SPEAKERS AND PUBLIC RELATIONS See Page 4 a r Latest Deadline'in the State I44a6tA I II IIII 111/II/I M III M VIII IIII I IIII CLOUDY, COOL VOL. LXVII, No. 108 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1957 EIGHT PAGES Dulles Vows No Vast New Mideast Aid No Funds Planned For Aswan Project WASHINGTON (J)-Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, act ing to keep the Middle East reso lution intact, pledged yesterday that it would not be used to launch a vast new spending pro gram in the area. In a letter to Sen. William F. Knowland (R-Calif.), the Senate Republican leader, Dulles als said none of the economic aid funds provided for in the reso- lution will be used to help Egyp build the Aswan Dam. The letter was plainly aimed a dissipating congressional fears that congressional approval of the Mideast resolution would open doors to the spending of addition- al billions abroad. Makes Letter Public Knowland made the letter pub- lic as Senate Democrats were making a new attack on the eco- nomic aid half of the resolution calling it vague and "a foot-in. the-door" plan. The Senate is r debating an amendment by Sen. Richard Rus- sell (D-Ga.) to strip from the res- olution authority for Presiden Dwight D. Eisenhower to spend 200 million dollars between now and June 30 on secail economic and weapons aid to Mideast na- tions. Sen. Knowland opposes the amendment. He used Dulles' let. ter as his latest argument, read- ing it to the Senate in full. Dulles wrote Sen. Knowland: No Committment "I understand that you have asked for assurances that the ad. ministration would not, under th authorization in the Middle Easi resolution .. . enter into any com- mitments which would seem, mor- ally 'or legally, to obligate the Congress to appropriate funds ir the future. I assure you that nc 1 such committment will be made "I also understand that yor have inquired whether any of the funds, the use of which is author- ized by this .resolution, would be used for the Aswan Dam. The an- swer is 'no.' " Last year the United States was deep in negotiations to help Egypi finance the Aswan Dam, an am- bitious project to back up the waters of the Nile for irrigation and other purposes. But after Egypt made large- scale arms purchases from the Communists, the State Depart- ment pulled out of the project. Panel Explores Qualifications For Teaching V gA five member education panel agreed last night there are other factors employers look for in teacher applicants besides experi- ence. j Speaking on "What. Public School Systems Look For in a Job Applicant Beyond Teaching Re- quirements," William Mills, of the education school asserted that an applicant's professional attitude is very important. Critera for Teachers "A person must have a willing- ness to be flexible and to experi- ment," he said. "A rigid, opinion- ated person has no place in our laboratory school." Appearance, ability to get along with children and a person's per- sonal character were other factors Mills considered important to an employer. Lund Gren, of the Ann Arbor Public Schools, said a teacher should know his strengths and weaknesses, be enthusiastic and take a little extra time in helping the poorer student. Respect for Authority "We would like teachers who have an ability to work in ^o- operation with the home and have a respect for authority," Sister Harriet of St. Thomas elementary school added. , Teachers do not have to be Catholic to teach in Catholic schools, she said, and because of the low salaries in Catholic schools, experience is not a prerequisite. Nancy Foren, president of the Student National Educational As- sociation, talked on nursery school teaching requirements. Crisis over Israeli Troop Broken Removal Appears L t 2 -Daily-John Hirtzei RELIGIOUS LECTURER-Herman Jacobs, director of Hillel Foundation, discussed the importance of "love of God" and "love and men" in the Jewish Faith at the IHC Symposium last night. e 1. z a s7 t' 7 i ' 3 t i ,, C C fi a 1 t rt i x t ,. f . Jacobs Stresses Value u: Of 'Torah'in Judaism By RICHARD TAUBSr There is little ascetic about the Jewish Faith, Herman Jacobs, f director of Hillel Foundation, said last night. l He told an Inter-House Council Symposium audience of 27 people d life is viewed as something essentially good, and "we have to make the most of it." For the Jew, life is not peeparation for another world, be he explained. S This does not mean the Jew must take the easiest way, he cau-t tioned. "Goodness in life comes from obedience. to the will of God, revelation of His glory, hallowing of His name, imitation- f of God, and advancement of the world toward the king- t dom of glory," or a "messianic b age." n Judaism Emphasizes 'Torah' SG AAlthough Judaism is based on the love of God and of men, it dif- b fers from other religions in its p V oti u emphasis on the book. "It might w be called a book religion," he ex- f Student Governmient Council plained., Studentprove rentonil- This is in contrast to religions it has approved a revision in all- founded by great men like Chris- campus Eosti ules in an e tianity or Buddhism, he pointed g fort to stimulate voting in the out. The book of the Jewish reli- TI March 19 and 