THE THIN VENEER OF CIVILIZATION See Editorial Page IL tr ga1T 7E4ait MOSTLY CLOUDY High-47 Low-28 Much colder today with showers or snow flurries likely Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIV, No. 72 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1963 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES ' - ., John F. Kennedy 'M', OSU V -l Still Set To. Play By MIKE BLOCK Associate Sports Editor The football game between Michigan and Ohio State sched- uled for today will be played. In a statement issued last night, the Michigan Athletic De- partment, in conjunction with those of Ohio State, Michigan Stat, and Illinois, said that de- spite the death of President John F. Kennedy yesterday both the Michigan-Ohio State and Michi- gan State-Illinois contests would not be postponed or cancelled. With Athletic Director H. O. (Fritz) Crisler as its spokesman, the department added that pre- game and halftime ceremonies would not be held, but special memorial services would take place instead. The statement read: "After careful deliberation and conference with our sister insti- tutions, Michigan State, Ohio State, and Illinois, we have de- cided to proceed with our respec- tive football games Saturday. "We feel that it is in the best national interest and tradition to carry on, feeling that in so doing we are carrying out the wishes of our late President, whose deep in- terest and concern for the physi- cal training and welfare of our youth is so widely known. These games will be played both at East Lansing and Ann Arbor with ap- propriate halftime ceremonies pay- ing tribute to the memory of ' President Kennedy." Earlier, Western Conference' Commissioner Bill Reed announc- ed that the conference would not take action to cancel or postpone these games or any others involv- ing Big Ten teams, but that it would leave each individual school to decide for itself. Referring to this decision, Crisler commented. "It was our hope at the Univer- sity that the Big Ten would act See 'M', Page 5 CLASSES CONTINUE: Hatcher Cancels Events Kennedy's Killer By GAIL EVANS Associate City Editor University President H a r 1 a n Hatcher condemned the assassin- ation of President John F. Ken- nedy as "a barbaric and senseless act." Commenting last night, Presi- dent Hatcher expressed disbelief that such an act would be possible in the United States. "Although the nation and the world is in a deep-state of shock," the Univeristy will carry on with classes today, .he reported. Stops Entertainment Last night the University's chief executive had asked that performances of the Association of Producing Artists, the Gilbert and Sullivan Society, the music school and the blues singer John Hammond, Jr., be cancelled. "In the fullest respect for the grief of the Kennedy family and the nation, the University be- lieved that it would be inapprop- riate to go forward with the per- formances." President Hatcher is making tentative , plans for a University memorial service in Hill Aud. fol- lowing the funeral services, Di- rector of University Relations Michael Radock indicated last night. Hold Up Scheduling Further University decisions af- fecting academic and non-aca- demic scheduling will await a Washington announcement on a state of national mourning. The University is in the process of preparing a letter of sympathy to Mrs. Kennedy, President Hatch- er added. In an official statement, he eulogized the President by saying: "Kennedy's death will result in an inevitable setback for all those things we hold so dear, the things the President stood for and fought for. We all join in mourning the death of our President-a great, a good and dedicated man." Reaction around the University i f Z i 1 J 1t F has been in keeping with the at- mosphere of national mourning. The Assembly House-Council- Inter-Quadrangle C o u n c i 1 all- campus dance was cancelled last night. The Michigan Union called off this afternoon's jazz program and evening's dance. The Law- yers' Club also cancelled its social' function scheduled for tonight. The International Student Asso- ciation postponed a dinner for Sunday evening, which was to be covered by a national magazine. Also, the Indian Student Asso- ciation cancelled a program sched- uled for this afternoon. After the news of Kennedy's death was made public yesterday, many University professors dis- missed classes. Last night, however, President Hatcher noted the importance of "carrying on." He said that the country has a new President in Lyndon B. Johnson and that it must continue to function. Campus communication media followed yesterday's events. WCBN scrapped all other programs' to broadcast news of the shooting. The Daily published a special edi- tion which was circulated late yesterday afternoon. Climate Changes For '64 Election Lyndon B. Johnson Oswald Charged Fe :..A..,.:... vr' .is. "":v .:"..:."Y..^.... ...w ..YA :..":"".A......."