SGC POSITIONS See Page 4 YI rL Latest Deadline in the State Daitb; O ,0 D SNOW, COLDER VOL. LXV, No.86 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1955 EIGHT PAGES Atom Lead Assumption Called Folly Gavin Says 'No Weapons Patent' WASHINGTON WP)-Maj. Gen. James Gavin saii yesterday Amer- icans should not "assume we have a patent" on new weapons, that it would be "complete folly" to think the Russians are lagging. Gen. Gavin, Army chief of op- erations, agreed at a news confer- ence with the Moscow statement of Marshal Ivan Konev that the So- viets have "all kinds of weapons." The American general did not comment on Konev's further state- ment that the Russian weapons are ready for "the complete de- feat" of imperialists, meaning the United States, One Likely As Other Gen. Gavin said the American Army is basing its training plans ' on the possibility of an atomic war ,or a nonatomic war. He said one is as likely as the other. He indicated that the era when hy- drogen weapons might appear on the battlefield might begin within five or fifteen years. Meanwhile, some American atomic experts speculated that Russia may have beaten America to a short-cut technique for set- ting off hydrogen bombs, but said any resulting lag has now been overcome. Experts gave that evaluation to the boasts of Soviet Foreign Min- ter Molotov that Russian H- bomb successes could make Amer- ican efforts appear backward. Save Time, Material Perhaps as far back as 1953, some authorities said, the Rus- sians may have found a way to save huge amounts of time and material in w.at is required to trigger an H-bomb. They may have hit upon a pro- cess involving heat - producing compression which would require comparatively little of the fission- able materials used in atomic bombs. American scientists in time worked out the problem. Even if the Russians did get the jump In this phase, some in the U.S. atomic field cvy they are con- fident that America has again pulled out ahead in the race. Meanwhile, the race goes on, and the Russians are expected to con- tinue to bear dowr heavily on nu- clear weapons, airpower and air defenses. There has been no evi- dence available here from this week's Russian command shakeup indicating any change in the Reds' nuclear weapon program. .Joseph N. Welch k To Speak Tonight Problems of trial evidence will be considered today by d'n expect- ed 600 lawyers at the sixth annual Institute on Advocacy sponsored by the University Law School. Joseph N. Welch, special coun- sel for the Army during the recent McCarthy hearings, -vill speak at 8 p.m. today, discussing "Advocacy Before Senate Committees"~ in Rackham Amphitheater. Leading attorneys will speak on their particular fields for a con- ference of lawyers from Michigan and nearby states. Today's speeches start at 2 p.m. with "Problems of Proof," given '' by Leo W. Hoffman of the Alle- gan bar; "The Use of Parole Evi- dence" by Prof. W. Burnett Harvey of the Law School at 3 p.m. and "Proof and Argument of Pain and r Suffering" by Paul W. Lashly of the St. Louis, Mo., bar at 4 p.m. Salk Experiments Results Demanded A group of-local health directors in Michigan has demanded that results of Salk polio vaccine exper- iment be made public immediately. Dr. Thomas Francis, head of the Polio Vaccine Evaluation Center has indicated results of the evalu- ation will not be released until Apr. 1. Health directors expressed the fear that it would be very diffi- cult to conduct a vaccination pro- gram if it had to be started after Apr. 1, as some schools close in May as well as early June. They voiced their demand at the State health commissioner's annual conference for local health Worker 'Editor j World News FL 10 Sees Peace Hope, Pittman Expresses Optimism In Address Delivered Here By MARY ANN THOMAS "Recent changes in the administration of Russia improve chances of world peace," John Pittman, Foreign Editor of the Daily Worker, said at a private meeting of about 20 University students yesterday. Commenting on the stability of international peace, Pittman cited the South East Asia Treaty Organization, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, German rearmament and the Eisenhower-Chiang mili- tary alliance as actions sharpening the possibility of war. But all these arrangements c End T achen Withdrawal Seen Soon TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)-Soldiers and guerrillas began landing on Formosa yesterday from the great Tachen withdrawal, which n'iay, be finished by late today or tomor- row. Most of the military personnel came from Pishan, 32 miles south- west of the Tachens, and the two Yu Shan islands, 35 miles north- east of the Tachens, Weather Hindrance Rain squalls swept the Tachens, 200 miles north of Formosa, where the big operation was moving more slowly" because tons of military equipment must go out with the garrison. The Tachens still shook to ex- plosions as the Nationalists blew up tunnels and gun positions in the scorched earth strategy, said Associated Press correspondent Jim Becker in a dispatch from the islands. Finish Tomorrow Rear Adm. Lorenzo S. Sabin Jr., commanding the actual withdraw- al, told Becker the Communists had given "no indication they will interfere and frankly I do not see why they should." Sabin estimated