YEARS' BEST GIFT See Page 4 il I r Latest Deadline in the State 4br .A6.Abo ,:43'atty RAIN, SNOW COLDER VOL. LIX, No.71 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS Fraud Charged on Slide Rle Ball ickets I,______";-____________________ Cagers Do Pitt, Fire Trucks Visit Campus Three Times Power Explosion Hits Angell Hall By PETE HOTTEN Frenzied firemen were kept on -the run yesterday hurrying to three alarms on campus within four hours. Fires were reported in West Quad, Angell Hail and Haven Hall. * * * ANGELL HALL classes and of- fiees were thrown into confusion when flames broke out in a tunnel connecting transformer vaults and basement electricity equipment. Estimates of the damages were not available, but a crew of University workmen were re- pairing and replacing damaged cables up to midnight, accord- ing to Walter Roth, Superin- tendent of the Plant Depart- ment. The West Quad fire, confined to Rm. 421 Adams House, was ex- tinguished by quick acting resi- dents before firemen had arrived. Damages to a waste basket and easy chair amounted to more than $80; according to Don Bergeron, '40D, Adams House Adviser. WEARY FIREMEN also rusled to Haven Hall in response to a call by students and faculty aianne4. by smoke in the building. Vhe "smoke entered the building by backing up in the tunnel to Angell Hall. The Angel Hall fire, caused by an overloaded trunkline, threw out all power and tele- phone lines and filled the building with smoke. However, only asbestos and insulation were burned. Roth said that temporary re- pairs to the Angell Hall electrical lines were being made, because a program to improve study and office lighting -amounting to more than $15,000-is in the planning stage. CLASSES IN THE basement were suspended and offices closed because of the lack of light. Members of the fire swept room in the West Quad are Don Palmer, '50; Bill Diener, '50; and Carvel Mair, '50E, who were settled in their room last night after an ex- tensive cleaning campaign. All three were in classes when the blaze occurred. End To Record Ban Gets Okay WAHINGTON - (P) - The Government gave its approval to an industry-union agreement that will end the "Petrillo Ban" on the making of phonograph records by AFL musicians. The agreement provides for a welfare fund for unemployed mu- sicians, to be financed by a royal- ty on each record sold. James C. Petrillo, head of the musicians union, and industry officials are to sign a five-year contract in New York today. Petrillo and his Union of In- strument Players stopped making records last December 31. They said the ban would continue until an arrangement was worked out to help musicians who Petrillo said were thrown out of work by the playing of records on the radio and in coin-operated phonographs. In New York, some company of- ficials said tonight not to expect a heavy rush of new recordings as most firms have some unreleased records still in stock. Two Students Die In Auto Accident Suprunowicz Tops 'Al' S corers with 14 Points By SY SONKIN At the end of the game the scoreboard read, "Michigan 62, Pitt 44," but the Wolverines knew that they had been in a fight. After six and a half minutes of play, the Wolverines took a lead they never relinquished, but the scrappy Pitt quintet never let up the pressure. EVERY TIME PITT came within hailing distance, the Maize and Blue sunk a flurry of baskets to pull away. Although he was on the losing team, Caterna topped both teams in individual scoring with 16 points, but his offensive efforts were not enough to overcome the Wolverine leaders, Mack <; Suprunowicz, Leo Vander Kuy .initiate Roll Call of Peace On Campus The Dean of Canterbury's speech started the ball rolling to- wards the formation of a tempo- rary student group the Roll Call for Peace Committee. Composed of individual stu- dents, the Committee is working in conjunction with groups all over the country who are petitioning for Truman-Stalin Conferences. THE PETITION which the grouphopes to circulate soon, de- clares that "We do not want to go to war over differences between our country and the Soviet Un- ion." The document further urges, "Since the Soviet Union has a- ready expressed willingness to sit down with us to straighten out these differences, we call upon our President and govern- ment to arrange conferences .... to settle all outstanding prob- lems. .." Members of the temporary or- ganization are Madison Pressnell, Bill Walton, Philip Culbertson, Al Lippett, Leo Weiss, Adele Haddad, Marvin Gladstone, Mrs. Nicholas Dancy, Dave Slautterbach, Leon Rechtman, Morgan Lewis, Al Fish- man and Bob Holston. Instruments 'In Danger' A police guard was stationed at Harris Hall yesterday after Jack Lee, assistant conductor of the bends, told police the safety of the University Bands' instruments was "in danger." Mrs. William D. Revelli, wife of Prof. Revelli, conductor of the bands, reported receiving a phone call from "the Salvation Army" requesting admittance to Harris