..,.....w.. . . ... .w,.. .. . . Q A..:11.w........f...A.1'.... .......".SS..w... . . . . . . . . . . . .................. ..... .........:t f Kennedy:0 A Citclir WASHINGTON (P)-The odds are long that President Lyndon B. Johnson will be the Democratic presidential nominee next year. It could mean the Republicans have a better chance than before yes- terday's tragedy. Those are political facts. But the assassination of President John F. Kennedy also raises tow- ering political questions for 1964. One of the biggest of these cen- ters on the person of Johnson, who has political handicaps that his fellow Democrats will take into consideration. South Means Debit First and foremost, Johnson has a Southern background that lib- erals of the party have never liked, although his vigorous es- pousal of the Kennedy program on civil rights has gone a long way toward undercutting that opposi- tion. At the same time, hisdcivil rights stand has diminished his popularity in the South. Since Johnson throughout most of his political career has been somewhat more conservative than Kennedy, he might have a stronger pull among conservative Democrats and the conservative uncommitted. And if the Repub- lican nominee is conservative he could not hope to swing Demo- cratic liberal voters. Helped GOP As of now, it appears that Re- publican presidential chances are helped by not having to face a President who had built a strong personal popularity as Kennedy did over a three-year period. All evidence, including polls, has indicated consistently that Ken- nedy would have been very hard to beat-a fact freely acknowledg- ed by the Republicans. Still, Johnson will have nearly a year in office before the elec- tion and thus will have time to build a record of his own and to try to gain something of the per- sonal popularity enjoyed by Ken- nedy. Psychological Effect Another imponderable, of course, is the effect the assassination of Kennedy may have on voters. How many who previously might have abstained from voting, or voted against Kennedy will feel moved to support the candidate who promises to carry on the program of the slain President? Obviously, Johnson's chancesJ turn heavily on who is the Re- publican nominee. The GOP nomination has be-3 come more attractive, and, cer- tainly, yesterday's tragedy will af- fect the Republicans' timetable and -intensify their apraisal of The President enjoys a plat- form and exposure to public view that no other politician can hope for. Every word he says in public is seized upon and spread around -while his potential opponents sometimes cannot be heard. Johnson Dumping Unlikely But what if the Democrats should decide to dump Johnson? This seems unlikely because par- ties seldom abandon a sitting President. And Kennedy only last week emphatically endorsed John- son as his 1964 running mate. Still, all questions must be weighed in politics. Who could the Demo- crats turn to if Johnson should not be nominated? Because of his close link with his brother, and because he has already been mentioned for 1968 and later, the name of Robert F. Kennedy, the Attorney General, comes forward. John F. Kennedy was opposed for the nomination by Johnson himself, and to some degree by such party stalwarts as Sen. Hu- bert Humphrey (D-Minn) Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo) and UN Ambassador Adlai Stevenson, twice the Democratic nominee. (EDITOR'S NOTE: This the first of a two-part series on the Kennedy years.) By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-John F. Kennedy, 35th President of the United States, was the first American chief executive to face the possibility of nuclear war and to risk it with a show of force to protect American interests. But later he succeeded in achieving an accord with Russia limiting nuclear tests. Domestically, he was confronted by a racial problem that epitomized a contemporary world issue-the relationship be- tween the black and white races. Foreign Problems There were foreign problems old and new during his administration. Inherited from previous administrations was the Cold War with Soviet Russia. Despite Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's determination to rid West Berlin of Allied oc- cupation troops, Kennedy held American forces there. He kept American troops in Southeast Asia to thwart Communist pen- etration in that area. rhrough economic help he sought .to aid Latin America, a target of propaganda from Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro. And he acted in similar fashion in Africa where newly emerged nations groped their way unsteadily toward stability, often with violence. In Europe there was the problem of keeping the North Atlantic Treaty Organization intact-a problem enlarged by French President de Gaulle's announced intention not to take direction or protection from the United States. Integration, Steel At home, in addition to the integration crisis, Kennedy became embroiled with the steel industry over a price increase And the United States did not come to the invaders' aid mili- tarily. United States prestige abroad plummeted. The crisis involving the Cuban invasion was not Kennedy's first with that small Carribean nation. The cold war warmed in the waning months of his second year in office when he confronted Premier Khrushchev with a demand to remove Russian missiles set up in Cuba-pointed at the United States from 90 miles away. Kennedy ordered a naval quarantine on offensive weapons being sent to the island nation; he said ships carrying them would be turned back and called on Khrushchev to withdraw the weapons already there. For five days the nation and the world waited for word from Khrushchev. On Sunday, Oct. 28, 1962 relief came when Khrushchev announced he had ordered work stopped on missile bases. He promised that the missiles would be crated and returned to Russia and said the United Nations would verify the dismantling. Remains Problem Although the crisis eased, Cuba remained a problem. Cuban exiles in the United States worked incessantly for the release of relatives captured during the ill-fated invasion of 1961. An effort to ransom the prisoners failed because Castro's demands were called exorbitant by