COLUMBUS BEDLAM See Page 4 Y L 1MwF A6 ~ai4 s p Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXV; No. 55 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUEAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1954 t Y COLD SIX PAGES 'Sense' Party Gives Plans Of Campaign Publicity on Big Scale Outlines By LINDA SIMON A "spectacular" publicity cam- paign was outlined by the Com- mon Sense Party at its meeting at the Union last night. Bill Allen, Grad, publicity chair- man, announced that a minimum of 5,000 flyers would be distribut- ed before the December student government elections. The mater- ial will inform the campus popu- lation of general aims and pur- poses of CSP. The complete CSP platform for the coming elections is printed in full in the space below. Sponsors Speeches A speech campaign, including every housing unit and student or- ganization on campus, will be sponsored by the party. Non-can- didiates will mainly comprise the speaking "army" unless there are not enough men to "go around." Vishinsky Dies Of Heart Attack Foreign Minister Was Preparing Important UN Atom Debate Speech NEW YORK (A--Andrei Y. Vishinsky died of a heart attack yes- terday while preparing for one of the most important debates in his career as the Soviet Union's leading orator. His blistering voice and brilliant mind had lifted him from the role of obscure bureaucrat to world fame in the East-West cold war. Vishinsky was 70. He died at 9;30 a.m. EST, the Soviet delegation to the United Nations announced, at its headquarters on Park avenue here. He had collapsed earlier, after attending a dinner given Sun- day night by the French delegation. Appoint Commission for Funeral A Moscow broadcast announced yesterday that the Soviet gov- ernment and Communist Party had appointed a commission to take charge of the funeral of Vishinsky, and said his body would be brought Tall Tree WASHINGTON W/) -- A 67- foot balsam fir tree from the woods of northern Michigan, described as one of "presiden- tial proportions," w iI I be brought to Washington to be- come the national community Christmas tree. President Dwight D. Eisen- hower will press a switch light- ing the tree on the evening of Dec. 17 to inaugurate the "Pag- eant of Peace" ceremonies on the White House grounds. Major radio and television networks will broadcast the tree lighting ceremonies. Edward J. Kelly, general chairman of the pageant, said the giant fir tree was donated by Michigan State College. Segregation Arguments WASHINGTON (A') -- The Su-j preme Court decided yesterday to wait until it has a full membership of nine justices before hearing ar- guments on how and when to end segregation in public schools. Arguments scheduled to begin Dec. 6 were called off "in view of the absence of a full court." Caused by Jackson A vacancy was created by the death of Justice Robert H. Jack- son on Oct. 9. President Dwight D. Eisenhow- er has named Judge John Mar- shall Harlan of the United States' Court of Appeals in New York to fill the vacancy but the Senatet will not act on the nomination Mendes-France Proposes Big Four Meeting To After German Ar Fa nsMob Band A fter OSU Game 4 to Moscow. He was the Soviet Union's first deputy foreign minister, with per- manent assignment as chief dele- gate to the UN. He had spent some of his last working hours getting ready for a renewal of the debate on the atoms-for-peace plan with which President Dwight D. Eisen- hower challenged the Soviet Union to prove its peaceful intentions to the world. The debate was postponed, as were all other UN sessions except World News Roundup By The Associated Press Sheppard . . . CLEVELAND -- An old school chum testified yesterday Dr. Sam- uel H. Sheppard spoke twice with- in three years of divorcing his slain wife, Marilyn. The osteopath is on trial for her murder July 4. On the second occasion, said Dr. Lester Hoversten, he warned Dr. Sheppard that his wife was a tol-! erant woman and that "he might actually be jumping from the fry- ing pan into the fire."3 During less than half a day on the witness stand, Dr. Hoversten also testified: 1. He saw no sign of unhappi- ness or discontent as a guest in, the Sheppard home. 2. When he saw Dr. Sheppard, a day after the murder, the de- fendant wept and told him, "Why couldn't they have killed me in-, stead of Marilyn, because Chip- his son-would need Marilyn more than he would need me." * * *- /'*cCrth y .... i CSP-talks will concern the im- By DAVID KAPLAN portance of good and effective stu- As an aftermath of Saturday'st dent government at the Univers- football game at Ohio State, Mich- ity. igan's Marching Band was victim Lucille Kurian, '55, BAd, sub- of post-game enthusiasm. committee chairman, reported that When the Band took the field, Quad station WCBN has alloted playing "Victors" and Ohio State's 15 minutes every weekday at 5:15 fight song, a mob of fans started p.m., starting Monday, for CSP snake-dancing through the bands- to give a public service broadcast. men. The broadcasts, designed to in- "Everybody was suspicious of form interested people