SGC ACTION PRAISEWORTHY ,See Page 4 j1 Seventieth Year of Editorial Freedom 41P att, 471 49 CLOUDY, WARM High-Bo Low-60 Occasional thundershowers likely this afternoon and evening. VOL. LXX, No. 152 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1960 FIVE CENTS EIGHT PA Appoint Bond Dean Of Business School. Plans Trip to Russia To Survey Sources of Soviet Economic Growth Prof. Floyd A. Bond, director of the business education division of the committee for Economic Development in New York, will be the new dean of the business administration school. The appointment, effective Jan. 1, 1961, was approved by the Regents and announced by President Harlan Hatcher yesterday. Dean Russell A. Stevenson, who has headed the business admin- istration school since 1944, will begin a retirement furlough July 1. An acting dean will be appointed in the interim. Prof. Bond holds three degrees from the University: bachelor of arts (cum laude with honors in economics), 1938; master of arts, t1940; and doctor of philosophy, DEAN FLOYD BOND ' accepts position STUDENTS: Neg oes Protest Legislation COLUMBIA, S.C. (T) - Negro students marched on the South Carolina State House and the gov- ernor's mansion at Columbia yes- terday in simultaneous demon- strations apparently aimed at proposed legislation dealing with a move to integrate public schools. About 30 students chanted "down, down, down with segrega- tion" while parading around the State House where the General Assembly was meeting to consider the new legislation. Officers of the State Law En- forcement Division stopped the students from entering capitol property and they joined a group of 50 others demonstrating before the governor's mansion about a mile away. The students paraded around the mansion for half an hour, singing the Battle Hymn of the Republic and "We Shall Not Be Moved," a marching song believed to have been inspired by the sit- down protest movement. Gov. Er- nest F. Hollings, however, was at his downtown office. More than 50 law enforcement officers kept a close watch on the demonstrators. There was no vio- lence and no arrests were reported. The students, apparently from Al- len University and Benedict Col- lege, returned quietly to their mid- town campuses after the protest parades. In Georgia, the first court test of the state's new anti-trespass law led to the conviction of 32 Negroes in Savannah City Court. Judgment was withheld on three other cases pending further arguments. Eight others were acquitted. A special police guard patrolled the court- house during the triad. Arts Festival Plans Feature Jazz, Poetry The Creative Arts Festival opens Monday with a jazz concert be- tween noon and 1 p.m. on the Ding.{ An art auction of works by local painters, sponsored by the archi- tecture and design school and the League, will be held at 3 p.m. the same day. A lecture and poetry reading by e e cummings will be presented 8 p.m. Monday at Hill Auditorium. Tickets for the lecture are on sale at the first floor Union desk onr i Afnr n aAn ...rnm a 1942. "At a time when higher educa- tion for business is facing many problems, the University is more than fortunate to be able to select a vigorous and able young man like Prof. Bond to become dean of the School of Business Adminis- tration," President Hatcher said. "He is not only a top-flight economics authority with proven ability as an administrator but he also brings with him an under- standing of the other social sci- ences which are so necessary for the practice and study of business administration." Anticipation Pleasant In his acceptance of the ap- pointment, Prof. Bond said, "It is' with pleasant anticipation that I look forward to serving the Uni- versity and the people of Michigan as head of a well known and highly respected business adminis- tration school." Prof. Bond was a member of the University economics faculty from 1938 to 1946. This summer Prof. Bond will be one of five American economists who will go to Russia for a month's study of the sources of economic growth in the Soviet economy. To Make Survey Upon his return to the United States, he will begin work on an extensive survey of what business- men think of higher education for business. This project will in- volve combining the thinking of men in the business and academic worlds as a follow-up to the Ford Foundation and Carnegie Corpor- ation reports on business educa- tion. In New York, Donald K. David, chairman of the Committee for Economic Development of New York said, regarding the appoint- ment, "Prof. Bond has made a significant contribution to the work of the CED and we regret losing him. I am pleased, how- ever, that from this new and im- portant position he will be able to continue his association with the work of CED." Symington A dvocates Arms Plan PHILADELPHIA (IP)-Sen. Stu- art Symington (D-Mo) has pro- posed a disarmament plan which would put a limit on the propor- tion of key resources--including steel-a nation could use for arms. He included, among his series of disarmament goals," a con- trolled system by which the pro- ductive capacity and the resources of all nations