DECISION ACCELERATES liti~ w 113a 4i4 ~ PARTLY CLEAR Hligh-7 2 Low-49 Becoming cooler tonight and tomorrow. U' DECLINE See Page 4 Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXI, No. 165 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 20, 1961 FIVE CENTS SIX PAGES Kennedy, Set Informal Tala On Cold War Cris President Hopes Parley Will E Full Evaluation of Soviet Po1 WASHINGTON (k)--President John F. Kennedy and S mier Nikita S. Khrushchev will meet in Vienna the weeken 3 and 4 for informal talks-but not an attempt Ito settle m West issues. This was pointed up by an announcement yesterday chiefs of government of the two major powers in the Cold see each other while President Kennedy is on his European It will be their first meeting since Kennedy became Pre No Negotiations "The President and Premier Khrushchev understand meeting is not for the purpose of negotiating or reaching agr the major international Kichrushchev To Hold Vienna Meeting * BOj * 4** * * * * * * * * * RD OF EDUCATIO CO SIDERS RP CUTBACKS, (LOS' G c a PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY to meet Khrushchev '' Experts Favor Talks University, foreign and Congres- sional comment was generally favorable on the upcoming meeting between President John F. Ken- nedy and Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev early next month. "I see no harm in an attempt on the part of the President to discover the state of mind of his principle antagonist," Prof. Henry Bretton of the political science department said last night. "I also think that it would be beneficial if the determination of determination of the United States to resist pressure on certain issues could be communicated to the Russians," he said. Desires Acquaintance Prof. William Ballis, also of the political science deparement, said that Kennedy desires to get ac- quainted with Khrushchev and to enable Khrushchev to recognize that in future negotiations, the United States will negotiate from strength rather than weakness. The British foreign office said that "such a meeting could im- prove the atmosphere for interna- tional negotiation." Members of the entourage of French President Charles de Gaulle unofficially reported that C he has no objection to the meeting but also little enthusiasm. Expresses Confidence West German Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer commented that "it is desirable and necessary for the two leaders to become personally acquainted." He expressed "full confidence" in Kennedy to protect West German interests. In Washington, Senate Demo- cratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana remarked that "no one should have any great expecta- tions concerning the meeting," al- though it certainly is a good idea for the two chiefs of state to dis- cuss world problems informally. However, Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D-Minn) questioned the timing of the conference after the events in Cuba and Laos. "It seems to me Khrushchev has most of the marbles now." Peace Corps To Test Soon Candidates for the Peace Corps who want to begin their service this summer will be tested next Saturday, June 5, or possibly June that involve the interest of many other countries," the White House statement said. "The meeting will, however, af- ford a timely and convenient op- portunity for the first personal contact between them and a gen- eral exchange of views on the ma- jor issues which affect the rela- tionships between the two coun- tries." President Kennedy will fly to Vienna probably during the morn- ing of June 3. He will make a two- hour flight from Paris, following his May 31-June 2 visit with Pres- ident Charles de Gaulle of France. London Trip Late on Sunday, June 4, the President plans to head home- ward, stopping in London. In Lon- don he. will lunch with Prime Minister Harold M. Macmillan be- fore leaving for Washington late in the evening. United States officials disclosed that President Kennedy took the first step toward meeting Khrush- chev. The secret negotiations be- gan last February. 'The project cooled off as United States-Soviet relations deteriorated in March and April, but Khrushchev revived the idea early this month. The original United States idea was to get President Kennedy into a session with Khrushchev be- cause all other major world lead- ers had negotiated with the Krem- lin chieftain except the new Pres- ident. The plan was, and still is, for an informal chat, not a formal, negotiating summit conference. President Kennedy wants the conference to evaluate his chief adversary on the international scene. Soviets Develop New Technique MOSCOW (P)- - Ostislav Kei- dysh. new president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, saad lavt night Russians have applied a new principle of space vehicle iaunch- ings: "The start of a guided cos- mic rocket from aboard a heavy artificial earth satellite." Keldysh, a mathematician chos- en yesterday for Russia's ton science job, told a meeting of the academy, "Such a method (of launching) has opened up a new possibility for interplanetary flights. In this case, there is no longer any need to select certain dates for flights to the moon." -AP Wirephoto BOARD MEETING-The State Board of Education, meeting at Western Michigan University, considered solutions for the problem of financing four state