WAR CRIMES TRIALS See Page 41 Lw 40 #ait t] FAIR Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 149 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1948 SI , PRICE FIVE CENTS House Group! Voles Passage Of Draft Bill Academic Year Can Be Finished WASHINGTON, May 3-(P)_ The House Armed Services Com mittee voted 28 to 5 today for a peacetime draft designed to hel build up a military force of mor than 2,000,000 men. Men from 18 through 30 woul have to register with those fron 19 through 25 liable for two year yrservice. Most veterans would be exempt. College students would b allowed to finish an academic year. Secretary of Defense Forrestal praised the measure as an ex- cellent one to cope with what he has called world tension and others have called the threat of war with Russia. At the same time, Forrestal said he prefers a Senate draft bill -Bich also provides for training of 1R,-year-olds as reserves. The Sen- ate Armed Services Committee worked on this measure in secrecy today. (The administration has been «Seeking: (1) A temporary draft and (2) A longer-range system of universal military training unde which younger men would be tVained in a new system of camps and other institutions. These UMT students would not be in the army. (The Senate Committee has favored merging the two plans, training the 18-year-olds in the armed services along with draftee4. The House Armed Services Committee unanimous- ly approved a separate UMT bill last summer, but so far neither House or Senate has voted on such a bill.) Forrestal told the House Armed 8rvices Committee that the draft bill it approved today provides an answer to the "immediate and im- perative demand for something to augment the size of our armed forces." Secretary of the Army Royall called it "thoroughly acceptable to all the services-Army, Navy and Air Force." Students Plan UNDody Here With the goal of a "world of goodwill," the call will go out tonight for students to organize a campus "Model UN" organiza- tion, according to Bill Miller, chairman of a committee planning the project. "Student representatives who participated in the successful Model General Assembly held April 21 and anyone interested in learning how the UN works may attend," Miller said. The new group hopes to set up more "model" meetings and dis- cuss the problems that face the present United Nations, sponso speakers on UN topics, present radio programs and affiliate with the Collegiate Council for the United Nations. Students will take the sides of various nations and discuss world issues on an unbiased basis, ac- cording to Miller. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the Inteinational Center. Campus Book Drive Planned A three-day campus drive, spon- sored by AVC, to collect books for the library of Ann Arbor's new Veterans' Readjustment Centcr will beg irtomorrow. Students are requested by Tom Murray, chairman of the cam- paign, to contribute any kind of readable book, either fiction or non - fiction. Veteran patients' reading preferences are more ma- ture and diversified than most people suppose, uc(ording to Rec- reational Director Margaret Mc- AHugh. Book receptacles will be located at several points on campus, in- cluding the Diagonal, the Union, and the League. Opened last October, the Cen- ter's library now has about 250 volumes, hardly enough, said Miss INSTALLATION NIGHT: Holders of League Posts For 1948-49 Are Named Appointments to League positions for 1948-49 were announced yesterday at the annual Installation Night ceremonies in Rackham Lecture Hall. Top League positions for the next year have been given to Pat McKenna, Gamma Phi Beta, president; Pat Hannagan, Delta Gamma, chairman of Judiciary Council; and Mary Carolyn Wright, Alpha Phi, Interviewing Chairman. Other members of the League Executive Council are Nancy Hess, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Southwestern U.S. Rocked By Tornadoes Two-Day Toll Set at 23 Dead,_156 Hurt By The Associated Press Death-dealing tornadoes, stirred up by spring's changing weather, added Texas to their list Monday with at least three killed for a 48-hour toll of 23 dead and more than 156 injured in six states. The Texas tornadic windstorm hit McKinney, a city of 100, and nearby Princeton, both about 30 miles north of Dallas. The storm cut a 600-yard path of fury, two miles long, through McKin- ney. Buildings Destroyed It tore the second floor off a $2,000,000 textile mill, blew off the top floor of the city hospital, ripped off the metal roof of a grade school, and smashed an es- timated 150 houses. Oklahoma, one of the states