HOMECOMING DISPLAY CONTROVERSY ERUPTS Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom ztiti; CONTINUED WARM High-70 Low--45 Sunny and clear today, fair and cool tonight. V ~-- ~ * j~ youJI.*.xm, No1. L1 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11. 1960 FIVE CNTSr -Daily-Larry Vanice POLITICALLY NEUTRAL -- Author Paul Blanshard, in a Challange address last night, analysed both Roman Catholic and Protestant positions on the separation of church and state. Blanshard Criticiz12es NewMeCarthyism'1 Analyses Demoninations' Positions On Relationship of Church, State By RUTH EVENHUIS "The term 'bigot' is hurled about in this era as was the term 'pink' in the McCarthy era," Paul Blanshard said in a Challenge address last night. He termed himself "neutral as to the total merits of competing candidates" in the national election, but objected to "Clerical Mc- (arthyism" impeding discussion of the principle of separation of church and state. Blanshard also summed up Protestant and Roman Catholic positions on separation of church and state and leveled a criticism at the Catholic hierarchy. Aid Unconstitutional He commended Sen. John F. Kennedy's statement that federal aid to parochial education is unconstitutional, but indicated that Kennedy To Speak At Union Democratic presidential candi date Sen. John Kennedy will visi the University late Thursda night, as the first stop in his sec- ond tour of Michigan this year. The Massachusetts senator wil arrive at Willow Run Airport a 11 p.m. Thursday and will b hurried to the Michigan Unior where he will address students or the front steps for an uncertair period of time, Ronald Pivwick Michigan national committeemar for the Young Democrats, said. Kennedy will stay at the Unior for the night and is scheduled to leave at approximately 8:3 a.m. Friday in a car cavalcade tc the train station. He will speak briefly there before departing on a day-long whistle stop campaign through the state. Kennedy's "advance man," Mar- tin Underwood, is presently in Ann Arbor completing plans for the senator's arrival. Pivnick said this is the first time a presidential candidate has visited the University and stayed overnight here. The Young Dem - ocrats and University Students for Kennedy are aiding the county and city party officials in making arrangements for the visit. Speaks in Pittsburgh The Democratic candidate will appear at a dance in his honor in Detroit Saturday night, when he will fly back into the state. Kennedy said last night in Pitts- burgh he cannot believe the Amer- ican people will put their confi- dence in a party and a leader who, he said, commits this coun- try to defending "two rocks off the coast of China." The Democratic presidential candidate revived his clash with Vice-President Richard M. Nixon pver the Chinese Nationalist is- lands of Quemoy and Matsu at a wildly cheering party rally, the Associated Press reported. Bedlam broke loose in the Syria Mosque when Kennedy entered the hall after a strenuous day of campaigning that took him into the deep south for the first time. Jabs at Nixon Kennedy opened up by jabbing at Nixon, his Republican rival for the Presidency, as a man who has called himself "a conservative at home and a risk-taker abroad." "I don't think the American people want either in 1960," he said to a burst of applause. "I think they want someone who is a liberal at home and careful abroad." Kennedy seemed to be trying to snatch the peace issue away from Nixon in their dispute over defending Quemoy and Matsu, which lie close to the Chinese Communist mainland. Touch Off War In their face-to-face television debate last night, Kennedy said that military leaders have called the islands strategically indefen- sible and that trying to hold them against a Communist attack could touch-off another world war. "I cannot believe," Kennedy said here last night, "that they (the people) will put their confi- dence in a political party and a leader who commits us to the de- fense of Quemoy and Matsu even though he says in the same state- ment that the people don't count, even though it is admitted that it is indefensible..." Regents Ask $121 For Capital Outlay Eisenhower Campaigns For Nixon Vice-President Talks In Western States By The Associated Press President Dwight D. Eisenhower plugged vigorously last night for Richard M. Nixon and Henry Ca- bot Lodge, saying "I think we could have found no two better, men" to carry on Republican policies which he finds highly, satisfactory. The chief executive made his first national campaign appear- ance of 1960 on television in a question-and-answer session with ten women from as many states. The only time Eisenhower show- ed any signs of irritation with Democratic critics of his adminis- tration was on the first question, asked by Mrs. Laddie Hutar of Chicago, having to do with United States