UNIVERSITY CODE:- DISCRIMINATION CHECK oft Page 4 1Mw ig.x ~Iuii Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom Ig- f.wFIVE CENTS CLOUDY, WARMERk SIX;P ANN ARBOR,. MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, UU'I:UJMZJM.to, imao VOL. LI, No. 25 -- I I 1 French Paratroops Quit Political Posts Algerian Leaders Bow to de Gaulle; Civilian Members Protest to Paris ALGIERS (P)-French army officers bowed to Premier Charles de Gaulle yesterday and shed their role of political leadership, touching off bitter protests in troubled Algeria. Hardly had the officers qdit their posts on the powerful Committee of Public Safety than the remaining civilian members called on committeemen throughout Algeria to protest de Gaulle's order. Predictions of more trouble for Paris came from both officers and civilians, who formed the committee in the May 13 uprising in Algiers that swept de Gaulle to power. In a move that could presage more strife, tge civilian committeemen told all subordinate committees "to hold emergency meetings, demonstrate their indignation at the enrs ^forced departure of their military comrades and address to the Pre- mier their pained astonishment." 'S sC At the same time, they desig- nated two newly-named Moslem Cl vice-presidents, Azam Ouali and Pro'Ussor Eli-Madaoul, to go to Paris to seek talks with de Gaulle on the sweep- T /Is ing order. De Gaulle removed D ies at i French military men from, public safety committees and forbade them to indulge in politics to as- Prof. Donald A. Gilbert, of the sure a fair campaign for the Nov. physics department, died of a 23 parliamentary elections in heart attack at 3:30 p.m. yester- Algeria, day after working out on a tram- The group also called on the poline at the Intramural Build- population to remain calm "but ing. to prepare itself to show to the Ann Arbor police Sgt. Claude holdouts of the old system there Damron said that Prof. Gilbert is no question that Algeria will was stricken while resting after return to the errors of the past." his workout. He had regularly The protest motion was adopted exercized on the device; unanimously by the 60 members Firemen worked for 20 minutes of the revolutionary body after with a resuscitator unit trying to paratroop Gen. Jacques Massu-and revive Prof. Gilbert. Dr. W. E. 11 other officers had withdrawn as Dolphin, Washtenaw County medi- committeemen. Expect Split From UAR, TumsiaRift CASABLANCA ({)-A deep and perhaps fateful split in the Arab- North African world appeared to be in the works last night. It ,is growing out of a newly intense feud between President Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia, and President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic. In Tunis, it was officially an- nounced that Tunisia is consider- ing a break in diplomatic, rela- tions with Nasser's Cairo govern- ment. In Cairo, UAR delegates returned to the Arab League council table after leaving in a huff Saturday when Tunisia accused Nasser of trying to dominate other coun- tries. Tunisians Boycott Tunisian, delegates were still boycotting the League after the bust-up Saturday. The League had been called into session mainly to welcome Tunisia and Morocco as new members, making it a 10-na- tion group. Morocco and Tunisia have usu- ally acted in concert before and since they won independence from French rule and both support the rebellion in neighboring Algeria against French rule. One com- plicating factor now is thats the rebel exile government is based in Cario. Confirms Possible Break Tunisia's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Sadok Mokkadem, confirmed in Tunis that a break with Cairo is being considered. He said this in reply to a ques- tion at a news conference where he explained Tunisia's withdrawal from the Arab League session in Cairo Saturday. The two main reasons he gave for withdrawing were 1) interfer- ence of Egypt, then of the United Arab Republic, in the internal affairs of Tunisia and 2) support given by Egypt to a group of Tunisians hostile to the Tunisian government. Exchange. Plan Deadline Date Approaches. Qualified students who are in- terested in participating in the Polish Exchange program should contact Ruth Callahan, secretary of the Student Government Coun- cil, in the Student Activities Build- ing for information and applica- tions. Nov. 15 is the deadline for appli- cation. The University is applying to serve as a host institution for the Polish students who will study in this country, according to Roger Seasonwein, '61, co-chairman of the National and International Ajairs committee. AIDS FOREIGN COLLEGES: WUS To Hold