BOARD EXCEEDS JURISDICTION See page 4 Y L £frr Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom dOCOOLER, os SIBLE SHOW VIU, No. 30 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1957 )peal.of Galens ... . ... W 1High Court ,Unxv Tillii enied byGroup shopping Area Fund Drive Blocked By SGC Board in Review's Decision By RICHARD TAUB e Board in Review for Student Government Council decided ;ht that Galens, medical honorary, had had a chance to appeal C decision. is-means Galens will not be able to hold a bucket drive for r in the State Street and South University shopping areas. Council had set campus boundaries including the State Street >uth University shopping areas on October 2 for its Campus Drive, and at the same time prohibited Galens from holding ual bucket -drive in that area. Denied Reconsideration st Wednesday Galens was denied SGC reconsideration of the ries, after it was given an opportunity to present reasons why Id be reconsidered. To Consider Virginia School Segregation A< [a 3oard I overnn of act; n to sc the C ever th f action :1 is au rer, wi will b r the B that " C exten 3y thep ,tions . n adva meeting had been called because of an alleged denials ie medical honorary. el Laing of the political science department, chairman cknowledged his error in calling the Board, after reading Tthe minutes of bothSGC meetings concerned with Galens. D rive Situation Misunderstood He misunderstood the situation, he said, and it was apparent froml ~oie1t - the minutes that Galens had had a chance to appeal. . This decision came after the cu lt Board realized it could not discuss SGC's action on Nov. 2 which de- fined campus boundaries, because n Review for Stu- of the rules under which the Board ent Council lifted operates. ion Sunday on the SGC President Joe Collins, '58, olicit faculty mem- pointed out that the. SGC plan' ampus Chest. states that appeals can only be he Board is called, made "within four days of publi- n on the issue to be cation in The Daily Official Bulle- utomatic. tin of the Council's action." th the removal of The issue did not come up for e includeA a state- almost twd weeks, Collins said Board advising the Where matters be- Appeal Choice Given'k- nd beyond the stu- It was at this point Prof. Laing properly authorized ruled that "unless someone could . . should be con- interpret. the SGC minutes. differ- nce of taking ac- ently," it was clear Galens had been given an appeal to the Coun- ided at its Wednes- cil. instruct the Cam- Dean of Women Deborah Bacon ard to solicit the deplored the "legalistic point of view"' the students had taken. She Asks Charge said that this type of issue was of the- meeting Joe always a difficult one for students IC president, asked to handle, because they "always what charge it had demand a pound of flesh." She explained that often "it is Laing of the poli- better to be wise than right." department and Dean of the music school Earl ie Board,' answered Moore agreed with Dean Bacon. ers "had shown He felt a great lack of wisdom was t SGC's decisipns shown by the Council's action. mpus Chest Board "You have already alienated a lty. large group of important alumni," neets, according to he said. -Rea Obiects 3C had dec meeting to Chest Boa lty. / - Collins9 t the startc ins, '58, SG Board on i called. of. Lionel1 science rman of th ilty memb ern" abou ave the Ca it the facu he Board m SGC plan,t Council w uestion oft on" or req ration ofr inistrative1 By SUSAN HOLTZER Architect Frank Lloyd Wright yesterday made a grand entrance into Detroit, drove quietly into, Ann Arbor, and sneaked into the architecture college. It was hard to say which he en- joyed most.' The occasion was a "lecture" Lawyer Say ss Hoffa Voters, Unqualified WASHINGTON (P)-Counsel for a group of protesting Teamsters members claimed yesterday that over 600 delegates to the union's recent convention were seated il- legally to rig the election of James R. Hoffa as president. The attorney, Godfrey P. Schmidt, told United States Dis- trict Judge F. Dickinson Letts there "never was a group of more complacent 'yeah men' ever gath- ered together anywhere." Schmidt said at least 478 of the convention's 1,754 delegates could be proved by their own admission to have been illegally seated, and another 128 could be proved im- properly qualified under union rules. Judge Letts recessed argument in the case until this morning when he again will hear from Schmidt and Teamsters Union at- torney Martin O'Donoghue. Letts refused to dissolve a week- old restraining order against Hoffa taking office. Wilitaims Firm Tells Dealings With Hoodlum LANSING, (A) - Gov G. Men- nen Williams today disclosed that a firm of which he is a director had dealings with labor racketeer Johnny Dio. Dio and his associates "victim- ized" Mennen Co., a Morristown, N.J., toiletries firm, and its em- ployes, Gov. Williams said. Writing to Sen.-John L. McClel- lan (D-Ark.) chairman of the Senate R a c k e t s Investigation Committee, the governor said he had decided to publicize the story "because it shows how a busi- ness firm, operating in good faithi can find itself' dealing with racketeers under the guise of la- bor organization." Sen. McClel- lan's committee, he said, already has been apprised of the situation. -Daily-David Arnold TWENTIETH CENTURT ARCHITECT-Frank Lloyd Wright speaks to a group of eager architecture students at the University's architecture college. He characterizes his orgaic architecture as the only truly American twentieth century style in existence, and calls the campus he designed for Florida Southern College "the only really American campus in the country." Wrig Blasts Architecture Instruction sponsored by the Detroit Town Hall in that City's Civic Center, but Wright, at his non-conforming best, turned it into a ten-hour marathon of pungent comments on any and every subject. The high point - for all con- cerned - came late In the evening when he addressed an awe-struck group of about 300 architecture students in the architecture build- ing. Students 'Waste Time' "Addressed" is not quite the word. What he actually did was to tell them they were wasting their time, that they did not know the first thing about architecture, and that not one of them would know a great piece of architecture when he saw one. They loved it. "There is nothing I can do for you," he said. "There is nothing I can do for any school." He was referring to his main complaint, against