prestige. He cited the often-stressed fact that the United States has yet to lose a vote in the United Na- tions. He said 120 heads of states would hardly have come to Wash- ington in his administration if "they thought the United States was a second-rate country." Then the President reported that in the past few days the head of a neutralist state with which United States relations are "cor- rect but cool" had told him1 privately "when we really get in -_P BUC HURLERS--Reliefer Elroy Face (left) and Starter Harvey Haddix (right) celebrateI triumph, in which Bill Mazeroski (center) drove in the two winning runs. vs. ~ Nj5L new "Service istributes Free Notes By JOHN ROBERTS The new student note - taking service was launched yesterday with the distribution of free intro- ductory notes in nine courses. Melvin Skolnik, '62, one of four honor students directing the oper- ation, said that the notes covered last week's lectures in Anthropol- ogy 31, Zoology 1 and 82, Geology 22, History 195, Astronomy 11 and 12, Psychology 31 and Social Psy- chology 62. Chemistry 3 will also be cov- ered by the group, but approval did not come through until last night, precluding the distribution of free notes. 'Considerable Response The organization, which calls itself the University Study Service, is headed by Harvey Lichterman, '62, Loren Fishman, '62, Michael Heymann, '62, and Skolnik. The latter reported that the "response has been considerable. Two phones have been kept busy, and some 200 subscriptions have already been ordered." The service, as finally struc- tured, involves two note-takers per1 lecture section. These students, who are honor students enrolled in the course, consolidate their1 notes and pass them on for edit- ing. Preliminary Editing Preliminary editing is done by a staff of three, with the final approval of the four leaders re- quired. Lichterman said that the charge for the service, if ordered for the entire semester, will be ten dollars. An alternate plan involves the payment of five dollars for a four- week trial subscription, with the option of renewing it for the seven remaining weeks at an addi- tional cost of seven dollars. Persons desiring the service in three or more courses will be en- titled to a reduction in the fiat fee to eight dolars per subject, he added. Lodge Rapped For Position -he had been severely chastised by forces within the church for his position. This conflict involves the Spanish and United States con- epts of separation of church and state, with the Vatican reluctant to accept the Catholic American's preference for separation. Blan- shard leveled his criticism at the heirarchy, saying that if people (including Kennedy) were the determiners of Catholic policy, there would be no problem. He charged the Protestant churches with more quantitative,; although less serious, violations of separation of church and state where religion enters the class- room in the form of exercises or instruction. A predominant Catholic inter- pretation of the "no establish- ment" clause of the First Amend- ment as barring only monopolistic license and not unequal favors is the rationale to which Blanshard attributes the Catholic pressure for federal aid to religion. Neither the Protestant nor Roman Catholic Church posits a satisfactory solution to the prob- lem of separation Blanshard ar- gued. The Protestant Biblical solution, "Render unto Caesar that which is Caesar's and unto God that which is God's," was not intended to serve as a definitive statement of political policy but an answer to a "loaded" query. The Catholic position that the ecclesiastical and civil spheres are limited according to their natures but with the church in the de- cisive position by reason of its "moral mission" is an adequate but not justifiable answer. Labeler WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower's tongue slipped last night in his political television show with women questioners. He referred to the House of Representatives as "The House of Democrats." Eisenhower quickly recovered, however. And at the end of the half- hour program he was going strong. The announcer apolo- getically cut off the sound por- tion while Eisenhower still ap- peared on the screen, talking and gesturing. a jam, we look to the United States" to preserve peace and up- hold the United Nations. Vice-President Richard M. Nixon hedge-hopped down the nation's continental backbone today and charged his Democratic opponent with "glaring misrepresentation" of Nixon's position on reclamation water projects. The Republican presidential candidate visited Denver and swung into an attack on a state- ment by Sen. John F. Kennedy that Russia would be outproducing the United States in electric pow- er by 1975. t i 1 t t r 1 E C f T T 8 E 7 : i; a c n n HUNGARY: Assembly To Debate Red Acts UNITED NATIONS (M) - The UN General Assembly