1 REP. MARSHALL: SAFE FOR DEMOCRACY? See Page 4 YI e Sit i~anT 74latty PARTLY CLOUDY High-74 Low-62 Little change in temperature today, tonight Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXII, No. 4 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1961 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGgS UN, T Immobile Army Units Retain Alert West Officials Fear Congolese Resistance NDOLA Northern Rhodesia ()-' President Moise Tshombe of Katanga announced last night a provisional cease-fire effective at 12:01 a.m. today between his troops and UN forces battling in the secessionist Congo province. It came two days after the death of Secretary-General Dag Ham- marskjold in a plane crash near this Katanga-UN peace negotia- tion site left the United Nations leaderless and in deep crisis. In Leopoldville, the announce- ment of a provisional cease-fire between Katanga troops and UN forces came as Congolese Prime Minister Cyrille Adoula was alert- ing his people for war to end the mineral-rich province's secession. 'Spare No Effort' Adoula said the Congo central government has decided "to spare no effort to end Katanga's seces- sion" and "will reply to force with force." Adoula's declarations were made before Tshombe announced the provisional cease fire. Many west- ern diplomats here believe the central Congolese government is in no mood to accept it. Cease Fire Terms Tshombe said the agreement signed by himself and UN repre- sentative Mahmoud Khiari of Tunisia set forth six points: 1. An immediate cease-fire. 2. It is to start at one minute past midnight in all territories ofI Katanga. 3. A mixed commission of four men is to be set up without delay with full powers to control the ceasefire agreement and to seek. means of settling relations be- tween the United Nations and the Katanga authorities. This includes an agreement on the location of United Nations troops in Katanga. No Troop Movements 4. No troop movements are to be permitted for reinforcing garri- sons or positions. This includes the movement of ammunition and weapons of all kinds including aircraft and tanks. 5. Both sides retain their free- dom, to make their own arrange- ments for their supplies of food. 6. An exchange of prisoners un- der control of the four-man com- mission appointed under point 3. Lull in Fighting When the cease-fire announce- ment came, UN reports indicated; a general lull in the Katanga war.] The garrison at Kamina, main UN base in Katanga, repdrted all quiet and said reports the base had been overrun were grossly exaggerated. In eight days of sometimes furi-1 ous fighting the United Nations failed to take over Katanga and return it to the Leopoldville re- gime. Adoula hinted the central government may try it alone. He said the Congo army has9 been put on a state of alert "and1 from today every citizen must be ready to answer a government call1 to serve in Katanga. No sacrifice will be considered too great." To Seize Planes Congolese sources reported the Adoula government was ready to requisition planes belonging to the Belgian-owned Air Congo to fly troops to Katanga if necessary. Powerful Lumumbist elements inl Adoula's government are pressur-+ ing him to use every means to1 crush Katanga's resistance. shombe Agree To Halt Kata nga gi hting "A SETTLEMENT: UAW Executive Board Denies Requested Strike Permission * * * * * * * * * SGC Asks Four Students m .. : . VETOES STRIKE CALL - UAW President Walter P. Reuther (left) said last night that the UAW International Executive Board refused a GM Council's request to strike on local issues. An earlier settlement was negotiated by Reuther and GM Vice-President Lewis G. Seaton (right). FINANCES: Predict Nuisance Taxes To Meet Greater Deficit By HARRY PERLSTADT Nuisance taxes may be on the way back as a result of a revenue lag in the state sales tax which could upset the now balanced budget. The House Taxation Committee meeting yesterday in Lansing heard in testimony that sales tax revenues for the months of July and August were running about $4 million behind the same period last year and that the accumulated deficit had risen from $64 to $71 million. Rep. Gilbert E. Bursley (R-Ann Arbor). a member of the 11- man committee, said that in view of the revenue lag the forthcoming Senate E nds legislative session may have to seriously consider the possibility *@ * of obtaining new funds. But he Investu atton did not see an immediate threat to the state's cash reserve. en er Increase Necessary "More revenue is going to be DETROIT (P) - The United Auto Workers International Exe- cutive Board said last night it would not authorize a general strike against General Motors Corp. in support of unresolved local issues. Less than two hours earlier the General Motors Council-a union advisory panel-had voted to ask the UAW International Executive Board for authority to strike. Walter P. Reuther, UAW presi- dent, said the council's action was an "action by members demon- strating some bitterness toward some local practices. This was culmination of resentment overl local problems and the locals' way: of protesting." * - Had Power Reuther told newsmen the exe- cutive board had the authority to call the strike in support of the unresolved local issues. However, he said, that more than 106 of GM's 129 plants had settled and that these settlements represented more than 80 per cent of GM's' 350,000 hourly paid employes. He said such a srike "cannot in good conscience be justified, therefore, it will not be authoriz- ed." "The international executive board has responsibility to the total membership of the United! Auto Workers union and to the nation and it intends to meet both. 