IN THIS CORNER See Page 4 Lw 4rn1u~ D3ait I Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LX, No. 108 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1950 SNOW SIX PAGES Molotov Says No H-Bomb In Existence Expect U.S.S.R. Bid for Peace MOSCOW-(1P) -Soviet Prime Minister V. M. Molotov declared yesterday that only lunatics could hope to frighten the Soviet peo- ple with a hydrogen bomb "which dops not exist." He asserted in an election speech that while all sorts of blackmailers from the imperialist camp had been trying to scare the U.S.S.R. with a monopoly of atomic bombs, the U.S.S.R was successfully mastering atomic en- ergy and atomic weapons. "YESTERDAY they terrorized us with the atom bomb," he said in a pre-election speech in Mos- cow which was broadcast by the Moscow radio. "Today they are striking ter- ror with the so-called hydrogen bomb,which never before exist- ed in the world. "Only fools can indulge in the insane calculation that they can terrorize the Soviet Union," Mo- lotov added. -He is a candidate for the Soviet Parliament in next Sunday's elec- tions. MEANWHILE, informed diplo- mats here predicted last night the Soviet Union will make some ov- erture toward a new effort to set- tle outstanding world problems. Tlyey said they would pay particular attention to pre-elec- tion speeches by Soviet figures prior to Sunday's parliamentary elections. The diplomats studied with in- terest a call by three other polit- buro members for, peace among the big powers. All three - Deputy Premiers George M. Malenkov, Lavrenti P. Beria and Andrei A. Andreyev - cited international peace as to- day ' prime objective. They made the declarations in campaign speeches as candidates for the Supreme Soviet (Parliament) in next Sunday's national elections. I ndict _Three Men After Lodge Row A OTTAWA, Ohio, - OP) - A * dispute within the Fraternal Or- der of Eagles erupted yesterday in- to grand jury indictments against three national lodge officers. Three grand Aerie officials and an Ohio State Eagles officer were named in 11 separate indictments - with charges ranging from blackmail to publicizing a lottery. * * * THE SECRET indictments were returned Thursday. Prosecutor J. Harry Leopold said they were r based on efforts to compel the Ottawa lodge to do these things. (1) Do business with an in- surance company and a supply company affiliated with the Grand Aerie, and (2) engage in a fund-raising campaign which the prosecutor described as a lottery. B. H. Goldstein, Grand Aerie legal advisor, said the indictments "were manifestly secured to satis- fy the spite and venom of the prosecuting attorney." Dean Keniston Cites Student- Faculty _Rift' Dean Hayward Keniston last night proposed a student-faculty council for the literary college, claiming the University is too big for the old student-professor in- timacy. Speaking in a "fireside chat" at Hillel Foundation, he said he fav- ored a council composed of liter- ary college faculty and of students appointed by Student Legislature. * * * "A DANGEROUS rift is growing among students, faculty and ad- Stand on China U.S. Recall Of Attaches Demanded Acheson Bran Defended by Lie ded 'Unfit' Aftermath I IIn Gubitchev LAKE SUCCESS - (') - Sec- retary General Trygve Lie said heatedly yesterday his plan to admit Red China into the United Nations is a surrender to common sense rather than a surrender to Russian demands. His face flushed at times as he answered questions at a special news conference he called as the result of editorial and other cri- ticism of his proposal. * * * HE FLARED UP at the end when a reporter read from a New York Times editorial saying that if Lie feels a surrender to the So- viet Union is required to save the UN, Lie should say so. Ford to Pay: For .Detroit A uditorium DETROIT - (P) - A $2,500,- 000 auditorium for Detroit's new Civic Center was assured today as the Ford Motor Company and its dealers announced they would foot the bill. The 3,000-capacity auditorium will be a memorial to Henry Ford and his son, Edsel * * * FUNDS WILL be donated the city of Detroit by the Ford Motor Company fund, a charitable in- stitution created only this week, and Ford, Mercury and Lincoln dealers. The fund will give $1,500,- 000, the individual dealers, $1,- 000,000. The gifts were announced to- day by Mayor Albert C. Cbo, who expressed "great grati- tude." Henry Ford II, grandson of the Motor Company founder, announ- ced formation of the fund Mon- day. He said it was designed to meet the company's "obligations in the field of charity, education, public health and hospitalization and civic and community devel- opment." FORD DID NOT announce what amount would be placed in the fund. His grandfather estab- lished the Ford foundation, which announced recently a grant of $16,500,000 to build a 17-story ad- dition to Henry Ford Hospital here.j Besides the Ford-donated au- ditorium, the new civic center is scheduled to include a $15,- 000,000 (M) city-county build- ing, a 17,000-capacity, $12,000,- 000 (M) convention hall and a multi-million dollar federal- state building. It will be located