WHAT MADE 'THE BUND' FAIL See Editorial Page Ci r Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom 41P 41atly CONTINUED WARM High-80 Low-60 Partly cloudy, becoming windy with showers late today VOL. LXXIII, No. 141 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3, 1963 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES Michigan Voters Accept New Constitution * * * * * * Hairline Victory Passes Document Wire Services Confuse Final Tally; Jubilant Democrats Add To Melee By WILLIAM BENOIT An erroneous teletype machine, the excitement of an election night and the jubilance of those Democrats who thought the con- stitution was defeated combined to make Monday night one of the most confusing of the year. Michigan does have a new constitution, even though it will not go into effect until Jan. 1, 1964. The final tally was 810,180 "yes" votes over 799,420 "no" votes, leaving a margin of 10,760. Most of the confusion stemmed from inaccurate newswire reports, as the state's two main wire services, -the Associated Press and United * * * * * * 'INFORMAL LOCUS': 'U' To Offer Honors Housing By DAVID MARCUS The University will offer an honors housing "opportunity" next fall, using two houses in Markley Hall. Female honors students can choose to live in Blagdon House with another .as yet unspecified house in Markley available for men, Prof. Otto G. Graf, director _ -' of the Honors Council, said yes- terday. Letters are currently being sent out to all freshmen, sophomores and juniors in the honors pro- gram informing them of the hon- ors housing option. Letters will also be sent to all of next year's freshmen who have so far been accepted into the honors program. Rebels Stage New Attacks In Argentina BUENOS AIRES 1) - Rebe planes and artillery bombed an shelled a government tank colum near La Plata last night in a ne outburst of the navy-led revolt t unseat President Jose Maria Gui do. d The latest clash broke out in residential section of La Plata about 35 miles south of Bueno Aires, two hours after Guido' command claimed Argentine rebel had been routed from most of th strongholds they had seized ina sudden anti-Peronist uprising yes terday. The rebels answered govern ment victory claims with warning that the Argentine fleet, led b the aircraft carrier Independencia was steaming full speed towar Buenos Aires to deliver a knock out blow to Guido's regime. Rebel marines who had hel downtown Buenos Aires most o the day abandoned the capita about dusk, and Gens. Benjamin Menendez and Federico Toranzo Montero, the two bitterly anti Peronist army men who served a figureheads for the naval upris- ing, were reported to have fled aboard the icebreaker San Martin Guido's command also claimed other insurgent units had been chased from such important in- land cities as Cordoba, about 400 miles northwest of Buenos Aires. Faculty Urges Strong Stand On ordinance The faculty of- the literary col- lege has urged that the Univer- sity take a "position in favor of a strong and fair housing ordin- ance for Ann Arbor," in a resolu- tion passed by the faculty with- out a dissenting vote at their April meeting Monday. The resolution, introduced by Prof. Nicholas D. Kazarinoff of the mathematics department, reads: "Resolved, that the faculty of this college believe that the Uni- versity should take a position in favor of a strong and fair hous- ing ordinance for Ann Arbor which effectively protects the civil rights of all its residents." Prof. Kazarinoff explained that he was concerned with the role of the University in getting the or- dinance passed by City Council. "I hope that the University takes an active part before the Council in obtaining an effective ordinance for the community," he said. U.S. To Arm French Planes WASHINGTON (1) - Nuclear weapons under United States con- trol will be attached this week to French fighter-bombers stationed in West Germany, defense , de- partment sources said last night. Officials said the action is be- ing taken under a bilateral agree- mnent between the United States and France which was first ne- Press International, couldn't seem r to agree on the fate of the new constitution. An early report from the A. sociated Press stating the con stitution had lost led importar Democrats to hold a celebratio dinner and issue victory state ments. The faulty report was du to duplication in recording ballot ein the Wayne and Oakland Count d areas. n Both the Detroit Free Press an W The Daily, the only mornin o papers in the state in operatio - at that hour, held up publicatio to get the correct story. The Fre a Press had declared the constitu , tion defeated, but halted thei ,s presses to change their front page s The Daily waited until 3:30 a.m s when passage seemed imminent. e Different Interpretation a Interpretations of the hairlin' victory (the 10,760 margin wa about .6 of one per cent of th - total vote cast) differed as bot s Democrats and Republicans claim y ed the results indicative of in , creasing support for their plat d forms. Democratic State Central Com mittee Chairman Zolton Ferenc d claims that Gov. George Romne f "suffered defeat at the