Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BYSTUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. " ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Then Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, APRIL 14, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: KENNETH McELDOWNEY .Lack of Research Facilities, Space Cause Faculty To Leave RESULTS of the 1960 Daily survey of faculty resignations reveals that the part which salary currently plays in keeping people at the University has been vastly overstated. Most deans and department chairmen inter- viewed said that the state's financial situation md the University budget appropriations for faculty salaries had relatively little to do with either the number of outside offers or the :umber of offers accepted. While University salaries may lag somewhat behind those of the Ivy League and some other schools, when viewed over-all, they are higher than those at most colleges across the nation. AS PROF. Charles Davis, geography depart- ment chairman, put it, initially larger salaries at most schools don't hold the promise that the temporarily smaller starting salaries at the University do. The American Association of University Pro- fessors indirectly acknowledges this, giving the University a "C" rating on minimum salaries, but a "B" mark on average salary figures. Harvard was the only university to receive in "A" rating. Certainly professors accepting offers from schools of the calibre of Harvard and Yale can not be called peculiar to this particular year. Such offers would be successful in any year. Further, it is generally well-known that the University will duplicate the higher salary offers from any schools to its more strategic professors. CONSEQUENTLY, it is research facilities and space considerations which mainly account for the numbers of faculty leaving to take positions elsewhere. These are problems inherent in the nature of a growing university. Overcrowded offices, run-down buildings and inadequate laboratory facilities can only be expanded and replaced step by step, to be sure. Still, to have the Legislature slash year after year the number one item on the University's building request is significant of the disregard it has towards the University's conception of its own needs. While the University continues to regard itself as essentially furthering the liberal and fine arts, the Legislature seems to feel no building should be erected which does not directly aid us in our competition with the Soviet Union. Until it revises its thinking, the University can not expect to hold many more of its faculty now and in the future. -JUDITH DONER "Who Would Have Thought That The Revolution Contained So Many' Traitors?" A \ JC INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Foggy Atmosphere Surrounds Summit ByJ . M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE APPROACHING Summit conference, like the now-deadlocked disarmament conference, promises to be more and more a propa- ganda battle and less and less a vehicle for easing East-West tensions, British Foreign Minister Selwyn Lloyd is the only major figure who expresses hope for concrete agreements, and even his classical diplo- matic approach is qualified by a warning against hoping for too much. The Allies have been playing around with the idea that Russia really wants to start on disarmament, that this can be made the Amherst Protest Offers Hope WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: RIGHT OR WRONG, the Amherst march on Washington is one of the most significant steps in the current anti-discrimination cam- paign. It is important because a march on the capital city dramatizes, much more clearly than any previous local demonstrations, the fact that segregation is a national problem. Although other demonstrations have been directed against national chain stores, they have often been coordinated with purely local issues. For example, picketers in Ann Arbor are picket- ing the local Cousins Shop, in addition to the three chain stores involved in the situation in the South. Another encouraging factor about the Am- herst protest is that it shows a dedication by students not directly affected by segregation to eliminating it. Amherst's students will travel four hundred miles and miss two days of classes to participate in the protest. This willingness to act shown by Amherst students is being sup- plemented by other students in several colleges across the country. Oberlin College, for example, has collected more than $2,000 to support the Nashville sit-down strikes, and collections are now taking place at the University, ANOTHER interesting point about the Am- herst demonstration is that this is probably the first time that there has been such common national student concern about a serious issue since the campus radicalism of the Depression period. The Amherst activity is even more en- couraging than the Depression