der Your Subscription o da N O 2-32 I 'U' OFFERS STIMULATION AL Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom Daiti See Page 4 C seC CLOUDY, SICO )WEBS .LXVII, No. IS ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1958 FIVE CENTS TWELVE PAGE I summer Session Enrollment expected To Reach 11,500 By SUSAN HOLTZER -Daily-Bruce Bailey DOUBLEHEADER-Enrollment at the University is seen rising at registration, where two students sign up for a course. The older of the pair handles the details, as the one on top looks over the situation, Registration for Summer Marked by Calm Confusion' Registration, so chaotic in September and February, was a strangely calm and sedate affair in June, as the usual crowds of lost and confused freshmen were replaced by quieter crowds of lost and confused graduate students. Nowhere was the slower pace of summer school more evident than in Waterman Gymnasium during registration. Many familiar scenes were conspicuous by their absence. Gone were the orientation groups Fine Favors School Aid By LANE VANDERSLICE. Dr. Benjamin Fine, former edi- tor of the New York Times asked yesterday for an extensive school building program and a tripling of teachers' salaries. Speaking before over 50 people attending the first day of a week- long symposium on high school physics, Fine called for twenty billion dollars in new school build- ings and a 59 billion dollar school rehabilitations program ever the next ten years. Fine, now with Yeshiva Univer- sity, deplored what he called a "copper philosophy," Nhere valu- able things are discarded and pen- nies saved only because the valu- able things are not recognized. Education is in this position, he said: expenditures for it are side- tracked while the public spends money for roads and other items where it can see direct benefits. Teaching should be made a full- time occupation, with teachers, earning enough to eliminate their need for summer jobs, Fine said. As an example of the present status of teachers, he cited the case where a teacher was turned down for a loan when he marked his application "teacher, part-time bulldozer operator" only to have it accepted when he changed the form to "bulldozer operator, part- time teacher." Eric Rodgers will speak on 'Aims and Methods in Science Teaching at P:30 aim. today in the' West Lecture Room, West Physics Building, The afternoon session will hear J. R. Zacharias and his staff of the Physical Science Study Com- mittee demonstrate and lecture on "The Exposition of A New Course in High School Physics." 'milling helplessly around Angell Hall and Waterman; in their stead, older and more relaxed stu- dents moved calmly about the business of entering the Univer- sity. The lines in Waterman moved slowly; many students, instead of trying to gain a few minutes by entering the gym ahead of time, strolled in as the mood took them, as unconcerned as they were late. The process of selecting classes was no longer a scramble for par- ticular courses at favorable hours. Most courses were scheduled for one hour only, and once elections were made and conflicts elimin- ated. changes were usually un- necessary. For most students, it was a memorable exper ence to walk up to the proper table, announce the course they desired, and get their electiontcard stamped - just like that. Confusion, of course, was not eradicated on campus; merely shifted from cne area of Univer- sity life to another. It centered around the race for housing, as many students who had not planned to attend summer school drifted back to campus. Russian Mob Pelts Embassy MOSCOW (P) - A Russian crowd in a vicious mood attacked West Germany's Embassy with stones, sticks and ink bottles yes- terday in revenge for the assault on the Soviet Embassy in Bonn last week. As the window-smashing dem- onstration raged, a handful of So- viet police raced back and forth blowing whistles and shouting. Soviet mounted police broke it up two hours after it began. West German Ambassador Hans Kroll said he has delivered "the strongest possible protest" to a Soviet deputy foreign minister, A. V. Zakharov. Total enrollment in the 1958 summer session was expected to reach approximately 11,500 stu- dents, the largest summer enroll- ment in the University's history. Incomplete figures place open- ing day enrollment at 8,062, with 6,959 in Ann Arbor, 203 in Flint and about 900 in other University centers throughout the state. Last year's total was 10,705. The largest single group on campus, according to N. Edd Mill- er, associate director of the