I CONVOCATION LACKS MEANING See Page 4 Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom :UIIa1tt WARM Partly cloudy today, thundershowers tomorrow High-$0 Low--58 -..W. t VOL. LXXI, No. 159 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1961 FIVE CENTS SIX PAGES Ask End of lSUAffiliate Bias -AP Wirephoto DIFFERENCE OF OPINION-British Foreign Minister Lord Home (left) and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyo conferred at Gromyko's residence in Geneva yesterday. They failed to agree on arrangements for a 14-nation conference on the future of Laos, and decided to postpone to formal opening of the parley until today. Rusk, Gromyko To Confer So Laos Talks Can Begin By The Associated Press GENEVA - Secretary of State Dean Rusk decided early today to meet Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko face to face to see if they could solve the issue of who should speak for the Laotian people at the East-West conference on Laos. Wrangling over the Soviet Union's insistence that the pro-Com- munist Pathet Lao be given full status as a government at the con- efrence table prevented the 14-nation meeting from getting under -way yesterday as planned. There .: . . ...:.-....."I.. . JOSEPH PERKINS ... integrationist Court Frees Integrationist Joseph Perkins, University stu- dent prior to June, 1960, was ac- quitted Wednesday of trespassing charges in a Charlotte, North Carolina court. Perkins, who is Congress of Racial Equality field secretary, was arrested while participating in CORE's Freedom Ride to challenge interstate commerce bus segrega- tion in the deep South. He was seized while attempting to have his shoes shined in the barber shop of the bus terminal. Judge Howard Arbucke ruled that the barber shop is an integral part of the bus terminal and that therefore an interstate passenger could not be excluded because of race. He based the decision on the Su- preme Court ruling in Boynton vs. Virginia case of December, 1960. On Tuesday three other Free- dom Riders were attacked in a Greyhound waiting room in Rock Hill. S. C. The police caught the two white youths, but the CORE members refused to press charges. An hour and a half later when the Trailways bus arrived in Rock Hill the waiting room was shut- tered. Jim Peck, editor of the CORE- lator, the CORE newsletter, and Henry Thomas, were arrested in Winnsboro, S. C. Wednesday,dbut were later released. The ride is testing the enforce- ment of the Supreme Court de- cision against discrimination on interstate motor carriers or in any bus terminal facilities which are available as a regular part of the transportation company's op- eration., were suggestions among the big Western delegation that perhaps it would be better not to hold the conference at all. The Rusk-Gromyko meeting is expected to take place this morn- ing. The outcome may determine whether the conference, called ao- cording to both sides to seek meansj of making Labs a peaceful and neutral nation, eventually gets started or not. Fighting to keep the Communist camp from winning a strategic edge in the jump-off stage at the bargaining table, Rusk advanced' two firm demands that prevented the conference from opening yes- terday as scheduled. Demands Certification First, Rusk insisted there could be no conference unless there was certification from the three-nation International Control Commission in Laos tht an actual cease-fire existed. He was satisfied on that point by a report from the Indian- Canadian-Polish commission. Second, Rusk refused to agree that the pro-Communist Pathet Lao could be seated at the con- ference as though it were a gov- ernment of Laos, as the Russians demanded. He said the Pathet Lao 'could not claim full governmental status with the same standing as Premier Boun Oum's pro-Western regime. It was on this point that efforts to open the conference broke down. Still Hope Although some delegates per- sisted through yesterday in be- lieving the talks might get under way today, a British spokesman said it was not likely they could begin until Monday or Tuesday. In Vientiane monsoon rains washed out a scheduled second meeting of government and rebel cease-fire negotiators at rebel-held Ban Namone. .The rains forced back helicop- ters carrying a government mili- tary team, truce commissioners and newsmen toward Ban Namone, 60 miles north of Vientiane. CUBA : To .Press Inquiries WASHINGTON P)-Two Sen- ate subcommittees announced plans to .press their Cuban inves- tigations yesterday as news arriv- ed that Fidel Castro had cut off all motor traffic to the United