UNIFICATION FALLACIES SeePage 4 Latest Deadline in the State oar 74latt 0 O , 2 VOL. LX, No. 166 'M' L Nine Earns Tie For BigTen Title Wisconsin Whitewashes Minnesota While Wolverines Top Buckeyes By HAROLD TANNER Special to The Daily COLUMBUS - Michigan's baseball forces inscribed their third straight Western Conference tie in the books here yesterday afternoon when they romped to a 7-3 victory over Ohio State. The victory gave the Wolverines, rated a darkhorse contender earlier in the season, a record of nine victories and three defeats and enabled them to tie with Wisconsin for the loop leadership. Wisconsin blanked Minnesota, 2-0, yesterday. THE WOLVERINES combined some potent long ball hitting with effective clutch hurling to topple the Buckeyes for the second straight day. FAIR _._ ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, MAY 28, 1950 EIGHT PAG Berli nAwaits Huge Red Parad * * * * Wi lle as Blasts GOP Budget f I Sparked by Leo Koceski's three safeties, Michigan rapped out ten base knocks off two Buckeye hurlers while the Bucks culled nine hits and nine walks off the offerings of Bob Hicks, Bob Larson, and Ed Grenkoski. Ohio State's hitting stalled in the pinches as the Buckeyes left 14 men stranded on the bases during the nine inning contest. * * * BOB HICKS started on the mound for the Wolverines and was touched for a run in the first inning when Stew Hein sliced a Texas League double into short rightfield and Ray Gebhardt slap- ped a run producing single into center. Michigan opened up its big guns in the second frame when Pete Palmer lined one of Paul Williams' serves far down the rightfield line for three bases and Bob Wolff singled for one marker. In the third the Maize and Blue continued to hit Williams solidly. Leo Koceski lined a solid one- baser into center and Lefty Mor- rill lashed one high and far over the rightfielder's head for a long triple and another run. THE WOLVERINES padded the margin in the fourth with a three run rally that was featured by a long homerun by Koceski. Bob Fancett singled to center, moved all the way to third on an infield out, and scored on Hicks' squeeze bunt: Hicks moved to second on pitcher Williams' bad throw try- ing to nip Fancett at the plate. After Bill Bucholz had flied out, Koceski walloped one into deep left center scoring behind Bucholz to make the score, 5-1. The Buckeyes who had lost their See MICHIGAN, Page 3 Draper-Adler h Trial Ends In Deadlock HARTFORD, Conn.-(P)-The " Federal court trial of a $200,000 libel suit by entertainers Paul Draper and Larry Adler against Mrs. Hester McCullough ended yesterday in a jury disagreement. The jury of eight women and four men was unable to decide whether Mrs. McCullough, wife of a Time magazine staff member, libeled Draper and Adler when she accused them of pro-Communist activities. LAWYERS FOR both sides said the case automatically will go back on the court calendar for re- trial at a later date. Federal Judge J. Joseph Smith discharged the jury when it re- ported for a second time its fail- ure to reach a verdict in delibera- tions that began at 12:30 p.m. Friday. * * * DRAPER, a dance stylist, and Adler, a harmonica virtuoso, is- sued this statement after the jury was dismissed: "We have truthfully told our whole lives to the jury. In the present climate of public opin- ion, the failure of this jury to be convinced of the truth of the charges which have been madehagainstus is vindication of our loyalty." Russian Officials In Japan Replaced Commerce Aides Must QuitJobs WASHINGTON-('P)-Two Com- merce Department officials whose loyalty has been questioned.# in Congress must quit or face ouster action, Secretary of Commerce Charles Sawyer decreed yesterday.4 He quickly added the action is no reflection on their loyalty, not- ing that their cases are pending before the department loyalty board. Sec. Sawyer announced his action was ."in the interest of good administration." The two men are William Remington and Michael Lee, both $10,000-a-year men in the office of international trade. The Senate commerce committee is reported to have put pressure on Sec. Sawyer to fire Lee. Some Senators have said the committee would launch an investigation of the department if Sec. Sawyer did not act. Meanwhile the controversy over Sen. McCarthy's (R-Wis.) charges of disloyalty in the State Department blazed anew, with Attorney General J. Howard Mc-. Grath comparing Sen. McCar- thy's methods to Adolf Hitler's Gestapo technique. Remington announced that he would not quit under fire, that he would see the fight through. Natijonais ts Quit Wanshcins HONG KONG--(R)-A British Navy spokesman reported the Ci- nese Nationalists abandoned the Wanshan Islands yesterday morn- ing, less than one day after they had announced a smashing vic- tory over Communist invaders. The islands are about 40 miles southwest of Hong Kong and 20 miles southeast of the Portuguese colony of Macao. They had block- adEd the Pearl River estuary ap- proach to Canton since the Reds seized that majcr south Chirna city last November. The British informant said Na- tionalist warships completed evac- uation of the islands a'$ 8 a.m. yesterday. They took temporary shelter, he said, on Lingting Is- land, only ten miles soutn of Hong Kong. As late as Friday the National- ist navy had issued a comrnique stating that it inflicted 4,000 cas- ualties and sank a Communist ship in a rousing victory over a seaborne Red invasion force. SOAPY AND PROFESSOR-Gov. G. Mennen Williams, who an- nounced his candidacy for reelection last night, greets Prof. John1 P. Dawson of the Law School. 'Soapy' was a student of Prof. Daw- son in 1935, when-he attended Law School here. PHOENIX FACTS: Scientists Cite ledical Use of Atoinic Energy Y , (EDITOR'S NOTE-This is the second in a series of articles de- signed to acquaint Daily readers with present and future plans for the use of Phoenix Project funds.) By VERNON EMERSON Atomic energy has saved more lives than it has destroyed, accord- ing to Dr. John Z. Bowers, Atomic Energy Commission medical re- searcher. And if plans submitted to the directors of the Michigan Memor- ial-Phoenix Project by members of the University medical school are accepted, many more will appar- ently be saved by this new-found force. REQUESTING FUNDS for re- search projects for use as soon as the Memorial begins to function on a full-time scale, doctors have outlined programs that may mean the end of cancer, heart disease, arthritis, rheumatic diseases, al- lergies and virus disease. "Further use of radioactive io- dine in treatment of over-active cancerated thyroid glands may lead to curative treatment of pa- tients, otherwise uncurable, and show the way to aiding other cancerous organs of the body," Dr. W. H. Beierwaltes, of the de- partment of internal medicine, explained. Dr. Beierwaltes has been work- ing with radioactive materials and thyroid with Phoenix aid since November, 1948. ACCURATE DIAGNOSIS of' congenital heart and circulatory diseases, as well as tracing their cause and treatment, is greatly advanced with radioactive mater- ials, Dr. S. W. Hooble, of the de- partment of internal medicine, pointed out. Dr. Thomas Francis, of the department o f epidemiology, noted that use of isotopes in the study of viruses may lead to a better understanding of their origins, behaviors and possible means of controlling them. "One of the most natural fields for use of radioactive matter is that of bacteriology," Dr. M. H. Soule, of the Hygienic Laboratory, stated in his request for Phoenix funds. * * * "USE OF THIS material opens up a whole new area of resistance and immunity to bacteria, the liv- ing agents of disease," he said. In the dentistry school, plans are being made to use radioac- tive substances in testing meth- ods of electro-medication, the permeability of dentin and ena- mel, and how fluorine controls formation of dental cavities. "The enlarged fund of biological knowledge already achieved with the use of the atom in isolated areas of research indicates clearly that a wholesale and throughgoing study of the biological sciences is necessary," Dr. F. H. Bethell, of the department of internal medi- cine, declared. "It is difficult to say specifically what uses it will serve in the fu- ture, but doctors must be ready to adapt themselves to these new situations," he said. (NEXT-Biologists and the atom.) Lesinski Dies Unexpectedly, In Dearborn By The Associated Press Rep. John Lesinski (D-Mich.) died unexpectedly of a heart at- tack at his Dearborn home yester- day at the age of 65. Chairman of the powerful edu- cation and labor committee of the House, Rep. Lesinski had come home only Friday for the Me- morial Day recess of Congress. He had represented the 16th Michigan Congressional District since its creation in 1933. The death of Rep. Lesinski is expected to place a southern sup- porter of the Taft-Hartley law at the head of the powerful House labor committee. Under the time-honored custom of observing seniority in filling committee chairmanships, Rep. Graham Barden (D-N.C.) is in line for Lesinski's influential post as the ranking Democratic member of the committee. Formal Bid For Second, I Term Made Tells 4 Danger In 'U' Fund Cut . By CHUCK ELLIOTT Special to The Daily YPSILANTI -Gov. G. Mennen Williams delivered a stinging blast at the Republican-motivated "economy" budget recently passed by the Legislature as he formally announced his candidacy for re- election here last night. Terming the budget as passed a "fake economy," he saw the Uni- versity appropriation cut as "the first step towards reducing the school from a first to a second class institution." * * * WILLIAMS spoke before an es- timated 400 people at the Washte- naw County Democratic Dinner in Charles McKenny Hall. "The appropriation cut to the University will hurt the teachers first, but will eventually hurt the students, because teachers cannot take this treatment for long and will not stay with it," he asserted. The extreme seriousness. of the situation is affirmed by the un- precedented action of President Ruthven protesting the cut, he pointed out. "The slicing of the medical school appropriations is especially indefensible, for although more doctors are desperately needed in Michigan, there are no funds avail- able to make the schools adequate," he said. * * * WILLIAMS branded the meth- ods used in passing the cut budget bill by the Republican-dominated Legislature as "a mockery of de- mocracy." "TAere are no actual savings gained by the reduced budget. People were led to believe the budget appropriations were for a whole year while actually many are for only eight or ten months," he said If they had actually been made for the whole year, the total figure of the budgetawouldrhave been greater than last year, Williams added. * * * "THE LEGISLATURE only did lip-service to the job of passing a budget. It is really gold-bricking, because adequate appropriations are only being put off," he assert- ed. All the state's social work, pri- marily that pertaining to chil- dren, is hampered seriously by the cut budget, he said. In this respect, Williams declared, the cut is "inhuman" because all sorts of essential institutions such as old people's homes, aid to mentally ill, and homes for underprivileged children have received crippling fund reduc- tions. Williams also lashed out at the Republicans for evading a corpora- tion excess profits tax. Preceding Williams' address, Rep. Martha Griffiths, of Detroit, denounced members of the House Ways and Means Committee for undue secrecy and lack of cooper- ation during the passage of the budget. The Committee is 'com- posed nearly exclusively of Re- publicans. -Daily-Alan Reid TOP TWIRLERS-Winners in the various divisions of the Univer- sity's National Drum Major Contest include Daniel Kohl, of Wil- loughby, O. (upper left); Marian Flynn of Paw Paw, Mich. (upper left center) ; Norma AuBuchon, of St. Louis, Mo. (upper right center); Dick Stulgaitis of Alto, Mich.(upper right); Joan Ellyn Hillegonds of Flossmoor, Ill. (lower left); Jack Rowley of Emleton, Pa. (lower center), and Joyce Kennedy of Dearborn, Mich. (lower right). * e Seven DrumdMajors Spin Wayf to Gold Medals Here After more than seven grueling hours yesterday afternoon, seven of the starting 98 contestants in the University National Drum Ma- jo.r Contest at Ferry Field twirled their way to gold medals. Students from 11 states and ranging from junior high through college competed for the awards in their respective school divisions. * * * WITH TWIRLING batons and brilliant uniforms, the colorful af- fair turned into a tasking mara- thon when extremely close com- petition caused an extension of the judging time. Toward late afternoon, the scantily-dressed performers were National Roundup By The Associated Press RALEIGH, N.C. - Liberal Sen. Frank P. Graham held a substan- tial lead over his chief opponent, a conservative, in the North Caro- lina Democratic primary last night but a runoff primary seemed likely. Unofficial returns from 1,413 of the state's 1,990 precincts gave Graham 198,074 votes and Willis Smith 164,405. DETROIT-General Motors Corp. signed a five-year con- tract last night with the CIO International Union of Electri- cal, Radio and Machine Work- ers. ** * * WASHINGTON - The switch- men's union has cancelled its threat of a June 1 strike against ten western railroads, the Nation- al Mediation Board said last night. forced to add jackets to their uniforms because of the un- usually cool weather. Scorekeepers, judges and par- ticipants became progressively tir- ed as the afternoon wore on. A combination of the cold and fati- gue greatly hampered the finalists. The top prize of the contest went to coed Norma Jean Aubuchon of St. Louis, Mo. She was the only participant to achieve a perfect .core. * * * CONTESTANTS WERE judged on four qualifications: voice com- mands and baton signals; twirling fundamentals; routine twirling, and aerial work. The contest was inaugurated last year to improve drum majoring in high schools and to increase in- terest in it among boys, according to Jack Lee, chairman of the con- test. The emphasis is placed on boys because of the Big Ten's lim- itationdof drum majors to males, he said. Last Official Garg Due Tomorrow Gargoyle tomorrow will present its final issue as an official Uni- versity publication, though the staff is planning a commercial magazine with faculty and alum- ni backing. Notice of publication suspen- sion will not be present in the final pages of Gargoyle. This is- sue was in the make-up stages when the Board in Control of Stu- dent Publications suspended Gar- goyle May 20. An eight-page spread, "Garg Looks at the Michigan Technic,' will be featured in this issue. City Silent, Alert Before Youth_ Rally.j Ulbricht Rejects National Election BERLIN-(P)-Berlin was quiet but alert early today, only a few hours before 500,000 east German Communist youths in the Russian sector were scheduled to start their long-planned Whitsuntide parade, the greatest ideological spectacle since Adolf Hitler. Walr' Ulbricht, east Germany's deouty premier and Communist stror g:ian, provided the only eal fireworks on the eve of the ray. In a vitriolic speech last night to a youths' "peace congress," the shrill-voiced Ulbricht flatly re- jected Western proposals for na- tion-wide elections to unify divid- ed Germany. The Communist leader picture Russia as Germany's great and enduring friend and the western powers as "enslavers." He'demand- ed that American and British oc- cupation forces withdraw frogn Germany. * * * EAST-WEST incidents yester- day were few and isolated. A burst of harmless gunfire rattled through the carnival air once during the day. The shoot- ing apparently was intended to warn west Berlin police against pursuing Red police who seized a west Berliner and made oft: with him into the Soviet sec-. tor. None was reported hurt. A full round of assorted Com- munist activities was carried out by the marching and milling youth on the eve of their big day of obeisance to Kremlin political lea- dership. THE "Free German Youth" ral- ly, dedicated to friendship with Russia, started rolling without any show of. an organized putsch against wary but quiet west Ber- lin. Allied armor stood ready to stop any mass intrusions. Violence in the early stages was mainly vocal - taunting. and cat-calling across the cold- war front where the Soviet East meets the allied West. The Moscow-East Berlin axis pumped a human stream of blue- shirted youth ranging from six to 24 years old into the devasted heart of the old Nazi Reich. Meanwhile, flights by East Ger- mans into west Berlin plagued the Communist bosses of East Ger- many. * * *. STAGING their huge youth demonstration, the Communists found some of their unwilling fol- lowers were slipping away from them in increasing numbers to the freedom of allied-occupied west Berlin. The desertions increased, des- pite tightened border controls. Leading the deserters were mem- bers of the Communist-controlled 'people's police." Most of the Communist youth were being watched closely by East German police to keep them from straying into the forbidden western sectors. Bulgars Name N~ew Officials LONDON - W)-- Bulgaria yesterday named a new chief of state and foreign minister in changes involving three top gov- ernmental leaders, the Sofia ra- dio announced. The broadcast, heard here, quoted the official Bulgarian news agency, but gave noreasons for the changes. Gen. Georgi Damianov, who had been defense minister, was named president of the presidi- um of the national assembly, suc- ceeding Mincho Neichev. The presidium, or council of ministers, and its president together consti- PROGRAM POPULAR: 'U' Faculty Evaluation Gets Varied Reactions The faculty evaluation program met with a wide variety of student and faculty reactions last week. All students queried expressed their approval of the plan, but they disagreed on the value of the criticism forms which were used. THE FACULTY, too, was gener- ally impressed with the turn-about idea. As one sociology instructor put it, "It makes us sit up and take notice of our methods." Wilbert J. McKeachie, of the proach to the subject by Prof. Frederick K. Sparrow, of the bot- any department. "Sometimes I'm surprised at the amount of acu- men which goes into the criti- cisms," he said. "I think the stu- dents have done a darn good job." Most student criticism was leveled at the evaluation forms, which many branded as super- ficial. "The questions were too incom- plete to afford a real evaluation," Blanche Davidson '51. remarked. ENGLISH UNINHIBITED: Rathbone Relates Theatre Hazards By MARGARET THOMAS English theatregoers, who will throw such things as banana peels or tomatoes at actors, are com- pletely uninhibited in their re- aetions to a naIv in enmnarisnn to more violently than an American would. "Often members of the audience wait outside V door for the actor to c and then throw things ha c-air i N a nr'e +ha+ the stage come out at him," this had Rathbone, who first came to the United States in 1921 and now calls New York his home (he is a Yankee fan), finds it hard to de- termine whether he misses Eng- Iand _"T hnac i-hrnpm n arrini+aar ::'