THE CRARY PLAN See Page 4 Lw '43UU aiti Latest Deadline in the State PARTLY CLOUDY, WARMER VOL. LXIV, No. 74 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1954 SIX PAGES mmwmmmw 4 7 1 k T I U.S., Russia 'U' Rege May Discuss . Atom Pools Buildn Molotov Hints $5,700,000 Progr At Meeting Soon In May; Four S WASHINGTON-()-Secretary Plans for a $5,700,000 Univer of State John Foster Dulles and get under way by May have been Russian Foreign Minister V. M. Announcement of the progra Molotov probably will meet and nix Memorial Laboratory, the Ch discuss President Eisenhower's library stack and storage unit a proposal for a peacetime pool of lowed the December, 1953, Regen atomic energy when they are in*" Berlin for the Four-Power con- AN ADDITIONAL $2,500,000 ference opening Jan. 25. later in the year if the State Le This was announced yesterday University's capital outlay reques by the State Department. - The Regents also accepte their Dec. 18 session. PRESS OFFICER Henry Suy- Biggest of the four construc dam said American Ambassador Children's Hospital. Work will b Charles E. Bohlen discussed the President's proposal with Molotov in Moscow last Wednesday. .4JTegents Suydam said Molotov took Bohlen's remarks "under consid- eration" and promised to get in touch with him later. A reporter asked whether Dulles intends to discuss the President's P s io proposal with Molotov at the Big Four conference. "I would assume so," said Suy- BY WALLY EBERHARD dam tersely, , Faculty appointments and leave EISENHOWER proposed in an nearly filled the agenda at th address to the United Nations D meeting of the University Boar 8 that an international pool of of Regents Dec. 18. atoic ateial beestablished for In addition, a memoir was ap atomic materials be eabihdfrproved and gifts were accepted fo research on peaceful uses of atomic Clements Library.e energy. sL * Suydam spoke to reporters at NICHOLAAS H. Kuiper of th his usual noon conference. At Agricultural University of Wage one point, he said, the Russians ningen in the Netherlands was ap "had accepted the President's po ite eterlndmaeati proposal." hinted lecturer inmathematic Newsmen asked whether he for the second semester of th meant the Russians had agreed present academic year. to start talking about the Presi- Frederick H. Wagman, direc- dent's plan, or whether the So- tor of the University Library, viets already had accepted the idea was given the additional ap- of a peacetime pool of atomic pointment of professor of library energy. , science and Howard H. Peck. "There has been no develop- ham, director of the William L. ment since Ambassador Bohlen Clements Library, was appoint. called on Molotov," he added. ed associate professor of history. New leaves of absence wer granted to: Prof. William W. Gilbert of th Jfail Sentence production engineering depart ment, for one year beginning Feb Il8, to study manufacturing pro Inl Local Court cesses in the plants of the Gen eral Electric Company. * * * University senior James Balog, member of the varsity football PROF. MISCHA Titiev, of the team, pleaded guilty in Municipal anthropology department, for th Court on Dec. 28 for assault and second semester of this year to battery. teach at the Australian Nationa He was fined $16.25 in costs and University in Canberra, Australia given a two day jail sentence. under a Fulbright award. Balog was charged with the Dr. Fred J. Hodges, chairman slugging of Guy Foster; '57, fol- of the department of radiology lowing an argument. Dec. 10. in the School of Medicine, from * * * Feb. 1 to Aug. 3 for visits to uni- Twenty-six candidates for po- versities in Sweden and radiol- sitions on the City Council and logical centers in Finland and the Board of Supervisors have Denmark. Slied petitions with the city clerk. Prof. Freeman D. Miller of the .clderkastronomy department for Octobe uIncluded In the group are 14 and November to serve as a con- Republicans and 12 Democrats. sultant on a classified project un- One hundred percent of the der a request from the Office o city public school teachers, who the Secretary of Defense. are membershof the Ann Arbor William J. Schull, assistant ge- Teachers Club and Local 284 of neticist in the Institute of Humar the American Federation of Teach- Biology, from Jan. 2 through Apri e aresinanerhtikes.fTrag- 15, to go to Japan to work for th ers are asking wage hikes rang-AtmcB bCaulyC ms. ing from $500 to $900 from the Atomic Bomb Casualty Conmis An Arr oardto$frucaton.h sion of the National Academy o Ann Arbor Board of Education. Sciences-National Research Coun. Goeffrey C. McGlashan, '54, cil., was sentenced to two days in the IN ADDITION, an extension o Ann Arbor jail and fined $16.25 a half-time leave for Prof. Roberi for simple larceny. He was found C. Hendrix of the medical school guilty of stealing food and water for December, 1953 and January pitchers from the local Legion Me- -- -_-J morial Home. . 