SPIES IN GOVERNMENT See Page 4 C, - '. I r WI tC~ A& AML A-- Batt IC RAIN, COLDER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LX, No. 105 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 1950 SIX PAGES Coplon, Gubitchev Found Guilty of Spying Lewis Asks Merger of Union Funds Wants Measure To Fight Industry WASHINGTON-(P)-JOhn L. Lewis today proposed a financial alliance of labor unions to help each other in fights with industry., He suggested that the opposition is already ganged up. . The United Mine Workers chief made his direct proposition only to Philip Murray and his co-steel workers, but he brought in prom- inently the idea of letting "cer- tain other unions" in on a joint war chest for strikes. Murray had no immediate comment. * * * LEWIS advanced his suggestion in a letter to Murray returning un- cashed a $500,000 check which the' steel workers union had sent as a contribution to the UMW's soft coal strike just ended. Simultaneously there were these related. developments in government moves to do some- thing on labor-management re- lations: 1. PRESIDENT TRUMAN asked Congress to pass a law for a nine- man commission to study long range problems of the coal indus- try, which the President described during the strike as "sick." Mr. Truman also made it official that with the strike settled he no long- er wants the authority, which he asked just before agreement was reached, to seize the mines. 2. THE administration, through Secretary of Labor Tobin, went all-out against a move in Con- gress to apply the anti-trust laws to labor unions. Tobin contended that such legislation would dam- age labor-management relations and return labor to the days of "government by injunction." Doctor Tells Court Sanders Is NotGuilty MANCHESTER, N. H.-(P)-A noted Harvard Pathologist testi- fled yesterday the air Dr. Her- mann N. Sander had admitted in- jecting into Mrs. Abbie Borroto's arm had nothing to do with her death. Dr. Richard F. Ford, one of the few doctors who has made an ex- tensive study of air embolism, gave this testimony at the "mercy death" murder trial of the 4year- old country doctor. Dr. Sander is charged specifi- cally with killing the cancer-rav- aged woman by injecting 40 cubic centimeters of air into her veins. * * * DR. FORD, who is head of the Department of Legal Medicine at Harvard, said: 1. Air could not have been in- jected into Mrs. Borrot's vein on' the left arm as the vein had col- lapsed. (Both sides agree the injections were made just be- low the elbow of the left arm.) 2. 40 cc.s of air could not kill a human being-regardless of tthe person's weakened condi- tion; a fatal dose would be at least 200 or 300 ces. Dr. Sander told the jury he made the injections on the spur of the moment when "something snap- ped" in his mind-even though he "knew" Mrs. Borroto was dead. WSSF To Open 'B1ood Gift' Booths Pledge booths enabling students to sign up to donate blood to the World Student Service Drive will be set up on campus tomorrow and Friday. The booths, to be manned by Alpha Phi Omega, national ser- vice fraternity, will be located in the Union, League, Administra- +nn R Tilrlinn annd Anaall -Hl Peace Is Russian Aim - Mrs. Robeson By PAUL MARX The Russian people are not preparing for war, according to Mrs.' Paul Robeson, who has recently returned from a tour of Europe and Asia. Speaking under the auspices of the Arts, Sciences and Professions Council and the Inter-Racial Association yesterday, she declared that the Russians believe that war means death, and therefore they are preparing for peace and a more abundant life. RUSSIAN DEVELOPMENT of atomic energy is purely for peace- ful purposes, she said. The recent atomic explosion in Russia was merely an experiment to see whether a river could be diverted to improve irrigation in a dry area, Mrs. Robeson explained. "The Russians don't want to waste atomic energy in destruc- tion when it can be used for con- struction." The Russians will make atomic bombs only to de- fend themselves, she added. In discussing the lot of the Rus- sian people Mrs. Robeson said that * * * Plane Crash Kills Fifteen By The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS - (R) - At least 15 persons perished yesterday when a Northwest Airlines plane roared into a residential district to crash and explode while trying for an instrument landing during a blind March blizzard. The crash came shortly after the ship took off from Wold-Chamber- lain airport for Seattle, according to the Civil Aeronautics radio con- trol tower. THE PLANE'S last stop before heading for Minneapolis was at Madison, Wis. The Northwest Air- lines office there said the plane came in with 10 passengers and three crew members. Five passen- gers got off at Madison and five more boarded. No passenger list was immed- iately available at Madison. NWA identified the crew of tonight's ship as Capt. Don Jones, pilot; William McGinn, co-pilot, and Mary Alice