THE CUBAN CRISIS See Editorial Page C, r Ait iauF 471tttl COLD High--40 Low-26 Partly cloudy, chance of snow flurries Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIII, No~ 36 OLANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1962 SEVEN CENTS Colorado Student BodySuprsFinof1 TEN PAGES iditor Referendum Backs President's Action Newton Receives Large Majority As Althen Remains Off Newspaper By MICHAEL ZWEIG University of Colorado students gave President Quigg Newton an overwhelming vote of support for his firing of Colorado Daily Editor Gary Athen, In a two day referendum ending yesterday, 2,956 students voted on the following motion: "Be it resolved that we, the students of the University of Colorado, deplore the manner in which the univer- "sity administration acted in the firing of Colorado Daily Editor Gary Althen. "Although we realize that ex- ternal pressures may have moti- voted the president's decision, we also feel that his action was an- tagonistic to former statements regarding academic freedom and the mechanisms within the uni- versityeby which this liberty is protected. .l ' Reconsideration "We urge an immediate recon-' sideration of this decision." The vote was 967 for the mo- tion, 2,049 against it. Newton fired Althen Oct. 17 aft- er several weeks of controversy centered around an article and a letter printed by Althen in the Colorado Daily. The article, appearing Sept. 21, referred to Senator Goldwater as QUIGG NEWTON a "murderer, a mountebank, no . student support better than a common criminal." The letter, written to explain the attack on Goldwater, referred to REFORM: former President Dwight D. Eisen- hower as "an old Futzer." Both " s were written by Carl Mitcham, Davies Cites Colo'ado senior and not a staff member of the Colorado Daily. Newton explained his firing of Althen to 4,000 students Tuesday afternoon. "It is my considered opinion" that Althen had hurt the By RUTH HETMANSKI university with "acts of editorial irresponsibility. We cannot risk Speaking on "Criminal Appeal further damage by permitting the in England" as part of the Cooley editor to retain his position," he Lecture Series Thursday. Prof said.l * * * * * * * * * * * * Kennedy Accepts Thant Offer For Talks on Cuban Quarantine I Pressure' Charge Hit By Power By KENNETH WINTER Regent Eugene B. Power has explained why charges that he pressured University faculty mem- bers to contribute to Neil Staeb- ler's campaign for congressman- at-large are "patently false." His explanation came as a reply to Rep. James Warner (R-Ypsi- lanti), who alleged that Regent Power had sent a threatening let- ter to the faculty, demanding con- tributions to Staebler. Regent Power answered by out- lining -"the actual facts": Letters 1) As chairman of the Staebler finance committee, Regent Power enlisted support from individuals throughout the state to serve on the committee. Each person was given committee letterheads for his own use. 2) Each member had these let- terheads to prepare his own let- ters to send to his own mailing list, seeking contributions. 3) Regent Power sent out ap- proximately 10,000 letters bearing his signature, but none were mail- ed to University faculty members. "If any faculty member received a letter signed by me it was the result of a clerical error," he said. 4) The faculty did receive a let- ter signed by International Center Director Prof. James Davis, a let- ter sponsored by ,"a faculty com- mittee of Staebler's supporters." Right To Participate Regent Power said that "none of these letters by any stretch of the imagination can be con- strued as a threat to those who fail to contribute. "I do not believe that my elec- tion as a regent has deprived *ne of the right-in fact, the obliga- tion-to participate in an effort to elect a candidate whose recod in education, as well as in other areas, merits my support," Regent Power commented. To Rap Firing On Newspaper The Collegiate Press Associa- tion and the National Association of College Publications Advisors is expected to censure -the action of University of Colorado President Quigg Newton in firing Colorado Daily editor Gary Althen. The three-day Detroit confer- ence has drawn delegates from throughout the United States. 