Sixty-NinthYear EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS th Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 torials Printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints.' "Some of You Still Seem To Have the Old-Fashioned Idea that We're Supposed To Deliver the Mail" Fl SUMMIT TALKS: Britain Seen In 'Disturbing' Role j wi -'psTAThS i, MAY 17, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT JUNKER Faculty Contact Good But Hardly A Cure-All JNIVERSITY STUDENTS have little idea what their relationship with the faculty iould be. Feeling vaguely uncomfortable about eir academic careers, they often complain of Eck of contact with their instructors. But student-teacher contact at the Univer- ty today is far more exensive than it was a neration ago. Likewise, it is far more exten- ve than at most other universities, including ose generally considered superior to this. Students, however, still complain. They com- ain not so much upon their arrival from high hool (when feelings of a lack of personal at- ntion might see justified) but particularly the end of their four years of study draws ear. Then, asked what they have derived from eir excursion in higher education, they com- ain. This complaint is voiced, moreover, in rms of something they "didn't receive." The ,ilure, it is implied, is on the part of the culty'. 7'ET FACULTY members consistently express their willingness to see anyone, carefully ting office hours at the beginning of each mester. They know, though, that the trickle visitors will not begin until after the first Lper or bluebook. By the end of the semester, the professors ll have seen only the students in danger of iling their course, and some of those getting s. The vast majority, what Prof. Frank race of the political science department has ,lled the "vast grey middle," never come in. hey never complain, they never seek addi- oval explanations or want to trade ideas. But when graduation approaches and they ok back over their University careers, they mplain of lack of faculty contact. WHAT ARE the implications of this puzzling phenomenon? First, the fact that students complain so much indicates at least dissatis- faction on their part with the education they're receiving. Dissatisfaction is not in itself un- healthy - if realized early enough in one's academic career, it could provide valuable in- centive. But many of the students have to be asked pointblank exactly what they have learned before the dissatisfaction is brought to the surface. This dissatisfaction is not constructive for a still more basic reason - it is misdirected, There is something about the University which leads students to express their dissatisfaction mainly in terms of the faculty. Apparently the faculty appears to the student as the friend to turn to in his insecure position at a big uni- versity. At some other schools, the student is not led in this direction. Faculties there are regarded as a series of great men on pedestals, not to be. bothered with students' trivia. Within the proper context, this seems o be an intellec- tually stimulating arrangement. Here, hough, where there is no natural in- clination to enshrine professors, there seems no reason for trying to move in this direction. So the students of the University are left with what has been essentially their respon- sibility all along. They have the oppotrunities for intellectual and social contact with the faculty - they need only take his opporunity. At the same time, the sudents mus realize that contact with the faculy is scarcely # cure- all, scarcely a substitute for being scholastically responsible. -THOMAS TURNER COORDINATING EDUCATION: IBill Aimned as Threat to Schools IHC Takes Stock SEVERAL DAYS ago, Robert Ashton, former president of the Inter-House Council noted is' hard to explain to a sophomore house resident why major changes in IHC cannot ome about in only one semester., This all came about when Hinsdale House ook the initiative to question the activities of HC, including the budget. Hinsdale submitted report to the IHC requesting a committee to >ok into its internal structure and see if omething could not V'e done to improve the rganization. For various reasons, including the fact that be report had been distributed to members of be Presidium and the IHC president did not rant to take the time for the Hinsdale presi- ent. William Anderson, to read the report loud, even though Anderson was going to ex- lain the points in greater details as he went hrough the report. He was not permitted to ead the report; but further, the new IHC resident permitted Ashton in his farewell peech to the Praesidium, to speak against the [insdale request. This Ashton did for 9t least 5 minutes, and Anderson was never given an dequate chance to explain Hinsdale's views. FOLLOWING this, Hinsdale House members -drew up a petition to request the house to fficially withdraw from IHC. This was to be one at the next Praesidium meeting. At the meeting, after Anderson read the let- er of resignation, the .president of Kelsey [ouse, South Quadrangle moved that the 'raesidium should dissolve itself until a spe- ial committee could look into the entire func- on of IHC and recommend improvements. The motion was seconded, but a vote was never held. No action was taken on this measure because a certain member of the Praesidium walked out so that no quorum was present and there- fore no business could be dealt with. The mo- tion then fell by the wayside. When other busi- ness was to be discussed, the council