I A IN THIS CORNER .. Y Lwr~tgx 4br See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LX, No. 119 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1950 CLOUDY, RAIN SIX PAGES' Troops Stop Red Uprising East of Rome Revolt Leads To Martial Order ROME - (/P) - Italian armorer troops put down a Communist-lec uprising in the Southern Italiar town of San Severo bloodlessb: x, yesterday after street fighting it which 15 policemen and three ci. vilians were injured. They insti- tuted a virtual state of siege. Forty Communists, including th( wife of a senator,- were' reporter arrested. Armored cars patrolled the deserted streets last night. * * * THE CLASH was one of a series of incidents that followed the 12- hour general strike conducted Wednesday by members of the Communist-led General Confeder- ation of Labor. Communists set up road blocks this morning around San Severo, a town of 38,000 150 miles Southeast of Rome at the spur of the Italian boot. They used hand .grenade. against small police units which attempted to pierce the barricades. A small artillery unit also failec r to break the barricades, made up of big empty gasoline drums, junked automobiles, trucks, mule carts and at least one steam roller Late dispatches estimated that 5,000 demonstrators, some firing from rooftops, fought troops and police before order finally was restored. But, despite the fire- works, no deaths were reported. Grenade fragments injured 1( of the police. The other five were beaten up. Two civilians were stabbed by a policeman in a hand- to-hand fight in a butcher shop. The third civilian, described as an ex-Fascist, was mauled by Com- munists. POLICE put in a call for help from troops at Foggia, the big wartime air base 18 miles to the South. The armored column rush- ed in swiftly; brushed aside the roadblocks and occupied Commun- ist headquarters and the Chamber of Labor. See No Jump AIn Local Rents With Decontrol By JAMES GREGORY Althoughi most Ann Arbor land- ladies favor removal of rent con- trols here, they have made no defi- nite plans to raise rents in their own rooming houses if controls are lifted June 30. Removal of controls in Ypsilanti and Willow Village, coupled with a broad Congressional hint that there may be no federal rent lids after June 30, appears to have caused no consternation locally. * * * ASKED IF she will raise her rents in the event of decontrol, a Cambridge Road landlady declar- ed, "I haven't raised my rent since I started four years ago and I have no intention of raising it." A student residing in Willow Village, where controls were re- moved, said he doesn't expect his rent to go up, since the fed- eral government owns the vil- lage. No complaints of high rents have been registered in Ypsilanti pince decontrol went into effect three days ago. Before decontrol, more than 100 of that city's prin- cipal landlords signed a pledge not to raise rents before Jan. 1, 1951. The pledge was put on file in Ypsi- lanti City Hall. YPSILANTI landlords are still trying to persuade Gov. G. Mennen Williams to raise rent controls himself, because such an action by the governor would make it im- possible for the federal govern- ment to reimpose controls. In Ann Arbor, Student Legis- lature's Campus Action Commit- tee has been working on the rent problem. Cnl Klyman, '51, a committee! member, urged roomers who feel they are being overcharged to complain to Thomas Edwards, fed- eral housing expediter for this area. Edwards is available for con- sultation from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. AleGregor Hits Education Plan By ROBERT VAUGHN Douglas McGregor, President of Antioch College, charged last night that America's educational system is highly authoritarian both in the classroom and in over-all administration. Speaking on "Human Organization In Higher Education," he told his Rackham Amphitheatre audience that educational practices contradict the values of democracy taught verbally. OPENING a three-day work conference sponsored by the Univer- sity's Research Center of Group Dynamics, President McGregor asked "Do we think we can preserve democracy as a way of talking rather than as a way of living?" "If democracy is a workable way of life, when are we going to provide young people with the opportunity to learn that way of life and how to assume personal responsibility for their be- havior?" President McGregor pointed out that educational administrators exert remarkable control over many aspects of the private lives of teachers and students alike, including personal habits such as smoking, use of cosmetics, rules governing use of automobiles or alcohol and content of college newspapers. * * * * TAKEN IN conjunction with our professed values, these long standing educational methods, suggest that we believe people learn nothing from experience, he said. "We tell them how to live in a democracy, but to be successful within the educational system they must adjust their behavior to the rigid patterns of autocracy." He stated that he was unimpressed with the argument that "young people in their upper teens or lower twenties do not know or cannot accept what is good for them, or that they will insist on un- realistic and extreme reforms." "OUR EXPERIENCE at Antioch indicates that young people in college have strong motivation, high ideals and great intellectual capacity and are entirely capable of being adults if given a reasonable opportunity and preliminary support." Despite the somewhat naive verbal idealism of college stu- dents they are cautious, thoughtful and realistic in determining policy, whether it be on race relations, the college building pro- gram, or the nature of the college curriculum, President McGregor continued. He said he believed that there is a greater degree of student and faculty participation and democracy in the operation of Antioch College than in most other institutions of higher learning in this country. "EDUCATION, like virtually every other phase of living today, is beset by the problems of over-specialization," President McGregor said. "We have too many teachers who are specialists.-n narrow phases of a single academic subject." Consequently, the student is ultimately left with a mass of unintegrated bits of knowledge and unrelated theoretical concep- tions, he added. "Before we can resolve the split between the verbal -teaching of democracy and the actual experience of it and make education a; process which equips students to live effectively, we must solve the problems of organizational structure, specialization and coordinationE that exist on virtually every college campus."1 CEILING RAISE PENDING:, Mortgages- Rationed As FHAj Nears Appropriation Limit Senators Loyalty Feqsoes Files o Tuera . O Senate Halts. Farm Price Support Bill By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Senate delayed final action on a compro- mise farm price support bill yes- terday after first voting to ap- prove the controversial measure. The surprising reversal came after the lawmakers by a 37 to 33 roll call vote had stamped their approval on the measure de- signed, in part, to prevent sur- plus potato production which has cost the government $500,000,000 in recent years. THE BILL also would ease pro- posed curbs on plantings of cot- ton and peanuts. Some Republi- cans and Northern Democrats hotly opposed these provisions. They complained that favor- itism was being shown to the South, and that easing the re- strictions would lead to sur- pluses which would add greatly to the cost of government price supports. The dispute over the bill was still raging when the Senate recessed for the day leaving the final de- cision pending. * * * MEANTIME the House passed and sent to the Senate another farm bill, increasing the capitali- zation of the Commodity Credit Corporation by $2,000,000,000 to meet the rising costs of farm price supports. The CCC is the agency which buys up, or makes loans on, farm products, to keep them off the market and thus bolster prices. Two farm state legislators also advanced a new version of the plan for putting $1,000,004,-000 worth of crop surpluses into the Marshall Plan. House debate opens today on the foreign aid bill. CHAIRMAN Cooley (D-NC) of the House Agriculture Committee said the new plan would earmark the sum for the economic coop- eration administration to buy on the open market crops. declared surplus by the Agriculture De- partment. He sponsored it jointly with Rep. Poage (D-Tex). Cooley wants to substitute it for a section of the bill which calls for chopping $1,000,000,000 out of the ECA fund and substituting the same amount of U.S. farm sur- pluses which the government has taken over under the price sup- port program. Farm organizations assailed this idea as a confused mixing of price support and ECA programs. PATIENT VIGIL-Sen. Millard Tydings (right) waits with set jaw for Sens. Joseph McCarthy (cen- ter) and Bourke Hickenlooper (left) to decide on giving him McCarthy's 81 person list of Communist sympathizers. The Democratic chairman of the Senate subcommittee investigating McCarthy's char- ges had cited the Wisconsin Republican for not giving up the list. He did as soon as he finished his whispered conversation. Stassen To. Open GOP, Conference- Harold E. Stassen, president of the University of Pennsylvania and candidate for the 1948 Re- BREAKS PRECEDENT: SL To Call All Camnpus Meeting on Liquor Ban Student Legislature will sponsor a precedent-shattering all campus meeting on April 20 to study the University's ban on drinking in pu wi th1 tot ca aft iblican presidential nomination, student residences and to work out ill speak on "Young Sparks in a possible solution to the highly ie Grand Old Party" at 8 p.m. controversialproblem. day in Hill Auditorium. Although several other student Stassen's talk will highlight a groups have made similar smaller- :o-day Big Ten Young Republi- scale attempts to study the liquor n Conference opening here this' ban, teLgsauesmeigwl ternoon. mark the first time that all Uni- * , * * versity students have been called WASHINGTON-('P)--The Fed- eral Housing Administration be- gan "rationing" its insurance of more mortgages yesterday. It said- it is approaching the limit of its current $6,750,000,000 insurance authority. FHA doesn't build any homes or lend any money for construction. It insures building loans made by private lending institutions, and in doing so requires certain stan- dards of construction and limits interest rates charged to the build- ers and home-buyers. The agency boasts that it is self sustaining, having paid all operating expenses out of its premiums and fees for the past nine years. * * * BUT, ALTHOUGH legislation is pending in Congress to raise the limit of its permissible insurance total, FHA is reported to be crowd- ing close to its present dollar ceil- ing. Its field offices have been or- dered to stop making final com- mitments to insure mortgages, and to send the applications to headquarters here for final clearance. By thus doling out the insurance, the agency said it hopes to be able to keep making commitments another two weeks. Some contractors privately ex- pressed the view that the FHA ac- tion was a method of putting "heat" on Congress to approve the pending legislation. SECOND FOR OLlVIA: De Havilland, Crawford Win Academy Awards National Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-A full-fledged Senate investigation of bigtime crime was approved yesterday by the Senate Rules Committee. * * * KEY WEST, FLA. -White House silence yesterday served to increase speculation that President Truman is considering a new assignment for Secretary of the Air Force Symington. Presidential Secretary Charles G. Ross passed up an oppor- tunity to quiet the speculation when he was asked at a news conference if Symington may be shifted to the championship of the National Security Resources Board. WASHINGTON --The State Department was reported last night to be working on plans to speed at least token shipments of American aid to Communist- threatened Indochina and pos- sibly Burma. Secretary Acheson received a THE ADDRESS is open to the public and no admission will be charged, Dave Belin, conference chairman, emphasized. He guaran- teed that the talk would be of interest to everyone who attends. His address, which will be keyed. to college interest, will deal with the role of and the need for youth in the Republi- can party and in our government as a whole, Belin announced. Following his address, Stassen will hold a question and answer period with his audience. * * * IN PERSONAL conversationj with Belin, Stassen praised the University Young Republican club for its work in originating the "Opportunity State" platform and in coining the slogan. He also ex- pressed his interest in the idea of organizing campus Young Repub- lican Clubs on a conference basis. The opening session of the con- ference will be held at 1:30 p.m. in University High School Audi- torium. John Tope, president of the Young Republican National Federation, will deliver the key- note address. The Conference will be covered by Time Magazine, the New York Times and both the Associated and United Press, in addition to state newspaper coverage, Belin said. together to work out a solution to the problem. * * * DEAN OF Students Erich A. Walter has been invited to attend the meeting by SL's campus action committee and will explain the ad- ministration's viewpoint on the Plane Crash Kills Twelve TUCSON, ARIZ.-(AP)-Twelve men were killed yesterday in the flaming crash of a B-50 air force bomber on a remote desert area near Hyder, Ariz. Two men parachuted to safety. The public information officer at Williams air force base identified them as Capt. J. H. Lee, Gaastra, Mich., and Lt. W. T. Gentry, Ko- komo, Ind. Witnesses said the big plane ex- ploded and wreckage was scattered over a five square mile area. It was the second fatal air force plane crash yesterday. At Rome, N.Y., a captain was killed and four other men injured when a C-47 transport crashed and burst into flames during a driving snowstorm. The victim was identified as Capt. Posie (CQ) M. Clinton of Graham, Tex. problem, tracing the history of the liquor ban and outlining various solutions which have been consid- ered by the University. George Roumell, '51, chairman of the campus action committee, described thetproposed meeting "an attempt to coordinate var- ious student opinions on the li- quor problem and to present a solid front to the University;" "Administrative officials have repeatedly challenged students to offer a workable solution to the problem and we felt that it was about time that SL sank its teeth into it," Roumell said. * * * LETTERS have been sent out to leaders of IFC, AIM, PanHel, As- sembly and other major campus organizations inviting them to at- tend the meeting, which is being arranged by Legislator Irv Stenn, '51. Roumell, however, emphasized that all students will be invited to attend the meeting-regard- less of their campus position or affiliation, "We feel that the question of the University's ban on drinking in student residences has become a matter of serious concern to the entire campus and is no longer strictly an IFC or an AIM prob- lem," he explained. * * * ALTHOUGH Roumell predicted that the initial meeting on April 20 may require successive meetings to further consider propose4 re- visions of the University's liquor policy; he was confident that such a large cross-section of students will be able to suggest a workable solution. Any such solution will then be reviewed by SL and presented to the University with a strong re- commendation for adoption, he added. Top Red Spy In US Named, B y M a th Clainis Agent in State Department By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Senators in- vestigating charges of Communism in the State Department have sent a formal request to President Tru- man for Federal loyalty records, Senator Tydings (D-MD) said yes- terday. Tydingsadispatched the request as chairman of a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee investi- gating the charges, made by Sena- tor McCarthy. McCARTHY sent a telegram to Mr. Truman charging that the President's "arrogant refusal" to open loyalty files was "endanger- ing the security of this nation." At the same time McCarthy i. chargedthat the man he has named as "the top" Soviet es- pionage agent in the United States has a desk in the State Department "or at least he did four weeks ago." His charge came on the heels of a statement by Tydings in which the State Department claims to have employed the man in question only once, five years ago on a four month mission outside the United States. * * * McCARTHY called Tycdings' statement "a deliberate misstate- ment of the facts,. and an ob-. vious attempt to twist and distort the truth." Meanwhile three former FBI agents have been hired by the senate committee to run down evidence on McCarthy's charges. At various times the Wisconsin senator has changed his figures of Communist party members employed by the State Depart- ment. Beginning originally with 205 he" pared the number to 57 in a recent news conference. FRIENDS said McCarthy was visibly nettled at reports that the Tydings Committee was checking up on him, rather than on alleged Communists. Senator Morse (R-Ore) joined in the discussion about government loyalty records saying that any Congressional investigating com- mittee is "entitled to inspect any evidence which the executive branch may have bearing on the loyalty of government officials." Without mentioning McCarthy by name, Morse also told newsmen, "Those who are charging disloy- alty within the govenment should either present convincing proof or pull in their horns. "Our people do not appreciate the goring of reputations of un- substantiated accusations." House Votes More Money To SpyProbe WASHINGTON - () - The House gave its Un-American Ac- tivities committee $150,000 yester- day to spend on new spy probes and to prepare a million-name _ "bible of subversive activities" in this country. This sum is in addition to a $200,000 allotment the committee has received since January, 1949, to carry out its investigations which have been concerned main- ly with Communist activities. THE MONEY grant was approv- ed on 347 to 12 vote after Chair- man Wood (D-Ga) told the House more funds were needed for the "hhland fnw. o-. in,.i-io -1 HOLLYWOOD - (P) - "All the King's Men," the story of a back- woods hick who almost reached the political heights, took three of the top awards last night in the annual Oscar derby. The picture itself was named the best of 1949, and Broderick Crawford, it's demagogue - like star, took down the best male acting statue. TO OLIVIA De Havilland, for her nerformance as a socially in- ing was by some 2,000 academy members, from nominations made by nearly 11,000 workers in all branches of the motion picturel field. THE RESULTS followed to the letter form charts drawn up after industry polls. There wasn't a surprise in the entire evening. Crawford's speech was brief: "I thank you all and I thank God." 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