polls. H l asked for a mandate, or at leas a a consensus from the voters an o got neither." - Romney, on the other hand 9 hailed adoption of the constitu- - tion as a "citizen's victory-the re suit of the most massive citizen' . effort in Michigan history." d Wait for Official Canvas a In spite of the closeness of th final figures, no leading Democrat seemed unwilling to call for a re- count until the official canvas o votes is in. Although officially the new con- stitution does not take effect un- til next year, the document as drawn up by the constitutional convention provides for the im- mediate establishment of a com- mission to study reapportionment of the Legislature. "The commission shall proceed to district and apportion the Sen- ate andHouse of Representatives according to the provisions of this Constitution," the document'reads. The commission is charged with producing a suitable apportion- ment plan for ratification by the state Supreme Court. Russian Chief Invites Chinese To Showdown MOSCOW W) i- Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev has turned down a Communist Chinese proposal for a Red summit meeting in Pe- king and instead invited Mao Tse- Tung to Moscow for a face-to-face showdown on Communist su- premacy. There was no immediate reac- tion from Peking on the Tass an- nouncement yesterday of the in- vitation to Mao to visit Moscow this spring or summer. A New China News Agency re- lease from Peking said only that the Soviet ambassador to Peking, S. V. Cherovenko, had delivered the letter to Premier Chou En-Lai and other Chinese party leaders. The feeling in Moscow was that Khrushchev hoped Mao would ac- cept his alternate suggestion and send a representative for talks that might help clear the air over the deep Moscow-Peking rift be- SGC To Consider Proposal On Student-Faculty Body By GLORIA BOWLES Student-faculty government-the student proposal and possible modification of it-will be considered by Student Government Council, tonight. A representative of the Faculty Senate and chairman of its Com- mittee on Student Relations, Prof. Charles F. Lehmann of the School Under the plan, honors students will have the option of bringing their non-honors roommates with them. In line with the current prac- tices of the Office of Student Af- fairs in regard to housing policy, present residents of Blagdon House will also have an option to stay, Prof. Graf said. He also noted that faculty mem- bers may serve as resident ad- visors if any faculty express a willingness to do so. Otherwise, staff personnel will be chosen through, "normal procedures" of the OSA. Extension of Experiment Peter A. Ostafin, assistant to, the vice-president for student affairs, saw the project in many ways as an extension of the experiment in East Quadrangle's Greene House and Markley's Little House this year. --t JAMES B. FISK .j.. main address Fisk To Speak In Convocation Dr. James B. Fisk, president of Bell Telephone Laboratories, will deliver the main address at the University Engineering H o n o r s Convocation April 26 at Rackham Hall. "- of Education, will meet with Coun- cil at 7:30 p.m. Prof. Lehmann's committee will take its recom- mendations on student - faculty government to the Faculty Sen- ate in April, and is currently con- sidering a motion passed by SGC which asks that two students be placed on eight major Senate committees. Meaningful Unity The SRC chairman said yester- day that "a viable, meaningful unity in the governing of the Uni- versity community" was desirable but noted that "it takes a long time to construct something that is useful." Chairman of the Senate Advi- sory Committee on University Af- fairs, Prof. Wilbert J. McKeachie of the psychology department, said in a letter to SGC that he has "a strong personal interest in the proposal and believes that it mer- its serious consideration." Also favoring the plan in "prin- ciple" Regent C a r 1 Braeblec (Roseville) commented that "the idea of closer communication and participation is reasonable" and said "no doubt the SACUA will respond favorably or else present some equivalent plan." Faculty Opposition However, a number of faculty members have expressed opposi- tion to the proposal, with some against student appointment to Senate committees. Prof. John W. Reed of the Law School wrote to Council saying that it is a "fallacy" that the af- fairs of the University should be 'governed' by a body made up of students and faculty." In passage on Feb. 13 of the student-faculty government mo- tion recommended by its Commit- tee on the University, Council noted that "the ideal of a free' inter-change of knowledge and be- lief is essential to the effective functioning of any educational community," and added that "in order for such an ideal to prosper it is imperative that students and faculty think of each other as equal members in a community of scholars, with common concerns. and common abilities." Council noted that "initial test- ing steps toward a joint govern- ment" should be taken and re- quested that students be appoint- ed to Senate committees. Hatcher Says No Housin Testimony University P r