Sum- mer Session, are thoes in graduate school, including a large number of teachers. In the past, graduates have made up about half the sum- mer total. The same is expected this year, Miller said. Enrollment Up Generally Enrollment increased "across the board," he explained, particularly in certain specialized programs. He said the interdepartmental pro- gram in Russian Studies had an enrollment of about 90 students, and similarly large groups had enrolled in the special Russian language course and the programs for science teachers. Included in the estimated total are summer camps for students of surveying, geology, speech, geo- graphy, natural resources and biology, those studying in exten- sion centers, and a number of two- week workshops in various courses which will be held near the end of the summer. Interlochen Counted Students taking courses for Uni- versity credits at Interlochen music camp are also being counted. One possible reason for the in- crease in the number of teachers, Miller explained, is a new law under which a teacher may deduct certain education expenses fromI his income tax. Other factors which may be contributing to the rising enrollment, he said, is the scarcity of summer jobs during the recession, and the general rise in college attendance. Shakespeare To Open Bill The speech department will open their summer playbill with 1 the hit of the 1957-58 playbill, William Shakespeare's "Love's Labor's Lost" This Elizabethan comedy will be presented at 8 p.m. tomorrow, Thursday and Friday at the Lydia Mendllssoohn Theatre. The cast will remain substan- tially the same as the previous production in April, with Bren- dan O'Reilly, '58, playing Ferdi- nand, king of Navarre, and How- ard Poyourow, '59, as Berowne. Prices for all performances will be $1.50, $1.10 and 75 vents. Sea- son tickets are still available, ac- cording to the department. Following "Love's Labor's Lost" will be three plays and an opera. The playbill is stressing modern works for the summer, according to Tom Skinner of the speech de- partment. "Inherit the Wind" by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee in 1925, will be presented July 9, 10 and 11. This story pits William Jennings Bryan against Clarence Darrow to decide the validity of the God versus Darwin argument. The department will offer Graham Green's "Potting Shed" o nJuly 16, 17 and 18 to comple- ment the summer session theme; of the religion of modern man. "Potting Shed" is a story of faith in a modern world. On July 30 and 31 and Aug. 1 Philip Barry's comedy, "Philadel- phia Story" will be staged at Ly- dia Mendelssohn. Th Summer Playbill will close Aug. 6, 7, 8 and 9 with the speech department- School of Music production of Verdi's opera, "La Traviata. " Auto Ban Off For Summner University driving restrictions are not in effect during summer session, Assistant Dean of Men Karl D. Streiff reports, INTEGRATION: Say Orer Outrages Negroes WASHINGTON (IP)-Four Ne- gro leaders took word to President Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday that a court order delaying school integration in Little Rock, Ark., outraged their race. They said they got a sympa- thetic reception but no promises, In Little Rock a federal judge yesterday refused to stay his own order delaying school integration here for 2% years. He indirectly advised the Na- tional Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People to try for the stay in a higher court. Will Take Cue Wiley Branton, a Negro attorney for the NAACP, said he would take the cue. "Have motion, will travel," Branton quipped. United States Dist. Judge Harry J. Lemley denied Branton's motion yesterday morning after hearing six minutes of oral argument and recessing court for an hour to write the opinion. Call Ruling "Green Light" The Negro leaders told Presi- dent Eisenhower that Saturday's ruling by Lemley, "is being con- strued rightly or wrongly, as a green light to lawless elements in their defiance of federal author- ity." Specifically, they urged Presi- dent Eisenhower to direct the Justice Department to file a brief against the decision when it is ap- pealed. The four also laid before Presi- dent Eisenhower other requests for action in the fields of integra- tion and civil rights. Neither on the Little Rock ruling, nor on any of the other points, they said, did President Eisenhower make any pledges or commitments. Understand Ike Better But they said that out of their 45 - minute conference with the President grew a little bit better understanding of his position