I OPPORTUNITY ITICIZE COURSES /Y CLOUDY, COOD ClearbWg today; partfly cloudy, Colder tonight. Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom See Page 4 __ --. L. LXXI, No.63 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1960 ADVISERS CONFER: Propose Defense Plan WASHINGTON (43)-A tightly controlled defense force, dispens- ing with army, navy and air force secretaries and emphasizing speedy military decisions, was proposed to President-elect John F. Kennedy by his defense advisers yesterday. Annual savings up to $8 billion were claimed for the proposed reorganization. The three armed services would continue to be separate units: under the plan produced, at Kennedy's request, by a committee head- ed by Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo). But the committee frankly recommended reducing the influence of the separate services. It said COnference Calls Recess On Test Ban GENEVA WP)-The three-powe nuclear test ban talks went into another long recess yesterday still deadlocked and with no ap- parent optimism for the futur of the marathon negotiation. United States delegate Charles C. Stelle proposed a two-month interruption at yesterday's 273rd session of the conference because he told Soviet negotiator Sem- yon K. Tsarapkin, experience of recent weeks "does not offer any prospects for progress." The recess, he said, will algo give the forthcoming administra- tion of President-elect John F Kennedy an opportunity for "thorough review" of the negotia- tion for a treaty to suspend nu- clear weapons testing. The talks started Oct. 31, 1958 To Be 'Decisive He warned that this review wil have been made when the talks resume again in February, and that the next session will be "de- eiaive." Stelle, Sir Michael Wright of Britain and Tsarapkin - who agreed to the recess with the comment that only the Soviet Union had displayed "good will' in the talks up to now - have made no progress on any major Issue since they resumehd the talks In Sept. after a six-week pause. That recess was decided be- cause Britain and the United States wanted to have another look at the negotiation and, at - the same time, hoped the Soviet government would drop at least some of its opposition against control measures the West de- mands. Refuses To Talk But since then Tsarapkin has refused even to discuss Western proposals on Issues related to con- trol. Stelle said one of the reasons the United States Government cannot accept inadequate controls in a nuclear test ban treaty is that in doing so it would estab- lish a "precedent in the whole field of disarmament." Thus, the point came clear: if the Soviet government bows to the Western concept of nuclear control it would not very well re- ject it any future disarmament negotiation; nor could the West insist upon effective control of disarmament once it has accept- ed a watered-down Soviet version here. City Considers Proposed Law On Liquor Sale The Ann Arbor City Council last night approved the first read- ing of a new liquor-control ordi- nance, (The present ordinance applies only to the sale of beer and wine because of a long standing ban on the sale of liquor-by-the-glass in Ann Arbor, which was revoked by the voters November 8.) The new ordinance, basically like the present one, was arrived at in meetings of the council and interested citizens. As it now stands, it would allow taverns to remain open until 12:30 a.m. weekdays with a directive against actually serving liquor after mid- night. Establishments would have to close at 1:30 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, but would also have to cease serving drinks at 1 a.m. The final vote on the ordinance Wil come next Monday at the council's regular meeting. Cuban Diplomats the country can no longer "afford -> the luxury of letting each service strive to develop in itself the ca- pability of fighting any future war by itself' and that interservice rivalry is steadily increasing, Recognizes Space Age Defense planning cannot con- tinue to consist of compromises among the three, the committee contended. Moreover, Symington, himself a r former Secretary of the Air Force, ) said the plan recognizes "the nu- clear space age instead of contin- - uing to have this arbitrary and e ridiculous division between land, sea and air." s Certain to set off a furor in ' military circles and Congress, the i Symington committee , r e p o r t sought to justify its sweeping rec- - ommendations by saying that in f the past the United States has y had 18 months to build and mo- bilize its defenses for war, while "if there should ever be a World - War III, we would be fortunate to . have 18 minutes to react." r' Separate Units - T h e Symington committee - would redefine the services as s "separate organic units within a single Defense Department." Each service would continue to l have its own chief. But these s three chiefs, plus another officer I as chairman, would no longer - constitute the Joint Chiefs of Staff which is now the nation's top military authority in uniform. Rather, each chief would simply head his own service. Another group of senior officers, appoint- ed by the President from the three services but. permanently separated from any particular one, would be an advisory group. The chairman of the joint chiefs, redesignated chairman of the joint staff, would head this: group. He would be next in the chain of military command below the defense secretary, Moreover, the plan would es- tablish three commands made up - of units of all forces and each self sufficient. These-the strategic command, responsible for all stra- tegic missions; the tactical com- mand, responsible for limited and conventional missions, and the de- fense command, responsible for defense of the continent-would report directly to the chairman of the joint staff. The committee suggested a special post of undersecretary of defense for weapons systems, re- sponsible to the secretary "for the complete cycle of weapons develop- ment, procurement and production r and also for construction and in- stallations, including bases, hous- ing and depots." STUART SYMINGTON on defense ALGERIA: Slim Asks UN Actiont UNITED NATIONS (R)-Tuni- sia opened debate yesterday on Algeria with a demand that the United Nations guarantee by its presence the honesty of any ref- erendum on the political future of that explosive North African ter- ritory. France boycotted the debate again in the 99-nation political committee in order to demon- strate its long-held position that Algeria is an internal matter of no concern to the United Nations. Two African nations sym- pathetic with France--Chad and Congo Brazzaville-called off at least temporarily a plan to seek postponement of the debate. Supporters of the Algerian inde- pendence movement among Unit- ed Nations delegates expressed confidence they could defeat the move. Tunisian Ambassador Mo'ngi Slim, whose country has sheltered the provisional government of the Algerian rebels, accused French President Charles de Gaulle of raising new fears over Algeria. Referring to a speech by de Gaulle in Paris, Slim charged the French President with putting emphasis on the possibility of partitioning Algeria. He acknowledged that de Gaulle still maintained the principle of self-determination for the Alger- ian people, but he added the French leader's statement was "full of dangers." Representatives of 25 Asian- African nations who asked the United Nations to debate Algeria for the sixth successive year are expected to bring in a formal resolution for United Nations supervision of any referendum in Algeria. Start Social Science Unit Within NSF By SUSAN FARRELL The "gradual uphill battle" of the social sciences for recognition in the National Science Founda- tion was climaxed yesterday with the creation of a division for social science research within the NSF. Prof. Angus Campbell, director of the Survey Research Center, viewed the foundation action as evidence of the "increasing ma- turity of the social sciences" and as "gradual public education as to what social science is and realiza- tion that it has something to offer in solving world problems." (NSF Director Alan T. Water- man said that the action indicated the "recognition of the importance and quality of scientific research in the social sciences and the be- lief in the sustained growth of these fields," the New York Times reported.) The new division will organize support of basic research into pro- grams in the anthropological, eco- nomic and sociological sciences and in the history and philosophy of science. NSF indicated that the creation of the division would be accom- panied by greater financial sup- port for social science research than it had formerly given. Much Smaller But Prof. Campbell pointed out that the budget of the division is much smaller than that devoted to research in the physical sci- ences and will probably remain so for quite a while. He does not expect a "tremen- dous increase" in appropriations in the near future but foresees a gradual increase in available funds over a long period of time. (University President Harlan Hatcher has called University social science research "pre- eminent," as compared to that at other Universities. In planning for increase of the advanced work in these areas, such as the SRC carries on, the University would expect expanded federal aid, he said.) Prof. Campbell said attainment 'of "nominal equality (of the social sciences) with the physical-medi- cal-biological sciences" was the last step in a battle that began in Congress in 1950 when forma- tion of the National Science Foun- dation as the principal government agency supporting basic scientific research was first considered. Movement To Exclude At that time there was a move- ment to exclude social science from the proposed act, Prof. Campbell said. NSF began giving grants for social science research about 1954, but these grants were for projects tied in with biological or physical and engineering sciences,. Henry W. Reicken, former pro- fessor of sociology at the Univer- sity of Minnesota, who has di-1 rected this program for severala years,'will continue as head of the' new division. Communists Declare War Unnecessary Manifesto Endorses Peaceful Coexistence LONDON R)-The Communist world declared unanimously last night war is not inevitable and that Communism can win out over the capitalist West in peaceful coexistence. "War is not fatally inevitable," it said. "The Communist parties regard the fight for peace as their prime task." Its manifesto, approved at a recent Moscow meeting of Red leaders from 81 countries said war will come only if the West starts one. The solid front reversing Marx- ist doctrine and bringing Red China into line was first sprung on the world by Communist pa- pers outside the Soviet Union-in London, Paris and Rome. Then Moscow Radio beamed later to Britain its version of what the official party organ Pravda would publish and it fol- lowed the same general line as the outside papers. Russia Holds Line The 20,000-word Communist statement represented strong en- dorsement of Soviet Premier Ni- kita S. Khrushchev's peaceful co- existence line and just as strong rejection of Red China's war-is- inevitable philosophy. The manifesto pointed up two important shifts from old Com- munist theory by arguing that: 1) East and West can get along, and must if the appalling destruc- tion of nuclear war is to be avoid- ed. 2) Communists in western countries can proceed in building toward eventual power without revolutions. Reds Reject War The manifesto alerted Commu- nists everywhere that the "peace campaign is the task today." In rejecting war as a road to Communist victory, the document accused what it called imperialist reaction of spreading the idea the Reds favored war. "Imperialist reaction, seeking to provoke diffidence toward the Communist movement and its ideology, continues to intimidate the masses, affirming that Com- munists would have need for a war between states to overcome capitalist regimes and establish a social order," the manifesto said. "The Communist parties reso- lutely reject this calumny. The fact that both world wars, un- leashed by the imperialists, have ended with socialist revolutions does not signify that the way to- ward social revolution must defi- nitely pass through world war..." The Moscow radio sunmary of the manifesto said the Commu- nist system is bound to win in peace over capitalism "by the force of its example." The broad- cast added that victory in the Socialist countries is so complete "that a return to capitalism is socially and economically impos- sible." Whites Brave New Orleans School Boycott NEW ORLEANS WA) - A thin line of blockade-running white children-seventeen in number- added yesterday to the break up of a segregation boycott at William Frantz school, one of the city's two integrated units. But, not a single white child showed up at McDonogh No. 19, the other integrated school. Tempers still simmered just be- low the bubbling point. Demon- strators lobbed two eggs at the Rev. Lloyd Foreman when he Students Start Vei ART OF SILENCE: Mareeau ,Pantomi-mes World (EDITOR'S NOTE-The follow- ing is excerpted from an auto- biographical article, "The Universal Language," by Marcel Marceau, who appeared last night In Hil A"d.) Now there is a sudden revival of interest in one of the oldest spectacular arts in existence: The Art of Silence. This art-called Mime-is as an- cient as civilization, and yet is one of the least practiced and most difficult of dramatic forms. It has been employed as an adjunct more or less, to the arts of acting and dance, for great actors-great ballet dancers must know the Art of Mime to round out those areas of silence which occur in every play or every ballet that has a story. As far back as I can remember performers such as Charles Chap- lin, Buster Keaton, Laurel and Hardy, were my inspiration. "Bip"-my own alter ego-who was born thirteen years ago, was introduced to the American public on his first tour here. Bip has has adventures and misadven- tures with everything from butter- fluers to untamable lions to dance hall girls, in white face, wearing a catruu i1inpd nlll v,,i nndillrdc*and 3 a I 1 1 1