1954, was approved. Walter Pear, '57, Allan Hansel- Dates for sabbatical leaves al- man, '57, and Joseph Haselby, '57, ready granted to Prof. Charles MacGlashan's alleged accomplices N. Davisson of the School of at the time of the theft, will be Business Administration and tried in the municipal court on Prof. Hide Shohara of the Jap- January 14. anese department were advanced * * * to the fall semester of the 1954- Two Ann Arbor deaths resulting 55 school year. from a Geddes car accident brought the total of Washtenaw A memoir honoring Prof. Carl county traffic fatalities for 1953 E. Buck of the public health school to 57. who died Nov. 21, 1953, was alsc * * * adopted by the Regents. Letting of a $1,000,000 bridge Two volumes of photomicro- contract for a new Whitmore Lake See 'U' REGENTS, Page 6 Rd. structure was delayed last week, but is scheduled to be given 1000 BARRELS A later this year. The proposed new bridge will replace the narrow bridge new in use, and will chan- nel traffic from US highways 12 uSCO n and 23. Oil was discovered on a farm IFC Committee one and one half miles north of Clinton in Washtenaw County just Petitions Due Soon before Christmas. nts OK fr Plans Ike PrO mies To Maintain To ward Prosperity am To Begin rtEforts 7L sit .al ;t. Im nd its bee 6 ty construction program which will * pproved by the Board of Regents. , which includes building of Phoe- dren's Hospital Psychiatric Unit, a an addition to Couzens Hall, fol- Om_ 10* Dor worth of construction may begin islature approves two items of the $111,063 in gifts and grants at on jobs is the psychiatric unit for 1OfDue gin next month on the $2,000,000 $30 >State financed structure in the campus Medical Center area. Mon- ey for the Psychiatric Unit was Bn appropriated by the Legislature from the State's hospital construc- tion bond issue. New Assessment University revenue bonds will Added to Deposit provide an estimated $1,400,000 t for the Couzens Hall addition. The project, which should start in By JON SOBELOFF May, will double Couzens' housing Beginning next fall, students capacity and add dining room now living in the Residence Halls facilities. * * ,will have to put up a $30 rent pre- A MARCH ground - breaking is payment in addition to their $10 set for the Phoenix Memorial room deposit. Lab. The North Campus structure They'll have to pay it by June will cost an estimated $1,200,000. 30 and they'll forfeit the prepay- Funds for the lab were raised as ment plus their room deposit if part of the Phoenix Project, the they break their contracts after University's war memorial dedi- that date. Incoming freshmen next cated to peaceful uses of atomic fall and from then on will furnish energy, a $20 room deposit instead of the About $470,000 from funds present $10 plus the $30 prepay- appropriated by the Legislature ment, for a total advance bill of will be spent on the library stack $50. and storage unit. Construction THAT'S WHAT University offi- is slated for a February start on . the North Campus. cials told .a special meetng of the ort Camus.about 50 Residence Hals house On the possible list for 1954 will officers who gathered yesterday be a $1,800,000 Automotive Engi- afternoon in the luxuriously mod- neering Laboratory and a $700,000 ern Regents Meeting Rm. of the addition to the Law Library. Administration Bldg. Since they planned how to Inter-House Council president spend; more than $5,000,000 on Roger Kidstn, '56L .id after construction, the Regents also ac- the meeting that the new plan cepted more than $100,000 in gifts will be "no great hardship" for and grants-with $10,374.14 from ,students A few sharp questions the Rockefeller Foundation as the were asked by two or three of the largest single contribution, student leaders, but the group The Rockefeller grant is for for the most part accepted the continuation of "methodological announcement with unenthus- research in the field of human re- iastic, but not unfriendly, silence. lations" being carried on by the Research Center for Group Dy- Manager of University Service namies. Enterprises Francis C. Shiel ex- * * * plained that the new plarn is an HERE ARE the other gifts and attempt to avoid recurrence of a grants: situation like last fall's, when so See CONSTRUCTION, Page 6 many men cancelled housing con- tracts that West Quad's Chicago House had to be turned over to women at the last minute. Regents Dr*p* * Health Lecture SHIEL POINTED out that the new oomcontactpolicy involves three major changes from present Compulsory freshman health procedure. lectures died quietly at the De-p cember University Board of Re- 1) The deadline for returning gents meeting, applications to the student affairs The Regents adopted a recom- office has been moved up from mendation by Dr. Warren E. For- Aug. 15 to June 30. sythe, director of the Health Ser- 2) The $10 room deposit will vice, eliminating the compulsory beraised to $20foralstudent feature of the talks,.b rasdt $2 for al stdns featre f th taksentering from now on, beginning Dr. Forsythe commented yester- next fall. Students presently liv- day