'CHAMPION OF UNDERDO Steinbeck Wins Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM (1') - John Steinbeck, whose hard-hitting novels brought him wealth-and fame as a champion of the underdog, won the 1962 Nobel Prize for literature yesterday. The 60-year-old California-born author, considerably mellowed in his writing and temperament since "The Grapes of Wrath" shocked the social conscience of the United States, is the sixth Ameri- can to win the premier literary-,> award. For nearly 30 years SteinbeckV has been turning out rest sellers a total of 27 books-and countless magazine and other articles thatE stirred controversy and raptures For A uthor of praise. JOHN STEINBECK . . sixth U. S. award -m V c ulAi1 tua a , S . Seaborne Davies, Dean of the Fac- ulty of Law of the University of Liverpool, called attention to the current reform mood in England concerning the administrative ma- chinery of criminal law. Particular attention is being paid to delays in administration caused by an increase in the num- ber of criminal cases. "The chief oddity of the present structure of appeals was that there were two separate struc- tures," Prof. Davies said. The orig- final distinction depended upon the type and seriousness of the case, but this distinction was much obliterated in modern times, leav- ing the mere structural duality. Appeal Right The establishment of the Court of Criminal Appeal in 1907 brought for the first time a gen- eral right of appeal from convic- tions of the more serious crimes. It was once feared that the estab- lishment of a Court of Criminal Appeal would undermine the in- tegrity and sense of responsibility of juries,, but the last 50 years have set those fears at rest. The Court of Criminal Appeal established in 1907 had some un- usual features. Its judges were concurrently trial judges rather than full-time appellate judges. members; now there are 35. This In 1908 there were 16 possible was the normal quorum of the court and as a result any three out of 35 could constitute the court. Thus, the court had no relatively fixed composition. Curious' "All of this has led to a curious constitutional development," Prof. Davies said. "The Court of Crim- inal Appeal has established what might almost be called a Court of Appeal within itself by the device of assembling a 'full court,' that is a court of five, seven or more of its members to review the, pre- vious decisions-of its court of three members, or to resolve disagree- ments between three who could no agree." Students Travel To Protest An More than 40 University stu- dents will leave by car for Wash- ington, D.C., tonight to participate in tomorrow's march on the White Ad Hoc Committee The text of the referendum mo- tion was approved by an ad hoc committee of 500 protesting stu- dents immediately following Al- then's dismissal, and was approved by Colorado student senate the same night But a week later, after Newton spoke, student senate reconsidered its action, and voted to delete the entire middle paragraph of the motion because it was "vague." may Initiate NSA Question A petition to place the question of continued participation in the United States National Student Association on the Nov. 14 Student Government Council ballot is be- ing circulated by the Young Re- publican Club. YR President Mark Hauser, '64, said that he expects that the pe- tition will "easily have 1,000 sig- natures" before Monday. More than 70 students are circulating the petition in hopes to initiate the NSA issue in the election. Wednesday night at the SGC meeting the necessary two-thirds majority to place the issue on the ballot was not achieved. Eight members voted in favor of the ref- erendum and five against with one abstention.I 1 1 i 7 I I 1 i i 1 1 E G'-s GO TO HOUSES: IQC Passes Revisions By PETER SARASOHN Inter-Quadrangle Council for- warded several Constitutional amendments to the various resi- dence houses for approval last night. One of the amendments, which deleted a section dealing with quadrangle and house councils, raised some controversy in a num- ber of houses. Some members of the residence halls interpreted this deletion to mean the abolition of these governing bodies. However, IQC President Robert Geary, '63, noted that the removal of this section from the constitu- tion was merely an administrative matter. He stated that the provi- sion concerning house govern- mnents did not belong in the IQC constitution. "We never thought of taking away house councils," he added. In another IQC action, the post of secretary-treasurer was divided in two. This was done because the job had become too big for one person to handle. A third amendment removes the voting power from the secretary and treasurer, in order to avoid the possibility of a future president establishing a "power bloc" on IQC. Since the president selected all the officers under the old sys- tem, he could select all of them from his