Bucket Drive Today -Daily-Robert Kanner FUND DRIVE--World University Service (WUS) annual bucket drive will be held from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. today, sponsored by Student Government Council. Janice Reisman (left) is among the first to make a drop in the bucket of Carol Weinstorck and Mort Wise. INSPECT 'APPRAISALS: Teachers' Conference, Studies Student, Thought More "scholarship with zest" is needed in the nation's colleges, Mark H. Ingraham, dean of the University of Wisconsin College of Letters and Science said yesterday. A university should stimulate a zest for things of the mind, Dean Ingraham told a Conference on Appraisal of Teaching in Large Uni- versities, sponsored by, Lilly Vdowment, Inc., and held here Monday and' yesterday. More incentives to recognize good teaching are needed, he said. He explained that the younger teacher who does no research will tend World University Service Bucket Drive will take place from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. today, sponsored by the Student Government Council. Students manning buckets will be located at the Diagonal, the Engine Arch and the Slab, the area which the demolition of the Ro- mance Language Building left va- cant last year, according to Carol Holland, '60, WUS chairman. Donations will also be taken in front of the Frieze Building, the Undergraduate Library, the League See related story, page 3 and during rush hours in front of the Natural History Museum, she explained. "We hope to collect at least $1,000 from this year's fund drive," Miss Holland said. "This will be the only chance to give to WUS this year." She reported that one contribu- tion to the drive has already been made. Vice-President for Student' Affairs James A. Lewis donated $5 to "get WUS started." This is the firsttime in three years that WUS has been held as an independent drive. The fund drive was operated as a part of the Campus Chest, which last spring was discontinued. Funds collected from the World University Service Drive fulfill a double function as a help and edu- cational agency. Funds, which are collected on college and university campuses throughout the world, are allocated to schools of higher education in underdeveloped coun- tries. gu UN T oArgue UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (A) - Britain yesterday accused the So- viet Union of confronting the United Nations with an ultima- tum by threatening to go ahead with nuclear weapons 'tests unless the western powers agree to So- viet proposals. Allan Noble, the British Minis- ter of -State, told the General-As- sembly's 81-nation political com- mittee the Russianls are trying to stampede the UN into hasty ac- tion that might risk,, chances of Big Three agreement on suspend- ing tests. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin immediately de- nied the ultimatum charge. He declared the United States and Britain were guilty of issuing ul- timatums by attaching conditions to cessation of tests. He called on the UN to approve a Soviet-pro- posed recommendation that the Big Three suspend tests imme- diately and unconditionally for all time. Noble said the Soviet govern- ment is threatening to go ahead with nuclear tests "unless the western powers here and now agree to the Soviet proposals." cal examiner, pronounced him dead at 3:50 p.m. Prof. Gilbert became a member of the physics staff in February of this year. Prior to that he had been with the United .States Atomic Energy A Commission in Washington since 1955. Prof. Gilbert received his doc- torate from State University of Iowa in 1951. He was a member of the faculty and the research staff there from 1942 to 1951. He was associate physicist at Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, Long Island, from 1951. to 1955. % Prof. Gilbert is survived by his wife, Harriet, and four daughters. Prof. David M. Dennison, chair- man of the physics department, said, "Prof. Gilbert was a brilliant young physicist who had made his mark both as a friend and as a distinguished colleague during the short time he was with us. We are saddened and shocked by his tragic, death." Europe Tour Plans Revealed By Comnuttee Dates for the 1959 Student Gov- ernment Council-Union Air Flight to Europe was announced to the Union's Executive Council last night by Martin D. Newman, '60. It will leave on June 23 and re- turn on Sept. 1. Although the dates of departure are fixed, the cities of arrival and departure are not. Tentatively, the flight is sched-. uled to leave from New York and arrive at Paris, but to leave Europe from Amsterdam-a free duty port -and return to New