REPUBLICANS' SPLIT See Page 4 Anit D~ait , a n Latest Deadline in the State FAIR, COLDER VOL. LX, No. 110 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1950 SIX PAGES McCarthy Names 'Pro-Red' Us.. Official i 1 s 1 * * * * * + Plebiscite on Belgian King Brings Split Leopold Gets 57 Percent of Vote BRUSSELS, BELGIUM-P- The leaders of both Government Parties, Social Christians and Li-. berals, split yesterday in a deeper crisis than ever as a result of the plebiscite on King Leopold. Two factions of the dominant Catholic and pro-Leopold Social Christian Party raced to Switzer- land with conflicting advice for the exiled King. Premier Gaston Eyskens, was reported on his way to Leopold's chateau to recommend his abdica- tion. * * * AT THE SAME TIME, Franz Leemans, aide to staunchly Leo- poldist Foreign Minister Paul van Zeeland, was enroute to Geneva with the. King's secretary and campaign manager, Jacques Pir- enne, with a completely contradic- tory recommendation. The 48-year-old monarch, who incurred unpopularity for his early surrender to the Ger- mans in 1940, received a 57.6 per cent majority in the nation as a whole in an advisory plebiscite Sunday, but failed to win the French-speaking South. The Liberals, whose votes in Parliament could be the deciding factor in any decision to invite the King to return, also split. One leader said the party should stick to its pre-Plebiscite position-that Leopold could. rxturn- only if he won a majority in allithree of the nation's main divisions. These divisions are Flanders, the Flemish-speaking north (72.2 per cent Leopold), the -Southern Walloons (40.2 per cent Leopold) and nearly evenly divided Bra-. bant (50.2 per cent Leopold). Vernon Sees Unrest If King. Should Return King Leopold III of Belgium would be making a politically stu- pid move if he should elect to re- turn to his throne now, according to Manfred Vernon of the political science department. "If Leopold takes the plebicite held in his country Sunday as a sign of the Belgian peoples' ap-. proval of his return, he will stir up serious unrest," Vernon de- clared. HE NOTED that the slim 51 percent vote in favor of the exiled King's resumption of the nominal leadership of Belgium was far too small for anyone to say that Leo- pold stands in the good graces of the people. "The king of a country of such diverse lingual and eco- nomic factors as Belgium should be a symbol of national unity, above party strife." Vernon charged that -Leopold could not hope to fufilli such a job. The very fact that he has shown a desire to attempt a return, knowing that such a move would set off party battles, has lowered him from any nonpartisan sym-. bolism, Vernon explained. N * AND THE people have not for- given their former king his seem- ing betrayal during the last war when he surrendered Belgium to the Nazis, he remarked. "They expect him to perform as his father, King Albert, did in the first world conflict. Al- bert never surrendered and re- mained with his troops until the end of the war." Vernon pointed out furthermore that the Belgians have not fully accepted their former leader's play-boy actions while in exile. WSSF Drive Gains Tabulations on the WSSF drive hit 240 pledges yesterday, accord- nsin~a lrimp Cni m. ,i..P British Order Air Tragedy Investigation Accuses Key State Department Aides (t" 80 Killed in Worst Crash In History Only 3 Survive; One Near Death CARDIFF, Wales-()-Britain ordered a full public inquiry yes-. terday into history's greatest air disaster-the crash of the huge chartered airliner that killed 80 persons near here Sunday. Lord Pakenham, Minister of Civil Aviation, through his chief Parliamentary secretary, an- nounced in a hushed House of Commons he had ordered a court of inquiry to attempt to fix the cause of the crash which ruined the triumphant homecoming of Welsh football fans. * * * AIR FORCE Marshal Donald Bennett, who left active service to enter commercial aviation, also examined the shattered plane. He said last night "as far as I can see everything was in correct or- der. The 83 people on board was a load well within the certificate of airworthiness requirements for this particular machine." The giant Tudor airliner, de- veloped from the wartime Lan- caster bomber into Britain's largest commercial plane, has been dogged by misfortune. Two earlier versions of the plane dis- appeared on trans - Atlantic flights. No date has been set for the public inquiry. King George VI and Prime Minister Clement Attlee led the nation in mourning the death of 75 Welsh football fans and five crewmen. * * * THEY MET their death when the plane undershot the airport on its return from Dublin. The fans had flown to Dublin en route to Belfast to watch their team win a football match and had picked up the plane in Dublin on their way back. Only three of the 83 persons aboard survived the crash as the plane came in for a landing. One of the three survivors is in a critical condition, though im- proved after Sunday night when he was not expected to live. The other two apparently owed their lives to the fact they were securely strapped to their seats at the rear of the fuselage which suffered the least damage. T' .Awarded Cancer Grant Grants totalling $17,800 were awarded the University yesterday by the National Cancer Institute for continuation of laboratory and clinical cancer research. Prof. Robley C. Williams, of the physics department, $2,786 for iso- lation and physical characteriza- tion of the causative agent of lymph tumors in birds; Dr. Albert H. Wheeler, of the University Hospital, $6,666 for the immunological study of inhibitors of tumor growth in mice; Dr. Frank H. Bothell, $8,348 for study of metabolic effects of the administration of pteroyl-glumat- ic acid antagonists. Honest Joe SLONDON-WG)-The Moscow radio said yesterday that 99.96 per cent of the eligible voters cast their ballots in the Soviet Union's election Sunday. The candidates for the Su- preme Soviet (Parliament) were unopposed. Prime Minis- ter Stalin was re-elected unani- mously, the broadcast said. The radio said 110,964,172 persons voted. Uoover Plan Given Boost By Trumtan 21 Changes to Be Attempted WASHINGTON-- OP)-Abolition of the maritime commission and of the semi-independent office of general counsel of the National Labor Relations Board headlined 21 reorganization plans President Truman filed with Congress yes- terday. Each plan becomes effective in 60 days unless either the Senate or House votes disapproval of it. * * * IN ACCOMPANYING messages, Truman predicted that adoption of the plans would save sums of money ranging from "modest" to "substantial" amounts. All, he said, are based on recommenda- tions made last year by the com- mission of government reorgani- zation, headed by former Presi- dent Herbert Hoover. About 20 percent of the Hoov- er Commission's recommenda- tions already are in effect, the President estimated, and adop- tion of today's 21 proposals would bring the total up to al- most 50 percent. As the new plans went to Con- gress, Truman himself was aboard his tossing yacht off Cape Hat- teras, en route to Key West, Fla., for a three weeks vacation. Equal- ly rough seas seemed in prospect for some of his reorganization pro- posals. * * * THE RECOMMENDATION for abolition of the five member Mari- time Commission, aroused advance opposition from shipping interests and some members of congress from seacoast states. Plenty of opposition seemed likely, too, for the proposal to abolish the office of General Coun- sel of the National Labor Rela- tions Board, a post held by Rob- ert N. Denham. Truman said the change he re- commended would "end the con- fusion which has resulted from divided responsibility." Denham has been at odds with the board majority for months over handling enforcement of the Taft-Hartley labor relations law. He has said publicly that the board has a bias in favor of labor. In turn, several labor spokesmen have demanded Denham's removal from office. A majority of the reorganization proposals are designed to streng- then the authority of cabinet of- ficers and of the chairmen of the boards which operate independent agencies regulating business, fi- nance and labor. Lists Hanson, Lattimore, Brunaner; Charges Acheson 'Shifting Blame' WASHINGTON--(P)-Senator McCarthy (R-Wis.) yesterday at- tacked three key State Department aids as having shown Communist sympathies-and demanded investigation of °a Navy civilian scientist whom he described as working on "topmost defense secrets." * * * * TESTIFYING UNDER OATH, at a crowded hearing before a Senate foreign relations subcommittee, McCarthy cited the following persons as having displayed Communist sympathies: 1. Haldore Hanson, 37, head; of the State Department tech- nical staff for President Truman's proposed "point four" program .I -Daily-Burt Sapowitchl SPEAKS ON RELIGION-Political columnist Dorothy Thompson, center chats with friends at are- ception at Lane Hall after delivering the keynote speech of Religion in Life Week last night. * * * * Petitions for Spring Voting Due Friday All students who have taken out petitions for this spring's all- campus elections should file them at the Student Legislature office in the Office of Student Affairs by Friday afternoon, according to Dave Belin, '51, chairman of the SL citizenship committee. Thus far the candidacies for Engineering class officers have been few in number, according to Belin, and all engineers interested are urged to apply before the 5 p.m. deadline today.! Although petitioning for the 23 vacant SL seats has been closed, Belin said that students still in- terested in becoming candidates for senior class offices in the liter- ary and engineering colleges may obtain petitions from 3 to 5 p.m. today at the SL