IMPOSSIBLE See Page A C, r Latest Deadline in the State 471 A6F t t. ]y FAIR AND WARMER VOL. LIX, No. 168 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS Investigators Find Red in Atomic Plant Federal Agents Remove Uraniunm By The Associated Press Congressional investigators turned up testimony yesterday that a wartime atomic scientist was "an active Communist" and that federal agents removed two bars of uranium from an atomic plant without being detected. General manager Carroll L. Wil- son of the Atomic Energy Commis- sion said the ADC's own security officers set the deliberate trap and filched the uranium bars from the Hanford atomic plant. HOWEVER, THE General Elec- tric Company, operator of the Hanford Atomic Plant at Rich- land, Wash., replied last night that this staged "theft" was not a fair test of atomic security because the agents gained access to the plant with authorization from Atomic Energy Commission. The story came out in hear- ings before a Senate appropria- tions subcommittee which is conducting one phase of a doub- lebarreled Congressional inves- tigation into the whole ABC set up. In a dramatic face-to-face con- frontation, former Communist Paul Crouch, of Miami, Fla., tes- tified that Prof. Clarence F. His- key was "known to me as active member of the Communist Party." HISKEY IS described in a re- port issued by the House Un- American Activities Committee as having served during the war in "highly secret research work on atomic energy" at the S.A.M. lab- oratory at Columbia University. The report said investigation disclosed that "Hiskey had con- tacted and given information to Arthur Adams, a man witha long record as a Soviet espionage agent. victor Reuither Mysteriously Shot at Home DETROIT-(P)-Victor Reuther brother of President Walter Reu- ther of the CIO United Aulto Workers Union, was mysteriously shot and wounded at his home last night. An unknown assailant fired through a front window of the home shortly before midnight, po- lice reported. Reuther was wounded in the right eye and right shoulder. Receiving hospital in Redford, a Detroit suburb, said Victor's con- dition was "critical." 'Ensians Given Out Saturday Only a Few Hundred CopiesStill on Sale General distribution of the 450 age 1949 Michiganensian will be- ginat 8 a.m. Saturday in the Pub- lications Building and will con- tinue throughout the day. To get books, students must present the receipt given them at the time of purchase according to Mary Riggs, '50Ed., distribu- tion manager. SHE ALSO said that "no per- son may pick up more than two books, as no arrangements have been made for group distribution." In the event that the pur- chaser has lost his receipt, the book can still be obtained upon presentation of the I.D. card, Miss Riggs added. Previously scheduled for dis- tribution on May 20, the yearbook had been held up by difficulty at the bindery in Chicago. Although 4,900 copies of the yearbook have been sold, a few hundred are still available and can be purchased tomorrow and Friday at the Publications Build- ing. Bill Zerman, sales manager, 6,500,000 NEEDED: Students To Aid Phoenx Drive Students interested in helping the Phoenix Project raise $6,500,- 000 for a memorial atomic research center at the University were urged by National Drive Chairman Chester H. Lang to contact the regional chairman in their districts. Complete appointment of the 14 regional chairmen were an- nounced yesterday by Lang. * * * * THE PROJECT, concentrating on research for peacetime uses of atomic energy, will eventually have its own building as well as utiliz- ing facilities and personnel of the physical and social science depart- ments at the University. '.9 SL Slashes U' Deciso On DKE's Student Legislature last night lashed out at the University Dis- ciplinary Committee for practic- ing "a principle which American courts have long avoided," in the rase of the suspension of Delta Kappa Epsilon for violation of the University Liquor Law. SL strongly opposes the prin- ciples of singling individuals in a group for actions of former mem- bers of the group, the recommen- dation to the Disciplinary said. * * * "THIS PRACTICE is an excel- lent example of guilt by associa- tion, a principle which American courts have long avoided. The adoption of such a principle by the Committee is contrary to the interests of students as students and as citizens." The proposal declared that in the case of Delta Kappa Epsilon, the present punishment is a result of a second offense-the first having taken place before present members came on tam- pus. "We strongly oppose this appli- cation of guilt by association in this case, and further, we strong- ly oppose threat of punishment in future by the elimination of the organization due to a third of- fense, this being an application of the same principle." SL ALSO PASSED a proposal to back President John Ryder's statement supporting Mens Ju- diciary decisions in recent SL elec- tions. Eight committee chairmen, appointed by SL Cabinet to serve next