called a recess until another house president, not pres- ent at the meeting, could be found to make a quorum. Consequently, little of any importance was done at the meeting, and many people said it Was a completely wasted evening. FOR AN ORGANIZATION made up of college age people, the Praesidium's action was quite immature. Apparently the members were afraid something constructive would be done at an IHC meeting for a change. There is an old saying that if you cannot face your problems, you should play like an os- trich and "hide", because obviously, then your problems won't find you, and you won't be forced to make any thoughtful decisions. Granted, it is easy for house presidents after many hours of deliberation and debate to de- cide to spend $70 for pins, which some, said they didn't even want; but when important matters such as doing something constructive with IHC arose, the members apparently found it too much for them. It is to be hoped in the future that Inter- House Council will realize that they must take stock of itself and its functions. Only then will that body see where problems lie and then possibly, do something about the situation. -BRUCE COLE By NAN MARKELT Daily Staff Writer LAST WEEK Sen. Elmer Porter (R-Blissfield) pulled a bill out of his pocket, which was duly sent to the education committee, then in effect he sat back and smiled. The nine state-supported col- leges and universities are squirm- ing. For the bill asks creation of a commission on higher education which would "co-ordinate" budget requests in particular and higher education in general. University officials tend to believe it would "usurp" their power. The question: Is the bill merely a threat to the schools, in particu- lar to the Council of College Presi- dents which is supposed to be effecting coordination, or will it soon be enacted? At present, what the bill says to the Council of College Presidents is, "Start working together, boys, ore we'll see to it you work to- gether under less favorable condi- tions.' THE COUNCIL of College Presi- dents is as concerned as theLegis- lature about drawing up a pro- gram of coordination, Wayne State University President Clarence B. Hilberry, who is also chairman of the council, told The Daily. To this end, the Council has planned to submit a joint budget request in the fall.But such ef- forts as "togetherness" have not been highly successful so far. The Council had planned to outline a joint capital outlay budget early this year. It never materialized, probably due to the more pressing financial problem of the cash shortage. The Legislature is understand- ably upset about "duplication" and "competition" among the schools.. For instance, last year Michigan State University was told to spend no part of its appropriation on a traffic study. Being a "constitu- tionally independent body, Michi- gan State disregarded the orders and spent approximately ten thou- sand dollars on research which was duplicated elsewhere. THE LEGISLATURE might be serious. Its concern may mean that the commission on higher ed- ucation is on its way through the somewhat tortuous process of pass- age. It may be more than a threat in the future. The bill would be passed if its sponsors actually want it enacted, reports indicate. It is almost "a sure bet" in the Senate, where its direct sponsors include nine of the Republican senators. And, they say, it could be pushed through the House with no great amount of opposition. Of course, the bill may be un- constitutional: the commission on higher education, as a legislative creation, may gather illegal reins over the constitutionally indepen- dent universities. However, Sen. Porter claims "some day there will be a coordinating body whether its done this way or some other-even if the state constitution must be changed." Privately, the legislators are not worrying about constitutionality. They think they can justify the commission's creationby referring to the Russell report on higher education on Michigan. This re- port definitely stresses the need for a coordinating body, although it is a very different body from the one the legislators back.. THE RUSSELL report advises "membership of not less than five nor more than nine." The proposed commission will have 15 members. The report implies that the most important function of the body should be to furnish the Legisla- ture and other state agencies with "whatever information they need about the institutions of higher education" and to advise them on educational policy. The most im- portant function of the proposed commission seems to be control over the schools' budgets, to the extent of telling each institution to make its appropriation request in accordance with designated formulas. Although budget coordination is also listed in the Russell report, 'it is -implied that control would be limited to furnishing "an annual estimate of the needs of each state-controlled institution fpr ap- propriations for the coming fiscal year." MOST IMPORTANT, the Russell report stresses that "on authority whatever" be given to the coordi- nating board over requirements for degrees, admission and retention' of students and "similar matters of internal management." Yet the Senate bill specifically states, "No new department, de- gree program or certificate pro- gram shall be added at any state supported college or university after September 1, 1959, except by specific prior approval by the commission." Authority over en- rollment is also given, where "the commission shall recommend to the budget offices and to the Legis- lature a supplemental contingent appropriation to provide for in- creases in enrollment." Obviously, then, the legislators' justification won't work. The Rus- sell report does not back their bill-nor does any other authority except the bill passed-in Texas in 1956, from which it ° is directly drawn.