own quadrangle. Formal Citation The 18-member Swedish Liter- ary Academy, in awarding him the Nobel Prize, issued this formal ci- tation: "For his at one and the same time realistic and imagina- tive writings, distinguished as they are by a sympathetic humor and a social perception." In its announcement of the award, the Academy went further: "Among the masters of modern Amreican literature who have al- ready been awarded the prize - from Sinclair Lewis to Ernest Hemingway - Steinbeck more than holds his own, independent in position and achievement. Redeemed Motif There is in him a strain of humor which tohsome extent re- deems his often cruel and crude motif. His sympathies always go out to the oppressed, the misfits and the distressed, he likes to con- tx-t the simple joy of life with the brutal and cynical craving for money. Steinbeck received international acclaim for "The Grapes of Wrath," a powerful story of the "Okies" fleeing the dustybowl. It grew out of his r-:lings for the migrants after living with them. It won him the Pulitzer Prize in 1940 and became a hit stage play and movie. "But in him we find the Ameri- can temperament also expressed in this great feeling for nature." Steinbeck's most recent novel, "The Winter of Our Discontent," published last year, is about a small-town grocery clerk who plots a bank robbery as a quick way of regaining his family's lost fortune and social status. By DENISE WACKER Several members of the English department shared the opinion that the presentation yesterday of the Nobel Prize in LiteratureI to novelist John Steinbeck wasi for the works he has produced over the last 30 years. Most also felt that while Sten- beck deserved the award, it might have been fairer and generally a wiser move to present the prize to Robert Frost or some other American or European writer. Commenting on the committee's choice, Prof. Joe Lee Davis assert- ed that "the (Nobel) Committee has shown much the same ap- proach to American literature as it has in the past, when it awarded the Nobel Prize to Hemingway. Faulkner, and Pearl Buck. "Generally, the committee has given the award to a writer it feels has expressed the curient trends within a culture. "This year, it evidently returned to the practice of making an award for a writer's complete works, rather than one effort,' Prof. Davis said yesterday. In making its selection, the Swedish Academy recognizes two basic trends in American litera- ture, he added. The first is an emphasis on humanitarianism- the welfare of the common man. The awarding 'on the Nobel Prize to Pearl Buck was based on this. Hemingway and Faulkner were presented with the award for the second major aspect of American literature, the great need for es- tablishirig roots, Prof. Davis con- tinued. See COMPARE, Page 6 To Maintain Blockade DuringNegotiations Russians Offer To Halt Shipments If Americans Recall Naval Forces UNITED NATIONS M~-President John F. Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev agreed yesterday to pre- liminary talks proposed by acting Secretary-General U Thant on ending the United States-Soviet crisis'over Cuba. But Thant failed to win any United States commitment on a temporary end to the naval arms blockade on Cuba dur- ing such negotiations. A Soviet tanker was halted yesterday but allowed to proceed with'out . . a search. Khrushchev announced he would agree to a temporary simultane- ous suspension of Soviet arms shipments and the blockade as pro- posed by Thant. Replies of both world leaders; were read out to the UN Security Council by U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson and Soviet DeputyV' Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zor- in.. Angry Charges Their speeches contained angry charges and countercharges byy. the two UN chief representatives of their two countries. At one point Stevenson demand-; ed an outright reply from Zorin on whether the Soviet Union had stationed long and short range missiles in Cuba. Number One U TsANT Kennedy made clear in the.. . proposes negotiations statement read to the Council by Stevenson that the United States WARNING:- regarded the secret introduction of offensive weapons into Cuba as the number one issue in the crisis. The President told Thant "theud c s u s answer lies in the removal of such 1t weapons." ii t P lc A White House official under- scored this by announcing in Washington that the Kennedy of- Joint Judiciary Council issued a fer to explore possibilities of a policy statement concerning stu- peaceful settlement did not signal dent riots at last