TWO VIEWS: RIGHT, LEFT See Page 4 j Cl . r Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom -:43 a t ly CLOUDY, WINDY High--59 Low-40 Rain tonight, diminishing to light showers tomorrow. ssnr t vvr ._ .... - VOL. LXXI, No. 134 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1961 FIVE CENTS EIGHT PAGS FIVE CENTS aEa t(HT a r .0 Officials Attack Space Program By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Congressmen on the House Space Committee criticized America's space program during hearings of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration yesterday, in the aftermath of the recent Soviet space triumph. Chairman Overton Brooks (D-La), chairman of the committee, demanded that "the program be speeded up or find out why it isn't." David S. King (D-Utah) said that the United States should push a big solid fuel space booster to do a quicker and better job than liquid fuel. Victor Anfuso (D-NY) said, "I want to see this country .t Legal Aspect Of Concert Under Study By PHILIP SHERMAN Development Council officials and University Attorney EdmunC A. Cummiskey are examining the legal aspects behind Wednesday's partially-abortive Ray Charles concert. They have scheduled a meet- ing for today, and do not rule ou possibilities of legal action in th wake of Charles's non-appear- ance. Meanwhile, the council's Stu- dent Relations Board, the con- cert's direct sponsor, started to refund half the ticket price to al ticket holders. Board advise] Richard Kennedy said between $1,500 and $2,000 has been return ed. Give Compensation (Board Chairman John Ross,'61 said Wednesday that the unre- turned receipts would be used to meet the concert's expenses, in- cluding some compensation for the orchestral part of the Charles show that did appear. (Charles's orchestra and some singers - the first half of the show-did perform. Charles was supposed to appear in the second half of his show but did not be- cause his private plane was grounded in Chicago. (Word he would not appear in Ann Arbor did not come until after the performance had start- ed.) Take Names The names and addresses of all ticketholders who got refunds were taken, in case the board is able to get compensation for its expenses from the Charles show. Kennedy said there is a binding contract for Charles's perform- ance, agreed to by New York agent Hal Ziegler, owner and pro- moter of the entire Ray Charles Show. Half the show's fee has been paid, according to standard proceedings. Unless Charles was prevented from appearing by means beyond his control, his non-appearance is a breach of contract, Kennedy said. No Insurance Carried Kennedy said no insurance' bonding Charles's appearance has been carried locally. (If insurance is carried on Charles's appearance, it would most likely be carried by Zieg- ler's.) Refunds will continue today from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Michigan Union side desk, and possibly in the Student Activi- ties Bldg., Kennedy said. Rumors Charles was in Los An- geles Wednesday night are untrue. The singer was given a Grammy award by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, but did not accept it in person, the Associated Press reported. Dennis Charts Corps Policies COLUMBUS, Ohio (M) - In its first few months the peace corps will probably concentrate on Af- rica, Latin America and South Asia, the National Association of Foreign, Student Advisers was told here yesterday. Lawrence E. Dennis, who has charge of recruitment, selection and the training program of the peace corps, told the group at its 13th, annual meeting that the corps is in effect a new kind of placement service underwritten by the United States government. mobilized to a wartime basis, be- cause we are at war. I want to see schedules cut in half." Dbing their best to answer the drumfire of questions were James Webb, newly installed NASA di- rector, and Dr. Hugh L. Dryden, deputy director who has been with NASA since its inception. Dryden said, "The race was lost . . . before the space agency was founded. The Russians began their major effort in 1954, and NASA warsnot set up until 1958. There is some question, sir that you can make up four years in two years.' s Describes Flight In Moscow, Maj. Yuri A. Gagar- - in described his flight into space. t "When you go orbiting around e the earth, you float above your - chair in the space ship. The sun blazes tens of times brighter than - here on earth. "The earth's sunny face is sep- arated from the black void by a : band of delicate blue color. r "On the descent into the earth's atmosphere one's legs and arms feel as before during weightless- ness, and I am no longer hovering over the chair," he said. Welcome The 27-year-old pilot gave this >account yesterday to Tass some- -where in the Soviet-interior as Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev pre- pared a tremendous welcome for him tomorrow in this excited cap- ital. Twenty-gun salutes in the astronaut's honor will roar out 5all over the Soviet Union. Col.rCharles H. Roadman, of the NSAS, told a newsman that Gagarin's reported good reaction to a 108-minute exposure to zero Sgravity was the proof that man can tolerate at least short-term exposure to weightlessness with- out adverse physiological or psy- chological reactions. Commission Asks Views The Commission on Year-Round Integrated Operation is actively seeking faculty and student opin- ion on the scope and nature of