'Stay on Job' "All General Motors workers employed in plants where local issues are resolved are instructed to stay on the job ... "The International Executive Board and the General Motors Department have developed a new approach to expedite the settle- ments of unresolved local issues which we are confident will meet with aproval of GM Council dele- gates.'' Reuther said the council will meet atr10 a.m. to discuss the matter. He declined to go into the new approach. The General Motors' Council surprise action last last night came after a day in which GM and the UAW apparently reached agreement on national contract demands and made substantial progress on various local demands. Agree on Economic Pact Two weeks ago they agreed on wages and extra benefits, but UAW President Walter P. Reu- ther balked at making a complete settlement and pushed union de- mands for concessions in both national and local agreements on working conditions. SGCPetitions Now Availalble ' Petitioning for the two Student 'Government Council vacancies left by Mary Wheeler and Philip Power 'will open tomorrow morning, SGC President Richard Nohl announced last night. Petition forms, now being tprinted, will be obtainable in the SGC offices in the Student Activi- ties Bldg. On v WORLD IN DANGER: Boulding Cites Similarity Between 1914, Present By MICHAEL HARRAH "The Berlin crisis is just an excuse for something much more serious, and the tension is beginning to feel like 1914 all over again," Prof. Kenneth Boulding of the economics department, co-director of the Center for Conflict Resolution, told the Washtenaw County Dem- ocratic Committee in Saline last night. "The whole world, and the United States in puarticular, is in terrible danger. Things are just like a large box of white balls with one black ball somewhere in the pile. Every morning the hand of fate draws out a ball. As long as it's a white ball, we live another day, but some morning the black b i rntss ball will turn up and that's It. 1~g ~ V R - That's the kind of world we may leave for our children." First Danger He said that this was the first time ever that this planet has been in danger of absolutely ir- retrievable disaster. He pointed to the Democratic Party as "the only party with the guts to face up to this crisis. The Republicans are too lazy." Prof. Boulding called for a "radical, revolutionary revision of our foreign policy. It will mean the end of national defense, which up to now has gotten us by, but no longer will work." He stressed negotiation as the' prime objective, saying that the Kennedy administration was "way ahead of the people in the matter of keeping peace for our nation. "We need to make a contract with the Russians. I would far rather have some of Reuther's boys working on this Berlin mat- ter than all the diplomats in Washington." He pointed to the "great dif- ferences" between the United States and Russia, saying that the United States established itself as a result of successful aggression, whereas the Russians have con- stantly been on the defensive, pushing everyone out of their country from the Tartars to the Swedes. Russians War-weary "The Russians are just plain war-weary," he concluded. "They know what it is to be fighting all the time. "And this is why we must re- assure them about the Germans. We must convince them that they can be controlled. The Russians have a mortal terror of them." He called the re-arming of the West Germans "a tragic mistake," saying that Nazism is far from dead in that country. "They are still bitter about their defeat, and they long for the day they'll re- take the Eastern sector." He called the resumption of nu- clear testing "an awful tragedy." Washtenaw County Democrats last night surveyed the wreckage of their constitutional convention campaign machinery. Five explanations were advanced for the Sept. 12 Democratic de- bacle: List Reasons 1) Voter apathy. 2) Local issues of concern to Republicans. 3) Outstate Democrats voting with the Republicans to avoid re- apportionment of the state senate. 4) Republican fear of a Demo- cratic-controlled con-con. 5) Lack of work on the part of local Democratic organizations. Vote Drops The county committee learned that their percentage of the total vote dipped 13 per cent in Ann Arbor alone, as 45 per cent fewer people voted. This meant that 58 per cent fewer Democrats voted than did in the April general election. Defeated candidate for the county-wide con-con seat Allan Grossman asserted however that "the Republicans did not win this election; the Democrats lost it. We defeated ourselves." He cited the July primary elec- tion in Northfield Township, say- ing that he polled 235 votes to 253 for his Republican opponent, former Regent Roscoe I. Bonisteel. In the September election, he dropped 173 votes to a total of 63, while Bonisteel lost only 98 votes for a total of 155. typical Voting He said this was "typical of the voting throughout the county. The Democrats simply didn't vote." Defeated first district candidate Robert Carr urged the group to. "watch the con-con very closely. The Republicans have taken their 99-seat total as a mandate, and we must make our voice heard to get the things we want out of this convention." Carr attributed his defeat largely to voter apathy. EMUNeeds $3 ,000,000 For Growth Eastern Michigan University has submitted a budget to. the State Department of Public Edu- cation of more than $3 million. The total also includes $894,444 for remodeling and additions and $57,020 for special maintenance jobs. But the need for funds for the construction of a new physi- cal education building and a new fine and industrial arts building is most acute, EMU President Eu- gene B. Elliott said. Temporary Use The state board intends to ask the Legislature, when it recon- venes, for funds to complete building plans for a new physi- cal education structure replacing the structure recently closed by the State Board of Education. Until then, the now closed facili- ties may be temporarily reopened for limited use. Spectators would be barred from the building; the second and third floors wouldre- main unused; the basement ceil- ing would be covered with fire re- sistant material; and additional emergency.exits would be installed in the main gymnasium, swim ming pool and locker rooms. Elliott said that local funds Will be used to make these Instala- tions in order to reopen the build- ings as soon as possible for class- es. It was predicted that the EMU's physical education pro- gram would be "phased' out" in two years if they do not have a new building by then. Notes Need Noting the need for the new arts building. Elliott said that the proposed $1.5 million facility is needed for the university's pres- ent enrollment and does not even include expansion problems. A supplementary capital outlay had been sought by EMU last spring, but had not been received. It had been hoped that the arts building would be available for use this fall. Thus far, $60,000 has been ap- propriated for construction of the fine arts building, with another $950,000 in the current 'request. The physical education building has already received $16,000 and is requesting an additional $664,000. Includes Funds The budget capital outlay re- quest also includes funds to be- gin work on a major library addi- tion expected to ultimately cost $1.9 million and an appropriation toward construction of a class-. room unit for the Strong Physi- cal Science Building. Other construction finances re- quested are $2.4 million for a new teacher education building and $125,000 for a bridge to cross the New York Central Railroad tracks which divide the campus. Funds requested for remodeling will be used on the present Fine Arts Building, the Rackhan School of Special Education, Pease Auditorium and Roosevelt School. The money requested for work on the present Fine Arts Building is to be used to convert it into a combination classroom and ad- ministrative offices. Esther Heads Near Boston NEW YORK (A) - Hurricane Esther, ugly and skittish, sent heavy fringe winds into the popu- lous northeast last night and threatened to lash the Boston area Group Studying OSA To Choose By The Associated Press 1 LANSING - A special Senate, Investigating Committee wound up three days of hearings here yesterday on whether there is a pro-labor bias at Michigan State University's Labor and Industrial Relations Center.1 The last of 21 witnesses,1 Charles A. Rodgers, stated that he. had been relieved of his duties as associate director in charge of management at the center last June after accusing the center of favoring labor. The Center is somewhat like the University's Bureau of Indus- trial Relations. MSU President John A. Hannah testified that the university as a whole served management more than labor and it was difficult for the center to offer a balanced program without duplicating ef- forts. The committee had proceeded with their investigation in spite of protest on the grounds of aca- demic freedom and constitutional rights that the Senate should not interfere with the university. necessary and the obvious solu- tion is to bring back the $55 mil- lionein nuisance taxes. All indica- tions show that the entire revenue from renewed nuisance taxes could be readily utilized for current needs in higher education, mental health and deficit retirement," Bursley said. The sales tax revenue lag was From Body Of Council Committee Request Set Number at Two; One Man, Woman By JUDITH OPPENHEIM Student Government Council early this morning unanimously adopted a motion stating that. it desires to appoint four members to voting posts on the Study Com- mittee on the Structure of the Office of Student Affairs. The motion, originally propos- ed by Brian Glick, '62, and Daily Editor John Roberts, '62, was amended