radicalism, how- ever, because it involves students who are not directly affected by the problem on which they are acting. The Amherst demonstration will not be the exciting, violent action of the Depression, how- ever, but is intended to be almost dramatically dignified. All demonstrators will wear coat and ties, be silent while picketing, and (in the stalwart Eastern tradition) there will be no women picketers. If students at the University could organize a similarly dramatic protest, which (in the care- free U-M tradition) might be even more radi- cal than Amherst and allow women, it might be one step towards getting University students interested in their school and its actions. -RALPH KAPLAN "A I WASHINGTON - The congres- sional spotlight this week will be focused on "Tommy the cork" Corcoran, the Roosevelt brain truster who though an out-in-the- cold Democrat was able to influ- ence the Republican appointed Federal Power Commission. However, the real story, which will not be in the headlines, is the backstage maneuvering to oust one man from that same com- mission after he stopped the big- gest natural gas price hike in this century. He is William Connole, vice- chairman of the FPC, an Eisen- hower appointee, who is now being eased out by Ike at the secret behest of Sen. Prescott Bush, Connecticut Republican. Connole also comes from Connecticut where he has had a long record of protecting the consumer which he has continued in Washington- Ordinarily, the Senator from any state is. all too anxious to have a man from his state reappointed. However, it happens that Senator Bush's son is president of a gas and oil company which is linked with the four gas-oil companies whose price hike Commissioner Connole helped to block. Connole will soon be looking for a new job. - * * * THE INSIDE STORY of what happened is complicated. But it involves millions of dollars saved to millions of gas consumers and millions in profits denied to four companies. It also involves the very same gas rate fight in which Tommy the cork made headlines. it tie over Natural Gas By DREW PEARSON conference's chief topic, and thati pressure on the matter of Berlin. Nothing at Geneva has indicated that they can make sufficient con- cessions on disarmament to get anything moving on that issue, much less to buy Soviet conces- sions at other points. INSTEAD, Nikita Khrushchev's Insistence on Allied withdrawal from Berlin, under threat of a separate Soviet peace treaty trans- f erring traffic control to East Germany, suggests i is still the major topic in his mind. The Soviet desire is to start dis- armament in Europe and in Amer- ican military bases abroad, dis- rupting NATO in return for a mere paper dissolution of the Warsaw Pact, which is meaningless any- way as long as the USSR controls the East European satellites. The West isn't even considering such a thing. w e AS THE Allied foreign ministers meet in Washington they would be glad to find some new ap- proach which would put the Soviet Union on the defensive before world public opinion, but their chief search is for means of keep- ing the Communists from doing the same to them. By repeatedly avowing that he has no respect for solemn agree- ments already in effect regarding Berlin, Khrushchev heightens the feeling that the USSR cannot be relied upon to live up to any com- mitments which might hamper her in the future, THE FOGGY atmosphere sur- rounding the conference ,is fur- ther thickened by the unreality about disarmament while Red China sneers, and of an atom test ban detection network which would involve stations in that country which is not even being consulted, This unreality will continue to surround all peace talk as long as Soviet Russia and Red China in- sist that peace can only be founded on world wide Commun- ism, CAMPAIGN: Hubert Takes On "A MAN we like is Hubert Hum- phrey. We don't follow his farm policies, nor do we think his chances of nomination bright. But on one point we are enthusiastic; he is this columnist's favorite anti-Nixon candidate. He would not approach such a fracas re- luctantly nor as a martyr. His eyes glitter at the possibility: frankly he would love it. And we think he could take on Nixon, without using Nixon's peculiar style of weapons, and emerge the victor. It would be the bare- knuckle battle of the century." -The New Republic it can. be used to turn aside Soviet Finally the story involve an astute move by the White House to appoint Harold Baynton, No. 1 assistant of Sen. Warren Mag- nuson, Chairman of the potent Senate Commerce Committee, to fill Connole's -place on the Power Commission. Baynton is an old Truman appointee, a loyal Demo- crat, and an able public servant, The White House figures that his appointment to replace Connole will quiet Democratic protests. The real story dates back about five years to the plan of Ten- nessee Gas Transmission to build a pipeline from the Gulf of Mexi- co to Canada, thereby tapping both the