SCRATCH PAD See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State Dal ti 4 CLOUDY, COLDER VOL. LX, No. 27 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 26, 1949 I~~' PRICE FIVE CENTS Strike Crisis Report Goes To Truman White House May Call Conference r By The Associated Press President Truman received a full report on the deadlocked and worsening steel and coal strike crisis yesterday. But the White House said he still hasn't made any plans to take a personal hand in trying to settle the walkouts. THERE WAS some speculation, however, that Mr. Truman may call the steel industry manage- ment and labor leaders to a White House conference later this week. Supplies of both coal and steel dwindled, forcing a tightening of the national belt. Arrival of cold weather underscored the critical shortage of coal. Cyrus S. Ching, head of the Federal Mediation Service, said no progress had been made toward settlement of either the coal or steel dispute. * * * IN THE STEEL strike, Irving S. Olds, chairman of United States Steel Corp., said he couldn't see an end of the steel strike "immed- iately in sight." He told newsmen "the public should remember that it was called by Philip Murray, the president of the union.' That wasn't the way the CIO's 51-member executive board saw it, though. The board pledged "full support in this strike which the steel industry, on orders > from Wall Street, has forced upon the steelworkers and the American people." Meanwhile Southern coal opera- tors, representing about a sixth of- the soft coal industry, reported Monday they were handed an ulti- matum demanding higher pay, a seven-hour day and a bigger we- fare fund royalty for the striking miners. PRESIDENT Joseph E. Moody of the Southern Coal Producers' Association said "we're certainly pessimistic as the devil tonight." He said the demands were not made in specific terms. The Southern operators and the UMW held a three-hour contract bargaining session in Bluefield, W.Va. They will meet again to- day. Houston Board Bans Textbook Best-Seller Says U.S. Has Leftist Trends HOUSTON, Tex. - (P) - Hous- ton's school board had banned a "best seller" civics textbook be- cause its 1947 edition said the United States has "strong social- istic. and even communistic trends." But, Attorney Ewing Werlein, board member who had the book banned, said last night the city's high school students will have to go ahead studying the book-at least temporarily. He said no oth- er texts were available, besides, this year's classes already have studied the portion declared ob- jectionable. THE TEXT, by Dr. Frank Ma- gruder, retired Oregon State his- tory professor, has been used by Houston's 2,221 senior high school civics students. Published by Allyn & Bacon of Boston, Mass., the book is de- scribed by Charles Bacon, senior partner of the company, as a "best seller" in its field and in use in both Army and Navy serv- ice schools. With one negative vote, the school board Monday night moved to ban the book. Board member Ewing Werlein, an attorney, said he feared the paragraph might cause youngsters "to think Social- ism and Communism are good." Dorm Blaze Evicts Coeds MADISON, Wis.-(AP)-Firemen last night extinguished a dormi- tory blaze which turned 237 Uni- versity of Wisconsin coeds out into BRITAIN'S ECONOMY: Three Parties Call Attlee Plan Timid LONDON-(A)-Three parties-Conservatives, Liberals and Inde- pendent Leftists-called Prime Minister Attlee's economy program too timid last night and demanded the downfall of his Labor Gov- ernment. Attlee went to Buckingham Palace for a private audience with King George. It was his second audience in eight days. The first was before he announced he had no intention of calling a general election this year. * * * * THE HOUSE OF COMMONS is to vote on four motions tomorrow after a two-day debate on the economy program announced yesterday as a 25 percent cut in dollar spending for imports and an eight percent cut in the Government budget outlay for the year. That program already has drawn down on Attlee the hardest criticism from the press since he took office in 1945. Critics said O Attlee's economy was "too little LELAND STOWE ... speaks tonight * * Stowe JWill Lecture at Hill Tonight Journalism Pulitizer Prize win- ner Leland Stowe will talk at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium on "We Still Have Time to Win the Peace." The author-journalist will pre- sent the second in the University's Lecture Series. * * * CURRENTLY foreign editor for the "Reporter" Magazine, Stowe has just returned from a Euro- pean tour where he visited Italy, Greece, and the Balkans. Part of his talk tonight will deal with the effect of U.S. for- eign policy--especially the At- lantic Pact and the Arms Aid Bill-on these areas. Stowe has been on the staff of the New York Herald Tribune's Paris bureau, and on the foreign .staff of the Chicago Daily News. FROM THE DAYS of the League of Nations to the end