THEMICHIGANDAILY Kennedy Sets Meeting With Soviet on Berlin R. ----z. World News Roundup By The Associated Press DALLAS - House Speaker Sam Rayburn's condition remained unchanged-still serious-at Baylor Hospital yesterday. Attending physicians said they did not know definitely what is ailing the 79-year-old Texan and may not know for several days. * * * * - THE HAGUE - The Netherlands does not intend to enter, into negotiations with Indonesia on the Dutch New Guinea dispute, premier Jan De Quay told parliament yesterday. Such discussions would not guarantee the right May Subsidize CampaignCos WASHINGTON (P)--The costs of the'1960 presidential campaigns have been estimated at $100 mil- lion. The question arises whether the federal government should chip in on thebill for choosing its chief executive. President John F. Kennedy ap- pointed a nine-member commis- sion yesterday to study that, along with other ideas about cutting the costs of campaigns. Kennedy noted in a 'statement that funds for national campaigns traditionally had been supplied wholly by private contributions. "It is not healthy for the demo-, cratic process--or for ethical standards in our government-to keep our national candidates in this condition of dependence," President Kennedy said.s f of self-determination for New Guinea Papuans, he said. The island republic claims West New Guinea, which the Dutch re- tained when they freed the rest of the island chain in 1949. * * * WASHINGTON - The White House announced that Dr. Cheddi Jagan, premier of British Guiana, will call on President John F. Kennedy at the latter's invitation in the week of Oct. 23. * * * WASHINGTON - The Com- merce Department said yester- day it licensed only $907,000 worth of goods in September for ship- ment to Communist bloc coun- tries - the lowest for any month since 1955. * * * NEW YORK - The stock mar- ket staged its biggest advance in nine months today with rail is- sues rolling ahead of all other groups. , Are all make mistakes.... ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE ON EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND Typing errors never show on Coriisable. The special sur- face of this paper makes it possible to erase without a trace-with just an ordinary pencil eraser. Results: clean. looking, perfectly typed papers. Next time you sit down at the keyboard, make no mistake -type on Cor risable I Your choice of Corr sable in light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In handy 100- sheet packets and 500-sheet boxes. Only Eaton makes ' Corrasable. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper, EATON PAPER CORPORATION PITTSFIELD, MASS. To Consider Big Talks Ont Problem May Exchange Views At Informal Meeting WASHINGTON (P) - Presideni John F. Kennedy and Soviet For- eign Minister -Andrei 'Gromyk will meet tomorrow for a confer- ence which may well -determine whether the Big Four get togeth- er later this year to try to solve the Berlin problem. A White House announcement confirmed speculation that Gro- myko will call on Kennedy to- morrow. The meeting is scheduled to start at 5 p.m. State Department experts stress- ed that nothing dramatic should be expected from the Kennedy- Gromyko meeting. To- Restate The President, these officials said, will restate the arguments Secretary of State Dean Rusk has already outlined in talks with the Russians in New York. There is hope that Gromyko will be con- vinced of Western firmness on what can and what cannot be negotiated at an eventual four- power conferen'ce. The Friday conference, there- fore, will likely be an informal talk in which both sides spell out their respective positions. Offi- cials said, however, the possibil- ity that Gromyko might have re- ceived new instructions from Mos- cow cannot be excluded. But they see the chances of a shift in the Soviet position prior to the forthcoming Communist party congress as almost nil. The State Department said there are no plans for separate conferences between Rusk and Gromyko. Earlier it was assumed that the two foreign policy chiefs would resume their New York talks here, concluding with a call on Kennedy. Rusk to Assist Rusk, of course, will be at Ken- nedy's side when Gromyko visits the White House. The Russian is expected to be accompanied by his ambassador, Mikhail Menshi- kov. In a related move it was an- nounced thateLlewellyn E. Thomp- son, the United States envoy to Moscow, will return to Washing- ton for consultations. But he is not due here in time to sit in on the conference with Gromyko. His trip to Washington is sig- nificant for another reason. Au- thorities here do not expect a continuation of the American- Soviet dialogue on the foreign ministers level in the near future. It is assumed that talks will go on at the ambassadorial level. Thompson, officials said, plans to go' back to Moscow in time to be there when the Communist. party congress opens Oct. 17. LEAVE Your PHOTO FILMS for Processing Anytime Special Outside Film Drop-Box at Our Front Door IEEEM PHOTO DEPARTMENT State St. at N. University " . t a t 3 5: 5 5 3 Bloomfield Hills), former state 'First Stages Of, Convention Go Smoothly By MARK BLUCHER The main auditorium of Lan- sing's Civic Center was barely fill- ed Tuesday as Secretary of State James Hare rapped the gavel and called to order Michigan's first Constitutional Convention in four decades., Television men manned their cameras as delegates moved slow- ly to their seats, chairs scraping the floor. Silence held the large arena. Opening day moved quickly through the usual anenities and welcoming speeches by Governor John B. Swainson, Lansing's may- or Willard J. Bowerman and oth- er assembled dignitaries. Double Call The time consuming reading of the certified delegates commenc- ed only to be followed by roll call of the same 144 names and the swearing in of convention mem- bers. The major business of the day, election of a convention presi- dent, proceeded like an extremely well-oiled machine. An air of great co-operation and bipartisanship seemed to pervade the great hall as delegates from both parties moved, seconded, and voted unanimously on the mo- tions presented. Reporters Circulate At adjournment, friends and relatives of the delegates moved onto the temporary meeting area to greet and congratulate the convention members. Reporters could be seen hopping from group