universities and colleges with a reduced legislative appropriation. The Board considered the possibility of closing Northern Michigan College. Shown from the left are: Mrs. Cornelia Robinson, of Kalamazoo; Western Michigan University President James W. Miller; Board Secretary Mrs. Eva Westfall; member Chris H. Magnuson of Detroit; and chairman Dr. Stephen S. Nisbet, of Freemont. STRIKES: Africa Ends' ,Gaerings CAPE TOWN M - - South Af- rica's government yesterday put the nation under an increasingly stringent siege-like rule with the aim of smashing in advance the three days of strikes and demon- strations proclaimed by nonwhite spokesmen for the end of May. Prime Minister Hendrik F. Ver- woerd's Minister of Justice, Fran- cois Erasmus, banned all public meetings except church .services until June 26. At the same time police swept across the country, rounding up thousands of nonwhite and sus- pected white subversives in non- stop raids. Courts all over the country con- ducted assembly line trials of per- sons seized in raids yesterday and Thursday. The Ministry of Defense, which is putting the country's police and armed forces on a battle footing to crush internal unrest, also an- nounced the virtual closing of South Africa's northeastern cor- ner area which borders on the Portuguese colony of Mozambique. An antiwhite revolt is feared also by Portuguese authorities. 'Harden Sees Freeze InFaculty Salaries Officials of Four State Institutions Predict No Increase in Enrollment By The Associated Press KALAMAZOO-The State Board of Education yesterday considered the problems of sharp cutbacks at Northern Mich- igan College and the possibility of closing the school com- pletely, Edgar Harden, president of NMC, told the board his institution must freeze faculty-salaries. He recommended that NMC's John D. Pierce High School be closed before the start of the fall semester. The board, governing body for Northern Michigan, and Central, Eastern and Western Michigan Universities, meets again today to consider pro-T Hilberry Defends WSU Action. By RALPH KAPLAN I Wayne State University Presi- dent Clarence B. Hilberry yester- day made public an open letter of explanation of WSU s recent bud- get cuts. The letter, sent to the legislative appropriations committee chair- men Sen. Elmer Porter (R-Bliss- field) and Rep. Arnold Engstrom (R-Traverse City) called WSU's policies "perfectly obvious," in Protestants Ask Change BUFFALO MP)-Protestant col- leges were advised yesterday to get rid of the attitude that they should provide "protective shelter- ing from ideas" considered hostile to the faith. In a lengthy report, a Presby- terian education committee said church-run colleges must offer the best in scholarship-even when it involves challenges to church viewpoints. There is no place in higher edu- cation for "the kind of pietism which substitutes the devotional for the intellectual and which is the death of learning," the report said. view of the reduced appropriation, and added the actions were "en- tirely non-political." WSU's budget request of $19.4 million was reduced to $15.6 mil- lion by the Legislature, $217,000 less than last year's figure. Francis Hurls Accusation In another statement released yesterday, Senate Republicanma- jortiy leader Lynn Francis of Midland asserted that recent deci- sions by state universities to freeze enrollments are "deliberate moves to discredit the Legislature." Francis, a member of the Senate appropriations committee, added "he was beginning to think Michi- gan college educators are a bunch of fakers, especially when they use the figures they have been throw- ing around the past week or so." Commenting on Francis' state- ment, Regent Donald Thurber said, "the statement is not at all in accord with the facts." Thurber Comments Referring to a Regents dinner' with Engstrom last night, Thurber commented, "I am glad Rep. Eng- strom has taken a more responsible position and has made no such unfounded assertions.'" Engstrom said he thought Hil- berry's letter and his meeting with the Regents would help "clear the air. I'm sure the Legislature and the universities have the same in- terests," he commented. "What we have to do is cease making vindic- tive charges and try to resolve the problems." Engstrom said Hilberry's state- ment "seemed acceptable." He added that he would have further comment upon receipt of the let- ter. Big Ten Alters 'Tender' Status By DAVE GOOD Special To The Daily IOWA CITY-The unpredictable Big Ten athletic directors and faculty representative threw much of what they accomplished Thurs- day out the window yesterday by reconsidering and passing the "package plan" on athletic finan- cial, aid. This resolution eliminates the need factor as a basis for finan- cial aid to athletes and instead requires a "predictable" 1.7 grade point average out of a possible 4 point based on high school grades and entrance exams for incoming freshmen. It also reduces the total number of athletic tenders a school can offer from 100 to 80. The directors seeped to contra- dict themselves again by deciding See BIG TEN, Page 6 posals brought up at yester- day's meeting. Recommend No Increase The presidents of all four in- stitutions of higher learning rec- ommended no increase in enroll- ments for the fall semester-thus following the lead of the Univer- sity and