OPERATION WELCOME See ?'age 4 ' iii: Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom :43'atty MOSTLY CLOUDY High--75 Low-48 Warm, windy with chance of showers VOL. LXXII, No. 142 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, APRIL 22, 1962 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES S s . Kennedy Seeks Unity Over Berlin Crisis WASHINGTON (AP)-Kennedy Administration offlicials are plan- ning a quiet but determined effort next week to heal the split in the Atlantic Alliance over terms of a possible Berlin settlement with Russia. The division beween the United States and Britain on one side and West Germany and France on the other is considered to be mainly troublesome to allied relations. It could become dangerous if 11 An Editorial. x Soviets Eiid Yugoslavia, China Visits MOSCOW (P)--Top level Soviet government figures yesterday ended simultaneous visits to the openly hostile Communist capitals of Yugoslavia and China. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko returned to Moscow from five days of talks in Belgrade with top Yugoslav officials, including President Josef Tito. Soviet Foreign Trade Minister Nikolai Patolichev left Peiping after signing a Soviet - Chinese trade protocol for 1962. Tass reported Patolichev took time out during the six days' trade talks to meet Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai. The Official news agenc's reports emphasized the friendly atmosphere of the visits, but gave little information on the substance of the high level con- tacts., The dispatches indicated that both Soviet officials had discussed a wide range of subjects not strictly connected with their visits. Some Western observers specu- lated that Gromyko and Patolichev may have probed the sharply di- vided ideological positions of the two camps that have caused a serious split in the Communist world. The Russian delegation to Pei- ping and their hosts exchanged repeated avowals of friendship and unity. The Chinese yesterday pro- fessed satisfaction with the trade pact. Both sides called it. "a new contribution to the cause of strengthening the great eternal and unbreakable friendship be- tween the peoples of the two coun- tries." But Western observers here noted that the Tass report of the trade protocol made no mention of Soviet credits needed by the Chinese since the near collapse of their economy. The pact provided for a straight exchange of Soviet heavy indus- trial goods for Chinese raw ma- terials and light industrial goods. Figures Missing Figures for the total trade turn- over were not given by Tass, and the usual percentage figure for the increase over the last year was also missing. Western experts noted that the final communique from the trade talks said they "also discussed questions of the further develop- ment of Soviet Chinese economic cooperation." }permitted to go unchecked too long, particularly if East - West agreement on Berlin seemed likely. Meanwhile in the city itself hundreds of Berliners and tourists watched a brief battle of auto- matic weapons and tear gas be- tween East and West Berlin police. The trouble began when an East German policeman lobbed a tear gas grenade at tourists in the West sector who ventured close for a look at the wall the Communists built across the divided old Ger- man city. A new Soviet turn to antagon- istic policies would eliminate the whole Western problem of unity because when the Russians get tough Allied disputes disappear in a common determination. New Twist The possibility of some such new twist in Premier Khrushchev's line has been under study in Washing- ton since he wrote a tough letter to Prime Minister Harold Mac- millan 10 days ago, indignantly rejecting an appeal for a nuclear weapons test ban treaty . , Khrushchev is due to make a policy speech to the Supreme Soviet within a few day. The posi- tion he takes may have a crucial bearing on the future course of Berlin negotiations. Unpredictable Impact Another development which will have unpredictable impact on East-West relations generally is the scheduled United States re- sumption within the next week or so of nuclear weapons tests in the atmosphere. . Secretary of State Dean Rusk is known to believe that the chief basis for hope about a Berlin settlement is that Khrushchev is becoming convinced that the United States and its allies will never withdraw from West Berlin and will never accept Communist interference with access to the city. Negotiable Issues On the other hand, Rusk has indicated to the Soviet government that many other Berlin-related is- sues are negotiable. It is on this point that he has gotten into dif- ferences with the West German government of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. Adenauer's former foreign min- ister, Heinrich von - Brentano, is due here Wednesday. Informants said today a number of United States officials expect to talk with Brentano, who is still the top Adenauer associate through his leadership of the Chancellor's party in the Bundestag. United States officials are not sure how much the whole matter may be caught up in political rivalries in Bonn. They speculate about the relationship between Brentano as former foreign minis- ter and Gerhard Schroeder, his successor. SAFE AT THIRD-Wolverine catcher Joe Merullo slides safely into third under