WORKING OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM : < See Editorial Page Seventy-Three Years of Editorial Freedom ~Iait4& COLDER High--34 Low-25 Snow flurries, overcast VOL. LXXIV, No. 82ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1963 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES 1 f 1, Senate Approves Rights Measure House Agrees To Extend Terms Of County Officers Until 1966 By MICHAEL HARRAH Special To The Daily LANSING,-The Senate unanimously passed a watered-down version of a bill .implementing the new Civil Rights Commission last night as the House approved by a narrow margin an equally con- troversial measure extending county officer terms until 1966. The Senate bill contained 13 amendments tacked onto the original implementation bill by the state affairs committee. The 13, limiting CRC action, were reduced to 11 by the appropriations com- mittee and accepted on the Senate floor. The appropriations com- mittee, considering the bill because of the $117,000 supplemental "appropriation involved, removed: one empowering the CRC to create f ong ress Approves $1.2 For College Construction Funds Billion local advisory agencies and con- ciliation councils on racial or re- ligious discrimination; and the other striking out the bill's pro- vision to empower the commission to pay travel and other business expenses of advisory agencies conciliation councils. n Passes to House andI 4 JOSEPH GILLIS motion defeated 4X CUT:- PIce Fall May Occur WASHINGTON () - A high ranking Commerce Department economist said yesterday enact Ynent of the proposed income tax reduction bill probably would pro duce cuts in some consume. prices. The official, Assistant Secretar3 Richard H. Holton, hedged thi forecast by saying, "I doubt i: there would be enough reduction to lower the cost-of-living inde: very much." The index moved up to a nev mark in November, after remain ing virtually stationary for three months, and Labor Department experts have predicted it will inch upward again in December. Arguments Officials in the executive branch of government have argued for months that the proposed $11- billion reduction in taxes would stimulate demand, create jobs, in- crease profit margins, make Unit- ed States industry more competi- tive with foreign products and smooth out some inequities in the tax structure. But there has been little men- tion of the possibility that the housewife at the meat counter ight get a break. "I can't see any big reductions," .olton said. Variations "And it will vary from industry o industry. I'm not saying what is likely to happen in some in- dustries which are operating at near capacity and which would experience an increased demand for their products." Mild support for Holton's pre- diction came from Doris Rothwell, chief of the Labor Department's consumer price division. "There is a possibility that this will hap- pen," she said in a separate in- terview. "Doctors and lawyers and others in the personal service field would receive more net income because of lower taxes, and I suppose some of them would be altruistic enough to lower their prices. One or the Other "A corporation apparently would either make a higher profit or it would sell at lower prices: I guess this would depend on how badly a company is being squeezed and how close it is to raising prices at the present time." She said any change in the in- dex would be indirect, since taxes are not included as a cost-of- living item. The index went up one-tenth of' a point in November to 107.2. This1 means that it takes $1.07,. on the average, to buy the same amount of goods that could be bought for $1 during the 1957-59 period. Thus the bill passes today to the House, where Lansing ob- servers predict further amend- ment to it. Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley in a statement yesterday said that the entire bill is "clearly in con- flict with express provisions of the revised Constitution." Kelley maintains t h a t the rights board is set up in the new constitution as a purely consti- tutional agency, over which the Legislature has no control, but the Legislature doesn't quite see it that way. Final Authority Some members of the Senate feel that the Legislature should have final authority over all ad- ministrative rulings passed by state agencies and commissions. This issue arises out of the recent controversy over Rule Nine, passed several years ago by the Michigan State Corporation and Securities Commission, which forbade real- tors to discriminate on the basis of race. The Legislature attempted to void this rule under the State Ad- ministrative Procedures Act, but Democratic Gov. John B. Swain- son vetoed the bill. However, the Supreme Court subsequently held that the Legislature did in fact have the authority under that act, and Rule Nine was voided. Kelley vowed to carry his pres- ent opposition to court if neces- sary, but senators were not moved. Consideration of the bill itself was postponed temporarily. Bipartisan Vote On the county elections, the vote cut across party lines, as Rep. Russell H. Strange (R-Clare) led a coalition of Republicans and a handful of Democrats to defeat the'motion of Rep. Joseph J. Gil- lis (D-Detroit), which would have fixed the four-year county elec- tions to begin in 1964. The issue, basically, was this: The constitutional convention ap- parently neglected to specify in which election the county office- holders shall begin to seek the; new four-year terms, instead of the present two-year terms. The governor