THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'arties Split on Constitution House Proposal Darkens 'U'-Delta Merger Plans effective guarantee that the dis- tricts will actually be of equal size; . i 4) Fiscal provisions-"Prohibi- tion of a graduated income tax will confine Michigan in an outmoded strait-jacket; 5) Education-"Enlarging the elected State Board of Education from four to eight members in itself accomplishes nothing. Mak- ing the state superintendent of public instruction an appointee of the board and responsible to it, rather than elected as at present,, merely further diffuses and con- fuses authority and responsibil- ity; 6) Local government-"Provi- sions in the proposed constitution . are undesirable. Their imple- mentation depends on the Legisla- ture; and 7) Civil rights-"The provisions against discrimination in the Bill of Rights and authorizing the es- tablishment of a State Civil Rights Comnission would have to seek authorization and funds from an unresponsive and up-to-now un- sympathetic Legislature. The Republicans unanimously approved a resolution supporting the document after Prof. Charles W. Joiner ,of the Law School, a former GOP city councilman, veh- emently supported the proposed constitution in a keynote speech. Prof. Joiner blasted the Demo- cratic party attack on the legisla- tive apportionment scheme that provides for a districting based both on area and population. He said the constitutional con- vention beyond the concept of one man for one vote to believe that the effectiveness of representa- tion is as important as the num- ber of people a given legislator represents. The constitution faces a stiff test in the forthcoming spring election. Present state highway commissioner John Mackie, *a Democrat, is waging a large-scale campaign against adoption of the document. Romney Offers 'U' Allotment For Next Year (Continued from Page 1) the dental school building, the medical science building and the pediatrics hopsital unit. Also, he said that the architecture college "presents a strong demand for immediate attention." He expressed disappointment that there was not a large increase in operating funds for higher edu- cation, but he said that he was "aware that Michigan must put its fiscal house in order first." Sen. Stanley G. Thayer (R-Ann Arbor) noted that the budget isn't going to meet the needs of higher education, but "there is no alter- native but to follow the governor's leadership." He noted that one problem is the severe lack of rec- ognition on the part of the legis- lators of the cost of the high qual- ity of graduate school education at the University. He disclosed that no one has as yet been chosen to introduce the budget, but that the selection would probably be made from the appropriations committee. (Continued from Page 1) PROF. CHARLES JOINER ... defends document CONVENTION: Two Seek Republican Leadership At least two contenders, Arthur G. Elliott and John A. Gibbs, will be seeking the chairmanship of the Republican state central com- mittee when Michigan Republi- cans meet in Grand Rapids Feb. 15-16. Elliott, now a special assistant in the Romney office, had been considered a contender for the post being vacated by incumbent GOP State Chief George Van Peursem since the governor singled him out at a GOP State Central Committee meeting Jan. 12 as one of the three men he considered qualified for the job. -Elliott was Romney's campaign manager in the gubernatorial race. Gibbs, a latecomer to the chair- manship race and executive as- sistant to the outgoing Van Puer- sem, said two recent conferences with the governor had cleared the way for his candidacy. The Grand Rapids convention will also nominate candidates for the two vacancies on the Michi- gan Supreme Court. At the present time, two men have declared their GOP candidacies, Circuit Judge Richard G. Smith of Bay City and former State Chairman John Feikens of Detroit. In the educational board nomi- nations William B. Cudlip of Grosse Pointe and James Egan of Brown City have announced bids .for the Regents. Constitutional convention presi- dent Stephen Nisbet announced that he is available for the Michi- gan State University Board of Trustees. Also reported seeking the MSU board nomination are former Rep. Charles Boyer of Manistee, Charles Harmon of Cassopolis, founder of the newly-formed Conservative Federation of Michigan and Wal- ter S. Patting of Lansing, presi- dent of theJ State Chamber of Commerce. Assistant Dean Paul X. Jamirich of Michigan State University is reported running' for the state superintendent of public instruc- tion nomination. to tax reform, this is the most important problem in Michigan." Strange had sharp criticism for University officials, whom he thought did not present the full story during their testimony be- fore the special committee, of which he was a member. "No one knew anything"; these officials didn't make clear whether or not the University actually supports a merger, Strange claim- ed. "The way it looks to me, the University has encouraged Delta; it certainly hasn't discouraged it." Legally, the University could affiliate with Delta by independent action of the Regents, but the board last week promised to sub- mit any cooperative program to the state Legislature for approval. Rep. William A. Boos (D-Sag- inaw), an education committee member along with Strange, at- tributed this move to the Uni- versity's not, wishing to antagonize, legislators into slashing its ap- propriation. Outside the Legislature, most of the opposition to the merger seems to come from the smaller state colleges, who fear the develop- ment of satellite campuses of the larger universities. However, the Michigan Coordin- ating Council for Public Higher Education and Michigan Council of State College Presidents have not taken a formal stand on the subject. Redistricting Plan To Reach Legislature By The Associated Press LANSING - The Romney ad- ministration's congressional redis- tricting plan, calling for the creation of a new 19th district, will reach the legislature sometime within the next two weeks. Michigan now has 19 seats in the United States House of Rep- resentatives-one more than in 1960-as a result of population growth in the decade after 1950. A new 19th district has not yet been set up and as a result, Mich- igan voters last November elect- ed a 19th congressman statewide, Rep. Neil Staebler (D-Mich) of Ann Arbor. The Romney plan will resem- ble the "Morris Plan" of 1961 and 1962. Romney would like to change the boundary lines for those districts which vary more than 15 per cent either way from the Michigan congressional dis- trict ideal of 411,747 people. However, Romney has indicat- ed he might support a plan that would -not allow more than 20 per cent variation either way from the "ideal" district. This would permit districts of 349,985-473,510 persons. Romney's plan is expected to start in the Senate Judicary Com- mittee, headed by Sen. Farrell E. Roberts (R-Pontiac). Roberts and Sen. Stanley G. Thayer (R-Ann Arbor), both moderates, have been working recently on redis- tricting possibilities. The Michigan Association of Community College Presidents and the executive board of the Mich- igan Federation of College Repub- licans have gone on record against the merger proposed by Delta. Legislature Given Budget - By WILLIAM BENOIT Special To The Daily LANSING - Gov. George W. Romney's proposed 1963-64 bud- get, presented at a joint session of the House and Senate Wednesday, was termed "realistic" and "for- ward-looking" by Republican legis- lators yesterday. Romney said that the state's 120 some agencies had asked for a total of $721 million but that re- quests were drastically cut to $547 million, a reduction of $171 mil- lion. Democrats reacted less enthus- iastically to the Governor's bud- get. Senate Minority Leader Char- les S. Blondy (D-Detroit) said the Romney budget "failed to fulfill all the needs of Michigan. But," Blondy continued, "I think it (the budget) will get Democratic sup- port and I hope it will get Repub- lican backing." See Paring House Speaker Pro-Tem Wilfred G. Bassett (R-Jackson) foresaw a move by some Republicans to "pare" the Romney program. "I know from experience it took great courage for the governor to pare - $171 million from state agency requests," Bassett said. "To insure solvency without taxes, the Legislature must find the courage to do some paring of its own." "If we reduce the deficit by $20 instead of $13.6 million the gov- ernor predicted it will take only three years to achieve solvency," Bassett noted. See Surplus In his message, Romney had pointed out that from all appear- ances his record budget would probably leave a surplus of $13.6 million to apply toward Michigan's current $85.6 million deficit. A rundown of Romney's major recommendations is as follows: General fund spending increases are incorporated into existing pro- grams of school aid, university and community college assistance and Civil Service pay increases. Capital Outlay Capital outlay for new educa- tion and mental health facilities would be increased $2.2 million to a total of $29 million. $1.5 million will be asked soon for planning of a $60 million building program at Michigan colleges and hospitals. The governor is proposing a novel $750,000 research fund in the field of economic development. Under the program, colleges throughout Michigan would sub- mit research projects to a pro- posed Economic Expansion Ad- visory Council. The Council would evaluate such projects and recommend their choices to the governor, who would then allot portions of the $750,000 to projects in relation to their value to the state's economy. ~~ .t ri w I Dial 2-6264 ' ' 1 ENDING TODAY A Shows at 1-3-5-7 and 9:05. Feature starts 20 minutes later I. I MI AlI DL O HELD OVER!,2" BIG shows at 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 P.M. WEEK THE RAGE OF THE LION COLOR by OE LUXE *STARTING SATURDAY I 1 " , f s:>;, I ..NOV ~ I~ I i