TJCKET POLICY LACKS CONVENIENCE See Page 4 :1 t1P auF Batt w Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXVIII, No. 157 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1958 FIVE CENTS FAIR, COOLER TWELVE PAGES Holland School Accredited by 'U' Two-Yeat Approval of High School Overrides Association's Withdrawal By SUSAN HOLTZER Holland Christian High School has been re-accredited by the University for a two&year period beginning July 1, with "no strings attached," according to literary college dean James H. Robertson. However, the University will continue to work with the Holland, Mich. school on "various local problens;" Robertson said, including t the lack of vocational courses in the school's curriculum. Robertson is a member of the Executive Board of the University's Bureau of School Services, which disclosed the decision yesterday. 'Tentative' Basis University accreditation had been on a "tentative" basis for the fast year, following withdrawal of approval by the North Central As- Ike Orders Little ock Troop Exit S 'WASHINGTON (MP)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower has ordered the withdrawal, at least for the summer recess, of all federal troops stationed in Little Rock to menforce school integration About 400 are still on duty at the city's Central High School, n 4 scene last September of violent outbreaks after the entry of nine Negroes into t'he formerly all- white school. Eisenhower indicated in his withdrawal announcement, made yesterday, that return of the troops will depend on whether state and local authorities sup- port federal court orders for nte- gration. The President's press secretary,' James C. Hagerty, was asked whether he could say that troops ' would not be sent back. He re- Sfusedto go beyond the President's M statement. "I thinkit is quite clear where the responsibility Ies.'We will just have to wait and see," he said. At Little Rock, Gov. Orval Fau- bus commented that state and local authorities are harged with enforcement of state and local laws and ordinances and not with enforcement of federal laws and orders.,_ Dulles Tells .Of Red Rule PARIS (W) - Secretary of State John Foster Dulles arrived yester- day from Berlin where he declared in a hard-hitting speech that Red China and the Soviet Union are bent on dominating the world. Dulles is here to brief United States ambassadors in Europe aft- er the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization 'conference in Copen- hagen. The NATO foreign minis- ters backed Dulles' tough ap- proach to the question of a sum- mit conference world tensions. Dulles left no doubt in his speech to West Berlin's Parlia- ' ment that the United States will look carefully behind any Com- mpnist words, no matter how al- luring.I He declared the Soviet Union was using talk of disarmament as a smokescreen to "produce a world dominated by the military power of the Chinese-Soviet bloc." "The Soviet government," he added, "is attempting by every act of propaganda to compel the abandonment of our military shield.. "It claims that those who create that shield are 'aggressive group- ings.' It claims that those who seek only defense should prove it by renouncing all but inferior weapons. DruidsiTap New Members Druids, sons of magic, Foretellers of the future, Priests and judges- very knowing, wise- The fires in.the Stonehenge Are set alight With fiames to heaven raised; sociation of Colleges and Secon- dary Schools. The NCA objected to the school's emphasis on col- lege preparation, and the almost exclusively academic curriculum. According to a member of the Holland Christian faculty, teach- ers in the school have taken the University decision as a warning that they have two years to add courses in home economics and industrial arts to their curriculum, "or else." The two-year accreditation is based on the University's own cri- teria, while a school meeting NCA standards is automatically ac- credited for four years. But Hol- land Christian teachers "can't see any difference" relating to their school in the two sets of require- ments, the faculty member said. Outlines Differences Some of the differences in cri- teria, as outlined by Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs James A. Lewis, mentioned guidance and testing programs, library services and selection of books, profession- al qualifications for teachers, wid- er breadth in their educational program, counseling time per stu- dent and laboratory facilities. Teachers in Holland Christian, the faculty member said, believe their school measures up to all of these. qualifications. He said .they believe the issue revolves around vocational courses. Include Art Courses Robertson said many people connected with the high school "would like to broaden the curri- culum to include such things as art courses and physical educa- tion. The question is, can they? "The whole problem," he said, "is getting the support of the people paying tuition." Robertson explained the subject had been raised a number of times at open meetings of the Society