ti#. , Ii McCarthy's Prestige Low See Page 2' Latest Deadline in the State 74aii4 CLOUDY, COLD VOL. LXV, No. 67 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1954 I i FOUR PAGES Hatcher Pleased By SGC Response Vice-President Lewis Expresses Hope For Early Action by Regents Board By DAVE BAAD University officials and student government study committee mem- bers were impressed yesterday over final results of the two-day stu- dent poll on Student Government Counch. University President Harlan H. Hatcher and Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis both expressed pleasure over the size of student response to the SGC referendum. Calling the 5,102 to 1,451 margin for SGC impressive, Vice-Presi- dent Lewis said he is very hopeful there will be action soon by the Board of Regents. The results of Wednesday's and Thursday's poll, will be presented to the Regents at their Dec. 17 meeting. Although making no comment on probability of Regental action, President Hatcher said again there is no question of the Regents' sin- cerity in trying to bring University students responsible student gov- ernment. Jones, Britton Pleased Prof. Kenneth L. Jones of the botany department and Prof. W. Earl Britton of the engineering school, both members of the stu- dent government study committee, were pleased over the strong stu- dent backing for SGC. "The vote indicated students have interest in student govern- ment and SGC is a reasonable start toward that goal," Prof. Jones said. Prof. Britton, happy over the fine turnout of voters, expressed pleasure over the clear-cut 3%-1i decision. "I was afraid of a 3-2 vote or even closer," he said. Disappointed that only 36 per cent of the studentsavotedwhen an issue as important as SGC was on '> the ballot, Student Legislature President Steve Jelin, '55, still called the large pro-SGC margin significant. Education of Voter "It indicates no mistake in SGC support," he said,."but I still have reservations as to the education of the voter." "I feel many voted for SGC be- cause of the tremendous campus organizational drive for passing the proposed Laing plan. Many vot- ers voted for SGC without realizing exactly what they were voting for," Jelin continued. Jelin said SL would now return again to "watchful speculation." "Since the two Regents members most interested in SGC, Vera B. Baits and J. Joseph Herbert, will be absent Dec. 17 I personally very much doubt it will pass at that meeting," Jelin concluded. Seeing no reason for SL not oper- ating in the next few months, Vice- President Lewis said he hopes SL will think of the present situation as a process of advance in student government. SGC Elections in February If the Regents pass SGC Dec. 17, Vice-President Lewis said pres- ent ideas call for SGC elections in mid-February. "The SGC study committee thought elections before the end of the semester impossible because of exam conflicts," he said. A month would be needed after elections to set up SGC and trans- fer the SL and Student Activities Committee functions to the new organization, he continued. "However, it would be best if SGC were set up before the pres- ent crop of student leaders leave their posts because their experi- ence will be valuable in getting SGC under way," Vice-President Lewis concluded. Children To Be Guests of IFC Fraternity men will act as hosts for Ann Arbor schoolchildren to- day at the annual Interfraternity Council-sponsored Christmas par- ty, Each house was assigned child- ren equal in number to the house membership to entertain between 1:30 and 3 p.m. More than 1,800 children will be accomodated by the 43 fraternity houses. Individual houses will provide refreshments and entertainment with five Santa Clauses coming around to visit the parties, IFC Social Chairman Rick St. John,' '56, said. Technic Out Soon. Michigan Technic, engineering magazine, will go on sale Monday and Tuesday. The magazine will be sold at Engin arch, East Hall and the E. Salk Notes ,ee Possibilities Of Vaeeine, By The Associated Press Dr. Jonas E. Salk of Pittsburgh reported in New York yesterday new evidence that his polio vac- cine can create powerful, long- lasting protection against polio. He hinted that knowledge being learned in the polio work might show the way someday