States naval base in Guantanamo Bay. The Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Latin American Affairs said it would question Adolf A. Berle Monday on his role in last month's disastrous attempt by Cuban exiles to invade their Caribbean land and overthrow Castro. Berle, an adviser to Secretary of State Dean Rusk, heads the State Department's task force on Latin America. Demands Records The Senate Internal Security Subcommittee said it has directed Richard Gibson to produce rec- ords Tuesday identifying the members of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee. Gibson is acting secretary of the pro-Castro com- mittee. The Navy disclosed the halt in auto and bus traffic to the Guan- tanamo base, which lies in Cuban territory. Once it found out about the halt, the Navy said, it used its own buses to meet the workers at the gate and drive them to their jobs. The United States buses are not permitted by Cuban authorities to leave the base. Work Normal The Navy said all work on the Guantanamo base was proceed- ing normally, despite the harrass- ment. Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore), chairman of the Latin American Affairs Subcommittee, would not detail what his group expected to learn from Berle, a former assist- ant secretary of state and ambas- sador to Brazil. But Morse told a newsman: More Information "I'm of the opinion there is a great deal of information the sub- committee doesn't know about in connection with this invasion. "We hope witnesses will be call- ed during next week who will give us the whole story." Morse said Tuesday's hearing would be closed to the public. G Group Seeks To Set Date For Deletion Request To Affect Three Fraternities Michigan State University's All- University Student Government passed a recommendation last Wednesday that three fraternities6 with racial bias clauses be given until Jan. 1, 1962 to remove them. Sigma Nu, Alpha Tau Omega and Sigma Chi would be affected by the resolution if it is passed by the Faculty Committee on Stu- dent Affairs. AUSG has no jurisdiction over fraternities, President Lawrence Campbell said. The body can onlyI make recommendations to thet committee for action. Fraternities at MSU are grantedI charters by the university. Other organizations receive them fromc the student government and aree responsible to it. Campbell said, "Although we do not have the Constitutional power to take any actions, I am quiteI optimistic that our recommenda- tion will be passed by the com-c mittee."c The resolution, which specific-s ally criticized the three fraterni- ties, provides a 180 day probatiun period after which they would beF suspended.E Campbell noted that the recom-t mendation only concerns racial discrimination and then only in cases of written bias clauses. He added that a waiver grant-f ing local autonomy would be con-N sidered sufficient.t The resolution received support from the MSU Interfraternityr Council President Lawrence Os- terink.c A similar measure had been in- troduced for consideration by thee AUSG last year but it died because of insufficient time at the endr of the last session before the re- cent MSU elections. LSA Studies New Proposal. On Counseling The literary college is consid- ering an arrangement wherebyI freshmen would be assigned coun-r selors by residence, hall houses, Associate Dean of the Literaryt College James H. Robertson saids yesterday. If the proposal were put intoF effect, all or most of the freshment residents of a house would have the same counselor. Dean Robertson cited two advan-I tages to the plan:. First, it "would give literary college freshmen a better sense of identity with their counselors ifc a number of people each knew were to have the same counselor." Second, it "would serve as a communication bridge between the residence hall staff and the aca- demic counselors." He also noted that "the pro- posal could be strengthened by the counselor taking part, by in- vitation, in house activities." . He added that the final decisionf would come after further consul- tation with the Dean of Men and Dean of Women's offices. The plan was originally discuss-t ed by- representatives of these of- fices several months ago.. * * elson Reported Leaving For Position at 'OPERATION ABOLITION': Debate HUAC Film Dup By BEATRICE TEODORO The charge that students who participated in the demonstra- tions against the House Un-Amer- ican Activities Committee in San ~Francisco last May were "Coin- runist dupes" was one of the central issues in a debate yester- day between Roger Seasonwein, '61, and Fulton