THE INGREDIENTS FOR BOMBINGS Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom Dati, CLOUDY, SHOWERS See Page 4 VOL. LXIX, No. 33 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1958 FIVE CENTS EIGHT PAGK FIVE CENTS .. ..... Give Nobel Prize To Soviet Writer 'Doctor Zhivago' Banned in USSR; Boris Pasternak Presented Award STOCKHOLM (P)-The Nobel Prize, for literature was awarded yesterday to Boris Pasternak, a Soviet writer whose "Doctor Zhivago" criticizes Communism. This book, banned in Russia and printed abroad over Soviet objection, is the first novel of the 68-year-old Russian poet. The 18 members of the Royal Swedish Academy made the Nobel award, worth $41,420. Notify Pasternak The Academy notified both Pasternak and Nikolai Voinov, Soviet Charge d'Affaires in Stockholm, of the award decision. There was speculation that Soviet authorities may take reprisals against Pasternak or at least prevent him from receiving his prize. . ::: i. BORIS PASTEENAK .0. wins Nobel Prize " irinciples To Be Kept --Broma e (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fourth in a series of 10 articles writ- ten by Prof. "Arthur W. Bromage of the University's political science de- partment for the Associated Press on the question of calling a Constitu- tional Convention. That issue will appear on the Nov. 4 ballot.) By ARTHUR W. BROMAGE If Michigan holds a constitu- tional convention after the No- vember election, the delegates will onsider what to keep in the con- stitution as it is and what tc change. Basic principles are not likely to be discarded. For instance, all state consti- tuents contain a Bill of Rights, Michigan has hers to protect the people against temporary majori- ties by some political party. This is not apt to be changed. The privilege of voting is grant- ed in all states in accordance with such things as age, residence, and citizenship. One change some- times suggested in this affects the minimum age limit. Most states including Michigan require the voter to be 21, but Georgia and Kentucky set 18 and Alaska 19. A 'constitutional convention would certainly continue the sep- aration of the Executive, Legisla- tive, and Judicial branches of the state government. The independ- ence of the governor, the legisla- tors, and the Judges from each other is an old tradition. Michi- gan has observed it in all three of her constitutions. The delegates to a constitution- al convention might consider oth- er methods for the selection of judges instead of direct election. Even if they did, there is no doubt but that they would preserve tb independence of the judiciary.' The legislature consisting of a separately elected House and Sen- ate is another tradition here. A one-house legislature exists in only one state, Nebraska, where more than two decades of experi- ence with it have demonstrated it can give satisfaction. In Michigan See CONSTITUTION, page 5 Chrysler Carp. Reports Loss r DETROIT W - Chrysler yes- terday joined Ford in reporting Nobe Prize winners generally come here to receive their awards and to discourse on their field. A Swedish literary critic who saw Pasternak recently reported Pasternak "appears to have reached an inner mental peace which renders him completely un- interested -in any reprisals that might be taken against him." Might Damage The critic, Nils Ake Nilsson, said Pasternak told him the. Soviet authorities explained they were not publishing his novel in Rus- sian because it "is bad and might damage my reputation as a poet. That is of course only pretext." Pasternak worked quietly on the novel for 10,years. He had been' noted for verses and. stories with a revolutionary theme up to 1933. Some called him Russia's greatest poet. In 1956, when writers had a littlemore freedom under the destalinization program, Paster- nak completed "Doctor Zhivago." ter. A pro-Communist editor in Italy who received the manuscript - smuggled out of Russia-insisted on printing the 700-page novel last year ,despite Soviet pressure to squelch its publication. (EDITOR'S. NOTE: The University Press announced yesterday that it planned to bring out an addition of the book with an introduction by Prof. Deining Brown, chairman of the Slavic Languages and Literature de- partment. Publication is tentatively scheduled for early December.) Gregg 'Takes SGC Petition Former Student Government Council member Ron Gregg, '60,' is the 12th person to take out a petition to run in the November SGC elections.+ the Council yesterday. Five places on the Council arel open. Robert Haber, '60, who was recently appointed to fill a va- cancy has taken out a petition.