r STATE LEGISLATORS ONLY PLAYING GAMES See Page 4 some", W f= t rit Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 442att SNOW, COLDER VOL. LXIX, No. 118 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 1959 FIVE CENTS . i -. TWELVE PAGES i T T at/..V T 1.%' X AWN ,, ,. __ -.- r An Editorial... A RECORD NUMBER of nineteen candidates will com- pete for seven positions in the Student Gdvernment Council election Tuesday and Wednesday. Despite the relatively large number of candidates, there are few individuals among them qualified to aid the University in fulfilling its educational responsibili- ties and to serve SGC during the forthcoming r e- evaluation period. However, of those running, three have shown t em- selves worthy of election. We recommend Phil Zook,'60, Jo Hardee, '60, and David Kessel, Grad. SGC has seen few workers as industrious and dedi- cated as Zook who has played an extremely active role in the internal functioning of the Council. As chairman of the Student Affairs Committee, former chairman of the Student Book Exchange and former elections direc- tor, Zook has probably expended more energy on Coun- cil'projects than any of the present SGC members. MISS HARDEE, SGC's administrative vice-president, has been a faithful and diligent worker on the Council for the past two years. Her analytical thinking and perception have contributed much to the Council's understanding of the University. In spite of his seemingly flippant attitude toward the Council, Kessel has shown serious concern for the affairs of SGC and contributed an original insight to, them. He is one of the first Council members in some time to show much imagination. With the reappraisal of the, Council's role in mind, we urge students to read critically the SGC section in today's paper and to fulfill their voting responsibility on Tuesday and Wednesday. --THE SENIOR EDITORS BERLIN: Fulbright Says Reds Ma y Fight WASHINGTON (A)--The chair- man of the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee said yesterday it is premature for anyone to assume the Russians won't start' a war over Berlin. Sen. J. William Fulbright (D- Ark.) also said the United States should be willing to hold summit conferences on Berlin and other issues instead of insisting on meet- ings at the foreign ministers' level. In supporting the idea of meet- ings of President Dwight D. Eisen- hower with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and other heads of state, Sen. Fulbright declared: Fulbright Claims "We have to accept the fact that in Russia there isn't any second most important man. It's just the most important man. To them, a foreign ministers' conference is rather a waste of time because Khrushchev speaks for all of them." Sen. Fulbright told Sen. George Smathers (D-Fla.) in a radio-TV program recorded for Florida sta- tions that the Berlin crisis is "a serious probing " by the Soviets that may lead to "very rough tac- tics" by then, "I think we ought to assume that they may go very far," Sen. Ful- bright said, adding: Might Use Force "If things don't go well, it could result in the use of force - and if that ever happens, even on a minor scale, it would be extremely diffi- cult to limit it. "I regret the assumption that many people make that there'sgo- ing to be no war. I think that's premature. I say it's a very serious situation." Sen. Fulbright said that "in- stead of being too sticky about summit conferences, we should tend to accept them - in view of world conditions--as a more com- mon practice, perhaps holding one every six months." Sen. Fulbright said the country must support the President in his determination not to yield one inch on Berlin. But he said he thought President Eisenhower spoke in the sense "we will not give one inch on Berlin unless there are conces- sions on the other side that would justify it . .." "If a free corridor could be established, free of any inspection and with a complete line of access to Berlin, coupled with some form of international control of Berlin, I think that might be an offer very seriously to be considered." French Ho stilit' Fleet Re y Among movall NATO Causes Action Hurts' Unity Effort Diplomats Appalled At Timing of Move In Mediterranean PARIS (A) -- France's virtual removal of its Mediterranean fleet from all North Atlantic Treaty Organization obligations yesterday stirred a bitterback-room fight in the Atlantic alliance. Allied diplomats were appalled at the'timing of the move - while the West is facing dangerous So- viet pressures over Germany and d is working hard to present a uni- fled front. Western diplomats did their best to put a good face on the French decision to retain com- mand of their Mediterranean fleet in time of war. But the anger was there. GERMAN TALKS: YPredict Agreement yIke, Macmillan WASHINGTON (P) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Prime Minister Harold Macmillan of Britain seem likely to reach broad agreement here next week on proposals for negotiating with Russia over German problems. That is the expectation despite some important differences be- tween the two men. Macmillan, according to, advance information, will urge President Eisenhower to agree to attend a summit confer- nce with Soviet, Premier Nikita -Daily-Allan winder TROPICAL CENTER-Prof. T. H. Hubbell (lower left-hand corner) is the general committee chairman for the planning of the Center.j It will be located near the Pan-American Highway about 150 miles north of the Guatemala border. The Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific Ocean will be several hours' drive from it. Headquarters for the proposed Center will be located near Tuxtla Gutierrez in southern Mexico. Committee Plans Tropical Studies Center DiscussMS Power Fight By SUSAN HOLTZER Two University officials agreed this week that professors at Michi- gan State University