EDUCATIONAL ALTERNATIVES Y Lrl ian Iait CLOUDY High-69 Low -55 Showers or thundershowers See Page 4 Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LrXXII, No. 172 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 27, 1962 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES Resignations Stir Rumors, at MSU College Officials Declare Reports Exaggerate Seriousness of Situation By KENNETH WINTER Twenty-seven faculty resignations at Thursday's meeting of the Trustees of Michigan State University have triggered reports of a mass resignation of MSU faculty members. However, two MSU officials said yesterday that these reports greatly overemphasized the seriousness of the situation. MSU Trustee Frank Merriman said, "I don't see anything alarm- ing about it. This, season of the year, you normally have many WTilliamrs Sees Possiability Of UN Action in Africa WASHINGTON (P)-Assistant Secretary of State for African Af- fairs G. Mennen Williams said yesterday it is a very distinct possibil- ity UN police forces may be necessary to prevent a "conflagration" in Ruanda-Urundi if Belgian troops pull out. Williams, former governor of Michigan, said that, with inde- pendence, it's likely that Belgian troops will be removed. "When the Belgians go, it's quite possible that racial antagonisms of the past will flareout and that there'll be fighting which might result in a conflagration," African Jaunt Williams, recently returned from Africa, also reported that Pre- mier Cyrille Adoula of the central government and President Moise Pathet Lao Plans Attack, JOHN A. HANNAH ..'nothing startling' SHELTER: Group, Asks New Plan, For Attack Spearheaded by . Mrs. Angus Campbell, several faculty mem- bers are backing "a reasonable, program for survival" in the event of a nuclear war. In a 10-point statement, the group has called for planning based on "realistic estimate of the gravity and imminence of the threat." It also notes that no pro- gram will protect everyone but it is possible to increase the number that may survive., They note that "protection of human life is our paramount value" and that no one has the right to decide for someone else that life would not be worth living after a nuclear attack. Likelihood Remains "The threat that all survival programs, whatever their charac- ter, tend to increase (or decrease) likelihood of a nuclear war has little supporting evidence," it is asserted, but that the threat is I grave enough to justify a carefully planned and adjustable shelter program. The group recommends that the cost of the program be a part of national defense budget, and that the government be changed with keeping the public fully informed in the, matter. Back Planning "We support the planning of a survival program," the statement concludes, "not in the belief that this will make victory . . . more likely, but in recognition . . . that (it) is possible and . . . it is our moral obligation to protect our so- ciety." Signers include the Campbells, Professors John W. Atkinson, Henry Bretton, Arthur Bromage, Dorwin Cartwright, William Fran kena, George Grassmuck, William B. Harvey, Arnold Kaufman, George F. Hourani, Henry J. Mey- er, Daniel R. Miller, Theodore ~Newcomb, Louis Orlin, William Willcox, and their wives. Also included are Professors John' Bowditch, Alexander Eck- stein, Samuel Eldersveld, Roberta Keniston, James Melsel, and Mrs. Helen Peek. 'U' Fee Rate Big Ten High The new tuition schedule auth- orized by the Regents makes the University the most expensive of any state-supported school in the Big Ten for out-of-state students to attend. Previously the University had been tied with Michigan State University for the position of hav- 'resignations from the faculty members who normally are chang- ing for next year." He estimated that this year's seasonal resigna- tions were no more numerous than last year's. Not Startling MSU President John A. Han- nah said that the number of resignations received Thursday was "nothing very startling," but said that, for several years, "we've been getting more resignations than we'd like." Hannah attributed this loss to MSU's faculty salary problem. He explained that, though MSU's sal- aries have increased, salaries of other universities have increased faster, so that MSU's relative po- sition has suffered. "Faculty members get the idea they'd be better off at other Big Ten schools-or even outside the Big Ten," Hannah added. Top Instructor's Pay He noted ~ that, while MSU's salaries to instructors