TEXAS REGENTS POSTPONE INTEGRATION See Page 2 C I - 4c 4kl~ga ~~IAit CLOUDINESS High-78 Low--65 Chance of evening showers Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXI, No. 24S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1961 FIVE CENTS FOUR PAGES Russians Display Naval Might ON THE NEVA - Soviet Press Agency Tass describes the craft in the foreground as a rocket-firing automatic launch. It was exhibited in a display of naval power in celebration of Soviet Navy Day. About 60 warships were displayed off the coast of Leningrad. KENNEDY CONFERENCE: *MeCloy Relates Talk Of Disarmament. WASHINGTON (41) - Disarmament Chief John J. McCloy has reported that Soviet Premier Khrushchev still is pushing his Berlin plan but has not slammed the.door on further disarmament talks, informed sources said yesterday. President John F. Kennedy called McCloy to the White House for a report on McCloy's lengthy talk last Wednesday with Khrush- chev at the Soviet chief's Black Sea vacation residence. Secretary -of State Dean Rusk also was tap- ped for the conference at the 0 ExtendWhite House. McCloy is the first high-rank- ing American to hold such a ses- E s111 1m ents sion with Khushchev since Ken- nedy told the world last Tuesday of the nation's resolve to keep WASHINGTON (R) - Congress West Berlin free. yesterday sent President John F. McCloy, a former United States Kennedy final and overwhelming high commissioner for Germany, authority to call 250,000 reser'- h hmm ssn eid 0~v ~AA t.A~tLALV O any,, Secretary Cites Peace With Labor CAPE CANAVERAL ()-Secre- tary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg yesterday reported vast improve- ment in preserving labor-man- agement peace at the nation's. missle and space sites. Goldberg promised a monthly report to President John F. Ken- nedy and the nation on how the recent no-strike, no lockout pledge governing missile-space base la- bor relations, is working out. "In a very real sense, our prob- lem is much graver than it was in World War II," the Labor Sec- retary -told a meeting with the local labor-management disputes committee The Labor Secretary, . on his first stop on a quick two-day tour of bases, brought a message from President Kennedy urging uninterrupted and economical production. He distributed copies of the message to scores of con- struction workers working on fa- cilities at the Saturn and Titan launch facilities. The new missile-space labor policy was constituted 'after Sen- ate hearings revealed a series of shutdowns and excessive overtime practices blamed for delays and heavy costs. Goldberg made a special plea to workers to remain on the job in event of a dispute. U,, Corps Negotiate On Center By MICHAEL OLINICK Negotiations for a Peace Corps training center at the University are moving ahead rapidly. "It is safe Ito say that if we can deliver the program the corps wants, we will be talking about actual contracts soon," Dean of State-Wide Education Harold Dorr explained yesterday. "And I think we can deliver," Dorr, the co-ordinator of Peace Corps projects at the University, said. He returned last Friday from "preliminary discussions" at corps offices in Washington. Provide Center Corps administrators have ask- ed the University to undertake a training center for Thailand for 75 volunteers and six corps lead- ers. They are slated to begin on- campus studies the first day of the fall semester and work for 14 weeks. "After a short 'home leave'," Dorr said, "they would undergo a three to four week orientation in Thailand with at least one qualified University instructor on hand to assist." Train Volunteers The general program on cam- pus would include basic trainigg in the Thai language and culture, American culture and institutions, physical fitness, personal health and hygiene, and a series of lec- tures in Corps orientation by Corps officials. Specialized training would also be asked of the volunteers. Most of them will have undergraduate degrees with several holding high- er degrees and ability in teach- ing English as a foreign lan- guage, industrial and trade arts program, vocational agriculture and malaria eradication. To Absorb Costs :he Peace Corps will absorb all the costs of the training cen- ter, which will involve a minimum of 12 to 15 University personnel. A continued basis 0. operation is hoped for, but the contract will probably only be for one semes- ter, Dorr said. The Corps volunteers will have a 60 hour week of classes, home work and language drill assign- ed to them, Dorr said. They will probably be housed in Couzens Hall and South Quad, dining to- gether at separate tables to prac- tice speaking Thai. Underground Plans Action With Tunis TUNIS (P) - The underground leaders of the Algerian rebellion are gathering here for a meeting on strategy in the war against France that may influence the future of North Africa. Algerian sources said yesterday the National Council of the Al- gerian Revolution - the rebel- lion's supreme policy-making body - will meet in secret near Tunis, probably starting this weekend. It will be the council's first meet- ing in 19 months. The meeting has been planned for some time, but it gains new urgency with the failure of the second round of Algerian nation- alist peace talks with France. MacMillan Common Market - Y IN GERMANY: Air Control Regulation In EffectI BERLIN (R)-A newiCommu- nist regulation effective last night gives the East German Reds control over Western air traffic: to isolated Berlin-if it is en- forced. Western officials don't believe it will be. It, calls for planes crossing Communist territory surrounding Berlin to report to the East Ger- man air safety center on enter- ing and leaving the city. The West does not recognize the East Ger- man regime. Western planes flying into Ber- lin cross East Germany in one of three corridors by agreement with the