CAMPUS LEADERS IGNORE FOLLOWERS See Editorial Page Ci r giltA6 ~~IAiI MOSTLY SUNNY Hligh--80 Low--45 Mostly sunny today with cooler temperatures tonight Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIV, No. 27 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1963 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES Present 'U' Non-Resident Total Shows Slight Drop Schools of Pharmacy, Social Work Experience Most Marked Changes By ROBERT GRODY Total University residence credit enrollment for the 1963-64 academic year is a record high of 27,388, an increase of 863 over last year. Breaking down the total, Roger W. Heyns, Vice-President for Academic Affairs reported yesterday that the statistic included jnrollment Hits New Peak of 27,386 4r *& *& * * * * * * Stalemate Develops 'Taylor A r"~ -H-2 Draws Up 17,688 men and 9700 women. He AHMED BEN BELLA .... pledges to farmers Algeria Sees End of Revolt ALGIERS (P-Algerian Presi- dent Ahmed Ben Bellatold 100,000 cheering supporters yesterday the military rebellion will be settled without bloodshed and, in an ap- parent bid for more support, pledged quick seizure of all farm- lands remaining in French hands. French settlers, with massive support payments from the home- land, have farmed most of Al- geria's richest land for decades. With the military revolt appar- ently spreading, Ben Bella said: "No blood will flow. We don't want to see one Algerian fight an- other Algerian . . . this country has seen enough blood. Let us stop our quarrels." As for his nationalization pro- gram, which has also hit industry, newspapers and hotels, Ben Bella said: "We are living a historic mo- ment which is giving back to the country its essential right - the soil." further explained that the total is -divided into 24,416 in Ann Arbor, 602 at Flint College, 586 at the Dearborn campus and 1,784 at the graduate centers. Total Enrollment Total University enrollment, in- cluding Extension Services sources is 30,799, up 836 over last year. Of the residence credit enroll- ment of 27,388, a total of 19,654 are Michigan residents (up 850) and 7,734 are non-residents (down 14). Of the latter tootal, 6,780 come from other states and United States territories; 195 are from Canada and 759 are from other foreign countries. Enrollment Distribution Distribution of enrollment by schools and colleges is: architec- ture school, 734 (up 8); business administration school, 1,002 (up 108); Dearborn Campus, 586 (up 61); dental school, 456 (down 2); education school, 1167 (down 4); engineering college, 2,906 (up 30); Flint College, 602 (up 66); grad- uate school, 6,604 (up 72) ; Law School, 1,007 (up 9); literary col- lege, 8,779 (up 377) ; Medical School, 1,290 (up 25). Music school, 613 (down 10); natural resources school, 196 (down 17); nursing school, 758 (up 63); pharmacy college, 117 (down 27); public health school, 240 (up 17); and social work school, 355 I(up 54). Two of the more striking changes from last year occur in the schools of pharmacy and social work. r Striking Changes The 25 per cent drop of enroll- ment in the pharmacy school (144 last year; 117 this year) was com- mented upon yesterday by Dean Tom D. Rowe of the pharmacy school. Dean Rowe attributed the drop *to the fact that the school has embarked this year upon a new five-year program, leaving it with- out a senior class. Dean Fedele F. Fauri of the social work school attributed his school's 14 per cent rise in en- rollment (301 last year; 355 this year) to the larger number of scholarships and traineeships available and the general rise of salaries in the field of social work. BYRON L. GROESBECK ... admissions report Class of '67 Gets Bigger Assistant Director of Admis- sions Byron L. Groesbeck reported yesterday that this year's fresh- man class is "between 3450 and 3500," an increase of approximate- ly 25 over last year. The percentage of out-of-state students in the freshman class "ranges between 30 and 32 per cent." The average college board scores of this year's freshmen are up 16 and 13 points in the verbal and mathematical Scholastic Achieve- ment Tests, respectively. Scores Last year's median verbal score was 549; this year's is 565. The median in the mathematical exam rose from 590 to 603. Groesbeck pointed out, how- ever, that these rises in the aver- age board scores are attributed more to a smaller number of stu- dents under the 500 range than a larger number over the 700 range. Another significant report from the admissions office is that policy has been altered so that in the case of out-of-state applicants, only those in the immediate family (son, daughter, grandchild, broth- er, sister or spouse) of a Univer- sity graduate will be given special consideration. Policy Changes In past years policy has been to grant special consideration to any out-of-state applicant who had any relative spend time at the University, whetherna degree was granted or not. This policy, Groesbeck noted, has been and, in its altered form, will continue to be applied only in schools such as Architecture and Design and the literary col- lege, where competition for ad- mission is especially stiff. He also pointed out that the policy has no really significant affect upon admissions