for vaccines giving long-term protection against zthe common cold and influenza. Meanwhile in Washington, pub- lic health officials recommended priority for receiving Salk polio vaccine from public health sources be given more schoolchildren, rath- er than pregnant women as has been proposed. f The Association of State and Ter- ritorial Health Officers recom- mended the states and territories undertake administration of any vaccine that may be made avail- able to them from the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis to. 1) Individuals included in groups tudied in 1954, but who did not re- ceive vaccine. (Two groups were used in studies, some of whom did and some of whom did not receive vaccine). 2) School children in first and second grades. The Salk vaccine was given to hundreds of thousands of children in a large test last summer. A scientific jury at the University under the direction of Dr. Thomas Francis Jr. of the medical school is presently evaluating the test results. SL Reports Final Result Of Election CSP Candidates Win 8 SL Posts At 5:13 a.m. yesterday, final counting of Student Legislature candidates' ballots took place. With approximately 20 redistri- butions taking place, early-morn- ing winners included in order, Har- lan Givelber, '57, Marvin Starman, '58, Sally Staples, '57, Bob Sommer, '57, Shirlee Clark, '56 and Joe Col- lins, '58. Others who won full-year terms in SL were Cal Covell, '58E, George Litwin, '58, Carroll Williams, '55, Ronald Schorr, '58 and Bob Kap- la,'57. Two One-Semester Posts One-semester posts went to Bren-: da Wehbring, '56 and Jean Schlus-i berg, '58. Winners early in the election were Robert Leacock, '57, Ron Boorstein, '57, Bob Chigrinsky, '55, Sue Levy, '56, John Kelly, '55, Ron Richardson, '56, Janet Neary, '58, Charnie Butman, '56, Joan Bryan, '56, Shirley Lawson, '57, Paul Dot- mont, '55 and Tony Trittipo, '58. Eight of the Common Sense Par- ty's 12 candidates received full year posts on SL. In addition to Leacock, Miss Levy, Miss Bryan, Miss Neary and Miss Butman, CSP winners were Miss Staples, Covell and Litwin. Two Weren't Active Temporary CSP chairman Leah Marks, '55L, said yesterday twoI of the four CSP candidates who were dropped during the ballot counts had decided earlier not to actively seek election. Considering this( she said, the eight winners of the 10 active CSP candidates represented a higher' percentage of winners than the rest of the candidates, since nearly all CSP candidates won. Straight CSP voting was notice- able during transfer of ballots, Miss JMarks commented. Richard New Headr Of Campus YR's Elected president of Young Re-' f publicans recently was Tim Rich- ard, '57. The new vice-president is Don Nissel, '55, while Bill Hanks, '56, was elected treasurer. Florence Danby, '58, was elect- ed secretary while Lewis Engman,' '57, Mal Schlusberg, '55 and Rich- ard Snow, '58, were named mem- bers-at-large of the Young Re- publicans Executive Board. UN For Jailing U"S. Airmen I Germany on Road To Rearmament BONN, Germany {IM--The treaties to rearm West Germany cleared their first hurdles on the road to ratification in Bonn and Paris yes- terday. But the attitudes of legislators in both countries showed many more obstacles remain before West Germans get the right to raise a 500,000-man force foi' the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. In Paris, the Foreign Affairs Committee of the French National Assembly recommended ratification of the treaties to restore German sovereignty, giving her the right to rearm and settle the troublesome Saar dispute. Narrow Margin But the Paris vote on the World News Roundup By The Associated Press Trotsky Slayer ..