can be converted from war to peace." Makes Proposal The senator, a candidate for the Democratic presidential nom- ination, made his proposal in a speech prepared for delivery be- fore a fraternal organization. Symington remarked that the factories and the resources of a nation "are its sinews of war, as well as of peaceful production." He said his plan, if accepted, would work as follows: "A number of key resources of a country, including the base ma- terial of any industrial complex, steel, would be selected; and agreement would be sought on the proportion of each, in each coun- try, that could be used for mili- tary purposes. To Establish Inspection "An inspection and control sys- tem would be set up to guarantee against violation. A violation would be clear-cut evidence of aggressive intent. "The ceilings on military use of key resources would be set so as to attain a major increase in living standards; and at the same time provide adequate warning before they could be converted to war purposes." This plan, he said, would be linked with (1) elimination of nuclear testing, with adequate in- spection (2) gradual reduction of existing nuclear weapons and (3) "enforceable and realistic reduc- tion of forces by all nations." Under his plan, Symington said, after a nation has comnitted its' resources to peaceful uses," a sig- nificant time must elapse before they can be converted to war." "In practice, this conversion time can be transformed into a virtual 'time lock'," he continued. "In order to shift its resources to war-like purposes, any nation would have to break open this lock of time, thereby warning the world of its intention to commit aggression." He conceded that this plan, like any other one for disarmament, is complicated. But, he said, "it would offer the hope that fewer guns would mean more food, clothing, shelter and the good things of life. Faculty To On Reconsidering Suspensions 4 SGC Plans Civil Rights Coordination Student Government Council Wednesday has declared May 17, sixth anniversary of the Supreme Court school integration decision, as a "day of non-violent demon- stration for civil rights." It asked other student and local groups to take appropriate action; the Council will act as coordinator if necessary. In other action, the Council named students to the Human Relations Board. Named for one- years terms: Ruth Bers, '61; Rich- ard Bremer, '61; Jeffery Karasick, '63; Jerold Lax, '63; and James Seder, '61. Richard Bauman, '61; Richard Barton, '63, and Mary Wheeler, '61. will serve for one-half-year terms. The Council also granted per- manent recognition to the Demo- cratic Socialists Club, and tem- porary recognition to "Challenge," and the Society of Women Engi- neers. Views Bias As .Factor In Prihmaryv NEW YORK (f)--The director of the Fair Campaign Practices Committee says a "sober and un.. happy yes" is the answer to whether religious bias will be a continuing factor in the 1960 pres- idential campaign. Bruce L. Felknor, writing in the ADL Bulletin, published by the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, said: "It is possible that the West Virginia campaign will erupt into a brush fire of bigotry that could spread to the rest of the country." Felknor, a Protestant, wrote that for several years it has been the fashion for commentators to say the ghost of 1928 was laid and that "never again would the re- ligious bigotry of the Al Smith campaign appear. "In 1960 the side issues of the 1928 campaign do not exist; it is now possible to get a clear look at w h e t h e r anti - Catholicism and other religious bias will be a polit- ical factor in 1960," Felknor wrote. "The answer, demonstrated in Wisconsin and likely to be dem- onstrated again and again before November, is a sober and unhappy yes." Reporting that the campaign was marked by "a rash of anti- Catholic/pamphlets with twisted denunciations of the Church," Felknor wrote: "Responsible partisans of Sens. John Kennedy and Hubert Hum- phrey were not involved in the distribution of the bigoted mail- ing pieces. Instead they came from unscrupulous and fringe ele- ment supporters of both men." .. y. n.. r ..r. rr r..v:..i. -:: ;r.. r." . , rr} r r r r,.; r r.; r. ryy,. .: :..;f..,,.:.v;r. ,:..".":."ru,...}.'r:r,"r.,r.ir."i," . ,. ": x:?: r.;.wrr:.. r,.rr rrr .:viri:: r. ..1. rrifii.. ..: .. r .v.n."fii .vri ..<'. .."