Newspapers Have Responsibility See Page 4 Y it i&1a Latest Deadline in the State :43 a t , ty Si SHOWt'tERS. WARMER VOL. LXV, No. 144 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1955 SIX PAGES President Sounds, IOptimistic Note Peace Hopes Raised as Eisenhower' Corresponds With Russia's Zhukov WASHINGTON (P)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday. sounded a cautious note of optimism about peace prospects, based in part on som epersonal correspondence he has had lately with Georgi K. Zhukov. Zhukov, an old friend and World War II comrade-in-arms of President Eisenhower's, is now defense minister of the Soviet Union. Speaking in a reminiscent, old soldier mood as the 10th anniver- sary of V-E day neared, President Eisenhower said he was sure s - everyone would want his corres- 'Government 17' II A-Ak -_ Holds Backh. ~ i i ui ae Some Vaccine Polio Hits Eightu. ItMmune' V ctinsItC 0 il WASHINGTON (4) - The gov- ernment ordered one of the com- panies making Salk vaccine to pull back all its shipments yesterday after eight children inoculated against polio were reported hit by the disease. Health authorities cautioned against a scare, however. They said there was no indication the With Red Chinl-a a i 1 T I } i) .r ., 1 4 ; A x r r pondence with Zhukov "if it were vaccine caused the disease, and S G C ~~ humanly possible, to lead to someththeewsvinctoheo- bnsetterment of the world situation." trryinsmecaeslteat SG Ctrryiingomscase, at east "Slim Hope" The vaccine in question was "I don't know whether it ever made by Cutter Laboratories in can," the President told a news Berkeley, Calif., which said it had' conference, "but it is a slim hope." -Daily-John irtzei made shipments for mass iocula- D And he said he would "confess" MEMBERS OF SGC EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE met yesterday tions of school children in parts of ra 4s 11to a hunch that, in spite of trou- with University President Harlan H. Hatcher for the first time. California, in Arizona, New Mexi- ble clouds in the Formosa Strait As President Hatcher greets Council president Hank Berliner, '56, co, Idaho, Nevada and Hawaii. and elsewhere, peace prospects on Dick Good, '56, and Donna Netzer, '56, treasurer and vice-presi- Shipped Small Lots By LEE MARKS the whole are "on the upswing." dent respectively, look on. The informal introductory meeting The Cutter firm also reported it More than 100 students showed This was President Eisenhow- general and SGC-ad- had shipped relatively small lots up for the first meeting of SGC's er's first meeting with news- ministration relations. for commercial use to its divsion administrative wing yesterday. men i a month and they bom- sales offices inLous Anges, son Sandy Hoffman, '56, admintstra- barded him with questions rang- tie, Dallas, Chicago, New York tine wing coordinator, expressed mgfromfotheSa setccne-hn'snt Or X and Atlanta. Dispatches from attelagingfavr othe psk vccin-he's! SBPortland said a small amount had satisfaction a h lreturnout i ao f h(rsn-vlnaybendsrbtenMie and predicted, "within a week we distribution system-to the situa- been distributed in Maine will have the basis of a really tion in South Viet Nam. "Stran Scholrship O ccupyGe G Cs TeUSPublic Health Service and almost inexplicable" he calledisudatooreonsefth strong committee system in op- hs.kj rage.I~~IJ) ~I ~ i 1 I ise tpode nueo h eration." nena tif jn tefineI vaccine after it was reported two la of Communist Asia. %---____- I inoculated children in Idaho, five Purpose of the meeting was to Student Government Council in California and one in Chicagos explain the function of the admin- "Chi-Com" decided last night to open peti- ommend policy on future delega- had come down with polio. One of istrative wing and acquaint pros- President Eisenhower stoutly ingimmediately fo next se-I tion of operating responsibilities pective workers with SGC's com- backed the stand Secretary of mester's Student Book Exchange of the Exchange. said to have died. mittee set-up. State Dulles took Tuesday-this manager. The committee will look into the Dr. Leonard A. Scheele, surgeon country will talk directly with the question of whether the book cen- general of the Public Health Serv "Go -Between Scn ato h oinpognrlo h ulcHat ev Murra MacDonald, '57, assist- hi'-Coms as he called the Chi- posed by Bill Adams '57, an ter should be un by specific ice, emphasized there was no --Daily-sam Chi MuyM aon,' it nese Communists, about a ceasegbyindividuals ant to Miss Hoffnan, termed the fire in the Formosa dispute. But passed by the Council directed gFo o by Cu l cause for alarm in the nationwide CLUGSTONE FAMILY PORTRAIT-Members of the east o administrative wing "a go-between he said there will be no discussion Campus Affairs Committee to rec- Former SL Control campaign to immunize Americans James Harvey's "The Clugstone Inheritence" pose for pictur between students and SG." behind Chiang Kai-shek's back of The Exchange was .formeirly u- against dreaded polio. winrellgebhin SCad ed Ntin Kaisder control of Student Legislature fRelation Uncertain "If people on the administrative matters directly affecting the