Ken- nedy, stewardess. All are resi- dents of Minneapolis. The flight was No. 307. The plane, bucking high winds and a snowstorm, plummeted into a quiet residential section at Em- House Group Votes Down Parochial Aid Rejects Federal School Bus Fund By The Associated Press Federal Aid to parochial and private schools was rejected 16 to nine yesterday in the first big test on the issue in the House Labor Committee. The vote came on a closely res- tricted point: whether federal money should be used to help pay for bus service for pupils of such schools in states which deny their own public funds for that use. It gave emphasis, however, to frequently expressed doubts that the House will pass any bill with aid for religious schools in it, and to the idea that the religious con- troversy might kill off any bill at all in this congress. COMMENTING on the religious school aid fight yesterday before the House group's vote, in New York a Catholic spokesman said critics of the church's position on federal aid to education have mis- represented and obscured the is- sues. The Right Reverend Mon- signor John S. Middleton, New York Archdiocesan secretary for education, reiterated Cardinal Francis Spellman's assertion that the church does not seek public funds for general support of parochial schools. But the cardinal does feel, Msgr. Middleton said, that paro- chial schools, as much as public schools, are entitled to govern- ment supported auxiliary services, such as bus transportation. THE ADVERSE vote on the is- sue immediately raised questions on whether the measure will even get out of committee. Represen- tative John F. Kennedy (D- Mass), author of the rejected amendment, told reporters: "This definitely means that some of us are not going to be so strong for the bill. So far as I am concerned, I won't vote for the bill." The issue came up as the House committee started rewriting a Senate passed measure to provide 300 million dollars a year in fed- eral money to help states finance their schools. See Verdict Warning to Subversives Both Convictions Will Be Appealed NEW YORK-(A)-Bright little Judith Coplon and her glum Rus- sian ex-friend, Valentin A. Gubit- chev were convicted yesterday of plotting to spy for the Soviet Un- ion at the height of the cold war. The government hailed the ver- dict as a warning to subversive activities. Both defendants, who had been free in bail, were jailed to await sentencing Thursday at 10:30 a.m. (E.S.T.). * * * MISS COPLON, 28 years old, formerly a $4,479-a-year political analyst for the Justice Depart- ment, faces up to 25 years in pri- son plus a $10,000 fine. This is in addition to a 40-months-to-10- years sentence she received after a previous spy conviction in Wash- ington. -Daily-Biurt apowitcn DEBATERS-Shown here in a more peaceable moment, before their clash on the Young Republican "Opportunity St,.te" labor plank are, left to right, George Simmons, '50L, Floyd Marks, '50L, Young Democrat debaters; Marvin Esh, '50, moderator; Howard Hartzell, '52, and Harold Ward, '52, Young Republican debaters. aL * * * * * * * * Y Debates YR Labor Platform 1* By CHARLES ELLIOTT The labor plank of the Young Republican "Opportunity State" platform underwent fire 'from a Young Democratic attack in a de- bate last night in the League chapel. Supporting the 21-point labor plank were YR members Howard Hartzell and Harold Ward, while the YD attack was forwarded by Floyd Marks and George Simmons. Not being a formal debate, no definite decision was reached. * * * IN OPENING, Hartzell outlined SPECIAL MEETING: Union Board Discusses Election Petition Tonight -Daily-Burt Sapowitch MRS. PAUL ROBESON neither she nor her brother, who lives in Russia, have ever seen or heard of a slave labor camp. THE RUSSIANS have every op- portunity to criticize Stalin or anything else, an opportunity they are constantly taking advantage of, Mrs. Robeson said. Democracy in the Soviet Union means that everyone has the right to vote and an equal opportunity in industry, she asserted. In giving her impressions of New China, Mrs. Robeson said that land reform is the most important change. Royalists Leading In Greek Election ATHENS, Greece - WP) - Con- stantin Tsaldaris' Populist (Roy- alist) Party held its slight lead over the Leftist National Progres- sive Union as late returns from Sunday's Greek parliamentary elections trickled in last night. Returns from 3,595 of the 4,015 precincts, as reported by the Min- ister of Interior gave the Popu- lists, led by Constantin Tsaldaris (Royalist) 263,320 votes, and the National Progressive Union's Gen. Nicholas Plastiras (left) 250,079 votes. t r i 3 erson Ave. South Parkway., and Minnehahal Faculty Vetoes LoyaltyOath BERKELEY, Calif. - (AP) - Uni- versity of California professors voted 900-0 last night to refuse to sign a non-Communist oath im- posed by the Board of Regents. ,They acted at a tnree and one half hour meeting of the academic senate for the