struck Saturday night, received . fresh blow. A tornado hit the center of the town of Caney in southwest Oklahoma, but a few- minutes warning enabled the res- idents to take refuge in storm cellars. The postoffice, a theatre and several stores and homes were de- stroyed. Neighboring Towns Hit Violent ,windstorms hit neigh- boring Coleman, Mill Creek and Sulphur in rapid succession. Three persons were reported injured. The deadly winds scourged Ok- lahoma, Missouri, Kansas, Ken- tucky and West Virginia in a West-East course which started Saturday. Heavy rains poured additional misery on survivors in hard-hit West Virginia after, the winds abated. Six rural West Virginia com- munities bore the brunt of the twisters in that state. Three members of the Raymond Aylor family of Hupp Hill died in the Clarksburg Hospital of storm injuries. One may was killed near Weston and a fifth victim, another man was killed at Mount Clare. Parties Make Ballot Deadline LANSING, May 3-(P)-Four minority parties gained a place on the Michigan election ballot as the deadline fell for the admission of new parties. Petitions to qualify the Socialist Workers party, the Socialist party., the Socialist Labor party and the Progressive (Wallace) party were filed before the deadline. The Republican, Democratic and Prohibition parties retain their place on the ballot by vir- tue of a sufficient vote cast at the last election.; L, vice-president; Ilona Freitze, 4 Jordan, secretary; Marjorie Zaller, Sigma Delta Tau, treas- urer; Arlette Harbour, Martha Cook, Assembly president; Mary Stierer, Pi Beta Phi, Panhellenic president; Gwen Sperlich, Gam- ma Phi Beta, WAA president; and Audrey Buttery, Delta Delta Delta, Daily Women's Editor. Chairmanships of League com- mittees will be filled by Jackie Read, Gamma Phi Beta, Casbah; Nancy Mussleman, Chi Omega, Dance Class; Bette Hamilton, Martha Cook. Drives; Virginia Nicklas, Delta Delta Delta, Merit- Tutorial; Eugenia MacCallum, Chi Omega, Orientation; Dulcie Kras- nick, Stockwell, Personnel; Nancy Culligan, Alpha Phi, Publicity; and Bobbie Joe Ream, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Social. Dean Alice C. Lloyd presiented three Ethel A. MeCormick schol- arships to Ilona Fletze, Jordan; Marjorie Zaller, Sigma Delta Tau; and Helen Olsher, Mosher. Members tapped by Senior So- ciety are Allene Brown, Cora May Chu, Ilona Fietze, Hannah Fisch- bein, Margaret Frostic, Joan Katz, Dulcie Krasnick, Allegra Pasqua- letti, Harriet Davis Norton, Na- See LEAGUE, Page 5 Stassen Bids For Farmers' Vote in Ohio CLEVELAND, May 3 - (/W) -- Harold E. Stassen posted tonight a proposal to boost farm price sup- ports as he bid for rural backing in his Ohio Presidential delegate battle with Senator Robert A. Taft In advance of tomorrow's ex- pected heavy primary balloting, Stassen urged in a prepared radio address that the cost of farm hired labor be included in fixing the floor the Government has put under some crops. This proposal, often made by farm state lawmakers, could be expected to raise the floor. This sharpened his differences with Taft. The latter said in Ne- braska some months ago that the level of price supports should be reduced somewhat. With fair skies forecast for most of the state, upwards of three- quarters of a million Republicans are expected to go to the polling places in a 12-hour stretch begin- ning at 6:30 a.m. (CDT). They will pick 53 delegates to the June Republican convention in Philadelphia which will nomi- nate a Presidential candidate. Stassen is contesting in races involving 23 delegates. While most of these battles are in industrial areas, at least eight will be chosen in districts where the farm vote is top-heavy. City Adopts Time Change At Midnight 'U' Clocks Will Conforim to Shift, Everybody in Ann Arbor will lose an hour's sleep when the city's clocks move ahead one hour at midnight tonight. A resolution passed at a city council meeting last night set. Daylight Savings Time as official. for Ann Arbor until about Sept.' 26. The resolution passed by a; vote of ten to three. This means that at midnight tonight, the time will be 1 a.m. Vice - President Robert P. Briggs said that the University would follow the city time change. Classroom clocks will be adjusted to switch to summer time. Several near-by cities, includ- ing Detroit, went on Daylight Savings a week ago. Beginning at 12:01 a.m. Wed- nesday, all trains will arrive and leave Ann Arbor one hour later than they are scheduled on the time tables, New York Central ticket clerk V. LaFlamme told The Daily last night. All NYC trains are running on Eastern Stand- ard Time. Greyhound bus line officials said that their schedules were all on Standard Time and that the hour difference between scheduled and running time would prevail. The resolution passed the council after an amendment setting the time change for next Sunday was declared defeated by President C. O. Creal. The shift to Daylight Savings had been opposed by local farm- ers and groups who did =not want, to follow Detroit's lead. At a prev- ious council meeting, a decision on the time change issue had passed by a narrow one-vote mar- gin. Council also requested the Tniv4mitnv 11 ppant m0tlfnnex th Racial Barriers In Housing Ruled 911 Illegal by Court Restrictive Real-Estate Covenants Held Violation of 14th Amendment WASHINGTON, May 3-('P)-Courts cannot enforce real estate agreements which bar colored persons from all-white neighborhoods, the Supreme Court ruled today. In a 6-0 decision, the Court said government action to back up such covenants violates the "equal protection" clause in the 14th Amendment, and in Washington, D.C., breaks a federal law covering similar ground. The court specified, however, that the clause "erects no shield against merely private conduct, however discriminatory or wrong- ful." It said there is no violation so long as the agreements are carried out voluntarily. two opinions handed down on the Tf een 0 issue. In neither did he go be- yond the question of excludingT would-be residents on the ground Ma of "race and color." a e U S Solicitor Philip B. Perlman, ino01 mT oral argument of the cases, also had discussed the question of ex- clusion of Jews. After hearing to- Wres MngMentor day's rulings read, he declined to rsin speculate whether covenants ex- Is Britain-Bound cluding persons on religious grounds also are barred. The distinction of being Mich- Justices Jackson, Reed and Rut- igan's first mat coach to be asso- ledge took no part in the cases. ciated with a United States Olym- Three separate actions were in- pie team was earned by Cliff volved-one each from St. Louis, Keen, veteran Wolverine wres- Detroit and the national capital. tling mentor. The St. Louis and Detroit cases, S o ..1...v ALL AMERICAN TRAINING-Fresh Air Camper starts his foot- ball training early under the expert tutelage of Julie Franks, former University football star and an All-American guard. Julie, who is doing graduate work in psychology, served as a counselor at the camp last summer. TAG DAY TOMORROW: TU' Fresh Air Camp Stresses Need for Individual Attention Botanical Gardens to Ann Ar- bor. The addition would make mor land accessible to the city for fu ture incorporation, Councilman Henry T. Conlin said. e - Accidents junp Washtenaw County's traffic toll took a quick leap over the week- end as 15 people were hurt in 18 accidents. This was the second-heaviest accident weekend here for 1948. SUBJECT IN TRANCE: Audience Sees Psychiatrist Reveal Powers of Hypnosis II World News At aGlance By 'he Associated Press WASHINGTON, May 3 - The Supreme Court rocked the movie industry today with a series of de-. cisions which may cost the film giants many millions of dollars. CHICAGO, May 3-A federal mediator seeking to avert a paralyzing nationwide railroad tieup set for May 11 said today, "It looks very much like there might be a strike." ** *: WASHINGTON, May 3-Quick- est possible action on the 15,000- ,000-hcmes-in-ten-years bill was promised today by Chairman Wolcott (Rep., Mich.) of the House Banking Committee, JERUSALEM, May 3-The vanguard of strong British re- inforcements reached Jerusalem today while Scottish infantry- men enforced a truce between Jews and Arabs in the Holy City's battered Katamon quar- ter. Jerusalem had its quietest day in months. PORTLAND, Ore., May 3---Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York tonight demanded that Commu- nism be kept open and above ground, and denounced as .a dem- agogic appeal what he said were "glib proposals" for outlawing it in the United States. * *- * NEW YORK, May 3-The St. Louis Post-Dispatch today won the Pulitzer Prize for disinter- ested and meritorious public service by an American news- paper in 1947. It was th? third time the papcr had won they award. * * * DETROIT, May 3 -;The CIO United Auto Workers today issued a demand for a 30-cent hourly wage increase at Ford Motor Co. plants. -a t- "To lan I If you want expert testimony as to what the Fresh Air Camp, whose annual tag day drive will be held tomorrow, can do for underprivileged boys, just ask a man who knows-Julie Franks, former University football star who served as athletic assistant at the camp