Partly cloudy, breezy and cool today. High near 63. Chilly to night; low near 35. Mostly sunny and milder tomorrow. High near 65. Partly sunny and warmer Friday with temperatures prob ably well into the 70s. Chance cf rain 30% today: practically nil tonight through Friday. VOL. 68, No. 114 from the associated press News Roundup: From the State, Nation & World The World Enemy Atrocities in Hue Discovered SAIGON Enemy troops executed more than 1,000 persons, burying some alive and shooting or beheading others, while they occupied Hue in February, the U.S. Embassy reported yesterday. Most of the victims were South Vietnamese, but they also included two French priests, three South Koreans and a Hong Kong Chinese who was a British subject. the em bassy said. There have been piecemeal reports of the slaughter of civilians while the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong oc cupied the old imperial capital during the Tet offensive, but this was the first time any officials gave an over-all picture. An embassy spokesman said it took two months to compile the reports from allied sources and South Viet namese police because officials wanted to be sure of accuracy. "Many had been shot, some beheaded," said the em bassy report. "A number of bodies showed signs of mutila tion. Most were found with hands bound behind their backs." - * * * Allies Squeeze V.C. in A Sbau Valley SAIGON South Vietnamese troops have swept into the southern part of A Shau Valley as U.S. air cavalrymen fight down from the north, tightening the squeeze on that North Vietnamese stronghold, U.S. officers reported yes terday. Slightly lifting security wraps on the operation that opened April 19, officers in Da Nang on the coast 50 miles east of the valley said the South Vietnamese ran into light resistance on entering Monday. Troops of the U.S. Ist Air Cavalry Division reported little opposition in the first three days of the operation, but security has prevented any report on their progress since. The lack of resistance indicated that the main North Vietnamese force has not yet been encountered or that it pulled out into nearby Laos in the past few weeks of re lentless bombing by the eight-engine 852 s of the Strategic Air Command. Informed sources said that for the past two days, the Stratofortresses have been pounding suspected troop con centrations in Laos just to the west of the A Shau Valley. Elderly Heart Transplant Patient Dies PARIS A 66-year-old French grandfather, the oldest man to undergo a heart transplant, , died - yesterday 51 1 / 2 hours after he received a now heart. The doctors who grafted it said the patient's age had been a major problem. Clovis Roblain, a retired truck driver called "Pop" by his friends, succumbed to an insufficient flow of blood to the brain, never regaining consciousness after a nine-hour operation Saturday night, doctors at La Pitie Hospital said. They had given Roblain, who suffered a cardiac attack last year, the heart of Michel Gyppaz, a 23-year-old metal worker who died of brain injuries Friday from an auto. collision. . - Dr. Maurice Mercadier, who headed a 10-man surgical team, said "we must have a patient sufficiently resistant to have a chance of success" in operations the team plans to perform in the future. The Nation Poor People's Campaign Continues WASHINGTON Representatives of the Poor Peo ple's Campaign calling on some of the most powerful men in government continued to get red carpet, treatment yesterday but their leader insisted: "We don't just want aympathy, we want action." Taking stock on the campaign's second day, the Rev. Ralph Abernathy assured his followers that polite recep tions and declarations of good intentions won't sway him. The plan is still to bring thousands of poor persons to Washington, he said, to camp here and apply mounting pres sure to the governmental apparatus until the lot of Ameri ca's poor impr^:ea dramatically. "They were concerned about our demonstrations," Abernathy said after a round of conferences. "We made it clear we intend to conduct nonviolent, peaceful demonstra tions. We also made it very clear to them that we are leaders of a revolution that is taking place in this country today." LBJ Urges World Money Approval WASHINGTON President Johnson launched a drive yesterday for a quick U.S. ratification of a plan for paper gold the first basic change in international currency in more than two decades. - In a special message to Congress, Johnson said the United States,- as a leader in the five years of negotiations which led to the plan, should be one of the first nations to ratify it. He called the plan a landmark and a historic step and said failure to approve it "could turn the clock backwards to the dark days of restrictive economic policies, narrow in terests, empty ports and idle men."