of World War II, he consistantly covered the biggest news stories on the conti- nent. Tickets for the lecture are avail- able from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today at the Hill Auditorium Box Of- fice. and too late." The first motion is by Attlee, demanding a vote of confidence. The second is an amendment by Winston Churchill's Conservatives, declaring the Government is "tak- ing no sufficient measures" to prevent inflation and restore the national credit abroad. * * * THE THIRD is by the Liberal Party's 10 members in the House of Commons. It "condemns the inadequacy" of the Attlee program. The fourth is a motion of censure by the independent labor group-a half dozen left wingers ousted from the Labor Party- which objects to the mere four percent slash in the outlay for defense. The Leftists demanded a 400,- 000,000 British pounds ($1,120,- 000,000) trimming of the armed budget-contrasted with the 30- 000,000 pounds ($84,000,000) re- duction ordered by Attlee. SIR STAFFORD Cripps, chan- cellor of the exchequer, leads off the debate tomorrow, with a ful- ler explanation of government plans. Thirty -Eight Vets Awarded ScholIar,sh i Ps Bomber Scholarships for the Fall semester, amounting to $100 each, have been awarded to 38 vet- erans enrolled in the University, Dean of Students Erich A. Walter announced yesterday. Conceived by Arthur Rude, '49L, the Bombership Scholarship Plan was initiated in March, 1942 so that students might provide fi- nancial aid for classmates who would be returning to the campus after the war. PART OF THE net receipts from campus social functions and other activities were donated to a fund which was invested in United States War Bonds. The original goal of the Plan was to accumulate enough bonds to equal the pur- chase price of an Army Bomber. A total of $22,500 in war bonds was accumulated during the war years in this manner. Undergraduate students with at least a year of military service, and enrolled for at least two se- mesters in the University, are eli- gible for the scholarships. They are awarded on the basis of first, need; second, character; and third, academic achievement. * * * THE 38 WINNERS of scholar- ships are Raymond Beeley, '50E; William Betts, '50E; Robert Car- ter, '50; Stanley Challis, '50; Ray- mond Cieslinski, '50E; Michael Dayton, '50E; Richard Delong, See THIRTY-EIGHT, Page q Red Czechs Order U.S. Official Out Second Spying Charge in 5 Days PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia - (I') -For the second time in five days, the Communist Czechoslovak Government yesterday ordered the expulsion of an American Em- bassy official -on charges of spy- ing. The newly named official, de- clared persona non grata, is John C. Heyn, assistant Attache in the Embassy's political department. However, he is already out of the country. Embassy sources said he was either in Germany or Vienna and would not return to Prague. * * * HEYN WAS accused of inus- trial espionage and attempting to learn Czechoslovak state secrets about industrial production and commercial relations. He was charged with using Czechoslovak citizens to gather this informa- tion. He was assistant to Isaac Patch, the Embassy's political attache, April 19. His home is in Springdale, Conn. Patch and an Embassy clerk, Samuel Meryn, were accused by the government of directing a widespread espionage ring. Patch denied the accusations. MERYN WAS imprisoned Fri- day and still is held incommuni- cado. He faces trial in a Czech court on spy charges. Meryn is a naturalized Amer- ican citizen. The actions against the em- ployes of the American Embassy in Prague came as the government pushed an anti-spying campaign among its own people. MONDAY FOUR persons were sentenced to death, four to life imprisonment and an unspecified number to prison terms ranging from four to 25 years. They were charged with terroristic activities and spying for an unnamed for- eign power. The American Embassy-headed by Charge D'Affaires James K. Penfield while it awaits the arrival of a new ambassador-was appar- ently taken aback by the attacks on U.S. personnel here. World News Round- Up By The Associated Press MONTGOMERY, Ala. - The Army plans to offer discharges beginning Dec. 1 to men with at least a year's service inducted un- der the peacetime Draft Act. Secretary of the Army Gordon Gray announced the new policy yesterday in an address before the annual conference of the National Guard Association. * * * LONDON-The world's orig- inal jet airliner sped from Eng- land to Africa and back on a test flight yesterday in six hours and 36 minutes. * * * PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia - Czechoslovak Roman Catholic bishops gave ground in the church-state fight yesterday, say- ing priests may swear loyalty to the Communist government and accept government salaries. * * * WASHINGTON - President Truman yesterday signed legis- lation providing $2,275,000,000 of new government