QUAD LIVING: TWO SUGGESTIONS See Page 4 S tgu aii]Y CLOUDY High-63 Low-43 Showers in morning, clearing by night. Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom VOL LXXI No. 155 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1961 FIVE CENTS SIX PAGES City To Increase Co- ileges To Revise Operations Tax Assessments Hulcher Attempts To Slash Boost; Budget Given Unanimous Support By MICHAEL HARRAH Members of the Ann Arbor Common Council last night defeated, 6-4, GOP Councilman Wendell Hulcher's attempt to slash the proposed hike in the property tax rate from 62 cents to 30 cents per thousand dollars of assessed valuation, and approved the proposed budget 10-0. Hulcher's amendment would have increased the tax only enough to cover the new city hall. Voting for the reduction proposal were Councilmen Robert Meader (R), . BUILDING: Veto Delay For Plans LANSING (A) - A Democratic legislator last night tried to pre- vent the state's three largest uni- versities from going ahead with plans for construction of self-li- quidating buildings. The proposal by Rep. E. D. O'Brien (D-Detroit) picked up only 10 supporters from among the 94 House members who voted on it. The House then passed and routed to the Senate a resolution approving proposed construction projects at the nine state colleges and universities. They will cost more than $33 million. Indicate Increase O'Brien argued that the proj- ects, chiefly dormitories and stu- dent union buildings, indicated that the University, Michigan State University and Wayne State University are anticipating great- er enrollments. Each school enrolls more than 20,000 students, "and they are big enough as they are," he said. The Legislature should encour- age expansion of the community college system instead, he said. No Approval - Rep. Arnell Engstrom (R-Trav- erse City), chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, pointed out that the three biggest universi- ties are separate constitutional bodies and need not obtain formal approval of proposed self -liqui- dating projects. They are paid for with student fees and tuitions, he said. To Inerease Aid Measure WASHINgGTON (JP)-A House Education Subcommittee yester- day tentatively approved an in- crease in the size of President J o h n F. Kennedy's proposed school-aid bill. It added $162 million to the proposed cost of a three-year plan to help public grade and high schools, boosting the estimated three-year total to about $2.45 billion. The subcommittee voted to base school aid payments on the total school age population rather than on the average daily public school attendance. It also recommended that the minimum payment per pupil be dropped from $15 to $12 per year. To Consider Strike Order For Missiles WASHINGTON (P)-Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark) said -yes- terday President John F. Kenne- dy is considering issuance of an executive order to deal with strikes and slowdowns harassing the space flight-missile programs. McClellan heads the Senate In- vestigations Subcommittee which has heard testimony that labor troubles at missile bases have thrown the whole program six months behind, and added hun- dreds of millions of dollars to its cost. He spoke after a closed door talk with Secretary of Labor Ar- thur- J. Goldberg, who had re- quested the conference. There had been reports the ad- ministration hoped to get a firm no-strike pledge from missile base wnrkers. while providing by exec- Henry Aquinto (R), Ralph Walter- house (R) and Hulcher. Council- men Gayle Flannery (R), Lynn Eley (D), John Dowson (R), Theo- dore Bandemer (R), Benamin Nielson (R), and Mayor Cecil 0. Creal (R) voted against the amendment. Councilman John Laird (R) was absent. The Council has refused similar tax increase proposals in recent years. In arguing for his amendment, Hulcher contended that the tax hike need not exceed the rate necessary to cover the city hall bonds. He pointed out that the city would receive an additional $191,- 000 through an increased tax base resulting from various property annexations throughout the pre- vious year. Budget Reductions In addition he pointed out sev- eral places in the budget where reductions in the appropriation might be applied.. His amendment was questioned by Bandemer, who asked why only 'the city hall bonds would be met, and not other special obligations voted in elections. Hulcher said that the city hall bond issue was the only one au- thorized during the past year, and therefore the only one necessitat- ing tax increase. Need for "ervices Eley questioned Hulcher's as- sumption that tax assessments should be in any way tied to an- nexation,.