e s i d e n t Harlan Hatcher said yesterday that he had just received and reviewed the preliminary draft of the fair hous- ing report from his three-man ad- visory committee, but that there "seemed to be nothing in the re- port which would change the Uni- versity's position, "which is to send no testimony to the Ann Arbor City Council." The City Council will hold its second public hearing on the pro- posed fair housing ordinance from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. tonight in the old City Hall. President Hatcher indicated that he planned to meet as soon as possible with Professors Donald Pelz, program director of the Sur- vey Research Center, Samuel El- dersveld of the political science department and Luke K. Cooper- rider of the Law School, the mem- bers of the president's fair hous- ing advisory committee, to discuss the data and analysis contained in their report. As of last night, President Hatcher did not plan to send a University representative or any other form of statement or testi- mony to the public hearing. The University did not send a representative or testimony to the first hearing, held on March 20. At that time President Hatcher' said that "if as the ordinance de- velops, it appears that a substan- tial number of University person-' nel are affected, or that further testimony on the part of the Uni- versity is indicated, then we w ul have a representative present." The University has sent a letter to Mayor Cecil O. Creal and the City Council stating that it' "heartily favors a fair housing. ordinance." It pointed out that the Univer- sity does not wish to "dictate egis- lation" to the city but that it does wish to work with the com-j munity, since housing problems are "so closely linked with the University as the residence of so1 many faculty and students of every race." ' Berkeley Nears Bill Rejectionr BERKELEY OP)-A proposed or-e dinance to ban discrimination inI Berkeley housing tumbled towardX defeat by a 5-to-4 margin withc more than one-third of the votes 1 counted from yesterday's munici-c pal election.e With 100 of 275 precincts re- s porting, the count stood 6,225 for 1 the measure and 8,090 against.I The margin remained constant4 throughout the early counting. An estimated 70 per cent ofL Berkeley's 52,936 registered voters turned out, with voting heaviest in the city's exclusive hill areas. Wallace J. S. Johnson, mayoral I andidate who opposed the or-s dinance, was leading Dr. Fred S. 7 Stripp, a backer of the measure,V by a 6-to-15 ratio. a The College of Engineering nounced that the subject of talk will be "The Responsible gineer." OTTO GRAF .honors housing an- the En- Fisk has combined a distin- guished career in industrial re- search with outstanding scientific service to the government, accord- ing to Dean Stephen S. Attwood of the engineering college. Fisk has been chairman of the United States technical delegation at the Geneva Nuclear Test Ban Conference both in 1958 and 1959. He was also director of the Divi- sion of Research of the Atomic Energy Commission in 1947-1948. At the annual academic full- dress affair, 25 outstanding Uni- versity engineering students will be honored with distinguished achievement awards, and 36 others who have achieved grade averages of 3.6 or better will be recognized. That experiment, proposed by Prof. Theodore. Newcomb of the psychology and sociology depart- ments, attempts, to link the resi- dence hall experience with the classroom experience. As much as possible, students in these two houses were put into the same classes and house personnel were chosen with special care. The honors housing proposal will allow extension of this pro- gram, which this year only includ- ed freshmen, into upperclassmen, Ostafin said. 'Informal Locus' He added that honors housing would give honors students an "in- formal locus" which will help them to take fullest advantage of the honors program. Prof..Graf noted that the major similarity between the Little- Greene experiment and honors housing is the "relationship in time and climate pf experimenta- tion." Ostafin cited as the reason for selecting Markley its lounges, conference rooms and other facil- ities which will provide room for honors activities. Honors housing has been under consideration for several years. This year, Prof. Robert O. Blood Jr. of the sociology department wrote a report setting out a ra- tionale for the program and a plan for implementation. precincts were from out-state. The, count stands: 815,745 fc cumbent Eugene B. Power of Ann. for Thurber; 768,895 for Repub-< lican Ink White of St. Johns. Narrow Victory Commenting on his narrow vic- tory, Cudlip said that "I wish to thank the people and hope to jus- tify their confidence in me." He indicated that it had been a "good, hard campaign." Cudlip emphasized the fact that he had tied his campaign to the support of the new constitution. He believes that the new educa- tion article will work to the good of the University and expressed surprise that the document pass- ed by so "narrow a margin." Regent Thurber is "awaiting the results of the official canvass which will be completed in the next two weeks" before making any decision about a recount. He pointed out that the present vote totals are all unofficial. 