FRENCH ASSEMBLY VOTE Latest Deadline in the State Daitir See Page 4 CLOUDY, COOLER VOL. LXV, No. 73 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1955 SIX PAGES :Fire Marshal's Report Discussed Gifts, Grants Accepted by Regents;. Post Created in 'U' Building Project By WALLY EBERHARD A dozen University buildings have been condemned by the state fire marshal, University President Harlan H. Hatcher reported to the Board of Regents at their December meeting. Special precautions are being taken in the buildings, which will be used until the University is able to replace them, President Hatcher said. The buildings include Romance Languages, Waterman Gym- nasium, Barbour Gymnasium, East Hall, Economics, West Medical, Pharmacology, Music, ROTC Rifle Range, Social Research, Radia- 1954 Called Worst Polio Year So Far By LEE MARKS With 37,771 cases reported through its 48th week, 1954 emerg- ed as the third worst recorded polio year, according to the Na- tional Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. Michigan was listed b, NFIP as one of 15 states having "more than their share of the total blow." Average rate for the continental United States was 23.5 cases per 100,000 population. The polio rate last year was exceeded only by the record high of 57,879 cases set in 1952 and by :949's mark of 42,0$3 cases. Prevention CW:t: Ilizing It was the seventh straight year of unusually high polio incidence but, said the NFIP, "polio preven- tion began at last to crystallize in- to the promise of eventual freedom from polio's crippling threat." The "promise" referred to is the ualk vaccine. Results of a mam- moth field test of Salk Vaccine are ow heing evaluated by Dr. Thomas Francis, chairman of the Department of Epidemiology at the University. "As usual," a spokesman for the NFIP said, "the disease struck without rhyme, reason or discern- ible pattern." Alaska Hit Bad Listed along with Michigan as having been struck severely were Alaska, with six times the nation- al average, Hawaii, Wyoming, Iowa, Nebraska, Nevada, Florida, Kansas, Texas, California, Utah, k New Mexico, Ohio, Kentucky and Colorado. United States Public Health Service figures show polio is a major child-killer. In major epi- demic years polio has killed more five-to-14-year-olds than any oth- er communicable disease. During 1954, NFIP financial aid went to 74,000 patients. Of these, 50,000 were carried over from pre- x vious years and 24,000 were newly stricken. Peiping Says UN Official Now in China By The Associated Press Peiping radio said United Na- "r tions Secretary General Dag Ham- marskjold arrived in Canton, Chi- na, at 8:30 a.m. yesterday on his way to Peiping on his "free the fliers" mission. The broadcast was heard in Tokyo. Meanwhile, in New Delhi, India, I Prime Minister Jauaharial Nehru was reported yesterday to have rejected an invitation to send a senior Indian diplomat along on Hammarskjold's mission to gain release of 11 American airmen. Authoritative sources said Ham- marskjold made the suggestion, but Nehru turned it down on the grounds India had abstained in } the General Assembly vote which directed the secretary general to do his utmost to get the -Red Chi- nese to free the American air- men and other UN personnel held 9 by the Peiping regime. The rejection served to empha- size Nehru's apparent opposition to the trip. The Prime Minister waited 19 hours after Hammar- skjold arrived here on his way to tion Laboratory and the tempo- rary classroom buildings. Create New Post The Regents also created a new post of assistant to the vice-presi- dent in charge of business and fi- nance, to serve under Vice-Presi- dent Wilbur K. Pierpont. The new assistant will be primarily con- cerned with details of the Univer- sity's building program, An agreement with the National Music Camp at Interlochen was renewed for five years. Under the agreement, the Summer Session will continue to offer a number of courses and "such other educa- tional activities as are mutually acceptable to the University and the National Music Camp." Gifts and grants amounting to $379,527.28 were also accepted by the Regents. Largest of the grants was one of $200,000 from the National Foundation for Infantile Paraly- sis for the Polio Vaccine Evalua- tion Fund. Evaluation studies of the field trial of the polio vaccine are being carried on under the di- rection of Dr. Thomas Francis, Jr., chairman of the department of epidemiology. Stock Donated From Regent Leland I. Doan of Midland, the Regents accepted 300 shares of Mathieson Chemical Corp. common stock, currently valued at $17,003.02, as an addi- tion to the Hester Spencer Doan Fund, established by Regent Doan in honor of his mother. The Michigan State Board of Alcoholism in Lansing donated $9,000 to continue research by Dr. H. M. Pollard. An anonymous donor has given 200 shares of McLouth Steel Corp. common stock, with present esti- mated value of $7,125, for research in savings and investments in the School of Business Administra- tion. From the Buick Motor Division of General Motors Corporation in Flint the Regents