THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNtSDAY, FEBIUARY 24, 1960 TUE MICIHG IN DAILY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24,1960 ..y , I ppeal Made king Lack )f Liberties By The University Press Service kn appeal for recognitior of the ;k of freedom and degrading lation for students in Spain as result of the dictatorship of neral Franco and protests ainst existing conditions have mn 'directed to American stu- its in a letter from the Execu- e Committees of the Democratic ion of Students in Spain and National Federation of Stu- its of Cataluna to USNSA. [he Letter apparently came as esult of the latest visit by-Presi- it Dwight D. Eisenhower to ain. Donald Hoffman, president of NSA, replied to the letter in ly February, pointing out to the ~ailh students that a number people in this country disap- aved of Eisenhower's decision to it Spain and feared that his it would be misunderstood as pport for the dictatorship of neralissimo Franco. COLLEGE ROUND-UP: MSU Students Protest Loyalty Oath By RALPH KAPLAN EAST LANSING-Student Con- gress at Michigan State University has passed a resolution to protest the disclaimer affidavit of the Na- tional Defense Education Act. The main reason for the resolu- tion was opposition to the affi- davit's "violation of our basic principles." In opposition to this view was the opinion that the fact that the affidavit is voluntary means it is not an infringement on free thought. It was also pointed out that worthy students who object to the affidavit should be able to find other means of financial aid. Further points in favor of the resolution are that the affidavit discriminates against students, is unclear in interpretation and is an unnecessary measure for the prosecution of subversives. * * * BERKELEY-Householders who use the University of California's listings after March 1 will be re- quired not to discriminate in their housing practices. Only Harvard and Yale have U BURTON HOLMES TRAVELOGUE "VIENNAthe DAN BE" Motion Pictures in Natural Color Narrated by Andre de la Varre THURSDAY-8:30 P.M. kets: $1.00 (Main Floor, Reserved) 50c (Bal., Unreserved) a Sale Daily 2.4 P.M. and Thursday 10 A.M..8:30 P.M. I PLATFORM ATTRACTIONS HILL AUDITORIUM NOW DIAL NO 5-6290 preceded California in adopting such a resolution. The action followed almost a semester of agitation. In October the National Associ- ation for Colored People com- plained about discriminatory hous- ing practices to the president of the university. Next came a series of meetings between the NAACP and the Dean of Men, which culminated in a December agreement to publicize the University's non-discrimina- tory ruling. In addition, a new committee was established to head all com- plaints of discriminatory housing practices. The latest step consists of send- ing a letter to all landlords. Only those who sign the non-discrimi- nation statement in the letter will be granted a University listing. BERKELEY - Gov. Edmund Brown has asked the University of California to investigate claims made by an American Legion member that Communist propa- ganda was used in a student apti- tude test. In question was a composition topic used In an examination taken last May by thousands of high school seniors for admission to California and UCLA. The question read: "What are the dangers to a democracy of a national police organization like the FB, whicn operates secretly and is urespon- sive to public criticism?" The Legion official charged in his letter to the Governor that the question is "a deliberate and a vicious Communist propaganda scheme to implant a universally accepted party line into the minds of our boys and girls in high schools." The Governor was asked to dis- cover if an answer in favor of the FBI would cause rejection by the universities. UCLA's head of the examina- tions has welcomed the investiga- tions. "Although the phrasing of one of the questions In the May 1959 examinations was unfortu- nate," he said, "certainly no Com- munist influences were at work. I welcome an investigation by Gov- ernor Brown." * . . IOWA CITY-The University of Iowa has passed a resolu'tion ban- ning discrimination in fraternities and sororities. Une r the terms of the resolu- tion, the Interfraternity and Pan- hellenic Councils, in a joint ses- sion, will outline and acceptable program of eliminating discrimi- natory clauses as now exist in local or national documents. The program is to be presented at the next Student Council meet- ing in March. A program was asked for that would be "a decinite stand with concrete evidence that fraternities are trying to eliminate clauses. It must be binding." LOS ANGELES - Platform, a UCLA student political party, has DANCE ORCH ESTRAS featuring THE DIXIE-CATS HUGH SCOTT MAC DANFORTH BOB JAMES DICK CORRELL BILL HENLINE ARTI E EDWARDS KAY MIESEN PHIL STANLEY plus many more HUGH SCOTT AGENCY 1332 Geddes NO 5-5700 circulated a petition to end com- pulsory ROTC at the university. Platform is opposed to compul- sory ROTC because a recent sur- vey demonstrated that ROTC stu- dents believed courses offered to be below the level of education expected of the