g THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEI DNESAAY, MARCH 2, 1960 4LD COLLEGE ROUNDUP: frican Colleges Yield to Apartheid ANNUAL CAMPUS EVENT: Forums, Mock Council To Mark UN Week Here .4 UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA - Details on the implementation of racial segregation in South African higher education according to the Apartheid laws were made known in December. The Western Cape University College was founded, effective No- vember 1, at which classes are to begin this month. The College is quartered in a former primary school in an outer district of Cape Town. Members of the National Union of Students U'rJSAS visited the grounds and found that the institution in ques- TIKSAYS ~INN How about you? tion was a one-story building with only about 15 small rooms. The grounds are closed in by a barbed wire fence and offer no possibilities for activity in sports. The neighborhood can only be termed a slum; housing facilities do not exist, so that the students will be forced to travel long dis- 'tances daily, if they want to live in any kind of decent quarters. The College will admit only "Couloureds, Malays, and Gri- quas;" so South Africans of Indian origin, for example, cannot study there. In a press conference, the presi- dent of the National Union of Stu- dents stated his position in regard to the regulations decreed by the Minister for Bantu Education for the University College of the North (Turfloop Tribal College) immedi- ately after its publication in De- cember. While part of the regulations are in agreement with customary university practices, e.g. on the admission of students, it is crudely complemented by the other part. Thus, students may only leave the college grounds or receive visitors with special permission. Furthermore, the formation of organizations, the holding of meet- ings, and the issue of press publi- cations are dependent on the ap- proval of the Rector. These rules encroach upon freedom of speech DIAL NO 5-6290 NOMINATED FOR TWO "BEST ACTRESSES" ACADEMY AWARDS MUMIIKARINE MIIN"MERY TAYWR HEPBURN CUFF , matr haew and association and, in the opinion of the national union, can never lead to a normal student atmos- phere. * * * SCOTLAND-At the end of No- vember a group of 23 students from the Soviet Union visited Scotland as the guests of the Scot- tish Union of Students and the constituent Students' Representa- tive Councils. The students, all of whom came from the universities and academic institutions in Moscow, were in Scotland as the first part of an exchange between Scotland and the USSR arranged for 1959-60. A similar number of Scottish students will go to the Soviet Union this Easter.- During their stay in Scotland, the Soviet students visited all the university cities. * * * ENGLAND -- The proposal to boycott all goods from South Africa is now being put into action in universities throughout the country. Proof has already been given that the boycott is having an ef- fect: three leading representatives of the Movement in Cambridge, including the Chairman of the Boycott Committee, have been ex- pensively wined and dined by rep-k resentatives of South African to- bacco manufacturers, who said{ they had come up to Cambridge,t not to try and influence anybodyI but to present the facts. * * * KOREA - The problems of Korean refugee students have been greatly aggravated by recent floods1 in their country. The number of refugee studentst has soared to an unprecedented total of 432.500; 44 per cent ofa these students live in Seoul, 19t per cent in Pusan, 12 per cent in Taegu, and 25 per cent are scat- tered throughout the rural areas of Korea.- Manual labor jobs help finance 87 per cent of the refugee stu- dents' education. However, em-. ployment is extremely difficult to come by in Korea and therefore. approximately 3.000 student refu- gees who are without supplemen- tary help from their parents must attend night school which is less expensive and leaves their days free to stand in line awaiting part- time employment., Because of the unfortunate situ- ation of these refugees, malnutri- tion is a common problem. Nine- teen per cent of the total student population suffers from tubercu- losis of which one-third are in' critical need of treatment. WAA Opens Petittontng 1A DAWN OF THE PAWN-This float entered in the last Michigras, two years ago, is typical of the decoratively designed displays that will be produced for the occasion this year. The float was based on a theme of the beginning of chess and was titled "Dawn of the Pawn. The float was entered by Eigma Alpha Epsilon and Kappa Alpha Theta and contained a chessboard with two students dressed as the king and queen. Announce Sponsors of Floats, Booths for Michigras Weekend By CAROLINE DOW Seminars and discussion groups climaxed by a third annual cam- pus United Nations will mark United Nations week, March 13-19. The International Affairs Com- mittee of the Union and League, the International