THE MICHIGAN DAIL'Y' FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1963 THE MICH "iGAN DAILVY FRIDAY, FEBRUARiYe 1,186.+3 Peter Gets Appointment To UN Science Parlay COLLEGE ROUND-UP: Florida Offieials, AAUP Hit Censorship n --= THE SAFE WAY to stay alert without harmful stimulants Hollis W. Peter, director of theI Foundation for Research on Hu- man Behavior, has been named a United States delegate to the United Nations Conference on the Application of Science and Tech- nology for the Benefit of the Less Developed Areas, beginning Mon- day in Geneva. The sole representative from this area, Peter will join nearly 2000 delegates from more than 80 countries in the Palais des Nations. The conference was call- ed by the UN Economic and So- cial Council in a resolution spon- sored by five nations, including the U.S. Peter is scheduled to present a paper to the conference Feb. 16 on "Guidelines in the Process of Change." Delegates will be seeking prac- tical means to match recent ad- vances of scientific and techno- logical progress all over the world to specialized needs of developing nations. Both natural and human re- sources will be examined, along with industrial development, com- munications and transportation, health, education, social problems and research. Their work is considered part of the UN's "Decade of Develop- ment," first stiggested by Presi- dent John F. Kennedy in Septem- ber, 1961, when he told the UN General Assembly that, "Political sovereignty is but a mockery with- out the means of meeting poverty and illiteracy and disease.'" Experienced as a social re= searcher and coordinator in both governmental and private capa- cities, Peter first joined the Foun- dation for Research on Human Behavior in 1952. NoDoz keeps you mentally alert with the same safe re- fresher found in coffee and tea. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Abso- lutely not habit-forming. Next time monotony makes you feel drowsy while driving, working or studying, do as millions do ... perk up with safe, effective NoDoz tablets. Another fineproduct of Grovet.aboratories. By BARBARA LAZARUS and GERALD STORCH GAINESVILLE - Florida Gov. Farris Bryant, state cabinet offi- cials, University of Florida Presi- dent J. Wayne Reitz and the Amer- ican Association of University Pro- fessors have denounced the state board in control's proposed censor- ship rule on state universities. The proposed censorship regula- tion includes strict censorship of all public statements by univer- sity personnel and. requires that contact between universities and all state agencies will go through the board. * * * EAST LANSING-The only so- lution to race problems is com- plete segregation of whites and Negroes Malcolm X of the Mus- lims in America said recently at Michigan State University. He added that Negroes do not want either segregation or integration, but, they want "separation that al- lows them to control their own economy, government and affairs." EUGENE - A motion to join USNSA was defeated by the Ore- gon student senate by a vote of 18 to. 8. This was the second time this year a notion raised in the senate was defeated. ** * MEDFORD, Mass. - The Tufts student council rejected member- ship in the United States Student Association recently. In a referen- Ii . I dum where 1,192 students voted, 863 voted against and 329 for joining USNSA. A majority vote either way would have required 1,507 students. * * * FORT WORTH-Texas Chris- tian University soundly rejected a motion to join the Southwest re- gion of USNSA by a margin of 1,- 108 to 196. If TCU had voted for joining, the division, which includes Rice University, would have been en- larged and the Southwest region vice-chairman would have been appointed to the national commit- tee. ,,* * * BLOOMINGTON-Indiana Uni- versity will vote on a referendum on Feb. 21 to decide whether to retain membership in USNSA. The major issue in the vote is whether the $1,300 paid for mem- bership by the student government is justifiable in terms of returns from participation. EUGENE - The Oregon state board passed a resolution declar- ing that they will oppose and pre- vent discrimination based on race, color or religion on all campuses under their jurisdiction. The board has requested that the presidents of two universities make reports on organizations on their campuses and submit a similar re- port two years later. The board also reported that each of the 17 sororities and 32 fraternities at Oregon State University and that all fraternities and sororities at the University of Oregon are "free to select and initiate new members without racial, color or religious restrictions.", « 0s" MONTREAL-The Student So- ciety of McGill University was foil- ed in its attempt to present United WILLIAM F. PUCKLEY ... gets paid ty bylaw which was passed in spring of 1961. thei /, /9reeinlg Ever since our doors were first opened to the public we have been catering to the vagaries and moods of masculine fashion without turning out our pa- trons' pockets. The polish attendant upon a gentle- man may well be acquired here with much pleasure. Inhabiting our stock is a plethora of elegance the like of which could never have been assembled before this year of nineteen-hundred-and-sixty-three. Consider this a cordial invitation from the manage- ment to inspect our collections admirably suited to the elegant life. for the man who cares to wear the very best!" VIDWLD'S LI, State Street on the Campus L, .. 1' 1 ': R CHAPEL HILL-University of North Carolina students have re- lented and' will pay noted conserv- ative William F. Buckley his full $450 fee for a speech made there last month. Previously, they had balked at giving him the total sum, charg- ing that Buckley had violated the "moral obligation" of his speak- ing. contract by merely reading a magazine article he had written. ITHACA-James A. Perkins was unanimously appointed president of Cornell University, succeeding Deane W. Malott who will retire July 1. Perkins was selected from more than 150 nominees and will resign as vice-president of the Carnegie Foundation and the Car- negie Corporation to assume his new post. * * * CAMBRIDGE-The dean of ad- missions at Harvard University re-. ported that applications are run- ning about five per cent behind last year's figures for the same date. Revenue from the ten dollar ap- plication fee may decline, and if the downward trend continues, an increase from ten to fifteen dollars may be necessary to replenish the treasury. * * * - ITHACA-The executive board of Cornell University's student government has refused to amend the Student Code to include a pro- vision that "there shall be no mix- ed company overnight in all stu- dent living accommodations." Defying a faculty recommendat tion for such a clause, the stu- dents said only that Cor'nell should discipline "disorderly and irre- sponsible conduct such as harm- ful or disorderly behavior which is the result of drinking, or destruc- tion of property, or public sexual behavior which is clearly inde- cent." * * * PRINCETON-The Undergrad- uate Council at Princeton Uni- versity has asked the university to eliminate the Chapel Rule, which requires freshmen to attend re- ligious services at least once every two weeks. , *« * CAMBRIDGE - The Massachu- setts Institute of Technology will ,begin construction later this year on a $3 million space research cen- ter, financed by a National Aero- nautics and Space Administration grant. COLUMBIA - Members of the Congress on Racial Equality are planning to file a law suit against the University of Missouri for al- leged discrimination in housing. Racial clauses in dormitory con- tracts, affiliate bias clauses and segregated off-campus university- approved housing lists constitute the basis for the CORE charges. * * * MADISON-The University of Wisconsin faculty has asked the United States commissioner of ed- ucation to clarify new regulations concerning fellowships from the National Defense Education Act and National Science Foundation funds. Last fall Congress eliminated the requirement for an affidavit disclaiming Communist P a r t y membership, but then empowered the two foundations to revoke awards "if they are not in the best interests of the United States." The Wisconsin faculty requested a more precise definition of this cri- terion and also asked that stu- dents be granted a hearing in such cases. * * * EUGENE-With three fraterni- ties already on the ropes, the Uni- versity of Oregon is conducting an extensive investigation into fra- ternity hazing practices during hell week. President Arthur S. Flemming condemned physical abuse of pledges after state legislators had threatened to investigate. Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Upsilon and Sigma Nu have been charged with hazing by Oregon's interfraternity council. * * * PALO ALTO-Stanford Univer- sity has received F five-year $2.5 million Ford Foundation grant for teaching and research programs for studies of Europe, Africa, East Asia and the Communist bloc. r * * PRAGUE-Although last sum- mer's Communist - run World Youth Festival held at Helsinki was expected to be discontinued, apparently Communist officials are planning to conduct another one in 1965. A Czechoslovakian youth maga- zine, in an article entitled "On to 1965-the year of the next Festi- valI", proclaimed "great interest" among young people of various countries in preparing for the fu- ture convention. HAVANA-Students at the Uni- versity of Havana reportedly have demanded the dismissal of long- time Communist Juan Marinello as rector, on the grounds that he is inescapably identified with Soviet (over Cuban) interests. Premier Fidel Castro has been engaging in lengthy discussions on the matter with the Havana stu- dents, considered his most reliable source of support. * * * OTTAWA - TTnless millions of dollars for research in the humani- ties and social sciences are ex- p e n d e d, Canadian universities within five years will be filled by third-rate students taught by third-rate American teachers, a Canadian foundation survey re- cently declared. It urged the immediate estab- lishment of a national center for such research and a cabinet minis- try to coordinate social science and pure scientific research. THE NEWEST MOST BEAUTIFUL PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS!, These days a typewriter is a must for every college student. Act now and you can rent or buy a new port. able for lots less than you think! Come in now. MO RRI LL'S 314 south State GUS HALL ... barred from Canada States Communist Patty chairman Gus Hall as a speaker recently when Canadian immigration offi- cials intercepted Hall at Mon- treal's Dorval airport and deported him as an undesirable alien. * * * EVANSTON--Alpha Tau Omega and Lambda Chi Alpha, the last two Northwestern chapters with discriminatory clauses in their na- tional constitutions, have been re- leased from operating under them. The fraternities compliance" came nine months before the re- quired deadline of Nov. 1 and is in accordance with an inter-fraterni- I and IN ANN ARBOR SHOPS AT " d' " f fN NEW-gind USED U - - -