JUST LOOKING See Page 4 Y L Latest Deadline in the State &U3 li NW FLU!RES SNOW FLURRIES VOL LXV, No. 37 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1954 SIX PAGES 1 * * * * * * * * 10 Seeks, Davis Severance Pay Literary College, Ex presses Stand AAUP Stand in Dismissal Cases Cited by Supporters of Resolution By ERNEST THEODOSSIN At a closed meeting of the literary college faculty yesterday, a motion was passed urging the University to give H. Chandler Davis one year's salary as severance pay. Introduced by Prof. George Piranian of the mathematics depart- ment, the resolution will be presented to University President Harlan H. Hatcher and the Board of Regents for final decision. Davis, a former mathematics instructor, was dismissed in August for failing to testify before a House Committee on Un-American Activities. After a 45-minute discussion the motion was passed by voice vote of about 80 to 85 per cent of the 200 people present. The literary i Trying Sigma Chi pledges and the Ann Arbor police are fast get- ting acquainted. Early yesterday morning a dozen of the fraternity men were found creating disturb- ances behind the General Li- brary. "Planning a raid," the police blotter said. An hour later four Sigma Chis were found in front of the Union carrying a private mail box, some chairs and a bench. The police let the boys carry the box down to headquarters and then turned them over to the fraternity for discipline. Comparison On Judiciary Groups Made (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last in a series of articles Interpreting cur-, rent problems, plans and functions ' of University student judiciary coun- cils.) By JANE HOWARD Why are there more campus ju- diciary groups for women than for men? A glance at University judicial structure shows that two coed groups, Women's Judiciary and Women's Panel, seem to have no male counterparts. t. But the apparent'voids in men's judicial structure are adequately covered-within Inter-House and Interfraternity Councils-leaving no particular need for new men's groups to parallel the specific women's organizations. Women's Judic Duties Dealing with primarily cases of latenesses and failures to "sign in," Women's Judic meets to co- ordinate and educate the individ- ual houses and residence halls, and to serve as an appellate body for cases handled by house judiciaries. Although men have no lateness regulations, quadrangle residents find that the IHC Judiciary Coun- cil assumes functions similar to those of Women's Judic. Accord- ing to Stan Levy, '55, IHC presi- dent, the group hears cases ap- pealed from the West Quadrangle Judiciary and from the 12 men's houses, within quads, which have individual judiciary groups. As examples of the IHC coun- cil's duties, Levy cited "disputes between two quads, infractions of house regulations and any discip- linary matters that aren't psycho- logical or psychiatric." IFC Handling Rule infractions among frater- nity men either go before indi- vidual house judiciary groups, set up at each fraternity's discretion, or, in what IFC President John Baity, '55, termed "more serious! cases," before the IFC Executive! Board. Confidential c a s e s involving women's reputations are brought before Women's Panel, a three- member organization set up to handle the most delicate of wom- en's University rule infractions. Although there's no similar "Men's Panel," confidential cases among men students are heard by the five male members of Joint Ju- diciary Council, who, in'such sit- uations, take action like that of Women's Panel. Secondary School Heads To Counsel New 'U' Students Two thousand new students will college faculty is composed of about 500 members. Faculty Resolution The motion presented by Prof. Piranian read as follows: "Whereas Dr. H. Chandler Davis was dismissed from his position as instructor in this college, at a time when his contract still had one year to run, whereas no charge of moral turpitude is involved in his case, whereas it is the position of the American Association of University Professors, expressed by its secretary, that in such cases a financial settlement, to the amount of one year's salary, is appropriate, and whereas Dr. Da- vis' dismissal came less than three weeks before the beginning of the current semester, and under such circumstances that it cannot fail to inflict a special hardship on him and on his family, therefore be it resolved that this body urges that the University pay Dr. Davis one year's salary." Motion to Table Discussion over the proposal centered around a motion to ta- ble voting on the Davis case until the Faculty Senate Subcommittee report on severance pay would ap- pear, possibly next semester. Oth- er faculty members asked that more information be presented on Davis' financial condition before a vote was taken. Supporters of Prof. Piranian's proposal argued on "general ethi- cal grounds," one faculty member reported. Practice