SOUTH AFRICA See Page 2 WE Latest Deadline in the State Da3 ti4 mt, HOT, HUMID VOL. LXII, No. 176 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JUNE 29, 1952 FOUR PAGES Regents Give Budget Final Acceptance Total Amounts To $22,225,150 President Harlan H. Hatcher announced yesterday that the gen- eral operations of the University will be carried on for the 1952-53 year under a budget amounting to $22,225,150. Regents' approval of the Uni- versity's' General Funds Budget became final yesterday. Tentative approval had been given at the June 13 meeting but Regents' by- laws require a waiting period of two weeks before the budget re- ceives final approval. THE BUDGET, which covers the instructional, research, admin- istrative and plant operation and maintenance costs, is $2,663,650 higher than the one adopted for the 1951-52 year. Despite this increase, the new budget must be regarded as an economy one," Vice-President Marvin L. Niehuss, chairman of the budget committee, said. Ma- jor factor in the larger budget is an item of $1,400,000 for salary adjustments for the faculty and staff, made necessary by in- creased living costs. This in- cludes an increase across the . board of six percent, effective last January 1, and selected mer- it increases effective for the next college year. Also included is an item of $162,- 000 added to the Medical School to provide instruction for an en- larged enrollment. Last fall the University admitted the largest first year medical class in the country, and by carrying that group into the second year and again admitting 200 first year students the University will be- come the largest Medical School in the country. To provide the necessary ibco e to balance the budget, the Univer- sity will receive an annual appro- priation of $16,936,650 voted by the State Legislature and antici- pates additional income from stu- dent fees a n d miscellaneous sorces of $5,288,500. THE STATE appropriation is $2,091,650 higher than the one re- ceived last year. Fee income, bas- ed on an estimated 16,000 students enrolled next fall, is expected to be $562,750 more than for 1951- 52 because of an increase in sem- ester fees which goes into effect in September. In announcing the budget, President Hatcher said, "The Uni- versity of Michigan received uin- derstanding consideration by the Legislature representing the peo- ple of Michigan. By rigid internal economics the University has con- centrated its resources on the things that count most, and will be able to serve the state as one T of the ranking institutions in the nation." Supplementing the q e n e r a1 Funds Budget are several self-sup- porting educational service enter- prises, including the residence halls, Michigan Union and Lea- gue, Intercollegiate Athletics, and Student Publications. The Regents also approved a budget of $7,351,802 for University Hospital, which is operated on a self-sustaining basis and does not receive any appropriation from the State Legislature. The new budget is $351,513 higher than the 1951-52 budget. Late Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn 4, Boston 2 Philadelphia 7, New York 2 AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 5, St. Louis 2 English Panel To Be Held The second meeting of the Con- ference for Teachers of English, dealing with basic skills in com- munication for pupils not going on to college, will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Bldg. Of One Mind -Daily-Jack Bergstrom RESOLVED-These summer school coeds do not intend to let the abundance of males deter them from their studies. t s Summer Session Ratio Fails To Excite Coeds By MIKE WOLFF Female freshman attendance here this summer has jumped 75 per cent over last summer's enrollment. Although only four women got their first glimpse of University life last year, the Class of 1956 boasts seven coeds. This does not in- clude an eighth who dropped her only course Friday because she "was doing too many other things." * * * * BEING ON THE SHORT end of the much discussed male-female ratio does'not seem to have had much effect on these independent students however. Two women had gone home for the weekend-obviously to the advantages of their position. Janette Nylen a literary college student felt she had been here too short a time to comment on sum- mer social life prospects. She did admit, however, that the ratio might "possibly" detract from more scholarly persuits. She hastened to add that she hadn't made her choice of schools on the basis of a