1 SENATE DIES, GARGOYLE DYING Y f i~ltai 114 see rage 4 " 0 Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom WARM, SHOWERS VOL. LXVII, No.141' ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1958 FIVE CENTS- SIX PAC I S Budget To Affect U nroment Staff Appropriation Slash To Force Cut Of 175-200 in Campus Personnel By MICHAEL KRAFT An end to rising enrollments and an overall reduction in staff emerged last night as part of the University's adjustment to the Legislature's "economy appropriation." University officials said the $929,000 cut in the appropriation will force a reduction of 175 to 200 employees from a staff of about 2500. However, the reduction will notnecessarily take place in instruc- tional areas nor would those now on the faculty be forced to leave, University Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Niehuss said. The University would, in general, reduce the staff by not replac- ing those who resign or complete assignments. A number of teaching U fellows normally go elsewhere and 4, U., S. Letter Incites Fury K InFrance PARIS (,')-France needs a pre- mier who can get French-Amer- ican relations back on a normal footing just as badly as she needs a man to make peace among the warring factions of her national Parliament. French fury against the United States-touched off by President Dwight D. Eisenhower's still un' published letter to Premier Felix Gaillard urging acceptance of the British - American good offices plan for Tunisia-has increased, since the government fell under a stream of anti-American oratory TUdiy. American press reports, uni- versally ascribed to a briefing by. United States troubleshooter Rob- ert Murphy, fanned the flame with their suggestion that America wa9nted France to start direct negotiations with the Algerian na- tionalist rebels to end the North African revolt. Denials Not Believed Washington's official denials, al- though published in Paris, were not believed by many Frenchmen. Hints that the State Department's attitude on North Africa might wa soon get tougher heightened the reaction. No French statesman has dared < pronounce the word independence in connection with Algeria. Any move aimed at giving Algeria its freedom would not be accepted by the present Parliament- except by the Communists, who want a quick peace at any price, and a minority of the Socialists. It prob- ably would provoke street rioting from diehard elements of the right. But most responsible French leaders realize that rejection of any new American proposals would not be realistic. France must have American support in her Algerian policy and elsewhere despite all talk.; Suspicious Reaction Some Frenchmen treated the American press reports and the Washington denial with suspicion because they came just after the government had been thrown out on the very issue of feared Ameri- can interference in North Africa. Others suggested the reports might affect nationwide local elec- tions slated for Sunday. Some 9,000 candidates are running for 1,579 county council seats. They thought the anti-American sections of the extreme right and left might gain votes as a result. The results could contain-some clues as to what the country is thinking and perhaps influence choice of a premier. All were agreed that, when fi- nally found, the new French pre- mier's first job would be .to find out exact American intentions re- garding Algeria and North Africa. President Rene Coty is ham- pered in his search for a premier by the local elections, which will be followed by a run-off ballot a week later. Jalmes' Criic To Live Talk this year might not be replaced, he said. Training Affected University President "Harlan Hatcher said "I'm sure this ' will adversely effect graduate training and the number of those going into teaching at a moment when there is a critical shortage." No across-the-board faculty raises will be possible but promo- tiop and merit raises have number one priority, Niehuss said. He declared the. University in. tends to maintain the quality of the staff and Is "willing to face the question of limiting enroll- ment" to do so.' Enrollment Level Held Enrollment in some areas, par- ticularly on the graduate levels may have to be "cut back," and it is "not unlikely that we will have to hold back the size of the freshman class," President Hatch- er said. Studies of adjustments to the reduced budget are not yet final. Certain of the schools and depart- ments will have to determine how much can be cut out of the non- instructing budget, such as equip- ment, maintenance and supplies before the University will know exactly how much is available for actual instruction, he added. Quad Janitor Locks Doors On Residents Approximately 25 students were locked in the ninth floor study hall of South Quadrangle last night from 10 to 10:25 p.m. The students were locked in when they refused to leave the study hall at 10 p.m. when a jani- tor, acting according to a new regulation by the South Quad- rangle Council, ordered