University and that almost all of those taking advar-ed FOTC had planned to do so prior to entering the Univer- sity. They also object to the com- pulsory ROTC program because it includes men hostile to the pro- gram, thus lowering the morale of the entire corps and ultimately defeating its own purpose. Compulsory ROTC also meets with objection because under the Selective Service Act of 1948, the training given in the, compulsory ROTC program is repeated in sub- sequently required basic training. They also feel that the Univer- sity of California is supported by public taxation and any qualified student should be allowed to en- roll. The conscientious objector cannot now enroll in the Univer- sity because ROTC is compulsory. This means a person can be ex- cluded from the university due to his moral or religious beliefs. Fraternity Counselors To Give Aid , Rush advisors for fraternity rushees will be available in Rm. 32 of the Michigan Union from 2 un- til 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, February 29 through March1. These advisors will have infor- mation about individual fraterni- ties, such as grade point averages, social schedules, and finances -. these will be shown to the rushee to help him make his choice. There will be a counselor from each fraternity. Since counselors are to advise on an impartial basis. they are not allowed to reveal their specific fraternities. "Our experience in the past is that the rushees do not realize the importance of visiting an advisor and obtaining the available infor- mation, regardless of whether the information required is of a gen- eral or of a specific nature," How- ard Miller, '61E, IFC rushing chairman, said. "We urge every rushee to take at least five minutes of his time to stop and see a counselor, even if just to glance through the infor- mation. By SANDRA JOHNSON Special To The Daily JACKSON - "The majority of textbooks we use and the majority of the professors we listen to, ex- pound the democratic, pseudo- liberal philosophy of government handouts for everyone and less in- dividual freedom for anyone." This opinion was expressed by Jim Mack, chairman of the Mid- western Federation of College LEADERS SPEAK: Responsibilities of YR's Stressed at Convention Dean Asks High Schools To Give Foundations Glamorous academic Innova- tions cannot give strength to the college curriculum, Dr. John G. Palfrey, dean of Columbia College, asserted yesterday. Higher education needs "the fundamentals of accuracy, clarity. and precision of thought and ex- pression," the educator said in his first annual report since he be- came dean of the college in 1958. He asked that the high schools provide more of the "foundations" so that the colleges can devote themselves to philosophies. In line with this policy, Dr. Pal- frey announced' that, starting in the fall of 1962, the college would require three years of high school work in one foreign language for admission. The trend is a combination of a return to the rigor and discipline of the nineteenth century, without the narrow limitations of the cur- riculum of that era, he said. Expansion Weighed Dean Palfrey also forecast the possible reconsideration of a 1956 faculty vote against a major ex- pansion of the college. The re- appraisal is related to the expan- sion of the engineering program, he said. Dr. Palfrey cautioned that the return to a more.demanding men- tal discipline must not "lead the colleges to discard twentieth cen- tury developments, including the range and the initiative produced by the elective system or the breadth of encounter provided by general education courses." The "current ferment" in edu- cation, he said, has had two im- mediate effects. , Pass the Buck First, it has led to a certain amount of academic buck-passing, with the graduate schools blaming the colleges, the colleges accusing the high schools and the high schools pointing a finger at the elementary schools, w h e n e v e r somebody complains about inade- quate English preparation, for in- stance. Second, he said, "the pursuit of excellence" has given rise to new opportunities for students with outstanding achievements. As a result, new "honors courses" have been introduced even in the fresh- man year. You cai't put out the humn fires -Utbr.i . Sthat burn in-- /Icro44 Caw~pu4 1 Richard BulonlaRIb ara Rush Jack Carson i. ic uoja n A WARNER BROS. K-rovm TECNNICOLOR* Pu@ .,..,,.. HENRY JONESs en ,, MILt.TON SPERLINGaPHIUPYORDANPai 'rby MILTON SPERUNG Soon: "SUDDENLY LAST SUMMER" '1 I DRAMATIC ART CENTER presents ACTORS' WORKSHOPS Lyman B. Kirkpatrick, Jr., in- spector general of the Central In- telligence Agency, will speak on "Central Intelligence and the Na- tional Security" at 4:10 p.m. today in Aud. A, Angell Hall, The lecture is open to the public. Ortega y Gasset .. Josh Ortega y Gasset, Spanish philosopher and author of the "Revolt of the Masses," will be dis- cussed in relation to his metaphy- sical and sociological ideas by Prof. Juan Lopez-Morillas at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Prof. Lopez-Morillas is a pro- fessor of Spanish at Brown Uni- versity and a lecturer at many other