by Arthur 1 osenbaum, '62. The amended version appear- ed as the final motion. SGC's action was in response to a letter from Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis, who wrote that the' study com- mittee had decided at its latest meeting to invite twotstudents, a man and a woman, to Join the committee, "with the understand- ing that SGC would decide as to any other arrangements it may wish to make in its role 'as adviser to the' vice-pside t for student affairs. II Flexible Terms SGC President Richard Nohl, '62BAd, told the Council that Lew- is had indicated that the ar- rangements (such as the number of students) were not inflexible, and that changes' might be made to follow SGC's wishes. Rosenbaum's amendment pro- vides that two of the members shall be from the Council at large and the other two shall be SGC members selected from Its Com- mittee on the University, one of three permanent committees set up in the Council's plan for reor- ganization of its administrative wing. Both sexes are to be represented in the delegation to the -study committee. The motion further recommends that one member of the student group which compiled the original study of the dean of women's office and OSA be ap- pointed to the Study Committee as a non-voting member. No Endorsement The motion states that SGC "does not by this action imply endorsement of the present ar- rangement in which the study committee functions outside the normal channels of the Univer- sity. "SGC, in fact, questions the advisability of this arrangement. By appointing members to serve on the committee the Council does not commit itself to support the committee's final recommenda- tions." Lewis is also requested to make available to the Council members the full report of the Student Relations Committee on the Office of Student Affairs which prompted formation of the study committee. Further Requests The Council also asked: That its Committee on the Uni- versity compile information re- lating to OSA and to transmit it to SGC. And that the minutes of the Study Committee be transferred in confidence to the SGC Com- mittee on the University. The motion as originally pro- posed by Glick and Roberts had called for two members of the Committee on the University and two others (neither group neces- sarily SGC members) to be select- ed by the SGC Interviewing and Nominating Committee. Soviet Union Tests ,i Stevenson Proposes UN Site For Hammarskj old Burial UNITED NATIONS ) - United States Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson proposed yesterday that Dag Hammarskjold be buried on the site of the United Nations in New York, "here by the river at the headquarters of the o.ganization to which he gave his life." Hammarskjold's relatives have decided on burial in the family plot at Uppsala, Sweden, after a state funeral. Stevenson's dramatic idea capped an afternoon of moving eulo- gies as delegates one by one strode up to the green-carpeted dais of ' the UN General Assembly to praise the secretary-general who was Sallade Ends killed Monday in a plane crash in Africa. Law Studies Only Russia appeared to qual- reported to'the committee in testi- mony given by Clarence W. Lock, state revenue commissioner and Ira Polley, state comptroller. They told the committee that the deficit increase of $7 million could be directly accounted for by the drop in revenue from sales, use and other taxes. The committee asked the state comptroller, Polley, for a complete analyses of the $71 million deficit. The breakdown will not be ready until late next month but is ex- pected to show most of the deficit is due to unfinished construction, credits due to local government within the state, and unpaid serv- ice and purchase obligations. Drop Means Rise Bursley explained that a drop in the sales tax meant that ex- penditures could rise, further up- setting the budget. Money for the primary school fund normally comes from the sales tax and helps fulfill the state's dollar per stu- dent formula, he said. In addi- tion, the Legislature appropriated an additional $44 million for the school fund, but if the sales tax revenue continues to fall, the sup- plementary appropriation may be drained and lead to additional tapping of the general fund. "This will not affect the appro- priations for the state colleges and Universities," Bursley said. Bursley also indicated that as soon as the automotive industry begins producing, the economy could take a long awaited upswing which, in the next nine months, could make up the lag in revenues. 7 r y i' c 1,, 1 r t r } HELP YEAR: Beat the Rush, Join the Daily Soberly pondering the pressing issues of the day, The Michigan Daily puts out six issues a week and still has time to beat the Union in football games. You too can see your stuff in print or help make money for this auspicious publication, re- puted to be the best rag east of Division Street. Organizational meetings for members of all classes (social, economic and academic) will be held at 7:15 p.m. today in the Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard St. It's better than a trip to the MNITTO. 'nkpr i1r . nnyr, five ,.anifc . . ... .. . .