OLE MISS INTEGRATON: A SMALL FIRST STEP See Page 4 1E li. it I igaYt 4Iaitj OVERCAST High-~O Low--5U Mostly Cloudy Today, Fair Wednesday Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIII No. 15 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1962 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES Hatcher Stresses Control Element in U' Growth * * * * * *[ * u *S * * * * Sold ie o End Riots, Disorder Arny Places* Howze in Command As Security Tightens oi Campus By The Associated Press OXFORD - Hoardes of combat-ready troops clamped rigid control on this seething Southern town last night after James H. Meredith, a Negro, ended segregation at the Univer- sity of Mississippi. Bent on smothering continued riots that took two lives Sunday night and led to yesterday's arrest of former Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker, helmeted troops patrolled with loaded rifles and fixed bayonets. The Army named Lt. Gen. Hamilton Howze of Ft. Bragg, N.C., to head the massive buildup of nearly 10,000 Army troops. _Observers said appointment of the 3-star general may mean there will be more soldiers in the state than were ever as- sembled in peacetime. Loaded Rifles Military police and infantrymen patroled Oxford with loaded rifles and fixed bayonets. They imposed tight security measures on the Ole Miss campus. Soldiers permitted no outsiders on the grounds. They searched everyone entering the gates. They kept the numbers of milling stu- dents under 100-scattering them. Scattered arrests persisted into the night. Soldiers broke out tear gas to quash one demonstration of about 30 brick-throwing stu- dents near a fraternity house. Troops caught a man wearing a white-hooded garmet to his waist and carrying a home-made gas mask. Arrest 215 -AP Wirephoto EMBATTLED CITY-Armed soldiers hold back a crowd of Oxford residents at the main square of the city yesterday. Last night was quieter as troops with loaded rifles and fixed bayonets patrolled through the streets of the university community. The 35 arrests made by federal officials yester- day brought the total arrested in the city to 215. SORORITY BAN: isconsin Staff Delays Vote By ELLEN SILVERMAN The University of Wisconsin faculty yesterday delayed a vote on a resolution to ban Delta Gam- ma sorority from that campus. The faculty Human Rights Committee had recommended that the local chapter be banned from the campus due primarily to the action at Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin. Prof. Jack Gilch ist, of the psychology department, and chairman of the rights commit- tee introduced the delay motion on the grounds that students had not had enough time to make themselves heard. (The commit- tee report was issued early last week.) The Delta Gamma chapter had EDWIN A. WALKER - ; arrested U.S. Marshals Arrest Walker In Mississippi OXFORD, Miss. (m)--Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker, who led a charge of students against United States marshals at the University of Mississippi Sunday night, was arrested by federal officers yester- day. He waived preliminary hearing before U. S. Commissioner Omar Craig on a charge of attempting to obstruct justice. Bond was set at $100,000, which the controver- sial Texan had not posted by mid- afternoon. When federal officers took him into custody at a military road- block on the outskirts of this riot- torn town, Walker told them: "I guess I am in custody." Commanded Troops Walker, as a Major General, commanded federal troops sent into Little Rock, Ark., in 1957 to enforce court ordered public school desegregation. He resigned from the army after a controversy over a troop indoctrination program in Europe. Walker walked into the court- room with a slight smile flickering across his face. Craig advised Walker he could waive the pre- liminary hearing or be represented by counsel. "My counsel is not in this state," Walker said. Craig told him he could get competent attorneys in Mississippi. Walker asked for and received permission to ,leave the court momentarily. Still Smiling He returned, still smiling and asked: "Is it proper to ask that if I waive this hearing, I will be as- sured that it (his trial) comes back to Mississippi?" Craig told him the trial would be held in U. S. district court in Mississippi. "IT waive this hearing," Walker said. Federal forces arrested at least 39 persons last night -- most of them youths taken in custody at campus roadblocks. The total brought the arrest number to 215 since the rioting began Sunday night. Many have since been turn- ed loose. For the most part, quiet settled over Oxford as night fell. The darkness ended a day marked by a 1downtown riot quelled o9 rifle fire into the air and tear gas. Gov. Ross Barnett