ANN ARBOR, LANSING: TWO POINTS OF VIEW See Page 4 ixt a4 Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom. 41P a-tt. 42 " 49 VOL. LXIX, No. 152 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 3, 1959 Residence Halls Must Aid Individual's Development (EDITOLS NOTE: This is the last of a series of three articles on the residence halls.) By RALPH LANGER Daily Contributing Editor 17, "The University provides resi- dence halls and supervises other Housing so that all students may 'have :housing and meals which assure them c o m f o r t, w e l- prepared meals, and good study c o0nditions," according to a hous- ing pamphlet distributed by the University. . Dlo inhabitants receive "com- fort, well-prepared meals, and good study conditions" in Univer- sity residence halls? Opinions dif- fer. It is generally accepted that the residence halls should be a part of the overall educational ex- perience. This is a departure from the view that residence halls were to live in and that they were sep- arate from the educational ex- perience. The latter view had its heyday in the last century and has pretty much gasped its 'last breath. Contribution Depends The possible contribution of residence halls to the academic and social development of its -in- habitants depends on three fac- tors: physical facilities; house ac- tivities or tone, and staff. Current , philosophy regarding comfort or physical facilities is the same as'that espoused by Karl Litzenberg in 1941 and published in the Michigan Alumnus Quar- 4 terly Review. "The . . . realistic school (of thought) holds that it is categor- icallywrong to accustom young] f men, and women to living condi- tions which they can never dupli- cate in afterlife," Litzenberg's ar- ticle says. Followed Assumptions. & l' The construction plans and equipment schedules of the Uni- versity of Michigan residence halls have followed the assumptions of' this school, and have accentuated unpretentious facilities for sleep- ing, dining, study, recreational, and social purposes rather than gilt and plush. The University is not open to the accusation that it pampers its' residence halls stu- dents by ensconcing them in sumptuousness," the article con- inues. The Michigan House Plan, dis- cussed by the article, is a well- thought-out philosophy andl pro- gram for providing basic equip- mept to t esidents. The Plan pro- vides for division of the larger units into houses which should be encouraged to develop their own esprit de corps. The houses should have a personality and an identity 4. but as the same time should ad- jus.t to the broad scope of the total residence picture. System Not Perfect The fact that the system has Yet to ,achieve perfection is quite well recognized. The observations of a subcommittee set up to perform an evaluation of the Michigan House Plan for the residence halls yTwo Concerts Tio Conclude MayFestival board of governors made mention of goals yet to be reached. , That many of the goals haven't, been attained isn't surprising con- sidering the tremendous poten-. tial of the Plan. What is import- ant is the present extent of achievement and the prespects for the future. What is 'today's resi- dence-hall inhabitant getting in the wsy of intellectual stimula- tion and physical facilities to help 50 per cent. As soon as the fresh- man has served his required resi- dence hall time he usually leaves for greener pastures - a frater- nity house or off-campus apart- ment. With these exiting upper- classmen the system loses much of the stuff a good system is made of, maturity, experience; and bal- ance. There are some definite and some intangible explanations for MARY MARKLEY-According to current philosophy, University housing has accentuated "unpretentious facilities for sleeping, dining, study, recreational and social purposes rather than gilt and plush." This soves the University from the accusation that it "pampers its students by ensconsing them in sumptuousness." Union Begins Counseling By Students Sixteen Departments Featured in Program By BRUCE COLE Beginning tomorrow, all stu- dents in the literary college will be able to see special student counselors who will be able to sup- ply information and advice on courses, concentration require- ments in the counselor's own field and requirements for a degree. Established by the Student Af- fairs Committee of the Union, headed by Michael Turoff, '61, the free counseling service will com- plement and augment the work done by faculty counselors. More than 5) counselors repre- senting 16 departments have en- listed in this program never before attempted at the University. List Departments The departments are: anthro- pology ,astronomy, botany, classi- cal studies, economics, Far East- ern languages and literatures, German, history, jo u r n a i1is m, mathematics, philosophy, physics, psychology, romance languages, sociology and speech. All counselors have been recom- mended by the individual depart- ments. They are seniors, graduate students and instructors. Besides academic counseling, appointments with campus coun- selin ggroups, such as the Bureau of Psychological Services, can be made through the Union's service. "A great advantage in this pro- gram is that students will be able to meet with the counselors in- formally enabling them to form a close personal contact, and ad- visors will spend as much time as necessary with the students in or- der to help them," Turoff said. This is something the faculty people are often unable to do as they have such a heavy load, he added. Counselors Have attended sev- eral training meetings with the faculty and the Union, and all the counselors will be able to tell the students everything-from