to group asking questions and ob- tamning opinions. Later the same afternoon in the main ballroom of one of Lansing's major hotels the delegates ap- peared in groups of twos, threes, and fours at a lavish reception held in their honor. Experts Plan Tour of Cities WASHINGTON RP) - President John F. Kennedy is sending blue- ribbon teams of experts on domes- tic problems to 10 major cities next month to do some pulse feel- ing. It will provide the administra- tion a chance to sell its home- front program at the grass-roots. Cabinet officers and top agency heads will be on the teams of four or five members who will discuss urgent national problems and future needs, the White House announced yesterday. The Presi- dent will not participate personal- ly, but will receive reports after each session. Those invited to the two-day meetings will include state and municipal officials, civic groups and interested citizens, the White House said. Senator Edward Hutchinson (R- Fennville) and Tom Downs (D- Detroit), an AFL-CIO attorney. Hutchinson and Romney were major rivals in a pre-convention Republican caucus. Hutchinsoh was the choice of the conservative bloc, and Rom- ney was supported by the moder- ate-liberal wing. But Nisbet be- came the compromise selection after ,the Hutchinson-Romney forces became deadlocked in pro- longed balloting. Nisbet said he planned to con- sult with the three vice-presidents on the matter of committee mem- berships, and the question of how to select the committee chairmen. Every Delegate The convention decided to set up 13 committees, nine of them substantive. Every delegate will serve on at least one of the sub- stantive groups. In deciding on the number of committees and how many dele- gates would be -named to each, the convention followed the rec- ommendations of the committee on permanent organization and rules, headed by Richard C. Van Dusen (R-Birmingham). List Committees The recommendations called for substantive committees to deal; exclusively with finance and tax- ation, one on declaration of rights, suffrage and elections, on legislative organization, legislative powers, the executive branch, the judicial branch, local government. and education. Four other committees also will be established on style and draft- ing, administration, public infor- mation, and rules and resolutions. Lee Boothby (R-Niles) said he wanted to remind the delegates that they were costing the tax- payers $144,000 a month in salar- ies alone. NEW SEMES We will obtain any PAPERBOUND BOOK in print- list 95c & Up at 10% OFF LIST PRICE For students ar GLOBAL 4829 WOOWARD (nr. Wa Open daily 11A.M. to 5 P.M -AP Wirephoto DISCUSS RULES-The first appointed committee of the con- stitutional convention met yesterday to establish permanent organization and rules. Fred I. Chase, convention clerk, and Richard C. Van Dusen (R-Oakland), committee chairman, sit at the head of the table. Convention N"Lames 'Troika' To Aid Nisbet with Revision LANSING (W)-Michigan's Constitutional Convention named a "troika" of three vice-presidents-two Republicans and a Democrat -yesterday to assist President Stephen Nisbet (R-Fremont) in guid- ing the convention in its task of rewriting the state's basic law docu- ment. List Vice-Presidents The three were American Motors President George Romney (R- China Cites Impending UN Disaster UNITED NATIONS ( ) - Na- tionalist China warned yesterday the United Nations faces disaster if international bullies have thei- way on adding members "clearly disqualified" by provisions of the UN charter. "Appeasement is very much in the air," Shen Chang-Huan, na- tionalist foreign minister, told the 100-nation assembly which will come to grips soon on the issue of seating Communist China. As usual, the entire Soviet bloc snubbed Nationalist China and left the assembly hall when Shen spoke. Gromyko Listens Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko showed up to listen to the next speaker, Romanian For- eign Minister Corneliu Manescu, who called for admission of Com- munist China and the ousting of the Chinese Nationalists. Shen declared the United Na- tions "is now in danger of being perverted to serve the interests of powerful warmakers and interna- tional bullies. "If they are allowed to have their way," he added, then the era of collective aggression, not of collective security, is upon us. Grim State "This is .a grim state of affairs, indeed. Unless the majority of the state members accept the reality of the danger and unite their ef- forts to meet it, the United Na- tions is destined to go the way of the League of Nations." He told neutral nations who are supporting seating of Red China that they are being used by the Communists. He said it was clear neutalism was "anathema to the Comnmu- nists," and they have no more love for a third force in international life than they have for capital- ism. "Neutralism is being used to soften up the free world's resist- ance to Communism," he declared. "I trust that the leaders of the majority of the neutralist states are far too intelligent and sophis- ticated to play in the hands of international Communism." Syria Arrests Spy Suspects DAMASCUS, Syria OP)-Syria's revolutionary goernment an- nounced yesterday it has rounded up infiltrating saboteurs who had been hired abroad. It hinted strongly they were on Egypt's payroll. The captives were in the pay of "those who claim Arabism, claim faith in unity," declared informa- tion minister Mustafa Baroodi in a statement broadcast by Damas- cus radio. President Nasser of the now- sundered United Arab Republic is the No. 1 exponent of unifica- tion of all Arabs, from Northwest Africa to the Persian Gulf. Nasser has called the Syrian re- volt last week against Cairo's rule a setback "which must be the starting point for destroying re- action and treason" throughout the Arab sphere. TER SPECIAL POWER ELITE by C. Wright Mills 50c I Supply Limited nd faculty only BOOKS rren) Suite 201 - Detroit . - Mon. & Wed. to 8 P.M. We carry a complete line. Of EATON PAPERS SLATEReS your college bookstore the UNIVERSITY of MICHIGAN BANDS present FREIHMe II onari1iLip £its 214 SOUTH INGALLS across from the Women's League HAIR CUTTING by Leonard HAIR STYLING by Ray HAIR STYLING by Bettsy MANICURING by Carolyn 'PHONE NO 2-8680 FOR APPOINTMENT I Student Government Council READING and DISCUSSION SEMINAR: I I I 11