'U, APPROPRIATION See Page 4 icj r Latest Deadline in the State 43Iatt 41) - _- WARM AND HUMID VOL. LIX, No. 161 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1949 1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ a_ _ _ _ _ _ _ PRICE FIVE CENTS UN Refuses To Recognize Franco Spain Latin American Resolution Fails NEW YORK-(I)-The United Nations Assembly last night stuck to its three year ban on Franco Spain. But it also beat down a Slav bloc Campaign to slap economic restrictions on the Madrid govern- ment. IN A FLURRY of roll calls, the Assembly: 1. Voted 26 to 15, with 16 ab- sentions and two absences, on a Latin American resolution which would have permitted UN mem- bers to send ambassadors and ministers back to Madrid. This proposal failed to pass because it did not get the needed two- thirds majority. 2. Voted down a 13-paragraph resolution by Poland which would have kept UN members from send- ing arms to Spain and would put strong restrictions-called sanc- tions-on trade with Madrid. The six Slav countries picked up some support on various paragraphs but never approached even a majority vote. THE FINAL vote on the whole resolution was six in favor, 40 op- posed and seven absentions, The United States and Britain abstained on the Latin American proposal but voted against the Polish plan. The assembly action meant the UN stands by two resolutions ap- proved in its 1946 sessions in Lon- don and New York. *~* * ONE RESOLUTION bars Franco from membership in the UN and any of its specialized agencies. The other resolution asked all UN members to recall from Ma- drid their ambassadors and minis- ters, leaving only lesser officials in charge. Russian Farm Standards Up Says Bergson "Raising the standards of the farm class has been the main achievement of the Russian eco- nomic revolution," Prof. Abram Bergson declared in a lecture last flight in Rackham Amphitheatre. Prof. Bergson, an economist at Columbia University, will deliver the second of his two lectures at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphitheatre on "Inequality and Social Classes in the U.S.S.R." HE POINTED OUT that by 1937 the standards of the peasants was equal to that of the city popula- tion. Since World War II, the movement of laborers to the cities has stopped, he declared. Although the collectivization of all farms in 1929 met with severe peasant resistance, only by a strong loyalty to the gov- ernment could the peasants have endured the hardships of World War II, Prof. Bergson re- marked. Various collective enterprises act much as private corporations in the United States, measuring their success by the amount of profit they make, he said. ** * HOWEVER, Russian standards of wealth do not begin to compare with ours, as Prof. Bergson showed. The average per capita in- come in Russia in 1937 was about one-third that in the United States, he claimed. While collective farmers must produce as much as the govern- ment demands, they are allowed to market their surplus goods on an open market, he stated. Fellowship Goes To Alice Dickinson Mrs. Alice B. Dickinson, teach- ing fellow in mathematics, has been awarded a $1,500 fellowship for research in higher mathe- Social EventsFail ITo Meet Costs Crowded Schedule, Warm Weather Force Student Groups Into the Red By CRAIG WILSON Ann Arbor was an "entertaining" town over the weekend. In fact, three student groups went into the red in their attempts to supply students with opera, theatre, art and song. * * * * "BOY MEETS GIRL," produced by the University Student Play- ers, "went down pretty badly," according to Lee Sunshine, production manager. ONLY 220 paid to see the two performances of the comedy- compared to 1,400 who saw "Time of Your Life," presented in the fall. The group will be able to cover all bills, and will have sufficient funds for a fall production, based on last fall's profits, according to Mike Cetta, president. - * * * * MEANWHILE, the Hot Record Society's Dixieland Jazz Concert, with the music of Art Hodes' Greenwich Village All-Stars, Sunday, 'fared almost as badly. r t s f Revenue ran 65 per cent below expectations and the group lost several hundred dollars, a s spokesman said. Eye witnesses rtAuditorium "prac- Defnde to tically vacan. "Gilbert and Sullivan Society's production of "Patience" Friday E is ler tase and Saturday fell off sharply from Thursday's attendance, leaving the group with two very "red" days. By JOHN DAVIES * * * and ELLIOT GERBER ATTENDANCE Friday was off The British are entirely within one-third and Saturday on e - their legal rights arresting and fourth. in holding Gerhart Eisler for re- And the Union Dance Satur- turn to the United States, accord- day night failed to pay its way, ing to Professors Lawrence Pruess according to Union manager of the political science department Frederick Kuenzel. and William W. Bishop of the Art Cinema ducked the weekend. law school. Unable to secure an auditorium Polish claims that Eisler's arrest reservation early in the week, was forcible abduction" are en- plans. for a possible movie were tirely unfounded because the Pol- cancelled. ish liner "Batory" was within * * * British territorial waters and THE ANN ARBOR Drama Festi- therefore under English jurisdic- val reported no appreciable decline tion, both agreed, in revenue and stayed comfortably in the black. THE BRITISH are under obli- Tennis Ball "made money" gation to send Eisler back under according to its spokesmen, al- an extradition treaty with the though 1,000 students attended United States. It.demands the re- and the capacity was 1,500. turn of those indicted for certain Men's Glee Club, which had Hill specific common law crimes. Per- Auditorium Saturday night, re- jury is the specific charge in the ported an 85 per cent capacity Eisler case. crowd. There was no admission (The Associated Press reports charge. Washington officials said last * * * night that a fresh charge may THE INTER-ARTS Festival, be slapped against Eisler as a fu- which scheduled events at 3 and itive from American justice if 8 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday, and when he is extradited from reported adequate attendance. England. Demands for a con- No actual figures were avail- gressional investigation of the able, because no charges were strange case arose on both sides made, they said. of Capitol Hill.) There was plenty of other com- Eisler, who is being held by the petition, too. Sorority and frater- Eislr, ho s binghel bythenity pledge formals piled up over British for an extradition hearing, the weekend. Many women s is expected by Prof. Pruess to ap- dormitories also scheduled spring peal on three counts to the Eng- formals. lish court. * m . * * * FIRST HE may ask for a writ of THE MICHIGAN Theatre con- habeas corpus, claiming the Brit- ti edait premierrunDoavieS' i ish have no right to hold him be- Happens Every Spring." The State cause of his seizure on a Polish countered with "The Boy with vessel. Second, he may say the Green Hair," and "South of St. specific charge he is accused of isLouis" along with a Friday mid- not included in the extradition night matinee. treaty. Not to be outdone, the Or- Lastly, Eisler may claim the pheum brought back "It Hap- Americans want him for politi- pened One Night," and the cal reasons rather than common Wuerth and Whitney played law infringements. over their heads. "However, this would be a dan- Individual officials also blamed gerous think to claim," Pruess other factors besides stiff compe- said, "because under international tition. law being guilty of a political "The weekend was the warmest crime is to be guilty of an at- yet this spring." tempt to overthrow the existing "Finals are only two short weeks government. away." GRADUATE RETURNS: Stoll Describes Political Freedom in German Q * * *1 Report Reds Take Over In Hankow Shanghai Holds Against Assault SHANGHAI-Communist troops were reported today to have occu- pied the central China metropolis of Hankow without a fight. In the battle of Shanghai, the Reds continued their assault, but the Nationalists still clung to the city's sea and air outlets. * * * A HANKOW dispatch to the Shanghai newspaper Sin Wan Pao said the Reds marched into the big mid-Yangtze industrial city at 4 p.m. yesterday. The Nationalists announced yesterday the evacuation of Hankow, Wuchang and Hang- yang, the tri-cities 600 miles up the big river from Shanghai. After another night of heavy shelling by the Red attackers of Shanghai, the Nationalists still held the city's two prime targets -the Woosung shipway to the north and Lunghwa International Airport to the south. * * * PILOTS for Chinese air lines estimated the Communists were not more than five miles from Lunghwa, 10 miles from the heart of Shanghai, and four miles out- side the city. The deputy commander of Shanghai's Nationalist garrison talked this morning about a "Stalingrad" defense of the city. If no "mistakes" are made and if the defenders utilize the defenses to the limit, Shanghai can hold out, he told a news conference. THE DEPUTY Commander, Chou Ni-Hsing, said the Commu- nists have four armies deployed around Shanghai. He said they had suffered 8,000 casualties. Throughout last night Red ar- tillery pounded Woosung. Heavy rain clouds muffled the sound somewhat. At dawn, the Nation- alists still controlled the en- trance to the vital waterway. Pilots for the Chinese air lines said star shells shimmered in the rainy skies over the battle area around Lunghwa last night. They said machine gun bursts could be heard from the airfield. (A Communist broadcast heard in San Francisco said Shanghai 'will be liberated in the not dis- tant future.") Court T pholds road Free Speech__View WASHINGTON-(IP)-A sharp- ly divided Supreme Court held that freedom of speech cannot be curbed merely because the speaker stirs people to anger, invites pub- lic dispute and creates unrest. Justice Jackson, one of a four- man minority, called the decision a "dogma of absolute freedom for irresponsible and provocative ut- terance" which almost completely ties the hands of local officers trying to maintain peace. "THERE IS danger that, if the court does not temper its doctrin- aire logic with a little practical wisdom, it will convert the consti- tutional bill of rights into a sui- cide pact," he said. The court struck down the conviction and $100 fine meted out by the City