ratio, however. SUZANNE McCotter, also enroll- ed in the literary college, admitted' that "it looks like a very good sum- mer" when informed that she was considerably outnumbered by the opposite sex. Both coeds emphasized that they planned to get some studying done in spite of the men.. One studious woman said she heard that "during the regular school year the ratio is a little under 3-1 and that of the three, one is married, one studies all the time and the third doesn't date girls." She wouldn't divulge her name -"in case I have been misinform- ed," she explained. Police Free ROK_ Council PUSAN, Sunday, June 29-(A3)- The Korean National Assembly, held captive by an angry mob for more than five hours, finally was released late yesterday 'by police under the personal direction of home minister Lee Bum Suk. More than 80 assembly members including one woman were held in the assembly hall by about 500 rep- resentatives of town and city councils and provincial assemblies. Police stood by and watched the blockade of the Korean Con- gress without intervening from 1:30 p.m. until Home Minister Lee, one of President Syngman Rhee's closest advisers, took charge personally. Earlier ap- peals for police aid from high government authorities had been ignored. It was generally agreed that the five hour siege of the Korean As- sembly and the forced detention of 80 legislators, all of them pro- Rhee or middle-of-the roaders, had erased almost completely any hopes for a compromise settle- ment of the political crisis. House Votes Cut Foreign Aid Measure Omnibus Bill Goes to Senate WASHINGTON -- (P) - The House passed and sent to the Sen- W;te yesterday a $10,122,840,780 omnibus appropriations bill. It was $3,731,205,250 below Pres- ident Truman's requested figure. ADMINISTRATION foes, aided by Democratic absenteeism, knock- ed out a total of $308,993,000 in two days of spirited debate. Major cut was $243,993,000 from foreign aid. Another 65 million was sliced from TVA funds for new atomic power equipment. The House approved funds for a $6,031,947,750 foreign aid pro- gram for next year. It was a total cut of $1,917, 853, 250 from Presi- dent Truman's requested total of $7,949,801,000. The House Appropriations Com- mittee had recommended approval of $6,275,940,750. But Republicans aided by some Democrats, sliced another $243,993,000 from the bill on the floor. THE FOREIGN Aid Program was part of an overall bill which now totals $10,122,840,780-a net reduction of $160,293,000 from the $10,283,133,780 recommended by the Appropriations Committee. The measure is to finance foreign aid, armed forces, atomic energy, and a variety of other programs. The money is supple- mental-in addition to funds al- ready voted for many of these agencies. The principal foreign aid re- ductions rammed through yester- day were in the funds for military aid to Europe, the Near East and Africa, and technical assistance to the Far East. Efforts to cut aid to Asia, the Pacific and Latin America were defeated. The House voted $1,200,000,000 -a cut of 568 millions-for Amer- ican air bases at home and over the world, upholding Committee recommendations on this. Other main points in the bill as finally passed: Atomic energy expansion-the House voted $1,485,000,000 to be- gin a six year program designed to double atomic capacity. The President had requested $3,191,- 000,000. The House also voted a provisio limiting the funds to be- ginning projects which the admin- istration can fully finance now. Opponents of this provision said it would set back development of the H-bomb by perhaps two years. Military construction - the House approved $2,187,899,840 of supplementary funds after cutting $805,968,600 from requests by all three services. A total cut of 568 million dollars was made in money to finance Air Force construction, including secret bases from Japan to England. World News Roundup By The Associated Press LONDON - The three Western Foreign Ministers yesterday con-- clded their round of conferences which left the question of a Four Power Conference on all-German elections in the laps of the Rus- sians. Western diplomats were divided on whether Russia would accept their strictly limited offer to talk about free elections. None of the Western Big Three believed the conference, if held, would bring any result. BERLIN --1U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson arrived in Berlin yesterday fot a well-timed 24-hour morale-boosting visit to this isolated city in the Russian zone. * * * SEOUL, Sunday, June 