and state officeholders, as well as the members of the' state Senate, are to begin seeking four-year terms in 1966, accord-' ing to the terms of the new con-j stitution, and Strange maintains this was the intent of the con-t con with regard to the county of- ficeholders also. tBritish Note Plans To End Arms Race LONDON WA) - British Prime Minister Alec Douglas-Home rais- ed the possibility in Parliament yesterday that new United States- British proposals may be put for- ward to end the arms race with the Soviet Union. In an announcement that sur- prised diplomats, the British lead- er also told Parliament that for- eign ministers will attend the re- sumption of the 17-nation disarm- ament conference in Geneva next month. No such decision has in fact been taken on the level of repre- sentation by the participating countries. But the idea is under active study in the West as one means of achieving even a limited accord with the Soviet Union.. Corrects Statement A British government spokes- man took the rare step of correct- ing the prime minister's state- ment. "Douglas-Home was being asked in supplementary questions wheth- er heads of government, and he himself, would take part in the Geneva conference," the spokes- man explained. "His intention was to empha- size that Richard A. Butler, the foreign secretary, would be in charge of the negotiations. Wheth- er Butler and other foreign min- isters will go personally is a mat- ter for decision in the light of de- velopments." Full Support Douglas-Home added that Brit- ain fully supports the plan for a phased; balanced, all-embracing disarmament program drafted by the United States. But he also stressed that "certain sugges- tions" in Russia's rival program are "well worthy of consideration" and might be wrapped into a final agreement. If new American-British pro- posals do in fact emerge soon they will be discussed thoroughly with other Atlantic pact powers in Paris Dec. 16-18 when the Atlan- tic Council of Foreign Ministers meets.I Revise Period Of Registration There will be no registration on Saturday, Jan. 18, for any stu- dents except those who take only Saturday classes, Edward Groes- beck, director of the Office of Registration and Records, an- nounced yesterday. Groesbeck said that students in this category-many of whom commute from out of town - should attend classes the morning of Jan, 18 and then register in the afternoon. The policy is a slight revision of earlier University calendar. Ail other students regiser at sched- uled times Jan. 13-15. Oxford Gets New Hours For Visiting By MICHAEL SATTINGER The Residence Halls Board of Governors yesterday heard a re- port from Eugene Haun, director of University residence halls, on recommendations of Oxford Hous- ing Project residents for new. visiting hours for the suites. Haun's office h a s accepted these recommendations, w h i c h have also been approved by Ox- ford staff members and student representatives and with Assem- bly Association, and will notify the Oxford representatives and staff of the official date of their im- plementation. The new visiting hours for the suites will allow the women to have visitors in rooms from noon to five minutes before clos- ing on Friday and Saturday and 5-8 p.m. Mondays through Thurs- days. Permission Was Needed Previously, permission was need- ed on the weekdays and weekend visiting hours were limited to 11 a.m.-7 p.m. on football Saturdays. The new visiting hours are sim- ilar to hours used for Cambridge House, which has since been closed. Haun's office also agreed to having the Oxfordhousing stay open for students who have cur- riculum requirements to fulfill during vacation periods. Some stu- dent teachers, for instance, must return to Ann Arbor before Uni- versity classess tart to be present while public school is in session. Haun also noted that comments of neighborhood residents con- cerning the project after an open house held at Oxford recently were favorable. Recommendation The residence hall board also voted to recommend to the Re- gents that "X-House" in Markley Hall be renamed Robert Lee Frost House after the late poet who was at the University as poet- in-residence during the academic years 1922-23 and 1925-26. The board named Prof. Thomas J. Garbaty of the English depart- ment as faculty associate of Bar- bour House and Prof. Arthur F. Messiter of the aeronautical engi- neering department as faculty associate of Huber House in' South Quadrangle. of "The Michigan Economic Rec- ord," published by Michigan State University's bureau of economic research and school of business administration. Obtain Figure The $305 million figure is ob- tained by multiplying the 1972 per capita contribution ($31.78) to higher education times the ex- pected state population (9,598.000). The 25 per cent per student in- crease is then derived by dividing the $305 million figure by the ex- pected doubled enrollment in 1972. The base per capita figures are estimated by projecting the per capita figures from the compar- able 1950-60 period. Basis for Analysis These per capita numbers are the basis to the entire analysis. Figuring that the personal income undergoes a $620 per capita in- crease by 1972, the 2.8 per cent of that increase which goes to higher education will raise the per capita allotment to higher education from $14.42 spent in 1960 to the $31.78 total in 1972. The $620 per capita increase is computed on the assumption that real per capita income will in- crease at a rate of two per cent from 1960 until 1972. The