AFTER FOUR MONTHS. BARE STATISTICS See Page 4 Y irtigan *1b " , / * , ,r Latest Deadline in the State RAIN, COOLER VOL. LXIV, No. 32 ANN ARBOR. MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1953 SIX PAGES R~ilX rPAajk 7 SAC Plans For Meeting With Hatcher Representation Goal of Group Three students from the Studen Affairs Committee and actini Dean of Students Walter B. Rea will meet with University Presi dent Harlan H. Hatcher next weel to ask for some form of studen representation on the faculty com mittee being set up to study SA( composition. In an informal discussion a yesterday's meeting, SAC mem. e bers unanimously endorsed the idea of student representation, and Janet Netzer, '54, Sue Riggs, '54 and Harry Lunn, '54, along with SAC chairman Rea will discuss the question with the President. * * * FIRST notice of the faculty study group was given in a lette from President Hatcher to SAC two weeks ago. The size or composition of the group was not specified, other than that its members would be former SAC representatives. It is also not known whether the study was initiated by the Presi- dent or came at request of the Regents. President Hatcher is out of town this week and not avail- able for comment. SAC approval was given to F. F (Flip Flop) Fraternity's consti- tution yesterday after it was learn- ed the group's national organiza- tion would allow it to exist here without a discriminatory clause. Flip Flop ran into trouble last spring when local members pre- sented a constitution for SAC recognition that limited mem- bership to Chinese students. The new clause specifies that "Chinese and other interested stu- dents" are -eligible. An interna- tional fraternity with chapters in China and the Philippines, Flip Flop made the membership excep- tion only in the local case. The Chess Club was granted tentative recognition pending ap- proval of its constitution. Recognition and approval were given the Chinese Christian Fel- lowship and the Psychology Club. In other action, SAC set 1 p.m. closing hours for campus social activities on Saturday, Nov. 21 and Saturday, Dec. 12. The late closing hour permis- sions are set in advance through- out both semesters so that the big school and college dances can be scheduled on those nights. The two approved yesterday are part of the regular number for the fall semester. Panel Agrees Jobs Affected By Religion Scientist, professor or house- wife, a person's religious beliefs are reflected in behavior on the job. This was the consensus of opin- ion at last night's symposium, "Re- ligion Motivates Occupation." * * * THE "TESTIMONY" given by the four members of the panel an- swered the argument of the hu- manists that religion serves only as a crutch, in the opinion of Prof. Frank L. Huntly, of the English department, moderator of the dis- cussion. Prof. Frank O. Copley, of the Latin department, dismissed the "rabbits foot" concept of religion and declared that he worships God because he is "the author of my being." There is no antagonism between religion and science according to Prof. Albert H. Wheller, of the public health school. "Their ulti- mate aims are the same," he said, ~ "the search for truth." Religion has affected his con- duct as a lawyer, Prof. John W. Reed of the Law School declared, to the extent that "I have ceased to be motivated by the desire for success'." He attempts instead, he said, to make professional deci- sions on the basis of their affect on other people. Literalr College Tn Hold Mei n ca ulles Favors lg OVer Fie Conference DECISION TODAY: -Daily-Dean Morton AUSTRIAN VISITOR-Heinz Drimmel, minister of Austrian uni- versities and scientific research, shakes hands with IFC President C. A. Mitts, at last night's Interfraternity Council meeting. With Drimmel and Mitts are the group of Heidelberg University stu- dents living on campus this year. * * * * House Presidents Urged To A id Health InspectionI By GENE HARTWIG Interfraternity Council house presidents last night heard a report urging cooperation with University Health and Safety Examiner Har- old Dunstan, who will be making a check of safety and health con- ditions in campus fraternity houses during the next several weeks. Such safety and health hazards as faulty wiring, poor garbage SL Proposes Stickers To Encourage Fair Play By DOROTHY MYERS Student Legislature's tentative plan for a "fair play" sticker will be revived again today after lying nearly dormant all fall. Larry Harris, '56, will present plans for the sticker to Assistant to the Presiden Erich A. Walter, Walter B. Rea, acting dean of stu- dents, and a member of Ann Arbor's Chamber of Commerce at 2 p.m. today. * ** * THE LEGALITY and significance of the sticker may be decided upon at the meeting Harris said. Initiated last year in SL's Human Relations Committee, the plan calls for a sticker carrying the words "Fair Play the Wolver- ine Way" to be distributed to <* * Ann Arbor's merchant com- munity. Theory behind the plan is that only merchants who do not prac- tice any racial or religious dis-, Ensian Proofs of 'Ensian senior pic- tures may be returned to the Student Publications Building from 10 a.m. to noon and from 12:30 to 6 p.m. daily through Friday through Nov. 13. l s ;SL To Invite AdlaiOthers Russia Proposes, General Parley Vishin sky objects to Sincerity est, U.S. Likes Pre-Withdrawal Port Talk By The Associated Press Secretary of State Dulles disclosed yesterday in Washington he favors convening a five-power conference as soon as possible to dis- cuss the rival claims of Italy and Yugoslavia to the Trieste territory. He also indicated significantly that he would like to see the con- ference take place before all the American and British occupation troops pull out of Zone A of the territory. MEANWHILE, RUSSIA'S Andrei