accepted $6,- 837.83. Of this, $4,337.83 was to cover expenses of the Michigan Marching Band at the Northwest- ern football game, and $2,500 was given to the University Bands As- sistance Fund by Buick in appre- ciation for the appearance of the band in Flint on Nov. 23 on the occasion of the building of the 50,000,000th car by GM. Law Loan Fund Six thousand dollars were ac- cepted as a partial payment from the estate of Ray M. Mann of To- ledo to establish the Ray M. Mann Loan Fund for Law Students. Westwood Pharmaceuticals di- vision of Foster-Milburn, Co., of Buffalo, N.Y. has given $5,000 for a study of the antiseptic proper- ties of the soapless skin cleanser and modifications of the product under the direction of Dr. Arthur C. Curtis, assisted by Dr. A. H. Wheeler of the Medical School's department of dermatology and syphilogy. The Kelsey-Hayes Wheel Co., of Detroit, has given $5,000 as the first year's subscription to the In- dustry Program of the College of Engineering. See GROUP, Page 6 Chair Vacated Luck? PORT ARANSAS, Tex. (FP) - A great many people spend a great deal of money to catch a tarpon. Not Florida Roberts, veteran fishing guide. He caught 12 Sunday while fishing from the Port Aranas jetties. "I didn't want to catch the pesky things," he said. "They'd been bothering me the last cou- ple of days." He was after trout. M' Cagers Drop First Big Ten Tilt Eaddy Nets 19 In 95-77 Loss Special to The Daily After dropping fiv of its seven non-conference games Big Ten champion Indiana suddenly came to life last night in its first con- ference game to down Michigan, 95-77, at Bloomington. Three Hoosiers tied or topped Michigan's leading scorer Don Eaddy in the scorf' spree. All- American Don Schlundt posted 30 points for the winners on 16 free throws and seven field goals to capture scoring honors. Two team- mates, Jim Barley and Burke Scott, neither of which have done much scoring in pre-conference tilts, dropped in 19 points apiece. Schlundt set the Big Ten in- dividual scoring record of 47 points against OSU last year. Fels Made Difference MicaT fouls provided the scoring difference in the contest. The Hoosiers were given 59 shots from the free throw line, sink- ing 43 for a new Big Ten record. The previous record was 42 points, scored by Indiana against Purdue in 1953. Schlundt came within one point of tying his 17 point free throw record set against Michigan in 1953. The floor game went to the Wol- verines, however, as they ended up with .368 shooting mark for the evening, while the Hoosiers could manage only .306. Ron Kramer, Tom Jorgenson and Don Eaddy looked strong from the floor sinking 12. 16 and 19 points respectively. Jim Shearon, subbing for Jim Barron, copped 11 points while looking very good f'- the losers. Indiana's quintet took an early 6-5 lead -I was r-z'r headed as they breezed to 51-40 half time lead. Jorgenson and Paul Groffsky started a Wolverine rally early in the second half, cutting the lead to 69-66, but the Hoosiers over- came the threat with a flui'ry of their own, and the contest was in the bag. Lead Precarious Although Indiana was never out of the lead, its victory was more precarious than the 18 point mar- gin showed. Several times, seem- ingly safe leads dissipated to Wol- verine onslaughts. At the nine- minute mark, the Hoosiers had a 22-12 lead, but an Eaddy-inspired rally cut the lead to 24-21. The large number of fouls on the Michigan squad were actually two handicaps in one. They not only accounted for almsot half of the Hoosier points, but forced three Wolverine players to leave the game. Groffsky, Jorgenson,. See BARRON, Page 3 SGC P SSED LL-C PUS P1 BY I REGENTS; DLL HEEDED Student Leaders o MeetToday Lewis to Discuss SGC Transition With 7 Ex-Officio Representatives By DAVE BAAD The Board of, Regents for the first time in University history has sanctioned a student government. Taking cognizance of strong campus support for the Student Government Council proposal, the Regents approved the new form of. University student government at their Dec. 17 meeting. SGC,-composed of 11 elected and seven ex-officio members, re- places Student Legislature and the 15-member Student Affairs Com- mittee, the student government of the last six years. SL, although recognized by SAC, has never been recognized by the Regents. Earlier in December, an all-" DR. CHARLES S. SIMONS OF THE RADIATION PHYSICS DEPARTMENT CHECKS CYLINDER CONTAINING RADIOACTICE COBALT 60 Cobalt Arrives After Delay 6 G4>- 4- An overdue shipment of radio- active Cobalt 60 was received by doctors at University Hospital's AlicerLloyd Memorial Laboratory Dec. 23. one week after expected delivery. The Cobalt was scheduled to ar- rive in Ann Arbor the Wednesday or Thursday before Christmas va- cation. When the radioactive material -worth more than $15,000-failed to arrive on time, University of- ficials called State Police and the Knoxville terminal and would not was shipped from Oak Ridge, arrive in Ann Arbor until the next Tenn., in a two foot square lead week. box weighing more than two tons. The size of a stack of eight pen- It will be used in "Theratron," nies, the radioactive material pos- a new, $65,000 radiation therapy sesses 1,800 curies of energy. It unit for treatment of deep tumors and cancers. Canadian atomic experts willi N m eI lehart ;transfer the material to to Therethswekan ao- ~gw~iir~tron sometime this week and com- plete adjustment of delicate shut- Art C h rman ter mechanisms. "Theratron" was built by Atom- Prof. Robert Iglehart of New ic Energy Commis ion of Canada, York University has been ap- Ltd. It is one of two'in Michigan pointed by the Regents to the and six in the country. The oth- chairmanship of the art depart- er unit in Michigan is at Detroit's ment of the College of Architec- Ford Hospital. f Detroit branch of the trucking firm handling delivery in an un- successful attempt to learn its 1- cation. Wire services carried news of the "lost" shipment through to Knoxville, Tenn.. where a news- paperman reportedly learned that' the shipment was tied up at the New U.S. Rule Bars Russians By The Associated Press Washtenaw County has been in- cluded in United States counties declared off limits to Russians yesterday in reprisal against sim- ilar curbs against Americans in the Soviet Union. The retaliatory action was dis- closed by the State Department1 after Secretary of State Joh'n Fos-, ter Dulles notified Soviet Ambas- sador Georgi N. Zarubin that the United States had revised its travel regulations. According to U.S. officials, the restricted area covers 27 per cent of the United States. It includes+ about 1,000 counties in 39 states, all of the Mexican border except; Webb County, Tex., and a 15-mile band around the Great Lakes on the Canadian border. ture and Design. The position was created last spring when the College was di- vided into three departments. Prof. Aarre K. Lahti has been act- ing chairman for the current ac- ademic year with Prof. Iglehart scheduled to take over in Septem- Dean Stason Made Member of Atoms For Peace Board ber, 1955. Dean E. Blythe Stason of the In addition to the art depart- law school has been appointed to ment, the College now includes an the board of the Fund for Peace- architecture department and a ful Atomic Development, Inc. landscape - architecture depart- Headed by Walker L. Cisler, ment. president of Detroit Edison, the Prof. Iglehart has been a mem- group is composed of scientists, ber of the New York University educators and industrialists; and faculty since 1946 and chairman is the first .non-government pro- of the department of art education gram to carry out the ideas of there since 1948. President Eisenhower's atoms-for- Chairman of a session during peace plan. the recent Ann Arbor Conference 'lAims of the group included the on consumer design, Prof. Iglehart improvement of international re- has also taught here during a sum- lations by arranging international mer session. conferences and providing ex- In the field of education, the change fellowships for foreign 42 year-old professor has had as- countries. sociations outside his university In discussing the fund's future teaching. He does television edu- during a luncheon, it was sug- cation work and is also connected gested that in connection with the with' the Museum of Modern Art's Phoenix Memorial Project, Uni- art education program. versity scientists will be called A graduate of the Maryland In- upon to do additional research in stitute of Art, Prof. Iglehart was the field of peacetime uses for previously a commercial designer. atomic energy. campus student poll conducted at request of the Regents gave SGC a favorable 5,102 to 1,451 vote. Election To Be Discussed Vice-President for Student Af- fairs James A. Lewis will meet to- day with the seven ex-officio mem- bers of SGC and the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women to initi- ate procedure for bringing the new student government into existence. The group will consider the election of SC representatives and other matters pertaining to transition to the new government. Vice - President Lewis said he expects the election of SGC mem- bers will take place between March 15 and 30 but added the "sooner the better." He would like the election as early as possible so that the ex- perience of this year's student leaders. may be utilized as much as possible in getting SGC organ- ized and underway. Election Dates Suggested A motion to hold the elections March 29 and 30 will be introduc- ed to the still functioning SL at its meeting tomorrow night. David Levy, '57, SL elections chairman for the elections held Dec. 8 and 9, thinks it will take at least eight weeks to organize a smooth running election. Elections for SGC couldn't be held until after the start of the spring semester-because of inter- ference with final examinations. Although Vice-President Lewis said yesterday his group will make final decisions, comment indicat- ed yesterday there would be gen- eral cooperation among campus groups in holding the election. One SL member suggested a plan by which all groups repre- sented by an ex-officio member on SGC would assist with