voted over Soviet protest last night to take up the Hungarian question again this year. The Assembly put the question on the agenda of its fifteenth session by a vote of 54-12 with 13 abstentions. The action had been proposed by the United States and then recommended by the 21-nation steering committee. Earlier, the Assembly voted 49-13 with 35 abstentions to put the question of Tibet on the agenda, as proposed by Malaya and Thai- land. Both questions involve charges of Communist aggression, in the one case against Hungarian and Soviet authorities and in the other against Chinese authorities. In the vote on Hungary, Indo- nesia, Yugoslavia and Mali, a new UN member in Africa, joined the nine-nation Soviet bloc in oppo- sition. In the one on Tibet, Guinea' added her name to the list. On both votes, only one of the 16 new delegations lately seated in the Assembly---Cyprus-voted in favor of debate. Thirteen others-all in Africa- were among those abstaining. So was Cuba. The affirmative votes in 'each case included North America, nearly all Latin America, Western Europe and some of Asia. Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.), a member of the United States dele- gation, pressed the American re-1 quest for a debate on Hungary. Face, Haddix of Pir Throttle Yankee Att NEW YORK (M)--Elroy Face, the scrawny guitar-pl the Pittsburgh bullpen, saved Harvey Haddix yesterday as Pirates went one-up on the.New York Yankees with a 5- the fifth World Series game. Haddix, a 35-year-old left-hander who specializes pitches, struggled in the early innings but allowed only thr to the seventh, When Tony Kubek and pinch hitter Hector Lopeze with one out in the seventh, Man- ager Danny Murtaugh came tor ds with Haddix, Danny made a knee OVV. high sign with his right hand, in- dicating to the bullpen that Face, 41T the man with the low fork ball, wat mCame was the man he wanted. I Near Double Play By MICHAEL L Little Elroy made Gil McDougald B force Lopez at second. He almost The second Soviet was out of the inning with a four days visited the double play but Bill Mazeroski's yesterday, toured its throw to first pulled Dick Stuart and spoke to students off the bag. It didn't matter for on his latest research Face then struck out Roger Maris. Prof. Vladimir I.f Face, who retired eight in a lowed the Friday vis row after relieving Vern Law Sun- Oleg Alexandrovitchl day, got Bob Cerv leading off the part of a scientific ei eighth. But he walked Mickey tween the United Sta Mantle on four straight pitches. Soviet Union. He was the only Yankee to reach Prof. Spitsyn, who base in Face's 2% inning workout. alone with state depa Bill Skowron popped out and Yogi proval, was allowed t Berra, pinch hitting for Elston part of the Universit Howard, grounded out. "That is," Prof. Leigh In the ninth, the Yanks went son, chairman of th( down quietly, one-two-three. department explained Pittsburgh greeted Art Ditmar cluding those projects like a long lost cousin with three been deemed classified runs in the second inning. The fense department. I ca Bucs had knocked out the Yanks',inseepsomeno. Ihe top winner in the first inning in in see some of the Wednesday's opener. Especially Inter Stuart Singles Prof. Anderson adde Dick Stuart's single and Smoky Spitsyn had spent t Burgess' double to the right field visiting the Phoenix corner put men on second and Project, where work is third with one out. Gino Cimoli, ried out in the field o who had forced Stuart, scored eas- a topic in which he i ily on Don Hoak's slow bouncer interested. See PIRATES, Page 6 "This is the first ti Million Budget P s Stress rLaboratory F installations Request Sent to State Lays Out Five-Year 'U' Building Scheme By SUSAN FARRELL A capital outlay budget of $120.8 million for the fiscal years 1961-65 inclusive has been approved by the Regents and sent to the budget division of the state Department ofAdministration. Primary emphasis of the budget .: is on expansion of laboratory and instrumentation facilities needed in upper class and graduate pro- P Wirephoto grams. Improvement of faculty of- the Pirate fice accommodations is also give h Phigh priority. The request for 1961-62 totals $16.2 million for new construction. teS It includes a new music school 11 building, a fluids engineering building planned for North Cam- pus, the second unit of the medi- a cal science building and additional funds for the Physics-Astronomy- Institute of Science andTechnol- aying ace of ogy building. None of these were the scrappy included in the appropriation ap- 2 victory in proved by the Legislature last spring. in breaking Include Buildings ee hits going Requests for the year 1981-62 also include buildings for the den- each singled tistry and education schools and the architecture and design col- lege, a mathematics building and JS tS computing center, a laboratory