0E Soviet Premier Calls For International Calm Before Summit Talks 1. Ike May Giver Virtual. Veto To Germans By The Associated Press Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev returned yesterday from his South Asian tour with a calm report on his travels and an eye on the summit talks ahead. No one, he said, should make statements at this time which might trouble the atmosphere. Looking tanned and fit, khrush- chev addressed a meeting of Mos- covites at Lenin Stadium soon after a Soviet airliner landed him from Kabul, his last stop on a three- week, 15,500-mile tour of India, Burma, Indonesia and Afghani- stan. Asks for Calm To a house packed as usual with top elements of the Soviet party and government, the Premier ap- pealed for mutual calm before his meeting with President Charles de Gaulle in Paris March 15 and the East - West summit conference opening in the French capital May 16. "The Soviet Union goes to these talks full of readiness to look with other states for ways to ease in- ternational tension and peaceful regulation of arguable questions," he said. "We from our side have done and are doing everything neces- sary to create a favorable atmos- phere for the forthcoming talks. We intend to achieve success in the future meetings. If our Western partners go to the talks with similar intentions one can hope for the success of the meetng of the heads of gov- ernment. "The thing now is that not a single state should complicate the atmosphere with any action. Our proposals are known to the whole world. If the Western powers are sin- cere in their desire for peace and will not create new difficulties then they will make their contri- bution to the cause of achieving results." German Veto President Dwight D. Eisenhower is prepared to assure Chancellor Konrad Adenauer that West Ger- many can exercise a virtual veto over Western policies for summit negotiations on the future of Ber- in and Germany. Adenauer is bound to be worried about what he considers the dan- ger of weakness in the Western approach to the summit meeting with Khrushchev. He is coming t the United States in a week to try to stiffen this country's resistance to any concessions to Russia, es- pecially on West Berlin. Adenauer seems to be afraid, however, that as Khrushchev builds up his combination of threat and pressure in an effort to wrest West Berlin from United States-British-French protection, new Western concessions will be offered in the hope of avoiding any new, militarily dangerous West Berlin crisis. ARTS AND LETT 'Arbor' Se New Prim By STEPHANIE ROUMELL Four hundred copies of the new literary magazine, "Arbor," went on sale here and in major cities throughout the country Thursday morning, and later that same day managing editor Bob Davis, '61, put in an order with the printer for 200 more copies. The magazine had sold out in Ann Arbor on the first day, and the second printing of it will be on sale tomorrow. Nearly half of the 72-page, pocket-size first issue was contrib- uted by authors making their first or second publications. Although the magazine was devised by stu- dents, Davis said that it is not truly a student publication. Of 13 authors in the first issue only a few are students. Some are faculty members, one is a resident dentist, and three are Ann Arbor: housewives. Broader Than Student "The Ann Arbor literary scene is actually much broader than the student," Davis commented. But "Arbor's" scope extends beyond the literary scene of Ann Arbor. It aims for contributions from people throughout the coun- try in poetry, fiction, essay, and plays. The magazine does not want to reflect any one kind of American sensibility, political view, school, attitude or form; rather it aims at reflecting the many areas in which American authors are at work. "For a long while, in the early part of the century, people won- dered if America had a literary tradition of its own," Davis re- lated. "Since then, a lot has been done; such as scholarly investiga- tions into what is American liter- ature. and pinpointing literary traditions such as that set by Melville." Literature Diversified "But the state of American lit- eratures today is diversified. Just pick up any four magazines and you can see that there are many schools and many individual ef- fects." Often these are at extremes, Davis observed, with no counter- parts in each other. "Yet each author is looking for an individual American sensibility, a set of attitudes which will allow someone today to handle his en- vironment effectively. But no one of these attitudes has gained substntal power or significance, Davis said. "I think that within 25 years, though, the number of various attitudes, schools, and approaches will be narrowed down, and a defi- nite set of American literary val- ues will evolve." Magazine's Purpose "Right now it is not the maga- zine's purpose to establish this sensibility or tradition," Davis de- clared. "What we do want to do is reflect the areas in which au- thors in America today are work- ing and to preview the important sensibilities." "This means the magazine be- longs to no one school of litera- ture such as the "midwestern poet," the "southern regenera- tion," or any other school." "We want to get a fair repre- sentation in the better work of these particular areas, which doesn't mean that each of our contributors must represent one of them." ERS: ls Out; ting Made, The policy of "Arbor," Davis said, is to include works on the basis of their own quality and not on the staff member's particular viewpoint. "We are concerned with the quality not the type of struc- ture form or subject matter. "Fantastically Hard" "It's fantastically hard to de- cide sometimes if a work is good or bad, or why it's good or bad. And there is no one way of judg- ing, particularly in this magazine. We judge it on how well it suc- ceeds in what it sets out to do, and we try not to compare it to something done before of the same type." Commenting on the future of "Arbor," Davis said, "There is a long way to go from feeling a need to seeing what that need is. The magazine will change when we see where such a change is needed. "Let's face it, "Arbor" is a small magazine. We don't want to be ostentatious and claim to be the biggest little magazine out. But we will put out the most readable little magazine we can with the money we have." The "Arbor" literary contribu- tions come from all over, Davis said. Contributors in the first issue are from Chicago, Baltimore, New York, Wayne (Mich.), as well as Ann Arbor. Rave aWORLD of FN 1 " TAwel with lITA ' unber#vob. Low Cos Europt 60 oeys , acofvem $675 CEORE 43-65 cays , . ..SED l 9 $lag up, south Akewico 5609up. Hawaii study Tout $591up and Around e Worad $14"1 up. 27th 'EUT 'AAk Yowu Troel AgOM Sa .. sKiigei As 5 KYT ic(94,t NA .251 Legislator Call Recess In Filibuster WASHINGTON (M)-After more than 125 hours of a virtually non- stop session, the Senate late yes- day temporarily broke off its marathon election-year battle over civil rights legislation. On motion of majority leader Lyndon B. 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