AN IMPRESSION OF IMMENSE POWER See Page 4 Y Seventieth Year of Editorial Freedom :43 a t fog MOSTLY CLOUDY Hiigh -29 Low-r16 Continued cold with possible snow flurries in late evening. _ - .... 4 VOL. LXX, No. III ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1960 FIVE CENTS RTX PAC a. Li MA, U G T I- I 4 Prepare Debate On Civil Rights WASHINGTON (-The House cleared decks yesterday for a civil rights debate many members expected to be decisive: Although the Senate has been debating civil rights bills since Feb. 15, much of the time in around-the-clock sessions, the House still is in position to write the version with the best chance of becoming law. The big fight will come, probably next week, on the Eisenhower Administration's proposal that federal judges appoint referees to help Negroes who report local officials won't let'them vote. The House devoted most of yesterday to disposing of three pending bills in which Southern opponents of civil rights legislation -'had demanded time - consuming PROF. CHARLES STEVENSON . .on ethical decisions Shows Ends Are Means By PETER STUART No end may be adopted as final . because "any end is desired part- ly for its own sake and partly as a means to something else," Prof. Charles L. Stevenson of the phil- osophy department said last night. Opening a series of nine Hillel Foundation lectures entitled "What's Worth Living For," he explained that anyone's ethical decisions are guided by focal aims, which economize all desires by providing means to as many small ends as possible. "Big principles are big because they are means to a great many little ends." Adopt Survival While adopting an end such as survival, one is also adopting it in part as means to other ends, Prof. Stevenson said. For ex- ample, people eat not only just to live but also for the enjoyment of it. The way anyone arrives at an ethical judgment is by enacting "a dramatic rehearsal in his imagination," as p h i l o s o p h e r John Dewey pointed out, in which he imagines all possible conse- quences of the alternatives. "By examining all the conse- quences, he hopes to find some reinforcement which will lead him to a decision." Study Consequences But studying all the conse- quences is so extensive a job that people frequently generalize the problem to simplify it. Prof. Stevenson noted, however, that qualifications and exceptions must be made to any broad ethi- cal generalization, just as legal statutes must be made defeasible. "Some extraordinary case can always be found as an exception to any generalization," he said. "So where one wishes to say 'all' he should be careful to say 'most'." Making ethical decisions is a full-time job, requiring "the whole of a man," according to Prof. Stevenson. It is a task of selecting and sorting relevant material, fUI t'7A T A tlZ roll calls. Eulogized Neuberger The Senate interrupted its civil rights debate to eulogize Sen. Richard L. Neuberger (D-Ore.), who died yesterday, and then re- cessed until 9 a~m. =today when it will resume the civil rights grind. The Senate is to vote at 2 p.m. today on a motion to limit debate and thereby end the Southern senators' filibuster. But the mo- tion was given virtually no chance of garnering the necessary two- thirds majority. Today, however, the House takes up a relatively mild bill which theI bipartisan forces pushing civil rights legislation hope to broaden by amendments on the floor. Plan To Delay Southerners are ready with de- laying tactics, even though the rules of the House, unlike those of the Senate, do not permit an actual filibuster. The Southerners may begin by insisting on the tedious and usually skipped read- ing of the preceding day's journal. House leaders, knowing the Southerners can stretch the al- lotted 15 hours of debate into several days, have scheduled a rare Saturday session. Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex.) predicted yesterday the final vote will come about Wednesday. He promised everyone will have a reasonable amount of time to speak. Passage of some sort of legisla-, tion strengthening the civil rights law, especially on voting, is gen- erally expected on both sides of the Capitol.+ Nevertheless, Southerners in the House as in the Senate are pass- ing up no opportunities to delay or harass the bills. The biggest remaining asset of the Southern opposition is Con-i gress' determination to adjourna before the July Presidential Nom-1 inating Conventions.4 Local Group Will Picket, City Stores By THOMAS HAYDEN Several University students will picket The Cousins Shop, 309 S. State, on Saturday afternoon be- cause it "engages in anti-Negro practices." The group announced yester- day they will also picket S. S. Kresge and F. W. Woolworth stores, both charged with dis- criminatory practices in Southern states. The picketing is part of the state and national boycott and "sit-in" campaign being carried on by civil rights groups, 