admission price increases at the three Ann Arbor theatres. At the same time, Student Gov- ernment Council was attempting to set up a meeting with represen- tatives of W. C. Butterfield Thea- tres, Inc. central offices in De- troit. Council President Douglas Brook, '65, and Council Member Thomas Smithson, '65, SGC's representa- tives to Butterfield, hope that an "acceptable agreement" can be reached before SGC meets Wed- nesday. To Remain in Theatre The idea behind the "stay-in" is to 'protest the 25 per cent price increase by having students re- main in the theatre through part of the second show. SGC asked for the "stay-in" to show "the management and own- -Daily-Richard Steiner NEWLY ELECTED OFFICERS of Graduate Student Council are (left to right) Fran Berland, Grad, treasurer; Susan Wright, Grad, corresponding secretary; and James McEvoy, Grad, president. The new officers hope to expand the activities of GSC to encompass a greater variety of activities in the community. McEvoy, DeLamater Gain Top Positions in GSC Voting By LAUREN BAHR Graduate Student Council yesterday elected new officers and discussed their involvement with the recently proposed course description booklet. James McEvoy, Grad, the newly elected president, said GSC will expand its activities in the community, especially in the areas ers of the Butterfield Theatres that it has wide-spread student support in its demand for a price reduction." SGC requested that "this be the sole extent of student action until next Wednesday, Jan. 27, thus giving SGC and Butterfield Thea- tres one week to reach an accept- able agreement before further ac- tion is taken."I Move Action However, several student organi- zations have asked for more action than SGC proposed Wednesday night. The Young Democrats, Voice Political Party and the In- dependent Socialist Club will form pickets at the Michigan Theatre both Friday and Saturday and pass out leaflets urging patrons "to remain in the theatre through the 9 p.m. show." The three groups are also urg- ing a boycott of the 9 p.m. show and a complete boycott of the State Theatre on both nights. Graduate Student Council last night added its support to the SGC resolution. The council took the action because it said "the quality of films presently being shown in no way justifies the in- crease in admission prices. GSC urges the University to exert in- fluence on both prices and qual- ity." Give Support Inter-Quadrangle Council, As- sembly Association, Student Em- ployes Union, International Stu- dents Association, the Lawyers Club and the Young Republicans earlier gave their support to SGC. Students are protesting the re- cent ticket price increase at the three Ann Arbor theatres, all own- ed by Butterfield. No demonstra- tion has been called at the Cam- pus Theatre because student lead- ers feel that its present show of three movies for the single ad- mission price is not unfair. Student leaders have pointed out that the Regents, with a mi- nority interest in the Butterfield chain and two representatives on the six-man Butterfield board of lirectors, "can certainly voice their opinion on the price increase, but they have failed to do this." The leaders have urged "the University to take a stand on this issue, and to use its power to re- duce prices to the original level." Students yesterday were distrib- uting 350 posters throughout the men's and women's residence halls supporting the single night dem- onstration called for by SGC. Other students working in the Student Activities Bldg., were con- structing pickets and printing leaflets urging the two-night dem- onstration. The Council motion had asked that all student organizations "en- courage their members to support SGC action." Churchill Still Eludes Death LONDON () - Sir Winston Churchill's ordeal neared the end of its first week last night with no change reported in his des- perate battle for life. Lord Moran, Churchill's per- sonal physician, visited him at midday and in the evening and said he could find no change in the slow but certain weakening of the 90-year-old statesman felled by a stroke last Friday. Medical experts repeated that Churchill could linger at the same low ebb for days. For Commons Seat LONDON (M-Britain's Foreign Secretary Patrick Gordon Walker lost his bid for a seat in the House of Commons last night in an election that shook Prime Minister Harold Wilson's Labor Party government and sent Conservative hopes soaring. His defeat in a district that for 30 years had been safe for Labor- ites reduced Labor's margin in Parliament to three seats. La The race issue was a factor in the downfall of Gordon Walker, an integrationist, and British Nazis harassed his campaign trail. In an impressive comeback after their dismissal from power last October, the Conservatives seized the Laborite seat of Leyton in Over New Youths, Police SSeek'Okgay' For Merger With League By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM The Michigan Union will ask its members early next month to approve its proposed student ac- tivities merger with the Women's Lea uie. 