isits and office building for the engi- neering college, expansion of the heating plant and extension of )US streets and utilities on North Campus. "All these are urgent necessi- INICK ties," Vice-President for Business scientist in and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont e University said yesterday. laboratories, The capital outlay budget, al- and faculty ways drawn up for a five-year findings. period, is reviewed and renewed Spitsyn fo- every year, Pierpont explained It sit of Prof. is submitted to the state budget it ovas as office, which in turn discusses it xRhange be- with University officials and makes tes and the recommendations to the legisla- ture. Is traveling A Separate Budget aein g p A separate capital outlay budget irtment ap- of $22.8 million for the Medical o visit any Center has also been approved by y he chose. the Regents. Sc.hemistry The request includes a children's " chmit hospital and a cancer, geriatrics 1 "not in- and chronic illness building to which have serve the younger and older age' i by thede- groups. nt even get The University's capital outlay request is formulated, on the first ested level, by the schools' and col- d that Prof. leges' individual analysis of their he morning building requirements. Memorial Their proposals are reviewed by being car- University committees, measured If radiation, against state and national stand- is especially ards for higher education and sub- mitted to the Regents for approval ime since I before being sent to the state a Russian budget office. ed on cam- rs ago, the Council W oos ared all of toR2ssians Pittsfield; Cuts i' work done Dries.' for which ewer Costs restrictions 'SOCIAL OBSERVER' VISITS ANN ARBOR: Shelley Berman Finds Self Very Dull' Comic By BEATRICE TEODORO "I don't know what they're laughing at," the tired man in the tweed sport coat said. "When I watch myself I find it very dull." But the American public evi- dently does not agree with baggy- eyed monologuist Shelley Berman, as they buy his three albums in record numbers, and pack in his nightclub and tour performances. "Nightclubs w e r e training grounds for me," Berman contin- ued. "People come to nightclubs to chat and smoke and drink, and if they're with women, perhaps to hold hands and nuzzle a little bit. as they occur to him. "When I be- gin a performance I have a men- tal plan upon which I can deviate and build," he said. "Never just plain deviate." Berman has no preference in the type of audience he draws. (Even if it's a vulgar, flatly eco- nomic desire," he said, "I prefer them all. And seriously, I hope I really appeal to all.") However, he added that he did hate to try to entertain the "jaded." "And students often think they are the most jaded and sophisti- cated of all," he continued. "Ac- tually, they are the most naive of people until they _realize that contribution to society is more important than beer parties and O'Neill's- plays and 'Oedipus Rex' and many modern playwrights can say things better than I can?" he asked. "Brilliant lines are being said and written every day. And I don't want to deny myself this self-ex- pression, this chance to appear on stage with a great and imagina- tive director, surrounded by fine actors." 'Secret Mechanism' Though acting can be develop- ed through training, it is still an art, Berman continued. And' the facility for artisticudevice is a "secret mechanism" over which no one has control. Unfortunately, there are people can remember that speaker has been allow pus for any reason," P son said. "Several yea state department decl this area off-bounds t because of the classifies in some of the laborat The exchange plan, traveling and visiting were lifted, will brin bers of the Russian p Sciences to different in the country. An eq. of American researche cuss their work in Union. 'To Break Ice "We hope that these break the ice," Anderso want to know what the doing in the field of we can exchange ideas ings with them. These here to discuss scienc( nothing to fear from t "The visits of both within a week is purely g 10 mem- Academy of universities ual number rs will dis- the Soviet e' e visits will n said. "We ese men are science so s and find- men came e. There is hem. these men coinciden- The City bridged another rift between Ann Arbor and Pittsfield Township over city annexation of township land for a proposed re- search park last night, by reduc- ing by 60 per cent a township bill for city-installed sewer services which had been disputed for two and a half years. The council approved the re- commendation of City Adminis- trator Guy C. Larcom, Jr., that the township's bill for use of the Swift Run sewer in December, 1957, first month the sewer opened, be reduced from $3,762.99 to $1,- 513.14. The earlier charge had ap- ..: . . ._ .: !'EY h..t.Y XYtn~6 v 4k:..fi _ fr?:.av.J .... SX.N '. .C ,.: 1: