ECONOMICS OF AUTOMATION See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State :4Iatj FAIR AND WARMER VOLI LXVI, No. 163 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1956 SIX PAGES SGC Talks On Freedom Week Events Communist Teacher Problem Big Issue Laying particular emphasis on the subject of Communist teach- ers, Student Government Council last night discussed problems raised by current Academic Free- dom Week events. Most Council members agreed that trouble acrose as a result of inadequate definition of the term Academic Freedom. IHC president Bob Warrick, 157E, said that the definition laid down by speakers 'so far was too tight and didn't in- elude a broad enough area. Snyder Comments Daily Managing Editor Dick Snyder, '57, commented the fact that a university pays a faculty member does not give that uni- versity the right to subjugate the professor's views. Union President Roy Lave, '57, felt that a faculty member's free- dom includes the responsibility of presenting all sides of an issue, and that the professor's views should not be given undue, empha- Snyder said that a professor does have a right to express his Irony Student Government Council President Bill Adams, 57, has" had, his bicycle towed away by Ann Arbor police Tuesday. "I forgot that the city prop qty line extends one foot into the sidewalk," Adams explain- ed. Asked if he had retrieved his bike yet, he commented, "It's 16 years old-I'm not sure it's worth the trouble." Adams claimed his bike had a Grosse Point license on it al- - ready and shouldn't have been taken. SGC has been cooperating with police In urging studtnts to get licenses. opinion, and if his view is Irra- tional, the opposite one should be defensible. "If we restrict a per- son, we're going to be that much more uncertain about our own opinion and will be unprepared to defend it. If we cannot defend De- mocracy on rational grounds, may- be it's time for a re-evaluation of that democracy," he said. Approves Appointments The Council also approved ap- pointments to the Religious Em- phasis Week Committee. Appoint- ed were Janet Neary, '58 and Ron Shorr, '58, from SGC; Hertha Ad- ler, '58 and Carol Krohn, .'57, from the Student Religious Associa- tion; Robin Olliver, '57E, from In- ter-House Council; Bob Stahl, '58, from Inter-Fraternity C o un c 11; Betsy Alexander, '58, from As- sembly Association; Ricky Erskine, '57, from Panhellenic Association; Grey C. Austin from the Admin- istration; Prof. Frank L. Huntley of the English department and Herman Jacobs, from the Board of Religious Counselors. SGC fall elections will be held Nov. 13 and 14. Tom Van dan Bosh has been appointed Elections Dir- ector. Block "M" will be moved one section further toward the end zone for a temporary one year per- iod next fall. Anne Woodard, '57, will attend the U.S. National Students Assoc- iation's International Student Re- lations Seminar in Cambridge, Mass. during the summer. She was one of 18 students chosen from 150 applicants from all over the na- tion. Approve Revised Constitution In other action taken last night, SGC approved IHC and Scroll constitution revisions. The council also granted permission for local sorority Alethia to affiliate as a colony of Phi Mu national sor- ority. The colony may become active after a year on campus. The council approved a motion that a Cinema Guild Board study committee be set up. The com- mittee will report and make rec- ommendations to SGC in the fall. The coed sophomer musical shotv will be held Nov. 15, 16 and 17.1 The Men's Glee Clib will give a combined concert with the Uni- a . -t of -14n -a laa ..iV, We .v Freedom Needs Res tra ints -Kirk 'Can Exist Only By Moral Sanction; Checks, Controls By Social Order' By TAMMY MORRISON Saying that Academic Freedom which has no limitations is not Academic Freedom at all, Russell Kirk yesterday outlined its attendant duties and responsibilities. According to Kirk, freedom has some relationship to Christianity in its conception of submission to a higher will and ignoring worldly desire. He said that it can exist only when it has the sanction of a moral order and when it can be checked and held in control by a social order. Ike Defends Rneent Row Ofnt Services Asks Heads To Obey Top-Level Decisions WASHINGTON (1) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower declared with table-thumping emphasis yesterday the nation's military planners can and must defend to the limit their sometimes