_ If ratified by 65 nations with an 80 per cent weighted vote in the International Monetary Fund the agreement will represent the first basic change in IMF operations since the Fund was established by the Bretton Woods conference of 1944. - The new money would take the form of a bookkeeping entry on government and IMF books and would be called officially a Special Drawing Right, or SDR in the Fund. Individual citizens would never see it. The State Shafer, Nixon Hail Rocky's Decision HARRISBURG Gov. Shafer said yesterday Nelson Rockefeller's decision to campaign for the Republican pres idential nomination "can't help but help the Republican Party and the nation." "This is going to be an exciting year," Shafer said. "We will have, all the issues discussed in full." Standing at his side as he welcomed Rockefeller into the race was former Vice President Richard Nixon, re garded as the front runner for the GOP nomination. Nixon had scheduled a luncheon meeting with Shafer to discuss Republican unity prior to Rockefeller's announce ment from Albany, N.Y. Nixon said he believed Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's entry into the Republican presidential race would benefit the country by providing a healthy debate on the issues of the day. However, Nixon said he still was confident he would win the GOP nomination. - Shafer said Rockefeller's decision confirmed the wis dom of taking an uncommitted 64-member Pennsylvania delegation to the GOP National Convention next August in Miami, Fla. "Events can change very swiftly," Shafer said. "I don't know what will 'happen in the future. But at the moment, there is no change in my plans to be a favorite son." • Shafer is scheduled to attend a luncheon meeting of the World Affairs Council in Philadelphia today at which 'time-Rockefeller is expected to, deliver a major address on Vietnam. - Wha . t'S'lnside THE HOT LINE 4 10. - C MEETING .....IiOOICY,.EEAGAN UNION? . LIOWNINE - 17.1* - 1 1 .A.F7A7ETTE THEEE:AND,ITEXN-WHAT?'. 1.3 43. - s oller attg .0.•„:,..„ , '`•4855• 6 Pages University security person- a constant thing with us:in're- type of thing ‘ in the Spring and nel hate issued a• warning to gard fo our young women." he this spring is no exception - ," " women students to :void, walk-, explained. "We want our, girls .she added. "It is a thing that ing alone on camp ,, s at night. to be ..e at all times." we - take - seriously and hope the , The precaution to walk only , "We always urge' students to. women ,students -too Pr PAGE 2 in pairs or groups' was given do this (walk in groups) -espe-, „their own protection." by the. Department of Security daily during' Spring Term - . Woodrow Bierly of the Public ~.PAGE 3 because of recent minor inci- ,when there tends to be more- Information 'department de . • " PAGE 4 dents. incidents of attacks, molesting :scribed the warning as "a year- Robert H. Barnes, security and things like that " Lorraine, ly precaution • taken -at his ...: .. 'PAGE :5 specialist at the • University, O'Hara, tif . s . istant Dean ,of • time' forzwomen at =dents. "It's . PAGE 5 said the warning was ...riven in Women. said. "There tends to spring and students are out all a;•preventative manner. "It's be a rise-. of Mei& its of-this - ,over campus," he added. Columbia: Editor's Note: Healy, a graduate student in journalism at Columbia, did. his undergrad uate work at Penn State, where he was co sports editor of The Daily Collegian. By BRIAN HEALY Special to The Daily Collegian NEW YORK CITY, April 30—The campus of Columbia University was quiet and some what peaceful late this afternoon, following a series of protests and demonstrations earlier in the day by more than 3,000 students. Rain began to fall around 6 p.m. and police and university officials hope it will have a calming effect upon the very angry campus. However, it is doubtful that any immedi ate solution will be reached in the next few days. after the violence of this morning. More Columbia news on page three The Tactical Police Force first began to appear in increasing numbers about 12:15 a.m. A crowd of more than 500, students that had circled the Low Memorial Library, the Columbia administrative building, for most of the night dwindled to less than 200. The Majority Coalition opposed to the tactics though not the aims, of the sit-in demonstrations, still rung the outside of President 'Grayson Kirk's office, where more than 50 demonstrators sat, talked, ate or tried to sleep. Vigil Over Suddenly at 2 p.m. the Coalition—which had vowed to stay until the strikers left the building—ended its vigil. More policemen arrived at the campus 'Lazy, Hazy, Crazy . . THESE DAYS aren't very far away. And if you lack the wheels to head for Whipples, remember the shady groves of the Old Main lawn are a delightful, if not equal, substi tute. Collegian Weather Reporter Elliot Abrams predicts warmer weather this weekend. so perhaps you'll want to reserve your patch of grass with a blanket on your way to first. Fox Discounts Possibility Of Tuition Hike This Year By DENNIS STINVELING ing system. The latter proposal is similar to Collegian USG Reporter that being instituted fall term for elective academic subjects." "There will not be a tuition increase next Fox predicted that coeds would desire a year," Jon Fox, acting Undergraduate Stu- compulsory