of Chicago to Arthur Terminiello, a Catholic priest from Birmingham, Ala., who was at the time of his speech under suspension from his duties as a clergyman. He spoke at the West End Women's' Club Auditorium on the night of February 7, 1946, under aus- pices of the Christian veterans of American.' The majority opinion called un- constitutional a Chicago ordi- nance which the Illinois courts_ had construed as permitting dis- orderly conduct conviction for any speech which "stirs the public to anger, invites dispute, brings about unrest or creates a disturb- ance." "A conviction resting on any of those grounds may not stand," ', Officials Making Attempt To Save Budget Last --Daily--Carlisle Marshall ROTC COMMISSIONS-President Alexander G. Ruthven presents Robert B. Har with his com- mission. Harn was one of 30 ROTC graduates to be commissioned in last night's ceremony on Ferry Field. Circling airplanes lent color to the proceedings as more than 700 cadets paraded before the reviewing stand. REORGANIZATION: OfferPlans To Change Senior Class Structure By BOB KEITH Plans are in the offing for re- organization of the executive structure of future senior classes. Val Johnson, literary college senior class president, has pro- posed uniting graduation classes in all University schools under one president. Russian Defeat Indicated in Berlin Election Scattered Returns Show Protest Vote BERLIN - (/P)-First scattered returns today from eastern Berlin in the Soviet Zone elections indi- cated the Communists were tak- ing a licking. This was in contrast with the confident predictions of Commu- nist politicians in the Soviet Zone of occupation that an overwhelm- ing majority of the voters would support them. * * * THE VOTING took place Sun- day and yesterday for a "people's Congress" of 2,000 members, all hand-picked by Communist-con- trolled organizations and put on a single ticket. The main election committee of the "People's Congress" for Berlin announced that of 7,000 votes counted only 2,800 en- dorsed the list of candidates on the ballot. A total of 3,809 votes said no. Some wrote on their ballots "we won't vote for a police state and we reject Communism." About 350 votes were declared invalid. THE EARLY RETURNS from Berlin showed a majority of "no" votes-the only way the Congress could be rejected since only one list of candidates was submitted. Russian - controlled prop a - ganda outlets gave no returns. They gave out reports only of a heavy vote being cast, ranging from 97.8 to 83.3 per cent. The "People's Congress" would be the Soviet answer to the West- ern State being set up in the western occupation zone by the British, French and Americans. It would back Russia in the four- power conference on Germany scheduled to open in Paris May 23. ANOTHER PLAN, originated by Dan Elyachar, '49, calls for weld- ing future senior classes into one broad corporation, with perpetual membership much the same as in a fraternity or sorority. Johnson's plan would main- tain individual representation of each college through a central council composed of "vice-pres- idents" elected by the different colleges. "The literary college president is often called upon now to rep- resent other schools, but he has no real authority to do so," John- son added. * * * UNDER HIS PLAN the senior class president would be elected in the spring and begin to serve in the fall, while the central coun- cil would be elected in the fall and begin to serve immediately. Johnson's plan, which has the backing of Men's Judiciary Council, will soon be introduced to Student Legislature for con- sideration. * * * ELYACHAR'S proposal for in- corporation is designed to achieve a more united expression of the whole class through fuller mem- bership and more active partici- pation in activities. Elyachar hoped that mem- bership in the corporation would ultimately be made obligatory, but Walter B. Rea, associate dean of students, doubted there was any way students could be forced into joining. "The University has said in the past that class dues are in no way connected with issuance of degrees," Dean Rea said. Opera Seeks. ScriptWriters' Union Opera is looking for that foundation of all successful mu- sical shows-a script. Jim Ebersole, new manager of the Opera, asks that interested writers (or anyone with an orig- inal idea) submit a fouir-page scenario to him as soon as possible. In the scenario, the writer should indicate the plot for a two-act show, with situations and characters described clearly. If enough scripts come in before the end of the semester, Ebersole will select the script and music writers before the fall term opens. For further information, Eber- sole asks that writers and com- posers call him at 2-3256. ROTC Holds Graduation Exercises Graduation exercises were held for seniors of the ROTC depart- ment last night in a colorful cere- mony on Ferry Field. Amid the roar of circling air- planes and the tones of the ROTC band, more than 700 cadets pa- raded before a reviewing stand. THIRTY GRADUATES were presented commissions by Presi- dent Alexander G. Ruthven. Addi- tional awards were bestowed upon outstanding cadets. Robert B. Harn and Walter H. Teninga were presented