the tag of Purdue third sacker Richard Lui. The hot corner saw plenty of Michigan baserunners yesterday, as no less than 20 of them passed in their way to the plate. Productive M' Iatsmen, Smash Purdue Twice By TOM WEBBER Acting Sports Editor The Michigan batsmen busted loose for their most productive day of the infant season yesterday and the result was a double drub- bing of the Purdue Boilermakers, 12-4 and 8-2. The Wolverines blistered five pitchers for 26 hits in the double- header, nine of them for extra bases. Sophomore Ron Tate contribut- ed the first homer of the season a Views Need For Growth In Economy By ROBERT SELWA Emphasizing that "economic growth is the most important problem facing Michigan," Rep. Gilbert E. Bursley will present to the Legislature this week an ex- tensive report covering 21 aspects of the state's economy. The report, compiled by the Joint Legislative Committee on Economic Growth, a committee that Bursley chaired, outlines the economic needs of Michigan and makes specific recommendations which include the following: " Establishment of a space science institute at the University to complement in a secialized field "the highly important work" of the Institute of Science and Technology. * Preparation and implementa- tion of an orderly program of long-term growth capital outlay for higher education and mental health. " Strong support by the ap- propriations committees of both houses for the research programs at the state's colleges and univer- sities. * Legislative study of the Ke- weenaw Peninsula as a launching site and range for North polar orbital shots and high altitude exploration. at Ferry Field, a two-run blast late -in the first game. Coach Don Lund also received two route-going per- formances from Dave Roebuck and John Kerr to brighten the over- cast day. The losses were Purdue's second and third against no wins, while Michigan upped its Big Ten mark to 2-l. The Wolverines' lone loss came at the hands of Illinois, 1-0, on Friday afternoon. Big Fifth Michigan blew the first game wide open in the fifth inning with a five-run outburst. The flurry broke up a 2-2 tie and gave Roe- buck the margin he needed. A walk and two singles chased Pur- due starter Creighton Burns and brought on Joe Caggiano who far- ed no better. The Wolverines picked up their remaining five runs in the seventh and 'ighth innings off Caggiano and a successor. Harvey Chapman, who started at third, led the attack with three hits, while Joe Jones, Dick Honig and Joe Merullo each added a pair. Jim Newman, Dennis Spal- la, Merullo, Honig and Roebuck all contributed doubles to the 13- hit attack. This was Roebuck's second im- pressive victory in less than a. week. On Tuesday, he allowed only one run and three hits in five innings of relief. This time out the big right-hander showed xcellenct control in walking only two. Honig Stars Chapman was rewarded by being moved up to the cleanup spot in the second game, but Honig was the big man in the seven-inning nightcap. See 'MI, Page 6 SEVEN OF THE EIGHT Daily staff members who peti. tioned for senior staff positions refuse to accept the appoint. ments made by the Board in Control of Student Publications; the eighth joins in our protest of the Board's decision. The central issue of concern in our dispute with the Board goes much deeper than the irresponsibility and injustice dis- played by the Board's members when they overturned the rec- ommendations for staff positions from the outgoing seniors. We believe that the 15 minute interviews, scrapbooks and 250 word petitions which are the prime basis on which the Board judges the fitness of applicants constitute insufficient grounds on which to assess the work of three years. We affirm the principle that the Senior Staff-who intimately know the abili. ties and capacities of the staff and the demands of the various staff positions-can make the best decisions. Above all, the fundamental principle under which The Daily operates, that students can and will produce a great newspaper, requires that the board accept the senior recommendations except in cases where gross irresponsibility is displayed. WHAT HAPPENED Friday night at the Student Publica.. tions Bldg. demonstrates emphatically that the senior edi. tors had not presented such a slate. Their recommendations, based on intensive discussions and long probing interviews, would have yielded a fine, workable staff which we were ready to accent. The Board in Control, however, chose to exercise its long dormant power with respect to editorial staff appointments. Its members unanimously chose to slap down the seniors' rec- ommendations in a crude attempt to mold the tone and range of Daily editorials. The Board's decision to create an unprecedented posi- tion of cb-editorial director was an expression of a feeling that Daily staff members were using this newspaper for "political pamphleteering" and were fast becoming an elitist group of stu- dents perpetuating negativism and arrogance. The Board has received criticisms like these over the past several years with a growing frequency. Apparently, the Board members felt these charges were true descriptions of The Daily and that the Board had to act to correct them. IN TAKING ACTION, the Board violated fundamental principles of the freedom of the press and instituted, in one