THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TTfltFF~ ,a asp.. a1 :a aaauuu of UN Officials Try To Soothe Critics Of, Cong Action UNITED NATIONS (IP)--The United Nations' top man in the Congo headed back there yesterday with the reported aim of pushing a new idea for outside arbitration of deadlocked money disputes be- tween the Congolese central government and the Katangan seces- sionist regime. But little optimism was shown here that the idea would work Secretary-General U Thant's military adviser went along for the stated purpose of studying "the future needs" of the United Nations NEW SETTING: To Resume Talks over Cuba U.S. Cites Segregation Patterns UNITED NATIONS (M)-Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan's departure from Washington yesterday cleared the way for shifting Soviet-United States talks on Cuba back to United Nations headquarters. But indications were that there was little prospect of quick agree- ment to clear up the unsettled issues of the fading Cuban crisis. A spokesman for the United States' U.N. delegation said Soviet and United States negotiators would meet at that delegation to- morrow to carry the talks for- U THANT plan tested World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Joseph Chris- topher O'Mahoney, for 25 years a Democratic senator from Wyom- ing, died yesterday at the Naval Medical Center in suburban Beth- esda, Md. He was 78. * * * CHICAGO - Thirty-two scient- ists, engineers and technicians who ushered in the atomic age gathered at the site of the original atomic pile on the University of Chicago campus yesterday to com- memorate the 20th anniversary of the birth of atomic power. They agreed that the future offers a choice of accelerated peaceful ad- vancement or annihilation, and that the choice has not yet been made. * * ~* SANTA FE-Republican Edwin L. Mechem resigned Friday as governor of New Mexico and was promptly appointed to the United States Senate seat of the late Dennis Chavez. *force in the Congo and "the ques- tion of an eventual withdrawal of the Indian contingent." Robert K.A. Gardiner, the Gha- naian officer-in-charge of the United Nations Congo operation, and Brig. Indar Jit Rikhye, the Indian military adviser, left for Leopoldville yesterday. Seek Agreement An authoritative source said his eventual object was to get Katan- gan President Moise Tshombe to end the secession along the lines of Thant's Aug. 20 plan for re- unifying the Congo. But he said a key to this was to induce Adoula and Tshombe to agree to split up the money com- ing from Union Miniere, a big company that mines copper and cobalt in Katanga. Union Miniere earns about $220 million a year in foreign currency and pays almost $50 million of this to Katanga in export taxes, thus sustaining the secession. New Split Thant's plan provides for a 50- 50 split of Katanga's foreign cur- rency reserves and export revenue with the central government. But Tshombe has balked at that. One of his arguments is that Un- ion Miniere itself needs a large part of the foreign currency to pay for spare parts, diesel oil and other things necessary to keep its mines and smelter going, and the Thant plan would not guarantee it this. The new idea, the authoritative source said, .is that Ad' ula and Tshombe should agree that ex- perts of the International Mone- tary Fund should decide arbi- trarily what percentages of the foreign exchange"reserves and the export taxes should go to the ceA- tral government and to Katanga, respectively. Union Miniere has agreed to abide by the arbitration of these experts, he said, provided Adoula tand Tshombe agree to do so. This idea it was indicated, was among those BelgiarForeign Min- ister Paul-Henri Spaak and Unit- ed States Undersecretary of State George C. McGhee discussed Wed- nesday with Thant and Gardiner. They have been holding talks here for the last week. PSYCHOSIS: See Danger In Studying 'Mind' Drugs CAMBRIDGE.(P)-Harvard Uni- versity officials, noting that "a number of undergraduates are be- coming interested in the effects of . . . mind distorting drugs," have warned students against possibly serious psychotic effects from their use. In a letter addressed to the Harvard Crimson, Harvard Col- lege Dean John U. Monro and Dr. Dana L. Farnsworth, director of university health services, declar- ed that "Our concern for this de- velopment is such that for more than a year we have had an agree- ment that Harvard University ex- perimenters studying the effects of such drugs should not employ undergraduates as subjects in their research work. "It is important to warn under- graduates that ingestion of these drugs may result in