hung up. Upon checking with the Salva- tion Army she learned that no such call had been made by them. and Hal Morrill, who sank 14, 13, and 10 points, respectively. In winning its third straight game, Michigan showed a spotty passing attack, losing the ball many times by simply throwing it inteothe hands of an oppon- ent. * *. * OTHER TIMES saw one of the speedy Panthers come from no- where to intercept a Wolverine pass as the Maize and Blue was trying to work its way under the basket. But when the chips were down, it was Michigan who put the ball in the basket for those all-important points. It was the improved shooting from the floor that gave the Wol- verines the victory. THEY SUNK 32.9 per cent of their shots, while the Pennsylvan- ians managed to hit only 21.7 per cent. Despite an advantage in height, the Maize and Blue was unable to completely control the backboard,was contrasted to their first two games. The visitors always seemed to have a man in the clear at a dis- tance from the basket, and, on a rebound, a Panther would bat theE ball to his teammate out in the clear. * * * THE PANTHERS broke the scoring ice 45 seconds after the game started when co-captain Sam David dropped in a two- pointer, but sophomore Vander Kuy's first goal tie it up shortly afterward. Then Caterna, who shares the Pitt captaincy with David, bucketed a couple quick ones to give the Panthers the biggest lead they enjoyed, 6-2. It didn't take long for the Wol- verines to knot the count at 6-6 on a basket by Bob Harrison and a couple of free throws by Boyd McCaslin. THEY QUICKLY moved ahead on Vander Kuy'.s second two- pointer, but saw Caterna sink an- other to deadlock the score again, It was at this time that Su- prunowicz scored his tie-break- ing shot, and the Wolverines ran up a 16-8 edge before the visitors found the mark again. Pitt sunk two more baskets to See CAGERS, Page 3 62-ll A44 Regents Will Hear Senate Ban Reports SL May Request Removal of Ban A confidential sub-committee report on the political speakers ban was given to the Faculty Sen- ate yesterday. The report, if approved by the Senate, will be presented to the Regents at their meeting Friday. * * * NO OFFICIAL announcement of the action of the Senate sub-com- mittee was issued, but informed sources revealed that the commit- tee had come out strongly against the ban The committee was set up last month by the University Senate, which is composed of all faculty members with the rank of As- sistant Professor and above. It is the main policy-making body of the University below the Re- gents. The subcommittee recommenda- tions will not be released until the Regents have considered them, ac- cording to Mrs. J. K. Adams, Sec- retary of Dean of Students Erich Walter. All meetings of the faculty sen- ate are held in closed session, ac- cording to Mrs. Adams. Members of the faculty senate received copies of the sub-committee report several days ago. MEANWHILE, the Student Leg- islature cabinet, hasualready pre- pared a report and submitted it to the Regents. SL President Blair Moody has not divulged details of the plan. However students close to the Legislature said that the SL will request complete abandonment of the controversial ruling. Members of the Senate Sub- committee and the SL cabinet met together "three or four times" to consider action on the ban, ac- cording to Moody. U' Physician.s Dig Knife Out Of Matt's Bach A rugged Southern laborer - minus a three inch knife blade which was imbedded in his spine for 23 years--i well on the road to recovery and is expected to be released from University Hospital "within a week," In one of the most amazing cases in hospital history, doctors successfully removed the blade in a two hour operation. THEY FOUND the blade had "completely pierced" the man's spinal column. The 48 year old patient, whom doctors refused to identify, picked up the knife blade in a light in Georgia, but didn't real- ize he had been stabbed. FoP 19 years he did heavy work and felt no pain. Finally, four years ago, the man complained he had difficulty walking. He entered the University Hospital, mentioning several ail- ments, includling a "pain in the back." AN X-RAY detected the piece of steel and doctors operated. Some infection was found, but "with the spinal cord completely! pierced it was a wonder it held to- gether through the years," a physician declared. "It's a wonder too that in per- forning some strenuous activ- ity the man difiu't crush or fur- ther injure his spinal cord," he added. A hospital spokesman declared that "medical records reveal no s'imvnilar case or anyvth ing like it."' CHILD WEARS KLAN GARB-A small girl, wearing the tradi- tional Ku Klux Klan regalia, makes her appearance at the city auditorium at Mason, Ga., during a mass initiation of 300 candl- dates into the robed order. About 150 women were among the masked group which looked on. SPARTANS REJOICE: Conference Bid Acceptance Celebrated By MSC Students Weather: Ugh A