revision of the University calen- dar, Prof. William Haber, com- mission chairman, said last night. At a special meeting of the Uni- versity Senate today in Rackham Lecture Hall, Prof. Haber will out- line the work his group has done so far and review alternative pro- posals for establishing a year- round calendar. This meeting is open to all fac- ulty members, but is not open to students, Prof. Haber said. However, students will have an opportunity to confer with the commission in a meeting the group is considering setting up later this month. Student Government Council will probably be involved in such communication, SGC President Richard Nohl, '62, said Wednes- day. He was mandated by the council to set up a meeting be- tween interested students and the commission to "insure that stu- dent points of view are adequate- ly considered." Although the mechanics of the' proposed meeting have not yet been worked out, Nohl said he was pleased that the commission is desiring student opinion. Prof. Haber will submit a re- port on the proposals for calendar revision to University President Harlan Hatcher about May 15. Tulane To Try For Bias End Tulane University decided yes- terday to admit students regard- less of race or color if "legally, Swainson Requests Increase Gov. John B. Swainson yester day linked Michigan's growth t her industries and educational in stitutions-and asked more mone for both. He addressed the annual lunch eon here of about 200 "Michiga Industrial Ambassadors," indus trial and business executives or ganized by the Michigan Economi Development Department to sca the nation for new industry an job prospects for the state. "We must support our college and universities by adaquate bud gets, facilities and faculty pay,' Swainson declared. "Money fo our state's education is more tha an appropriation-it is a wise in- vestment." Cites Endeavors He cited the University's stak in space exploration (research lab. oratories), medical research (Sall vaccine) and peacetime uses 0 atomic energy (the Phoenix pro ject). "Today as you visit the Insti- tute of Science and Technology,' he told the ambassadors, "you wil hear many strange words. These are overpowering concepts, but a source of pride to know this i going on in Michigan, and a source of energy to sell our state." He charged the ambassadors t "sell" Michigan in order to obtair opportuniites for the young peopl now being educated and the state' natural resources. Need Reform "But," he added, "we need fis- cal reform legislation to make th state more attractive to industry.' Michigan is the "best possible' location for industries and her people are dedicated workers Swainson said. "The recent Rus- sian space exploit may be a shoc to some, but to our people it is a spur to greater things," he ex- plained. University President Harl Hatcher, speaking before Swain- son, echoed the governor's mesh- ing of education and industry. He called the two "inseparable." Tells of Contribution "The University is always eager to bring forth knowledge, make it useful and train persons to use it. This is our controution," he said Thomas Dickinson and Law- rence, co-chairmen of the eco- nomic development committee of the Ann Arbor Chamber of Com- merce, tied the Chamber of Com- merce-sponsored city industrial research park to Michigan's growth. "The research park is going to widen the tax base, help to create more jobs, produce new methods that will relate directly to in- dustry and aid diversification of the state's idustry," Dickinson said. Says Victory Over Soviets Impossible' COLUMBUS, Ohio (A)-William Mandel told about 200 Ohio State University students in a back yard talk near the campus yesterday that the United States "cannot possibly win a war with the Soviet Union." Mandel will speak at the Uni- versity at 4:30 p.m. Saturday, in Rm. 3R-S of the Michigan Union, through the auspices of the Poli- tical Issues Club and Voice. The controversial critic of the Un-American Activities Commit- tee and commentator on Soviet affairs, said his chief objection to the Congressional investigating committee is that "they represent a form of fascism in the United States." "I have always believed that war with the Soviet Union is insane and we could not win. There is no issue that cannot be settled by negotiations. The essence of American democracy is that Americans have just as much right to be a member of the com- munist party as the John Birch society," he said. Mandel appears in the film, "Operation Abolition," which des- cribes him as an "identified agent f the Communist Party." Birchers Plan For Appropriation Payroll Tax Nears Vote In Senate LANSING (A) -- A bill which would allow local units of govern- ment to levy a one per cent pay- roll tax-if approved by voters- moved up to the final voting stage yesterday in the Senate. The measure was part of a tax bill package reported out of the taxation committee. It would permit cities, villages, townships and counties to lexy the tax on both residents and non- residents, regardless of where they work. However, the taxpayer would not pay the full one per cent un- less he both lived and worked in the community. "This is a new concept," explain- ed Sen., Clyde Geerlings (R-Hol- land) who said the provision call- ing for only half the tax being levied on those who live in one community and work in another would curb any tendency toward reciprocity. Under the bill, Wayne County only, and none of