conflict- ing ideas on defense of the United States. But he also cautioned, in his first personal comment on the re- cent upsurge of Army-Air Force- Navy rivalry, that once top-level decisions are made he expects all hands will "loyally support" those decisions and refrain from debat- ing them in a way that will "alarm everybody else." Fiery Eyes , President Eisenhower spoke out with fire in his eyes and voice at a news conference in which he also pictured the newly announced cut In Soviet armed forces as a "streamlining" operation-part of changing defense concepts on both sides of the Iron curtain in the light of new weapons and meth- ods. The President said he frankly isn't sure what the Russians are up to. But he said if it turns out they really are reducing their armed might, and not just redeploying manpower, that "would be ,a very warmly accepted step and it would be real progress." Unique Fervor President Eisenhower has sel- dom spoken to correspondents with more fervor than he did yester- day in batting down what he de- scribed as the idea that the coun- try's safety can be entrusted to any particular type of weapon alone - whether guided missile, long-range bomber or anything else. He gave the table in front of him a series of vigorous rapt as he declared the whole problem is one of total national strength, right down to good schools and prosper- ous farms-"a unit, an integrated problem," he called it, "not one of just little bits of pieces all over the world." *The old theory of enlightened self- interest is not a sufficient guide to order. Poor definition of Academic Freedom can lead to what, Kirk called "the license of irresponsibil- ity and the license of indolence." Theory of Absolute In the case of the former, a pro- fessor will operate under the theory that Academic Freedom is absolute, and that he has no re- trictions placed upon him. "The! idea of absolute freedom is more widely spread than it ought to be," Kirk said. The license of indolence means that a professor will use his right to freedom to insulate himself from new ideas. "We have to hear the doctrinaire in general, not just the Communist," he main- tained. - Mature Scholars A Must S willexist if a faculty is com- posed of mature scholars who de- sire to conserve and extend truth and if students have full ground- ing in rudiments so they can ab- sorb general ideas, he 'said. "It's a question of indoctrina- tion versusright reason. rOn the lower levels of education, the for- mer is somewhat necessary, but the task of a university is employ- ment of right reason. If there is a lowering of standards, Academic Freedom will decay," he' said. No Inventiveness Kirk maintained that aca- demic atmosphere does not usually foster inventiveness. "A man who has an original idea has a hard time in a university because he runs up against the natural con- servatism there." In conclusion, he said, "Free- dom is never taken away, it is forfeited by those who have ceased to earn it. This danger can be alleviated by encouraging the con- servation and extension of truth that justifies Academic Freedom." To Discuss 'Freedom' "Academic Freedom: Dead or! Alive at Michigan?" will be the topic of a forum at 7:30 p.m. to- day in Auditorium B, Angell Hall. Part of the current Academic Freedom Week program, the for- um will be noderated by Prof. Gerhard E. Lenski of the sociol- ogy department. Speakers will be Dean of Women Deborah Bacon, Prof. Roger W. Heyns of the psychology depart- Council president Hank, Berliner, ment, former Student Government '56, and Murry Frymer, '56, Edi- torial Director of The Daily. New Farm Bill Passed By Congress Sets Billion Dollar Per Year Soil Bank, Additional Benefits WASHINGTON (A') - Congress completed action yesterday on the second farm bill of this session, a measure setting up a billion-dol- lar-a-year . soil bank and giving farmers other new benefits. The House passed the compro- mise legislation on a 304-59 roll call vote. The Senate approved it Tuesday. Now the bill goes to the White House for President Dwight D. Eisenhower's signature. He is ex- pected to accept it as a substitute for farm legislation he vetoed April 16. The President objected to the first bill mainly because of its provisions for a return to high, rigid crop supports. The new bill does not contain these provisions. Has Only Chance Representative W. R. Poage (D- Tex.);, floor manager for the com- promise legislation, urged it on the House as "not the second best