r IT SEEMS TO ME See Page 4 l11rr 43&Ua I OOF .AL A- -:43atty ine,, M _,. , . Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY AND COLD VOL. LXIV, No. 55 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1953 SIX PAGES 'U' Financial Report Given By Pierpont Booklet Presents Monetary Record By GENE HARTWIG Listing details of income and expenditure for the year ending June 30, 1953, the 20 page Univer- sity financial report was officially released yesterday by Vice-Presi- *~dent Wilber K. Pierpont. The illustrated booklet presents a graphic and word picture of the seven separate funds under which the University's accounting rec- ords are maintained. * 9 * * IN ALL, the University paid out $33,985,482 in, salaries during the last fiscal year as compared with $30,878,467 for the preceding year. An additional $10,929,565 in contrast to $9,147,885 a year ago for materials, supplies, and trav- el expenditures added to the sal- ary figure accounted for 87 per c cent of the total expenditures for the year. The General Fund covering teaching, research, public service and student advisory services showed income of $22,,725,910 and expenditures of $22,630,582 with a margin of $95,328 between income and outgo. Both income and ex- penses under the General Fund were well over two million dollars higher than the previous year. THE. self-supporting activities of the University under the Aux- iliary Activities Fund including the hospital, publications, athletic and other student activities, resi- dence halls, Food Service, laun- dry, airport and non-investment property showed an income of $15,723,392 against $15,696,550 in expenditures. Gifts, grants and income dur- ing the year classified as Ex- pendable Trust Funds amounted to $14,687,165, a $3,644,058 in- crease over the previous year. Student Loan Funds as of June 30 amounted to $836,822, an in- crease of $33,636 over the prev- ious year. Endowment Funds now total $21,684,147, a million and a half dollar increase over last year, due principally to the Leckie bequest See 'U' FINANCIAL, Page ii Faculty Gives Nod to Survey on Vocations Approval of the all-senior vo- cation survey scheduled for next week by the Commission on Hu- man Resources was voiced yester- day by a University dean and two faculty men connected with psy- chological research. Prof. E. Lowell Kelly, director of the Bureau of Psychological Services, said, "In my judgment, this testing program, designed to discover the essential similarities and differences among college majors, constitutes one of the most important aspects of thelarger -investigation undertaken by the Commission." THAT COLLEGE students in various fields of study differ from one another is obvious, Prof. Kelly said, "how they differ is something we don't know, yet such knowledge is critical if we are to make more effective use of our human re- sources."I Given to all seniors in the lit- erary college and the schools of architecture and design, social work, natural resources, medi- cine, dentistry, education, law, business administration, engi- neering, music, pharmacy and nursing, the tests will require two hours. Senior Board as well as admin- istrators of the participating schools are urging 100 per cent cooperation from all seniors. Prof. Kelly explained, "Previous small-scale studies of the problem have indicated the potential value of data of the kind provided by the tests, but nothing less than a large-scale testing program such as here proposed is adequate to yield definite findings." FlateherPlans Brownell Tells Senate No Comment On Probes Of FBI Report Linking Daily Editorial RSR Cited over Radio lasser, Red Spy Ring --Daily-Chuck Kelsey NEW SL OFFICERS-Seated, from left to right: Janet Netzer, member-at-large; Fred Hicks, vice- president; Bob Neary, president; Ruth Rossner, recording secretary. Standing, left to right: Ned Si- mon, member-at-large; Vic Hampton, treasurer; Steve Jelin, corresponding secretary. SL Elects Neary,_Hicks,_Hampton By MARK READER Arthur L. Brandon, Director of University Public Relations, said yesterday President Harlan H. Hatcher did not plan an addi- tion to his comments on Congres- sional investigating committees until the appearance of the Clardy group in Michigan early next year. Brandon's statement came on a coast-to-coast r a d i o newscast which claimed a "dramatic dis- agreement" was in evidence on campus between the students and the University President. THE PROGRAM referred to a Daily editorial printed in Sunday's paper calling President Hatcher's stand toward Congressional com- mittees "inconsistent, contradic- tory, weak and unbecoming a uni- versity president." Commenting on the editorial written by Virginia Voss, '54, Edi- torial Director, and Alice B. Sil- ver, '54, Associate Editorial Direc- tor, Managing Editor Harry Lunn, '54, said on the newscast six of the seven senior editors agreed with the article along with the majority of the junior staff. Lunn went on to tell a listeningr audience of approximately five million people that The Daily had received favorable comment throughout the day on the edi- torial but "it was hard to tell the general opinion of the students" in the