charged last night that the responsibility for '"unwarranted breach of the peace and violence in Mississippi rests with the President of the United States." In a nationally-televised speech (CBS), his second of the day, the defiant governor said President John F. Kennedy "ordered armed forces to invade Mississippi and their actions were directly respon- sible for violence, bloodshed and death." Asks Troop Withdrawal He urged Kennedy to "put a stop to further violence by the immediate removal of Meredith and the withdrawal of federal troops and marshals from Missis- sippi soil. Meanwhile, the state of Missis- sippi yesterday challenged a fed- eral appeals court's continuing jur- isdiction in the James H. Mere- dith desegregation case. Appeals to Court It asked the 5th United States Circuit Court of Appeals to dis- solve its restraining order that blocked a variety of Mississippi officials, including Barnett, frome interfering with Meredith's enroll- ment at the University of Misss- sippi. The state also argued that if the restraihing order is dissolved, the contempt citations aganst Barnett and Lt. Gov. Paul B John- son Jr. would necessarily fall. City Councl I Permits Use Of Equipment The City Council has granted =permission to the 1962 home- coming committee to use two sound trucks and a steam calli- ope on campus between 6:30 and 7:30 p.m on October 26. Permission had already been given for the committee to close off Ingalls Avenue between Hill Auditorium and the League for Homecoming activities. The council also voted that a special committee be set up by the mayor to study and make rec- ommendations on the advisability and possible provisions of a fair housing ordinance. Professor Lynn Eley of the poli- tical science department, a council member, had objected to the pro- posed committee's studying the advisability of the ordinance. An amendment adding that the com- mittee would study advisability and p r o v i s i o n s concurrently1 settled debate and the amended motion was passed.+ placed ads in the Daily Cardinal, the Wisconsin student miewspaper. and two local Madison papers, charging the committee with un- fair practices, Jeffrey Greenfield, Daily Cardinal editor told The Daily yesterday. Accuses Committee The ads charged the committee with making up its mind before the hearings were held. Although the committee chairman noted that one of the reasons for de- laying the vote was to allow other hearings to be held if the parties involved wanted them, Green- field commented that the Delta Gamma officers felt that little could be accomplished and would not press for another hearing. Votes Delay The faculty meeting, one of the largest such meetings in the last few years Greenfield noted, voted for the delay after Prof. Richard Hartshorne of the geography de- partment defended the commit- tee's efforts. He commended the committee and attacked the Delta Gamma advertisements as "De- famation." "He was applauded vigorously," Greenfield said. The next faculty meeting will be held Nov. 5 and the vote will be taken then. Greenfield com- mented that he thought action taken at Minnesota this Friday would probably affect the out- come of the vote. Minnesota will decide Friday what action it will take regarding Rusk Sets Limit For Withdrawal UNITED NATIONS (A)-Secre- tary of State Dean Rusk empha- sized in talks with Poland's For- eign Minister Adam Rapacki yes- terday that the United States is I pressing for Communist with- drawal from Laos by an Oct. 7 C deadline. Delta Gamma. As at Wisconsin, the issue is the local autonomy of the local chapter since at both schools regulations have been passed to outlaw those groups which do not have such autonomy. Delta Gamma chapter at Be- loit has gone local to protest its suspension from the national af- ter having pledged a Negro wo- man last year.) Scene Tense As 'Ole Miss' Ends Tradition (EDITOR'S NOTE: Mark Acuff, director of the Collegiate Press Serv- ice, spent Friday at the University. of Mississippi in an attempt to re- port the Southern crisis from a student perspective. He was hamp- ered by the reluctance of univer- sity officials, faculty members and student leaders to talk with re- porters.) By MARK ACUFF Special To The Daily OXFORD - The University of Mississippi is more than a univer- sity to the white population of the south . . . it is both Ole Miss and an institution in belief. If South- erners were to pick the last insti- tution they would want to see in- tegrated, it would be Ole Miss. But sooner or later, it was bound to happen. Last week it did, as James Meredith, Negro, Air Force veteran, son of a Mississippi cot- ton farmer, grandson of a slave, applied for admission to Ole Miss, federal court order in hand. At last