the contents of the courses in their fields to the types of teachers in- Volved in the courses., Able To Do Much "In fact, the student counselors will be able to do almost every- thing the faculty does with the exception of signing a student's elections card," Turoff said, "in- cluding helping the student find the field in which he is most in- terested." Also ,a student must see his faculty counselor if he wants to add or drop a course. The entire program, almost six months in the planning stage, has been organized with the coopera- tion of Prof. Donald L. Hill of the English department and chairman of faculty counselors for juniors and seniors in the literary college. Any student in the literary col- lege wishing to see a student counselor must call or stop in at the student offices on the second floor of the Union, Turoff said. A confidential record of each student will be kept so the stu- dent counselor will be able to see an individual's record and thus see better how to counsel the stu- dent and help him in his prob- lems. For Herter PANAMA: Authorize Coast Patrol - Says his academic and social expan- sion? To the average resident the Plan itself doesn't mean much. What this hypothetical student cares about is what directly af- fects him - how clean his room is, how much space he has avail- able for "living," how noisy his neighbors are, and other practical, day-to-day considerations. He is being furnished with a room, a desk, a bed and a place to hang his clothes. This is the necessary equipmnent with which to study and sleep. But it is in' the atmosphere and additional facili- ties for intellectual and social ad- justment and growth that the system falls down the most. - Usuallyleaves With the present makeup of houses the dropout rate of upper- classmen is terrific - more than1 World News, Roundup' By The Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL -The Air Force's chief strategist for missiles and space research said yesterday the nation's first intercontinental. .ballisticmissile will be ready for troop. use next July- despite recent. troubles in the program. Lt. Gen. Bernard A. Schreiver, new chief of the Air Research and Development command, told news.- men that the Atlas "is right on schedule and will be operational early this summer." * . , CAIRO-Anew inyasion of Iraq -probably on a minor scale-was reported under way yesterday. The radio in Iraq's capital of Baghdad reported the presence of infiltrators on Iraqi soil. The broadcast called on the population to assist the popular resistance forces in catching foreign infiltra- tors. the high turnover rate in resi- dence halls composition. First of all the halls are operated under rules designed primarily for the new freshman who is ever present to stay for a two-semester stint. Upperclassman Chafes The upperclassman chafes un- der "no screens off the window," staff-determined and enforced quiet hours, and similar "new- student" regulations. Other reasons for high drop-out are the desire for independence and freedom offered by , apart- ments - and to some extent by fraternities - and a general aver- sion to and wish to get away from group living. Residents tire of the rules, waiting in lines and regi- mentation associated with insti- tutional living. Solution Possible There is a potential solution- upperclass housing. Here the up- perclassman can ,have a residence that makes its own rules, in the main, sets and enforces its own quiet. hours and insgeneral has no necessity to have or adhere to re- strictions aimed at' a less mature and less experienced student, Unfortunately the University will probably not be offering up- perclass housing for the next couple of years, despite consistent urging by several generations of s t u d e n t leaders. Philosophical changes 'take time to gain accept- ance, and prospects are that up- perclass housing will only be tried experimentally in two to four years.. A Freshmen a Problem A stumbling block has been what to do with the left-over freshmen. Some antagonists to the program have argued that fresh- See RESIDENCE, Page 4, By The Associated Press The Council of the Organization of American States (OAS) yester- day authorized an international naval patrol off Panama to halt any vessels bringing forces for a new invasion there. The approval was given only after some debate over the touchy question of the .extent of the ter- ritorial sea. The government of Panama, apparently still believing that re- inforcements could be landed for the 87-member Cuban force which surrendered ,Friday, asked the authorization through the special OAS investigating committee. Naval vessels for the patrol Professor Dismissed A t UCLA By RUTHANN RECHT An assistant professor at the University of California-Los An- geles has been dismissed because his research has been insufficient in quality and quantity. "Under the UCLA system of promotions and appointments, if an instructor has been with the university for eight years and has not been promoted to associate professor, then he must seek an- other job," Prof. George E. Mow- ry, chairman of the history de- partment, told The Daily yester- day. Prof. Trygve R. Tholfsen of the history department "had written only one article in the five years he had been with the university," Prof. Mowry said. At that time- eighteen months ago-he was no- tified that he would not be pro- moted, but the news did not be- come public until recently. Takes 'Moderate Viwe' "I take a moderate view of the situation," Prof. Tholfsen told The Daily yesterday. "I guess my dis- missal is an attempt to raise the level of the department, although I'm not in a position to judge whether it was qualified." "I did