the operation could be wound up by tomorrow, weather permitting. Some Navy officers thought the work could be finished sooner. More than 40,000 civilians and soldiers are being removed from the Tachens and surrounding is- lands. ARCHITECTURE: Smith Speaks On Dwellings The architecture of Morocco is often likened to a Lion, Algeria's to a man and Tunisia's to a woman, architect, - author and photographer G. E. Kidder Smith began, lecturing yesterday after- noon in the Architecture Audi- torium. Accompanying his talk on North African Architecture with rich color slides and maps, Smith, a Princeton graduate, described his travels from Morocco, east through Algeria to Tunisia. Religiously inspired buildings, white mosques displaying grace- ful arches and domes, intricately decorated minaret towers and ruined Roman temples were dis- cussed by the architect. Mud and rock houses, sometimes resembling the Indian pueblos of southwestern United States, sheer mud city walls and houses hol-1 lowed in the ground are more com- mon structures of the area. BIG TEN MISS: /a Old Law Fo Beauty Qu an still be negotiated, the quiet- spoken journalist added. "They are not at the level of causing a war." Quotes Khruschev Statement Presenting the Communist pap- er's interpretation of the recent upheavals in Russia, Pittman quoted the statement of Com- munist Party secretary Nikita S. Khrushchev to William Randolph Hearst, Jr. in which he said the new emphasis on heavy industry is due to economic factors. Pittman supported Georgi Mal- enkov's confession of inability in the economic field and discounted any inference of Russian empha- sis on the military. When Malenkov resigned, he explained, the Supreme Soviet "looked around for a replace- ment" and found it in an eco- nomic expert "who happened to be a military man." Zhukov's Appointment 'Logical' "The appointment of Red Army Marshall Georgi Zhukov to de- fense minister was a logical step since he had been a first deputy of defense," the Daily Worker edi- tor continued. In connection with V. F. Molo- tov's report'edly ."get tough" speech, Pittman commented that the only new thing in the foreign ministers talk was the statement that the United States shouldn't think themselves ahead in thermo- nuclear production. Replying to Pres. Dwight D. Eisenhower's and Sen. Alexander Wiley's (R-Wis.) interpretation of the shakeup as a sign of Soviet weakness, Pittman said that this idea "has been a general inter- pretation of such changes for years." WOlfsot NEW YORK, Feb. 10 OP)--j Louis E. Wolfson, young Florida financier, disclosed today plans for a coast-to-coast tour and other strategy in his fight for control of Montgomery Ward & Co. Wolfson told newsmen he ex- pects to announce his slate for the nine places on the board of directors around March 15. His slate may include a wom- an, Wolfson said when a news- man asked him whether he would emulate board chairman Robert R. Young of the New York Central who won his proxy fight for control of, that railroad last spring with a woman candidate on his list. nounaUp By The Associated Press Reuther Criticizes . . WASHINGTON - President Dwight D. Eisenhower's econom- ic planning was sharply criticized yesterday by CIO President Wal- ter Reuther. . He said the administration is "looking through a rear-view mir- ror" when it should be looking forward to the days of automatic factories and offices. "I firmly believe that the ad- ministration is selling the Ameri- can people short," Reuther said, "that its petty, half-hearted eco- nomic programs are based on an hypnotic preoccupation with sta- tistical indexes of the long-run past, rather than with the tre- mendous strides toward economic abundance that present American technology and ingenuity are cur- rently making possible." * * * - Nixon Protection . . . MEXICO CITY - Mexican au- thorities were reported yesterday to have arrested 14 or more Puer- to Rican Nationalists in a move to protect United States Vice Presi- dent and Mrs. Richard Nixon on their visit to Mexico. Yesterday the Nixons mingled freely with Mexican crowds. Police officials declined to con- firm the reported arrests. Howev- er, Puerto Rican sources hee told reporters several men and at least one woman were being held. Market Rise .. . WASHINGTON - The stock market's continuing rise brought new expressions of concern in Congress today, and a suggestion that margin trading be ended. At a meeting of the house com- merce committee, Rep. Oren Har- ris (D-Ark) said stocks were "go- ing out of sight" and that he fear- ed a "boom and bust." Rep. John B. Bennett (R-Mich) declared he thought margin re- quirements "should be raised to 100 per cent." * * * Cohn Implication . . NEW YORK - Harvey Matu- sow said in Federal Court yester- day that Roy M. Cohn worked with him in preparing false testi- mony Matusow says he gave for the government in a trial of 12 secondary Communists. Matusow testified at a hearing on a motion by the convicted Communist for a new trial. * * * Road Compromise -. . LANSING - Some House Re- publicans today backed away from their party's road program in favor of a compromise with Gov. G. Mennen Williams. Republicans interrupted the aft- ernoon session of the house to caucus in their third attempt in two days to untangle the highway problem. - "We are still making progress but will have to meet again net week," said speaker Wade Van Valkenburg (R-Kalamazoo). , . Van Valkenburg said Republi- can interest in the governor's highway program is "waning." I OFFIC ERGER, (CLT -Daily-John Hirtzei WINTER OF DISCONTENT-Students who left their houses prepared for yesterday morning's deceptively balmy weather were irritated by the sudden blizzard late last night, blanketing Ann Arbor and all of southern Michigan with more than three inches of snow. The storm ended late yesterday, with snow flurries and colder temperatures predicted for today. 