for Christian Education, an or- ganization composed of the par- ents of Holland Christian stu- dents. He said they had continual- ly turned down the proposals. "But it can be brought up again now," he said. Need More Upperc lass Comments Niehuss Discusses SGC Course Book By JUDY DONER A course evaluation booklet should not be based on the opin- ions of freshmen and sophomores Vice President and Dean of Fac- ulties Marvin Niehuss said yes- terday. Commenting on the Student Government Council's plan to pub- lish a booklet "similar to the one at Harvard," Vice President Nie- huss said he believed the opinions of upperclassmen in the various departments might be more valid. "I question, too, the merit of publishing direct comment about instructors," he said. It would seem that the student-faculty evalua- tion system as set-up at present would be a more likely help to the teacher. 'Might Reflect Opinion' The booklet may reflect a survey of opinion,'rather than of percep- tion, according to Prof. Eric W. Stockton of the English Depart- ment. "Although it is a well-in- tentioned last grasp to foster edu- cation around here, it is not going to help much," he said. The booklet at Harvard is not nearly as complete and unbiased as seems to be the impression here, Prof. Stockton added. Jean R. Carduner of the Ro- mance Language Department said he believed the booklet could help. "It would do rationally what is already done now," he maintained. "Don't think for a moment that the faculty ignores the problem of course evaluation," Prof. Alfred M. Elliot of the zoology depart- ment said, "but if the ultimate gains are worth the effort, then by all means let the booklet be published." Idea's Danger Cited "Potentially pernicious," Robert Y. Drake, Jr. of the English De- partment said when told of the SGC plan. "If the students knew as much as the faculty, we'd trade positions with them," he added. Director of Admissions Clyde Vroman said if the purpose of the booklet is to give students more influence on courses they aren't in a position to make the evalua- tion, but if the booklet is to help incoming freshmen it might be successful. "The merit of the evaluations booklet will depend on the extent to which the judgement is based on the solid, educational value of the courses, without catering to the tastes of students who want easy degrees or entertainment," Prof. Shorey Peterson of the Eco- nomics Department maintained. It will be necessary to point out to the students that the booklet is not the only criterion for choosing courses, Vice President Niehuss added. lice 0 0 White House Still Qiet On Incident Ike Noncommittal On Filing Protests WASHINGTON (P)-The White House gave a no comment reply yesterday when asked whether there might be diplomatic pro- tests over the treatment of Vice President Richard M. Nixon in Lima, Peru. Press Secretary James C. Hag- erty said President Dwight D. Ei- senhower had read pretty closely the published accounts of how stones were hurled at Nixon. But when asked whether this country would file any protests, he said: "I haven't any comment." Members of Congress and the secretary general of the Organiza- tion of American States blamed Communists for the jeers Vice President Nixon has received in South America. Sen. George Smathers (D-Fla.) said the mob action of stoning Vice President Nixon in Lima was obviously inspired by Communists. Chairman Thomas E. Morgan (D-Pa.) of the House Foreign Af- fairs Committee said "This proves the Communists in Latin America are a real menace. I hope this convinces the State Department, and wakes up the assistant secre- tary of state for Latin-American affairs Roy R. Rubottom." Dr. Jose Mora, an Uruguayan, and secretary general of the OAS, said the jeering- Vice President Nixon has received is Communist inspired. Governor To, Si gn Bills LANSING, (iP) - Gov. G. Men- nen Williams said yesterday he would sign the "austerity" appro- priation bills approved by the legislature - but "with great re- luctance." The first money bill to get the governor's signature appropriates $65,166,750 for the state mental health program - about one mil- lion dollars under current levels. "It is tragic when a choice has to be made between inadequate services and financial insolvency," said the democratic executive. The Republican - dominated legislature adopted a $332,500,000 budget in the face of growing revenue shortages. Williams had asked for $349 million. The cutback in mental health alolcations, he said, means the size of working staffs at 15 mental hospitals will be cut a total of 325 persons. (Of the $332,500,000 appropriat- ed, the legislature earmarked $30 million for the operations of the University. This amount was $1 million less than the operating budget for this year.) Dixon Stoning in Peru SIR LESLIE MUNRO: Doubts Possibility of Summit Talks By BARTON HUTHWAITE United Nations General Assem- I bly president Sir Leslie Munro yesterday termed the possibility of a Big Four summit meeting "not very optimistic." The 57-year-old statesman at- tributed his