MICHIGAN GOP DOOMED _ See Page 4 Y Sirt iAan 4TIaii4 CLOUDY, SHOWERS Latest Deadline in the State Fl, 11 VOL. LXVII, No. 136 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 1957 WOR SIX PAGES Sfl PAGE I Coeds Hit Holiday Dormitory Drawing Passover Observances Prevent Barbour Selection, Women Say By LEE MARKS Daily City Editor A Several Jewish coeds have protested holding the drawing for Betsy Barbour at 9 p.m., April 15th, the first day of Passover. The drawing is held to determine who will live in Barbour, a Sdormitory of 118 coeds limited to upperclass women. This year there are approximately 150 applicants for the 70 openings. An estimated 40 per cent of these applicants are Jewish. The coeds claim observance of the Passover ceremony will pre- vent them from participating in the drawing. Drawing by proxy is not permitted. 0 'U' Officials; Discuss NewjI WO j Killed, 100 Injured w Calendar Conflicts Assistant Dean of Women Elsie Fuller pointed out yesterday that the drawing had to be held before April 16th and could not be - held before spring vacation be- cause of other calendar conflicts. Mail 'Cut )1ue She said proxy voting was not permitted because "the girls A s Cshould be there to see it done so ~ s tong ress Ithey know it's fair." i'Martha Strauss R Barhmir h, CP - Ri ps Budget WASHINGTON (M)-Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield shook a finger of blame at Con- gress yesterday on grounds it was forcing on him the possibility of drastically cutting mail deliveries starting Saturday. This, Summerfield said, can "serve only to penalize the Amer- ican people" and thousands of postal employes. The postmaster general sum- moned newsmen to what he called an "emergency press conference" in the wake of Wednesday's vote * by a House Appropriations sub- committee to give his department only 17 of the 47 million dollars extra it has asked for expenses in the next three months. There were 'indications the full Appropriations Committee may go along with the 30 million reduc- tion. But Summerfield said that un- less there are assurances in the next 48 hours that his department will get the entire 47 million, he will be forced to make drastic cuts and "it would be completely un- fair to place that responsibility on the postmaster general or this ad- ministration." These are the possibilities under consideration and the estimated sav ngs which would result over three months include halting car- rier mail deliveries in cities on Saturdays and closing all post of- fices and halting all rural mail de- liveries qn Saturdays. World News Roundup By The Associated Press SANTIAGO, Chile - Troops, tanks and armored cars main- tained order in Chile yesterday after two days and nights of de- structive riots over rising living costs. Officials acknowledged 18 deaths in clashes between dem- onstrators and police or army troops. Hundreds were injured. WASHINGTON - An eight-day' budget-cutting spree ended abruptly yesterday as the House wiped ont on roll-call votes all but $15,671,300 of the $68,647,300 in cuts it had previously made in new money for the Labor and Welfare departments. This was $134,446,000 less than President Dwight D. Eisenhower had requested. A House Education subcommit- tee yesterday approved 6-1 a five year two-billion-dollar program of federal grants to the states to help build classrooms. The bill amounted to a compro- mise between the administration plan and a proposal by Democrats calling for a six-year, $3,600,000,- 000 program o; aid. CAIRO - Canadian Ambassa- dor Herber; Norman tucked two farewell notes in his pocket yes- terday and jumped to death from a building near his Cairo home. He was charged before a U.S. Senate subcommittee with once having been a Communist, IV.attLLl g , rSL'.a oDl L *flluse- mother, said she was quite sure the drawing would not eliminate many girls since there were only a "small number that seemed dis- turbed." Dean Fuller, Mrs. Strauss and Betsy Alexander, '58, Assembly As- sociation president, all, said the time had been arranged only aft- I er consulting with Hillel, social and religious center for Jewish students. Assurances From Hillel The drawing was originally scheduled for 7:15 p.m. and was changed 'to 9 p.m. after assur- ances from Hillel that there would be no conflict, Mrs. Strauss re- ported. But Hillel director Herman Ja- cobs claimed last night that he was "quite surprised" to find the drawing scheduled at that time. It was possible, he pointed out, that some unofficial source at Hillel had been contacted but he know noth- ing of it. "In fact," he reported, "just two weeks ago I requested late permis- sions for Jewish girls from the Dean of Women's Office because the ceremony lasts so late.' Will Prevent Participation He said he though holding the drawing on April 15th and pro- hibiting proxy drawing, would pre- vent many Jewish girls from par- ticipating. Regarding proxy drawing, Dean Fullercommented, "Monday (April 15th) is part of the regular school year This is not a religious insti- tution." She also claimed that other reli- gions conflicted with the drawing, pointing to Holy Week. Miss Alexander said coeds al- ready in Barbour felt strongly about having the drawing done in person because it showed "inter- est in the house," Both Dean Fuller and Miss Al- exander said they were opposed to permitting proxy voting. 