WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNES~)AY, NOVEMBER 2~, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FOR THE LAYMAN: Plant Gives Legal Advice If involved in an auto accident, the best course to follow is to get all the names and addresses but not to make any committment. Prof. Marcus L. Plant, of the Law School, says that after an accident, the persons involved are ;- in no condition to accurately de- termine fault, and, should not ad- wit anything. "Such an admission," Prof. Plant added, "may be used against you incourt; there may be a clause in your insurance policy which voids that insurance if you admit liability; or the other party may; have been guilty of contributory negligence." Should the accident be serious to the extent that someone is in- jured or killed, or if the car is damaged so badly that it cannot be moved, the police must be noti- fied immediately. Information that should be ob- tained from the parties to an acci- dent includes names _and addresses, 'U' English Professors To Participate in Council. Six University English professors s are giving up their Thanksgiving holidays to participate in the forty-fifth annual meeting of the National Council of Teachers of English. The meeting of professors from almost every college in the country and some from foreign countries will be held in Hotels Commodore' and Roosevelt in New York City, Nov. 24 to Nov. 26. "Planning a Research Project Concerning Our Professional Po- tential" is one topic on the agenda. Prof. Warner G. Rice, chairman of the Michigan English depart- ment and chairman of the Com- mittee on Education of College English Teachers will preside. This discussion is sponsored by the Committee on College English for Non-Major Students and the Conference on College Composi- tion and Communication. G. Kerry Smith, executive sec- retary of the Association for High- er Education will speak on "The Meaning of Professional Stature." From Ball State Teachers Col- lege, CCCC member William A. Sutton will speak on "The Atti- tudes of Indiana Teachers." The last speech will be on "What Most Teachers Want" by CCENS chairman Edward Foster of the Georgia Institute of Technology. Later, the teactlers will break up into small discussion groups. Prof. John Weimar from Michi- gan will take part in, the Friday Pushes Atomic Energy Power BONN, Germany (A)-The Eco- nongcs Ministry reports West Ger- many expects to produce electric power from atomic energy by 1970. Forbidden atomic research dur- ing the 10-year Allied occupation, the Germans are pushing studies now in an effort to catch up with other nations. luncheons along with CCCC chair- man Jerome W. Archer from Mar-. quette University. At that time, the speaker will be J. Donald Adams, a "New York Times" book reviewer. He will talk on "College and the Writer." Prof. Charles C. Fries, chair- man of the Michigan English Lan- guage Institute is a member of a panel discussion on "Teaching of English as a Secondary Language." Speaker and . discussion leader for the topic, "Literary Interpre- tation through Behavioral Sci- ences" is University Prof. Norman Nelson. Another University instructor, Fred Wolcott, will take part in a discussion on "Recent Research in Language Arts." Students Find Room Buried Under Paper< The occupants of South Quad's room 3116 got a bit of a surprise Sunday evening when they return- ed from the movies. During the four hours they were gone, a number of unidentified students completely filled their 12'x20'x8' room with wadded up newspapers and magazines. Using laundry carts from the Quad maintenance department and large waste bins, it took Larry Feh- renbaker and Tullio Coccia, two hours to, rid their room of the paper inundation. Bob Seidemann, next door neighbor, said he heard talking and rustling of papers through the. walls about 8 p.m. From the sounds, he estimated it took about 45 minutes to fill the room. William Helms, Reeves House Resident Advisor, said the prank usually occurs somewhere in the Quad at least once a year. names of insurance companies, li- cense number of the car andinf or- mation about any witnesses. In case of accident, your own insurance company should be noti- fied immediately. Don't, under any circumstances, sign any paper without first read- ing and understanding it thorough- ly, Prof. Plant continued. Real estate transactions, he said, are one of the main sources of danger. They involve hidden com- plications and should be handled only through a lawyer. "You should," he said, "be es- pecially careful about signing any note or promise to pay, particularly if a large sum is involved. "A good rule to follow," he con- tinued, "is If you don't under- stand it thoroughly, don't sign it- see a lawyer.' " It is also foolhardy, Prof. Plant said, for a layman to draft his own legal papers, especially in the case of wills. . "Some of those stories of wills written on egg shells," he com- mented, "or barn doors holding up in court may be true, but such cases invariably involve a long, expensive court struggle." Officials Laud role. Traffic Plan LNSIfG (MP-Judges, prosecu- tors, city attorneys and mayors yesterday commended the police and sheriff's 10-point "action pro- gram" to reduce Michigan traf- fic .fatalities. However; none of the groups adopted as sweeping promises of strict action against erring motor- ists as did Monday's conference of law enforcement chiefs. Justice of the Peace Kenneth Sanborn of Macomb County, pres- ident of the Justice of the Peace Association, said the judicial groupscouldnot properly endorse the 10-point program because their members must maintain an impar- tial position fitting their judicial role. To Submit Plan The Union expects to submit a plan for the operation of the Stu- dent Book Exchange to Student Government Council Dec.. 1. According to Bob Blossey '56, Executive Secretary of the Union, "There are still a few problems we have to work out before we will be ready to release the plan." SBX was delegated to the Un- ion by SGC several weeks ago for the Union to operate as a non- profit student service. 