BAD PRECEDENT see page 4 wY~~ Lw ~ rn i ai4 FAIR AND WARMER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LIX, No. 146 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS _ -- 1 Communists Near Center Of Kunshan Fight Within 30 Miles of Shanghai SHANGHAI - () - Chinese Communist troops are pressing on the railway town of Kunshan, only 30 miles from Shanghai, a garrison communique said last night. Earlier information said rail- way service to Kunshan had been stopped. The communique did not say that Kunshan had fallen. * * * AN EARLIER communique, however, had located fighting west of the Chenyi railway station, which is seven miles west of Kun- shan. The garriso also admitted a second redcolumn again was driving south of this front to- ward Kashing. Kashing, 62 miles southwest of Shanghai, controls the railway to fortified Hangehow. The tone of the communique in- dicated that the biggest red force was headed not toward Shanghai but in the direction of Kashing and Hangchow. Hangchow is 59 miles southwest of Kashing. * * * THE GARRISON quoted war prisoners as saying the Commun- ists who crossed the Yangtze had only three days rations and were without rear supply stations. The third Communist force, of unknown size, was moving over- land towards Kashing from the east and was last reported about 30 miles away. Once Kashing falls, Shanghai will be sealed off by land. Trains still :were operating to Hangchow via Kashing during the after- noon. Men's ,JudiC Ends Hearngs On Vote Fraud Men's Judiciary Council yester- day concluded hearings on the stuffing of the engin 1h ballot box during last week's campus elections; no new evidence was found; "We feel that we have thor- oughly' investigated every impor- tant angle of the case," Bill Reit- zer, '51L, president of the Council, said. RESULTS OF the findings will be made public after the Council deliberates early next week. The stuffed ballots have held up results of a Union vice-presi- dency and two engineering class presidents' races. Questioned yesterday was Mor- gan Ramsay, '0BAd, candidate for Union vice-president of the combined schools. HE TESTIFIED that he didn't know of any "irregularities" in last week's balloting. The fraudulent ballots were un- covered when alert election coun- ters found bundles of ballots con- sisting of one Student Legislature ticket with several Union vice- presidency or engineering ones. The bundles were folded and punched together. Racial Clause Arouses Fight Williams House Vies With Own Resident A stormy, two-hour Council meeting at Williams House, West Quad, last night, ended in a "fight to .the finish" declaration by res- ident Howard Johnson, '51, to house members. The meeting was reportedly called to argue the case of John- son, a Student Legislature mem- ber since last fall, who voted against the recent SL discrimina- tory measure. * * * THE CLAUSE states that the University should not allow on campus any organization whose charters contain discriminatory phrases. Claiming he was the only in- dependent member to east a up. rnlivp ....m'a. n .. Ut A '1i Convocation Will Hear Conant Talk By GEORGE WALKER Students, faculty and visitors from all parts of the country will gather at 11 a.m. today in Hill Auditorium to witness the 26th annual Honors Convocation and recognize the outstanding scholastic achieve- ment of 1,577 students. Dr. James Bryant Conant, president of Harvard University, will address the assembly on "Skepticism and Courage in the Modern World." CLASSES WILL be dismissed at 10:45 a.m. so that students may attend the traditional affair, which will honor the largest group of students in the Convocation's history. Dr. Conant, who arrived in Ann Arbor yesterday morning, spoke at a Phi Beta Kappa initi- ation banquet last night on "Sci- ence and Common Sense."f Attacking what he called "sci- ,f entific illiteracy," the noted scien- tist and educator debunked three. common concepts of science-the treatment of science as a mere: branch of mathematics, as a sort z of magic, and the belief that there. is only one scientific method.r * * * ..-.-.,... "THERE IS a vast oversimplifi- cation in reducing the scientific method to a formula of hypothe- sis, deductions and conclusions," Dr. Conant said. He upheld the conceptual ap- proach to science, which at- tempts to establish theories and analyze a problem, as superior to the empirical method-a trial and error system that usually involves costly experiments. "The less there is of empiricism in; of success," Dr. Conant remarked. * *' * JAMES BRYANT CONANT ... speaks today m* * *n science, the more certain we are * LATER IN AN interview with The Daily Dr. Conant commented on the Fair Educational Practices Bill, now before the Massachusetts legislature. Dr. Conant said that he had no objection to the objectives of the measure, which would eliminate discrimination in the state's schools and colleges by making illegal questions concerning race and religion in applications for admissions. "However," he added, "I think the bill is unnecessary and