Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom :4aii4 WINDY, COLDER High-20 Low--1 Occasional snow flurries. V ~7UFW .~1.. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1961 FIVE CENTS EIGHT I S iii lfiii 1 L>t IYMIIIIII Ghana Asks African Comman Take Over congo Situatio ELECTION: . i:s.:s'.v 25.es I Heads ...: . IQpClaims, Dipomats' Rap laim . *s.~. I ithdawa UN Protects Offis Of Lumumba Gr From Rivals' Mov DISCUSS DISARMAMENT-This panel presented opinions on the arms race last night. It is composed of Dr. Harry Shipman and Rev. Curtis Crawford, Wendejl Hulcher, Harry Swan, Rev. C. H. Loucks, Richard D. Blodgett and Prof. Leslie Kish of the sociology department. Sees Weaponry As End to War The Alice Lloyd Hall inter-dormitory council will hold a discus- sion on dress regulation changes tomorrow evening with Assistant Deans of Women Elsie R. Fuller and Catherina Bergeon participating. The council has been attempting to change dress rulings since last fall, when a committee of Alice loyd residents, headed by Elaine Wender, '63, agreed to request permission to wear slacks to breakfast By BUEL TRAPNELL The basic revolution in weaponry "gives us the first opportunity in history to abolish the institution of war, because governments now realize it is suicidal," the Rev. Curtis Crawford said last night. However, he stressed the ineviti- Fire Called- Malicious' The fire in East Quadrangle Friday night was an attempt at malicious destruction, the Ann Ar- bor police department said last night. "The fire was probably lighted by someone, because a package of matches was found near the scene of the fire," John H. Taylor, resident director of East Quad- rangle, said. The East Quadrangle house- keeper, Mrs. Edith A. Jayne, noted that the laundry carts which fire- men found ablaze had been moved from the basement where she normally stores them into a sub- basement tunnel during the night. This tunnel is approximately 20 yards from a room where firewood, used in, Quadrangle fireplaces, is stored. Somebody had lighted news- papers in a stairwell'between the third and fourth floors of the quadrangle, Assistant Fire Chief Harold Gauss said. Gas pipes leading to a laundry dryer were ripped from the basement wall, he added. An anonymous phone call re- ceived by the police implicated one student as the cause of the fire. The office of the Dean of Men and the Ann Arbor police depart- ment are continuing their investi- gation.. bility of nuclear war if the arms race is continued. Although power- ful arms deter surprise attack, they cannot prevent a war precipi- tated by accident, desperation or insanity, he said. About 12 nations now have the economic, scientific and techno- logical resources to produce nu- clear weapons. The greater the number of people able to destroy the world, the more likely it is that the destruction will come Mr. Crawford said. Lectures for UN Mr. Crawford is a Unitarian minister who lectures on disarma- ment and international affairs for the United Nations Speakers Serv- ices, the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy and the{ Foreign Policy Association. Mr. Crawford said that the aver- age American, regardless of what he may say, prefers the arms race because for the time being it pro- vides peace and prosperity. Preceding Crawford's speech, Dr. Harry Shipman, the Ann Arbor Civil Defense director, described the city plan for civilian protec- tion not only against bombs, but tornadoes and floods. After the speech, City Council- man Wendell Hulcher, Harry Swan, the Rev. C. H. Loucks, Richard D. Blodgett representing the service clubs, and Prof. Leslie Kish of the sociology department discussed disarmament. Dean Bacon Backs Plan OnInternational L By FAITH WEINSTEIN An American and international graduate student housing unit is a more logical and feasible plan than a suggested graduate-under- graduate international house, Dean of Women Deborah Bacon said yesterday. UNITED NATIONS (P)-Pre dent Kwame Nkrumah of Ghar proposed yesterday that a new al African United Nations commar take over the Congo, .disarm a Congolese troops, free politic prisoners and convene parliamen while all foreign diplomats lea the country. He made the proposal in a cab to Secrestary-General Dag Han marskjold. Nkrunah andHarr marskjold. Nkrumah had Han to the Security Council, which taking a weekend recess in i Congo debate and said he wou like to come to New York to gii his views. Meanwhile, Hammarskjold's ac visory,, committee on the Coni decided to publish an interim r( port from the UN conciliatic commission in that country recon mending that a coalition and Iec eral setup be established on ti basis of the present governmei headed by President Joseph Kas vubu's premier, Joseph Ileo. Force Bolstered Hammarskjold announced earli that Malaya had agreed to se 800 more troops to the UNfor( in the Congo,' thinned lately 1 withdrawals. Nkrumah's government reco nzes Communist-backed Antoir Gizenga's regime in Stanleyvil as the Congo's legal governm instead of Premier Joseph Ile regime in Leopoldville. But in his message, Nkrums said the present situation is serious the Security Council mu abandon its previous concept non-interference in the intern affairs of the Congo. Lists Phases He also said the new approa4 must involve first a, military ax then a political phase, that tJ initiative must come from Africi countries with Asian milita force support and "all Initiat and aid from the big or NAT powers should ceas." "The flow of arms and equl ment into the Congo," he sai "provide the conditions whi couldlead to a civil war of tJ Spanish tye with rav n A~ltilCA 6 lt;Wllgrv c "American and foreign graduate students have a common bond-1 quences throughout the w interest in a subject outside themselves," she said. "It's the things ,world." you are interested in that pull your together.' Any plan for ..a co-educational Y international unit would run into O r ±I tPG certain difficulties, Miss Bacon noted. "Since 80 per cent of for- eign students are both male and &. graduate students, the house would have no regulations, no hours and no social structure. Open to Seniors "This means that it would "not have very many undergraduate women living there-in fact, it wuold probably be limited - to se- lected, qualified seniors." James M. Davis, director of the International Center, said that he would like to see either a coedu- cational graduate unit or interna- tional- facility. The graduate unit, including fa- cilities which would fulfill the needs of "mature" (not necessarily graduate) foreign students, will soon be recommended by the In- . ternational Center Board of Gov- "V ernors as a replacement for a<# survey-recommended international } }f facility. . oil Walker, Denver Bomb Pucksters, 6-2 By MIKE GILLMAN Associate Sports Editor It was "Jerry Walker Night" at the Michigan Coliseum' last night and the 3788 fans who saw Denver bounce the Wolverines for the second straight time, 6-2, won't forget the show. All the senior wing for Murry Armstrong's Pioneers did was tally four of the visitor's goals as Denver continued on its merry way toward another national championship. Walker led Denver to its 15th win in 16 Western Collegiate Hockey Association outings by scoring twice in both the opening and final periods of the game. And he isn't even a professional prospect! That's the word from Montreal Canadian talent scout Ken Rearden who watched the weekend series-his introduction to college hockey. 49 Goals t ~nnFnfhfot 1, " a ?nVar-. nrhc -nr-ArT ., ~rl Scores Other Plan Miss Bacon is very much against the plan for an international facility. "As far as I can see, it's just high class segregation," she said. "Foreign students have noth- ing in common except the fact that they are not American." Establishing a housing unit that will be all or mostly foreign stu- dents would ge "going the wrong ... f ........ hn . r /' "f. £ ..eGP fit . :,