RATIONALIZATIONS Se rage 4 - 4It Ar I t A WEAR EAR MUFFS Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 112 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS Fear 30 Dead in Fiery Chicago Air Crash Six Delegates Give Dewey Full Support Wins Primary in New Hampshire By The Associated Press CONCORD, N.H., March 10- Governor Thomas E. Dewey was assured tonight of six of New Hampshire's eight delegates to the Republican National Convention and whatever campaign stimulus goes with the initial ballot vi- tory of the 1948 presidential pri- maries. Final returns from the year's first presidential primary in the nation showed candidates favor- able to the New Yorker clinched three of the four delegates-at- large posts and three of four dis- trict delegate nominations over men pledged to Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota. Informed of the result: Dewey said: "This expression of support is heart-warming and encourag- ing to me." Stassen, who won two of the delegates, said in Minneapolis his showing was "strong" but "not quite strong enough." He regard- ed the Wisconsin primary next month as the "second inning" of the battle for Republican support. Senator Taft of Ohio, another candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, termed the results in New Hampshire "about what was expected." There was no slate of delegates pledged to him in the primary. In beating back the initial chal- lenge of the former Governor of Mnnesota, Dewey showed strength in the cities as well as the rural communities. Leading the victory were two veteran GOP campaigners ,Gov- ernor Charles M. Dale and former Governor Robert O. Blood. The latter polleld the top vote of 27,- 980. Dale was second with 27,74. Third in the four-place dele- gate-at-large field was another Dewey supporter, Robert Upton, vice chairman of the Republican state committee. He received 20,- 949 votes. 'No Campaign' * . (MaeAthur TOKYO, March 10-(/P)-Gen- eral MacArthur's refusal to let the U.S. presidential campaign interfere with his occupation job indicated today he will remain aloof from campaign issues, at least for the present. Furthermore, it is unlikely he will make any special effort to clarify his views on subjects other than international topics which he already has discussed. His Public Relations Office is- sued a statement saying MacAr- thur's announcement of availa- bility will make no changes in headquarters operat ions. The statement obviously came from MacArthur. Correspondents had asked for a press conference. The statement advised them MacArthur would meet them as before-for off-the- record conferences giving back- ground of the occupation. Most observers believe MacAr- thur will not let himself be drawn into domestic issues until he re- turns to the United States. Harvard Vets Advertise Against 'Fighting Doug' CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 10 -(/P)-The Harvard Crimson, un- dergraduate daily newspaper, to- day carried a full page advertise- ment with 57 signatures which read: Not one veteran's vote for 'Fightin Doug' MacArthur." The student signees were iden- tified as World War II veterans. Strilo Is Elected The Engineering Council cast mrnn mnm vfnf- V nn Vm..ri (AP Wirephoto) FINNISH CABINET CONSIDERS RUSSIAN PACT-Finland's premier, Mauno Pekkaa (center) is flanked by Foreign Minister Carl Enckell (left) and Agriculture Minister Vihtori Vesterinen, during meeting of cabinet in Helsinki, (March 4) to consider steps to meet Russia's request for a friendship and mutual assistance pact. Helsinki sources reported that President Paasikivi's reply to Stalin would contain agreement to negotiate such a pact. RADIO FOR WINNER: (if I Were Editor' 1'HE DEADLINE is drawing near for readers interested in entering The Daily's "If I Were Editor" contest. Prizes worth more than $50 including a table model radio and five $5 prizes are offered for the best six letters in the contest closing Fri- day evening. The radio was donated by the Music Center Inc., one of our advertisers who is also interested in making The Daily a better newspaper. OPEN TO ANY DAILY reader, the "Editor" contest puts the reader on the spot for a change. Anything goes in the contest-what would Anti-Poll Tax Bill To H1ave Public Hearin g WASHINGTON, March 1---(/P) -Dixie won a skirmish in the civil rights fight today when the Senate Rules Committee agreed to hold public hearings on anti- poll tax legislation. Previously, a three-man sub- committee had approved the bill without hearings. It said the facts were so well known there was no reason to argue. Senator Stennis (Dem., Miss.) protested at a closed-door session of the committee today, and Chairman Brooks (Rep., Ill.) said the committee would condu't. a four-day hearing. Brooks said the full committee, composed of eight Republicans and five Democrats, will hold the hearings here, probably starting a week from next Monday. Southern g'vernors and sen- ators backed Stennis in his pro- test. He said the hearings should be held in the seven southern states which have poll taxes-- Texas, Virginia, Mississippi, Ar- kansas, South Carolina, Alabama and Tennesse. The poll tax measure is one of President Truman's key points in his civil rights program which caused a split in party ranks. The legislation would remove any requirement that a poll tai: must be paid in order to vote for federal officials. These include the President, Vice - President and Congressmen. you do if you ran the paper. Any particular cause The Daily should espouse? How about news cover- age, sports and women's items? You may write on any subject for many) related to the report- ing, writing, editing or advertis- ing end of The Daily. But Hurry! Letters must be in The Daily office by 6 p.m. Friday night. Then members of the Sen- ior Staff will get to work judging the entries. The six winners will be printed in Sunday's paper. Officers Say N Draft Here Yesterday's unofficial reports that the conscription systeni, left from the last war, was being over- hauled found little positive sub-. stantiation in Ann Arbor. Mayor William E. Brown, who headed the local draft board dur- ing the war said that he had heard nothing officially from the state or national agencies. He said that he had been asked informally sev- eral weeks ago if he would be will- ing to serve if the board was re- activated. Attorney Edward F. Conlin, also a former board member said that he too had been asked informally if lie would serve on a reorgan- ized draft board. .Prof. Laylin K. James of the law school said that he had had no communication from the state or national boards. Jan Masaryk Takes Life in Suicide Leap Czech Minister's .Motives in Doubt By The Associated Press PRAGUE, March 10-Jan Mas- aryk, Foreign Minister of Czecho- slovakia, plunged to his death to- day after staying two weeks in his country's new Communist-con- trolled cabinet. An official government an- nouncement said he committed suicide. The 61-year-old diplomat was the son of a Brooklyn-born mother and a Bohemian father who be- came Czechoslovakia's first presi- dent. He jumped more than 50 feet to his death on the stone flag- ging of a court yard in Czernin Palace, said an announcement from the government which seized power, two weeks ago today. Communist Minister of the Interior Vaclav Nosek told Par- liament that Masaryk had ended his life after a night of brood- ing over "tedentious malicious letters and telegrams from his former friends in Great Britain and America assailing him for his manly stand" in remaining in the Communist-led govern- ment. (Prime Minister Attlee said in London, Masaryk may have taken his life because, "He could not en- dure to live in the suffocating at- mosphere of totalitarianism."' (In Sydney, Eiusralia, Czech, Consul K. Tokoly said Masaryk's death "is not suicide. It is plain murder." Tokoly said he was re- signing his post.) Government sources gave this account of Masaryk's death: He apparently stepped up on a low couch that stood under the window of his bathroom and hurled himself out of the window. He occupied a small apartment in the palace that houses the For- eign Affairs Ministry. A guard on duty found him ly- ing crumpled on the stones. He summoned a medical student on duty at a first aid station in the ministry. The student pronounced him dead shortly before 7 a.m. IIis head was uninjured. No official cause of death was given. A post mortem will be held. A state funeral was announced for Saturday afternoon, with Communist Premier Klement Gottwald speaking at the Pan- theon of the Prague Museum in Prague's Central Square. The body will be taken to Lany, to be in- terned in the family plot beside that of his father, President Thomas G. Masaryk. Wallace ERP A 1r~Itfd fleilI B~y The Associa ted Press WASHINGTON, Marh 10--The Senate cast aside today by an overwhelming 74 to 3 vote a Henry A. Wallace-backed proposal to put U. S. aid to Europe under United Nations control. Senator Taylor of Idaho, candi- date for vice-president on Wal- lace's third party ticket, offered the proposal-after a 35,000-word speech that began yesterday-as an amendment to the $5,300,000,- G00 European Recovery Bill. Proposed Amendment Taylor charged that the ERP bill, commonly known as the Mar- shall Plan, "prepares for war and puts Europe on a permanent dole." Senators Pepper (Dem., Fla.I and Langer (Rep., N.D.) joined Taylor in voting for his amend- ment, which provided for a $5,- 000,000,000 contribution by this country to a UN reconstruction and eco omic development. admin istration for Europe. Russia, as a UN member, would have a voice in controlling the aid setup proposed by Taylor. The Marshall Plan seeks to do the job Secretary Harriman Hits Un-American Committee By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 10-Secretary of Commerce W. Averell Harriman tonight accused a House un-American Activities subcommit- tee of un-American action. In a formal statement dealing with the sub-committee's investi- gation of Dr. Edward U. Condon, Director of the Bureau of Standards, Harriman said: "The subcommittee's action is, in my opinion, un-Americai. "It summoned members of my staff to secret sessions. It has pub- lished their interpretation of their testimony. The press and public were excluded and could not form an independent opinion. From my knowledge of the situation, I can say that the subcommittee's action is misleading. "It is interesting to note that the subcommittee now appears not to dissent from the Commerce Department Loyalty Board's finding DC-4 Nose Dives Bursts into Flame Miami-Bound Plane Crashes Near 'W dy Cit~y'; Cause Undetermined CHICAGO, March 