NEGRO MUST CHANGE CIVIL RIGHTS TACTICS See Editorial Page 'Y L 5k 7Iait~ SUNNY AND WAI High-80 Low--52 Diminishing winds, with hig than normal temperature Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom 4. VOL. LXXV, No. 3 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1964 SEVEN CENTS AFTER POLITICAL UIP Viet Nam By The Associated Press looking SAIGON-South Viet Nam's lat- tion o est political upheaval and mob casion violence has probably set back the ident United States - supported war but h( against the Communist Viet Cong draw f by at least two months, American military sources said yesterday. turned At the same time, however, the a deed U.S. reaffirmed its support for gon f Gen. Nguyen Khanh as premier of yestero that nation. Maxwe State Department press officer of Bala Robert J. McCloskey disputed pub- lished statements quoting Khanl to, the effect that the U.S. favored Maj. Gen. Duong Van Minh, fo- La mer chief of state and One of the key figures in the Vietnamese po- - litical leadership along with , Khanh. Two Coups The two-month estimate of mili- A tary set-back compared with a long, t reckoning that six months' prog- is cur ress was lost following the up- pressu rising which overthrew Presiden, "I Ngo Dinh Diem last November Of the and that three months more went down the drain after Khanh oust- Si ed Minh, Diem's successor, Jan. 30, three In the interval the U.S. has in- creased its military manpower in Viet Nam from 16,000 to about 20,000 and boosted expenditures from $1.5 million to nearly $2 million a day. Saigon shakeups tend to hit provincial chiefs, the military of- ficers who are key men in a pro- gram of systematically restoring government control in areas now under varying degrees of Commu- nist rule. "As long as there is a big ques- tion mark on how long these men will stay in, they will tend to be apathetic, sitting on their hands and playing it "safe," an American officer said. May Be Knocked Off Answering speculation that in- stability, due to the fact a care- PR taker government is in charge dur- ing the two-month transition per- iod that is supposed to lead to more civilian rule, may open the O F way for another military coup, an- other U.S. official declared that that the caretaker government may be knocked off." The tempo of Viet Cong mili- Z tary activity has remained ten- tatively low after the disturb- ances. One American adviser re- WAr marked, however, that "it alwayf neuver takes the Viet Cong a week or so health to react and exploit internal trou day me ble on the government side." convert U.S. officials feel that these dis- that Si turbances were the primary rea- Mansfi son for Khanh's statement about run to where U.S. support lay in the Pend Saigon government. They noted House that they assume Khanh was backed: and ex P Rbenefit e eSMan UAR Pledge suMan Humph duced Sit AMprovidi elderly known By The Associated Press This NICOSIA-President Archbishop bate. E Makarios completed his mission ate m to the United Arab Republic yes- have t terday with a pledge of support posed for his Greek Cypriot cause from (D-Ar President Gamal Abdel Nasser. Ways a There were varying accounts as handle to the kind of support Makarios But got: Icare ft -A communique in Alexandria, securit Egypt, offered UAR moral support. version -Makarios told a news confer- late ye ence the pledge was for "all pos- The sible assistance" in the event of these c attack on Cyprus. -A -A Greek Cypriot newspaper as com correspondent close to Makarios in the and the Egyptians reported Nas- -A ser promised modern military the pl hardware and the use of Egyptian House air bases if Cyprus is attacked, -A threatened or invaded. Inursing Before Makarios returned to period, Nicosia, a pro-Nasser Cypriot in th newspaper also said that Makarios measur assured Nasser that any Cypriot Teml union with Greece would be con- day wa ditioned on the demilitarization early of the island and the removal of lion fo British bases on Cyprus. . controi At the same time, United States for ur efforts at Geneva to work out a Court- settlement on the Cyprus crisis both h between Greece and Turkey have a popu reached a stalemate. Former Secretary of State Dean M A Acheson is coming home for con- -itd sultation with President Lyndon B. Johnson on possible next moves. A spokesman for the State De-, partment said that as a result of the Geneva talks' "both Greece and Turkey have made substantial progress toward an agreed solu- BILC tion of the Cyprus problem, and South's have narrowed the gap consider- regatio ably. Negroe 