MRA QUIZ DEFINES AMERICANS? See Editorial Page Y Lw6 &tit4&j COOLER High--85 Low--63 Partly cloudy; chance of thundershowers Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIII, No. 17-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1963 SEVEN CENTS FOUR PAGES SEC Hits Policy Of U.S. Exchange Advises Abolishing Floor Trading; + Seeks Restrictions on Specialists WASHINGTON (M)-Investigators of the Securities and Exchange 'Mommission criticized yesterday the mechanics and policing of America's stock exchanges and recommended dozens of sweeping } changes. The scope of the criticism and the proposals was unexpected. The recommendations would do away with personal floor trad- ing, put more restrictions on stock specialists and odd-lot traders, and Stassen Announces Presidency Plan Igive the over the market in SEC more supervision vast over-the-counter the United States. Rails Dispute Raises Crisis By VAUGHN WALKER The current railway labor dis- pute "raises fundamental ques- tions about the adequacy of pres- ent collective bargaining methods in the railroad industry," Prof. Russell A. Smith of the law school said yesterday. "The present controversy is go- ing to induce a lot of thinking about the Railway Labor Act, the current statute covering labor- management disputes in the rail- road industry," he continued, and, the present law should be re-ex- amined. "Its provisions appear to be in adequate to handle the fun- damental questions now being raised in the dispute." Unlike past controversies in the rail industry, "the carriers are the prime-movers in the current dis- pute." Prof. Smith commented that they sought since 1959 to put the new work rule changes into effect. "The unions have ex- hausted every legal measure to prevent these rules from taking effect, culminating in the recent Supreme Court decision, which would allow the carriers to make the changes they desire." Other Commissions The two previous commissions appointed to handle the matter made several recommendations which were accepted by the car- riers, but rejected by the unions. Prof. Smith does not foresee the present Wirtz commission making any recommendations acceptable to both the carriers and the un- ions. The matter would then go to Congress. Prof. Smith said that "Congress appears unlikely to act before the deadline at the end of this month. Congressional action in the mat- ter would probably result in either seizure of the railroads by the gov- ernment or compulsory arbitra- tion or a combination of both. "The initiative now rests with the administration convincing the carriers to delay the work rule changes." he said. He predicted that the carriers would accept such a delay if Congressional ac- tion appeared C imminent. Stimulate Thought "At least the current dispute will stimulate a great deal of thinking on these matters, if not action by Congress," Prof. Smith said. Prof. Smith observed the likeli- hood that government seizure of . the railroads might well not settle the fundamental matters raised by the current dispute. The basic issue is the replacement of rail- road firemen who are superfluous on modern diesel engines- used by the railroads. Appoint Two To Committee No Approval William L. Cary, chairman of the SEC, sent the five-volume, 14- pound, 2100-page report to Con- gress without official approval or disapproval. "We expect to send a letter within the next few days detail- ing our views on the specific rec- ommendations," he told Congress. Prices on the New York Stock Exchange slumped badly as soon as the news from the capital reached New York..Some traders on1 Wall Street said they were shocked at the proposals. Part Two The report was the second in- stallment of a study requested by Congress. after some scandals rocked Wall Street two yearsnago. The special study committee, head- ed by Chicago lawyer Milton H. Cohen, plans to release the last part of the study in a few weeks. The most drastic recommenda- tion of the committee would elim- inate floor traders on the New York Stock Exchange and Ameri- can Stock Exchange. A floor trader is a member of the exchange who, while hunt- ing for a quick profit, buys and sells stocks for himself and not for clients. The committee said there are more than 300 floor traders, but 15 of them account for half of all the buying and sell- ing. No Responsibilities The committee said these floor traders, are the only members of the exchanges who may buy and sell on the floor without having any responsibilities to the market. Although supporters ,of traders say their buying and selling helps stabilize the market, the investiga- tors, disagreed., "Their trading . . is inimical to the orderly functioning of the mar- ket, tending to accentuate rather than to stabilize price movements," their report said. Sets Deadline The committee recommended that the activity of small floor traders b0 ended ry next Jan. 2 and that of all others by Jan. 2, 1965. The report was critical of spe- cialists on the New Yorke Stock Exchange - the traders assigned the exclusive right to buy and sell the stocks of certain companies. It also asked for stiffer polic- ing of odd-lot dealers, the small traders who buy and sell in blocks of fewer than 100 shares. Other Items In other analyses and recom- mendations, the committee: -Said that "data on short sell- ing presently compiled by the New York and American Stock Ex- changes are inadequate for regula- tion." Short selling is the practice of selling stock that the seller does not own or has to borrow. -Found that the third market -the sale of exchange-listed stocks over-the-counter - "has been, on balance, beneficial to in- vestors and the public interest." -Discussed and found little cri- ticism of the 14 small regional ex- changes in the United States.\ To Seek '64 Nomination If Suppted. Talks on Key Issues In Lecture Series By MARILYN KORAL F o r m e r Minnesota Governor Harold E. Stassen announced here yesterday that he plans to enter the 1964 Republican presidential primaries in at least three states- New Hampshire, Wisconsin and California. If he receives "substantial sup- port from Republican voters," he will "definitely be a candidate for the Republican presidential nom- ination." Stressing a peace program, Stas- sen commented, "if the members of our Republican Party will not otherwise have an opportunity to consider policies such as those in which I believe deeply, I will be inclined to provide that oppor- tunity, even though I recognize the heavy handicaps in doing so." Former Candidate Stassen has previously been in the running for the Republican nomination in 1948 and 1952. He led an unsuccessful move in 1956 * * * * * Ban Talks Progress; M.Voscow, Communist s Confab Nears By PHILIP S Fu e ii *£h Co-Edito The Institute of Technology is "willin Attempt To Arrange classified material" Suitable Statement does "not impede t of scientific materi MOSCOW (P)-The Soviet-Chi- ing-director Prof. Ja nese ideological negotiations ap- of the geology de peared last night to be sliding to- plained yesterday. ward a futile finish. He said that the A session yesterday was wrapped a policy of never1 in the usual secrecy, but reports materialtake up a circulated that the negotiators are of its -laboratories' arguing about a final communique, Basically, Prof. Wi which may be issued this weekend. sponsored research According to one report, there will support education. T be no meeting today, but one to- avoids heavily-class morrow. as it avoids applied None of the reports could be cause neither adds t confirmed but here is a summary of the main ones: -The Russians want a com- Troops1 munique which will put the blame for the ideological dispute square- ly on the shoulders of the Chi- nese. Charles -The Chinese are demanding a communique which recites the fact that a meeting was held, and which leaves the door open for a WASHINGTON- future meeting. The Chinese would that "law and order like to call a meeting of all the dered state troopers world's Communist parties and six policemen and a ask them to decide who is right, Nearly 100 Neg Moscow or Peking. Tuesday refused to There is also a report that the the integration ofa Chinese have suggested that each cilities and public s( side issue its own communique, In Cambridge, Md. summarizing the respective argu- o rc nNg ments. of a truce on Negr Although there was no solid in- tions brought renew formation as to precisely what was city, plagued with r going on in the conference room, The Negro leader the war of words raged elsewhere. Cambridge non - vi The official Chinese news agen- committee would wit cy indirectly accused the Soviet demonstrations pend.y Union of collaborating with the of actions taken by United States in an alleged at- committee and the tempt to set up a nuclear weapons In Harrisburg, Pa., monopoly. Scranton said tha Referring to the East-West nu- commodation featur clear test ban talks now under Federal civil righ way here, the Chinese agency said should apply onl the Americans are participating licensed facilities. because of "sinister motives." In Providence, R. The agency claimed that the H. Chafee issued Kennedy Administration wants a order creating a go test ban so as to "enable the big force on civil rights powers to monopolize nuclear In New York, Bis weapons and facilitate continued Childs, a Negro Pr United States pursuance of its heads the greater N policy of nuclear blackmail." mittee for equal opp The Soviet contribution to