* "The need for services grows without reference to the size of the city," he said,-Implying that an increased tax base would not always provide for the services required. Hulcher concurred in voting on the budget since, should the budget fal to get the required seven votes, the city automatically assumes the budget originally proposed by the city administrator before it was amended by Council at their work session two weeks ago. Hulcher said he was voting for the lesser of two evils. In other action, Council voted to refer the proposed joint venture on a carport near St. Joseph Mercy Hospital back to the committee that recommended it for further study. Councilmen Eley and Ban- demer questioned some of the technical points of the proposal. "I see small if any chance for this to benefit the city," Bande- mer said. Commi ission Reconunends Tax Increase LANSING (--The State Tax Commission yesterday recom- mended a $331 million boost in the state equalized property val- ues-one of the smallest percent- age increases in years. Total equalized valuation for the state will climb 1.33 per cent to $25,202,011,000 if the .state equalization board approves the commission's recommendations. The board will not act until after a hearing in the state Sen- ate chamber May 22, giving coun- ties a chance to oppose the com- mission's figures. GORDON N. RAY . . Phi Beta Kappa lecture Ray Speak s On Authors* By RONALD WILTON H. G. Wells shared with George Bernard Shaw the reputation as the most advanced men of their time, Gordon N. Ray, secretary general of the John Simon Gug- genheim. Foundation said last night. He spoke to the fifty-third -an- nual induction banquet of the Alpha Chapter of Michigan Phi Beta Kappa in the Anderson Rm. of the Michigan Union on "George Bernard Shaw and H. G. Wells: A Turbulent Friendship." Ray drew upon the mostly un- published correspondence between the two men to illustrate their re- lationship. Although in public they were allies, they wrote argument and abuse to each other, Ray said. Shaw Elder Because Shaw was the older of the two he assumed an attitude of superiority over Wells and tried to keep him off balance. Because of this Shaw gets the victory on points in most cases, although the reader sympathizes with Wells, who he thinks should have won. Ray divided their correspondence into six decades according to the dominent topics in their writing. Fabian Society From 1900 to 1910 their chief theme was the Fabian society. This was a society of British socialists to which Shaw belonged and fin- ally got Wells to join in 1903. In 1905 Wells tried to bring about a revolution within the organization by demanding that the Fabians assume a larger role in British society. He was defeated by the old guard of the organization led by Shaw, and resigned from the group in 1908. The letters Wells wrote during this period were the best of his life. The next decade saw what Ray called "Perhaps the biggest attack anyone ever made on Shaw. In attacking Shaw's favorable stand on the Russian Revolution, Wells likened Shaw's mind to a garbage heap without something on which he could stop and say; here is the man. Concerned with Man During the twenties they con- cerned themselves with man and science. When Wells learned that his wife was dying with cancer, he received a letter from Shaw advis- ing him to stay away from doctors as they were all "assasins." The last two periods dealt with economics and the problem of old age. They kept writing until they died. Shaw once asked in a letter how history would regard them. Ray answered him that although they had little-success in showing the way to a better life they were both among the most interesting men of their time; See Drastic Adj ustments For Quality The State Cbuncil of College Presidents yesterday said that the nine state-supported colleges and universities will have to make dras- tic budget and operations adjust- ments to preserve quality educa- tion. This will prevent increases in enrollment to meet the large num- bers of students seeking admis- sions, the council announced. Hinting discontinuations of ma- jor services, Chairman Victor F. Spathelf of Ferris Institute said that the budget changes neces- sitated by the Legislature's actions might "affect major institutional operations and programs." Increases Limited The only enrollment increases will be in areas where specific funds are appropriated, Spathelf said. The only mention in the pres- ent appropriation bills affects only Michigan State University- Oakland, which the Legislature has said it expects to add a junior class next year. The council said that the refusal to increase enrollments would mean refusing 6,000 students this fall. "We are faced with two alter- natives," Spathelf said. "One is to maintain the present quality of higher education and the other Io to make adjustments to try and fit in the thousands of new stu- dents who are seeking admission, To Keep Quality "Since we can't do both, it was the unanimous decision that the quality of our higher education must be maintained." The present appropriations gill, which Is expected to pass the Legislature sometime this week, cut the funds for educations from the governor's recommendations of $117.4 million to $109.3 million. The universities' bugets suffered even more drastic cuts from their requests of $141 million. The Regents had already an- nounced, as had several other of the institutions' governing boards, that if the Legislature passed the proposed budget, they would be forced into drastic courses of ac- tion. They listed the possibilities of deficit financing, rebudgeting of funds and accompanying changes and cuts in operations, and cuts in enrollments. James Miller, president of Wes- tern Michigan University, discuss- ing appropriations, said that as long as the Legislature remains in session there remains a bit of hope of obtaining funds requested by the schools.