U' GAIN A FRIEND BY FRIDAY See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State Paii4F CLOUDY, COOLER VOL. LXVII, No. 169 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1957 SIX. PAGES SIX PAGES U.S., Russia Must Meet Halfway-Ike Says Compromise Needed To Disarm WASHINGTON (M) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower said yes- terday the United States must be ready to meet Russia "halfway" in order to work out a disarmament agreement needed to ease world tensions. He called on Americans to "keep our minds open" about the pros- pects of a limited agreement des- pite Russia's past record of broken promises. President Eisenhower's remarks at a news conference could have been an implied reproof to Admir- al Arthur W. Radford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. 'Don't Trust Reds' Radford said Sunday in talking about East-West disarmament talks: "We cannot trust the Rus- sians on this or anything. The word with every country with Communists have broken their which they ever had an agree- ment." - Eisenhower did not mention Radford by name but said "in the interest of the United States" some progress must be made to reduce the world's arms burden. Speaking emphatically, he said: "I think our first concern should be making certain we are not our- selves being recalcitrant, we are not being picayunish. 'Need Open Mind' "We ought to have an open mind and make it possible for others, if they are reasonable, logical men, to meet us halfway so we can make these agreements." The President acknowledged the Soviets, with their history of breaking international treaties force the West to be "especially careful" in negotiating any sys- tem of arms inspection. But Eisenhower said he is seek- ing initially only "the -first simple moves" by both sides toward dis- armament. These first steps, he said, would give all a chance to "test the good faith" of each other as well as the efficiency of any arrangement for inspection of each other's ter- ritoryto make certain that prom- ises are kept. "There has got to be progress in some kind of disarmament or there is going to be no reduction in world tensions," he said. The President's emphasis on the need for a reasonable American approach toward the Russians ap- peared to foreshadow possible newj United States concessions in the disarmament talks, now in recess, in London. Coaches Study Financial Aid' For Athletes EVANSTON, ll. (P) - Football coaches and athletic directors yes- terday studied the Big Ten's new financial aid to athletes program and proposed further change in an amendment aimed at modifying the code. The policy-making faculty re- presentatives meet with the ath- letic directors tomorrow and Sat-I urday at which time a series ofI proposed amendments w ill be weighed.' One proposed amendment would_ provide awards of board, room, books, tuition and fees-regard- less of proven need of an athlete- to graduates in the upper quarter of their high school classes, who subsequently must maintain a B average. The coaches and athletic direc- tors today recommended that such a scholarship award be granted to athletes graduating in the upper third of their classes and there- after maintaining a "B-C" schol- astic average. This would restore the same standard for an academic scholar- ship wnich prevailed under the old Big Ten code. The new financial aid program basically assists ath- letes on the basis of need only and requires financial statements from the athletes' parents Gulantics Ended r ,-' vsnnMr Forum Committee Established by SGC Speakers Selected Would Discuss Educational, Controversial Subjects By RICHARD TAUB Student Government Council set up a committee last night to prepare for the establishment of a forum program to discuss educa- tional and controversial questions. The committee will include the chairman of the Education and Social Welfare Committee and three council members. It will investigate possible speakers, sources of funds, and try to find a name for the program. According to the motion, the program aims at contributing to campus discussion, and sponsorship by the Council of a balanced JOHN F. ENGLISH .. . new union leader Foreign, Aid Plan Gains New Support WASHINGTON (P) - The Eis- enhower administration appears to have drummed up some fresh support and enthusiasm for its $3,865,000,000 foreign aid program in the last 24 hours. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles carried the fight for the program to the Senate Foreign Relations committee yesterday and won the praise of several sen- ators for his "persuasive" presen- tation. One of the committee members, Sen. Homer Capehart (R-Ind), said that "for the first time in 10 years I am going to vote for the support of this program because it is sound in principe." Bill Faces Fight Despite apparent gains, how- ever, the big foreign aid bill still faces a battle in Congress. De- mands for substantial cuts in for- eign aid and spending persist and are supported by many leading members of Congress. One of these was Sen. Harry F. Byrd (D-Va), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. He called Wednesday for "a com- plete blueprint" of future foreign aid spending. Sen. Byrd said in a statement the President omitted from his n a t io n w i d e radio-TV address Tuesday night the fact that more than six billion dollars of unex- pended balances remain from pre- vious foreign aid appropriations. Must Help Allies During the course of his argu- ments before the foreign relations committee yesterday Dulles said' he still believes in the philosophy' that if you don't spend money to1 help your friends abroad you may eventually "have to spend blood." The secretary said it would be "folly" to cut the mutual security program below $3,800,000,000. Sen. V. William Fulbright (D-t Ark.) told Dulles he had presented "a wise and imaginative program,"z especially with respect to long-r range economic development. 