OUNDATTON TRIP 'ROVIDES IMPACT See Page .4F Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom FeAIR, I, No. 146 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1958 FIVE CENTS COOL Commttee M fens De ar me r anizati Pla JOHN WEICHER' MICHAEL KRAFT , RICHARD MARTENS CAROL HECHT city editor .. . editorial director ... advertising manager . .. associate business manager Taub, Daily Staff Richard Taub, '59, was named Editor of The Daily st night by the Board in Contro of Student Publications. At the same time,, the Board announced the. appointment of Stephen Topol, '59; as Daily Busi- ness'Manager. Taub, a junior in English hon- ors, will succeed Peter . Eckstein, '58, as editor. He will stress "con- tinued emphasis on academic areas" while editor, Taub said, "with more thorough reporting and writing." Martens, Hecht Named Topol will succeed Robert Ward, '58E, as business manager. Richard Martens, '59E, will be advertising manager and Carol Hecht, '59, will be . associate business man- ager. Other newly-named senior busi- World News Roundup t t i LONDon (.) - Prime Minister Harold MacMillan said yesterday Britain will continue nuclear tests "unless and until international agreements make them unneces- sary." He said the Conservative gov- ernment's policy as the Foreign Office and Admiralty served no- tice the British are ready to begin their third round of H-bomb tests. Their third round of H-bomb tests. Shipping was warned to stay out of a 38,000-square-mile area around Christmas Island in the south Pacific. LJUBLJANA, Yugoslavia )-A high ranking Yugoslav Commu- nist politburo member disclosed last night Soviet boss Nikita Khrushchev has been principal target of the rash of strong criti- cism here for Moscow's policies. An Italian communist newspa- per editor mentioned that anti- Yugoslav accusations detailed by Vice President Alexander Ranko- vie in a bitter speech to the Yugo- slav Communist Congress here Wednesday did not appear in the Soviet theoretical journal Kom- munist when it listed Tito's sins against world communism. JAKARTA, Indonesia (R) - In- donesian government forces are 12 miles from the rebel capital of Rsk++sm.~p in C rn,1 Smatra- Panel Calls :,Court Blasts Maneuverilg, By JAMES SEDER - Many of the recent attacks on the Supreme Court were debunked as jolitical maneuvering at a dis- cussion of the high court held in conjunction with the 16th Annual Conferenceof Political Scientists'. The delegates emphasized that there are two, ways of looking at the Court. One way is to take a consistent attitude on the basic prerogatives of the Court whether or not one agrees with the philos- ophy of the Court at a given time. May Demand Curbing The other approach is to demand a curbing of the Supreme Court's power when one disagrees with the prevailing philosophy of the Court' and advocate a "strong" court when one approves. Prof. Oliver Williams of Michi- gan State University told the group that many criticisms of the Court and proposed Court reforms were aimed primarily as "harassment" of the Court rather than as a serious proposal, Compares Bills He compared some of the bills introduced to Congress for chang- ing the character of the Court to bills which are passed by Con- gress in spite of the foreknowledge that it will be voted by the Presi- ,ent and that the veto cannot be overriden. Prof. Williams explained that many court decisions adversely affected many groups. These groups_ fight the Court in any way they can. He told the group har- assment was the main method of attempting to influence future court decisions. This can be done by public crit- icism through the newspapers, or it can be done by introducing various motions to Congress. Menez Reads David Tarr, '59; will be Features- Magazine Editor. The Personnel Director will be Dale Cantor, '59. Beata Jorgenson, '59, will head the Activities Staff as Associate City Editor, according to the Board announcement, while Jean Wil- loughby, '59; will assist Kraft as Associate Editorial Director. Brooke Tompkins, '59, will assist Tarr as Associate Features Editor and Elizabeth Erskine, '59, will assist Cantor as Associate Personnel Director. David Arnold, '59E, was named Photography Editor. Home Towns Diverse, Editorial staff appointees come from home towns as widespread as -Taub's Great Neck, N.Y. and Tompkin's Pacific Palisades, Cal. Taub, Editor for the next year, is a member of Sphinx, junior men's honorary and Phi Eta Sigma, freshman men's academic honor- ary. He was once an Angell' Scholar. Weicher, who as City Editor will { be responsible for the mechanics of putting out The Daily for the next year, is also in English