Colleges Face { 'Baby Boom By ROBERT FARRELL Michigan's colleges and universities will soon be facing the "baby boom"-and in addition to the increase in facilities needed to accommodate the added students, there are two problems that must be faced, a new report from the Institute of Publics Administration indicates. First, population figures indicate that there will be a lack of faculty man power, and second, the state's colleges are misplaced in relation to its population. Prof. David Goldberg of the sociology department, program director at the Institute of Public Administration, indicates in k his study on "College Enrollment Potential in Michigan, 1960 75" that there just won't be enough young adults to provide new faculty members to keep up with rising enrollments. r College Population Increases And the enrollments themselves may rise at greater and greater rates, he explains, due not only; to increases in the college-age population, but to increases in the percentage of this group which goes to college. This percentage might even+ reach 50 per sent, he says, basing his figures on the rise in the similar figures for the past decade. Twenty years ago, the number of people between the ages x of 25 and 34 (the group that would provide new faculty) was fourteen times the number in college. Now it is only seven times, and soon, Prof. Goldberg says, it may be cut in half <. again. College Locations Wrong Further, Michigan's colleges just aren't where its people are-and with more students per family expected in the near future, and the problems of student housing, more provision must be made for colleges near the students' homes, Even compared with the present distribution of colleges in California, Prof. Goldberg found, Michigan's situation is poor The metropolitan area around Los Angeles contains 42.9 per cent of the state's population and 44.9 per cent of its students. San Francisco contains 17.7 per cent of the popula- tion and 18.5 per cent of the students. And the rest of the California figures run about the same way.: Michigan's Percentages But in Michigan, the Detroit area contains 48.5 per cent of the population and 28.5 per cent of the students. Lansing's equivalent figures are 3.8 per cent and 15.9 per cent and Ann9 Arbor's, 2.2 per cent and 21.9 per cent. Thus, new facilities must be developed in the metropolitan" areas if the state's higher educational system is to provide fully for the needs of the future, Prof. Goldberg says. _i INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS: Business Leaders Confer On 'Michigan's Future' By CAROLINE DOW Thirteen major formulae strengthening Michigan economy through management action were discussed yesterday at the business school's Bureau of Industrial Relations conference.. Roblee B. Martin, president of a Michigan cement company, gave the keynote address on the "Management Action for Michigan's Future" conference. Speaking on Michigan industry's responsibility vfor its own future, Martin stressed that management must cultivate ">research to keep up with the new products and operations. Management must be flexible in :.Y order to meet the fluctuations of consumer demand and the business cycle. The need for politically f 4 $: informed and personally active businessmen in the field of politics is a must for a fair political at- mosphere in Michigan. "When the businessman fails to speak--nobody else is going to speak for him," Michigan Cham- ber of Commerce executive vice- president Harry R. Hall said. Y Srra Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom ~1taitF VOL. LXXII, No. 3 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1961 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES SGC To Get OSA Letter From Lewis Power, Wheeler Leave Vacancies By JUDITH OPPENHEIM At tonight's Student Govern- ment Council meeting Council President Richard Nohl, '62BAd, will read a letter from Vice-Pres- ident for Student Affairs James A. Lewis regarding student par- ticipation on the committee to study the Office of Student Af- fairs. The Council will consider Lewis' communication and the question of student representation on the committee. It will also receive a copy of the procedure for filling vacancies left by members' resignations. Philip Power, a special student last year and Mary Wheeler, have left the Council. Filling Vacancies The procedure, adopted in 1957, provides that vacancies left be- tween elections shall be filled by all-campus petitioning and in- terviews to be conducted by a special board. The board is to be composed of the executive committee of SGC one elected member and an ex- officio member, both chosen on recommendation by the executive committee and approved by the Council. The Council plan provides that these interim appointments will extend only until the next SGC election. Submits Motion The executive committee will submit a motion that Brian Glick, '61 and Assembly Association President Sally Jo Sawyer, '61, elected and ex-officio members of the Council respectively be ap- pointed to serve in the Interview- ing Board. The motion also proposes that the SGC president shall convene the interviewing board after peti- tions have been received. Under old business, the Coun- cil will consider a motion by In- ter-Quadrangle Council President Thomas Moch, '62, regarding "pink slip" reports made out by the quad educational staffs on quad residents. Approves Slips The motion, introduced at the May 18 meeting last year, ex- presses approval of these slips but recommends that their existence and nature be made known to res- idents. The reports, which are submit- ted to the Dean of Men's office, become a part of the student's permanent record. They are used by quad staff members and some- times their contents are summar- ized for potential employers re- questing information on individ- ual University students. They ask for comment on study habits, motivations and general attitudes of the student and con- clude with recommendation that he be approved, conditionally ap- proved or disapproved for read- mission into the quad system. The SGC meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. on the third floor of the Student Activities Bldg. Meetings are open and anyone who wishes to do so may attend. Students wishing to express opinions at the meeting may speak during constituents' time. { THE EMPTY CHAIR-The seat at the far right of General As- sembly President Frederick Boland of Ireland (center) and As- sistant Secretary-General Andrew Cordier was usually occupied by the late Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold (above). His tragic death left his position unfilled, with the Soviets lobbying for their 'Troika' plan, -AP wirephoto Russians Press for bourns Il *0 'Troika ,Pl an tma k l As UN 4> Truce Talks 13-POINT PLAN: S commence In Kata nga Khiari Takes Over For Hammarskjold NDOLA, Northern Rhodesia (P- A Tunisian United Nations official took Dag Hammarskjold's vacant chair and opened truce talks with Katanga President Moise Tshombe here yesterday. The role of head negotiator for the UN fell to Mahmoud Khiari, chief of civil operations in the Congo. A probe of the plane crash that killed the secretary-general and 14 of his 15 companions paralleled the delayed negotiations. Expert opinion tended to dis- count speculation that Hammar- skjold's four-engine DC6B might have been felled by sabotage or Katanga gunfire. Veteran pilots who viewed the fire-blackened wreckage in a forest reserve north of this neutral cop- per mining center said the crash appeared typical of the results of a; power failure or faulty instrumen- tation. There was no elaboration of a report Monday by the lone sur- vivor-Harry Julien, a 36-year-old American UN, security guard--that a series of explosions shook the plane before it plunged into the forest. Badly burned and only semi- conscious when he was pulled from the wreckage, Julien was reported to be as comfortable as could be expected in a Ndola hospital, but not in shape for questioning. "He is still very ill and under heavy sedation," a hospital sp3okes- man said. "He has not spoken since he was brought here." Col. Bjorn Egge, UN intelligence chief, said a forensic surgeon has been flown in to establish how the victims died-whether in the air or on the ground. 0Uae IU SOP Gets 'Moderate' Plan By HARRY PERLSTADT A proposal which will expedite "the present Republican platform into a legislative program," in- cluding state support for higher education and scientific research, has been sent out to all state Re- publicans prior to the GOP State Central Committee meeting in St. Joseph Saturday. The proposal, drawn up this August in Traverse City by eight Republican moderates, among them Sen. Stanley G. Thayer (R- Ann Arbor), covers 13 problems facing Michigan. In addition to higher education, the areas of mental health, economic growth, taxation and civil rights are dealt with. "There is a moral responsibil- ity to translate programs into bills which become laws: We wish to meet the state's needs by facing the issues," Thayer said. Fundamental Failure The eight moderates believe in state aid to education and scien- tific research. "If we fail to sup- port our schools properly it will be fundamentally a failure to un- derstand their purpose in our civ- ilization," the proposal states. Thayer explained that the 13- Rusk, Gromyko Plan Berlin Talks UNITED NATIONS ()-Secre- tary of State Dean Rusk and So- viet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko are considering arrange- ments