"Your Mov;e" Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AU'HORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBIICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 ,I ALGERIA: Inconsistency, Danger Loom in U. S. Policy Opinions Are Free th Will Prevail" By ARNOLD SAMEROFF Danp Staff Writer .itorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS HAYDEN , ..,: Khrushchev's Visit Provokes Varying Attitudes Here. .. 'M going to have a - long, sharp knife. And, I'm going to ram it all the way o that sonrof-a . . . The speaker did not nplete the phrase. That these words should have been applied a man who was probably the most powerful ' Atesman to visit the United States in decades ems wildly improbable. And yet they were tributed to Mayor Norris Poulson of Los Lgeles, one of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- ev's hosts and a man who should have known tter. The intense emotionalism and general brou- ha which accompanied Khrushchev's visit sulted li too rmany such outbursts. EVERAL THINGS caused such violent reac- tions, and they help to explain, if not to cuse the kind of emotional insult that Mayor ulson flung ,at the Premier. First of all, there is the attitude with which e government issues and then backed up hrushchev's invitation to visit this country. gotiations of some sort were obviously badly eded, both by our uneasy nation now facing r the first time the increasing momentum td excellence of Russian technology "arnd wer, and by a Republican Party which needs, mething solid on which to base its record iring the last eight years in the forthcoming 'esidential elections. Apparently, the best way to conduct the gotiations was on a face to face level between e leaders of both countries. Also important a the favorable psychological impact on a spicion-ridden world of the fact that leaders basically opposed countries were' willing to ~PHA Sayer ac tLPH A. SAWYER will have a difficult job as the new Vice-President in Charge of esearch. The need for research coordination is evi- nt. Faculty members work on areas varying. or nuclear reactions to national character the physiological processes of the brain. rants range from hundreds to millions of llars and come from widely varied sources. Research at the University at times suffered om a lack of cordination. Some investigators not have sufficient backing because they n't know where to find it or can't present. eir appeals effectively. Projects have over=4 pped or duplicated others done elsewhere. visit each other on at least a politely friendly, basis. BUT, HAVING decided this, the administra- tion didn't sem to know quite what to do with it. From the beginning the affair was handled in a very curious manner.1 Although the recent cultural exchange pro- gram has done much to improve the attitude of the American public towards Russia, it would have been impossible to expect a coun- try raised on a "Hate the Reds" theme to accept the political leader of the USSR; with open arms. Some citizens including, apparently, a good part of the Republican Old Guard, felt positively betrayed by the administration. The administration, sensing this, immediately tried to deny their role in the visit, like a small boy with mud on his shoes who looks back on the tracked-up kitchen floor and says "Who, me?"'° THEN CAME the press release from Wash- ington,- reciting "Be polite but be reserved," "Do not demonstrate at parades" and "Stand up for our country," all like so many choruses of "who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf." Then came the "I hate Khrushchev" buttons and the politicians who, following Eisenhower's lead, blasted the man from coast to coast. Then came Khruslichev. In the fact of hostility, both genuinely pro-. voked and semi-unintentionally produced by the administration, Khrushchev stood up very well. The visit was not, however, intended as an endurance contest for the Premier. And it certainly wasn't the ' most advan- tageous way to begin negotiations. -FAITH WEINSTEIN es Hnard Job, YET, BY ITS very nature, research is an individual matter and mut be free to move in any direction. It must be given a great deal" of autonomy. Sawyer's job is thus cut out for him. He has already directed much of the University's re- search, and was chosen because of his work in science fields, aid should know well the prob- lems.involved in his new job. We assume the new Vice-President will in- crease research volume, without directing con- tent. We hope his appointment does not mean emphasis on science at the expense of humani- ties, languages, and the social sciences. --NAN MARKEL erblock is away due to illness . t, 159, The PftiewrPublsin