farm bill we have had before us this year" but "probably the third or fourth best, but the only one which seems to have a chance to become law." The compromise was hammered out Monday and Tuesday by a Senate-House Conference Com- mittee working from two different versions of the legislation. Start This Year The soil bank program will get under way this year, but not on any substantial scle, since most spring crops have l'4eady been planted. Congress refused Presidett Eisenhower's request for authority to advance farmers up to 500 million dollars this year for land they promise to put in the soil bank next year. The bill provides for supporting oats, rye, barley and sorghums, the small feed grains, at 76 per cent of parity this year without any planting or marketing restrictio . Support For Corn. Corn produced outside the big commercial corn belt would be supported at 82 per cent of the parity rate for commercial corn. The rate for commercial corn, al- ready fived by administrative or- der, is 83.7 per cent of parity. Parity is ,a price level deemed fair to the farmer in relation to his over-all production costs. The bill provides an additional 500 million dollars to be used in helping dispose of farm products not now receiving direct price sup- ports. Truman Hits 'Misquotin' q g Of Reporters NAPLES (AP)-Harry S. Truman said yesterday he didn't want to embarrass anybody-but that in fact he never held' "squirrel-head- ed" generalship responsible for the way allied landing were carried out below Rome in 1943-44. He had been quoted as saying the Salerno and Anzio landings were unnecessary "and planned by some squirrel-headed general" and also that there were a lot of easier places that could have been chosen for beachheads. Wouldn't Say That "I would make no comment like that," the former president told reporters. "I had been listening to the con- versation of several people who had been there. I am very sorry about it. But it's an embarras- sing situation and I hope you'll clear it tip." Truman's secretary, Eugene Bailey, earlier had reported Tru- man made "a complete denial" of the quotations attributed to him Tuesday night. When reporters asked Truman himself about that, he said: "I don't want to embarrass any- body, especially people who are with me and reporting on me. I never scold anybody when things don't go straight and I wish you would clear it up." Denies Misquoting , 'Tmna 7m- Acci+.a Pr-v/_ Foreign Fall'1 lousing Shortage Mead Sees S Increasing President's Foreign Aid Bill Passed Committee Slashes Eisenhower's Request WASHINGTON "P')-B a lop- sided vote of 24-4, the House For- eign Affairs Committee gave its final approval yesterday to a for- eign aid bill slashed $1,109,000,000 below President Dwight D. Eisen- hower's $4,900,000,000 request. The formal committee action sent the big bill to the House. Leaders scheduled it for floor de- bate June 6. Administration supporters were clearly concerned about the effects of such a large fund slash in the program to bolster free world countries against communism. Uncertainty But it remained uncertain how they would try to counter it. They could fight to restore a big amount of the cut on the House floor- where there is considerable senti- ment for an even bigger reduc- tion-or concentrate their efforts on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which acts on the bill after it passes the House. Representative J. M. Vorys of Ohio, a ranking Foreign Affairs mmittee Republican, said there wA_ be "plenty of time for re- conr.:itering and counting of noses" before the bill comes be- fore the House. NO Coercion He indicated there will be no oncerted administration push to restore the funds in the House un- less GOP leaders think they can get the votes to win. .pantyRaid Promoters PRO AND CON: By DAVID TARR qLop e Cases for and against the control of lectures at state universities were aired last night in the last of three Inter-House Council spon- §ored Faculty Debates. The debate was, in effect, a discussion of the place of the Lecture Committee, which "helps administer the speakers program," at the University. Dickinson Defends Defending the duties of the Committee, Prof. Z. Clark Dickinson, Students Face of the economics department and a member of the "Our group enforces the rules of the Regents for Committee, said the educational interests those of Prof.3 history control+ barring ers from propaga give the "I bel ganizati invite a the worl not fea