MLITARY SUPREMACCY MAJOR IS$UE54 See Page With Seventieth Year of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXIX, No.49 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1959 FIVE CENTS LRTLY CLOUDY High-22 Low-15 Windy, Colder Occasional Snow Flurries six'PI State College Heads To Pick Supervisor New Officer Will Present Budget, Outline Needs of Higher Education A coordinator for the state's nine tax-supported colleges, and universities, slated to be named at the Council of State College Presidents meeting yesterday was not selected. However, such an executive will probably be chosen within the next 60 days, University President Harlan Hatcher indicated last night. The coordinator will have three major duties, Edgar L. Harden, president of Northern Michigan College and chairman of the council, 'said: He will attempt to present Council Asks State Support Of Projects Immediate enactment of a bill to provide capital outlay funds was called for yesterday by the Council of Presidents of State Colleges and Universities. A measure to provide up to 12 million dollars for new state building projects - most of them at institutes of higher learning - has passed the House but is being held in the Senate appropriations committee. The educators unanimously adopted a resolution calling for' passage of the bill "even though this may require, additional- tax revenue." Ftilure to act before the end of 1959, the council said, will delay availability of needed new class- room space until the fall of 1962. List Items The new construction bill in- cludes: 1) $800,000 for planning and start of construction on the Uni- versity's Institute of Science and Technology (or Science and In- dustry as the governor calls it). 2) $70,983for additional con- struction on the University's men- tal research building. 3) For Michigan. State Univer- sity, $100,000 for a tuberculosis laboratory and isolation barn; $1 million for a classroom and office building and $750,000 for an ad- dition to the administration building. 4) First unit of a general class- room building at Wayne State University, cost $750,000. 5) Plus more than $2 million for construction at five other state- supported colleges. Set Aside Originally the new construction bill was part of the overall state capital outlay bill. However, ap- propriations for remodeling and maintenance were enacted late in September, and the separate new coistruction bil was 'set aside, awaiting the state Supreme Court decision on the use tax. With the use tax declared ile- .,,.r gal, funds to support new con- struetion were doubtful. Thus, so far, no action has been taken. 'Last week Gov G. Mennen Wil- liams accused Republicans ' of having no intention to finance new construction. The state will still be short $40 million if the proposed Republican $70 million tax package is passed, he told educators in 10 cities. Stop Construction "All new construction at state universities and colleges will -be stopped," he said at that time. "The legislature will make up the Krest of the $0 million by refusing topass a 'capital outlay bill which includes $5.5 million fo new edu- cational bildings." The University sent a pro$- sional capital outlay request to Lansing in late August. It asked for a new School of Music build- ing, as well as medical and engi- neering facilities and the Insti- tute of Science and Technology. Showed Interest The Legislature + showed inter- est ,in appropriating funds only for the Institute and for addition- al construction on the mental health building. Since the music school, number' one on the University's priority list as it has been for several years, was dropped, a revised cap- ial outlay request was tentatively scheduled for consideration at the Regents' meeting this Friday. Whether it will be considered is now doubtful. T4~7 . QQLPm one budget for higher education to the Legislature, set forth the needs of higher education to the people of the state, and try to eliminate duplication of courses. Screen Three Three candidates have been screened for the job, it is reported. Rumor sees James T. Ivy, associate director of administration for the, Ford Foundation as leading candi- date. Harden would not identify the other two, saying only they are from Michigan and Kansas. Each of the three has been asked to outline procedures he would use in coordinating the col- leges and universities. "We don't know how much pow- er the executive will be given, but the man we want is one who will be able to carry out our policies and guide us," Harden said. On Request "We are doing this at the re- quest of the Legislature. It has suggested at various times we ought to get together. We believe the executive we choose should be able to assess the road education must travel." Cost of the coordinator would be paid by assessment on the Indi- vidual colleges and universities, with of Legislative appropriation in the future. Harden said presidents of col- proved the plan and the state leges and universities have ap- board of education, controlling agency over four regional schools, has