- Lois Wurster, '60, has announced her decision not to run. The other incumbents President1 Maynard Goldman, '59, Executivet Vice-President Dan Belin, '59, and Sue Rockne, '60, have indicated that they will announce their in-t tentions on Monday. USSR Khrushchev Tells UAR At Reception Russians To Provide Funds and Assistance MOSCOW ()-The Soviet Gov- ernment announced yesterday a 400 million ruble loan to the United Arab' Republic to aid in building the huge Aswan Dam pro- ject on the Nile., The announcement was made by Nikita Khrushchev at a Kremlin reception for the visiting Field Marshal Abdel Hakim Amer, a vice president in the Nasser regime. Amer replied-that the people of the UAR would be glad to learn of the Soviet aid. Brings Crises (The ambitious Aswan High Dam project for irrigation and electric power development figured in a series of 1956 Mideast crises.- A plan for American, British and World-Bank backing was with-, drawn suddenly in an announce-, ment by Secretary of Stato, John Foster Dulles. Almost immediately, in July 1956, President Nasser seized and nationalized 'the Suez Canal as a source of revenue, he said, ,to finance his projects such as Aswan. The Israeli, British-j French invasions of Egypt followed in October-November and crisisj has followed upon crisis since.) Khrushchev said the loan would be used for deliveries of Soviet machinery, equipment and other; materials the UAR lacks., and for Soviet technicians and specialists. He said it would amount to up tot 400 million rubles-equivalent oft 100 million dollars at the officiali exchange rate applicable in such foreign aid transactions. No termsI of interest were reported., The aid was requested by Amere who has been in Moscow on an official visit since Oct. 18. Beforet that he was in Czechoslovakia for1 a week. Both the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia are sources of armst used by the UAR. Amer RepliesF Responding to Khrushchev,c Amer said:' "The Egyptian people will greety with inspiration and gratitudet your offer to help build a dam which is very important for theb economy of our country and forf raising the standard of living ofs our people."t The UAR official is returningt home by TU-104 jet transport to- day. The Aswan High Dam was to be more than 300 feet high and three miles long. It was intended to1 irrigate 1,400,000 acres of farm land and have an electric powerr capacity of over 1,400,000 kilo- watts. It was calculated that it- would cost well over one billion dollars and take from 12 to 16 years to build. - *7 * * * * Dulles Says U . All1 Attacks in S.Opposels Strait Area GSie Stand Directors On TV' Film the cause of a lack of funds in the was University's operating present tors budget. ;ion. Previous to his July 1956 ap- Report Says Chiang and pointment as University vice- ddi- president, Stirton, 55 years old, Promises To Reduce had served as vice-president at . is-Island Forces w. Wayne University a re IFC Group Defeats Plan For Pledges By THOMAS KABAKER The Interfraternity Council Ex- ecutive Comittee last night defeat- ed a proposed by-law change which would enable the Executive Committee to place fraternities whose pledge class average is less than 2.0 for two consecutive se- mesters on social probation. According to Sam Wilson, chair- man of the scholarship commit- tee, "This action seems to be the only measure that will be serious- ly felt by the offending parties." It was said that a fine or rush- ing suspension would be too detri- mental. H. Seger Slifer, alumni mem- ber of the Executive Committee, said it was unfair to hold frater- nities responsible for the actions of men who, in fact, are not mem- bers. They have no control over the pledges as they do not live in the fraternity houses. Bill Cross, Assistant to the Dean of Men in charge of Frater- nity Affairs said pledges repre- sent their fraternities on campus. "There are too many fraternities that let scholarship go unnoticed,," he said. The motion was defeated by a vote of seven to two. Earlier in the meeting, Thad Ketchum was appointed by the committee to take the office of executive vice-president, replacing Lou Kolb who did not return this, year, subject to action by. the Fra- ternity President Assembly. Alpha Delta Phi was fined $100 by the Executive Committee for failure to reply to the health and safety inspection reports within the prescribed period. This was their second offense. Sigma Chi was fined $50 for the same offense. Army Space T ryPuzzles CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (M) - Disappointed missile scientists were at a loss today to explain what happened to the Army's lat- est space venture-an attempt to blast a beacon balloon satellite into rbit. "The thing did not work properly nd we don't know just yet what1 aused the trouble," said Jack Froehlich, one of the chief scien-t ists in the project. Hope was abandoned that the 2-foot diameter plastic and r luminum foil balloon would evers e spotted. Hundreds of volunteer I "Moonwatch" observers and 41 D racking cameras throughout the vorld were advised to call off the t earch three hours after the ( nighty Jupiter-C launching rocket s oared aloft.9 DEARBORN CENTER'S HEAD: Name