'Wayne State, V U'Announce Labor Institute University President Harlan Hatcher and President Clarence B. Hilberry, of Wayne State Univer- sity, announced the joint spon- sorship of an Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, yester- day. The project, known as the "In- stitute of Labor and Industrial Relations, The University of Mich- igan-Wayne State University," will have as its objective "to pool and to integrate resources and fa- cilities available to the Univer- sity and Wayne State University in the labor field, industrial rela- tions and related subjects so as to make the maximum contribution to the State of Michigan and to better serve the educational and research needs of workers and management." University Board of Regents has approved the plan and informal approval from individual mem- bers of Wayne's Board of Gover- nors has been obtained. Formalr approval is expected at their next meeting Wednesday. Its three major functions will be to stimulate interest in im- proved instruction at undergradu- Fee Raises By PETER ECKSTEIN Twenty-five per cent is the tu- tion increase most talked about b administration officials, it was ru- mored yesterday. Reports said proposed tuition in- increases of $50 per year for Mi- chigan residents and $130 for out- of-state students in the Literary College are thebasis of current tdiscussions. Present fees are $200 and $470 per year. Tuition increases-which Uni- versity President Harlan Hatcher promised legislators would go to at least 15 per cent per student-are now under consideration by the University committee on fees. Hatcher's Offer Hatcher had offered the legisla- tors a fee increase if they would agree that tuition should go no higher than 20 per cent of the to- tal cost of education, the rest to be made up by state appropria- tions. Fee increases proposed publicly by Hatcher would have brought tuition income of the University to $8,500,000 or slightly more than 20 per cent of the total proposed operating budget o $41,600,000. Based on these figures, the Uni- versity is now requesting $33,000,- 000 of the legislature. Increases of 25 per cent would, however, raise fee income to $9,- 300,000 or 22.5 per cent of the total budget. The percentage would be even higher should the legislature cut the $33,400,000 request by more than $1,000,000. Expect Budget Cut In Lansing and Ann Arbor, the expectation is that the legislature will cut the University request by several millions of dollars. One University fear is that the legis- lators will take Gov. G. Mennen Williams' request of $31,600,000 and cut it by the promised fee revenue increase of $1,000,000. Were this to be the legislature's action, and were the University to raise fees by 25 per cent-the fig- ure now being most discussed-the University would have to slice its operating budget by $1,700,000. Cuts in the University's operat- ing funds could be made up by abandoning plans for a full 10 per- cent salary increase for University employees, or failing to hire the new faculty members considered necessary to meet expanding en- rollments. Library Head Explains Ban EAST LANSING ()--Reasons for a long-standing ban on the "Oz" children's books by the De- troit Public Library were ex- plained by the library director at a statewide library conference at Michigan State University yester- day. Ralph Ulveling, Director of the Detroit library system which stocks more than one million books but not the "Wizard of Oz" stories, said the fairy tale authored by Frank Baum gives youth the wrong approach to life. He criticized the books for their "negativism" and said that in- stead of setting a high goal they drag young minds down to a cow- ardly level. "There is nothing uplifting or elevating about the Baum series," Ulveling declared. "They do not compare in quality to fairy stories by Grimm and Anderson. NEXT? Defense Cut rProposed In England LONDON () - Britain yester- day announced a revolutionary five-year defense plan that will nearly halve its armed forces, and place the nation's security under the umbrella of American nuclear power. A policy declaration in a long- awaited White Paper set forth the Prime Minister Harold Macmillan government's radically advanced concepts for reorganizing the country's air, land and sea forces to the needs of the atomic age and Britain's ability to meet the costs. Aspects of the new policy re- portedly have divided the Cabinet and military planners. Cut Back Defense The program provides for cut- ting back dfense spending by more than 560 million dollars - or nearly an eighth of the whole de- fense budget-in the next fiscal year ending March 1958. Within five years the armed forces will be cut from 680,000 to 375,000 men. It also calls for reducing Bri- tain's garrisons around the globe, a complete withdrawal from South Korea and the ending of the draft in 1960 when the next general election normally would fall due. The British have a single bat- talion in Korea. In starkly realistic terms the White Paper recognized "there is at present no means of providing adequate protection" for Britons against a nuclear attack. Even if only a dozen enemy bombers get through Britain's air defenses-as would seem "inevitable" - they could inflict "widespread devas- tation," the document stated. White Paper The White Paper added: "The defense of Britain is possible only as part of the collective defense of the free world. This conception of collective defense is the basis of the North Atlantic, Southeast Asia and Baghdad alliances. The free world is today mainly depen- dent for its protection upon the nuclear capacity of the United -States." Pending international agree- ment on disarmament, "the only existing safeguard against major aggression is the power to threat- en retaliation with nuclear wea- pons," the declaration went on. Accordingly Britain has decided to recast all its old strategic ideas. As to the navy, "a considerable number" of battleships now in re- serve are to be sold - possibly to Commonwealth countries - or scrapped. Cruisers, destroyers and other types of smaller warships even- tually will be replaced with a smaller number of more modern vessels, some of which will carry guided missiles. As Tornadoes Lash. APRIL SNOW, SLUSH: Storms Preview Student Exodus -Daily-Dick Gaskii --Daily--Norm Jacobs WINTER'S END?