1HEAVAL Rde War 'Set BHt Cuban LSA Department Hea( for some new demonstra- f support. On one recent oc- he proclaimed himself pres- under a new constitution e was compelled to with- rom the position. Withdrew for Rest he end of last week, Khanh executive authority over to uty and withdrew from Sai- or a rest. He was visited day by U.S. Ambassador ell D. Taylor at the town at. "A Policy ) View Col literary college committee thoughtful look at the future rently enjoying its opportu res of deadlines., t's a delightful experience," Committee on Long Range nce its inception in Februa times in a "very free and _________________ McCloskey said "there is no evidence to support this reported view" that the U.S. is not uphold- ing Khanh's position. McCloskey declared that "everything we said here last week would make that PANAMA CITY () - Anti- clear." Castro commandos destroyed a McCloskey said U.S. policy or' radar station-commanded by three this question was stated officially Russian officers and manned by by Secretary of State Dean Rusks 150 Cuban soldiers on the eastern in a television interview, when coast of Cuba Sunday, Cuban exile Rusk said of Khanh: "We do ex- leader 'Manuel Artime said last pect him back (from his rest) . . night. He remains the prime minister." Artime, secretary of the Revo- lutionary R e c o v er y Movement, said the 55-minute attack was carried out at 6 a.m. against the Com m ittee installation at Cabo Cruz on the south coast of Oriente Province. lege Future He said he had no reports of g casualties either among the at- tackers or the defenders but that the radar site was destroyed. established specifically to take a Refugees of the University and the college According to Artime, the radar unity to brainstorm without the station was responsible for inter- cepting many boats carrying refu- Prof. E. Lowell Kelly, chairman gees fleeing Cuba. Policy and Planning, commented. Artime said the attackers travel- ed in two boats and landed on a ry, 1964, the committee has met reef one mile away from the radar open survey" of all the topics site. He did not specify how many relating to the quality and growth men were in the raiding party. of the University, Kelly said. Some of the attackers walked a The group will probably decide, mile to their objective while others when it meets early this fall, to carried out a diversionary attack, investigate three questionsTe Artime said. s ' depth. It should have reports and The exile leader spoke at a news recommendations for the literary conference at the home of a college faculty later in the semes- Cuban friend in Panama. Russians . ter. He said that Cuban exile intel- Long-Term Thinking ligence sources had determined "We'll be doing just the thing that three Russians were in com- the executive committee of the mand of the radar site. college has never had time to do: Artime declined to give details think and investigate in terms of of the operation, including ques- 10 to 15 years from now," he tions on whether the attackers noted. remained in Cuba or made their As originally mandated by col- way back to the unspecified place lege Dean William Haber, the from which the raid was launched. long-range policy committee will Artime arrived here yesterday, be concerned with: declining to say where he came -The place of liberal arts edu- from. He said he does not want to cation in the University today; embarrass governments that are -The impact of the University's friendly to his organization. He growth upon the college and the also said he has to be careful college's growth upon the nature about his movements because he and quality of education; has been marked for elimination -The exploration of alternative by the Castro regime. organizational patterns for the college, ad -The developing problems and Arotests 'Report Enrollment Cris 3 I r ,X TEMPORARY HOUSING has, among its other disadvantages, bats. This specimen, now being "" kept alive- in a jar, was found and captured by five courageous freshmen living in the base- ment of Prescott House in East Quadrangle. 