Y. Vishinsky said in the United Nations yesterday that the Soviet Union is agreeable to a meeting of chiefs of state of the big pow- ers. i L disposal, unsanitary kitchen conditions, unsafe condition of furnaces crimination will display the stick- and pipes, inadequate fire extinguishers, and improper food storage ers on their doors or windows. facilities will be main points in the * * Wilson View On Security Hit byYD's University Young Democrats last night challenged the recent state- ment of Charles E. Wilson, Secre- tary of Defense, that in security hearings where loyalty is not ques- tioned the decision must be in fa- vor of the state. Along the same lines, a plea for legislation requiring "traditional rules of evidence" in Government loyalty and security-risk hearings was sent to Michigan's Senators yesterday by the Southwest Oak- land County Democratic Club. * * * THE COUNTY Democratic group condemned the Radulovich pro- ceedings as "more dangerous to our liberties than the evils that they seek to combat." The Young Democrats stated that "Wilson's position .. . pre- sents a real danger to a free America." At the meeting the YD's accept- ed a Young Republican challenge to debate "Resolved: that the Re- publican Administration does not have an effective farm policy," on Nov. 24. Prof. Samuel Eldersveld, of the political science department, and chairman of the Ann Arbor Demo- cratic party, spoke to the group on how to integrate Young Dem- ocrats with the city democratic or- ganization.. check it was reported. * A NUMBER of houses were also listed as not having complied with last year's Health Service request that fraternities require their do- mestic help to have X-ray exam- inations for TB. Houses were urged to comply with the examination request as soon as possible. Guest at the IFC meeting was Heinz Drimmel, minister of Aus- trian universities and university matters and Austrian scientific re- search. Drimmel, who is spending six weeks in the country studying problems in 'the American educa- tional -system, was accompanied by the group of German students from Heidelberg University study- ing on campus this year. DRIMMEL SAID, "I am not here to transplant the American system to Austria but to study the prob- lems here in the light of those we have a home." C. A. Mitts, '54, IFC president, restated the IFC's policy stand of last year that fraternity men should not participate in so called panty raids and urged presidents of the State Street houses especially to caution their men about creating noisy con- ditions that might touch off any general disturbance. Ken Rice, '54, received unani- mous approval of the presidents to serve as head of the IFO Ball committee. In a further action the presi- dents okayed the IFC budget for the 1953-54 school year. SL MEMBERS have not yet ap- proved the sticker's proposed de- sign, drawn last year by Stu Ross,{ '55, nor have they voted money required to print the stickers. f Robin Renfrew, '55, chairman1 of the HR committee said her group has not definitely approv- ed the plan because members do not know whether the sticker's legality will be called in ques- tion. She said HR members appearedr to be "very interested in the pro- ject" but were waiting to vote ap- proval orrdisapproval of the plan pending report of today's meet- ing. Harris said he "was confident both the committee and SL would, back the.project if all obstacles to it are removed." Ca mp Change Evokes Praise Proposal of a new site for a pris- on conservation camp has brought sighs of relief from those who feared the establishment of the; corrections institution only five miles from the University Music camp at Interlochen. The new site is in SpringdaleI Township, about eight miles from Bear Lake and 25 miles from In- terlochen. CORRECTIONS Director Gusf Harrison said the new site is cen-t tral to needed. conservation work in the Manistee county.t At the University, Prof. Joseph1 E. Maddy, who led a wave of pro-t tests when the prison camp was first proposed near Interlochen,i said he was very pleased at thei new proposal. To Camnpus The academic freedom sub- commission of the Student Legis- lature yesterday agreed to send in- vitations to Adlai Stevenson, Walt- er Reuther, Senator Homer Cape- hart, George Sokolsky, and Robert M. Hutchins to speak on campus during Academic Freedom Week, Nov. 15-22. * * * TEN OF THE 200 campus or- ganizations asked to join in plan- ning Academic Freedom Week participated in the meeting yes- terday and decided to make the Nov. 22 conference day the climax of the whole program. On this day all students inter- ested in the problems of freedom in educational institutions would be invited to discuss five major topics of the question: 1) Congressional investiga- tions. 2) Rights of students. 3) Criteria for judging the qualities of teachers and the rights teachers should have. 4) The nature of American traditions in academic freedom. 