Michigan State Univer- sity. Meeting at WMU here, Harden told the board that under the Leg- islature's 1961-62 appropriation, he will be able to spend only $6,000 for badly needed equip- ment. "We need nearly $140,000 worth of equipment," he said. "As it is, we're renting typewriters and add- ing machines and doing without microscopes and other laboratory supplies." Faculty Resigning He said three faculty members resigned last week because salary increases have not been met. His school had asked the Legislature for a $250,000 budget increase, but received only a $34,017 increment. Harden said closing of Pierce High School would take seven fac- ulty positions from the secondary school and allow them to be used by the college. He said the col- lege also would be able to use the added room. He wants the state board to consider no salary increases for faculty members during the next school year for the college at Mar- quette and to discontinue state board scholarships for students. Face Dilemma Eugene Elliott of Eastern Mich- igan told the board his university is faced with a choice of two prob- lems-the closing of 'its experi- mental Roosevelt High School or raising tuitions. A group of Ypsilanti citizens appeared before the board to re- quest that the high school remain open by doubling the current tui- tion. It proposed making the tui- tion $10 a year for the Roosevelt Elementary School and $20 for the high school. Elliott expressed doubt that the increased tuition for the second- ary schools would give the uni- versity enough money to maintain a status quo. Can Give Raises Norvel Bovee, Central Michi- gan vice-president, said Central feels it can give faculty raises called for annually by the board next year. However, Miller asked the state board for flexibility in giving increases on a spot basis, some of them to come with facul- ty promotions. StephenyNisbit of Freemont, chairman of the four-member board, said a dilemma would occur if the four institutions varied on pay raises. MIPA Urges More Fun ds For Schools, I By MICHAEL OLINICK The Michigan Interscholastic Press Association yesterday urged the State Legislature to abandon its "apparent indifference" to the growing numbers of college age youth and find more funds for higher education. The MIPA statement came out of an emergency session attended by teachers of journalism and ad- visers to newspapers and year- books representing 120 Michigan high schools. The group, holding its annual convention at the University, called for a "return to the State's policy to encourage intelligent planning and natural growth of our great. institutions of higher learning. "It is inconceivable that a mod- ern legislature can be unaware of the problem of survival that this nation faces in world affairs, and that at these critical times it should reduce the educational op- portunities through which alone the nation can meet its obliga- tions, both in the services to our citizens as well as in the leader- ship expected of the United States in a divided world." The MIPA further urged that all teacher education programs be supported at "top level" so that the need for more and better qualified teachers may be "reason- ably" met. The secondary school officials also asked that the Legislature "assume its responsibility of lead- ership by arranging a tax system that will support the services the citizens of Michigan need.' Group Awaits 'Mixed' Ride In Alabama BIRMINGHAM W)-A racially mixed group of college students remained at a Birmingham bus station last night, apparently heading into a marathon effort to ride integrated out of this tense Deep South city. Drivers' refusals to take them on the road-perhaps because they fear another outburst of race viol- ence-stymied the group time and again. The mounting tension, now'in TRACK, BASEBALL, GOLF, TENNIS: 'M' Teams Vie for Four Sports Crowns Roundup *..*ByTO j By TOM WEBBER After barely missing a sweep of the four Big Ten winter champion- ships by eight points, Michigan is once again in the thick of the fight for the four spring championships. Indiana (swimming) and Michigan State (wrestling) stopped the Wolverines' dream last February, and these two nemeses, along with Ohio State, are blocking the road again this spring. The Wolverine baseball team got back into its winning ways yes- terday by downing Purdue, 7-5. Bill Freehan poled two homers and a two-run ninth inning single to propel Michigan to its ninth Big Ten victory against one loss. The win coupled with Wisconsin's upset victory over Indiana gave the Wolverines a little breathing space at the top of the standings. A split of today's doubleheader with Illinois will assure Michigan of the title even if Indiana should sweep its two-game set. ,.- V-+ T -na . +S '\A'n -ira fan . oam is n nvP ia . t+wn_ Baseball . ..I By BRIAN MacCLOWRY Special To The Daily LAFAYETTE - Bill Freehan literally lifted Michigan off the floor here yesterday when he bit two home runs, two singles, and drove in five runs to propell the Wolverines to a come from be- hind 7-5 victory over Purdue. The victory coupled with In- diana's 5-0 loss to Wisconsin left the Wolverines needing only a split in this afternoon's double- header against Illinois to wrap up their first Big Ten title since 1953. It had to be one of the greatest nne-mannerfornmanens in Michi- mesmo <'U