Chi- cago Tribune medals by Dr. James P. Adams, Provost, for their scholastic attainment and military leadership. Cadet Louis Dehmlow was awarded by the Sons of the Amer- ican Revolution for his soldierly bearing, leadership, and excellence in ROTC scholastic work. Paul R. Ross, Jr., and Infantry student, received an award for the outstanding sophomore cadet from the Scabbard and Blade honorary fraternity. Other awards for distinguished achievement were presented to John A. Lindquist, Louis J. Schnei- der, William Fouch, Martin, Ever- ett, William Powell, William Per- vin and John Sherzers. Presidents of 'U,' MSC in Senate Plea Faculty Exodus Laid to Low Pay. By JIM BROWN A delegation of University offi- cials will appear before a Senate Finance Committee hearing this morning in a final attempt to sal- vage the University's budget ap- propriation which was slashed by the Housel ast Friday. President Alexander G. Ruth- ven and Michigan State College president, John A. Hannah had requested the hearing yesterday morning. * * * APPEARING BEFORE the com- mittee will be President Alexander G. Ruthven, Regent Roscoe 0 Bonisteel, Vice-President Marvin L. Niehuss, and Assistant Provost John A. Perkins. Although Lansing sources had earlier thought that a compro- mise bill might be worked out by the Senate, the Associated Press yesterday reported that leaders thought the budget bills would go through almost automatically with the exception of the money for the institutional construe- tion. They looked for an inter- chamber dispute on that, In jointly requesting the hear- ing, President Ruthven and Pres- ident Hannah said, "The appr- priations for the University of Michigan and for Michigan State College as approved by the House of Representatives fall so far short of the requirements of the two In- stitutions that we have joined in asking the Finance Committee of the Senate for an opportunity to be heard." THE HOUSE slashed the Uni- versity's request for a $12,500,008 budget by $1,513,685. Michigan State had asked for $10,676,204, including funds for the Agricul- tural Extension Service, but this figure was cut by $1,742,014. Asserting that both institu- tions have been losing ground in comparison with the state uni- versities of surrounding states, President Ruthven and Presi- dent Hannah said, "We are con- vinced that the issue involved is of greater importance than the individual interests of either Michigan State College or the University of Michigan." "The ability of the two Mich- igan schools to pay salaries com- parable to those paid at other top- flight institutions and the abil- ity to provide comparable educa- tional services determine entirely the quality of education available to Michigan studens at Ann Arbor and East Lansing," they declared. Pointing to the increasing tend- ency of outstanding teachers and research workers to move to Illi- nois, Minnesota and elsewhere, President Ruthven and President Hannah said, "These able men are not replaceable. It is much more difficult to build again than it is to maintain what we have, and the proposed appropriations would not let us do even that." City Picketers Ask PayHike An army of 50 city workers strode up and down before City Hall for two hours last night, bear- ing "more money" placards which urged passersby to "call your Al- derman." Congregating at approximately 5:30 p.m. the picketers, white and Negro workingmen, emphasized in their posters that "This is not a strike; this is a protest." Several carried placards stating "We want a living wage-take care of the people who take care of your city." The picketers dispersed shortly after 7:30 p.m., as City Council prepared to open its regular meet- it I National Round- Up By The Associated Press DETROIT-The government will decide today whether it will go to work at once as peacemaker in the Ford strike. Company and CIO United Auto Workers representatives met again yesterday but there were no re- ports of progress as the strike dragged through its 12th day. * * * WASHINGTON-The Senate today passed a bill giving Presi- dent Truman broad new powers to reorganize the government's sprawling network of agencies subject to the veto of Congress. TRENTON, N.J.-The question of life or death for six Trenton Negroes convicted of first degree murder was put before the New Jersey Supreme Court today. * * * AMARILLO, Tex.--Damage es- timates edged past $3,000,000 yes- terday in the wake of a tornado which whiplashed the Panhandle capital, By DON McNEIL Despite military control and the nearness of the Russian occupa- tion forces, more political freedom exists in Germany than in the United States. Dick Stoll, '49E, recently re- turned from a visit with relatives in the British Zone of Germany, reports that all political parties are able to act without fear of eco- nomic or political repercussion. A JANUARY graduate, Stoll spent six weeks with his grand- father and relatives seeing the British and American Zones. One FOOTLIGHTS FOR BARD: Dramatists Present 'Twelfth Nig~ht' Malvolio, Sir Toby, Belch and cfnyworrl tN 'hoc hatl~arnrr ,-nlac' rar.Pnt.ly haan cppn in "'Pha f lharrv I i s~wau.rt asna iaun rie rcnn o, 41pee-n seenr, in '7T-,n nerryw.t