should be given the increased authority they are requesting. The MSU faculty, through the American Federation of Teachers, is planning to ask for faculty vote on all curriculum changes, and the creation of faculty policy com- mittees within the departments, to recommend salary scales, tenure, promotions and appointments. The proposals are to be pre- sented to the steering committbe of the academic council in April. Needs More Say Prof. Irving Copi of the philoso- phy department, chairman of the literary college's Curriculum Com- mittee, said "the fac-ilty ought to have more say." He said the Uni- versity faculty has "adequate con- trol over curriculum," but said he felt they do not have enough to say about the handling of money. "This, of course," he noted, "is mainly because of the way the thing operates. Appropriations are handled by the Legislature, the money from student fees is han- dled by the Administration, and the money for research is handled very much by outside contribu- tors." James H. Robertson, assistant dean of the literary college, de- fined the main problem in terms of centralization of power. i Discusses Centralization "When power is centralized," he explained, "you can do things quickly, and so you give the ap- pearance of being responsive to See SUPPORT, Page 8 Foreign Aid Needs Support To Be Passed WASHINGTON P)-Rep. Thom- as E. Morgan (D-Pa.) said yester- day that President Dwight D. Ei- senhower's foreign economic aid program will need a lot of help Khrushchev in midsummer even if a preliminary foreign ministers' meeting fails to break the East- West deadlock on German issues. Despite reservations, President Eisenhower may give at least ten- tative assent, since he is under- stood to regard a summit confer- ence as probably inevitable. The President, in some degree at least, will set the stage for his participation in the talks with Macmillan through a radio-TV report tomorrow at 9:30 p.m. By BARTON HUTHWAITE A University committee is cur- rently drawing up tentative plans to establish a University Center for Tronical Studies in the jungles of southern Mexico. Mexico has already agreed to set aside 500 acres of land for the project-if the University can raise the $500,000 to $750,000 needed to establish the Tropical Center. Securing the operating expenses of the Tropical Center will be "our biggest problem," Prof. T. H. Hub- bell, director of the zoology mu- seum and chairman of the general committee, said yesterday. Foundations Interested Some foundations have ex- pressed interest in the project, he continued. "We hope to file formal financial applications with them some time in June or July," he commented., An informed source told The Daily recently that the State Department, the Pan-American Union and the National Science Foundation have been informally approached on the Tropical Cen- ter. Four sub-committees are pres- ently ironing out details on the various aspects the Tropical Center would cover before funds are form- ally requested, Prof. Hubbell added. UMRI Assists The University Research Insti- tute (UMRI) is assisting the seven-man general committee in formulating a detailed proposal, he added. The Tropical Center's head- quarters would be located near the town of Tuxtla Gutierrez in southern Mexico. "We decided on that location, because of the diversity of ter- rain," Prof. Stanley A. Cain of the conservation department, financ- ing chairman, said recently. Cli- mates range from dry lowlands to Fellowships- Awarded to 24 TI' Students Twenty-four University students have received Woodrow Wilson Fellowships, it was announced to- day. The grants for graduate study are awarded to 1,200 students each year, from a field of 7,000 candi- plateaus and mountains, with arid land changing to tropical rain forests. Office To Cooperate Dr. Leon Brindis, governor of Chiapas, ; the Mexican state in which the center would be located, assured the committee last summer his office would cooperate in every way, including the assignment of land for buildings and study re- serves. The Tropical Center would ex- clude agricultural work and medi- cal studyin favor of planned sys- tematic studies of the tropical region-physical and biotic condi- tions, resources and aspects of human life and culture. Parallel University and University of Mex- ico teaching programs-may also be included. A linguistics course might also be considered for the project. List Fields "The Tropical Center would delve into fields of natural re- sources, biology, anthropology, lin- guistics and perhaps more," Prof. Cain said recently. "It also would be open to investi- gators from everywhere," he added. The recently appointed Mexican undersecretary of agriculture for game and forest conservation, En- rique Beltran, has provided a great deal of assistance in setting up plans for the Center, Prof. Hubbell said yesterday. Prof. Hubbell said the. Center would serve as a school for the SGC-A ffiliated Relations Discussed by Candidates (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third in a series of articles on Student Government Council candidates.) By JEAN HARTWIG Since 12 of the 19 candidates running for Student Government Council are affiliated, the question of SGC's relation with fraternity and sorority issues is especially crucial during the current campaign. Casey King, '62, told Tau Delta Phi fraternity SGC should not interfere in areas involving the existence and function of other stu- dent organizations. Speaking at Helen Newberry, Morton Meltzer, '61, considered the recent spring versus fall rush controversy. "If Panhellenic wishes See related story, Page 2 dates. The candidates are nomi- nated and screened by faculty committees in each of 700 under- graduate colleges. Given by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, the grants consist of tuition, fees and a $1,500-a-year living allow- ance. training of graduate students and advanced undergraduates. "We hope the University and other foundations would be able to pro- vide fellowships for deserving stu- dents, he added." The idea for the Tropical Center first came in the spring of 1956. An official compmittee was set up in 1957 to consider the possibilities of such a center more closely. Since then committee members have taken trips into the rugged area to find a suitable location for the project. After canvassing Mexico and many authorities in the United States, the Isthmus of Tehuante- pec area in Chiapas was chosen as the best location. 