count, there were two dead and 75 injured, and the Ole Miss campus looked like nothing so much as the scene of a recent military battle Troops continued rounding up rioters and eliminat- ing the last pockets of resistance I spent a (lay on the Ole Miss campus. I contc ss to being fright- See TENSION, Page 6 Washington Blames Riot On Barnet Accuses Governor Of Breaking WordS By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - President John F. Kennedy was reported yesterday to feel that Gov. Ross Barnett went back on his word to provide adequate state police pro- tection on the University of Miss- issippi campus for the enrollment of James H. Meredith. A government source close to the events building up to the rioting on the campus implied this feeling by Kennedy in telling of exchang- es between the governor and Washington officials. This source and the Justice De- partment both recounted a time- table of state police shifts on and off the campus-a sequence indi- cating the rioting reached its height while the Mississippi of fi- cers were of f campus. It was reported that Kennedy talked with Barnett three or four times by telephone Sunday and tat Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy also talked with the gov- ernor in a series of calls initiated by Barnett in the early afternoon. Blame Marshals Meanwhile Mississippi,members of Congress sought yesterday to f ix on federal marshals the blame for murderous mob violence at the University of Mississippi. And they called for congres- sional investigations of the role of the Justice Department and of United States peace officers in the riots. The Mississippians charged that U. S. marshals set off the riots by "firing directly into a group of students.' Responsible Source The Mississippi senators said their information came from an unnamed "responsible source" on the campus. One senator from the Deep South suggested an investigation by the Senate Judiciary Commit- tee-headed by Sen. James . Eastland (D-Miss). The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People yesterday congratulated Kennedy for his action in the University of Mississippi crisis. Shaul Comments Dennis Shaul, president of the United States National Student Association, called Meredith's reg- istration and attendance at the University of Mississippi "an at- tempt to promote the ideals of America, to extend the rights of citizenship to those now denied them, and to make this nation's protestations about civil rights a reality." He added that Meredith "-. has the full support of the vast majority of American students." Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro said last night the U.S. was right in sending federal troops to compel admittance of James Mere- dith to the University of Missis- sippi. Views Strong Trend Towards Expansion Outlines Plans for Changeovers To Year-Round School Operations By KENNETH WINTER The University's guiding principle in planning expansion is "con- tinued steady growth in a controlled manner, so that there will be t no decrement in quality," University President Harlan Hatcher told the faculty last night. With this principle in mind, President Hatcher viewed the Uni- versity's plans for a change-over to year-round operation. "The pressures on this University to grow are relentless - Both from outside and inside the University," he said. Regarding outside pressures, he noted the postwar', birth rate increase, which is about to affect the colleges; and the ex- panding need for educated people in modern society. Inside pressure comes from the department heads and deans with- in the University, seeking expan- sion of their own disciplines, he noted. "It would be a disaster for us to inhibit their enthusiasm - but there must be some en- thusiasm for the common good of the University," President Hatch- er remarked. One answer to the need for ex- pansion is the year-round Uni- versity calendar, he continued. Two Major Steps He noted two major steps which have already been taken: (1) Ad- ministration of the summer ses- sion has been transferred from the Office of the Summer Session to the individual schools and col- leges; and (2) a 1963-64 calendar has been approved which will "permit the University to move into a modest full-year opera- tion." Further advances toward full- year operation - involving three terms of equal length each year- will be made "cautiously," so as to retain full housing, staff and fi- nancial support, President Hatch- er said. A pilot full-year program is being readied, so that the Uni- versity will be prepared to move into complete full-year operation "when the conditions and sup- port are there," he added. Academic Freedom President Hatcher next turned to the question of academic free- dom. A