1 Garg.Re mains On Sale Today About 300 copies of the year'sc last issue of Gargoyle, campusf humor magazine, will remain onc sale today, according to Carl York,c '58, circulation manager.J 'program would not indicate en- dorsement of the speakers or their points of view, Might Commit Funds Too Early Maynard Goldman, '59, treas- urer, was concerned that the mo- tion might commit council funds too early in the year. Peter Eck- stein, '58, newly appointed Daily Editor, noted that the council would have a surplus of several thousand dollars next year, and Jean Scruggs, '58, pointed out that the whole program was subject to Council approval, so no financial commitment would yet be made. Carol Bamburger, '60, Calendar Committee chairman, presented the council with next year's activ- ities calendar. She reported that Galens had requested permission to have a campus fund raising drive next December. Galens was not permitted to hold its drive on campus this year because the Council had thought it would harm the Cam- pus Chest Program. Should Permit Drive John Wrona, '57, said the Coun- cil should permit Galens to hold the drive because, "the group has been very successful .raising funds in the past and wishes to wait until the Campus Chest drive be- comes an established success" No action was taken, and calen- dar approval was postponed to next week. Harlan Givelber, '57. Campus Chest Board chairman, presented the final Board report to the Council, with recommendations for next year's drive. He said Galens had been guar- anteed "the greater of either their percentage (20 per cent) or the difference between the amount they collect in the city . and $7,000." Under these conditions, he noted, the group had nothing to lose and actually stood to gain. Dropped from Board Inter-Cooperative Council and International Students Association were dropped from the Campus Chest Board because of their lack of interest. Neither group had at- tended any meetings, Givelsen said. The Council also eliminated from the Board Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis because he did not have time to attend the meetings, and was on the allocations board anyway. Joint Judiciary Council appoint- ments were announced at the meeting. The Council will include Dave Cooper, '57, Mike Jacobsen, '58, Harold Barron, '58, Frank Knox, '57, and Lucinda Hendricks, '59. First alternate is Michael Ru- bin, '58. Because Wrona resigned from the Council last night Shorr an- nounced petitions have been re- opened for the second Council Position this spring. Petitions closed last week for another Coun- cil position which was vacated by Jan Winklehaus, '57. New Code Leads Union 'Clean-Up' WASHINGTON (P) - The AFL- CIO yesterday adopted a code that P.r e s i d e n t'George Meany said would have "very definitely pre- vented" such misuse of union funds as is charged to Teamsters. boss Dave Beck. The code contains a set of ac- counting principles calling for regular audits. It bars union loans to union officers for their personal profit or to firms with which a union has labor contract dealings. Meanwhile, a group of top Teamsters Union officials, headed by the union's secretary-treasurer, John F. English, discussed plans to seek Beck's ouster as president because of the Senate Rackets Committee charges he misused large sums of the union's funds. English, who talked freely about his plans Tuesday night after being named to Beck's place as an AFL- CIO vice president, would not talk to newsmen yesterday. But it was learned he was con- sulting with fellow Teamsters lead- ers on a "Beck must go" campaign and union clean-up. The plan of the English group is to demand that Beck convene the Teamsters executive board soon, within the next week or so. If he refuses, the group intends to: assemble the board anyway to de- mand Beck's resignation. Meany said the code, adopted unanimously by the AFL-CIO Ex- ecutive Council, was being recom- mended for adoption by all the federation's 140 unions. Campus Chest Organizations Choose Head Joe Sherman, '58, was appointed Chairman of the Campus Chest Board, Harlan Givelber, '57, pres- ent board chairman, told Student Government Council last night. Sherman was appointed by four organization representatives who are members of the board, Givel- ber said. The groups are Inter- House Council, Council of Student Religious Organizations, Michigan Union and Michigan League. Other groups who are on the board, but not represented at the meeting are: Interfraternity