are tops in the Big' Ten, its salary rates to professors rank near the bottom. This loss of position has come about because "Other states are relatively more generous to their institutions of higher education, which has resulted in relatively higher salaries there," Hannah commented. He estimated that MSU would need a $2-$2.5 million appropria- tions increase to remedy this prob- lem, but added that the Legis- lature was not expected to provide this amount. U 7 U' Negotates For Papers Of Vandenberg By MARJORIE BRAHMS The University is presently ne- gotiating for the late Sen. Arthur II. Vandenburg's (R-Mich.) let- ters and papers, University Execu- tive Vice-President Marvin L. Nie- huss said recently. The Senator expressed a desire for his papers to be placed in Cle- menta Library. Among the papers, consisting of letters, scrapbooks, and some historical documents, are documents from both his public and private life. Arthur Vandenberg, Jr., the sen- ator's son, has written a book based on the papers and has brought them together in bound form, Niehuss commented. The late Sen. Vandenberg, a University Qalumnus and an editor of the Grand Rapids Herald, was appointed United States Senator in 1928 and was subsequently re- elected through 1954. He was Re- publican floor leader for many years and took an active lead in fostering the international ap- roach to world affairs which many people felt brought about the adoption of the United Nations Charter, Niehuss said. Hint Trouble In VU'Funds The Detroit Free Press yester- day hinted that the recent uproar about the appearances of suspect- ed Communists at the University, Wayne State and Michigan State Universities may well have an ad- verse effect on their respective appropriations. Senate Appropriations Commit- tee Chairman Elmer R. Porter (R- Blissfield) was the key to a sim- ilar controversy in 1960, when WSU refused to reinstate a ban on Communist speakers. The sen- ator at that time threatened the WSU appropriation and $200,000 was ultimately lopped off, though Porter denied there was any con- nection. Implies Cut The Free Press implies that the Legislature this year, through the Appropriations Committee and its House counterpart, the Committee on Ways and Means, will use the speaker issue to slice funds off the several appropriations in question. For example, MSU is manuever- ing to establish a medical school, which, according to the Free Press, the Porter committee wants to block. The Communist speaker hassle many provide a good "out." No Indication Outwardly, there has been no indication that this fear-a budget cut-might materialize over the Communist speaker issue. Speaker of the House Don' R. Pears (R- Buchanan) has repeatedly dis- counted any serious attempt to doctor t1e University's budget for feasons such as this, but he con- cedes that it could perhaps be limited, in one way or another by lack of funds. Porter still maintains that is the reason for the WSU budget cut two years ago. The Free Press articl was care- ful not to dispute that circum- stance, but the paper made it clear that it might have been something1 more than coincidence.1 Paraguay Sets Free Elections ASUNCION, Paraguay (R)-Pres- ident Alfredo Stroessner, often3 called the dean of Latin American dictators, said yesterday the 1963 national elections "will be entirely7 free" to all parties.< The 49-year-old president, who has ruled Paraguay since 1954, announced he will be a candidate1 to succeed himself. Opposition par- ties, their ranks thinned by, thet growing number of Paraguayans 1 going into exile, have not saidt whether they will take part inc the election.z The general asserted in an in-t terview he felt he had the full support of the people and ther elections would prove it.f He added, however, there was; little prospect of lifting the statec of siege, which was extended May1 18 for another 90 days.i Tshombe of secessionist Katanga province "don't seem to be com- ing together very fast" in their Congo negotiations. Speaking on a televised news program with Sen. Kenneth B. Keating (R-NY), Williams said Tshombe "has been very slow to renounce the sovereignty of a sep- arate state and this has balked negotiations." Asked by Keating if they will eventually get together, Williams replied: "Well, I trust they will. It will be a sad day for the UN and for the United States iw they don't." June Decision Williams said a decision will be made in June on whether Ruanda and Urundi will have independ- ence. "At