{ Prediction: the bill's flaws mean it is not being seriously considered" by the Legislature. If the legisla- tors wanted to enact the bill, it would have been drawn up with a more careful eye to higher educa- tion in Michigan. It will be used as a big stick and nothing more. By ARTHUR GAVSHON Associated Press Correspondent GENEV A - Britain's would-be role of conciliator between the West and Russia was reported yes- terday to be deeply disturbing French and other diplomats at this Foreign Ministers Conference. Considerable mystification is be- ing expressed privately by these officials, who claim to have noted some unusual activities on the part of Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd's delegation. In particular, Lloyd and his ad- visers have been infuriated by a publishedreport suggesting that Britain and Russia actually have gone so far as to conclude a secret political and economic deal in the midst of the Berlin crisis. * * * BUT BRITISH spokesmen re- fuse to comment on the sugges- tion. They decline even to ac- knowledge the existence of any feeling of uneasiness about the nature of their political role here. It is known that Lloyd himself- after consulting with London - ordered that no comment be of- fered on the reports. No Allied diplomat goes so far as to say Britain has acted, is act- ing, or intends to act in a way that could expose her to charges of disloyalty. Nonetheless, an atmosphere of mistrust and concern is building up. In a sense it seems to be a byproduct of a number of circum- stantial developments that came in the wake of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's journey to Moscow last February and March. * * * THE PICTURE being circulated covers British moves before and during the current Foreign Min- isters' talks. Before the conference: 1. French officials said "secret but reliable" reports have reached their government that Britain has provisionally promised Russia a big loan to boost trade. The reports suggested Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, for his part, pledged in Moscow that Communists in the Middle East would lay off British oil interests. The inform- ants stressed these reports are "not proven," but they say they regard them as sufficiently dis- turbing to warrant some sort of check. The British scorn to an- swer. 2. West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer asserted to Mac- millan in Bonn last March 12 or 13 his journey to Moscow had weakened the Western Alliance. 'He suggested Macmillan could have achieved in two days what he had got from Khrushchev in 10--and reaped the same domestic electoral advantages. And he claimed the day had passed when a British leader could travel to Moscow to talkl about Germany's future without the say-so of the German Government. Macmillan's rebuttal has not been released- but Adenauer has since declared no hostility toward Britain. * * ,* DURING the Conference: 3. Lloyd's interventions have been marked by what his col- leagues see as an undue softness toward Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and Russian poli- cies. There is no suggestion that 'Britain's own policy has changed. But firmer British speeches would be preferred. Lloyd .could retort he is just practicing good diplo- macy in a flexible fashion.' 4. French, and to a lesser extent American, officials profess to be puzzled by what they regard as over-frequent contact between one or two high British and Soviet offi- cials. They also have detected what they see as a British ten- dency to concede points to the Russians-points of procedure that could become points of political substance. The British could argue they were faithfully representing Western interests in keeping the channels of negotiations with Russia open. AMONG illustrations cited by informants the following stands out: Gromyko had plunged the con- ference here into a state of un- certainty with his eleventh-hour demand for full participation rights for the puppet East German regime. Lloyd offered to see the Russians, as first-day chairman of the conference. The outcome was that East and West Germans were accorded ad- viser status but with a limited right to speak. The French took this as an important reverse. They claim it could have been avoided if Lloyd had been tougher. The British, however, say that at one point loyd actually warned Gro- myko there would be no confer- ence at all if he pressed his de- mand. A lot of the current mistrust and suspicion can be traced back to old French and West German resentments that Britain enjoys a special relationship with the United States. Some flows from the new radicalism that marked ,British policies since Macmillan decided to visit Khrushchev. A lot is just plain, old-fashioned anti- British gossip. BUT SOME of the trouble clearly is the result of such circumstantial factors as these: The fact that Britain really is considering some sort of trade credit arrangements for Russia; the presence of a British trade mission in Moscow now; the Brit- ish decision to supply new arms to Communist-influenced Iraq; the assurances the Iraq Petroleum Co. has won from Iraq that its invest- ments are safe from seizure or nationalization in the foreseeable future. Y ou, Too, Can Get O.ut MOSCOW ()-A total of 2,344 people have volunteered to be shot out, of the Soviet Union on a rocket to outer space, Pravda re- ported yesterday in Moscow. The Communist Party newspaper said many letters have been received addressed to "Moscow Sputnik" begging to be the first Russian astronaut. Some volunteers are women, Pravda added, but it didn't say how many. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p m.the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SUNDAY, MAY 17, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 164 General Notices Special meeting of the Universaty Senate. Mon., May 1, at 4:15 p~m.: in Raekham Lecture Hal. The purpose of this special meeting is to discuss issues of athletic policy. Lectures The Henry Russel Lecture, Raymond L. Wilder, Research Professor of Math., Wed., May 20, 4:15 p.m, Rackham Am- phitheater. "The Nature of Modern Mathematics." (Continued on Page 7) A t I r INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Same Old Story in Germany '4 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst 'uTHY DO you hear people. saying so positive- ly that the eventual reunification of Ger- tany is a foregone conclusion? No great nation, they say, can be kept di- ided as Germany is now, especially when it osesses such dynamism. Well, Communism is a somewhat different >rce than peoples of the world have been sub- cted to heretofore. It not only uses all the d imperial methods of conquest, but also has capacity for inveigling some people into illing cooperation. Nobody can be positive of just how this force going to work out. JUT A GLANCE at German history explains why there is such a strong belief in her fu- re. Little is known about the Germans prior to ie beginning of the Christian era. But it is recorded that the tribes living be- veen the Rhine and Elbe Rivers took up the ea of federation' in the first century. This nsisted of groupings for d'efense, for tribal ower. and for colonization of adjacent terri- ry, especially eastward. By the 10th century this sort of thing had veloped to the point where there was a Ger- man emperor, although his control over his landed princes who elected him was an ex- tremely tenuous 'thing. There was sufficient coalescence to provide the base for expansion into Northern Italy. ALL THE TIME there was constant warfare with the Franks, the Bohemians and the Papistry, not to mention constant civil war. The federation started falling apart under these pressures, and by 1125 there was no real Germany. And France had replaced her as the only centralized political force in Europe. Nevertheless, eastward 'colonization con- tinued, and reunification began. The empire was alive again by the time of Charles IV in the 14th century. Terrible wars accompanied the reformation, and in the 15th century Ge'many was divided into five major sections, with the Catholic Church the chief landlord. By the end of the Thirty Years' War in 1648, there was practically no Germany as an entity. THEN ATTACKS from France began to solid- ify the country again. And on the anvil of these wars, Germany was beaten into a more cohesive state, than ever. In a manner of speaking, Louis XIV preceded Bismarck as a great unifier. IHC, Hinsdale House Draw Readers' Comments To the Editor: BEING the past Secretary of IHC, I feel qualified to make a judgment on the withdrawal from the organization by the Hinsdale House Council. My personal ob- servations are that the IHC Pre- sidium is a group of disinterested students which approves reports that are sloppily written, and brings up motions are are spoon- fed to it by the Executive Board and in general has little perspec- tive of the residence house plan. Anybody who reads the Hins- dale House Report with the follow- ing view would express comments contrary to the editorial by Mr.' Bloomgarden. Hinsdale House is not a fraternity, Mr. Bloomgarden, but it still has pride in its exist- ence as a part of the Michigan House Plan. Hinsdale men are active on this campus in athletics, extra-curri- cular activities and honor roll lists. Since it is an independent house, it expresses individual judgment in men, a temporary home before theis entrance to the truly inde- pendent world of fraternities and apartments. Thus Hinsdale House doesn't see any improvement of their immediate environment by IHC's activities and thus have withdrawn. -Robert H. Garb Not Notified * * * To the Editor: IT SEEMS that every day Hins- dale's withdrawal from IHC gets a considerable, spread. Unfortu- nately, it now seems to be not just a matter of facts, but a series of mud-slinging contests. I am of course referring to Mr. Bloom- garden's article in Friday's edition of The Michigan Daily. Throughout Mr. Bloomgarden's article, and especially the last paragraph, the language seemed to be somewhat loaded. Words such as "disgusting," "renegades," and "rotten" lead me to the opin- I merely wanted to make this point clear because I cannot see my words quoted opposingly by both sides. It seems that I must make my position clear. The days of isolationism are gone forever. -James M. Flugrath . Benzinger Librarian Have Another . To the Editor: "Dipso's Dilemma" or "Pre-Exam Confusion" MARTIANS dancing on a frisbee- Kumquats drying on the line. Silver kicking the 'Lone Ranger- Guess I'm drinking too much wine, Glasses walking on the ceiling- Bagels learning how to fly. Burger's beating Perry Mason- Take away this glass of rye. Michigan's fees are cut in half- 4 m- ....:.... ..' 4':