them to leave so that he could turn out the lights and lock the doors. Instead of complying with the request, the diligent students de- cided to remain to continue study- ing. Those locked in the study hall requested the students outside to call Mark Noffsinger, resident director of South Quadrangle, and,I although Noffsinger was out of town, but a business manager or- dered the doors opened.. JAKARTA: Nationals Advance on ,Rebel JAKARTA, Indonesia (A')-Gov- ernment troops closed in yesterday on the rebel capital of Bukittinggi, readying the stroke to cut down the two-month-old revolutionary regime. With the outnumbered rebels reported offering only slight re- sistance, a military spokesman stepped up the timetable of con- quest, saying the mountain town may fall at any hour. The 6,000-man Jakarta invasion force, after' quickly overwhelming the rebel port of PadangIn Thurs- day's landing on western Sumatra, 'had expected to take three days to march the 58 miles north to Bukittinggi. Future Is Dim *But the future stretches bleak and uninviting for the harassed government of Premier Djuanda even though the rebel regime soon may be reduced to fighting a fur- tive. guerrilla war in the jungles. The situation is summed up by Charles Tambu, former diplomat and now the editor of the influen- tial Times of Indonesia. "The rebellion in Sumatra, a ide from costing the. governmen an estimated 15 million rupiahs - $1,321,000 - daily for military operations, sees brother pitted against brother," Tambu wrote. Inflation Increases "There is galloping inflation, the economy of the country is in a chaotic condition, gold reserves are below 10 per cent, and the budgetary deficit this year will easily exceed last year's 12 hun- dred billion rupiahs."' The deep political issues which gave rise to the revolt of the young army colonels on Sumatra in some respects resemble the State's rights question that led to. the U.S. Civil War. Asks Government Resign Rebel Premier Sjafruddin Pra- wiranegara, once a national hero, demanded Feb. 15 that the Dju- anda government resign in favor of men who would carry out last Se'ptember's decisions to give greater autonomy to the outer is- lands. The autonomy question is a burning one which eclipses all others, including communism, in' Jakarta. , The number of important and respected persons, both in the armed forces and civilian life, who have sacrificed their careers and possibly their lives for this issue must have impressed the central government and President Su- karno. There have been unconfirmed reports that the National Council, the advisory body of 45 men cre- ated by Sukarno as part of hisi guided democracy, will proclaim1 full autonomy for all outer regions as soon as military victory is com-E plete.-c DON AMECHE BETTY FIELD ... 'Holiday for Lovers' ... 'Separate Tables' Drama Season To Feaure Plays by Miller, G. B. Shaw NANCY KELLY .Candida' Special to The Daily LANSING-Republican austerity spending won the final round the battle over higher education appropriations as the House Representatives accepted a $87,423,891 bill with $30 million tagg for the University. This gives the University about $1 million less for next year th they have for the current fiscal year. The bill does not specify how the funds are to be distributed b grants a lump sum for general operations expenses. This is, accordi to Sen. Elmer Porter (R-Blissfield), to make the educators economi and "squeeze all the water" out of'' their organizations. if' 1 Senate Proposal Passed by Housc Committee's Plan Finally Adopte After Resubmnission to Legislators By ROBERT JUNKER Don Ameche, Nancy Kelly, Basil Rathbone, Bette Field and Lather Adler will star in the five Drama Season presentations from May 12 to June 14. On the playbill will be Arthur Miller's "A View from the Bridge," S. N. Behrman's "The Man," George Bernard Second Shaw's "Cardida," Terence Rattigan's "Separate Tables" and Ronald Alexander's "Holiday for Lovers." Miller Opens Season Luther Adler will open the sea- son with Arthur Miller's most re- cent Broadway success, "A View from the Bridge." The Pulitzer Prize-winning author has set this play against the background of the New York waterfront. .Adler won acclaim recently when he starred in this play in Chicago and on tour. Miller is a graduate of the University and author of "Death of a Salesman" and "The Crucible." . Vicki Cummings and Hurd Hat- field will play in "The Second Man" the week of May 19, one of the Lunts' greatest stage successes. Miss Cummings has appeared on4 Broadway in "The Voice of the Turtle" ahd "Lunatics and Lovers." . Hatfield has been seen on Broad- way in "Anastasia." To Play Shaw Comedy "Candida," often called George: Bernard Shaw's most popular play, will bring Nancy Kelly to Ann Arbor. This comedy concerns thex dilemma faced by a wife when here husband demands she choose be- tween him and a young writer she is interested in. Miss Kelly's recent appearance in "The Bad Seed" both on Broad-j way and