20 elections, ac- gion, which contains the body of S cording to Jim Childs, '57, SGC law, is called the "Torah," the re- w Elections Director. ligious director said. It might be o Contrary to the last election, called "the primer of Jewish life." campaign i literature may be The Jew believes that man was r posted in stores near campus, with made in the Image of God, he t permission of the owner. said. However, he must justify his W On campus, however, posters position on the basis of a thor- f will be confined to official bulle- ough study of history and law. tin boards, University housing, Sense of Humility fraternities, sororities and other Because of such a study, th1e re- J University approved housing. No ligious counselor explained, mani campaign literature may be cannot "be glib or superficial. He placed in University buildings will realize a sense of humility." t other than residences. Jacobs explained that there is ti Under no circumstances may great diversity of opinion in the se campaign literature be placed on Jewish religion. "No force has r the outside of any building. An ever said all must think alike." H- Ann Arbor city ordinance also forbids placing campaign litera- ture on trees, lamp posts, and DRAMATIZES MORALS: mailboxes. SGC also changed its former Roche Explain rule, "Incumbents need not ob- i 5 intrst ed tn 35 signatures", to read, ch E pan "Persons presently holding an of- In Second Lect fice on SGC, by election, need not obtain 350 signatures." Quad Menu To Feature Heal Choice Students in the residence halls will receive a choice in dinner meat courses after March 13, Leonard A. Schaadt, business manager of residence halls, told The Daily yesterday. After April 15, selection will ex- tend to vegetables and perhaps other solids, Schaadt said. However, this project will takel a great deal of experimentation, he explained. Although the'staff has studied other universities' choice-menu set-ups, there may be unforeseen problems. Women's Dorms There will not be food choices n sit-down dinners in women's esidence halls for some time yet, Schaadt said. The University must irst learn to cope with the prob- ems that come from girls giving different orders to waitresses. The change to choice menus will be a gradual one, according to Schaadt. "We want to go into one hing at a time." Food counters were not designed' or choice or selective menus and hey must be revised. Plates will e made smaller, so that more may be put out at one time. Timing Study A careful study of timing must e made as well, Schaadt ex- lained. It takes longer for a line with selective menus to move thhn or one with no choices at all. Schaadt expressed the feeling t was unfortunate that students were unable to wait until the pro- ram had been all worked-out. Fhe administration, according to chaadt, had been studying and working out problems of choice f menus since last September. John Mayne, '58, South Quad- angle Council president termed [he move the "first big step to- rard solving one of our major ood problems." [urors Needed Student jurors are needed by he Law School today in connec- ion with current practice trial essions. Interested persons are equested to report to room 232, [utchins Hall at 1 p.m. s Role of Trial ure of Series accurate Daily coverage of SGCa World News 11 Roundup-_, By The Associated Press Nixon Travels ..*, WASHINGTON - Vice-Presi- dent Richard N. Nixon headed for Africa by plane yesterday on a special goodwill visit aimed at demonstrating an i n c r e a s i n g United States interest in the Af- rican continent. Bearing messages from Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower, Nix- on is scheduled to visit eight Afri- can countries and Italy on a swift moving 22-day, 18,000-mile tour. ** * Negro Testifies * WASHINGTON - Gus Courts, a Negro testifying for civil rights legislation, said yesterday he is just one of many who had to leave Mississippi because they tried to vote. He told a Senate Judiciary sub- committee, "My wife and' I and thousands of us Mississippians have had to run away. We are the American refugees from the terror in the South, all because we wanted to vote." * * * GUmbler Talks .. . WASHINGTON - A Portland, Ore., gambler, who said he once had the inside track with the Teamsters Union there, testified yesterday that a rival paid "$10,- 000" to get back in the union's good graces. Elkins' testimony topped a busy day in which the committee or- dered contempt of Congress pro- ceedings against Frank Malloy, a Portland teamsters official, for refusing to answer questions about violence and racketeering in the Oregon city. * * * Friendly Cooperation BONN, Germany - Chancellor Konrad Adenauer agreed yester- day to high-level trade talks be- tween the Soviet Union and West Germany in an effort to develop "friendly cooperation." action; a more representative sys- tem of election of members-at- large; a written constitution de- fining and limiting SGC's powers; separation of powers and a sys- tem of checks and balances for SGC; a more equitable basis for Board in Review decisions; and a change in the composition of the Board in Review. Ex-Officio Position Elaborating on the recommen- dations, the