rich offshore gas of the Gulf and the rich supplies of Canada. In case one supply slacked off, the other could be used. The Liberal Canadian gov- ernment, now out of office, agreed to build a pipeline down to meet that of Tennessee Gas in the long- est international pipeline link in the world. It is comparable to the Russian pipeline now being built from the Black Sea to Poland. * * * WHEN TENNESSEE Gas, whose Washington attorney is Tommy the cork, tried to negotiate a con- tract for offshore gas in the Gulf of Mexico, the chief producers, CATCO, quoted a price of 22.4 cents per thousand cubic feet. Since 1,75 trillion cubic feet was involved, this meant a billion- dollar deal. And since the price was high, Tennessee Gas argued before the Power Commission that it be reduced. But the Power Commission found for CATCO. It even per- mitted CATCO to put the high price into effect while the case was being appealed to the courts, which is unusual. One FPC com- missioner, however, vigorously bucked the FPC majority and argued that the price was far too high. He was Vice-Chairman Con- nole, champion of the consumer. And when Tennessee Gas ap- pealed the Commission's case to the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia, the Court sided with Commissioner Connole's mi- nority dissent. CATCO then ap- pealed to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court handed down a strong opinion again siding with Commissioner Connole. Justice Tom Clark of Texas, a great oil- gas state, handed down the deci- sion that 17.5 cents was ample price for Texas offshore gas. THIS WAS almost five cents under the price permitted by the other FPC Commissioners, and CATCO was furious. CATCO is comprised of the following big companies-Continental Oil, At- lantic Refining, Tidewater, -and Cities Service, some with important friends in the White House. However, it was Senator Bush who pulled the rug out from un- der the man who had bucked the big four, Commissioner Connole. Senator Bush's son, G. H. W. Bush, is president of Zapata oil, which in turn holds various leases from the four CATCO companies. (Copyright 1960, by the Bell Syndicate) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETN (Continued from Page 2) Open Wednesday nights 7:30 - 9 p.m., Thursday mornings 9:30 - 11 am. Top- coats and sweaters for nen and women. Infants equipment and clothing -nd children's clothing. These are available for all Foreign Students and Families needing the above items. University of Michigan Graduates Screening Examinations in French and German: All graduate students desiring to fulfill their foreign language require- ments by passing the written examiria- tion given by Prof. Lewis (formerly given by Prof. Hootkins must first pass an objective screen examination. The objective examinations will be given four times each semester (te., Sept- ember, October, November, December, February, March, April, and May) and once during the Summer' Session, in July. Students who fail the objective examination may repeat it but nt at consecutive administrations of the test (e.g., September and October) except when the two administrations are sep- arated ,y more than 35 days (e.g. Dec- ember and February). There will be two more administra- tions of the objective examinations in French and German during the cur- rent semester. The first will be on Thurs., April 21, in Aud. B, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. The last will be on Fri., May 6 in Aud. C, 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. Within 48 hours after the examinations the names of students who have passed will be posted on the-Bulletin Board outide the office of Prof. Lewis, the Examiner in Foreign Languages, Room 3028 Rack- ham Building. Students desiring to fulfill the Grad- uate School's requirement in French and German are alerted to an alternate path. A grade of B or better in French 12 and German 12 will satisfy the for- eign language requirement. A grade of B or better in French 11 and German 11 is the equivalent of having passed the objective screening examination. Today at 4:10 p.m. the Department of Speech will present a double-bill of student written one-act plays. The Window, by Shannon King, and The Good Cross by Donna Eichenlaub will be performed in Trueblood Aud., Frieze Building. No admission will be charged. Doctoral Preliminary Examinations in Education: All applicants for the doc- torate who are planning to take the May prelim. exam. in Education, May 25, 26. 