RFC ANTI-TRUST ACTION See Page 4 Yl r e Latest Deadline in the State 4br t t CLOUDY, SNOW Latest Deadline in the State cLOUDY. SNOW _...._...... s.. . ,,.. a ..... , ..... VOL. LX, No. 44 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1949 PRICE FIVE VF.'KT q 1e#A a A Ya vi4 t 11 I _-_ _-_ _ German Self Aid Proposed By Acheson Secretary Ends Three Day Tour BERLIN - (/P) - Secretary of State Dean Acheson told Germans yesterday the United States cannot export freedom and prosperity to nations which lack courage and . will to help hemselves. The failure of China to with- stand Communism proved that, he said. THEREFORE divided Germany Student Gripes Sought by LS&A By AL BLUMROSEN Have you Literary College students got any gripes or suggestions about your college? If you have, now is the time to get them off your chest. And there is a good chance that something may be done about them through The Daily's "If I were Dean of the Literary College" contest. Student suggestions are slowly trickling into The Daily, as the contest goes into its third day. The best ideas will be reprinted in the columns of The Daily and all suggestions and complaints will be forwarded to Dean Hay- wadd Kenniston who last week said he would welcome any ideas from students on the curriculum of the Literary College. * * * Q Dean Kenniston said yesterday U.S., Sovii Western Powers el4 To Stop Hate must exert all its "spirit, mind anc energy" in its battle for libert and recovery. Such an effort wil always win American support and tangible help, the secretary de clared. Acheson wound up a three- day tour of Western Germany here in Berlin where East and West collide. For the third time since he came inito Germany from Paris, the Sec- retary of State told newsmen that High Commissioner John J. Mc- Cloy makes the policy statements for the United States in Germany. HE GAVE NO clues to the deci- sions reached in Paris last week by the American, British and French Foreign Ministers in their conference on Germany. His emphasis on this was viewed as a direct answer to British criticism of McCloy over the question of ending the dis- mantling of German industries and other economic problems. He said McCloy has the full con- fidence and backing of the Presi- dent of the United States and the State Department. ACHESON TOLD a news con- ference the world is beset by two types of problems: y. 1. Russian aggressive tactics. 2. Economic ills. "A group of powers led by the Soviet Union is attempting to make thrusts in various directions --which interfere with the whole environment of freedom and lib- erty which many nations still have and intend to keep. Now, these thrusts have to be met where they ocur," he declared. * * * "THEN THERE are problems which exist whether the Soviet Union existed or not. Those are the problems of economic recov- ery in Britain, France, in Ger- many, in Southeast Asia, the en- tire Middle East. On the China question he said: "The United States can help those people who are determined to help themselves. I was continu- ally irritated by a phrase which was going around the States. Peo- ple talked about the failure of American policy in China. It was not the failure of Amedican pol- icy. It was the failure of Chinese policy in China." Nora Hunt, 'U Voice Teacher, Dies At 84 Nora Crane Hunt, University voice instructor from 1903 until her retirement in 1941, died yes- terday morning at her S. Forest Ave. home. Eighty-four years old Sunday, Miss Hunt had also served for the rpast eight years as corresponding secretary of the School of Music Alumni Society. SHE HAD established a bril- liant reputation as local lecturer and concert artist as well as teach- er. Miss Hunt finished graduate work from the music school in 1903, when she joined the facul- ty as voice teacher. Previously, hse had studied voice and choral conducting at London and Co- lumbia University. One of the founders of Alpha chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, na- tional musical society originating in Ann Arbor, Miss Hunt was di- rector of the University Girls' Glee Club from 1910 to 1935. Funeral arrangements have not yet been completed. City Council Okays . 1 n - - .- -Daily-Bill Hampton World News Round- Up1 WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court agreed yesterday to decide whether aliens jailed by United States authorities abroad can seek release in Federal courts here. The Justice Department and the Army are fighting against any such authority, which they con- tend-would -'impede the-orderly administration of enemy- occupied, areas"and throw all U.S. war crimes convictions into confusion. * * * WALHALLA, S.C.-An aroused public spurred police yesterday in a search for two white slayers of a respected Negro farmer. The farmer, Michael Rice, 69, bled to death after the two men blasted him with a shotgun in his home aturday night. They removed his money belt contain- ing $400 to $500 in savings. * * * COLUMBUS, O. - The good- night rebuff -of June Crafton to Ohio State freshman James Heer after a gay homecoming dance was called the key to the "probable cause" for Heer's sudden desire to get hold of a gun and subse- quent killing of fraternity brother James McKeown, by police yester- day. y.