THE BOX SCORE IN RETROSPECT See Page 2 C I 4r SirA6 D ai4 a.i Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXIV, No. 35S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1954 CONTINUED FAIR FOUR PAGES Administrative Positions Fill1ed Four Faculty Members Approved; Davis To Head International Center! Six administrative appointments and four appointments to the $458,144 Accepted By Regents Gif ts, Grants Told Yesterday Library Books 1. Students having in their possession books borrowed from the General Library or its branches are notified that such books are due Wednesday, Aug- uist 11. 2. Students having special need for certain books between August 11 and August 13 may retain such books for that per- iod by renewing them at the Charging Desk. faculty were made yesterday by the Regents. Gifts and grants amounting to 3. The names of all students Prof. JamesM. Davis, at present counselor for international ser- $458,143.78 were accepted by the who have not cleared their rec- named as Regents of the University of Mich- ords at the Library by Friday, vices at the University of Washington in Seattle, has been igaed antterAgs etn - uut1 ilb ett h 7igan at their August meeting Fri- August 13 will be sent to the director of the International Center and assistant professor of edu-> day, President Harlan Hatcher an- Cashier's Office and their cred- caion. At the University of Washington, he also has been executive nounced. its and grades will be with- director of the Foundation for International Understanding through From the National Foundation held until such time as said Students. for Infantile Paralysis, Inc., New records are cleared in compli- He holds four degrees, including a BS from Ohio State Univer- York, the Regents accepted three ance with the regulations of the sity, Bachelor of Divinity from Oberlin, MA and Doctor of Educa- grants totalling $137,098.77. The Regents. tion from Columbia University. largest of these was for $100,000 He has served as a minister in for the Polio Vaccine EvaluationI the First Congregational Church Fund. One of $36,098.77 is to cover Employment and was an Army chaplain in In- the operation-of the Polio Respira- Okay Plat dia, Burma and China, receiving tor Center at University Hospital D rop Fails the Bronze Star with Oak Leaf for the second half of 1954. The DropFails Cluster. third grant was for $1,000 and will FoT Dental University Press Director provide a postdoctoral fellowship.I T oDirector of the University Press The National Fund for Medical A d~ T o ccur will be Fred D. W ieck, the present Eduain n. e ok has iA t i t to t editor -of the Newberry Library provided a grant of $41,530.50 Bulletin in Chicago. which the Regents accepted. It is: WASHINGTON P-Administra- Born in Berlin, Germany, Wieck to be used for the support of the Authorization for the employ- tion officials expressed encourage- has been editor of the Newberry instructional budget in the Medical ment of an architect to assist in ment Friday at a report showing School. an expected increase in unemploy- publication from 195152 and from Three grants totalling $33,500 the preparation of a preliminary ment failed to develop in July. March 1, .1954 unil the present. were accepted from the National study for an addition to the Dental Employment held steady during Dr. John M. Sheldon, professor Science Foundation, Washington, Building at the University was the month, the report said. of medicine in the internal medi- D.Cn temnhthreotsi.cine department, has been ap-DC given by the Regents at their Au- Issued by the Commerce and pointed director of the Depart- Seven grants amounting to $26,- gust meeting. Labor departments, the statistics me t of Postgraduate Medicine, 480 were accepted from the Mich- mn ofPsgaut Mei ineer soito, eri.1TeRgnt aeteatoia placed civilian employment at 62,- filling the vacancy left by Dr. igan Heart Association, Detroit. T President Harlan Hatcher an- 148,060 in July, or 50,000 more than From the American Cancer So- ' in May but 972,000 less than the Prof. Allan F. Smith of the Law -ciety, Inc., New York, the Regents unced, after studyig a d record level reached in July a year School was amed as director of accepted two grants amounting to resentation from the School of ago. There were about 21 million Legal Research, filling the post $22,484. ethat more jobs in July than at last . From L. J. Montgomery, Battle ta winter's low point of Prof. Lewis M. Simes who is Creek, Mich., the Regents accept- (1) Present facilities in the Den- resigning the position in order to ed $20,000, to help deserving young tal Building need considerable re- ULittlye CagedJuney.it devote all ofh tieto teachimedical students to further their habilitation and enlargement for Unemployment changed verylit-! Mrs. Elizabeth Alsop Leslie, education. training the present