Lewis III. The film "Operation Abolition" is distorted because it does not prove its allegations that the Uni- versity of California Berkeley campus students were led and in- cited by Communists, Seasonwein, a member of Student Government Council, said. "Through factual inaccuracies, ambiguity and innuendo," he add- ed, "the film leads to the belief that the students were Communist dupes." Students Dupes Lewis, technical director of the film, asserted that the students were dupes because they allowed themselves to be "led" by such "Communists" as suppoenaed wit- ness Archie Brown, and cited singing within the Committee chambers. In the context of the film, how- ever, the meaning of dupes is based on "fallacies and false state- ments," Seasonwein said. "The fallacy asserts that if an individual has the same goals or used the same methods as a Com- munist, he is a dupe," he said. Planned at Berkeley He pointed out that the demon- strations were planned by the Berkeley Student Committee on Civil Liberties and cited a Univer- sity of California professor as stating there were no Communists "in positions of leadership" in the policy of the the student com- mittee. Lewis said the film made a dis- tinction between the pickets out- side the City Hall, who were not under as much Communist influ- ence as those demonstrating in the building. He quoted statements of San Francisco Mayor George Christo- pher, police inspector Michael McGuire and Municipal Judge Al- bert Axelrod to the effect that "known Comrmunists were in lead of agitation." * -Daily- REBUTTAL-SGC member Roger Seasonwein, '6 "Operation Abolition" in a debate with Fulton Le technical director of the film. The debate on the was held yesterday in, the Multipurpose Rm. of UG PROTEST BIAS: AADAC Pickets Kre Whie Stockholders.I During the S. S. Kresge annual stockholders' throughout yesterday afternoon, over 100 members of t Direct Action Committee and Detroit Congress of R picketed S. S. Kresge's national office.. Rudolph Lombard, student sit-in leader and chai Orleans CORE, addressing the stockholders on the pro of stock purchased by Ann Arbor CORE urged the sto to continue to accept dividends * * * * tanford To Remain es' Through End Of Summer 'U' Officials Refuse Comment on Report; Nelson Unavailable By RALPH KAPLAN Vice-President for University Relations Lyle M. Nelson will ac- cept a job as director of Univer- sity Relations of Stanford Univer- sity this fall, a source at Stan- ford said last night. The Stanford position will be a newly created post in the office of the President. The job will be separate from present public re- lations and information positions at Stanford. The source reported that Stan- -James Keson ford was about to launch $100,- 1, discusses 000,000 fund-rising drive and need- wis III, the ed a university director to head HUAC film it. Solve Dispute MI Improving Stanford's public re- lations with the community and placating inter-university disputes will also be duties of the Stan- ford job, the source reported. sS Stanford's President James B. Sterling refused to deny the re- port. University President Harlan 1leet Hatcher had no comment. Nelson could not be reached for comment. Nelson became director of Uni- meeting and versity relations in 1957, after nArbortransferring from San Francisco he AnnlAty State College. In June, 1960, the acial Equality Board of Regents approved a pro- posal to make this post a new rman of New vice-presidency. The title of Vice- xy of a share President for Relations had not ckholders "not been used since 1951, when. the post was held by Marvin L. Nie- lasL lhuss. 31 Regent Eugene Powers refused to predict whether or not the Re- Tax gents would continue the post as a vice-presidency if Nelson were to leave. "The- functions will be performed, regardless of the title P'The House that goes with the job," he com- mented. Power said, "Nelson has emittee heard done an excellent job and been a esterday but valuable addition to the admin- the adminis- istrative staff." ch centers on Was General Secretary billion in tax Nelson was assistant to the s which mod- president and general secretary of plants, the corporation at Educational the measure Television and Radio Center n e verbal brick- Ann Arbor for two years until witnesses who September, 1953, when he went to is nats San Francisco State College, iscriinatory,and d Besides his duties as vice-presi- e and shaped dent, Nelson has worked with the g people Development Council, been chair- of the legis- man of the broadcasting commit- , too-notably tee, and general