FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY P w wF RR 6 rA'&W.X A JLJMJM JM uci Court Orders Action CONFERENCE ENDS: Pledge Continued Berlin Aid i 11 4 On Barnett Contempt Educational Interest Cited By Rafferty LOS ANGELES-Max Rafferty, victorious candidate for state su- perintendent of public instruction in a contest unprecedented for public interest, attributes his suc- cess largely to grass roots concern to get better 'public schools, the Christian Science Monitor report- ed recently. According to the latest available returns, Rafferty defeated Ralph Richardson, member of the Los Angeles City Board of Education, by 2,528,712 to 2,319,590 votes. Some 250 "Parents for Rafferty" groups throughout the state cam- paigned indefatigably for Raffer- ty's program, which was mainly directed to ridding the schools of "progressive education," getting the right for local school districts to pick elementary school text- books and reorganizing the educa- tion department. The nonpartisan race for state superintendent of public instruc- tion amounted to California's first statewide debate over public school policy and the candidates faced each other before audiences 47 times. Richardson spoke to the com- plexity of public education prob- lems in California's big urban ar lems in California's big urban areas. Rafferty called for new at- tention to content. "I am opposed to the currently popular 'life adjustment' philoso- phy in education," Rafferty said repeatedly. "I would like to stress the importance of subject matter." Although the state superintend- ency is nonpartisan, partisan views evidently played a big part °n the recent race. Richardson had been a staff ad- viser to Gov. Edmund G. Brown. He had Brown's endorsement, was endorsed by the Brown-appointed State Board of Education, and had the approval of the state's profes- sional school associations. Rafferty, as he has said, was a grass-roots candidate. He had no professional education association backing. He was enthusiastically supported by organizations and po- litical groups that described them- selves as conservative. Roniney Ends Last Bonds With Business By The Associated Press DETROIT - Gov-elect George Romney resigned yesterday as vice-chairman and director of American Motors Corp. and an- nounced he will put income from firm's stock into trust fund while he is governor. Romney thus severed official connection with a company which he led from a failing automobile and appliance manufacturer into a $50 million a year money maker. He also announced that he was placing his 104,000 shares of American Motors stock in the hands of a bank trustee "who will manage and administer a trust, for me, to permit no diversion of my attention from the office to which I have been elected." Romney said that his options, as an officer, to buy Amercian Motors stock at less than the market price ended with his resig- nation. He said he had 90 days in which to exercise options pre- viously earned, "but I have made no decision on these." SMALL VOTE CHANGE: Reid Indicates .doubts About Seeking Recount By The Associated Press DETROIT-Despite picking up votes in Oakland and Jackson Counties, Republican lieutenant gubernatorial candidate Clarence A. Reid indicated he may not seek a recount in his narrow defeat to Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski. Lesinski held a 3,470 vote lead over Reid, according to an Associated Press tally yesterday of the official canvass of the Nov. To Try Two In Criminal Charge Case Face Fine,, In Barring Jail Term Meredith CHRISTIAN A. HERTER ... new post 6 votes from all Michigan coun- ties except Genesee and Wayne. Vote Totals Genesee will report its official totals today. Wayne will make its vote official Monday. Reid said last weekend he was interested in a recount. "I'd like to get Wayne and Genesee in here to see whether they will push it up any more. I want them all in before I decide," he said. "I figured I might have had a chance on a recount if the dif- ference had been 2100 or 2200 votes," Reid said. "But I don't think a recount would do any good if the difference stays up around 3300." Defeat Margin - Reid had been told last Mon- day by United Press International that his margin of defeat was slightly more than 2400 votes. "I am neither encouraged nor discouraged," he said. "I thought it would be about 2300 votes. These new figures make me have to ex- amine the whole affair." Reid said he had been examin- ing areas for a possible recount. "There are some in Kalamazoo, Kent and Muskegon counties as well as in Wayne where I would want a new count, assuming I go ahead and request it," he said. Include County Jackson County was included as official even though its totals will not be certified by the board of canvassers until today. There was a difference of 422 votes in Reid's favor between the unofficial re- turns and the figures of the county clerk. Associated Press figures elec- tion night gave Lesinski a margin of slightly more than 11,000 votes. However, an error of 8,139 votes was found in Tuscola County. NEW ORLEANS (P)-The Fed- eral Appeals Court directed the Justice Department yesterday to institute criminal contempt ac- tion against Mississippi Gov. Ross Barnett and Lt. Gov. Paul B. Johnson. The court earlier held the two in civil contempt for their efforts to block Negro James H. Mere- dith from enrollment at the Uni- versity of Mississippi. For that, Barnett faces the pos- sibility of jail and daily fines of $10,000, and Johnson the possibil- ity of daily fines of $5,000 until such time as the court deems they have purged themselves. No Penalties The court hasn't imposed any penalties yet, pending a decision on whether-and if so, when-the two purged themselves of con- tempt. In Jackson, Barnett expressed surprise at the court's action. "I hadn't dreamed of it," he said. Johnson said, "I have no com- ment at all." The Justice Department said in Washington it would await receipt of detailed instructions from the court before acting. Defy Orders In defiance of