authority to insure or purchase mortgages on homes. In addition, he put his name to laws providing $150,000,000 annually in Federal aid to states for hospital construction, and legislation promising increased Federal aid for airport construc- tion this year. * * * DETROIT - The CIO United Auto Workers and Chrysler Corp. agreed early this morning to put aside threat of strike aciton while they negotiate on pensions the union has demanded. A 30-day strike vote certifica- tion made by the State Labor Me- diations Board would expire at midnight tomorrow. But the two sides agreed to extend it, giving the union the right to terminate the extension upon seven days' written notice to Chrysler. ssins Of Yugoslav Attache -Daily-Ed K READY FOR ACTION-The "Engineering Marvel," touted as the car of tomorrow, standsi for its first road test. The "Marvel," a 1916 Mo lel T was completely overhauled and modei Ask] Recall by student engineers and was to the Engineering Processional. T traveled in a cage during the p Final Count Reveals 107 Petitioners Final count of candidacy peti- tions for the student elections in November is 107, according to SL elections chairman Bill Clark. The last 16 petitions were ap- plied for just before the deadline yesterday. Deadline to return the filled-out petitions is today and an Administration Building window will be open from 1 to 4:30 p.m., he added. *, , * THIS NUMBER equals last fall's record, Clark said. But 52 were thrown out by Men's Judiciary Council for irregularities at that time, he added. All but one of the disqualified petitioners were al- lowed to re-petition. Eleven petitions have already been returned, he said. A breakdown of petitioners shows that 57 students will run for 25 seats on Student Legislature, 39 for 10 positions on J-Hop Commit- tees, 10 for three vacancies on Board in Control of Student Publi- cations and three for two posi- tions on Board in Control of In- tercollegiate Athetics. * * * TEN STUDENTS applied for SL petitions yesterday: Keith Beers, Chester Szemborski, Allan Clam- age, Donald Abramson, Gordon McDougall, Wym Price, Herb Sil- verman, John Neubardt, Jo Mis- ner and Don McNeil. J-Hop petitioners numbered five: Margaret Donovan, Dick Sanders, Dave Pease, Rostom Landourjian and Gil Osnos. Directory Sale Due to a breakdown at the printers, only half the student directories could be sold yester- day. Another 2,500 copies of the directory will go on sale Thurs- day from 1 to 3 p.m. owed along the st Keets adjacent to the campus in conjunction 'he man in the m sk is "Eddy Current" otherwise Fred Kerr rocessional, and w.Ls labeled "The Wild Engineer." Costumed 'U' Ergtinee Parade with 26 Frv4 Ambassador Reds Accuse Note Handed to Slav Embassy LONDON-(LP)-The Soviet Un- ion said yesterday it has demand- ed the recall of the Yugoslav am- bassador to Moscow because he is guilty of "spying and subversive. activities" against Russia. The action followed Russia's re- nunciation last month of her treaty of friendship with Yugo- slavia. It brought Moscow peril- ously close to a full diplomatic break with Marshal Tito's govern- ment. * * * THE RUSSIAN ambassador to Belgrade has been absent from his post for many weeks. Karl Mrazovic, the Yugoslav ambassador to Russia, went to Moscow last Dec. 16, when rela- tions between Yugoslavia and Russia were already near the Kozma boiling point. ready rnized The economic squeeze put on with Yugoslavia by Russia and her who eastern satellites was in full effect. Moscow dispatches at the time said only a minor Russian protocol of- ficer was sent to greet Mrazovic on his arrival. THE MOSCOW radio, which an- nounced the demand for the recall r I of Mrazovic, said it was contained in a note handed to the Yugoslav Embassy in Moscow Monday. nprove- The text of the note: e, pro- "The Ministry of Foreign Af- fairs of the Union of Soviet So- cialist Republics has been au- n hge thorized by the Soviet govern- a huge ment to inform the Yugoslav ributed .government of the following: rs. A "During the Budapest trial of er the the state criminal and spy (Las- engin- zlo) Rajk and his accomplices it ted to was established that the present Yugoslav ambassador in the ont was U.S.S.R., Mrazovic, had for a long nstalled time engaged in spying and sub- cal En- versive activities against the Soviet mattress Union, and while being Yugoslav ick. ambassador in the U.S.S.R., had engineer come out in the Yugoslav press sanity; with slanderous fabrications pushed against the Soviet Union. Eddy "In view of this the Soviet gov- ic light ernment considers it impossible ide rule for Mrazovic to continue to be , "don't Yugoslav's diplomatic representa- tive in the U.S.S.R." ngineer- how will unctions 'e i g G t neering. an all Prison Term ng Bob Combo. - _ - By NORM MILLER , Imprisoned in a mobile cage, boxed in a bottomless airplane and perched in the "Engineering Mar- vel," weirdly costumed students of the Engineering College parad- ed