DULLES ARTICLE SHOWS FOLLY (See Page 4) Latest Deadline in the State :4aii4 CLOUDY, SNOW, COLDER } VOL. LXVI, No. 81 SGC Hears First Conduct Report Bingley Cites Research Program As Preparation For Group Study Indications are that the new approach toward solving old prob- lems, as generated by the recent driving ban study committee, is now being applied to the problem of outmoded University rules and .~regulations. r'.Stressing the need for careful research in order to acquaint Stu- dent Conduct Study Committee members with the problems con- fronting them, Assistant Dean of Men John Bingley, Committee chairman, outlined activity to date at last night's Student Government Council meeting in the Union. In order to obtain "as competent a final report as possible," Bingley y has been compiling data relating to disciplinary policy since SGC ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1956 SIX Red China Charges .S. Blocked Peace Attempti New Outbreak of Riots Hits Bombay; Toll Hi h BOMBAY, India ()-Rioters defied a new curfew and fought a pre-midnight battle last night with police over the future of the City of Bombay. The rioters lost nearly 100 of their numbers in dead and wounded for the day. The violence began Monday in protest against a decision of Prime Minister Jawharal Nehru to keep Bombay apart from the surrounding states and their language differences. 21 Shot! The government reported early today 21 rioters were shot dead and 75 wounded by 114 bursts t yf called for a study committee late Grant Given By Defense {.,Department 'U' Gets Contract For $5,000,000 A five-million-dollar contract from the Defense Department to the University for continuatior during 1956 of research on battle- field surveillance problems was announced yesterday by the Com- mittee on Budget Administration The project is, among 5p grants totaling $5,681,26 approved dur- ing the past months. T e battlefield surveillance studies are conducted by the Uni. versity Engineering Research In- stitute under its secret "Projeci Michigan," a scientific investiga. tion of improvements of means foi detecting targets, and for obtain- ing information on the militar3 situation on the battlefield. Among others of the larger aP- prdved contracts in the Engineer- ing Research Institute were $50,000 for metallurgical research, $23,00( for study of the effects of atomic energy on chemical transforma- tions, $22,500 tp investigate uses of ferritic steel for higher tempera- ture application, and $20,000 tc continue study of the computer section of training-type "fligh simulators for the Air Force. Other items announced today included $110,000 for a study o voting behavior in the 1956 Presi- dential election, $24,914 for analy- sis of the conditions relevant t the will to survive, $25,740 for study of the effect of atomic explosions on human biology. SBX to Take SIn Used Books At Registration Student Book Exchange will in- augurate used textbook collections during registration, Exchange manager Bill Diamond, '56E, an- nounced yesterday. Books taken to registration should have the owner's name and asking price written in them. Ex- change agents will issue receipts. t Books may also be taken to the Exchange itself, which is being housed this year in the second floor of the Union addition, or turned in to representatives in housing units. E