* MEXICO CITY - Jacques M( nard, slayer of Leon Trotsky, br a year-long silence yesterday a with a sardonic silence toldi terviewers Moscow had not do right by him. He declined to say what meant by his reference to Mosc but added that he remained a tr Communist nevertheless. * * * Butler Says .. . WASHINGTON - Paul M. Bt ler, new chairman of the Den cratic National Committee, sr yesterday he believes the bre between Sen. Joseph McCart (R-Wis.) and President Dwight Eisenhower would be a "defin hindrance to the Republican pa ty - * * * 'No Split'-M1illikin . . WASHINGTON - Sen. Edwa Millikin (R-Col.) said yesterd he expects no major Republic split and "there already is; irresistible demand that the Pr sident be a candidate for anoth term." Severe Winter . . LONDON - Winter lashed pai of southern Europe with icy mai wind and snow storms yesterde Flooding rivers and biti temperatures plagued wide are of the British Isles. ** * Hemingway Wins . . STOCKHOLM - Author Erne Hemingway received his Not prize yesterday along with fo other Americans and two Germa King Gustav Adolf VI present the 1954 awards amid tradition royalty pageantry. The seven w ners share the equivalent of $14 000. Condemns Red China key treaty providing for rearmament ---was by the narrowest of margins, - 16 to 15, with 11 abstentions. Later an independent deputy tried to change his positive vote to absten- tion, which would have made it 15-15 if he had been allowed to do In Bonn. the Bundesrat (upper house) gave preliminary approval I hto all the treaties except the con- or- troversial Saar settlement. The' oke Bundesrat said its position on this nd pact, which is most unpopular in in- West Germany, would be made ne own after the Bundestag (lower PUCK (circle) SLIPS .house) acts. MONTREA he This was a storm signal of trou- ow ble to come for the Saar agree- 1 CI rue ment, which the French insist must 1Ch N be accepted as their price for al- lowing German rearmament. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer also lteal faces the prospect of a critical- ut- loss of strength in the Bundesrat,' o- which is due to be reshuffled fol- By DI aid lowing elections in the states of M ak Bavaria and Hesse. It consists of .na Michigan's surprising hoc hy ministers from the nine states. 1 row agamst Canadian OPP D- Molotov Makes Statement 3-2 triumph from a late-rallyin ite These pailiamentary Coliseum before nearly 2,500 sa ar- ThseayBob Pitt's goal at 7:10 of Pai n'"d "Bonn were accompaniedof the fire for the undefeated W by new rumbles from Moscow, hdalwdtevstn Where Soviet Foreign Minister V. lapse had allowed the visiting . M. Molotov declared similar moves the period. The winners had d i by Moscow would have been con- rd strued in the West as "an act of{ ay wa" Ho Board an "We shall not be caught nap- . ping by the ratification of theToBeovsdElected "The Soviet people is 'confident of its strength. By a 3 to 2 margin, Univers "The Soviet Union and the Chi- students voted to retain the pre nese people's democracies have ent system of choosing J-Hop mei 'ts such manpower, and enjoy such bers-by all-campus spring el in, support abroad, that there issno tions, according to Student Legis ay. force in the world that could arrest ture member Joel Tauber, '57. ng our progress along the path we More than 3,000 votes were ca as chose." in favor of electing J-Hop membe Thursday night Moscow delivered, at a student referendum held another note to the Western Pow- conjunction with SL electio ems threatening to increase the EastI Wednesday and Thursday, Taub bloc's armed forces ' if West Gem- said. st many rearms. The second alternative, havi bel a committee choosesJ-Hop mei )ur bers, received 2,000 votes. S. Levies The committee was to inclu FAthe past chairman of J-Hop, of -Daily-Lynn Wallas I BY LORNE HOWES FOR L'S FIRST GOAL quad .downs arabins 3-2 CK CRAMER key squad made it three victories' osition last night by snatching a close ng University of Montreal club at the: tisfied fans. the final period pulled the game, out' olverines after a momentary defensive Carabins to tie the score earlier in isplayed sparkling defense while gar- - nering single goals in each of the l first two periods. Landry Stars The earlier Wolverine scores were countered by Captain Bill' MacFarland and Bob Schiller. Rol- land Landry acted as a one-man of- ity fense for Montreal in blasting both es- of his team's goals within a period" M- of 24 seconds shortly after the two- ec- minute mark of the third stanza. la- Midway through the first period MacFarland drove in fast from the ast blue line to grab a pass from team-E ers mate Dick Dunnigan and drive it in through defending Carabin goalie ns Cy Guevremont for the initial Mich- em igan score. Hbowes Outstanding With goalie. Lorne Howes turning in another of his usual outstanding de games and the