gloomy prediction to Russia's "sterile and immovable propaganda" of recent wceks. In an interview with the Daily, Sir Leslie seriously doubted that the Western powers would con- cede to Moscow's demands for Communist Poland and Czecho- slovakia to be included in an ef- fort to hold the conference. * Has Some Hope But the New Zealand ambassa- dor did not dispel all- hopes for a summit meeting. "The Russians may come to an agreement-on the West's terms," he said. "But the meeting should not take place unless there is some reasonable hope it will be success- ful," he added. Endorses Proposal Sir Leslie endorsed the United States Arctic inspection proposal as "a limited approach to remove world tension." "Russia's rejec- tion of the plan provoked a very grave situation," he added. "I am also in complete agree- ment with United Nations Secre- tary General Dag Hammarskjold's support of the military inspection plan in respect to the Arctic," he emphasized. Sir Leslie noted the West has "no reason" to become alarmed over recent Soviet missile devel- opments. Space Agency "Most of the smaller nations realize these developments are within the power of both the 'U.S.S.R. and the United States," he said. I would like to see an outer space agency, similar to the Atomic Energy Commission, es- tablished under United Nations, Sir Leslie said. "Outer space must be controlled for peaceful means as a matter of "necessity." Sir Leslie Munro will speak at 11 a.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Philip Hart TO Address YD Meeting Lieut. Governor Philip Hart will address a meeting of the Young Democrats tonight at 8 p.m. in the Union, according to YD presi- dent Torre Bissel, '60. Hart, presently seeking the Democratic nomination for United States senator from Mich- igan, will speak on the topic of Federal Issues in 1958. After being elected to his present post in January, 1955, Hart was re-elected in 1956 for a second term in office. I -Daly-Harol Gassenneimer UNITED NATIONS-Assistant to the University President Erich A. Walter (left) greets Sir Leslie Knox Munro on his arrival at Willow Run Airport yesterday afternoon. Sir Leslie, United Nations General Assembly president, will address the 35th annual Honors Convocation at 11 a.m. today in Hill Auditorium. U.S. Regains WVorld Record For High-Alitude Flights LOS ANGELES (W-The United States regained the world altitude record back from France with a jet flight to 91,249 feet-17.28 miles the Air Force announced yesterday.! Maj. Howard C. Johnson piloted a Lockheed F104A Starfighter up to a 45-degree angle above the Southern California desert town of Mojave to the new mark Wednesday. He topped by more than two miles the height of 80,190 feet-15.19 miles-claimed for a French experimental Trident Isere-06 at Istres, Arrest COmmuniss Instigators Of Student Riot Sought, Nationalistic Party Expels Demonstrator For Helping in Attack By The Associated Press LIMA, Peru - Peruvian police were reported cracking down on Communists held responsible for the stoning and spitting attacks on Vice-President Richard M. Nixon here yesterday. Informed sources said Lima po- lice were put under orders to round up Communist leaders of the agitation among students at 'San Marcos University, where the most violent attacks occurred. One stone had grazed Nixon's neck. Another had hit Secret Serviceman Jack Sherwood in the face, chipping a tooth. Expel Student The sources in Lima reported the high command of the nation- alistic Aprista party has expelled a student member for helping in the anti-Nixon demonstrations. The Aprista party, Peru's larg- est, is generally described as both anti-Communist and anti-United States and is warm to the causes of the Peruvian Indians. Despite the anti-Communist label, some of its members work closely with the Communists. Under Peru's constitution the Communist Party, as an, interna- tional organization, is outlawed and members could be exiled. Communists Suffered The Communists "think they won a victory," Nixon told a news conference, "but they suffered, as time will tell, a great defeat." Demonstrators had torn up a floral American flag in a wreath 'Nixon. had laid at a monument to Jose San Martin, a South Ameri- can liberator. Nixon told the news confei'ence Foreign Minister Raul Porras had given him official and personal apologies for desecration of the United States flag. Peruvian Communists have been exploiting to the hilt econ- omic problems involving relations between Peru and the United States. Miehigamua. NamsNe Indian Braves Listen to this tale of romance Tale of Indian warriors bold - In the early moon of green leaves Came they forth, the stoics Unmanned U.S. Moon Rocket Possible at Present - Quarles By ROBERT JUNKER "We could probably send an unmanned rocket to the moon now," Gilford G. Quarles, chief scientist of the United States Army Ordnance Missile Command said last night. Speaking on "Research and Development of United States Missile Projects," Quarles cited engineering and scientific breakthroughs needed before manned