-;.; io State ...21'Iowa chigan State 10 Kansas . . . . . 2 . . . . S 1 Pitt ..:... 10'Minnesota ....48 Mississippi ...6 Duke ..... 6 Navy ...... 14 Illinois.'... 7 Syracuse.... OKansas State. 7 Louisiana State 6 Georgia Tech . .0 Notre Dame.. 7 Purdue... WOMEN'S WEEK See Page ! Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LX, No.36 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1960 + rnn rr ri i Late Wisconsin Field Goal Beats NIXON, KENNEDY: Debate Plans Fold; Disagree on Blame WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. John F. Kennedy and Vice-President Richard M. Nixon sought votes in suburbs of two of the nation's big- gest cities yesterday while chances of bringing them together for a fifth debate all but disappeared. Each side attempted to saddle the other with responsibility for the collapse of negotiations for one more face-to-face encounter which the nation could see and hear via television and radio. Nixon's representative withdrew from the Washington talks, say- ing the Democrats had violated agreed procedures three times. He denfanded that Kennedy apologize for charging bad faith in the negotiations and withdraw his deadline for an agreement on fin- K hl hhv al terms. Kennedy retorted from Phila- delphia that Nixon is free to de- iet a~ie bate or not, as he sees fit, but: Se s S"I am not going to drag him up - in front of a, microphone." The P Sing Democratic nominee's press see- 9 retary said Nixon has used every trick and device known to avoid MOSCOW M) - Premier Nikita another TV-radio duel. S. Khrushchev says the Soviet Apart from the strong stands Union eate it l catch up taken with only 10 days of the union tetite ite i cacp campaign remaining, the oppor- capita production within 10 years tunity of resuming the talks and and surpass it by far in 20 years, reaching agreement appeared al- most nil. The Soviet leader made his re- Nixon, campaigning in the Chi- marks in response to a question cago suburbs, seized on a Hal- from a delegation of Cuban jour- loween theme. He said this offers nalists. "a good time for America to take Carlos Franqui, editor of Cuba's a look at some of the hobgoblins semiofficial newspaper Revolucion, Kennedy has been conjuring up." asked Khrushchev how long it will "One by one he has let them take the Soviet Union to surpass loose," Nixon said, "trying to the U.S. economically, frighten America into believing "By our estimates we shall solve what is not true; trying to scare this task of outstripping the U.S. up a few votes. in the production of major goods Halloween Failure per capita in 1970, that is, in 10 "But this Halloween is a fail- "By economists' estimates, in ure. America does not respond to '1£0Byur ecmit estmts, il his wails of woe because Ameri- 1980 our per capita output will ca long ago learned , , ,that you! be much greater than the U.S. cannot really be scared by some- In 1965, our production of con- thnn tt isn't e re y sumer goods per capita will be on thing that isn't there. c n the level ok even above the level Kennedy told one audience in of Eropen contris."the Philadelphia area that no of European countries." cadidt fr te presidencyt this In response to another ques- year "should go to the people tion, Khrushchev stressed the with anything but the truth, and1 Soviet Union's advance from eco- then the people can decide what nomic backwardness in the four they want." decades since the Bolshevik revo- "I don't believe that this ad- lution. ministration has been foresight- "The results speak for them- ed," he said. "I don't believe that selves," he said. "Our country they have understood the kind of ranks second in the world eco- revolutionary world in which we nomically. live." In the development of science Prom~ the rival party chairmen and culture we also stand very -Republican Thruston B. Morton high. This is attested by the fact and Democrat Henry M. Jackson that we alone lead in competition --came confident claims about with America in the conquest of the results of the Nov. 8 voting. space, while other countries so far "We're going to win," Jackson have not even entered this race." said. "We're going to win," Morton Blast Plan To Relocate 300 Pupils By PAT GOLDEN Relocation of 315 elementary school pupils in northwest De- troit to relieve overcrowding at two schools will begin tomorrow in the midst of what appears to be a three-way conflict. School Superintendent Samuel M. Brownell recently ordered 315 Negro children from the over- crowded Brady and McKerrow schools to transfer to Guest, Mon- nier and Noble elementary schools tomorrow. Guest and Monnier are all-white, and Noble has a small percentage of Negro stu- dents. His action follows Detroit school board policy of transfer- ring students to the nearest schools with vacancies on a strict- ly non-racial basis. Hold Meeting At a mass meeting Tuesday night at Temple Baptist Church a group of 2,000 parents and in- terested adults decided to keep their children out of school Fri- day, Monday and Tuesday in pro- test. Robert P. Williams, spokes- man for the group, says that the main issue in the conflict is that children are not getting equal ed- ucational rights because the Board of Education is not doing its job. Defines Protest "We do not protest any chil- dren going to school in their own area, regardless of their race. But they have taken out the Guest school eighth grade and are now bringing in students from another area because they say there is room at Guest." Williams' group is also circulat- ing petitions for the reall of all seven board members. "The recall is most important. The boycott is merely a demonstration of our feelings to emphasize our cam- paign