BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU See Page 4 Latest Deadline in. the State D4aii4 CLOUDY, COLDER VOL. LX, No. 33 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 2, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS i Students Split Over Political Parties Plan SL Generally Opposes Scheme By PETER HOTTON and JAMES GREGORY Campus leaders' opinions on a proposed political party system for student elections broke across fra- ternity-independent lines, with SL members usually opposing the plan and most non-members for it in a Daily poll. Some of those favoring the plan claimed it would fix SL members' responsibility and change the basis of voting from one of resi- dence to one of issues. * * * MOST DISSENTERS predicted the system would pit Greeks against independents again, thus destroying work that has helped bring the two groups together in recent years. SL President John Ryder, '50, opposed the plan, which he felt would tend to degenerate into intense blocks of Greeks and independents. "In Student Legislature, there are unavoidable splits, but in gen- eral the Legislature must be rep- resentative of the students as a whole and not of any pressure groups'," he declared. * * * SL VICE-PRESIDENT Quent Nesbitt, '50, opposed the party sys- * tem as a means of splitting pros and cons over issues, but favored it on dividing on two different posi- tive approaches on work projects. And the group that won in elec- . _ tion. would have SL support to work on a projectin its own way, he added. Jake Jacobson, '50, president of IFC, favored the party sys- tem. He is not in SL. Disagree- ing with him was Dick Morrison, '50, IFC vice-president, one of the few non-SL members to op- pose the plan. Morrison went along with the views of AIM President Walt Han- sen, '50, an SL member. Jacobson said, "It's a very excel- lent idea. But we must get strong leaders representing significant is- sues." "AND I THINK there are plen- ty of significant issues in this elec- tion," he added. Morrison refused to favor a party system without "some as- surance that it wouldn't degen- erate into voting on basis of residence." "I don't think there are enough major issues on this campus to warrant a party systemi based on them," he declared. Hansen agreed. "There aren't enough significant issues to allow parties to have legitimate differ- ences," he said. * * * ADELE HAGER, '51, one of SL's representatives to the Student Af- fairs Committee, was also against a party system, and agreed with Ryder that such a system would fall into a Greek-independent squabble. The students almost as a whole agree on big campus is- sues, such as discrimination, she said. "Voters should judge individual candidates by their merits: open mindedness, clear thinking, inter- est and sincerity, and not by their ' party," she added. Dave Frazer, '51, SL treasurer, was the only legislator to favor the plan over present procedures. But the problem of the party system is how to make it work ef- ficiently, he said. Exp losion Rips Postal Building WASHINGTON-(P)-A heavy explosion ripped the top floors of the Post Office Department build- Sherman Named o HeadNavy 'Compromise Expert' Named As New Chief of Naval Operations WASHINGTON-(P)-Vice Admiral Forrest P. Sherman, known as a trouble-shooting "compromise expert," was named yesterday to succeed Admiral Louis Denfeld as Chief of Naval Operations in the row over national defense. The White House said President Truman will give Sherman his commission as the Navy's No. 1 admiral tomorrow. THE PROMOTION jumps Sherman over .the heads of nine other admirals who rank him in seniority, including four who have full four-star status. Sherman, 53. a native of Merrimack, N.H., rates three stars at present. The new uniformed chief of the Navy was graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1917. He was second man in his class * * * > of 203 midshipmen. During World War II; he commanded the carrier Wasp which was sunk in the Solomon Islands battle in the Pacific in Septem- ber, 1942. He was the last man to leave the big flat-top before it sank under Japanese bombs and shell fire. Sherman had been rated the top prospect in Pentagon specu- lation ever since Denfeld was ousted by Mr. Truman, on Secre- tary Matthews' recommendation, last Thursday. The removal of Denfeld followed his outspoken criticism of top defense policies which he aired in testimony be- fore the House armed services committee. AMONG OTHER things, Den- feld charged that under the uni- fied defense setup - particularly under the increased powers given to the civilian Secretary of De- _nse by Congress-the Navy was. being cut down to a mere "con- voy and anti-submarine service." Recalled to Washington over the weekend, Sherman flew home on a 5,000-trip from his post as commander of the U.S. 6th task force in the Mediter- ranean. The comparatively youthful new Naval chief-he just turned 53 on Oct. 30-won his reputation as a compromiser in 1946 at a time when large sections of the Navy were opposing passage of a law to unify the armed services. Two Planes Collide; 55 Persons Die Disaster Occurs Over Washington WASHINGTON-(/P)-While an airport radio man frantically tried to keep them apart, a giant pas- senger plane and a Bolivian fight- er rammed together today killing 55 persons in the worst airplane disaster in history. There was only one survivor, and he was badly injured. He is Erick Rios Bridoux, 28, di- rector of the Bolivian air force and pilot of the fighter plane. * * * ALL 51 PASSENGERS and four crew members of the Eastern Air Lines DC4-bound from Boston to New Orleans-are presumed to have perished in the crash, al- though only about half the bodies have been recovered. A Congressman, a former Con- gressman, a well known cartoonist and other notables were on the plane. The crash occurred about 300 feet in the air as the fighter and the airliner tried to land at Washington's busy National Airport at the same time. Glen D. Tigner, traffic control- ler at the airport, said the radio man made urgent attempts to get the Bolivian plane to turn aside. But this failed. THEN AN EFFORT was made to get the big airliner to swerve. This came too late. The two aircraft hit, and the big plane plunged into the bank of the Potomac River spewing bodies into the water as well as on to the land. The fighter plane hit the water. Among those aboard the air- liner were: Rep. George J. Bates Rep., Mass.), 58, serving his seventh term as a member of Congress. Helen Hokinson, whose cartoons of plump club women have de- lighted readers of "The New York- er" magazine. Michael J. Kennedy, 52, former Tammany Hall leader and a mem- ber of Congress for two terms. -Daily-Wally Barth HALF PINT ORATOR-Irving Steinhardt, Grad., confidently sums up his evidence against Tyler House during the two-hour trial which resulted in a 50-glass-of-milk decision against the East Quadrangle dormitory. FORREST P. SHERMAN . . . new Navy chief No Limit Set On Expense In SL Campaign Meeting To Explain All Campaign Rules Student Legislature candidates, will have an open road to election as far as campaign expenditures are concerned. The Legislature, after consid- ering the problem of limiting ex- penditures, found that enforcing any rule would be impractical, so it dropped the matter. * * * BUT SL's citizenship committee, which is handling elections, put an "unofficial" limit of $20 on campaigning funds, at the first candidates' meeting yesterday. Committee members' views to the limit favored partial en- forcement of the rule because in the past most campaigning has not cost more than $20. General reaction to the deci- sion by candidates was the wish they had $20 to spare for expen- ditures. But in case of obvious display of wealth, the committee warned, the campaigner will be dealt with "properly." OTHER CAMPAIGN rules were explained at the meeting: No cam- paign material is to be posted on campus buildings other than resi- dences, trees or lamp posts. No penalty has been set up by the University for infraction of the rule, but violators will be given "unfavorable publicity" until they remove their signs. A city ordinance also prohibits campaign material in the same places, and provides for strict penalties. If a candidate fails to muster 25 first-place votes in the elec- tion, he must pay "up to" $5 to the Legislature. Oust UEW, Farm Machinery Union CLEVELAND-(A)-The CIO convention's resolution committee last night voted to expel the leftist-led United Electrical Workers and the United Farm Equipment Workers. The committee left for later action the fate of nine or 10 other unions headed by leaders the CIO right-wing majority accuses of pro-Communist sympathies. * * * * . THE UE IS THE CIO's third largest affiliate and claims 450,000 members but pays per capita on only 375,000. The Farm Equipment Workers have about 20,000. It also was announced that the CIO will charter a right-wing group within the UE to organize a separate union. The committee's recommenda-T * * Plaintiff Gets Mill In Bovine Bounty Irv Steinhardt's idea for Tyler A lesser man House's Homecoming display has discouraged bu finally paid off-to the tune of 50 glasses of milk. known for his But it wasn't until after a brought suit for drawn-out legal action, climaxed against Tyler H by a two-hour court battle last extra 70 glasses night, that he could rightfully call Deciding to r the milk his own. case, the Tyler It all started several weeks ago which ordinari wh'en the Tyler House Council an- cases orni nounced that 50 glasses of milk ases concernio would be awarded to the person hight-little k who could supply the best idea for ahead. the house Homecoming display. * * * * . ACTING AS STEINHARDT, a former resi- Steinhardt intr dent of Tyler House, submitted an ing evidence to idea which emphasized the "beer" for damages:n( in Bernie Bierman and the Coun- ers taken in cil (for the want of better plans) waist, (2) a bel accepted it. dneo ai But when Steinhardt returned to of havin Tyler to collect his hard-earned larger waistlio milk, he was met by cold stares nail--all to s and, as he phrases it "more bull wasted downt than cow." nizable shadow The Tyler Council asserted due to the lack that, among other things, the After some R contest had not been "officially" tween Steinh approved and that Steinhardt, O'Hern, couns e no longer a Tyler resident, was it was determi not eligible for the prize. was, actuallyv y Win Battle n would have been it Steinhardt, long guzzling capacity, r 120 glasses of milk House, claiming the s in damages. ule on Steinhardt's Judiciary Council, ly disputes serious g disputes and dis- )n, held court last knowi g w at lay * * HIS own counsel, roduced the follow- support his claims 1) a pair of trous- four inches at the t which showed evi- g encircled a much to at one time anid' sely-chewed finger- show that he had to a hardly-recog- of his former self of milk. egal wrangling be- ardt and William el for Tyler House, ned that Steinhardt in the courtroom, rial to proceed. of his 120 glasses e paid somehow at time - Steinhardt e would carry the udder" 70 to high- think that this was l," he asserted, "be- t just skimmed over ft the courtroom, it ;hat Irv Steinhardt on me," he beamed. tion on the UE and FE expulsion will be submitted to the conven- tion today and is expected to re- ceive thumping approval from the right wing majority. THE CONVENTION, in a day of torrid oratory, voted to bar Communists from the policy mak- ing executive board. Today, delegates will act on other changes in the CIO consti- tution, permitting the board to expel unions led by Communist sympathizers. The resolutions committee, headed by the United Auto Workers' chief, Walter P. Reu- ther, held a special meeting last night to deal with the UE and FE. All 12 leftist unions are threat- ened with ouster, but the Reu- ther committee action makes the' UE and FE the first to walk the plank. The UE took the initiative ear- lier in the day by pulling its dele- gates from, the convention floor and announcing it would withhold future per capita taxes to the CIO. This was tantamount to quitting the CIO. * * * THE -RIGHT WING paraded Philip Murray, Walter Reuther, Emil Rieve, Joseph Curran and Michael Quill to the rostrum to plead for the anti-Communist pro- posal. Longshoreman president Harry Bridges led the opposition and was singled 'out as a special target by most of the high- ranking rightwingers. Murray, CI president, said he had "failed miserably" to get a pledge from left-wing leaders to follow CIO policy. He referred to the "brazen, hypocritical attitude of the imposters." Reuther, CIO United Auto Workers president, put the issue of ousting the left-wing unions this way: "IT IS A QUESTION of saving the body or the cancer. The noisy minority thinks we ought to save the cancer and throw away the body." Reuther referred to the left- wingers as "the phony left-the corrupted left-the morally de- generate left." President Curran of the National Maritime Union brought a thun- derous ovation with this challenge to the unions whose leaders have showed pro-Communist leanings: "If you're going to get the good and the prestige that goes with carrying the mantel of a demo- cratic organization like the CIO then by God carry out its pro- gram." Garg;' Peddles Anti-Marxian Literature to Russian Peasants Students Cani Strike, CIO Off idalSays By JANET WATTS (Special to The Daily) CLEVELAND - Students and teachers have the right to strike for their own rights, according to Abram Flaxer, of the public work- ers union, who is attending the CIO constitutional convention here this week. Flaxer declared that teachers should be able to strike for higher pay rates if they can't get them any other way. "STUDENTS too should be able.! to express their views on matters of civil liberties if they feel that their rights are infringed," he said. Flaxer flounted certain state laws which restrict public work- ers, including teachers, and keep them from striking. Gho h-O such a law. "These restrictions discriminate against the individual's basic right to