University "can only be honored as a place of free in- quiry," where no subject is closed' to debate, he said. He said that University policies had been misinterpreted as pro- moting censorship of controversial views, but asserted that such was not their purpose. President Hatcher concluded with a discussion of student atti- tudes today. Refers to Book He referred to "Student," a book by University of California teach- ing fellow David Horowitz; who writes that a large number of stu- dents drop out of college today, and those that remain don't en- joy their studies. He quoted Horo- witz's charge that "the most im- portant force defeating students, is the irrelevance of knowledge" taught by today's universities. President Hatcher acknowledged this student discontent, but re- marked, "The answer is not to empty the classrooms, to sit down in the lobbies of House Un-Amer-j ican Activities Committee hear- ings, or to ride buses into tense, hate-torn regions of our country." "We, as faculties, must create in the students the positive exper- ience of a sense of growth, or values, of usefulness, that will identify their present process ofs growth with the larger sphere oft participation for which they sof clearly yearn," President Hatch- er concluded. PRESIDENT HARLAN HATCHER .. full-year operation Gosling Wins High Award, I Prof. John R. G. Gosling of the gynecology d e p a r t m e n t was awarded the University's highest honor for faculty members of in- structor or assistant professor standing last night - the $750 Henry Russell Award. The award, established in 1920 by a bequest from Henry Russell, '73, is presented annually for out- standing teaching and scholarship. E Secretary of the University Erich A. Walter, in presenting the award, citedrthe qualifications which led to the choice of Prof. Gosling for the honor. Cancer Research He noted Prof. Gosling's cancer research, his authorship of the widely-used text, "Fundamentals of Gynecology," his role as faculty advisor to Victor Vaughn Wo- men's Residence House, and his chairmanship of the medical school-LSA Liaison Committee. Prof. Gosling's award was part' of $7,750 awarded to faculty mem- bers last night. Five Distinguished F a c u 1 t y Achievement Awards, presented by the Development Council, consist- ed of a certificate and $1,000 apiece. They were presented to Profs. Carl E. Badgley of the medical school; Arthur W. Bromage, chair- man of the political science de- partment; William G. Dow, chair- man of the electrical engineering department; Rensis Likert of the sociology and psychology depart- ments and director of the Institute for Social Research; and Floyd A. Peyton, chairman of the dental materials department. Seventh Year This is the seventh year that these awards have been presented. Also presented in the ceremony, which followed University Presi- dent Harlan Hatcher's "State of the University Address" to the faculty and staff of the University, were four Distinguished Service Awards. These commendations, totalling $500 each, were provided by the Universty Club of Chicago. Only assistant professors and instruc- tors are eligible. This year's recognition went to Profs. Carl Cohen of the philoso- phy department; Clarence J. Laf- ler of the pathology department, technical consultant at University Hospital; Louis J. Orlin of the near eastern studies department, assistant chairman of freshman- sophomore counseling in the lit- erary college, and faculty associate of Winchell House: and John P. White of the political science department. Brown, Nixon DETROIT CEREMONY: r'U' Newman Club Pastor Receives Monsignoriate By MALINDA BERRY Msgr. John F. Bradley of the University's St. Mary's Catholic Student Chapel received the purple robes of his office at ceremonies in Blessed Sacrament Cathedral in Detroit Sunday. He was elevated to the position of Papal chamberlain. The Mon- signor was made a member of the Pope's household, sharing in the title and distinction of those who serve the Pope in his residence in Rome. Formal Garb post of chaplain on a secular campus was thought to be merely a necessary evil. "It is extremely obvious to me and my fellow priests that this honor is conferred to signify the importance of, the work of the Catho- lic Church on a secular campus," Msgr. Bradley said. It is the method of a Bishop to say publically "thank you" to the Catholic faculty that have been trying, each according to his own talents, to further this work and present a proper image of Catholi- cism to the University and to the Catholic students, he continued. Method of a Bishop Goldberg Joi IS j I The formal garb of the office includes a purple cassock with a floor length cape. For informal occasions the Monsignor wears a black { ' t