system of pass-fail while male dent Government president said last night. students would choose the optional program He added that University students will prob- "because most men do well in physical edu ably not see such a program enacted next cation and it helps to pull up their average." year "because this is an election year, and On the problem of women - students being the legislators running for re-election do not allowed to live downtown, Fox said, "It's want to alienate the students and parents basically a problpm of economics for the Uni who must re-elect them." versity." Fox said that a USG poll has re- Fox, in a WDFM press conference, said vealed that at feast 250 coeds would live the 1969-1970 academic year is the one for downtown if given the opportunity. concern. He added that USG is attempting to Fox said in an interview with Charles form a full time lobby in Harrisburg to fight Lewis, vice president for student affairs, that a tuition increase. . this topic had been discussed. According to Fox, the University cannot enroll any more - Fox said, "The Board of Trustees has its students. Thus 250 women moving downtown own lobby in Harrisburg. Why shouldn't we? The only way to get student opinion known would essentially "be vacating an entire in the state capital is through our own or- dormitory." • ganization and that is what we're trying to Since this would be economically unfea establish." sible for the University, Fox .said "Some Fox added that a legislative lobby people have proposed leveling Nittany and through the Pennsylvania Association of moving those students into the vacated dorm- College Students is being examined for pos- ith r Y 2 % sible implementation. . According to Fox, this would probably be A student opinion telephone poll for the rejected by the University because Nittany Senate Committee on -Resident Instruction provides "the' students necessary to fill va will be conducted today and tomorrow, Sc- canoes which occur in other residence halls." cording to Fox. The poll, to reach 10 per cent Another solution discussed . with Dr. of the student body, will "examine students'-_Lewis was requiring sophomore men to live opinions as to a pass-fail grading system for in residence halls.. Fox rejected this plan be compulsory physical education courses." cause "this would not' solve one problem and The students will be asked to .approve or would create another." c disapprove of a compulsory pass-fail system - Fox added. ."We have substantiated ,the or the option of pass-fail and regular grad- -(Continued on page' three) Wome'n Should Avoid Walking ;'Alone Coeds Receive Warning UNIVERSITY PARK, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 1, 1965 gates on Broadway and Amsterdam avenues, swelling their ranks to more than 1,000. Four fire engines were parked one block away in front of the Cathedral of Saint Joan the Devine. The administration had been silent for more than eight hours. It was time for the "bust." The violence that followed, as the stu dents were forcibly evicted from the build ings by the police, has been described widely in the press. It is doubtful whether anything else could have been expected from the police, who had been taunted and ridiculed for five days, and students who were reso lutely convinced of the justice of their cause and foolish enough to think they could beat off the police. Today students are on strike and banned from entering their own campus. The school's faculty has asked that the day be one of meditation and reconciliation for students, faculty and administration. But the issues which caused the six-day crisis have not been solved. There are two issues which must be dealt with before peace can be restored to Morningside Heights. They are questions of student power and black power. The Students for a Democratic Society, which sponsored the protest, decided last summer that 1968 would be a year dedicated to student power. The Columbia experience affirms this. It was not the building of Columbia's new gym in a Harlem park which raised their ire. It was not the University's association with the Institute for Defense Analyses, a De fense Department branch specializing in wea pons research. News Analysis SDS and Student Power —Collegian Photo by Pierre BeMein! Easy Answe s The students are angry simply because they have no say in the running of the Uni versity. The gym and IDA would not have been issues, many argued, if the students and faculty, not the administration, established Columbia's policies. For the issues, in that case, would not have existed. Students' desire for amnesty confirms this. Columbia has stopped the construction of the gym at Mayor Lindsay's request and the political roadblocks and public pressure which now oppose it make it doubtful that it will ever be built. The IDA has been the victim of general feeling at most universities against secret government agencies. The recent controversy has made IDA activities public, creating widespread resentment. It will be no surprise if these relations are soon severed. Not