MOVE AHEAD Bee Pa 4 .II, It 43t ~~IAi CLOUDY ANT) WARMER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 133 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS luthven Condemns Charges Against Law Group, AVC Statement That Groups Are 'Red' Controlled Is 'Ridiculous,' He Says President Alexander G. Ruthven lashed out yesterday at charges made that the AVC and the Lawyers"Guild on campus are controlled by Communists. b President Ruthven's statement came as a reply to testimony given by Joseph Kornfeder, a former Communist organizer, to the State Senate committee investigating subversive activities. According to a Detroit paper, Kornfeder told the committee that these organizations as well as the Jewish Congress are "Red dominated." Commenting on Kornfeder's remarks President Ruthven said, "In - my opinion, the statement is ridic- Stassen Gains Big Victory In Nebraska Trailed by Dewey, Taft, Vandenberg OMAHA, April 14 - (A') - A roaring tide of Nebraska Republi- can vot'es carried Harold E. Stas- sen today into the field of top- notch contenders for the GOP presidential nomination. His smashing victory in yester- day's presidential primary here delivered to the former Minnesota governor 13 of the state's 15 votes on the first nominating ballot at Philadelphia. In a sweep that promised him a final margin of more than 15,- 00 over Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, Stassen climbed to the top of the popularity stand- ings in this heavily-Republican midwestern area. Stassen collected about 43 per cent of a GOP ballot total expect- ed to top 200,000 when all of the state's precincts are counted. Dewey, apparently in line for support of one convention dele gate, got 34 per cent. Senator Robert A. Taft was a bad third rumner with 10 per cent. The count, from 1868 of the state's 2,024 precincts stood: Stassen 74,925, Dewey 59,135, Taft 19,348, Senator Arthur Van- denberg 8,340, Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur 6,269, Gov. Earl Warren of California 1,675, House Speaker Joseph Martin 843. With this victory wrapped up, Stassen turns tomorrow to cam- paigning in Ohio. There he is seeking to take away from Taft some of that state's 53 delegates in a May 4 primary. At Minneapolis he promised to carry on the work of "developing a vigorous, forward-looking and humanitarian Republican party." He thanked Dewey and Taft for their "clean, constructive" cam- paign in Nebraska. Dewey, absorbing his second po- litical beating from the Minneso- tan in a week, indicated at Al- bany he will continue the fight in a head-on battle with Stassen in the May 21 Oregon Republican primary. SL Office-Seekers To Submit Photos Candidates in the forthcoming Student Legislature election should submit, pictures for the Candidate Display to Rm. 2, Uni- versity Hall before April 23, Dick Burton, Legislature elections com- mittee chairman has announced. Pictures, which should be stand- ard application photo size (two and one-half by three and one- half inches), will be displayed on a bulletin board on the diagonal before the election to let students "know who they're voting for," Burton said. i . r ulous." Representatives of the organi- zations named branded Kornfed- er's testimony as false. 'Outright Lie' David Babson, AVC chairman, declared that the charges are an "outright lie." Both the chairman and vice-chairman of this organi- zation are members of the Young Democrats, he said. There are no Communists on the executive committee and only two ifi the entire organization, Babson declared. He also ex- pressed doubt that any Commu- nist had ever held office in the organization., Pointing out that he had never seen Kornfeder at an AVC meet- ing,. Babson labelled Kornfeder's sources of information as "ques- tionable." Must Be Non-Partisan Any veterans' organization must be non-partisan to be rec- ognized by the Veterans Adminis- tration, he said. But political af- filiation in a non-partisan organi- zation is a matter of personal con- cern, he added. Jerry McCroskey, chairman of the Lawyers Guild echoed Bab- son's denunciation of the testi- mony. He said, "The assertion that the Lawyers Guild is dominated by Communists is completely un- true." When contacted about the Jew- ish Congress, the Office of Stu- dent Affairs said that no organi- zation by that name is known to exist on campus. World News At a Glance By The Associated Press ATHENS, April 14 - An en- tire company of the gendarmerie -the Greek military police-re- belled in Sparta last night and killed their commander and 25 or 26 imprisoned Communists. m SHANNON AIRPORT, Eire, Thursday, April 15-Twenty- nine persons were reported killed today when the Pan American World Airways Con- stellation "Empress of the Skies" crashed and burned while attempting to land at Shannon airport. S* * * SACRAMENTO, Calif., April 14 -Admiral Chester W. Nimitz was appointed today by Governor Warren to the Board of Regents of the University of California. WAS"NGTON, April 14- Gen Omar N. Bradley said to- day that if Universal Military Training is shelved, the Nation should raise a standing army totalling 1,500,000 men and costing billions of dollars. * * * WAS.HINGTON, April 14-New and tighter checks on Commu- nists were voted by the House Commit tte onUn-American Ac- tivities today. Rep. Mundt (Rep. S.D.) an- nounced adoption of an amend- mentto his bill designed to curb Red activities in the United States. Daily Plans Presidential Straw Vote SL To Manage Pseudo-Election Students and faculty members will have a chance to register their presidential preferences in a Daily sponsored straw vote to be held April 25. The pseudo-election will be! managed by the Student Legisla- ture and will be held with the reg- ular Legislature elections, that body decided at its meeting last night. Blank ballots will be provided for the presidential vote, allow- ing each voted to write in his choice. Student and faculty ballots will be different colors in order that comparisons may be made. Following a pattern marked out by the University of Wisconsin newspaper, The Daily Cardinal. The Daily is sponsoring the vote to get a good cross section of stu- dent and faculty opinion on the presidential race. Harvey Weisberg, f ormer Legislature president and Chair- man of the Regional National Student Association, spoke to the Legislature on the NSA deci- sion to suspend negotiations with the International Union of Students, made by the Executive Council last week. He explained that the decision was based on the lack of IUS ac- tion on the violations of academic freedom made by the new Czecho- slovakiai government, indicatin'g a basic political aspect of the or- ganization, and added that NSA would send delegates to western European countries to work out details in the NSA international program. The Legislature backed the decision, but voted to urge NSA to send observers to the east- ern European countries to see if some basis for cooperation could be reached. For the second consecutive meeting, the Legislature con- cluded business, operating with a bare quorum, and passed a resolu- tion that NSA delegates be select- ed by the cabinet on a petition basis, with appointees subject to approval by the body as a whole. Members absent from the meet- ing were Anderson, Baldwin, Bal-I lou, Bovee, Gripman, Levy, JoeI Miller, Silva, Spada and Gringle. ** Housel State Senate To Act Today On Measure Grant of $9,750,000 Is Less Than Asked By DICK MALOY (Special to The Daily) LANSING, April 15-University appropriations bills have passed one legislative hurcile in Lansing but face another today in the State Senate. Yesterday the House approved a $9,750,000 appropriation for University operating expenses., The Senate is expected to act on the measure today. The $9,750,000 amount is about three quarters of' a million dollars less than the University requested, but the leg- islative slash follows similar econ- omy cuts in all appropriations measures during this session. Vital to Program Bills containing amounts vital to the University's multi-million dollar construction program are still in the Senate Finance Com- mittee. The Committee has okayed amounts necessary to complete the General Service Building, the Business Administration Building, Engineering and Chemistry addi- tions. It also appears that work will be resumed on the new maternity hospital with $500,000 dollars ear- marked by the Senate group for this unit. Work stopped on the' hospital at the request of the Leg- islature more than a year ago when building costs skyrocketed. Personal Inspection After a personal inspection of existing inadequate maternity hospital facilities here last month Gov. Sigler urged legislators to restore funds for the new unit. The half million dollars ear- marked for the hospital is about one third of the amount needed to complete the structure. It is expected that the con- struction program fund bills will be reported out of committee to- day and sent to the Senate where speedy approval is seen. . . Passes 'U' * * Appropriations Bills N: Union Offers * * POLL ON SPEAKER BA Students Hit Academic