CONSERVATIVE CED See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State &IiF r COOLER, RAIN VOL. LX, No. 42 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOV. 12, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS S Wolverines Seek Fourthd Ten Tr umph First Loop Win Sought By Hoosiers Indiana Threat Despite Record3 By PRES HOLMES (Sports Co-Editor) "Here comes the old man andf his kids again." Almost a year ago to the day, when Michigan defeated Indiana, 54-0, a tired and weary Hoosierf muttered this phrase as Al Wis-f tert led a platoon of Wolverines onto the gridiron late in the game. WELL, THE "old man" will be coming at them again this after- noon when Michigan meets In- diana in the Stadium in the sev- enteenth renewal of the rivalry. Wistert, who captains the Maize and Blue team this season and received All-American hon- ors last year, has been instru- mental in leading the Wolverinesr back to their winning ways since their two early season losses, and will be aiming for another victory today. Michiga} has won three in a row since losing to Northwestern, its first Conference loss in fifteen1 starts, and still has an excellent chance to take the'undisputed Big Ten crown for the third year in a row. INDIANA is still looking for its first Conference victory and has a season record of one win and six losses. Though the record is far from impressive the Hoosiers' one win is more than enough to cause followers of Michigan to worry. Indiana broke loose October 22 against a mighty Pittsburgh eleven and downed them 48-14,1 piling up more points in that one game than they had the whole previous season. The potential which Indiana Coach Clyde Smith had known was there all along operated with clockwork precision that day, and the Wolverines have been prepar- ing themselves this week in event Indiana should find themselves again. EVEN WITH the poor team rec- ord the Hoosiers rate high in the Conference individual statistics and Michigan will need almost split vision to keep the situation under control. Nick Sebek, the Hoosiers' stel- lar quarterback, although he possesses a negative 44 yards on the ground, places fifth in the total offense department with 438 yards. This passing finesse of Sebek's places him second in the passing division, less than a hundred yards behind Don Bur- son of Northwestern. Burson, however, has pitched in six See SEBEK, Page 3 Michigan Tech Drops ExNazi FromFaculty HJOUGHIION, Mich.-(P) -Tie State-owned Michigan College of Mining and Technology yesterday fired a German professor who ad- mittedly was once a Nazi Party member. The presence of the professor, E. V. Suttler, on the faculty was publicized by Rep. Bennett (R- Mich), who demanded that he be deported. "IT WOULD BE lamentable," Bennett said, "to permit this CONTROL NEEDED: UN Warned About Power of A-Bomb LAKE SUCCESS-)P-Assistant Secretary of State John D. Hickerson yesterday told the United Nations-and the Soviet Union especially-that countries which can level mountains in peacetime with atomic energy also can level cities in war. He implied that this is one of the best arguments for international control of the atom for peaceful uses. * * * * HICKERSON made a short reply in the special political committee of the UN Assembly to the 90-minute speech Thursday by Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky. The Russian delegate said the Russians are using the atom for such peaceful jobs as moving mountains, irrigating deserts and clearing jungles and Arctic wastes. Vishinsky was not on hand to hear the American reply. Commenting directly on Vishin- Ikv'ccli m that Russia uses Cook Blasts 'Harboring' Of IBearden DETROIT - (IP) - Governorj Williams, who refused to send a Georgia Negro back to a Southern prison, was the target of a hot blast from south of the Mason- Dixon line yesterday. Eugene Cook, Georgia's attorney general, said Williams had acted "in violation of our federal con- stitution." * * * HE REFERRED to the freeing, of Sam Bearden, 37, who escaped in 1934 from a Georgia prison.- In his seven years in Mich I gan, Bearden has lived an ex- emplary life, according to off- cial reports. After his arrest, Georgia de- manded extradition. Williams re- fused. THE WARRANT against Bear- den was dismissed yesterday by Recorder's Judge Gerald W. Groat. Cook urged Governor Herman Talmadge to take up "this flagrant and unconscionable violation of the principles of country" at the Southern Governors Conference Nov. 21 at Biloxi, Miss. Slayer Safe In Michigan Governor Not Forced To Extradite Escapee No judicial authority can re- view Governor G. Mennen Wil- liams' action or order him to sur- render custody of slayer Sam Bearden, according to Prof. Paul . Kauper of the Law School. "Article four of the Constitu- tion requires a governor to sur- I render a person who has fled from another state if a request is made by the executive authority of that state," he said. "BUT A SUPREME Court de- cision of 1861 states that the obli- gation to surrender a person is not a judicially enforceable duty," Prof. Kauper added. As a practical matter, if a governor refuses to extradite an escaped convict his discretion becomes the final word." The reason most frequently giv- en by other governors on similar occasions was that the escaped prisoner was being subjected to unduly severe punishment, Prof. Kauper said. "The Constitution prohibits 'cruel and unusual punishment'." GOVERNOR WILLIAMS, for the purpose of exercising his dis- + 1 th + +rr ctrovnrin r S ymca energylol l and atomic energy only in a vast land i reclamation program, Hickerson said: "Whether or not this is non- sense I will not say." HE TOLD the committee that while the United States had "not attempted anything so spectacular as mountain-moving," his