SCHOLARSHIPPING, MSU STYLE See Editorial Page Y Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom 74I ait&r WINDY High-67 Low-40 Partly cloudy with afternoon rain VOL. LXXIV, No. 156 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1964 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES I - - I JAMES FARMER Prepare T o Deter NEW YORK (AP)-Stern emer- gency - measures were mounted yesterday against possible racial violence at today's opening of the New York World's Fair, Stockades, tear gas and nearly 3000 police awaited any disorder- ly civil rights demonstrators. The bishop of a Harlem church, meanwhile, decried the planned demonstrations as inviting a "blood baptism." Insurgent groups, led by the suspended Brooklyn chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), ignored disfavor from racial associates and the threat of court action by insisting they will go ahead with a "stall-in" on highways leading to the fair. Contempt The plan was to put an esti- mated 2000 cars on the highways in the midst of what is expected to be a heavy crush of traffic, then have them run out of gas. A state supreme court order has placed such demonstrators in peril of imprisonment for con- tempt. In explaining the purpose of the demonstration, Isiah Brunson, 22, Negro chairman of Brooklyn CORE, has said: "We are having the 'stall-in' ... because the city and state have seen fit to spend millions and millions to build the World's Fair, but have not seen fit to eliminate the problems of Negroes and Puerto Ricans in New York City." Peaceful Pickets The stall-in plans have been denounced by major Negro civil rights groups and the national CORE has suspended the Brook- lyn chapter. James Farmer, national direc- tor of CORE, yesterday disclosed that the organization will instead carry on its own peaceful demon- strations by picketing at the fair -partly to counter the stall-in. Regarding the demonstrations, fair officials said in part in a, statement: "Equal rights are not advanced by violating the law and incon- veniencing one's fellow citizens... 'In the over-all public interest, the fair's police force on opening day will exert every effort to avoid conflict with the demonstrators so long as CORE adheres to its representation that illegal demon- strations will at least remain or- derly and not interfere with the fair's operation." However, stockades able to handle up to 3000 persons were in readiness--should it be necessary --at the fair to hold demonstra- tors temporarily until they can be turned over to city police. Jpoint Judie Moves Into Apartment Case By BARBARA SEYFRIED Pending before Joint Judiciary Council is a case involving charges of gross misbehavior by four students in off-campus housing. If JJC rules on the case it will extend its influence into an area which it has never handled before to any extent. The case involves alleged misconduct in an apartment which has caused an unreasonable amount of noise and dam- age. Other students living in the building have complained as well as the landlords. "Joint Judic will have to decide whether to merely make the students pay damages-which they are willing to do-and let them move into another 4 apartment where they might r' f }i.: repeat the same offense, rec- ommend suspension from the University, or mete out some other punishment," John Bing- ley, director of student activi- ties and organizations, explain- > ed recently. Transfer to OSA In the past, most cases in-_r