Panhel majority in- sists that the Daily editor's ex-officio position on the Council be abolished because he is "not elected by a large enough body to warrant a vote". His opinions "are likely to be personal and not rep- resentative," the report claims. The Daily, they believe, should "function as an impartial re- porter rather than a representa- tive voter." The majority also asks that The Daily reserve space for an SGC column, other than the editorial page and the Daily Official Bul- letin, in which members would be able to express their views. Referendum and Amendment In consideration of SGC's con- stitution, sorority women request "provisions for student referen- dum and amendment," and no SGC interference in the internal workings of any student organi- zation, unless asked for advice. Election of representatives, they agreed, should be on a group al- legiance basis - "either by dis- tricts according to housing, 'lass or geography." SGC Petitions Now Total 16 Three more students, Assembly President Jean Scruggs, '58, Tom Capua, '59,- and Phil Zook, '60, have signed out petitions for Stu- dent Government Council mem- berships. Announced candidates for the six one-year terms now total 16. Petitions, due 6 p.m. Tuesday, are still available in the SGC offices of the Student Activities Bldg. In other elections, 12 persons are running for literary college senior offices, four for engineer- ing college positions, three in busi- ness administration school and one in the education school. SGC REPORT: Panhel Demands Daily Censorship By ROSE PERLBERG Panhellenic Association yesterday called for the removal of the Daily editor from Student Government Council and SOC censorship of Daily coverage of Council action. In an overall report prepared by the 21 sororities for the SOC Evaluation Committee, Panhel accused The Daily of "slanted and biased" SGC reporting and asserted that "college students should be able to select the truth for themselves." Insisting on censorship of all SGC news copy, the Association recommended that "SGC should approve all news articles concerning Council action that are printed in The Daily." The report includes eight major areas of criticism, with Panhel's majority and minority rationale and suggestions for future SGC operation. Among the recommendations made by the sororities are: more Dr Days Residents of the south side of East Quadrangle may find themselves unable to quench their thirst by Monday if Busi- ness Manager B. V. Tappe car- ries out an ultimatum delivered recently. In a memo to all south side residents the following ap- peared: "We are having a continual- ly recurring problem with the theft of drinking fountain spi- gots. Because of this we have had the water shut off in all south side fountains for five hours yesterday. If the spigots are not returned by Monday, the water will again be shut off until such time as the spigots do return." Study Group Fears SGC Unoriginal' By VERNON NAHRGANG The likelihood that Student Government Council has degen- erated into a dull,unoriginal body was discussed at yesterday's SGC Evaluation Committee meeting. ' "Is it possible that SGC has just gotten too respectable?" Prof. Roger Heyns, assistant to the lit- erary college dean, asked other committee members. Bob Leacock, '57, beamed a "yes" answer and said, "SOC meetings are dull because some of the people on it are dull." Prof. Heyns said the council had become complacent with "no challenge, no threat, and no. in- terest." 'Dull As Dishwater' Assistant Dean of Men John Bingley compared Student Legis- lature meetings with SGC meet- ings, calling the former "exciting" and the latter "dull as dishwater." "On cutting down the member- ship (to 18)," Dean Bingley said, "it made it'impossible for minor- ity groups to get their members elected and bring their problems to SGC." Here the discussion was cut short by committee members an- xious to continue the committee's problem-finding but unconcerned with discussing problem solutions. SGC Structure "Anxiety" on the part of stu- dent members of the committee then raised the question of what finality in respect to SOC's struc- ture would result from the evalu- ation committee's report. "Whatever comes out of this," Prof. Lionel H. Laing, of the poli- tical science department and committee chairman, said, "we have reason to believe this (the SGC Plan) will not be set in con- crete, but will still be in the trial stage." * Final Adoption Prof. Laing did not say what "reason" he had, nor did any committee member explain what the procedure for final adoption of and amendment to the SGC Plan might be. However, the committee agreed its final report would list the problem areas it found and pro- bably recommend a further study of them. Assistant to the Dean of Men Dave Baad, Grad., who resigned from the evaluation committee because of his leaving the Univer- sity, asked that the r e p o r t "strongly recognize the problems in such a way that action will be taken." Garg To Hit' Campus Today Gargoyle, campus humor maga- U.S. Hopes For Solution Reach Peak Possibility of Hitch Remains, But Snag Said Highly Unlikely WASHINGTON () - The para- lyzing crisis over Israeli troop withdrawal