will prove in practice very difficult to enforce. It will probably be unworkable." AN ATOMIC scientist himself, Dr. Conant expressed wholehearted approval of the University's Phoenix Project. He thought the idea of a living memorial to the war dead "an excellent" one.' PANEL SPEAKER SAYS: Students Need Chance to Assume Responsibilities Senate Reins Seized By Economizers Republicans Hit StabilityPlan WASHINGTON -(P)-Economy forces grabbed the reins in the Senate yesterday and sent the $2,400,000,000 Labor-Federal Se- curity appropriation back to com- mittee to be cut. The upset roll call came on a motion by Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio) who pleaded with the Sen- ate to establish a "general pat- tern" of spending cuts lest higher taxes "destroy the free enterprise system." M!EANWHILE, Republidan members of a Senate-House Com- mittee accused President Tru- man's Economic Advisory Council of peddling "political propaganda" in support of his ideas for a stable economy. The GOP minority of the JointEconomic Committee fired the charge in a report assailing Mr. Truman's general stabiliza- tion program. That program, presented in January, among other things calls for a $4,000,- 000,000 tax boost and for stand- by authority to restore wage and price controls on a limited basis. "We reject the basic philosophy of the President's economic re- port which, in effect, recom-. mends that we set up in this country a planned and controlled economy and increase taxation for that purpose," the Republican groups declared. * * * THE BILL to finance the La- bor Department and the Security Agency for the fiscal year be- ginning July 1 was the first reg- ular appropriation measure to come up in the Senate this session. Taft and other backers of reduc- tions told their colleagues they should start with the firt such measure and cut them all as they come to them. The GOP Policy Committee chairman argued for a 5 per ent cut - about $15,497,888-in the funds provided for administra- tive costs in the measure under consideration. He said he wished it could be 10 per cent. And he made it specific that he wanted 10 per cent out of the appropria- tion for the recently authorized $5,500,000,000 extension of the Marshall Plan. Call Shipherd College Future 'Optimistic' Shipherd College's future looks "optimistic" to Paul Leser, re- signed Olivet professor of history and anthropology, because it has a balanced faculty and a prom- ised student body. The new school is being organ- ized by 16 professors who resigned from Olivet's faculty over dismis- sal of two professors. * * * FOLLOWING his address to the University Anthropology Club Les- er told The Daily that the Olivet administration has gained a "100 per cent victory." "Shipherd would get at least 100 of the 140 students who re- fuse to return to Olivet if Pres- ident Ashby remains. And with 100 freshmen the situation would be satisfactory," he said. Replying to charges of Com- munism in Shipherd's faculty, Prof. Leser pointed to the renew- ed contracts offered all resigning faculty members by Olivet's ad- ministration. He explained the dismissal of Prof. T. Barton Akeley, one of the discharged, by a 'beard and a beret.' "Prof. Akeley wore both, and they expressed bohemianism and communism to the conserva- tive townspeople," he said. Negotiating in Good Faith Vet Patients Fight Action Of Legislators Elimination of Grant Protested By DON KOTITE Protests over the State Legisla- ture's elimination of a $250,000 Veterans' Readjustment Center operating grant flared yesterday as seven clinic patients left to seek audience with Rep. John Espie, head of Lansing's House Ways and Means Committee. The crusade to the state cap- ital followed a similar trip by six patients Wednesday to contact Gov. .Williams about the fund re- fusal. * * * MEANWHILE, at the Univer- sity, clinic psychiatrists announced the wandering patients must face restrictions for their inprecedent- ed departure. Latest reports said their whereabouts were not known. The first group finally gained access to the governmental man- sion after "getting the run- around," on patient declared. He reported the Governor pledged full support of the prob- lem but that he declined to press action, claiming "my hands are full right now." "GOV. WILLIAMS told us to buttonhole representatives and to circulate petitions stating our cause,";the spokesman said. In an attempt to point a tnger at the one element re- sponsible for the grant denial, representatives of veterans' groups conferred here yesterday with psychiatrist Prof. Moses M. Frohlich, head of the Center, and clinic patients. "The action probably took shape last year, when the Office of Veterans' Affairs was abolished and its power delegated to the state," patient Jim Furse ex- plained at the meeting. FURSE NOTED that several legislators feel the fund refusal stems from a Lansing reluctance to appropriate money to train stu- dent psychiatrists. They agree it should be used solely for veteran readjustment, he said. The Center's 37 patients plan to contact veterans' groups throughout Michigan through written pieces. The Ann Arbor Le- gion Post has already been noti- fied, Furse said. Speaking for fellow patients he commented, "Closing the clinic's doors would mean bitter disap- pointment to many. There cer- tainly must be something else to do rather than abolish it." Young GOP Backs Controversial Bill The Young Republican Club adopted a resolution supporting the principles of the controversial Fair Educational Practices Bill at a regular.meeting held last night. The members qualified their sanction by adding that they did not believe University facilities should be denied to organizations that have discriminatory clauses in their constitutions for which they are not responsible. The club also maintained, in the same resolution, that the bill should be amended so as to pre- serve ''the right to persons to de-I termine their own housing status." ECLIPSE OF VENUS-Adele Hager, '51, Marge Kalbfleish, '49, and Sue Shera, '50, dress Venus de Milo to conform to the spirit of Martha Cook's famous pledge. Later, they banded together to protect Venus against those who attempted to disrobe her. Ideological War Rages OttMartha Cook Pledgep * President Says Russians By AL BLUMROSEN College students do pot get enough chance to assume respon- sibility, Dean Hayward Keniston of the literary college told a group of 100 high school and college ed- ucators yesterday at the 14th An- Schoohen To Meet Today On Campus Meetings of the Michigan Schoolmasters Club will start at 9 a.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall with a business meeting fol- lowed by a general session at which Chicago schools superinten- dent Herold C. Hunt will speak on "Raising Our Professional Hori- zons." Members will then attend the Honors Convocation to hear Pres- ident James Bryant Conant of Harvard University. * ~* * THE EVENING program in- cludes a reception, dinner, and ad- dress by Kenneth McFarland, su- perintendent of schools in Topeka, Kans., at 7:15 p.m. in the Union. McFarland will speak on "Be- hold This Day." The teachers and school admin- istrators, from all over the state, will also hear a concert by the Men's Glee Club. CONFERENCES on specialized areas of the school curriculum will begin at noon with a series of luncheon meetings. Also, a luncheon meeting at 12:15 p.m. in the League will hear results of a statewide survey on "Teacher Supply, Demand, and Placement." The theme of the Schoolmas- ters Club conferences is "Im- nual Conference on Problems in School and College Cooperation. Dean Keniston said that high school students should be given more chance to take part in running their schools so they would learn to assume responsi- bility and be ableto work in the interests of the whole group. * * * THE PANEL speakers, from high schools and colleges through- out the state came to substantial agreement on the following: Colleges should place more emphasis on the individual stu- dent's interests, habits and abil- ities rather than on particular grades he received in high school, or the courses he took. High school should give en- tering college students a basic knowledge of writing, grammar and organization, an ability to read, digest and understand and a clear notion of his abilities and aptitudes relating to his chosen career. Upcoming freshmen should un- derstand basic mathematics and have a scientific attitude. They should know how to study. * * * MOST OF the speakers stressed the fact that each freshman was an individual, different from all others, and should be treated as such by the colleges. All stressed the value of close contact- between the high schools and colleges so that the secondary schools would know what the colleges wanted from the incoming freshmen. By LEON JAROFF The statue of Venus De Milo in the main hall of Martha Cook was clothed and disrobed three times yesterday as an ideological battle loomed over the true meaning of the famous Martha Cook pledge. One of the women who costum- ed Venus, Adele Hager '51, ex- plained thatathe move was prompted by false rumors which swept the campus yesterday after The Daily revealed the text of the pledge. * * * "WE DIDN'T want people to start thinking of Martha Cook as 'Goon Castle' again," she declared, The Pledge "We feel that displays of af- fection in Martha Cook Build- ing should be limited to those in good taste and not embar- rassing to parents,, friends, or girls in the dormitory. We feel that this is a personal matter, so every girl should be on her honor to maintain those ideas which the house should repre- sent." "so we dressed Venus in a petti- coat to show that we were taking this uproar in the right spirit." "Most of us signed the pledge in a sincere effort to limit dis- plays of affection inside of Martha Cook Building," she added. "We certainly had no intention of limiting outside activities." Miss Hager blamed the attempts to disrobe Venus on the "con- servative element" within Martha Cook. "They were finally stopped when we posted guards around our