of the Ameri- can Association of University Professors to request -severance pay in such cases was also dis- cussed. Last week members of the AAUP's local branch explained that in the past faculty dismissed for "just causes" have received one year's severance pay. Turning Point Commenting on passage of his proposal, Prof. Piranian said, "I hope that the passing of the mo- See RESOLUTIONS, Page 6 Democrats, GOP Get Up. at Dawn Election day began at 6 a.m. this morning for many of Ann Arbor's Republican and Demo- cratic party workers. The first job of the day was to put up posters of the candidates 100 yards in front of the polling booths. The restnof tthe day, the duty of these workers will be to wait at party headquarters for any emergency work that is need- ed. Parties Render Services The services rendered by the parties to their voters are many and varied. Baby sitters will be supplied for women with young children. Drivers are ready to take party members who do not have means of transportation to the polls. People at party headquarters will also be on hand to direct voters to their proper voting place. At the polls, the clarification of election laws will be ascertained by party workers. Qhallengers-one for every pre- cinct --will be stationed at the polling places to make sure there is no confusion in the counting of ballots. The county supervisors in various townships are in charge of challenging for their particular area. Workers Record Voters * Each party stations workers at the polls to record the voters. To- wards evening, these names are checked against party lists and those persons who have not al- ready voted are contacted by the party. Members of the campus groups of Young Republicans and Young Democrats will be available at their respective headquarters to aid the regular workers.I City Urges 'U' Renew Inspection Housing Groups Donate to Fund As an aftermath of the fire at 508 Monroe that killed two per- sons Thursday, City Council last night said a reinstatement of the University student housing inspec- tion program should be made. According to councilman Dean Coston, the University has a defi- nite responsibility to inspect houses it owns. Checks for The Dailys Fire Relief Fund amounting to $20 from Alpha Gamma Delta sorority, $20 from Pi Lambda Phi frater- nity and $10 from Pi Beta Phi sorority were received yesterday for distribution to 14 evacuees from the rooming house. Checks may be brought to the Student Publications Building. Coston said during the council' meeting the University has ex- pressed its desire to cooperate in inspections. The building inspector and his staff should begin inspect- ing housing units as quickly as possible, he added. "The sore spot in Ann Arbor housing today is the group of old frame dwellings," Coston asserted. Prior to World War II, the Uni- versity had certain authority con- cerning student housing, he con- tinued. "During the war, the situation got too big for the University to handle." Up to then, the Univer- sity had lists of approved and dis- approved housing, he commented. Council also approved annexa- tion of a parcel of undeveloped land near the North Campus. The University will pay the cost of im- provements to the land, Council reported. During the meeting Council also passed on first reading an amend- ment allowing slightly more liberal hours for the local curfew. Free Flu Vaccine Given to Students Flu vaccine inoculations are be- ing given free of charge to all students who desire them from 8 to 11:45 a.m. and from 1 to 4:45 p.m. through Friday hnd from 8 to 11:45 a.m. Saturday at Health Service. It has been recommended by Dr. Warren Forsythe, director of Health Service, that all students obtain these shots. i z i I J t ((( I -Davy-Dean Morton SNOW FLURRIES-After a brief storm on Sunday, by early yesterday morning there was hardly a trace of snow. Crisp winds and dropping temparatures hint at snow again U.S. Religious Leaders To Lecture on Ethics 2 3 c "politicians who even attempt to make a partisan issue of war and peace-who would have us believe that one party is less desirous of peace than another." Speaks from New York In an election eve radio speech from New York, the Democratic party head said, "We are, I fear, reaching new depths in the pur- ~suit of office." President Eisenhower, in the course of his four-city speaking tour Friday, repeatedly stated the theme that the Republican party has provided peace as well as pros- perity, and was decreasing unem- ployment without war booms. "We won't go to war in order to get work," the President said in Cleveland. T "This I Believe," the annual all- campus lecture series sponsored by the Student Religious Associa- tion and the Campus Religious Council will bring three nationally- known religious leaders to the Uni- versity from Wednesday to Nov. 11. Centered around a theme of "Ethics-By God or Man," the two-week program consists of three parts. First