THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE ,-. ir Force Probes Cheating . 4 Problem Found Common in U.S. By The Associated Press NEW YORK-About half the students questioned in a 99- college survey admitted having cheated and "this is probably a conservative estimate," a Colum- bla University researcher reported yesterday. Few get caught. Fewer are pun- ished severely. Seldom are they expelled. The survey findings were report- ed even as the United States Air Force Academy was being jolted by a cheating scandal reminiscent of the 1951 shakeup at the United States Military Academy. Air Force Academy So far, with the investigation still continuing on the Colorado campus, 29 Air Force cadets-in- cluding some athletes and top scholars-have left school. In the earlier West Point scandal, 90 Arnmy cadets were expelled, in- cluding 43 varsity football play- ers. Supported by the federal gov- ernment, Columbia researcher William J. Bowers questioned 5,422 students at 99 colleges and universities, as well as more than 600 college deans and more than 500 student body presidents. Cheating Prevalent "Perhaps the most alarming finding of this body concerns the prevalence of academic dishonesty on American college campuses," Bowers said. Students and teachers them- selves do not realize the extent of it. "The magnitude of the problem is grossly underestimated by mem- bers of the campus community," Bowers continued. Students' Estimates "Two and a half times as many students have cheated as student body presidents estimate,' and more than three times as many have cheated as deans estimate. "Even students themselves un- derestimate the proportion of stu- dents who have cheated at some time; they tend to believe that only about half as many have cheated as their self-reports in- dicate." Origins Bowers traced the origins of college cheating to the high schools and the prevailing stu- dent philosophy thre that being , "brain" damages the student's popularity. Thus cheating is the means of "getting by" without risk to social standing. In college, he continued, the most influential deterrent Is the student body's opinion of cheating in general. Where student dis- approval is high, the frequency of cheating is low and vice versa. Large Schools "Large schools have higher levels of cheating than small ones," Bowers reported, "and co- educational schools have higher levels than either men's or wom- en's colleges . .. He said the lowest level occurred on campuses with honor systems where the students themselves police honesty. Such a system uncovered the current Air Force Academy scan- dal. There, the heart' of the school's honor code is the cadets' pledge that "we will not lie, cheat or steal, nor tolerate among us those who do." 'WILL HE CHEAT TODAY?' Bundy Hits Viet Retreat WASHINGTON (P)-A top Unit- ed States spokesman on Far East- ern policy said yesterday that U.S. withdrawal from South Viet Nam is "unthinkable." He held open the possibility of enlarging the war in response to Communist actions. Assistant Secretary of State Wil- liam P. Bundy said that in the past year infiltration of Red guer- rilla fighters and supplies from North Viet Nam through Laos and South Viet Nam has "markedly in- creased." This infiltration from the North "has included for the first time significant numbers of indigen- ous North Vietnamese trained in North Viet Nam in regular mili- tary units," he said. Bundy's disclosure of Vietna- mese problems and U.S. policy for dealing with them was contained in a speech prepared for the Chamber of Commerce in Wash- ington, Mo. His speech publicly confirmed information disclosed by high of- ficials Friday night. that heavy infiltrations of North Vietnamese roops into South Viet Nam had taken place during 1964. Officials put the number at several thou- sand. This appeared to introduce a new element into the conflict, which was already going badly for the United States, primarily because of political dissension in Saigon and the Instability of South Vietnamese governments. Investigation of Cadets Continues AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo., (M--Air Force investigators from the outside have been brought in for a probe of classroom cheating1 which has already caused 29 resig- nations at the Air Force Academy. Col. Richard Haney, the acad- emy information officer, said yes- terday the investigation has been placed in the hands of officers from other Air Force installations who are experienced in this type of work. It was disclosed that about 30 football players were among the approximately 100 cadets involved in the classroom cheating. No Comment Ben Martin, Academy football coach, said regulations forbid any comment from him at this time. Secretary of the Air Force Eu- gene M. Zuckert issued a state- ment in Washington saying that an investigation indicates the existence "of a well organized group of 10 or 12 cadets who