Students Asso- ciation and Student Government Council will sponsor the week's activities. "Activities are planned to bet- ter inform the campus about the United Nations and specifically to arouse interest in several contro- versial topics of international dis- pute," James Burns, '61E, of the Union, said. William Jordan, director of- the Political Affairs Department of the United Nations will speak on the role of the United Nations at the close of the mock session on Sat. urday, March 18. The campus United Nations will have two campus delegates from each of over 60 countries. The de- bate will cover two key isues, with the final vote taken that evening on all resolutions. Six topics are under considera- tion; the final decision will be made at a nopen meeting in the Union at 3 p.m. Sunday. One current and one policy is- sue will be chosen. The current issues are Palestine, Kashmir and the India-Pakistan border dispute, and Algeria. The question of the admission of Communist China to the United Nations, United Nations aid to underdeveloped countries and world disarmament and nuclear testing are the policy issues under consideration. Each delegation of foreign stu- dents is assigned to a campus housing unit which will assist the delegation with its preparation for the seminars and the debate itself. Any housing units which have not been assigned a delegation or any international students wish- ing to participate may contact Brian Glick, '62, or Dick Small, '62, at the Union Student Offices. THE JOHN BARTON WOLGAMOT PLAYERS in Jarry's savage burlesque (Gopotty Rex) "The Surrealists invented nothing better." -Andre Gide SAT. & SUN., MARCH 5 & 6 M i I_ LOUIS ARMSTRONG and HIS ALL STARS March 5 Hill Aud. 1:15 and 9:30 P.M. Tickets on sale at Hill Box Office 1-5 P.M. weekdays (Plenty of good seats available) $1 .25-1 .5-2.00 The titles and varieties of booths and floats for Michigras were announced with the names of the housing units to sponsor them by parade chairmen Anne Wear, '61, and Robert Brod, '61, and booth chairmen W ill i a m Fried, '60, and Marilyn Zdrodow- ski, '60Ed. Each booth or float is sponsored by a men's and a women's housing init. The units submit plans to the Michigras Central Committee for their projects, and the com- mittee decides which ones will take part in the affair. The titles and sponsors of re- freshment booths are:; "Pinoch's Pad," DeltabUpsilon-Pi Beta Phi; "Yogi Bear's Cave," Zeta Tau Al- pha-Delta Kappa Epsilon; "The Reid Speaks On Parking The Ann Arbor City Council heard recommendations last night I concerning the downtown parking problem from Lloyd B. Reid, the city's traffic consultant. Reid said that an inventory of cars parked and parking times in the downtown area and question- naires distributed in the lots pro- vided the bases for his decisions. The traffic department discov- ered that 5,223 different cars park in central Ann Arbor on an aver- age day. Most of the parking space in the central area is tak- M-A-A-A-D Tea Party," Alpha Sigma Phi-Kleinstueck; "The Toy Box," Kappa Delta-Delta Tau Delta; "Television," Delta Delta Delta-Chi Psi; "TP 10-Nine-Eight, 'Reservation for Two'," Sigma Al- pha Epsilon-Couzens Hall; "Have a Merry-Go-Round with Us," Col- legiate Sorosis-Sigma Phi Epsi- lon; "Cafe Michibo," Angell House-Phi Epsilon Pi; and "Nu Gam Bob Shoppe," Gamma Phi Beta-Sigma Nu. The skill booths in the celebra- tion will be: "Michi-Choo-Choo," Theta Delta Chi-Sigma Kappa; "Space War," Zeta. Psi; "Fanta- sia," " 'Babe'linquency," Lambda Chi Alpha-Kappa Kappa Gamma; "Pablum Panic," Phi Sigma Del- ta-Blagdon; "Hurl - A - Hoop," Bush, Huber; "The Old Swimming Hole," Fisher, Hayden; "T.G.L.F. Toys 'n Golf, It's Fun," Geddes- Alpha Epsilon Pi; and "Every Child Needs an Outlet . . . Sig Freud," Hinsdale-Hinsdale. Show booths will be: "Political Playpen," Alpha Epsilon Phi- Theta Xi; "Marionette Mania," Phi Gamma Delta-Betsy Barbour; "Maid-in-Japan," Beta Theta Pi- Alpha Phi; "Terrify Our Young- sters: Monster Matinee," Hunt- Allen Rumsey; "Outlaw Univer- sity." Alpha Kappa L a m b d a- Thronson; "Mother Goose on the Loose," Tau Delta Phi-Delta Phi Epsilon; "Come Dream with Us," 'Need Funds i 4. Alpha Delta Pi-Delta Sigma Phi; "Check, Mate!" Zeta Beta Tau- Sigma Delta Tau; "Comic Book Characters on Strike," Sigma Al- pha Mu-Phi Mu; "Show Biz U. S. A.," Newberry - Gomberg; "Dick and Jane - (The Real Story)," Kappa Alpha Theta- Sigma Chi; and "Charlie 'Brown and Peanuts Town," Evans Schol- ars-Phi Sigma Sigma. Floats for the parade will in- clude: "Fountain of Youth," An- gell-Phi Epsilon Pi; "Toyland Ex- press," Phi Mu-Sigma-Alpha Mu; "Toast to Our Youth," Sigma Del- ta Tau-Zeta Beta Tau; and "So Simple a Five Year Old Can Build It," Alpha Gamma Delta-Phi Sig- ma Kappa. These will also be in the pa- rade: "Toy for a Demented Dic- tator," Delta Chi; "W-Hoopin' It Up!" Alpha Xi Delta-Psi Upsilon; "Michigrapoly," Cheever House- Trigon; "Tomorrow's Toy - Or Geddes Presents