..r rr d+r.,.r: «. .:r.rf... Jr. rr.".rs;,..r ~A -David Giltrow Joan Comiano, ADC President Announce By THOMAS TURNER "If you want to be known you can be known," Joan Comiano says of the University, "but if you want to be anonymous you can be anonymous." Joan chose the former course, rising in two years to the presi- dency of Assembly Association, independent women's group. The choice represented "a part of me rather than an ob- jective decision," she explains. "I've always been in activities. - . . I prefer something more administrative than creative." Eschews Whrl As a freshman, Joan es- chewed the activities whirl, so much a part of her high school career in Greenwood, Ill. Then, late that spring, she went to an Assembly - sponsored tea, signed up, and found herself social chairman. A vacancy due to departure of the second vice - president gave Joan a chance to move up during the next year, and when her sophomore spring came around, she was elected As- sembly president. There was "nothing particu- lar" she hoped to accomplish in the course of, the term which lay before her, Joan says in retrospect, but the year was an active one. Much of Assembly's value lies in what it can do for consti- tuent houses which come to it, she points out. Hears Complaints For example, it heard com-' plaints from a cooperative that it had been unfairly treated in Homecoming theme-allotments, and took action on the co-op's behalf. Complaints from member houses or individual girls on food and phone service are com- mon, she remarks. Beyond handling such com- plaints, Assembly coordinates house governments, fosters house programs and institutes programs of its own. One of the most successful of the latter, in Joan's opinion, is the "Big Sister-Little Sister" program. A girl with a year or more experience in the dorms can be of great help to a fresh- man in the crucial period through first semester, through sorority rush and ending in March after second semester five-week exams. 'Big Sister' Assembly tries to make the relationship to a "little sister" a friendly one, Joan explains, not just a case of "come down once a week and see if you're still alive." In the area of housing, As- sembly has been instrumental in setting up the upper-class Little House in Markley, and the new Cambridge Hall in Uni- versity Terrace. Assembly has been handling the petitions to move into these units, she said. Housing problems are very. subjective, Joan believes, which makes Assembly's role so im- portant. Assays Housing Some girls are happy only if identified with a small group, while others would prefer a larger unit and its larger budget. See JOAN, Page 2 Joint Judie, May Re-Hear Student Petitions Continue Circulation In Residence Halls By HARRY PERLSTADT The faculty Sub-Committee on Discipline will announce today whether or not it has granted an appeal in the case against the two alleged leaders of last Wednes-. day's demonstration. The sub-committee met yester- day afternoon to decide whether there are grounds for an appeal. Should an appeal be granted the case will return to the Joint Judi- ciary Council for a rehearing. Petitions Circulated While the faculty sub-commit- tee was meeting, petitions asking for a reconsideration of the Joint Judic decision were circulated. William Townsend, '61E, president of East Quadrangle's Hinsdale House, ". said that there are now about 1,000 signatures on the pe- titions. Also yesterday afternoon, the Interquadrangle Council defeated a motion requesting a reconsidera- ; tion of Joint Judic's recent deci- sion. The motion, which was Identical to a motion passed by the West Quadrangle Council Tuesday night, 'read that "the IQC go on record as asking a Just reconsideration of the Joint Judiciary Council de- cision to suspend Mark Hall, '63 and Stanley Lubin, '63, from the University, in view of the ap- parent haste and unusual nature of the decision." Attempt Amendment The West Quad representatives attempted to amend their motion so that it would not imply any thing about the nature of the de- cision but merely question the pro- cedures used in arriving at it. Dan Rosemergy, '61, president of IQC, called the amendment out of Order because it was contrary to. the original motion. "I'm in favor of the decision made by IQC," Rosemergy said. "However, this does not indicate that the IQC is not concerned with the problems involved in the par- ticular situation. We feel a respon- sibility to the students in the resi- dence hall and on the campus. We would like to review two areas," he said.° Ask Review "One area is the Judicial pro- cedures and effectiveness in rela- tionship to demonstrations on campus. We do not condone such demonstrations and feel that they are detrimental to the University's reputation. Rosemergy then recognized John M. Hale, assistant dean of men in charge at residence halls, who explained the procedure of the Dean of Men's Office in discipline cases. Hale remarked that al- though there was no definite precedent in this type of case, the dean's office and Joint Judi had followed normal procedures. Sphinx Taps New Court Once again the Pharoah has commanded his legions to cross the great desert and invade the land of the barbarians to pice slaves for the Pharoah's Court. Once again the East has learned to fear the Pharoah's might. Into the temple, where gathers the court, came neophyte slaves to the court of Sphinx. Here they learned of many things Here they learned to dedicate themselves to Michigan and to the Pharoah.... So Came . . - Mike Balgley, '62, Michael Burns, '62, Paul Carder, '62, Dick Clark, '62, Stuart Dow, '62. Todd Fay, '62, Dennis Floden, '62Ed., 'T' Francis, '62, Wilbert Pr.nlrln 'RV..r Pm, Fuancn 'R9 Decisio: SIMON LECTURES: ConstructDecision-Man Machines City Attorney To Clarify Registration Procedures By MICHAEL BURNS City Attorney Jacob Fahrner met yesterday with