of the subtlest and vilest forms, pre-censorship of The Daily's editorial page. We believe that the Board has no right to de- cide which channels editorials should be steered into or to shuffle appointments to guarantee that a certain balance of interest and orientation will be represented. Had we accepted the Board's appointments, we would have acknowledged its ethical right to step in and control the paper's internal policies, something which is incompatible with either the tradition of The Daily or our conception of its na- ture. We believe that the basic policy underlying the editorial page of The Daily is to keep it open for "freedom of expres- sion grounded on fact." This is the phrase which appears in The Daily's Code of Ethics. The Board asked us in our interviews to accept that code and each of us agreed. The Board apparently does not believe in its own code, since it attempted to force its own view of what editorial policy should prevail in the pages of The Daily. WE FEEL that the Board appointments contain an implicit attempt to curb the freedom of this newspaper, a restric- tion we will not accept. Our commitment to a newspaper to serve the University community, however, is a very great one. We do not want to create a vacuum by walking out of The Daily and totally silencing the one effective voice the members of this commu- nity share. For this reason, we will continue to publish The Daily as an informal "task force." It is our intent to direct the production of the very best and very freest newspaper we can. However, we sincerely hope that we can reach an under- standing with the Board as we recognize their legal obligations and their distinguished record of service to the ideals of a free press. We will continue to make efforts to attain concordance with the Board. We protest the Board's appointments. We cannot accept its attempt to deny us the freedom that would make us great. But we cannot turn our back on The Daily. -THE JUNIOR STAFF COLLEGE CO-ORDINATION: Lauds .Free Choice Would Continue o Publi'sh Daily Harrah Accepts Senior Position; Lower Staffs To Remain on Paper Seven of the eight petitioners for senior positions on the Daily Editorial Staff announced last night that they would not accept the appointments made Friday by the Board in Control of Student Publications. After more than 24 hours of deliberation, Judith Bleier, Caroline Dow, Fred Russell Kramer, Cynthia Neu, Michael Olinick, Judith Oppenheim and Harry Perlstadt decided to remain night editors but continue putting out The Michigan Daily. The eighth petitioner, Michael Harrah, has accepted his post as city editor. The seven felt that the Board had attempted to disturb the workings of a free editorial policy "by an attempt to mold the tone and range of Daily editorials" through the ap- pointment of co-editorial directors. Explain Influence The petitioners explained that the editorial director had no real influence on the editorials that appear in The Daily as they are individual, signed opinions of staff members. Thus the appointment of co-editorial directors, which ignored the recommendation of the former;: senior staff, was uncalled for. They condemned it as an "im- moral" attempt to influence the editorial freedom of The Daily. The Board has the legal right to make Daily appointments. The seven petitioners will return as individuals to put out The Michigan Daily as a "task force" of night editors until new editors can be appointed or until an un- derstanding can be reached with the Board. "We believe that we owe the campus the best newspaper we can put out," Olinick said. This decision was a change from that announced by the seven at 5:30 a.m. Saturday after the senior staff had submitted a pro- test resignation to the Board. The senior staff had been protesting the alteration of their appoint- ment recommendations to the Board." Morning Decision The morning decision of the seven was to resign their positions, after publishing one protest issue. They were joined in this projected act by the majority of the sopho- mores and freshmen on the edi- torial staff. The understaff has now indicated that members will remain on in their present posi- tions awaiting further develop-f ments.l This decision was reached byI the seven after a series of com- promises proposed to the board proved unsuccessful. "We still be-t lieve that we can reach some un- derstanding with the board. In the meantime, we are ready to serve, in our present capacities, both the campus and the board," Olinick said. Pay Up!. Collection of the $50 continu- ing enrollment deposit from all undergraduates began Thurs- day. Students whose last names fall within the A-Bot category should have paid their deposits Thursday, Peter A. Ostafin, as- sistant to the vice-president for student affairs, said, but any- one who misses payment on his due day may turn in the money any time before May 4. Deposits should be paid in the lobby of the SAB according to the following alphabetical schedule: Monday: Crp-Fz Tuesday: Ga-How Wednesday: Hox-Lami Thursday: Lami-Mere Friday: Merf -Pick May 1: Picl-Send May 2 Sene-Tup May 3: Tug-Z Student identification cards will be required for imprinting the receipt at the time the de- posits are collected. MICHAEL OLINICK ... leads dissent Start Project On Housing- The Human Relations Board's "Project Welcome," which is at- tempting to eliminate discrimina- tory rental practices in Ann Ar- bor, is * getting started along a number of fronts. The project has gotten the sup- port of Voice Political Party, East Quadrangle and Student Govern- ment Council. Inter-Quadrangle Council has recommended that the individual quads let the HRB circulate their petitions within the residences. Panhellenic Association and Assembly Association are also being approached for support. Tomorrow night the HRB will hold an organizational meeting for people interested in working on the project. They will be ad- dressed by Donald Pelz who is for- mer consultant- to the Council of Churches Life and Work Com- mittee and familiar with racial problems in Ann Arbor. From Tuesday through Friday they will have a booth in the Fish- bowl with petitions, material and personnel who will discuss the problem with people and answer questions. The purpose of the project is twofold. The first reason is to make sctudents aware of the prob- lem of discrimination in renting and to commit them to welcoming people into their residences on the basis of their merits. The sec- ond is to indicate to landlords that they will have the support of stu- dents if they rent on an open occupancy basis without regard to race, religion or nationality. Walker Asks Guard Control HOUSTON (P)-Former General ar ..... . .............. ............ ..... . . . . .*.*.. .*. .... ......... ...-. . . . . ** :,*..:.*...* .........** ...... gy+ .:.r Jr....:.. ...... ....,.......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Y ...h...a"'rr nVJ .l:"rrY . .:" . . .....tiiVrrr{Yr."... i.. . .{:.:.l:'r:1:rrr:::5'::.{. fY 4 : Mp - } '' ' jam: "}1. . .? . i: . ' }N ?r .l'"J ti'' f 'f }.} 1{ \ "$ y 11.: yx ' . T{ : ;y ti :{ " yl y.MY !!' :15" 'YP. ,:: : i N}: 4.1': ' ;}ff C Vf i t .t { {ti A Harry Burns Hutchins, 1909-1920 .~i.... (EDITOR'S. NOTE: This is the fifth in a series of biographies of University presidents. The sixth part, covering the regime of Mar- lon LeRoy Burton, was mistak- enly printed before vacation. President Burton assumed his duties after the retirement of President Hutchins.) By MICHAEL HARRAH THERE WAS NEVER any doubt about who would suc- ceed James B. Angell; Harry Burns Hutchins, dean of the Law School, was the logical choice. The law dean had served as president while Angell was act- ing as minister to Turkey; he had virtually run the Univer- sity in Angell's name just be- fore the New Englander's re- tirement. And everyone liked him. Triy rit N1,eins was clean- years, the executive duties had devolved to this person and that person, and they weren't too easily rounded up again. Secondly, the new president launched an ambitious cam- paign to boost alumni support, which was already high. He went on long tours, speaking of the "new" University, be- lieving that the people of Mich- igan shouldn't have to bear the full burden of financing a truly national university. In short, he was drumming up pri- vate gifts-an endowment. THIS WAS the day of great fortunes. Bequests to the Uni- versity were non-taxable, and President Hutchins made the most of it. The first result was Hill Auditorium, a gift in the will of Rege~nt Arthur H~ill. The Wolverines took to the road for long trips, and Field- ing H. Yost had so little to do that he took out his dusty law degree and got a profitable practice going on the side. In 1907, .Michigan's Wolver- ines quit the Big Ten. In 1912, Yost' Field House was erected. And until the war, the Univer- sity tried to prove that it didn't need the Big Ten. But it did. THE ONSLAUGHT of World War I found the University somewhat isolationist. The Re- gents refused to authorize stu- dent military training, but a poll taken by The Daily showed that the students favored it and right away too. They didn't want to wait until America was dumped into the war. President Woodrow Wilson drove to the Capitol to urge a joint session of Congress to declare war on Germany, the entire campus packed Hill Aud. to hear former Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson. At that meeting, Prof. William H. Hobbs was ready to defy the Regents, whose policy it was to ignore the war, hoping it would go away. As the crowd was worked to a fevered pitch by Stimson's speech, Hobbs finally rose. "Re- solved!" he cried. "That the University encourage and sup- port the training of its stu- dents for service to the nation -through the medium of com- pulsory military training! s!" According to a University biographer, Kent Sagandorph, the noise almost tore the roof : :ti By RICHARD KRAUT v "Free choice is the key to a system of higher education." With this, Merritt Chambers, executive secretary of both the' Michigan Council of State College Presidents and the Michigan Co- ordinating Council for Public Higher Education, summed up his views at a recent interview. The principle explains his opin- ion of a super board which would a great deal of individuality with- in the institutions." "The super board is dead," Chambers said. No state has creat- ed one in the last seventeen years. "This shows that people see the disadvantages in the highly cen- tralized system." The super board represents one type of coordinating system now in use today. A second is compulsary coordination of state institutions I