'Razor-Edge' Vote The canvass checks the accur- acy of each precinct's totals. "In a razor-edge decision such as this election, just a few errors here and there can spell the difference between victory and defeat," the apparently defeated Democrat stressed. The election of Power and Cud- lip places three Republicans and five Democrats on the Board. Pre- viously the split had been 6-2. Cudlip is a partner in a Detroit law firm and served as a delegate. to the Constitutional Convention from his local district. He is a' 1927 graduate of the Law School. Other Boards The election of members to the other university governing boards was also altered after the late morning returns. One Democrat' and one Republican was elected to each. Republican Stephen S. Nis- bet passed up his Democratic op- ponent Jan Vanderploeg to se- cure a seat on Michigan State' University's governing board. Dem- ocrat Donald Stevens retained his early lead to win the other open seat. The final vote totals were Nis-f bet, 804,021; Stevens, 791,671; Re-I Publican Arthur K. Rouse, 785,-1 476; Vanderploeg, 774,472.E Republican Alfred H. Whittakert unseated his incumbent Democrat- c opponent Michael Ference, who ed last night, for a position on l Wayne State University's govern-t ng board. Incumbent Democrat< Leonard Woodcock retained his seat, as was indicated yesterday. Totals ranged: Woodcock, 809,355;l Whittaker,u791,107; Ference, 785,- ,83; Republican Marshall V. 1 NJoecker, 770,938.C Election day turned out to be a half victory for each party in the race for positions on the univer- sity governing boards. The onlyr bet lost by both Democratic candi-s dates for one board-the Universi- ys-was one on the weather. Re-i gents Thurber and Power took outc an insurance policy which wouldX have paid them $6500 if it hadc rained more than one twentieth t Qf an inch in Detroit between 3 t P.M. and 8 p.m. Monday-when nost of the voters go to the polls. They lost the bet despite cloudy - skie and dr7.Ru ran Gets SecondSeat InRegents ace Late-Reporting Out-State Districts Award Republican Slim Victory By GAIL EVANS Late yesterday morning Republican Regental candidate William B. Cudlip of Grosse Pointe Shores inched ahead of his Democratic opponent Regent Donald M. D. Thurber to gain the second open seat on the Board. When The Daily went to press at 3:30 a.m. yesterday, Pudlip was 39,179 votes behind Thurber. Even at 8 a.m. Thurber still led by 3300. But later in the day with all but one precinct reporting, Cudlip had captured the Regental post by a margin of 2,058 votes. All the late WILLIAM B. CUDLIP ... .,victorious ORBITING: victorious Democratic in- 799,424 for Cudlip; 797,366 'UT' Designs Explorer 17 Instrumnents By NEIL FRIEDMAN The Explorer 17 satellite orbited last night from Cape Canaveral carried, as part of its payload, in- struments for an experiment by Space Physics Laboratory scient- ists. The instruments, designed by the University scientists, are two electron temperature probes to study the structure of the atmos- phere. The satellite was launched by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration at 9 p.m. and was put in orbit by a Delta booster rocket. The satellite's orbit will carry it around the earth at a height of 155-580 miles. Early radio signals indicate the Explorer reached its orbit, but its exact path around the earth had not been determined. In addition to the two electron probes, the 410-lbs. instrument package also carried mass spec- trometers and two different types of pressure gauges. There is also a sun-moon aspect sensor to determine the relative positions of the sun and the moon. The flying laboratory, complete- ly encased in a stainless steel shell, features a new pulse code mnodulation telemetry system de-. signed to send data to earth in a igitalformthat can be fed di- r'ectly into a computer for an- alysis. Previous satellites relayed data n analog form, which had to be converted to digital before com- puter insertion. The new system could save up to several weeks time in analyzing some informa- ion. The different instruments in the payload will be turned on and off for the experiments which will be VOICE FORUM: Ross Discusses Need for New Politics i By JEAN TENANDER "If every group in society were to politically express its demands on society and government and if every poor person and Negro could express his demands certain func- tions of the government would be- come rhetorical," Robert Ross, "It is important to determine what our politics are as opposed to what our programs are," Ross stressed. Sociologist C. Wright Mills told us to be and to create publics and to hold the elite's re- spect, he said. "He told us we were to be politically relevant as well the United States today," Ross said. He said he felt "we, today's students, are the first group on the left not directly related to labor unions or to working class problems generally." Turning to elements in the his- torv of American nolitics that he '-U amaW