approved it in principle. Old Request The Legislature, at least Sen. El- mer Porter (R-Bhissfield) head of the Senate appropriations com- mittee, knows of the move. Porter has asked coordination of the schools' budgets for several years. He has in fact pressed legisla- tion which would set up a coordi- nating body for state higher edu- cation directly responsible to the state rather than the schools. But, "I think there will be lots of disappointments," Porter com- mented. "The college presidents have never agreedin the past. It's very unusual for a man to accom- plish anything when he has nine bosses to listen to.", "Neither do I know where the money will come from to pay him," the legislator said. Already Working The Council of State .College Presidents is already in the pro- cess of developing an information and research office "which will be a permanent research agency," President Hatcher has noted. Presently headed by Prof. Bruce Nelson, , on loan from Eastern Michigan University, the "com- mon headquarters" located in Ypsilanti has begun to carry on where the Russell report left o where the Russell report (John Doe Russell Report on Higher Education in the -State of Michi- gan) left off, President Hatcher reported. HERTER: Threaten Americans In Panama WASHINGTON () - Secretary of State Christian A. Herter said yesterday he has reports "which indicate the threat. of further vio- lence" against Americans in Pan- ama. He told Panama's ambassador, Ricardo M. Arias, that he is "in- creasingly concerned for the safe- ty of American citizens resident in the Republic of Panama." Urgent Request Herter urgently requested the Panamanian government to take necessary precautions a g a i n s t rock-throwing demonstrations and clashes of the bind which erupted against Americans Nov. 3 and 4. Some 300 Americans live in Panama, mostly in the capital. Another 11,000 live in the Canal Zone into which Panamanian demonstrators crossed during the clashes two weeks ago. Herter offered to send a high- ranking department official to Panama to discuss the current controversy with Panamanian authorities. Still Willing The State Department said Herter added that "representa- tives of the United States contin- ued to be willing, as in the past, to seek mutually satisfactory so- lutions to outstanding problems but that this can be established only in an atmosphere of calm." Herter publicly warned of the threat of further violence only a few hours after the State Depart- ment's top Latin American offi- cial accused Communists of tak- ing a hand in the anti-United States demonstration.- Roy R. Rubottom, Assistant Secretary for Inter-American Af- fairs, conceded, however, "There are certain purely national as- pects involved in the demonstra- tions also." Arias, as he left the State De- partment, said he and Herter were not very far apart in seek- ing a solution to the present prob- lem. "Both of us are very interested that a solution be found," he said. "My government feels the prob- lems can be solved if we get down to the origin of the causes which brought this about." City -Council Tables Motion On State Aid The problem of getting money owed to Ann Arbor by the state for Urban Renewal was tabled by the City Council last night. Councilman A. N. Dingle dis- tributed to the members a pro- posal to have a letter sent1 to the state senator from the area urging him to get the needed funds. Councilman H. Aquinto moved that the proposal be read over by members of the Council and dis- cussed at the next meeting. A shopping center zoning sub- ject concerning the proposed de- velopment on Packard and Sta- dium was referred to committee. City Administrator Guy C. Lar- com, Jr. will meet with the city planning comittee on the shop- ping center. Nehru Rejects Himalayan ACCUSES UN: USSR Claims Wester 'Interference 'in Laos UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (M)-The Soviet Union yesterday accused Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold of trying to use the United Nations to cover up "further interference of the western powers in Laos." The new Soviet statement followed Hammarskjold's announce- ment that he was ordering a special United Nations representative to spend up to four weeks in the restiye, Asian kingdom. The statement charged that Hammarskjold's cur-" rent visit to Laos "can only make the existingsituation still more 1 lane rash Back Saturday Hammarskjold is expected to K ls C e arrive back here Saturday afterta week in Laos, where the govern- ment has charged that Commu- nist North Viet Minh forces are I assengers trying for its overthrow.9 The Soviet Union told Ham- marskjold before he left for Laos NEW ORLEANS (A')-A four- that it considered his visit could engine National Airlines plane plummeted into the shark - in- fested waters of the Gulf of Mexi- co early yesterday with 36 passen- Spgers and six crewmembers on Summit V. S.