will be lectures by leaders of the three major reli- gions at 8:30 p.m. in Auditorium A, Angell Hall, Nov. 8 and Nov. 11. Sceptics Corner Second part of the program em- phasizing ethics will be a Sceptics Corner led by a student with a faculty member as a resource. Provided as open discussions for the free exchange of ideas and beliefs, the Sceptics Corner will meet at 4:15 p.m. each Tuesday and Wednesday of the next two weeks in the Faculty Lounge atl the League and Thursdays in Rm. 439, Mason Hall. Prof. Fred G. Walcott of the School of Education will partici- pate in the first Sceptics Corner tonight. Discussion groups in the cam- pus living units completes the lec- ture series program. Cited as the core of the annual program by co- chairman Nona Grosse. '55Ed, the plan is for the housing units to invite a speaker to dinner and an informal discussion. Thirty-nine faculty members and campus religious leaders have made themselves available for the program. Arrangements for inviting speak- Give Final Talks Ike Appeals for Large Turnout; Stevenson Blasts GOP Record By The Associated Press The 1954 battle for Congress ended last night in a last angry flareup of charges and retorts, and the finale is being coupled with personal appeals from President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Adlai .E. Stevenson for a big vote in today's national election. As the day of decision approached, Democrats still forecast they would capture control of both houses of Congress. But Republicans claimed increasing hope of bucking the usual off-year reaction and repeating their 1952 victory. The slow-to-start campaign, marked in the beginning at least by' a good deal of disinterest on the part of the voters, heated up con- siderabl in the final days and wound up in a verbal slugfest be- tween the GOP top command and Democratic leader Stevenson. Stevenson last night assailedT _ op Party Men ers may be made through Edith Skobo at Lane Hall or by contact- ing Mary Ellen Eckert, '56SM, chairman of sororities, Dick Little, '56, chairman for fraternities or' Edna Carlson, '55Ed, chairman for dormitories.j Father Murray To Speak The Rev. Fr. John Courtney Murray, Professor of Theology at Woodstock College, will lead off the trio of lectures Wednesday. Representing the Roman Catholic point of view, Father Murray is editor of Theological Studies and member of the American Political Science Association and the Cath- olic Association for International Peace. While serving as religious con- sultant for the High Commission- er of Germany in 1950, Father Murray was awarded the Cardi- nal Spellman Award for his con- tributions to theological scholar- ship. Dean Liston Pope of the Yale Divinity School will be the second lecturer. On the Central and Exe- cutive Committees of the World Council of Churches, Dean Pope is editor of "Social Action" and "La- bor's Relation to Church and Com- munity." Final Speaker Rabbi Silver Final speaker will be Rabbi Hil- lel Silver of The Temple, Cleve- land. Chairman of the American Section of the Jewish Agency for Palestine and President of the Zionist Organization of America, Rabbi Silver has been an active participant in social and labor movements. i Stevenson said also that the Re- publicans "have not earned a re- newal" of their mandate by their record or "by their political tac- tics in this campaign. "The present Republican Con- gress has been singularlynuncon- structive in dealing not only with our friends abroad but even with its own President," he said. Eisenhower Speaks on TV President Eisenhower said last night that no American can "sit out" today's election for control of Congress. In a television broadcast from Washington with Mrs. Eisenhower sitting at his side, the President said that anybody who does not vote in the election today takes a chance of having a minority of the people decide the issues for them. "There is no such thing as sit- ting out an election," Eisenhower declared. He added that "if you do not vote for what you believe in" it is easily possible for minorities to take over and establish policy for the next two years and possibly long beyond that. Mitchell Accuses GOP Democratic Chairman Stephen A. Mitchell accused the Republican Congressional Campaign Commit- tee last night of distributing a piece of "malicious fakery"-a spot ra- dio announcement which tells listeners that Moscow "orders" the defeat of Republican candidates. Calling it a "100 per cent false- hood passed off as an actual re- cording of events," Mitchell said he would demand that Congress and the Federal Communications Commission investigate. He also said he would have law- yers look into the possibility of legal action against stations which have carried "these fake drama- tizations." Blood Examination Voting Study To Examine Party Shift By DEBRA DURUHSLAG How will the "party-switchers" vote in today's election? In the 1952 election study con-' ducted