THE UNIVERSITY'S 'SOFT SELL' fee Page 4 Y Lite Arna Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom :4Iati] COLDER High--32 LOW--1 Partly cloudy, clearing later today. VOL. LXXII, No. 109 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1962 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAC HIGHER EDUCATION: Consider Capital Outlays By MICHAEL HARRAH Special To The Daily LANSING-The State Legisla- ture is currently considering some $24 million in capital outlay pro- posals for higher education. Rep. Gilbert E. Bursley (R-Ann Y Arbor) and Sen. Stanley G. Thayer (R-Ann Arbor) have proposed the expenditure of $1.5 million for a new heating plant at the Univer- sity and $4.5 million for the con- struction of a new music school. Also Sen. Garland Lane (D- -Daily-Larry Vanice PICKETERS-Members of the Ann Arbor Fair Housing Associa- tion marched before city hall last night for over four hours during a Council meeting. The group later presented its demands to the Council and called for the body to support its aims publicly. Pittsfield Picketers Ask City Council Statement, Aid By DAVID MARCUS in an attempt to "get a public statement of policy from the City Council," ten picketers asking integrated housing in Pittsfield Village marched around City Hall last night. Sponsored by the Ann Arbor Fair Housing Association, the group marched four miles from Pittsfield to the city hall where they picketed for over three hours. At the conclusion of the Council meeting, Harold Mial, a spokes- man for the Association, spoke to the Council urging it "publicly sup- port the principle of open occupancy."_ Plan Meeting Mayor Cecil O. Creal announced that a meeting had been ar- ranged for next Friday in his office between representatives of the 9picketers, the Human Relations Flint) and Sen. Philip Rahoi (D- Iron Mountain) have proposed $350,000 to continue general reno- vations of the Medical Center, $2.8 million to complete the Physics- Astronomy and Institute of Science and Technology building and $10,000 to lay plans for the Medical Science Bldg-Unit Two. MSU Proposals For Michigan State University, Sen. Paul H. Younger (R-East Lansing) has proposed $6 million for a chemistry unit. Lane and Rahoi ask $840,000 to complete the mechanical engineering unit, $5000 to study a phytotron build- ing construction and $20,000 for classroom planning. For Wayne State University, Rep. John M. Sobieski (D-Detroit), Sen. Charles S. Blondy (D- Detroit) and others are 'asking $2 million for a medical research building. They have requested $15,000 for classroom planning at Grand Val- ley College at Grand Rapids. Ferris Requests Rep. Frederick O. Olsen (R- Sheridan) has asked $1.7 million for a physical education building at Ferris Institute of Big Rapids and also $2.7 million for a trade- technical building. Rep. Russell Hellman (D-Dollar Bay) and others have asked $2.6 million for construction of a math- ematics-physics building at Michi- gan College of Mining and Tech- nology at Houghton. They also asked other planning funds as follows: Central Michigan University at Mt. Pleasant, $5000, classroom unit; Eastern Michigan Univer- sity at Ypsilanti, $2500, library addition; and Western Michigan University at Kalamazoo, $5000, industrial and engineering tech- nology unit. Natural Science They have asked $578,570 to complete a natural science unit at WMU, $150,000 for extension of utilities and $75,000 to remodel the existing natural science build- ing. For Northern Michigan College at Marquette, Rep. Dominic Ja- cobetti (D-Negaunee), Rahol and others are requesting $2.5 million to build a fine arts building. V ie w Courts At con-Con LANSING (JP)-The Constitu- tional Convention waded back in- to the question of the judicial branch of state government yes- terday. Delegates entered their eighth day of debate on the subject with some of their knottiest problems yet unsolved-and possibly due to get knottier. They tabled the question of methods of selecting state supreme court justices last- week to move on to other judicial problems. When they clear probate courts and the justice of the peace sys- tem, they are scheduled to return to the supreme court question. A six-man committee in the Re- publican caucus was to work out a compromises But Republican delegates appa'rently are divided between the original district plan for selecting justices and a com- promise plan worked out by the caucus committee. French Of Dis Reds Agree ALGE To Western A Suggestions ALGIERS day set fire Foreign Ministers prison in 0 up a Moroc To Lead First Talks new bloods Algeria. WASHINGTON ()-Soviet Pre- Two pers mier Nikita Khrushchev has agreed wounded, o to a United States-British pro- tack by Eur posal to start the Geneva dis- rorists on t armament conference at the for- 1,850 Mosle eign ministers level. for activiti He has agreed also, United gerian inde' States officials said yesterday, to The terro have a big three foreign minis- sion and fir ters meeting in advance of the gates in an main session. prisoners tr Khrushchev's changeabout, aft- ers dumped er having called for opening the bottles oft Geneva parley at the summit lev- prison comp el, apparently cleared away one fire which f final uncertainty over the launch- ble putting ing of what was to have been an Fi 18-nation disarmament conference Iin Algier on March 14. of explosive Size Reduced royal Mor The conference was reduced to plane short] 17 nations yesterday when France uled to take announced it would not send a to Casabla representative, for the Alg Secretary of State Dean Rusk high. Police was reported planning to leave on the Euro Washington March 10 or 11 to ganization. meet with Soviet Foreign Min- Officials ister Andrei Gromyko and British fuse about Foreign Minister Lord Home in gone out b Geneva March 12. the explosiv The main topic of their meeting der a seat. is to be a treaty to ban nuclear The stew tests constellatio Khrushchev made known his aboard to i views in a lengthy letter to Ken- passengers needy and British Prime Minister fouda thei Harold Macmillan, which arrived found the from Moscow Sunday. Att No Answer Also in A The White House said Kenne- man was s dy's response to the Khrushchev a razor in a message had not been set as of pean youth late yesterday and it appeared un- serious. likely a reply would be dispatched The day c before today, a record b Kennedy and Macmillan have plastic bom contended right along that the minute per best way to make progress on blasts injur disarmament is to have lower lev- but damag el officials set the stage. stores and e They have left the door open $400,000. for a summit meeting later, per- haps before June 1, provided the Geneva negotiators have madeB some progress or provided that Bad summit attendance would be help- ful in solving a deadlock. Soviet Disagrees O f Khrushchev had contended that the government heads themselves RICHMO should show up first at Geneva. Supreme C He said this would emphasize the that Princ importance of disarmament and under no c boost chaices of agreement. to support It was still not known whether The cen Khrushchev might decide on his abandoned own to appear at some stage dur- tem three ing the Geneva proceedings. court-order United States authorities greet- tion. Since ed with caution Khrushchev's have been g agreement on foreign , ministers' while 1,700 attendance at Geneva. had no sch Announce armament RIIAN TERRORISM: ttack Moslem Prison Government Doubts Valui (P)-Terrorists yester- to a crowded Moslem ran and tried to blow can airliner in a day of hed across embattled ons were killed and 30 fficials said, in the at- opean secret army ter- he Oran prison where ms were held, mostly es in support of Al- pendence. rists set off an explo- re and then locked the a attempt to keep the apped inside. The raid- cans of gasoline and butane gas inside the ound, causing a violent iremen had great trou- out. nd Explosives s, a 12-pound charge was found aboard a occan air transport ly before it was sched- off on a return flight rnca, where sympathy erian nationalists runs blamed the bomb plot pean Secret Army Or- said a slow burning two yards long had efore the fire reached e in a sack hid1den un- !ardess on the super n plane had gone nspect the cabin before were loaded. She no- nge odor and the pilot sack hidden under a ack Newsman lgiers; a foreign news- ashed in the face with an attack by two Euro- s. The wound was not opened in Algiers with reaking wave of 135 .b explosions in a 90- Iod before dawn. The ed only a dozen people, e, mostly to Moslem cafes, was estimated at SClosingf schools ND (R) - Virginia's Court held yesterday e Edward County is onstitutional obligation public schools.'/ tral Virginia county its public school sys- years ago to avoid ed classroom integra- then white children oing to private schools Negro children have ools. I -AP wirephoto ALGIERS STREET SCENE-In a pre-dawn demonstration of its strength, the Secret Army Organization exploded 135 plastic bombs within 90 minutes. A Moslem woman and child walk in a rubble- strewn street. TOURS VENEZUELA, PERU: Hatcher To Study Unrest In South American Schools Later this week, University President Harlan Hatcher will begin, his month-long tour of Venezuela and Peru for the Ford Foundation, but he'll also be anxious to study the student situation on his own. "The unrest among students there is not easily explained," the president said yesterday. "But because of it, both the national university at Caracus, and San Marcos University in Lima have been Boycot TO Consider OSA Report Student Government Council Will consider recommendations suggested by four committees for major changes in the Office of Student Affairs Study Committee report at a special meeting at 7 p.m. today. Any adopted recommendations will be sent to Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis as the;SGC comment on the Reed Report. The structure committee will recommend that the proposed Executive Council 'for Student Af- fairs be made a policy setting group reporting directly to the Regents, that it advise them,on OSA administrative appointments and that the proposed dean and associate dean of student posts be abolished. The rule making committee will ask that the proposed executive council be composed of represen- tatives of SGC and the Faculty Senate's Student- Relations Com- mittee. It will also suggest that the Ju- dicial Advisory Council be abol- ished and its functions be taken over by the executive council. Brian Glick, '62, will submit a minority report urging mandatory due process in judiciaries and a rule-making role for the proposed executive council. The philosophy committee will comment adversely against the inferior role of students in rule- making in its report to the Coun- cil. Nine To Run In SGC Race Nine candidates will run for six Student Government Council seats in the SGC election March 20 and 21. Running re T-Toward Abrams. Commission and Leonard P. Rea- ume, an owner of the Pittsfield project. The Council then passed a reso- lution presented by a councilman, Prof. Lynn W. Eley, of the politi- cal science department, which not- ed that "discrimination in hous- ing is contrary to public policy" of the city of Ann Arbor. Several months ago, Eley had proposed a fair housing ordinance which was referred to the Human Relations Commission for study. Need Ordinance "I do not believe that we can cope effectively with problems of discrimination in housing unless we have an ordinance with penal- ties," he said. A sheet handed out by the pick- eters to passers-by complained of the breakdown in negotiations with Reaume and claimed wide- spread support in Pittsfield Vil- lage itself. The sheet also noted the backing of the Ann Arbor Democratic Party and Ann Arbor Congress of Racial Equality. De Gaulle Stresses Propaganda, Disptes Surrounding Parley PARIS ()-The French govern- ment last night said it would boy- cott the disarmament conferenc opening in Geneva March 14 be. cause it did not believe the meet ing could achieve positive results The move reduced the numbe: of conference nations from 18 ti 17. A statement issued by th French foreign ministry said tha it was hoped that later "it migh appear possible to organize, in a atmosphere clear of any spirit o polemics ' or propaganda, discus sions on the problem of disarma. ment, as well as on the other bli problems of the world, between th powers which can effectively con tribute to their solution." Former Stand The statement was a reiteratio of the position taken by Presiden Charles de-Gaulle when he replie to the proposal by Soviet Premie Nikita Khrushchev for an 18-na tion summit meeting on disarma ment. De Gaulle said he felt that a four-power conference would b more advisable. He indicated h felt nothing could be gained, b; bringing in non-atomic powers t the talks. De Gaulle also wanted the talk to be based on French suggestion for destroying all atomic stock piles and setting up tight control on' atomic delivery systems. List Implications The boycott could be an ex pression of de Gaulle's hostilit toward the United Nations. Th conference brings together mem bers of a special_ UN commtte on disarmament. De Gaulle long has considere the UN an ineffective organizatio and given little support to its ac tivities With the French out of th talks, the Western lineup at th March 14 conference will be th United States, Britain, Canada an Italy. The Communist bloc will corni prise Russia, Bulgaria, Czechoslo vakia, Poland and Romania. Neutral Nations In addition, there will be thes neutralists: Brazil, Burma, Ethic pia, India, Mexico, Nigeria, Swe den and the United Arab Repub lie. France's long-standing positio' on disarmament has been that a' atomic stockpiles be destroyed an strict control be instituted ove delivery systems. Bursley Sees 'Tough Battle' On Enrollineni Defenders of the University high out-of-state enrollment fac a "tough battle" in the legislatu this session with state legislatol who want to severely cut the pref ent rate, says Rep. Gilbert E Bursley (R-Ann Arbor). "Their opposition will be a m jor problem this session. It will t difficult to maintain the stat quo," he commented Friday. Rep. Bursley warned that a ei in out-of-state enrollment may 1 unconstitutional and "would I damaging on the morale and t1± cosmopolitan strength of the Un versity." Bursley commented that Ia spring, when the sponsors of bill to limit out-of-state enrol ment to 15 per cent announc6 their intentions, he asked them 1 "wait until next year." Rep. Bursley said that the cau of the movement to cut out-o. state enrollment appears to be fear among constituents of th ECONOMIC HISTORY: Describes 19th-Century India closed." He recalled dissatisfaction that institution moved its physical plant from the center of Mexico City to the outskirts, but he said the unrest was explained by the various problems that the shift brought about. Protest Move "Students barricaded the' Uni- versity and the army had to be called in. Fortunately there was no armed conflict," he said. "However, the Latin American situation goes deeper than that,. I think. Perhaps two factors are instrumental: "First, when one registers as a member of a Latin American Uni- versity, he has a permanent mem- bership, whether he attends classes or not. Therefore, some persons register and .then devote their efforts organizing small cells. Their mission is purely political, and so is the unrest they create. Mobile Faculty "Second, these universities have no permanent faculty. There teachers are, by and large, pro- fessional people who come out from town to teach a course for a semester or two." The president added that this fact tended to decrease the aura of stability at the university. He said that this survey was not a part of the Ford mission but an interest of his own. "I don't know how far into the matter I'll get," he said. "But I'll make all the inquires I can." Contract Talks May Resume WASHINGTON (P) - President John F. Kennedy administration may issue a call today to steel negotiators to get back into ses- sion on labor contract talks, pos- sibly sometime next week. - at the University of Mexico when Units Clash In Katanga ELISABETHVILLE (P) --Shoot- ing flared between United Nations troops and President Moise Tshom- be's armed forces in Northwest Katanga yesterday, menacing the truce in effect since the battle of Elisabethville last December. Both sides agreed hostilities erupted at Kaminaville, 12 miles south of the Belgian-built, UN- garrisoned military and air base at Kamina. Each side blamed the other. Tshombe charged 1,200 UN troops attacked Kaminaville,' launching the assault with a heavy mortar and artillery barrage short- ly before noon. Attack Troops A UN spokesman in Leopoldville, Dik Lehmkuhl, denied this. He de- clared Katanga gendarmes at- tacked UN troops in the area and that the latter returned the fire "to extricate themselves." Indian and Swedish troops normally man the sprawling col- lection of military installations and hangare at Kamina. It is a base for Swedish, Ethiopian and Indian jet fighters and bombers, but Tshombe said he received no reports that aircraft were sent aaginst Kaminaville. Many Wounded He said the town held out in bitter fighting and that there was an undetermined number of killed and wounded on both sides. Tshombe told a news conference "this (Kaminaville) attack is a deliberate attempt by the UN to, sabotage my talks with Premier Cyrille Adoula." But he added, "It will not succeed." By JAMES NICHOLS "A confusing bedlam of chaotic infomation which is difficult to plow through" makes the study of the 19th Century economic history of India difficult according to Prof. Morris D. Morris of the University of Washington economics depart- ment. Prof. Morris spoke on "Some As- pects of Indian Economic Growth and Stagnation During the Nine- teenth Century" at 8:00 last night at Rackham. Prof. Morris cited "political in- stability" as an important factor determining India's economic ac- tivity. Because of India's great size, its insufficient water trans- portation, the monsoons which seasonally interrupted communi- cations, and the absence in India Though few records are avail- able for the 100 years before 1880, he felt that the growth rate was "relatively slow" in the early 19th Century. Prof. Morris questioned the "great myth" of a huge Indian textile industry supposedly de- stroyed by competition with mass- produced English cloth. Most of the textile industry grew in India in response to European demand, he said. Only.an "infinitesimally small percentage of the population" was engaged in making fine textiles, he explained. Most of the Indian weavers were producing coarse cloth with which the British could not compete effectively because of transportation costs. Import Yarn mh- cr . sr inh 7 Ain i rfn market for Indian hand - loom cloth," he said. Prof. Morris cited a "frontier movement of significant impor- tance" during the 19th Century in India. Once political stability had been established by the British, capital became available for culti- vating additional lands. Begin Specializing "A tendency toward regional specialization developeddwhich saw a larger proportion of the land devoted to the crop best suited for it," he said. Because these advantages were not offset by an increased popula- tion growth rate, they resulted in a high per capita income for the Indians, he said. Prof. Morris attributed the de- mia- in nr,.ni+. irmemaftr. I I