4' '' Neutral' ' r On Candidates,; i gDespite recent adveitisements giving favorable University opin- ions of one of the two Republican congressional candidates, the Uni versity reported yesterday it takes no official stand on candidates for public office. The statement was issued in re sponse to advertisements for in cumbent U.S. Rep. George Meade in which Vice-President for Re- search Ralph Sawyer is quoted as tnking Meader for his help to hiher education. "Both Meader and Stanley Is Thayer '(currently state senatori. and Meader's opponent in today's primary for the GOP congressional nomination) h a v e been good'r friends of the University," yester day's statement said. "University officials have par ticipated in testimonial programs for both these men this summeri This was because of the Univer- sity's wish to acknowledge pub- licly the services rendered . . by both and should not be miscon strued, as an endorsement of the cand idacyof either of them." Firings Stir eba-t Second in a 8e6ies By JEFFREY GOODMAN "Violation of academic freedom," the critics cried 10 years ago when the University dismissed two professors for refusing to answer questions before the House Un-American Activties: Committee.} "Nobody's freedom has been invaded or abridged," Uni- versity President Harlan Hatcher asserted. The professors hadl an obligation- to the University to testify on their alleged Communist affiliations and political beliefs. And so the battle lines were drawn in what was the hottest] controversy at the University during the tense era of the 1954 McCarthy investigations. The dismissals issue was still rever- berating four years later, and some critics feel it is still affecting the University. The controversy began at the peak of the congressional hunt for Communist Party members, when HUAC opened hearings in Lansing in the spring of 1954. Refused To Answer At first the hearings were as remote from the University as possible in those days. The explosion came when three pro-a fessors were subpoenaed by the committee, refused to answer questions and on the same day were suspended from their, teaching duties. Professors Mark Nickerson of the medical school andR Clement Markert of the zoology department had claimed theirr immunity under the Fifth Amendment, from having to testify against themselves. H. Chandler Davis, mathematics instructor, stuck to a First Amendment contention that the committee's questions violated his freedom of speech.> Hatcher immediately asked the executive committees of the Medical School and literary college to investigate the cases and recommend either reinstatement or dismissal. In addition, he later appealed to a special faculty Senate advisory committee for counsel. The committee was part of a complex procedure which had' been established several months before the hearings, at the faculty"s insistence, to handle suspensions and firings. Fitness To Teach Critics of Hatcher's actions called it everything from un- necessary to a violation of the professor's rights to withhold possibly incriminating information. The President said the three men had shown disloyalty to the University and had' cast serious doubts on their fitness to teach. The Congressional investigations finished quickly, but the faculty deliberations dragged on into the summer. Davis, who had followed the most dangerous course pos- sible in invoking the First Amendment, continued refusing to discuss his political beliefs and affiliations. When the literary college executive committee, a mathematics department com- mittee and the Senate advisory committee questioned him,"'he would give only his reason for not speaking: "I will not talk politics under duress.". All three groups recommended that Davis be fired. x In July, Hatcher notified the instructor that he would ask the Regents for dismissal.> Last Appeal Davis at once appealed-as he was authorized to do under the previously-established procedures-to another faculty group,M the Committee on Intellectual Freedom and Integrity. Again, however, he would not volunteer specifics. This group, too, See CRITICS, Page 6 .:+" v.v.. . W f: :.. ....,..?... .a "'.,'.. ..i.1'"JNit.Z7: "+ : Aa*:5x:1.4f J..3}...S .: IOF. E. LOWELL KELLY yen Debate [I M'edic'are Senate SHINGTON (A')-Senate ma- ing over social security and care for the aged yester- arked the opening of a post- ntion congressional session enate Majority Leader Mike ield (D-Mont) says could Oct. 1. ding in the Senate is a - passed, administration- 1 bill which would increase pand present social security is and increase tax levies to rt the nationwide system. sfield and Sen. Hubert hrey (D-Minn) had intro- an amendment to this bill ing for health care for the under social security, as the King-Anderson plan. could cause lengthy de- Even if approved by a Sen- ajority, the House would o concur: the plan is op- by Rep. Wilbur D. Mills k), chairman of the House and Means Committee which s social security legislation. Senate sponsors of health or the aged under social y worked out a revised to the