THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE REVER' T- IHG ND IYPE ~V SA4aS Civil Rights Loses Former Top Priority Communists Give Arms POTENTIAL DANGER: Indonesia Contributes To Asian Trouble v Meader Rejects Civil Rights Draft By JOHN WEILER (V Peek Lists Labor, To Somalia The House Judiciary Committee yesterday published a formal re- port including the majority's rea- sons why the civil rights bill should be passed and seven sep- arate reports of dissatisfaction with the committee bill. Rep. George Meader (R-Mich), who wrote one of the separate re- ports, said he felt that the civil rights bill as reported out of committee was unconstitutional in some of its provisions. He said that the draft of the civil rights bill "had so many fish hooks in it that it is impossible to support it in its present form." Meader did not support the ad- ministration bill, the subcommit- tee bill nor the compromise bill. Vote Protection He said that any legislation he would support would have to in- elude "protection for the rights to vote from denial or abridgement as secured in the Fifteenth Amendment; regulation and pro- tection of interstate transporta- tion of persons; assurance that federal financial assistance will not be employed to perpetuate discrimination by reason of race or color; and prevention of dis- crimination on the grounds of race or color in employment by the federal government or in the execution of contracts let by the federal government." Objectional Feature Meader said the objectional fea- tures of th'e bill were that it pre- empted the field of civil rights, and thus did not "preserve state statutes and municipal ordi- nances" in the field of civil rights. Meader also cited "an alarming tendency in adopting new federal programs to utilize the sanction of what may be clled govern- ment by injunction." He noted that he "opposes strained interpretations of the in- terstate commerce clause as it has been applied to the equal pro- tection clause. This tends to un- dermine the vitality and autonomy of state and local governments and to promote the expansion of federal power beyond constitu- tional limits," he said. Congressional Obligation Meader also said that in his Judgment "the Congress is under an obligation to carry out the mandate of section two of the Fourteenth Amendment by reduc- ing the representation in the House of Representatives of states in which the right to vote is denied or abridged." He suggested a bipartisan com- mission set up under the , Civil Rights Act up to study the facts and r e p o r t recommendations which would add "necessary evi- dence with which Congress could; apportion representatives among several states and effect the man- date of section two of Fourteenth Amendment. The amendment, however, was voted down by a voice vote in the committee. He also offered an amendment, for the public accommodations1 section of the bill, which would provide for enforcement with criminal proceedings. "There is also a non-preemption provison which would preserve the validity, in the field of public accommoda- tions of the laws of 32 states," Meader's report says.j The majority committee report said "considerable progress has been made in eliminating discrim- ination in many areas." It noted,) however, that "it has become in-1 creasingly clear that progress has been too slow and that nationalz legislation is required to meet a national need which becomes evenI more obvious."1 Committee's i Budget Request} Given to Senate WASHINGTON - The Senate Appropriations Committee voted on November 13 to restore 50 mil- lion dollars to the National Sci- ence Foundation Budget which had been cut 266 million dollars by the House. The Senate, expected to act on the bill sometime this week, will conside rthe committee's .recom- mendation of 6373 million com- pared to the 6323 million voted by the House. The committee also voted to re- store $80 million to the budget of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, bringing the total to four billion dollars. However the Committee was criti- cal of NASA's university programs and declared: The committee found that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has initiated an academic grant program which is projected to cost between 21 and 28 million dollars per year in the near future. Rep. George Meader, left, refused to support the proposed civil rights legislation, claiming it contained too many "fish hooks". Prof. George Peek, Jr., right, said that without a priority reversal, the stock market would fall and labor would be antagonized. DRAWS COMPARISON: Slosson Cites Conflict Between Israel, Arabs ^ 2 By NANCY KAHN "The conflict between Israel and the Arab world is basically the conflict between East and West," Prof. Emeritus Preston Governors Set Economic Gain