to hold their first Berlin crisis discussions here tomorrow. The first contact on setting up the crisis talks was made at the United Nations General Assembly meeting yesterday by United States diplomat Charles E. Bohlen and Soviet Deputy Foreign Minis- ter Valerian A. Zorin. rROBLEE B. MARTIN .flexible management CONGO: Brazzaville Sends Threat To Stockholm STOCKHOLM ()-The Foreign Ministry said yesterday the Con- go Republic (Brazzaville) has threatened to expel all Swedish residents unless Swedish United Nations troops pull out of rebel- lious Katanga Province in the for- mer Belgian Congo (Leopoldville). A Swedish spokesman called the report threat "a clear attempt at political blackmail." The Foreign Ministry said a 1Swedish missionary, Mrs. Linnea Almquist, was called to President Fulbert Youlou's palace in Brazza- ville yesterday and told that "if all Swedish UN troops are not evacuated from Katanga all Swedes living and working in the Congo Republic will be expelled within two days." There are about 100 Swedes- mostly .missionaries and their families - in the former French Congo, which has sided with Ka- tanga President Moise Tshombe in his secession from the former Belgian Congo. FilmShowing Draws Rebuke WASHINGTON 0P) - The Air Force said yesterday it removed two officers from their jobs and reprimanded them for violating . rr,, a-rc bino Qthe film "Oner- Political Cooperation Martin urged management to be cooperative with the political pro- cess. This cooperation would en- tail considering a compromise with labor in legislation rather than asking for all or nothing. In addition, management must actively promote a better under- standing of economics. Additional Speeches Depth discussion of.these points came in other speeches during the day. In the morning, Detroit Ed- ison assistant vice-president How- ard R. Stevenson outlined Michi- gan's economic balance sheet, credit and debit side, then Direc- tor of the Upjohn Institute for Employment Research Harold C. Taylor spoke-on the opportunities of individual firms to stabilize business in Michigan. The role of creative research in Michigan's future was outlined by See BUSINESS, Page 2 point "blueprint for action" was sent out to permit state Republi- cans to "examine the plan and be prepared to discuss and evalu- ate its merits. The directional pa- pers have not been put on the agenda of the committee meeting. We do not seek endorsement, but discussion and consideration," he said. The meeting at St. Joseph, in addition to the State Central Com- mittee meeting, will also serve as a preliminary caucus for the forthcoming Constitutional Con- vention. Featured speakers at the Clergymnen' Out on Bond ATLANTA R) - A group of Episcopal clergymen, arrested while trying to desegregate a Jack- son bus station, said yesterday that they had hoped to escape the consequences which befell "Free- dom Riders." The 13 churchmen, including a son-in-law of New York Gov. Nel- son Rockefeller, Rev. Robert L. Pierson of Evanston, gained re- lease from Jackson City Jail on $500 bond yesterday, then flew to Atlanta en route to a meeting in Detroit. At a news conference in Atlanta, the ministers said that they were not expecting special, treatment in Jackson, "but we thought we might be able to bring about the break which is bound to come sometime." The group, comprised of 10 white persons and three Negroes, planned to leave for Detroit today where they'll attend the. General Conference of the Episcopal Church. In a statement read before leav- ing Jackson, Pierson said the clergymen were arrested because they "have been engaged in a pilgrimage of prayer to testify to the nature of the Christian church. We cannot submit to the immoral laws which demand that we separate racially." The clergymen were jailed on breach of the peace charges after they refused to obey an order by a police captain to leave a .white waiting room of the Trailways bus station. The 13 and two others, who are still in jail at Jackson, were sen- tenced to four months in jail and fined $200 each. The $6,500 for their bond came from contribu- tions by Episcopalians all over the nation, Rev. B. Morris of Atlanta said. Callig You The editorial and business staffs of The Daily will hold organizational meetings at 4:15 meeting will be Sen. John Tower (R-Tex) and Rep. Clare E. Hoff- man (R-Allegan), both self-an- nounced conservatives. Hope To Educate The moderates hope to educate the Republicans on their program and to work towards it through* caucuses and the legislativercom- mittees both standing and interim, Thayer said. Part of the 13-point moderate proposal deals with the needs of higher education: "We must real- ize that while a good education is expensive, a poor education is even more