entire Michigan de- ne fensive line playing superbly, of- Group Urges, Red Release Of Flyers' Iammarskjold Takes Challenge UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.') -- The United Nations assembly by the smashing vote of 45-5 yester- day condemned fled China for jailing 11 American airmen as spies. It appealed to Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold to do his ut- most to obtain their release and that of hundreds of other UN personnel captured in the Korean War and still detained by Peiping, Hammarskjold immediately ac- cepted the responsibility, saying, "I will do all in my power to serve the interests of the organization." Greatest Challenge He already had set in motion the. machinery of his office but he declined to indicate what steps were being taken. It is known that he regards this case as per- haps the greatest challenge ever to face the secretary general since the UN began work in 1946. Stubborn Soviet bloc resistance to the resolution and its repeated claims the airmen were. "spies"' who got what they deserved indi- cated the Red Chinese, as of the present, will ignore the UN ac- tion. An Indian attempt on a ten- tative basis to see what could be done has been firmly rebuffed by Peiping. Only the Soviet bloc members voted against the condemnation, which was contained in a resolu- tion put up Monday by the Unit- ed States and its 15 UN part- ners in the.Korean War. Six Abstain Six countries -- Afghanistan, Burma, India, Indonesia, Yemen and Yugoslavia-abstained. Four other members, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Saudi Arabia and Syria were absent but Syria had serv- ed notice it was opposed to the condemnation. The .others had said nothing. UN officials announced later that Costa Rica and El Salvador asked that they be recordeds supporting the resolution, thus bringing the vote to 47-5. The of- ficials added that Syria, absent during the balloting, asked that she be included among the ab- stainers. Later, the Assembly's Special Political Committee rejected Sovi- et charges that the United States was committing aggression against Red China and had seiz- ed the island of Formosa. The vote was 5 in favor Soviet bloc and 39 against. This was the second item affecting China being con- sidered Friday by the UN. . It was the second time the UN Assembly has condemned Red China, which has sought a seat in the UN as a "peace-loving" coun- try. Panel Ponders India's Future After Ghandi* "Land in India is under-utilized rather than over-utilized," Indian journalist Robindra Chakravart, Grad., said last night in a panel discussion of "After Ghandi, What?" India's Five Year Plan, a con- tinuation of Mahatma Ghandi's construction program, aims to in- crease India's national income by 11 per cent, Chakravarty noted. The second panelist, Bhoodan worker Pat McMahon, pointed out over 3,000,000 acres of land were collected from landowners under India's Five Year Plan. Of these, 72,000 were distributed to "land- less" people to cultivate, Miss Mc- Mahon said. Chakravarty claimed, "it is dif- SACRE BLEU! Wine Costly French May Switch to Water By DEBRA DURCHSLAGj The French have often been forced to swallow, their pride, but -sacre bleu-never water. In a country where babies are supposedly weaned on wine, milk is for cats, water is for crops but wine is a national pastime. However, Premier Pierre Mendes-France is making changes that strike at the heart of French custom. Backed by the French Cabinet, the Premier has decided that even France can't afford $135,000,000 a year to finance the effects of alchol, time-honored though it may be. 20 Per Cent Chronic According to the French Economic Council on Alcoholism, 15 per cent of the men and five per cent of the women of the country are in a state of chronic alcoholism. The cure and care of alcoholics I s ' 1 , nal in- 0,- Just a Hoax San Francisco police havej concluded that the story of An- dre Goosev was "just a hoax." Goosev had confessed to kill- ing a girl known only as "Jean" in Ann Arbor last year. He later denied the story. $545 in Fines Fines totalling $545 were levied against 48 students by Joint Judi-{ ciary Council from Oct. 6 to Nov.' 17, it was announced yesterday. In two other cases, no action was taken while $240 in fines were sus- pended as the individuals had al- ready been fined by civil authori- ties. No campus organizations were cited as groups by the Council in I the list of offenses reported. other J-Hop committee member, fensive thrusts by Montreal were one member of SL to be chosen by repeatedly thwarted throughout the its cabinet, one member of the 'first two periods. League interviewing and nominat- Meanwhile, Schiller took advan- ing cointtee and a member of tage of the last of four penalties; the Union Executive Council. against Montreal's wing Roneck! to put the short-handed Carabins r--7- _7 down by two goals at 16:51 of theI Muyst~ery UtJI1solC second period. Schiller grabbed. the face-off following the penalty; No new information is available adh aeoffloigtepn on the vandals responsible for alty and smashed the puck into the throwing a brick through a win- net from the vicinity of .the blue dow of University President Ham- line. lan H. Hatcher's home Wednes- Evidently fired up by Montreal { day. coach Arthur Therrien between pe-. alone costs the French govern- " ment a sizeable sum, and the sta- 1 OGGiE CASE tistics become more impressive BeGIE ISTORY when accident and crime figures attributable to alcohol are includ- ed. i1 !y-wa t-a fa 7 From the French workman's point of view, however, the rule against selling hard liquor be- tween the hours of 5 and 10 a.m. smacks of revolutionary action. Not only is he deprived of his cus- .tomary morning drink, but he has to face up to the fact that bars will be closed completely one day each week. Liquor is big business in France. The sidewalk-cafe becomes more than a legend when 10 per cent of the national income is spent on alcohol. One Frenchman out of seven is involved in the making of wine, with alcohol as / France's ln,'.anc4 *nA'.,n4',.- ,JW4d CLUl .1 ZILUL :1 is After Receiving Letter (EDITOR's NOTE' This is the third in a series of articles on the Court of Last Resort.) By JIM DYGERT Within a few weeks after Erle Stanley Gardner returned from Baja California he received a let- ter from a part-time voluntary chaplain at the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla. In the letter, Bill Gilbert asked for an appointment at Gardner's California ranch to discuss the case of Clarence Boggie, serving a life sentence for murder. Boggie's pre- very cooperative. "If Clarence Bog- gie is innocent we want to find it out just as much as you do," said Smith. Smith was entirely different from the type of warden Grdner expect- ed to find. In the course of his in- vestigations for the Court of Last Resort, Gardner has run into many wardens and other officials who did not welcome his intrusion. They resented anyone's intimating their machinery of justice had made a mistake. But not Smith, who was later to life sentence for murder and hav- ing a record of two previous con- victions, maintained . stoutly that he had never committed any crime and subsequent findings indicated his story might well have been true. But the immediate issue was whether Boggie killed Moritz Pe- terson as the Washington courts had decided he did. Peterson had been a 78-year-old recluse in Spo- kane, Washington. He roomed at a private boarding house but also owned a little shack at the rear of Neighbors heard the sounds of a terrific struggle in Peterson's shack on Monday, June 26, 1933. As housewives and children ran fromj their houses, they saw a stocky, heavy-set, bushy-haired man who ran with a peculiar "sideways gait" emerge from the shack. They chased him for two or three blocks until he disappeared into a wooded area. One woman looked in the doo- of Peteison's shackand 'found him moaning, his head virtually beaten in. She dashed to her house and riods, the Carabins returned to the ice for the final period and caught up to the Wolverines quickly. Landry picked up' the rebound of one of his shots at Howes and: flicked it past him for the first Montreal score at 2:14, A 2:38 he climaxed a .drive from middle iceI with his second goal of, the min- ute. - Pitts Scores Goal In a situation similar to that of the first Michigan score-each team having a man in the penalty box-Pitts took a pass close up from MacFarland and slid the puck: See MONTREAL. Page 3 Blood Drive Closes Here