of the pres- trouble," a bandmember said, "and ent state of student government as the mob got bigger and bigger1 at the University and future pos- a general commotion started. Sud- sibilities for "better" government, denly, someone grabbed a hat off will terminate the day before thestedfthinsmt election. started things." Student Fears Hats Stolen More than a dozen hats had Members discussed the problem been stolen by souvenir hunters, of interesting students in CSP. others lost plumes and several "One of our main difficulties in small fights began. "Most of the enlisting members has been the hats have been recovered," Prof. fear of students to enter any po- William D. Revelli, Band Director litical organization whatsoever. said. Eight are still missing. "The CSP is interested only in Neither band officials nor bands- achieving a better form of stu- men are sure of who started the dent representation. We are not a snake-dance or who participated radical group by any means," Al- in the hat-snatching and fights. len said. . Some bandsmen thought that they Unanimously approved for CSP were either Michigan or Ohio backing Sally Staples, '57, makes State students. the eleventh candidate with Com- Others feel that they were Col- mon Sense backing to run in the umbus townspeople who had at- December 8-9 election. tended the game. Paul Dormnt,155, also petition- "You know how it is in a mob." ed for CSP support in the cominga bandsman commented. "I was election, but was refused. goff in a corner of the band and couldn't see who was carrying on, but it got to be a real free-for all." CSP .Presents "Some Instruments Dented No instruments were stolen, but- F ll Platfora few were dented in the course F l i a o inE of the post-game activities. One of the trumpeters had a trumpet The Common Sense Party, first mouthpiece pushed into his mouth student political party to take part and a tuba player had his tuba in an election on the University of dented as a result of a tackle from Michigan campus, has submitted behind. its platform to the student body for The band will make its last pub- their consideration. lic appearance this season when Briefly, this is the platform: it marches in the General Motors 1-To work for a "dead" week- Carnival today in Flint. end prior to the final examination Officially ending the season will rbe a banquet on Dec. 2 at the period. Lage 2-To seek extended closing hours League., in women's residences." 3--To see that no racial, religious lP or ethnic considerations be used in er Pl it placing students in 'U' housingj units, except on the request of the May Eliminate1 individual student. l 4-To make the theory that p- DPeriods litical and economic beliefs should O"'-"""' PICTURES FROM THE Ohio State Game 1955 Michiganensian by assistant house gr Palmer, '57, associate engravings editor Mi and organizations editor Bernice Paricin, '56 on sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at the Administration Bldg., Engine Arch, near the before January. WASHINGTON - Sen. Joseph! Decision in May McCarthy (R-Wis.) was reported Decison i Mayto have undergone minor surgery In a unanimous decision last at BethesdaeNaval Hospital yes- May 17, the court ruled that seg- terday. regation in public schools is un- He told a caller he was feeling constitutional. The decision, how- better but he didnt think he would ever, left unanswered - pending get out until Monday. further arguments - the question That is the day the Senate is to of how and when desegregation resume debate on whether to cen- must be carried out. sure him. Sen. McCarthy is under In other cases yesterday, the treatment for bursitis of the el- court: bow, attributed to an injury fromt Said federal and state legisla- I an over-zealous handshaker. a tures have almost unlimited pow- * * on the Diag. The Dick Harrison, 'i to $6.50 on Dec.! 'Ensian is still selling for 56, promotions editor, the 8. ANDREI Y. VISHINSKY a meeting of tribute to the col- league known as the "no" man of the UN. Attended by Russian Doctor The Soviet delegation said Vi- shinsky was attended by a Russian physician-in common with the So- viet custom of shunning Western, contacts except when necessary., A funeral announcement is expect- ed later. New York police were called, and Lt. John McCarthy was admitted to a room where Vishinsky lay fully clothed on a bed. The Soviet 'delegation announced he died of an acute stenocradiac attack. This is angina pectoris, a suffocation of the heart. Speculation began immediately on Vishinsky's successor. One pos- sibility mentioned as Andrei Gro- myko, deputy USSR foreign min- ister who formerly headed Mos- cow's UN delegation. Lodge Comments Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, chief U.S. delegate to the UN saw Vishinsky just before midnight Sunday at a dinner given by the French to visiting Premier Pierre Mendes-France. Vishinsky was "in fine good humor, laughing . and talkative as always," Lodge said. "Mr. Vishinsky represented one of the world's greatest powers with extraordinary energy a n d re- sourcefulness," Lodge stated. ers to order slum areas. redevelopment of{ Refused to pass on validity of an Alabama law making marriage of a Negro and a white person a crime. 