Backwardness' 0 Students on the Diag seemed largely agreed with campus po- litical leaders yesterday after a roundup of opinion revealed gen- eral disapproval of the Regents' ban on open partisan political meetings at the University. But this condemnnation of the ban did not match the unanimity found among heads of political groups which was reported here yesterday. While the majority contacted by Daily reporters falt that the Regents' action displayed "academic backwardness" and that the ban would put clamps on education, some thought the restriction necessary to avoid "unbridled campaigning" on campus. A high official in University administration circles defended the ban on the grounds that the University cannot sanction in- discriminate politicking here. He said, too, that the full permission granted to political speakers at closed meetings would stimulate new interest in the various or- ganizations, and would increase membership. See BACKWARDNESS, Page 6 Lewis Silent on Court Contempt Charge * * CALL TO MEMBERS: Student Meetii Changes in Un Important constitutional changes affecting administrative and financial policies of the Un- ion will be voted upon in an open meeting of all Union members Monday, April 26, Gene Sikorov- sky, Union president, announced yesterday. The proposed changes would in- crease student control over the determination of prices and the election of officers, Sikorovsky said. Tom Walsh, vice-president rep- resenting the literary college, in- troduced the proposals in a re- cent meeting of the Board of Di- rectors, but they were rejected. Since then more than 200 stu- ng To Consider ion Constitution PASTEUR FAILURE: Dog Bites Kill Four-Year-Old; Physicians Watch Helplessly Two Killed in Rail Disaster In Oklahoma KREMLIN, Okla., April 14-(1?) -A speeding Rock Island stream- liner plunged from the tracks here today killing at least two persons and injuring 42 more as it crashed into freight cars on a side track. The passenger train, the Texas Rocket, was struck by a dump truck as it sped southward at nearly "eighty miles an hour. The three coaches of the train were derailed by the impact, careened down the right-of-way, smashed into the freight train and caught fire. (Dr. Joseph E. Maddy of the University Music School, en route to judge a music festival at Enid, Okla., was unhurt when he was thrown to the floor.) (Maddy was riding with Ray- mond Dvorak of the University of Wisconsin music faculty. Dvorak was among the critically injured.) As the train-a deisel locomo- tive, baggage car and three coaches roared into town it was hit at a crossing by a dump truck filled with dirt. Research Zeal Essential-Kahn Cites Present Need For Mork in Field dents have signed a petition ask- ing for a vote on the changes. This is necessary before a meeting can be held, Sikorovsky said. "There must be at least 400 members present at the meeting before the changes can be voted upon," he explained. "Three quar- ters of those voting must approve the modifications before they can go into effect," he said. One amendment would make the senior student vice-president a member of the Finance Commit- tee. This would give students three of eight positions on the committee. Second Proposal The second proposal, if ap- proved, would place the two sen- ior student vice-presidents on the Appointments Committee, thus re- sulting in a four to three student majority in this body. The last of the proposed changes would reduce the number of faculty and alumni members of the Selections Committee, which appoints the President and Secre- tary, to two and increase the stu- dent members of this body to four. Awaited Opportunity Said Sikorovsky: "This is the long awaited opportunity for stu- dents to have a greater say in the running of the Union. Whether members approve or disapprove of the amendments, I think it is of utmost importance that they at- tend the meeting and vote." Other proposed changes in rep- resentation and voting procedure have been authorized for consid- eration by the Union Board of Di- rectors. Tr'ieste Parley Denial Claimed Disturbing CP ROME, April 14-(Al)-Rightist newspapers said today that Italy's Communists had been thrown into consternation by Moscow's turndown of the western powers' proposal to hold a conference on Trieste. United States diplomatic ob- servers said they believed the So- viet Union's refusal to talk about the American-British-French pro- posal to return the free state to Italy signified Moscow had aban- doned hopes of Communist vic- tory in the Italian elections of April 18. Communists, however, were as vigorous in the pre-election ac- tivities as ever. The interior ministry announced tonight that the Communist- dominated Chamber of Labor at Mantua, an industrial town in northern Italy, had proclaimed an immediate general strike throughout Mantova province. Expert Advice Available for Frosh,_Sophs Undecided underclassmen may take their program troubles to a band of student "experts" from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today, Rm. 1025 A.H. Factual information concerning the content of courses in the ma- jor literary college fields will be given by the student advisors, unperclassmen with at least a "B" average in their concentrate. Settle Programs Sponsored by the Student Leg- islature, the Course-content Ad- visory program was initiated dur- ing registration week this semes- ter. Today's session is designed for freshmen and sophomores who want to settle their programs now, but advisory sessions, ex- panded to cover as many schools and colleges as possible, will be held during registration agair next fall. The program has been praised by University officials as a step forward in student managemeni of their own affairs, and a good example of "students helping stu- dents." Department Included Departments represented today, include chemistry, economics, English, geography, geology, Ger- man, Greek, history, journalism, mathematics, philosophy, physics: political science, psychology, ro- mance lang uages, sociology speech, teachers certificate pro- gram and zoology. No Answer to Government Heavy Sentence May Be ImposedToday WASHINGTON, April 14-(- John L. Lewis, glowering and silent, refused today to defend himself against a contempt of court charge that lays him open to a possible heavy fine or even a prison term. Lewis may learn his fate to- morrow after the Government winds up its effort to prove him and the union guilty. The mine chief called no defense wit- nesses. His lawyers declined even to enter a formal argu- ment. The charge: That Lewis and the union disregarded an April 3 court order directing an imme- diate end to the coal miners' walkout which cut deep into the nation's industrial output. Lewis told the miners to stop their "voluntary" work stoppage Monday-after he reached an eleventh hour agreement in an old age pension dispute. The government charges that he didn't act soon enough. About half of the 400,000 min- ers still were away from their jobs today-waiting to see what happened to their chief. Through his battery of lawyers, the bush-browed Lewis entered his and the union's plea shortly after 10 a.m. (EST). "Not guilty," it said. Then he sat, impassive and oc- casionally chomping on a pepper- mint drop, while the government called witness after witness in effort to show: 1.-That Lewis really ordered the walkout, although he insists he didn't. 2.-That the walkout was-in the words of the Taft-Hartley Act -a strike endangering national health and' safety. 3.--That Lewis and the UMW were guilty of contempt for not 4calling it off immediately when a Federal Court told them to. Bogota Unrest Remains Acute University physicians could only stand helplessly by as Pasteur treatments failed and the "over- whelming infection" of hydro- phobia killed four-year-old Carol Mannor, at noon yesterday in University Hospital. Twenty Days Carol, who was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Mannor, 3473 LaSalle Dr., East Ann Ar- bor, died 20 days after being mauled by a rabid dog and re- ceiving seven facial gashes. She had been playing in her backyard with five-year-old William Kline, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Kline, Truce Plan Told NEW YQORK, April 14-a)- The United Nations tonight an- nounced terms of a truce plan de- signed to end fighting and blood- shed in Palestine. One section would bar all per- sons of military age-either Arabs or Jews-from entering the Holy Land. Security Council delegates were reported in virtual agreement on most of the provisions of the plan which will go to a council vote to- morrow at Lake Success. 