Ce, NEW HOPE for a settlement to the Algerian conflict emerged last week in French President Charles de Gaulle's proposal for a basis of agreement with the Algerian national provisional gov- ernment. His proposals appear to cover the range of possible solutions and to offer a fair deal to the rebels. The choices range -from integra- tion into the French nation; au- tonomy, which would involve an Algerian government backed by France and closely connected with her economically, militarily and in her foreign policy; and indepen- dence. Even de Gaulle realizes that in- tegration is a concept to which the Algerians would never agree. In- stead he favors autonomy, mainly because he realizes that he can- not make a better deal. inde- pendence, in de Gaulle's eyes, would be a terrible fate for the Algerian people. There appears to be no doubt in his mind that the Algerians could not possibly gov- ern themselves; and for them to attempt to do so would only lead to the country's ruin. * * * HOWEVER, .this same indepen- dence is the only solution to which the nationalists will agree. Al- though offered them, agreement under de Gaulle's terms seems rather far-fetched. France wants to remain in control of the Sa- hara; she maintains that she will retain any area that expresses a desire to remain French, implying a partition of Algeria; and in any case she would remain in control for four years before a plebiscite to decide on independence could be held. As they stand, the French pro- posals are not possibilities for agreement. Their value lies in that they offer a basis for negotiations betwen the French and the Al- gerians. At present de Gaulle is awaiting a reply of the Algerian nationalist provisional govern- ment: a reply which could mean the end of a conflict that has cost France much in men, money, and prestige. INTO THIS atmosphere the United States has etered in the person of Secretary of State Chris- tian A. Herter. At a luncheon last Tuesday, Herter stated that he hoped no action would be taken in the United Nations to endanger the. "just and peaceful solution" 1to the Algerian situation proposed by President de Gaulle. By labeling the ' French pro- posals .'just," the United States has given them its stamp of ap- proyal. Coming before the nation,. alist answer, the United States statement becomes a type of pres- sure on the rebels to agree to the terms offered them and also pres- sure to keep the Algerian question off the United Nations agenda. Last year an Afro-Asian spon- sored resolution to censure France failed to carry by one vote. The United States abstained. This year there is a great possibility that such a censure move could pass if it reached the United Nations, and it definitely would not help rela- tions between the Afro-Asian bloc and the western powers. * * THE STATE Department has spent much time in the last few years climbing back and forth over the fence between the Afro- Asian bloc and France and Eng- land. American guiding policy has been made the best deal under the circumstances, but the result has been quite close to the worse deal. The ambiguities of the Sues crisis when the United States first attacked and then defended Nas- ser, the Lebanon crisis which end- ed as practically an American ag- gression, and the Israeli situation in which the United States stands on both sides of the fence are examples of a policy that tends to confuse observers and to indicate an attitude of opportunism rather than of concern with basic prin- ciples. The State Department must come to some conclusions and de- fine the tenets of our foreign policy in other fields than the fight against Communism. Will, for ex- ample, the Western European countries be backed in their at- tempt to maintain modified colon- ialism or will America set the path for these countries to follow in recognizing the right of nations to govern themselves? * * * AT TtIS TIME with a dwind- ling majority in the United Na- tions, the United States needs the support of the Afro-Asian bloc. The only way to improve relations with this bloc is to recognize the national self-determination that each of these nations has fought for or is at presnt fighting for. Backing France in the Algerian situation will just be one more patch on the rotting fabric of our foreign policy. The United States constantly stands on the right of self-deter- mination for the Eastern Euro- pean countries under Soviet con- trol. It is hypocritical. that the same stand is not taken with the Western satellites. With the News THnE NEWS is finally out - the Dearborn Center has 33 full time students enrolled. This figure is shocking, merely in terms; of money. With $350,000 on