standards, At taiks UNITED NATIONS (P)-British Foreign Secretary Lord Home dis- cussed a wide range of disarma- ment proposals with Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko yesterday but there was no give on either side. This was reported by British sources last night after a two- hour luncheon meeting between Home and Gromyko, the latest of a series of probes to see what further Cold War agreement might be possible to follow up the limited nuclear test ban treaty. Secretary of State Dean Rusk sees Gromyko today, and tomor- row all three plan to meet again. Sources said Home also intends to see President John F. Kennedy in Washington Friday before return- ing to London. Cautious Acceptance Home gave cautious acceptance to the Soviet proposal for an 18- nation summit meeting on dis- armament. He said it would have some value if a work program was drafted in advance on a lower level. Home spelled out this British position in a major policy speech in the 111-nation General Assem- bly, then went on the the lunch- eon talk with Gromyko at the headquarters of the Soviet mission to the United Nations. British informants gave this account: Disarmament Possibilities Home and Gromyko, for the first time in the current round of meetings in New York, went into depth on the list of disarmament possibilities that have been men- tioned since the test ban signing. Gromyko for the first time raised the Soviet proposal for a non-aggressioon pact between the North Atlantic and Warsaw mili- tary blocs. IST Sets Up Physics Lab To Study Light The Institute of Science and Technology has established a new laboratory for research in electro- optical sciences and Prof. George W. Stroke of the eletrical engi- neering department has been ap- pointed head of the new unit. Prof. Stroke, who joined the faculty this fall received his doc- toral degree in physics at the Sorbonne and was formally at Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. The laboratory is part of a pro- gram initiated this year to enable graduate students to work in the relatively new field of optics. "The University is pioneering in this field," Prof. James T. Wil- son, acting hear of IST, said. "New knowledge in optics is be- ing developed and used in indus- try with dramatic results-espe- cially in electronic information processing, light amplification and control with lasers and communi- cations." The new la'oratory will con- duct studies in diffraction grat- ings, light propagation, speed of light measurement, electro-optical communications, and optical elec- tronics, Stroke commented. "As far as I know, the Univer- sity is the only school in this country to offer such a course in electro-optical science," Stroke added. For Military Men Quit Palace SANTO DOMINGO (IP) - The armed forces which overthrew Dominican Republic President Juan Bosch will move out of their offices in the national palace this week, a high government official said yesterday., Such a withdrawal would mark the first time in modern history that Dominican military men have not had a substantial force with- in the palace. Military Remained Dictator Rafael L. Trujillo was always surrounded by a small ar- my, and the military remained after Trujillo's downfall. The government official said in an interview the generals and their staffs will move into the armed forces building at Centra de Los Heroes. It is believed this move was urged by those members of the three-man provisional government and the 14-man cabinet anxious to show the United States and the rest of the hemisphere that the new regime is worthy of recogni- tion as a democratic establish- ment. Political Power Throughout Latin America, armed forces are traditionally a power in political affairs. The Do- minican move was regarded as an attempt to achieve full separation of the military from the govern- ment. Meanwhile, in Miami three lead- ers of the ousted Juan Bosch re- gime vowed yesterday to return to power within a short time. "The provisional government cannot last because it is a tyran- nical one and is not the expression of the people," declared exile Do- minican Republic Vice-President Armando Gonzalez Tamayo. Exiles Arrive Tamayo, Dominican Revolution- ary Party President Angel Mio- lan, and Jacobo Mazluta, Bosch's finance minister, arrived in exile Monday night. They said they would begin im- mediately plotting against the new Dominican regime. "First we want to talk to Bosch, who we understand arrived in Guadeloupe," Miolan said. Claims Funds Misused Meanwhile, a government offi- cial claimed Bosch misused $92,- 000 in government funds while in office by transferring it to the Dominican Revolutionary Party, the party to which he belonged. administration, faculty and Of- fice of Student Affairs. On the student role as inter- preted through Council action, SGC Administrative Vice-Presi- dent Thomas Smithson, '65, ex- plained that he assumed "that students coming to this campus have certain responsibilities cou- pled With the ability to carry them out." He noted that the student government should be given the authority to enact these responsi- bilities. Community Participation Robert Shenkin, '65BAd, com- mented that the students should use their Council "as a