handiwork," she said. * * * THAT THERE was a "conser- vative element" present was force- fully demonstrated to a Daily re- porter when he was surrounded by a group of women in Martha Cook's "Red Room" and chastized for publicizing a "personal" pledge. Other coeds, led by Miss Ha- ger, came to his rescue, however, and the "conservative element' retreated-but only after trying vainly to persuade The Daily not to print the picture of Venus. Meanwhile, the controversy crept into the Martha Cook po- litical scene as candidates for var- ious house offices decided to stand or fall on the pledge issue. Outstanding among the cam- paign posters was one advocating the presidency for Dean Spalding '50, the lone male to sign the pledge. Chaplains Say Rules Do Not' Change ideas Religious Growth, Mores Discussed New rules may clamp down on students' modes of behavior but not change-their ideas, a group of college chaplains decided yester- day. Members of the national chap- lains conference discussed campus mores and students' religious growth at Rackham in one of the last meetings of the conference. * * * "THE TEACHING of Christian ethics is a better plan than nega- tive censorship of activities," one chaplain declared. Sex and drinking are the two biggest problems that the chap- lains meet in most colleges. In other schools these problems are handled with immediate disci- pline. Less than half the group indi- cated that the administration and the chaplain worked closely to- gether in matters of discipline. * * * BUT THE chaplains claimed that they are often called umon in Finish Seen For Inipasse Over Berlin Diplomats Hold Cautious Outlook WASHINGTON -- (P) --- Presi- dent Truman buoyed hopes yester- day for an early end to the East- West deadlock over Berlin, say- ing he believes the Soviets are act- ing in good faith in negotiations to lift the blockade. He told a news conference he thinks the situation is encourag- ing. DIPLOMATIC authorities, how- ever, indicated that if and when an agreement is worked out to lift the year-old transport carrier blockade from the German capi- tal it will then throw open the broader problems of Germany's future for consideration of the Big Four foreign ministers coun- cil. Meanwhile, in New York, Secre- tary of State Acheson said that any agreement reached with Rus- sia on general German problems will have to protect "the basic safeguards and benefits" already arranged for Western Germany. Acheson assured 45,000,000 western Germans that until such an agreement is reached, the United States will vigorously sup- port development of the western German program. This calls among other things for a dem-- cratic government giving Grmans much leeway in handlingtheir own affairs. * * *' AS THE WESTERN Powea waited for Moscow to make the next move on the Berlin questlon, these were other developments: 1.-Diplomats of six Western nations signed an agreement in London setting up international control of Germany's rich Rtdir Valley where its prized industries are centered. Russia, which wants a hand in the Ruhr control, was ignored in the new pact by repre- sentatives of the United States, Britain, France, Belgium, The'_W Netherlands and Luxembourg. 2.-Warren Austin, chief U.S. delegate to the United Nations, told the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee that the North Atlantic defense pact is needed because Russia has "brazenly" violated its pledges to refrain from use of threatseand force against other countries. Austin said, however, that "the balance is swinging toward the forces favoring peaceful progress." s * a 3.- AN ASSOCIATED Press dispatch from Moscow said diplo- mats there considered Russia aiid the Western Powers have made a start toward a new stage of mu- tual relations in their negotiations over Berlin. 4.-A new incident in Berlin added fresh strain to the deli- cate East-West relations as the Russians threatened to halt barge traffic from the British sector. Both the Russians and British posted armed guards at three canal locks awaiting a dawn showdown when the barges are due to start moving again. 5.-British and French officials in Berlin joined with Americans in protesting scheduled air-to- ground firing by Soviet fighter planes in the airlift, corridor. Pre- vious protests, however, have been ignored by the Russians. Swinton Gets AP Cairo Job Former Daily City Editor Stan Swinton has been notified of his appointment as chief of the Asso- ciated Press Bureau at Cairo, Egypt. Cairo is the central headquar- ters for AP news collection for the entire Middle East region. WAnFlnina- athree-vemr hiteh o MODERN FORTY-NINER: Uranium-Fever Hits Former Student t ap By MARY STEIN In quest of a million-dollar ura- nium strike, a former University A new-type Geiger counter that can spot uranium a quarter of a mile away will help him in will be worth at least $150,000. The one deposit reported was worth several million dollars." tous Lost Dutchman mine in Arizona from "desert rats." "And after comparing accounts T +hinl T -nnxz ur rn t lnnr ,.n