Naime Change Semantics See Page 2 CILr Lw 61 :4Ia it 0 04 * * E'c, "e, Latest Deadline in the State FAIRWARMER VOL. LXV, No. 133 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 16,' 1955 FOUR PAGES 'U' Delays Stand On'MSU'Name Burma, Thailand Ministers To Visit; Mental Health Research Aid Sought By WALLY EBERHARD The University Board of Regents "have been advised of their con- stitutional responsibility" in the matter of the name change of Michi- gan State College, University President Harlan H. Hatcher said yester- day. Speaking at a press conference after the monthly Regents meet- ing, President Hatcher did not indicate whether the University would Veterans Employee Hospital Battles Disloyalty Charges .r. Regents OK Grants, Gifts Montgomery Donates $20,000 to Fund The Board of Regents accepted gifts and grants amounting to $86,922.61 yesterday at their April meeting. Lawrence J. - Montgomery of Battle Creek, Mich., donated the largest sum of $20,000 for the Lawrence J. Montgomery Research r Fund which assists medical stu- dents. A grant~of $14,900 was given by the Foundation Fund for Research in Psychiatry, through Yale Uni- versity. It will be used for the Foundation Marriage Research Fund headed by Director of the Bureau of Psychological Services E. Lowell Kelly. Chicago U. Donates The University of Chicago has given $8,000 to the Citizens' Com- mittee Research and Training Project for the study of school- related lay committees. Final installments of $3,000 and $2,500 on a three-year $10,000 project have been given by the Ciba Pharmaceutical Products, Inc., Summit, N.J., and the Eli Lilly and Co., Indianapolis, Id. respectively for hypertension re- search. A grant of $5,000 was given by Photo Engravers Research, Inc., Savannah, Ga. to supporta fel- lowship to study photoengraving problems in the Department of Chemical and Metallurgical Engi- neering directed by Prof. Charles W. Phillips. CiSpencer Chemical Co., Kansas City, Mo. gave its first payment of $5,000 on a three-year subscrip- tion to the Industrial Program of the College of Engineering. Grant For Nuclear Research The Regents accepted a $5,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, Washington, D.C. for the partial support of a confer- ence on "Problems of Nuclear Structure" to be held at the Uni- versity this summer. A fellowship in industrial hy- giene for next year will be estab- lished from the $4,800 grant giv- en by the James S. Kemper Foun- dation, Chicago, Ill. From the Midwest Universities Research Association, Madison, Wis., a grant of $4,000 was accept- ed for research directed by Prof. H. R. Crane. University of Michigan School of Nursing Alumnae Association, Ann Arbor, has given $3,500 to es- tablish the Couzens Hall Alumnae Lounge Fund. Grant For Narcotics Research A grant of $3,375 for the Nation- al Research Council Narcotics Re- search Fund was given by the Na- tional Academy of Sciences, Wash- ington, D.C. Phillips Petroleum Co., Bartles- ville, Oka., renewed its research fellowship of $2,000 in.~ the De- partment of Chemical and Metal- urgical Engineering for the period from Sept. 1, 1955 to Aug. 31, 1956. A chemical engineering fellow- ship for the 1955-56 year was re- newed by Standard Oil Founda- tion, Inc., Chicago, Ill. A stipend of $1,200 is provided for a master's degree candidate or $1,500 for a doctor's degree candidate, plus $1,000 to the engineering college for incidental expenses. The Samuel Higby Camp Foun- dation, Jackson, Mich., has given $1,500 for the foundation's schol- arship fund for medical students. Grants of $1,000 cach were given by Johnson Service Co., Milwau- kee, Wis., to establish an engi- neering scholarship and by Dr. Albert T. Berg, Staten Island, N.Y.' to the Medical School Special Fund. take legal action to forestall the state legislature's bill to change MSC's name. No decision will be made on the matter until the legal problems are explored further, he indicated. "There are plenty of legal minds who disagree with the Attorney General," President Hatcher said. Ministers To Visit President Hatcher also said the Prime Minister of Thailand Field Marshall Pibulsonggram - -U Nu-would visit the Univer- sity in May, studying peacetime uses of atomic energy. "They have designated the Uni- versity of Michigan, the name of which seems to be well known the world over," President Hatcher added. In answer to a reporter's ques- tion that this might indicate a keynote for the University's atti- tude to the name change proposal, he said, "It is merely a statement of fact." The problem remains, he said. Conceivably, he added, someone could ask the Prime Minister of Thailand, "Do you mean you vis- ited the Michigan State Universi- ty?" Conceivably, P r e s i d e n t Hatcher added, "The prime min- ister could say 'yes, the State Uni- versity of Michigan.'" Mental Health Research Also at the Regents meeting, Dr. Raymond W. Waggoner, director of the Neuropsychiatric Institute, requested by letter that $175,000 be appropriated