'Can Dinners' To Aid Needy Because of an Assembly Associa- tion project, Thanksgiving will bring a full meal to 26 of Ann Arbor's needy families. For the fifth consecutive year, Assembly undertook the collection of cans and packages of foods in women's residence halls at special "Tin Can Dinners" in the dormi- tories last week-with no coed ad- mitted unless she brought a por- tion of food for the families. Names of the food recipients were given Assembly by the Dun- bar Community Center. The 30 large boxes of goods collected were distributed Sunday, under a group headed by Lois Shein, '56, Lois Yandell, '57 and Turker Karamiz- rak, '55E, International Students' Association president, } t Yoshida .Y,. TOKYO-Prime Minister Shig-it eru Yoshida's storm-tossed politi- c cal ship was deserted yesterday by 35 Diet members and Minister of a State Masazumi Ando, who called b on Prime Minister Yoshida to re- sign. In his resignation, Ando declar- ed that "the only way to save the state" was for Yoshida to step down from his six-year tenure as prime minister. NATO . . . WASHINGTON -The military chiefs of the North Atlantic Treaty f Organization met here yesterday but postponed consideration of q West German rearmament until: q1 their next meeting in Paris in mid- A December. st Peck To Lecture Ih To European Club1h h Prof. George A. Peek of the po- C litical science department will ad- dress the European Club on the!s peculiarities of the American sys- ci tem of government at 8 p.m. to-+e day in the International Center. b i Future of Trial I Period Rests on Thanksgiving vacation begins at the close< nd ends at 8 a.m. Monday. The four-day holiday was extended on a t ears at the Deans' Conference last Marchv [hat the practice would be discontinued if t lasses Wednesday and Monday. Extension of the trial period was based on ttendance in the various colleges was relative efore and the Monday after Thanksgiving va Assistant to the President Erich A. Walt should hope will be asj Jry Indicts Ias they we for their W E I coming bac Ex-Instr'uctor !oigbc X Engineeri David Davi A former University instructor dents to av vas among eight persons indicted week. "Stu y a federal grand jury yesterday time to get or contempt of Congress and they sh The eight refused to answer schedule in uestions before the House Un- days in futu American Activities Committee. Before 19 The one time University in- holiday wa tructor, Lloyd Berenblatt, taught trial basis o ere between 1947-50 of the Stude He was called before the House giving vaca Jn-American Activities Commit- day. ee in connection with a series of University earings it held in 1953-54 on sized that a ommunism. tem is likel Assistant Attorney William Hitts holiday pri aid the cases of two others once attendance ited by the committee for alleg- and Monday d contempt were not presented )y the Grand Jury. vthe___- -Drujit Magi, From theS Aided by th Mystic plan "got the bird" last Tuesday when darkness. a 43 pound turkey for Thanks- Many rock Subjected holiday with his World War II torches Montgomery. The British mili- Observed by esident and Mrs. Eisenhower at nagic. Georgia. Most decay destroyed One Like It Finally from said he hopes to raise a big From the c lingered t the presentation in the White emerer k, "Turkey Management" and Causing th ower laughed and reminded his shiver Gettysburg, Pa., is finished he Causing nat ;. All to bend raise big turkeys may be re- And to cap ure Department's report which Wizar Take Place Approval t- UN Speech fi r Rejects Red Suggestions Asks Agreement On Austrian Pact UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. = - French Premier Pierre Mendes- France yesterday suggested a Big Four conference on outstanding problems-but only after the West- ern European nations and the Unit- ed States have ratified the ton- don and Paris agreements to free and rearm West Germany. ' v' ' The French Premier told the UA Assembly that a conference of United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union could be held next May in Paris. He said the agreements should be ratified by the countries concerned by that -Daily-Dean Morton 'time and added that an agreement are selected for the on an Austrian treaty would be a happy prelude to such a session. oups editor Mary Jo Praises Eisenhower ke Montgomery, '55, . The 'Ensian will be Rejecting the recent Soviet pro- Unio, th Busnes posals for a security conference of Union, the Business 20 to 25 countries, Premier Men women's dorms and des-France praised President Ei- $6, but according to senhower's atoms-for-peace pro- price will be raised gram and said France would coop- erate in it and inmeasures being pursued in the Disarmament Com- mission to limit armaments. Ht ydThe absence of Soviet Chief Dele- gate Andrei Y. Vishinsky from the . assembly hall w h i I e Mendes tuden that all was not well with the us sidelegate. He died before the Premier