Honor System: Teaching Values, Not Formulae See Page 4 Y itF :43. xity e~ Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY, RAIN OL RINo. 137 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1957 ' EIGHT PAGES Brandon Accepts Position at NYU Director of Relations at Michigan Transfers to Vice-President Post By PETER ECKSTEIN Director of University Relations Arthur L. Brandon has been ap- pointed vice-presidnt for university relations of New York University, it was announced last week. Brandon, 58 years old, has held his present position since 1951. He had previously been University Relations Counselor and Di- rector of Information Services, posts he had held since he first came to the University in 1946. His position with NYU, which he will assume this summer, will involve him in developing general public relations policies for the School and coordinating its publicity servics. He will also assist NYU -President Carroll V. Newsom in ARTHUR L. BRANDON .. . accepts NYU post New Mayor, Council Split on Proposal Ann Arbor City Council meet- ing last night brought a party line split over Mayor Samuel J. Eld- ersveld's proposal to appoint mem- bers of six special committees. Professor Charles W. Joiner, third ward Republican, recom- inended the six special committees be re-examined and that more time be given for such a task. The split came over Joiner's motion to return the proposal to the working committee. After the 8-3 vote Democrats Pwyer, Denard and Eldrsveld for the motion, Russell T. Burns, fifth ward Rpublican, said that the vote "doesn't reflect" on the mayor's ability to make appointments. The Council also learned that the Attorney General's office in Lansing has approved some tax benefits for the Ann Arbor Tran- sit Company. Among these were 50 cent license plates and a lower gasoline purchase price for the buses. One of the committees in- volved in the dispute was a pro- posed University Relations com- .mittee which would handle Uni- versity-City relations in conjunc- tion with Guy Larcom, City Ad- ministrator, and which would also assume the duties of the Special Revenues Committee. The other committees were the Annexation, Rules, School Board Relations; Human Relations and the Bus Committee. Burns, in his fifth year on the Council, was unanimously re- elected mayor pro-tem by the 'Council. With the exception of the may- or's veto power, the mayor pro- tem has all the power of the may- or in the mayor's absence. In other action, the Council voted to annex 20 acres border- ing the southwest part of the city, ,mposed early-morning parking restrictions on downtown streets and heard a report on the effec- tiveness of the Ann Arbor dog ordinance. Pogo Creator. To Talk Today On 'New Day' Walt Kelly, nationally-known cartoonist and creator of Pogo, speaks at 3 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. - Kelly will discuss "New Prob- lems Needed for a New Day." His the area of general administra- tion. Earns Hatcher's Praise University President Harlan Hatcher sad yesterday NYU would be richer and the University poor- er for Brandon's s w i t c h i n g schools. Hatcher termed him "a close friend and very able assis- tant - the kind of man you like to have around you." A new director of university re- lations should be chosen before Brandon leaves, the President said. He called the chances "strong" that he will be chosen from outside the present Univer- sity administration, but "we have nobody really in mind at the mo- ment." During Brandon's tenure as di- rector several publications were initiated or reactivated - the University Record, a staff house organ, the Letter to Alumni, which goes to all former students whose addresses are known, and the Michigan Report, sent to parents of undergraduates. Many Activities at 'U' He was one of the organizers of the Development Council and is a member of its board of directors. Since 1948 he has served on the executive committee of the Insti- tute of Social Research, and since 1951 as the President's represen- tative to the Board in Control of Student Publications and the Board in Control of Intercollegi- ate Athletics. On accepting his new position Brandon said it was offered to him as a "genuine challenge." NYU, he commented, "is the nation's largest university located in one city. Since that city is fore- most as a public-relations and communications center, I believe it provides an unequalled oppor- tunity in my professional field in the next few years." Expresses Regret4 He expressed regrets at leaving the University and Ann Arbor. In his nearly 12 years here, Brandon said, "it has been a joy to serve with my fellow officers and my colleagues not only in university public-relations, but in other areas." He said "the bringing together of a very capable staff" was pro- bably his "greatest long-range contribution" to the University. Daily Iowan Regains Right To Editorialize The State University of Iowa's Daily Iowan appears to be regain- ing its editorial freedom after los- ing it for five months. Iowan editors last week startled representatives of