submit' a manuscript to the history department to be pub- lished" he said, "but they reject- ed it." Since then, "I've published' a few chapters as individual ar- ticles," he noted. "These articles were published in England, as my field of specialization is English history." Thinks Both Important Prof. Tholfsen feels that teach- ing and scholarship are equally important to a university. "Each school has a right to expect its faculty to publish work of high quality, for that is an indication that a man is a good professor," he remarked. But, he emphasized, it would be' a mistake for anyone to stress scholarship at the expense of teaching. Next September, Prof. Tholfsen will become an associate professor at .Louisiana State University. Under UCLA rules, thereare four qualifications for promo- See UCLA, Page 5 Meeting with Russi work have been given, or offered, by the United States, Colombia and Cuba. Honduran Ambassador Celeo Davila noted that the breadth of the territorial sea has been a hot- ly-debated point, especially in Latin America. He asked what limit might apply. Panamanian Ambassador Ri- cardo Arias said the Panamanian. legislation provides for a 12-mile limit, as contrasted with the three-mile limit recognized by the United States and other nations. Guatemala rushed troops to de- fend its eastern shores yesterday after receiving a warning from the Panamanian government that a landing may be attempted by 400 Cubans who originally sailed for Panama. The Panamanian embassy here told the Guatemalan government that the Cuban force changed boats in the Caribbean Sea while en route to Panama. It said the Cubans had transferred to a small ship believed flying the Guate- malan flag. The transfer was said to have been made Monday or Tuesday. Guatemalan President Miguel Ydigoras ordered troops to pro- tect possible landing areas on the. Caribbean coast. He also ordered patrols to check highways. All ranches with private airports were alerted. . 'U Netters G s W in Tw ice By FRED KATZ Michigan's depth-laden tennis team maintained its spotless rec- ord yesterday with a 9-0 shutout of Minnesota and an abbreviated 6-0 whitewash job on Toledo. The action was part of a four- team round-robin weekend meet. The Wolverines were the only' team to win all three of their matches. They pasted Ohio State, Friday, 9-0. In the only other match yester- day at the Varsity Courts, OSU handled homestate rival Toledo with ease, 9-0. This weekend was the first time the Wolverines had had outside competition, and they established themselves as a definite threat for the Big Ten title come May 21, 22 and 23. Both Ohio State and Minnesota are considered to be first-division caliber, in the Conference. Despite the impressive showings, Coach Bill Murphy fears only the worst Tuesday when his charges face Notre Dame, the midwest's finest net aggregation. It was the Fighting Irish who, snapped the Wolverines' conseutive dual meet record string at 47 last year. In both matches yesterday, the Wolverines were extended to the full three-set limit only once. First singles player and captain See NETMEN, Page 6 In Twinbill" By DAVE LYON Special to, The Daily COLUMBUS - Ohio State dropped Michigan out of the Big Ten baseball race yesterday by taking both ends of a doublehead- er 7-4 and 9-1. The double= defeat gave Michi- gan a 2-4 conference record and kept OSU in contention with a 4-2 mark. The Buckeyes got to Wolverine pitching for big leads in the early innings of both contests. In the, first game, OSV had to withstand; a Michigan home run barrage to win. Michigan offered little resistance in the seven inning nightcap, how- ever, as curve-balling righthander Dale Denny scattered four singles. Both Michigan starting pitchers, Al. Koch in the first game and Bob Marcereau in the second, had trouble finding the plate. Koch walked four men, 'and al- lowed OSU seven hits and six runs in the 2% innings he worked. Three double plays prevented the Bucks from scoring more than they did. OSU held a 7-2 lead when Mich- igan put on an eighth inning up-. rising. Leadoff hitter Bill Roman and Dave Brown clouted successive home runs to make it 7-4. Jim Dickey followed with a sin- gle, but the rally died when Dickey See OHIO STATE, Page 6 CastroAsks Economic Aid BUENOS AIRES )A'-Fidel Cas- tro declared yesterday the United States should provide 30 billion dollars over a 10-year period to achieve economic stability in Latin America.,. The Cuban Prime Minister, in a fervent speech, called for the United States to back such a pro- gram for Latin American develop-, ment.' WASHINGTON 'W) - Secretary of State Christian Herter flew in from Paris yesterday and told President Dwight' D. Eisenhower the Western powers are ready to open negotiations with Russia for an end to the Berlin crisis and a start on German unification. He described, as very successful his talks with British, French and West German foreign ministers last week. And in an airport arrival state- ment he challenged Russia to show an honest desire to negotiate in the Big Four meeting coming up at Geneva May 11. Reached Accord The Westei'n ministers reached final agreement on a set of. pro- posals to present 'to Russia for ending the Berlin crisis and mak- ing a start on German unification and control of armed forces. Officials said proposals in this package may be bargained over separately if Russia shows a sin cere interest in negotiation, which state department authorities con- sider unlikely. This was Herter's first exercise in high-level personal diplomacy as Secretary of State. Dispatches frem Paris reported Allied diplo- mats were favorably imipressed with his work. The assignment was carried out