weather-battered Ann Ar- bor which has suffered through two gray days of fog, frequent unpredictable showers and high humidity is in for more pun- ishment with sinking thermo- meters and snow predicted for today by the Willow Run Weather Bureau. Students leaving Ann Arbor for the holidays may be faced with icy, treacherous roads, last-minute cancelled airplane flights and delayed bus sched- ules. Herrin Says By BEV BUSSEY Sports Feature Editor It was another V-E Day when the students at Michigan State learned about their acceptance into the Big "Ten," Sunday. Five minutes after the decision was made in Chicago, Michigan State News reporters covering the Conference meeting phoned in that MSG's bid received unani- mous approval. FINAL EXAMS were forgotten and books shoved aside tempo- Vet Televisi on Fund Project Short of Goal The drive for funds to purchase a television set for the local Vet- erans' Readjustment Center is far short of its $700 goal, according to Art Moskoff, chairman of the AVC committee sponsoring the cam- paign. Nearly $400 is still needed to insure installation of the video set by Christmas, Moskoff said. He urged all persons and organiza- tions wishing to make contribu- tions to phone 2-7570, or to bring or mail their donations to 1017 Vaughan St; TILE D1I'VE started when AVC learned that the veterans at the Center, desiring a television set to help disperse the monotony of confinement, had collected $100 among themselves-far short of the amount needed to purchase a suitable model. A local television dealer vol- imteered to waive his profit and his labor costs, offering to in- stall a $1,000 set for $"00. AVC, deciding to undertake the task of raising the additional money, required, contacted the other five local veterans' organiza- tions, and received enthusiastic as- sin ances of support from each. Organizations which have al- ready contributed to the fund in- clude campus AVC, $60 and the American Legion. $100. The two VFW posts, the town AVC chapter and the DAV have also pledged fi- nancial support. rarily as the news spread like w fire around campus. ild- I With the announcement in extras of the campus publica- cation, bulletins over the radio, and lightning action by campus leaders, the storm broke. Students converged from every direction to the side of the Union Building, where a rally was held at 9 p.m. They jammed the main highway until police were forced to reroute traffic from city limit to city limit, * * * AROUND A HUGE bonfire, glowing even brighter than the towering Xmas tree next to it, they broke into cheers and the MSC Fight Song. r Emcee Arnold Barnsdorfer in- troduced newly-elected football captain Hal Vogler and the Spartans' little package of grid- iron dynamite, George Guerre. Before they had a chance to ex- press their feelings, a few strong Spartanites carried them off on their shoulders. But, the almost uncontrollable group weren't satisfied. They marched over to President Hanna's home and chanted him out of the house. The mob snake- danced back to the Union where they led the cheerleaders in cheers -and sang just about every so- cial "group song" in the books. 4 * * WOMENS CURFEW broke up the proceedings. To keep the few remaining students from doing any damage, Bransdorfer suggest- ed going over to the dorms to serenade the MSC coeds. The celebration lasted two hours --unlike Big Ten "brother" North- western's week - long vacation when their Rose Bowl bid came in. But to Spartan students, final exams were calling. Russo-ltaliani Pact Sigled .il Moscow ROME-()-The Italian For- eign Ministry said Italy has signed a series of trade and reparations agreements with Russia. They were signed in Moscow and included a treaty for com- merce and navigation, the For-' t eign Ministry said. Suspects To Get Lie Testa a In Spy Caseg By The Associated Press While the Grand Jury in Newf York was given a 75 minute look at the "pumpkin films," Rep. Carl r Mundt (Rep., S.D.) announcedb in Washington that the principals k in the Chambers-Hiss case may be asked to .take lie detector tests. Rep. Mundt, Acting Chairman of the House Un-American Activi- ties Committee, said it may decide within the next day or so whether to ask three principals to take such tests. THE THREE are Whittaker Chambers, admitted onetime Com- munist courier, and the Hiss brothers, Alger and Donald. Chambers has testified that Alger Hiss, a former State Department official, slipped out secret U.S. documents from him to send to, Moscow; he has said Donald Hiss was also helpful. The Hisses dis- pute him flatly. Meanwhile, in New York, Al- ger Hiss handed in his resigna- tion as head of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace today but it was rejected. Instead, the foundation's trus- tees granted the fprmer State De- partment official a three-month leave of absence from his $20,000- a-year post after tabling his res- ignation. He will continue to re- ceive his salary while on leave. Rep. Richard