DISCIPLINARY DECISION Bee Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State 43 CLOUDY VOL. LIX, No. 165 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS 9 Disqualified Candidates Win Appeals Resign After 'U" Overrules Judic By JOHN DAVIES An appeal by four student gov- ernment candidates against the Men's Judiciary Council decision which disqualified them was up- held by the University Sub-Com- mittee on Discipline, it was re- vealed yesterday. But the candidates, whose dis- qualifications were removed, re- signed as a group from the posts which they won. "OUR MAIN purpose in appeal- ing was to clear our names," they said. The candidates were disquali- fied early this month by Men's Judiciary because ballots bear- ing votes for them were "stuf- fed" in the engine arch ballot box. The case was termed an "obvious fraud," by the Council. The resigning candidates are Tom Sparrow, '52, SL candidate; Morgan Ramsay, '50BAd, combin- ed schools Union vice-presidency candidate and Robert Vogel, '51E and James Morse, '52E, candi- dates for junior and sophomore engineering class presidencies re- spectively. * * * HOWEVER THE Sub-Commit- tee on Discipline referred the case back to Men's Judiciary "for such further recommendations as it may care to make." The Judiciary Committee will not attempt to uncover more in- formation on the candidates it disqualified, according to Men's Judiciary President Bill Reitzer '51L. "As is true in every instance wherein a superior tribunal over- rules an inferior one, the latter acquiesces to the greater wisdom and judgment of the former," Reitzer commented on the Sub- Committee's upholding of the ap- pear. * * * SL PRESIDENT RYDER, lash- ing out at the University Sub Committee, asked "Does this mean that student government is per- mitted only to operate as long as it conforms strictly to University Policy?" "There is no reason why this should have gone outside the realm of student government. SL appointed the Men's Judi- ciary Council. It was an SL rule that was violated and the par- ties concerned are represented by us," he added. Sub-Committee Chairman Dean Grover C. Grismore said that his group "would have been shirking its duty" if it failed to hear the appeal. He added that it received its power from the Regents' By- Laws which gave the group's par- ent body, the University Conduct Committee, power over matters "involving organized student groups." * * * THE FOUR resigning officers told The Daily they ". . . would like to fulfill the duties of our offi- ces, but felt it best to resign. "We feel that this course of action is the most suitable from all viewpoints. We appreciate all the time and effort of the Men's Judiciary Council and the Disci- plinary Committee, and regret the unfavorable publicity that has re- suited from this incident." CED Presidency Goes to Rechtman Leon Rechtman, '50, was unani- mously reelected chairman of the Committee to End Discrimination yesterday. A final meeting of CED for this semester will be held at 4 p.m. Monday in the League. BIG TEN AGAIN Conference Gives MSC Official Nod EVANSTON, Ilf.-(P)-The Western Conference yesterday voted that Michigan State College be accepted as a tenth member and that the East Lansing institution begin conference competition in the aca- demic year 1950-1951, excepting in football. The acceptance of Michigan State was announced by Prof. Ken- neth Little of Wisconsin, chairman of a special investigating commit- tee, which reported on a survey of Michigan State athletic policies to the current conference business meeting. *~ * * * PROF. LITTLE ISSUED this statement: "The faculty representatives have just voted that a report o of a special committee certifying Anglo, U.S. .deny Talks OntGreece By The Associated Press A Russian feeler for a big power conference to settle the Greek civil war was firmly rejected by the United States and Britain. Moscow was told in effect: call off your Balkan satellites which have been helping the Greek guer- rillas and we'll talk business - within the United Nations. * * * THE U.S. State Department coldly charged that Russia has been "lending encouragement to the illegal operations which have disturbed the peace." Britain told the Soviets there won't be any negotiations "be- hind the back of the Greek gov- ernment." Greek ambassador Vassili C. Dendramis declared after a visit at the State Department in Wash- ington: * * * ' "THERE is one condition for peace-that the rebels lay down their arms." Meanwhile in Athens tue Ius- sian proposals were dismissed by authorative sources as "a ma- neuver which is part of the gen- eral Soviet propaganda frame- work." The Greek cabinet met for two and a half hours, then adjourned with the announcement that it had no statement to make. * *. * TASS, THE official Soviet news agency, set off a flurry about pos- sible peace in Greece by announc- ing that Russia had presented a conditional settlement plan to the U.S. and Britain. '* * * London, followed quickly by Washington, put out the western versions of the informal and somewhat vague talks on which the Tass account was founded. The American statement made it clear that as long as Greece's northern neighbors keep helping the guerrillas, the United States is going to keep pouring in help to the Athens government. The British Foreign Office said that during Russia's informal feel- er talks in New York Hector Mc- Neil, the British Minister of State, had told Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko that "the hostilities would soon cease if the nothern neighbors of Greece stopped giving aid and shelter to the rebels." that the rules, regulations and other requirements of the Con- ference are now substantially enforced at Michigan State Col- lege and that Michigan State College be declared a member of the Conference." . The Spartans will not compete for the Conference football cham- pionship until 1953, since league grid schedules for 1950, 1951 and 1952 were drawn at the Confer- ence winter meeting last Decem- ber. IN BASKETBALL the Spartans will be included in the 1950-51 schedule and will compete in in- door and outdoor track the same school year. Their first actual league compe- tition will be in cross-country in the fall of 1950. Fritz Crisler, University of Michigan Athletic Director, said his school was "happy and priv- ileged" to welcome Michigan State College as a new member. Dean Lloyd C. Emmons, of the Michigan State College Sdhool of' Arts and Sciences, said that "we are particularly enthusiastic be- cause the move firmly establishes our school athletically, and con- firms our academic position among Big Ten schools. Emmons will become a faculty representative member in the Big Ten policy-making group. Sons Elected SDX President Raymond W. Sons, '50, has been elected president of the campus chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, pro- fessional journalism fraternity. Other new officers are: Ber- nard Bailey, '50, vice president; Raymond L. Courage, '49, secre- tary; Pete Hotton, '50, correspond- ing secretary; and Hugh C. Boyle, '50, treasurer. New professional members init- ited were: Ralph McPhee, of the Washtenaw Post-Tribune; Law- rence Prakken, of Prakken Publi- cations, and Lawrence Towe, edi- tor, Charlevoix Courier. Undergraduate members initiat- ed include: Clarence L. Baxter, Jr., Al Blumrosen, Jim Brown, Ber- nard Bailey, Dick Campbell, Rob- ert Chamberlain, Bill Cunning- ham, Pres Holmes, Josiah Horton, Pete Hotton, Fred Keister, Donald Knack, Barney Laschever, Thomas Lyons, Donald MacLachlan, Hal McMurrough, Dirk Nebbeling, Gerd Padel, William Peterson, Mac G. Quaye, George Riviere, Darwin Sampson, Seymour Son- kin, Rudolf Soucek and David Stremmel. AEC Hiding Reds, Says Ferguson Direct Charges Face Lilienthal WASHINGTON-(AP) - Senator Ferguson (Rep., Mich.) accused the Atomic Energy Commission to- day of keeping loyalty suspects "under cover" on AEC payrolls for over 10 months. Ferguson fired the accusations point-blank at AEC chairman David E.Lilienthal at a stormy hearing of a Senate Appropria- tions Subcommittee. * * * THE SENATE investigation was touched off by a disclosure that a Communist, Hans Friestadt, had been granted a fellowship under the AEC's multi-million-dollar student air program. Lilienthal, whose own ap- pointment to head the nation's atomic development program was bitterly attacked in the Senate before he finally was confirmed, acknowledged that questions have been raised about the loyalty of "maybe as many as three" of the 500 persons who have been awarded AEC schol- arships. Lilienthal has been answering Senators' pointed questions for two days. He was called in con- nection with the Atomic Commis- sion's request for $1,090,000,000 operating money next year. * * * UNDER questioning by Senator Wherry (Rep., Neb.), the AEC chairman confirmed that a young Boston medical student research- er, Dr. Isidor S. Edelman, holds a $3,750-a-year atomic fellowship although he has been denied clear- ance for secret work on security grounds. The committee promptly an- nounced it will call Edelman to testify Tuesday. Edelman will also appear before the Senate- House Atomic Energy Commit- tee Monday afternoon. Lilienthal said Edelman is not working on atomic secrets, and has denied that he is a Communist. But he went on to say that an FBI check had turned up "de- rogatory information" about Edel- man-which he refused to di- vulge-and it was decided that Edelman should not be allowed to work where he would have con- tact with AEC employes who do have access to secrets. Rail Workers Strike Against Reds in Berlin By The Associated Press BERLIN-East-West trade in Germany had its ups and downs yesterday as West Berlin railway workers walked out on strike against their Russian managers while truck traffic proceeded without the forecasted interrup- tion. The rail