serious haz- ard to mental health and sta- bility, even for apparently normal persons. "The drugs have been known to intensify seriously a tendency to- ward depression and to produce other dangerous psychotic ef- fects." The Crimson quoted Harvard authorities as saying that their present concern was to warn stu- dents and that no plan for any action against students was under consideration. The Crimson carried a report that there had been black market- ing of cubes, impregnated with one of the hallucinatory drugs selling for a dollar each. ANASTAS I. MIKOYAN . . . leaves Washington ward. Recessed Session Any formal Soviet-United States agreement to settle the Cuban question would be put before the Security Council, which has been in recess since Oct. 25 while ne- gotiations have been going on among Cuba, the Sovif ; Union, the United States and Thant. A source close to Sir Patrick Dean of Britain, president of the council for December, said nobody had asked for a meeting next week on Cuba or anything else and he did not think there would be one. Thant told a reporter the United States had not yet replied to a Cuban-Soviet proposal he relayed on Nov. 15. No Hurry The United States delegation seemed to be in no hurry to reply to it. But United States sources said the Americans had told the Russians long ago that parts of it were unacceptable. Communist accounts indicated that Castro's oft-repeated five de- mands were reflected in clauses that would have the United States lift its economic embargo of Cuba and talk with the Cuban govern- mentaabout eventual withdrawal from the United States base on Guantanamo Bay in eastern Cuba. The United States negotiators have even refused to talk here with Cuban chief delegate Carlos M. Lechuga. The Communists have said the proposed agreement in c lu d e s withdrawal of Soviet missiles and bombers from Cuba, lifting of the United States naval quarantine of that country and a United States pledge not to invade Cuba. Alters Policy About Satellites WASHINGTON (A)-The Pent- agon announced yesterday it is putting into writing a list of ex- ceptions to its otherwise iron- clad ban against announcing any details about military space shots. These exceptions cover such satellites and other researchsve- hicles as the Navy's Transit navi- gation satellites and the Air Force's Dynasoar- and applied re- search space probes. Moses Quits State Posts Robert Moses, for 50 years the well known driving force behind power, parks and parkways in New York State, announced Fri- day that he was giving up all five of his state posts after a disagree- ment with Gov. Nelson Rocke- feller. He said Rockefeller had asked him to resign immediately as chairman of the State Council of Parks so that thegovernor could appoint his brother, Laurance S. Rockefeller, to the post. "Under the circumstances, I shall retire from all state park work on Jan. 1" and from the chairmanship of the State Power Authority, Moses said in a state- ment issued from his office at the State Council of Parks. 'Growing Load' In Albany, Rockefeller said in a statement that he had suggested Moses resign the Council of Parks post "because of the growing load on him" from his other positions. "There is no one who has done more to develop parks, not only in this state but anywhere in the na- tion, than has Moses," the gover- nor said, "and the people of this state will forever be indebted to him. "It is regrettable," he added, "that in his statement of resigna- tion to the press Mr. Moses has made an invidious reference to my brother, Laurance." Cite Potentiality Meanwhile, Rockefeller, in his first newsconference since the election, said he was a potential candidate for the 1964 GOP nom- ination for the presidency and added that he thought the Repub- licans could beat President John F. Kennedy. He noted that he was abandon- ing his policy, adopted during the campaign, of not speaking on na- tional issues. Rockefeller will ad- dress the National Association of Manufacturers Wednesday in Washington. He stressed that he accepted the NAM invitation as part of duty to the national Republican party. Copyright 1962, The New York Times WASHINGTON (A)-While the South desegrates i t s schools slowly and with great reluctance. there is a growing storm in the North over school segregation, the Civil Rights Commission said yes- terday. These conclusions were reached after a commission study of public school segregation in four South- ern states and five Northern cities. The reports showed that public school segregation existed in all five Northern cities and four of the five are, or have been, involved in law suits seeking integration. Study