Chi- and management was delegated by It is difficul to say whether o e pwegruly rgantehmd oGC cam- cese-firetalkss would-notdas-d C t SL from inrt p id uas petitioning or not the association between ac- Inertce work, we can make it the most By way of explanation, he said, !./ fom inivid uals pin on assocas s beted vs II 4 pru MacDonald said. a- the iteress ofd th Na n- incom e a XI In other action last night. SGC one of cause and effect or one of pus, Ge ore Importance adopted the $2,000 student ac- coincidence," Salk said at Pitts-T o H ae TennereGO G Given Mort Han e alists since, he said, theyare fir-Bill f vtivities scholarship fund plan in- burgh. I SGC President Hank Berliner, ing now only in self defense. Bill avoredI itiated by SL before it was super- He called "reasonable" the gov- '56, declared, "Administrative wing Somehow the approach of next seded by the present governing or- ernment's action to halt tempo- Premiere performance of James Harvey's "The Clugstone Inh will be given much more impor- week's V-E anniversary came to Two prominent Ann Arbor citi- ganization. rarily all injections of vaccine tance" will be given at 8 p.m. today at the Lydia Mendelssohn Thea tance in the SGC structure than dominate the session. President zens yesterday threw their sup-- Under the plan the total amount made by Cutter. Additional performances of the original student play presented in any student government be- Eisenhower was asked if he had port behind a proposed state law of money dispersed in any one In Philadelphia, inoculation of the speech department will be given at 8 p.m,. tomorrow and Sturd fore it." any "reflections" on the victory enabling cities to lev income year will not exceed $450. The I first and second grade school Directed by Prof. Hugh Norton of the speech department,i Working on tha administrative in which he led the Western taxes. number of scholarships to be children with antipolio Salk vac- play is a character study of the hopeful heirs of the Clugstone wing, Berliner said, will give stu- forces, and he said with a rue- Prof. Arthur Bromage of the awarded will be determined by the cine was halted. heritance, the relationships among the five children and their spou dents a chance to work with peo- ful smile he thought at the time political science department and plan's Board of Directors. Dr. James Dixon, city commis- or in one case, fiancee. ple and learn something about the it meant the end of art active Mayor William E. Brown, Jr., both Basis for the awards will be fi- sioner of health, ordered the halt The Clugstone family will University. career for him. indicated they thought the law, nancial need, participation in ex: because of withdrawal of vaccine CIO mT ted portrayed by Gwen Arner Gr Policy to Award Recognition "Long Ways" I allowing levies up to one per tra-curricular activities and a on the West Coast. avDale Stevenson, Grad.. Val "It will be the policy of SGC "I saw a nice farm over the cent of income, would make tax- minimum over-all average of 2.5. Dr. Dixon said that "as far as' Schor, Grad., John Olson, Gr to award recognition to people who other side of the ocean," he went ation in Michigan more equitable. Khoury Reports on Building we know" the vaccine being used S eworkers and Michael Gregoric, '55. administrative wing on, "and-it is still a long ways Sen. Lewis G. Christman of Ann Ty in Philadelphia, supplied by Wy- The cast also includes Don work on the leas."nrborisrnetovth bil'sgpon Tawfiq Khoury, Grad., gave a' eth Laboratories, Inc. is "safe." A )LP tet rdSsnGlb satisfactorily over a certain period away at least." Arbor is one of the bill's spon~ report on Student Activities Build- aStreat, Grad., Susan Goldb of time," the SGC president told There was some laughter and sors. i ing progress. The Council accept- None of the Cutter vaccine SsL4 '57, Rol Jones, '56, and Mar an attenti roup much pricking up of ears. Was Prof. Bromage, a former alder- ed romendtion taDick being used in the Philadelphia pro- Mercer, '57. this a tipoff the President meant man, said the city "can't continue gram. But Dr. Nixon said he was PITTSBURGH (P)-CIO United The living-room setting of. Although now no experience is to run for reelection? President to work the property tax harder. Good, '56 A&D, chair the group stopping inoculations until the Steelworkers yesterday told the old Clugstone homestead in necessary to run for SG, Berlin- Eisenhower reddened and looked He praised the proposed income next year and that the group he Wyeths vaccine's safety is "re-con- basic steel industry-a force in the mid-west was executed by P er said "It ma well b that i Eiscomposededeofdsevenooex-officaseo tGCpropfirmed."m e future Say wll r e shat for a moment as if he'd let a cat tax law as providing a "greater composed of seven ex-officio SGC firmed." nation's prosperous economy -- it Jack Bender with costumes eight weeks experience (on the ad- out of a bag. Then he laughed diversification of revenue sources." members, SC president and vice- -----wants a pay boost for 600,000 Phyllis Pletcher of the speech ite e a eartily and sought to explain that Prof. Bromage said the tax, now president