THE MICHIGAN DAILY I CONTINUES: Faie Troube in areroons Per ularge talemav a ... s ., ' . a ,. 3?o ir .. {:. trxrvua ". 11 AF IIC4 -I /l ES ..ra 77ba'i.Zoab a*Z z'o r e tt'op~ p 1 3 4 f 0 0 : Q' ... ..'. (' C'Bo'o.Z? Education Financing Suggested President A. Whitney Griswold of. Yale University recently called for a substantial increase in the proportion of the nation's wealth which goes to higher education. He- proposed the plan to insure continued strengthening of the American educational system in, the face of the inflation which is attacking it on two fronts. Pres. Griswold pointed out that the two-fold nature of inflation is "partly a dilution of educational values caused by an inflation of the demand for higher education.", He added that this demand "is expected to double the present en- rollment of our colleges and uni- versities by 1970." The second part of this infla- tionary nature is an economic in- flation "in which the bare costs of existence are outracing the University's income." From his review of Yale's posi- tion in the national educational economy, President Griswold list-, ed four conclusions. The first is ''since Yale cannot stop the economic inflation, it will have to learn to keep up with it." He thought Yale charges must be made to reflect the costs of the Universit more accurately. He said that Yale must also find new sources of income, and that it must be bolder in exploring all possible sources of income than it has been in the past. His fourth conclusion is that Yale "must realize that all such. exploration . . forces us out of our old, familiar private ways into a competition much more severe." Math Award Bill. Proposed A proposal to award $500 schol- I arships to every high school senior who can pass a fairly difficult mathematics test has been made in Congress. Reps. Melvin Price (D-Ill.) and J. E. Van Zandt (R-Pa.) sug- gested the plan, which came as the government began its drive to get a four and one-half billion dollar education program thrpugh Congress. Administrators have testified at public' hearings conducted jointly by two House education subcom- mittees. Dental Medal Given to Jay By Academ Prof. Philip Jay, of the School of Dentistry, 'was awarded the Fauchard gold medal and citation for 1957 at ceremonies in Chicago on Feb. 1. A former dean of the University School of Dentistry, Dr. Russell W. Bunting, read the citation. The Pierre Fauchard Academy, a service organization for den- tists, presents the award annual- ly to a man whom the Academy: FOR 1958-59: EMC Asks $3 Million Governor G. Mennen Williams has proposed a budget of $3,489,- 055 for Eastern Michigan College's operating expenses in 1958-9. The proposal is $275,979 more than last year's operating budget at the Ypsilanti bo llege, butg$323,- 304 less than the amount requested by the college, according to Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, Eastern Michi- gan president. Most of the funds cut from the proposed budget were planned for salaries and wages, for 60 new positions at the college. The ma- jority of these were for faculty positions with the remainder for administrative, maintenance, and clerical personnel. The college also requested $3,- 079,047 in capital outlay funds. for the 1958-9 fiscal year. These included construction of a new physical recreation building and a new arts building. Eastern Michigan also seeks a unit on its proposed physical science building, and funds for a, teacher education building and an instructional services building. The budget was based on an expected enrollment of 5,200 stu- dents, and includes fundstderived from tuition. The legislature, will be asked only to make up the dif- ference between the tuition and the proposed budget. FULLY EQUIPPED LIGHTWEIGHT BICY4 Including a Set of Side Baskets Already Iun Durable Lock, and a ' Regular $59.95 INTRODUCTORY OF $4 95 Authori Weoperate dealer1 CUSHNM a complete SCOOT bike repair and shop Motor i South Main at W. Madison Phone 1, Just 4 Blocks West of State Stree FER CLIE stall1 might. zed for AAN ERS ZER Bikes IER% NO 8-71 tf it L *Ada fdL +'ampo By TOM, HENSHAW lated Press Newsfeatures Writer ew Algeria may be looming. e embattledFrench in an all )rgotten corner of their vast African empire. place is the Cameroons, a ;le of jungle, plains and tains at the strategic elbow West Africa joins the Con- ance holds it under trustee-1 or the United Nations. trouble comes from an out- .Communist-backed terror known as the Union of the es of the Cameroons (UPC), has slain 32 persons and pped 17 ,in the past 10 weeks. Terrorism Curtailed? e. Frencha say terrorism has curtailed but indications other quartersare that inter- nal Communism is about to rthe little known land a piece of rebelliond -ameroons delegate, Dr. Felix nie, attended the recent Red nated Afro-Asian Conference iro. Moscow Radio identified as "a noted figure in the roons nationalist movement." I the Cameroons were accord- seat on the 10-member secre- of the Afro-Asian People's arity Council, an outgrowth e conference. Other members: a and Red China. Hard Core Small e rebel UPC is led by a sha- native figure, French-edu- Ruben Um Nvobe; whose -core followers, estimated at o 700, fear and worship him witch doctor. meroons Premier Andrea-' Marie M'biola recently offered am- nesty to those terrorists who quit Nyobe and the UPC but the offer has not met with notable success. Despite his small following, Nyobe's influence has been large, particularly in the Bamileke and Sanaga-Maritime administrative districts where most of the recent violence has occurred. Caneroons Split The Cameroons - came under French rule after World War I when the French and British split the German colonies in Africa between them. A British section of the Cameroons is administered as part of Nigeria. A United . Nations mission re- cently commended France for making satisfactory progress in economic development and edu-. eational advancement in its part of the trusteeship. In general elections last month,? natives (about 3,000,000) and Eu- ropeans (about 14,000) voted on an equal basis. Moderates who favor continued coop eration with France won a majority in the 70-member assembly. Independence Goal The assembly currently is con- sidering a statute that would give the Cameroons more local auton- omy. The statue is expected to be ready for presentation to the French Parliament and to the people of the 'Cameroons for refer- endum next month. French inde- pendence is planned. Economically, the Cameroons 'has been suffering from a decrease in value of palm oil, one of its major products. Recently, gold has been discovered near Batouri. The land is noted as the home- land of the gorilla and for the pygmy native tribes who inhabit the forests along the Sanaga River. The outstanding physical feature is Mt. Cameroon, an active volcano on the British-held coast. Germans Arrived First Germany annexed the Came- roons by treaty on July 15, 1884, beating the colonial-minded Brit- ish and Frenc" by a matter of days. The British, pens in hand, arrived July 20 and the French July 26. It -took the combined'British- French forces a year and a,, half to' conquer the German-held Cameroons during the early part of World War I. Britain and France divided the ,ountry under 4eague of N'ations mandate in 1922. The section adrinistered by the British is smaller (34,000 square miles) than the 'French (166,800 square miles). Its population of about one and orne-half million contains less than 1,000 Euro- peans." Little trouble has been noted to date in the British section of thf colony, due both to the size differ- ence and the smaller number of Europeans living there., Courtesy University News Service PROF. PHILIP JAY ....wins 'Fauchard medal feels has made outstanding con- tributions to dentistry. The medal is their top service award. Prof. Jay was honored for his work and research in dental caries control through the development j and utilization of laboratory tests and procedures. He established the first."dental caries laboratory here while Dr. Bunting was dean. Dr. Bunting initiated the dental caries re- search program at the University. Saliva samples from dental pa- tients in all 48 states and all prov- inces of-Canada are sent to Prof. Jay's laboratory. Technicians de- termine the lactobacillus count in each specimen and 'report back to the dentist. Amount of tooth decay, Prof. Jay says, is directly related to the number of lactobacillus in saliva. After determining the lactobacil- lus level, the dentist may help a patient reduce decay by prescrib- ing strict adherence to a special low-sugar diet. Wednesday "Specials /. SAVEI s ONE SHIRT finished FREE with every $2.00 worth 'of dory c 'lean- ing. 4 * TEN CENTS OFF any $1.00 "or mor worth of laund ry. . # ,:. MONEY' * ONE - DAY SERVICE on wash pants; lob cdats and flat work. f ' t i' C 1 e e Q f ' 1 s: , I _I ,. e FORTIFY YOUR PREJUDICES with some concrete evidence gathered by living among other nationalities at UNIVERSITY LAUNDROMAT 1327 South University NO 8-841 I ROOM AND BOARD OR BOARD ONLY 1 Phone 3-8506... 915 Oakland-(ask I for Nancy or Chris) I i1 NELSON INTERNATIONALS WE" CAERTOWHE HOUSE (i Read Daily Classifieds r ,, un ia ,, ; .. ,. S RESTAURANT 9apwu4 31',' 19ine 31' offers you a taste .treat of a traditional Italian dish ECONOMICAL ENGLISH BIK PIZZA . 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