by the state for the "specific purpose of basic re- search in the field of mental health." Dr. Waggoner pointed out the increasing shortage of trained per- sonnel and research in the field of mental health, while it remains the nation's number one health problem. The Regents also approved a proposal by Frederick H. Wag- man, director of the University library, to exchange certain vol- umes with the University library. The exchange will expand the University library's collection of 18th century English Drama, ac- cording to Wagman. BATTLE TITANS TODAY: wolverine Iaseballers Steamroll Toledo, 16-1 MUDDY WEATHER-Work on the North Campus Automotive Lab pus construction was sMowed recently by the April showers. Work a swing after a slow-down due to the mid. CHANGES PLEASE FACULTY: Plan NewCalendarI Daily-Dfck Gaskiil s (above) as well as other cam- on North Camims is now in full 4>7 By JANE HOWARD "It's a definite compromise, and a step in the right direction." Asked yesterday about the Cal- endar Committee's new proposal for the academic year, University personnel concurred that the plan should serve as a satisfactory mer- ger of student, faculty and admin- istrative interests. Pending approval of the Board of Regents' May meeting, the plan, okayed by Wednesday's Dean Con- ference, would go into effect in 1956-57. Two separate plans make up the Calendar Committee proposal- one extending the year from Sept. 9 to June 9 and the other from Sept. 16 to June 16. One offers one week of classes between the Christmas vacation and final ex- aminations, and the other a two- week class period. Hard to Please All "Pleasing everybody with one calendar," Literary College Assist- ant Dean James H. Robertson ex- plained, "would be just about im- possible." Dean Robertson agreed with Prof. Paul S. Dwyer of the mathe- matics department, who drew up the Committee's proposal, that the plan should eliminate several de- fects in the present calendar. Christmas and spring vacations, the proposal dictates, would begin Saturday noon rather than Friday evening - permitting Saturday classes a full 15 weeks' worth of class time. (At present Saturday + classes don't meet in vacation weeks.) Christmas vacation would be3 shortened to twelve days - a move designed to cut, but not to elim- inate, the present "lame duck" ses- sion of the year between the wint- er holidays and finals. Thanksgiving Definite Thanksgiving vacation, in re- cent years holding only a tenta- tive spot on University calendars, would become definitely estab-1 lished with the plan's approval, Dean Robertson said. Calendar Committee Chairman Erich A. Walter pointed out thatI the proposal would allow two full 15-week semesters. A defect in4 present schedules which virtually reduces both semesters to 14 and one-half weeks would be overcome. "Cutting a semester below the fifteen-week limit", Prof. Dwyer explained, "makes it difficult for7 the faculty to get across all of a, course's material." He added that 15 weeks is standard semester length at most colleges and uni-1 versities. More Saturday Classes Highlighting the new proposal are indications that much more use will be made, in the near fu- I ture, of classes set for Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays-a ne- cessity, administrators think, in view of expected vastly increased enrollments. Dean Robertson predicted thatj afternoon and 8 a.m. classes will be held more frequently, t'oo. Orientation and registration procedures, now"encompassing a full week, would be condensed into a three-day period by the new proposal's effect. New students would begin orientation on 'Sun- day evening rather than Monday, with registration held between Monday and Wednesday (and pos- sibly stretching i n t o eveningI hours)-and class work would start. Thursday of the fall semest- er's first week. Conceivably, Prof. Dwyer said, orientation would have to begin earlier than Sunday, Commencement Later Graduating seniors would find By JIM BAAD A one-hit, one-run pitching performance together with 13 hits and four enemy errors gave Michigan a completely one-sided victory over Toledo, 16-1, yesterday at Ferry Field. The rout was Michigan's eighth win, and the third in a row since the team returned from the southern tour. ' L-' 7 Starter Al Levy pitched brilliant no-hit, no-run ball for four innings to receive credit for the Wolverine wallop. The senior south- paw showed excellent control," walking only one man and forc--" their commencement exercises ing the rest to ground out. Fingerprint held on Sunday rather than the customary Saturday, if the plan Three pitchers followed Levy' were effected. This change, Dean to the mound as Coach Ray Fisher j L I. Walter noted, would allow the tried to give everyone some ex- graduates real diplomas rather perience. Jim Clark, Ralph Fagge, D than tokens, because faculty and and Dick Peterjohn were Levy's - Recorder's Office personnel could successors and all did themselves Edi give more attention to results of credit. Toledo's