Propos By RONALD WILTON For 8000-12,000 UniversIty students registration and classifica- tion will be a lot different next semester. Starting on Monday the Office of Registration and Records will put Into operation its new "Advanced Classification Program," developed by Edward G. Groesbech, director of the office. The plan will result in early classification for thousands of students and a corresponding easing of the registration process. Undergraduate students meet with their counselors early in each semester to determine the courses they will take the follow- ing semester. If they elect one of a hundred odd basic under- graduate courses which are usually in heavy demand they fill out full schedule cards which will be forwarded to the registration office. Advance Scheduling Thus, the student will have all his courses scheduled ahead of time and he will not have to go through the classification room at Waterman gymnasium during the registration period. However, New he will still have to have his fees assessed and reg cut his registration time to around ten minutes. At the registration office the student's entir be made. up with the student'd time choices use possible. If conflicts are found or the student's desired se filled then he will be given the same class at a di an unsoluable conflict is found then the course el be changed but the elections card will be returned 1 counselor for alternate elections. Balance Sections Ronald, L. Keller, assistant to Groesbeck, exp more students applied for a course than had bee then the registration office would notify the respect and ask them to open more sections and assign to the course. If the department could not do this the card would be returned to the counselor for anothe He emphasized that in courses limited by spac such as laboratory courses spaces would be reserve Classificatioi ~ister. This will having the greatest need for the course. "These would primarily be seniors who need the course to graduate." e schedule will He added that in literary college courses, which usually ex- d as far as is perienced a large number of students registering from another college, space would be set aside for non-LSA students. ction is already Must See Counselor fferent time. If Keller pointed out that all students wvil1 have had to see their ections will not counselors by Jan. 17, when the literary college stops its counsel- to the student's ing. The office expects that classification will be complete and class schedules sent to the affected students by Jan. 21. Students not electing one of the 100 selected courses will have )lained that if to go through the classification process in the gymnasium during ~n allowed for, registration. lye department Calling the present effort a "pilot program," Keller recalled more teachers that last spring "we had a plan of advanced classification for 19 ~n the student's courses. But with the tri-mester coming on we realize that we r election. have to have an enrollment plan for every student." .e requirements He predicted that if this project worked a bigger plan would ~d for students be in operation next fall. "Eventually we can anticipate that the P rogram entire registration procedure will be done by mail. We would send all necessary information to the student and he would fill out his desired program and send It back. We would then send him regis- tration materials for him to fill out and a fee assessment. He would then return these to us and the process would be over." In the registration office is a room where four large boards, one each for the literary college and the engineering college and the others divided between the other schools, are mounted. On these are listed every course in the respective schools. As each schedule comes in an office worker makes a mark on the card of the desired course. Keller emphasized the fact that the new program eliminated the old alphabetized registration schedules for the people involved. "Prom now on there should be no compylaints from people who find themselves registering last for several semesters. Now its first see his counselor, first registered." He added that a very positive factor in the new program was the new time schedule made up for next semester which he characterized as "the firmest one we have had in a long time." SGC PERSONNEL POORLY QUALIFIED See Editorial Page Sir i~au ~EIait~ SHOWERS TONIGHT Mostly cloudy, with cooler temperatures in the evening Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom VOL, LXXUII, No. 33 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1962 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES lied China Sends] Tanks Into India Nehru Warns National Freed om 1V.enaced, Sets Economy for War By The Associated Press NEW DELHI--Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru warned last night that India's independence as a nation was threatened as Red Chinese brought tanks into battle and extended their attacks to a spread of 1,400 miles along the Himalayan frontiers. Premier Nehru placed India's economy on a war footing last night and pledged to lead his country to victory over Communist China, which he called an "enemy." But later Peking announced that the Chinese Communists opened a third front at the extreme end of the border, massed troops OAS Promises Aid T o Back President HOUSTON (AP)-.Three high-ranking officials of the Organization of American States said here last night the OAS will fully support President John F. Kennedy's blockade of Cuba, even to the point of using arms if they are called for. The officials were Dr. Jose A. Mora, secretary general of the OAS, Dr.