at the foot o Bates and Woodward Avenues on Detroit River. Week's Pledge Net $3000 In WSSFDrive ZBT, Cheever House Top Donation List The next to the last day of WSSF Week brought campus blood donations for the World Student Service Fund up to 200 pledgescworth a total of $3,000, drive chairman Wym Price an- nounced yesterday. Although yesterday was the last day for pledge booths, Price noted, slips and boxes for pledges still remain available in the Parrot, Dascola's and Lane Hall THE LARGE turnout at the blood bank has produced "quitera bit of congestion," and Price re- quested students call Lane Hall before going to the hospital to find out if they will be able to accommodate them. They can also make an ap- pointment directly with the hospital, he pointed out. He also asked that solicitors with pledges outstanding turn them in, so the final tabulation of receipts for the week and the drive so far may be made. Lie was asked whether his planto accept Red China in the Chinese Nationalist seats here is a surrender to the Russians. He shot back: "Not at all! It represents a sur- render to international law and common sense!" * * * AT THE same time, Lie 'an- nounced he refused to extend for a full year the accreditation of Nicholas Kyriazidis, Greek Com- munist accredited as a news cor- respondent at UN. His press card was extended for three months. Lie called attention to a letter from the United States govern- ment saying it may soon renew deportation proceedings against Kyriazidis and suggesting that he be given accreditation for 60 days or three months. * * * MEANWHILE in Washington, Senator Knowland (R.-Calif.) told the Senate late yesterday that Lie was acting "as a partisan of the Chinese Communists" by sug- gesting they replace the Chinese Nationalists in the UN. Knowland said Lie apparently had abandoned his impartiality. States representatives not only Knowland and Senator Brews- ter (R Me) demanded tht United vote against such a move but take active leadership to prevent ad- dition of another Soviet Russian satellite to UN membership. World News Roundup By The Associated Press LANSING - Secretary of State Fred M. Alger, jr., scion of a fam- ily famed in Michigan politics and lumbering, announced yesterday he would seek the Republican nomination for governor, throw- ing the GOP primary campaign into a wide-open five-way race. Alger thus pitted himself against four lready announced candi- dates: former Governor Harry F. Kelly, former Lt. Gov. Eugene C. Keye , Cong. Albert Engel of Mus- kegonI and Mayor Thomas Leith of B:ighton BONN, Germany - Political r arties of all hues lined up be- And the West German govern- ment for the first time yesterday to protest against the recent French-Saar pact. Chancellor Kon ad Adenauer told Parliament he will protest to the Western Allies. * * * WASHINGTON - The Govern- ment told the railroads yesterday they can fire up all their engines and use as much coal as they please after midnight today. The order came from the inter- state commerce commission. BELFAST, Northern Ireland- Northern Ireland's second bomb- ing within the week set Belfast buzzing last night with talk that the outlawed Irish Republican Army is on the loose again. A tall, bespectacled man tossed a bomb against a wall behind the Roden Street police station today. Some windows were bro- ken. WASHINGTON - The Senate agreed yesterday to begin voting Wednesday on a housing bill aim- ed to meet the needs of 'families with moderate incomes. Hungary Acts On Vogeler Evidence BUDAPEST, Hungary - ( - Hungary used the Robert A. Voge- ler case to demand last night that the United States recall three mili- tary officers attached to the U.S. Legation in Budapest. The recall of two British lega- tion attaches was demanded pre- viously. * * * THE AMERICAN officers are Col. James Kraft, military attache; Lt. Col. John Hoyne, deputy mili- tary attache; and Maj. Donald E. Griffin, deputy air attache. Hungary's Communist govern- ment declared all "persona non grata" (unwelcome) on the basis of testimony in the espionage and sabotage trial of Vogeler, the American roving represen- tative of the International Tele- phone company, and six co-de- fendants last month. Vogeler, who was convicted and sentenced to 15 years imprison- ment, testified Hoyne and Griffin had been in touch with him and that Kraft "also knew about my espionage activities as he had been a close friend ever since we met in Vienna several years ago." * * * . (IN WASHINGTON, State De- partment officials said the Hun- garian demand was under study. (Speculation was that the three would be withdrawn, since Budapest declared them person- ally unacceptable. In return the United States could oust one or more Hungarian diplomats, or break relations. The ouster course seemed more likely.) (The British foreign office said Britain will withdraw their two attaches, but "wholly rejects" Hungary's reason for asking their recall. A spokesman said it was established diplomatic practice that a mission member be with- drawn when he is declared per- sona non grata.) Hungary again protested to the