five midwestern college newspapers meeting in Madison, Wisconsin with the news that several Iowan editorials had been censored by supervisors from the school's journalism depart- ment. The Iowan is published in con- junction with the SUI school of journalism. Most of the censored editorials dealt with allocation of football seats to students. Administration action against the paper's edi- torial freedom began with the cen- sorship of an editorial criticizing the shifting of the student section 400 seats toward the end zone to make way for the state legislature. But last Wednesday the Iowan was permitted to run an editorial explaining the censorship policies and criticizing the University ad- ministration for them. An editor's note with the editorial described its publication as marking a "def- Hdouse Votes Post Office Added Cash WASHINGTON W)-The House approved an extra 41 million dol- lars for the Post Office Department yesterday in a move to get quick restoration of normal mail services. The deficiency bill was passed on a voice vote and sent to the Senate, which may act on it Tuesday. Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield has announced he won't start to restorethe service cutbacks until President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs the legislation and Summerfield is certain he will have enough money to maintain normal operations through June 30, the end of the fiscal year. Post offices throughout the coun- try were closed to the public Sat- urday, and Saturday deliveries suspended. Pickups from street boxes were put on a Sunday basis for the entire weekend. Post office officials estimated about one mil- lion dollars was saved in this way. Monday mail deliveries to met- ropolitan districts were cut to two a day and window service at post offices limited to eight and one- half hours daily. Further curtail- ments are in prospect unless Con- gress provides the additional oper- ating funds., Acting Majority Leader Mike Mansqeld (D-Mont.) said the Sen- ate may take up the measure this afternoon. This will require unanimous consent to suspend the rules, which require a money measure to wait three days before it can be debated on the floor. Mansfield said he doubted there would be any objec- tion to speedy action. Sweden Call Two Experts Foreign Spies STOCKHOLM, Sweden ()-A legal expert of the Swedish Atom- ic Energy Commission and a for- mer navy draftsman were form- ally charged yesterday with es- pionage for "a foreign power" - meaning Soviet Russia. The indictment accused the nu- clear lawyer, Robert F. Damstedt, 29 years old, and draftsman Gosta T. Jakobsson, 35 years old, of con- spiring to ship out blueprints of Swedish submarines. It made no -mention of any transmission of atomic secrets. "They are people with some- what extravagant drinking habits who talked a little bit too much about things they intended to do, but may not have done it," a For- eign Office spokesman said. "These men have confssed to the police that they intended to sell these blueprints to the Rus- sians." The Swedish law on espionage is so broad that mere substantia- tion of Prosecutor Werner Rhyn- inger's contention that Jakobs- son took the blueprints to his home would be conclusive. Damstedt and Jakobsson were arrested April 1, opening another round in a stormy exchanges of spy charges and countercharges between Russia and Sweden since World War II. Three other Swdes were indicted with them for failing to report the blueprint case to Swedish author- ities. The Soviet Union, no match for the big Western powers in surface warships, is concentrating on ex- pansion of its submarine fleet, al- ready by far the world's largest. Sweden is in the forefront of small nations in atomic energy research. rimie Minister, Cablinet VIC HEYLIGER * ,.enters restaurant business ' Resignation Announced 'ByHeyiger, e 1 by DALE CANTOR Vic Heyliger announced early last week that he will leave his post as Michigan hockey coach, July 1, to enter private business, His suddent resignation marks the end of a 13 year reign as Michigan ice mentor - a period of unprecedented growth and suc- cess for collegiate hockey which produced six NCAA championships for the Maize and Blue. Heyliger, a great scorer and a fine skater for the Wolverines from 1935-37, will enter the restaurant business in Colorado Springs, Colo. and plans to con- tinue operating the boys' summer camp in Wyoming which he has been running for the past 12 years. Heyliger had been considering making the change for some time, but his resignation came as a sur- prise to Michigan athletic officials. The 41-yr.