Soviet Union. Air traffic is handled by a special air safety center, where United States, Brit- ish and French officers sit with their Russian counterparts to ap- prove flights. Allies Confident The Allies are confident that Moscow will not permit the East Germans to interfere with air traffic here as long as Russians work at the center. Although there is a possibility the Russians will say they can ap- prove only military flights, they have not indicated they plan to back the East Germans. Pilots of the three big civilian airlines serving Berlin were told by Western officials to ignore the new rule. The three lines are a headache for the Communists because of the role they play in transport- ing refugees from East Germany out of Berlin. High Rate All refugees, now arriving at West Berlin's Marienfelde refugee center at the rate of 1,500 a day, must be flown out. This month, 30,444 registered at Marienfelde. The refugees keep coming de- spite tougher controls by Com- munist police on trains and high- ways and despite trials in East Germany against persons accused of trying to flee or of helping others to escape. Hold Alert The United States, British and French garrisons in Berlin held another early morning alert yes- terday, practicing defense of the city. Allied officials called it an- other routine exercise of the kind that takes place irregularly. Communist East Germany add- ed a new complication to the Berlin crisis with a report that polio is spreading across the Iron Curtain from West Germany. The official East German news agency said the Health Ministry asked the Interior Ministry to "take steps in regard to travel be- tween West Germany and the German Democratic (Communist) Republic that will produce the best protection for the citizenry." -AP Wirephoto AFTER ANNOUNCEMENT - Britain's Prime Minister Harold Macmillan returns to Admiralty House after announcing his move to seek entry into the European Common Market. To Negotiate Entry UNDER PRESSURE: Officials at Texas Resist Integration The Board of Regents at the University of Texas has resisted student and faculty pressures toward further integration. Petitions from the Student Assembly and ,the Students' Associa- tion favoring integration of athletics and dormitories and a petition from the Committee on Minority Groups appointed by the University's former president calling for additional integration were turned down. The regents stated that "we believe from all indications that we are in this field already considerably in advance of what has in this ists into military service and ex- tend active duty tours and enlist- ments one year. By a 403-2 roll call vote the House approved the emergency resolution which also authorizes extended training periods for the 2,440,000 members of the ready reserve. The swift action came six days after Kennedy called for a mili- tary buildup to meet Communist threats to West Berlin and other areas of East-West tension. The Senate previously had passed the measure. The President can now put a quarter million ready reservists in uniform for one year as individ- uals or in units. Money to pay for the expanded fighting strength will come later. The legislation will provide $3 billion plus $207 million to start a Civil Defense shelter program. Reps. Bruce Alger (R-Tex) and Eugene Silver (R - Ky) voted against the resolution. Tunis Rejects Bilateral Talks With France WASHINGTON (R) - Tunisian Ambassador Habib Bourguiba Jr. yesterday ruled out direct bilateral talks in his country's dispute with France-at least until France ac- cepts what the diplomat called the principle of evacuation. "We can hardly talk with an aggressor and invader as long as he is occupying our country and refusing to abide with the reso- lutions of the United Nations," Bourguiba said. Affirm Plan Of Retirement WASHINGTON (t)-The White House affirmed matter of factly yesterday that Allen W. Dulles is retiring in a few months as di- of two weeks of United States- Soviet talks on setting up a multi- nation disarmament conference. Informants said the bulk of the day-long Khrushchev-McCloy dis- cussions dealt with the German question, with Khrushchev restat- ing his determination to sign a peace treaty with Communist East Germany and give the East Ger- mans control of access to Berlin. On the disarmament question, United States sources said the Soviets altered their position slightly during the fortnight of talks held in Moscow between Mc- Cloy and Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister ValerianZorin. area occurred in public, private, and church-related colleges throughout the South. We have probably gone further than a ma- jority of the citizens of Texas and the Legislature would approve." Represents Faculty The faculty was represented by a petition for desegregation signed by a "substantial but minority" number of member's signatures and by the nine faculty members of the Committee on Minority Groups. The Campus Survey found that in polling every eighteenth stu- dent 59 per cent were in favor of "equal access to all university- owned facilities" and 33 per cent against. Seventy-four per cent fa- vored integrated intercollegiate athletics with 19 per cent opposed. Indicates Concern The regents' statement indi- cated concern for the "sentiment and the wishes of the people of Texas and their elected represen- tatives," and noted that "an act- ive vocal minority does not always speak the wishes of the majority." However, the statement said that, in line with the Supreme Court decision concerning inte- gration, the University of Texas has proceeded 'with all deliberate speed' toward integration Heads Agree On Defense WASHINGTON OP)-The Pen- tagon reported yesterday that the United States and West German defense chiefs reached complete agreement in discussions here on the need to improve both conven- tional and nuclear