1 1 Ls SGC Steering Committee Adopts SL Resolutions By DAVE BAAD Student Government Council's steering committee adopted three recommendations yesterday concerned with student government dur- ing the interim period while SGC is being organized. The committee passed Student Affairs Committee's recommen- dation that four SAC sub-committees continue to function through the transition period until SGC is able to appoint new members from its own Council or dispose of the group's services. The recommendation, made by SAC at its meeting Tuesday, in- cluded the constitutions committee, the calendaring' committee, the University committee on housing and the student housing study com- mittee. Also yesterday the steering committee adopted Student Legisla- Sharp Increase .in State Employment Observed By PETE ECKSTEIN A "sharp upswing" marked Michigan employment during the last three months of 1954. According to the state Employment Security Commission, the im- provement was partly due to a seasonal increase in automobile pro- duction. "Labor market conditions in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area have improved considerably" as well as those in other parts of the state. The upswing followed a year of adjustment for Michigan manu- facturing industries. Declining de- fense activity, inventory liquida- rbi s L ocal tion and less consumer buying were responsible, the commission said. t Unemployment in the state av-j .onIUts eraged 211,000 monthly in 1954 as against 80,000 the year before. The lowest' unemployment figures of saying "a queen contest would the year were reported for Decem- highlight any event. Michigan ber, a total of 149,000 persons. needn't take a back seat to any Long-ruin trends in Michigan school." employment are reported in a Another queen-contest advo- booklet published by the federal cate is Duncan MacDonald, '55. government. According to the "It would be kind of nice to have booklet, employment increased a homecoming queen," the former from 1,821,000 men and women in University quarterback comment- 1940 to 2,391,000 in 1950. ed, "it would add a lot to the col- Michigan ranks fifth in the na- or and festivities of the big week- tion in manufacturing employ- end " ment, generally because of the au- "Not Worth Result" tomobile industry. ture proposals to have SGC take o SGC Posts Now Sought By Fourteen Only one Student Government Council petition was picked* up yesterday from 1020 Administra- tion Bldg. The petition, being circulated by Paula Strong, '56, brings the total of prospective SGC candidates to 14, a figure termed yesterday b5 Ruth Callahan, SGC's Adminis- trative Secretary "rather disap- pointing." Other petitions taken out since! Monday include two for literary college senior class officers, four for Board in Control of Student Publications. seven J-Hap, five Union Vice-President and none for either engineering school senior! class officers or Board in Con- trol of Intercollegiate Athletics. SGC petitions so far have been issued to Miss Strong, Donna Net- zer, '57, Bill Adams, '57, Joel Tau- ber, '57, Bob Leacock, '57, Janet Neary, '58, Larry Levine, '56, Hank Berliner, '56, Larry Harris, '56, Bill Hanks, '56BAd, Jesse Meyers, '57, Lois Zertecka, '57, Bruce Boss, '57 and JoAnn Karch, '57. over Cinema Guild temporarily and to continue present SL representa- tion on- 11 University committees during the interim period. Recommended by SL at its meeting Wednesday, the Cinema Guild resolution calls for passing Cinema Guild to SGC urntil the new student government might wish to dispose of it in some other manner. Eleven committees which will continue to have SL representation include the Union Board, Loan Committee, Fresh Air Camp Com- mittee, Regional Executive Com- mittee of National Student Asso- ciation; President's Conference, Treasur- er of Central Pep Rally Commit- tee, Lecture Committee, University Calendaring Committee, Library Steering Committee and Literary College Administrative Board. At the same time the steering committee voted to maintain the NSA Travel Director and the SL Executive Wing Coordinator. The steering committee's next meeting will be at 3 p.m. Thursday in the Union. Assassination Plot PANAMA (A') - Prosecution of ex-President Jose Ramon Guizado on charges of plotting the assas- sination of President Jose Anto- nio Remon was recommended yes- terday by a special inquiry com- mission. 'Very Tasty' CHICAGO (/P)-The collec- tor of customs yesterday re- ceived nearly a ton of fried grasshoppers consigned to a Chicago food distributor. "I . guess people eat them," said collector Frank Peska as he figured a duty of $315.20 on the shipment.. Seniors Say' Dormitory Facilities OK During yesterday's Inter-House Council meeting in the East Quad- rangle President Stan Levy, '55. 