enrollment of tie, declining by 1,000 from June former administrative assistant in The Quaker Oats Company. Chi- dental students and dental hygien- to 3,346,000 in July. This was far the Office of the 'Dean of Women, cago, has made a grant of $20,0001istsanddnsadetl yi- less than President Eisenhower's replaces Mrs. Sarah Healy as as-: aot, has made a gr on$n,00Is AEC Refuses' To Step into Atom Strike Suggests Dispute Go Before Panel : WASHINGTON (A - The Atom- ic Energy Commision Friday night turned down a union request that it intervene in a labor dispute which has brought a strike threat at key atomic and H-bomb mater- ial plants. The AEC suggested, however, that the wage dispute be taken to a government panel. The CIO Gas, Coke and Chemi- cal Workers, whose 4,500 membersI struck plants at Oak Ridge,Tenn., and Paducah, Ky. for four days: in early July, have threatened a new walkout at the same plants on an unnamed date. The plants produce the nation's entire. supply of uranium material used in mak- ing the super bombs. Telegrams Earlier Friday the union's pre-, ident, Elwood Swisher, sent tele- grams to President Eisenhower.: asking his "personal intervention," and to Chairman Lewis L. StraussI asking the AEC to get into the labor controversy between the un- ion and Carbide & Carbon Chemi-: cals Corp., which operates the plants for the AEC. Swisher ac- cused Carbide of "selfish and ir- responsible conduct." AEC Chairman Strauss sent Swisher a reply declining to inter-' vene and saying the proper gov- ernmental agency for any appeal is President Eisenhower's Atom-1 Ic Energy Labor-Management Re- lations Panel. Cyrus S. Ching The panel mentioned by Strauss is headed by Cyrus S. Ching, for- 1 mer government mediation chief. McCarthy Maintains Charges Have Fallen Cites Moss, Parrish Case ~ As Example' l Ta1ks Before TV, Newsreel Group WASHINGTON U-Sen. McCar- thy (R-Wis) claimed Friday night that some of the charges made ¢h by those who want the Senate to , censure him have already "fallen by the wayside." v '"The Annie Lee Moss charge has fallen. The Parrish charge has .1fallen," he said in a brief talk be- fore television and newsreel cam- eras. These c h a r g e s were made against the Wisconsin senator by Senators Flanders (R-Vt) and Ful- bright (D-Ark) and were among the 46, some overlapping, which have been referred to a special Senate committee for considera- tiovenly,U nprofeissional" Flanders accused McCarthy of "conducting his committee in such .-a slovenly and unprofessional way that cases of mistaken identity -Daily-Marj crozier have resulted in grievous hardship FORGOTTEN CRANE BEHIND LOCAL HOTEL or have made his committee, and thereby the Senate, appear ridicu- lous. Examples: Annie Lee Moss; ant O ed raneM k s Lawrence W. Parrish, subpoenaed and brought to Washington instead of Lawrence T. Parrish." )blem In Hotel Yard Lawrence W. Parri sh.who woirks in the Bethlehem Steel Co. i Ab Prc chief economic adviser, Dr. Ar- thur Burns, had feared might hap- pen. He had said seasonal expan- sion of the potential work force might drive the July jobless total beyond four million. When a school or college student starts looking for a job in the sun r mer he becomes part of the poten- tial work force and is classed as unemployed until he finds work.; However, if he does not seek work, he is not classed as unemployed. Student Jobs Officials said one factor stabiliz- ig the situation is that fewer stu- dents apparently sought jobs this summer. The generally tighter la- bor market is one reason advanced why many teen-agers might have, decided against seeking work. Others delayed looking for jobs un- til July. The Census Bureau estimated nonfarm employment at 54,661,000, up 191,000 from June, and agricul- tural employment at 7,486,000, down 142,000 from June. The Bu- reau said nonfarm employment usually increases more than that in July, and farm employment de- clined more. The Labor Department, however counted a 289,000 decline in non- farm workers compared with the Census Bureau's estimated 191,000 increase. It was explained that the Labor Department counts only: workers actually drawing pay, while the Census Bureau counts those having a job but not at work for some reason such as vacation shutdowns, temporary layoffs or; strikes. CUr~l~Iic Add1.-. E Sc _L7 1 YI L 77s~i sistant dean of women. Dr. Robert Gibson Lovell, pro- fessor of internal medicine, will have the additional post of sec- retary of the Medical School. Faculty Appointments One professor, one associate professor, one assistant professor' and one visiting assistant profes- sor were named by the Regents. Prof. John Stephenson McNown, a member of the State University faculty of Iowa since 1943, was appointed professor of engineering mechanics. Prof. McNown holds four de- grees and was a Fulbright research scholar at Grenoble, France, inf 1950-51. p1± VL4 yb 0 gtsy4 research fund. The Dow Chemical Company, Midland, Mich., has given $12,500 t) continue a grant in the Depart- ment of Pharmacology under the direction of Dr. Maurice Seevers. From an anonymous donor, the Regents accepted $12,500 for the W. J. Research Fund in Obstetrics and Gynecology. The fund will be under the supervision of Dr. Nor- man F. Miller. Two grants totalling $12,372 were accepted from the United Cerebral Palsy Association, Inc., New York The National Sanitation Founda- tion Testing Laboratory, Inc., Ann Arbor, has given $10,500 for the I Studies in Sanitary Practices fund. (2) That' the annual number of dentists and hygienists now being graduated will prove insufficient to meet the needs of the State of Michigan in the future. This will be due to the growing demand for This same panel some time ago recommended a six-cent hourly raise foi the workers whose pay rates now range from $1.58 to 2.40 an hour. The CIO union and an AFL r 1 F { r r' What can you do with an aban- doned crane? dental services and the rapidly Hunion group representing another William Mackie, manager of a growing population in the state. 4,500 workers at two other Oak South Thayer hotel, says the only Ridge atomic plants have rejected thing he knew to do with the one 360 Students the 6-cent proposal as inadequate. behind his hotel was to "keep it The School of Dentistry's pre- The AF of L group has not struck around for odd jobs." sentation as made under the signa- nor is it threatening a walkout. ' The crane was first used back ture of Dean Paul H. Jeserich The unions have been asking for in 1946 to build his hotel he ex- pointed out that the present en-a a 15-cent pay boost. , rollment is approximately 360 un- Swisher complained in a state- plained. After the work was com- dergraduate dental students and ment that company was stick- pleted and workmen tried to take 75 dental hygienists. Each year ing fast to the six-cent recommen- the crane out of the back yard 97 freshmen dental students and dation and refusing to discuss any they found that the only exit was 39 dental hygienists begin their higher raise. too small. training. Eisenhower invoked the Taft- No one was able to figure a way is standing on ground strewn with left shoes, milk bottles, empty cans of false teeth cleaner, and an old Band poster Macie said that finally he has been able to order parts and ex- pects that the big machine will be moved this fall. Five-Man Seaway Board Picked by Ike shivarbzatO,,v~'y ~ias 011 'a '.. a'.x.64 + U11tJ , *IUS0, vy 0 excused with an apology when he appeared before McCarthy's inves- tigations subcommittee July 19 during a probe of alleged Commu- nist infiltration of defense plants. But he was recalled Friday and at a closed session, McCarthy re- ported, refused to answer some questions about communism on' the grounds he migpt incriminate himself. Parrish confirmed that he had invoked the Fifth Amendment when he left the hearing room. Regarding Annie Lee Moss, Ful- bright has charged that McCarthy "strongly implied in public hear- ings of his own subcommittee that Annie Lee Moss, an employe of the Pentagon 'was known to be a member of the Communistpart and that if she testified she would perjure herself'-before he had given her a chance to testify." Mistaken Identity Mrs. Moss swore that she had never 'been a Communist. After she testified that there were other An- nie Lee Mosses in Washington, and Prof. Samuel Richard Hepworth Role of Family The dental school faculty feels has been name dto the business From the Grant Foundation,Inc. the enrollment should be increased administration school faculty. An New York, the Regents accepted 1 instructor in accounting at the $9,000 for the support of a project entering hygienistsudents a University from 1949 to 1952. Prof. on The Role of the Family inn bring the total enrollment to 575 Hepworth has been a member of Education for Social Relations." undergraduate dental students and the University of California fac- The study to be conducted in thd d1hygenists. ulty since that time. 1 Institute for Social Research will Hartley law's emergency proce-1 dures during the prior strike, so the government is now in a posi- tion to apply at any time for an 80-day court injunction to head off a new walkout. Leonard 'To Pay Ike Visit to get it out at that time so it just sat there. A year or so later .I Macie said he used it to dig a d well for the hotel's air-conditi ing system. While the machine sat patien int he back yard vandals st some of its parts, including all spark plugs. At present the crE France Plans eep Replacing Prof. James Ferrell, chairman of the Slavic languages department who will be on leave, is Prof. William B. Edgerton. As- sistant professor of Russian at Pennsylvania State University, Prof. Edgerton will be a visiting professor for the academic year of 1954-55. Dr. Leonard Franklin Bender was appointed an assistant pro- fessor of physical medicine and re- habilitation in the Medical School, beginning on or about Nov. 1 (fol- lowing his release from active ser- vice in the U. S. Navy) until June 30, 1955. Committee Appointments ' Ten appointments to commit- seek to find out how the family prepares the individual child for adjustment to other groups. The John and Mary R. Markle Foundation, New York, has given $6,000 for the foundation's scholar- ship in medical science for 1954-55. The Regents accepted $5,6001 tute for Cancer Research, New' York, for research under the di-4 rection of Dr. Robert C. Elder-1 field of the Department of Chem-I istry. The project- will involve synthesis and isolation of candi- date hypotensive agents. From the Life Insurance Medi- cal Research Fund,Hartford,Conn., the Regents accepted $5,500 for the Life Insurance Medical Re- search Fund. Other Grants Othe' gifts and grants of $100 or more were: From the James Foundation of New York, Inc., $5,000 for the Lake Angelus Special Fund. This will be used to purchase and construct; spectrographic equipment for the McMath-Hulbert Observatory. From Clifford E. Paine, Fenn-r ville, Mich., $5,000 for the Morti- mer E. Cooley Foundation of En- gineering Endowment. From the John Harper Seeley Foundation, Ann Arbor, $5,000for the John Harper Seeley Fellow- ship in Surgeiy Fund. This is used to help needy and deserving med- Michigan was cited as already having a relatively poor ratio of dentists to population as com- pared to other states in the Mid- west. The Michigan figure was, one on-. WASHINGTON (,Pi - President Eisenhower Friday nominated a; qtly five member board to serve as' tole advisors to the St. Lawrence Sea- the way Development Corp. The corporation was set up re-' cently after Congress passed legis-1 lation authorizing U. S. participa- tion with Canada in construction 1+U.Isf t ItUio I tees were also approved by the.j C Regents. On the Faculty Planning Contract GivenlCommittee, Dean Burton D. Thu- ma of the Literary college and Authority for the borrowing of Prof. Burton L. Baker of the an- $2,200,000 to construct an addition atomy department were named to Couzens Hall and remodel parts to three-year terms. of the present building and theI Prof. Solomon J. Axelrod, Asso- awarding of three contracts for ciate Director of the Bureau of work on the addition was grant- Public Health Economics, was ap- ed by the Regents at their meet- pointed to a four-year term on ing. the Executive Ccmmittee of the President Harlan Hatcher said; School of Public' Health. that $2,200,000 in University of Prof. Ronald Freedman, of the Michigan Dormitory R e v e n u e sociology department, was ap- Bonds would be issued and sold to pointed for a four-year term on the National Bank of Detroit and the Executive Committee of the the Mutual Benefit Life Insur- Statistical Research Laboratory. ance Company. The bond will be Dean Walter V. Marchall of the secured by net operating income College of Architecture and De- from Couzens Hall, a residence sign was appointed to succeed hall for women students. himself for a three year term on The Regents also gave approval the Committee on University! to a contract of $599,000 for the Scholarships. construction of the medical li- Prof. Frank X. Braun will also! brary unit which will be attached succeed himself for a three year' to the Kresge Medical Research term on the Board of Governors Building. The library will be built of Residence Halls. On the Execu-# with a $600,000 gift from the S. tive Committee of the literary col- S. Kresge Foundation. lege, Prof. Kenneth L. Jones, dentist to 1,957 population. Other WASHINGTON (R) - A group of !of the seaway. an undercover informant aiding Midwest ratios were: Minnesota, ' Michigan Republicans, including ED C D ebate he advisory board's job is to the subcommittee was unable to 1,328: Illinois, 1,446; Iowa, 1,615; Donald S. Leonard, nominee fori review the general policies of the identify her, some members said Wisconsin, 1,425; Ohio, 1,937; and governor, discussed campaign tac- development corporation with re-it looked like a case of mistaken Indiana, 2,048. tics in several meetings Friday PARIS -The National Assem spect to design and construction ofdentity. The faculty of the dental school and will visit President Eisen- bly agreed reluctantly Friday to the seaway and rules and regula-i Mrs. Moss had been suspended feels that the State of Michigan hower at the White House Satur- pull the European Defense Com- tions for vessels which will use from her civilian job with the will face a serious dental shortage day morning. munity treaty out of the pigeon the waterway Army, then restored to a less sen- by approximately 