and Joint Judiciary members employed in steel pro- partment. hearilyandsouhtvteexlaintht Prf.fromge aidlhewaxnowchairman. fntAio-i.11Maldcntlns iktsfralpromne "long ways" remark. being studied by the Senate Tax-.ducing plants. Tickets for all performances students to run for election."After all," said the 64-year- ation Committee, would be "a Ed Velden, '55E, was appointed i ,d C" s Just how much of a pay hike the on sale at the Lydia Mendelss Berliner stressed, "SGC is not a old president, "when you are my major revenue producer," if used as member of the Student Hous- union will ask will be determined box office. Student tickets for closed corporation in any sense. An age, 21 months is still a long time." to the full one per cent. Ann Arbor ing Committee to approve sorority James R. Holmes, 22 years old, by its powerful 170-member wage day's performance are still av opportunity is presented now His present term has 21 months could "certainly plan to reduce and fraternity annexes. of 1624 Pear St. was killed in- policy committee. That group will able. . which hasn't been presented in re- to go. real estate taxes" if the plan were Donna Netzer, '56, and Dick stantly yesterday when his car col- be called into executive session cent years-that of working with The Zhukov matter came up adopted in town. Snyder, '57, were recommended as lided with an Ann Arbor -Railroad later-probably next month. a financially sound student gov- early in the news conference. If the bill passes, the approval student members on the Develop- Co. switch engine at a Pontiac Wage talks will attract great Block 'A' Charmel ernment that has the respect of Newsweek magazine had said Zhu- of local voters would be required ment Council's Boardl of Directors. Road crossing. j interest because steel finds its way Chairmanships for the f students and the administration." kov wrote President Eisenhower for a city to institute an income The recommendations will be Holmes was coming into town into almost every phase of Ameri- lowing Block "M" subcommi Committee leaders Joel Tauber, recently asking for release of Val- tax. presented by President Harlan H. at a high rate of speed, accord- can life. The steel industry has tees are open: Facilities, Oper '57, campus affairs, Bill Adams, ery Lysikov, the teen-age boy who "I think it can be sold to the Hatcher to the Board of Regents ing to Kenneth L. Worthington, hinted that any pay hike will be tions, Design, Memberships a '56, public relations and Bob Lea- fled from behind the Iron Cur- people of Ann Arbor," Prof. Brom- May 20. fireman on the engine. Worthing- offset by a price increase. Public Relations. cock, '57, human and internation- tain. Young *Lysikov was deliv- age said, providing an educational Current members on the Devel- ton said the car probably would If the price of steel goes up ap- Interested persons may co al welfare, then explained com- ered into the custory of his par- campaign "relates the plan to opment Council are Daily Manag- have cleared the front of the en- preciably, it could up the cost of tact Les Salans, NO 3-8508 1 mittee functions to the prospec- ents soon after he decided he the basic needs of the city, which ing Editor Gene Hartwig, '55, and gine if Holmes had not applied automobiles, refrigerators, bridg- May 4. tive workers. wanted to go back. are certainly very great." Ruth Rossner, '55. the brakes. es-thousands of things. _ Berlin University INFORMALITY PREVAILS: Scholarship Gien Next year's scholarship for theIsiis MeetigJoInt udiciary Cou1cl Free University of Berlin has been ay Vn a oW awarded to Dave Learned, '58M. The scholarship, which includes- ng f -. y eri- tre. by ay. the in- ses be ad., erie ad., ald erg, ian the the rof. by de- are ohn to- ,ail- - it.. a- nd by "Talks Might Not Include Nationalists (lii.ng' Opposes Aiiv Cease-Fire WASHINGTON 6P) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower asserted yesterday the United States would be glad to meet and talk with the Chinese Communists about a For- mosa cease-fire. He acknowledged there might have been "an overstatement" or "error in terminology", in the dec- laration of Saturday which ruled out any discussion with the Reds concerning the Formosa area un- less the Chinese Nationalists par- ticipated. This statement was put out by Undersecretary of State Herbert Hoover Jr., and the State Depart- ment said at the time that Hoover acted after a long telephone con- versation with President- Eisen- hower, who was at Gettysburg, Pa. Won't "Affect" Nationalists The President told his news con- ference that talk about acease- fire would not "affect" the Chines Nationalists, although he appeared to recognize in response to a ques- tion that they have an interest' in it. He explained what he meant was that the United States could discuss a cease-fire "without dam- aging the interests of the Chinese Nationalists" because he said, the Nationalists are now shooting only in self defense. President Eisenhower's remarks about the lack of effect on the Na- tionalists surprised some officials and diplomats. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles had conceded to inquiring reporters Tuesday there was some difference between the U.S. and Nationalist position on cease-fire policy. The fact is that Chiang Kai. Shek's government has been bit- terly opposed to ending all mili- I tary operations because it nour- ishes the hope of some day re- turning in force to the Red-held mainland. The Communists also have generally opposed a cease- fire in their public statements and insisted on their right to "liber- ate" Formosa by force. Have Little Choice The key to U.S. determination to negotiate a cease-fire in spite of the Chinese Nationalists' atti- tude lies in the apparent fact the Nationalists have very little choice except to go along. They are de- pendent upon the United States for arms and military supplies. They are committed by an ex- change of letters under last De- cember's defense treaty not to en- gage in any offensive operations j against the Reds except by joint agreement with the United States. Chou Prepared Red Chinese Premier Chou En- lai said last Saturday his nation was prepared to negotiate with the United States over easing Far East tensions, including Formosa. With respect to the matter of direct talks, the President said the room and board, books, tuition, By GENE IiARTWIG and other necessary expenses, will Daily Managing Editor be paid for by the Free University. Donna Hoffman, '55, has been Yesterday The Daily went to a Joint Judiciary Council meeting named as the alternate. For three hours a procession of students were ushered into the The student who will come here meeting. They stated the circumstances of their cases, the Council from the Free University is Wer- asked questions and penalties were levied. ner Koenig. Money collected by There was no tense court room atmosphere. No one got excited, the Free University of Berlin and throughout an informal attitude prevailed. used to pay for his expenses, Joel Without revealing the names of violators the procedure followed Tauber, '57, chairman of the com- at yesterday's session was this. mittee, has announced. The alter- Joint Judic Chairman Howard Nemerovski, '57L, opened the ertstue r he Fre Un- meeting at 4:15 p.m. and the Council tackled its first case, a student i involved in a second violation of the driving regulations. he United States would not discuss used as false identification to purchase intoxicants" to an explanation he got fair treatment and was relieved that the Council told him what the affairs of th Chinese Nation- of repeated violations of the student driving regulation. he was accused of before he was asked questions. "I was worried about aalists behind their back bn t that Council members matched these statements against the typed that at first," he said, if the Communists wanted to talk official brief of each case before them, and then asked questions of In each case when the penalty is levied the chairman or a mem- I about a cease-fire the United the defendant to bring out additional information shedding further ber of the. Council lectures to the student on the seriousness of his States would be glad to talk with light on the case, offense. The student's responsibility to observe University regulations them as a test of their good in- In each case Council members asked the defendant to what ex- I and the damaging effect such violations have on the University's and tentions. tent he was financially self-suporting to aid in determining the type students reputation is usually pointed ,to. of penalty to be levied. When the case is completed the Judic action goes on the stu- Students, Faculty, Following the questioning the defendant was asked if he had any- dent's permanent record card, kept in the condifential file in the thing more to add and then was asked to step out while the Council I Office of Student Affairs. Unlike a court record this file is not avail- Administrators decided the case. - able to anyone but authorized University personnel. If the case was a first offense the Council promptly came to a Cases Determine Penalties To Confer Today decision and notified the defendant of the penalty. In second viola- The kinds of penalities levied vary from case to case.AttAnlexchangekofvideaseonucods- ions the Council told the student he would be notified within a week One case involving a second violation of student driving regula- men problems wil kdeynote om to 10 days after the sub-committee on discipline had reviewed the tions drew a straight $20 fine. Another involving repeated violation day's Student, Fculty nd Ad- case, got $45 with the Council's recommendation that if there was a further ministration Conference at 2 p.m. Many Factors Involved violation the student be suspended from the University. ' in the Union. Reaching the decision involved consideration of the student's Still another case in which the student was charged pith drink- I Opening the program will be Dale To Address Press Association Edgar Dale, audio-visual expert Innovation: Microphones On the table were two microphones, one in front of the chairman, the other in front of the defendent. A recent innovation in Judic pro- ceedings, these make it possible to record each interview on tape for future reference. r