FOREIGN STUDENTS POLITICALLY CHECKED See Pages Y Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXI, No.117 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1961 Lutherans F'ound unor College Two-Year School May Be Erected At Location in North Campus Area Plans for a new junior college near North Campus, scheduled to open in 1963, were revealed yesterday. The $6 million college will be built on a 210-acre site in Ann Arbor township by the Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod. It will open with approximately 400 students and will eventually hold be- tween 600 and 1,200. Announcement of these plans was made by Martin E. Strieter of Rock Island, Ili., treasurer of the synod. Sign Papers Church officials signed papers yesterday to purchase the site two miles east of the city from the Richard Earhart Estate Foundation. - f~n~cth~t---------&A +n n IQC ESTI C RITICISi BLISHES GROUP TO STU 4 PhiP BetsSet For Officials National officers of Phi Delta Theta plan to visit their rebellious Lake Forest chapter "within the next day or two," a member of the Lake Forest group said last night. ' Leonard Walters,-vice-president of the local chapter, said he had been told that a national council was coming to re-investigate the situation at Lake Forest. The o- cal chapter announced Wednes- day it was going to repledge a Jewish student the national had ordered depledged. Phi Delts' national executive secretary, Robert Miller,. claimed, however, that he knew of no action the national was planning. "I don't even know if the announce- ment from Lake Forest is true. I haven't had any contact from the group. I didn't- know anything about it until I read it in the newspapers."' Miller is in charge of the na- tional headquarters of Phi Delta Theta in Oxford, Ohio. In announcing its intention to repledge the Jewish student, the Lake Forest chapter said it was prepared to ask a court injuhc- tion preventing the national from revoking or suspending its char- ter. A five man high council ordered the depledging of freshman Don- ald Schiller in February because it felt that the fraternity wanted only members with "Christian be- liefs." Senate Argues Church . School Controversy WASHINGTON (,P) --Federal aid for church-operated schools, came under renewed attack yes- terday and a Catholic senator who favors such support said he doubts it can win Senate approval. Paul S. Blanshard, well known as a writer on church-state mat- ters, strongly criticized any fed- eral aid to church schools and called on Americans to "stand up and be counted" on the issue. Favors Aid Sen. Philip A. Hart ID-Mich) told a news conference he thinks federal lending to parochial schools would be constitutional and he favors it-providing in- sistence on it would not block passage of the administration's $2.3 billion aid program. But, he added, "I doubt if there are the "votesto do it, either by an amendment or a separate bill." President John F. Kennedy has taken the position direct aid or loans to private and church schools would be unconstitutional. But he has suggested that the matter be taken up in a separate bill rather than being tied into his pending measure. Keep Hands Off Meanwhile, t h e Republican leadership in Congress pursued a hands-off course in the mounting debate. Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, Senate minority lead- er, told newsmen the loan pro- posal was not even discussed in a meeting of Senate and House GOP leaders yesterday. Nor, he added, has it been considered in any oth- er leadership meeting. Blanshard's testimony was part of a day-long debate before a House subcommittee in which a uonsTrucion is expeced to e- gin this fall. The coeducational institution, as yet unnamed and without a president, will provide Juniorucol- lege courses on the freshman and sophomore level. The majority of students will train as pastors, Lutheran high school teachers and deaconesses of the church, Strie- ter explained. The, church's 2.3 million synod supports three senior colleges, where the students may transfer for advanced work, two seminar- ies and nine other junior colleges. Housing for approximately 400 students will be provided initially. Site Adviser Prof. John W. Hyde, of the architecture college, acted as con- tinuing adviser on site selection. for the church group. He said, he knew of no official plans for any official connection with the Uni- versity. However, the Ann Arbor site was chosen partially because of "the possibility of interchange in scholarly and research areas" be- tween the two institutions, Prof. Hyde said. Site selection was made by a higher education board consisting of Samuel J. Roth, superintendent of Michigan Lutheran schools, and Prof. Louis A. Wolfanger of Mich- igan State' University. ApoinTW TO Of .'U', Staff' Two members of the University faculty have been named to gov- ernmental posts. Wray Smith,. assistant 'director of the Institute of Science and Technology, was appointed chief of the, education staff of the House-Educationaland Labor Committee by Chairman Adam Clayton Powell (D-NY) yester- day. Prof. Myron E. Wegman, dean of the public health school, was chosen as one of a group of 25 experts who will advise President' John F. Kennedy on federal ac- tion in a national attack on can- cer and heart disease. Kennedy announced appoint- ment of the group at his Wednes- day press conference. Wegman is awaiting further de- tails of Kennedy's charge, but says that the group will be di- vided into several smaller groups to consider such problems as ba- sic and clinical research, man- power and