WEDNESDAY, FEBRUJARY 27, 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY IpAr-W VIPU 2Yi V THE MICHIGAN DAILY a ~ rta u " rtrt r: 4 Rusk Threatens Force If Cuba Employs Arms, Must Avoid 'Infection' Ferency Predicts Vote To Accept Constitution By GERALD STORCHI State Democratic Chairman Zolton Ferency last night predicted the proposed state Constitution will be approved at the polls April 1. "I doubt very much that it will be rejected," he told the Young Democrats here last night. The party has trouble "getting its story told" due to a recalcitrant press and "Romney snow jobs," Ferency explained. In criticizing the document, he devoted particular attention HOT SURFACE, COLD CLOUDS: R Report 'Smog' Covers Venus By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Venus has a temperature of 800 degrees, pre- cluding the chance of life as earth people know it, the National Aero- nautics and Space Administration reported yesterday in releasing more findings of Mariner satellite's probe of the planet. Reporting on the Dec. 14 pass of the planet, NASA officials said that the clouds consist of an oily "smog." The scientists also an- >nounced several other findings whinh mov h nUjt L va1oU 1±UA±Lr VOLUNTEER TEACHERS: Students Boycott School To Protest Segregation ENGLEWOOD, N.J. (A)-Nearly half the pupils of the predom- inantly Negro Lincoln Elementary School did not report for classes yesterday as their parents prepared for a lengthy boycott to protest alleged de facto segregation. Negro leaders said they have enough volunteer teachers and tem- porary classrooms to continue the boycott indefinitely. It will not end, said Russell Major of the Englewood Movement. until authorities actually end Anti-HUC Move Fafls WASHINGTON (A')-The Hou Committee on Rules yesterd killed a proposal to abolish t House Committee on Un-America Activities as an independent gro and make it a subcommittee the House Judiciary Committee. The vote that tabled the pr posal was 12-1. The dissenter w Rep. Richard Bolling (D-Mo). T members weire absent. The rules group acted aft hearing contentions that the pl to change the status of the cozy mittee on un-American activiti was part of "the Communist co spiracy" and would "give substa tial aid to our enemies." Sponsors of the proposal, i: Ading Reps. James Roosevelt (1 k if) , Leonard Farbstein (D-NY and John V. Lindsay (R-NY), sa their motive was to provide for more effective organization of t investigation of Communism an other forms of subversion. A three introduced identical resole tions. Five Ask Passage Of Youth Corps WASHINGTON (M)-As an ind cation of the importance it a taches to the bill, the Kennedy a ministration sent five Cabinet o ficers to Congress yesterday urge passage of a measure to s up a youth conservation corps. racial imbalance in the schools or "until people are thrown in jail."' Roll Call There were 239 pupils absent out of an enrollment of 498, when teachers called the roll in the school bt:"ing. Superintendent of schools Mark se R. Shedd estimated that eight per ay cent were out for reasons unrelat- he ed to the boycott. He told a news conference that n he boycott should be considered up 49 per cent effective. A three-day of boycott of the Lincoln school last fall was considered to have been o- 60 per cent effective, While the pupils climbed into a chartered bis for a trip to tem- wo pcrary classrooms, seven pickets marched in front of the school. er There was no violence. an Today's Attendance n Shedd said he expected more pu- es pils to attend today, but Major n- said more Negro parents would be ,n- urged to keep their children out. Some Negro parents, while sup- L- porting the aims of the movement, D- have privately opposed the boycott. Y)d Shedd said the school board id would meet in a few days to deter- he mine what action would be taken. hd Legally, the parents could be fined nl under the state's compulsory at- tendance law. Shedd said the u- school board would have no juris- diction if the pupils were to be permanently enrolled in private schools. Past Protests Negro leaders have protested here for two years against racial i.- discrimination in the schools re- t.. sulting from Negro housing pat- d- terns. f- Their complaints are now before to the state commissioner of educa- et tion, with hearings scheduled to begin April 1. Guatemalan Head Urges Red Ouster Advocates Weapons If Situation Demands By The Associated Press HOMSTON-Secretary of State Dean Rusk said last night if Cuba tries to use arms outside its ter- ritory it "will be met with the I armed forces of the hemisphere." Rusk made the statement in a news conference before addressing the Texas Daily Newspaper Asso- ciation. He also said "a Soviet military presence on that island cannot be accepted." Outside Arms He said the use of arms by Cuba outside the island would be "intercepted, interrupted and stop- ped." "Cuba must not become a source of infection for the hemisphere," he said. Meanwhile, in Washington Gua- temala urged the American repub- lics yesterday to unite in cleaning European and Asian Communists out of "the unfortunate island of Cuba"-by force if necessary. Guatemala's Position Guatemala's President, Gen. Manuel Ydigoras Fuentes, express- ed his country's position in a for- mal message to the 20-nation Or- ganization of American States. The United States and all Latin Amer- ican republics except Communist Cuba are active members. Ydigoras said the self respect and honor of the OAS states de- mand a solution to "the frightful case of Cuba," if need be, "with bayonets fixed." Rusk continued, the United States and its hemisphere allies have previously declared their op- position to the export of arms and subversion by the Red. Castro re- gime and United States naval pa- trols operate in the Caribbean area. As for Russian troops on the is- land, President John F. Kennedy has been pressing for their with- drawal. The White House said So- viet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev has promised to pull out several thousand more soldiers by mid- March, although no hard evidence of their departure has been an- nounced yet. ZOLTON FERENCY ... sees Democratic defeat 81 DAYS: Talks Fail; Paper Strike To Continue NEW YORK tP)-An eleventh- hour effort to settle New York's 81-day newspaper blackout by ne- gotiations between publishers and striking printers failed yesterday, Mayor Robert F. Wagner announc- ed. Wagner did not say when he would present his recommended settlement for the dispute. He call- ed for written reports from both sides today. The parties met without a me- diator for over six hours at a secret location. "They reported after the lengthy session that they were no further toward any agreement than they were when they left here over 10 days ago," Wagner said. Wagner, who fell heir to the third-party role President John F. Kennedy suggested for "independ- ent determination" of the stale- mate, said Saturday that if media- tion failed, he would set forth a proposal. It would not be binding. After announcing the failure of yesterday's talks, Wagner skirted questions about his next move, saying "when I receive those writ- ten reports, I will announce the next step I will take." When Kennedy recommended that a third party present a settle- ment proposal, he named no one for the umpire's role. The New York Newspaper Guild suggested Wagner for the job. "to its "very hashed up" education section, blasting one provision to earmark half of sales tax revenues for universities, high schools and grammar schools. Never Enough Previously, only local districts had been included, and even with this more limited outlet, "ear- marking had never provided enough money," Ferency said. On other issues, the state chair- man vehemently denied charges that the party and he himself are labor-dominated. He cited the opposition of state AFL-CIO President August Scholle to his candidacy for the chair- manship, anddalso his failure to gain AFL-CIO support when he ran for Detroit prosecutor two years ago. Unions Unsuccessful "Labor has failed miserably on attaining its bread-and-butter is-* sues," such as adequate workmen's compensation and minimum wage laws, Ferency added. Most important, at the Demo- crats' recent state convention, "there wasn't a caucus there that had more than one third labor representatives," he said. In fact, his struggle with Joe Collins for the chairmanship "was the first open, honest, fair contest we've (the party) had in many years." Conceding that several union- dominated Wayne County dis- tricts at the convention voted by unit rule, Ferency declared he's "personally against unit rule" and promised to recommend its ibo- lition to the state central commit tee. The move will be part of his efforts to "open up" the party, to broaden its base and remove its "labor-dominated" image. Accuse Soviets 'Of Pressure Agcainst Peking TOKYO (;P)-Communist China accused the Soviet Union yester- day of "perfidiously and unilater- ally" tearing up hundreds of aid agreements and contracts as part of a campaign of economic pres- sure against Peking. The Chinese made this charge for the first timne in an unprece- dentedly bitter