negotiators. Finally, through private negotiations conducted with Castro by James B. Donovan, a New York lawyer skilled in undercover negotiations, 1,113 imprisoned Cubans were flown to Miami just before Christmas 1962. However, early in 1963 administration critics, spearheaded by United States Senator Kenneth B. Keating (R-NY) charged that Russian troops still were maintaining and guarding me- dium-range missile sites they had previously constructed in #*1.i1~. President's Rites Set for Monday, To Lie in Repose at White House WASHINGTON (N)--Lyndon B. Johnson gathered up the monumental problems of the presidency today as the world, the nation and his family mourned John F. Kennedy, dead by an assassin's bullets. "I will do my best-that's all I can do. I ask for your help and God's," the new President said, numbed and haggard, after accompanying the slain chief executive's body back to Washington from Dallas. Within a few hours, D'allas police charged 24-year-old Lee Harvey Oswald with the murder. No Confession However, Capt. Will Fritz, head of the homicide section of the Dallas Police Department, said that Oswald had made no 'statement, had signed" nothing and had admitted no part in the President's death. World Notes The body of the slain President will lie in repose at the White House today and will lie in statet ra a Death in the rotunda of the Capitol on Sunday and Monday. His funeral will be held Monday at St. WI Matthews Roman Catholic Cathe- dral, the White House announced last night. By The Associated Press At the White House, Johnson WASHINGTON -- The world's hurried into a series of confer- leaders eulogized the slain Presi- ences with military men, congres- sional leaders of both parties, and dent John F. Kennedy yesterday Kennedy administration experts as messages of sympathy poured on foreign policy. into the nation's capital. Seeks Unity French President Charles de A senator said Johnson asked Gaulle proclaimed, "Kennedy died and received assurances of support a soldier, under fire, for his duty from men of both political faiths. and in the service of his country. It was early afternoon in Dallas In the name of the French people, yesterday when t h e assassin a friend at all times of the Ameri- struck. Kennedy was riding in a can people, I salute this great motorcade with Gov. John Con- example and his great memory." nally of Texas and their wives. British Prime Minister Sir Alec He had received a rousing recep- Douglas-Home, in a nationwide tion. television address, said, "Every- Three rifle shots spat out. Con- thing in one cried out in protest nally was hit seriously but will at the news," characterizing Ken- recover. Both were rushed to a nedy as "a just man, a man who hospital, the President was dead hated bigotry, who believed that within 30 minutes. all men were equal in the eyes of A physician said the President -shot in the neck and head-lost consciousness as soon as he was hit and never revived. The fatal volley was fired from a textbook warehouse overlooking the expressway down which Ken- nedy's car was heading. Administer Oath Kennedy's body was placed aboard the presidential plane in a bronze casket for the journey back to the capital. Before the plane departed, Johnson took the presidential oath of office in one of the cabin compartments. ohnsonthen swung quickly in- tthe White House pattern. The new President set up a conference for 9:30 a.m. today with Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Rusk and four other cabinet members swung their plane around in mid-Pacific, en route to con- ferences in Japan, and hurried back toward Washington. At 11:30 a.m. Johnson will con- fer with former President Dwight D. Eisenhower in a further exten- sion of his bid for bipartisan unity. Renounced U.S. Oswald, a dishonorably dis- charged ex-marine, two years ago tried to renounce his American citizenship and swore allegiance to the Soviet Union. A murder charge was filed against him shortly before mid- night, some 10 hours after he had been arrested on another charge -of slaying a policeman who stop- ped him for questioning after the assassination. God and acted on that belief." The United Nations General As- sembly paid a minute of silent tribute to the President, then ad- journed its session as a sign of mourning. Secretary-General U Thant expressed "profound- sor- row at this most tragic event." Cuba's United Nations Ambas- sador, Carlos Lechuga, said: "In spite of the existing antagonism between the United States govern- ment and the CubandRevolution, we haveheard with deep sorrow the tragic news. All civilized men will always be saddened by events such as this." 60,000 West Berlin citizens gathered at city hall, where Mayor Willy Brandt told them, "We have lost our best friend. A tortured humanity has lost the man so many believed could help us along the road toward a just peace and a better life in this world." Pope Paul VI expressed hope that "the sacrifice may advance the cause he promoted and de- fended for the freedom of peoples and the peace of the world." Stock Marke-t Drops, Closes NEW YORK (M-Wall Street halted business immediately today after President Kennedy was shot. Stock exchanges and commodity markets closed early. Banks, Madison Avenue adver- tising agencies and other busi- JOHN CONNALLY ... recovers See Connally Improvement DALLAS (M)-Gov. John Con- nally (D-Texas), wounded by the sniper who assassinated President Kennedy yesterday, was in stable and satisfactory condition last night. He apparently had not learned of the President's dath. :8