5) The present loyalty and se- curity program. Students from other Michigan educational institutions and from FACSIMILE OF PROPOSED STICKER Dean Sugests nvting Russia But he objected to any test of Soviet sincerity and good inten- tions as a preliminary step to this meeting. At a meeting of the UN Cor- respondents Association, Vishin- sky was asked about the pros- pects of results from a face-to- face meeting of the chiefs of state. "There is no special problem in this," Vishinsky said in reply. "As you know there is no question which cannot be solved on a basis WASHINGTON -(P) -Brit- ain's Prime Minister Churchill is reported to have agreed to de- lay for several months any moves for a top-level meeting with Soviet Premier Malenkov.. Informed officials who re- ported this last night said Sec- retary of State Dulles reached such an understanding with the British Prime Minister during the Big Three foreign ministers meetings n London two weeks ago. of mutual interest and respect and without a preliminary test of the sincerity and good intentions of the Soviet Union." * * * DULLES' remarks on Trieste seemed to place the United States to some extent on Yugoslavia's side in the bitter dispute over the Adriatic port area. The Italian government has stated repeatedly that it will re- fuse to join the United States, Britain, France and Yugoslavia in any conference until it has military and civil control of Zone A. Dulles said at a news conference that the sooner a five-power par- ley is held the better it will be for Western plans for defending southern Europe against possible Communist attack. B~ig Ten schools also will be & PANMUNJOM-(AP)-U. S. Spec- to attend.s- ial Envoy Arthur Dean told Red delegates yesterday the Chinese Tan Beta's Hea and North Koreans were free to invite Russia to the Korean peace Falsom Address conference because the Red forces "were equipped with planes, tanks, guns and munitions sent from the .The new head of the Un Soviet Union." sity's Engineering Research Dean, representing the United stitute Tuesday night told old Nations, declared at the third ses- new members of Tau Beta Pi sion of the preliminary peace gineering honor society, that talks: ogineers must tear down the "The Soviet Union has open- ficial walls" between theiravar ly supported your side by word disciplines, and must placer and deed. emphasis on research. "The U.S.S.R. has thus played Richard G. Folsom, past1 a direct role in the Korean hos- of the University of Califon tilities." mechanical engineering dep Dean made his sharp attack on ment, speaking at the society' the Russian role in the Korean itiation dinner in the Union,; War in answering a long state- gested that within 25 yearse ment by the North Korean -dele- neering colleges may consis gate that reiterated Communist unified four-year science c insistence on including "neutrals" culums. in the political conference. asked r iver- In- d and , en- en- arti- rious more head rnia's part- s in- sug- engi- st of urri- Former U, Student Asks, To Quit U.S. Houssein Salehr-Omoum, a for- mer University student who has been held in Washtenaw County jail since Aug. 24 for non-payment of alimony, appeared yesterday at a Department of Justice hearing in Detroit to arrange to leave the country voluntarily. Saleh-Omoum, an Iranian, is being deported for failure to mainanhssuetsau.H ne- ed the University in September, 1951, and dropped out of school last December. FINANCIAL problems led to the deportation proceedings against him, according to M. Robert Kling- er, assistant counselor to foreign students. Klinger said Saleh- Omoum had never successfully completed a semester's work after his first semester at the Univer- sity because he was working part- time. "The Immigration Service kept excusing him," Klinger ex- plained, "until he dropped out of school and lost his student status entirely." The International Center pro- vided legal aid for Saleh-Omoum, Klinger said, but his current legal representative is an Ann Arbor attorney. The 31-year-old Iranian would have been compelled to leave the country months ago, Klinger said, but deportation was delayed so he could face charges of non-payment of alimony in the Washtenaw Cir- cuit Court. Saleh-Omoum was released from Washtenaw County jail on a $500 federal bond in the custody of the U., S. Immigration Service. No Gargoyle; Ban Rumored Gargoyle will not appear on campus today. Explanation for the campus hu- mor magazine's failure to come out on schedule consisted of a blunt, "no comment," from Garg man- aging editor Jan Winn, '54. Rumors of a possible banning were gaining momentum, but re- mained unconfirmed. Other quarters suggested that Garg's conspicuous absense from its traditional haunts was a move on the magazine's part in favor of the World University Service campaign being held today. In a prepared statement pre- sented late last night Miss Winn said, "things may have blown over by Friday." Sewers Explode 'THE HEIRESS':- Victorian Drama To Open * * * * At 8 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, audiences will see the curtain rise on the elegance and formality of an 1850 parlor. Here "The Heiress," a young girl dominated by her father, will de- velop a precise sophistication that enables her to renounce not only her father, but also her 'lover. * * * BASED ON Henry James' novel, "Washington Square," "The Heir- ess" is a play characterized by fine- ly-drawn personalities. 'The rela- tionships of the characters are complicated, and their reactions intense. The costumes of this period play are replete with the ruffles and flounces typical at mid-29th century. Far from causing a detraction, they heighten the dignity of these aristocrats and make the breakdown of their ' Wolverine Still Lacking Identification Everyone wants to be an indi- vidual. The desire for recognition is spreading fast and has even in- fested the animal kingdom, one. member of which seems to be nearing his goal. T THE WOLVERINE Club's Name the Wolverine Contest is closing Friday after which the fierce little animal can sit back, assured that he has attained a personal iden- tity. The club is offering free trans- portation and a ticket to the Nov. 7 Michigan-Illinois football game to the winner of the con- test, as well as an opportunity to care for their stuffed speciman for the rest of the semester. To enter the contest, which is open to all University students, a name must be submitted along with a statement of 25 to 50 words telling why that name was chosen. The winner will be anounced Nov. Bucket Drive -Daily-Dean Morton FIRST CONTRIBUTION-Willie Hackett, '56, accepts a donation i N I I I