northern section. The oath called for signing by all university employes-12,000 in all-by April 30 or resignation. The 900 professors-there are 1,109 in the academic senate - unanimously denounced the spe- cial oath as improper, discrimina- tory, "unjust and a violation of established principles of privi- lege and tenure to dismiss with- out a hearing loyal members of the faculty." RING DEM BELLS: First Fire Drill Dampens' Residents of West Quad World News Round-Up By The Associated Press PARIS - Strike-battered Paris yesterday faced the threat of a utility walk-out that could cripple the whole city. Both non-Com- munist and Communist unions joined in calling for a general strike-of indefinite length-in all gas, power, and electric plants in the entire area. It would take ef- fect Wednesday midnight. * * * WASHINGTON - President Truman sent Congress his plan yesterday for a long-range study of the coal industry which he has called "sick" in both its general economy and its labor relations. At the same time the President put it on record that he considers the "emergency" over now that a new contract has brought peace in the soft coal diggings, aind no longer wants authority to seize the mines. * * * TAIPEI, FORMOSA-A force of 1,000 Chinese Communist troops yesterday was said to have landed on Hainan, second largest island left to the Nationalists. Two hun- dred Reds were killed and most of the remainder have been taken prisoner, the agency said. * * * A student petition calling for direct popular election of the Michigan Union president and re- cording secretary will be discussed by the Union Board of Directors at a special meeting tonight. President Bill Wise, '50BAd, called the meeting after studying the petition last week with Herb Leiman, '50, who circulated and submitted it. AT TONIGHT'S SESSION Wise will ask the Board to form some type of committee to go over the petition with Leiman's group. Signed by 236 students, the petition calls for amendments to the Union Constitution which would provide for election of the two top officers by the Union's entire student membership. The proposed amendments must go before a general meeting of Union members for final approval, but Wise and Leimnan have agreed Alumni Given Phoenix Posts Renville Wheat and Murray D. Van Wagoner, both University alumni now living in Detroit, have been appointed to the Phoenix Project's National Special Gifts Committee, George W. Mhson, chairman of the committee, has announced. Wheat, a partner in a Grosse Pointe law firm, will serve as na- tional chairman of foundations. Van Wagoner, a former governor of Michigan and military governor of Bavaria and now vice president of a Detroit manufacturing con- cern, has been named national chairman of advanced gifts. that certain portions of the pro- posals require further study and discussion before the general meet- ing is held. Although Wise regarded the amendments as "not adequate as they now stand," he said he will be "more than happy to ask the Board to study them with a stu- dent group as soon as possible." Leiman welcomed the opportun- ity to meet with Board members as a "highly significant step to- wards solving the question of elec- tion Acheson Says Aid for Korea A Necessity WASHINGTON - ()P) - Secre- tary of State Acheson told Con- gress today that unless American aid continues to bolster South Korea there is "no hope" for sur- vival of the little post-war repub- lic. Korea has been menaced by Communists within its borders and from Red-occupied North Korea. Acheson underscored what he termed the need for new help to keep the republic alive, but he told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee:', "THE THREAT of Communist' overthrow appears at least tem- porarily to have been contained." Acheson appeared before the Committee to support the Tru- man Administration's proposed $100,000,000 Korean aid pro- gram for the 1951 fiscal year be- ginning July 1. the precepts of the YR labor plank and stated their belief in the Taft- Hartley Act, "with just application and revision." He said that one purpose of the plank was to prove that the Republican party is not "anti-labor." In a blast at Tru- man's "coercive" tactics toward la- bor, he said that "it is just as bad to try to run labor as it is to run the industries." Simmons, speaking for YD,7 asked that certain inconsisten- cies of wording in the plank be explained, and that as many of them. stand, they are entirely ambiguous. He continued that although the Young Republicans were nomin- ally for the Taft-Hartley Act, the fact that they propose revisions to it automatically in their platform invalidates their claim of support. * * * WARD, a YR member, count- ered that the plank was far from inconsistent, and that any am- biguity encountered was simply conjecture. The revisions suggest- ed to the Taft-Hartley Act are not planned to change it completely, he said. It should have an amount of flexibility, he