27, and 28, 1960, must file teir names ith the Chairman of Advisers to Graduate Students, 4019 U High School, not later than April 22. Michigan Entomological Society, Fri., April 15, 7:30 p.m. Room 2009, Museum Bldg. "The Evolutionary Relationships of the 17-year and the 13-year Cicadas" T. E. Moore. "Distribution of Inects- Is It Random? An example from Ich- neumonid wasps." V. K. Gupta. Elec tion of officers for the coming year. Concerts Good Friday Concert: The University Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Josef Blatt, will be heard at 3:30 p.m., Fri., April 15, in Hill Aud. performing Bruckner's '"symphony No. 9 In D minor" and the Beethoven "Choral Phantasy." In the latter work the orch- estra will be assisted by David Effron, pianist, and the University Choir. Open to the public. Lectures Guest Lecturer: Jack Bornoff will give a lecture entitled "Survey of the Con- temporary Music Scene" on .Thur., April 14, at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. A. Lecture on "The Physical Bases of Time" by Prof. Adolf Grunbaum of Lehigh University (Philosophy Dept. on Wed., April 13 at 4:15 in Aud C. Aeronautical- Astronautical Engin- eering Lecture: Prof. Hsu Lo of Purdue University will speak on "Motion of a Satellite in a Geo-Magnetic Field," Fri., April 15, 4:00 p.m., Room 1504 East Engineering Building.t Academic Notices Seminar in Mathematical Statistics: will meet Thurs., April 14 at 4 p.m. in room 3201 Angell Hall. Professor P.S. Dwyer will speak on "Hoef1fding'a Theorem and the cl Test." Social Seminar on Thurs., April 14 at 8:00 p.m. In the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. The speaker will be Dr. Harvey E. Brazer, who will discuss "Organization and Operation of Tax Study Committees." Coffee hour to follow. Applied Mathematics Seminar: Mr. Pavel Chalento of the University of Kiev, U.S.S.R., will speak on "Approxi- mate Solution of Linear Functional Equations," Thurs., April ,14, at 4:00 p.m. In Room 248 West Engineering. Re- freshments will be served in Room 274 West Engineering at 3:30 p.m. Doctoral Examination for A. Martin Eldersveld, Speech; thesis: "A Review of Thematic Analysis of Arthur H. van- denberg's Senate Addresses on Foreign Policy," Thurs.. April 14, 2020 Frieze Building, at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, W. M. Sattler. . Seminar: The Properties of High Tem- perature Gases. Thurs., April 14, 4:00 p.m., Rm. 1041 Randall Lab. Ralph Guernsey will speak on "A Theory of Irreversible Processes in Fully Ionized Gases." Oernsey will continue this lecture at'the next meeting on April 21. On April 28, the seminar will be addressed. by Prof. Lawrence Aller who will discuss the solar atmosphere. Colloquiun: Dr. M. G. Smith, Uni- TODAY AND TOMORROW Preparing for the Summit THIS WEEK in Washington the leading West- ern Foreign Ministers will be holding the first of three meetings to prepare for the sum- nit in Paris on May 16. As the series of meetings begin, the control- kng fact is that there is no big issue which all ;he Western powers think it is desirable to raise. There is nothing that all of them, indeed ay of theI, urgently want to do. At bottom they are united in the feeling that on the crucial 'uestion-which turns on the two Germanys and the two Berlins-the situation as it is is good enough, and that the best thing to do would be to leave it alone. Adenauer and de Gaulle most insistently, Macmillanrand Eisenhower acquiescing, believe hat the Western position at the summit must be to stand pat on the status quo, and to be prepared to make tactical moves to repulse or o divert any Soviet move to change the status Iuo [N THEORY, the Western nations want more than the status quo. In theory, they want he re-unification of the two Germanys. In heory, they want the liberation of Eastern Europe. In theory, they want a reduction of armaments. But in fact they have no hope that any of these goals can be reached at a price pvhich they are willing to pay. In fact, Western Europe is prospering might- ly although Germany and Berlin are divided. n fact, Western Europe is not afraid of war tthough the Red Army is on its frontiers. For he status quo appears to them to be so secure nd is in fact so profitable that the problem of he summit meeting is how to go there and how n come away from there without changing any- hing and without losing face. JPE UNRESOLVED question about the sum- mit is whether the Soviet Union is so dis- atisfied with the status quo that it will run ny serious risk in order to change it. Nobody nows,. We can only guess. The worst that Mr. C. has threatened us with is that he will sign separate peace treaty with the East German tate, will leave' it to the IEast Gfermans to argue ALTER LIPPMANNI The Soviet threat is now indefinite and rather ambiguous. It is not a very terrifying threat be- cause the risk, if the worst came to worst, is fully as great for the Soviet Union as for the United States and its allies. Mr. K. must know by this time that while we cannot stop him from signing a treaty with East Germany, signing that treaty will not change the status quo. Western access to West Berlin cannot be blocked. At most it can be harrassed. APART PROM the special problem of Berlin, there is an underlying agreement with the Soviet Union. This agreement can never be ad- mitted and formalized in a treaty. The agree- ment is that the