appeared yesterday to be broken. American officials were con- vinced that within a few days Is- rael will pull its forces out of the Gaza Strip and the Gulf of Aqaba area. The possibility of some kind of hitch remained since the Israeli plan will not go before the United Nations until this afternoon and the reaction of all the countries there, particularly the Arab bloc, is not yet known. However, a snag was considered to be highly im- probable. UN Statement Ambassador Abba Eban an- nounced at the State Department late yesterday that he had. in- formed Secretary of State John Foster Dulles in a two-hour meet- ing of Israel's statement to be made to the General Assembly in New York. He told reporters that the state- ment "will cause widespread sat- isfaction" among all the people who are interested in bringing "peace and security and non-bel- ligerency" to the Middle East. His announcement here and a similar announcement by an Is- radei spokesman at the United Nations climaxed three weeks of feverish diplomatic activity in Washington. In recent days the negotiations had involved not only Eban and Dulles but also President Dwight D. Eisenhower, French Premier Guy Mollet and Israeli Foreign Minister Golda Meir Received Assurances Israel finally made its decision to withdraw, according to infor- mation from diplomatic sources here, after being assured of wide- spread support for its aims of pre- venting Egypt from again using the Gaza Strip as a base for raids against Israel and assuring free navigation into the Gulf of Aqaba. These assurances do not provide the formal iron-clad guarantees which Israel had first demanded, but they seem to constitute a large measure of what the Israelis wanted and to that extent may b represented as a victory for astute Israeli diplomacy. Talks Extended Expectation of success in the long negotiations caused Mollet and President Eisenhower Wed- nesday to extend until yesterday morning their talks on restoring United States-French "nderstand- ing which they had expected to finish Wednesday afternoon. However, the situation was not sufficiently clarified by the time they met briefly yesterday for them to make any formal com- ment on it. Proposals Set For Dearborn Branch of. U' Planning committees for the Dearborn branch of the University will probably propose the erection of a general classroom and faculty .office building and at least two engineering laboratory buildings. Harold Dorr, Dean of Statewide Education and chairman of the building planning committee, said yesterday there has been no deci- sion on whether to plan a separate library or include one in the gen- eral classroom building. This change was made primar- ily to clarify the position of Ron Shorr, '58BAd, newly appointed member of SGC. Question arose as to whether Shorr's four week term would qualify him as an incumbent, since he was not chosen in an all- campus election. SGC will hold a three day work- shop for all candidates. As a part of their training, candidates will also be required to attend the SGC meeting next Wednesday and as many other meetings. as possible. Military Editor 'To Lecture In, U' Series General A.C. Wedemeyer, scheduled to appear Tuesday in the University Lecture Course, has cancelled his engagement. Hanson Baldwin, Military Edi- tor of the New York Times, will replace Wedemeyer at 8:30 p.m. March 12, according to Lucille Upham, Lecture Course secretary. Wedemeyer has been assigned By LANE VANDERSLICE In the second of three lectures on "The Criminal Mind," Dr. Philip Roche, '30, explained his conception of the function of a trial. "A trial dramatizes the moral notions of a community," Roche said, describing the court as "a religious institution that has been secularized." He discussed the M'Naghten decision, basis for modern legal interpretation of insanity, which says that to be guilty of a crime a person must be conscious of his crime at the time he commits it, He said that most people who criticize the M'Naghten decision don't realize that "if we did not have the M'Naghten decision we would have something else, < "The trial is founded upon arti- cles of faith," the professor of psychiatry at the. University of Pennsylvania Medical School said. He described the M'Naghten decf- sion as founded on a principal "as old as the talisman." He said people inherit notions of justice from childhood, and they are thus subconscious emo- tional forces. He emphasized that history has no concern for medical and scien- tific application. "There is no har- mony with advancing thought," he, said.I Distinguishing between a healthy and a psychotic mind, he pointed out that a healthy mind is pre- sumed to have conditioned con- trols that enable it to adjust and FINAL PRODUCTION: Dramatic Arts Center To Give 'Medea' By ALLAN STILLWAGON Dramatic Arts Center's final production, "Medea," will open at 8:30 p.m. tonight at the Masonic Temple. Euripides' classic Greek tragedy explores the depths of two char- acters, Jason, the egotistical Hel- lenic adventurer, and Medea, through whom he gains a golden jfleece. ,jjI i I Audrey Ward stars as Medea, whotslays her own children in or- der to torture her husband. John Mackay portrays Jason. BEEN=