expensive," the pro- gram states. Thayer explained that the mon- ey for the schools could come from re-enacting the nuisance taxes in lieu of a tax reform. But he added that the most should be obtained for the tax dollar. College Competition "Competition between our col- leges and universities in the es- tablishment and development of programs should be eliminated to avoid costly duplication in vari- ous fields," the statement said. Thayer explained that the group proposed a keen analysis of high- er education. "We must decide the purposes of various institutions. The University has a high level geared to a top graduate student program. Ferris Institute has four-year programs, mainly in technical training for electronics, printing and automation. Each school has its aims defined and each performs its own mission." The moderates advocate more "terminal courses fitting our youth for job opportunities," Thayer said, noting that a gap exists between unskilled labor and See REPUBLICANS, Page 2 Haimmarskj old Prophecised Cash Crisis UNITED NATIONS (R) - The crisis; of the United Nations is not only one of men but also one of money. The prophecy of the late Sec- retary-General Dag Hammarsk- jold was that the organization' will be "virtually without funds" by the end of this month. The trouble is that too many UN members have not paid their shares of the cost of running the UN forces in the Middle East and The Congo. In his budget proposals, Ham- marskjold warned that unless there was more financial support by early next year, it would be impossible to keep the two forces going "even on a reduced scale.". He foresaw that the United Na- tions would be almost out of cash by Sept. 30 and would have to U.S. Seeks Temporary Successor Soviet Union Insists On 'Team' To Replace Secretary-General UNITED NATIONS () - The Soviet Union joined 98 other UN delegations yesterday in a stand- ing tribute to Dag Hammarskjold -then made clear it would keep up its fight for a three-man board to replace him. "Any person would not be good," Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko said in turning down a Western-supported move to name an interim secretary-general to fill temporarily the gap left by the death of Hammarskjold in an Af- rican plane crash. Informed of the Soviet position, United States Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson declared the United Nations must choose an interim secretary-general. Mongi Slim of Tunisia has been mentioned for such a post. Opening Day Thus battle lines were drawn between the United States and the Soviet Union on the opening day of the 16th General Assembly on an issue that posed a threat to the very existence of the UN organi- zation. The assembly opened its 16th session at 3:22 p.m. EDT and ob- served the usual minute of prayer or silent meditation. Then Ambassador Frederick H. Boland of Ireland, the Assembly president, proposed that the dele- gates observe a minute of silence in memory of Hammarskjold. Tragic Shadow He said the Assembly was meet- ing "in the shadow of an immense tragedy, in the midst of deep and heartfelt mourning which extends far beyond the walls of this cham- ber to millions of men and women throughout the world." Four minutes after the opening the Assembly adjourned until 10:30 a.m. EDT today, when it will elect Slim as president of the 16th ses- sion.* Reporters met Gromyko as he came out of the big blue and gold assembly hall and fired questions at him. Troika Campaign Quickly he made clear that the Soviet Union would maintain its Troika campaign for a three-man board to replace the single post of secretary-general. One would rep- resent the Western, one the Com- munist and one the neutral na- tions, each with the right of veto. "We must hare three secretar- ies-general," he said in sticking to the plan presented t the Assembly last year by Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. As to the suggestion that Slim might be named to serve as a kind of interim secretary-general, he replied: "Wa hn~i fy +a ninrnlan- . JOIN THE DAILY: See What's Really Behind TR's Facade "I'd like to have my head carved in the side of this building," Theo- dore Roosevelt is known to have said softly upon his last visit to the Student Publications Bldg. to inspect The Big Stick that is The Michigan Daily. The sands of time have worn dim TR's image leaving only a tiny remnant of the once husky features. But the Big Stick has grown larger and awaits YOU to latch on to it. The Big Stick can be held by anybody regardless of socio-eco- nomic or ethnic gackground, or whose side you're on. The Big Stick will be exhibited for your inspection in the con- genial setting of a Trainee meet- ing at 4:15 p.m. today and 7:15 n m +fMrr-c, J M a nllnt.11 % d . . . .... m :i