'reported that a survey made of seniors living in the men's resi- dence halls showed the students preferred the physical facilities presently in use. Of the 150 replies to about 175 questionnaires mailed out, no sen- iors gave preference to triple rooms over singles and doubles. Double-rooms were the most pop- ular form of arrangement,. Levy said. At next Thursday's special IHC meeting in South Quadrangle the problem of . what to do with re- gard to the occupancy of Chicago' House next year will be discussed the IHC decided. Male students are scheduled to reoccupy the house with girls now there scheduled to be moved to the Couzens Hall addition. How- ever, there is a possibility that the addition may not be ready for oc- cupancy at the beginning of next semester.' During the session .yesterday, Bill Butzloff, '58, was elected re- cording secretary. Levy said that the Operation Inquiry report will be released about March 1. Annual elections for president and administrative and executive vice-presidents will be held April 14. PACT- 'Monopoly' Accusations Disapproved Meany Claims - 'Only 25 Percent' By The Associated Press MIAMI BEACH, Fla. -- AFL un- ion leaders yesterday unnimous- ly approved the AFL-CIO merger agreement and the pact appeared well on its way to. being put into effect. Endorsement by the AFL Ex- ecutive Council was only one in a series of necessary ratifying ac- tions, but AFL President George Meany said he was coifident they will be accomplished. Told that some business leaders have expressed fear that welding the AFL and CIO into a single 15- million - member organization would tend to create a labor mon- opoly, Meany expressed disagree- ment. Only Part Organized "We represent only a minority of workers in the country," Meany said. "There are more than 60 mil- lion workers and we've organized less than 25 per cent of them." Meany said millions of workers probably never could be organized because their work doesn't lend itself to uniohism. Meany and CIO President Wal- ter Reuther, along with other top AFL and C O officials, signed the detailed agreeinent to merge their big organizations here Wednesday White Collar Workers Meany cited the ."great mass of White-collar workers who need to better their conditions" as one field for concentration of the or- ganizing drive. In its last session the Executive Council called for at least a 10 percent wage increase for postal and other Federal employes, whom they termed "stepchildren of our American economy." Haber Says 'Bigness' Will .Add Respect By MURRY FRYMER Desire for "bigness and the respect it draws was given as one of the reasons for the CIO-AFT . merger yesterday by Prof. William Haber of the economics depart- ment. "The new federation," said Prof. Haber, "puts labor in a more Im- portant position psychologically and politically." Actuall:-, he add- ed, labor is in the same position as before the merger but "we respect and fear bigness." The labor expert said that the new respect would be a greater weight in the drivedfor more nem- bers Good And Bad Effects . "However," he. said, "size will also tend to make them more sus- pect." Prof. Haber pointed to what he thought would be the good and bad effects of the merger. "As far as it (the merger) re- duces Jurisdictional controversies," Prof. Haber said, "that is good for the workers and the country. That it .will reduce inter-union conflicts is also good. As far as the merger leads to great power, it is dan- gerous for the country." Prof. Haber said, however, that he did not expect the merger to lead to such power..The American tradition is conservative, he said, and that, he expected, would lead to moderation. Little Monopoly Basis The University economist found little basis in the charge leveled yesterday by president of the Na- tional Association of Manufactur- ers, Henry G. Riter III, that the new federation constituted a "dan- By CAROL PRINS Nobody from Ann Arbor com- peted in last week's contest for "Miss Big Ten," held at Michigan State College. Candidates from all other Big Ten universities except Wiscon- sin were on hand for the competi- tion, with a University of Minne- sota coed winning the title. Absence of a University contes- tant was not, as Dean of Women Deborah Bacon put it, "because we don't have nretty girls on cam- PROGRESS NOTED: Phoenix Project Launches 100th Study l a { E By JANE HOWARD Dedicated to peacetime use of atomic energy, the Michigan Me-! morial-Phoenix Project last week observed a milestone in its four- year history: initiation of its hun- dredth project. Most recent of the projects will pus' nuclear reactor building. Bid- ding is now in progress for the unit, he, said, with its contract to be granted early next month. Reactor goundbreaking ceremo- nies are scheduled for later this year. A three-story windowless structure, the unit will adjoin the north end of the research building. materials - increasing ductility without changing stress and strain characteristics. Dedication Plans Begin As other Phoenix Project work has progressed recently, heat .fa- cilities and elevators have been installed into the North Campus Phoenix Building, which is slated