-old Heyliger called his decision to leave the coaching fieeld, "the toughest choice I've ever made." He added, "I've been a coach or player all my life, and I don't know of a better place to coach or play than at Michigan. It's been perfect and I'm going to miss it very much. But this is simply an oppor- tunity that I can't afford to pass up." Athletic Director, H. O. "Fritz"- See SURPRISE, page 6 Buber To Talk At Conference Prof. Martin Buber of the He- brew University, Jerusalem, will be the featured speaker at a reli- gious conference tomorrow through Friday at the University. Prof. Buber, one of the world's leading Jewish theologians, is the author of "I and Thou" and other important books on religious thought. He will speak three times during the conference, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Rackham Lecture Hall on "Elements of the Inter- Human," and on Thursday and Friday mornings on "Man in Flight" and "Prophecy and Apo- calypse," respectively.. RISK: Bomb Site Declared By Britain LONDON (M - The British gov- ernment yesterday asserted its right to declare a danger area for H-bomb tests in the mid-Pacific and said any trespassers will be there at their own risk. Minister of Supply Aubrey Jones in a brief statement to the House of Commons, stood by Britain's plans to conduct the test. It was a curtain-raiser to major debate today on the government's plans to streamline conventional defense forces and rely on guided missiles and atomic power as a deterrent to war. The Labor party has proposed a motion of censure against the gov- ernment and is demanding post- ponement of the H-tests until efforts can be made to gain agree- ment for calling them off. Britain has declared the area around Christmas Island in the Pacific a danger area, and is pre- paring to explode her first H-bomb there sometime this spring. The Japan Council Against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs has been pushing plans to send a "peace fleet" to skirt the area, and has announced that 264 per- sons have, volunteered to go on the protest mission. A British man and his wife are among the volunteers and Lord Bertrand Russell, British philoso- pher, and a group of prominent Britons have taken the lead to raise funds to finance the venture. The Russians are waging a propaganda campaign against nu- clear tests even while going ahead with four nuclear explosions with- in the last 12 days. Williams Cites U' Tax Report Suppression LANSING (A') - Gov. G. Men- nen Williams yesteerday charged there has been "an outrageous attempt" to suppress a University of Michigan report on the effects of state taxes on industrial plant location. Williams said he also had been told "on good authority" that efforts were made to persuade the University to recall copies of the report already distributed. "When this failed," he said in a statement, "certain of the busi- nessmen who are named in the re- port as members of the advisory panel for the study repudiated it publicly." The report, prepared by Univer- sity economist Dr. John A. Lar- son, "demolishes a favorite argu- ment that state taxes are adversely affecting business," the governor said. Commenting on it last week, he said he was "gratified" that Lar- son and five other professors who advised him in the study "could find no claim that state taxes are a determining factor in the loca- tion of business in Michigan." Gets -Daily-Charles Curtiss NEW OFFICERS-The three senior posts in the Union Student Offices will be filled by Fred Wilten, left, Don Young, center, and Duane LaMoreaux, right. Young 'To Fill Position As Nvew Union .President by JAMES BOW Don Young, '58, was chosen President of the Union late yesterday. After nearly eight hours of interviewing, the selections committee of the Union Board of Directors announced the three Union senior officers for the coming year. Also selected were Fred Wilten, '58E, Executive Vice-President and Duane LaMoreaux, '58BAd, Administrative Vice-President. The new senior officers will replace Union President Roy Lave, ,57E, Executive Vice-President Fred Trost, '57, and Administrative Vice-President Herb Karzen, '57. Young, who will serve as 53rd Union president, was chairman of the public relations committee on the Union Executive Council. An economics major from East Lansing, Mich., Young also served on the Michigras central committee and is a member of Sphinx, junior men's honorary; Phi Etas Sigma, freshman scholastic honor- ary; Phi Kappa Phi, all-school honorary; and Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity. Former chairman of the uni- versity relations committee of the Union Executive Council, Wilten as executive vice-president will be concerned with the external activ- ities and programs of the Union. Wilten, an industrial engineer- ing major from Bridgeton, N. J., is also a member of Triangles; engineering honorary and Alpha Pi Mu, industrial engineering; honorary. LaMoreaux, whose duties as administrative vice-president will include co-ordinating Union stu-; dent programs, is majoring in in- dustrial management and per- sonnel administration. He is from Ann Arbor and is also a member of Triangles. In discussing Union programs for the coming year, Young said, "We hope to work more closely with student government, the League, and with men's housing groups. We have strong hopes that the+ recently-proposed Union repre- sentative body will provide a means of drawing the male stu- dents and the Union closer to- gether," Young added. Dean of Men Walter B. Rea is chairman of the