somewhat in the man- ner of Herter's cancer-stricken predecessor, John Foster Dulles Appeared Relaxed The new secretary, whose walk . ing is, impaired by arthritis, ap-' peared relaxed despite a busy week of meetings and a long overnight flight from Paris. Within two hours Herter had flown by helicopter to Gettysburg, Pa. There-he conferred with Pres- dent Eisenhower, then returned to Washington. Both Herter's airport statement and White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty, in relaying word of the Secretary's talk with Presi- dent Eisenhower, used the words "very successful" 'to describe Her- ter's meetings with Britain's Sel- wyn Lloyd, France's Maurice Couve de Murville and West Germany's Heinrich von Brentano. Reached Agreement "Both 'in spirit and in sub- , stance," Herter aid, "we reached complete agree lent on ahighly important Western position. This should assist us greatly in making progress at Geneva should the Soviet Union demonstrate an hon- est desire to negotiate." Herter said under questioning that the agreement he spoke or covered all issues that cameup in the Paris talks. He said he will leave again Fri- day for Geneva, where the West ern ministers will negotiate for several weeks with Russia's An- drei Gromyko as a prelude to a possible Summit Conference later. Asked whether he was optimistic about prospects for the Big Four conference, Herter said: "I I knw!. what frame of mind the other fel. low was in I could answer that better. From what Herter said and from 'other sources, it was clear the Western ministers had agreed only on their opening moves at Geneva. Drama Tickets Counter sale of season tickets for the 1959 Drama Season will begin at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Lydia.Mendelssohn Theatre boi off ice. Both regular season tickets and the special student tickets for any three of the five plays to be pre- sented will be sold. The student rate will make the 1, ;.. I The 1959 May Festival will con- clude today with two concerts fea- turing Thor Johnson as guest conductor in the afternoon and Giorgio Tozzi, basso, in the even- ing. The fifth concert of the series will open at 2:30 p.m. and will be devoted to the presentation of Handel's oratorio, "Solomon," fea- turing four soloists: Lois Marshall, soprano; Ilona Kombrink, so- prano; Howard Jarratt, tenor; and Aurelio Estanislao, baritone. The University Choral Union, Marilyn Mason, harpsichord, and Mary McCall Stubbins, organ, will perform in the oratorio as well. It is being presented in observance of the, 200th anniversary of the composer's death. The sixth and final concert of the series at 8:30\p.m., conducted by Eugene Ormandy, will begin with Mozart's ."Symphony No. 39 in E flat major," and will con- tinue with two other Mozart works featuring. Tozzi: "Se Vuol WASHINGTON -The National Labor Relations Board ruled yes- terday that an employer may not temporarily break a lawful lockout to disqualify workers from pos- sible unemployment benefits. The Board decided 3-2 that a group of grocery stores in Great Falls, Mont., had engaged in an unlawful labor practice by such conduct in April 1957, during the latter part of a two-week lockout of their clerks. Police Silence Student Party A reported 50 to 100 students evacuated a party in Ann Arbor early this morning, damaging an apartment and ripping out a po- Disriination in Fraternities (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article, the second in a series of seven, deals with the history of fraternity discrinination at the University.) By THOMAS HAYDEN The story of discriminatory clauses at the University reached its crucial chapter shortly after World War II. Since then, three of the most significant rulings regarding racial and religious discrimination have been decided on the strength of a. single vote. Two of the decisions were reversed by University presidents. At the same time, the number of written clauses has dwindled from 22 to four. Sentiment Prevails A serious sentiment for an end to discriminatory practices was prevalent in the years immediately following the war. The Student Legislature had been created in 1946. The Interfraternity Council, according to former Assistant Dean of Men William S. Zerman, "had ,not gotten on its feet," and the general campus, "as well as many other campuses at the time, was still disorganized." Early in 1949, campus housing groups submitted to Student Legislature results of individual surveys indicating the number of clauses in existence, IFC's report showed 22 of 34 fraternities had ,a.rin,:c,.ct.r,. A rlam .rp Hurdler's Surprise Record Highlights 'M' Track Win U.S. Military, Posture Called Out of Balance WASHINGTON R)-The Asso- ciation of the United States Army says over-reliance on hydrogen. weapons is forcing American di- plomacy and strategy into an all- or-nothing pattern. In a critique on current defense policy, the Association said: "The present military posture of the United States is out of balance and incapable of exerting its full influence on war and cold war C-11' ..n hofliu'k'n t s hrcl By JIM BENAGH Special to The Daily KALAMAZOO - Sophomore Dick Cephas sneaked into the start of the low " hurdles, rejectingthe advice of his coach, and proceeded to blaze over the obstacles in record time, as-he paced the Wol-, verines to an impressive triangu- lar-meet triumph here yesterday. Michigan rolled up 9112 points in an easy win. Host Western Michigan was runner - up with 551/2: and Marquette had 13. Cephas, his legs battered from recent hurdle campaigns and his body weary after earlier competi- tion in the 86-degree weather, stepped over the 220-yard low, .ttirk in ;.R_ " U------- -.mammma