that time the United States is very hopeful .. . that there will be a peace-keeping mechanism there," Williams added. He said it is quite probable the Belgian troops will pull out July 1. Since a UN commission got dec- larations from both Ruanda and Urundi saying they didn't want them. Williams said it is a distinct possibility UN forces then would became necessary because "I think that if the native forces are left to themselves, they will be insuffi- cient to cope with the problem." To Relinquish Law Deanship After 6 Years Closing out his six years as As- sociate Dean of the Law School, Russell Smith says he is "looking forward to doing some teaching, writing and research." The Regents accepted his resig- nation at their March meeting. Beginning in the fall semester, Prof. Spencer Kimball will assume direction of legal research duties which constituted the major area of the associate deanship, al- though the deanship itself will be eliminated. Dean Smith's position as co- director of the Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, a joint project of the University and Wayne State University, has not yet been filled. Meanwhile, he will start to de- vote more time to authoring "The Labor Agreement," a book on the collective bargaining process. He will also collaborate with Prof. Dallas Jones of the business administration school on a study of the impact of the legal doc- trine on labor-management rela- tions. Other duties formerly handled through Dean Smith's office have been re-assigned as Prof. B. James George will take a one-year leave of absence and Prof. Alfred F. Co- nard will devote additional efforts to research. Prof. Whitmore Gray will take over from Prof. George as advisor to foreign students in the Law School, while Prof. Olin L. Brow- der, Jr., will assume Prof..Conard's responsibility of advisor to Amer- ican and Canadian law students. Phouma New Troops Reiiforce Asian Fleet WASHINGTON (;P)-Another 1.- 800-man Marine battalion landing team has been put aboard 7th Fleet ships, replacing the one land- ed in Thailand, Pentagon sources said yesterday. This makes readily possible quick reinforcement of United : States forces in Thailand if an emergency arises. It is standard procedure to keep a Marine battalion at sea with the 7th Fleet's operating forces. But the Navy and Marine Corps EARTHU appeared to have moved with un- usual speed to fill up the forward- Dave Ca deployed elements cruising in opponent waters off Communist-endangered Wolverin Southeast Asia.f Carrier Returns W o The convertedecarrier Valley OI Forge, now used as a helicopter base for Marines, and accompany- ing transports which carry heavy weapons, supplies and ammunition for a battalion, apparently headed back for Okinawa immediately upon putting the third battalion , of the ninth regiment ashore. KALA. At Okinawa, the first battalion selves into of the third regiment, reinforced seven rank into an 1,800-man team, quickly doublehead embarked and the ships steamed Thetd out at onceto rejoin elements of h t the Seventh Fleet. Michigan t Eas Reah who had su as ea 16 games 1 That force is presumed to be verines. operating in the South China Sea Dave R and along approaches to the Gulf boh wen of Siam, within easy reach of gan and k Thailand and South Viet Nam for bats silent both ships and carrier-based Kerr was planes and helicopters. the nightca The battalion now afloat has allowed onl the same reinforcement of men three in pi and equipment as that now de- finish the; ployed in Thailand at Udon, close six win-no to the border of Laos. In the or overcome c To Ask Indian the game% seven free r ters. He set Pakistan Talks pitch a fop the Bronco UNITED NATIONS (;P) - India after allow and Pakistan may be asked to the first in settle their dispute over Kashmir Early in through "negotiation, mediation or seemed una a combination of both," reliable pitching o sources reported yesterday. Salo. They said Chile, Ghana, Ire- 'M' catcl land, Venezuela and the United things in h Arab Republic have been studying ever, leadin drafts of a resolution requesting single to le the UN Security Council to ask the ond and,a two nations to submit to talks. See DIA Seeks -Dail VARD-Michigan's first baseman and sec( mpbell (left) and Joe Jones (right) lo( baserunner falls to the turf after a r es swept a double header yesterday from WA verines Sweep By JOHN SCOCHIN Special To The Daily MAZOO - Michigan's Wolverines virtually an NCAA playoff birth by battering ther ed college team, Western Michigan, 6-1 er yesterday. win bill sweep, coupled with Friday's 9- three straight decisions over the NCAA- uffered only one loss in - Coali*tion Troops Fail In Saravane Seizure Try North Viet Nanese Aid Guerrilla Forces Via Laotian Outpost VIENTIANE (P) - The rebel Pathet Lao was reported mounting a new attack in Southern Laos yesterday as Souvanna Phouma, the neutralist prince, took first steps to renew negotiations for a coalition government. y-Bruce Taylor A military spokesman for Prince and baseman, Boun Oum's pro-Western govern- ok on as an ment said the pro-Communist undown. The forces were threatening Saravane MU. in southern Laos, but he denied reports from Thailand that the town had already fallen. T w o He said Pathet Lao columns liE were 36 miles northeast and 22 miles southeast of Saravane, which is about 75 miles from Laos' =0 southern border with Cambodia. The town is only 50 miles from the Thailand border and about the same distance from South Viet Nam. hurtled them- U.S. Post nation's number Ubon, site of a radar observa- and 6-0 in a tion post the United States is building in Thailand- and likely victory, gave camp for some units of the deter- y rent American force building up bound Broncos, in that country, is about 100 miles to the southwest. Tchepone, 80 miles north of, Sar- eaves avane, already is being used to channel arms and men from Com- munist North Viet Nam to aid f the Viet Cong guerrillas in South Viet Nam. F u e1 Pathet Lao occupation of Sar- b UJ avane and its airstrip would open a network of jungle roads for (P)-In the busy wider infiltration into South Viet ntry, Astronaut Nam, and also into Thailand, rpenter made a Occupy Junction left him short A government spokesman re- his spacecraft's ported on May 6 that the Pathet Lao had occupied Ban Phone, a irpenter left on junction commanding roads from system as he Saravane to Pakse near the Thai- y-wire, or semi- land border and Attopeu in south- 1 system. Both eastern Laos. uel for three or The Tailand newspaper Bangkok Post said yesterday Saravane was came as Car- surrounded and under heavy fire. return to Cape This was the same newspaper receive a bigwhich said Friday that the Thai- to receive a big land Defense Ministry had reports tai newssconfer-- the town had fallen. aa newsconfer- The rebel movements in the south were the first since the Talks Pathet Lao broke the year-old )r came from Ltcease-fire and overran Nam Tha rs, a spokesman and northwestern Laos early this Aeronautics and month. The offensive caused Thai- ion, a day after land to invite the United States the Hawaiian and other SEATO nations to send ad doubts about forces to bolster that country's ondition during threatened border. Since then the Pathet Lao has remained quiet ing a Thursday in the northwest. ng the 17 track- Avtar Singh, Indian chairman it "had the im- of the International Control Com- was very con- mission, said Prince Souvanna has was going on," sent a letter to King Savang Va- upied. thana asking for an audience, and sterday that to will convene a new summit meet- arpenter should ing of Laos' three warring princes two control sys- soon after the audience. e time, he had Souvanna has been agreed upon by both East and West as the Gas choice for premier of a new gov- e mistake, Car- ernment that would include the of fuel for his Pathet Lao, neutralists and Boun S hfu h Oum's pro-Westerners. before facing the Wol- ebuck and John Kerr the distance for Michi- ept the potent Bronco throughout the day. especially brilliant in p. The Michigan senior y four hits and walked itching his shutout to season with 'a perfect loss record. pener, Roebuck had to ontrcl trouble early in which saw him give up asses and hit two bat- tled down, however, to ur-hitter and shut out s the rest of the way ing them one run in ning. the opener Michigan able to cope with the f Western's Leeland her Joe Merullo took and in the fifth, how- g off the inning with a ft. Then he stole sec- after Salo retired the MONDMEN, Page 7 ARTS AND LETTERS: Cooper Defines Compos Political Controversies Stir Wisconsin Students By NAN ROBERTSON New York Times News Analyst A plaque on Bascom Hall at the University of Wisconsin reads: "Whatever may be the limitations which trammel inquiry elsewhere, we believe that the great State University of Wisconsin should ever encourage that continual and fearless sifting and winnowing by, which alone the truth can be found." At the bottom of the hill