said. Asking should commun son ren was nee of a few to make He c Commit and edu the plar gents an He als rules do from br the mee more, th which h sial lect' tions fc from ca the inte Universi s of the University and not< f political groups." Preston W. Slosson, of the department, opposing the of lecturers observed that so-called subversive speak- n campus creates "the best nda in the world we can em." ieve that any student or- on should be allowed to nd listen to any person in Ld they want and we should ir the consequences," he Free Advertising g whether the University "furnish soapboxes for nist orators," Prof. Dickin- marked that "protection" ded, "from the maneuvers vstudents who are learning careers of revolution." alled upon the Lecture tee "in a public spirited cational way to implement n and policies of the Re- nd administration." o observed that Committee not prevent organizations inging anyone to speak if eting is closed. "Further- he duties of the Committee, andles very few controver- turers, must keep organiza- ollowing communist lines ampus in due respect for erests of students and the ity. udents Should Know reeing with the protection nt Prof. Slosson said stu- hould "be exposed to every al wind that blows." what if more subtle cases. mmunism are preesnted? people are much too smart ly advocate violent over- of the government. But e speaking to the most in- t and critical audience in rld," he said. Dickinson agreed that lec- are speaking to a critical e at universities but said S even .Die As Dredge capsizes MILWAUKEE (MP)-A 120-foot dredge, bucking like a bronco in waves 10 to 15 feet high on wind- raked Lake Michigan, broke a boom cable while being towed to shelter early, this morning, heeled over and plummeted to the bot- tom. Seven of the 19 men aboard the flat-bottomed craft lost their lives in the cold, white-capped waters before dawn. Two others were missing and presumed drowned. "The heavy seas came on us," said 47-year-old Edwin Selvick, an operating engineer from Des Plaines, Ill. "It was just a matter of three or four minutes after that she turned over. Everybody dove in the lake. Then she turned over." The tragedy occurred in pitch darkness about four miles due east oT Cudahy, a suburb just south of Milwaukee. The dredge was being towed to a haven in Milwaukee Harbor by the 65-foot tug E. James Fucik. 16 Illinois Delegates . Leave Alai' SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (P)-One- fourth of the Illinois Democrat delegation yesterday expressed "very strong sentiment" for Sen-. ator Stuart Symington of Miss- ouri, but decided to go unpledged to any candidate seeking the pres- idential nomination at 'the Dem- ocratic National Convention. The action of the 16 downstate delegates was taken at a meeting called by former United States Senator Scott Lucas, a delegate to the August convention in Chicago. The meeting, termed a personal project of Lucas, was not sanc- tioned by Democratic state head- quarters. Lucas said the meeting was not a move to hamper the candidacy of former Illinois Governor Adlai E. Stevenson, the party's 1952 can- didate for president who is seeking the 1956 nomination. Enrollment Difficulty Forseen In Private Housing By DONNA HANSON Foreign students will again face face a definite problem in securing housing next semester, according to Kathleen Mead, house director of the International Center. The population of foreign stu- dents at the University now Is4 1,178, with an enrollment increase to approximately 2,000 expected for next year. Along with this in- crease of students will be a greater demand for foreign student hous' nig which must be mt by the University. Need Private Homes Since many of the students are graduates, they must be placed In private homes, "and due to so many houses being pulled down be- cause of University expansion, parking lots and city inspection, it is very difficult finding enough rooms for them," she said. Referring to the housing prob- lem faced by foreign graduate stu- dents last fall, Mrs. Mead said roomless students were forced to sleep in cots in the recreation room of Madelon Pound house, a part of the'International Center. "The League-and the Union both have dorm rooms which we em- ployed for the same purpose," Mrs. Mead added. These facilities were used until Mrs. Mead located rooms and apartments for the students. Enough Rooms Then "There were really enough rooms to take care of the foreign stu- dents .at the time," according