coun- try had not neglected the peace- ful side of atomic energy. "For example," he said, "for some time the United States Atomic Energy Commission has been distributing either free or at very low cost, Isotopes for medical and research purposes to any and all countries which desire them." "To date I believe some thirty countries have received shipments. Soviet scientists are offered the same opportunities that have been given scientists of other countries, providing they comply with the conditions applicable to all." Rouind-Up By The Associated Press FRANKFURT - U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson arrived in Germany yesterday to hold secret conferences with American mili- tary chiefs and West German po- litical leaders. His visit was expected to mark a major relaxation of Western Al- lied restrictions on Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's West German government. * * * WASHINGTON-British and American diplomats predicted last night that Britain will give full diplomatic recognition to the Chinese Communist Govern- ment by the end of this year. PITTSBURGH-Violence broke out yesterday in the struggle be- tween right and left wing elements of the 13,700-member United Elec- trical Workers local at East Pitts- burgh. * * * WASHINGTON - Kaiser-Fra- zer Corp. said last night it got col- lateral for a $44,400,000 Recon- struction Finance Corp. loan by using part of the loan itself. The Kaiser statement followed an assertion by Cyrus Eaton, Cleveland financier, that $16,000,- 000 of the RFC business expansion loan was to be used to pay off loans to private banks. Picked For Cabinet.Post To Succeed Krug On December 1 WASHINGTON - () - Presi- dent Truman yesterday selected Oscar L. Chapman for Secretary of the Interior as he accepted the resignation of Julius A. Krug in a warm note which overlooked re- ported differences on policy. Chapman, 53, will climax 16 2 years service withvthe department when he takes over December 1. He has been undersecretary since 1946 after three years as assistant secretary. THE HEFTY 6-foot-4 Krug re- signed in an exchange of friendly letters with Mr. Truman. Krug's stated reason: "We have done a pretty good job of accomplishing our objectives." Agreeing, Mr. Truman re- called that Krug had often said he wanted to quit and this left no alternative but to accept his resignation "reluctantly and with sincere regret" His letter began "Dear Cap," which is Krug's nickname. There was little, if any, hint in the letter of reported cooling re- lations between Mr. Truman and the man hehnamed in March, 1946. to take the place vacated by Harold L. Ickes. * e , TRUMAN in recent weeks has frowned on some ideas of the de- partment's reclamation bureau. and he had vetoed a Navajo re- habilitation bill because it had an amendment making the Indians subject to state law. Krug was said to have okayed this amendment. Chapman, who will be given a recess appointment subject to Senate confirmation next Jan- uary, told reporters that he has no changes in mind in policy or personnel. Chapman said at a news con- ference that for many years he has favored the Columbia Valley Authority, a vast development proposal backed by the Admini- stration and which is a subject of controversy in Congress. HE EXPRESSED interest in de- veloping natural resources, par- ticularly in the West. Bands Salute Sousa T oday * Massed bands from 29 Michigan high schools will join the Univer- sity Band in a special half-time tribute to composer John Philip Sousa at today's Indiana-Michi- gan football game. The 1,850 bandsmen will make two huge formations reaching from goal line to goal line, spell- ing out the words "Bands" and "Sousa" to the music of three well known Sousa marches. Flags of Boy Scout troops serv- ing as ushers in the stadium will be massed on the field along with school flags during the playing of the closing number, "Stars and Stripes Forever." -Daily- mar i NEWSMEN VIEW ENGRAVER-Members of the University Press Club of Michigan examine The Daily's Fairchild engraver in the Student Publications building. A representative of the Fairchild company explains' the workings and features of .the machine which can engrave pictures on plastic in six minutes. Club members are visiting Ann Arbor for a state-wide convention. Griffin Hits, Iner't Britis h Competition Britain's "economic stagnation" was blamed on security seekers by Prof. Clare E. Griffin of the School of Business Administra- tion who spoke to yesterday morning's session of the Univer- sity Press Club. "The main difference between the United States and England is our emphasis upon competition," Prof. Griffin said. "England is placinghsecurityabove progress, although she clings to the no- tion that she can have both." * * * - PROF. GRIFFIN pointed out that the major issue of the world is between public attitudes and policies which are conducive to progress and those which create stagnation. "This is a broader cleavage than between socialism and capitalism," he declared. "Nei- ther the socialists nor the con- servatives in England believe in competition. It is rather a question of public or private ownership." At another session last night W. R. Walton, managing editor of The South Bend Tribune, told the Press Club that newspapers must look to their public relations if they aie to stop readers from pass- ing over the editorial for the comics page. "PUBLIC RELATIONS is doing a good job, and then getting cre- dit for it by telling your story," he said. Walton pointed out that "one-newspaper" towns have a particularly hard time making people believe the newspaper is unbiased. Effects of Atomic Energy Not Seen in Near Futu re Corporation, Union Agree On Pension Last Major Firm Returns To Work PITTSBURGH-(A'-The great 1949 steel