Satisfied However, in the end, the students were still not satisfied, because they did not feel they deserved punishment for using admit tedly illegal means to end what they con sidered an immoral policy. The students who held the buildings were asking the university to make student power legitimate and the SDS is now calling for a strike to achieve that end. The second issue, however, is much more complex and is one facing the entire urban community of the nation. It is the question of what should be the policy of an elite white private university with its more than 1,500,000 black neighbors in Harlem. The demonstrators who occupied Hamil ton Hall were all Negroes. The police were expected to evict all students occupying buildings last Thursday. However, Kirk was Rockefeller Gets Into GOP Race ALBANY, N.Y. (AP? Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, revers ing his prcvious position, threw himself into contention yester day for the Republican Presi dential nomination and vowed to fight Richard Nixon "right up to the last vote." "I now commit myself to seeking this office and so serve our nation—with all my heart and mind and will," he said: - • Rockefeller's express ion s ranged from jut-jawed deter mination to-breezy optimism as he made his announcement and then replied to quese_ons in a news conference. Just ,0 days ago, in another news conference, the New York governor took himself out of the race for the nomination. A number of the men who per suaded him to change his mind were present yesterday. Changed Country In a con 7ersation at his offi cial residence later, Rockefel ler said to a reporter, "The country has changed. Never in history has so much changed in five weeks. Now I am giving the people an option." In a statement which he read before the questioning began. he set, forth four reasons for reversing himself: (1) ". . . the gravity of the crisis that face us as a people." (2) His conviction that "to comment from tht sidelines is not an effective way to pre sent the alternatives." Murphy Spe • ks Out On Probation Question , By PAT GUROSKY possible to regain a 2.00 by the often work under a feeling of Collegian Administration time they graduate. It is in' "false security" about their the student's best interest if grades. "A freshman who has Reporter he is dropped before this situa- a 1.4 cumulative average and The current . system of aca- lion occurs," Murphy said. thinks he is doing all right Eleatic probation, which pp- "Drop action will be taken doesn't realize that he will have hibits students on probation more frequently by the Univer- to maintain a 2.6 throughout from participating in extra- sity in the future," he added. his sophomore year to pull his curricular activities, is "a rule Murphy called the AAAS average up to a 2.00," he said. out of the past which has lost Committee plan "a good piece The members of the AAAS its effectiveness," according of legislation." Coupled with Committee are; Ashby, di to Raymond Murphy, coordi- the pass-fail program, the Uni- rector of the Division of Coun nator of men's activities. versity is "moving into an era seling; Galen Godbey: student Murphy said yesterday he of new kinds of appropriate representative: T. Sher in a n has known of student leaders academic regulation," he said. Stanford, director of admis who regained their academic J. D. Ashby, chairman of the sions: Donald Josephson, de status by studying hard dur- Senate sub-committee which partment head of dairy sci ing the term they were on pro- formed the proposal, said yes- ence; David McKinley, asso bation, but that the University terday that it will be "a con- elate dean of business: Law cannot suppose this would hap- structive improvement to elim- rence Perez, assistant dean of pen in every case. A very small Mate the restrictive view of of engineering; and Walter minority of students in leader- academic probation." Walters, associate dean of arts ship positions suffer, because of Ashby said that students and architecture. the probatibn restriction, he said. The Academics, - Athletics, an d Adr. issions Standards Committee of the University Senate will submit a bill Tues day to the Senate advocating major revisions in probation rules. The new plan would put no restriction on activities during the probation period and the system would be based on grade point deficiency rather than on the present drop-level average. A grade point de ficiency would exist when the total number of grade points earned by a student is less than the , told. 