HOW TO END GERRYMANDERING See Page 4 Y 5k 43Ufl a ~IaiIA& MOSTLY CLOUDY High-45 Low-35 Not much temperature change through weekend. Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXII No. 125 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1962 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAC SGC Accepts Report, Refuses To Seat lion ber L,; Fl + * * * * * * * * * wsU 'Package' Includes Tuition, Funds Vocalists Vie for Victo --Dai SING WINNERS SING-The women of Martha Cook and the men of West Quadran House last night copped first-place honors in the annual Inter-Quadrangle Council-Ass tion Sing. Their selection was "Shenandoah." Second place went to Jordan Hall and also In West.Quad, for a rendition of "On the Gallows Tree." The third slot was Vaughn dormitory and West Quad's Williams House for their performance of a medle show tunes. UNIQUE FINANCING: Deta College Asks Expan Increases ry May SwapFesHk ry r;::rFor Outlay Proposal Resembles Last Fall's Offer With Minor Changes By CAROLINE DOW Wayne State University has re- newed its proposition to the Legis- lature to raise tuition in exchange for a $120 dollar increase per stu- dent in its appropriation. With minor changes, the "pack- age deal" offered to the Legisla- ture last fall has been renewed. WSu would raise its tuition by $30 g semester, making its rates the same as the University's, and the Legislature would raise the ap- propriation by four times that amount Such a plan would increase WSU's tuition revenue by about $600,000 and its tax income by about $2.4 million. ly--Bruce Taylor Revisions igle's Michigan The offer, originally on a three embly Associa- year basis, has been reduced to Adams House, one year and the provision that won by Victor tuition payment could be deferred y of Broadway has been dropped. "Since we could not bind next year's Legislature, we decided to work on a one-year basis and the deferred payment provision was too confusing," a spokesman for WSU said,., The first proposal by WSU was informally discussed by the Michi- slon gan State Presidents Council but no decision was reached on the subject. The original proposal was ty colleges evolv- not accepted by the Legislature. r institutions. WSU officials plan to take the it even considered revised package to the Legislature e State Presidents next week. Tuition will not be ordinating Coun- raised if they do not accept the o late to be con- plan. stitutional status No Effect Here joining the coun- This deal, accepted or not, will in the future to have no particular effect on the t now," he said. University, University Executive Vice-President Marvin L. Niehuss said. ster The Legislative Committee on appropriations will continue to discuss fee increases and is in- snes terested in what an institution will do to find more money," he said. "The offer for fee increase ething we have shows that WSU's heart is in Wne stitute for several right place," but it will probably k said. "I am quite not effect the University, he said. ceed and it will If the Legislature does not give eat benefit to the more money than the governor has asked for, then the University will need more money," he said. tyS Corps Others Intact WSU's appropriation was the erviCe only one cut last year as the Legis- lature kept all other university ia (P)-A leftist and college allotments the same. ,the West African WSU, at that time, had to iut e American Peace its student body by refusing fresh- as "an auxiliary men already accepted. nited States secret The Detroit university also had to trim down the size of its med- ials expressed sur- ical school and summer session itterness of the programs as well as taking other n spread. economy measures. Wisdom Said Key To :Future President Claims History Aids U.S. BERKELEY (P)-President John F. Kennedy, before the largest crowd he has ever addressed in one place, declared yesterday that the tide of history is sweeping the world away from Communism to- ward democracy and freedom. "Knowledge, not hate, is the passkey to the future," Kennedy told an audience of 88,000, largest crowd in the history of the Univer- sity of California's 80,000 seat Me- morial Stadium. Mankind must seek eternally to acquire knowledge and apply it with wisdom, he said in a speech prepared for delivery at the cele- bration of the 94th anniversary of the university's charter day. History Beneficial And with a revolution for na- tional independence "a fundamen- tal fact in our era," the President asserted, "no one who examines the modern world can doubt that the great currents of history are carrying the world away from the monolithic idea toward the plural- istic idea-away from Communism and toward democracy and free- dom." While Americans may look with confidence on the direction history is taking the world, Kennedy said, they must