in motion pictureswon, BASIL RATHBONE her the "Tony" award and an ..'Separate Tables' academy award nomination. "Separate Tables" will bring to the local scene Basil Rathboner and Betty Field the week of June 2. This play was a success in Lon- w i no ns don where It ran for two seasons IJ? and in New York last year. C i H oD It is Rattigan's latest play, WASHINGTON ()- A budget among the, predecessors of which deficit of about eight billion dol- have been "The Winslow Boy,," lars next fiscal year was forecast "0, Mistress Mine" and "The Deep Saturday by Sen. Harry F. Byrd Blue Sea." The play combines both (D-Va.). humor and drama. Byrd, chairman of the Senate Rathbone has Ireviously ap- Finance Committee, said he ex- peared in Ann Arbor in "The Heir- pected this to develop because of ess" -and is well known for his a sharp rise in spending for anti- performance in "Romeo and recession purposes coupled with an Juliet" with Katherine Cornell. anticipated drop in federal rev- Miss Field previously starred in enues. the Drama Season production of Byrd, said he agreed with the "The Fourposter" with Burgess estimate of Secretary of the Meredith. Her latest film role was Treasury Robert Anderson that in "Peyton Place." the deficit for this year will top Features Ameche three billion dollars. The final production of the sea- But he went far beyond the pre- son will feature Don Ameche in diction by Anderson Friday that his original Brodway role in the the coming fiscal year, starting comedy, "Holiday for Lovers." The July 1, will see red ink spending story concerns a businessman who approaching four billion dollars. takes his dream tour of Europe. Anderson said he expects this to John O'Shaughnessy, who di- happen even if federal revenues rected "Command Decision" on remain at a high level, which he Broadway, will return for his third said is not likely. year to stage the Drama Season "I think the deficit is likely to plays. run eight billion dollars or even Season tickets will go on sale more," Byrd said. "The Treasury May 5 at the Drama Season box estimated a two-billion-dollar in- office in Lydia Mendelssohn crease in revenues for fiscal 1959, Theatre, according to Ronald but the indications are now that Muchnick of the Drama Season there will be a two-billion-dollar office. drop instead of an increase." British Rush. Men to Aden LONDON (A') - Britain rushed troop formations yesterday to the southwest corner of the Arabian Peninsula, where trouble has flared along the border dividing the Aden Protectorate and Yemen.. The 8,000 - ton British cruiser Gambia and the 1,575-ton frigate Loch Fada steamed into Aden with the first detachments. Other units were sent by plane from Kenya, to which they had been flown from Britain earlier in the week to form a strategic reserve. The troops, in numbers not dis- closed, are reinforcing Aden gov- ernment levies facing Yemeni tribesmen believed armed with- Russian weapons. Four days ago the British gov- ernment protested to the Yemeni charge d'affaires in London against two attacks which the British said the Yemeni had made on two border forts. The protest charged the Yemeni used heavy mortars. Sporadic fighting has gone on for the last couple of years along the frontier, spurred apparently by the belief that the area con- tains untapped oil riches. The frontier is not clearly defined. Yemen has accused the British of making attacks on Yemeni ter- ritory. Yemen recently associated itself in the United Arab Republic with Egypt and Syria. rEight Follows Citizen Arrest An attempt to test the citizen's right to make an arrest got an unidentified University student in- to trouble Friday. Bill Passes House The bill passed through the House by the narrow margin of 56 to 52. The simple majority of the House neededto pass the bill is 56. The legislators adopted a con- ference committee report which cut cut a $2,322,146 amendment to the original bill. The addition, pro- posed by Rep. George Sallade (R- Ann Arbor), would have restored $929,900 to the University. The report of the conference committee was exactly the same as the report of a different confer- ence committee on the same prob- lem. The second committee was appointed after the House refused to accept the report of the first. Same Report Submitted The second committee, however, was composed of the same mem- bers as the first and submitted the same report. The report passedthe Senate 20 to nine and then was approved by the House at ap- proximately 6 p.m. yesterday. In the Senate, Sen. Donald Smith (R-Owosso) was the only Republican to vote against the committee's report because he would like to show the educators that "we mean business when we say 'economize.'" Rep. Louis Crampton (R-La- peer) lead of critics of the confer- ence report blasting the inclusion of two represenattives who were not sympathetic to the house amendments on the second con- ference committee. He referred to Rep. Arnell Engstrom (R-Grand Traverse) and Rep. Perry J. Phil- lips (R-Port Huron). In a last minute attempt to keep the fight alive Rep. Ralph Young (R-East Lansing) motioned for a reconsideration of the vote. Caught off guard, some repre- sentatives discussed the issue, ad- mittedly "so we could take enough time to get full membership of the House back in the room." The motion was ultimately de- feated. Hoover Fine After Surgery NEW YORK (P)--Former Presi- dent Herbert Hoover, nearing 84 and plagued by recurring gall bladder attacks, had, the organ re- moved yesterday. His excellent general health brought him through the operation like a man 20 to 25 years younger.. "The doctors could not be more pleased with his -condition," said one of his two sons, Herbert Hoover Jr. "They say everything is very wonderful." The son made the report to newsmen at 1 pm~ about four hours after the conclusion of the hour - and - a - quarter surgery. Operation Not Emergency "There is no emergency in con- nection with this operation. My father had been bothered for some time, and he and his doctors de- cided this would be a good time to attend to it-a time when he wasn't suffering from it." Hoover's other son, Allan, of Greenwich, Conn., also was at the hospital, the Harkness Pavilion of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medi- cal Center, during the operation. A doctors' report issued by the hospital at 4 p.m. said: "Mr. Hoover has fully reacted. The im- Government To Consider Nuclear Plan WASHINGTON (A)- Adminis!- tration officials are shaping a new plan for halting nuclear tests about next Jan. 1 by agreement with the Soviet Union. The plan is pointed toward forthcoming al- lied talks and a probable summit conference later this year. Despite the 1'Soviet Union's charge that U.S. nuclear bombers are risking World War III by their operations in the far north, high State Department officials are convinced that both the Soviet Union and the Western poweri rS moving steadily toward a meeting at the summit. Te much de ban on nuclear tests is co the most likely subject for agree. ment. Develop New Angle One new angle developed by U.S. planners in this field, it is understood, is a proposal that if a test ban had to be revoked at the end of two or three years, the atomic powers would guarantee in advance that any further tests would be free from fallout. The most obvious way to elii- nate fallout, officials said, would be to explode the atomic devices under ground so that radioactive materials would be sealed in the earth. Ultra high altitude nuclear explosions presumably also would offer a means of fallout control if properly engineered. The U.S. test suspension pro- gram has been worked on inten- sively since early this month by officials of the State Department, Atomic Energy Commission, and' Defense Department. It is subject first of all to a decision in the National Security Council under the immediate direction of Presi- dent Eisenhower. Plan for Discussion Whatever formula is approved will be subject to discussion with the NATO allies because President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Secre- tary John Foster Dulles have de- cided that in dealing with the Russians they must maintain a solid allied front. Dulles plans to attend a meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Copenhagen May 5-7. The shape of allied decisions as they involve Britain depends on an important factor: The extent to which the Vnited States is will- ing to share its atomic weapons know-how with Britain. The issue is pending before Congress, and the outcome is uncertain. But United States officials say that if this country does not give the British the information they have requested to carry through their ownweaponsdevelopment, the British intend to go ahead with testing. Students Seek I SA P ositons Four students, three from the United Arab Republic, are running SPRING IS HERE: Familiar;Ice Cream Trucks Announce warmer Weather yVT lTV *rY' TyY Y yr V b t f. 0 ;r ii J u t I I I i World News' Roundup By The Associated Press LONDON-Sources close to the family of Sir Winston Churchill said: Saturday the former prime minister has suffered a new attack of illness that alarmed his household. The 73-year-old wartime leader was reported to be better now although not entirely recovered. Informants would not disclose the nature of the latest illness or say why it had not been announced. Churchill recovered only last month from a serious attack of pneumonia and pleurisy. He was stricken while vacationing on the French Rivieria. * . * . CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.-An Air Force attempt to launch a Thor ballistic missile without publicity ended Saturday in a thunderous explosion. The missile, designed to carry an atomic warhead at least 1,500 miles, blew up on its launching pad. The blast and a muffled roar that followed was heard for miles. A huge ball of black smoke rose high iri the sky. There were no injuries, the Air Force reported in a statement two " : . .... .......... I