Coun- cil, International Students Asso- ciation, Inter-Cooperative Council, Student Government Council, Pan-' hellenic Association, and Assembly. New Perils Of Twisters In Missouri President Declares Region Disaster Area ST. LOUIS (P) - New tornado alerts, coming on the heels of two days of 'power-packed twisters that killed 51 in Missouri and a fringe strip of Kansas, kept resi- dents of the area jittery yesterday. The frightening black funnels were still on the move, having left 14 dead in the southeastern quar- ter of Missouri Tuesday and 37 in the Kansas City area Monday. Meantime, in Washington Pres- ident Dwight D. Eisenhower des- ignated the tornado-battered re- gions of Missouri as a major dis- aster area eligible for federal aid. The White House announced that Federal Civil Defense Ad- ministration officials will confer with Missouri's Gov. James T. Blair Jr. regarding the amount of relief money required. Heavy rains and high winds - mistaken for, tornadoes at some points-hit parts of southern Mis- souri yesterday. Streams went out of their banks in the south-west- ern part of the state. The twisters touched down at scattered points in Missouri and Illinois Tuesday from midafter- noon on through to midnight, ISA Elects A ktay NV ew President Gunay Aktay, '59E, and Cla- venda Bright, '60P, were recently elected president and vice-presi- dent, respectively, of the Interna- tional Students Association, Tues- day. Aktay won over Chandra Ahooja, '58, with a final count of 298 to 290. "We now have to plan our pro- gram for next year," Aktay said. "Since so many campus organiza- tions have taken an interest in the work of theIhternational Center, ISA's work has become even more important." Aktay is a Turkish Naval stu- dent studying Marine Engineering at the University. When he re- turns to Turkey he will be working at the naval yards in Istanbul. "Much of our work next fall will be centered around the World's Fair," he said. The fair will fea- ture international exhibits and an international dance. Miss Bright, a Liberian, plans to return there when she gradu- ates from the University. "I hope to work in a hospital for a while and then start a pharmacy," she said. Aktay and Miss Bright said they will seek to make ISA better known on campus during the com- ing year. Goeritz Calls 'Emnotion' Goal In Architecture Buildings should communicate an emotional feeling of wonder- ment, sculptor-architect Mathias Goeritz said yesterday. Goeritz, discussing his own work in the field of emotional archi- tecture, showed several slides of a new project that is being con- structed in northern Mexico City. This project consists of build- ing a city within a city. Goeritz helped design the towers at the; entrance. However, the functional pur- pose of the buildings in the project is of little interest to him, Goeritz said. Their aesthetic beauty is what is important. Goeritz who was born in Ger- many was greatly influenced by German Expressionism- and Dada- ism. His work is a combination of primitive simplicity and freshness combined with the frantic emo- tion of German Expressionism. Group Leader n-E 0 0 LINKED IKE, BECK: Senator Morse Target Of Republican Assault WASHINGTON (P-Republican senators linked hands yesterday in a united assault on Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) for saying that President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Dave Beck are "the same kind of immoralists." But Sen. Morse fought back, repeating the charge on the Senate floor: "In my book the President of the United States is guilty of political immorality." Sen. Morse challenged the Republicans to offer a resolution to censure him. No one took the dare. "Shocking," "very offensive," "unfair," "character assassination," "bad taste"-these were some of the verbal shells the GOP fired in a demonstratiorr of solidarity.$ The sharp-tongued Sen. Morse, P"T.11' who used to be a Republican him- self, compared President Eisen- hower to President Beck of the Teamsters Union in a speech at Detroit last Saturday night. Beck has been accused by Chair- man John L. McClellan (D-Ark.) of the Senate Rackets Investigat- ing Committee of misappropriat- ing $320,000 of his union's funds. He has been expelled from the AFL-CIO Council and indicted on charges of income tax evasion. Sen. Morse accused the admin- istration of doing big financial favors for power companies, and said it was guilty of "shocking betrayal" of the interest of future generations in water resources. Hitting at the administration on other scores, he said that when Harold E. Talbott resigned as sec- retary of the Air Force he was given "a high medal." - Local Strike Nears End Settlement seemed near yester- day between -the striking union carpenters and laborers of Wash- tenaw county and county contrac- tors organizations. The strike, arising over pay dis- putes, began May 14 and has halted building in the Ann Arbor area. Yesterday the case was pre- sented to Circuit Judge James R. Breakey Jr., who conferred with Bernard Butler, attorney for the local and William Kelley, attor- ney for the Washtenaw County General Contractors Association and the Ann Arbor Home Build- ers Association for one and one- half hours. The