reject "oversimplified theories of international life." Among these he cited "the theory that American power is unlimited, or that the American mission is to remake the world in the American image." Foreign Aid In its aid programs, Kennedy said, the United States must try to help newly developing countries achieve "genuine national inde- pendence." Its military policies, he added, must help other nations "protect the processes of democratic reform and developmentiagainst disrup- tion and intervention." The possibility of Soviet co- operation in space enterprises "opens up exciting prospcts of collaboration in other areas of learning," Kennedy said. "And cooperation in the pursuit of knowledge can hopefully lead to cooperation in the pursuit of peace." Group Pickets Kennedy Tall BERKELEY (P)-A picket line two blocks long, protesting federal administration actions, marched in front of the University of Cali- fornia Memorial Stadium yester- day as crowds surged by to hear President John F. Kennedy speak. Some signs read: "JFK Stinks," "Stop Testing," "Who Approved the War in Viet Nam?" "Peace in Cuba," "Abolish HUAC." The picket line was organized by an ad hoc committee at the university two hours before the start of Kennedy's address within the stadium. A committee spokesman esti- mated there were 500 pickets in the line. Their march wasfbrisk and orderly. A single uniformed officer watched them, but crowds hurrying to the stadium paid little attention. JOHN A. HANNAH ... seeks postponement Delta College President Samuel Marble is "cautiously optimistic" about the possibility of the Legis- lature's approving making Delta a four-year institution. The Senate passed the bill 30-0 last week; the proposal comes be- fore the House of Representatives in the near future. The bill would make Delta a unique experiment in Michigan higher education. Lists Powers It would grant the college au- thority to give degrees, make Delta eligible for state appropriations and allow the three counties which support Delta to vote one-half mill more of taxes to the college's operation. Delta, a community college for the Bay City, Saginaw and Mid- land triangle, has also been offered $3 million additional support from a local corporation for capital im- provements if it can raise a matching $1 million by the end of the year. The matching money could come partly from private and local aid. Thus, if all goes well, Delta will be supported by state, local and pri- vate sources of income, a unique financial position for a Michigan institution. Future Expansion Already serving a day-student body of 4,000, over 90 per cent of which are from the three support- ing counties, Delta expects to ex- pand to 7,000 students by 1972. Formed less than a year ago by Legislative action, Delta is on tri- mester and will begin its third semester/next month. Delta's formation and expansion is part of a statewide movement Frost To Read Own Poems Robert Frost, the American poet who was scheduled to have been the major speaker at the Creative Arts Festival, will be' coming in- stead to Ann Arbor on April 2. His appearance at the Festival was cancelled due to illness. Wrmt will rt-admi, o rf hie nw Asks Recess Of Con-Con LANSING MP)-A proposal that the Constitutional Convention re- cess about April 15 and then re- convene after the November elec- tions was presented yesterday by John A. Hannah (R-East Lans- ing), Hannah, president of Michigan State University, made the sugges- tion in a speech on the convention floor in which he acknowledged that there would be several ob- stacles to overcome. Most delegates sampled at ran- dom threw cold water on the idea, some terming it "ridiculous and impractical." More Sessions Under the Hannah proposal, the convention awould expand its work schedule so that the delegates would meet three sessions a day, five days a week. Sessions would run from 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., with breaks for lunch and dinner. The convention then might be able to complete first and second reading consideration of all mat- ters and recess by April 15, recon- vening Nov. 12, the Monday after the election. Hannah indicated he felt there was too much political wrangling over the proposed new constitu- tion. Outlines Benefits He said the new calendar would: -Permit public reaction to be heard on all the convention's ten- tative decisions for the guidance of the delegates. -Complete work on the consti- tution at a date much closer to the April 1963 election when it' will be submitted to the voters. Hannah proposed that the com- mittee on style and drafting as- semble a tentative constitutional document for the information of all the people so that they might have an opportunity to give dele- gates their guidance in the recess interim. Chilly Reaction The idea got a