CARVER SCHOOL CRISIS NEARING SOLUTION See Page 4 C, r 5k 43an ait PARTLY CLOUDY "igh-70 Low-52 Cloudy with scattered shower* Cooler in the afternoon Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom V0. LXL No. 4 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1960 * FIVE CENTS EIGHT PAGES -,Day--Michael Krabach PRESENTS CHALLENGE-Harold Taylor, president emeritus of Sarah Lawrence College, offered the first challenge of a year-long series on American Civil Liberties with a lecture on freedom in America.f T aylor Says Ideals B asic t1o Demo racy Discusses McCarthy Influence; Encourages Student Movement By RUTH EVENHUIS "Democracy becomes impotent when exercised by those who shrink from unabashed idealism," Harold Taylor, president emeritus of Sarah Lawrence College said at the first Challenge meeting last night. "McCarthy stiffened the American mind in a posture of defense and anxiety, ignoring the fact that Communism spreads wherever there is despair and lack of faith in American democracy," he con- tinued. "Freedom," he said, "is a state of mind which exists only where people make it live vigorously, confidently and bravely." He observed Pro posal For Aged Postponed LANSING (D - The heart of Gov. G. Mennen Williams' medi- cal care plan for needy elderly persons won approval of the state Senate last night while the House adjourned until today, postponing passage of the bill. The House adjourned shortly after midnight after considering the Senate proposal The Senate, which is controlled by Republicans, endorsed the pro- gram by a 21-9 vote, after cutting back the bill from $14 million a year to $11.5 yearly. Reject Protests The Senate in passing the bill rejected Democratic protests over the reductions. ravoring the main proposal in the Senate were all 12 Democratsand nine Republi- cans. All nine negative votes were cast by Republicans. Critics objected that the legis- lation, subject of the special ses- sion that began yesterday morn- ing, amounted to a drop in the bucket. As approved the principal ef- fect of the bill will be to provide the equivalent of Blue Cross and Blue Shield hospitalization and surgical benefits to an estimated 6,000 men and women over 65 years old who cannot afford prop- er health care and who are not eligible for age assistance bene- fits. Predicts Failure Earlier in the day Sen. Frank D. Beadle of St. Clair, GOP ma jority leader, predicted the pro- posal for new benefits could not 'Tryouts~ A trainee meeting for those interested in becoming members of the editorial, sports or photography staffs of The Daily will be held at 4:15 p.m. today at the Student Activities Bldg. Business staff tryout meet- ings will take place at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday and at 4:15 and 7:15 p.m. Wednesday. muster needed support from GOP ranks unless stripped of many of its provisions. Beadle said many GOP senators were unwilling to vote for diag- nostic benefits and nursing home care favored by the Governor and the bi-partisan legislative group that advised him. In addition, he said Republi- cans decided to insist on a rela- tive responsibility clause that would relieve public, agencies of paying for a needy person's care if a son, daughter, brother or sister was able to foot the bill. Beadle said he could get no estimate of how much the changes would reduce public expenditures under the program. As originally presented, the proposals were estimated to cost $14 million on an annual basis- with half supplied from state and county sources and the remainder from the federal treasury. Major Changes For Distributio * * * * * * * * * Ike Emphasizes UN Peace Effort U.S., Russia Clash in UN Over Tibet UNITED NATIONS () -- The United States and the Soviet Un- ion met head-on yesterday in their first bitter clash of the General Assembly session. The issue was acharge of Com- munist Chinese repression in Ti- bet. The General Assembly's 21-na- tion steering committee voted to put the charges on the Assem- bly's agenda for a full-scale de- bate later in the session despite bitter,.Soviet protests. The Tibetan item was one of a large number approved by the committee. One other proposal brought a flareup-Algeria. Al- though the committee accepted a proposal to hold an Assembly dis- cussion on the nationalist rebel- lion in the French North African territory, France objected strenu- ously and said it again would boy- cott the debate. Would Disregard Edict Ambassador Armand Berard of France warned the committee that~ France would disregard the As- sembly's verdict on Algeria as it has in the past because President Charles De Gaulle's government feels the UN has no right to con- sider the problem. He warned that the debate itself might only make it difficult for De Gaulle to reach a solution of the six-year-old con- flict. The debates on Algeria and Ti- bet will be held later this fall, probably in the Assembly's poli- tical committee, which includes all members of the United Na- 'tions, Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister1 Valerian Zorin said that the de- bate on Tibet will be "nothing' but an attempt to renew the cold war." Asserts Right United States Ambassador James J. Wadsworth promptly re- plied that the Assembly has a right to discuss Communist Chi- nese suppression of the 1958 re- volt in Tibet because "the funda- mental rights of the Tibetan peo- ple continued to be systematically disregarded and equally syste- m~i-MvdFRrfvd" ilngering traces of McCarthyism in such instances as the House Un-American Activities Commit- tee's recent investigation into pos- sible Communist infiltration of California schools and "abuse" of the students demonstrating against the investigation, "There are loyal people who oppose the abuse of freedom in education," stated. He said that such student move- ments are not Communist influ- enced and stated that investi- gating committees "can generate little repression that will seriously affect the movement." In commenting on student move- ments in Europe, Asia and the United States, Taylor stressed the conflict between the present and preceding generation. "Youth has a need to revere and imitate its elders, but it can't," he said. "Shared goals have given youth a sense of comradeship and an accompanying sense of alienation toward the older generation. They look at their parents' example and realize that their expectations of society and life will be unfulfilled without their own efforts," he ex- plained. He pointed out that the South- ern Negro is often In opposition to his parents, in jail, and unable to respect even his university president. Taylor criticized the concept of colleges and universities asr"places where the young should be pro- tected from the social issues of the time," adding that "the student is being suspended between two worlds while he is being educated. "When student involvement in political issues causes alarm and repression, it is little wonder that "apathetic" students prefer "the security of political science to social action," he observed. Taylor called for the encour- agement, support and imaginative suggestions of teachers, stating that the scholar "has a mission to inbue the life of the student with freedom, the search for ideas, and the capacity for original thought." Appointment Procedure Set Student Government Council, President John Feldkamp, '61, lastI night proposed the proceedure for appointing the Committee on Membership in Student Organiza- tions. Requested n Policies By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS (M--Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower is- sued yesterday a massive chal- lenge to the Communist world to pledge itself against use of force and subversion and join efforts to insure peace under the guard- ianship of the UN. The President challenged the Russians on such issues as dis- armament, use of outer space, nuclear weapons control, and peaceful change through organiz ed assistance in a burgeoning new world of independent nations. The general reaction among delegates in the crowded Assembly hall was that the President had made a constructive statement. Some were enthusiastic about it, and these included Africans, and Latin Americans. Communist bloc leaders, following Khrushchev's lead, were non-committal, but, Communist President Tito of Yugoslavia, who was to meet with Eisenhower later on, pronounced the American's address "a positive statement." "If the UN system is success- fully subverted in Africa," Eisen- hower said, "the world will be on its way back to the traditional exercise of power politics in which small countries will be used as pawns by aggressive major powers. Any nation, seduced by glittering promises into becoming a catspaw for an imperialistic power, thereby undermines the UN and places in, jeopardy the independence of it- self and all others." Renew Disarmament Keynoting a historic diplomatic: struggle in the UN General As- sembly's 15th session, the Presi- dent informed the attentive Com- munists he wants talks on dis- armament renewed at once. But he warned that disarmament can- not be brought about through or- atory or propaganda. The Communist's walkout from the disarmament commission in Geneva this year brought nego- Police Make Drug Arrest City police yesterday arrested a University Hospital nurse on charges of fraudulently obtaining narcotics. Mary D. Milstead, 22 years old, stood mute to the charge before municipal judge Francis L. O'- Brien and was released under $200 bond. Arrest of the general duty nurse from Saginaw followed a two-week investigation by authorities of dis- appearing narcotics. Police offi- cials said she apparently used the drugs herself. tiations to an abrupt halt he said, but "their unexplained ac- tion does not, however, reduce the urgent need for arms control." "My country believes that ne- gotiations can-and should-soon be resumed ..if negotiations can be resumed it may be possible to deal particularly with two press- ing dangers-that of war by mis- calculation and that of mounting nuclear weapons stockpiles." Steering Committee Meets The 21-nation steering com- mittee, meeting soon after Eisen- hower spoke, put four disarma- ment items on the agenda for discussion in the Assembly's poli- tical committee. The disarament proposals in- volve Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's "general and com- plete disarmament" plan, a de- bate on nuclear tests proposed by India, methods of limiting the spread of nuclear weapons as pro- posed by Ireland and an item on this summer's meeting of the UN Disarmament Commission. Macmillan to Attend British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's decision to fly to New York Sunday will bring into the UN Assembly arena three of the four principals of the mid- May summit fiasco in Paris. "The prime minister has ab- solutely no intention of going in for summitry on this occasion," a British delegation spokesman told reporters. President Eisenhower a n d Khrushchev- already are here. French President Charles De Gaulle, the fourth at the Paris summit, has given no indication of coming to New York. Khrushchev Leaves Manhattan Meanwhile. in Washington, the State Department granted per- mission to Khrushchev last night to leave Manhattan Island and spend the weekend on Long Is- land. The Soviet delegation to the UN has an estate at Glen Cove, L.I. The State Department an- nounced that Khrushchev sent word he wishes to go to Glen Cove tonight or tomorrow morning and COOL RESPONSE-Delegate reaction to President Eisenhower's UN address yesterday was generally favorable except for the Iron Curtain representatives shown here who sat througl% the speech without applauding. return to Manhattan Sunday eve- ning. Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro said yesterday he had in- vited Khrushchev to visit Cuba and that Khrushchev had accept- ed. Pro-Castro Men Kill Girl C a st r o supporters fatally wounded a nine-year-old girl yes- terday during a brawl in Man- hattan, aroused by the Premier'sl UN visit. The child, Magdalina Urdaneto of Caracas, Venezuela, was not in any way connected with the feud. She was struck by a stray bullet while dining with her parents in a restaurant Wed- nesday afternoon and died early yesterday. LSA Faculty' To Receive Suggestions Group Asks Abolition Of Math-Philosophy Area Requirements By ROBERT FARRELL Sweeping changes in the liter- ary college distribution require- ments will be recommended to the college faculty at a meeting next month, college officials said today, Speaking to the literary college steering committee, Associate Deane James H. Robertson an- nounced that a curriculum eom- mittee report, already approved by the dean and executive com- mittee, urges changes in the re- quirements in mathematics and philosophy, the natural sciences, humanities and social sciences. Recommendations Named Although the formal report will not be distributed to the faculty until early October, Dean Roger W. Heyns said that its recoM- mendations included: Abolition of the mathematics philosophy requirement. Placing philosophy in the hu- manities area and raising the re- quired number of credits in this area to twelve. Split Science Splitting the natural science area in two parts--one containing courses in astronomy, chemstr,. and physics and the other con- taining those in the remaining sciences with work required In both sections. Only minor changes in the so- cial science requirement. No changes in the English com- position or foreign language re- quirements. If approved by the faculty, these changes would become ef- fective next fall for all students entering the literary college, but would not affect students pres- ently enrolled, Heyns said. No Mathematics Credit The effect of the changes in mathematics and philosophy is to discontinue all distribution credit for mathematics courses while continuing that for philoso- phy courses, which would fall in the humanities area under the new plan. The science requirement under the new plan would still retain the demand for a two-semester laboratory science sequence, add- ing the regulation that the third .semester of work be taken in the other one of the two new secions than the laboratory work. Heyns said that the curri ulu and requirements of the literary college are "under constant study," and that the recommen- dations "represent a large amount of careful consideration by may faculty members and co mmlt. tees." Previous Actions A report from the same com- mittee, presented to the faculty in February, 959, which urged radical changes in the social sci- ence distribution requirements (without considering the other areas) was not approved by thej faculty. Heyns said that this was one of the reasons that the presett re- ommendations asked only rela- tively "insignificant" changes in this area. Studies leading up to the pres- ent recommendations have been going on for several years, Heyns said, and one of the reports con- tributing to the final requests was on the natural science require- ments which recommended in part: Science Requests Splitting the natural science area into three sections, one con- taining chemistry and physics, one astronomy and geology and the third botany and zoology. LAUNCHING IMMINENT: Atlas-Able Rocket Poised For First Lunar Orbit CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (QP)-The moon moved into a favor- able position as a target yesterday and a powerful United States rocket is poised for an attempt to launch the first lunar satellite. A towering Atlas-Able rocket stands on its pad here, awaiting the signal to blast off on the exacting task of propelling the satellite deep into space and guiding it into orbit about the moon, some 230,000 miles away. The 388-pound payload, called Pioneer VI, is crammed with in- struments designed to send back more information about the moon's environment than any previous space probe. The most favorable launching time is a five-day period starting ' yesterday. The chance of success STUDENT-FACiLTY: Predicts Ratio's Stability By MICHAEL OLINICK I The ratio of faculty to students should remain at .the same level as last year's when final enroll- ment figures are completed, Vice- President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Niehuss predicted yes- terday. "The increase in the number of freshmen admitted is small and is balanced by additions to the faculty," he said, adding that "In 1959-60 we maintained a ratio of onoe instructing faculty member for every 13 students in the uni- versity. This is the same ratio we had 31 years ago." Since 1929, this ratio has not, fluctuated sharply except in the; period after World War II when! the flood of collegiate bound veterans pushed the figure to 181 students per instructor. colleges, we often see a 5 to 1 ratio or even lower." The number of students per instructors is about 17 in the li- terary college. "We tend to feel that it should be 15 to 1," Niehuss explained, "but we're really not sure what the optimum size of a class should be. Our tests do not reflect this, so we must go along with the experiences of the colleges and their departments." Non-Realistic Ratios Many private colleges and Eas- tern Universities claim a faculty-, student ratio of 1 to 4 that is not teally realistic, Niehuss said. "It all depends on how you count the faculty members. We have about 1700 full time jaculty. Now if' counted bodies alone, 'that is; counting a half-time instructor as i this period is greater because the paths of the earth and moon will be most closely aligned as they orbit around the sun--and the sun therefore is not in a posi- tion to distort the course of the + rocket by its pull of gravity. If the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is unable to fire the Atlas-Able in this time, the shot will be postponed until the next ideal period, which comes every 28 days, To escape the earth's gravita-j tional field, Pioneer VI must, reach a speed of 24,000 miles an hour. The three stages of the Atlas-Able are designed to attain this velocity. Then, as the space craft streaks toward the moon, additional thrust will be provided as needed by igniting a unique start-and-stop rocket in the pay- load. This small rocket, which is controlled by ground signal, can, be fired four times during the flight for forward acceleration. To Try Bike I I I