conflict. The program, aired over thej Taylor Grant show, said the dis! puted editorial hinted University' officials were "appeasing the in- vestigators" because of outside pressures. * * * I 1 { 34 By ARLENE LISS By DOROTHY MYERS By a rising vote of acclamation, Student Legislature last night re- elected Bob Neary, '54BAd., presi- dent for the coming semester. Rather than outline his aims in a traditional acceptance speech, the 20-year-old senior from Des Moines, Ia. said the newly-elected cabinet would meet to adopt a platform of joint aims to Pe pre- sented at the next meeing. FRED HICKS, '54, was chosen' vice-president, also by acclama- tion of the group. kAmember of the SeniorBoard, Hicks is enroll- ed in. the history honors program and was SL treasurer for the first part of the semester. First contest in the elections developed in the race between former incumbent Steve Jelin, '55, and present incumbent Via Hampton, '54, for treasurer. In a speech nominating Hamp- ton, Hank Berliner, '56, advised: SL members "the election had not been rigged in spite of some pre- dictions of a close 21-18 vote in favor of the opposing candidate." Surprised looks dotted many Legislators' faces as Berliner con- tinued his nominating speech by citing the changed support of for- mer SL treasurer Hicks from the by-election which installed Jelin] in the treasurer's office six weeks ago to yesterday's election. Hicks, Berliner said, had supported Jelin; at the time only because hei thought Hampton would graduateI in February. Both Hampton and i Resolutions On Freedom OK'd at Meet, SL Conf erence PesuIts iin Stau ds Jelin had competed in the prior election. A SECOND contest between in- cumbent Janet Netzer, '54, and Ned Simon, '55, for the position of first iember-at-large saw thel election of Simon. A three-wayI World News . Roundup By The Associated Press OTTAWA - In the Canadian Parliament and in The Toronto Star yesterday, a charge arose that a U. S. Senate investigating group is using the Gouzenko affair as a buildup for what was described as a fantastic and sordid smear on Lester B. Pearson, Canadian for- eign secretary. ** * DETROIT - Federal Judge Frank A. Picard yesterday de-j nied a motion for mistrial in the case of six Michigan Com- munists charged with conspir- acy to violate the Smith Act. WASHINGTON - The Federal' Parole Board reconsidered a pa- role for Alger Hiss yesterday and refused for the second time to free him from prison. WASHINGTON-Harry J. An- slinger, chief of.the Federal Nar- cotics Bureau, testified yesterday Red China is seeking to flood the United States with illicit dope. race to fill the second member-at- large spot, however, saw Miss Net- zer elected on the second ballot. Ruth Rossner, '55, and Jelin also competed for the position. Position of recording secretary was filled by Miss Rossner, who faced no competitors for that cabinet office. Cris Reifel, '55, and Jelin com- peted for the seventh cabinet post, that of corresponding secretary. Final voting installed Jelin in the position. PRIOR to the cabinet elec- tions, members heard a report on an SL conclave, held Friday at the Fresh Air Camp. A motion initiated by Bob Ely, '54E, to abolish SL's Inter- national Relations Committee was unanimously defeated. The committee has received much recent criticism for its "antipa- thy toward international stu- dents" and "concern with cam- pus trivia rather than interna- tional affairs." A resolution stating that Stu- dent Legislature should appointt the seven student members of the Student Affairs Committee and SL President Bob Neary's motion on Lt. Milo Radulovich were' passed: by votes of 19-11 and 21-7 respect-S ively at the plenary session of the DR. CARL E. BUCK Academic Freedom Conference ... died Saturday Sunday night. Less than forty people attended t the all day conference which ~ r D C~ marked the end of Academic Free- dom Week. Attendance was mark-, ed by the shifting nature of the' audience as groups came and went during the day. THE RESOLUTIONS framed by For Today workshops, which had met in ear- lier session, were made in the form Services for Dr. Carl E. Buck, of recommendations to SL accord- ing to an SAC regulation. The mo- professor of public health prac- tions will therefore be considered- tices, who died late Saturday night on the legislature floor, from a stroke, after a long ill- ness, will be held at 2 p.m. today Opinion at the plenary ses- in Muehlig's Chapel, 403 S. 4th. sion seemed to generally favor A member of the University the SAC motion, however some faculty since 1941, Dr. Buck was students doubted its connection granted a sick leave for the 1952- with academic freedom while 53 academic year and the leave others thought no action should was extended indefinitely in Sep- be taken until the SAC commit- tember.' Promotionl Preceded By FBI Data Espionage Info ent to Officials WASHINGTON-(P) -FBI re- ports linking Harold Glasser to Soviet espionage in the United States were sent to nine officials months before he was promoted to a higher job in the Treasury De- partment, Attorney General Her- bert Brownell told Senate investi- gators yesterday. The statements that Brownell sent