cool reception from most delegates. George Romney (R-Bloomfield Hills) who hopes to get the Re- publican nomination for gover- nor, said he would take no position on the proposal and would abstain if it came up for a vote on the floor. Some GOP delegates said that perhaps as many as 30 conven- tion members may decide to run for the Legislature. Under the pre- vailing legal interpretation, such delegates must resign before the election is held. that prohobits circulation of peti- tions in the Michigan Union. He was exonerated because he had reported the violation to the elections director and satisfactor- ily completed requirements set by the director to rectify it. Thursday the Committee receiv- ed a complaint that Monberg had submitted false information to the elections director and deliberately falsified his testimony. Invalidation "Since the requirements set by the elections director were based upon false information presented by Monberg, the legal rectification which Monberg claimed was inval- id,' the report stated. "Monberg deliberately falsified his testimony before the commit- tee," and thus it was recommend- ed that he not be seated. The difference between the cases of Monberg and Miss Ford as pointed out in the report were that "Monberg testified falsely" whereas Miss Ford "testified hon- estly" and "if the Council were to seat Monberg it would allow to go unpenalized two instances of fal- sification of information and an established and legally unrecti-; fied violation of its petition rules." Ford Already Penalized Miss Ford, the report noted, has already been penalized by disqual- ification from. the election. In the report the committee ex- plained a candidate had been dis- qualified if he had deliberately violated a petition or election rule with knowledge of the rule, or if a candidate accidentally violated a rule and did not report it to the election official. In the latter case, the candidate would have to follow procedures which that official stated would legally rectify the violatioh. No Action on Stuffing The committee considered a number of complaints concerning ballot stuffing, but was not able to substantiate any of the charges. The report emphasized that the committee did not recommend the election be invalidated because of extensive irregularities and/or frauds in the election process it- self. The report stated that even the number and character of the al- leged irregularities would not have significantly distorted the election results. Irregularities in the petitioning- process are not of the same status as irregularities in the entire elec- tion and do not merit the invali- dation of the entire election, the report explained. Complaints against candidates not elected to the Council were not considered. A complaint against Batlle was studied, witnesses were called, but it was not substanti- ated. Claim Deliberate Lie Given in Testimony Consider Complaints Concerning Ballot-Stuffing During Election By CYNTHIA NEU Student Government Council refused to seat Lawrence Monberg, '63, yesterday after accepting the final report of its Credentials and Rules Committee concerning the disqualification and seating of can- didates, and the certification of the election. Before Kenneth Miller, '64, Richard G'sell, '64E, Katherine Ford, '64, Howard Abrams, '63, and Fred Batlle, '64A&D, took their places as the newly-elected members of the Council, the committee report was read, outlining the reasons for not seating Monberg. His half-year position will remain unfilled until the Council takes further action. Continuous Session The committee, which had been meeting for more than 24 con- secutive hours, explained in its report that on Tuesday Monberg had been found in violation of a ruling to establish and expand commun- ity colleges. Delta would be the first community college to become a four-year institution and this action may pave the way for simi- lar moves. As of yet, the newly - formed Michigan State Coordinating Council for Public Higher Educa- tion has not considered this ques- tion of communi ing into four-yea Marble has no Joining either the Council or the Co cil. "We were to sidered for con; at Con-Con and, cils is too far think about righ Students Pre-Regi Committees To Propose School Deanls By JUDITH OPPENHEIM University Executive Vice-Presi- dent Marvin L. Niehuss has an- nounced three committees which will select chairmen of the literary college, the dentistry school and the school of natural resources. Prof. Donald M. Dennison, chair- man of the physics department, heads the committee choosin a new literary college dean to suc- ceed Roger W. Heyns, who has taken the post of vice-president for academic affairs. Professors Angus Canipbell; di- rector of the survey research cen- ter, Samuel J. Eldersveld of the political science