added. The last speaker, Marks, speak- ing for the YD, suggested that the only way to judge the Republicans was from past actions, and re- ferred specifically to the Republi- can 80th Congress. He also pointed out "definite in- consistencies" in the plank, such as the YR stand on discrimination in union membership. The moderator for the Debate was Marvin Esh, '50, a member of the varsity debating team. Auto Accident Victims Better The condition of three persons seriously injured in a midnight automobile crash which took the life of Joanne Chapel, '50, early Sunday, was described as "slightly improved" last night. The injured are: Katherine Teetor, '51, Stephen A. Hunter, a February graduate of the University, and Robert E. Boomer of Detroit. Funeral services for Miss Chapel will be held in Birmingham today. Gubitchev, 33 years old, an engineer who still holds the rank of third secretary of the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Af- fairs, can get up to 15 years and $20,000 in fines. He is the first Russian convicted of spying in this country since the cold war began. Lawyers for both defendants said the convictions will be ap- pealed. A federal court jury of six men and six housewives returned the verdict at 11:45 a.m. (EST) after failing to reach agreement last night. The jury had been out since 3:34 p.m. yesterday. BROOKLYN-BOft Miss- C p. lon, an honor graduate of Barnard College here, paled slightly but showed no other sign of emotion. Only a few hours before she had been bright-eyed and cheerful. Before she left the courtroom she hugged and kissed one of her court-assigned defense lawyers, Leonard Boudin. Then she em- braced her brother and sister-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Cop- lon. Gubitchev, blond and scarcely an inch taller than five-foot Miss Coplon, stared stonily ahead when he heard the verdict. A slight flush tinged his cheeks as the jur- ors, twice polled, intoned "guilty . . . guilty . . . guilty." In the six-week trial they flatly denied any spy plotting. Their story was that they met secretly in New York because they fell in love after a chance meeting at the Museum of Mod- ern Art. Miss Coplon said her love cooled when she learned Gubitchev was married. The Jury, however, believed the Government's version-that they met secretly in New York so that Miss Coplon could slip the Rus- sian secret FBI reports and other data from her Justice Department offices. The Government did not charge that any papers actually passed between them. Coplon Case Starts Cycle --Efimenco The conviction of Valentin Gub- itchev andJudith Coplon as R#.S- sian spies is just one of many more such trials to come during the course of the cold war accord- ing to N.M. Efimenco of the politi- cal science department. Efimenco said that Russian pro- tests of an alleged U.S. govern- ment frameup in the trial were "meaningless." "The protests were entered by the U.S.S.R. as an attempt to dis- avow Moscow of any accusations of spying." "Any nation engaged in a 'cold war' would try to obtain confiden- tial information through its agents and has the right to try." More than 1300 residents fled from the West Quadrangle into a drizzling rain at 9 p.m. yester- day as the first fire drill alarm ever rung in the structure was sounded. The drill was called a success by James Robertson, chief resident advisor. "The men filed out in orderly fashion and the evacuation of the quadrangle took only three and one half minutes," Robertson stated. * * * HOWEVER, the alarm system completely failed on the fourth floor of Allen Rumsey house. Men lrine cm hote-riridnr hering a other colleges last year that end- ed in loss of life. Fire drills are a common and regular occurence in most womens dormitories here, especially in such older and less fire resistant struc- tures as Betsy Barbour and Helen Newberry. * * * THE MOST SEVERE criticism offered was by Don Correll '51 who said the alarm system could barely be heard. "It was a blazing suc- cess," Correll stated. "That alarm wasn't loud enough to wake a mouse out of a light sleep." Correll was attending a house INDEPENDENT VS. AFFILIATED: First Forum Debate To Be 'Greek' Issue (~\. By JIM BROWN The independent-affiliated issue will break out into the open to- night at the Michigan Forum's inaugural debate program at 7:30 p.m. at the Architecture Auditor- ium. T m.a* * *a THE FORUM will feature a Stockwell Hall will dependent colors. carry the in- Patterned after the "Town Meeting on the Air" and the in- nationally renowned Oxford Un- ion, the Forum will feature 10 minute talks by each member of the opposing teams, followed by a 15 minute roundtable dis- early last spring, the Michigan Forum is designed "to provide a medium for the free exchange of views on controversial matters of current interest." Originally it was planned that individual campus clubs and as- sociations would challenge other grouns to debate questions of