that although several polls ing in the dorms will not have taken among students after com- pletion of the six lectures since their inception in 1918 have shown 3) A new $30 prepayment of about 85 per cent approval of the rent must be .paid by all residents idea, it seemed to be difficult to by the June 30 deadline. The pre- keep them going. payment will go towards paying Student indifference and resent- the student's first dormitory bill in ment at taking a required, non- September. credit course were cited by Dr. For- Failure to turn in a contract by sythe as chief reasons for elimi- June 30 would cost a student his nating it from University require- room deposit and his room assign- ments. ment priority. A student cancelling his contract after June 30 would Ex-Professor Dies forfeit both his $10 or $20 room deposit and his $30 prepayment Professor Emeritus Otto J. "except for reasons to be enum- Stahl of the music school died erated and published." Friday, Dec. 18 in Ocala, Fla., en route to St. Petersburg. OSA Administrative Assistant He would have been 73 years Karl D. Strieff told the group that old the following Sunday. Ap- freshmen could be sure they had pointed professor of music theory housing awaiting them at an ear- at the University in 1939, he re- Her date under the new plan. tired in 1951. See PREPAYMENT, Page 6 * * * * Advances Raised -4? I .I I s 5i ' a. ', fl r) t) i f e r . CENTER DUEL-Michigan Center, Harvey Williams (right) and Buckeye pivotman, Paul Ebert (left) staged a scoring duel last night in the Wolverines 85-76 win over the visitors. Ebert tossed- in 35 points while Williams countered 24. Wolverine Cagers Clip OSU, 85-76 i i 1 i I 7 a 1 J 7 f t By WARREN WERTHEIMERv Big Ten victory number one was racked up last night by Michigan's cagers as they withstood a fourthI period surge by Ohio State and whipped the Buckeyes 85-76. The Wolverines, bouncing back in fine fashion after Saturday night's heartbreaking loss to In- diana, made use of their height advantage to score from under- neath and out rebound the Co- lumbus five. THUS, despite the fact that the .losers connected on close to 40 percent of their shots as com- pared to Michigan's 36 percent, the Wolverines still hit more floor shots. Harvey Williams, who fouled out of the last contest in the first half, was a different ball- player yesterday as he led Mich- igan scorers with 24 tallies. Wil- liams, at 6-8, four inches taller than any Buckeye who played, made good use of his advantage as he scored the bulk of his 11 field goals on tip ins. For Ohio State, Paul Ebert was just about the whole story. The SWITCH: New Currency In Engraving foff ice Stolen WASHINGTON -- (A') - A dar- ing thief stole $160,000 in new $20 bills from the Bureau of Engrav- ing and Printing by switching two dummy packages for the real thing, officials discovered yester- day. It was by far the biggest theft in the bureau's long money-making history, and apparently occurred over the holiday weekend when Christmas-wrapped packages were commonplace. * * 6-4 senior started out red-hot as he hit four straight outside shots. * s EVENTUALLY Ebert missed but he managed to connect enough' times to be the game's high scorer with 35 markers. Included in this tally were 13 fouls made out of 13 attempted, tying a Big Ten record' for consecutive free throws. For a while in the fourth quarter, it looked like Bill Per- igo's five might have to wait for another day before it saw a one in the win column next to Michigan in the Conference standings. Led by Ebert and Chuck Ellis, who threw in 14 and 8 respectively in the final stanza, Ohio State almost caught the local dribblers. The Yost Field House crowd saw the winners' 13 point third quarter lead dwindle to one as the Buckeyes pulled up to 68-67. How- ever Jim Barron, Maize and Blue guard who garnered 20 points in the contest, came through with a field goal and six foul shots and the Wolverines pulled away. * * * MICHIGAN followed the same! pattern of most of its games thisI year and got off to a very slow start. With Ebert making like George Mikan, Ohio State raced off to an 18-10 lead. The Wolverines slowly came back and just before the end of the initial period, Paul Groff- sky connected on a three-point play, to tie the score at 21. Michigan gradually pulled ahead in the next quarter and almost broke it open in the third 10-min- ute stanza. Williams put five bas- kets and a free throw around a pair of one pointers by Groffsky and the Maize and Blue found it- self 13,points to the good. * * * . IT WAS AT this point that the winners got cold from the floor and started losing the ball on bad passes. However they found the range just in' time and Coach Floyd Stahl's outfit never did re- gain the lead they lost when Michigan scored its 24th point. Particularly outstanding for the Wolverines yesterday was Don Eaddy. For the second straight game, he was given the job of guarding one of the toughest men in the Conference and for that matter in the