AEmudPi," Ged- des-Alpha Epsilon Pi; "(Overjoy at Being a Toy) .. . But, Alas, a 12 o'clock Per," Alpha Epsilon Phi-Theta Xi; and "Cata-puller," Henderson-Alpha Rho Chi. Also included will be: "Dream On, Dream On, Little Boy . . . Imagination's Your G r e a t e s t Toy," Blagdon-Phi Sigma Delta; "Castle in the Sand," Zeta Tau Alpha-Delta Kappa E p silon; "World's Largest Wind-Up Toy." Victor Vaughn-Michigan; "Rock of Ages," Theta Kappa-Theta Delta Chi; "Toys From a Child's Fantasy," Collegiate Sorosis-Sig- ma Phi Epsilon; "We're Quacking Up," Gamma Phi Beta-Sigma Nu; and "A Whale of a Tale," Stock- well-Williams. And these will be included: "Musical Pull Toy," Prescott; "The Little Box That Could," Kleinstueck-Alpha Sigma Phi; "The Toy Symphony," Fletcher- Triangle; "His Master's Voice," Acacia; and "Jack the Jumper," Reeves-Mosher. A meeting for all house repre- sentatives for either floats or booths will be held at 7:30 Thurs- day in the third floor conference- room of the Union. Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg. Buy tickets at Bob Marshall's The Committee on the Program in Russian Studies and The Department of Journalism present: JOHN SCOTT Special Assistant to the Publisher of TIME Magazine Who will speak on: "Russia Revisited": Thursday, Mar. 3, Rockham Amphitheatro at 3 P.M. (This advertisement is paid for as a public service by the University Press Club of Michigan) 4 I' Daily Classifieds Bring Results 8:30 P.M. Admission 950 I uSWe as OW NPc 7 )r PmE"W"a TENNESSEE JOSEPH L. SAM WILLAMS - MANKIEWICZ -SPIEGEL Our Next Attraction will be "The Mouse That Roared" ENDING THURSDAY a DIAL NO 2-6264 C. S. Forester's great human drama and true adventure! - All Foreign Students of all foreign military services are cordially invited to attend THE MILITARY BALL UNION BALLROOM MAR. 4, 8:30-12 TICKETS $3.00 I L- ..... . ;m- lmmmmm TONIGHT AT 8 The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation 1429 Hill Street presents 'MICHAEL M. LUTHER Department of History as the 3rd and final lecturer in its Forum on "JEWISH-GENTILE RELATIONS: TRENDS IN GERMANY, UNITED STATES, U.S.S.R." Subject: "Trends in U.S.S.R." Everybody is Welcome en up by all-day parkers, mostly # people who work in this part of F or Science For Positions the city. Reid suggested three ways to Petitions are available beginning force the all-day parkers out of Support for research and devel- today for appointments to the the choice spots so that shoppers opment programs is "top heavy" Women's Athletic Association ex- could park closer to their destin- in relation to funds spent on basic ecutive board, tournament man- ation research, Prof. Paul A. Weiss of ager and club manager posiitons. This could be done by increas- the Rockefeller Institute declared Petitioning will close March 14. ing rates and lowering time limits yesterday. The petitions are available at the on curb-meters in the central In an interview prior to a lec- League, the Women's Athletic area, increasing rates or roping ture sponsored by the Institute of Building and Barbour Gymnasium off sections in the downtown lots, Science and Technology, Prof. and must be turned in at the and providing 400 cheaper all-day Weiss said the United States has League. spaces at curbs farther out from relied "too frequently" on ideas Women will be interviwed for the business district. imported from abroad to fill its president, vice-president of special Reid estimated that about $4,- scientific warehouse. projects, vice-president of student 900 could be realized from the in- "We have as much-and prob- relations and other positions. creased revenue. ably more - talent than other - ' countries for basic research, if we'd only cultivate it,"he added. BURTON HOLMES This requires both funds and public respect for risk-taking, he continued. "Tn fact, public atti- tudes toward scientists have much more to do with our competitive AE---LAND OF status than the number of dollars THE BIBLE Congress appropriates for re- search." Motion Pictures In Natural Color The United States should not Narrated By Robert Mallett go "all out" for science at the expense of other disciplines, Prof. THURSDAY -8:30 ,P.M. Weiss added. "The humanities should get their due share of pub- Tickets: $1.00 (Main Floor, Reserved) - 50c (Balcony, Unreserved) lic support. On Sale Daily 2-4 P.M. and Thursday 10 A.M.-8:30 P.M. "There s nothing worse than a PLATFORM ATTRACTIONS HILL AUDITORIUM inanities-or a humanist who's a scientific illiterate," he added. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre F 4Cpi4 Campu4 Starting Friday KENNETH MORE ANAWYNTER "DOG OF FLANDERS" uirrrwnrr Prof. Francis L. K. Hsu, chair- man of the anthropology depart- ment of Northwestern University will lecture at 4:15 p.m. today on "Cultural Differences Between China and the United States" in Aud. A, Angell Hall. * * * "ONE OF THE GREAT TIMELESS FRENCH PICTURES!" .-Wintw, Pout - U. r fBANC0IS TROFfAUT'S 'iF>J~ off 1 I 0