York, New- man added. Passengers must buy round-trip tickets, which will cost $350. If the flight is sold out, $12 will be returned to the students, he ex- plained. No one-way tickets can be sold, he said, due to a Civil Aeronautics Board regulation, Bomb Blasts Peoria Temple PEORIA (P) - A crude, home- made bomb damaged a Jewish temple early yesterday. Peoria's police chief called the blast the work of a crackpot or screwball. To Be Given Flu shots will be offered from 8 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. and from 1 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. tomorrow in the basement of Health' Service, Dr. Morley Beckett, director of Health Service, said. Tomorrow's session is for 'stu- dents and staff of the University, who received their first flu shot two weeks ago and those people who have not yet received any shots. Students do not need their Health Service cards, and the shots will cost one dollar, Dr. Beckett said. A later date will be set for second shots for all people who received 'their first flu innocula- tions last week. Another polio shot clinic is scheduled for Oct.,23. A record 1,900 people received flu shots two weeks ago. Dr. Beckett felt this turnout was due to the- prediction of another wave of Asian Flu in this area. The flu shot offered this year is a polyvalent vaccine which pro- tects the individual ,from all known types of flu. SGC To See. Forum Plan Influential writers such as so- ciologist David Riesman, eco- nomist John Galbraith, novelist Jack Kerouac or essayist. Edmund. Wilson may be invited to campus, according to Student Government Council's Forum Committee. Forum Committee chairman Barry Shapiro, '59, Union Presi- dent, will outline the group's plans to the Council at tonight's 7:30 p.m. meeting in the Student Activ- ities Building. As the committee now sees them, these plans call for inviting the influential figures to speak to stu- dents during the day, and to eat in student housing, giving closer contact than current lecture pro- grams provide. SGC will vote tonight on a nominee for the vacant position, according to SGC Executive Vice- President Dan Belin, '59. Belin explained that the nomi- nating committee interviewed-sev- en petitioners yesterday and will; interview one this afternoon. to become a poor teacher, while too much time spent exclusively on research can also have'the same result. Ruth Eckert, professor of higher education at the University of. Minnesota, reported on research done on student evaluation of teachers. She said that the student of more limited academic ability, most of whom 'were not planning to get degrees, made appraisals of teachers which agreed substan- tially with ratings made by much more experienced observers. In another study of student rat- ings, Prof. Eckert said that stu- dents gave -professors higher rat- ings on things such as clarity in making assignments, skill in lec- turing and knowledge of their subject fields, rather than on the degree to which the students be- came involved in the course. Prof. Peter Hountras of the University of Pittsburgh and for- mer instructor in psychology at the University, reported that his study of teacher effectiveness indi- cated that students who show signs. of anxiety prefer a unified depart- mental policy which determined classroom procedures, rather than an individual approach by each instructor.' INFLATION DRIVES UP PRICES: New Higher Fines Mark End of Campus Tradition By LANE VANDERSLICE The new library fine schedule, which will raise library fines for an overdue book to 25 cents per day, will mean the end of one of the oldest campus traditions, the nickel library fine. Unlike such high-power campus traditions as a kiss under the Engine Arch or a stroll past the Museum lions, the nickel-a-day library fine has received little attention. But the nickel fine qualifies as a tradition under a Webster's Dictionary definition of tradition as "a long-established custom." The nickel library fine was first instituted in 1906. Nickel Worth Quarter A nickel would go about as far then as a quarter would now. Room and board in private homes for students cost from $3.50 to $6.00 a week and tuition for in-state students in the literary college was $15 per semester. Student library employees were paid 14 cents per hour. The Daily ran an article that year saying that a student needed $198.a year for his total expenses at the University. This drew criticism from one student, however, who said that all of his expenses for the previous year had totalled $177.86, and he knew many others who had spent less. .:. ,. ^"F'U :; -::;i: .. .' f "::' sl "^.. .. . .