fact that 2.8 per cent of the. increased personal income will go to higher education is explained by the notation that "rising in- come has actually been accom- panied by relatively larger in- ereases in expenditures for higher education." Expenditure Boost Examining the 1950-60 period, the report explains that when per capita incomes increased some $198 in that time, the higher edu- cational expenditure was boosted $5.58 per head-roughly 2.8 cents of every dollar. This "consumer demandanaly- sis" indicates that adequate fi- nancial resources will be available to support Michigan higher edu- cation in the future-without rel- ative tax increases, the reportj suggests.; WAYNE MORSE ... college bill DYNA-SOAR: Eliminate Glider Plan WASHINGTON (P) - Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara announced cancellation of the Dyna-Soar manned space glider project yesterday. In its place he ordered the Air Force to go ahead with develop- ment of an orbiting research lab- oratory designed to keep a crew of spacemen aloft for weeks at a time. McNamara said the Manned Orbiting Laboratory program, combined with related research, will yield greater returns in knowl- edge about the problems of life in space, and at the same time will save about $100 million over the next 18 months. McNamara stressed that the new project is "an insurance program" to prepare this country to send manned space warships aloft if the need should arise. He em- phasized, as he has before, that the need for such a military space mission is still not clear. The MOL will consist of a pres- surized cylinderabout the size of a small 'house trailer. It will be able to accommodate more than' one crewman. McNamara said the intention is to attach the laboratory to a mod- ified Gemini capsule and lift them into orbit with a giant Titan III rocket booster. "The problems of re-entry con- ditions, materials and techniques are to be studied at substantially lower costs without actually using a manned vehicle, like Dyna- Soar," he said. laboratories and libraries to meet the expected doubling of college enrollments in this decade. All Eligible All 2100 of the nation's colleges and universities are eligible for the grant and loan funds. Pref- erence will be given to those plan- ning to expand enrollment. Hailed by Democratic leaders as the most important new adminis- tration program to clear Con- ress this year, it is expected to be followed soon by another major education bill. The latter, agreed on by House and Senate conferees yesterday, authorizes $1.56 billion for voca- tional education and college stu- dent loans and extends the im- pacted areas program aiding school districts glutted with children whose parents work at nearby fed- eral institutions. Vocational Bill The vocational bill is expected to be called up in the House later in the week. It is a compromise between a $3.2-billion, five-year Senate version and $450 million voted by the House but limited to vocational grants. The new college construction legislation authorizes expenditures over three years to provide for the flood of new students expected in the year immediately ahead as babies born right after World War II reach college age. College enrollment is expected to jump from the 3.6 million of 1960 to 7 million by 1970. Must Double Capacity Every college now in existence will have to double capacity and 1000 more collees capable of han- dlin 2500 each will have to be built, according to Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore) the bill's chief sponsor. These are the annual authoriza- tions in the collee bill (all run for three years): -$180 million in rants for four- year collees, private,. junior col- leges and technical institutes. Their use would be limited to buildings for instruction or re- search in the natural and physi- cal sciences, engineering, mathe- matics and modern foreign lan- guages, and for libraries. Based on Enrollment Each state's allotment of funds would be based on its college and hih school enrollment. The fed- eral share of a project could be no more than one-third. -$120 million in loans for con- struction of all types of class- rooms at four-year colleges, pri- vate junior colleges and technical institutes. No one state could re- ceive more than 12.5 per cent of the funds appropriated for any one year. At least one-fourth of the cost of a project would have to come from non-federal sources. Loans could run up to 50 years at an interest rate of about 3.57 per cent. -$50 million in grants to pub- lic community junior colleges for the same types of buildings as in the grants to four-year schools. Each state's allotment of funds would be based on the number of its high school graduates and comparative income factors. -$25 million the first year and $60 million in each of the next two years for grants for graduate schools and graduate centers. Council Delays Traffic Study < _ .. Analysis Indicates 3e More College Aid By LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM If current economic trends continue, taxpayers will increase their current per-student support of higher education 25 per cent by 1972. In total dollars, this would yield a total appropriation to higher education of $305 million-almost three times the current appro- priation of $110 million. This projection is made in the latest issue Aid To Help Public, Private Institutions Upper House Action Prepares Way For Signing; See Second School Bill WASHINGTON (M--Congress sent to President Lyndon B. Johnson yesterday a $1.2-billion education bill authorizing federal funds for the first time to aid construction at both public and private four-year and junior colleges. Final approval came on a 54-27 roll call vote in the Sen- ate, with 37 Democrats and 17 Republicans voting for, 17 Democrats and 10 Republicans against. The measure, endorsed by Johnson and the late President John F. Kennedy before his death, will help build classrooms, NIKITA S. KHRUSHCHEV ... agriculture General Library To Extend Closing Hours for Exams By ALAN Z. SHULMAN The General Library will extend its closing hours during the coming exam period to meet increasing demands for its use, Fred L. Dimock, circulation and divisional librarian announced yesterday. From Saturday, Dec. 14 to Thursday, Dec. 19, the library will open at 8 a.m. and close at 12 p.m. except on Sunday, Dec. 15, when it will open at the usual time, 2 p.m. On Friday, Dec. 20, the General "Library will close at 10 p.m. and "onthe last day of finals, Saturday, Dec. 21, it will remain open until 6 p.m. ' Cite -USSR Weaknesses' WASHINGTON (W) - Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's giant new fertilizer program has strengthen- ed the view here that Russia's economy is in deep trouble. And the United States govern- ment does not want to bail out the Communists with long-term cred- its from the West. But Khrush- chev's domestic difficulties, draw- ing resources that might otherwise go for arms, may push him into a more accommodating policy to- ward the West. This has raised hope of some progress in the disarmament field. Gives Speech Khrushchev's four-hour speech before the Communist Party's Cen- tral Committee meeting in Moscow Monday was still under study at the State Department yesterday. Press Officer Richard I. Phillips declined comment on it. But it was plain from Khrush- chev's figures that the plight of Soviet agriculture has caused him to make a massive reappraisal. Soviet fertilizer output, suppos- ed to reach 35 million tons a year by 1965 under the seven-year plan begun in 1958, has climbed to only 20 million tons. Plastics Plastics, supposed to rise to a two-million-ton output by 1965, are being produced only at a 600,- 000-ton rate. Fiber production, with a 1965 goal of 666,000 tons, is only up to 310,000 tons. Khrushchev's chemical invest- ment program, which proposes purchase ofmore than one billion dollars worth of goods abroad over the next seven years. is expected to be a heavy drain on Soviet re- sources and Khrushchev said he wanted foreign credits in making such purchases Step in Fertilizer But even with a large-scale step-up of fertilizer, it is doubted here that the Soviet farm system can change from failure to suc- cess without substantial altera- tions. Perhaps one-fourth of the added fertilizer may be wasted by fail- ure of Russian peasants to use it effectively. Beyond that, it is believed that the Kremlin will have to move to- ward either larger farm holdings by the peasants, which would be against past Communist policy, or larger farm holdings by the state. POWER ALIGNMENT: Last- West-Hi-Polarity Breaks Down By JEFFREY GOODMAN The East-West bi-polarity that developed after the Second World War is gradually breaking down to yield a polycentric power align- ment that may set North against South, Prof. George Kish of the geography department said re- cently. He was speaking at Notre Dame University in a lecture sponsored by its Committee on International Relations. Prof. Kish emphasized the tran- sitions in the balance of power and the emerging role of under- developed nations. World Map Changes Since 1945 the world map has seen the breaking up of the Grand Asian allies in power blocs- NATO, CENTO and SEATO- while Western Europe revived economically. A wave of independence swept1 Africa, so that by today there are only a few isolated and small colonies, while there were no more than three independent countries after the war. Furthermore, Prof. Kish said, the Communist bloc began to lose its monolithic character with the political heresies of Yugoslavia's Josef Tito, Red China's Mao Tse. Tung and Poland's Andrei Go- mulka and the Hungarian Revolu- tion of 1956. Grows Unsteady But the Western Alliance also struggles of emerging nations in Latin America, Asia and Africa. These neutrals, concentrating on their own problems, further de- creased the consolidation of the two power centers, and both blocs had to make "agonizing re- appraisals" of their alliance sys- tems. As a result of these changes, the world scene now includes a cross- polar confrontation of nuclear rockets and a developing con- frontation in the Caribbean and Asia. At the same time the emerg- ing nations of Latin America, Asia and Africa, in their "revolu- tions of rising expectations," are posing a third bloc. There may eventually be conflict between Good Cooperation "Our student staff has been very goodtabout cooperating with us in this plan," Dimock said. "However, since we will be staffed only with student help during the additional hours, service will be limited. Students who wish to check out library books for home use will have to do so before 10 "Service from the file section of the circulation department, the periodical room and the main ref- erence desk will not be available during these hours. However, the graduate reserve service and the science library will be open to stu- dents who require course reserve materials." "In effect, the General Library will operate as a giant study hall," Dimock observed. Extend Hours I ~ ~