architecture - Euroe Study ]Plan Praised By Director "The junior year abroad plan is wonderful; I'd like to see it at the University," Prof. James M. Da- vis, Director of the Interrational Center, told the Literary College Steering Committee yesterday. For supervision of the year of study in Europe, faculty members would accompany any group sponsored by the University, he suggested. "This plan would ensble the faculty to work and vacation in Europe. This would give stimula- tion and new life to their teaching at home. The University could thereby build up a rich resource for improving its. total teaching after a period of years," Prof. Davis noted. The junior year abroad plan is "a revolutionary approach to curriculum," Prof. Davis . con- tinued. If conducted in Europe, the plan would add to the Univer- sity's' prestige, which now ranks "relatively low in their conception, of American universities," he noted. In talking of a junior year plan in Asia, the director observed that a plan of this type would be "a unique contribution" to national junior year programs since no other school conducts one in Asia. At their next meeting the Steering Committee will discuss -the information they have re- ceived so far, and attempt to se- lect the area in which the pro-, gram the University might insti- tute will take place, according to Leslie Dietz, '58, chairman. the way it is taught in the colleges. Over and over, in the lecture, his talk to the students, and in private interviews, he emphasized what he feels is wrong. Wrong Teachers "They teach by comparison," he said, "and not the way they should --by analysis. That's the only way See FRANK LLOYD, page 6 Arab King T o -Mediate, Trk, Crisis UNITED NATIONS (R') - Tur- key and Syria last night were re- ported accepting the offer of Arabia's King Saud to mediate their border crisis. Saudi Arabia officially an- nounced the two countries had agreed the king should step in. Turkey announced its accept- ance here while the Syrians in the United Nations still declined to make it official on the basis of what they had heard from home. Meeting Today This word came as Sir Leslie Munro, president of the 82-nation General Assembly, called a meet- ing for this afternoon to begin debate on the Middle East prob- lem. Turkish Anibassador Seyfullah Esin said his government had in- formed the Saudi Arabian mon- arch that it was prepared to take part in mediation efforts. Esin heads Turkey's UN delegation. But Syria denied published re- ports that Damascus had agreed to mediation now. A statement from the Syrian UN delegation said such reports are "not in conformity with fact." Accept Offer In Washington, the Saudi Ara- bian Embassy issued a statement Syria had accepted the mediation saying that both Turkey and effort and that a Syrian delega- tion would meet Saud within the next two days. A spokesman at the Syrian Em- bassy said the embassy had no direct word from Damascus, but he 'considered the Saudi Arabian information as accurate. United States officials also said that Syria as well as Turfcey had agreed to the mediation. Western delegates conferred privately on the best way to coun- ter Syria's Soviet-backed charge that Turkey is about to start war in the Middle East. Diplomats at the UN believed Syria wanted a full airing r of its charges in the Assembly before considering any other course. to review action of hich might involve the Council's iuris- uire "further con- egental policy or practice." 'Faculty Jurisdiction' " Prof. Laing commented perhaps the Council's action was a "reach- ing out to take faculty jurisdic- tion," and the Board should de- cide "what are the Council's pro- per limits." See BOARD, page 2 /orld News roundup Dean of Men Walter B. Rea "objected to the whole business." He thought that it was possible that next year the Council would "push Galens back into the Hos- pital. ? However, he noted again, that the Board had to follow the "letter of the law" and should not over- rule SGC. Collins commented that SGC also had to operate "within the letter of the law." That is what the Board is for, he-,continued, "to see that we do. If we don't, it is up to the Board to correct us." Jewett Speaks Collins invited Bob Jewett, 58K Galen's president, to explain to the Council why it thought it had been denied the right to appeal. Jewett told of Galens request last March for a campus and city drive, which was postponed by the Coun- cil until the definite arrangements had been made for Campus Chest. He said that he had not received a letter from Collins on the new delineation of boundaries prescrib- ed by the Council until six days after the action had been taken. Collins indicated this was standard policy, since the action was not final until the Board had had a chance to review it. See BOARD, page 6 By The Associated Press PARIS - President Rene Coty sought by personal persuasion last Anight to get bitterly o p p o s e d French political factions together in the interests of forming a new- government. The need to end the three-week- old crisis was clear. Coty was armed for his talks with a pessimistic economic report .presented to him by ex-Premier Robert Schuman, a former fin- ance minister who spent the week- #end consulting financial experts. - He first asked Schuman himself to form a government centered on Schuman's Popular Republican- MRP-party.Schuman refused. WASHINGTON - With the United States poised for an early test firing of its satellite rocket- the Vanguard-Britain yesterday proposed the two countries pool nuclear and missile secrets to counter Russia's recent successes in the space race. - Britain's c a b i n e t authorized Prime Minister Harold Macmillan BRICKER, GORE: Senators To Discuss Atomic Energy Controls Having recently returned from the international atomic energy conference in Vienna, Sens. John W. Bricker (R-O.) and Albert Gore (D-Tenn.) will present their views on "Can Atomic Energy Be Controlled?" at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. ate that he opposed any agree- ment under which control of the atomic bomb would pass to an in- ternational agency because it would mean "world government." This interest led to intense study of the value of nuclear energy and in the House from 1938 until his election as senator in 1952. Prior to his election to congress in 1938, Sen. Gore was Tennessee State Commissioner of Labor. Works Bill Author Sen. Gore is co-author of the 1956 Gore-Fallon bill that consti-