status quo with the two Ger- manys is tolerable. It is not the best that either side wants, But it is not the worst that either side fears. This unavowed and unavowable con- sensus reflects the balance of power which, for the time being at least, is equal enough to pro- duce a diplomatic stalemate. If this is a correct estimate of the situation, it follows that the problem of the summit will be a little like the problem at the Republican convention in July. It is to find something in- teresting and useful to talk about. "Disarma- ment" is the obvious subject to talk. For it is an inexhaustible subject for diplomats who have to talk-because talking helps to keep the peace. It is a subject about which no one expects serious end far-reaching agreement. Dr. Ade- nauer, for example, who wants to do nothing about the central issue in Europe, wants to talk about disarmament. For disarmament, like the synthetic dog bones flavored with ham which are now for sale, gives the diplomats something to chew on. THIS IS not a cynical view of the summit meeting. If it sounds cynical, that is because the Western powers want to be united and therefore have to be unanimous; they are going to the summit not to make things better but to prevent them from becoming worse. They are preparing, therefore, the tactics of a defen- iia n vreian ,_n n .nran4 1.s.,* a 1 rn rlunn LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Writers Discuss Discrimination, Protests A To the Editor: O THE people of Ann Arbor: It is not clear to me why the Ann Arbor News persists in sup- pressing information as to the makeup of the Council Committee which worked on the question of housing discrimination. On March 17, following the re- port of this committee, I ad- dressed the following letter to the editor of the News and personally handed it to Mr. Robert Schairer of the News editorial department with the obvious intent that it be published. March 17, 1960 To the Editor The Ann Arbor News The Ann Arbor News account of my report, submitted to Council last Monday was a good account and I wish herewith to express my appreciation of it. Due to my own oversight in pre- paring and offering the report, the names of the other members of the Council Committee on Human Relations were not in- cluded. They are : Richard Den- This letter never appeared in the paper, * * * IT IS NOT only unfair to these people who have worked with me on this matter to withhold the appropriate credit from them, but it is also unfair to the community to attribute all official action in this direction to one councilman, and by implication to one politi- cal party. As has been stated repeatedly, by many Ann Arbor citizens of both parties, this issue is a moral issue, not a political one. It is in- deed unfortunate that the one local newspaper upon which we all depend for knowledge of local affairs should have failed to in- form its readers of the bipartisan character of the Council Com- mittee. --A. Nelson Dingle Councilman, nth Ward 1958-1960 (larification . . To the Editor: IN AN EDITORIAL of Sunday, HAVE I HEARD "only one side of the story"? My concern in this issue is based on a broad acquaintance with the entire problem. I have talked at considerable length with picketers at the picketing scene- despite the inference in Sunday's editorial to the contrary. While these discussions have been of limited value (since pic- keters are often poorly informed themselves), at least two pickets I talked with had enough interest in presenting their ideas to sug- gest we go for coffee at a nearby newly-opened beatnik-house res- taurant. Much to my disappoint- ment, they would not discuss the issues at hand but, rather, talked of a social function not at all related to my purpose of coming with them. WITH MUCH greater success, I have also talked with U. of M. officials, student heads of various campus organizations, more than fifty interest students, a "test case" who called me, proprietors of the Cousins Shop, SOC mem- bers, newspapermen, my executive HAS "LACK of research cast doubt on his (Mahey's) motives"? As previously stated, I have ex- pended considerable time and ef- fort to determine many opinions and problems connected with the picketing act. Surely, I have no personal gain in mind-as was also inferred in the April 9 edi- torial. I have asked to be anony- mous in many articles. My con- cern is solely to find the best solu- tion to the problem Leggett says exists. Regarding any question on mo- tives, it is my opinion that people who raise such questions should not jump to judge others by them- selves, lest people question' their motives. If Miss Williams had carefully informed herself by reading each article, it would have been very apparent to her why I am against picketing. Briefly, three reasons given for my position may be read in Sat- urday's front page article. if it is her, purpose to even more closely analyze motives, she may begin with her own! My