'John Leggett, Grad., one of the co-or- dinators of the local picketing, explained. Picket Stores Kresge's and Woolworth's are not being picketed because of dis- criminatalon in Ann Arbor but for the practices of southern members of their national chain, Leggett said. But the Cousins Shop has dis- criminated against an Ann Arbor Negro shopper, he said, as shown in the recently-released report of the City Human Relations Com- mission. He said "no organization or group of organizations" are be- hind the picketing. The idea emerged from "about a dozen in- dividuals." Issue Statement An official statement prepared by Leggett announces "On Sat- urday, between 1 and 5 p.m., a group of students and other par-' ticipants will picket the Cousins Shop. This store engages in anti- Negro practices. "We will also picket Kresge and Woolworth stores in Ann Arbor. The picketing of these stores is part of a nationwide boycott and sit-in campaign being conducted by civil rights groups. The goal of this campaign is to eliminate dis- criminatory practices against Ne- groes. "You and your friends are in- vited to take part in this peaceful demonstration. At 12:30 p.m., we will meet briefly before the dem- onstration at 341 E. Liberty,l apartment 3 . . . If you cannot take part in the demonstration, come and be a friendly witness." AV By JEAN SPENCER Student Government Council last night took action to discourage examination files after voting down a motion to abolish the SGC exam file. The motion passed encourages the Dean's Conference to "take such action as will discourage the Negro Group Demonstrates At Lansing . LANSING VP) - Some 400 dem- onstrators rallied by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) staged a march on the Capitol yesterday to urge stronger civil rights legis- lation. The demonstration fell short of its objective. It was timed to coin- cide with a hearing in the House State Affairs Committee on bills which would expand the authority of the State Fair Employment Practices Commission to take in education, public accommodations and private housing. The hearing was held but com- mittee chairman Lloyd Gibbs (R- Portland) ducked out of the Capi- tol before the committee could vote on releasing the bills for House debate. All died automati- cally under a deadline for meas- ures to clear committee. May Force Bill Rep. Joseph J. Kowalski (D- Detroit), Democratic floor lead- er, said an attempt would be made to force the bill from the commit- tee by a special vote. The move would require bipartisan support. The placard - carrying crowd, mostly Negroes, cheered civil rights speakers and sang hymns and patriotic songs for more than an hour in bitter 23-degree cold. The good - natured throng saved its biggest applause for Gov. G. Men- nen Williams, long-time advocate of more extensive civil rights legis- lation." Representatives of real estate and property owners groups urged Gibbs' committee to reject pro- posals covering private housing, Warns of Gestapo Donald Sargent, vice-president of the National Civic Association, which claims a membership of some 40,000 Detroit area home- owners, said the proposals would create "a Gestapo commission" as far as property rights are con- cerned. "It would do nothing but give a special group of citizens special privileges," Sargent said. "In pro- posing to eliminate discrimination, they're setting up new standards of discrimination." "Negroes have to learn to be- have themselves, and then they'll be accepted," Sargent said. Harold M. Davis of Lansing, vice - president of the Michigan Real Estate Association, termed the demonstration "a show of force." free circulation of exams and repetitious use of an exam by a professor.", It further encourages each pro- fessor to provide study questions to aid his students in preparing for exams. Al Haber, '60, maker of the motion, termed it "positive ac- tion" against the "academic lazi- ness" fostered by examination files. Abomination Roger Seasonwein, '61, who moved to abolish the SGC exam file, called the exam file "an abom- ination." "An exam file is not part of the University as an educational in- stitution," he asserted. "It adds to a situation I feel to be an in- tolerable one. A good deal of the learning process is figuring out what will be on the test." He added that the first step in abolishing such files "is getting rid of our own." Aid Students Other members felt that exam- ination files aid students in learn- ing the basic questions and areas of emphasis in courses, that many professors freely distribut- ed exams, and that since such files do exist, doing away with a public one would take away any equalizing influence it might exert. "All the evils of cheating aren't in the examination file," one member said. Seasonwein drew a parallel be- tween cheating and the exam file in that if everybody were to cheat, class grade curves would not be affected by anyone's