strike ended last night with the signing of an Armistice Day peace pact between the United States Steel Corporation and the CIO United Steelworkers. Big Steel agreed to the Bethle- hem pattern and the union gave 177,000 striking employes their back to work signal. * * * THE SETTLEMENT, effective at midnight last night leaves only 138,000 strikers idle out of 513,- 000 who walked out October 1 in support of demands for company- paid pensions and insurance. U.S. Steel ordered mainten- ance men into its plants across the nation at once. Steel will start pouring from furnaces by Monday or Tuesday. Federal labor officials said in Washington that the settlement will return steel production to near normal and end the crisis. THE CONTRACT gives the co- poration's employes $100 mini- mum monthly pensions - includ- ing social security - when they reach 65 if they have 25 years ser- vice. The pact also provides a five cents an hour insurance plan. Insurance costs are divided equally between workers and employer. Wage rates, now averaging $1.65 an hour, are unchanged. * * * * THE U.S. STEEL contract tech- nically applies only to six major operating subsidiaries, employing 150,000 unionists, but the corpo- ration said the union agreed to direct all striking big steel em- ployes back to work. A company spokesman said it is understood all fabricating companies owned by U.S. Steel will sign similar agreements as a matter of course. Chairman Carroll R. Daugherty of President Truman's Steel Fact Finding Board said he was "de- lighted and very happy" over the settlement. "IT IS AN indication of what real collective bargaining can do when parties want to get to- gether and find a suitable solu- tion of their differences." Lewis To Try For Solution Of CoalStrike NEW YORK - () - John L. Lewis yesterday expressed willing- ness to try again next week for a coal dispute settlement but he adopted no conciliatory tone toward government mediators. The United Mine Workers presi- dent told newsmen he would meet next week with Cyrus S. Ching, director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, "or any- body else," in an effort to reach a settlement. * * * CHING SAID in Washington, after learning of Lewis' statement, that he has no present plans to arrange new coal peace meetings. Revolutionaryr changes in our way of life caused by atomic en- ergy are far from "just around the corner" according to a panel of faculty members which discussed the subject yesterday before a ses- sion of the University Press Club. Held in Rackham Amphithea- tre, the panel was made up of a nuclear physicist, Prof. Robert Pidd of the physics department, a radiologist, Prof. Fred J. Hodges of the medical school and an eco- nomist, Prof. William Haber. * * * UNIVFMSITY Vice - President Hinsdale Men Get Thank You Fromt Biggie + Marvin L. Niehuss acted as the moderator of the discussion. They discussed, from the viewpoint of their respective fields, the question "How Will Atomic Energy Affect Our Lives?" .1. Immediate radical progress is unlikely since no basic discoveries in the field have -been made since the war's end, Pidd said, although he admitted that some may be made at any time. But even if a discovery were made at once, Pidd declared that it would be many years before the engineers could apply it in a man- ner which would affect the pub- lic directly. 2. THOUGH MEDICAL re- search has been much speeded by the use of isotopes taken from atomic piles as tracers in the study of living processes, Hodges said this work had only begun. Researchers have no idea where their work may lead them at the present time, he said. 3. "Profound" changes will modify our economic system, Haber declared, "Every great scientific discovery has had a definite effect on our economic structure," he recalled. Union To Operate Ticket Sale Booth The Union's regular football ticket resale booth will operate from 10 a.m. to noon today, sell- ing tickets for the Michigan-In- diana game. All tickets will be sold at the standard $3.60 price, with the pro- ceeds in full going to those who turned the tickets in for resale. Hinsdale House men, who sent the Michigan State Spartans a good-luck floral horseshoe before the Spartans' unsuccessful tilt with Notre Dame Saturday, re- ceived a note of thanks from Big- gie Munn, Spartan mentor, bar- ing Munn's views just who could beat the Irish. "Outside of the University of Michigan," Munn said, "the only team that could perhaps beat them is the Philadelphia Eagle team." THE ONE-FOOT-HIGH horse- shoe sent by the Hinsdale men was made of green and white carna- tions. A ribbon on it read "Good Luck." Munn thanked the men for "a beautiful gesture on your part" and explained, "We gave all we had but we didn't have enough." I THERMOMETER DIP DROPS PITCH: Temperature Tamp ers With Tooter's Tone An operator, spokesman, Jo- seph E. Moody, president of the Southern Coal Producers' As- sociation, commented that "un- less Lewis is more specific and shows some sign of modifying his previous position, there is no use in resuming negotia- tions." The UMW head reiterated his explanation of his failure to show up for a Washington meeting called by Ching Thursday, ex- plaining he was trying to get the I By PHOEBE FELDMAN It's an ill wind that blows upon the man blowing the flute. Tf We fr,,ririWe a ha. Tf iwe This is caused by the instrument expanding and contracting with the temperature. Th.- Pxnenannn en ntn.an_ only metal wind instruments, which can withstand weather changes more readily than wooden nn Panln tions, and a hot violinist will find his music box getting rather' warm-and lower pitched-too. Stirkv weather is a problem too. on cue, though, claiming the only reason for his finickiness was his keys' stickiness. But there's a situation in P