attack on Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev., The official Peking People's Daily-shattering speculation that Moscow and Peking might be mov- ing toward a reconciliation-ac- cused Khrushchev of starting the' quarrel wh~ich now divides world Communism by condemning Red China in its border dispute with India. .. Fail To Get A greement MIAMI BEACH (IP)-The AFL- CIO Executive Council concluded a 10-day winter meeting yesterday amid some disagreement among top leaders over the type of shorter work week they want from Con- gress. The union chiefs are more con- vinced than ever, they said in a se- ries of policy statements, that a cut in the present 40-hour week is needed to share available jobs and restore purchasing power to spur the economy. For months, the AFL-CIO lead- ers have called for a legislated 35- hour week with a 40-hour pay and with heavier overtime penal- ties to curb unemployment and provide jobs for the expanding work force. New Plan Walter Reuther, head of the auto workers union, told news- men, however, he has some misgiv- ings whether marginal firms and industries could stand a drastic work hour cut. He suggested some might be forced out of business, thereby increasing unemployment. Reuther plugged, instead, for a plan to adjust the length of the work week up or down, according to changing economic conditions. The 40-hour week would continue as the standard. But when unem- ployment increased to specified levels, weekly work hours would be cut automatically. Full 40-hour pay would be maintained out of an equalization fund financed from a new payroll tax. Disagreement George Meany, AFL-CIO presi- dent, indicated he still favors the straight 35-hour week approach. Asked about Reuther's views, Meany said, "I'm not prepared to pass judgment on that until I give it more study." Unusual Opportunity at Reasonable Prices Detroit Symphony Orchestra Concert, Valter Poole. conducting Jerome Hines, guest artist Ford Auditorium, Detroit Mon., March 4, 1963, 8:30 P.M. Tickets, contact CHRISTIAN ENTERPRISE 3650 Carpenter Rd. Prices: $3.00 and $2.00 Call: NOrmandy 8-9629 wicn may upset several standard theories about Venus: New Theories 1) There are no breaks in Ve-I nus's cloud cover, but one spot is colder than others, indicating a: hidden configuration on the plan- let; 2) There is no dense cloud of electrons high in its atmosphere; and 3) There is no detectable carbon dioxide in the atmosphere al- though there may be some in the 15-mile thick, 45-mile high cloud cover. Record Temperature Commenting on the temperature findings, Prof. Fred T. Haddock of the astronomy department said that the 800 degree reading does not surprise him, as it did NASA officials. The reading is close to radio - astronomy measurements taken rczently. The high temperature rules out any possibility of landing men on the planet. Manned flights could be made to Venus, but not on it, NASA officials said. The question of water vapor of Venus remains unanswered, they added. A microwave radiometer instrument aboard Mariner - the same one that figured in the tem- perature readings-was jammed by space noise, making the data unclear. Further analysis may provide an answer, NASA officials surmised. The scientists said that all the new findings about the planet were subject to some change on further analysis, but they indicat- ed any such changes would not be of a major nature. MARINER II . before flight PROF. FRED T. HADDOCK ... no surprise (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) THE CURSE OF THE CAMPUS: NO. 2 As was pointed out last week, one would think that with all the progress we have made in the education game, something might have been done by now about roommates. But no. The roommate picture has not brightened one bit since Ethan Goodpimple founded the first American college. (Contrary to popular belief, Harvard was not the first. Mr. Goodpimple started his institution some 75 years earlier. And quite an institution it was, let me tell you! Mr. Goodpimple built schools of liberal arts, fine arts, dentistry, and tanning. He built a lacrosse stadium that seated 102,000. Everywhere on campus was emblazoned the stirring Latin motto GAVE MUSSI-"Watch out for moose." The student union contained a bowling alley, a clock, and a 16-chair barber shop. urn COUPON DAYS Reg. 98c Regency Drugs d 170 s Q-TIPS-4 LIMIT 1 THIS COUPON GOOD TO MARCH 6 M 1 World News Roundup .. . at, t ' COUPON DAYS yt ,____. 