meaning- ful voice in the conduct of their affairs." He said that by using "whatever means it has at its dis- posal," the Council should seek to maintain this powerful voice. Gary Cunningham, '66, observ- ed that the Council should strive to answer the desire of students "to participate in a community." He called on Council "to set the overall tone of this community and make the student feel is he is do- ing more than just studying." Involvement in 'U' Turning to the student role in academic affairs policy-making, Howard Schechter, '66, said that "it is morally and democratically correct to assume that if the stu- dent is involved in an academic community, he must have his views well represented with those who make policy." Naming specific ways the stu- dents could involve themselves, Russell Epker, '64BAd, appealed to students to examine the proposed See SGC, Page 2 CLIFFORD TAYLOR -. presents amendment IFC Fines Fraternity The Interfraternity C o u n c 1 executive committee, acting as a judicial body, last night fined Theta Xi fraternity $100 for illeg- ally initiating a pledge with a scholastic average of less than 2.0. The executive committee also approved a proposal to charge 50 cents admission to IFC Sing con- certs. -This is the second consecutive semester Theta Xi has violated the IFC by-law stating, "No man shall be initiated . . . unless his overall scholastic average is 2.0 ..." A $50 suspended fine for the spring violation will now auto- matically be levied; $50 of the new fine will be suspended; the viola- tion will cost Theta Xi $100. "This is not strictly a punish- ment," IFC Executive Vice-Presi- dent Richard Mandel, '64, chair- man of the judiciary, said. "We want to make fraternities aware that they must check the grades of initiates." The Office of Stu- dent Affairs publishes a list of the averages of fraternity pledges. The IFC concerts are currently free. IFC Social Chairman Robert Tobias, '65, said expenses now are too great. Membership CanidaesAir Ieas CaddtsOn Role of Student By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM The 10 candidates for Student Government Council's eight avail- able seats last night presented their views interpreting the student's role in the University as it might be expressed through Council action. Speaking at the annual Daily press conference in two groups of five, the candidates specifically examined Council's possibilities of aiding in academic affairs policy-making and SGC's relation to the Plans rou To Present Amendments On Motion Action Follows Move By SGC Last Week By H. NEIL BERKSON Interfraternity Council Presi- dent Clifford Taylor, '64, is seek- ing implementation of a plan to create an IFC committee to deal with fraternity membership selec- tion. Tonight he will present three amendments to the Student Gov- ernment Council motion, "Mem- bership Selection in Student Or- ganizations," which is up for final passage. They would: -Allow the IFC membership committee, if established, access to all information concerning fra- ternities filed with the SGC mem- bership committee. SGC Approval -Make appointments to the IFC committee subject to SOC ap- proval. -Create disciplinary procedures whereby any member of the IFC committee who released "confi- dential" information could be im- peached by SGC and tried by Joint Judiciary Council. Follow-Up Action If the amenddents pass to- night, IFC would still have to set up its committee. Taylor's amendments are a fol- low-up to SGC's action of last week. At that time a section was inserted into the "Membership Se- lection" document stating, "In the event that Panhellenic Association and/or Interfraternity Council es- tablishes a committee dealing with discrimination in their respective organizations the Student Govern- ment Council Committee on Mem- bership shall work in conjunction with" them. Monday, Panhel President Pa- tricia Elkins, '64, said that her or- ganization would not participate in such a committee because it would lack original jurisdiction in fraternity-sorority discrimination cases. She has indicated she will ask SGC to delete Panhel's name from the motion tonight. To Operate Within IFC The IFC committee would oper- ate solely within the structure of the fraternity system. While it could impose its own punishments; on fraternities found guilty of dis- crimination, SGC's membership committee would have primary re- sponsibility in the field. Taylor's action in the area of membership selection is nearly un- precedented for IFC. The frater- nity system has made another statement on the subject: a reso- lution by the Fraternity Presidents Assembly in 1959 against selection on the basis of race, creed, color, religion, natural origin or ances- try. IFC is now considering certain bylaw changes which would enable it to establish its membership committee..The present IFC By- laws make no reference to mem- bership selection. "We should have these changes prepared within two months," Taylor said last night, "and we're optimistic that FPA will approve them. For the first time, they would enable us to move into the area and give us the authority to handle problems which might arise." Choose Staff For Magazine The Board in Control of Student Publications