United States against what it called the "over swollen number of the staff of this legation." I -Daily-Burt apowitcn STUMPED-The Union's "Bowery Bill' surveys the massive lock he must somehow circumvent in order to gain access to the Union Open House today. Before he tackles the job, however, he plans to wander through campus accompanied by a fraternity marching band. * * * IourweryBill'lTo Smash Gate, Let Guests in Union By BOB KEITH A shaggy character named "Bowery Bill" will mount the steps of the Michigan Union at 1 p.m. today and attempt to rip a huge "pad- lock" off the front doors. If he succeeds, he will throw open the portals to the thousands of students and townspeople-male and female alike- who are ex- pected to attend the traditional Union Open House from 1 to 5 p.m. A WIDE VARIETY of free entertainment will be offered at the annual affair, according to staffman Charles Remen, '52. He outlined School Daze l ALPINE, Tex., - (A) - Bet there's no hazing here! Dad's just a college freshman, but his son's a sophomore. Moth- er's a sophomore, too. But Dad has company. His daughter's a fresh- man, and so is his daughter-in- law. "Dad" is Tate C. Dodd, World War II veteran, who is now seek- ing a degree from Sul Ross State College. His wife, Eva, is a home econo- mics student at the college. Rich-I ard Dodd, 21, their son, is a sopho-a more at Sul Ross. His wife, Beth,s is an art major.r Mayo ,Doctor Cites MedicalN Shortcoming By BOB SOLT= Medicine may fall "so horribly"f behind today-in spite of surgical advances-because doctors "wor- ship" laboratory reports instead of getting to the core of a man's sickness, Dr. Walter C. Alvarez of the Mayo Clinic claimed last! night. Lecturing on psychomatic prob-! lems in medicine, Dr. Alvarez de- clared that "one of the greatest curses in medicine is that doctors ' stop looking for other possible causes of sickness after they have made a diagnosis." "WHEN YOU have a difficult medical case, especially of a psy- chotic nature," Dr. Alvarez ad- vised, "talk to the sick man's rela- tives, his wife, and his friends; you may learn ten times more' than if you just depend on lab- oratory reports. "In other less severe cases, talk to the patient, take his his- tory, size him up, and learn to make a diagnosis from a look or a handshake," he explained. Dr. Alvarez said every doctor should ask his patient two simple but very important questions: "Are you happy?" and "Why did you come here?" WHEN A direct and pointed question does not serve its pur- pose, the doctor should then learn to gain the information he needs by asking more general and vague questions, that gradually draw the patient out. Dr. Alvarez cited cases in which mistaken diagnosesoc- cured because doctors "swal- lowed laboratory reports whole." "These mistakes are made by even some of the country's lead- ing internists, and that is why I'm here tonight making a fuss about it," he said. Another difficulty cited by Dr. Alvarez is that doctors "look for the rare causes of sickness and' miss the all-too-common. French Police Use Tear-Gas On Strikers PARIS-(/P)-French police and mobile guards used tear gas against demonstrating strikers in two French cities last night as tempers flared higher in the docks and public utilities walk-outs. Tear gas grenades were thrown at Moulins, in central France, where a crowd of about 600 had defied police orders and marched on the prefecture after a meeting sponsored by the Communist- dominated General Confederation of Labor. SEVERAL persons were slight- ly injured, and one was arrested. Strikers who tried to parade through the streets of Rombas, near Metz, were dispersed by mobile guards using tear gas. One guard was injured, and 15 demonstrators were arrested. Ther a sa sin . minor disturh- Russian Spy Reported Set To Quit U.S. GOP Lawmakers Level Accusation WASHINGTON - (P) - Two Republican lawmakers yesterday accused Secretary of State Ache- son of "unfitness" for his past for recommending that Valentin A. Gubitchev be deported instead of being imprisoned as a Soviet spy. Senator Wherry (R-Neb) nd Rep. Fellows (R-Me) made t at charge in separate statements which also asserted that Acheson's move blocked the execution of jus- tice in this country. * * * MEANWHILE, Valentin A. Gu- bitchev was reported to have ac- cepted the government's offer to leave this country instead of going' to jail for 15 years. The convicted spy reportedly will leave the United States aboard the Polish liner Batory on March 20. Both the New York Times and the New York Herald Tribune said they had learned of Gubitchev's decision. The Times said Gubitchev's wife, Lydia, would sail with him and that it was believed his passage to Russia would be financed by the United Nations. GUBITCHEV, a suspended Uni- ted Nations employe, was given a 15. - year suspended sentence Thursday on condition that he return to Russia in two weeks. He was convicted by a New York court of conspiring with Judith Coplon, former Justice Depart- ment worker, to steal U.S. secrets for Russia. She was given a 15- year prison term. In recommending this treat- ment