, ATHLETIC FEE HIKE: FAIR OR FOUL? Si1r ujaun ~~I4ait1 PARTLY CLOUDY High--72 LOW-47 Warming up today and tonight See Editorial Page Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom v L. LXXIII, No.. 171 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY. MAY 17, 1963 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES uaa; [axa rr ur.o , 3 NCA Study Claims EMU Fund Trouble, Report Notes Legislative Failure To Appropriate Sufficient Money By MARILYN KORAL A report" compiled by the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools claims recent low faculty morale and admin- istration difficulties at Eastern Michigan University are direct con- sequences of the state Legislature's failure to cope with the emerging needs of state-supported institutions. Results of the NCA study, conducted in January, were partially eb H e Foot ballC cs To Bul dArena CARL WINTER opposing systems Winter Cites Coexistenee "The side-by-side existence of two social systems marks a new feature of our world," Carl Winter, head of the Communist Party in Michigan, said yesterday. Speaking on "The Theory and Practice of Peaceful Coexistence," Winter outlined the meaning and importance of coexistence in to- day's world. "There now exists side by side two diametrically opposing social systems, one that consists of pri- vate ownership of property and means of production and nother which consists of social ownership of property and production," he said. Greatest Powers' These two social systems are represented by the two greatest powers in the world, Winter added. "It is possible and essential that these two systems, socialism and capitalism, exist along side each other, avoiding military conflict and resolving all differences by peaceful means," he stated. , The idea of peace is not new to the socialist camp. When capital- ism was trying to overturn a new -socialist republic in 1917-1922, Lenin, the leader of this new re- public, called for peace and co- existence, Winter said. No Alternative "There is no alternative to peaceful coexistence but the ex- termination of mankind," Winter declared. Thermonuclear weapons and the annihilation, of man makes peace an imperative need for all mankind. "People everywhere have a great stake in preserving peace and bringing about nuclear dis- armament," he added. "Peaceful coexistence is not. merely the absence of war. The cold war continues to mount in intensity and to prepare condi- tions for nuclear war," Winer commented. Neither does it mean. the preservation of the status quo, he added, Dissolution of War Peaceful coexistence means the dissolution of the cold war, the .abolition of nation blocks such as NATO and SEATO, the aboli- tion of military bases in foreign countries with a move toward gen- eral disarmament, equality, inde- pendence and sovereignty for all nations and extension of social, cultural and trade relations, Win- ' ter explained. Coexistence will not come easily and cannot be willed into being, Winter added. It requires an en- ergetic, deliberate and planned effort on the: part of all societies. Any serious effort to promote peaceful coexistence will entail a hard, long struggle. o Consider SGC's Power yesterday of the State Board of - i i i? < .. .,-t:.; i;=:"........ LIT MAGAZINE: New Generation, Shows Wide Variety of Content By GLORIA BOWLES Ninety-two pages of Generation-the second issue of the year- is on sale today. The student literary magazine features short short stories, poetry and three plays, one of them "a short incident in one act" by the publication's editor, John Herrick, '63. The selections range from "Anomaly's Eyes," the adventures of a little girl, by Martha MacNeal to another story "Such Marvelous Green Breasts" by Charles R. Webb and poetry by Trim Bissell, '64, Thomas Clark, '64, and Joan Golomb, '63. Student Artists Generation also shows the work of the student artist. Abstract painting, pen and ink drawings and lithographs decorate the magazine. The increasingly wide acceptanc.e of photography as a fine art in its own right is recognized by Generation editors. Student camera- men have made a considerable contribution, primarily with pictures of modern sculpture. Campus literary critics will probably disagree on the quality of I schools and colleges in the Uni- Generation's contributions. It is almost inevitable that Generation versity. readers will variously acclaim the selections. as coming from some The new exam schedule will be of the University's best young writers, with others tagging the major compressed into six days instead part of the work "pure nonsense." of the present 10. Thus there is Humor Magazine a definite possibilit that students , Generation, with the Daily and Gargoyle, is administered under