andl a bit better understanding of their. position on his part. In Little Rock, Lemley said,1 "From a practical standpoint to grant this motion and stay the en-1 forcement of our judgement would. to a large extent nullify our order."I He said it would probably take three months to carry the case to. the Supreme Court "and in the meantime the situation at Central1 High School which we have found, to be intolerable .. . would con-7 tinue. .."1 Governor I*_ U President To Discuss Faith's Role President Harlan Hatcher will open the 1958 Summer Session lecture series with a discussion of "Religion and Higher Education in America" at 4:15 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. Theme of the series of lectures, plays, concerts and art and library exhibitions to be presented during the summer is "Religion in Con- temporary Society." The theme coincides with the centennial cele- bration of campus religious or- ganizations. To Study Effect Designed to study the impact of religion on modern civilization, the program is not planned as a de- scription of various faiths, Prof. George Peek, Jr. of the political science department, chairman of' the program committee, noted. In addition to 10 scheduled lec- tures, the speech department will !Present "The Potting Shed" by Graham Greene on July 16, 17, and 18. lA concert, "Music and the Present Day Church," with organ- ist Marilyn Mason, choral director Robert Fountain,na choral group, and comments by Prof. Harold Haugh of the School of Music is scheduled at 8:30 p.m., July 28 in Hill Auditorium. Art Exhibition Scheduled Beginning today, religious ex- hibitions will be hung in the Alumni Memorial Hall art gal- leries. Manuscripts will be on dis- play in the General Library. Unless otherwise specified, lec- tures will be held at 4:15 p.m. in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. A panel and the lecturer will follow each lecture at 7:30 p.m. in Auditorium A. On June 26, Franklin H. Lit- tell will discuss "Religion in Post- war Europe." Littell is presently representative in Germany of the Franz Lieber Foundation. REGENTS, ALUMNI: Walter, Tirrell Named To University Posts 1 t z a z c t Wlay ERICH WALTER JOHN E. TIRRELL .regent's secretary ... alumni secretary Erich A. Walter, assistant to University President Harlan Hatch- er, has been appointed as secretary to the Regents, President Hatcher announced recently. Dean of Grand Rapids Junior College John E. Tirrell has been named general secretary of the University Alumni Association, suc- ceeding T. Hawley Tapping, who is retiring after 35 years in that o'osition. Walter, who will assume the post held for the past 32 years Collegce Adds by Herbert Watkins, will con- tinue to hold the office of as- sistant to President Hatcher. Nucler Dept Former Instructor Receiving his B.A. from the University Regents approved University in 1919, Walter, 61 the addition of a nuclear engi- years old, first joined the faculty terad deprtmen nutoterengi- as an instructor in rhetoric. Two veering department to the engi- years later he received his Master neering college at their June of Arts degree and in 1923 was meeting. promoted to assistant professor The new department, effective of English. July 1, wi i be headed by Prof. Since then, he has served as ,eny.om egf y chairman of academic counselors, Henry J. Gombcrg, of the engi- associate dean of the literary col-' neering college, assistant director lege and dean of students, before of the Phoenix Project.lantmensfsstantstohe Instruction will be confined to appointment as assistant to the the graduate field. presidenti 1953.Editor The appointment of Tirrell was made following a meeting of the executive committee of the Alum- Ind cAssociation Tirrelltwillserve as editor-in-chief of the Michi- gan Alumnus, which is sent to all University alumni. By ROBERT JUNKER Tirrell, 31 years old, received an Hints Action If Educators Request Aid Williams Gets Repo On Effects of Budg Cuts by Legislature By M[CHAI7, KRAFT Daily Co-Editor Gov. G. Mennen Willians hin ed in Lansing yesterday a "wi ingness" to call a special legis] tive session on higher educati if the state supported colleges r quested it. The move, seen by one legisli tor as an inmitation to educato to unite in demanding a spec session, came after Gov. Willian received a report on the fina cial conditions of the state in versities. In the just-ended legislati session, lawmakers cut approx mat~ly one million dollars fro both the University's and Mich gan State University's operati budgets. May