space flight will be practical. Sponsored by the Engineering Council, he emphasized the need for perfecting an engine which requires less fuel than those presently used in missiles. The most advanced engine idea, "far from engineering reality" at the present time, would change fuel into light energy. This engine would need only 350 pounds France, last Friday. The French flight had exceeded the mark of 76,928 feet, or 14.57 miles, reached last April 16 by a United States Navy Grumman F11FlF flown by Lt. Cmdr. George C. Watkins. How did the stratospheric climb feel? "No particular sensation," re- plied Johnson, operations officer of the 83rd Fighter - Interceptor Squadron, Hamilton Air Force Base, Calif. A native of Knoxville, Tenn.,, and a veteran of 87 combat mis- sions in Korea, he lives in Novato, Calif., with his wife, the former Doris Jean Holder, and their chil- dren, Theodore, 10, and Carol, 5. The sky at extreme altitudes is "sort of a dark purple," Johnson said. "It gets darker the higher you go." Others have flown higher in ex- perimental ships released from the bellies of mother planes, but his was the highest airplane as- cent made from takeoff to landing. At a news conference, Johnson described the flight. His plane, powered by a Gener- tl Electric J79 engine, left Palm- dale with a full load of fuel, al- most 5,000 pounds of a mixture made mostly of light kerosene. Hatcher Cites Theory Behind Dorm System By WILLIAM RANSOM "One of the simplest . . . and yet one of the most elusive parts of an individual's educational ex- perience is the way he lives while at college. In this manner University Pres- ident Harlan Hatcher summarized the theory behind -the residence hall system at the University, dur- ing a talk at the Inter-House Council's annual banquet last night. President Hatcher suggested two opposite views as to what role University living should play in the college experience. Under the Oxford system, he indicated, a young man is removed to a clois- tered campus and placed in the company of a few tutors. Provides for Faculty The European idea provides for a faculty and large lecture groups, he said and allows the student to come and live as he pleases, The University has entertained elements of both systems in the past, he pointed out. The old boarding house plan went along with the European system and the Law Club "nearly duplicates the Oxford system." he said. After the war, President Hatch- er pointed out, it was decided the University should be a "resident university" with, a college rather than a metropolitan environment. Adds to Education It was then that the residence hall system was developed to con- tribute to a "delight in living" during the college days and at the same time to contribute to the educational process. Today it represents a part of the whole University, he said. Law Review a ._ ,,__ ___ __ of fuel for a round trip to the moon and back, but for a trip around the universe it would re- quire fuel equal to the weight of the earth, he commented. Cites Ideas "This system needs major scien- tific breakthroughs for its success," he continued. He cited other ideas for improved rocket engines which are being experimented with.now. One would use a nuclear reactor, which "has promise" but is now° seen as useful only for a very large ship because of its size and weight. "Actual manned space travel is probably several years in the fu-' ture," he commented, but several designs of space ships have been worked out. Designs Ship Werner von Braun, one of the A&D To Hold School-Wide Open House By ELIZABETH ERSKINE Throughout the busy, somewhat overcrowded architecture andi design school students have been finishing special projects for A&D's first school-wide open house to be held today and tomorrow. From the shops in the basement to the renovated photography labs on the fifth floor, the unusual -relaxed, informal atmosphere of A&D has an added element-one of activity and preparation. The students and faculty sponsoring the open house hope to acquaint others in the University, community and state with the work being done in architecture and design. Dean Opens Program At 3 p.m. today in the A&D auditorium Philip Youtz, dean of the school, will open the two-day open house. Instructors in the art department Milton Cohen, James Eldredge and Louis Tavelli will demonstrate "Experiments in Light and Color." A coffee hour will follow at 4 p.m. r Y r J a t s valiant; Forth they romped to paleface wigwam Wigwam, one of friendly Great Chief, Came they forth to take their token, Then to the mighty oak of Tappan Dashedthe screaming, yelling redmen; To the tree of Indian legend Where the white men pale and trembling Stood around the mighty oak tree Warriors choice of paleface nation Choice of tribe to run the gauntlet. Down the warriors, painted demons Swooped and caught their prey like eagles Loud the war cry stirred the stillness As they seized their hapless captives Forth they bore them to their wigwam There to torture at their pleasure. There they are around the glowing w qx,- _