community service and public education. Wegman will serve with the latter unit. The entire group will meet at the end of the month in New York. After further meetings, it will pre- sent recommendations to Kenne- dy on April 22. TO MEET TODAY: Regents To View. sU WUCourses, By CYNTHIA NEU The proposed agreement between the University and Wayne State University to allow students at either school to take courses for credit at the other school will head the list of items to be con- sidered' by the Regents at their meeting at 2 p.m. today in the Regents Room of the Administration Bldg. Under the program passed by the WSU Board of Governors Wednesday, students would pay tuition at one school and, with the dean or department head's permission, take graduate, advanced wand special courses at the other Meteor Holds Life Signs NEW YORK WP)-New signs of life from somewhere in space have been found in chips of a meteorite that fell to earth 97 years ago, scientists reported yes- terday., This may be the first concrete evidence that life exists or did exist on some other planet than earth. Traces of wax-like substances were found in the meteorite - substances which had their origin in living matter, the scientists said. High Carbon The meteorite sample also showed a high content of organ- ic carbon-a raw material of life. The wax-like substances-hy- drocarbons-amounted to a few parts per thousand in the meteor- ite chips. In most earth soils it is measured as less than 50 parts per million. Other hydrocarbons similar to those found in plants and animals were also detected. Where on earth would amounts of the hydrocarbons be similar to the amounts measured in the me- teorite? Perhaps in swampy areas. One swamp in Sumatra has soil with a hydrocarbon content of two parts per thousand. Fell in France The meteorite fell near Orgueil, France, May 14, 1864. It was seen' ,by many people as it entered the earth's atmosphere and exploded. Chips from one fragment were obtained from the American Mu- seum of Natural History in New York City by Prof. Bartholomew' Nagy, a 34-year-old Hungarian- born member of the chemistry de- partment of Fordham University. Grant Funds For 'U'Study A five-year grant for virus study has been awarded to a research team to be directed by Prof. Thomas Francis, Jr., chairman of the University's epidemeology de- partment. The award, made by the Na-l tional Foundation, grants $178,-l 969 for the first year of study. school. Regent Charles Kennedy of Detroit gave his tentative per- sonal support to the plan as did Regent Eugene Power of Ann Ar- bor and Regent Donald Thurber of Detroit. Kennedy Favors "So far as my knowledge goes, I am in favor of the proposal," Kennedy said. "I, however, could not definitely state my opinion until after further discussion. "WSU and the University both have fields of special interest and the exchange of these ideas is good. In fact, the exchange of ideas is the purpose of any uni- versity." Power said Wednesday he was personally in favor of the plan and cited it as "another example of how two universities working together with mutual trust and cooperation could better serve stu- dents and the state." Thurber Approves Thurber said yesterday that he was "generally favorable to such arrangements," and believed it would be of "mutual benefit to the students, institutions and, stan- dards," of the two universities. Another item on the Regents' agenda will be the acceptance of the annual report on the Board of Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics from Herbert O. Crisler, athletic director. The Regents will also consider a proposal to change the depart- mental structure in the public health school. Better Focus "The plan is designed to put into better focus the nine sub- units of the present public health practice department, one of five departments within the school," Prof. Myron Wegman, Dean of the school, explained. The proposal would divide the present department into two separate but related departments. The first would be community health services, which would work mainly with problems of providing direct services to the population, Prof. Wegman said. Health Development The other division would , be health development, and would be concerned with those problems of specific areas, such as maternal and child health nutrition, mental health, health education of the public and dental health, Prof. Wegman said. ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHER: Russian Professor Fascinated by Siberian Area By LINDA REISTMAN "If I were young again, I would want to go to Siberia," Prof. Julian Saushkin, head of the department of economic geography of Moscow University, said,. "because there are so many possibilities for the future there." As an economic geographer, Prof. Saushkin's ultimate concern is with regional and inter-regional development problems. The young professor, who visited the University yesterday, declined to reveal his age, but has been teaching at Moscow University for "many, many years." Visited as Student change with Columbia University, Prof. Saushkin's busy itinerary includes lectures at Columbia, Yale University, the universities of Illinois, Wisconsin, Chicago and two lectures at the United Nations for geography experts, before his return to Russia March 23. Invited Here Prof. Shaushkin attributes his visit to the University to Prof. George Kish of the geography de- partment. "He invited me to lec- ture here when he heard of my trip. We met five years ago at the International Geography Con- ference in Rio de Janeiro and have remaned riens evr sic,,