its cities or townships, would be allowed to levy the payroll tax, but in out- state areas, smaller governmental units each could adopt the tax. The proposal also includes a provision under which any govern- mental unit could require employ- ers to withhold the tax from "sal- aries, wages, commissions and other compensation paid to em- ployees." U' Re'jects Exalmination A new test for predicting how well an individual high school stu- dent will do at a given college has been designed by the American College Testing program. The new test, using five indices, will predict a student's success in a specific way by relating each institution's standards to each stu- dent's abilities. "The University has no plans for making use of this new test." Piof. C. Vroman, director of ad- missions said. Prof. B. G. Fricke of the psy- chology department and assistant chief of the Bureau of Psychologi- cal Services, who has worked in the field of educational testing and has himself done research on col- lege entrance tests, said that "the new A. C. T. test is not much better or much worse than other already available tests." "In fact, they are inferior to the College Entrance Examination Board tests used by the University at the present time. 'Their greatest value is to the small Midwestern colleges which have no personnel or facilities of their own to conduct educational testing," he added. "Many of the smaller colleges will be requiring these tests and the University may receive some scores from students applying to more than one school. -Photo Courtesy University News Service LIGHTNING MACHINE-Michigan Industrial Ambassadors, organized to promote the state as a good place to do business, viewed this power unit in the University's new magneto-fluid dynamics laboratory yesterday. Part of one of the world's most advanced engineering laboratories, this "Lightning Maker" will furnish great amounts of of electrical energy for research in space flight phenomena, high energy storage and transfer, and thermo-nuclear energy. To Open Special Laboratory Beadle Sees Good, Chance Boosts The University's engineering college is developing one of the world's most highly developed and advanced laboratories, which will open for operation in September. The laboratory's primary use will be for advanced instruction and frontier research in three areas: space flight phenomena, high energy storage and transfer, and thiermonuclear energy. Three departments - aeronautical and astronautical engineering, electri- cal engineering, and nuclear en- gineering will share use of the new laboratory. The Magneto-Fluid Dynamics Laboratory is being installed in a space adjacent to the University's propulsion laboratory on north campus. Need Strong Machine These operations require a ma- chine that will produce vast amounts of electrical energy. This machine, which makes the labora- tory's advanced operations possi- ble, is a unipolar generator and a huge coil, some five feet thick, 20 feet in diameter and wound with a cable as thick as the stout end of a baseball bat. This machine's energy output at its peak is between one and two million kilowatts-about the nor- mal load of the entire Detroit Edison Company. University astronautical engi- neers will use this energy to build a hypersonic wind tunnel which will be used for research on re- entry of space vehicles into the atmosphere. The project is ex--' pected to provide information on what happens to the chemical composition of air heated by the passage of such a vehicle. The engineers will dump the spark (about 350,000 amperes) in- to an arc chamber, where it will immediately heat a gas to around 20,000 degrees (Fahrenheit) - about twice the temperature of the sun's surface. This hot gas will then expand and ultimately blast through a tiny nozzle and past a model in a test section into a vacuum tank. Study Waves Electrical engineers will have the opportunity to study electro- magnetic wave reflection and ab- sorbtion by ionized gases to bet- ter understand communication technology. The laboratory will be used by nuclear engineers for research on controlled fusion reactions (har- nessed power of the hydrogen bomb) in the new laboratory. Sustained thermonuclear reac- tions require temperatures of about a hundred million degrees. Such temperatures have been ap- proached but not attained in at least one United States laboratory. Gases this hot are ionized- stripped of positive and negative particles and thus enabled to car- ry an electric current, and are contained in a strcng magnetic field. A high energy source-which the laboratory will provide - is necessary to yield both the high temperatures and strong magnetic fields required to approach sus- tained thermonuclear reactions. Experimental work by Universi- ty nuclear engineers will focus on understanding hot gases in a mag- netic field, developing measuring techniques, and making measure- ments of these conditions. Experiments in instructional work will be set up to accompany a one-year course in thermonu- clear education at the University. At present, although several uni- versities do research on fusion, none has a course in this subject. Phone Taxes Could Bring New Funds Health, School Bills Face Senate Fight In Last-Ditch Tries By The Associated Press State colleges and universities got some encouraging news yester- day about an appropriations boost from Sen. Frank Beadle (R-St. Clair), Senate majority leader, but the