As Future Goal At the second annual Midwest- ern Governor's Conference in Omaha yesterday, eleven midwest- ern governors investigated the possibility of a research institute to increase economic growth in this area, the Detroit News re- ported. With the approval of the indi- vidual state legislatures concerned, the governors would serve as board members of an organization aimed at obtaining more research work for their states. The organ- ization would attempt to pull both government and private research work from the East and West coasts. The organization would utilize the governor's board as an execu- tive unit only. It would maintain a permanent executive director and up to four other staff mem- bers. Institutional Aid The organization would be aid- ed by educational and other in- stitutions in the participating states. The educational institu- tions would pool their facilities for the benefit of the research in- stitute. The conference's host, Governor Frank Morrison of Nebraska, not- ed that most of the research now being done is being carried on in the East and Midwest and that "more and more industry is being tied to research." Governor George Romney re- fused to comment on the proposal awaiting further explanation. He will participate in a panel dis- cussion today on "An Expanding Midwest Economy." One of Three Romney, one of the three Re- publicans at the conference, flew to Omaha Wednesday with his wife and five staff members. Rom- ney's delegation was second in size only to that of Minnesota's Karl F. Kolvaeg. Ohio's James A. Rhodes was the only midwestern governor absent from the meeting. The three-day governor's con- ference will also discuss such topics as highway safety, treat- ment of the criminally insane, and higher education. Governor Wil- liam Guy of North Dakota is the chairman of the conference. Following his arrival, Romney and the other Republican govern- ors attending the conference ap- peared at a fund-raising dinner given by area GOP associates. Slosson said recently at a lecture entitled "Israel, the West in the East."{ Prof. Slosson explained that the Jewish people have always served as a bridge .between East and West, not really accepted in either area. "The hostility in Europe toward the Jews was based on the grounds that the Jews were 'ori- entals' and thus did not belong," Prof. Slosson said. He added that Hitler used this-as the basis of his criticism against the Jews in Ger- many. Lived in Europe Because the majority of the Jewish population has lived in Europe and the United States for the past 1,000 years, they have, in truth, become Westernized. Thus, the Arabs, in turn, regard the Jews as outsiders from the West, he explained. "The Arabs are not 'anti- semitic'-they are more semitic than the Jews-they resent the Jews on the grounds that they are intruders from the West and, as such, have no right ir the East," Prof. Slosson said. "The Jew has a paradoxical fate. He has always been regarded as an oriental by the West, and as a Westerner by the East," he added. Prof. Slosson pointed out that the conflict between Arabia and the West stems from the time of the Crusades. This has carried through to modern times in the form of Eastern resentment of Western advancement. Modern Israel "Modern Israel represents the industrialism, commercialism, lib- eralism and democracy of the West. Thus, it is natural for the resentment of the East to be di- rected toward the Jews as repre- sentatives of the West," he said. "Israel is like a piece of Europe and 'America which has estab- lished itself in the midst of a be- wildered Asia," Prof. Slosson con- cluded. He added that the grow- ing political and economic ad- vancement of the Arabs may, in time, lessen their resentment of the state of Israel and its inhabi- tants. Business as Cause By NELSON LANDE Prof. George Peek, Jr., of the political science department, as- serted yesterday that because "business is counting on a tax cut" to stimulate investment, and be- cause economic expansion would result in increased employment, President John F. Kennedy has switched his legislative priorities. As a secondary motive, Prof. Peek cited that "some working class people may perceive a civil rights thrust as a threat to their status." Besides, civil rights legis- lation is ineffective without jobs to absorb the unemployed. Last month, Kennedy placed civil rights before a tax cut in Congressional action. Last Friday, addressing the fifth biennial con- vention of the AFL-CIO in Miami Beach, the President asserted that "no one gains from attending a better school if he doesn't have a job after graduation.