'TAG DAY DRIVE See Page 4 Y Sitr Uta Latest Deadline in the State ~aii4 CLOUDY, RAIN VOL. LX, No. 145 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1950 SIX PAGES Maragon To Go To Prison For Perjury Freed On Bail, Awaits Appeal WASHINGTON - (,') - John Maragon, ;who used to be seen around the White House, was sen- tenced yesterday to spend eight months to two years in jail for perjury. A Federal District Court con- victed him of lying to Senate in- vestigators about his bank ac- counts and the jobs he held in 1945 and 1946, when he still was a friend of Presidential Military Aide Harry Vaughan. * * * A MARAGON was freed on $5,000 bail until an Appeals Court de- cides whether his conviction will stand. As an immigrant from Greece, Maragon came to this country as a boy, shined shoes in Kansas City, worked for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and finally became a man-around-town in , Washington. He is 57 years old. The government pictured him at his trial as a promoter who tried to put pressure on Federal em- ployes in business deals with pri- vate firms. It said he used Vaugh- an's name and represented him- self as coming from the White House. Maj. Gen. Vaughan him- self once called Maragon a lovable little fellow, but then said he ought to be fumigated. * * * MARAGON'S lawyers said he was a "peanut vendor among prin- ces" who did nothing wrong in business matters with the gov- ernment and was a victim of en- trapment by Senators who inves- tigated five percenters. (Five per- centers are persons who represent others in business affairs with the government for a fee, usually five per cent.) The government failed to con- vict Maragon of lying about business negotiations with gov- ernment agencies. But it did get a conviction on two charges: That he lied to the Senate in- vestigators in saying he had only a Washington bank account, when he had another in San Antonio, Tex. That he committed perjury also in saying he no longer was on the payroll of a Chicago importing firm when he took a temporary job with the State Department overseas. Shortage of Psychiatrists Ca led Serious A serious shortage of psychia- trists now exists because of the tremendous increase of public in- terest in psychiatry within the past 10 years, Dr. William C. Men- ninger, medical director of then Menninger Sanitarium, declared last night. "If the public cannot get first class psychiatric help, they may turn to second and third class psychiatrists and provide a field in which quackery can flourish," he warned. ONE OF THE reasons for the shortage, he said, is that many medical students who are inter- ested in psychiatry are talked out of it by students and professors who are still skeptical about the field. Noting the hundreds of stand- ees who were crowded into the Rackham Lecture Hall to hear him, Dr. Menninger lauded the work of journalists and of other interested laymen in bringing the impor'tance of psychiatry be- fore the public. "We have still to combat the tendency of the public to stigma- tize people who have mental dis- orders," he continued. "This ten- dency arises from the basic fear we all have about our own per- sonalities." Lattimore Lashes Accusers lies WASHINGTON-(0h-Owen Lattimore poured out a bitter three- hour denunciation of his accusers yesterday and charged ex-Com- munist Louis F. Budenz with telling "hogwash" lies for "personal profit." Banging the witness table, Lattimore divided his attack between Budenz and Republican Sen. McCarthy of Wisconsin who has called him Russia's Top espionage agent in the United States. * * * HE TERMED McCarthy a man who "disgraced his party and the people of his state and the nation." Toward the end of his long outburst before a Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee, Lattimore drew a rebuke from committee -1counsel Edward P. Morgan for cIrnv iI waJ fr m "obJectivity Smathers Defeats Pepper In Florida Primary 4 V I Lecture .Ban Discussed at SL Meeting In a special meeting of the Uni- versity Lecture Committee and the Student Legislature Cabinet, Pro- fessors Carl G. Brandt and James K. Pollock explained the basis for their action in refusing to allow avowed Communist Herbert J. Phillips to speak on the University campus. As the two representatives of' the lecture committee attending the meeting, Prof. Brandt and Prof. Pollock listed the following as major reasons for the commit- tee's action: * * * IN VIEW OF a regents by-law forbidding the use of University facilities for a speaker who advo- cates overthrow of government by force, in light of the present na- tional situation of the American Communist Party and its mem- bers, and because the lecture com- mittee is directly responsible to the Regents wbh in turn are re- sponsible for protecting all Uni- versity facilities. The lecture committee's re- fusal to authorize Phillips as a speaker was the only logical conclusion. Both men emphasized that the committee had not rejected the topic of the speech. In the 15 years of the lecture committee's existence, it has never rejected the subject matter of any speech. *I * * WAS THERE a possibility of getting student representatives on the lecture committee in either a voting or non-voting status? At the present time, 'getting student representatives on the committee in any status was practically impossible, the pro- fessors said. Doubting the necessity of such representation, since the students' views are directly presented to the committee by every group peti- tioning for a speaker, the two men indicated that the Regents would, in all probability, reject such a proposal. SL OFFICIALS said that a full report of the meeting would be given the SL tonight, when it re- convenes at 7:30 p.m. in the Union for its first session since spring elections. Although much of the first meeting will be taken up by intro- ducing candidates and working them into SL committees and other posts, in addition, a full re- port of the elections, a report on the liquor meeting and a report on the trip four legislators made to Lansing for talks with members of student government there will also be heard. Y.M.C.A. Votes To Withdraw From Chest Climaxing a disagreement over finances and policy, the Ann Ar- bor YMCA board of directors yes- terday voted unanimously to with- draw their agency from the Com- munity Chest. Cause of the dispute was the Community Chest's stand that the "Y" could not conduct a pri- vate membership drive to match a $3,000 gift offered to prevent an anticipated $6,000 deficit in next year's budget. ye rug. disun * *n CIIIVQTn i-ar it mung n straying away ro 1VJU1VV in his remarks. During cross-examination, Sen. Hickenlooper (R-Iowa) asked Lat- timore whether he had ever rec- ommended to an American gov- ernment official that the United States recognized Russian-domin- ated Outer Mongolia as a sover- eign nation. * * * LATTIMORE REPLIED that he had urged such a step in his writ- ings and may have recommended it in a memorandum to the State Department last August.tHe said he did not recall ever speaking to an American official about it. Hickenlooper injected a mys- tery note in the inquiry when he asked-without further identi- fying the individual-if Latti- more ever knew a man named Loomis, who, he said, had ar- ranged to furnish information "provided by you" to Russia. "No, sir," Lattimore answered. At the end of the day, Chairman Tydings (D-Md) asked Lattimore to return to the witness chair to- day for further questioning. Hickenlooper served notice that he has at least another hour and a half of questions to ask Latti- more. World News Roundup By The Associated Press TAIPEI, FORMOSA - The Chi- nese Nationalists yesterday an- nounced they had abandoned fiai- nan Island to the Communists but claimed they had brought off more troops than expected * * * JAKARTA, U.S.I. - The In- donesian news agency Antara re- ported that four suspects have been arersted at Bandoeng in connection with the killing of Yale Professor Raymond Ken- nedy and Time magazine Cor- respdndent Robert Doyle last week. * * * FREIBURG, GERMANY - A German court yesterday convicted two German doctors of the "mercy killings" of 3,000 inmates of Baden asylums under Hitler's so-called euthanasia program. NEW YORK - FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover last night said the main strength of the Com- munist Party lies in its fellow- travelers who he said are "gnaw- ing away like termites at the very foundations of American society." WASHINGTON--Paul G. Hoff- man, Marshall Plan Administra- tor, predicted yesterday that the Soviet's satellite empire will "crack quite suddenly" under the stress of tensions now building behind the Iron Curtain. DETROIT-Chrysler Corp. ac- cused the CIO United Auto Work- ers yesterday of "scuttling" every possible settlement of the 98-day Chrysler strike. Poll Shows 'U' Students, Uninformej, Current Events Knowledge Poor Less than a third of the students on campus know what the Kerr Bill is, a Daily spot check taken last week reveals. Designed to test the "average" student's knowledge of current, events, the poll was conducted byj more than 50 Daily "tryouts who' were stationed at differentpoint around the campus to insure a random sampling. OF THE more than 600 students interviewed, only 32 per cent gave correct or nearly correct answers to the question: "What is the Kerr Bill?" On two other questions asked ' by the Daily's interviewers, stu- dents made a better showing. Most knew something about Sen. McCarthy, and half of them could identify ex-Communist Bu- denz. INSTRUCTED to be lenient in accepting answers as correct, the tryouts found that many of the students could answer none of the questions asked. Here's what the pollsters re- ported: 1. Why is Sen. McCarthy in the limelight? 85% answered correctly; 1; % answered incor- rectly. 2. What is the Kerr Bill? 32% correct; 68% incorrect. 3. Who is Louis Budenz? 54% correct; 46% incorrect. Of the students interviewed, 60 per cent were enrolled in the lit- erary college, 13 per cent in the engineering college, five per cent in the business administration school and 22 per cent in other schools and colleges. * * * MANY OF the interviewed were facetious; others were genuinely ignorant. One student thought Sen. Mc- Carthy was in the news because he had been accused of being a Communist by other members of the Senate. Race Republicans Say Truman Support Ebbs Cite Victory As Example of Split FLORIDA - (P) - Claude Pep- per, veteran New Dealer, last night lost his bid for another term. Pepper's acknowledgement of defeat came after Smathers had piled up a plurality of more than 50,000 votes and was still gain ing. --auy-waly ±sartn NEW UNION OFFICERS-Jerry Mehlman, '51, (right seated) takes over as president of the Michi- gan Union after appointment by the Union Selection Committee. At left is Hal Sperlich, '51 E, who was named recording secretary. Looking over their shoulders are outgoing officers Bob Seeber, '50 BAd retiring secretary (left) and Bill Wise, '50 BAd (right) who relinquishes a year's reign as president. * a * * I Selection Board Appoints Mehlman Union President. Jery Mehlman, '51, was appoint- ed to the presidency of the Mich- igan Union yesterday. Mehlman, a 20-year-old politi- cal science major from Washing- ton, D. C., was named by the Union Selection Committee to suc- ceed outgoing president Bill Wise, '50 BAd" * * THE SELECTION COMMITTEE also appointed Hal Sperlich, '51E, as recording secretary, according to Dean of Students Erich A. Wal- ter, committee chairman. Sperlich succeeds'retiring secretary Bob Seeber, '50 BAd. A member of Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, Mehlman has serv- ed a year on the Union Junior Others replied vaguely that he A lum ni l l was "connected with Communists.'' Executive Council, during which time he has supervised person- nel and directed various pro- jects including the Michigras parade. Mehlman holds membership in Pi Sigma Alpha national political science honorary fraternity, and he's pointing for a career in law. SPERLICH IS specializing in in- dustrial mechanical engineering. He is 20 years old and lives in Saginaw. Sperlich belongs to Theta Chi fraternity, as well as Tri- angles and Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering organizations. As Union councilman he head- ed the House Committee and took charge of Michigras booths, the Winter Carnival ice show and the Union Open House. Mehlman and Sperlich have both been connected with the Union staff five semesters. They will be formally installed in their new posts at a banquet tomorrow night at which Dean Walter will administer the inaugural oath. Haskell Elected President of SRA Don Haskell, '51, was elected president of the Student Religious Association last night at an elec- torate meeting in Lane Hall. Other officers elected were Joyce Simon, '51, vice-president, Leon Putnam, secretary, and Jan- et Watts, representative at large. S usis tence Level Called ' Precar io us' "More than one-half of the people on the earth are precarious- ly balancing on a minimum sub- sistence level," Dr. Fairfield Os- born, noted conservationist, de- clared yesterday. Dr. Osborn claimed that "one of the major fundamental causes of social and political tension in the world today is the lack of bal- ance between available natural re- sources and population demands. * * * HE WARNED that "the hour is later than we think" since the worlds natural resources are be- ing depleted without sufficient re- placement. The two.factors he named as a basis for concern are an increas- ing population combined with an acceleration in the misuse of productive land. Charging that not enough pro- gress has been made in the con- servation movement in this coun- try, Dr. Osborn put special empha- sis on the conservation job that mustrbe done by the nation's in- dustries. "SINCE ONE-HALF of all our industries rely on renewable nat- ural resources such as forest pro- ducts, water supply, and agricul- tural crops, corporations and other industrial concerns using up these resources must do something about this problem," he said. WITH 1,231 of the state's 1,595 precincts reported, the count was Pepper 250,741, Smathers 304,426. Technically, Smathers, a self- styled "middle of the road Lib- eral" was only nominated in yes- terday's Democratic primary. But Florida Democrats possess a normal voting edge of 15 to one over the Republicans and his nomination was equivalent to election. Republicans had given advance notice that they would regard a Pepper defeat as indicative of a national trend against the Tru- man "Fair Deal," since Pepper sup- ported the national administration on almost all occasions while Sma- thers opposed it on several counts. NATIONAL Democratic figures held that it was more of a per- sonal scrap and that its effect would not be felt outside Florida. They noted, too, that Pepper was an outstanding foe of President Truman's nomination in 1948. Pepper had support of organi- zed labor and Smathers charged the CIO Political Action Com- mittee with efforts to line up the Negro vote solidly for his opponent. Smathers struck at Pepper for lending "comfort" to what he call- ed pro-Communist groups. Pep- per called Communism "odious." * * * SMATHERS voted for the Taft- Hartley law and has warmly de- fended that stand in his cam- paign. Pepper opposed that act and pledged to continue seeking its repeal. Ohio-Joseph T. Ferguson, state auditor, had a better than two to one lead in early returns over his nearest opponent in the seven-man contest for the Democratic Senate nomination. The winner will oppose Repub- lican Senator Taft in November. In Alabama, Sen. Lister Hill, advocate of returning his state to regular Democratic ranks, had a three to two lead over Lawrence McNeil, Birmingham business man and States' Righter, for the Sen- ate nomination. Stassen Callsx Truman Worst U.S. President NEW YORK-(P)-Harold A. Stassen last night called President Truman "the cleverest politician" and "the worst President ever to occupy the White House." He said Mr. Truman is embark- ing on a political tour of the West "to try and get a puppet congress." * * * TO THE QUESTION, "Who is Louis Budenz?", one student re- plied, "a French movie actor," an- other thought he had recently been convicted of perjury and a third described him as a second baseman for the New York Giants. "I don't know, but he sounds like a football player," another student answered. Several of those interviewed thought the vetoed natural gas bill introduced by Sen. Kerr was a bill to admit more displaced persons. Others recognized it as a bill to get rid of the oleo-margerine tax or as a measure "to get rid of all dogs." Hear Ruthven President Alexander Ruthven will introduce the Phoenix Project to alumni from Lenawee, Monroe and Washtenaw counties At a din- ner today in the Union. OtherAspeakers will be Dean Ralph A. Sawyer of the Horace Rackham School of Graduate Studies, who was technical direc- tor of the Bikini bomb test, and Prof. William Haber, chairman of the social sciences division. Earl Cress, regional chairman of the tri-county area, will givethe welcome address, and University Regent, Alfred Connable, Jr., will be the toastmaster. i - -.------- --- WITH ORMANDY CONDUCTING: Welitch To Star in First May Festival Concert STASSEN, president of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania and for- mer governor of Minnesota said Mr. Truman "is the cleverest pol- itician ever to occupy the White House" and called on Republicans to "meet the 1950 situation brought about by . . . his use and misuse of the great power of his office" by: 1-"Fighting back vigorously and hitting hard in the exposure of the conditions of his Admin- istration." 2-"Bringing forward defin- inite, sound, constructive mea- * * * * * * By ROZ VIRSHUP Soprano Ljuba Welitch who rocked the musical world in her performance of "Salome" will star in the first May Festival concert at 8 n.m. tomorrow in Hill Audi- two Mozart arias previously scheduled. The program also includes the Overture and Allegro from "La Sultan" by Couper-Milhaud, tone poem "Death and Transfigura- Climbing rapidly as diva she soon became prima donna of the Opera House at Gratz. From there she went to the State Opera in Vienna where she sang her first Salome and then on to London, building up as:masmo