29-Chi- nese Reds hurled two assaults at a pair of hills on the Western Korean front during a torrential rain last night but booming Allied artillery turned them back. * ' * PITTSBURGH-The CIO Unit- ed Steelworkers said yesterday it has signed a total of 33 new con- +rn o+-. anhnclxri no the wna ff 1A_- n PROTEST MEETING-Womert fall to the ground as baton-wielding police charge a protest meet- ing in front of the city hall in Johannesburg, South Africa. The melee ensued after police arrested E. S. Sachs, veteran labor organizer, who was addressing a meeting called to demonstrate against a IMinistry of Justice order to Sachs to quit his post as general secretary of the garment workers union. House OfW Law Institute Told of Hioh Safety Rate in Atomic Field The safety record achieved in the atomic energy field is twice as good as the rest of the nation's industry, John C. Bugher, director of the Division of Biology and Medicine of the Atomic Energy Com- mission told the Law School Summer Institute yesterday. In both the wartime operation of the Manhattan District starting in 1942 and the subsequent activities of the AEC since 1946 there have been only two deaths and less than ten serious injuries. Bugher said. S* * * "THE SURPRISING safety record" included both "the everyday type of industrial accident as well as those resulting from atomic re- action," he continued. Bugher at- -_ tributed the record to the safety standards established in the in- dustry and the fact that the AEC is empowered to enforce the stan- dards. Also addressing the meeting, Rep. Henry M. Jackson (D- Wash.) predicted that a power- producing atomic reactor cap- able of supplying all the elec. tricity needed for a city of 100,- 000 can be in operation by the end of 1954. A member of the House-Senate Joint Atomic Energy Committee, Jackson said that the power plant he proposes could be built for $30,000.000 to $40,000,000 and could sell electricity at "commer- cially attractive rates." ' The legal aspects of possible injury or damage from radiation exposure were discussed by 0. S. Hiestand, Jr., assistant counsel at the Oak Ridge operations of the AEC. Declaring no employee at Oak Ridge is known to have suffered a radiation injury, Hiestand said that considerable case law will have to be developed for this new field. SEQUEL: .. Cicero Passes age, Pric Extension ECo-ntrols N Bill Awaits President's YSignature Men Receive Fines Three Cicero, Ill. officials have been fined for violation of the Civil Rights Statute in connection with the three-day racial disturb- ances there last summer. Cicero's Superintendent of Po- lice, Erwin Konovsky, was fined $2,000 and costs-$1,000 on each of two counts: conspiracy to de- prive Negroes of their civil rights, and depriving Harvey E. Clark, Jr., a Negro, of his civil rights by preventing him from occupying an apartment he had rented. Police Sgt. Roland Brani and Policeman Frank Lange were fined $250 each',and costs on the second count. Meanwhile, Mrs. Camille de Rose, who owned the Cicero apart- ment building where the riots oc- curred, was judged insane by a criminal court jury. A test of her sanity was ordered June 13, when she carried a loaded pistol into a courtroom and made demands for "justice." Lattimore Gets Pubtic Apology WASHINGTON-0P)-The State Department apologized publicly to Owen Lattimore yesterday and re- voked the order barring the Far Eastern affairs specialist from leaving the country. In a formal statement the De- partment described as false a tip it received to the effect that Latti- more was planning a trip behind the Iron Curtain. It was on the basis of this tip that the Depart- ment directed customs officials to stop the Johns Hopkins University professor from leaving the United States. "THE DEPARTMENT of State," yesterday's statement said, "ex- presses to Lattimore its sincere re- gret over the embarrassment caus- ed him." Lattimore expressed apprecia- tion for the State' Department's action but said assurances should be forthcoming that $ach a "monstrous and un-American injustice cannot happen again." The public apology by the State Department followed the indict- ment by a Federal Grand Jury at Seattle Friday of Harry A. Jarvin- en, 32-year-old travel agency exe- cutive, on a charge that he gave a baseless tip to the FBI and the Central Intelligence Agency that Lattimore had arranged to buy tickets for a trip to Russia. When issuance of the supposedly confidential State Department or- der was disclosed by the Balti- more