the a Federal court sui public argumeit appeared in the state and city const issue of the official Soviet labor there is discrimin newspaper, Trud. In a dispatch Negro workers. from its correspondent in China, Involved is about Trud accused the Chinese authori- building projects, m ties of "attempts, to incite in the have been targets o fraternal Chinese people unfriend- demonstrations in re ly feelings and sentiments toward In New Orleans, t the U.S.S.R." court of appeals was Trud said the Chinese people NAACP to order tw actually have warm feelings to- public school' syste ward the Soviet people. Negroes to all-white Peking Still. Split' i * * * T -Lives with' Secrecy UTIN r Science and ng to live with as long as it he normal use Al' IST act- 6mes T. Wilson partment ex- institute has letting secret major portion work. Ilson declared, is designed to Therefore, IST ified projects research, be- o education. A university has no business running a completely secret re- search project or installation in peacetime, he asserted. "No laboratory should have so much classified work that it can- not furnish open, publishable thesis material to graduate stu- dents," Prof. Wilson, explained. Secrecy in sponsored-research recently erupted into controversy when Prof. Lucien M. $ibermann left the University of Chicago for the defense department's In- stitute for Defense Analysis and broke up his radar research group because the university administra- tion was not supporting secret de- fense projects. (Some of his group may join 1ST.) He indicated he could not con- tinue to work there as long as the Ordered To Protect ton fronm Violence By The Associated Press -South Carolina Gov. Donald Russell, vowing will be maintained" in his state, yesterday or- into the historic port city of Charleston where fireman were injured in a racial clash. roes jailed as a result of violence that flared identify themselves to police. The Negroes seek all public fa- HAROLD STASSEN . . . new approach * to "dump" former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon from the Re- publican ticket.. Discussing his own program, Stassen charged that President .John F Kennedy has formulated foreign policy on the basis of "self-interest rather than the in- terest of humanity. "However, I should add in fair- ness that the leading spokesman of our Republican Party is cur- rently urging that our policies be narrowed even more in a nation- alistic sense." He wouldn't say who he had in mind. Deterioration Stassen said that United States' relations with England, France and Germany have "deteriorated" because President Kennedy has not called for their advice on im- portant issues. He said that future presidential leadership should at- tempt a closer relationship with European allies. He urged that the United States recognize East Germany, and per- mit both Germanys to have seats in the United Nations General Assembly. This will result in "a much better prospect of ultimate- ly uniting Germany and of finally tearing down the Berlin Wall without war." chool systems. , an extension o demonstra- ed hope to the acial strife. ship said the olent action hhold further ing evaluation the bi-racial town council. Gov. William t public ac- es of proposed ts legislation y to state- I., Gov. John an executive overnor's task S. shop Alvin A. otestant who ew York com- ortunity. filed t to halt all ruction where ation against $2.8 billion in any of which of civil rights ecent weeks. he 5th circuit asked by the wo Mississippi ,ms to admit e schools.' Council Group Reap praises Fair Housing The Ann Arbor City Council's committee on housing legislation last night discussed a revised ver- sion of the proposed fair housing ordinance in the fifth of its series of informal sessions. Ann Arbor Mayor Cecil 0. Creal sat in on the discussion last, night. The changes introduced at 'last, night's meeting were the result of "recent testimony from other groups invited to express their opinions of the ordinance," com- mittee chairman Wendell E. Hul- cher, Fourth Ward Republican, said. He was partially referring to the meeting last week when the committee was joined by Profes- sors Samuel J. Eldersveld of the political science department, Don- ald C. Pelz of the psychology de- partment and Luke K. Cooperrider of the Law School. At next week's committee meet- ing representatives from real es- tate, banking and the construc- tion industry will be present to discuss their opinions of the pro- posed ordinance. University of Chicago administra- tion was not enthusiastically sup- porting or seeking the necessarily secret contracts. Need Classified Data But, it is hard to keep up in physcal science research without access to classified material, Prof. Wilson