Nixon (Rep., Cal.), who showed the films to the Grand Jury agreed to let the jury see them again whenever it pleases. East-West Rift Is Blamed for Dollar'_Policy The rift between East and West has forced a policy of dollar di- plomacy upon the American state department, Prof. Jacob Viner of Princeton University told the Eco- nomics Club last night. Prof. Viner, eminent economist and state department consultant, will discuss "American Free En- terprise-Fact, Fiction, Ideal or Evil" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Amphitheatre. * * * "FINANCIAL DEALINGS by private capital on the interna- tional scale has been prohibited by the general political and economic instability of the post-war world," he said. Foreign aid programs which have sprung up to handle world economic re-habilitation are bound to be political in nature, Prof. Viner commented. "Thus present American eco- nomic policy is carried out with an eye toward helping potential friends and trading with potential enemies only when it will benefit the U.S. strategically," he ex- plained. Party Printed Extra Ducats Group Holds Up Criminal Action By LEON JAROFF A charge that 50 Slide Rule Ball ickets had been fraudulently >rinted and sold was leveled last might by Lex Herrin '50E, c- hairman of the Slide Rule Ball 'ommittee. "The identity of the guilty party as been established," Herrin add- d, "but no action will be taken gainst him if the unused tickets nd the receipts from those sold re turned in to Rm. 205 West En- ineering Annex before Dec. 17." AN ANONYMOUS tip first called he committee's attention to the raud and an investigation soon evealed that more tickets had een collected at the dance than Lad been sold and given out. Checking with their printers, the committee discovered that a person, representing himself as a committee member, had or- dered and obtained an addi- tional lot of 50 tickets on the day of the dance (Dec. 3). To avoid revealing his name on a receipt, he had paid cash, they found. "As far as can be ascertained," Herrin said, "at least 10 or 12 of the fraudulent tickets were used for admission to the dance." "FURTHER CHECKS may re- veal an even higher number," he added. Other reports to the Slide Rule Ball Committee revealed that some of the fraudulent tickets were offered free at . - yers' Wig and Robe dance wh was held on the same night.' Herrinadmittedhhowever, that there was no indication that any of the lawyers had accepted or used the tickets. "I don't want to give the im- pression that this thing is merely a continuation of the traditional lawyer - engineer feud," Herrin stressed. "The. obtaining and use of these tickets is a serious, crimi- nal act." (THE OFFENDER, if appre- hended, could be prosecuted by the State for obtaining money under false pretenses and would be sub- ject to disciplinary action by the University.) Herrin recalled a similar case of fraud which rocked the campus several years ago when. a number of illegally-printed J-Hop tickets were discovered. The guilty party in that fraud graduated and left for Europe before he could be ap- prehended, according to Herrin. Women Crowd Local Stores On Mens' Night It was Men's Night at State Street stores last night, but wom- en took advantage of the situation. For the most part feminine shoppers made up the pre-Christ mas crowd that jammed the stores and they'll be back again tonight for Women's Night. ONE WOMEN'S apparel shop proprietor reported that men were either "too embarrassed or too broke" to do much shopping. Other stores were filled with both - men and women. Some jewelry, cosmetic and lingerie clerks said that they made more sales last night than they had for the past week. Many male students brought in their girl friend's girl friend to give advise for that special pur- chase. 4. * * AND MEN ARE generally bet- ter shoppers than women, clerks reported, "They know what they want and they don't dicker about price," one saleslady said. S-fnn,- MA r,.nonon. .o.- ro a n *ffn SMITH TO RETIRE: Prof. Arthur Bromage Wints GOP Alderman Nominatior Prof. Arthur W. Bromage, of the political science department, was nominated as a Republican can- vanced for the post which will be vacated in the spring by Alderman Shir-ly W. Smith, vice-president and secretary emeritus of the University, also a Republican. ALDERMAN SMITH, who has represented the ward for fouir years announced Saturday that he will not be a candidate for elec- tiop in the April 4 election. Prof. Bromage, a recognized authority on municipal, county, and state governments came to the University in 1,929 from Harvard University. In 1938 and 1939 he served as secretary of former Governor Frank Mur- phy's commission on reform and . mac ir _~n n r.u '~r~n. 'P(ST', EDITOR LECTURES: Graha Discusses Monopoly Trend' By JIM MARCIIEWKA Monopoly trends in newspaper advantage of their control of the channels of information. tion is added to the ordinarily great responsibilities of newspa- V ~-4e, -. -- I