'U' To Host Conference A three-day national training institute for the 1961 White House Conference on Aging will be held at the University starting June 24. This institute stems from an act of the last session of Congress calling for a White House confer- ence on the problems of the United States old-age population, An- thony M. Lenzer, executive secre- tary of the State Legislature's Legislative Advisory Council on Problems of the Aging, said yes- The conference here is geared to train state and local people for running special meetings on old- age problems throughout the United States. Also, these people will be told how to bring the prob- lems before the public and thus create wide-spread interest in them, he skid. After public interest has been stimulated-and the White House Conference put on, it is hoped that national legislation will be passed to help aging citizens, Lenzer added. Each state has been asked to hold state and local conferences before the national conference in order to discuss all aspects of this complex field. People trained at the institute here will be in charge of these meetings. Then each state will pick a delegation for the White House conference. In Michigan, a bill is in the Legislature to create a Commis- sion on Aging, Lenzer said. Series Tickets Colleagues Irate Even the French appeared taken aback by the irate reaction from their colleagues in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Officially they would only con- firm that the move was taken be- cause of what France considers its special responsibilities in the Mediterranean. This means the guarding of links with Algeria, where a four-year-old Nationalist rebellion endangers vast French holdings. Allied officials, however, view the order as one more step by President Charles de Gaulle to get a bigger voice in the Atlantic alliance. Diplomats Furious United States diplomats were described as furious over the French action and the timing. A British source observed that "the most worrisome thing about it is the timing, during the Berlin crisis." "There seems little hope the French can be dissuaded," the source said. "However, if the reac- tion is bitter enough it might stop anyone from a similar move in the future." Military Worries The big worry to the military men appeared to be that if France can high-handedly w i t h d r a w forces pledged to NATO other countries might some day follow suit. In that case the heart of the alliance would be wrecked. The French claim they were within their rights and that Washington and London were in- formed beforehand. They also point out that both the British, and United States fleets have a special relationship to NATO, al- lowing them to be freely used else- where, such as in Formosa Strait. Western diplomat9 have told the French this is, of course,- true. However, they accuse the French of bad faith. Had France asked for ,a change of NATO assign- ments in the Mediterranean, mili- tary spokesmen say, French in- terests would certainly have been met. World News ROundup By The Associated Press , BLANTYRE, Nyasaland -Eight hundred troops and police last night pushed into Nyasaland's rebel-rocked southern province in a drive to bring the remote tribal areas back under government con trol. It was the biggest single opera- tion since violence erupted over African demands for freedom. CAIRO - A United Arab Re- public military spokesman said three Iraqi jet planes carried out a machine-gun-rocket attack yes- terday about six miles inside Syrian territory. to get rid of it, they should be able to do it. Houses More Relaxed "Houses can relax more about filling their quotas if they have two rushes during the year in- stead of one," he said. At the same open house, Babs Miller, '60, ad- vocated first semester rush, ex- plaining that the weather favors rush in the fall. "I don't feel that the extra se- mester helps the sororities or the prospective rushees, due to rigid contact rules," she explained. "I feel that the houses want fall rush, but what about the rushees? I propose open rush the first semester and deferred pledg- ing, which might be done the sec- ond semester," Bob Garb, '62, said. Would Support Greeks At the Delta Tau Delta frater- nity, Harry Cummins, '61, said he would "generally support the Greeks on matters brought before SGC." He also favors fall rush. In favor of fall rush, King said he would bring it up before the IN WESTERN CAPITALS: Some Leaders Favor Disengagement, R 7"' -. .4, - C 'P . yr r . r klirp I By JOHN M. HUITOWER Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON (-) - A great many powerful people in the capi- tals of the Western world are be- ginning to rally 'round the banner of disengagement. They want to see a thinning out of Soviet and Allied forces in cen- tral Europe. Eventually they would like to see these forces separated by some kind of buffer territory. To Urge Review A review of United States and British policy on disengagement is one of the projects Prime Minister Harold Macmillan of Britain in- tends to urge upon President Dwight D. Eisenhower when the two meet here next Friday. Mac- millan is likely to find himself pressing an unpopular subject up- on Arn unw~illing 'nartr} ": ;;>:: :: . .... x