UNIVERSITY LECTURE COURSE PROBLEM PSee Page 4 Y L tb i11 OI FI.= WIFlilll I1i11111 I Nun nuiwr . 1 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXVII, No. 14343ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1957 WARMER, SHOWERS SIX PAGES Jordan's Premier Defend s Policies, Criticism of Pro-Western Leaning Voiced by Former Army Leaders AMMAN, Jordan (P) - Premier Hussein Khalidi spoke up sharply yesterday for his government's pro-Western leanings. He was. defending against attacks on the kingdom's policies by two military leaders who fled to Syria. The Eisenhower Doctrine was a factor in their long-range debate. Denounces Statements Khalidi denounced statements by Maj. Gen. Ali Abu Hayari and Maj. Gen. Ali Abu Nuwar, both former chiefs of staff. He said the statements "caused confusion and have been used in a way contradictory to the best interests and security of this faithful country." Nuwar was quoted as saying in Damascus that the United States f J lJ f F tL NIEHUSS SAYS: I 'U' May Ask Hearings On Budget Reduction By MICHAEL KRAFT University officials will "probably" request the Senate Appropria- tions Committee to hold an open hearing on the University's reduced budget, Marvin L. Niehuss, University Vice President and Dean of Faculties said yesterday. "While we have not yet sent in a formal request, we will definitely be meeting with committee members this week," Niehuss said. The appropriations bill, which cut the University's revised oper- ating budget request from $33,000,000 to $29,131,000, has been referred back to the Senate Appropriations Committee and will be reported to the Senate floor by Friday. Capital Outlay Also under discussion is the capital outlay request for University construction which the committee cut in half, leaving $7,710,000 and USSR Warning to British On Suez Attack Revealed Embassy in Amman put "strong HoIffa Asks Indictment CroEd Be, Dr'pp0red pressure on me to form a military -Qgovernment in Jordan under my premiership provided I accept the Eisenhower Doctrine." Claimed Deceit He accused the present Jordan government of 'fsheer deceit aimed at paving the way for American colonialism to complete its plots against the liberal Arab movement." Hayari succeeded Nuwar as chief of staff and held the job two ' days before fleeing to Syria.' , He told a news conference in I Damascus Saturday that palace | military attaches in Amman had i officials and foreign non-Arab plotted against Jordan's indepen- dence. WASHINGTON (A)-Counsel fo: James R. Hoffa, Midwest boss o: the 'Teamsters Union, opened full-scale attack yesterday on a: indictment charging Hoffa wit conspiring to pry secrets from th Senate Rackets Committee. The lawyers asked for dismissa of the indictment on thre grounds, First, they contended Hoffa wa deprived of his right to a prelini nary hearing after his midnigh arrest in a Washington hote March 13; second, that the federa grand jury which returned th indictment was "infected" by "im proper publicity" in the case; an finally that count three fails t state an offense. Cited as Grounds The last two contentions als were cited as grounds for dismiss irig the indictment against Hy- man I. Fischbach, a Miami attor- ney accused with Hoffa of plotting to plant a spy on the Senate Com mittee's staff. The senators have been investi gating Teamsters Union affairs. Hoffa and Fischbach pleaded in nocent in U.S. District Cour March 29. Their trial was set for May 27. Ask for Delay In the event the court refuses t dismiss the indictment, counsel for the two men asked that the tria be postponed for six months be- cause they said "there exists in the District of Columbia at the present time such great prejudice" against the defendants. They said this prejudice was "a result of improper and hostile pub- licity.", The first count of the indictment against the men accuses them of conspiring to defraud the United States. Sen. J. L. McClellan (D-Ark) committee chairman, has said John R. Cheasty cooperated with the committee from the outset and was given papers which he passed on to Hoffa with the knowledge of the FBI. G. B. Harrison To ive alk Eminent Shakespearean scholar and professor of, English, G. B. Harrison, will deliver a lecture on Shakespeare's "Richard III" at 4 pm. today in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Prof. Harrison's lecture is pre- sented in connection with the final major production on the spring playbill of the Department of Speech, "Richard III." The critic and author is acting as Shakespearean consultant for this production. Perfcrmances of "Richard III" are scheduled for April 25, 26 and 27 at 8.G0 p.m. in the Lydia Men- * delssohn Theatre. On April 27, at 2:30 p.m., a special matinee will be performed fer high school stu- dents. James Brock, visiting orofessor, is the director for this produc- tion. Under the direction of Ed- ward Andreasen of the Depart- ment of Speech, a unique stage setting is planned to permit the action of the play to move quickly from one setting to another with only one intermission. Tickets for "Richard III" will be ' vailable at the Lydia Mendels- 1 Claims Interference e Jordanian Foreign Minister Su- leiman Nabulsi Sunday night also s accused "certain foreign diplo- - matic missions" of interfering in t Jordan's internal affairs. l He reiterated his intention of l establishing diplomatic relations e with Russia although he insisted - Jordan opposes communism. d An I s r a e li Foreign Office o spokesman in Jerusalem said most of Jordan's 20,000 army has been confined to barracks because of o fear of disloyal units, to keep - them away from the masses and . to keep a check on officers, some - of whom have been defecting to g Syria. - I - Strikers Hit r Rail Express D NEW YORK ()-The Railway r Express Agency yesterday embar- l goed less-than-carload rail and - air shipments to seven major cities where its operations were halted t by a strike of the Teamsters t Union. The embargo does not affect carload lots The strike, which began one minute after midnight yesterday, t came at the end of a 30-day cool- ing off period provided by the Railway Labor Act. Rejected Settlement The union rejected a presiden- t tial board's recommendations for settlement which the company ac- cepted. The strike affects Railway Ex- press Agency offices in Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Newark, N. J., Philadelphia, St. Louis and San Francisco. The union said "certain points adjacent" to those cities also were affected. Drivers Reported Truck drivers were reported off the job at Paterson and Elizabeth, N. J. About 1,500 of the company's 3,000 truck drivers are involved. Railway Express President A. L. Hammell said in a statement that the company offered the teamster employes a 29-cent-an hour package, of which a small1 part was retroactive to Jan. 16, 1956.1 Accepted by Others1 "Substantially this was the same as that previously accepted by 90, per cent of our employes repre- sented by other unions," he added.a The fact-finding board recoi-1 mended a three-year contract, ef- fective from Nov. 1, 1956, consist- ing of a 29-cent package. Few Calendar Polls Returned About 200 calendar question- naires have been answered and returned, according to Mary Ter- ry, '58, of the University calen- Dulles Says~ World War Improbable NEW YORK (')-Secretary of State John Foster Dulles yesterday spurned any suggestion of inevit- able war between the free world and international communism. He said armed aggression is no longer "a paying( proposition." In his first foreign policy speech of President Dwight D. Eisenhow- er's second term, Dulles counseled patience on many fronts - in the Middle East, those involving rest- less Red satellites behind the Iron Curtain, and on disarma- ment. Rededicated U. S. He rededicated the U n it e d States to the United Nations and its ideals of peace with justice, telling critics, "that is no abdica- tion of foreign policy. "It is the exercise of foreign policy, and its exercise in the way which represents the best hope for humanity." Touching briefly on the horrors of modern warfare, Dulles told the annual Associated Press luncheon regarding deep differences be- tween Russia and the free world. Divides World "Indeed, history suggests that a conflict as basic as that dividing the world of freedom and the world of international communism ultimately erupts in war. "That suggestion we reject. But to reject in terms of words or hopes is not enough. "We must also 'exert ourselves to the full to prevent it. "To this task, the American people must unswervingly dedicate1 their hearts and minds throughout the years ahead." Bus Schedules; For AA Readyt Detailed bus schedules are now available from the Ann Arbor Transit, Inc., John W. Rae, com- pany co-ordinator, announced yes-I terday.j The schedules, which have been missing since the Transit began operations a wee: ago, are being distributed on all buses. The pamphlets containing the sche- dules also include rates and the bus routes. University students with identi- fication cards can ride for a 15 cent rate, according to the pamph-I let. Substantially the same routesI exist as under the previous trans- it system with a new route, Route 5, being initiated.t This route extends from Main3 and Huron Sts. to Detroit St. toi Broadway to Plymouth Rd. tot Barton Dr. to Pontiac St., tog Broadway, to Beakes St., to North Main, to Huron.t Main and -Huron is the main1 terminal point for allthe cityI bus routes.P 'no funds for planning' or begin- ning new construction. "We'll ask the committee to raise the appropriations, but we have to find out exactly where they stand," Niehuss pointed out. Action (by University officials follows a University Regents reso- lution directing the administra- tion to "do everything possible to persuade the Legislature that the appropiration bill introduced in he Legislature is inadequate to maintain the University of Michi- gan as a quality educational insti- tution. The motion urged the measure be reconsidered and the Univer- sity's appropriation be increased. Voiced Feeling Niehuss voiced the feeling that even if the Legislature does in- crease the appropriation, it will be "far below what we think we need." University President Harlan Hatcher called the bill "inade- quate even for the University's minimum needs." Niehuss said both a raise in stu- dent fees and cuts in enrollment had been discussed. "Probably both would be likely," he pre- dicted. Limit Enrollment Keeping the student enrollment at 22,000 rather than expanding to next year's projected