- Rights Mean Jobs "Civil rights legislation is im- portant. But to make that legis- lation effective, we need jobs in the United States," Kennedy fur- ther declared. "If jobs are the most important domestic issue that this country faces, then clearly no single step can be more important in sustaining the econ- omy of the United States than the passage of our tax bill. For this will help consumer markets, build investment demand, build business incentives, and therefore provide jobs for a total addition to the economy of the United States in the next months of nearly $30 billion." Motivating Factor Prof. Peek elaborated on the motivating factors behind the President's priority reversal. "The stock market is assuming that a tax cut is coming. I think that the market will fall if it doesn't come." He added that the President had formerly emphasized the civil rights issue because of racial ten- sion. Now that the demonstrations have quieted down, Kennedy no longer feels obligated to press as vehemently for civil rights legis- lation. Furthermore, according to Prof. Peek, the President would 'lose votes in making class dis- tricts" where many union locals resist national union pressure to end racial discrimination. ROTC Set-Up Reconsidered By Legislature WASHINGTON - A House Armed Service Subcommittee has approved legislation which would permit colleges and universities to establish two-year ROTC pro- grams, either in addition to or in place of existing four-year pro- grams. A "clean bill," introduced by Rep. EdwardHerbert (D-La.), chairman of the subcommittee, embodied the subcommittee's rec- ommendations. Those students wishing to di- rectly enter into the two-year ad- vanced program would be first re- quired to complete a six-week course of field training or a prac- tice cruise. This bill also would make avail- able to the other services the pro- visions of the Navy's "Holloway plan" by authorizing a monthly retainer pay of $50 for up to four years and payment of tuition and fees for students entering ROTC programs agreeing to serve at least four years on active duty. These students would be appoint- ed cadets or midshipmen in the service programs. The bill auth- orizes the appointment of up to 8,000 students in each of the three service programs providing this financial aid. The bill also authorizes an in- crease in the retainer pay from the present $27 a month to $50 a month for all students in the advanced course. African land of Somalia is accept- ing arms from the Soviet Union but without any apparent fervor, for Communism. The deal appears to have come out of Somali nationalism, blown wild and militant. United States officials reported recently the Somalia has dci&ded to accept a Soviet offer of $30 million in arms and reject a West- ern offer of $18 million. They said the capital, Mogadishu, already was teeming with Communist ad- visers, and the Russians are build- ing a huge air base in Somalia. Somalia probably wants the military build-up for a single pur- pose: the creation of a greater Somalia, uniting all the Somalis in the eastern horn of Africa. Five Pointsk The Somalian flag has a star with five points, one for each seg- ment of a greater Somalia. So far Somalia includes only two of these segments, the old British Somali- land and the old Italian Somali- land. The other three segments are now outside the Republic of Som- alia: France controls French Somaliland, Etthiopa controls the Somali-populated Ogaden Prov- ince, and the British colony of Kenya controls the Somali-popu- lated Northern Frontier District. Surging Somali nationalism has become a critical problem for Kenya, which becomes indepen- dent on Dec. 12 and is trying to prevent its Somalis from seceding and joining Somalia. New Arms By STANLEY MEISLER Associated Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON-The little Eat In the midst of a sea of its own By WILLIAM L. RYAN S' Special Correspondent JAKARTA-The biggest power in Southeast Asia is making a big contribution to the sensitive area's instability. dangerous economic troubles, In- donesia is embroiled in a squabble with its neighbor, Malaysia. The crisis is more potentially danger- ous than appears on the surface. If some day the claw of the Red Chinese dragon should reach for control of the whole of South- east Asia, Indonesia with its 100 millions is bound to loom in- portantly in one way or another- either as a bulwark against fur- ther Red expansion or as potential ally of the Communists. Malaysia Tangle This makes the Malaysia issue the more worrisome, since it can easily billow into world crisis. Britain and Australia are com- mitted to defending Malaysia should there be attacks on Sara- wak and Sabah (North Borneo) which joined Malaya and Singa- pore to make up the new nation. Should there be open hostilities, the British commonwealth will be Japan, alert to the dangerous possibilities of this for Southeast Asia, is among those nations which appear to be urgently