Cities The study covered Highland, Park, New Rochelle, N.Y., Phila- delphia, St. Louis and Chicago. The reports found that school segregation in the North grows mainly out of residential patterns. Re-segregation occurs in a school when the neighborhood around it changes from integrated to Negro as the whites move out. Segrega- tion exists when the neighborhood around the school is all-white or all-Negro. School integration in the South, the reports said, has been slowed by court acceptance of token in- tegration. It has proceeded very slowly in North Carolina and Vir- ginia as a result, the commission said. Faster Pace The rate of desegregation was found to be more rapid in Tennes- see, but concern was expressed over the lower scholastic achieve- ment of the average Negro student in the upper grades of Negro schools. The reports also found that fed- eral courts in the South generally will accept a more limiter' program of school desegregation if - a com- munity takes action before a law suit is filed than if it waits until it faces a court order. St. Louis was credited with a major achievement in desegregat- ing its schools eight years ago, but was said to face now problems of resegregation as residential pat- terns change. 'De Facto Segregation' "On balance," the St. Louis re- port said, "de facto segregation in the St. Louis public schools has patently worsened during the past seven years." In Highland Park, a suit was filed after Negro students who had been attending an integrated school were ordered to attend a segregated school. The dispute was settled by a juggling of school boundaries and grades. Only Case A case involving an elementary school in New Rochelle resulted in the only decision where a North- ern community was found to have violated the 1954 Supreme Court decision. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo- ple has charged in Philadelphia that an easy transfer rule tends to encourage discriminatory prac- tices and create segregated white and Negro schools. The report on Philadelphia noted that more than half the Minister Views Algeria Plight PARIS (R) - Algerian adminis- tration was left by the French in such "catastrophic shape" that it will take six months to find out how the country stands, Algerian Foreign Minister Mohammed Khe- misti said yesterday. He made the statement to the French Diplomatic Press Associa- tion. In Paris to negotiate French aid, the 28-year-old foreign min- ister said the destruction of nearly all official records by the Euro- pean SecretArmy Organization forced the new administration to start almost from scratch. Only a rough estimate can now be made, he said, of next years income from taxes and other sources. The estimate varied be- tween $240 million and $440 million. city's 214 elementary schools are populated by 99 per cent or more white students or are 97 per cent or more Negro. Three Lawsuits The Chicago Board of Educa- tion has been target of three law- suits and a complaint charging discrimination in teacher hiring in the past year. Nearly 90 per cent of the Chi- cago's Negro pupils attend schools which are virtually all Negro, the report said, adding that this is due to racial concentration of housing in the central city area. AO Housemother Named Campus Tour Representative Mrs. E. Strachan, Alpha Tau Omega housemother, for the ninth consecutive year has been appoint- ed campus representative of How- ard Tours, the original college and travel program to the University of Hawaii summer session and to the Pacific. Applications for 1963 are now being accepted by her at 1415 Cambridge Road; tele- phone-NO 5-7953. Next summer's tour of 56 days to Hawaii costs $589, plus $9 tax from the West Coast. This price includes roundtrip jet between the West Coast and Ha- waii, campus residence, and the most diversified itinerary of din- ners, parties, shows, cruises, sight- seeing events, beach activities, and cultural entertainment; plus all necessary tour services. Waikiki apartment living, steamship passage, and visits to Neighbor Islands are available at adjusted tour rates. Steamship travel, however, will be at a prem- ium. Therefore, interested travel- ers should apply early to protect their reservations. 