co-ordinator of al of special various University relations func- dividends and tions. nuation of the air passenger M, Nine Edges aking for the nber of Coin- W s o s6 ax credit planWisconsin, - eatment . . . a ne segment of By BRIAN MacCLOWRY he said, bene- It was Bill Freehan day at Ferry which happens Field yesterday. to make un- No one planned it that way, so ments in 1961. the big catcher staged an ad lib n, Americans presentation of his own, hitting on vice-presi- two home runs and a double and %I depreciation driving in five runs, which .lifted park "another Michigan to an uphill 6-5 victory nt boom." But over Wisconsin. d do far less It was his second homer, lead- ic good "than ing off in the bottom of the tenth would leave a inning, that gave Mike Joyce his income in the fifth conference win, and eighth - and low-in- of the season, without a loss. thereby would Tossed Gopher Bal sumption." His victim was Badger- right- hander Ron Krohn, who had la- bored through nine innings only j 7~ Rto see victory dashed on his first l nfnhin te fmt' * * tainted with injustice." Lombard presented 6,500 boycott pledges from concerned shoppers to the stockholder's meeting. Ac- cording to CORE's more recent information, Kresge now has seg- regated counters in Atlanta, Mid- field and Birmingham, Ala., Me- taine and New Orleans, La., and Danville, Va. Lombard told the stockholders that D. W. Fritz, manager of the New Orleans store stated last Sat- urday he will "cooperate with the national directive to serve Negroes at the lunch counter." African States Reaffirm Support for United Nations MONROVIA, Liberia (MP)-Leaders of a score of African nations regarded as pro-Western or noncommitted last night reaffirmed their faith in the United Nations. They called the UN "The only organization which, in spite of past weaknesses and mistakes, is best adapted to achieve a real solution of the Congo problem." A resolution adopted by the leaders at a conference here also called on all African nations "to desist from such activities as hasty -- recognition of breakaway regimes in the old Congo republic and generally from taking sides with rival groups in any form or man- IF ner. " Ma'yI Revisec WASHINGTON (A Ways and Means Coy many witnesses y few good words for tration tax bill whi a plan to grant $1.7 credits to businesse ernize and expand This key part of drew the bulk of the bats from assorted described it as d confusing, ineffectiv to benefit the wron But other phases lation were opposed the proposed repe benefits on stockc the suggested contix 10 per cent tax on fares. Joel Barlow, speE United States Char merce, called the to "preferential tax tre direct subsidy to or business." It would, fit only a business v to be in a position usually large investi Robert R. Natha for Democratic Acti dent, said the specia allowances might s5 temporary investmez he said they wouli long-range economi tax measures which larger proportion of hands of the middle come groups which1 stimulate more con P"91 MA COLD WAR PROBLEMS: llN 1T A 1A - j ioynoee I Votes Ilirthi Rate remtl By JUDITH BLEIER and MICHAEL HARRAH "Population is a major threat to world survival; we would be more alarmed if we weren't so immediately concerned with atom- ic warfare," Prof. Arnold J. Toyn- bee of the University of London said yesterday. Prof. Toynbee was in Ann Ar- bor to address the 38th annual Wnr f-.- na.t+n He also mentioned the possi- bility that the sides as they uow stand would realign. "These al- liances -don't last very long. The West might find Russia as her, staunch ally against Communist China. It's a very temporary sit'va- tion. Nothing but some sort of world government will solve the problem. Agreement, not Conquest *'T"-ho d nnr.a cnn thn-, He likened the recent American "fiasco" in Cuba to the Suez af- fair. "I was in Japan at that time," he recalled. "The feeling was that someone had started a local war, and it could easily develop into a major conflict. "When a big country attempts to step on a smaller nation, it arouses the feelings of the whole human race." Prof. Tovnbee said that there Directed at Ghana This obviously was directed at such countries as Ghana and Guinea, which recognize the Lum- umbist and Stanleyville regime of Antoine Gizenga as the Congo's legal government. The UN and the West recognize the Leopoldville government of President Joseph Kasavubu. Neither Ghana nor Guinea was represented at the conference. The two countries, along with the United Arab Republic, Morocco and Mali, make up the so-called Casablanca group, which does not .______sa ~***