- Alberto Zuleta, president of the Council, and Gonzalo Facio, Costa Rican ambassador to the OAS and to the United States. They were ac- comlpanied here by Delesseps S. Morrison, United States ambassador to the QAS. "At this moment we need strong solidarity for all the American republics in this hemisphere to end aggression," said Mora, who lives in E. LOWELL KELLY .. Peace Corps Peace Corps Means, Goals By S;TEVEN HALLER The Peace Corps has three prime objective, E. Lowell Kelly, chief of the Peace Corps' division of selection, said yesterday. Prof. Kelly, who is on leave from the psychology department to serve in this capacity, prefaced his remnarks with a film delineat- ing the history and work of the Corps since its founding by Presi- dent John F. Kennedy. The most publicized of the Peace Corps' objectives is to aid peoples i1n other lands to develop their own resources, Kelly said. Another objective is to help peo- ple in other lands find out for themselves what Americans are really like; how pluralistic the United States is and how many ethnic backgrounds there are. Conversely, the final objective of the Peace Corps is to help Americans find out what the peo- ple of other countries are like. Concerning these three objec- tives, Kelly added, President Ken- nedy has suggested that the most important aspect of 'the Peace Corps is not the aid given abroad Sthe~ imnves~nmnt o-ninril hy the for a fourth and sent tanks rum- bling toward an Indian air base in the Ladakh area at the western end of the border. Britain Plans Aid In London Britain accused Com- munist China yesterday of ag- gression against India and stood othe military aid to her threaten- ed. Commonwealth partner. Intensified fighting along the wild, disputed frontiers of the two Asian giants brought these de- velopments: 1) The foreign office went out of its way to remind newsmen that Britain regards India as the victim of Red Chinese aggression. 2) The Defense Ministry an- nounced that Admiral of the Fleet Earl Mountbatten, chief of the defense staff, will visit New Delhi among other Asian capitals early e3) Qulified officials reported after informal exchanges that the British government soon is likely to announce its headiness to meet supplies. Nehru Asks Faith Calling on the people to have faith and full confidence, Nehru saint a radio bradcast no im year economic plan will be re- duced. But he declared everything will be sacrificed if necessary to save Indian freedom. Nehru's warning and call for national sacrifice was sounded as Indian defense spokesmen an- nounced that Mao Tze-Tung's Chinese warriors had opened a new front in the area of Rima, only about 20 miles northwest of Burma's border. In this drive the Chinese were threatening Chushul, site of In- dia's only landing strip in the area. Co-ed Housing The Residence Hall Board of Governors will meet tomorrow to discuss plans for the implementa- tion of co-educational housing which will take effect next Sep- tember. Decisions still have to be made Board Sts .The Board in Control of Student Publications reinstated publica- tion of "Gargoyle," the campus humor magazine, last night. Three issues of the magazine will be published during this aca- posas and interviewsith st- dents, the Board appointed the following senior staff: John Dob- bertin, Jr., '64, A. Aleksis Lahti, '63A&D, and Stuart Goodall, '63. "I am extremely happy that our petition was accepted because the committee has done a lot of prepatory work," Goodall said. Plan To Protest Cuban Blockade An ad-hoc group of faculty stuentss are pla ng emonsta-d tions tomorrow against the Cuban blockade, former Daily Editor Thomas Hayden, Grad, announced. 3Uruguay. Mora called Kennedy's decision "very courageous and im- portant for all the hemisphere." Mora said he felt certain that a sizable majority of the 20 nations within the OAS will stand with the United States and use arms to stamp out Communist aggression in Cuba if the blockade proclaimed by the President yesterday does not work. He said under the treaty of Rio de Janiero those nations which do not agree to use force against Cuba of the organiztion's members vote to do so. Foreign reaction varied. The British foreign office said the disclosure of the Red buildup in Cuba will shock the whole civil- ized world. A West German spokesman wel- comed "the determination of the United States government to couin- ter the dangers arising from the situation.'' Kennedy, in his talk to the nation, noted the risk of conflict spreading to other cold war points and renewed United States promises to defend West Te .Communist-controlled news media from Havana to Moscow de- nounced the Washington action as aggression against Cuba. ACAPrphtE C iNPROXIMITY-President John F. Kennedy imposed a quarantine on Cuban shipping which the Organization of American States is expected to support. In a radio-TV speech Kennedy revealed Cuba's possession of nuclear missiles. HOSPITAL CARE: OSA To Meet The Organization of Aerican 9 a.m. today and the United Na- tions Security Council plans to convene this afternoon to consider the Cuban situation. Canada said it has stopped So- viet planes bound for Cuba and the Caribbean from landing at Canadian air bases. In his speech, Kennedy announc- Although there may be a wave of violence at the popular level, the Latin American governments will go along with President John F. Kennedy's blockade of Cuba, Martin C. Needler of the political science department predicted last nighbt By GERALD STORCH The Bureau of Hospital Administration received a $132,000 grant from the American Medical Association over the weekend to conduct a nationwide study of ''Changing Patterns of Hospital Care." Thomas B. Fitzpatrick, a member of the bureau's staff who will direct the project, outlined three main areas of investigation: 1) How has the hospital population changed since 1946 in age and sex distribution and type of diagnosis? 