Eastern schools. He has written on Unamuno, Ortega and other Spanish philosophers of the nineteenth and twentieth cen- turies. Math Seminar . . . The mathematics department and the Bureau of Appointment will sponsor a panel discussion on, career opportunities in mathe- nm. pics and statistics. The panel, scheduled for 4:10 p.m. tomorrow in therMultipurpose room of the Undergraduate Li- brary, will discuss mathematics instruction at the secondary and college levels, pure mathematics in research and development, its re- lation to engineering and business administration, and its use in data processing. Art Lecture . .. Prof. Ben Karp of the State University College at New Paltz, New York, will speak on "Nine- teenth Century Scroll Saw Work" at 4:10 p.m. Friday in the Archi- tecture Auditorium. Prof. Karp is interested in scroll saw and art-shinkle decoration as a phase of American design his- tory. During the last several years he has mad many photographs of the fast-disappearing houses on which this type of "carpenter sculpture" appears. An exhibition of his photo- graphs from the Hudson Valley area will be on display at the time of the lecture. Young Republicans, while he was t speaking at the College Y-R's statei convention last Friday. "I am not criticizing your pro- fessors or your textbook writers. "In a way, I am oomplimenting them, for they are doing a better1 job of selling their program on thet college campuses than we Republi- cans are.E "It is the responsibility of thes Y-R's," Mack explained, "to pre-t sent our party-its issues, its view point, and its deep interest in the future welfare of young people." Lawrence B. Lindemer, chair-t man of the Republican State'Cen-{ tral Committee, enthusiasticallyi predicted- that 1960 would be a1 great year for the party.I Later in the evening, Rep. Alvin M. Bentley (R-Mich.) described the need to eliminate. "irrespon- sible" spending in the government. "Future taxpayers and citizens," he warned, "will have to bear the birden for many years to come." On Saturday, Peter McPherson from Michigan State University was elected state chairman for the coming year. Jo McKenna, '62, head of the University's delegation was named recording secretary. Ann Arbor Patrolman{ Leavees Beat'i The Ann Arbor patrolman who1 wore police badge number one re-1 tired recently after thirty-five years of loyal service. In the spring of 1925, Benjamin H. Ball became a rookie on the Ann Arbor Police Force and has walked a beat ever since. Bal had served under five police chiefs and seen a complete turnover of police personnel but politely declined any offers for promotion. A pro- motion wouldhave meant office duty, away from the beat and the. people. Ball's main beat was on S. State Street beyond the main campus. During his years of police work Ball encountered bootleggers, drunks, thieves, frolicsome stu- dents, and traffic offenders, "You've got to realize that most of the time we meet people at their worst," he said. "I guess I never met anyone I hated." "I knew that first day, this was what I wanted," Ball said. "I've never changed my mind. I guess some people are born to police work or teaching or bricklaying. "No other job on earth is like police work. With this you've got to take the job home with you, live with it, love it," he related. "I always did. And I was -never unhappy." Dr. Palfrey said well-planned. honors work, especially for solidly prepared students, was sound edu cation, but cautioned: "There is a danger that colleges may rush into honors programs because they are fashionable and waste their time and energy on an ambitious super-structure of hon- ors work at the expense of the necessary foundation. A primary assignment of Columbia College is to make sure it is providing this foundation before offering ad- vanced work that assumes it." Urges Firm Stand ', Dr. Palfrey also urged the lib- eral arts college to "stand firm against pressures to consider its assignment in terms of planned results and quotas of human man- power to be trained for specialties in current demand."I He called on the colleges to con- centrate on "science's broader im- plications in the world today," while asking the high schools to make students "literate in mathe- matics and at least one science." Dr. Palfrey warned, however, that the colleges must not "simply Issue orders to the schools from on high." He called for coopera- tion and joint planning including the writing of textbooks. No Fighting Nor must the college and the university fight each other, he added. At Columbia, he said, "teaching in the college is no longer regarded as a tour of duty for a rising professor t be com- pleted as soon as possible." "Members of the college faculty, as they gain tenure or become members of the graduate facul- ties, continue to teach two-thirds or at least one-third of their timea in the college," he said. (Copyright New York Times 1960. Reprinted by special permission.) Seats Filled On Airflight The Michigan Union Airfiight to Europe has been sold out, accord- ing to Michael Turoff, '61BAd., chairman of the Union Student Affairs Committee. "We are, nowever, still trying to