department, Ger- ald F. Else, chairman of the classi- cal studies department, William Frankena of the philosophy de- partment and William J. LeVeque of the mathematics department are members of Prof. Dennison's committee. The dentistry school dean will be selected by a committee headed by Dr. Robert E. Doerr. Members are Dr. William E. Brown, Jr., Dr. Paul Gibbons, Dr. James R. Hay- ward, Dr. Donald A. Kerr, Dr. George E. Myers and Dr. Louis C. Schultz. Prof. G. Robinson Gregory heads the committee choosing a natural resources school chairman. Others are Prof. John E. Bardach, Prof. Stanley E. Cain, Prof. Achibald B. Cowan and Prof. Alan A. Marra. The literary college committee has nothyet begun its meetings. The other two committees have been meeting since November. Niehuss said the groups have been asked to aim for April as a tentative conclusion date. He noted however, that the com- mittees will deliberate as long as is necessary to find the best possi- ble men for the positions. Congo Talks Grind to Halt LEOPOLDVILLE (') - Unity talks between Premier Cyrille Adoula and Katanga President Moise Tshombe have reached a crisis, usualy reliable sources said yesterday. The informants said the trouble came when Tshombe insisted that he must be regarded as a chief of state negotiating with anothe chief. Persons in touch with the talk expressed pessimism and one called this "the showdown stage.' The informants said Adoula i annoyed at Tshombe's insistenc that any agreement reached on ar end to Katanga's secession musi be referred to the Katangan par. liament in Elizabethville for rati- fication. Adoula wants to talk solely or the basis of the eight points the two leaders reached at Kiton last December, they said. The pre- mier holds that Tshombe alone can commit his copper-rich prov- ince to return to Leopoudville' rule. Korean General rr 1 1 The agonizing experience of en- tering registration with a beauti- ful program only to discover all one's planned courses already closed may soon become a mere memory. ! Under the University's new pro- gram of pre-registration for most frequently elected courses, Edward G. Groesbeck, director of the of- fice of registration and records, says nearly every student should be able to register for the program he selects. For the past two weeks, stu- dents wishing to enroll in astron- omy, 111, botany 101 and 102, chemistry 222, English 231, 232 and 269, Latin 103 and 211, philos- ophy 131, 133 and 134, psychology 100, 101, 110 and 410 and zoology 101, 103, 251 and 282 have been pre-registering for these courses on a "first come, first serve" basis. Students wishing to enroll in these courses first see their coun- selors and then go to the Admin- istration Bldg. to fill out class cards and sign up. This system allows the registra- tion office to tellthe departments which courses are in demand so that they may make necessary adjustments in faculty and room assignments and to expand cer- tain offerings. When all possible sections are filled, counselors will be notified so that they will be able to advise students to change their programs months in advance instead of dur- ing the hectic three days of regis- 4-,. fin,, 1 "This is som been hoping to in years," Groesbeck sure it will suc certainly be a gr students." Paper Sa 'Secret St LAGOS, Niger Lagos newspaper Pilot, attacked th Corps yesterday branch of the Ur service." American offici prise at the :b Pilot's six-colum SWAINSON SPEAKS: SAcademy Views State, Research,.Finance By ROBERT SELWA A symposium on "Psychology and Civil Defense" at 2:30 p.m. today in Auditorium A will climax the 66th annual meeting of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters. Leading the symposium will be Prof. Ross Stagner of Wayne State University, moderator; J. David Singer, associate research political scientist in the Mental Health Research Institute; Prof. Stephen B. Withey of the psychology department, and Professors David D. Berlow and Malcolm S. MacLean of Michigan State University. Yesterday the 22 sections of the academy met for the presentation of manuscripts and for discussions. Prof. Willis F. Dunbar of Western Michigan University analyzed By BUEL TRAPNELL Gov. John B. Swainson yesterday told the economics section of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters that research is the means by which the state will regain its leadership in industry. His speech was followed by a panel discussion of Michigan's, economic future, moderated by Prof. Daniel Fusfeld of the economics department. "To me, it is as if Michigan industry is short-changing itself by not putting its brainpower to work," the governor said. "Our university scientists could have done just what has been done in Massachusetts and California in scientific-industrial development." Emphasizes Research Need