year, were confirmed. They are: Hugh Greenberg, Campus Action; Herb Van Ber- gel, Varsity; Ginny Bauer, Pub- lic Relations; Mary Lubeck, Cultural and Educational; Bill Clark, Citizenship; Dick Hooker, NSA; Adele Hager, SAC, Leon- ard Wilcox, Better Business Bu- reau. Summer Legislators will be: Quent Nesbitt, Stuart Hertzberg, Herbert Van Bergel, Debbie Du- binsky, Ed. Reifel, Louis Wirbel, Polly Hodges. PROPOSALS passed for Sum- mer SL were work on SL and NSA handbooks, a permanent SL meet- ing and business room and to ex- amine and evaluate, with other campus organizations, present reg- ulations on "social conduct." The Legislature also passed a proposal to have 1,000 copies of the revived SL Handbook for Freshmen, containing informa- tion on SL committees and work on campus, to be printed and distributed to freshmen during registration week. New PCS Lists Revised lists of Ann Arbor, De- troit and other city Purchase Card System stores are available to card holders in the Office of Student Affairs, according to Cathy Hous- ton, PSC chairman. ' The Phoenix Project's Building will include special laboratories and an auditorium. The regions, the alumni who are the regional chairmen and their home towns are: 1. Me., N.H., Vt., Mass., Conn., R.I., N.Y. and northern N.J. - Harry C. Stevenson, Sr., Roches- ter, N.Y. 2. Southern N.J., eastern Pa., Del., Md., Va., and D.C.-James W. Follin, Washington, D.C. 3. Western Pa., O., and W. Va.-Millard H. Pryor, Mans- field, O. 4. N.C., S.C., Ga., Fla., Ala., Miss., La., Tenn. and Ky.-Rob- ert R. Snodgrass, Atlanta, Ga. 5. Ill., Ind. and Wis.-Dewey Fagerburg, Chicago, Ill. 6. Ia., Minn., Neb., N.D., S.D. and Wyo.-Andrew E. Roedel, Cheyenne, Wyo. 7. Ark., Colo., Kan., Mo., N.M., Okla. and Tex. - Elmore J. Blackert, Victoria, Tex. 8. Calif., Ariz., Nev. and Utah - William C. Mullendore, Los Angeles, Calif. and Kenneth S. Baxter, San Francisco, Calif. 9. Mich.: Washtenaw, Lena- wee and Monroe Counties-Earl H. Cress, Ann Arbor. 10. Mich.: Western - George C. Thomson, Grand Rapids 11. Mich.: Upper Peninsula- Walter F. Gries, Ishpeming. 12. Ida., Mont., Ore. and Wash. - Edgar N. Eisenhower, Tacoma, Wash." 13. Mich.: Counties in the "Thumb"-Christian Matthews, Mt. Clemens. 14. Mich.: Wayne County- Glenn M. Coulter, Detroit. State chairmen will now be ap- pointed by the regional chairmen, except for regions in Michigan, where counties are treated as states, Lang said. Need for Union Self-Education Elder States JACKSON-()-The AFL state convention was told yesterday that unions must start educating their own members. The statement came from Ar- thur Elder, of the Michigan Fed- eration of Teachers. He said the University of Michigan no longer offers satisfactory courses. * * * HIS STATEMENT was the lat- est in a long controversy between the unions and the University. Last year the University discontin- ued its Worker Education Service after a General Motors executive claimed it contained leftist teach- ings. The University resumed the courses later, under a new pro- gram but again dropped them when unions boycotted them. Elder was discharged as direc- tor of the service before the new program was tried. "IF WE CAN'T look to the University for that service, it must be carried on by the unions them- selves," Elder told the convention. Suggesting "missionaries" among workers to combat anti- union opinion, he added the "time to start this education, political action and legislative program is now, not next year." Health, Civil Rights Cut Off Must List Program Sliced By Democrats WASHINGTON - () - Demo- cratic leaders drastically curtailed the Administration's program for this session of Congress yesterday by stripping the hotly contested Health Insurance and Civil Rights proposals off the "must" list. At the same time, Senate Ma- jority Leader Scott Lucas indi- cated he expects no Senate action this session on President Tru- man's $4,000,000,000 Tax Boost plan, the new Brannan Farm Plan or the Foreign Arms Program. * * * WITH A TENTATIVE Congress adjournment date set for July 31, these are the main bills he listed for priority action: 1. Extension of the Reciprocal Trade Program-already ap- proved by the House but pres- ently stalled in the Senate. 2. Repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act. 3. Ratification of the North At- lantic Security Treaty, which re- quires only Senate approval by a two-thirds majority vote. * * * THE ILLINOIS Democrat sketched out these major decisions after first meeting with President Truman at the White House and then taking up the legislative pro- gram with members of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee. Americans for Democratic Ac- tion promptly fired a statement of protest against halting the drive for the Civil Rights pro- gram. Lucas said Democratic lieuten- ants will seek action before ad- journment on minimum wage boosts, as well as the international wheat agreement and a pay raise for top government executives and for military personnel. * * * HE TOLD NEWSMEN at the