11-A special report to The Daily from the Chicago Tribune placed the toll at between 30 and 35 persons in the Chicago airline tragedy which ocurred at 10:58 last night. However as The Daily went to press this report had not been confirmed by the Associated Press. CHICAGO, March 10-(/P)-At least 13 persons were killed tonight with a Delta Airlines DC-4 plane bound for Miami, Fla., crashed and burned fiercely just outside Chicago's municipal airport. The plane, crashed at 10:58 p.m. (SCT). An hour later it was still burning and firemen feared more bodies might be inside. Six were r recovered. An eyewitness, Pat Smith. a Northwest Airlines cargo handler, said the plane "came straight down in a vertical dive and splat- tered and exploded on the ground." The airliner plunged into a field just outside the airport boundary at 55th Street, two blocks west of ; Cicero Avenue. t: Officials Hold M~eeting overa Food Situ ationt Students Circulate V Food Policy Petitions 1 Top University official' went into a huddle with Residence Hallsi stoff personnel over the "food sit- uation" yesterday, but no worde on the outcome of the conference was forthcoming.z The seties of meetings wasc called as a result of charges against East Quad food and its preparation levelled Tuesday morning in a radio broadcast by two Tyler House residents. Withheld Comment As University administrators withheld comment, a new five-t man food committee circulated petitions among three houses of the East Quad in an effort to measure student resentment against the University's residence hail food "policy." Figures on the number of resi- dents signing -the petitions will be submitted to University offi-r ials Monday, according to BobI Gardner, committee chairman.tHe told The Daily that "a concerted t attempt will be made to seure a. complete breakdown of residence hall food costs from the author- ities." Gardner said a letter concerning the aims of the committee had already been sent to University Vice-President Robert P. Briggs. Committee spokesmen claim gnat about 90 per cent of Greene and Tyler rsid nts have signed their petitions. Spotinterviews Spoth interviews by The Daily indicate that the food gripes cen- ter' around the preparation of the food. Individual charges of "not enough variety" and "inefficient service" were also made. Few com- plaints about quantity or the "raw quality" of the food were made by the residents questioned The student, who told The Daily he had been "chosen by lot," claimed the University would not "tell us where our money is go- ingy." IVAA Tickets Ot tSale Today Tickets for the Michigan- Holy Cross NCAA basketball game at Madison Square Gar- den March 18 will go. on sale at 8:30 a"m. today at the Ath- letic Administration Office. Garden ducats cost $2.50 each foiseats in the end arena, while the better pews in the mezzanine sell for $350. 'There are tournament tickets also available for the March 20 NCAA contests, Don Weir, Wolverine ticket manager, an- nounced yesterday. that Dr. Condon is a loyal Ameri- can. There was complete agree- ment on this finding by members of the loyalty board before (Har- riman underscored 'before') issu- ance of the subcommittee report of March 1." The commerce secretary re- ferred to a report which charged that Condon had associated with alleged Soviet spies. The report called him "one of the weakest links" in the nation's atomic se- curity. The Harriman statement was issued a few hours after a govern- ment qfficial reported that a gen- eral directive is being prepared instructing all executive depart- ments to decline to release confi- dential loyalty files to congres- sional committees. The order will be issued by President Truman, it was said, if it meets with his approval. At the White House, however, presidential press secretary Charles G. Ross said he knew nothing about the order. The .official who reported that the order is being drawn said it has been discussed with the chiefs of several agencies, but that its is- suance is being held up by the temporary absence of Attorney General Tom Clark. The blanket order, it was re- ported, would lay down an ad- ministration policy of keeping confidential the loyalty inquiry. reports on federal employes which are now being compiled by depart- mental boards. Political Clubs Begrin Drives Dems To Hear Talk; Sublicans Organize The donkey and the elephant will both move forward in their 1948 campus campaign plan to- day. The local chapter of the Young Democrats will hear Bob Carson, publicity director for the Demo- cratic State Central Committee at 7:30 p.m. in the Henderson Room of the League. He will speak on the activities of county and state divisions of the Democratic Party. And the new-born Young Re- publicans will get organized at 7:15 p.m. in the Union. A con- stitution for the partisan political group will be submitted to mem- bers for ratification at the meet- ing. Plans to petition the U~ni- versity for official sanction will be completed. Business School Adds 7 To All 'A' Student List The School of Business Admin- istration contributed seven more members to the University's list of all "A" students yesterday. Tli~os'e who received all "A" grades for the Fall semester of 1947 were: Gerald Christin, John Jansma, William LaBaw, Geral- dine London, Lillian McLaren, Wayne Roth, S. Sidney Zilber. -courtesy Ann Arbor Daily News.- ... JAN MASSARYK * * Marshall Calls State o orldt TerySeious' WASHINGTON, March l0-) -Secretary of State Marshall declared today that, the world sit- uation is "very, very serious." He made plain at a news con- ference that he was referring both, to Communist expansion in Eu- rope, including Czechoslovakia, and to what he called a "consid- erable passion" aroused in this country by European develop- ments. Authorizing direct quotation, he cited the death Of Foreign Min- ister Jan Masaryk of Czechoslo- vakia as evidence that the Com- munist rule of that country is "a reign of terror." Marshall said he did not know whether Masaryk had committed suicide, as the Czech official ver- sion reported. Marshall's summary of the world situation carried a virtual appeal to the American people to remain cool-headed and allow their gov- ernment to pursue what Marshall himself would regard as a coldly calculated course of action. When asked about China, Mar- shall told thenewsmen that he still favors taking Communists into China government - even while opposing the spread of Com- munism in Europe, Broadening the political bhase of the Chinese regime, which he tried to arrange as President Tru- man's special envoy, is still what he would like to see, Marshall said. The problem has changed in two years, Marshall added, be- cause the Communists are now in open rebellion against Chiang Kai-Shek's government, Airport officials said the plane had a capacity of 44 passengers. There were conflicting reports as to how many were aboard. The airlines said 30 were aboard. Re- porters at the scene were told there were 24 in the plane. Deputy fire marshal Otto Dahl said he un- derstood there were 17, including four crew members. The fire marshal and reporters counted six bodies removed from the wreckage. Firemen feared more bodies were inside. Chicago police said the plane took off in snow flurries and cleared the northeast. corner of the, field on Chicago's southwest side. Then it fell into a prairie from about 500 to 1,000 feet. "The whole prairie caught fire," flirst policemen on the scene re- ported. 'It looks pretty bad." A cab driver, David Heckman, said two uniformed crew members, one stewardess, and four passen- gers were removed and taken to Holy Cross Hospital. Viw iDeath Of"'Masaryk By NAOMI STERN Shocked dismay but little sur- prise was registered by four fac- ulty members yesterday, at the news of the suicide of Czech For- eign Minister Jan Masaryk. However, it was agreed that too little evidence was available to consider possibilities of murder, intimated by some international observers. "My guess is that he killed him- self out of sheer despair and frus- tration," Prof. Preston W. Slosson, of the history department said. It is improbable that he was "suicid- ed" by the Communists, as his name alone meant too much to the new regime, he added. Masaryk was a weak man with- out the drive or stamina of his fa- ther, the founder of zechoslo- vakian democracy, Slosson de- cleared. It is very possible, he continued, that he nominally ac- quiesced to the new government through inability to fight and then simply could not go on. Terming Masaryk's death "not surprising under the circumstan- ces, but a distinct shock nonethe- less," Prof. Howard M. Ehrmiann, of the history department, advo- cated immediate investigation of the whole Czechoslovakian situa- tion by the UN Security Council. 'We can no longer afford to be indifferent to the extinction of de- mocracy and the democratic way of life in Czechoslovakia," he em- phasized. Prof. Dwight C. Long, of the his- tory department, pointed out that the Czech people may be stirred to action by the death of the man who personified their hopes for HANDCUFFS HANDICAP: Disabled Vet Designs Own Gadgets To ReplaceLost Arm By DICK CHAPIN , Necessity, the mother of iven- tion, has had its proverbial status reaffirmed by the ingenuity of a disabled student veteran. Don, the veteran, lost an arm in action. After the long months in the hospital when he recoin- menced his civilian life, he found that life was not quite as easy as when hie faced it with two good hands. He discovered that the many simple little every day tasks of normal living were no longer simple. Buttoning buttons, for instance, 97.9 1. 4'11 i_. - IV7__I ; Irr .. 7 ' nt a spring wire hook on the end. This "buttoner" is held between the knees, thrust through the but- ton hole, hooked around the ut- ton and, with one quick flip of the wrist, the job is done. Able now to dress himself with- out difficulty, Don turned to his other problem: how to keep the paper from dancing all over the desk while he wrote on it. Paper weights were the obvious answer but paper weights are not known for their portability, and Don wanted something that he could carry with him to class. BRINGS HOME THE VENISON. Darmg Damsel Drags in Dead Deer + _ t By FRAN IVICI A new hunting record was set last week when a University coed brought in a deer without firing a 11 through the woods, where they found the frozen deer. "I couldn't let them just throw it back in the woods, when I thought of what my 10th grade The deer finally reached Ann Arbor, and not on Nadine's lap. fIt was taken to 'U' High to await dis- section by the biology class. At the moment, the students have