- Staebler Gets Massachusetts Teaching Post Neil Staebler has been named distinguished professor of public affairs at the University of Massa- chusetts for the second semester of 1961-62 John W. Lederle, pres- ident of the university, announced yesterday. Democratic national commit- teeman from Michigan, Staebler, and Meade Alcorn former Repub- lican national chairman, will teach seminars in American poli- tics for graduate students and selected upperclassmen under a grant from the Ford Foundation, Lederle said. * * * Commission Returns Meeting To Laos for * * * * POLICY: Syracuse Students Complain By IRIS BROWN Six students will meet with administrators of Syracuse Uni- versity today to discuss alleged university attempts to stop dating between students of different races. The student newspaper, The Daily Orange, discloeed these at- tempts in a story Friday which quoted two coeds. The women cited warnings from student deans that their parents would be notified if they continued to date Negro boys. Dean of Women Marjorie C. Smith issued a statement in the same issue saying that she was in favor of "communication between students of different races, "but whenever it seems advisable that parents know more about the dat- ing habits of their daughters, the university advises the coeds to share this kind of information and offers to correspond to the parent if the student wishes." Unlimited Freedom She added: "A woman student is free to deternine her own social life within the limits of the time she has . .. and standards of good taste." Speaking at a rally of about 700 students which was held Friday to protest the reports, University Vice-President and Liberal Arts College Dean Eric Faigle stated that there has never been a uni- versity policy concerning the dat- ing habits of students. "If any such policy has been enforced ... it has been without my knowledge or the official sanction of the Board of Trustees," he said. He said the "confusion" might ,have resulted from a misinterpre- tation by a student adviser at a girls' living center of a confidential communication from the Dean of Women's office. Holds Stand However, Miss Smith commented that she stood on the statement she had previously made. The Representational Committee of International and American Students is expected to. refer to specific cases at its meeting with administrators today. The rally Friday was called by the International Student Organi- zation. A faculty poll printed in The Daily orange indicated the general faculty reaction to be against any regulation of student dating life. Navy Launches Polaris Missile CAPE CANAVERAL () - The Navy yesterday successfully launched a long-range Polaris mis- sile more than 1,600 miles down the Atlantic range. Officials re- ported the 31-foot solid fuel rocket performed as planned. -AP Wirephoto ALGERIAN PLAN-French President Charles de Gaulle gave a nationwide broadcast yesterday in which he said he was prepared to discuss the whole range of Algerian issues with the nationalist rebels. De Gaulle Set To Carry Out Algeria S elf-Determination PARIS P)-President Charles de Gaulle said yesterday he will carry out his policy of self-determination for Algeria with or without the Algerian nationalist rebels. But de Gaulle emphasized in a nationwide radio-TV broadcast that he is ready to negotiate all phases of the Algerian problem with the nationalist leaders. The towering President also declared the April * * 22 military revolt in Algeria "will not retard the forward progress of France. "It is necessary that we settle the Algerian affair . . . We intend to discuss with those who fight us the future of Algeria and the means to make it work by universal suff- rage." De Gaulle said if these talks fail "we must hasten and develop on the spot accession of the Al-' gerians to all responsibilities, in- cluding those of their government, so that in spite of everything, a new Algeria will be built ..." He had reassuring words for the million European settlers in Al- geria, saying France would never abandon them. At the same time he warned that if the Algerians choose to break completely with France a partition of the vast North African territory might be necessary. French- settlers, in a stunning reversal of past attitudes, hailed de Gaulle's radio-TV address as reassuring and humane. The settlers appeared particu- larly impressed by his acknowledg- ment of their contribution to World War II victory and his promise that in no case would France abandon Algeria's Euro- peans. De Gaulle's threat that in case of continuing obstacles by the na- tionalist rebels he would build a sovereign Algeria without them, was greeted with approval too. Algerians generally