to the Senate Internal Se- curity Subcommittee listed the re- ports and those who received them, but did not reveal what the FBI reports contained. * * * GLASSER was among the Gov- ernment employes named in an FBI report of Dec. 1946, as ac- cused of aiding a Soviet spy ring by unnamed informants. The late Harry Dexter White, then assist- ant secretary of the Treasury was another one mentioned in this group and this report. Brownell is expected to re- lease information next week on others that were co-workers with Glasser in the Treasury Department, among whom were Victor Perlo, V. Frank Coe and Solomon Adler. I Brownell cited a report dated Nov. 5, 1945, and "a summary" dated Feb. 21, 1946, both of which he said were sent to the then Sec- retary of the Treasury Fred M. Vinson, on successive days in March,.1946. Glasser was appoint- ed to the higher position in Aug- ust. Altogether, Brownell listed 10 different FBI reports concerning Glasser. He said that among the offi- cials having received one or more of these reports were -James F. Byrnes, Tom Clark, James V. For- restal, Brig. Gen. Harry H. Vaugh- an, Adm. William D. Leahy, Lt. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, Spruille Bra- den and Fred Lyon. DISCUSSING the President's tee- studying the problem made position of not planning to issue. its report. another statement until the sub-; group of the House Un-American In a debate marked by parlia- Activities Committee appears in mentary ramifications the group Michigan, Henry L. Bretton of the endorsed the Radulovich motion political science department agreed which SL had defeated 17-11 three with the President's stand. F weeks ago. Stirring up the issue of the Lec- Bretton said, "I believe it is ture Committee, the conference the duty of the citizen to co- passed by 21-2 a resolution stating operate with Congress in the the right of students to hear exercise of its legitimate tasks speakers, regardless of their views, and prerogatives." and expressing disapproval of the "On the other hand." he noted, Lecture Committee. " ~ o lnrtitilrn FF n n~nt .Z f ! !( (I It it i SL also moved to appoint a representative to a board under authority of the University Speech Clinic which governs activities of# 'dysphasia victims. SPARTANS SUPPORTED: Campus Opinion Tends To Favor Bowl Choice By JIM DYGERT In the wake of the most controversial Rose Bowl decision of modern times, a small-scale Daily poll showed the majority of cam- pus opinion agreeable with the choice of Michigan State. Athletic director Herbert O. "Fritz" Crisler, whose opinion was expected to wield the most influence in the voting, commented that "Michigan State will give a fine account of itself on New Year's Day' and "should live up to the __ high standards set by other BigIA T[Pt i"IT Turkey Trot The Turkey Trotters, Wol- verine Club sponsored air line buses, will be taking students to Willow Run Airport from 11 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. tomorrow. The buses will leave from the front of the Union tomorrow, and will also be leaving the Air- port from 7:30 p.m. Sunday to 12:30 a.m. Monday to bring air passengers returning from Thanksgiving Vacation into Ann Arbor. Tickets, priced at $1 one way and $1.50 round trip will be on sale from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5 p.m. today at win- dow 7 in the Administration Bldg. and in front of the Un- ion tomorrow. I it is the privilege of the citizen j THE MOTION also urged the to check Congress by the vote when University to "heed student op he feels Congress is abusing its ion as expressed" in the 1952 Lec- power." Fo sepesdinte15 e~ ture Committee referendum and Prof. Arthur J. Carr of the Eng- called on SL to "continue to press lish department said, "My reac- for the realization" of freedom as tion to the broadcast was that it regards campus speakers.t was an un-biased presentation. -! In a resolution that echoedI I just hope the parties in the dis- a motion made by SL last week pute won't drive each other into on the rights of students called extreme positions." See CONFAB, Page 6 See C-N- -B- - P-- - - -- - PROF. Guy E. Swanson of the sociology department said Presi- INFANTRY CHORUS: dent Hatcher was on "sound legal grounds" in his quote regarding dePauT Ex- President Hatcher had said, "anyone refusing to answer ques- C horal C o t tions on the ground that -it might tend to incriminate him is placed under a burden of proof to explain his actions." Thirty-three ex-GIs who have TWO WEEKS AGO, Dr. Buck was awarded the Sedgwick Me- dal, the highest annual award of the American Public Health Asso- ciation, "for unique leadership he gave for nearly four decades to community agencies throughout the United States and Canada in! their efforts to apply modern sci-I ence to disease prevention and; health improvement." He served as president of the Michigan Public Health Asso- ciation in 1929 and secretary and chairman of the child hy- giene section of the American Public Health Association from1 1927 to 1931. The 64 year old Dr. Buck leaves a wife, Lucille; a father, Carl D., who is professor of Greek litera- ture at the University of Chicago; a sister, Clarinda D. of Chicago;j and two sons, Carl D., Jr. and William both living in South Carolina. Gis To Give Cert Today sung together since their days of i I , I I I I a I i Opera Tickets With 70% of the tickets for "Up 'N' Atom" already sold, Union Opera officials last night voiced hopes of a sell-out before Thanksgiving. No tickets are available for the Friday night performance, but good seats may be had for Wednesday, Dec. 9, the Op.