which to operate, this means the Center is costing the University more than $10,000 per- full-time student. Of course there are 300 extension stu- dents which must be taken \into. consideration. For comparison, a rough esti- mate of Ann 4rbor cost per stu- dent is about $1,00 per year for each full-time student. Why this low enrollment and high cost? The answer is simple; the Center was rushed too quickly into operation. Michigan State at- tracted 500 students for its Oak- land branch which is also begin-. .ring operation this fall. But they claimed the MSU-O unit would open this fall and took admissions on a definite basis last spring. The University hemmed and snorted and promised tentative admit- tance depending upon the size of the state appropriation. By the time they knew they had the money to open the Center, many qualified students had made per- manent plans elsewhere; leaving the Dearborn white elephant with an almost empty howdah. ** * THE CENTER is also only tak- ing applicants who are juniors, by Robert Junker thus limiting the field. Admission standards are high, but no higher than the published standards for the MSU-O branch. Thus there are some reasons for the small en- rollment. But the chief reason seems to be the hurried unplanning of the University administrators. The funds were appropriated in June. Three months later the Center is opening. Curriculum was devel- oped late. The literary college pro- gram was not considered import- ant enough to bother with at this time. All in all, the entire ap- proach was one of administrative- ly controlled chaos. The Center should have waited a year until opening. Then a decent enroll- ment, the right programs and a, more obvious educational direc- tion should have evolved. And the point cannot be ruled out that many students probably did not fall for the "unique work-study program" line on which admissions were based. The- concept of liberal education should be much more appealing, and certainly seems much more valuable, than the on-the-job training, or whatever name it is" currently being marketed under. * * * THE FAULTS of the Center are becoming obvious. Liberal arts, a concept to which the University is committed, were dealt a harsh blow by the Dearborn Tech con- cept of education. As has. been stated here before, a curriculum of this type is worthy of MSU, but hardly of the University. Rushed planning ,and a tentative admis- sions program also dictated hold- ing off the opening a year. The amusing aspects of this opening cannot be overlooked. The concept of 33 students march- ing to their 28 classrooms is rath- er too much to grasp at a single sitting. A campus of four new buildings, two of which will stay' closed, is telling. But this situa- ,tion is obviously not so amusing for the administration, or prob- ably the Lansing legislators who provided the funds which could be used Justifiably elsewhere. The Dearborn C e n t er h a s opened, a technical center "in the heart of the southeastern Michi- gan industrial complex" for all the city of Dearborn to enjoy.- Some will, like the employers who} can conduct on-the-job recruit- ing. One would hope that this bold, daring, "unique" e.x p e r i m e n t would come off somewhat better than the Center's opening. If not, the Dearborn Center can be writ- ten off as an educational blunder, of limited vision, impracticality and statism (Michigan Statism). DAI LY OFFICIAL BILLTIN The Daily Official Bulletin .is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no ,edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1959 VOL. LXX, NO. 7 General Notices Flu Shot clinies for students, staff and employees will be held in Rm. 58 (basement of the Health Servioe) Thurs., Oct. 1, Thurs., Oct.,8. and Thurs., Oct. 15. Hours are 0:00-11:45 a.m. and 1:00-4:45 p~m. Proceed directly to basement, fill out forms, pay fee ($1.00 for students and $1..50 for staff and. employees) and re- ceive infection. It is reco m anded that eaqi person receive two injections, 2-3 weeks apart. The-clinics will be open for both first and second shots. Social Security and Its Relation to a Free Economy" will be the topic of the discussion held as a spart of the Sum- 'mer Rteading and Discussion Program Tues., Sept. 29 at 4:30 p.m. in the Honora Study Lounge of the Under- graduate Library. Prof. William Haber of the Economics Dept. will lead the discussion. The program is open to the .public. (Continued on Page 5) <1: Educators and Discrimination VHILE THE University continues its Uedu-. cational" approach to the problem. of ranting Negroes legitimate opportunities, the ate of Michigan is actually doing something. Last spring Dewitt T. Burton, a