Stirton to AMC Offers Funds for Aswan Dam WILLIAM STIRTON .elected to board Governor Candidates Clash on TV DETROIT (A)-Democratic Gov. G. Mennen Williams and Paul D. Bagwell, his Republican challenger, last night hotly disputed Michi- gan 's economic climate before a statewide television audience. Gov. Williams, as he has before, said Bagwell "smeared" the state and misled the people with asser- tions that the climate was driving jobs and business elsewhere. "At this very moment," Bagwell countered, "Gov. Handley of Indi- ana is going around that state bragging about 40,000 jobs from 38 industries that moved there to escape the labor government of the state of Michigan." The half-hour debate had a postscript seen only by the studio audience in WWJ-TV. In it the governor angrily accused Bagwell of using "terribly misleading" fig- ures. "What kind of honesty is this with the people?" Gov. Williams demanded he he towered over the seated Bagwell, his voice cracking with emotion. He referred to some data used by Bagwell to measure Indiana's industrial job gains against Michi- gan 's, a comparison Gov. Williams had challenged on Oct. 6 in Detroit and Oct. 18 in Marshall when the two candidates crossed paths be- fore. As first presented in a Bagwell newspaper advertisement, they showed that Indiana added 137 plants last year as against 16 for Michigan. Bagwell su6sequently adjusted the Indiana figure down to 97, but Gov. Williams still expressed dis- satisfaction, saying unlike cate- gories were being compared. William E. Stirton, Univer vice-president and director of Dearborn Center, yesterday elected to the board of direc of American Motors Corporat He will retain his positions office at the University, in a tion to his new duties. Stirton declared he would let the job "dilute my full-s attention to University busine Strengthen Bridge At the same time, Stirton pressed hope that the new p tion would help to "strengt and improve the bridge betw business and education. .Essentially, he said, his new t will require attendance at monthly board meeting inI troit in addition to time sp studying various facets of the fice. He pictured the job as so what analogous to that of a U versity Regent. Give Cross Section "It's hoped that the compo backgrounds of the directorsv give a cross section of the co munity life which the corporat serves," he said. "I hope I'll be able to give th a careful, objective analysis what the public thinksa wants." Stirton was appointed direc of the University's Dearborn C ter Oct. 1. He is expected to ganize, develop and adminis the Center, which is to offer work-study program in engine ing, business and the liberal a Delay Opening The opening of the Centeri been delayed until Sept. 1960,1 not cale ess.'" ex- osi- hen veen task a De- ent of- me- mi- site will om- tion iem of and ctor en- or- ster r a er- rts. has be- a i 1 i t J I t t 1 , He began his educational ca- reer at Cass-Technical high school in 'Detroit, serving as principal from 1944 to 1951. A graduate of the University,. he holds a bachelor's degree'in electrical engineering and a mas- ter's degree in physics and mathe- matics. Stirton is a past president of several Detroit-area education organization . At present he is a member of Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liams' commission on the St. Lawrence Seaway and the Great Lakes Tidewater commission. Co idwvater School4Aide Shoots Self CHANGE ZONING: e: Accept Sugestiono Of PlanRs Committee F t By MARY STATON 1 The Plans Standards Committee last night accepted the City a Planning Committee's suggestion that the west side of Main St. b between Felch and Summnit. be zoned residential and the plan provide suitable screening between business and residential property. t Previously, the committee had voted that the area be zoned asw commercial. A 15 to 5 vote reversed the decision. A substitute plan to defer action for a period of two weeks so that North Central r Property Owners Association could. go over plans was voted down by a narrow margin.- EARLY SNOWS HA. Action from the committee will now make it possible for further * ** * Eisenhower Ends Trip WASHINGTON (I)President Dwight D. Eisenhower enthusias- tically wound up a slam-'em-hard campaign trip today and immedi- ately gave thought to hitting the trail again. "I didn't run into any pes- simism or apathy," President Ei- senhower told a cheering crowd of Republican leaders and others that met him at the airport. He seemed unwearied by his six days of speechmaking over a 5,- 300-mile circuit, during which he denounced the Democratic opposi- tion with a sharpness unprece- dented for him. President Eisenhower also ap- peared to be surprised at the crowd that turned out to' meet him. He walked down the ramp from his plane unsmilingly until he caught sight of the people. Then he waved and saluted, beam- ingly. "Thanks for coming out," he told them. "I didn't