Delay Dearborn Gov. Williams was told at ye terday's meeting with represe tatives of the state's universiti that the cits will delay the ope ing of the University's Dearbo Center uitil 1960, although t buildings will be completed September, 1959. A postponeme will also be necessary in the ope ing of MSU's Oakland Coun branch. Gov. Williams counselled t 'administrators to consult wi their respective g,>veri. ; boar "to see if we should contempla some special procedure" to mc effectively bri g the problem b fore the Legislature. Questions Result He questioned, in view of t Legislature's "hold the line" R titude, whether the picture higher education setbacks col be made "comprehenm Le" in "normal presentation to tV Legislature in a normal session University President Harla Hatcher said that "in all prob bility, the universities will ne some relief "ef ore the academ year is completed," The LegislE ture's appropriation of 30- millio dollars to the University is a mi. lion less than last year's and seve SeW-%ssion See AT SUMMER DAILY: It's Official-Tryouts To " ;VI fromHope ollee in ol- !-. " °° ha" . L v ya a,r' ,v "You mean this is the only nickel coke machine on campus?" land, Mich. in 1949 and an AM million below the University's ashocked tryout asked David from the University in 1951. He ginal request, Tarr, '59, co-editor of the sum- has a doctor of education degree yPreside pe ch lsaiad b mer Daily on the second floor of from Harvard University.e oas the Student Publications Bldg., While serving as dean of the md mn h aiu Grand Rapids Junor College for supported institutions to reqi Michael Kraft, '59, also co- the past three years, Tirrell was a special session. University V editor of the summer Daily, men- electep President William Stirton, tioned the fine cross-ventilation Assct president of the Michigan represented the University the uildng psseses wichAssociation of Junior Colleges,. ersne teUiest the building possesses which He will assume wp Lansing yesterday, was unav keeps the temperature at 70 de- e his new post able for immediate comment gres throughout th summer. "W Sept. 1, 1958. the meeting. grees throughout the summer. Sallade 'Dissatisfied' "We also possess fine original mo- Adam Aslk d Rep. George W. Sallade (R-1 saic work on the city room walls, AdamsArbor) who led an unsucce he added. j fight on the House floor to r Ted Cohn, '60, business man- 1 0 Step D OWn the Legislature's appropriation ager, led the tryout to the shining higher education, said "I'm v new addressograph and adding By G ld a ter dissatisfiedwith the final ac machine the business staff pos-. 'B' etaken by the Legislature in sesser trying to woo her from the spect to higher education. A editorial staff. "So they're not WI'ASHINGTOJN (A-Sen. Barry Icial session might prove very v, brand new," he said, "but we Goldwater (R-Ariz.) voiced a fresh able in dramatizing the need really polish them." demand yesterday that Sherman education, and might also p al p hh .Adams resign as President Dwight very beneficial in providings "These opportunities are now D. Eisenhower's chief assistant. plemental funds. However, I d available to the campus," all three Adams, under fire in congress vvhether that view is shared b Daily bosses exclaimed as If for accepting costly favors from majority of legislators." prompted. "We will hold four try- Boston Industrialist Bernard Gold- Gov. Williams said strict cu out meetings," they joyously re- fine, indicated he has no intention on college spending, by dimini lated, of quitting his job-a decision re- ing a major attraction for col Meetings have been scheduled ceived glumly by some Republi- industrial growth, tend to cut for 4:15 p.m. and 7 p.m. today cans. the state's tax base potential. and tomorrow in the conference Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) room on the first floor of the proposed creation of a commission Student Publications Bldg., 420 charged with drafting a federal Maynard. "That s right across the code of ethics to cover such cases street from the women's resi- as those in which Adams is in- dences, or at least Newberry," the volved. three bosses whispered. Goldwater, who just returned T.youts'for editorial staff re- from a meeting of Republican WARSAW (a) - Wladys norters. business, sports and pho- county chairmen in Arizona. said Gomulka is reported unha 0 it w 'a ,A a ~3 SP ra s r s1 oI by lls lie Im 1. --r-your -n-enience .lipout.his coupoandmailtodayt For your convenience, clip out this coupon and mail today to | ., _:: ..