that Bascom crowns, you may find a Young Conservative throwing an egg at a Young Socialist, or vide versa. In Madison, Left meets Right, but they do not shake hands. "' The following facts may give a Sclue to the university's vitality, tone and freedom of expression, observed during a coast-to-coast tour of campuses: J5s aMain Speaker Last week, the main non-univer- r Iity speaker was Gus Hall, spokes- man for the Communist party. This week, the big attraction was Clarence Manion of the John Bir chSociety. Every year, there is a Reserve Officers Training Corps Military Ball. It is followed the next even- ing by the "Anti-Mil Ball." .Thean the student newspaper, scrupulously airs the views of a Left-wing and a Right- wing columnist in turn. Should someone. ask a Leftist student if he is a Communist, he is apt to snap: "Of course not. I'm a Marxist-Leninist." The head of the Young Repub- lican club says it is "political sui- cide to call yourself a moderate. Error L Spaeecri Without GRAND TURK( moments of re-e Malcolm Scott Ca human error that of fuel to control position. By accident, Ca a manual control switched to a fly-b automatic, contro were consuming fu four minutes. This disclosure penter prepared to Canaveral today b welcome, get a dis ice medal and hold ence. Powers Word of the erro Col. John A. Powe for the NationalA Space Administrat the report that tracking station ha the astronaut's cc the third orbit. The station, dur night critique amo ing facilities, said pression that he fused about what or at least preocc Powers said yes the extent that C not have been on' tems at the sam erred. Out of As a result of t" enter did run out manual control s~y had put the Auro into the proper1 enter the earth's a But he still had in the automatics able to use this sy, automatic or hand. to put the blunt er craft forward. This is the corr re-entry, so thatt or the blunt end brunt of the treme tures that are gene i . ora space craft position to re- tmosphere. fuel remaining system and was Tstem in a semi- I-controlled way .nd of the space 'ect position for the heat shield lcan take the ndous tempera- rated. By JEFFREY K. CHASE "I am concerned with the re- sponsibility of the composer," Prof. Paul Cooper of the music school says. Cooper, who divides his time be- tween teaching and composing, continued, "This responsibility is many-faceted: responsibility to the art form itself, to its function in society, to the public, and, last but not least, to the composer's own creative integrity." "For instance, I feel that it is the composer's duty, and his alone, to make the decisions in a musical work of art, rather than to leave them n theI- i rnrfn,.vnar. 'dnr to4th desire to communicate, to be un- derstood, is basic to the creative urge and an essential in elevating mere self-expression to the level, of art. "4n the other hand, a creative artist's integrity demands that he choose his means of communica- tion with absolute honesty, both as to content and as to vocabulary.' "This is perhaps the most con- stant and the most vexing problem with which a composer, or any artist, must deal throughout his creative life," Cooper suggested. Chromatic Compositions ed in 1953 by the Los Angeles Phil- harmonic Orchestra, two sym- phonies, two sinfonias, three string quartets, an oratorio-"Job," many songs and a viola sonata which will be premiered next fall in Ann Arbor. Movie Music Cooper has also written the film score for "The Gold Seeker" which won first prize at the International Film Festival in 1956. At present he is working on an opera. "I hold strong convictions on the matter of craft," added Coop- er, whose teachers of composition include Ernest Kanitz, Roger Ses- sions and Nadia Boulanger, with Set Support For Reform Of Tax Base Republican gubernatorial hope- ful George Romney last week took a position backing a fiat rate state 'income tax, as a part of an over- all system of tax reform. Romney set four goals for a satisfactory fiscal program. 1) A reduction of the proportion of the total tax carried by low income families. 2) Additional revenue for local government. 3) Relief on property taxes and 4) A reduction in business taxes to help improve the state's com- petitive position in the search for new industry. Romney has also announced Seek Increase Of $62 Million By The Associated Press House Democrats are asking that the state budget be boosted to $525 million, an increase of $62 million over last year, tied to tennhraLy oDcf nuisance taxe