seek- ing avenues for conciliation. The Japanese express such worries as these: President Sukarno probably regards Malaysia as a fact which must be lived with but cannot back down on his objections to it without losing face. He calls it a trick of British imperialism and denies that the people of Sarawak and North Borneo gave their ap- pr'oval. Sukarno, in economic trouble at home, may maneuver himself into some sort of reckless response to Western acceptance of Malaysia, say some Japanese. This, they add, could go as far as abandon- ment of his posture of nonalign- ment and allying himself fully with the Communist camp. Th us, the reasoning goes, the non-Com- munist world could lose 100 mil- lion people and the resources of Indonesia. Kid Gloves These possibilities create a ten- dency to treat Indonesia with kid gloves. It is such an important country in Asia that it is getting assistance from all sides - the United States, the Soviet Union, Red China, Japan, Europe-while its regime seems to be squandering the nation's own rich resources with happy abandonment. Indo- nesia is expensive to everybody. Since 1949, United States aid to Indonesia, much of it outright grants, has totalled $644.6 million. By coincidence, that is almost the exact total of Soviet and Red Chinese economic aid combined. But the Soviet investment in mili- tary aid to Indonesia is much larger-than any other nation's. It totals the equivalent of more than a billion dollars. Indonesia stopped trade with Singapore and Malaya when Ma- laysia was formed in September. This jolted the rubber trade. Rub- ber brings in about 50 per cent of Indonesia's foreig nexchange earnings, two-thirds of the export total coming from small holder planters who send 80 per cent of their rubber to Singapore for pro- cessing. They may be hurting bad- ly soon. It will be necessary to cut im- ports if Indonesia is to save he dwindling foreign exchange re serves, already at the dangerou level of about $135 million. Cut ting imports will hurt Indonesia industrial production program and create new job problems. To a lesser extent the oil busi ness may suffer, but most of the oil has been going to Japan, Aus tralia, the United States and the Philippines. The total export wa almost $252 million last year, o which Indonesia's share of th profits was almost $90 million Should the Malaysia crisis broad en into a wider international one this trade will be threatened, too Indonesia earns about $600 mil lion in foreign exchange yearl but much is used to import suc things as automobiles which nov clog Jakarta's streets, and eve food, in a country whose lush lan could create agricultural miracle Against this sort of backgroun Indonesia becomes a major worr to the West. Economic confusio could lead to chaos and politica turmoil, a climate in Which it i conceivable that the Communist would try to take over. Somalia may use its new arms in a show of force against an in- dependent Kenya if the Kenyans try to keep the Northern Frontier District from seceding. United States officials said they are worried that the Soviet Union, which slipped badly in the past in West Africa, has now found a new stepping stone to tropical Africa on the East coast. Actually the east coast of Africa always has seemed more fertile ground for Communism than the west coast. The reason is not hard to find. Colonialism always was harsher in the east. Second Class In Kenya, for example, the Brit- ish once encouraged whitesettlers to turn the colony into a white man's country. Africans became second-class citizens, and their education was neglected. Somalia, which never was tab- bed as a white man's country, has other reasons for anger at its former European masters. The Somalis ebelieve that the British and Italians unjustly gave chunks of Somali territory to Ethiopa after World War It. In addition, the United States has sent $80 million worth of military assistance to Ethiopia since the end of the war. Turn Eastward To Somalis, it seemed natural for them to turn to America's enemy, the Soviet Union, if Amer- ica was helping Somalia's enemy, Ethiopia. It is understood that the Soma- lis wanted more aid than that and also questioned the feasibility of an army using supplies from three different sources. , FORGET THAT POGO STICK ! You don't have to run all over town to pay r as 1- 's ie I- Ii s' n. do y n al 13 r 'S h Vi !'1 1' ' 4 '4 your bills . . . not when you have an Ann Arbor Bank Specialcheck account. Each personalized check costs just 10c with no service charges and no minimum balance required. Relax! Pay your bills the Specialcheck way. ANN ARBOR BANK SEVEN FULL SERVICE OFFICES: Main at Huron / E. Liberty near Maynard / Packard at Brockman / S. University at E. University / Plymouth Rd. at Huron Parkway J Whitmore lake / Dexter SOVIET II