1275::.....:: ElCounmtries Receiving Assistance from Russia:: 179 :::::::: "::::::::::::::":" : ::; ::::.:::.:::: ::<. Countries Offered Assistance by Russia x. ...: ::........American.. ;Econom::::::After... ... ...... . .. ................. ........ ........ ;.........................i..ss~ A ssistan ce...x 194i .. I2S..6 ..-55 i2IL:2::"S:a ' :Kx:;:i:::.,:.i.......r..... .. ..:e ::: .. ... . ..... .. . ... .. : . .., :":::c.: : ; . . .; . .. . ........ .. .,, , .. ... ... ..s £ . .}. , .t r , z i ., ... r . ,B ef... .. .... r e.£ . .. . ....1 1 8 0;.. ... : .... ..... M:, .... ....................... ... .. ....... .,...,,..z 000.a.fH: , Fiscal Ye £a Ko...,.re ,.ta..,,...,.....E'.._ ..AF......HANISTAN..""t .::: ........ £: 4 ji: i4E3£ .....................359.....RAN A er133Ecoomc Ate ...............I...A N Assistance Beor 12 ...::::: : ::::::::::::'::::::::::::::::::::::":: -:::::::T/O::::::Y::::AY Fiscal Year DISTRIBUTION OF U.S. FOREIGN AID (Total for 1946-55 Fiscal Years: 51 Billion Dollars) w-ELRoPA- EMiltcnary " +a ,,.. o , sIdES . - . 0 o o~~ .5.PACIFIC . EOEKO :aROTHERRS t AEconomic Aidn Economic Aid MIlitary Aid "' ' ' a ' a ' /D ASTAS/A 0 . P4AC/C % fA/V EASTASIA BEFORE KOREA AFTER KOREA Total Aid 26 8Billion Total Aid 25 Billion r .... . ....S '>....... ::::: :e .........................:: ........H...A.. ::1 ............. :. ............. . . .. ..................... ... ...... ....................... ......... :::::::: : 2 1 ::..:: ; :::,: ::::::::.............-...........I. .. .......... ....... .. ..... .. .. ...... .. .. .. ... .. . .. .. ...... .. .. .:. ... .. .. . I I Y MW WY Reds Drive For.Bigger Voice in Near East and Asia By DAVID L. BOWEN Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer Western diplomats are rapidly becoming convinced that the Sov- iet Union is ready to launch a economic influence, the Russian ambassador in Cairo recently told reporters: "We will send economic mis- sions, scientific missions, agricul- powerful drive to become the eco- tural missions, meteorological mis- nomic and military patron of all sions and any other kind of mis- the vast region between the Medi- sion you can imagine that' will terranean Sea and the Pacific Oc- help these countries." ean. As the accompanying map shows, Russia now has direct economic the scene of this new Soviet "eco- assistance programs under way in nomic offensive" has not been a India and Afghanistan. An Af- major recipient of United States ghanistani mission is in Czecho- foreign assistance. In the 10 years slovakia discussing arms ship- since the end of the war, 75 per ments, and Russia has followed up : cent of the $51,336,000,000 the Un-: its arms deal with Egypt with of- ited States has sent overseas has fers of a wide variety of economic gone to Western Europe. The big- and technical assistance to that gest shares of aid to Middle East- nation and her Arab neighbors. ern, Asian and Pacific nations Offers of economic aid also have have gone to those actively par- been made to Burma and Indone- ticipating in Western defense sia. plans -Greece, the Nationalist As an example of the fervor government on Formosa, South Ko- with which the Soviet Union is rea, the Philippines and Japan. pursuing its effort to widen its Figures compiled by the De- I s 3 r partment of Commerce and pub- lished late last month show that the most striking alteration in the foreign assistance picture during the past decade is the new empha- sis on military help. In the five fiscal years before the Korean con- flict started, 95 per cent of the 26 billion dollars sent to foreign nations went to build up shatter- ed economies. Most of this was put to work in Europe, and suc- ceeded in practically eliminating the threat of Communist subver- sion there. In the five fiscal years since the start of the Korean War, 53 per cent of the 25-million-dollar Am- Yrican assistance program was aim- ed at building military strength. In the 1955 fiscal year, 57 per cent of foreign aid was for military pur- poses. Prior to the Korean War, prac- tically no economic aid was fur- nished the Middle Eastern and As- w..; -:: i I$ MISSILE AND CONTROL EQUIPMENT DEPARTMENTS " NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION " DOWNEY, CALIFORNIA GIFT UMBRELLA Cwehnti 4.85 ENGINEERS, SCIENTISTS- PHYSICISTS, MATHEMATICIANS important on-campus interviews soon! North American Missile and Control Departments Representative Will Be Here Nov. 30, Dec. 1. You'll learn first hand about the advantages and opportunities in choosing a career with future at North American. Here engineers and scientists are now discovering new frontiers in four exciting new fields: I 11 N -F .t . ;:%ii::"yttti.+.v: "r: ri:;?:"}:'ti}.:4.; ?:?w:: v?":vi:" Reg. 7.95 to 10.95 Extraordinary savings on couturier-slim umbrellas exquisitely designed with imported handles from france, Italy and England .. . each gifted with beauty and practicality, a lasting reminder throughout the year. Choose from a multitude of patterns and fabrics in costume- complementing colours. ELECTRO- MECHANICAL Missile Guidance Systems Fire and Flight Control Systems Computers, Recorders ROCKET PROPULSION High Thrust Engines Propellants Pumps SUPERSONIC AIRFRAMES Structures Thermal Barriers Vibrations and Flutter NUCLEAR ENGINEERING Research Reactors Medical Reactors Power Generation Reactors :v}}riy:li: is ' I