Negro, was ected to the Board of Trustees of Wayne tate University in a statewide election. Then last week Governor Williams appointed nother Negro, Otis M. Smith, to the post .of tate Auditor-General. If his appointment is )nfirmed by the Senate, he will-it is generally elieved-be the 'first Negro to serve on the ate's administrative board since the post-Civil Var reconstruction era. IONCERNING SMITH'S chances for 'confir ~mation, Senate majority leader. Frank eadle commented, "I don't know anybody 'ho has anything against him." There is an amazing difference in, attitude between the practical politicians who must periodically face the voters and who have actually committed themselves to positive ac- tion,' and the ivory-towered, idealistic educa- tors who yell "education," "patience" and "property rights." The latter only act-on the few occasions when they do act-when pressure becomes unbearable. (Some of these educators would even scrap the idea of responsible Atu- dent government rather than jeopardize prop- erty rights.) For years, "education"' has been used, in- stead of direct action, to eliminate discrimina- tion in off-campus .housing. But international students and Negroes still have difficulties find- ing off-campus housing. And many people believe that politicians are hypocrites. -JAMES SEDER _ _ . , ; LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: e Store Owner Answers Criticism of Book Prices INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Another By JOHN RODERICK n Associated Press News Analyst-S OKYO-Nikita Khrushchev takes another 'K trip this week which could have more effect i on immediate world peace than his visit to the Jnited States. He goes to Peiping for face-to- n face talks with Mao Tze-Tung. o These two giants of world -Communism will n have a chance to discuss a multitude of prob- 'ems against the noisy backdrop of Red China's L0th anniversary celebrations.. They will confer behind the high red walls t cf Peiping's Forbidden City, long the home of s he celestial ,Emperors of China. Their imperial surroundings will only ac- F entuate the extraordinary change which has' t ome over a once-weak and exhausted China o n the past decade. p p WHETHER THEY stroll around the arti- ficial lake built by a long-dead ruler orp ake tea on the motionless marble boat yhich" u carcely more than a half century ago was allC hat China boasted of a navy, neither will long , orget that together they rule 850 million- hu- MI Journey,' much to talk about with Mao, 10 months his enior. Mao in turn may well tell Khrushchev what he wants him to discuss with Eisenhower n Moscow. Their conversations will undoubtedly-in the manner of Communist get-togethers-range ver the full spectrum of domestic and inter- national subjects. HIGH ON THE agenda may well be the crises created by China's dispute with India over heir common frontiers and the Communist ituation in little Laos. , They probably will take time to discuss the Formosa situation, whether to precipitate new ension in that area through renewed assaults on the off-shore Nationalist islands, and the progress or lack of it, of China's revolutionary peasant communes system. Though Mao pays lip service to Khrushchev's position as leader of the Soviet Union, he is well aware that his own influence in world Communism is a powerful and sometimes over- hadowing one. Mao knows he made a revolution while lo The Editor: ABOUT ONCE each year The Daily allows this writer to comment on previous letters to the editor, editorials and the like re- garding the text book "situation" in Ann Arbor. James Seder's in- teresting editorial in Thursday's issue indicates this year may be no exception. Mr. Seder points out that text prices seem high. Of course he is correct. However any other word could be substituted for "text" be- fore prices and Mr. Seder would be correct still. Thus room prices are high, tuition prices are high, food prices are high, lab fees are high, parking fines are high, car prices are high, gas prices are high, cloth- ing prices are high, supply prices are high, dating prices are high, etc. etc. A list of items purchased by anyone-student or non-stu- dent-would result in this same conclusion: America has been the scene of steadily rising prices since the heart of the depression in 1932-33, and (minor ups-and- downs disregarded) the basic di- rection of all prices has been up and will continue to be so. , The book industry is scarcely the bell-weather of our economy. A list of 50 basic industries in terms of their economic impor- tance in this country would leave the entire book industry in 49th or 50th place. As long as price explicit-that local book