William Danne- miller, local lawyer, to discuss the clarification of local voting regis- tration procedures. The clarification, primarily intended to provide information for students concerning their residence eligibility, is expected to be completed by the end of next week Fahrner said. , He explained that a few more meetings with Dannemiller would be necessary before the rulings could be released. The code of pro- cedures will be shown to the group of students and other interested persons who originally approachedFahrner on the subject. State Attorney General Paul L. Adams, when informed of Fahrner's intentions, said that it was "a desirable thing as far as the objective is concerned," although t By SANDRA JOHNSON "Machines have already been constructed that can imitate the human process for making simple decisions," Herbert A Simon, as- sistant dean of the graduate school of Carnegie Institute of Technology said yesterday. "Today three separate plans exist for machines that can play chess. One of them employs a process of choice which, like the human mind, seeks the play that appears to be most satisfactory." Simple Game "Chess," Simon continued, "is a relatively simple game since the player has a finite number of alternatives but they represent the advancement we have made in scientifically analyzing the deci- sion-making process. "If a theory were developed which would take into considera- tion the more complex factors that must affect a businessman's decisions, it would provide a ra- tional basis he could rely upon when he must make a choice." "The routine, repetitive type of decision," Simon said, "can be solved habitually or by referring to standard operating procedures sach as manuals. "However for the unfamiliar, once-in-a-lifetime decisions the business executive has no estab- lished precedents to refer to. A realistic theory is much needed here and would have a cons'der- able effect. "For routine decisions the prob- lem is usually well-formulated, the alternatives are enumerated, and the only problem is to select the best one. (a I - he explained he could not com- ment on the specific rulings- com- pilation until he had seen it. Registration of qualified stu- dent voters was called "highly de- sireable" by Adams, adding that all persons, whether students or not, should attempt to register if they are eligible. Adams presented the state con- stitution's section which states, that simply attending college in, the state does not qualify one as an eligible registree, but that es- tablishment of official residence and domicile would qualify any person meeting the other require- ments. Last night, Student Government Council postponed consideration of a report by Nancy Adams, '60, executive vice president, concern- ing the progress of the city at- torney on the matter. Miss Adams said in her report TO PERFORM TONIGHT: 'Beauty of Music Resounds ' i Segovia By BEATRICE TEODORO and CAROLINE DOW "Critical decisions too often have an infinite number of alter- natives-there is no limit to the number of computers this execu- tive might use or to the ways in which they could be employed." On these more important deci- sions the final choice demands far less attention than the pre- liminary steps, Simon said. The executive should have something more substantial than vague in- tuition to guide him through them. Democrats To Curtail Electioneering LANSING (M-)-Top level state candidates have agreed to limit electioneering at the Democratic State Convention in Grand Rapids today and Saturday, one of them said yesterday. Secretary of State James M. Hare said ground rules were the result of. a "fair election code" effort launched in March by Gov. G. Mennen Williams and Neil Staebler, state Democratic chair- man, to avoid primary bitterness. Ed Winge, headquarters public relations man, confirmed the ar- rangement. He said it had been reached several weeks ago and applied to candidates for governor and lieutenant governor in the Aug. 2 primary, Besides Hare, announced gover- nor candidates include Lt. Gov. John B. Swainson, Detroit Coun- cilman Ed Connor and William L. Johnson, Ironwood broadcaster. Basically, the business of the convention is to adopt policy ,ffmn~ nn-a -s-.- icla Qj ~nt1,P.ha The grey haired man bent over his guitar and listened intently to the accompanying strains of the Philadelphia Orchestra. It was the 52nd rehearsal for Andres Segovia since he began his United States concert tour last January. It was also his last in this country. After his performance tonight in Hill Auditorium, Segovia will leave on a concert tour of Latin America which will end at the famed "Festival of Casals" in Puerto Rico. Even after the many hours of rehearsals and concerts, Segovia finds much pleasure in playing -the guitar for himself. This is what differentiates a profession from an art, he explained. Segovia never play for the audience; he plays for himself because "there is beauty in art" and a good artist should be able to hear this beauty "for the first time," each time he plays. A and artist is alsA the result of "ten per cent inspiration and . ... ....