White House parley-also attended by House Speaker Sam Rayburn- did not touch on the possibility of an extra session. He and Ray- burn agreed that if the lawmakers can meet the streamlined legis- lative "must" scheduled they can wind up their work by August. Lucas said he thinks Mr. Tru- man is "definitely satisfied" with the progress being made on the sweeping legislative program laid down in January. Judic Council To End Probe Investigation May Be Resumed Next F11 Men's Judiciary Council will not probe the "stuffing" of the ballot box any further this semester be- cause of time limitations, accord- ing to Bill Reitzer, '51L, Council president. Four student government can- didates were disqualified early this month Eby a Council order because ballots with votes for them were found "stuffed" in the box. BUT AN APPEAL to the Uni- versity Sub-Committee on Dis- cipline was upheld, the order "set iside," and the case returned to the Council for any further recom- mendations it "may care to make." R.eitzer said last week the Council would not cease investi- gating the case of the four stu- dents, but might probe to fur- ther find the parties guilty of the "stuffing." The candidates were Tom Spar- row, '52, student legislature; Mor- gan Ramsay, '50BAd, Union com- bined schools vice-president; Rog- er Vogel, '51E, junior engineering president and Jim Morse, '52E, sophomore engineering president. Redt Meets Slight Opposition BIG FOUR MINISTERS AT WORK-This is the scene in the Pink Marble Palace conference room in Paris where the Big Four foreign ministers yesterday rejected Russia's proposal to wipe out the West German State. The Associated Press claims that Ernest Bevin is seated at the extreme left at a table, and that Dean Acheson is at extreme right. Seated next to him is Dr. Philip Jessup. People with better than 20-20 vision should be able to identify Andrei Vishinsky standing in left foreground. ove Into Shanghai ----'J * * * ENTRIES BREAK RECORD: A nnounce Hopwood Winners Tom orrow Winners of the annual Avery and Jule Hopwood contest will be announced tomorrow after the Hopwood Lecture which is to be given by. Dr. Francis Otto Matties- sen at 4:15 in Rackham Lecture Hall. Sixty-six contestants have sub- mitted 89 manuscripts in the con- test this year, according to Miss Mary Cooley, assistant and Di- rector of Hopwood Awards. * * * CONTEST MANUSCRIPTS were submitted in four fields; fiction, drama, poetry and essay. This year's entries surpassed those of last year when 65 contestants sub- mitted only 74 manuscripts. Sixteen novels have been sub- mitted, more than in any other previous year. A total of 41 man- uscripts have been entered in the major contest, open to seniors and graduates. There were 16 field of fiction, 11 in essay and 10 in * * entries in the in drama, four poetry. * test, open to qualified undergrad- uates, include 22 in the field of fiction, nine in drama, four in essay, and 13 in poetry. Last year approximately $6,- 500 was awarded to contest winners. Nowhere else in the world does a university offer its students such large prizes for their literary efforts. Representatives from several large publishing companies will be present in Ann Arbor to discuss manuscripts with Hopwood con- testants. Fros - Soph Week Plans Get SAC Nod Bill Gripman's "school spirit" program took another step toward becoming reality yesterday when the Student Affairs Committee ap- proved the five major activities that will constitute Frosh-Soph Week next fall. After eliminating plans which would have conflicted with fresh- man eligibility rules and restrict- ing the tug-of-war to male par- ticipants, the SAC approved the following schedule: OCT. 10. Organizational rally for sophomores. Oct. 11. Freshman organization- al rally. Oct. 13. Tug -of - war across the Huron River between fresh- men and sophomores. Oct. 14. Sophomore show pre- sented for freshmen. Oct. 15. Frosh-Soph dance. * * * GRIPMAN'S original plans had called for freshman participation in the show and in the prepara- tions for the dance but, after care- ful study, the SAC decided that such freshman activity would vio- late eligibility rules. ENTRIES IN THE minor con- Delay L.S.A. Scholarships Presentation of scholarships annually given by the literary col- lege has been temporarily delayed, according to Richard C. Boys, chairman of the scholarship com- mittee. Cause of the delay, Boys said, stems from the uncertainty of Universityappropriations which are still being considered by the State Legislature. "Ordinarily the scholarships would already have been present- ed by this time," Boys said, "but the situation being what it is, nothing definite can be an- nounced. He added that those students who still are being considered for the scholarships have been noti- fied of the delay in presentation. Reds Ask for West German StateSplit PARIS-OP)--Russia proposed in the Foreign Ministers Council last night to wipe out the West Ger- man State and return German af- fairs to four-power control ma- chinery. All three western poxiars immediately rejected the propos- als, made by Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Vishinsky. The breakdown of Four-Power machinery led to the Berlin Blockade. THE FIRST of the long-awaited Soviet proposals was outlined by Western Power press officers after a meeting of nearly three hours. In effect Vishinsky's plan would: 1. Nullify the West German State at Bonn by 'putting Ger- man control in the hands of a German state council under the Allied Control Council. 