1963 will be the "Big Summer in Hawaii" because this is the bi- ennial year of the world famous Trans-Pacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Hawaii, with everybody sharing in the extra fun and added excitement. In addition to Hawaii, Howard Tours offers a 67 day study pro- gram to the ORIENT and another study tour of 45 days around SOUTH AMERICA. Both are San Francisco State College summer session study tours offering six upper division university credits. College men and women may call Mrs. Strachan for further infor- mation. I t t 4 r R Spaghetti Dinner OPEN TO ALL 6 P.M. NEWMAN CLUB 331 Thompson i Bank Aids World's I TODAY JOHN B. MARTIN REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEEMAN speaking on REAPPORTIONMENT AND THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH' 4:00 P.M. MULTI-PURPOSE Room, UGLI Special Projects Comm., Mich. Union I 1i By BARBARA LAZARUS The International Bank f or Reconstruction and Development -the World Bank-consists of 80 member nations and is con- cerned with granting loans for development projects in develop- ing nation's economies, Alice Brun, an executive director of the World Bank, said Thursday. Miss Brun represents the five nation homogeneous bloc of Den- mark, Sweden, Norway, Finland and Iceland. "If"a particular government plans a project such as a neW power plant, it can make applica- tion to the bank. The bank in turn, sends personnel on a 'mis- sion' to study both the project itself and the country's economy, investigating such things as its balance of payments and tax structure." Private Funds The bank requires that a coun- try first try to get its capital in the private investment market, before it applies for a bank loan. The bank is supposed to supple- ment the private flow of capital, and if finally the country cannot get a loan on reasonable terms from the private market, it may be allowed to receive a bank loan, Miss Brun explained. "Each director must consult with the contries he represents before any large loans or major policy decisions can be made. The board bank policy f or the year is formulated at an annual meeting of governors, who each represent their country," Miss Brun added. The bank, which has lent over $7-billion in the 15 years since its formation, receives its money from member nations, by selling bonds on the private investment market and from profit it may accumu- late on its capital. IDA, IFC "Two important organizations affiliated with the bank are the International Development Asso- ciation (IDA) and the Interna- tional Finance Corp. (IFC). IDA grants loans to underdeveloped countries on a 'soft loan' basis, requiring no interest payments. IFC, which has capital of only some $100 million, gives money to private corporations," Miss Brun explained. The only way IDA can receive capital is through gifts from rich- er, more industrialized nations, since it offers no interest pay- ments, and it does not build up profits for further lending. The board of directors is pres- ently considerin ghow it can make more funds available to IDA and expand loans to these poorer na- tions to an even greater extent, she said. Growth "The bank also offers some technical assistance experts who may be called upon to aid on a specific project. This assistance is offered as a part of the Develop- ment Service Department," Miss Brun added. The Economic Development In- stitute, which is also a part of the bank, provides six month study courses for selected groups of experienced administrators whose work in their countries requires decisions on economic policy and the formulation of development projects. The Institute classes present a practical orientation and helps give the participants a broad per- spective of the problem of eco- nomic development. Miss Brun indicated that "many industrialized European nations such as France, Sweden, Germany and Holland have become capital exporting countries, contributing to the bank's capital fund. Swit- zerland, which is not officially a member of the bank, has also con- tributed large amounts of money." ALL FORMER SOUTH QUADDIES: You Too Are Invited to NOEL MODERN 62 (The Biggest and Best Christmas Dance on Campus!) December 15, 9-1 A.M. $3.50 Tickets on Sale at South Quad Now! j 11 ann Orb Or civic ithe afre a co~iedy 11)1 trwIan C JxQe aece~uber 6,'Z, 8 -8:o0 p.m. YEARBOOKS, V Send in your order for the 1963 'Ensian and have your book reserved for, you when it is published. I r I i :Enclosed find $5.00 (check or money order only) for one: * (Payable to Michiganension, 420 Maynard St.) S1963 'Ensian. Sorry, we cannot bill you at a later date.: U U * Your receipt will be sent when your order comes in.; * U U U i Name p " I E *AA Address iU * I * I * I :Mailing instructions: $1 .00 additional charge if book is to be mailed * U * I * I * I * r * I * m j f"I." Y ti'F YY 4 i yf JrJ I Pefi r v.Y 01. J r; r: r. OPEN RETREAT Dec. 2, 3, 4, Sun., Mon., Tues. Retreat Master: Rev. R. Butler, O.P. "National Newman Chaplain" Sermons: 5 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Monday 5 p.m. . .. for men i II