honors. He is a resident of Chicago and 20 years old. Weicher trans-, ferred to the University from Col- gate University of Hamilton, N.Y. Weicher will replace Vernon, Nahrgang, '5$, as City Editor. ' Kraft English Major Kraft, 20 years old, is a resident of Detroit. Majoring in English,1 he is a member of professional journalism fraternity Sigma Delta Chi. As new Editorial Director Kraft will replace James Elsman, Jr., '58.1 Tarr's post combines duties cur- rently supervised by both Carol7 Prins, '58, Magazine Editor andI William Haney, '58, Features Edi-l tor. Tarr is a 20-year-old resident of Pontiac and a political science major. He is also a- member of Sigma Delta Chi. Majoring in 'Poll Scr Miss Cantor, 20 years old, is majoring in political science. She lives in Chicago. The Personnel Director the past year has been Donna Hanson, '58. Miss Jorgenson, an English ma- jor from Royal Oak, Mich., is re- See BOARD, page 5 Drop Case Against SGC The case of Andre Barroso, '61L, against SGC was dismissed in Municipal Court yesterday because the presiding judge found no cause of action, on the grounds that there was no certainty that SGC was responsible for the SBX dur- ing the period that Barroso's transactions took place. According to Arthur E. Car- penter, the attorney for tie de- fense substituting for Arnold W. Tammen, the regular SGC lawyer in this case, it was revealed that the Michigan Union operated the SBX during the time in question. As the trial progressed, it was also revealed that Ira Bernstein, '59, manager of the SBX at that time, remembered Barroso because he brought in 26 books to sell and Barroso had filled out the slips for the books in red pencil. Bernstein said he was sure Bar- roso knew the policies' of SBX when he came to sell the books. Barroso even cashed a check he later received for six of the books, Bernstein said. Senate Vote Stops First labor Move Knowland Offers Second Measure WASHINGTON (P) - The Sen- ate voted 53-37 yesterday against the first of a series of labor law measures offered by Sen. William F. Knowland (R-Calif.) By its vote, the Senate signaled it was not ready to act on any broad program of labor legislation. Sen. Knowland, the Senate Re- publican leader, promptly called up another measure for a second test of sentiment. This was designed to protect members of local unions against the establishment, by national or international labor. organizations, of long term trusteeships over the local's affairs. TenRepubicans voted with 43 Democrats ;in, defeating Sen. Knowland's 'first proposal, which was designed to require secret bal- lot elections of union officers and to limit their terms to a maximum of four years. One Democrat, Sen. Frank S. Lausche of, Ohio, voted with Sen. Knowland and 35 other Republi- cans on the first test. Sen. Knowland offered his pro- posals as amendments to a bill to regulate pension-welfare plans. Calling his amendments a bill of rights for labor, he said now is the time for action. Later in the session, he said, tlie Senate will be too busy (with other matters to consider labor legislation. Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Tex- as, the Democratic leader, led op- position to broadening the pen- sion-welfare bill into a general labor measure. He and Democrat- ic leaders of the Labor Committee assured the Senate that general labor legislation would get a hear- ing. U.S. May Ask Arctic Zone WASHINGTON () - The United States may ask the United Nations Security Council shortly to take steps toward creating a disarmament inspection zone in the arctic. Russia recently complained there is danger of an accidetal clash between Soviet and United States air forces in that region, Action toward setting up an in- spection zone is understood to have been recommended by this country to its NATO allies. The practical effect 'of a suc- cessful appeal to the Security Council would be to revive ne- gotations between the Soviet Union and key Western powers. Floats,Lg By RALPH LANGER The parade is ended but the campus shivers on. The weather cast a marrow-chilling blanket of wind about the estimated 25,000 spectators at yesterday's Michigras parade. Despite the temperature, however, a goodly number of coeds in sparse costumes rode the floats down the long' windy parade route. One student, immersed like a goldfish in a tank of water, received groans of sympathy from the onlookers as she spun and splashed in her frigid environment. The parade failed to start promptly at 3:00 p.m., as scheduled. According to walkie-talkie reports the first float got under way about 3:30 n.m. A snectator near the indges' booth asked when the narade # -: