BOARD SILENCES GARGOYLE AGAIN See Page 4 SHOWERS L w ~az IHigh--46 LOW-38 Low pressure area approaching; light variable winds expected Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1961 FIVE CENTS 4.SIXPA ,No. 122 Joint Cornmittee Ties U,' wsU * * * * * * * * * I Claims New Group Will Cut Duplication Administrator Denies Commitment Or Merger Plans Between Schools By CYNTHIA NEU University President Harlan He President Clarence Hilberry issu announcing the creation of a com program, of higher education for In effect,. the committee will closer together; However, no' merge: and there are "no commitments o president and dean of faculties, said Common "By exploring areas in which one or both universities has streng Legislators Aprove Bill For jobless WASHINGTON (A') - Legisla- tion providing for an emergency extension of unemployment bene- fits passed the House yesterday and headed for quick action in the Senate. The House passed the bill by a roll call vote of 361-31. President John F. Kennedy placed the bill at the top of his list of -emergency measures to deal' with the recession. It provides that 15 days after enactment, which would be when the :President signs the bill, ex- tra unemployment checksn would start going out to persons who have been out of work so long they have exhausted .their pres- ent benefits. Means Extra Benefits Labor Department officials said; the measure means nearly $1 bil- lion in extra benefits to as many as three million jobless during the two-year life of the program. The two years start with last July 1. Duration of the extra benefits would vary in, the different' states, but could run for a maximum of 13 weeks. In its final form, the bill was a compromise of slightly differ- ing versions passed previously by the House and Senate. One conflicting point was the starting date of a four-tenths of 1 per cent payroll tax increase in- tended to pay for the extra bene- fits. The Senate originally voted to start the tax Jan. 1, but ad- ministration forces won a move to make the date next Jan. 1. Runs Two Years The tax increase also would run for two years. Under the bill, the federal gov- ernment would advance money to the states to start the program, and would be reimbursed. later from proceeds of the tax increase. in another facet of the same problen, Kennedy asked Cohgress to appropriate $54 million to fi- nance extended compensation for unemployed railroad workers and for aid to dependent children of jobless parents. - The President asked $24 million for idle railroad workers, and $30 million for . public assistance grants to states to finance the first three months of an emer- gency program of aid to the chil- dren of uneniployed parents. The money is for the fiscal year which ends June 30. Castro Foes P redit War MIAMI (AR) - Two anti-Castro' atcher and Wayne State University ed a joint statement yesterday mittee whose goal will be a unified southeastern Michigan. l bring the University and WSU r of the two universities is planned t any kind," Marvin Niehuss, vice- I. Interests h we have common interests and gth* we can alleviate unreasonable duplication and also serve the students better, as in the case of allowing students to take courses for credit from either .school," President for Academic Adminis- tration, said. (The WSU Board of Governors and the Regents last week passed resolutions permitting students to take courses at either university, particularly in specialized areas and graduate work.) The comnmittee will study all phases of the educational pro- grams of the two universities, in- cluding present programs and pro- posed extensions of programs now under consideration, in order to bring about closer coordination, the two presidents said. "This is a very constructive step," President Hatcher said. "Much of our need is in graduate and advanced areas which are very expensive to maintain. Secure Programs "Over the last several years we have had repeated conferences with WSU, and in these discus- sions have tried to identify, areas where we could attain maximum cooperation. This more formaliz- ed committee is designed to carry on this relationship, and to se- cure 'future programs," he said. Vice-President Niehuss said that some of the areas discussed in the past were problems of the aging, public and municipal ad- ministration, approaches to city and regional planning, and joint library projects and storage li- braries. Broadening Program Lyle Nelson, vice-president for University relations, said that the University is interested in broad- ening the program, and in the fu- ture the plan might possibly in- clude the University's Dearborn. Center or perhaps even junior col- leges. The committee will be compos- ed of two administrative officers and three representatives of' the governing board4 of each univer- sity. --Daily--James warneka NEW COUNCILMEN-Five SGC candidates won one-year terms last night. They are, from left to right at top, Brian Glick, '62; William Gleason, '63; John Martin, '62; Roger Seasonwein, '61, and Per Hanson, '62. Three candidates were elected for six-month terms which will expire in November. From lower left to right, they are James Yost, '62; Arthur Rosenbaum, '62, and Kenneth McEldowney, '62. GLABERMAN: Ogar Protests Marxist Calls CIO Methods Stalinist Late Accounts "'4 By HARVEY MOLOTCH The CIO of today is a one-party state which maintains discipline of workers in much the same way as the Stalinist; system,. Marxist Martin Glaberman, managing edi- tor of the Detroit newspaper Cor- respondent, said last night. What was originally a demo- cratic organization with a goal of securing control over production by the worker, has degenerated into a professional ruling class which, although idealistic and well-meaning, tries to tell the worker what is best for him, the factory worker-journalist said. "The saving feature is that American organized labor is not a state and thus lacks the power which would allow it to transform American society into a system resembling Soviet Communism," Glaberman said. Labor Bureaucracy "Stalinism is merely a form of labor bureaucracy which corres- ponds to a period when mediation between capital and labor is crushed. Labor is no longer a me- diator, and instead runs capitalism in its own name." The Stalinist system was codi- fied by Stalin in the 1936 Soviet defined as "classless," but never-, theless possessed two distinct groups-workers and intelligent- sia. Russian Intelligentsia "Intelligentsia is a Russian word for capitalists," Glaberman said. The American counterpart of the Russian professional ruling group is composed of the union leaders, the capitalist and the gov- ernment. As an example of how the three groups work together, the Detroit editor cited a "typical Lost Bicycles Available Now Those who have lost a bicycle in the last 90 days and have not checked the bicycles impounded by the University are asked to do so between 4 and 6 p.m. today at Rm. 1015 of the Administration Bldg. The 191 unidentified bicycles, unless claimed today, will be sold at an auction beginning at 9 a.m. 'Saturday at the storage garages on East Washington St. near For- technique" used, to increase pro- duction at the expense of the worker: When an attempt is made to establish new work rules, the work- ers wage a "wildcat" strike - a strike against the capitalist and also against their union. The capi- talist arbitrarily fixes any 10 work- ers for "leading" the strike. The union comes to the rescue, de- manding the return of the dis- missed workers, and within the "big hulabaloo" which results, the government steps in to mediate. Union 'Victorious' The union is 'victorious' and the capitalist "loses" because the fired workers are returned to the assem- bly line. But meanwhile the entire issue which caused the strike is lost, and the worker returns to the production method which the cap- italist originally demanded. Glaberman drew an analogy be- tween the American "wildcats" and the latest "milestone" of so- cialism, the Hungarian Revolution. The brief socialistic state which was established arose from a mass upheaval among workers against their totalitarian bureaucratic op- pressors. The election of two successful Student Government Council can- didates was protested last night by Richard Ogar, '63. Ogar had taken out SGC peti- tions during the campaign, but failed to turn them in. Less than two hours after all eight open seats had been filled, Ogar charged that two of the win- ners, William Gleason, '63, and Per Hanson, '62, had not filed their statements of campaign ex- penditures by the stipulated time, 5 p.m. Monday. He protested that losing candi- dates Mark Hall. '63, M. A. Hyder Shah, Grad, and John Curry, '63E, along with Gleason and Hanson, should not have had their names on the ballot because of the viola- tion. Ogar said he knew-of the viola- tion Monday night and assumed the names would be withdrawn. "I noticed when I voted Tuesday that the names were still on. I didn't know the proper channel for pro,- test until tonight, though. Be- sides, I wanted to see how the election came out," he added. The case will come before the SGC Credentials and Rules Com- mittee at 5. p.m. today. Members of the committee are retiring Council President John Feldkamp, '61, Mary Wheeler, '62, Philip Power, Spec, James Hadley, '62, RichardNohl, '62BAd, and Den- nis 'Shafer, '63. Feldkamp said that in the past, the committee has not held strict- ly to the deadline for filing of financial statements. All of the late reports except Hall's were turned in late Monday night. "In former elections, we've had state- ments coming in at count night. The committee might be strict this time, but I think they would want more of a case before inval- idating any part of the election," Feldkamp commented. The committee will report on the incident at Friday's special Council meeting for the seating of new members. Final authority for seating new members rests with the present Council members. Candidates Meet constitution when the country was est Ave. SIDELIGHTS EASE TENSION: Write-Ins Enhance Election Night Richard Ogar, '63, Wilbur Gur- ley, Andrew Agifuchie and Ted Bomb, former Acacia dog, all re- ceived write-in votes in the Stu- dent Government Council elections last night. Ogar took out a petition, but never turned it in. Bomb ran in the SGC election two years ago and received fifty votes. He lived at the fraternity until last year and now lives in Ann Arbor. "If this is a mandate to bring him back to campus we'll be glad to oblige," Dan Barr, '61, said. Lawrence Libit, '63, got twenty- eight votes; Fileri Dikeman, '61, got eight. Both returned their pe- titions but dropped out in the middle of the race.