'suburban London in the first major electoral test faced by the Wilson government. Leyton, as usual, had sent a Laborite back to Parliament only three months ago with a margin of 7.926 votes. Gordon Walker lost to Conservative Ronald Buxton by 205 votes. The outcome left Britain with a foreign secretary twice rejected by the electorate and yet already playing a full time role in world councils. Gordon Walker lost his parliamentary seat in the Smeth- wick division of Birmingham last October. Peer Possibility of housing and civil liberties UMSEU To Picket Shop By ROBERT BENDELOW The University of Michig Student Employes Union a nounced yesterday it will pick Drake's Sandwich Shop to se an increase in student wages f the shop's 25 student employes. However, Truman Tibbals, ma ager of the establishment, repli that his employes are satisfi with the current wages and do n 'require outside bargaining pre sure. Barry Bluestone, '66, UMSI president, announced the pick ing will take place 11 a.m.-5 p. every weekday starting Mond until the union's wage deman have been met. Minimum Wage The union is pressing for a mi imum wage of $1.25 per hour f all Drake employes. Tibbals sa that employe salaries range fro $1.-$1.25 per hour depending up the type of work required and t length of time the student h worked at the restaurant. -He conceded the union's rig to picket in protest but voic strong objection to the methc used by the union. Tibbals sa yesterday was the first time th he has been approached by t: union. He met with student union lea ers, including Bluestone, for ov an hour. 'Pays the Lowest' The union, which is also wor ing for student wage increases _ the University, chose Drake's its first off-campus target i cause "it pays the lowest wag and offers the least fringe ber fits" of area restaurants, Blu stone claimed after the meetir He was referring to the alleg policy of most restaurants of c fering their employes free mea "r Tibbals explained that few of1 employes eat at the shop but a granted a one-third discount food at all times. He answered the wage obje Premier; of students. GSC will also increase --the number of inter-departmental graduate groups, he said.- "We will continue to work closely with Student Government Council and other University or- ganizations. We also hope to work more with foreign students by providing information and activi- ties for them," McEvoy comment- ed.; an The other elected officers were: n- John DeLamater, Grad, vice- cet president; Fran Berland, Grad, ek I treasurer; Harold Prowse, Grad,1 for recording secretary and Susan Wright, Grad, corresponding sec- n- retary. ed The council moved to reactivate ed the membership committee to be zot chaired by James Norr, Grad, to es- work on the course description booklet. EU The booklet will be prepared by et- eight student organizations and m. it will be designed to give students ay specific information related to ds courses and their professors. It will stress such things as the pre- paredness of the professor, the n- number and types of papers and or the value of the reading list. id id The committee will concentrate1 on on finding the means by which all1 he the finished write-ups for the1 as booklet can be parcelled out to graduate students in the various r departments. But even if the approval-being There seemed a good possibility sut in a rerendumaFeb 10 that Gordon Walker now would sought in a referendum Fep. 10-- be created a peer so as to have a is forthcoming, the exact status seat in the Lords. of the merger will remain in doub This however, would still leave until the Regents or administra- the Wilson government in the tive officers give their final en- teWlo oeneti h dorsement. awkward position of having a key The proposed merger would cabinet member who could not be fuse the student activities organi- questioned in Commons on for- zations of the League and Union eign relations, except the prime into a University Activity Center minister. under the direction of a four-man Although there is no written co-educational board. rule, modern British practice calls Asks Changes for cabinet minister to sit in the The referendum will ask Union House of Commonsbwhere they members, which include all males can be questioned by members. currently enrolled h e r e and Sir Alec Douglas-Home was in alumni who were once students the House of Lords as the Earl of for at least eight semesters, to Home when he took the post in approve changes in the Union's 1960. constitution which would imple- Others Answered ment the merger. And this meant that othelr gov- Specifically, the r e q u e s t e d ernment members had to answer, changes would. questions for him and explain --Enlarge the student repre- policy in Commons. sentation on the Union Board of Labor held the Nuneaton par- Directors to four positions, but liamentary seat in the second spe- allow two of these students only cial election yesterday. There the one-half vote each; minister of technology, Frank -Permit women to occupy these Cousins, was elected with a mar- four positions and thus become gin of 5,421 votes over his Con- members of the board; servative opponent. -Allow representatives of the Gordon Walker lost after an League to participate in the an- unruly campaign in which Colin nual selection of the four students Jordan, leader of the British Nazi since they will sit on its board