seven-man Union Board selections' committee which chose the Union senior officers. Pro -Western Senate Ups E, H Bond Interest Rate WASHINGTON (M)--After only ten minutes debate, the Senate yesterday passed by voice vote a bill to increase the interest ceil- ing on government savings bond to three and one-quarter per cent from three per cent. The measure, aimed at spurring lagging =sales of the bonds, now goes back to the House which passed it earlier with a three and one-half per cent ceiling. President Dwight D. Eisenhower originally asked Congress to hike the limit to four and one-quarter per cent on the series E and H bonds, to permit the same return as other government obligations. The Senate acted after a brief explanation of the bill by Sen. Harry F. Byrd (D-Va), chairman of the Finance Committee, and cut the figure to three and one- quarter per cent. The Treasury had said it plans to apply the three and one-quar- ter per cent rate on all series E and H bonds sold after Feb. 1, 1957. Under the Treasury's plans the E bonds will reach maturity, and maximum value, in 8 years and 11 months instead of 9 years and 8 months. The issue price and the face value will remain the same but the four-for-three payoff in the shorter period will convert to three and one-quarter per cent. Purchasers, to get the full three and one-quarter per cent, must hold the bonds to maturity. The Treasury hasn't decided what interest will be paid on E bonds after maturity. At present they draw a straight 3 per cent. Byrd was the only one to speak on the bill, although several other Democratic senators had planned to make speeches. J-Hop Recount Arab Legion Aids Hussein Win Control King Appoints Khalidi To Head Government Of Mid-East Nation AMMAN, Jordan (m -- Young King Hussein, backed by tough Bedouin fighters of the Arab Le- gion, won yesterday in his struggle to give Jordan a moderate govern- ment purged of Communists and extremists. Dr. Hussein Fahkri Khalidi, 61- year-old Palestinian refugee who has shown leanings toward the West, was named prime minister in a seven-man Cabinet. His appointment ended a six- day crisis set off by Hussein's ous- ter of Prime Minister Suleiman Nabulsi, a moderate Leftist wh headed the powerful National So- cialist party. Nabulsi is included in the new Cabinet as a concession to the party, which controls 13 seats in the 40-man Parliament. But no other National Socialist made the grade. Hussein Gains Stature Hussein emerged from the crisis wiih greater stature than ever, The 21-year-old King was ruling through virtual martial law. His trump card was the loyal support of the Bedouin warriors who make up the bulk of the British-trained Arab Legion. They command strategic posi- tions atop the seven hills upon which Amman is built, and occupy posts in the business district. They camp in strength on Amman's out- skirts. When they entered the city Monday they blackened their faces with burnt cork-an Arab sign that they meant business and were prepared to kill. Squelch Uprising Attempt These troops have already put down one attempt at an uprising by "subversive" elements in the army, This occurred Saturday night at the army base at Zarqa, 20 miles north of Amman. There was a brief but bloody skirmish. Reports received in Damascus said three officers were killed and 10 persons wounded. Hussein rushed to Zarqa and made a dramatic appearance be- fore the troops. Officers and men threw their handkerchiefs to the ground in the old Arab sign of loyalty and obedience to their commander. Although the crisis appeared to be at an end, the government still imposed censorship on outgoing news dispatches. Campus Briefs Michigan chapter of the Ameri- can Association of University Pro- fessors is sponsoring a panel dis- cussion meeting 8:30 p.m. today in the west conference room of the Rackham Building: Prof. E. Lowell Kelly of the psychology department, Univer- sity Vice-President Marvin Nie- huss and University Regent, Eu- gene Power will discuss "Commu- nications in an Expanding Uni- versity." * * * Speaking on "The Psychologcal. Problems and Tools of Integra- tion," Prof. Richard Cutler of the psychology department will ad- dress the Culture Club at its meet- ing today. The speech will be at 8 p.m. in the third floor conference room of the Union. * * * "Conscience Against Society- The Right to Dissent" will be dis- cussed by two University profes- sors at 7:30 p.m. today in the Hen- derson Room of the Michigan 'League. RELIGIOUS CONFLICT: Drawing for Barbour Occurs Despite Protest By RICHARD TAUB Drawing for housing in Betsy Barbour took place as usual last night despite protests of several Jewish women before vacation that it conflicted with observance of the Passover holiday, which began last night. Proxy drawing was not permitted. Approximately 130 women waited eagerly and nervously at the League as names were taken from a bucket. About 40 percent of the 150 applicants for 77 spaces were Jewish, According to Herman Jacobs, director of Hillel foundation, several girls left the Passover service early to attend the drawing. - #