picture in the House looked far from promising. The Senate is expected to take action on the higher education and mental health appropriations bills today in an attempt to beat the midnight deadline set for passage of all bills by the house in which they originated. Beadle told reporters yesterday there is a good chance some of the funds for state-supported higher education will be restored. Extend Levy The added revenue would come from an extension of the four per cent levy on telegraph and tele- phone bills or a $1.25 per barrel tax on beer, set to expire June 30 as part of a $55 million nui- sance tax package. Meanwhile House Republicans sent six appropriations bills to the Senate without changing the recommendations of the GOP- controlled ways and means com- mittee. Democratic efforts to add to these bills by amendment were stymied by straight party line voting on the House floor. The House action may indicate a future pattern in the Senate where the crucial higher educa- tion and mental health appropria tions bills are awaiting consider- ation. The GOP-controlled Senate appropriations committee has re- commended a slice of $7.8 million from Gov. John B. Swainson's $117 million higher education budget and a $2 million cut in the mental health request. To Debate Taxes The Republcans agreed to take from the table the beer and telephone-telegraph nuisance taxes so that they may be debated and voted upon pending the outcome of the appropriations bills. The tax bills came out of committee without recommendation and thus had been automatically tabled. GOP Senators also gave pre- liminary approval to a tax pack- age which would permit local governments to impose 'an income tax and reform personal property taxes. The package would require real and personal property to be assessed at a rate to be established in December by the State Equaliza- tion Board and would replace local personal property taxes with a specific levy set at the average rate of present county personal property taxes. While Republicans were staving off Democratic attempts to %dd more money ranging from $5,000 to $6 million to five bills, the GOP forces, headed by ways and means committee chairman Rep. Arnell Engstrom (R-Traverse City), added $5 million to Swain- son's welfare request. Realistic Budget "This is a realistic budget. I'm through balancing budgets by un- derappropriating," Engstrom said of the governor's recommendation for an $81 million appropriation, Engstrom's committee suggested $86 million, and the House de- feated by a 56-50 straight party vote an amendment to lower the figure to $81 million. Although the welfare budget fell short by $6 million last year, Democrats argued an upswing in business should relieve the wel- fare rolls shortly. College Officials Ignore Invitation State-supported college and uni- versity officials did not renond tn Group Organizes To Revive Campus Humor Magazine By LORA KRAPOHL A group of students interested in "arousing favorable student opinion for a campus humor magazine," have drawn up the constitu- tion for a new student organization to be known as the "Gargan- tuans," Frederick Neff, '63, spokesman for the group, said yesterday. "The group will try to produce an atmosphere conducive to the level of creativeness necessary for a high quality humor magazine which the University is now without," he added. To Approach Board "We are also interested in submitting material to the Board in Control of Student Publications for possible publication in a 5tudent humor magazine," Neff REDS MAKE GAINS: Factories Rise in New China By BUEL TRAPNELL Spotlessly clean streets, bright- ly colored clothing of many ma- terials, well-fed people in good health and giant factories rising above the rice paddies signified a new China to Maud Russell. Visiting that country in 1959 after an absence of 16 years, Miss Russell, a worker for the YWCA, observed "immense changes" that made her ask, "Am I in New York dreaming or in China seeing these things?" She said that everyone talks Miss Russell showed slides to augment her commentary. They show that the traditional all-blue clothing the peasants wore during the 26 years she lived there (1917- 1943) has been replaced by muti- colored Western clothing for all but work. "The peasants have no real lack of food," she said, and added that foods from differing regions of China now are available all over the country, as are imported Asian and EurropenP foods. towards Communism, is engaged. in constant evaluation of itself, finding its mistakes and correcting them. Although the advent of Commu- nist government made it possible for peasants to own land, the economy is very socialistic, she ob- served. During flood threats, the Cen- tral Ministry of Finance takes charge of all the food. Some is then distributed to those areas hit by floods. Previously, regional said. "The Gargantuans hope to in- corporate two other groups which are currently trying to bring back the Gargoyle to campus," Neff added. The Gargoyle was the cam- pus humor magazine which stop- ped publication last. year when no senior editors were appointed to its staff. Has Constitution The Constitution which the group has drawn up has been sub- mitted to the Student Government Council Organization Recognition Committee and has been given tentative approval by the commit- tee, Neff said. "Our group plans not only to abide by all University rules but also to work in the spirit of the