strike came as a blow to West Berlin's economy, just rally- ing from the effects of the Soviet blockade. Four power talks on eco- nomic questions yesterday had been proceeding more smoothly than they had for several days. * * THE CHANGE in the Soviet at- titude on road traffic along the Autobahn from Helmstedt to Ber- lin came as a surprise to Western autorities. First the Russians at Helmstadt hadgstopped all Ber- lin-bound freight which did not ! carry a Soviet Zone permit. Then yesterday they opened the Aut6- bahn. But the railworkers' strike choked off the vital traffic from Western Germany even as road traffic picked up. More than a dozen West Ger- man trains hauling food, coal and House,Senate Battle Over Compromise Action Expected Sometime Today By AL BLUMROSEN (Special to The Daily) LANSING-The State Legisla- ture had not acted on the Univer- sity budget appropriation as The EDaily went to press at 3 a.m. to- day. Action is expected before the Legislature adjourns later in the day. HOUSE AND Senate members of the Conference Committee were WASHOUT-'So that's where our bridge went' the Oklahoma Highway Department said after a flash flood in Whitebread Creek near Gracemont, Okla. The 300-foot wooden span was swept 100 feet from its moorings in the state's torrential rains. It's a total loss. EXPERT SPEAKS: Communists Opposed By Most Czechs,---Ienes, By JO MISNER The Communist Party in Cze- choslovakia faces opposition from about 80 per cent of the people to- day, according to Vaclav Benes, former Czech government offi- cial and expert in international law. "If the Moscow government were to fall-in a week's time, West German States Form New Republic FRANKFURT, Germany-(R)- West Germany's new constitution, uniting 11 states in a Federal Re- public, was ratified yesterday. The deciding vote was cast by the State Parliament of North Rhine - Westphalia, which ap- proved the constitution 153 to 38 in Duesseldorf after a day-long de- bate interrupted frequently by Communist demonstrations in the gallery. *~ * * NORTH RHINE-Westphalia was the eighth of the 11 states, which make up the occupation zones of the United States, Britain and France, to indorse the charter. Approval by two-thirds of the states was required to make the constitution effective. Only one state, traditionally independent Bavaria, voted against the charter, and its leg- islators agreed Bavaria would join the republic if the other 10 states decided to do so. The only state yet to vote is Wuerttenberg - Hohenzollern, in the French zone. * * * THE CONVENTION which wrote the constitution will reas- semble at Bonn Monday and pro- claim its adoption. P Adoption of the constitution, opposed from the first by the Communists of both Western Ger- many and the Soviet Zone, strengthens the hands of the Western Foreign Ministers for the four-power conference on Ger- many to open in Paris Monday. maybe in a day, there would be no more Communist Party inuCzecho- slovakia," Benes said last night in Rackham Amphitheatre. IN THE face of popular opposi- tion, the whole Communist Party in Czechoslovakia, including the Gottwald faction, is fully aware of its dependence on Moscow, Benes said. Courts today sit almost in- cessantly in Czechoslovakia, condemning opposition to death or lengthy prison terms, he said. Already 20,000 people have left, the country in protest of the Red regime or to escape violence. "Their object is to break the. morale of the democratic tradi-I tions in Czechoslovakia-to intro- duce spiritual slavery," he de- clared. THE PAPERS are full of at- tacks on Western imperialism and articles glorifying the Soviet gov- ernment, he said. "Even history is given a new Marxist twist." "The supply situation is ex- actly as bad as it was during the war. Communism in an econom- ically developed country can not lead to prosperity, but to impov- erishment." Benes pointed out that there are now two classes of citizens in Czechoslovakia: the privileged, who buy goods at normal prices; and the majority who buy on a free market, paying in many in- stances up to ten times the normal price. "THIS INEQUALITY is all pointed toward the gradual de- struction and liquidation of the middle class," he said. Reviewing the events which led up to the Communist coup last March, Benes pointed out that 63 per cent of the voters were against the Communists in the previous elections. "But imagine a free election when people are told a foreign army will march through the country three days before," he safd. "A coalition cannot stop those who are prepared to kill- no constitutional measure could have stopped the Communists." Peace Talkis Near Collapse In Ford Strike Company Refuses To Act Before June 1 DETROIT-(PI)-Peace talks be- tween the Ford Motor Company and .the United Auto Workers (CIO) in the 16-day-old Ford strike stood on the verge of col- lapse yesterday. Threatening the talks on the very day the Federal government put a mediator on the scene was a heated dispute over starting time for negotiations on a new union contract to replace the one which expires next July 15. * * * THE COMPANY, with 102,000 production workers idle in the 16-day old strike, refused to agree to contract talks during the strike, specifically not before June 1. The union demanded that Ford agree to begin contract talks by next Monday. Other- wise, UAW President Walter Reuther threatened to pull the union negotiating team out of the strike talks. Further, Reuther declared in a statement that the union would file unfair labor practice charges against Ford if the company does not open contract discussions by Monday. * * * APPROXIMATELY 65,000 Ford workers at the company's Rouge and Lincoln-Mercury plants here walked out May 5, charging that Ford had stepped up the speed of assembly lines to the detriment of workers' health and safety. The company denied the charge. After more than five hours of discussion today, negotiators took a recess until tomorrow at 10 a.m. There was no statement by either side as the meeting broke up. In the liveliest session since direct peace negotiations opened 10 days ago, each side pointed the blame for possible break-off of peace relations at the other. John S. Bugas, Ford vice pres- ident, declared that if the strike talks are broken off "it will be strictly the Union's responsibility." Reuther replied that responsi- bility for such a threatened end to the peace talks "rests squartely on. the shoulders of the company." BULLETIN (Special to The Daily) LANSING - The House and Senate Conference Committee on University appropriations ap- proved an unspecified sum for plans for the University building program, Rep. John P. Espie (Rep.), told The Daily at 3 a.m. today. The sum is not expected to exceed $100,000, he said, working feverishly to arrive at a figure acceptable to both. The committee was appointed early yesterday and did not meet until 2:35 this morning. Conference committee reports on other bills that did reach the House floor early this morning were passed by almost unanimous votes. THE LEGISLATIVE feud began after the Senate had turned down the House bill which would have given the University a budget of $10,986,315 in favor of a $12,500,- 000 appropriation. House and Sen- ate members prepared to go into conference on the bill. The House and Senate seemed unable to agree on any major issues as their final session be- gan. Representatives, working in the oblong cream and brown house chamber before packed galleries were resigned to a long session. In the anterooms reporters and spec- tators placed bets on the time the meeting would wind up. Best guess was 7 a m. *' '* * SHARP DEBATE in the Senate earlier in the day resulted in the Houserbill being sent to a joint conference committee. Principle objections to the increased appro- priation came from Sen. H. D. Tripp (Rep.) who said that the two schools, the University and MSC, were expanding, "far beyond what is necessary." Supporting the budget increase, Sen. Don VanderWerp said that the House recommendation would "do serious injury to the schools." If you are going to make the schools suffer this year, it will take 25 years for them to make up the damage done." * * * EARLIER in the week, in a spe- cial trip to Lansing Pres. Alex- ander G. Ruthven warned the Senate Finance Committee that the University was faced with the alternative of increasing tuition fees or slashing enrollment by 3,000 students if the budget re- quest was turned down. "I will oppose both of these alternatives vigorously," Presi- dent Ruthven declared. He add- ed: ",Fees are already as high as they should be. As for reducing enrollment,I will absolutely not be a party to any movement to deny education to the people of Mich- igan." Glee Club Awards The University Glee Club has announced Don Cleveland, '50E; Pres Holmes, '50; and Ken Greid- World News At A Glance By The Associated Press SHANGHAI-Shanghai's last air link to the outside world was snapped yesterday and even the Communist troops who set huge in the Poutung waterfront area * * * WASHINGTON-The Senate economy bloc suffered its fourth smashing defeat in a row yes- terday as the chamber passed a $751,440,690 flood control and waterways bill despite cries of "pork." * * * sea lane was menaced by Chinese fires east of the Whangpoo River of the beseiged city. * * . HOLLAND-A record throng basked under sunny skies yes- terday as the Holland Tulip Fes- tival enjoyed its first day of good weather, bringing out "above 50,000" in temperatures in the 70's. * * * CURRICULUM CHANGE: Political Science Courses Revamped By DAVE THOMAS Sweeping changes in introduc- tory political science courses have been announced for the fall semes- of the political science depart- ment, who announced the new course TA. ..t1 1. .... . i L. .±n. will be supplemented with sym- posia and discussions on the part of the department faculty. I