federal court or- ders, Barnett and Johnson each personally blocked the 29-year-old Nefro from entering the previous- ly all-white University of Missis- sippi and knocking down more than ancentury of segregation policy. Accompanied by federal mar- shals, Meredith arrived on the campus Sept. 30. A night of riot- ing followed with two men killed and scores of marshals and stu- dents injured. The university reg- istered Meredith the next morn- ing while federal troops moved in to restore order. Since then, Meredith has at- tended the university under guard. Federal marshals and about 500 Army troops remain. WASHINGTON UP) - President John F. Kennedy and West Ger- man Chancellor Konrad Adenauer pledged anew yesterday that West Berlin's freedom will be preserved in "all circumstances and with all means." The two leaders at the end of two days of conferences issued a joint communique in which they agreed "a solution of the German question can be found only in the preservation of the right of self- determination" for the West Ber- liners. The communique reported the consultations "were conducted in a relaxed and friendly spirit which has become traditional in the rela- tions between the two govern- ments" and noted that the two men "dealt in particular with events relating to Cuba." Praise Handling Adenauer early in his visit had praised Kennedy's handling of the Cuban situation and agreed that its final solution must be the No. 1 concern of the United States at this time. The communique said that in addition to Cuba a wide variety of other common problems were dis- cussed. These included the over- all German situation, allied plan- ning for any emergency, the fu- ture of the Atlantic alliance and the political and economic inte- firation of Europe under the Com- mon Market. The President and the chancel- lor, the communique declared, were agreed that the Atlantic alliance "continues to be the basis for the maintenance of freedom." 'Full Agreement' "The conversations have shown that. both governments are in full agreement in their assessment of the international situation. The meeting has reaffirmed the very close cooperation, based on the friendship of the two peoples, which exists between the two gov- ernments," the communique con- cluded. Adenauer returns to Germany today. Earlier; the chancellor confer- red with Secretary of State Dean Rusk at the State Department dis- cussing mainly problems of NATO and the European Community. At noontime, Adenauer made his now traditional public appearance nwp KONRAD ADENAUER ... German solution with restraint as the crisis "is not entirely over." "If you think," Adenauer said, "on the various lies (Soviet Pre- mier Nikita S.) Khrushchev has told the Americans, then in the future you will attach less import- ance to what he says and more to what he does." First Danger He called the Cuban crisis "the first direct and mortal danger" the American people had to face and declared that "they stood the trial. "When I hear about coexistence in the future, I will think of Cuba, and so will many others," he said. The firm stand of the United States in the Cuban crisis may force the Soviets to review their position on Berlin, Adenauer said, and advised patience on the Ber- lin issue. Adenauer said the Soviet adven- ture into nuclear bases in Cuba and the Red Chinese invasion of India constituted a striking coin- cidence and declared, "never in all the years of the struggle against Communism have there been so many acts of aggression as in the last few weeks." attending a luncheon with Wash- ington newsmen at the National Press Club. Express Respect Speaking extemporaneously, Ad- enauer told reporters that the Ger- mans had great respect for the at- titude of the American people dur- ing the "most grave weeks" of the German crisis. The Western world, he advised, should assess the Cuban situation at Michigan Union SEATTLE in ANN ARBOR 1962 World's Fair TONIGHT 7-12 P.M. TOMORROW 12 noon-i. A.M. Returns Set Peabody Win BOSTON OP) - Official returns confirmed yesterday that Demo- crat Endicott (Chub) Peabody de- feated the Republican incumbent, John A. Volpe, by 3,091 votes in their contest for Massachusetts governor. The official count -of the votes cast Nov. 6 gave Peabody 1,051,653 to 1,048,562 for Volpe. European Student Exchange Program Summer Exploration of Europe--$598.00 ------------- For eligibility details mail coupon to: International Student Exchange 409 Waldron Street West Lafayette, Ind. Name. I Address "IN i Name Herter As Negotiator On U.S. Trade' WASHINGTON UP) - President John F. Kennedy picked Christian A. Herter, former Republican sec- retary of state, yesterday to be the top man for the United States in the new foreign tradenegotiating program. Kennedy said Herter will be "one of the top policy officials of the United States government in shaping and achieving our inter- national objectives in the commer- cial, trade and economic fields." Herter will have the key role in one of the major programs enacted by the last Congress. It provides sweeping authority for the administration to wipe out some tariffs and cut others The President recently took the initiative in trade negotiations when he urged a conference of the General Agreement on Tariff and Trade nation for next spring in a letter to Canadian Prime Minister John Diefenbaker. Herter was secretary of state from 1959 through the close of the Eisenhower administration to January, 1961. National By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Strong indica- tions that Red China and perhaps France may have an arsenal of nuclear weapons in the near fu- ture became public yesterday in censored testimony by Secretary' of State Dean Rusk and disarma- ment officials. * * * NEW YORK-The stock market slid into an irregular decline yes- terday. The Dow-Jones 30 indus- trials were down 1.34, the 20 rail- roads, down .07, the 15 utilities, down .12 and the 65 stocks, down .34. 11 .M Y:f t RO .+" ifk :",': { jy 4' ' :". .. . 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