for Gubitchev, both the State and Justice Departments indicated their hope that the Soviets may give similar treat- ment to Americans who may be involved in court proceedings behind the iron curtain. But Wherry asserted that "Rus- sia's friendship cannot be bought by bribery." HE SAID the Soviet "propagan- da machine already has begun to call the action of the United States in the Gubitchev case a sign of weakness and recognition that Russia was right all the time." Noting that no suspension was recommended in Miss Cop- Ion's case, Wherry said, "sen- tencing one person to 15 years in prison and freeing another is a travesty upon justice." At the same time, lawyers for Judith Coplon, along with the Russian, filed briefs with the U.S. Court of Appeals in support of their request for bail. The govern- ment has until Monday to file answers. Sander Waits For Ru1ig on Medical Status CANDIA, N.H. - () - Dr. Hermann N. Sander returned to quiet family life in his big white colonial farmhouse yesterday to await consideration of his pro- medical body of New Hampshire. Freed from a charge of mur- der after the death of a hopeless- ly-ill woman cancer patient in De- cember, the 41-year-old country doctor relaxed with his wife and three children. BUT STILL to come is a hear- ing before the state board of re- gistration in medicine-a five- man group which will decide what actin. if anv. it shouild ta~ke in events ranging from ping-pang, I CONVENTION COMING: I Young Republicans Striving To Avert Dissension in Ranks Leaders of the University Young Republican club are hard at work to keep the group united as they prepare to play host to delegates from 25 visiting colleges at a con- vention slated for March 24 and 25. A split in the Young Republi- cans has been festering in the ranks, with both sides trying to avert an open clash until after the YR Big Ten Convention, at which Harold Stassen is scheduled to speak. BUT BOTH factions, the "con- servative" element led by Howard Johnson, president of the group, and the "liberal" part, led by Dave' Belin, former president and Leo- nard Wilcox, candidate . for the presidential post now held by Johnson, have said they plan to bring the fight out into the open following the convention. The friction began at a re- cent election meeting at which Wilcox and Johnson both de- livered speeches before the bal- loting. Johnson, speaking after Wilcox, criticized the adminis- tration of out-going president Belin in charging behind-the- scenes action. Johnson was vice-president the group, and Wilcox secretary the time. of at Drop Charges AgainstKlan PELL CITY, Ala.,-(IP)-Mur- der charges against a Ku Klux Klan leader and two other men were dropped yesterday. Circuit solicitor Leland Randall said, on his motion, the charges were withdrawn against the Rev. Alvin Horn, Talladega Baptist minister and organizer for the Georgia association of Klans; Jesse Wilson, 55, Talladega coun- ty farmer, and E. L. Hudson, Tal- ladega carpenter. bowling and billiard demonstra- tions to afloor show andwater ballet. The "Michifish" water ballet will feature fifty aquatic-~angels in two 40-minute performances at 2 and 3:30 p.m. in the Union Pool, Remen said. Meanwhile deft campus sports- men will exhibit their skills at the bowling alleys, ping-pong tables and in the billiard room. * * * AT '2 P.M., spectators will gather in the main ballroom for a pro- gram featuring top talent from the entire campus. Touching it off will be selections from the latest Union Opera, "Lace it Up," now in the final stages of production. Elsewhere, the Michigan Alumni Association will present "Michigan on the March," a sound and color movie portray- ing the progress of the Univer- sity through the war years. Free refreshments await open house visitors, and the basement taproom will be open to men and women throughout the afternoon. Two Pilots Killed STEUBENVILLE, 0., - (A') - fwo single-engine Air Force planes crashed and burned near here last night, and both pilots were killed. STUDENTS WORTH $100 A HEAD: Ann Arbor Eyes U.S. Census By JAMES GREGORY You are worth $100 to Ann Ar- bor. The Michigan Municipal League has pointed out that a new cen- sus ruling, which makes students residents of the cities where they attend college, means an increase in state tax revenues for Ann Ar- The Council was worried be- cause the University's spring vacation comes at a time when census takers will be making their rounds. Robert J. Baker, district super- visor of the 1950 federal census, has since given assurances that all the academic noses hereabouts and rooming houses will be con- tacted personally by the census enumerators, unless the count threatens to last into spring vaca- tion. In that case, census question- naires will be distributed to these units also. Franncis C .hiel .busines man- Windfall gain approximately $100 per stu- dent during the next decade. Thus the University's 20,000 students will bring the city about $2,000,000. This estimate is based, however, on current laws and present econ- omic conditions, although it is the best available at this time. An-