commented. Most of the secrets provide "peripheral knowledge," he ex- plainedndealing mainly with equipment of military planning rather than scientific theory. Security precautions used to guard segments of IST research "gives an air of secrecy that does not really exist," Prof. Wilson said. Semi-Secrecy He commented that very little of IST's work is completely clas- sified secret although parts of many projects are. "Much of the work is unclassified, and its re- sults are published in the usual scientific journals." Prof. Wilson explained that while a research mathematician is studying theoretical radar con- cepts, he may need a classified Air Force radar set to test them, thus adding a secret factor to his work. "The government takes a broad view on secrecy, seeking no more than is necessary. It is obvious to them that classified material holds back progress," Prof. Wilson said. IST has extensive dealings with federal agencies that require se- crecy on certain portions of their projects. The biggest IST program - Project Michigan - results in highly-secret detection apparatus. Another important project is the Accoustics and Seismics Lab- oratory Vela-Uniform project which has made headway in de- vising means of differentiating earthquakes from underground nu- clear tests Some parts of this program are also secret. World News Roundup By The Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY-A special three-judge federal court, plow- ing into untouched legal ground, shattered a half-century of rural domination in Oklahoma's Legis- lature yesterday by reapportion- ing both houses on a strict popu- lation basis. It marked the first time a fed- eral court has actually reshuffled legislative seats in any state. * * * SAIGON-President Ngo Dinh Diem's government cracked down hard yesterday on Buddhist street demonstrations in a church-state struggle complicating the Ameri- can-backed war against Commu- nist guerrillas. Scores were arrest- ed. American security officers said there was deliberate police brutal- ity that shocked and disgusted them. NEW YORK-Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller has decided to enter state primaries in a bid for the 1964 Republican presidential nom- ination, Newsday, Long Island newspaper, reported yesterday. Rockefeller neither confirmed nor denied the report. * * * LISBON-The Portuguese gov- ernment said yesterday that Afri- can rebels have seized control of 15 per cent of Portugal's West African colony of. Guinea and gov- ernment troops have been unable to dislodge them. Negotiations May Result In Agreemen Communique Gives First Official Word Of Tri-Power Meeting By The Associated Press MOSCOW-Russian, British and American negotiators announced last night they have "made pro- gress in drafting some of the provisions" for a treaty banning nuclear tests in-the atmosphere, outer space and under water. The announcement, set forth in a three-power communique after the third day of negotiations, LORD HAILSHAM ... British negotiator gave some promise of a quick agreement on a limited test ban that might open the way for East- West security talks and possibly a summit conference. The communique, presented the first official word that the pro- jected treaty would exclude un- derground tests, the, detection and inspection of which are in dis- pute, and that the drafting stage had been reached. Broad Exchange "Views were exchanged on other matters of mutual interest," it said. The negotiating teams-led by United States Undersecretary of State W. Averell Harriman, Lord Hailsham of Britain and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gro- myko-met for more than three hours yesterday. The apparently fast pace lent new force to prospects that with the limited test ban agreement might come a quick easing of East-West tensions and a Russian- American declaration of non- aggression. Action by Kennedy American sources have said President John F. Kennedy may be willing to sign such a declara- tion if an acceptable test ban agreement is worked out. Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev in turn would be asked to sign a similar agreement. The two, as outlined in Washington by an associate of the President, might commit the two governments not to try to change present arrangements in Europe by forcible means. In Washington, Rep. Cornelius E. Gallagher, (D-NJ) said that if Soviet and Western representa- tives agree on a basis for control- ling nuclear testing an early sum- mit conference would be likely for signing of the agreement. A mem- ber of the House foreign affairs committee, Gallagher added that "I have no special information that an agreement is close." Ann Arbor's Annual Art Fair Attracts Admirers .2LZ,