strength to de- fend Western Europe. The Defense Department said this in summarizing the discus- sions between Secretary of De- fense Robert S. McNamara and West Germany's defense minister, Franz Josef Strauss. The two talked during Strauss' visit to this country The talks included: discussion of present and future planning for the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization, United States-German military cooperation, and the Ber- lin problem, the statement said. In reporting complete , agree- ment on the need for conventional and nuclear arms modernization, the Pentagon said both McNa- mara and Strauss "agreed that a balanced and gradual system of deterrent will remain the basis of defense." Outer Seven Also To Seek Membership House of Commons Appears to Favor Move for Entry LONDON (P)-Britain took the first step yesterday toward a linkup with Europe's Common Market. Prime Minister Macmillan's an- nouncement that he will seek en- try into the economic group, known as the inner six nations, was hedged with the same con- ditions that have kept Britain out since its formation in 1957. But his move set Western Eu- rope afire with a new resolve to try to join in one economic unit a bloc of 13 nations and 300 mil- lion people rivaling the giant re- sources of the United States and the Soviet Union. Issue Communique The European Free Trade As- sociation, known as the outer seven nations, issued a communi- que from its headquarters in Ge- neva, calling for all members to seek similar negotiations for as- sociation or membership in the Common Market. Denmark, one of the members of EFTA which was sponsored by Britain as an effective counter- weight to the Common Market, at once announced it will fol- low Britain's lead. So did Austria. Norway's trade minister, Arne Skaug, told newsmen the govern- ment favored negotiations for membership or association, but said the actual decision would be a parliamentary process. Overcome Obstacles But it was apparent many ob- stacles would have to be overcome before the old dreaff of Euro- pean unity could be realized. Macmillan's announcement stir- red a ferment of excitement in the House of Commons, although the general mood was in favor of his decision. Tariff-Free The six-nation Common Mar- ket, led by France and West Ger- many and including Italy, Bel- gium, Netherlands and Luxem- bourg, has set a target date of 1972 for becoming a tariff-free zone in which goods would move as freely among its members as among the 50 United States It would have a common tariff wall against outsiders and seeks a de- gree of political integration. EFTA, embracing Britain, Den- mark, Norway, Sweden, Switzer- land, Austria and Portugal, with Finland as an associate, aims at lowering tariffs among its mem- bers without the common external tariff system. No political inte- gration is involved. In deciding to seek membership in the Common Market, Macmil- lan recognized that the six-nation bloc isthreatening to squeeze Britain out of many of its tradi- tional markets. Alarms Partners But the move alarms Common- wealth partners who fear it will wreck the preferential system by which they enjoy special privileges such as low tariffs on their ex- ports to Britain. Many Conservatives and La- borites in Britain also feared the move would mean the end of the British price support system that guarantees the prosperity of Brit- ish agriculture, and would have ruinous effect on some industries and workers. Some Conservatives dislike a move that implies abandonment of Britain's age-old isolation from the continent and fear a loss of sovereignty. Defense Set To Use Ships WASHINGTON () - The De- fense Department has told sena- tors it is pulling about 40 ships nut of mothballs as one step in Chinese Nationalist Leader Receives U.S. Assurances WASHINGTON (A') - Nationalist China's Vice-President brought his worries about Red China to Washington yesterday and received assurances that the United States will oppose the Communist nation's admission to the United Nations. In turn, Chen assured President John F. Kennedy that all actions of the Formosa regime will be coordinated with American leadership. Chen, who also is Prime Minister of the Chinese Nationalist government, came here as the representative of President Chiang Kai-Shek who has vowed not to leave Formosa as long as his gov- 'BLERP' ZEEPS: ernment remains at war with the Communists who rule the Chinese mainland. S tructurc .aInammediate Discussions I Ct r Approach Forms New Grammar Rules By JUDITH OPPENHEIM Chen went almost immediately into discussions with Kennedy which lasted an hour and 40 min- utes. The pledges of mutual co- operation were renewed publicly in an exchange of toasts at a White House luncheon. The talks which will be con- tinued tomorrow are designed to reassure Nationalist China of full United States support at the United Nations when the issue of Communist China's representation is raised at the General Assembly session in September. beThe Chinese Nationalists have been worried also that moves by the United States to recognize Communist Outer Mongolia would ml r ..+,. an4 i +n e firmine "The blery zeeped." The structure of this sentence formed the basis of "The New Grammer - and Composition: A Class Demonstration" presented yesterday by Bernard Weiss, supervisor of language arts of the Detroit junior high schools. His "lesson" was presented with the aid of several junior high school students. Weiss showed how word pattern and meaning are interdependent in sentence formation. To illustrate he quoted a nonsense verse from "Alice in Wonderland": 'Twas brillig and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe All mimsy were the borogroves' And the mome raths outgrabe. He demonstrated how it would be feasible to substitute for the n.nn.rca .ahoi es thwo rns- : :-: -..w c.. ..... ... aaman m me., el