office. In addition, students may still take out petitions for presidentl and secretary of the sophomore and junior engineering classes. Columnist Sees Religitn As Cure For Moral Ills By PHOEBE FELDMAN "The principle characteristic of the epoch in which we live is al lack of restraint, moral and social, in our actions," columnist Dorothy' Thompson declared last night in the keynote speech of Religion In' Life Week. She attributed this lack of restraint to the current breakdown of religious ties. * * * * "AT THE TURN of the century, everyone believed in an intermin- able progress on the basis of a great new science leading to a bright' *new socialistic-Shavian world of to help under-developed' coun-n tries. H^ is a former Associated Press reporter. 2. Owen J. Lattimore, 49, a State Department consultant on Far East affairs, now director of the Walter Hines Page School of International Relations, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. A Harvard graduate, Latti- more served as political adviser to Gen. Chiang Kai Shek in 1941-42 and was a deputy direct for of the U.S. Office of War In- formation from 1942 to 1944. 3. Mrs. Esther Caukin Brun- auer, 48, a $9,706-a-year official on the State Department's Unit- ed Nations staff. He said he wanted an inquiry covering Stephen Brunauer, hus- band of Mrs. Brunauer, a Navy commander during World War II. now employed in the explosives re- search division of the Navy bureau of ordnance. * * * McCARTHY also asserted that Secretary of State Acheson is try- ing to "shift the blame" in de- WASHINGTON - (R) - Mat- thew Ovetic told the House Un- American Activities Committee yesterday that William Patter- son, National Executive Secre- tary of the Civil Rights Con- gress, is a Communist. Cvetic, who rose to high of- fice in the Communist Party while serving as an FBI under-. cover agent, also identified as a Communist Alex Wright, des- cribed as Western Pennsylvania Vice Chairman of the Progres- sive Party. Cvetic said "all the planning, all the programming" of the Civil Rights Congress in West- ern Pennsylvania was done by the Communist Party. Natitonal Round-aUp By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Convicted spy Judith Coplon won freedom yes- terday on $40,000 bail after Valen- tin A. Gubitchev, convicted with Miss Coplon of plotting to spy for the Russians, announced he would accept the offer of the U.S. gov- ernment and return to Russia. WASHINGTON - The Su- preme Court agreed yesterday to pass upon constitutionality of President Truman's three-year- old loyalty program aimed at ridding the government of any disloyal employees. WASHINGTON--A proposal to authorize direct government home loans to veterans was attacked as unnecessary by Senator Cain (R- Wash) yesterday. hound i1 of symbols, Prof. C. S. Coe said. "IT BEARS a vague resemblance Writer Asks For Outlawing1 Of RedParty Coming out in favor of outlaw- ing the Communist Party in the United States, political analyst Dorothy Thompson remarke d wryly in an interview yesterday that "we retain the Communist Party as legal and then persecute the Communists."I "I'd rather have the issue set- tled so that we'd all know wherej we stand," she explained. * * * SHE DECLARED that she be- lieved no country would ever use the H-Bomb "because it would lead to total demoralization, caus- ing the end of all governments en- tirely." Miss Thompson also said she favored the creation of a United Europe and the constructive use of Europe's resources. Terming Communism an "ersatz religion of black mgagic, organized of doubters worshipping icons of secular gods," she declared that democracy cannot digest Com- munism, but must either beat it through the use of the superior faith of Christianity, or be beaten by itself. "Fbr no one can believe in Christianity and be a Communist," she concluded. material plenty and altruism," she continued. "Reason was to replace faith and religion with an atheistic humanism, and God was gone before the onslaughts of an em- pirical science. The cry was al- ways for solid proof." "But today scientists have dis- covered that the world is not made up of little bumping billiard balls-the basic fallacy of com- munist theory-but only of en- ergy and radiation," she stated. "NOW THE MOST advanced scientists are beginning to wonder what that energy and radiation is. Some call it thought; others Todav's Highlights 4 p.m.-Seminar on the "New Testament in the Twentieth Century," under Dr. Milton Froyd, West Conference Rm., Rackham. 5 p.m.-"Faith Speaks to World Problems," Dr. - Robt. Smith, Congregational Church. 7:30 p.m.-Christian Science (open) Testimonial Meeting, Upper Room, Lane Hall. religion. In the old days-of se- curity and a forseeable future- they had a name for it: God." "Today we are being led by mor- al idiots," Miss Thompson declar- ed. "The concept of good and evil -tied up with religion-is virtual- ly gone, and no one anywhere in any country is secure. Anything may happen to anyone anywhere," she concluded. M andel Calls': Soviet Rule 'Democratic' , Calling the Soviet system "a government of the people, by the people and for the people," Wi- liam Mandel declared last night that Sunday's election in the Sov- iet Union was democratic. Mandel, the author of "A Guide to the Soviet Union," and "The_ Soviet Far ast and Central Asia," attended Moscow University for a year in 1931 and 1932. He spoke at the Unitarian Church. "IT IS difficult to see why the average Soviet citizen would not vote for the government," he said, because of the tremendous social, economic and scientific improve- ments the government has made for the people. The Soviet Union has a gov- ernment of the people, he de- clared, because every one of Its leaders is a man of the people," "in the humblest log cabin- sense." If Franklin D. Roosevelt had been a poor workingman's son, he continued, he probably would not have become president "in our time." The Soviet government is more truly "by the people" than that of the United States because of the greater participation in public affairs in the Soviet Union, he declared. The Russian Communist party has six million members, he said, who give up many of their person- al freedoms to work for what they consider the welfare of the coun- try. To Try Doctor Tomorrow The assault and battery trial of Dr. Neil H. Sullenberger, former University Hospital staff member, will open at 9 a.m. tomorrow in Ann Arbor Municipal Court. Washtenaw County Prosecutor Douglas K. Reading is scheduled to conduct the prosecution of the doctor, accused of striking Mrs. Louise Philpot, University Hospit- al elevator operator. Attorney Louis E. Burke will defend Dr. Sul- lenberger. The trial will be held before six jurors and Municipal Judge Fran- cis O'Brien. Mrs. Dorothy Griffel, president of the local chapter of the Nation- al Association for the Advance-. ment of Colored People, revealed yesterday that "a lawyer, at Mrs. Philpot's request, will sit in on the trial to witness the whole proceed- ings. *"We are anxious that there be a vigorous prosecution of the case and that the jury act impartial- ly," Mrs. Griffel said. Attlee Government Outvotes Censure LONDON-W)-Prime Minister Attlee's Socialist Labor Govern- ment last night won its second confidence vote in less than a week, beating down a Conserva- fending the alleged loyalty suspect cases which the Wisconsin senator has been airing on Capitol Hill. "This is all being cleverly load- ed onto the shoulders of a harm- less and likeable young man by the name of John Peurifoy, De- puty Under Secretary of State," McCarthy said. "I hope the secretary will have enough guts to stand up and say, 'this is my baby,' and take the blame for it. I suggest that Mr. Acheson stand up like a man." * * * PEURIFOY has acted as the State Department's chief spokes- man in countering McCarthy's al- legations that the department is honeycombed with Communists and fellow travelers. Once again, as partial evidence to substantiate his charges, Mc- Carthy offered newspaper clip- pings, magazine articles and books - plus statements that some of those he named were sponsors of Communist front or- ganizations.. The State Department was quick to defend both Hanson and Mrs. Brunauer. Michael McDermott, press officer, said they have been "thoroughly investigated" and the department is "satisfied they are loyal Americans." BRUNAUER denied to newsmen that he was ever a member of the Communist party or ever told as- sociates he was. Between 1923 and 1927, he said, he was a member of a youth group in New York which advocated "Communist principles." Since then, he said, he has joined no subversive organizations. I l + (Ym,~!A-,-l1Yb Q1 ib EINSTEIN MEETS RIVA L: Foolisr By ROMA LIPSKY A complicated and profound- looking equation taking up a full blackboard in an Angell Hall class- room may have amazed students yesterday afternoon, but it's all Formula according to mathematics profes- sors. The formula, cryptically entitled "Demonstration of Lariophraslun in finding the value of the Fusch- ian function V, by using the topo- logical method of proving the ex- istence of integral equations," is Angell formula, instructing students to "see Prof. Coe if you are inter- ested in the details of this," is all part of the gag, he said. The identity of the authors of the equation remains a mystery to both Prof. Cos and Prof. Gail Classroom BLUE CHALK notices on the blackboard requestingcthat the work not be erased and an an- nouncement stating that there will be "no class today after copy- ing this you may leave" are signed "Prof. Young." "I'm sure he didn't write it," Prn (hp %i- "f hA a sa ri to equations which might arise out of Einstein's theory of rela- tivity, but it doesn't mean a thing," he said. i I ;I i