2. Give implied Western recog- nition to the hand-picked East Communist regime by giving it an equal voice in control of German affairs. * * * 3. STRIP FROM Western Ger- mans the self-governing powers they have received in the western occupation statute by going back to the presently defunct Allied Control Council. 4. Call for a new election in strife-torn Berlin of a govern- ment for all the city. 5. Wipe out the Ruhr authority which the three Western Powers, with Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, have set up. Reds Give Up Berlin Stations Three-Power Action Protested by Russia BERLIN-( P)-Several thous- and Soviet-directed railway police yielded control of West Berlin railway stations to West Berlin po- lice last night on order of the United States, Britain and France. Russia protested the three- power action, which came on the fourth day of a bloody strike against the Soviet-controlled rail- way and elevated systems. At least two persons have been killed and hundreds have been injured. * * * STRIKE DETAILS from the anti-Communist UGO (indepen- dent labor organization) moved into the stations with the West Berlin nn ipi TTC GOladers csid Nationalists5 Hold Sections InNortheast' Bells Welcome Communist Army SHANGHAI-(P)-The Chinese Communists occupied the heart of Shanghai yesterday without a fight but Nationalist machine guns barred the way into the northeastern part of the world's fourth largest city. Green - uniformed Red troops marched in from the southwest early yesterday to the pealing of church bells - apparently the city's welcome. BY 10 A.M., THE Communists had taken over the city down to the Bund, which fringes the West bank of the Whangpoo River, and to the north as far as Soochow Creek, which bisects the city east and west. Nationalist soldiers, however, still were stationed on the bridges over Soochow Creek. Several armored cars stood on Garden Bridge, near the point where Soochow empties into the Whangpoo. As the first units of Communist troops moved downtown without opposition, Nationalist troops at the City Hall even broke out a huge sign over their barricade saying "Welcome Peoples Libera- tion (Communist) Army. * * * WHILE THE Communist job of taking over Shanghai moved for- ward, the din of battle still echoed from the Woosung front. The Nationalist garrison is fighting to keep open the road to their escape port of Woosung, 10 miles north of Shanghai. The Red radio in Peiping assert- ed that Communist troops were so firmly established on the east bank of the Whangpoo that all river traffic between Shanghai and Woosung was stopped. Fighting still sputtered in Poo- tung, the district across the Whangpoo from Shanghai. * * * 'Aid Essential To China' .-Gale "The Chinese Communists have officially expressed their opposi- tion to the West, but it is im- possible for any Chinese govern- ment to exist without Western economic cooperation," Dr. Esson P. Gale declared in commenting on the current Chinese situation. "The Communist government will have to make its peace with the United States," he said. "They are too far from the Russian Com- munist center, and poor transpor- tation facilities will hamper any Russian attempt to have the Chi- nese trade exclusively with them." Dr. Gale, who spent a number of years in China on the Amer- ican foreign staff and in the Chi- nese government, declared that there was no possibility of restor- ing the Nationalist government. "At one time, they were doing a valuable service for the Chinese people," he said, "but they have lost the people's confidence since then." Union Opera Meets Tonight Union Opera will hold a meet- ing at 7:30 p.m. today in the Un- ion for all persons interested in writing music or scripts for next year's opera. Jim Ebersole, opera manager, hopes to receive enough scenarios by June 30 so that he can make a prompt selection of the one which will be expanded into the script for the 1950 production. "IF NEXT YEAR'S show is a i DAILY STAFF UP IN THE AIR: Precocious Bird Fights Eviction Proceedings By PERRY LOGAN Up in the air! It's a bird! It's a plane! It's-no, by George, it is a bird. - He flits from lamp-chain to lamp-chain at the very top of the building, lighting from time to "Now see here," I exclaimed, somewhat to the point I felt, "I'm only trying to help. You needn't --- nOrT' -- -,,,i been intense in publication cir- cles. He has a dull-green-gray back.. . that he is a red-eyed vireo,. which he hasn't denied. Conscientious bird lovers, 1An..ninQ^ +ht +fer 6 hounrs of