Dick Baldwin was seniors' final examinations. handed the loss. Rutherford Calls Claim 'Half-Truths' Dkimissal TO Get Hearing Thursday By JOEL BERGER A former Veterans Administra- tion Hospital employee charged last night he had been fired from his position on the basis of false security charges. Jesse C. Rutherford, former Hospital aide, said he was fired Dec. 21 for alleged Communist Party connections. He will appeal his case at a hearing Thursday. before intelligence officials of the Internal Revenue Office. Twenty-eight-year-old Ruther- ford claims the charges in the document dismissing him were M "lies and half-truths." His at- i In both semesters the plan pro- See PREPARE, Page 4 Stars' Axed ByGodfrey NEW YORK (P)-In a bid to re- gain a top spot on the air, Arthur Godfrey yesterday fired six sing- ers-half the vocal cast of his tele- vision and radio shows. "We've become top-heavy with stars," Godfrey said in an an- nouncement that rocked the en- tertainment world like nothing since his much-publicized firing 18 months ago of Singer Julius La Rosa. Try For Top Ten "We are going to try to break into the top ten again with a new show," he told a reporter. "This will give more people a whack at it, give more opportunity." The big housecleaning cost the jobs of the Mariners, a mixed Ne- gro and white male quartet whom Godfrey once swore by; MarionI Marlowe, fiancee of one of God-r frey's producers, and Haleloke, the show's little Hawaiian singer. Salk Receives $10,U00 Award Dr. Jonas E. Salk, elected from 400 nominees, received the $10,000 1955 Mutual of Omaha Criss award yesterday for his discovery of the anti-polio vac- cine. "The accomplishment of Dr. Salk," commented Dr. CharlesI W. Mayo of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, "may well be the greatest contribu- tion to medicine in our genera- tion." Meet Detroit Today Fisher will match his squad against the University of Detroit. in the Motor City this afternoon. The Wolverines beat the Titans here three days ago, 5-0. Toledo got off to a bad start in the first inning, allowing the first Wolverine run to score without a hit. Toledo pitcher Dick Baldwin walked centerfielder Bruce Fox, and after Danny Cline popped out, Fox went all the way around the basepaths stealing a base and completing the trip with the aid of two straight wild pitches. After a wild third inning in which Michigan scored eight un- earned runs -on three errors, four hits and a walk, the game ceased to be a contest. Highlighting this runaway frame was Catcher Gene Snyder, whose double down the left field line drove in three runs and was the Wolverine's only ex- tra-base knock. Besides the three actual errors, Toledo made several costly blund- ers in judgment in the fatal frame by either throwing a fielded ball to the wrong base or through too I much hesitation before throwing. See "M", Page 3 Eleven Russian editors, sched- uled to arrive in New York .Tues- day for a 30-day tour of the Unit- ed States are still in Moscow due to a foul-up over a question of finger printing. Included in their itinerary is a visit to the University May 8 to 10. Reports indicate that unless the misunderstanding is cleared up by top-level action in either Moscow or Washington, the editors are not likely to come to this country at all. American immigration laws re- quire that all persons coming to the United States must be finger- printed. Diplomats are exempted from the stipulation. However, Russians generally associate fin- gerprinting with criminals, and foreigners going into the Soviet Union 'are not fingerprinted. The editors refuse to undergo fingerprinting and have cited pre- vious instances in which Russian visitors to the United States have not been fingerprinted. Last year a group of Soviet chess .players and two professois entered this country without be- ing fingerprinted. American offi- cials have described the two in- cidents as oversights. 3 T J x T ' ,,, i I ;,: ,': s', l TWO RESTRICTIONS? Senate Should Direct League Activity '- Landers EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third in a series on women's student government. Today's article deals with the Women's Senate. By PHYLLIS LIPSKY Of the three chief organs which govern the Women's League, Women's Senate has the greatest potential scope. League Council and the Interviewing and Nominating Committee are concerned largely with internal affairs. "Senate should be the group which makes decisions as to what 'direction women's activities are ilkins Elected b SGC To Review Board Post By DAVE BAAD Student Government Council yesterday elected Roger Wilkins, '56L, to SGC's second representative to the Review Board. Council President . Hank Berliner, '56,\ automatically serves as SGC's other representative. Action came after short discussion over whether the representa- tive should be a member of SGC or a non-member closely associated with student government. Wilkins, a former member of Student Legislature, agreed to accept the position in a