by the Survey Research Center, it was found that one out- ,of every five votes for' President Dwight D. Eisenhower came from a Democrat. The big question now is how definite was that switch. Impi'ortant Implications Prof. Angus Campbell, director of the Survey Research Center, says that the answer to this ques- tion will have important implic- tions for both parties, If voters who previously consid- ered themselves Democrats decide that they still like Ike, then Presi- dent Eisenhower may have brought about the same shift to the Repub- lican party that Franklin D. Roose- velt accomphished for the Demo- crats in the 30's. Studies conducted by the Center have determined that the largest single item generally influencing a voter is his party affiliation. Is- sues and personalities are other im- portant factors, with the three mo- tivations varying a great deal from one election to another. A mass movement in all classes of voters, largely because of the Eisenhower personality, d e t e r- Imined the 1952 victory. However, party loyalty, Prof. Campbell be- lieves, will be more important in the present election. Although no large-scale analysis is now being made with the scope of the $90,000 1952 study, sever- al political questions have been in- cluded in the Center's semi-annual interim study. Democratic Cross-Overs Center researchers are particu- larly interested in determining how many Democrats have made a" more or less permanent cross-over into Republican ranks. For exam- ple, one of the questions aimed at determining in what party the vot- er considers himself, correlates this with past and present voting behavior. Important issues of the congres- sional campaign have been at- tacked with questions like "What would you say is the best (and worst) thing the Republican party has done in the last two years? nThe type of questionnaire used inCenter interviews is aimed at developing psychologically neutral questions which do not prejudice the interviewee. Open end ques- tions which allow a wide-range of answers are also found to be the most effective. For example,.the question on Senator Joseph R. Mc- Carthy asks if his support of a candidate would make any differ- ence to the voter. See CENTER, Page 6 Forsythe Exhibit To Open Today ' The Painter ooks at Land EXPECT 45 MILLION AT POLLS: Voters To Choose Governors, Congressmen By RONA FRIEDMAN More than 45 million citizens are expected to visit the polls to- day to pick governors for 33 states, 37 Senators and 432 members for the House of Representatives. As vigorous campaigning drew to a close both Chairman Leonard W. Hall of the Republican Nation- al Committee, and Chairman Stephen A. Mitchell of the Demo- cratic National Committee issued statements of confidence: "If the voters go to the polls on Tuesday in the numbers we con- fidently expect," said Hall, "we ill gain at least three seats in the Senate and fifteen or more seats in the House." "I believe," Mitchell said, "that the Democratic party will gain four seats in the Senate, 25 seats in the House, and elect at least eight additional governors, includ- ing Averell Harriman in New York." Campaign issues have not been dramatic, John White of the po- litical science department pointed out. Republicans have attempted to identify the Republican Party with Eisenhower and to capitalize on the end of the Korean War, he continued. Apparently they felt that these appeals were not enough and un- der the leadership of Vice-Presi- dent Richard Nixon supplemented them in the concluding days of the campaign with the 1952 for- mula, K. 1, C 3, Korea, Commu- nism, corruption and control, he added. Democratic appeals have been largely based on the domestic eco- nomic issues of unemployment and falling farm prices, he said. They have also capitalized on the tra- ditional loss of power by the major party in an. off-year election. Tn vnnn t nf_ n.. al e nn and nine Democrats are considered safe. Of the 17 remaining doubtful states, 15 are Republican and two are Democratic. The Congres-' sional Quarterly gives the Demo- crats an edge in both races and gives the Republicans an edge in only five. The ten crucial races are in Arizona, Colorado, ' Connecticut, Kansas, Maryland, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Pennsylvania, and Wyoming. "From the national point of view, the New York gubernatorial race is the most interesting," White said. If Averell Harriman wins, his hand, as well as the lib- eral element, will be strengthened in the Democratic Party. Converse- 1cr T'a r ..kil l. m "nura. iv: fh To Of Gauge Success Polio Vaccine The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis began taking blood samples here yesterday from 5,000 Michigan children to gauge the success of the Salk polio vac- cine. Two similar tests were made ear- lier this year on the children who participated in the nationwide in- oculations last spring. Approximately 40,000 children in