-The snow refuses to say a final goodbye to the campus, so students are saying goodbye to the snow, going home or to Florida, as the student on the left Is doing, in hopes that spring will finally be here when he comes back. Some, however, are not so: face Ann Arbor's brand of April showers. University students will not im- mediately escape the dampness of Ann Arbor weather as they leave today for spring recess. According to the United States Weather Bureau at Willow Run Airport clouds will again hide the sun and rain will complete the weather picture for what looks to be a dreary exodus. Convertible auto tops willbprob- ably be up as a great number of students leave for Florida today. The weathermayrbe full of Vita- min D in the deep South but get- ting there will entail driving or flying through rain or fog Ike Stresses Classrooms Over Atom s throughout most of the Southern route. This forecast is also expected to hold true for regions to the east and west of the campus commun- ity. State Police report that highway conditions will be generally bad' throughout Michigan due to heavy overcast and the possibility of freezing rain. Many University students are looking ahead to a week of beach- es and parties as they heau for the latest thing in spring vacations, the East Coast of Florida. Fraternities and sororities re- port that an average of seven to ten members from each house are making the trip. Ore sorority has already arranged accommodations in the Sunshine state for fifty girls. A late model car, parked in front of South Quad yesterday, was painted with the motto. "Florida or Bust."w Less fortunate members of the Blackout Hits Women's Halls A blackout covered the Wo- men's dormitories last night from 10:45 to 11 p.m. All power was shut off with the, exception of one circuit in West Couzens, where there was light but no power. Warnings were issued to stu- dents by their respective house- mothers about ten minutes before lights actually went out. However, no explanations were given to the residents by house officials. WASHINGTON (?) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower plugging anew for his classroom construc- tion program, said yesterday the nation's schools are more import- ant than Nike antiaircraft batter- ies "and more powerful even than the energy of the atom." In a nationally televised address at the centennial dinner of the National Education Assn., Presi- dent Eisenhower asserted: "Our schools are strong points in our national defense. Our schools are more important than our Nike batteries, more necessary than our radar warning nets, and more powerful even than the ener- gy of the atom. "This is true if for no other rea- son than that modern weapons must be manned by highly edu- cated personnel. fortunate; they have to grin and student body are going home to rest in preparation for the final seven weeks of the spring semest- er. A local travel agency is re- ported to have two file drawers filled with transportation reserva- tions made by students for all points of the nation. For the most part, the campus will be left to the squirrels and the few robins who have ventured north to take up summer residence in spite of the snow. U.S. Seeks TO Change Egypt Plan WASHINGTON (P)-The United States was reported yesterday to be making last-minute efforts to win some revision of Egypt's plan for operating the Suez Canal de- spite initial rejectionof the main American proposals by the Egypt- ian government. The Suez issue was one of the questions discussed in a 45-minute conference yesterday b e t w e e n President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Fos- ter Dulles. Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, according to information from diplomatic officials here turned down threeamajor changes which Dulles had asked in a note sent to Cairo last Sunday. Changes for Protection Those Nhanges were designed to protect the interests of user na- tions in the operation of the canal to the greatest extent which Dulles considered possible under the plan proposed by Egypt a week ago. The Egyptian reply was re- ceived here Tuesday night. Dulles had said at a news conference Tuesday morning that he expected to, know within 24 to 48 hours whether there was any chance for serious negotiation with Egypt. The 48-hour period expired yes- terday and the word from diplo- mats,-here was that the Egyptian'+ response really offered no solid basis for hope that serious nego- tiations were possible. Nasser Stands Firm Every indication was that Nas- ser was standing firm on his own' terms for operating the waterway under complete Egyptian control. However, there were also sever- al signs that Dulles, who is per- sonally directing the exchanges with the Egyptian