for a recall election," he explained. Member Comments School board member Remus Robinson did not feel that the protest was as massive or as or- ganized as it appeared Friday, when more than 1,200 children were absent from the three schools. "Some parents might have kept their children home be- cause they didn't know what a few people might do. We have no way of knowing how substantial or how valid the feeling is, but we do know that some of it has been generated by people who do not have any children in school." Three Highland Park Junior College students picketed Friday morning against the parents' boy- cott at Guest School. They will continue their action as long as the parents' group does. Assessment Difficult Williams said it would be dif- ficult to tell what portion, if any, of the people protesting the board's action were doing so for reasons of personal prejudice. He said that his committee had had three or four spokesmen out of 15 parents present at a meeting with Brownell Tuesday before the mass meeting. -Daly-David Giutrow LOOK BUT DON'T TOUCH-Don Bangert of Wisconsin and John Houtman of Michigan stare at a loose ball during yesterday's game. The two teams fumbled a total of six times. DOOR TO DOOR: AADAC To Use Leaflets In'Support of Rule Nine BY PETER STUART The Ann Arbor Direct Action Committee will carry its anti- discrimination campaign to local homes today with the distribution of leaflets supporting Rule Nine. A special AADAC committee will distribute some 2,000 of the leaflets today concentrating primarily in Negro neighborhoods, but plans eventually to cover the whole city, Judy Yesner, '61, chairman '_ +f the me.rial committee explained. Hit Detention Of Tourists WASHINGTON (M--The United States protested Thursday against the arrest and secret detention for seven weeks of two Americans who toured the Soviet Union in the summer. The two are Mark Kaminsky, a resident ofaEdwardsburg and a former Ann Arbor High School teacher, and Harvey C. Bennett of Maine. The two were accused of going into a restricted area. Kaminsky was tried and convicted of es- pionage, drawing a suspended sentence. Both were subsequently expelled from the Soviet Union. The State Department announc- ed Friday that Edward L. Freers, minister councillor of the United States embassy in Moscow, had lodged a formal protest against the seven-week period in which the two were held incommunicado. Kaminsky will be able to resume his position as a Russian language instructor at Purdue University whenever he is ready, school of- ficials said. Rule Nine is a Michigan Corpora- tions and Securities Commission ruling which prevents real estate brokers from aiding in rentals or sales in which restrictions are made based on race, creed or color. "We hope to counteract adver- tising by the Ann Arbor Board of Realtors which creates a false im- pression of Rule Nine," Miss Yes- ner said. Sponsor Leaflet The leaflet, co-sponsored by the local chapter of the National As- sociation for the Advancement of Colored People, states in part: "Rule Nine should have gone into effect Aug. 14, but the real estate lobby has temporarily stopped its enforcement with legal maneuvers . . . Rule Nine can encourage people to value human dignity." Store Exempted The city Human Relations Com- mission voted to write a public letter outlining its objections to realtors' advertising which dis- favored Rule Nine, at its meeting Oct. 18. Yesterday, AADAC again ex- empted the Cousins Shop from its weekly i anti - discrimination demonstrations. Asks Debate About Religion In Campaign CINCINNATI (I)-The president of the National Council of Churches said yesterday he thinks religious issues should be discussed openly during the presidential campaign. The Rev. Dr. Edwin T. Dahl- berg, Baptist minister of St. Louis, told a group of reporters that, "If we do not discuss these matters on an intelligent level, then f an- atics and crackpots will grab the ball and run away with it." "Speaking as an individual," Dr. Dahlberg said, "I rather welcome the vigorous debate that is going on in the field of Catholic-Protest- ant relations this year. These is- sues have been driven underground too long." He said high-level discussions will help to better relations be- tween those "two great groups of Christendom. "And there are some real dif- ferences of convictions on the part of sincere adherents of both faiths." He said they have been avoided in the past because many persons worried about unity. said. Jackon Speaks In a separate statement, Jack-1 son said that the Republicans are using fake and phoney polls in an effort to make the voters ' think they will win, while ignor- ing impartial surveys by major' newspapers, Morton, in a statement of his own, challenged Kennedy's con- tention that United States pres- tige has slipped badly during the Eisenhower administration. 7 'VOICE OF CONSCIENCE': Josh.White Sings of Politics, Loneliness By JUDITH SATTLER "A folk singer is the voice of conscience," said singer Josh White. White appeared last night before an enthusiastic audience in the Ann Arbor High School auditorium. "As the voice of conscience," he said, "I sing of the troubles, trials and tribulations, and the joys of the people. I sing what I see." Since he is singing what he sees, White sings about political and social problems as well as love and loneliness and other traditional folk song subjects. Wide-Ranging Program His program included a song about the raceless-ness of blood plasma, and about Franklin Roosevelt, "The Man Who Couldn't Walk Around." $ The son of a South Carolina preacher, he worked as a boy, leading blind street singers through the town. Blind Lemon Jefferson, ' ::r: F