last night appointed George White, '65, and Douglas Eldridge, '65BAd, as editor and business manager of this year's Generation, the campus inter-arts CIVIL RIGHTS: Voters Defeat Public Accommodations CAMBRIDGE, Md. (A') - Voters in Cambridge defeated a public accommodations referendum yes- terday, 1,994 to 1,720. The decision raised the possibil- ity of renewed demonstrations. National Guard troops have been garrisoned in Cambridge since July because of racial violence. The issue yesterday was a ref- erendum on an amendment to the city charter that would have re- quired service to Negroes in res- taurants, motels and hotels. Negro Vote In the all-Negro 2nd ward, the vote was 587 in favor of the pub- lic accommodations amendment and only 32 against. But only 40 per sent of the 1,535 registered voters cast their ballots. By contrast, up to 76 per cent of the registered voters cast bal- lots in the white wards. Mrs. Glor- ia Richardson, leader of demon- strations for integration this sum- mer, had told her supporters not to participate in the voting. She said public accommodations were a right inherent in citizenship and should not be decided by vote. White city officials expressed dismay. Mayor's Comment Mayor Calvin W. Mowbray said, "We'll have to start all over again, so to speak." He, the city council and other civic leaders had campaigned for the amendment, saying Cam- bridge, a community of 12,000 on W. Hall, 36, of suburban Garden- dale, was released last night after posting $300 bond. Col. Al Lingo, commander of the State Highway Patrol, announced the man's arrest yesterday after- noon, a few minutes before a ha- beas corpus proceeding called for Robert E. Chambliss, 59, who was taken into custody Sunday and held since then on open charges. Civil Rights Commission Meanwhile in Washington, the United States Commission on Civ- il Rights died at midnight Monday but was virtually brought back to life yesterday. The Senate voted 70 to 15 to ex- tend the agency a year, and sent the legislation back to the House where the Democratic leadership will seek similar approval later this week. The Senate's action came after Southerners registered token op- position. It was accomplished by attaching the one-year extension onto a minor claims bill previously passed by the House. Final.Vote The final vote on the bill with its civil rights rider was 71 to 15. Only House concurrence in the change will be necessary now to send the legislation to President John F. Kennedy. Barnett Arrives at Princeton To Meet Hostile Students PRINCETON (Y')-Boos and hisses from a hostile crowd of 5000 greeted Mississippi's segregationist Gov. Ross Barnett last night as he arrived to speak at Princeton University. Three dozen state troopers formed a hollow square to shield the governor and his wife for the 10 yard distance from his car to the entrance of Alexander Hall. The civil rights demonstrators had ignored pleas of their leaders to move back when Barnett's car arrived at the hall behind a state IKAFKA LECTURE: Sumner Cites Man-Law Relationship "police car. As the crowd surged forward, integration chants gave way to boos and catcalls and the troopers went to work. Barnett told the packed Prince- ton audience that the civil rights agitation sweeping the country "is being promoted by selfish politi- cians of both parties in their mad scramble for minority votes." The segregationist governor re- ceived both boos and applause as he preached states' rights and blasted civil rights legislation now before Congress. The proposals; he said "are revo- lutionary in essence. The only proper way to change the form of the government, if it need be changed at all, is by submitting the proposals to the people." Barnett said it "is time for true Americans to become awakened." "There are too many selfish, mealy - mouthed, pussy - footing, fence-riding politicians who are seling the American people down the river for their own personal political ambitions and gains," Barnett said. He added that Mississinians By JEFFREY GOODMAN "The God of love had become the God of law," David Sumner of the English department said last night in expressing the essence of Franz Kafka's "The Trial." "Kafka was working in two directions, against man limited to contractural, expedient, superficial relationships with other men and against the court, which symbolizes law and ultimately God, pulling men away from each other, passing down unalterable judg- ments without explanation," Sumner explained. Speaking in the third Kafka lecture sponsored by SGC's Reading- Tln-_ n f-_n-nn gii-n _frs na ofth ,:'t itanne,.rs society, the daily proprieties that are wholly extrinsic to a man's basic worth. The second kind of guilt is a man's inability or refusal to follow the precept of love for self and neighbor, his violation of personal relationships. Two Kinds of Guilt There are elements of both these guilts in the protagonist Joseph K. The guilt K. feels in the first sense is created by the actual trial. K.'s arrest has been wholly arbitrary, but it nevertheless absorbs K. and creates an obsession for proving his innocence of a crime about which he has no conception. This is the only guilt GOV. ROSS BARNETT ... grim reception Y'R's Endorse