enroll- ment of 24,100 would save approx- imately $1,500,000 he estimated. At the last Regents meeting, he said 165 new faculty members would be needed to handle the in- creased enrollment. No funds have been provided in the committee's recommendations for either fac- ulty increases or raises. The Regents have not made any decision on a tuition increase. At their March meeting, they en- dorsed a suggestion by President Hatcher that the University might increase by 20 to 25 per cent if the Legislature a p p r o p r i a t e d enough funds to reach the $34,- 131,458 the University originally requested. "I don't see how we will get by without substantial tuition in- creases," Niehuss said. In Lansing yesterday, Demo- cratic Party chairman Neil Staeb- ler announced the Democrats would would stage a legislative conference Saturday. He said it will consider ways of combatting the Republican State Budget pro- posals which he called "an out- rageous insult" to the people. 'Ensian Copy Position Open Petitioning is now open for the position of Copy Editor of the 1958+ Michiganensian. This paid position involves cre- ative writing and Seinor Staff sta- tus on the Editorial staff of the yearbook. No 'Ensian experience is necessary, although some cre- ative writing exprience is prefer-+ able. For further information, stu- dents are asked to contact Carey Wall at the 'Ensian office, or ati NO 2-3153. All petitions are due Monday., COURT RULES: Segregation Appeal Sent To Districts WASHINGTON () - The Su- preme Court emphasized again yesterday it expects federal dis- trict courts to keep tabs on steps toward eliminating racial segrega- tion in public schools. It did so in denying without comment an appeal brought by the Wichita Falls, Texas school Board. The board had appealed from a decision by the United States Court of Appeals in New Orleans directing a district court to keep on' its docket a suit by Negro children for admission to public schools nearest their homes. Requests Desegregation The school board contended that under its policy of desegregation of all schools the Negroes' request had been granted. The District Court for northern Texas agreed with the board and dismissed the complaint. The court of appeals, however, directed the district court to re- tain jurisdiction in the case. Right of Transfer It said that while the Negro children had been admitted to the public school nearest their homes, "It is by no means certain that they had the same free privilege of transfer to or attendance at any school of their choice as was ac- corded the white children." In another action, the court agreed to rul: on constitutionality of a law requiring deportation of aliens who at any time were mem- bers of the Communist party. Critics Ask U.S. Control Radiation WASHINGTON (') - A member of the genetics committee of the National Academy of Sciences yes- terday criticized what he called the government's failure to carry out a year-old academy recom- mendation for a national system of individual record-keeping on radiation exposure. Dr. H. Bentley Glass of Johns Hopkins Universty declared that last year's estimate of the average reproductive c e 11 exposure of Americans to medical and dental X-rays and other medically used radioactive substances has since been revised upwards. In Chicago Adlai E. Stevenson yesterday renewed his plea that steps be taken to control the test- ing of large nuclear bombs. The 1952 and 1956 Democratic presidential nominee, who had called for such steps during the past campaign, issued a statement to that effect after he had con- ferred for an hour with a special representative of Japan, Dr. Maso-' toshi Matsushita, who is visiting Western leaders and is expressing opposition to further nuclear tests. "If the United States continues the tests, it would lose its moral influence in Asia," Dr. Matsushita told newsmen after the parley with Stevenson. -Daily-David Arnold TWO IN A ROW - Steve Boros being congratulated by John Herrnstein (36) and Al Sigman (41) after blasting a three run homerun in the sixth inning of yesterday's ball game. (See page 3) NO FORMAL ACTION: Faculty Senate Okays Board Nominations x By ALLAN STILLWAGON Faculty Senate yesterday informally approved 10 nominations for the Senate Advisory Committee, and accepted two names as'candidates for the faculty seat on the Union Board of Directors. Among other reports heard by the body was the annuMd confiden- tial report on the "economic status of the faculty" and a proposal to alter a Senate by-law regarding severance pay. No vote or formal action was recorded at the semi-annual meeting, according to Prof. George M. McEwen of the engineering English department, Senate secretary. Alteration of the complex by-law relative to severance pay was Soviets Told, -Eden Month In Advance, Bulganin Predicted Holy War as Reprisal LONDON () - Russia warned Britain a month before the Brit- ish-French attack on Egypt that the Arabs would sabotage the Suez Canal and Middle East oil work- ings in reprisal. Moscow also predicted the Arab states would meet the invaders with a holy war. The sabotage materialized. The holy war did not. Warnings Conveyed The warnings were conveyed by'- Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin to then Prime Minister Anthony