2) Wat nffet ave advancs haveall theechanges maden upon hospital costs? * A sample of patients discharged ~ A ctivity from 80 selected general hospitals in the continental United States during the years of 1946, 1954 Amog te plitcalstes wichand 1961 will be used, Fitzpatrick -. ~. -' -- - ,I.,said. PEA CE RA CE: Gottlieb Payne VieW Kennedy To Halt Castro Build-Up President Moves To Counter Threat; Accuses Soviets of Interference By PHILIP SUTIN Revealing that the Soviets have nuclear-carrying missiles and jet botnbers in Cuba, President John F. Kennedy yester- day announced in a nationwide radio and TV address 'that he had ordered a naval blockade of the island and took six other steps to counter the new threat. Speedy developments followed the Kennedy speech. A Defense Department spokesman said the United States is ready to sink every Communist ship that refuses to adhere to the blockade. The Navy announced at San Juan, Puerto Rico, that more than 40 ships and 20,000 men assembled for annual Caribbean exercises are now* "sustaining the blockade" of lT Cuba. in ,1nnn ed hed a"titqaatn He said that there might be a 1 Oderd a"stictquaantnefew riots and stone throwing in- ndalesive military equipmetcidents provoked by Fidelista ele- found to be containing such 'weap- win tudemns. kesad t ons will be turned away from the However, Kennedy's revelation island. The quarantine will be ex- of nuclear weapons in Cuba "is a tended to "other carriers"-pro- shocker and will shock most Latin ably airplanes if necessary; American governments as it has 2) Ordeed those arme filorces torteUnited States," Needler de- Cuba and prepare "for any even- Expect Support tuality";eipeicAtc He said that even Mexico and Hemipherc AtackBrazil, two countries with signifi- 3it Dcklared thait anynuclea cant left-wingapro-Castro minor- ern hemispheric nation will be 'th Uited States blockade. How- considered an attack against the ever, their position may be equi- United States; vocal, Needler added. 4) Reinforced the United States Prof. Joseph R. Julin of the naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Law School said that Kennedy's on the eastern tip of the island quarantine has little legal back- and ordered all dependents evacu- ing in international law, but Is ated from the base; similar to a specific blockade By MICHAEL ZWEIG Political action is a very neces- sary part of peace activity in this country, Sanford Gottlieb, nation- al coordinator for Turn Towards Peace, said last night, in conjunc- tion with Tom Payne, Democratic candidate for the House of Repre- sentatives from Michigan's Second District. Goettlieb called President John F. Kennedy's resumption of nuc- lear testing last spring the turn- ing point in the direction of peace activity in this country. "We learned that moral' pressure with- out political activity is not enough." He described the increasing numbers of peace candidates who' are running for congressional seats this year. There are 20 candidates, including Payne, represent both major political parties and inde- pendent groups who are cam- paigning to bring greater em- phasis on methods of attainig peace and disarmament. GiOLdieb outlined were a strength- ening of the United Nations and a change in the composition of Congress "to free the administra- tion from the shackles" of a Con- gress not oriented towards peace legislation., He expects the study to be completed by December 1963. "Hospital administrators are generally convinced that a sub- stantial portion of rising hospital cost is due to 'utting into effect Disamamet Psitin :the latest medical innovations, DisaramentPosit onincluding expensive equipment, The administration's position ontechniques and personnel aspects," disarmament and nuclear testing fFitzpatrick said. is determined by what it thinks jProf. Leslie, Kish and Irene Hess Congress will accept, Gottlieb said. of the Survey Research Center are Payne, who is a peace candidate, presently working on selecting the said he would work for the probability-sample for the study. strengthening of t h e United In adiint eeypeet States Arms Control and Disarm- nddtn unvrd she ament Agency. He stressed the in tefcsuovrdith impotane o pece eserchandsurvey, the bureau will submit to spoke of multiplying the numbers ht da ii s fnereains of Centers for Conflict Resolution othdaaiisfnlrer. or similar institutes.-- 5) Called an immediate meet- ing of the Organization of Ameri- can States "to consider this threat to hemispheric solidarity" and in- yoked the Inter-American Defense Pact; 6) Called for an emergency meeting of the United Nations Se- curity Council, requesting "the prompt dismantling and with- drawal of all offensive weapons in Cuba." The United States, he said, See KENNEDY, Page 3 The mock Michigan gubernator- ial election will be held today from 18:30 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. with polling places in the Fishbowl, the Engine Arch. and in front of the which one nation may place on another in peacetime. SHe surmized that Kennedy used the term "quarantine" because it is not legally clear whether a third party need respect a specific blockade. Stop Any Vessel A quarantine, Prof. Julin added, allows Kennedy the opportunity to assert the power to stop any Ivessel. A specific blockade was first used in 1827 by Great Britain, France and Russia against Tur- key with whom they were not at war, to help secure Greek inde- pendence. he explained. ~The term "quarantine" derives from a 1937 speech by President Franklin D. Roosevelt which urged the free nations to quarantine ag- gressor nations, Prof. Julin added. Prof. William W. Bishop of the Referring to Kennedy's address to the nation last night, Payne SANFORD GOTTLIEB said, "We have no choice but to ...peace activity work harder for peace so that the country will not again be faced within the political party structure with such a serious situation."' BULLETIN KEY WEST (I)-AII of Cuba's miilitary forces have been mobil- ized as a result "of the news from the United States," Ha- I i