1 S Reg. $100 Regency Drugs ROLL-ON DEODORANT SECRET LIMIT I 60c THIS COUPON GOOD TO MARCH 6 M : r_ r , ' k ? _ . '-' - :- . :. f .,, 1} I_ . ,.1 By The Associated Press L O N D ON - Harold Wilson, Britain's new Labor Party leader, last night called again for limited Allied recognition of Communist East Germany as part of an East- West Berlin settlement. BRUSSELS -France urged its Common Market partners last, night to avoid making young African nations pawns in the trading bloc's quarrels. But Italy and the Netherlands held up crea- tion of a $730 million fund badly wanted by the French to aid the Africans. - * * * WASHINGTON - President John F. Kennedy's omnibus edu- cation bill ran head on yesterday into the issues of race and relig- ion, which have helped kill pre- vious education measures. Wit- nesses at a House Education Sub- committee hearing opposed fed- eral support for church-related in- stitutions or segregated public schools. They urged adding to the bill a provision that aid be with- held from school districts which have taken no steps toward de- segregation. * * * donesia intends to resume diplo- matic relations with the Nether- lands. NEW YORK-After a day and a half of decline, New York Stock Exchange prices met support in mid-afternoon yesterday with the result that the list staged an ir- regular advance. The Dow-Jones Industrial closed up .67; rails .40, and utilities .66. THE STUDENT ZIONIST ORGANIZATION and B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION invite you to a KUMSUFZ (get-together) Continuing our weekly series of instruction in "ISRAEL'S DANCES and SONGS" Refreshments Thursday, Feb. 28 . . . 7:30 P.M. HILLEL FOUNDATION ... 1429 Hill Street > f ! .;' + .P:..' di.. N} .r hi w 'i1 ;.. t 1 1;4"I L.. i. 1 i f !t =' ! sr, r;.,s r 7 ;R {;,,K ..+}#. y .4Ia tt 1 T ,; . t a COUPON DAYS Reg. $3.59 Regency Drugs 50cc SPOLY vISOL $3 LIMIT 1 M .' THIS COUPON GOOD TO MARCH 6 M I * 1* * * I* 4* *1 GOLD BARS & BRAID prejenbi A NIGHT ON THE WORLD Two Bands Michigan Lead Formal Military Ball All U.S. and Foreign Military Personnel Invited Rue :00 'K( 'K 'K 'K 'K "k, *! 'K, ' 'K Saturday, March 16 9:00 to 1 Tickets Available at North Hall and T.C.B. $3.00 per couple 01* '{, (It was this last feature-the barber shop-that, alas, brought Mr. Goodpimple's college to an early end. The student body, being drawn from the nearby countryside, was composed chiefly of Pequots and Iroquois who, alas, had no need of a barber shop. They braid their hair instead of cutting it, and as for shaving, they don't. The barber, Tremblatt Follicle by name, grew so depressed staring all the time at 16 empty chairs that one day his mind finally gave way. Seizing his vibrator, he ran outside and shook the entire campus till it crumbled to dust. This later became known as Pickett's Charge.) But I digress. We were discussing ways for you and your roommate to stop hating each other. This is admittedly diffi- cult but not impossible if you will both bend a bit, give a little. I remember, for example, my own college days (Berlitz, '08). My roommate was, I think you will allow, even less agreeable than most. He was a Tibetan named Ringading whose native customs, while indisputably colorful, were not entirely endear- ing. Mark you, I didn't mind so muchthe gong he struck on the hour or the string of firecrackers he set off on the half-hour. I didn't even mind his singeing chicken feathers every dusk and daybreak. What I did mind was that he singed them in my hat. To be fair, he was not totally taken with some of my habits either-especially my hobby of collecting water. I had no jars at the time and just had to stack the water any-old-where. Well sir, things grew steadily cooler between Ringading and me, and they might have gotten actually ugly had we not each happened to receive a package from home one day. Ringadin opened his package, paused, smiled shyly at me, and offerA me a gift. "Thank you," I said. "What is it?" "Yak butter," he said. "You put it in your hair. In Tibetan we call it gree see kidstuff." "Well now, tha's mighty friendly," I said and offered him a gift from my package. "Now you must have one of mine." "Thank you," he said. "What is this called?" "Marlboro Cigarettes," I said and held a match for him. He puffed. "Wow!" he said. "This sure beats chicken feathers 1" "Or anything else you could name," I said, lighting my own ed UNITED NATIONS-The Unit- I Nations reported yesterday In-, wwWwj q I b = - _- i e , COUPON DAYS 7" Reg. $1.29 21ln-.r Regency Drugs LV-03 All LIMIT 1 76c THIS COUPON GOOD TO MARCH 6 M . ,;,.:, r ' - { ; , .,.,.. . r,' , 1 --$-- ...VALUABLE COUPON tu' SAVE°2.00 i Get 11 Weeks of The Michigan Daily i i For Only $3.50 I i I =me., moolkL