pre-meeting discussion with Daily Manag- ing Editor Gene Hartwig, '55, who nominated Wilkins for the post. Committee Appointments Committee appointments and 0th Y ea ""nominations for National Student Association Coordinator and ad- ministrative wing coordinator were Climaxing 50 years of service, approved yesterday by SGC. World News Roundup By The Associated Press British Elections Called LONDON - Prime Minister An- thony Eden yesterday called a na- tion-wide election for May 26 to stabilize the nation after the wrench of Sir Winston Churchill's retirement. Nine days after taking office, the new Prime Minister thus chal- lenged the divided Labor party to a political fight that could spell the end of his administration. * *~ * Trainmen Plan Strike BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - A strike of 4,000 additional Louisville and Nashville Railroad workers was called for Monday as nearly 25,- 000 Birmingham steelworkers end- ed a one-day walkout in sympathy for striking telephone and L&N employes. going," according to Lucy Landers, '55, retiring' League president. Including representatives from every women's housing unit on campus, Senate has the power "to initiate new rules, regulations and policies pertaining to women stud- ents." There are, however, two consti- tutional restrictions on the Sen- ate's power to change regulations governing women: 1) Proposed changes must be reviewed by the Dean of Women before they can be brought to a vote,- because the "Rules and Or- ganizations" booklet in which they are published is regarded as of- ficial University policy. 2) The final vote on rules changes is not cast by the Sena- tors. Proposals must be taken back to the houses they represent and a three forths majority of the total vote of women's students is needed to pass such changes. Two-Year Existence Senate came into existance two years ago as a replacement for the Board of Representatives. For several years, however, it had "practically served no func- JESSE RUTHERFORD torney is Charles Lockwood of De- troit, who handled a similar case last year. Lockwood's client, Uni- versity student Milo Radulovichi, was reinstated by the Air Force following dismissal because of his father's alleged Communist Party affiliations. Statement by Kiefer The statement of charges against Rutherford was sent to the VA Hospital by Alois F. Keifer of Detroit. He is the director of the Internal Revenue Office's intel- ligence division and will preside at the hearing. Rutherford claims he is not now and never has beenra member of the Communist Party or front groups. Instead, he was a candi- date on the Progressive Party tick- et for Superior Township clerk in 1948 and for state representative in 1952. The Progressive Party has never been listed as a subversive group or Communist Party front organiza- tion by Attorney General Herbert Brownell. Spoke With Robeson? -One of the main charges listed against Rutherford, who has taken an Extension Service course here and courses in the University of Detroit, is that he appeared on the platform and spoke during an out- door meeting here on Oct. 18, 1952, at which Paul Robeson was the principal speaker. Rutherford emphatically told The Daily the statement. that he spoke during the gathering was "a diabolical lie. I made no speech there." Only connection with the affair was that Robeson's appearance was sponsored by leaders of the county Progressive party, Ruther- ford claimed. "I was just an on- looker," he continued. Ruthertord is also accused of at- tending a dinner Oct. 28, 1952, in the Union which was given in hon- or of Robeson. "No dinner was held in the Un- ion that day," Rutherford declar- ed. "However, there was a dinner Oct. 28 which all local Progressive Party candidates attended. Another charge made by the VA against Rutherford was that r ACTIVITIES, SPECIAL DISPLAYS: UniEon Oen ouse Mat, \ o { . 'the Michigan Union will hold its annual open house today. This year's program, a bigger, more versatile one in honor of the anniversary, features a variety of shows and exhibitions, capped off by the "50th Anniversary Ball" at 9 p.m. The activities begin at one o'clock with a full program con- sisting of dancing lessons, sports movie, a jazz concert, senior ta- ble carVing, exhibitions by Michi- fish and the Michigan swimming. team, as well as dancing and a fashion show by Van Boven. In addition, tournaments will be Bill Adams, '57, will head the public relations and elections com- mittee; SGC Treasurer Dick Good, '56A, the finance committee; Joel Tauber, '57, campus affairs; Bob Leacock, '57, human and interna- tional welfare and Vice-President Donna Netzer, '56, the interview- ing and nominating committee. Jane Germany, '56, was named to coordinate NSA activities with University student government and Murry MacDonald, '57, was named coordinator of the admin- istrative wing. Dance Date Delayed held in ping pong, billiards, pool Decision on a date for the Un- and bowling. ion-Sigma Alpha Mu co-sponsored .II