Eden in a secret exchange of let- ters last fall when the Suez Canal crisis was rushing toward a show- down. Prime Minister Harold Macmil- lan's office hurriedly made the ex- change public five hours after Moscow announced it was publish- ing today the exchanges between Bulganin and Eden and French Premier Guy 1Mollet, An indication that 10 Downing St. acted with decisive haste was the fact that no mimeographed copies of the letters were ready as they would be normally under such circumstances. Called in.Reporters Instead, British reporters ac- cedited to Parliament were called in and the letters were readto them, Whe decision of the British to let themselves be smoked out and put their own initial emphasis qn the exchanges was apparently designed to blunt a renewed Soviet propa- ganda drive to picture the Rus- sians as friends and protectors of the Arab World. Moscow's maneuver to publish the letters came right behind weelend notes to the United States, Britain and France urging renunciation of force in the Middle East and the scrapping of Western military bases. Moscow Concerned Western diplomats in London speculated Moscow was concerned by the apparent success of the Eisenhower Doctrine of aid for the Middle East and the recent patch- ing up of British-U.S. relations that had been strained by the attack on Egypt. "Such correspondence is not us- ually published," said one Western diplomat, "and it tends to reduce the value of personal contacts be- tween heads of state." Bulganin predicted that if Sri- tain and France attacked Egypt "all the Arabs would rise in sacred struggle against a foreign inva- sion." This failed to materialize. Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, bound to Egypt in a military pact, did not rush to the rescue. Bulganin's prediction of damage to the Suez Canal and Middle East oil turned out a little better. Egypt sank ships to block the canal and Syria blew up the pipe- lines from Iraq inside Syria, there- by cutting the flow of vital oil to Europe to a trickle. AP Requests China Trvel NEW YORK (P)-The Associ- atdPesBado ietr urged yesterday that United States newsmen be permitted to travel to Red China and report first hand from the Chinese main- land. Commenting on the State De- partment's refusal to permit newsmen to travel in Red China, the board said in its report to the annual meeting of members of The Associated Press, worldwide news cooperative: "The most noticeable gap in our coverage, and one that has caused instituted by the Senate after the of the pharmocology department' and H. Chandler Davis of the mathematics department for their refusal to answer the questions of the House committee on un-Amer- ican activities. Faculty members selected by Senate nominating committee as Advisory Committee candidates are: Prof. Oliver C. Applegate of the dental school, Prof. Solomon J. Axelrod of the public health eco- nomics bureau, Prof. Richard A. Deno of the medical school, Prof. G. Robinson Gregory of the na- tural re sources school, and Prof. C. Theo ore Larson of the archi- tecture college. Other nominees are: Prof. Helen Peak of the psychology depart- ment, Prof. Floyd A. Peyton of the dental school, Prof. Merwin H. Waterman of the business admin- istration school, Prof. J. Philip Wernette of the business adminis- tration school, and Prof. James H. Zumberge of the geology depart- ment, Prof. Robert L. Dixon of the business administration school and Prof. Lionel H. Laing of the poli- tical science department were nominated for the Union post. Elections are being held by mail. Results will be announced May 10 or 11. dismissal of Prof. Mark Nickerson SAB Plans Dedication, Open House By RICHARD TAUB Students will have an oppor- tunity to see what is behind the shiny facade of aluminum, glass and brick in the building at E. Jef- ferson and Maynard Sts. from 3-5 p.m. on Friday. The new million dollar Student Activities Building will be dedi- cated by University President Harlan Hatcher and an open house will be held for all students. "We want to give the students an opportunity to see what's here -what they have and where," Scott Chrysler, '59E, of Student Government Council explained. "What's here" includes offices for 42 extra-curricular groups, the Deans of men's and women's offices, workshops and a room de- signed to house the Student Book Exchange. Chrysler emphasized the dedi- cation will be brief. Members of the student activi- ties board of SGC will serve as hosts. They will be stationed throughout the building to answer any questions. Each student group will have a said, to explain its organization. display of some kind, Chrysler They may !range from photo- graphs to actual projects. Lecture Today By Bredvold TO RUN UNTIL SATURDAY: First All-Student Art Show Opens in Rackham By JAMES BERG The University Student Art Sale opened at eight p.m. yesterday in the Rackham Galleries. It is, according to Tom Frank, '57 A & D, the first entirely student originated and operated art show at the University. It is hoped that the show can be continued in future years. The exhibit will last until Saturday and will be open, to the public from 1 to 10 p.m. each day. It is a continuing show, and new works will be added from time to time as old ones are sold and removed from display.