were stealing examination papers and offering them for sale. Resignations "Some of these cadets have al- ready submitted their resignation for the good of the service," he said. Haney said that no more resig- nations would be announced over the weekend and that he was closing down the information of- fice for that period. Zuckerthemphasized that the "overwhelming majority of the 2700 cadets are not involved." Honor Code , The honor code manual, by which each cadet is bound two months after he enters the Acad- emy in June as a freshman, says: "The cadet honor code consists basically of four precepts: 'We will not lie, steal or cheat or tolerate among us anyone who does.' "There can be no shading, no equivocation, no quibbling among honorable men. Therefore, a cadet who violates the cadet honor code indicates his unworthiness to be a member of the Air Force cadet wing." The manual goes on to say that "cadets and officers of the USAF Academy must report every sus- pected breach of the cadet honor cole." Maj. Gen. Richard H. Warren, academy sueprintendent, was re- ported in Washington, but was flying back later yesterday. It was at the Air Force Acade- my that President Kennedy made his last appearance in Colorado. He gave the commencement ad- dress to the graduating class in June 1963, five months before his death. Judge Halts Interference In Selma Voting Drive SELMA, Ala. (AP)-Federal Judge Daniel H. Thomas restrained Dallas County law enforcement officials yesterday from interferring with a Negro voter registration drive in Selma, Ala. The order said that "persons legally entitled to register as voters should be permitted to do so in an orderly fashion, calculated to produce that result. And this court intends to see that opportunity is afforded." The petition for the temporary restraining order had been sought by attorneys for legal defense fund of the National Association for World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - President Lyndon B. Johnson went into the hospital yesterday with a bad, hacking cough and a pain in his chest, and the White House said he is "responding well to treatment and there is no cause for alarn." At noon, Johnson already had recovered sufficiently to talk to newsmen in the bedroom he occupies on the 17th floor of the Bethesda Naval Hospital. Johnson chatted for 13 minutes with four reporters chosen to represent the dozens of newsmen who had gathered at Bethesda " Naval Hospital after his early- iTmorning hospitalization was an- REV. MARTIN LUTHER KING' King Opens New* Drive SELMA, Ala. -In a county! where they outnumber whites but trail far behind in registered vot- ers, Negroes hope their current voter registration campaign and others to follow will bring on a day when no candidate can be elected without their support. How long it will take to achieve the balance of power-if ever they do-depends on the success or failure of the registration drives. Eventually, the Negroes hope to elect candidates of their own race. Similar conditions exist in oth- er counties, but Nobel Peace Prize winner Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. chose Selma as the starting point for a promised statewide voter registration movement. Black Belt Capital "One reason for this is that the people here requested our' help, and, Selma symbolizes. the capi- tal of the black belt defiance of: the civil rights law," said the Rev. James Bevel, a member of King's staff. The black belt is a strip of land running through South Ala- bama and is named for the rich black soil. But because it is pri- marily farming country, it also is a center of heavy Negro popula- tion. Negro Majority Although Negroes outnumber white residents in Dallas County, their voting strength is too weak to have any effect on an election. Only about 335 Negroes are reg- istered to vote out of an adult population of 15,000. In the white community, there are 9000 voters out of a potential of 14,000. King, keynoting the new civi: rights struggle, promised his fol- lowers the time will come when they can elect officeholders of their own race. That, he said, is precisely what they aim to do. Blame Authorities Negro leaders blame state and county authorities for what they call a pattern of discrimination which keeps their people from vot- ing. At the present rate of regis- tration, says King, it will take more than 100 years to catch up. County officials, disavowing any discriminatory intent, say the Ne- groes are at fault. In the twc weeks before the current civi: rights drive began, the registra- tion board was in session six days but county authorities say only a few Negroes tried to reg. ister. the Advancement of Colored People. Harass Negroes The request accused Dallas County officials of harassing Negroes in their attempt to regis- ter to vote in Selma earlier this week. The voter registration drive was led by Nobel Peace Prize win- ner