night's meeting, any suspension of the blockade. according to Judic chairman Gary Suggestions L. Hoffman, '63. Kennedy merely took note that The statement says that Joint Thant "made certain suggestions Judic "wished to bring to the at- and has invited preliminary talks tention of the student body the to determine whether satisfactory following University regulation, in rrangements can be assured." light of the denonstrations which He added that Stevenson "is this past week: ready to discuss promptly these . NO student shall be involved with you." inciting, leading or participat- arrangements whe reyfromning in student riots or raids which K rrusheadn hh the pl om could result in injury to persons, IKhrushchev in which. the Soviet destruction of property, or viola- leader said he welcomed the sec- tion of a University regulation, retary-general's initiative. state law, or city ordinance.' Khrushchev said he understood'"Joint Judic is prepared to take Thant's concern "since the So- disciplinary action against any viet government also considers this students inciting, leading or par- situation as highly dangerous and ticipating in some activities in requiring an immediate interfer- the future. This is in no way in- ence by the United Nations, tended to infringe upon the rights "I am informing you that I agree of free assembly and free speech, with your proposal which meets but rather to protect them" the interests of peace." Washington reported that Rus- sian ships which turned back fio Cuba included most of those sus-l pected of carrying offensive wea- Asks Position pons. A huge vessel designed to transport missiles was reported O among them. O onsttuion Informed government sources said no new Russian ship had been Norman O. Stockmeyer, Repub- sighted moving toward Cuba and lican candidate for Secretary of the fleet of blockading United State yesterday challenged his States warships strung out across democratic opponent, incumbent a broad area of the Atlantic. James M. Hare, to "make known It appeared likely that the Navy his position" on the proposed new might intercept one of the oncom- constitution. ing Communist cargo ships during He told the Ann Arbor Realty the day. This could bring the first Board, "The people of Michigan actual order to halt and be are entitled to know precisely how searched. Secretary of State candidates feel about the new document." iT Stockmeyer praised the pro- posed constitution and said he is Observe M UG "100 per cent in favor" of its adoption. 1 i o e n In an interview after his morn- SRC Discovers Elderly ceive Lower Income By MALINDA BERRY The income of older citizens is "substantially lower" than that of younger people says the University's Survey Research Center. Citing figures from its 1962 survey of consumer finances, the Center says that, not only are older citizens worse off financially "'than younger people, they are likely to stay that way. The report said 71 per cent of those 65 and over had a dispos- able income of less than $3,000 in 1961, and 10 per cent had more Grads than $5,000. Less Than $2,000 HOMECOMING FESTIVITIES: Elephants To Greet Old By ELLEN SILVERMAN Out of 9.3 million people 65 and over, 4.5 million have a disposable Elephants, sky divers and twisters will begin Homecoming festivi- income of less than $2,000; 40 ties this afternoon as a prelude to a weekend of activities climaxed by per cent of these have practically two dances and an appearance by Bob Newhart tomorrow. no assets. The SRC report adds, Not incidentally, the University will take on Minnesota in the "and most of them have no med- Homecoming game tomorrow afternoon in the traditional battle for Insanio, ditr" n the LttleBrownJug.In addition, -distribution of the Little Brdwn Jug. assets among the over-65 units Homecoming's elephant race, the newest feature of the program, is "much more unequal than will be held this afternoon at 3:30 p.m. Elephants from six housing among other units," the SRC said. groups on campus will compete for the honor of representing the Uni- Boosts Average versity in an intercollegiate race series at 5 p.m. The University's com- A small number with large petitors are Adams State College, the University of Illinois, the Uni- assets raises the average for tne versity of Washington and Orange State College. entire group, it said. Elephants Arrival Some 34 per cent had no liquid The elephants will arrive late in the day. "At 9 o'clock this morn- assets at all (less than $100 inj ing they left from Indiana," Homecoming Co-chairman Charles bank deposits and bonds), andj :16