to B. V. Govindaraj, Grad., vice-pres- ident of the International Stu- dents' Association, "but the land- lords were withholding them in the hope of getting higher rent. "This is substantiated by the fact that in a month's time, there was a general influx of rooms," he added, Govindaraj indicated that this housing problem might well re- cur next year, especially if "more American studentsattend the Uni- versity because the landlords, if given the opportunity to rent to Americans, will do so rather than rent to the foreign students." Undergrad Difficulty Undergraduate foreign studets have difficulty securing dorm rooms since their room reserva- tions are supposed to be submit- ted by June, "and many of them don't know if and when they are coming here for sure," Mrs. Mead said. Commenting on Ann Arbor land- lords' atitudes towards accepting foreign students, the House Dir- ector said there have beens a few difficulties because the students are foreign. "Some landladies feel it is a privilege to house foreign students, whereas others only rent to them because they don't bring their homes up to the calibre American students demand," Mrs. Mead claimed. Foreign Students' Attitude As to foreign students' attitude, a survey taken by the Interna- tional Center last year indicated more than one student out of three living in rooming houses found them only "fair" or "un- satisfactory." The survey explained this indi- cation by pointing out the im- possibility of many definite ar- rangements prior to their arrival. By the time they arrive, it said, the better quality and more conven- iently located accommodations have often been taken. The report also said some land- ladies refuse to take foreign stu- dents, particularly those with dark skins. "The International Center handles this problem by listing I Show Stopper Penalized isagr argumen LAWRENCE, Kan. (R) - Five dents sh University of Kansas students doctrina were out on bond and a sixth was "So w under jail sentence yesterday in for com the wake of a panty raid of a Those p Baker University sorority house to open at nearby Baldwin. throw0 Dr. Laurence C. Woodruff, dean they are of students, said investigation of telligent the Tuesday morning episode was the wor continuing and might require sev- Prof. eral days. tudencix He earlier had said the univer- audienc sity would expel all known partic- that " ipants. moted y Robert 'M. Hershberg, 18 years vnersity old, freshman from New York City, was fined $100 and sentenced to 30 days in jail after pleading guilty in County Court Tuesday toaJI charge of disturbing the peace. Robert Ray Hopkins, 19 years Ne old, freshman from Russell, Kan., who was charged with intent to do Junior bodily harm, was released under member $1,500 bond. The complaint alleg- for the: ed he sprayed Louis Fundis, Bald- Electe win City marshal, with a fire ex- Vana, ' tinguisher. Vice-pr Four other students charged '59, Phi] with malicious destruction . of Tannen property were released on $1,000 Epsilon; bonds. '59, Sign COUNCIL 'DISAPPOINTED': Civic Center I By BILL HANEY the issu all views that are year in and year out rily warrant use of buildings. C Elects W Officers r Interfraternity Council s last night elected officers Fall semester 1956-57. ed were: President, Kent 59, Delta Kappa Epsilon; esident, Jerry Schneider, Epsilon Pi; Secretary, Don baum, '59E, Delta Kappa ; Treasurer, Dave Reiter, ma Alpha Mu. pro- don't Uni- Bond Issue Defeated ue "because the figure is t -. «...,.-....i...."9 Ann Arbor City Councilmen were "extremely disappointed" last night after their proposed $2,600,- 000 general obligation bond issue' to improve Veterans Memorial. Park was defeated. A sntall volume of voters cast 3,404 votes against the proposal, while only 675 favored the billj way out of proportion." However the members of the council had already contacted personally over 1,500 citizens, ac- cording to Councilman Norman J. Randall, and couldn't change their proposal after presenting one stand to that many people. "Even though we felt a lower figure would certainly be accepted u.re AMn t foal a q.. nnn Ann hn "The most that will be done now that the issue is beaten is limited to tearing down the old Fair- grounds buildings," Randall said. Any work on the Park must now be financed through the regular budget of the Parks Department. Any further recommendations on developments for the area must now come from that department. Received Outside Support _* MEN.~ '