un- fair advantage, "Therefore, if everybody has access to exam files, you'd say it's good." "If faculty people want to be lazy and set up examinations that, are not really academically healthy, we don't have to help them." Morrill Knocks Proposed Ban By Directors University of Minnesota Presi- dent James L. Morrill came out Tuesday against the proposed Big Ten ban of post-season NCAA' championships He has long been an opponent of Big Ten participation in the Rose Bowl. Morrill issued a statement say-, ing he felt "confident that the action forbidding participation in the NCAA championships will be rescinded-and I hope sincerely it will." One of the reasons given in favor of the ban by the faculty representatives and athletic direc- tors who tentatively approved it3 at the Big Ten meeting last week- end was that it is consistent withl the decision to drop the Rose1 Bowl. If post-season competition is cut in one sport, it should be cut in1 all sports, it was pointed out. DISCOURAGEMENT: SGC Votes on Exam Files The motion failed, as did a mo- tion to reconsider it later. Council members expressed the feeling that while they had endorsed the principle that examination files should be discontinued, they do now exist and the SGC file can be of use to the student body until the practice is generally dropped. A member voiced his opinion that it is "inconceivable to say you're opposed to something in theory and then practice it," but the motion to abolish the file was not reconsidered. Cuba Wrong, Herter Says WASHINGTON RP) - Secretary of State Christian A. Herter com- plained yesterday that as soon as United States-Cuban relations take a turn for the better, Premier Fidel Castro and .his aides "seem to go out of their way to make them more difficult." Herter spoke about Cuba - America's No. 1 Caribbean head- ache-in his first news conference since returning from a two-week trip to Latin America with Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower. The United States foreign af- fairs chief said the United States has given "no consideration to breaking off diplomatic relations with Cuba.", Wants Diplomatic Solution And he expressed hope that' such circumstances would not arise, and that troubles with Cuba can be solved through diplomatic means even though United States Ambassador Philip W. Bonsal is presently here on recall from Ha- vana.1 Herter reaffirmed Eisenhower's1 position that the United States1 will not make economic reprisalsI against Cuba. He declined to di- vulge the administration's proposal for new sugar legislation, whichj some members of Congress hope to use as a weapon against Castro.1 Despite his general tone of re- straint, Herter was clearly un- happy over the latest attacks byt Castro against the United States. The Secretary rejected a Cuban protest that he had used insultingt language in dressing down a CubanI envoy here Mnday. Lodged Complaint Herter said his words "were carefully chosen ... not insulting at all" when he complained to Cuban Charge d'Affaires Enrique Patterson about what Hertert trme eCastro's baseless charge that the United States was re- sponsible for last Friday's Havana munitions ship explosion that cost more than 50 lives. Herter said Castro had "un- happily tried to turn the very1 real grief that the Cuban people have and that we have, over that hideous explosion in Havana har-t bor, to animosity against thes UJnited States ." He said a formal protest wouldc be dispatched to Havana by thec end of this week.t cates that GOP finance strate- gists have taken the position that the state colleges and universi- ties will have to raise tuitions if they intend to get the funds they say are needed. Stress Salary Raises University administrators have stressed the necessity of raising faculty salaries to combat "raid- ing" by other schools. The legislature has planned to finish with appropriations bills by the middle of next month. Uni- versity administrators are ex- pected to return to Lansing to ap- pear before the House Ways and Means Committee within the next few weeks. The University's request for capital outlay funds is scheduled for report by the Appropriations Committee today. Observers in Lansing said the appropriataion may be enough' for the Univer- sity to resume expanding facili- ties. The Institute of Science and Technology, the second section of. the Fluids Engineering Labora- tory and the Astronomy and Physics building have been men- tioned by University officials as the most necessary of the build- ings planned. It has been three years since the University has, been, appro- priated funds for the construe- tion of a new building. MIass Culture Lecture Set Prof. Bernard Rosenberg of the City College of New York will speak on "Mass Culture, Mass So- ciety and Politics" at 8 p.m. to- day in the Multipurpose Room of the Undergraduate Library. Committee Asks $1.6 Milion Rise Amount Falls Short of Minimum Required for University-Hatcher By THOMAS KABAKER The Senate Appropriations Committee yesterday recom- mended a $1.6 million appropriation increase for the Univer. sity, about $3.5 million less than asked by administrators for the coming academic year. University President Harlan Hatcher called the appro- priation "inadequate," saying it "falls short of the minimun requiren ents that would enable the Unviersity to hold to its present responsibilities." "Not Surprised" . President Hatcher added, however, that he was "not sur- prised" by the committee's recommendation. He mentioned the sentiment among several"-T legislators that the Univer- sity should raise tuitions to meet part of its increased costs. Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Niehuss said recently that if the legislature did not increase its appropriation by $1.5 million, he would urge an increase in tuition. And word from Lansing indi- FAYEZ A. SAYEGH S. . unity for peace 'Arab Cia i 'HAMLET' PIRACY-: Lab Playbill To Present 'Fratricide Punished' By MAME JACKSON "Fratricide Punished," a one-act piracy of Shakespeare's "Ham- let," will be presented on the Laboratory Playbill series at 4:10 p.m.' today in Trueblood Auditorium at the Frieze Building. "This play is interesting not only for its own entertainment value, but also for its great scholarly value," Al Katz, Grad., play director, said. "The script tells many of Shakespeare's intentions in 'Hamlet' Unity Needed By JOHN FISCHER Numerous avenues for Middl Eastern and world peace can 1; opened by Arab unification, Faye A. Sayegh, former director of th Arab States' delegation to th United Nations, said last nigh Speaking at a lecture co-spon. sored by the International Stu dents Association and the Ara Club, Sayegh demonstrated tha Arab unity could be viewed as necessity for world peace. Sayegh, who is author of "Ara Unity," listed six benefits towar peace that could accrue fror Arab unity. Sees Benefits The first benefit would be t fulfill a psychological craving c a majority of Arabs for unity and thus allow them to devot more energy toward other prob lems such as economic develop ments and democratization. Another advantage of this ful fllment would be that the Arab would brood less on their dis memberment by some of th Western powers and thus tend t overcome their hostility toward them. A third benefit of unity would be to further the economic devel opment of the Arab world b: having a unified economy, by re moving customs barriers and duplication of industries and by permitting larger industries by expanding markets. Economic Advance This, economic unification is not probable without politica unity, he said, in light of lack o Arab political sophistication. In addition, this increase i economic development will fur- ther world peace as well as Mid- dle Eastern by a campaign against poverty and underdevelopment a a fight toward peace. The United Nations, he said, recognizes tha world peace requires economic as well as political action. A fifth force toward peace is the lessening of friction between Arab governments by uniting and also gives us an indication of how the play affected its seven- teenth century audience." This particular version was written by Elizabethan actors and scribes from their memory of a Shakespearean performance. "Every element of the original 'Hamlet' is evident in the pirated version. Only the expression is changed. "Only the bare plot remains in this production. This plot line it- self provides a rousing and enter- taining melodrama, but half the fun of the performance is being able to recognize the equivalents of Shakespeare's great speeches whiz by in five or ten seconds." Katz said he neither cut nor changed the original Elizabethan script. "Nothing is done to mask the constant changes of mood be- tween tragedy and ludicrous farce -an accepted concept of Eliza-7 r s 'Tolantlie': Problem of Being Half-Mortal.. t~ x By LORA KRAPOHL "One of the problems of the hero, Strephon, is that he is a fairy to the waist and mortal below," Jim Bob Stephenson, director of the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta, "Iolanthe," said. The operetta opens at 8:30 p.m. today, and will continue through Saturday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. At 1:30 p.m. Saturday there will be a school matinee. So that Strephon, who is not deemed sufficiently important to marry Phyllis (the ward of the court of Chancery) can acquire the necessary prestige, the fairies get Strephon elected to Parliament and then take on the House of Lords. r" "Considering what is happening in our Senate now I could only wish a fairy could appear there. In the parliament of Chancery any bill which Strephon proposes has to be passed by both Houses," Stephenson added. 7 "At first Strephon tells the Fairy Queen that he couldn't go into .;parliament because one-half of his body is conservative and the other, 4' 1-1