country. After doing an outstanding job on All-American Bob Leonard in the Indiana encounter, Eaddy came right back to hold the soph sensation Robin Freeman to 13 markers, seven below his average. What's more, he contributed 15 himself to the Michigan attack including a clutch basket follow- ing his alert interception in the fourth and nearly fatal period. * * * OFF HIS recent performances, it would seem that the 5-11 jun- See CAGERS, Page 3 TV Address Hits Sellers 'Of Gloom' Lists Past Gains Of Republicans WASHINGTON-(P-President Eisenhower solemnly assured the American people last night that "every legitimate means" is being used to maintain the nation's pros- perity "and will continue to be used as necessary." But, the President said, he does not intend to deal in "pie-in-the- sky promises to all, nor in bribes to a few, nor in threats to any." * a IN A 15-MINUTE nationwide television-radio talk Eisenhower hit out at "self-appointed peddlers of gloom and doom" and said his Administration will not tolerate a boom-and-bust America," depend- ent on war or threats of war for prosperity. In a report on what he de- scribed as past accomplishments of his Administration and a gen- eral look ahead at the 1954 leg- islative program, Eisenhower said the realities of living- peace In the world, cost of food, clothing and shelter, taxes and income and savings and jobs, schooling and health-are of "deep concern" to his Adminis- tration. Eisenhower said that "help" is the Administration's key word and the key word of the program it will lay before Congress Thursday when he delivers his annual state of the Union message. "We do not mean monuments to costly and' intolerant bureau- cracy," the President said. "We mean service-service that is ef- fective, service that is prompt, ser- vice that is single-mindedly de- voted to solving the problem." AFTER ticking off a dozen ac- complishments with which he credited the Administration in the past year-the end of fighting in Korea came first - Eisenhower added one more. He said this was the groundwork that has been laid for sustaining "the basic prosperity of our people." "Every legitimate means avail- able to the federal government that can be used to sustain that prosperity for this purpose-will be used-if necessary." The President, topping off a busy day of legislative conferences with his Cabinet and Republican Congressional leaders, added: "This Administration believes that we must not and need not tolerate a boom-and-bust Amer- Ica. We believe that America's prosperity does not and need not depend upon war or the prepara- tion for war." Sound planning and aggressive enterprise, the President said, must be accompanied by faith in Amer- ica's growth and progress, "a faith which cannot be shaken by self- appointed peddlers of gloom and doom." City Council MeetingReport City Council Alderman Gene D. Maybee last night urged Council members to set up a joint commit- tee of councilmen, members of the Board. of Supervisors and the local Board of Education to "dis- cuss mutual problems and to strive for better cooperation." The request arose from what council members described as "presentation and discussion of major differences only through newspaper articles." Other business discussed at the Council meeting included the pass- ing of a motion to set up six 15- minute parking meters on corners in the State-North University area. The meters will/be used on a three month experimental basis. orld News Roundup . A' By The Associated Press DETROIT - Defense attorney Ernest Goodman attacked government testimony and witnesses yesterday to support his motion for a directed acquittal of six Michigan Communists, charged with violating the Smith Act. 7% r * * * LONDON - Scientists are now planning to send an unmanned rocket to the moon to take photos f Ysa v M 3.L .VV if DAY: Bred in Was htenaw County THE AUDACIOUS switch was and bring them back, a British as- discovered when a bureau em-a ploye lifting a bundle of money de- tronomer said yesterday. tected the bogus packages. They John G. Porter, an official of were lighter than the ordinary the Royal Greenwich Observatory, eight-pound bundles and con- said that space trips by humans tained only paper cut to the size also may be possible in the future. of money. He said the planet Mars as well Henry J. Holtzclaw, assistant as the moon might be "well worth director of the bureau, called a visiting. E i (tt 7' * * * MONTREAL-The U.S. Senate investigating team has completed its questioning of Igor Gouzenko, the former Soviet code clerk who turned informer on Russia's atom spies in 1945, it was announced yesterday. WASHINGTON-Supreme Court justices late yesterday watched a private showing of a crime movie called "M," in preparation for a final decision on whether a state may ban it as being harmful to Up to now, most geologists have considered southeastern Michigan as unlikely to produce THE WELL on the Curtis farm is not a "gusher." Oil is being pumped to the surface at the rate iI