government through Ambassador Raymond A. Hare in Cairo, has not yet given ~outh iMississippi Hardest Hit By Storms Winds Hit Hospital, Hurt Many Patients; Damage Extensive By The Associated Press Savage tornadoes whipped across Dixie yesterday, leaving at least two dead, 100 or more injured and scores of homes demolished. Property damage was reported heavy. Apparently breaking out of the Southwest, hard hit earlier in the week, the tornadoes lashed at several Mississippi communities, struck into west and north Ala- bama, roared in Kentucky and Tennessee before moving east- ward and northward toward the Atlantic. Mississippi bore the brunt of an early morning storm, which killed Louisa Jones, 62-year-old Negro who had fled to the shelter of a school bus near Louin. The body of Leland Newsom, about 30 years old, was found in his automobile after it was blown into flood wat- ters near New Hebron, in south central Mississippi. Many Casualties At least 89 persons were report- ed injured in Mississippi, 50 to 75 in a Negro tubercular hospital. Tornadoes struck at other small communities. Many homes. were damaged or destroyed. The storm veered off into Ten- nessee, already struck by a small tornado at Nashville Wednesday night, and hit half a dozen more communities. Some property damage was caused in and around the south- western Tennessee communities of Guys, Chewalla, Ramer and East- view and Selmer and Chesterfield in the Jackson area of west Ten- nessee. Twister Hits Kenticky A tornado struck in the Bowling Green area of western Kentucky in the early morning hours and damaged several buildings. Hard rains disrupted communications. The snow belt reached from the Western Plains to the Atlantic in the northern states. Persisting rain swelled the Ohio River and its branches In west- ern Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. Heavy snows were reported in Nebraska, Minnesota and Penn- sylvania. Strands Motorists High winds picked up snow that had fallen Tuesday and blew It across southeastern Wyoming. Snow isolated communities and stranded motorists. A Greyhound bus with 30 pas- sengers aboard was caught in huge drifts on Sherman Hill, Wyo. Schools, Airports Closed Most of the rural schools in South Dakota were closed, and the highway department told motor- ists to stay off the roads. The Pierre, S. D., airport suspended operations.. ~ Many schools in southern and central Minnesota were closed Sleet made travel hazardous in parts of Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan. The Ohio River was reported to be rising at a rapid rate at East Liverpool, Ohio, near the Penn- sylvania boundary. Flood Areas Some areas in central Ohio were doused by more than two inches of rain in 24 hours. Tributaries of the Scioto River edged up close to flood levels. The Embarrass River went over its banks and spilled across sev- eral hundred acres of bottom land at Lawrenceville, Ill., near the In- diana border. The Big Muddy Riv- er overflowed at some, points in Murphysboro, Ill. Students Receive Norwegian Grants RESULT OF FINAL REPORT: SGC Supported by U' Evaluation Committee By MICHAEL KRAFT "Mission accomplished," Student Government Council's evaluation committee voted yesterday after drafting its final report supporting the continuance of SGC and rec- ommending a study of possible modifications. In form of a letter to Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs James A. Lewis, the report marks the ending of the two-year trial period for SGC. Lewis will submit a recom- mendation to the Board of Regents, which granted a student govern- ment official recognition for first time when SGC was formed in March 1955. The importance of freedom to Prof. Lionel H. Laing, of thet political science department. *2. "The trial period having' been concluded, the committee is of the opinion that SGC as the form of student government should be continued," members of the committee decided following dis- cussion onH the trial program prompted by Robert Leacock, '57. 3. "It is our opinion, however, that nothing should be done at the Regental level that would make further modification difficult or impossible," agreed committee members, emphasizing the need for flexibility within the Regent's 1nurab every letter" according to DeanI of Women Deborah Bacon. These I included "differences of opinion" over a constitution for SGC, the size and electoral process of the group and composition and scope of the Board in Review. "But such questions being or- ganic in character ought not to be hastily resolved," the committee declared. 5. Again emphasizing relations with the Regents, the evaluation committee recommended that "the SGC Plan should contain provi- sions by which subsequent modi- The briefs, letters and minutes are the "raw material" of back- ground for future successors of the evaluation Committee she §aid. Who will make future studies? The committee indicated during discussion they thought it would be presumptious to be specific. However, Prof. Laing ventured that "my own feeling is that SGC might be specific." Data Collected A thick notebook containing ten briefs and memoranda from stu- dent organizations and 24 letters from alumni and students was col- lected by committee members. Meeting ten times since appoint- ment by Lewis on Jan. 21, 1957, S fications in structure could be ac- complished without tencsiy ,J-aws . - Further Consideration of "always opening the subject matter for Regental considera- I i i