1970 unless some Sen. Ferguson, who was unop- holes where it has been languish- sitive post after the hearing. method of obtaining an increased posed in last Tuesday's Republican ing for more than two years and The President asked the Senate But last Wednesday she was numberteAg.2 o atfca oconfirm a emesof the ad-I number of dental graduates can primary in his bid for a third start debate Aug. 24 on ratifica- bto o as membes suspended again on the basis of be provided.I term, was host at breakfast and tion. visory board: what the Army called "new infor- luncheon meetings and said har- Although several French govern- John C. Beukema, Muskegon, mation." This apparently was The Regents were informed that mony prevailed. ; ments have talked about bringing Mich.; Henry C. Brockel of Mil- what McCarthy was referring to the administration of the School; _the project to permit West Ger- waukee, Wis., Edward J. Noble of when he said "the Annie Lee Moss of Dentistry believes the best way D man rearmament in a six-nation Greenwich, Conn.; Kenneth M. charge has fallen." to avert such a shortage would D i1 )Bll army up for approval, this is the Lloyd of Youngstown, Ohio and Mrs. Moss' attorney says the be to increase the enrollment of ' 'first time a date has been set; Hugh Moore of Easton, Pa. only new information against her dental students at the University All subscriptions and adver- is an accusation that she was is- of Michigan. Such a move would tisements in The Daily must be sued membership card No. 37,269 help the present situation under paid today at the Student Pub- I Ifin the Communist party in 1943. which applications are received; lications Bldg. E I/ orn dGIaA S I The attorney said he was convinc-. whc frompic 0250 to500rMchi- iStudentsBi who do not TOr d ew s R oundup eadhnma each year fo 5 o50Mci tdnswod o pay ! ed his client knew nothing of any' gan residents while only 97 fresh- these bills will not receive __such card. men dental students can be ac- credit for this semester's work. ' Peress Case cepted. ( By The Associated Press McCarthy also said Friday he STE. AGATHE, Que.-Emile Dionne, one of the famous quintup- has discovered that 30 Army offi- lets, diedFriday at a Roman Catholic hostel near this resort center cers had "active" roles in giving an R egents A ccept R arfein the Laurentian Hills, honorable discharge to Maj. Irving She was described as a victim of epilepsy since she was 3. The Peress, adding, "I'll be interested girl who celebrated her 20th birthday with her four sisters May 28 to see why so many high field officers took part inyconsideato Books, Records Gift suffered three strokes prior to her death.'' Gifs-i thfom-o a areTwo occurred Thursday night and the third-the fatal one-- Peress is a New York dentist while she lay in her bed Friday morning at the hospital operated for who refused to say whether he ever book, recoids of a railroad, and ue through 1952. The gift was old folks by the Oblate Sisters of Mary Immaculate. had any subversive connections equipment for use at one of the made by George H. Crane of Pon- Thursday she was seen by residents of the hostel neighborhood, when called before McCarthy's University's camps and in a re- tiac, president of the A. and K. two miles from Ste. Agathe, strolling normally about the institution's Senate Investigations subcommittee search laboratory were accepted Equipment for use in the study grounds at Lac Brule. She wore the dark habit of the Oblate order,' last year. by the Regents yesterday. of the initial aspects of continu- * McCarthy has called on the Army The ra'e book was a gift from ous fermentation was accepted LONDON-Moscow radio announced Friday night that the Soviet repeatedly to say who Was respon- His Imperial Majesty Haile Selas- from Parke, Davis and Company, Union has turned over to the East German Communist government sible for what he described as "the sie I. emperor of Ethiopia. It is a Detroit. The equipment consists of' promotion and honorable discharge manuscript copy of the "Four Gos- two stainless steel tanks, each of full control over its political, economic and cultural life, of this Fifth Amendment Commu- iThe 10 gallons capacity two sets of Last March 25 the Soviets declared their recognition of the East: nist i ical students. Inc., Detroit, two grants totalling $4,520 as follows: $2,400 for the1 Consultation Service Fund and E $2,120 for antigen research by Dr.t Reuben L. Kahn. Fromt he Michigan Departmentk of Mental Health, Lansing, $4,000 for research on ACTH.l From Playtex Park Research Institute, Dover, Delaware, $4,200' for the Urinary Excretion of Car-x bohydrate Intermediates in Infan-1 I + chairman of the botany depart- book dates back to the 16th cen- stainless steel baffles, two air fil- German satellite regime as "fully sovereign." The Russians retained