$.R. Charkhlig aN LADAKH CHINA PAKISTAN NEW Sigats. LHASA MC MAHON LINE DELHI tiBHUTAN c SIKIMi s Patna ASM Altahabad*EASE INDIA PAITAN CALCUTTA C.,' Mondolay MILES C Bay of Bengal BU MA it .8 DAG HAMMARSKJOLD .. . accused have repercussions that would en- danger peace in southeast Asia. But the Secretary General said Sunday he was summoning Sakari Tuomioja, a former Finnish prime minister, to Laos. Tuomioja is Executive S'ecretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe in Geneva.: Report on Laos Hammarsjold said Tuomioja would report back to, him on the economic situation in Laos and the country's need for aid from the United Nations. The Secretary General made the trip to Laos after a United Na- tions Security Council Fact-finding Committee reported evidence that the Communist regime of North Vietnam had supplied arms to Laotian rebels. The Soviet Union reiterated yes- terday that it "firmly adheres to the opinion that the tension exist- ing in Laos can and must be elim- inated 'only on the basis and with- in the framework " of the Geneva Agreements which are the founda- tion of peace and security in Laos and in Indochina as a whole." Offe Red Chin boa'rd., Coast Guard rescue units lo- cated -nine bodies and intensified the search for others, with little hope held for any survivors. The big DC-7B lbst radio con- tact shortly after midnight as fog slipped in over the gulf and all but closed operations at Moisant Airport, destination for the Miami originated flight. More Bodies. One of the pilots of the two Coast Guard helicopters which guided search vessels to the scene said "there probably will be more bodies found, but it's getting dif- ficult because of sharks." Lt. James L. Sigman, Executive Officer of the Coast Guard Air Detachment at New Orleans, said he couldn't miss seeing the sharks as his helicopter swept low over the 300-foot deep waters. Three Coast Guard vessels re-. ported picking up the nine bodies amid the scattered debris. The bodies were to be taken to Gulf- port, Miss., the Coast Guard said. Lost Contact The plane left Tampa, Fla., at 11:02 p.m. and was due in New Orleans at 2:20 a.m. (CST). Its last contact with a radio point was at 12:33 a.m. The plane went down about 100 miles southeast of New Orleans, about 25 miles from the marshy Louisiana coast near the' mouth of the Mississippi River. . . Sigman said it was his opinion that the plane blew up when it hit water. - He discounted any explosion in the area, pointing out the wreck- age was spread over a compara- tively small area of two to three miles. A mid-air explosion, he said, would have tossed bits of wreckage over a 10-mile area. The plane apparently had no forewarning, he said, and cited the lack of life preservers on any of the bodies. brought under the 1957 Civil Rights Act dealing with discrimi- nation in the conduct of an elec- tion itself. Three previous suits, in Alabama, Georgia and Louisiana, dealt with charges of discrimina- tion in voter registration. The Memphis action asked the, court to enjoin the committee from preventing Negro participa- tion in primary elections for local office. Acting United States Dist. Atty. Gen. Rives Manker filed the com- plaint after, a group of Negro vot- ers claimed they were refused per- mission to vote in the primary for three local offices. Manker said notices sent to poll officials by the county Democratic Executive Committee stated spe- cifically that "this is a white Democratic primary." "This has gone on up there for many years," Manker said. "It was all out in the open. They were not trying to hide anything." Manker said that when the Ne- groes filed their complaint they brought a letter which quoted the committee as instructing polling officials that only white Demo- crats were to be permitted to vote in the primary. The Negroes contended, Manker said, that "they are Democrats and, ought to be able to vote in any so-called Democratic primary." High Court To.,Test, Act WASHINGTON (A) - Whether Federal government can sue a state in enforcing the 1957 Civil Rights Act will be decided by the Supreme Court. The ,court agreed yesterday to review decisions of two lower Fed- eral courts ruling out such suits based on charges of discrimina- tion against Negroes who wished to register to vote. This is the second major phase of the Civil Rights Act now before the court. Agreed To Review Last June it agreed to review a, decision holding portions of the act unconstitutional. The case the court yesterday agreed to review arose in Ala- bama. United States District Judge Frank M. Johnson of Montgomer yruled that neither on the act's face nor in its history was there any reasonable basis for holding that Congress intended to provide for suit against a sover- eign state. The United States Court of Appeals in New Orleans upheld Johnson. The section involved provides that whenever "any person" de- prives or is about to deprive an- other of voting rights, the United States Attorney General may in- stitute civil action for an injunc- tion. Filed Suit Under this section, the Justice Department, on Feb. 5, 1959, filed suit to prevent the registrars of Macon County from barring Ne- groes from registering. The regis- trars resigned before the suit was actually filed and no successors were named. Then the Justice Department amended its suit to make the state of Alabama a defendant, and as such subject to commands that it observe the federal law. The department contended the state was responsible for acts of its agents and duties of the regis- trars continued until successors were appointed. Judge Johnson said in dismiss- ing the suit thta Congress had de- liberately used the word "person" to bar states from being made de- fendants in injunction actions. DISPUTE-Yesterday Nehru turned down a conference with Red China.