refused com- ment on the speech. Party Agrees On Platform For Con-Con State Democrates reached agree- ment yesterday on their party's platform for the forthcoming elec- tions of delegates to the constitu- tional convention. The Democrats seek "an equit- able system of legislative repre- sentation as expressed in the Democratic party platform," a statement issued by the Demo- cratic State Central Committee said. Other planks in the platform in- cluded- the reductioni in the fre- quency of elections and the num- ber of elective officials; main- tenance of the system of an elect- ed judiciary, and the retention of constitutional rights as guaran- teed by the federal Bill of Rights and the initiative, referendum and recall provisions of the 1908 state Constitution, now in effect. Gov. John B. Swainson had listed his own Con-Con objectives as fair apportionment, retention of popular control over the judi- diary and preservation of present constitutional rights. He also said that the Repubil- can dominated legislature hopes to degrade the forthcoming con- stitutional convention by forcing it to meet in unimpressive. quar- ters. "Since the beginning of the cur- rent session, there has been a great deal of foot-dragging on the part of the Republicans with the- in- tention perhaps of impeding the implementation of the conven- tion call," Swainson said. Introduce Bill On Wage Laws WASHINGTON (P)-Rep. Adam Clayton Powell (D-NY) yesterday introduced a bill to bring em- Truce Group Must Certify Cease-Fire- To Talk with Rebels, Royalists Preceding Geneva Conference VIENTIANE (W) - A revived three-nation Truce Commission returned to Laos yesterday,with certification of the cease-fire be- tween the Western-backed royal government and pro-Communist rebels as its first job. The commissioners arrived as government truce negotiators were holding another fruitless session with a group representing the Communist Pathet Lao and ex- Premier Souvanna Phouma in Hin Heup, 55 miles north of Vientiane. Each side there accused the other of violating the cease-fire which was proclaimed last Wed- nesday, but there was no report of any wide-scale military action. No agreement was reached on where cease-fire talks would be held and whether there would be separate political discussions. Cease-Fire Condition Verification of the cease-fire i a Western condition for attend- ance at a projected 14-nation conference, due to open in Geneva Friday, on 'ie future of the jun- gle kingdom. Chairman Samar Sen of India flew in aboard a chartered D-4- with 20other men-representa- tives of India, Canada and Com- munist Poland on the commission -from Saigon, South Viet Nam. A similar commission group pro- ceeded to Xieng Khouang, the reb- el headquarters about 100 miles north of this. administrative capi- tal. There it is to deal with the Pathet Lao and with Prince Sou- vanna, professed neutralist whom the Reds term the rightful head: of the government. Long Absence The three-nation Truce Com- mission, established under the Geneva Indochina settlement of 1954, is taking a hand in Laotian affairs again after a long absence. The group withdrew in 1958 by request of Laotian leaders who in- sisted its work was finished and accused the Polish members of spying. Sen said in an airport state- ment: "The international commission for Laos are anxious to establish contact with the appropriate par- ties in Laos . . . It is the hope of the commission that the par- ties will cooperate fully with them and that the immediate task of the commission will be carried out smoothly and satisfactorily." Michi gamua Adds Braves To 'U' Tribe When from out the paleface wigwam From behind the staring moonface. Came the slow and solemn five booms Telling that the evening spirit Wanders over woods and meadows, Lights the campfires of the heavens, Then the Michigamua warriors In their feathers and their warpaint Soon will gather 'round the oak tree: 'Round the oak tree called the KOREAN AMBASSADOR SPEAKS: Fixed Election, Unpopular Actions Caused Revolt By GERALD STORCH The Korean revolution in April of last year was inevitable, H. E. Lee Wook Chang, the Korean am- bassador to the United States, said Sunday at a Korean students reception. The Korean people were dis- satisfied with the rule of President the students, he continued. The popular sympathy was overwhelm- ingly behind the anti-government forces, however, and Rhee was forced to resign. Rhee is now living in Hawaii and "he probably will not return due to the resentment against Ahim.s", ho vaui tries have always been friendly, he remarked. As an example the Korean gov- ernment encourages students to come to the United States to study because of better oppor- tunities for education and finan- cial aid. The new regime is facing an unemployment problem with these men in the army who are needed in civilian areas." The real dilemna is that these men are also needed to com- prise a strong defense force force. Chang sees a very gradual reduc- tion in the armed services popu- lation. Inflation is another problem currently plaguing Korea. In the