3135 Washtenaw St., East Ann Arbor. Playmate William received face and hand scratches and respond- ed to Pasteur treatments given two hours after the stray dog at- tacked. But little Carol soon showed symptoms of hydrophobia and was rushed to the hospital. Physi- cians admitted they were unable to check the disease's agony. Police shot the proven-rabid dog, but Carol had to die too. She was the first to die from dog bite in Michigan since April, 1943. No Dog Quarantine "An unfortunate incident," Dr. Otto K. Engelke, M.D., director of the Washtenaw County Health Department, commented. But "no countywide quarantine of dogs will be requested of the State de- partment of agriculture unless the situation changes. The county has had only three cases reported since September-a low score." The County Board of Super- visors announced Tuesday that a law requiring vaccination of all dogs before issuance of dog li- censes would be forthcoming the next time the county is quar- antined. Wagging Dog Woos Judge PITTSBURGH, April 14--(P)- Brownie, a medium-sized part German Shepherd dog doesn't know it, but his court-room be- havior saved his life. A jury convicted Brownie's owner of keeping a ferocious dog, a charge preferred by a man who claimed "Brownie" bit him. Normally such a verdict means a death sentence for the dog in- volved. But Judge J. Frank Graf wanted to see the dog. When Brownie was brought into the courtroom, he shuffled towards attorneys to have his head petted. Then he looked up at the judge. That was enough- Judge Graf sentenced Brownie's owner to a year's probation and allowed the dog to go home. f E 1 i l .1 l 1 1 i Crisis End Thwarted By Delay in Burial BOGOTA, Colombia, April 14- (I)-The government's attempt to. end the national crisis arising from last week's bloody revolt was thwarted today by the delayed burial of an assassinated political hero. The plan to give a state funeral to Jorge Eliecer Gaitan, whose slaying set off the futile insur- rection, was held in abeyance when his widow refused to permit this burial until President Mari- ano Ospina Perez resigns. Gaitan was the leader of Colom- bia's liberal party. Ospina is a conservative. The development occurred as the 21-nation Pan-American Conference formally resumed its work for the first time since the uprising disrupted the meeting Friday. Unrest still persisted in the capital. Soldiers and sailors in large numbers guarded Gogota, patrolling the streets in tanks, trucks and automobiles. Oscar Wilde Play To Be Presented Oscar Wilde's masterpiece of artificial comedy, "The Import- ance of Being Earnest," will be presented by the speech depart- ment at 8 p.m.,-#April 21-24, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The plot of this drawing room comedy centers on the social world of the late nineteenth cen- tury. With tongue in cheek, Wilde tells the story of the man-about- RESULTS That's what you can expect when you run a classified ad- because they are read. Here are some "result-stories." SOLD 1935 Chevrolet Tudor Std. $175. Clean, good mechanical condi- tion. SOLD LADIES Bicycle - Genuine im- neortedEnglinsh Rleigh with STAR VA TION FA CES 200,0 00: 'Exodus' Survivor Asks Jewish Relief Enthusiasm and fire are es- sential for the success of the med- ical research worker, Dr. Reuben L. Kahn, chief of the serology lab- oratory at the University Hospital and world famous for his research in the fields of serology and im- munology, emphasized yesterday at the meeting of thePre-Med- ical Society at the Union. "With these qualities," Dr. Kahn continued, "an every-day person can go much further in this field than the more clever person who lacks these qualities." Many students who f ail to enter medical school for any reason need not give up their devotion to medicine completely, he pointed out; they can turn to medical re- search, for which there is great need at the present time. More funds than ever before ALWAYS HAD A SMILE: Popular Mailman Dies After Years of Faithful Service By TED MHLLER A blond, neatly dressed Ameri- can Jew spoke biting words about Anglo-American foreign policy yesterday while painting the direl C+> "people that have spent 14 years in concentration camps." The campus quota is $7,500 and that of Ann Arbor, $55,000. At the same time, Aronoff the refugees in their quest for a home. The Exodus was a small ferry- boat plying the east coast of the United States before its spectacu- lar mission began. Its top ca- By FRED SCHOTT One of the best known and liked guys around campus is dead. He was Milton R. Aken, the jovial mailman who kidded his way from one address to the other during the last eight years on his route near Washtenaw Ave. Only once do any of the stu- dents who know him remember last war. He was 46 at the time of his death. During his eighteen years around town, he knew, according to his friends, everyone on the route by his first name. He was always invited to fraternity par- ties and weddings and at Christ- mas time he received presents from all the houses along his