the elec- tion. Groups Represented on SGC Groups represented by ex-officio members are the Union, League, Pan-Hellenic, Assembly, Interfra- ternity Council, Inter-House Coun- cil and The Daily. SGC, approved for a two-year trial period, has various functions including recognition of new cam- pus organizations, approval or disapproval of student-sponsored activities, coordinating student ac- tivities and originating student projects among others. Subject To Review SGC action will be subject to review by a seven member Board of Review consisting of the Dean of Men, Dean of Women, three faculty members and two student members. Student members will be the President of SGC and one other member appointed by the Council. . The Board must declare its in- tention to review a decision of SGC within 96 hours of its appearance in' the Daily Official Bulletin or the decision becomes final. Wreck delays 'Special T rain A freight train derailment east of Buffalo, N.Y., held up return- ing students aboard the "Wolver- ine" more than nine hours yester- French Vote Falls Short, 'Bretton Says, By MURRY FRYMER Despite approval of the French National Assembly last week to re- arm West Germany, the slim plu- rality of the vote is causing in- creasing skepticism as to the con- sistency of the French govern- ment. Prof. Henry L. Bretton of the political science department, com- menting on the slim 287 to 260 passage vote, said yesterday, "It is a sign that there is not a majority for German rearmament in the IPench National Assembly." Coupled with the very difficult porblems involved in creation of the German army, this spells out the future of a European army,. he added. Although P r e m i e r Mendes- France, pushing for passage of the bill which would put West Ger- many into the Western European Union and NATO as a sovereign armed ally, received 52 per cent support of those voting, actually the 187 votes constitute only 46' per cent of the entire body. Majority of Total Necessary Prof. Bretton said that a ma- jority of the entire membership would have been necessary. "What seems to have been a victory for European integration is instead a defeat," he said. "It is a declara- tion, in fact, of no confidence in the French government and the German army." Prof. Bretton was skeptical as to whether the vote would actual- ly set the stage for rearmament of the Bonn government. "I'll believe it when I see it," he said. What can France do now that the vote has been taken? Can Be Made Difficult "France can make it exceeding- ly difficult for us to introduce the angle of diplomatic negotia- tions before the rearmament of Germany can actually begin," Prof. Bretton commented. "Before the rearmament of Germany can begin, it will be necessary for us to mobilize the people of Europe. That can effec- tively be sabotaged by a French government intent on doing that with the renewal of diplomatic negotiation with the Soviet Un- ion." Prof. Bretton said that it would be more difficult for the Bonn government now, than before the French Assembly vote. "The lack of enthusiasm is clear repudiation of the spirit of a Eu- ropean Union and repudiation of the Adenauer policy of reconcilia- tion. "It constitutes a boon for anti- European forces in Germany," he said. 8,008'Seeuity' MAY FESTIVAL SOLOISTS: Musical Society Signs Stevens, Serkin <( l By McCarthy WASHINGTON (P) - Sen. Jo- seph R. McCarthy (R-Wis) rang down the curtain-on his investi- gating committee chairmanship yesterday with surprise testimony rom a brunetterwitness who said she was under a Communist "death sentence" for FBI under- cover work. She identified herself as Mary r T T By DAVID KAPLAN Metropolitan Opera, soprano Rise Stevens and noted pianrat Rudolph Serkin have been signed by the University Musical Society for the 62nd May Festival. Miss Stevens ..,ade her debut at the Met in 1938 and has since ap- peared in numerous operas, her most famous roles being Delilah in "Samson and Delilah" and Car- men in the Bizet opera. Serkin is known throughout the country by his concert appear- ces and recri'dings. A mak- ing his debut at the age of 12 "Missa Solemnis" with Miss Mar- shall, Miss Rankin, Meredith Cha- bay and the University Choral Union. All-Viennese Saturday afternoon's program will be an all-Viennese concert with Ormandy cor--eting a pro- gram of Strauss, Reznicek and Mozart selections. Also appearing on the program will be the Youth Chorus conducted by Marguerite Hood. The Chorus will sing a group of Viennese folk songs which were, orchestrated by Prof.' Marion McCartor of the School witli Bartok's "Concerto for Or- chestra." Carl Off's "Carmina Burana" will be performed Sunday after- noon. The choral work will be sup, by Miss M 'shall, Chabay,1 Meredith and the University Chor- al Union. After the intermission, Grant Johannesen will play Pro- kofieff's "Concerto No. 3 for piano and orchestra." Miss Stevens will appear in the Festival's final concert Sunday evening. Her selections will include works by Gluck, Tchaikovsky, Z int-Saeis and Bizet. The or- ....._. hs ................. _.... _ I