store re- tailers and their employees are normal human beings trying to serve their customers well and at the same time seeking to enjoy, average middle - class economic status; 2) curiosity about his feel- ing-againsto'some extent implicit -that one of the very smallest industries in this country should be able and expected to resist the basic' direction of the entire do- mestic economy. Mr. Seder's editorial deserves special praise, however, for his awareness that text .book prices- in both new and used texts-are determined primarily by the pub- lisher and the professor; not by the retailer. However, if we as- sume that the average student spends $1,000 a semester as the total cost of taking 5 courses, each course costs him $200 (and about 3 weelts of his life). The cost of books for this average course would seldom total $10.00, or a maximum of 5 per cent of the total economic requirements for taking a particular class. In ac- tuality my hunch is that the costs of books for most courses most of the time comes closer to 2 or 3 per cent of the total financial outlay involved in getting another 3 hours of college credit: Stated differently, most students spend (one way or another) at least two thousand dollars during n" ..4 - "- . r~c~nmaoi w ,. r credit hour. (I am of the opinion that it would-though space does not permit elaboration.) ACTUALLY there is a way to save money on text prices. Many text books which are discontinued by professors here, with the re- sultant drop in market value, are used by other colleges-especially very small and impoverished southern schools. If saving money on texts is of significant impor- tance in obtaining an education, a student can achieve this by transferring to a whole spate of third and fourth rate colleges in Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and so on. That there is a clear relationship between the quality of texts used and the over- all quality of the educational pro- gram offered by these schools is an essential of my point. Most students spend far too little on books while they are here do not realize that book-store facilities in Ann Arbor are excelled nowhere in the country (with the possible exception of Harvard). Mr. Seder's editorial overlooks this observation, and I believe it is 'to the loss of the academic com- munity that such a comment, is. seldom made. We can understand why book authorsjpublishers, and retailers occupy such an insig-, nificant place in the entire eco- nomy when we see how little they. a .nnrawina am in na ea,- stitute ' book store, and library browsing for movie-theatre sitting. (I am aware you cannot neck in book stores and that it is difficult in libraries, but that is a matter for another day.) * -Bob Marshall Economics - To the Editor: I WAS QUITE amazed to see a letter by Fred Beaver of the Student Bicycle Shop concerning the Student Bike Exchange in Wednesday's edition of The Daily. I agree with Mr. Beaver that he has the overhead that the Exchange does not, but he, in my opinion, is using the Exchange as a poor reason to raise his. prices on new and used bicycles. There are a few bicycle shops in Ann Arbor and they virtually have a monopply of parts for bicycles. It seems to me that Mr. Beaver ,could find a better excuse to raise his prices,, (e.g., the cost of labor increasing, wholesale parts becom- ing more expensive, the cost of rent increasing, etc.). * * * IN MR. BEAVER'S conclusion, he poses a question to us: Should University students dictate the businses policies of Ann Arbor? My answer to him is yes to certain degrees. After all, the population of Ann Arbor is somewhere around 50,000. Then, if we add the popu- lnfin of ta nivrs. which is twice atsyear at their Police Head- quarters, at which, at that- time, over 200 bicycles are sold. -Sheldon G. Larky Answer. . To The Editor: RE: LE ER of R. B. Schmerl,' .9-25-1959. Since Mr. Schmerl attempts to base .his analysis of ethnic in- tolerance 'on economic exploita- tion, I should like to inquire as to what he considers are the deter- minants which allow the realtors, to profit by the discrepancy be- tweeny the price a white man can get and a black man must pay for the same house? -Jon 3. Faily Congratulations To the Editor: THE OPENING of the new Dear. born Center raises certain in- triguing problems for the casual observer. Enrollment: In an institution of a reported 28 classrooms, with an enrollment of 33 students,'it is clear -that the University has at last solved the problem that is facing the rest of the nation's educational institutions: over- crowding. For this, University ad- ,ministrative officials should be congratulated. Philosophy: The University has