spoke but his deathws of Wednesday's classes not made known until almost an hour after Premier Mendes-France rial basis for two more finished. with the understanding Now, with Moscow obviously pur- oo many students cut suing a more flexible policy and presenting a new look to the world, i a report showing that some elegreater inerest on the ly good the Wednesday French suggestion. cation last year. Ready to MeetRussia ter said yesterday, "I n Washington, a State Depart- that students this year ment spokesman in effect backed' jealous of the privilegeuppemndesrnce re last year by staying said the United States is prepared Vednesday classes and to meet with Russia whenever it k on time." seems probable that such a meet- ng Councl President, ing would be fruitful and after ade- es, '55, also urged stu- quate preparation. oid cutting classes this "Ratification of the Paris agree- dents worked a long ments should precede such nego the extended vacation tiations, so that our course in this hould observe the class r e s p e c t is irreversible," the order to keep the holi- spokesman, Henry Suydam, said. ure years," he said. The Soviet attitude on Premier 52, when the four-day Mendes-France was shown by an s first instituted on a attack by Pravda, the official Com- on the recommendation munist Party newspaper, whb as nt Legislature, Thanks- sailed him as an enemy of Euro- ation included but one pean security. Once before, in the 1951 Assem- y officials have empha- bly in Paris, the then French presi- a return to the old sys- dent, Vincent Auriol, proposed a y if students abuse the Big Four parley but nothing came vilege by showing poor of it. at classes Wednesday Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., chief American delegate, said it would Ybe studied with the closest atten- tion and care. He said Premier rs Brew Mendes-France was "wise to spe- cify that ratification of the Paris agreements was an indispensable ,c P-' otiont prerequisite" Stgnehenge circleM ono ie witches cauldron is were brewed in LawViolations were examined 4111were overturned l..n r e R U 0wea~vertrnbazngCarged RCA to heat from blazing y men of knowledge and Civil action under the Sherman Antitrust Act has been filed ed, were burned, were against the Radio Cor.poration of . America. n the murky grove The complaint alleges that since ave where Fingal 1932, RCA has monopolized the radio-television patent licensing of the Mighty Oak business, excluding potential or actual competitors from the pat-' e earth to shake and ent licensing business. The complaint also alleges RCA ions and cities to cower licenses almost all radio-television i the twig and sapling manufacturers under standard ture the sturdy awend: form agreements, called "package ding Wintergreen licenses," containing provisions re- not be criteria for the hiring and firing of a faculty member, so long as he does not attempt to influ- ence others through his position as a teacher, a University policy. 5-To encourage and help stu- dent organizations with discrim- inatory clauses in their constitu- tions to remove such clauses and the consequent practices. 6-To continue omitting discrim- inatory clauses from new hous- ing programs. 7-To advocate the use of the 'Michigan House Plan' as the ba- sis for future growth of the resi- dence hall system. This concept means small self-sufficient living units with their own staffs' and house governments and including their own social, study, and eating facilities. 8-To work for the integration of the athletic program into the educational community. See CSP, Page 6 Foreign Students O- A A I1-.SIU Prof. Paul Dwyer of the mathe- matics department submitted two proposed calendars to the Univer- sity Calendaring Committee at a meeting yesterday. Main change explicit in the two plans would cut the "lame-duck" period between Christmas vaca- tion and final exams from the present two weeks to one week. No decision will be made until the committee has studied pos- sible ramifications of a calendar change in the athletic program, the Residence Halls set-up and orientation program. Basic difference between the two plans involves scheduling the be- ginning of orientation week either one or two weeks after Labor Day. Both plans wouldballow the full 15 Iweeks of classes before exams. Registration would move up to Monday of orientation week allow- ing classes to begin Thursday. Christmas vacation would be shortened to 11 or 12 days. Final exams would begin Fri- (Inv Thusd, wmld l.pvp z . IKE LIKES 'EM: Bigger Turkeys Crowd Food President Dwight D. Eisenhower" Perry Browning presented him with giving dinner. He is intending to share his h comrade Field Marshal Viscount 1 tary leader will be the guest of Pr the Augusta National Golf Club in Hopes To Raise Accepting the bird, the President + 'turkey like it someday. Immediately one of his guests a House garden whipped out a boo offered it to him. President Eisenho benefactor that when his farm near is going to do some serious farming. President Eisenhower's plan to vised when he reads the Agricultu