movement, turned some of the also. foreign secretary's meetings into Student Direction riots. The four students would be in charge of the activities center al-TT. though their membership on the Hiiuts Cheating Union and League boards would give them other assignments. At A cademy Union President Kent Cart- 01V wright, '65, said the referendum is required only for the Union AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. because all its constitutional (P)-The entire cadet wing-ex- changes must be approved by two- cept those cadets given permis- thirds vote of the membership. sion to leave earlier-were confin- The alumni represenatives can ed to the Air Force Academy yes- cast their ballots by mail on writ- terday as an investigation of re- ten forms inethe Michigan Alum- ported cheating at examinations nus magazine. Faculty life mem- proceeded. bers will vote at the. Union. Col. Robert Haney, head of the Few Problems Academy information office, said If the electorate stamps its no details could be given yet con- approval on the merger, the only derning what he said might be a remaining barrier will be the ad-"ser n alh" ministration. sever e scandal."s. Binistratiodn.d dt He said the investigation "may Both boards have endorsed the continue for two weeks or two establishment of one student ac- months." Air police patrolled au- tivities organization under their tomobile parking lots to see no joint direction. The Regents have cadetleft the grounds. in the past accepted the idea but Te A e my r ads.o referred it last week for further The Academy had made no of- study to Vice-President for Stu- ficial announcement since its brief dent Affairs Richard Cutler. statement of last Tuesday that a Although the merged structure formal investigation was under only affects the student activities way about reported violations of functions of the Union and the cadets' honor code. League, the proposal raises a The code provides that a cadet question of new relationships be- must not lie, cheat, or steal, or tween those organizations and the tolerate those of their classmates office of student affairs. who might. , -Associated Press BUDDHIST MONKS AND VIETNAMESE YOUTH sit at the gate of the National Buddhist Institute facing paratroopers during the anti-government demonstration in Saigon on Wednesday. Demon- strators said they sat down to prevent troops from entering the pagoda. Khanh Says Rebels May Achieve Political Victory CAN THO, Viet Nam (Y')-The Communist Viet Cong guerrillas cannot win a military victory, but they might take over South Viet Nam by psychological and political means, strongman Lt. Gen. Nguyen Khanh said yesterday. "This year the Viet Cong have adopted new tactics," the armed forces commander told newsmen here. "They are fighting in large units, up to two regiments, maybe more. In this new phase, they are using conventional rather than guerrilla tactics, and they are thus within our specialty. We have tac- tical and material superiority in conventional warfare. Psychological .But I think the whole problem is psychological," he said. Khanh warned against defeatist thinking. "The battle of Dien Bien Phu was not what lost the Indochina war for the French in 1954. It was the pessimism of politicians that lost that war," he said. "Let's not, make the same errors as in 1954. "From a military standpoint, there will be no new Dien Bien Phu, but psychologically I don't know. There seems to be defeatist feeling in Saigon, perhaps even in Washington. Chinese Threat Khanh, military strongman of SouthViet Nam for the past year, said that even the danger of the new Chinese Communist atomic bomb was more psychological than military at the moment. "In Asia, psychological things are the most important," he said. "China is our hereditary enemy, and they are a nation of 700 million while we are only 14 or 15 million. Even if they cannot yet deliver their atomic bomb, it worries us." Referring to his recent diplo- matic clash with the United States embassy, Khanh said his relations with the Americans had returned to normal., I "We had certain differences of opinion," he said. "I was charged at one point with being anti- American, but this certainly is not a valid charge. Vote To End Dock Strike" NEW YORK UP) - Longshore- men in the port of New York vot- ed better than two to one yester- day to accept a once-rejected waterfront labor contract, thus paving the way for eventual settle- ment of a multimillion dollar East and Gulf,'Coast dock strike. Final tabulation showed 12,104 in favor of the contract, with 5,236 against. Two weeks ago the same contract was voted down 8,722 to 7,957. The strike has idled 60,000 dock- ers from Maine to Texas for 11 days. No Mass Return No immediate mass return. to work was in prospect, however, despite approval of the new pact, which contains an historic and controversial automation clause, which gives shipping firms the right to reduce waterfront work gangs from 20 to 17 men. Up to ILA Hotwever, Alexander P. Chopin, chairman of the 145-member New York shipping association said, "It is up to the ILA leadership to get the men back to work as quickly as possible. In Washington, Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz said he hoped union and management of- ficials at the other ports on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts will be able to arrive at a speedy settle- ment so that shipping operations can be resumed. Battle Army Puts Close Watch On Buddhists Government Forces Crush Viet Cong Unit In Delta Offenisive SAIGON (P)-A skirmish be- tween police and 30 militant youths built up tension yesterday at the Buddhist .headquarters of Premier Tran Van Huong. Meanwhile, helicopter - borne Vietnamese forces crushed a large Viet Cong unit in the Mekong River delta 50 miles south of Sai- gon in one of the most success- ful government efforts in weeks. According to reports from Unit- ed States authorities, government troops killed 46 Viet ong and captured 61 other guerrillas in the fight. Thirty-five other per- sons were rounded up as sus- pects. Three of the assaulting helicop- ters were downed by heavy ene- my fire, but friendly losses for the day were listed as only five killed and 11 wounded. Heavy Fire During the government attack, some 1500 government troops were poured into the Kien Hoa prov- ince landing zone where enemy troops had been erported. The troops were, carried in two big waves, both of which drew heavy fire. In Saigon, Vietnamese infantry- men moved up, strung barbed wire and placed the sprawling Buddhist headq'uarters under virtual sieg, after the youths, who started the clash by heckling the police, were subdued. Ten were arrested. A paratroop battalion stood in reserve at nearby offices of Sai- gon's military governor, Brig. Gen. Pham Van Dong. Dong said he will take all nec- essary measures to preserve pub- lic order and security. He warned that the city's curfew, now in ef- fect from 1 a.m. to 4 a.m., will be extended if disturbances per- sist. Loyalty While soldiers showed their loy- alty to Huong's government, how- ever, 40 Buddhist chaplains of the armed forces lined up on the oth- er side. On this second day of a fasa which avowedly will be carried to death if necessary, the chaplains had a tearful conference with the hunger strikers at the headquar- ters' main pagoda. They pledged loyalty to the leader, Chairman Thich Tam of the Buddhist Institute, and said they will seek volunteers to fast with him. The monks rested on cots under mosquito netting, hoping for an nusurge of popular sympathy to topple the U.S.-backed govern- ment. Oppression Though Buddhists complain Hu- ong is oppressing them-a com- plaint used effectively in 1963 against the late President Ngo Dinh Diem-none of them have yet chosen to revive the fire sui- cide technique. There obviously has been no rush of volunteers for self-immo- lation, such as the six monks and a nun who burned themselves to death to dramatize their opposi- tion to Diem. American sources said U.S. Am- bassador Maxwell D. Taylor had urged Chau and Thich Tri Qu- ang, another of the hunger strik- ers, at a meeting Saturday not to rock the boat. The U.S. considers a stable gov- ernment essential to successful prosecution of the war against the Viet Cong. Castro Vows To Hit Planes HAVANA (IP)-Prime Minister Fidel Castro said yesterday that if "pirate" flights over Cuba are CLARIFYING THE BIBLE: De Vaux Contrasts Archeology and Tradition By KAY HOLMES The truth is something which has 'been long sought after, and has been claimed to be found in various sources. The Bible represents the truth for centuries of Semites. However, what happens when Bib- lical truths are exposed to the critical eyes of archeologists? This question with its numerous ramifications was discussed by Father de Vaux, director of L'Ecole Biblique et Archeologique at Jerusalem in his lecture at the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation last night. Entitled "Biblical Traditions and External Evidence," Father de Vaux's lecture was one of a series of three Zwerdling Lectures on "The Hebrew Patriarchs and History." The Zwerdling Lectures are an annual series provided in memorial for Osias Zwerdling of Ann Arbor by his three sons, and are presented by the near eastern language department, the Beth Israel Congrega- The difficulty with oral traditions lies in the fact that they are not fixed, but may be added to in various ways. Those traditions develop through derivations from outside groups, and they are en-' larged in history as each generation adds its own interpretation. Poetic forms may also be added to the tradition, he noted. "Since writing is used to preserve, not to create, writing is the last stage in the development of a tradition," Archeology is the test of Biblical truths, for it provides the ex- ternal evidence needed to check Biblical traditions. Although the Bible tells of Joshua's trumpets crumbling the wall of Jericho, archeologists have dated their findings of the city in the third millenium before Christ. This is much too early for the Biblical accounts, and even the nature of the conquest itself is in dispute, for the warlike Biblical tradition has been confronted with a theory of peaceful infiltration over a longer period, he said. ............... ......... ----------- ............ . ............ ..... ..... .................... ......... ------------------- ........... ................ ............ .........