last summer. "You can't imagine what it does for a kid who never knew how to hold a bat when he is able to play ball with the rest of the fellows." Franks said. The Feeling of Belonging "For the first time he is part of the group, and looked up to. That gives hime the confidence he rneeds and helps him fit in better in other social situations," he ex- plained. Although l his sciaty wa ath- letics, Franks said that he, like the other counselors, emphasized personal attention for each boy in all activities. "We try to give them the affection and under- standing that they need but have never had," he said. Good food, rest, and work and play with other children are fitted into the camping program and they all help make the boys better citizens, he added. Tag Day Contributions Money for the equipment used in camp activities, medical per- sonnel, transportation and other expenses is contributed by Uni- versity students and faculty dur- ing the annual tag day. A goal of $5,000 has been set Marble Aces ToCom-pete Ann Arbor's crack-shot marble whizzes are polishing off their eight - to - thirteen - year - old 'shootin' thums' for the City Mar- bles Championship Tournament at 3:30 p.m. today, in Yost Field House. All junior (and sis too) need is an ample supply of glassies, megs, peewees, boulders (king-size jobs) and five cents for entry fee to get into the Graf-O'Hara Post No. 423, Veterans of Foreign Wars, competition. To the lucky winner will fall the honor of defending Washtenaw County's reputation against the waxed knuckles of sharp-shooters from such strongholds as Living- -ton, Lenawee, Jackson, Monroe, Hillsdale, Ingham, Eaton and Oakland counties, in Ann Arbor, May 9. From there, some freckle-faced conqueror will march on to the state tournament at the VFW National Home in Eaton Rapids later in the month. The path to glory continues with a national tournament in Kansas City. by organizations sponsoring to- morrow's tag day, including As- sembly, AIM, Pan-Hel, IFC, the League and the Union. These groups have also been active in developing the camp as a student recreation center. Dur- ing the spring and fall camp fa- cilities are available to student groups for picnics and dances. Loeal Citizens Protest Arrest 0 aa a m Of Sen. Taylor Several University faculty mem- bers and townspeople sent a tele- gram last night to the mayor of Birmingham, Ala., protesting the "terrorizing" of the Southern Ne- gro Youth Congress and the ar- resting and "manhandling" of Senator Glen Taylor (Dem., Ida,). Text of the telegram follows: "Protest emphatically the action of Birmingham police in terroriz- ing Southern Negro Youth Con- gress and arresting and manhan- dling United States Senator Glen Taylor. Supreme Court decisions have frequently declared the ille- gality of Jim Crow laws and up- held the right of freedom of as- sembly. Millions of Americans stand ashamed at the perversion of the constitutional rights and immunities of citizens in your jur- isdiction." Signers of the telegram were: Prof. John L. Brumm, Mr. Ralph McPhee, Rabbi Hershel Lymon, George Antonofsky, Prof. DeWitt Parker, Prof. Wilfred Kaplan, Prof. Preston Slosson, Prof. Theo- dore Newcomb, Mrs. Mary New- comb, and Prof. John Shepard. Other signers were: Prof. Na- thaniel Coburn, Prof. Roy Sellars, Prof. Michael Pargment, Prof. Lewis Vander Velde, Prof. Escri- bano Y. Sanchez, Prof. Wesley Maurer, Rev. Edward Redman, Rev, Edward Blakeman, Dean Ba- ker, and Lawrence Praaken. Prof. Sumner Myers, Prof. Gail Young. Prof. Raymond Wilder, Dr. Leonard Thornhein, Maxwell Read, and George Piranian com- plete the list of signers of the telegram. Had 'Close Shave' WASHINGTON, May 3-(iP)- Senator Taylor of Idaho told the Senate today he doubts he would be alive if he had let himself be provoked into "talking back" to police after his arrest in Birming- ham, Ala. Taylor, Vice-Presidential can- didate of Henry A. Wallace's new party, was arrested on a disorderly conduct charge. He was freed on bail for a trial tomorrow. Ann Arbor's Mayor William E. Brown said last night that the decision would work no hardship in Ann Arbor because, "'there is no problem here as far as I know." City Attorney William M. Laird said that all the agree- ments were purely private mat- ters and that he didn't know how the decision would affect Ann Arbor residents. involving state courts and laws, were consolidated. The Washing- ton case, purely federal, was han- dled separately, In all, however,, the results were the same. Lower court de- cisions upholding enforcement of covenants were overturned. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People said in a statement at New York that the decision is a "blow" against segregation. The St. Louis case was that of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Shelley, Ne- groes. They bought property in an area covered by a covenant re- stricting it to Caucasian occu- pancy until 1961. The agreement provided forfeiture of the property as the penalty for violation. Spanish Club Will Present DramnaT oday "Nuestra Natacha," La Sociedad Hispanica's dramatic offering for this year, will be presented at 8:301 p.m. today and tomorrow in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Alejandro Casona's social drama is cast entirely with members of the Spanish Club. The three-act play is under the direction of An- thony Pasquariello of the Spanish department, and makeup, props and costumes have been handled by the students. The action of "Nuestra Nata- cha" takes place in a Spanish uni- versity and in a girls' reform school. Casona was long considered one of the foremost Spanish dramat- ists and educators until the Franco regime banned his works from the press and stage of Spain. La Sociedad Hispanica will pre- miere the play in this country. Tickets will be on sale from 2 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. today and to- morrow at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office. .een was named Saturday dur- ing the Olympic trials at Ames, Iowa to manage the 1948 U.S. Olympic wrestling squad. Producer of four Big Nine title holders and coach of four mem- bers of the 1928 Olympic squad, Keen started preparations for the welfare of this year's team by making the necessary arrange- ments for the outfit both in America and in England. The Wolverine mentor stated that the team would probably train for the Olympic games at the United States Naval. Academy, at Annapolis. During his 23 years of wrestling, Keen has trained 30 Big Nine champions and produced nine na- tional champions. Keen directed Michigan to a successful season this year as the way tie for second place in the Wolverines finished in a three- Western Conference finals. Jim Smith, who won the 136 pound class title paced Michigan to its second place position behind the Boilermakers of Purdue. Keen protested the final rank- ing on the basis that Betzig should have won his event, but was the locer when the officials decided in favor of the Illinois matmen. B ULLE TIN BOGOTA, Colombia, May 3-- (A')-Colombia broke off diplo- matic relations tonight with the Soviet Union, The Colombian cabinet decid- ed late this afternoon to sever relations with Russia almost a month after the abortive revolu- tion which took 1,504 lives in Colombia. A diplomatic rupture had been expected ever since Presi- dent Mariano Ospina Perez blamed international Commu- nism for the revolutionary riot- ing which broke out following the assassination of Liberal leader Jorge Ellecer Gaitan, April 9. Engineering S(hool To Vote Class Office Seekers Must File Petitions Class officers for the College of Engineering will be elected on May 13, Ev Ellin, Engineering Council president announced. Students wishing to run for of- fice may obtain a petition any time up to 5 p.m. Thursday in the Dean's office, Rm. 255 West En- gine. All petitions must be in at this time. A president and secretary for the freshman, sophomore and junior classes will be elected, and president, vice-president, secretary By LIDA DAILIES Marion Raspberry sat in the packed Rackham Amphitheatre last night, judiciously inspected her surroundings, and calmly stated that she saw no one there. At the gentle, but insistent questioning of Dr. Milton H. Erickson, Eloise psychiatrist and hypnosis expert, Miss Raspberry quizzically raised her eyebrow but repeated her statement. Thus, Dr. Erickson, in his hypnosis demon- stration, showed how the trained hypnotist can induce negative hal- lucination, a state in which the subject cannot respond to outside Miss Raspberry was describing the contents of three other crystal balls, a birthday party complete with pinning-the-tail-on-the-don- key and a male-suggested spin- the-bottle game, a "splash" party last August and a forgotten Christmas celebration in her school days. Back to Nursing School Miss Raspberry was then asked by Dr. Erickson to "forget 1948, 1947 . . . " Transported to her nursing-school days in 1941, she pictured the day of her capping ceremony. 'Trh vc, g1a, _ g I or4 i' it A. main TR AIL-BLAZERS BEWARE: Signs Sprout here Grass Grows By FRSN IVICK Slew-footed1 stuidents havel Alpha Phi Omega, national serv- dent walking to the campus side-