King-Anderson plan sterday after debate., revised version would make Note Co priorities of the college. State of the College Kelly said it had been under- stood that the committee would prepare of a "State of the College" report once a year. But he didn't think any such report was expect- ed for about a year from the time the committee was named. A letter from Dean Haber to the literary college faculty at that time stated that "many members of our faculty . . . raised serious questions concerning trends, direc- tion, alternatives and priorities. Kelly said the committee has already touched on such topics as University size, the residential col- lege, how the University can re- main a great institution and grow at the same time, how it can com- pete for the funds needed by an institution of this "magnitude and quality," how it ought to relate to the state and other state schools and the effects of the new three- semester calendar. Named to the committee were Professors Dorwin Cartwright, psy- chology; Irving M. Copi, philos- ophy; H. R. Crane, physics; Ron- ald Freedman, sociology; Otto Graf, Gerian; Shorey Peterson, economics; Alfred Sussman, bot- any; Frederick Wagman, library science; Raymond Wilder, mathe- matics; William Wilcox, history Methods Used For Rate Hike Maxine Loomis, '65, president Assembly Association, presented motion to Assembly House Counc yesterday expressing displeasua with the methods employedi increasing room and board rat for residence halls. Residence Hall Business Mar ager Leonard Schaadt announc this summer that the fee for roo and board would be $34 above la year's prices. This increase wE approved by the Office of Bus ness and Finance, but such actin is also subject to the approval( the residence hall Board of Go' ernors, according to the Regent by-laws. The Board of Governo never approved the new charge. "Although the increase has be justified by the vice-president f business and finance as necessar this in no way releases his offi( from the Regents' by-law," Mi Loomis said. "AHC plans to work for an e fective revision of the Regent by-law pertaining to the resident halls and their Board of Gove: nors, without protesting this pa highly irregular proceeding of a ministrative action," Miss Loom of a cil ire in es .n- .ed m st I- on of w- ts' rs yen or ry, ce ss For EffectsF Of Crowing Chairmen Authorize More Recitations;- Expand Class Limits. By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM The literary col.ege faces its most serious enrollment crisis in more than a decade, several of the college's department chairmen re- ported last night. Introductory courses for fresh- men and concentration oursesfor upperclassmen are the most highly overpopulated. H o w e v e r, t h e chairmen stressed-that ka record literary college enrollment of 9400 Is overcrowding courses "across. the board." Taking emergency remedial ac- tions, chairmen have recently authorized the expansion of course limits from 5-10 per cent where necessary. Some of the chairmen interviewed complained that they. a r e compromising educational quality by these actions. The situation was copared by officials to the early 1950s when the University also underwent an admission boom. All Major Divisions Overcrowding has spread across all major divisions of the college's program. Social a n d natural sciences and foreign languages, the usually popular divisions, hif suffered thegreatest rowng.a However, the other divisions - English and the humanities-are also swamped. The introductory English course, 123, closed early last week because the college didn't want to over- hire. The instructors no. longer ate needed second semester since English 124 has been dropped as a pre-requisite. Students ' closed out" will have to take the course second semester. Overcrowding difficulties were not reported in some other schools -including gthe nursing, music, engineering and graduate schools. These units all have students en- rolled in literary college courses. In a series of phone interviews conducted last evening, depart- mient chairmen saw "a general en-. rollment problem' touched off by an unexpectedly high freshman class. Literary college officials predicted a freshman enrollment increase of from 400-500 students last spring. The increase is re- portedly at least 700 students, with final figures not yet announced. The total class is now about 2600. Upperclass Totals High Associate Dean of the Literary College James H. Robertson also pointed to unprecedented upper- class totals, fostered in the enroll- ment splurges of the