TUESDAY, APRIL 24,196Z TnE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRJL 24, 1962 'I'UL MICHIGAN DAILY aCaVL A. AMR High Court Allows State Ruling In Legislative Distribution Case Tests To Seek New Warhead WASHINGTON P) -- United States scientists and military chiefs, poised for a new series of nuclear tests, hope to find ways to pack even greater destructive power into smaller warheads. Informed sources said yester- day a major aim of these aerial tests, the first such shocks in the Pacific in nearly four years, will be to increase the efficiency of United States missile warheads and nuclear bombs. Experiments looking toward more efficient warheads will come in what are called "weapon ef- fects" tests in which nuclear de- vices-as distinguished from fin- ished weapons-are exploded un- Professors View Results Of Verdict By MARK BLUCHER "The return of the Scholle ver- sus Hare case to the Michigan Su- preme Court is a very healthy thing," Prof. George Peak of the political science department said yesterday. "It is in line with the Baker versus Carr decision (the Tennes- see Case) and it may go even further. It will force the constitu- tional convention to think serious- ly about what it will propose to the voters and it will make the delegates look more carefully at proposals using population-based representation," he continued. "The only reason that the Mich- igan Supreme Court has not taken action before this was due to the question of justifiability. This question is now settled and the Court must take cognizance of this fact and do something about it," Prof. John White of the poli- tical science department said. Second Reading "Since con-con is approaching second reading on reapportion- ment the issue is more significant, for an effort will probably be made to amend the text of the Senate apportionment proposal," Prof. White continued. "While the Baker versus Carr case influenced some of the dele- gates this decision is likely to cause more consideration on the reap- portionment issue." "The fact that the new Senate apportionment system is not scheduled to go into effect until 1970 raises the question of wheth- er the Michigan Supreme Court will wait ten years to make a de- cision or whether the convention will decide to put the plan into ef- fect at once," Prof. White said. Cannot Know Attitude "One cannot know the attitude of the state high court but it is interesting to note that they will be passing on the present consti- tutional language while con-con is changing that same language." "This is only one of many cases which will extend and implement the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the historic Baker versus Carr decision," Prof. White commented. U.S., Soviets Agree To Talk on Berlin WASHINGTON () - Secretary of State Dean Ruk and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly S. Dobrynin agreed yesterday to conduct fu- ture talks on the Berlin crisis here in Washington, United States sources said yesterday. This was described as the main result of a 50-minute conference this afternoon. Guatemala Notes Cuban Arms Ship GUATEMALA CITY (P)- The government said last night a Cu- ban ship carrying guns, saboteurs and explosives was moving toward this Central American area. Sets Bases f f Of Authority In Michigan .M< -Decision Gives Notice Not To Avoid Issues I:WASHINGTON (P) - The Su- preme Court told state courts yes- Gterday that they have the author- ity to rule on claims tha distribu- tion of state legislative seats vio- lates the federal constitution. ~. .. -- .* * * ,,.:, / After *@ * Find yours in this OUTSTANDING COLLECTION. A dazzling array! FASHION F1 PRICED TO C Suits-Dre Beautiful SPRIl WOOL and and 4 NOVELTIES of wo orig. 35.00 to 59.95 Orig. now from 25.00 now 14.98 to 39.00 Group Group, Foam back 2-pie FEATHERWEIGHT at 14 COATS DRES at 19.00 of ev from sh ort( 2 groupshta RAIN 'N SHINE Coats 12/2 8.98 and 14.98 origir 14.98 GI RDLES now BRAS-HOSIERY 8.98 I A I I BOOK, SALE TODA Y at- FOLLEIT' S rouse uroup To Send Act To Conference WASHINGTON (UPS) - Mem- bers of the House rules committee have agreed to allow President John F. Kennedy's college aid bill to go to a House-Senate confer- ence committee. The bill has lain dormant for over two months since the two houses passed widely differing ver- sions of the bill.1 The $2.7 billion Senate version would provide a five-year program for federal scholarships and loans to public and private colleges and public junior colleges. The House bill, totalling only $1.5 billion, calls for no scholar- ships, and a five-year program to aid construction in public, pri- vate, and church-connected col- leges. Sixty per cent of this aid would take the form of matching grants and 40 per cent of low in- terest loans. The main trouble in reaching a compromise is expected to arise over the costly scholarship pro- gram, which many conservatives feel Senate liberals will try to push through on an all-or-nothing basis attached to the more popu- lar construction program. Although some Congressmen are pessimistic, supporters of the bill feel a suitable compromise can be reached, perhaps one which would attach a student aid to the present federal student loan sys- tem. day. * * * NEW YORK - An unemployed Negro sent here from Louisiana by a segregationist group said yester- day he had decided to accept a job as a $100-a-week handyman and freight loader. MOSCOW - The newly chosen Supreme Soviet, or Russian parlia- ment, opened yesterday. ** * WASHINGTON - The State Department announced yesterday it will start today its first passport revocation hearings under its new regulations barring passports to Communists. PALM BEACH-President John F. Kennedy yesterday picked Vice Adm. Edwin J. Roland for promo- tion to Commandant of the United States Coast Guard. * * * SAIGON - Viet Cong rebels opened fire on a motorboat on the Saigon River Sunday. * * * BERLIN-Numerous Soviet jets took to the air around the ap- proaches to Berlin yesterday and Western airline pilots were warned by the radar control center in the city to be careful. * * * HAVANA - Two Swiss diplo- mats flew to the Isle of Pines yes- terday with Castro government permission to visit 17 prisoners they described as North Ameri- cans. May SuspendI Impacted Area Federal Aid WASHINGTON (UPS) - Secre- tary of Health, Education and Welfare Abraham Ribicoff has an-, nounced that federal aid to "im- pacted areas" may be cut off in areas which continue to practice segregation in schools. For the past eleven years the federal government has sponsored a program to give financial assist-. ance to school districts "impacted", by large numbers of children, whose parents work and often live on military installations, so that they usually pay no local school taxes. Besides cutting off such aid to those of these schools which still practice segregation, Ribicoff is contemplating a federal test suit to challenge segregation in school districts now receiving aid under the impacted areas program. The new policy, a departure from that practiced previously un- der both the Eisenhower and Ken- nedy administrations, will prob- ably have only limited immediate effects, but its long-run effects could be great. In 1961 for exam- ple, the 17 southern and border states received a total of over $12 and % million under this program. Textured rayon and silk in custard, pink, or black. 7 to 15. 27.95. See our special showing of LANZ Dresses May 4th, 1-4 P.M. 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