Sun on June 20, and then officially confirmed, Lattimore de- nied categorically that he ever in- tended to make such a trip. Eleventh Hour Renewal Voted WASHINGTON - (P) - The House yesterday passed, 194 to 142. and sped to President Truman a compromise 10-month extension of price and wage controls due to expire at midnight tomorrow. The Senate had approved the measure earlier in the day on a voice vote. The compromise had been hammered out by a Senate- House conference committee in a gruelling night session that ended early yesterday. * * * ALTHOUGH the Administration did not get all it asked, by any means, the bill was regarded as something of a victory for Presi- dent Truman. The Senate-House Committee knocked out a House amendment by Rep. Talle (R- Iowa) to remove controls from alt commodities not under rationing or allocation. Since nothing is rationed now, and few things are allocated, this would have been a body blow to the Administration con- trols plan. The conferees also drastically modified a provision by Rep. Cole (R-Kas.) to guarantee selles their price markups based on in- dividual rather than industry- wide profit margins before the out- break of the Korean war. The version adopted by the compromise on this point amounts to a restatement of present law. The Administration suffered a blow when the conferees decided to retain a provision exempting processed fruits and vegetables from price controls. IN THE BRIEF House debate preciding last night's vote, no- body seemed happy with the new bill. Some Democrats thought it didn't go far enough anP didn't give the Administration enough control authority to do the job' properly. However Administration lead- ers inthe House called the bill workable and predicted the President would sign it. Some Republicans thought it gave the President more control over the people than is needed. One of them, Rep. Cole of Kansas, urged that the compromise be de- feated. He said that if Congress doesn't assert itself, there will be controls for 20 or more years. The measure sailed through the Senate with only a scattering of "no" votes. In the House the de- cision was closer, as had been ex- pected all along. Foa To Speak On Near East "Social and Political Develop- ments in Israel and the Near East" will be the subject for the third in the Summer Session series of lec- tures on "Modern Views of Man and Society" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Architecture Auditorium. Uriel G. Foa, executive director of the Israel Institute of Applied Social Research, will be the lec- turer. He has been executive di- rector of the institute since 1949. A native of Italy, he holds degrees from the University of Parma in Italy and from the Hebrew Uni. versity in Jerusalem. Ann Arbor News To Raise Price The Ann Arbor News yesterday announced a price increase, "due 'TWELFTH NIGHT': Hunter To Direct First Summer Series Play_ By MARGE SHEPHERD Prof. R. D. Hunter, guest direc- tor for the speech department's production of "Twelfth Night" which opens at 8 p.m. Tuesday, is no stranger back stage at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Chairman of the Department of Speech at Ohio Wesleyan Uni- versity, Prof. Hunter directed a group of the college players in a guest summer production here four years ago. * * * WORKING ON a full schedule, he is teaching two classes, inaddi- tion to directing "Twelfth Night" and "Winterset." Prof. Hunter was graduated from the University in 1917 and received his Masters in 1923. During this time he participated Viola. The huge Sir Toby Belch will be played by Richard Bur- win, Grad; the comical Sir Ague- cheek by Conrad Stolzenbach, Grad.; Feste, the clown, by Herb- ert Rovner, Grad. and the mis- chievous Maria by Shirley Shep- ard, Grad. Carole Eiserman, Grad., will play the part of the countess Olivia; William Hadley, Grad., will be Viola's brother, Sebastian; Vernon Lapps, Antonio and James Briley, Fabian. Costumes for the summer series are being prepared by Lucy Bar- ton, of the University of Texas faculty. The author of several books including "Historic Cos- tumes for the Stags" and "Period Patterns" written with Doris Ed- MUSIC SCHOOL FACULTY: First Concert To Be Given Tuesday * * * * * * The first faculty concert of the summer session will be presented' by Prof. Emil Raab, second vio- linist in the Stanley Quartet, and Prof. Benning Dexter, pianist, of the School of Music, at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. - ipr;:il lar mr nn fc n sammannummaaram