past few years. Dean William Haber of the literary college was unavailable for comment. Prof. James C. O'Neil, chairman of the romance language depart- ment, reported the department "has been turning away qualified people at all levels since the first day of registration." He added that he has been forced to raise recitation limits from 22 to 26 or 27. "This may seem like a small difference, but it's important for the success of language instruc- tion," he said. "This year's over- enrollment wipes out all of our efforts in the past few years to keep recitation classes small." Prof. Samuel Eldersveld, chair- man of the political science de- partment, expressed concern over jam-ups of 100-level (basic fresh- man) courses,. as well as courses in the 400-bracket. He attributed part of the 'interest in political science to the impetus of an elec- tion. year. Natural Sciences In the natural sciences, the overcrowding was reportedly Just as serious. Prof. David M. Den- nison, chairman of the physics department, disclosed "some prob- lems, but not necessarily acute ones." He explained that the ma- jority of physics students are sophomores and second semester LQilill3UWV ' Vl V1VLa4i Va Vii4lai ' ------------- - EMBARRASS JOHNSON Wallace Seeks Pledged Slate -hanges:and James Wilson, geology. continued $7 flat increase in benefit1 npared to the five per cent DINGBATS AND CRUP House bill. $5600 wage base to financey an as against $5400 in the bill. provision for 60 days of F g home care. in a benefil r s s instead of the 180 days e original King-Anderson + re. porarily laid aside yester- . as another major obstacle tc adjournment, the $3.3 bil- *. reign aid bill containing a versial amendment to delay p to two years Supreme ordered reapportionment of ouses of state legislatures on lation basis. ~s.Scools d. Dull f - MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)-Gov. But his reported plans to ask ts' George Wl the unpledged Democratic presi- aace, appaiently hop- dential elector nominees to step r- ing to prove President Lyndon B. aside so Alabama can vote for or st Johnson is unpopular in Alabama against the President ran head- d- set the stage yesterday for a pos- long into a loyalist Democratic is sible Johnson-Goldwater show- challenge. down. _Wallace called the uipledged candidates to his office, presum- ably to. urge them to resign as nominees so a new elector slate. pledged to Johnson, could be put on the November ballot. Roy Mayhall, state party chair- f 0 @ man, announced in advance of the meeting that he would refuse to I A warm human plumpness set- accept any resignations. tied down on his brain. His brain The unpledged nominees ran un- yielded. He joined The Daily. der the Wallace banner in the His life will be -a little more Democratic primary May 5 when exciting, a little more challeng- the governor himself was a presi- ing for his having joined. To- dential candidate. They have re- night he will spend the whole fused to promise their electoral ! evening and morning with a girl votes to Johnson if the Democrats, S--covering the primaries, that is. carry Alabama-as usual. A trainee, after his first story But a somewhat-likely Repub- can wave and yell "Hiya, dean" tc lican victory against the unpledg- people whom most freshmen dc ed Democratic elector nominees not even know. would, in a sense, be a defeat for Daily staffers can impress their Wallace, because it was he whc friends with the subtle mysterie, spearheaded the free elector cam- of the DOB, s-lines, dingbats, the paign last spring. m m-squad, refers, the Anaday, tur- With a 'slate of pro-Johnson j ties, slugs, widows, dropdecks candidates on the ballot instead W crup, three-quarter and Benday of the unpledged ticket, the gov- Sboxes, the WNR, A-cuts. ernor could call it a repudiation And there's -lways the chance of the President if Alabama went they may take a visiting dean out Republican for the first time in for a drink. almost a century. I you're'an aert. inonived snrt nDemoevts wanting to vote foi Racial unrest and passage of the civil rights bill have contrib-' uted to an upsurge in Republican strength in this traditionally Dem-' ocratic stronghold. GOP leaders- and some Democrats-are sayinf that Sen. Barry Goldwater (R- Ariz) will carry Alabama. Segre gate By The Associated Press OXI, Miss. - The deep s last bastion of school seg- on cracked yesterday when s attended formerly white GOY. GEORGE WALLACE Registration' Ends Today Late registration will conclude today in the Waterman Gymnas- ium hasement from 9 a.m.-4 p.m.. >: