FACULTY ROLE IN 'U'EDECISIONS See Editorial page Y SirA6 4Ia41A FAIR High-6U Low-29 Record high temperatures continue through Sunday. Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIII, No. 63ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1962 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES BOMBERS LEAVE CUBA: U.S.-Soviet Talks Conclude WASHINGTON (P) - Another Russian step toward full elimina- tion of the offensive threat in Cuba was reported yesterday, but two days of talks with Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoy- an ended without evidence of prog- ress toward agreement on a final Cuban settlement. United States authorities told newsmen early last night that So- viet medium-range bombers in Cuba are being re-crated and read- ied for shipment back to Russia. These 750-mile range plans can carry nuclear bombs and are re- garded as offensive threats to the United States, although not so dangerous as the 42 nuclear rock- ets which the Soviets pulled out of the Communist-ruled island earlier this month. Soviet Promise There are believed to be about 35 of the Ilyushin-28 jet bombers in Cuba, and Soviet Premier Niki- ta S. Khrushchev on Nov. 20 as- -AP Wirephoto LATEST SCAPEGOAT-Daily Mississippian editor Sidna Brower has come under fire from students in Oxford for her role in the James Meredith case. riticize Mississippi Editor For Inaction During Crisis By H. NEIL BERKSON Tensions still reverberate across the University of Mississippi campus. The latest target for disgruntled students is Daily Mississippian editor Sidna Brower. A student senate committee reprimanded her Thursday night for failure "in time of grave crisis to represent and uphold the rights of fellow students" and failure "to counter the OSU Studies Ban Change By JEAN TENANDER Two suggested revisions of Ohio State University's existing speaker bylaw are presently waiting for approval by OSU's faculty coun-l cil, the rule making body of the university. Last week the student senate passed a resolution urging the uni- versity's administration to remove a ban on speakers imposed be- cause of "undesirable affiliations or associations" some speakers may be felt- to possess. This was then submitted to the faculty council1 as was the proposal suggested six weeks ago by the faculty advisory1 committee. Along with the student senate's revision plan they also sent a let- ter to the faculty council urging{ it to vote against the advisoryt committee's proposals. The ad- - visory committee was set up as af special committee to study the speaker bylaw last spring and as a result of its investigations has sub- mitted a revision which gives the1 president of the university final authority over selection of allk speakers invited to speak on thex campus. Speaker SelectionA The student senate's proposalr asks that instead of the presidentt having complete power over speak- er selection, speakers would be chosen by a* committee of threet students and three faculty mem- bers who would then make rec-t ommendations to the president1 about their choices. Lantern Editor William Worthe said he felt it was doubtful that the president would reverse the de-t cisions of such a committee. t He also said that if the facultyx council accepts the proposal of the advisory committee "freedom at OSU would be killed." Unpredictable "The faculty council is very un- predictable and I cannot tell how, it is going to vote, but I don't think they should vote the ad- visory committee's suggestion," he, said. The present bylaw on speakerst is extremely vague and does not1 delegate authority directly to theC president. In the past speakers who were being considered for invita-c tions to the campus have beent selected by a student committee,a who submitted their suggestions to a faculty advisor, who in turn submitted the recommendations to distortion by the national press" of the university's student body.' The full senate will vote on the motion Tuesday. At the same time other students began circulating a petition to have her impeached. 'Hate Sidna' "A 'hate Sidna' campaign has started down here," Miss Brower declared last night. "Some of the petitioners actually had the nerve to come to my sorority and ask our president to sign it. She refused. "The feeling against me has been growing for some time," Miss Brower said. Originally there was a motion to censure her, but this was changed to the reprimand. The censure motion would have stemmedwfrom editorialsMiss Brower wrote attacking students involved in violence against James Meredith. No Editorial Comment The Mississippian did not cover Meredith'ssarrival on campus and the ensuing violence, because it had already gone to press. Editor- ially, the paper has made no comment on the issue of segrega- tion itself. The paper has not con- tacted Meredith nor done any features on him. It has confined itself to straight reporting and a condemnation of the violence. "I'm not too worried about my position," Miss Brower said. She explained that the publications board would first have to recom- mend her impeachment, and that a two-thirds vote of the senate would be needed to confirm it. The petitions have no meaning by themselves. 'The moves against me have made many people angry. Some who have been afraid to speak out before are getting sick of the con- tinued violence and irresponsibil- ity," she said. "But students here are still so emotionally upset they keep look- ing, for people to blame. First it was Meredith, then the troops, then the Kennedys, then the troops again. Now it's me." sured President John F. Kennedy they would be removed within a month. Yesterday's report - presumably obtained from aerial surveillance-- said nothing about any of the planes being placed aboard ships but it is assumed this will come later and will be known through continuing aerial reconnaissance. United States authorities gave this account of their latest in- formation concerning the bombers. Some of the bombers were still in crates at the time the Cuba crisis erupted, while others were uncrat- ed. Long Talk Word of this latest Russian step in meeting Khrushchev's promise to eliminate the threat of offen- sive weapons in Cuba came a few hours after Mikoyan concluded a 2 -hour talk with Secretary of State Dean Rusk. The Soviet official told news- men he expects "some progress" in the difficult efforts to conclude a final agreement to end the Cub- an crisis which last month moved the world close to nuclear war. But United States officials took a wait-and-see attitude. Little Progress In advance of yesterday's Rusk- Mikoyan talks United States au- thorities had reported no real prog- ress toward a final Cuban settle- ment, or on other East-West issues. Kennedy was understood to have pressed during his lengthy session with Mikoyan yesterday the United States demand for ade- quate international inspection to make sure Cuba is free of offensive weapons.' American authorities take the position that while the Cuban crisis is past its danger peak, it remains important enough to de- mand major attention among East-West issues. Other Topics Rusk and Mikoyan were said to have talked also about Brazil's proposal for a nuclear-free Latin America, measures to g uar d against surprise attack and-other disarmament issues including a nuclear test ban, and Berlin. Mikoyan was said to have raised the Berlin question briefly, in- cluding the usual Moscow theme that a peace treaty should be signed with East Germany-but he set no deadlines. United States officials said they still expect Ber- lin will return to the fore as a cold war dispute. Officials said no specific ar- rangement has been set up for further talks on Berlin but indi- cated these could be expected. Announces Revolt News TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras ()- An unofficial radio station said last night a rebel band led by former army Col. Maximo Be- jarano had started marching on+ the capital Honduras while Presi- dent Ramon Villeda Morales is visiting in Washington. The radio station said Bejarano and 60 armed men seized the town of Colomoncagua and was mov- ing toward Esperanza, capital of Intibuca department in the west, as their next objective. There was no immediate com- ment from the presidential office. Bejarano was involved in two abortive revolts in 1959, a year after Villeda Morales took office. In February 1959 Bejarano was a leader of a rebel band that seized the city of Santa Barbara in western Honduras but was chased out by the army. The following May, Bejarano led some 500 armed rebels in an attack on Gracias, a small state capital in western Honduras. The government said troops joined by divilians drove off the rebels. UCLA Body Votes To Le 'Editor Stay The student legislative council of the University of California at Los Angeles has defeated a motion to fire the editor of the UCLA Daily Bruin. Unlike most schools which have publications boards, the student government has direct control of the student newspaper. The motion said, in part, that the council was "disgusted with the quality of the paper"and its editor's failure to improve it. Personal Charges Bruin editor Al Rothstein said yesterday that the complaints consisted of a series of personal charges and rumors, totally un- true, which were circulated around campus by elements hostile to the Bruin. "They charged me with every- thing from conspiring to grab power on the student government to being drunk while working on the paper." Rothstein considered the 13-5 council vote a repudiation of the charges and "a vote of confidence in my editorship." Undermine Authority According to Rothstein, the as- sistant city editor of the Bruin worked to undermine his author- ity, circulating many of the ru- mors. He has since been replaced on the paper. Rothstein said both ultra- liberals and Greeks on campus were.responsible for the contro- versy. "On the one hand, our political viewpoint has lately been turning more toward the center. On the other, we have strongly attacked sorority discrimination." Anti-Semitism He also said there was an ele- ment of anti-semitism involved, but that it was small. "One girl on council complained that all the top staffers on the paper are Jewish liberals." Rothstein said the only justifi- able complaint against the news- paper was that it had had an extraordinary number of typo- graphical errors. 'We are working to correct this. High Quality "I feel the overall quality of our paper has never been higher, and an overwhelming number of stu- dents on campus agree," he de- clared. It should be clear, he noted, that the number of students op- posed to him was extremely small. The motion charged that there was a decline in the number of new staff members, "without whose support the future of the Daily Bruin is in serious jeop- ardy." Strong Support "As a matter of fact, we have more staff members than ever before-and so many top fresh- men we hardly know what to do with them," Rothstein said. He noted that both the presi- dent of the council and the dean of students, who sits on council, were very vocal in their support of him. "Now that it's all over the paper has settled down and is function- ing a lot more smoothly," he om- mented. I nian Troops Still Await t'' By MICHAEL OLINICK Editor The Office of Student Affairs Advisory Committee spent its first meeting yesterday getting organized and giving initial attention to five issues presented by Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. Five members of the Faculty Senate's Student Relations Com- mittee and six from Student Government Council heard Lewis outline Red Speaks Out On Profits I United Auto Workers Presidentj Walter P. Reuther yesterday de- manded a profit-sharing program similar to American Motors Corp., or the equivalent in cents-per- hour, the Detroit Free Press re- ported last night. Reuther's demand, aimed es-i pecially at Ford Motor Co. and' General Motors Corp., was de- livered in a speech to the 700 delegates of a UAW Skilled Trades Conference held in Chicago. The labor leader announced the pro- gram to prepare the auto industry for the 1964 negotiations for new contracts. "The UAW has never gone to the bargaining table without let- ting the auto companies know its feelings," Reuther said. "It is too early to talkuabout our 1964 de- mands in detail, although we are already collecting basic economic data." Based on AMC The proposed profit - sharing plan is based on the AMC pro- gram, which has produced the equivalent of about 18 cents an hour for the 25,000 UAW members employed at AMC, in addition to a straight seven cent an hour wage increase, in its first year of operation. Reuther said that had a similar plan been in operation at General Motors, UAW members there would have received an extra $900 for the year-or the equivalent of $.45 an hour. The profit-sharing plan at Ford' would have produced $733 or $.37 an hour for the 120,000 produc- tion workers. Not Revolutionary The idea behind profit-sharing is not a revolutionary one, Reuth- er said. "Every time we get a wage increase or improve ourI fringe benefits, we are sharing profits." Reuther said that the UAW isa going to start working in both legislative halls and will try at the bargaining table to modernize overtime payments.; He said that workers should get doubletime instead of time-and-a- half for any overtime worked. his current major concerns about student affairs on the campus. They are: 1) The role of student govern- ment: Lewis posed the question of whether SGC has been given an impossibly large administrative as- signment that prevents it from dealing with important policy mat- ters. Emotional Problems 2) Academic pressures: Lewis said he was troubled by what he characterized as a "wave of deep emotional maladjustment of stu- dents" which may be caused by increasing academic loads. 3) Faculty role in student af- fairs: This topic received the most discussion especially in relation to the question ofncontinued faculty participation on SGC's Commit- tee on Membership in Student Or- ganizations. The SRC has an- nounced that it does not wish to continue recommending professors to serve on this committee. 4) Student-Faculty government: Lewis noted that he would call upon the advisory committee to discuss proposals being made in this area by SGC's Committee on the University. Overall Organization 5) The relationship of the Mich- igan Union and Women's League: Lewis said he would be interested in discussions about the advisabil- ity of creating an overall organi- zation to include the projects of SGC, the Union and the League. At the beginning of the two hours session, Lewis reiterated his belief that the committee should serve only in an advisory capacity, that he would not ask it to vote on any questions and that respon- sibility for all decisions reached by the OSA rested with his office. Question was raised about press coverage of the advisory group's meetings by The Daily, and after some discussion, Lewis said he would make the final decision him- self before the next meeting. Members Listed Members of the advisory com- mittee include Professors Eleanor G. Cranefield of the social work school, SRC chariman Richard Cutler of the psychology depart- ment, William Kerr of the engi- neering college, Charles F. Leh- mann, assistant dean of the edu- cation school, and John G. Young, assistant to the dean of the engi- neering college. Representing SGC were Council President Steven Stockmeyer, '63; Executive Vice-President Richard G'sell, '63E; Administrative Vice- President Kenneth H. Miller, '64; Robert Ross, '63; Union President Robert Finke, '63, and Daily Edi- tor Michael Olinick, '63. The seventh SC member, In- terfraternity Council President John Meyerholz, '63BAd, attend- ing the National Interfraternity Council convention in Pittsburgh, was absent. Appointed in Fall These members were appointed by SGC early this fall, although there was considerable opposition from the Council's "liberal" fac- ion, which claimed that advising the' GSA was rightfully the func- tion of SGC as a whole, as is out- lined in its constitutior. However, the majority felt that it was best to cooperate with Lew- is's advice plan, and to appoint representatives to the committee unless it was otherwise proved un- satisfactory. Hatcher Plans Chillnese K British Try, To Mediate RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (P) -- Britain's Commonwealth secretary Duncan Sandys hastily changed plans yesterday and flew to New Delhi. Authoritative sources said a hitch had developed in an agree- ment between India and Pakistan to renew talks on Kashmir. Sandys had planned to fly back to London after sealing the agree- ment yesterday. Sandys was believed seeking clarification of a statement by Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru after the agreement was announced that he believed any change in the status of Kashmir would be "very harmful." A Pakistani government spokes- man said he could not determine whether Nehru was setting policy by his remark to the Indian par- liament or whether he was playing to the gallery. The spokesman, Secretary of Foreign Affairs S. K. Dehalvi, said Pakistan would like to believe In- dia was willing and anxious to come to terms on Kashmir. But if Nehru's remark set the policy for India in the coming talks, the ne- gotiations would be "absolute" nonsense," he added. High Danger Indian officials felt that until the situation clarified, there was high danger of an incident that could spark renewal of the heavy fighting that brought Peiping's forces to the edge of India's pop- ulous plains of Assam. Red China reaffirmed its in- tentions in a defense ministry communique issued yesterday and broadcast by Peiping radiorearly today. The conditions were the same as when Red China imposed a cease-fire along the battlefront Nov. 21. The Chinese troops, the com- munique said, will pull back 12.5 miles behind what Peiping calls the line of control of Nov. 7, 1959. The broadcast also called on In- dia to "promptly take correspond- ing measures" to Peiping's cease- fire and troop withdrawal. Demilitarized Zone The broadcast said these pro- posals were contained in a letter Red Chinese Premier Chou En- Lai sent to Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru Wednesday. Chou again asked Nehru to agree to formation of a demilitarized zone along the so-called control line "and the establishment of checkpoints by each part on its own side of the line . . . and the return of captured personnel." In New Delhi, a government; spokesman said Chou's letter add- ed nothing to previous Red Chi- nese proposals which India has neither accepted nor rejected. FIRST OSA SESSION: Advisory Commitfet Withdrawal Communists ? Meets Retain Hold In Mountains N Explosive Situation Remains as Officials Fear More Fighting By The Associated Press NEW DELHI--Still digging in defensively, Indian troops are waiting tensely today for the Red Chinese to make good their prom- ise to begin pulling back from positions along the Himalayan battlefronts. Red China insisted withdrawals would take place on schedule, and authoritative sources reported the Indian government had indications the Red Chinese will pull back. JAMES A. LEWIS But it may be days before In- presents issues dian forces can ascertain whether prsnsistheeCommunist units are doing what they say they are going to ASHMIR: do. 'NOT NATURAL': California Set To Establish 1 New Branch at Santa Cruzt By RUCHA ROBINSON Within the next five years, the University of California will add a seventh major campus to its network. This new campus, which will be established on the Monterey Peninsula at Santa Cruz, will not be one branch of the university, but a complex of approximately 20 small resident liberal arts colleges.b The complex fits in with the master plan of higher education int California and will be a "unique and distinctive academic enterprisef for the university," a spokesmant for the University of Californiat at Berkeley said. Develop Separately s While there will be a centrali ifacilities for all the 20 colleges of r the Santa Cruz branch, each will be encouraged to develop inde-I pendently. Lectures will be open to all students, but seminars and small discussions will be limited to the imdividual colleges. At present 90 per cent of stu- dents attending California state schools are in-state students. The new campus is expected to main- tain this ratio and will "enableI the university to accept students who are qualified," the Berkeley {] spokesman said.n i z i 3 E U,' Nation Accelerate Civil Drefenase Plans* By RICHARD KRAUT On the University, city, county and national levels, efforts to implement a civil defense program are being accelerated. Director of University Relations Michael K. Radock said yesterday that the University will appoint a University civil defense director within 10 days. . He said that Executive Vice-President Marvin L. Niehuss, who will make the appointment, is waiting for the subcommittee on special hazards of the University committee on safety to submit a special report. Disaster Preparation This report, according to Special Assistant to the Vice- President for Student Affairs, Peter Ostafin, who is chairman of the subcommittee, is the result of a study of what actions the University should take to prepare for a disaster. He said the report would be submitted within a week. In addition, the national civil defense office recently announced a six-point program to step up the shelter program, making use of buildings which could provide radiation shielding. According to a defense department statement, "by the time the new Congress 'convenes, we will know how far the presently available resouces will carry and what public funds are needed to meet any deficiency." Receive Supplies Director of Washtenaw County civil defense Col. General G. Miller said that the county hopes to receive food and medical supplies within several months "when the Washington red tape begins to unravel." Washtenaw County has no marked civil defense shelters presently, but Miller hopes eventually to provide shelter space for 80,000 persons. The county's population is 180,000, but 38,000 come into Washtenaw to work daily. In the past year and a half, the county has received about $8000 from the federal government for civil defense. The county civil defense office is presently working on the Scores Contracept, By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM "The use of contraception frustrates the intended natural use of the sex faculty," the Rev. F. R. Brunnett said last night in a fireside lecture-chat, "Contraceptives and the Natural Law," at Newman Center. Just as we would be frustrating or abusing our health by misusing our circulatory systems, so would we be corrupting the sex faculty by using it as "an end in itself," he said. "It is a means to procreation, a social faculty not given to man for himself. "We do not have to be sure that the intended goal of the faculty is reached; we only have to be assured that this intended end is not Return to 'U' University President H a r 1 a n Hlatcher will return firom his~ seven-week junket to Japan, Hong Kong, the Philippine Islands, For- , mosa, Thailand and India on