- One of the conditions of the proposal would be a with- drawal from the borderline between India and China now sur- rounded by fighting. FILES COURT SUIT: Justice DepartmentAets To Halt Discrimination MEMPHIS (P)-The Justice Department filed a Federal court suit here yesterday aimed at halting the alleged barring of Negroes from voting in adjoining Fayette County. The history-making action challenged the validity of what it called an all-white primary hel din Fayette last Aug. 1. It said Negroes were openly barred and that some were turned away from the polls by election officials. The suit, filed against the Fayette County Demo- cratic Committee, was the first Calls Chou's. Suggestions 'ImpractiO Hits Partial Retrea Of Border Troops From Present Line NEW DELHI, India (A-Pril Minister Jawaharlal Nehru turn down yesterday the Prposall Premier Chou En-La of P China for an early Himalay summit, meeting to settle it] border dispute. Nehru also rejected as imprac cal Chou's suggestion that bc sides withdraw their border for at once for a distance of 1 miles from their present positIo As anti-Chinese demonstratic broke out outside, Nehru told P liament he has send other proo als to Peiping "which seem to practical." He declined to go ir detail until Chou gets the n from New Delhi. Demonstration About 850 Kan Sangh (Rightil Party demonstrators in front. Parliament waved signs say "Nehru, shake off softness" a "drive out the Chinese invader N. R. Goray, Praja Social Party member of Parliament, t the demonstrators Nehru tend to be weak and vacillating and t demonstration was a good thi to show the temper of the pub Nehru told Parliamenthe 1 always been willing to talk Wi Chou but "if talks are to bear fri as we want them to do" thi must be adequate, advance pi paration. Proposals Made Nehru said Chou had made p! posals intended to eliminate ti danger of more border clas and "we agree this is a hig desirable aim." But he added t1i the way Chou wants to do "seems to us to be impractical. In a note Nov. 7, Chou suggest both sides withdraw 12% ml from their positions in two d puted areas-the.northeast bor with Tibet and the Ladakh p2 teau 1,000 miles to the west. In northeast, this would be fr a point near the MacMahon hin drawn by the British in 1914 a considered by India its border w Tibet. China claims 32,000 squi miles south of the line. Conce ably, a withdrawal here would p all Red Chinese troops north the MacMahon line. Reds Control But in Ladahk, the Chinese cc trol about 8,000 square miles territory India considers its os such a short withdrawal woi leave Red Chinese in control much of this territory. Nehru also expressed displeas about reports that Commun Chinese had interrogated 10 1 dian policemen captured in a Cla in the Ladahk district Oct. 21. said this was "deplorable "p cedure." The policemen a~nd I bodies of nine other killed in I clash were returned to India S8 urday. Parliament, assembling after two-month recess, heard motk from opposition members prop ing strong action against Chin border forces. andbanning mnd Communist Party. Both motic were ruled out of order and a border debate was set for Nov. Pope Appoint Americans As Cardinals VATICAN CITY ()-Pope Jo XXIII yesterday appointed t new American cardinals, bringi United States representation the Roman Catholic Church Se ate Body to six, highest ever. Archbishops Albert Gregc Meyer of Chicago and Aloisius Muench of Fargo, N.D., are amc PANEL DISCUSSION: Educators Discuss High Schools in America By CAROLINE DOWa The pros and cons of a decentralized educational system in modern America was the major focus of four international educators at a panel discussion on American high schools last night. Querico Samonte, Gral., of the Phillipines, questioned whether the local autonomy of each American school board was consistant with the present American cultural situation. He felt that it did allow, more freedom for local initiative and prevented federal rigidity. On the negative side he noted that the American nation has gone beyond the community environment ecologically. The geographic mobility of Americans presents a drawback to the varied local school system, he said. Questioned Taxing Property He also questioned the practice of taxing property for school support maintaining that property no longer reflects the wealth of the United States. Cleveland Thomas, Grad., of the West Indies, pointed out that our system should be more centralized so that all schools could keep ;:. .:,.: .:: vx . .,: >;