'number of credits earned multiplied by two. Students would be permitted a . certain deficiency according to their term standing before they would be dropped by the University. Murphy - said he is convinced the proposed plan has definite advantages over the present system. "Students now get' into the situation when their arsrales are so low it is' statistically im- initially advised against using police force due to fear of reprisal from the Harlem com munity. Harlem did not oppose the gym when it was first proposed in 1961. The section of the park in which it was to be built is trash strewn and rock-covered. The park itself is a refuge for thieves, muggers and assorted other deviates, which makes it unsafe after dusk. The gym undoubtedly would have given the community athletic community facilities vastly superior to any it has now. No More Charity But the black community no longer wants charity. Negroes want recognition as equals from a white university which fig uratively and literally looks down upon them from the cliffs of Morningside Heights. They view the gym as an attempt by Whitey to push himself into the black community and steal black land. However, the problem goes much deeper than the gym. The university has repeatedly refused to allow its laborers to unionize. Many of the workers are from Harlem. Columbia is also in the midst of an ex pansion program, buying up hundreds of homes in the campus area. Many of these homes are occupied by blacks who are forced to move. This has caused increasing tension between the campus and the black com munity. Monday night 350 Harlem residents dem onstrated in front of the campus against what their leaders termed racist policies. They have promised to return. Wednesday. hundreds of white students will demonstrate at this university. They also have promised to return. (3) He said many persons, "within the Republican party and outside it," urged him to get in the fight. (4) "Personalty, I am deeply disturbed by the cousre of events - growing unrest and anxiety at home, and the signs of disintegration abroad." Nixon Speaks Out Comments promptly came from Nixon, the apparent front runner for the GOP nomination, and from Gov. George Romney of Michigan, whom Rockefeller supported until he dropped out of the race in early March. Nixon's statement said in part. "I think Gov. Rockefel ler's announcement will make for a more exciting convention and will result in a more mean ingful discussion of the issues. I'm glad to have him in. I have thought all along that it would be ye* heluful for the Republican party to ha% e an other active candidate in the contest. Romney echoed t" is thought, adding: "Because no other can didate in either party can match his executive experi ence in national and state gov ernment ever y American should give his availability for the President the same careful consideration that the Michi gan delegation will in deter mining which candidate it finally support at the conven tion in Miami Beach." On March 21, when Rockefel ler said he would :lot contend Levine, Moshinsky Honored by Hearst Collegian Editor Paul Levine uated Winter Term. was award and former Edito:ial Editor ed a foundation scroll for her Julie Moshinsky were honored story of Puerto Ricans in sub by the , William Randolph urban Philadelphia. The story Hearst Foundation in its March appeared in The Evening and newspaper writing contest. Sunday Bulletin of Phila- Levine won a fourth place for delphia. Now employed full ris tor y, "Championship time at the Bulletin, Miss Mo- Wrestling Wall-to Wall," an shinsky served four years on analysis of the National Col- Collegian staff. She w: - :s a staff legiate Athletic 'Associa tio n , writer and nertrs editor before tournament held March 20-22 in becoming editorial editor her Rec Hall. For his full page senior year. story including photograrhs, Paul R:rnirez, a University Levine was awarded a $3OO of Florida junior, won the first scholarship. The University's place award in the March School of Journalism received competition for his story of a matching grant Levine's the plight of a Negro woman story, written when be was and her six children. His award sports editor, appeared in Col- enabled the University of Flori legian, March 29. da to win the overall writing Miss Moshinsky, whd grad- award competition for 1967-68. On Probation? ---See Page 2 SEVEN CENTS for the nomination, he said he would answer "any true and meaningful call from his party. Asked if he now has heard that call, he reported, "I think the draft is ready—l would say it has been the result of events." His supporters said this re fers primarily to President Johnson's , announcement that he would not seek re-election. At another -point, Rockefeller said he has been edging toward his decision to run over the past 10 days or so. ' He said: ". . after discus- sions with so many of those who are present in this room, Sen. Thruston Morton and Mr. Wil liam E. Miller, who only ON weekend came back from an extensive trip in which they felt and expressed to me their deep conviction that this was the right course of action, I felt that this was in the inter ests of the party and that it was the desire of the people." The news conference, which was nationally-televised, sound ed at times like a combination of a victory celebration and a national nominating conven tion. The lied Room in ‘ the state capitol was jam-packed and so were the corridors outside. There were about 100 newsmen and perhaps double that many suectators and supporters of the governor in the room. He Was interruoted several (Continued on page four)