know there was going to be all this out here.I Quite a gang." COLDWATER, Mich. (A) -An attendant at the Coldwater State Home and Tiaining School com- mitted suicide yesterday as in- vestigators planned to ask him to take a lie test in the death of a patient. The attendant, Charles Trom- bley, 37 years old, shot himself in the chest with a rifle. Branch county coroner Donald Diedrich and prosecutor Harold J. Smith agreed on a finding of suicide. Trombley was among attendants who loaded 45-year-old John Ki- biloski, a mental patient, into 'a station wagon at the Coldwater, institution. The patient's death brought an investigation. by a Legislative committee headed by Rep. Harry J. Phillips (R-Port Huron), who said Kibiloski had been handled like a "sack of potatoes." 'U' Regents Meet TodayV The University Board of Regents will meet today at 10 a.m. Lyle Nelson, director of University Re- lations, said. Up for discussion is the Univer- sity request for legislative appro- priations for the operating budget and for capital outlay. Committee meetings are sched- uled for the morning, to be fol- lowed by a conference with Roger Heyns, dean of the literary. col- lege. After a luncheon at the Union, the Board will hold a business. WASHINGTON (') - Secretary of State John Foster Dulles said yesterday the United States is "not going to attack or tolerate attacks against the Chinese com- munists" in the Formosa' Strait. Sec. Dulles' statement, made in a television interview filmed for use in Great Britain, was made public here while the secretary was flying home from talks at Taipei, Formosa, with Chiang Kai-Shek. He was bringing with him a re- ported prozmise from the president of Nationalist China to consider reducing Nationalist forces on the Quemoy fnd 'Matsu islands near the Chinese Communist mainland. Bring Pressure Developments at Taipei and Washington indicated the United States and Nationalist China were trying to bring the pressure of world public opinion to bear on the Red Chinese to institute a long term cease-fire. They also appeareC to be try- ing to reassure this country's European allies and neutralist na- tions that they have no aggressive plans in the Formosa area. A communique issued at Taipei on the Dulles-Chiang conference containe, a public renunciation of the use ,of force by Nationalist China to return to the mainland. Use Peaceful Means It said the Nationalists would rely upon peaceful means to carry out their "sacred mission" of free- ing China's 600 million people from Communist rule. Both the communique and the television interview contained firm declarations of intent not to yield to force or threats of force by the Chinese Reds. In their joint statement, Sec. Dulles and Chiang expressed belief that in the face of United States-Nation- alist determination to stand firm the Reds "will not put their policy to the test of general war." Sec. Dulles told his'..British aud- ience that "the whole position of the free world in the Western Pa- cific, running from Japan . down to Viet Nam, Australia and New Zealand, depends upon main- taining a strong line against the thrusts of the Chinese Commu- nists." Gen. de Gaulle Asks Rebels Cease-Fire Imeeting. [LT EFFORTS. Quite a gang." meeting. Search for Prof. Price's Son in Quebec plan may be presented to a board and to the public. If the plan were adopted, it wouldhcall for measures which would redevelop the sub-standard housing areas in Ann Arbor and would cail for added development, beautification and planning in parts of the city, Guy C. Larcom, City Administrator, said. In an area where some sub- standard and standard housing exist, he said. the standard hous- .. . - i l i 1 l t i t PARIS (R) - Premier Charle de Gaulle, in a bid to end the ex hausting Algerian war, yesterda; appealed to the rebels to come ti France for cease-fire negotiationQ He gave his personal guarantee of safe conduct to the representa, tives of the Algerian Nationa Liberation Front (FLN) - lead ers of the four-year-old rebellion De Gaulle issued his dramati( end-of-hostilities invitation at ht first press conference since be. coming premier of a tired, embit" tered and divided France in June At the same time, the 67-year. old general announced that France would soon become a member 01 the exclusive "atomic club" anc By THOMAS HAYDEN The desperate, month-long search for two University students missing in the Quebec wilderness today drew to a somber close. Prof. Percival Price was expected to return to Ann Arbor today as winter snows have blanketed all traces of his son, Alan, '59E, lost on a canoe trip 900 miles north of here. The body of young Price's companion, Robert Cary, '58E, was recovered from the Nottaway River two weeks ago and has been buried in a small cemetery near James Bay. * I_. . _ n NMIMMENEENE ...:' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ :i- . . s . :,: t consequently could not agree