associations alleged that Local 512 of the Carpenters and Joiners had tried to bypass them in negotiations by taking blank contracts directly to independent contractors. Butler believes that settlement can be reached in a reasonable amount of time. He also feels that the circuit court does not have jurisdiction over the case. Judge Breakey said that if a settlement has not been reached by Monday he will probably dis- miss the case. Eisenhower Vows Fight Over Slashed Budget At Weekly Conference IHait [ians Seek. End Of Strife PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti (A') - Haiti's military government is- sued fire-without-warning orders to police yesterday in an effort to break up looting, arson and sabotage. It banned political meetings and demonstrations. The aim was to force this Caribbean Negro repub- lic back into a regime of order after six months of turbulence and government upsets. Brig. Gen. Leon Cantave, the mild army chief who Tuesday sent home the seven members of a governing Executive Council and set up army rule, was accused by the ousted councilmen of be- ing an outlaw "in open rebellion against the executive authority." He was faced with strikes and lockouts in Port Au Prince which crippled business. Strike tactics have overthrown three Haitian governments since Dec. 12, but there was no indica- tion the resistance movement was spreading to the five provinces outside Port Au Prince. The first night of the curfew passed without incident. It remained to be seen whether the 10 contending candidates for president would be able to stir up hostile reaction to the army, a small but well-trained force of 2,500 regulars and 3,000 reserves. Critic To Give Hopwood Talk Malcolm Cowley will speak at the Hopwood Awards Lecture at 4:15 today in Rackham Lectur Hall. The noted author ana critic wfil discuss "The Beginning Writer In The University." Cowley has written, among other things, "Exile's Return," and "The Dry Season." He is a visiting lecturer in the English Department through June. Says House Reductionls Hit Defense. Political Aid Offered In Coming Campaign To Budget Backers WASHINGTON W) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower declared yesterday with a glint of fire in his eye, that he'll fight to the end for his slash-threatened budget. President Eisenhower told a news conference a spending re- duction voted Tuesday by the House Appropriations Committee would "cut directly into defense" -in the vital fields of planes and guided missiles. The President said he would give more enthusiastic support in next year's congressional elections to those Republican lawmakers who support his program than to those who buck it. To Work With Democrats And he served notice that, in trying to get his program enacted, he'll work with "sympathetic" lawmakers outside the GOP lead- ership - but not, he emphasized, without letting the Republican leaders know that he's doing so. President Eisenhower's com- ments came less than 24 hours after his second radio-TV address in a week on behalf of his $71,- 800,000,000 budget, which a num- ber of Republicans as well as Democrats in both houses of Con- gress have been voting to whittle sharply. Public Favors Plan He said public opinion, as re- flected in letters and telegrams to the White House, has been swing- ing toward support of his spend- ing program. The White House said later that 90% of the reaction to his talk Tuesday night has been favorable. This speech dealt spe- cifically with the $3,865,000,000 foreign aid bill. Budget and related matters dominated President Eisenhower's meeting with nearly 200 newsmen. President Emphatic The President's manner was emphatic rather than angry. He seemed to enjoy putting some of his firmer views on record. He commented to an aide, in fact, "Well, that was a short half- hour," when the session ended. As for his budget, the President was all primed to discuss the two and one-half billion dollar cut voted by the House Appropriations Committee Tuesday in his defense program. He said some $1,300,000,000 of this was "not a budget cut at all" -- just a bookkeeping operation which might mean Congress would have to be asked for more money later. ON THE DIAG: 'U' Symphony Gives Annual Concert Course Changes Planned For Political Science By DAVID TARR Changes in the basic course offerings of the political science department have been arranged for next year. Political science one and two will be eliminated and in their place political science 11, a new one-semester course, will be offered. It can be elected by first semester freshmen and others entering the field of political science. This course will be a prerequisite to any of the second semester courses, 52, 67 or 91. These are now offered only to students on a sophomore or higher level. New Combination The student concentrating in political science will now take 11 in combination with at least one of the other courses. The changes have the effect of creating an inverted pyramid leading from a single basic course through a direct line to specialized fields. Political science 11 "is envisaged as a 'gateway' which may lead] PROF. EDWIN A. ENGEL ... receives Fulbright grant Engel Granted Fulbriaht Tri>