TUU~ MW AN nAItLY TIMR MTCI cials To Review AT UN: Kasavubu' SGC Proposed 'U' Budget Administrators To Meet in Lansing With New State.Budget Examiners By SUSAN' FARRELL University administrators go to Lansing today to discuss the University's $41 million appropriation request with state officials. "It 'will be an informal, informational session to acquaint the new budget examiners with our request," Vice-President for Univer- sity Relations Lyle M. Nelson said. University President Harlan Hatcher, Vice-Presidlent and Dean of Faculties M(arvin L. Niehuss and Vice-President for Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont-will attend the session. Contemplated enrollment increases, wage and salary increases and a proposed increase of 125 faculty members will be considered. e This meeting and formal hearings 13 0 / C PIC SpeakerI Tells of Negro Voting1c PlighJLt j By PETER STUART Gathering on election night to discuss the problems of disen- franchised Southern Negroes, a small group of students meeting under the auspices of tlhe Politi- cal Issues Club heard some first- hand evidence from a former In- structor at Tuskegee Institute. Singer Buchanan, Grad, detail- ed his unsuccessful attempts to register as a voter in Macon County, Ala., and concluded: "rI -keep trying the legal way, and if I can't do it that way, there will come other ways." "I really feel sorry for the vote registrars in Tuskegee because they see complete annihilation in the pressure to vote," he said. "They are making a last ditch stand." The Negro population of the county (numerically superior) keeps trying to register-90 per cent of those rejected hold univer- sity degrees, he declared. Buchan- an himself has failed to qualify as a voter because of "illiteracy." First Problem "When a Negro in Macon Coun- ty wants to register, the first problem is finding the registrars in session. Then we are asked to take certain tests, such as repeat- ing the preamble to the Constitu- tion, which I had to do," he said. Most of the would-be Negro voters, after completing such rig- orous testing, never receive any1 reply from the registrars, accord- ing to a news film entitled "Re- port from Alabama" shown at the meeting. "But the whole broad problem is not purely a Southern one," Buchanan pointed out. "I had an awful time finding a place to live in Ann Arbor-and money was no problem. No One Answer "Yet it's important to remem- ber that what can be done in one town, cannot be done in another. I don't think there's one answer." Offering one possible solution to the problem, William Livant, Grad, PIC member who addressed the meeting, suggested that pres- sure from the people for civil rights must be levied against the government. "At a time when most people are laying down their political initia- tive for another four years, it is our job to pick it up, by pressing for the right to vote for all citi- zens," he declared. "The pot must begin to boil before Congress convenes." later in the year are conducted by the budget division of the state administration department as part of the routine processing of 'ap- propriationrequests from all state agencies. Budget Division The recommendation of the budget division goes to the gover- nor who, after further considera- tion, presents his program to the Legislature when it convenes in January. The $41 million for 1961-82 re- quested by the Regents at their last meeting set a new record for the University, At that time, President Hatcher said the request, based on an esti- mated increase in enrollment of 771 to 1,271, had been carefully studied and reduced to minimum levels before being considered by the Regents. State Responsibility But he also pointed out that the University shares with the state administration and the Legisla- ture the responsibility for main- taining its "position of eminence in American higher education." To this end, this year's appro- priation request emphasizes "pro- tection of present faculty" by ask- ing for funds sufficient to pro- vide widespread merit increases and enlargement of the faculty by 125. Navy B.ases. LONDON OM - The United States agreed unconditionally yes- terday to quit the major part of its five base areas in the British West Indies, but said it hopes to stay on in some considered essen- tial to Western defense. At the same time American del- egates to a three-sided confer- ence joined Britali in promising economic aid to the West Indies after that emerging common- wealth state becomes independ- ent. A communique issued after a five-day conference said all three parties accepted the "basic prin- ciple that the West Indies, when independent, would have the right to form its own alliances and to conclude such agreements as it thought fit regarding military bases on its soil." The announcement thus spelled a drastic revision of the historic 1941 agreement between Sir Win- ston Churchill and the late Pres- ident Franklin Roosevelt. Under this, Britain gave the Americans base rights , in the West Indies until the year 2040 in return for 50 used destroyers and other mil- itary equipment at a crucial time in the war against the Nazis. The five bases are one each in Antigua, Jamaica and Santa Lu- cia and two in Trinidad. Asks Seat For Self UNITED NATIONS ) -- Congo President Joseph Kasavubu de- livered a dramatic appeal to the United. Nations General Assembly yesterday for immediate seating of a delegation headed by himself and representing all factions- in his chaotic African republic. But Kasavubu was denounced immediately by Ismael Tour e of Guinea, who charged that the Congo leader's trip here was spon- sored by colonialist and imperial- ist powers. Guinea is one of eight Asia-African nations supporting a proposal that Assemblydrecogni- tion be given, a rival delegation representing deposed Premier Pa- trice Lumumba. "His speech was drafte Paris and Brussels," Toure declar- ed. "We know who was behind this trip and that the aim was' not honorable. This hoodwinks no one."' Soviet deputy foreign minister Valerian A. Zorin assailed Kasa- vubu,-the United States, Belgium and Secretary-General Dag Ham- marskjold in a wide-ranging speech that wound up the after- noon session, XKasavubu Used Zorin said Kasavubu was being used by colonialists, and that Lumumba was the only legally- elected representative of the Con- golese people. The Congolese leader took the rostrum at the outset of debate which had been postponed 24 hours in order to permit him to speak. He declared that only the chief of state has the right to nominate the Congo's representatives to the Assembly. The African leader entered the Assembly from a room behind the rostrum, and returned there after his 15-minute speech. The Congo's seat in the Assembly remained va- cant-as it has been during all sessions of this Assembly. Credentials Group Kasavubu appealed to the cre- dentials committee, which has not yet reported on which Congo fac- tion should be seated, "to exam- ine without delay" the credentials of his delegation, He said his delegation included representatives of rebellious Ka- tanga and Kasai provinces, and declared "this gives you an idea of the unity I have gathered around me." Wit~h Rd,11 c State Names New Cultural Plan Aims To Attract Educated Personnel Governor G. Mennen Williams yesterday named a 68-member cultural commission for the state. Williams sees improving culture as a way to attract highly- educated scientific and technolo-, gical personnel for industry in the state. Wayne State University vice- president William Birenbaum, is chairman of the committee, which is supposed to "determine-the pro- per role for the government of the state in encouraging and as- sisting in the full expresion of our culture." Choreographer Agnes DeMille and composer Aaron Copeland have consented to serve as con- sultants to the commission, along with Lloyd Goodrich, director of the Whitney Museum of Art in New York. "We are well known for auto- mobiles and for our scientific and4 cultural strength, but it is often overlooked that Michigan stands among the leaders in the country in the number of creators in the arts and scholars in the arts we possess," Birenbaum said. The state should seriously con- sider providing financial support for cultural institutions, he said, adding that while the commissiori will have to study the existing situation, as long as he is chair- man "this will not be just a study commission." Birenbaum also claimed Michi- gan will be pioneering in having the government assume a role in cultural development, and that this committee could be the be- ginning of a ntional pattern of cultural development groups. -Daily-Henry Yee SGC ELECTION-Approximately 2,000 students went to the polls in yesterday's first round of the Student Governninet Council election. The bad weather apparently held the total down, though the figure was somewhat higher than the first-day return of last semester's balloting. ITALIAN VOTE: Communists Gain in Elctior. Aec .-. G'Sell Says. Rain Cause Of Vote La; Two Thousand Vc On First Day To I Last Spring's Low By PHILIP SHERMAN A stretch of bad afters weather apparently held down total vote as the first day of dent Government Council ba ing drew to a temporary halt terday. About 2,000 students vi elections director Richard G' '63, estimated, with almost th fourths casting their ballots fore 1 p.m., when the bad wea began. The weather outlook for ti is little better than yesterday ernoon, with rain, snow and teimperatures predicted. G'Sell says today's total actually have exceeded the' thousand figure. In any cas ought to exceed last semen 1,850, which was a record loN year ago, about 2,000 voted oi first day's balloting. Thirteen candidates are bid for five open slots in the elee They are: Lynn Bartlett, Louise Kao, '64; Marshall K '61; Bruce Leitman, '63; Rie] Nohl, '62; Ted Parnall, '63; R ard, Pinnell, '64 A&D;~ Philip F er, Spec, Julie Raben, '62M; Riecker, '63; Dennis Shafer, Kay Warman, '61BAd, and N Wheeler, '61. The polls are located on Diag, at the Michigan Unior the Michigan League, in fror Angell Hall, at the UGLI, ui the Engineering Arch, in fror the Business Administration B in the lobby of Mason Hall in front of the University M um. Teachers En First Strike In New York NEW YORK (P) - The teachers' strike in New York C history ended last night, the and day after it began. About 6,00 delegates of the st ing United Federation of Tef ers voted at a closed meetin accept a proposal to return work with a guarantee from board of education of no repri ROME (.IP;-Commtlunists bagge d one-fourth of the votes this week for their biggest margin yet in this pro-Western and Roman Catholic country. Although the contests were h0- cal, the nationwide trend couldl spell trouble for Italy's Christian Democratic government. Complete returns yesterday showed the Communists won 24.5 per cent of the total vote Sunday and Monday in the balloting for provincial councils. continuing an almost uninterrupted gain from the 19 per cent they polled in the first postwar elections of 1946. In the 1958 national elections. the Reds polled 23 per cent, con- Mobutu Charges UN Troops Aid Anti-Government Plot test against the government par- ty. For, in addition to the ex- treme left, the extreme right Fascist Italian Social Movement fMSI) scored gains, especially in Rome. The Christian Democrats' to- tal in provincial contests was 40.3 Man-in- S-pace Test Capsule Falls into Sea WASHINGTON (P) - A major, test in the man-in-space program' flopped yesterday. It involved the launching of a Mercury capsule under conditions of extreme stress. The capsule failed to separateE from its booster rocket after the launching at Wallops Island, Va. Both the Mercury vehicle and the 25-foot-tall "Little Joe" boost- er plunged from an altitude of 53,000 feet into the Atlantic per cent, still leaving them Italy's most powerful party. They did slightly better in city council elections-41.4 per cent of the bal- lots or 3.3 per cent better than city elections of 1956. Deceptive Margin But the Christian Democratic margin is deceptive. Although the ruling party is split by factions, the Communists often work hand in glove with Pietro Nenni's left- wing Socialists. Together, the So- cialists and Communists polled 38.9 per cent, Premier Amintore Fanfani, who, took office after Communist-in- spired rioting toppled his prede- cessor this summer, showed con- cern at the results. He said in a statement: "It is necessary to make the advantages of demo- cratic life better known and prized." The Communist victories were scored despite Italy's alliance with the West, the nation's booming standard of living and a warning by Italy's Roman Catholic bishops against voting for Marxist par- ties., LEOPOLDVILuE (P)-Col. Joseph Mobutu accused the United pared to 42 Nations yesterday of having a hand in what he called a foiled plot to Christian D topple his military regime and return deposed Premier Patrice Lum- the Reds ga umba to power in the Congo. the Christia UN officials described the charge as sheer nonsense. per cent. Mobutu said the UN command sought to trick rival Congolese C army units into fighting as an excuse to disarm his forces and re- onall,t 90t convene the pro-Lumumba Congolese Parliament which he suspend- provinces a ed two months ago, towns,. The plot was foiled, he told a news conference, when his troops A good ma disarmed opponents trying to take over the parliament building in a ly intended pre-dawn coup. Mobutu said Cleo-' phas Kamitatu, pro-Lumumba president of the Leopoldville pro- vincial government, was the UN's instrument in the alleged plot. 2.4 per cent for the Democrats. This year ined 1.5 per cent and an Democrats lost 2.1 ast Ballots per cent of 32,035,569 ballots for offices in 78 and 6,919 cities and any of them apparent- their votes as a pro- :;' ;; 1; .< <' - E "; 5. %1, . ' J, . f >!j i : y : ', Iv, 1 r : : Nf f r.y 3 > 1 :r z' v'i. ri.,. ,. :: <; r 'f.. ''/_ .5 ., .°7 '3 } >4 t " f. Yes they did come! We now have dg in, :d G - . ", J r {{. Y7l 5 F w% '' z'-'r; i y, . ', .l ; , . f /:.Y ;l '. r ' f !i 3 Army Adjutant He said an army adjutant and a non-commissioned officer who were members of Kamitatu's Bambala tribe brought a squad of infantry and arms to the parlia- ment building early yesterday, claiming to have orders from Mo- butu to take over the guard. Loyal Mobutu troops guarding the building refused to be tricked and disarmed their rivals without a shot being fired, the colonel said. Mobutu alleged that. the opera- tion was staged by Kamitatu with the connivance of the United Na- tions. Kamitatu disclaimed knowl- edge of the incident. In Rage Mobutu was in a rage. He de- liberately missed a meeting with the acting UN mission chief, Brig- adier Indar Jit Rikhye of India. "These Indians who run the United Nations here are doing everything they can to bring Lumumba back to power and turn the Congo into a Soviet state," Mobutu told hastily summoned newsmen at his fortified camp on the outskirts of Leopoldville.' "I am an anti-Communist and proved it by expelling the Soviet and Czech missions," he said. "Never, never will they be permit- ted to return as long as I am alive." 1 a few of the Buggy horns from India. IBM WILL INOVEBER Marketing and Sales Engineering and Science JOHN LEIDY Phone NO 8-6779 * 601 East Liberty Candidates for Bachelors or Masters Degrees are invited to discuss opportunities in: rroLn.;.aaYxuS ._F i CK .. 9>S.. ..,. s, ,..:.?', ,7, ,o S i tit v rf s_ ° T," .< . , . ..t 7, yam : This is a unique opportunity to find out about the many career opportunities at IBM. The IBM representative can discuss with you typical jobs, various training programs, chances for ad- vanced education, financial rewards, and com- pany benefits--all important factors that affect your future, SOME FACTS ABOUT IBM An Unusual Growth Story: IBM has had one of the exceptional growth rates in industry. 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