get another airplane," Turoff said. "There are about 50 people on the waiting list for this flight and we would like to take care of them if we could." Turoff said the problem was in finding a major airline with the proper facilities still available. "In the past, we have had trouble with the smaller airlines," he said. "Departures were not prompt and the service was poor." This year's arfiight is on the Scandinavian Airway System and leaves Idlewild Airport in New York for London on June 15, re- turning Sept. 1 from Amsterdam. Camp Alumni Form Group The newly-proposed National Music Camp Alumni Club formed an Ann Arbor chapter last week- end. Seventy former students, staff members and faculty members of the famous Interlochen, Michigan music and arts center held an in- formal reunion at the Union. Speakers highlighting the occa- sion were Prof.. Joseph . Maddy of the music school and president of the National Music Camp, and Vice-President Don Gillis. beginning City Council Considers Zoning Plan The City Council, concerned re- cently with city zoning procedures, may have come up with a plan to improve them. Meeting in an informal working session Monday, Council members considered the establishment of a Council committee to which cer- tain zoning questions could be referred. To Avoid Shortcomings ° The aim of such action would be to avoid shortcomings in present public hearing procedures. Although no action was taken by the Council last night, a formal measure is being drawn up. Under the suggested plan, zoning requests for which the Planning Commission either recommended denial or recommended denial with an accompanying recommendation for a type of tzoning different from what the petitioner asked would be referred to the proposed Council committee. Practice Explained Under present practice, the Council can simply concur in a denial recommendation of the commission, with no public hear- ing being held. It can also concur in a denial recommendation and go ahead with ordinance steps on a recommended substitute zoning. The only public hearing guaran- teed now is one that is part of the zoning ordinance procedure, after the first reading of a proposed ordinance and prior to final action. Opportunity Given the committee plan were. adopted, petitioners whose requests would ordinarily not reach the formal hearing stage or whose land might be recommended for a different type of zoning, would have an opportunity for a hearing before the Council committee. The committee would then make its own recommendation to the Council. A committee with a revolving membership of three is Manned. F ~ DIAL Nt3 S-64 T Never Before Has The Camera Dared To Focus. So Intimately, So Revealingly! Feb. 25 and. every I Thursday 41 ICB Needs Radio Staff The Student Government Coun- cil's International Coordinating Board has several positions open for the staff of its radio program "World," Dietrich Bergmann, '60E, board chairman, announced. "World" is broadcast Sundays at 11:45 a.m. over WCBN, the cam- pus network. It is a fifteen minute program concerned with political, economic and social conditions in the homelands of University stu- dents. This year the concentration is on Latin America. People are needed to announce and write articles for the program. Students to publicize the show and to contact students from the coun- tries are also needed. "Anyone interested in working with "World" or wishing more in- formation can call the SGC offices in the SAB between 3 and 5 p.m. during the week." Bergmann said. Receive Works For Annual Art Exhibition Entries for the thirty-seventh annual Ann Arbor Artists Exhi- bition will be received at the Rack- ham Galleries from 6 to 9 p.m. tomorrow and Friday," Kingsley Calkins, chairman of the Ann Arbor Art Association exhibition committee, announced recently. Original paintings, drawings, sculpture, graphic arts or crafts may be submitted, and all work must be framed and fitted with wire for hanging. Artist: may submit a total of two pictures, or two craft works in addition to one painting or craft work in the exhibit which opens March 3. Exhibitors must be members of the association, but membership may be obtained when works are submitted. The exhibition will be judged by Prof. David Mitchell of Wayne State University's fine arts depart- ment. Further information may be ob- tained by calling the association. I I TheDBVEIS NEXT Number 2 of Russian Cultural Exchange Films "CiRCUS STARS" *a x A 7:30-9:30 P.M. Lane Hall, Second Floor ____________* TO own r/ .f i, (7/ t r t t 3 i Z a T! a DJIAL NO 2-6264 ENDING TONIGHT TH E "-MOST DIABOLICAL MURDERER OF ALL TIME! * THURSDAY ROD STE IGER EDW. G. ROBINSON THvm Stereo 60116 infree i~b This is Sarah Vaughan, launched by the Basie Band- and singing what comes natu- rally! Soaring C-ward, octave hopping, wailing like a horn. Listen-to her ad-lib stylings of "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes" "Stardust'"; "No 'Count Blues"; Six others. The New Sound of Leisure- best Interpreted on Monaural 20441 a * I 6A,((Pj tll - Eu~r SMOOTH B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 Hill Street TONIlGHT 11 1 111 r