around campus yesterday. The parade was held as part of engineering week celebrations, which will culminate tonight with Engineering Night, to be held at 7:30 in the Union Ballroom. THE "ENGINEERING Marvel," a 1926 Model T, equipped by the Must Submit Open House Choices Today engineers with the latest in ments in automotive scien ceeded down State St. w aid of a tow car. Prominantly displayedc rear of the "Marvel" was turbo jet engine, made of keg and cardboard contr by aeronautical enginee steam boiler, planted ov hood by the mechanical eers, had a shaft connec the rear wheel. Protruding from the fr the blade of a bulldozer i by civil engineers. Electri gineers added radar, a r spring nailed to a broomsti "Eddy Current," an e whose work had taken his was imprisoned in a cage by electrical engineers. chewed the. tips of electr bulbs and manipulated a st Sculptor Feared Lost in Atlantic By The Associated Press Stuart Benson, 72-year-old sculptor and former Ubiversity student has apparently lost his life somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean. He was reported missing since last Wednesday from the Polish liner "Sobieski," which docked in New York Harbor yesterday. He had been stricken by a long illness which kept him confined to his cabin, according to the ship's mas- ter. --tr -under a sign which warned Today is the deadline for cam- let this happen to you." pus residences to submit open *t ho * house preferences for election can- BOOTHS SET UP by en didates, according to Student Leg- ing groups for tonight's si islature elections chairman Bill depict the activities and f Clark. of different fields of engi Each house is to submit three The main feature will be preferences of time for open star variety show, starri houses to Pris Ball, 6922 or 2-3279, Leopold and his Dixieland he said. , * Admission is free and e THlE OPEN HIOUSES are de- is invited to attend, accor signed to give candidates a chance Tom Ramage of the Eng to express their views on campus Council. issues and policies to house groups, in informal sessions, he added. PhlippineEn'i Open houses will be held from Nov. 7 to 20. Weekday hours will lono red T o be from 5 to 6 and 7:15 to 8:30 p.m. Hours for the first Sunday The International Cen will be 2:30 to 3:30 and 7 to 8 the Philippine Club will p.m. and for the second Sunday tea honoring Bart A. U 2:30 to 3:30, 3:30 to 4:30, 4:30 to cultural affairs officer of t 5:30 and 7 to 9 p.m. ippine Embassy in Washin The plan was a success last 5:30 p.m. today at theI spring and should encourage more tional Center. intelligent voting, Clark said. It Umayam's visit to the is also designed to combat bloc sity is part of a nationw voting by giving candidates a covering all the colleges th chance to campaign on their own a large Philippine enr views rather than on their campus There are 30 Philippines background, he added. here. veryone cling to ineering VOY 7y ter and hold a Fmayam, he Phil- igton, at Interna- Univer- ide tour hat have ollment. students OVER THE HILL: New Rules Dramatized In Mock Court-Martial or r orgery Former Washtenaw County Treasurer Clyde D. Fleming was sentenced to a three and a half to 14-year jail term yesterday af- ternoon, on a charge of embezzling public county funds. Fleming was sentenced on a forgery count and given .sus- pended sentence on one embez- zlement charge. Other charges were dropped. Circuit Judge George Hartrick of Pontiac, in administering the sentence, said he was being as lenient as he could. * * * A FEW HOURS before Fleming, calm and expressionless, heard sentence pronounced, he had changed his plea from innocent to guilty. Defense Attorney James 0. Kelly read a statement asking leniency, prior to passing of sen- tenie. Pointing out Fleming drew only $1,968 a year as coun- ty treasurer, he said, "if the job paid the proper salary, cases of this kind- wouldn't occur." The 37-year-old ex-county of- ficial was indicted last March on a 24-count forgery and embez- By BOB VAUGHN The prisoner arose and faced the bench. Grimly, the sentence was read. "It is the judgement of this court that you shall be confined for 30 days and forfeit two-thirds of your pay." THE GENERAL court-martial was concluded. Private Kelly would return to the Army stockade from which he had escaped. KELLY PAID a high price for his few hours of freedom, but it migh~t have been higher if it was not for the recent revision of court-martial rules. The new rules, for example, call for representation of en- listed men on the bench and provide an opportunity for the defendent to select his own. counsel. 1 NO DIRECT EFFECT HERE: Canpus Groups View Red Convictiois - x By JANET WATTS The conviction of the 11 Com- munists in New York last week will hv no direct effect on Tni- ful of things we say and the books of the conviction, and materials we read." unconstitutional. . * * the Smith Act, * Gordon McDougal of the Younn Proxresives said "We THIS GAMBLE doesn't keep i