- era's opening performance, and Thursday, Dec. 10, Tickets are priced at $1.25, $1.75, and $2.25, and students are asked to mail their ticket requests and checks to the Un- ion Managers Office, University of Michigan. Swanson concluded, "but the Army training nine years ago will appear in the fourth concert of President didn't say enough about Ithe Choral Union Series at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. what kind of questions are revel- Known as the dePaur Infantry Chorus and directed by Leonard ant and not revelant and what dePaur, the group made its civilian debut five seasons ago. questions should and should not The Chorus will open today's concert with "Four Melodies of be asked." the Middle Ages" by Ivan Langstroth. Brahms famous lullaby S"Wiegenlied" will follow. Grieg's "Ich Liebe Dich" will continue the L: first portion of the program which will end with "Triumvirate: Suite - for Male Voices" by Ulysses Kay. epA RETURN to the classics will open the second portion of the "CIrirrTIIH12T7A Ten schools in the Rose Bowl." ALTHOUGH Crisler expressed his opinion that Michigan State was a good choice, Conference regulations prohibited him from revealing how he or the other Big Ten athletic directors voted on the matter. i } l 1 W litIdIow HoLaxCIIa LU.V I' Z. Pultdown Hoax Ca] concert, with Mozart's "Ave Ver- According to Crisler, Michi- gan State's probationary status is a matter of concern .only to the Conference's faculty repre- sentatives and had no bearing on the athletic directors' vote. Most of the students contacted by the Daily felt that the decision was a good one, although not many agreed that the Spartans have a better team than Illinois. Although some believed that cf'af Hn.. n hn++M n - -n TheBy JON SOBELOFF jaw was easily explained - it T announcement by three was actually the jaw of a mod- British researchers that the Pilt- ern orang-utan*. down man is a fake won't cause Dr. K. P. Oakley of the British any anthropological upheavals, a Museum and two Oxford Univers- University scientist said yesterday. ity professors announced Sunday Prof. James N. Spuhler, of the that up-to-the-minute chemical anthropology department and the tests prove beyond doubt that the Institute of Human Biology, jawbone was a deliberate plane claimed that even if Piltdown faked by artificially staining the man's ape-like jaw was a hoax, the jaw and teeth. main beliefs about modern man's ancestors based on the existence A LITTLE potassium bi-chro- of the jaw are unshaken. mate and iron salts were all the dent of the time might have trick-+ ed up the ape bone as a practical+ joke. Discussing the importance of the+ hoax discovery, Prof. Spuhler said; the existence of Piutdown man had been considered proof that! modern man was not directly de-1 scended from Neanderthal Man. THE REASONING was that since Piltdown man, with the skull ers indicates they were definitelI um" and Bach's "Jesus, Dearest earlier than Neanderthal man," Treasure." The Bach-Gounod ar- Prof. Spuhler said. "Even if Pilt- rangement of "Ave Maria, God is down is a few hundred thousand With Us" by Kastalsky-Norden, years younger than we thought, we and "Psalm 150" by Morton will still know modern men preceded conclude the religious numbers on the more primitive Neanderthal the program. type in-time." Ti,-.q-fr.'i,-. r n fnr " Ike's Farm Policy Debated By YRs, YD' s Young Republican speakers Dave Belin, '54L, and Tim Rich- ards, '57. favored a thorough study of farm policies while Young Dem- ocrats, Roy Van Dyke and Ralph Goldberg, '56, asked for action in the face of falling farm prices at last night's debate between the Young Democrats and Young Re- publicans. Speaking on the affirmative side of the question "Resolved: The Republican Administration does not have an effective farm policy" Van Dyke declared that after ten months in office the only direct action the Admin- istration has taken on the farm problem has been to set up a study commission. on - +4. icnn- .iccinr. -' rnnrt. * * * "ONE OF the uses of the pro-r gram which appeals to me is theY possibility it may contribute to an informed psycholoav of voca- c Prof. Spuhler also pointed out that not all scientists were taken in by the Piltdown hoax.- He said the late Franz Weiden- s I e. suu ort Lst c-Jt~ e a.. o~ the Guard Republican Band of Paris performance, scheduled for Monday,. November 30, may be purchased from the University Musical Society in Burton Me- morial Tower from 9:45 a.m. to _ _ - . .. 4 - - .. . characteristics of modern man, j reich, famous anthropologist of' lived before Neanderthal man, the New York Museum of Natural Noandahal r n't e h ,mva 14itnrvv 1ba Ariddnn t+e hasis' I .. . w i r hnaxtPr nPpciPCi to syivP thR nnnPar_