the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Sheriff James Clark made wholesale arrests Tuesday and Wednesday after the Negroes first refused to use an alley entrance, and then the front door. The Negroes demanded that they be allowed to use a third entrance which led past Clark's office. The sheriff accused them of trying to make trouble and arrested them for unlawful assembly and refus- ing to obey an officer. The approximately 230 Negroes arrested by Clark and his men are free on bond. Registration Procedure . The United States district Judge outlined how the voting registra- tion procedur'e should be carried out: "Those seeking to register and those seeking to act as vouchers (registered voters vouching for the applicants) will form an orderly line not more than two abreast from the entrance of the office of the board of registrars, down the corridor of the courthouse .. . on a first come, first served basis for the white or colored." The sheriff was not available for comment on the decision. King Encouraged In Atlanta, King called the rul- ing very encouraging. "It will help the voter registra- tion drive a great deal," he said. King had returned to his At- lanta headquarters Friday night, but said he planned to lead an- other registration drive in Selma Monday. "We still face obstacles inside the courthouse," King added. "There are still complex literacy tests and the slow process of registration. In some cases, these can be more injurious than any- thing else." Teachers Register Selma was quiet yesterday fol- lowing an unsuccessful attempt by approximately 100 Negro school teachers to register. They tried three times to enter the court- house before Clark and his men pushed them back. The officers bore clubs but did not touch any- one with them. No one was arrested. King called it the most signi- ficant development of the current campaign. "This is the first time in the history of the movement that so well organized and dramatic a protest has been made by any pro- fessional group in the Negro community," King said. The voter drive was concurrent with a test of public accommoda- tions in Selma cafes and lunch tcounters. l i. f i i Y 1 EDITOR'S NOTE: For years physi- cist C. P. Snow through his novels has tried to bridge the intellectual gap between scientist and artist, technician and politician. Now, as a minister and court sage of Brit- ain's Labor government, he has an opportunity to bring his book char- acters to life. By The Associated Press LONDON-Thirty years ago a London publisher issued a new novel, "The Search," by a rising young writer. In the same year Britain's Royal Society published a research paper, "Physico-Chem- ical Studies of Complex Organic Molecules -Monochromatic Irra- diation." Both works had one thing in common-their author. He was a Cambridge University physicist named C. P. (for Charles Percy) Snow. During the past three decades Snow has attempted to bridge the intellectual gap between those two early publications, while advanc- ing up the ladder of success as scientist, novelist, administrator and now as the British Labor gov- ernment's resident sage. 'Two Cultures' The gap symbolizes what he calls "the two cultures," a situa- tion in which scientists and art- ists, or technicians and politi- cians, no longer speak the same language. PrimeMinister Harold Wilson has granted Snow an opportunity of the sort writers and thinkers have dreamed about since Socra- tes first conceived of the philoso- pher-king-the power to put ideas into practice. He named Snow parliamentary secretary in the Ministry of Technology. Government Minister The appointment is Snow's first as a government minister, rather than as one of the faceless bu- reaucrats who people his novels. He says he accepted it out of a sense of duty and "because I wanted to see what it would be like." "Action is a release for me. I enjoy it," he told an interviewer recently in his office overlooking the river Thames. Snow and his chief, Frank Cous- ins, former head of Britain's big- gest labor union, are charged with the task of introducing a reluctant British industry to modern tech- nology - automation, electronics and modern methods of manage- ment and labor relations. Raise Technology Snow in particular is responsi- ble for raising the status of tech- nology in the public eye. Engineering counts for so little in Britain that although every humanities place in the nation's universities is filled, hundreds of engineering places are empty. Young people don't want them, Snow commented. :Free to iMi ch igan Students 250 to others A new booklet, published by a non-profit educational founda tion, tells which career field lets you make the best use of all your college training, including liberal-arts courses-which career field offers 100,000 new jobs every year - which career field produces more corporation presidents than any other-what starting salary you can expect. Just send this ad with your name and address. This 24-page, career-guide booklet, "Oppor- tunities in Selling," will be mailed to you. No cost or obli- gation. Address: Council on Op- portunities, 550 Fifth Ave.. New E York 36, N. Y., UM-1-18 "This is maddening, and if it goes on long enough., all our ef- forts are going to get us nowhere. We still don't believe in the tech- nological revolution." Admires United States He is a frank admirer of way the United States and Soviet Union have mobilized entific talent. "Nowhere in MAN OF MANY TALENTS: Snow Mixes Politics, Science C. P. SNOW world has the low status as in ica, in Russia, head up high. said. engineer such a Britain. In Amer- he can hold his Not here," Snow the the sci- the Remedying this is at best an amorphous task, and Snow is somewhat reticent about his plans. He favors the discreet methods of the "closed politics" he de-. scribes in his books-bringing sci- entists and businessmen in con- tact with each other. "When peo- -.s............. From our Wonderful Blouse and Shirt Collection #1 -- ple come into something, they bringtheir friends in, too," he said. Open Method Beyond that, there is one open method which carries, weight in class-conscious Britain, the semi- annual honors lists of peers, knights and medal-winners. The new Labor government's list, in which Snow had a voice, had more engineers and technologists on it than ever before. By the time he was 30, Snow had published a dozen papers on his specialty of crystallography. He abandoned a promising future in physics to devote more time to literature. A friend and colleague, physicist J. D. Bernal, recently said: "Snow was more interested in scientists as people, and in their effect on the world they lived in." Contemporary World Through the years Snow has written of the world in which he has lived: a world as he calls it, of closed politics -- the intimate gathering of college deans deciding on who shall receive a fellowship, the almost too-casual committees of civil servants formulating poli- cies which they hope their politi- cal masters will be forced to fol- low. Above all, it is a world of per- sonal and political commitment, whether out of ambition, ideal- ism, duty, or a mixture of all these. It is a story of man work- ing out his destiny within so- ciety, a story on which many mod- ern novelists, like their heroes, have turned their backs. He deals with the problems of commitment to modern society rather than alienation from it. ATTENTION: CIN EMA DDICTS Join The CINEMA GUILD Board Help Select the Film Schedules * Work in Advertising, Film Festival, Treasury or Secretarial areas INTERVIEWS JANUARY 25th BEGINNING 7 P.M. Sign Up Now, CINEMA GUILD Office, 2547 SAB y0 Bay)s wishes to express their sincere wishes for a most satisfying pledge year in 1965. MONOGRAMMED CCLE IPINS are the perfect gift for your bi or little sister .. , So personal and so appreciated! Come in and see our wide nounced. SAIGON-The Communist Viet Cong have begun a campaign to steal government uniforms in what may be a prelude to a new deceptive twist in their fighting tactics. A Vietnamese government em- ploye disclosed yesterday that guerrillas twice stopped a bus tak- ing him back to Saigon and made government soldiers aboard sur- render their uniforms. SAIGON - Anti - government demonstrators burned books yes- terday in a United States infor- mation service library in Hue, 400 miles north of Saigon, smashed all the building's windows and ransacked offices. Premier Tran Van Huong urged his people "not to be dragged into this monkey business" in a des- perate radio appeal to halt the growing violence. * * * UNITED NATIONS - Secre- tary-General U Thant appointed Maj. Gen. Syseno Sarmento of Brazil commander of the United Nations emergency force in the Middle East yesterday. He replaces Maj. Gen. Carlos Flores Paiva- Chaves of Brazil, who left the post because of illness. 1 X MACSHORE CLASSICS In-Or-Outer Shirt Long cuffed sleeve-tucked button front - i11 Sizes 28-38; white- $,498 GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe Monday Noon Lunch 25c "Trends & Directions in Social Work" PROF. SIDNEY BERNARD School of Social Work Tuesday Noon Seminar, "The Validity of the Love Ethic" 219 S. Main St. Mass Registration Mass registration could give the Negroes control of the county, just as it did in Tuskegee. A federal Judge found that registration of-. ficials there long had discrimi- nated against Negroes, and order- ed it stopped. Now the Negroes have a voting majority and have elected two city councilmen and four county officials. With a 15,000 to 14,000 advan- tage in voting age population, Dal- las County Negroes could do it, too. Tie art of fine wring ives eautiful support to drip-dry '.~. .~Mermaids ,. rI DR. CARL COHEN Associate Professor of Philosophy SPEAKS at HILLEL In white only.BANDEAU: B and C cups4.50; D cup $5. LONGLINE:.BandC Ilii