job security." Flaxer's union is one of 11 endangered by the CO amendment passed yesterday which allows the executive board to eliminate left wing unions that do not follow CIO general policy. The amendment is aimed at Com- munist dominated groups. Speculation arose that the Com- munist-led unions may leave the CIO to form their own organiza- tion before any executive action forces them to leave. "All unions will take steps nec- essary to preserve their own or- ganization," Flaxer pointed out. Gov. WiliamS Clreates Youthl..' Commission By The Associated Press LANSING-Governor Williams yesterday created a Michigan Youth Commission. Its duties will include a study of modern day problems involving family life and preparation for Michigan's part in the mid-cen- tury White House conference on children and youth which will be called by President Truman In 1950. * * * WILLIAMS NAMED Mrs. Mar- garet Price of Ann Arbor to be chairman of the commission. Prominent in Y.W.C.A. and local charitable work, Mrs. Price was the defeated Democratic candidate for Auditor General last year. Williams previously had appoint- ed her to the Mackinaw Island State Park Commission. Members of the committee In- clude Clarice Freud of Detroit, University extension service pro- fessor, along with many other leaders in educational and civic organizations. Gov. Williams said three stu- dents representing Hope Colle, the University of Detroit, and this University will be announced later. Walter P. Reuther, President of the UAW-CIO, and Dean Kather- ine E. Faville of Wayne Univer- sity's College of Nursing, are na- tional members of the mid-cen- 0F International tension mounted today as the devastating havoc being wrought in Russia by an al- lusive Gargoyle in spotless evening clothes continued. The Gargoyle, peddling maga- zines bearing his name at 25 rubles per copy, is making his way across Russia, apparently bound for the port of Murmansk. * *.* A SEDITIOUS rumor has it that copies of this same "Gargoyle" will hit the University campus to- day. According to Igor P. Blatzno- vov, eminent Russian bureau- crat, "forged iron rails, factories, the earth itself blows away as this Gargoyle passes." "The magazines this demon un- loads upon the unsuspecting pea- sant population have caused wide- spread demoralization," he con- tinued. "No one," Blatznovov said, "who has read a copy of the Gargoyle has yet recovered his equilibrium or health." Discounting the rumor that the Gargoyle would be on campus to- day, Blatznovov revealed that "the Politboro suspects the Gargoyle is a United States robot placed in Russia for sabotage purposes de- spite the attempts of the NKVD to stop him." Meanwhile, Brain Duff, '50, Gar- goyle editor, blandly announced that the student magazine of wit and wisdom would go on sale to- day as scheduled. "Gargoyle hasn't failed us yet," he said. Teniiga To Speak at SL Meeting Wally Teninga, student member of the Board in Control of Inter- collegiate Athletics, will explain to Student Legislature's meeting tonight the duties of a student member of the Board and his re- sponsibilities to the student body. Teninga will answer any ques- tions and tell of his own experi- ences as a member at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. enabling the t Awarded 50 of milk-to b some future t vowed that he fight for the " er courts. "I still don't a Grade A trial cause the court the evidence." But as he lef was obvious ti was happy. "Drinks arec I STATE DEPARTMENT SPEAKER: Johnstone Discusses Student Aid Problems * * * Aid to Chinese . Fnlbright Awards . .. Chinese students at the Univer- sity need no longer be plagued by money worries-four million U.S. dollars stand behind their schol- astic efforts. William C. Johnstone, Jr., di- rector of the State Department's Office of Educational Exchange, ments for the grants will receive tuition and maintenance allow- ances as soon as their applications ' are received," he said.' * * * *...*. They will also be given expense money for the return trip to{ China-when that is possible. Theh Communist conquest of China cut Winners of Fulbright awards must be unofficial ambassadors of the United States as well as schol- ars, William C. Johnstone, Jr., said yesterday. Johnstone, who directs Ameri- ca's role in the exchange of "knowledge, ideas and people" with foreign countries, conferred with University officials at a Un- University applications are due Dec. 1 at the Rackham Building. Scholarships are offered to the United Kingdom, France, Luxem- bourg, Belgium and Italy, among other countries. Besides fulfilling academic and language requirements, Johnstone said that students seeking the awards must propose study proj-