* * * DETROIT -- The CIO has named Walter Reuther to head its delegation at an Interna- tional Conference of Trade Un- ions in London starting Nov. 28. * * * LANSING - Answering of 4.ial Georgia criticisms of his refusal to permit extradition of a Detroit Negro, Governor Williams said yesterday he would have taken the stand "for anyone regardless of his, race." race.* * * LONDON-Prince Charles, sec- ond in line for the British throne, celebrated his first birthday yes- terday.] that he heartily approved of the contest. "WE REALLY want to know what the students think about their education,'' he said. "In the past they have taken little inter- est." He cited the actions of the student council at Cambridge, which publishes a full report on the state of education there every two or three years, as a goal to Lz imed at. "I hope we can get some organi- zation to take an interest in this," Dean Kenniston added. HE SAID that most of the recent educational changes at Cambridge came as a result of this student action rather than through fac- ulty suggestions. It has always puzzled me that Michigan undergraduates showed so little interest . . . in the kind of education they get," Dean Kenniston added. "We may not be able to act on all the suggestions we get," he said, "but we will know what the stu- dents are thinking." All suggestions should be mailed to "The Editor, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Ar- bor" Radio Comic To Highlight VarsityNight Robert Q. Lewis, noted CBS comedian, will highlight the an- nual Varsity Night show as the master of ceremonies, at 8:15 p.m. Friday at Hill Auditorium. A Michigan alumnus, Lewis gained national popularity last summer when he substituted for Arthur Godfrey on CBS. He will start his own television show this month. * * * SPONSORED BY the University Bands, Varsity Night entertain- ment will feature two other pro- fessional acts, Fred Maher, ven- triloquist, and Margaret King, ac- cordian player. In addition to several band numbers, student contributions to the program will include songs by the Vaughn House Trio and the Travelers' Quartet. Carol Neilson, coloratura soprano, and Carl Ryding, pianist, will also perform. Magicians Robert Shetler and John Purvis will furnish the "mag- ical twist" for the show. Tickets cost 65 cents and will be on sale all week at the Union, League, Administration building, Harris Hall, Burr Patterson and Auld Co., Liberty Music Shop, Grinell Brothers, and Lyon and Healy, Inc. THE STATEMENT called the motion itself "innocuous," claim- ing that it required little more than a token show on the part of each fraternity. "That it failed of passage- apparently because of some members' fear that it might 'show that something is rotten in the fraternity'-is highly dis- couraging to students\ hoping that affiliates could cleanse themselves of these undemo- cratic clauses," the statement continued. Much of the present inaction upon this and other issues could have been avoided had independ- ent students voted in strength i the past, the AIM Cabinet claimed. "DISCRIMINATION .has been handled with kid gloves largely be- cause of over-representation of af- filiated groups in the student gov- ernment," the statement charged, adding, AIM's citizenship committee pledged itself to continue in assist- ing independent candidates, "who live in non-discriminating housing units, and are under no pressure from their constituents to protect discrimination, so that positive constructive action may be taken upon this issue by SL and/or other responsible groups." Today Ends Union Sale Of Play Tickets Tickets for the Union's "Mr. Roberts" theatre party, scheduled for Thursday evening, will be sold for the last time today, in the Un- ion lobby. The Union. box office will be open all day for this purpose. * * * HOWEVER, the trip is threat- ened with cancellation unless enough tickets are sold by 5 p.m. to cover expenses, according to Jim Callison, of the Union executive council. ."Mr. Roberts," one of the most popular of the current Broadway comedy successes, is currently being played at a De- troit theatre. Tickets are priced at $4.50. This figure includes both theatre ad- mission and round trip bus fare, Callison said. IF THE TRIP is taken, buses, will leave at 6:30 p.m. Thursday; from the Union to take the group, directly to the theatre. They will return to Ann Arbor shortly after midnight, according to Callison.- Women who want tickets may apply for late permission by leav- ing their names with the Union ticket agent, he added. Accident Victim's Condition Serious Clarence Doster, '51E, according to the latest hospital report, is still AIM Blasts Fraternities' Bias Inaction Call Support For Independent Bloc AIM's Exectuive Cabinet last night accused fraternities of gen- eral apathy regarding the racial discrimination issue, and called on voters to support independent SL candidates as a remedy for current inaction on the problem. In a prepared statement the Cabinet said, "The citizenship committee of AIM regards the tabling at the last IFC meeting of the motion requiring fraternity chapters to press for elimination of discriminatory clauses as being an indication of general apathy among fraternities regarding this issue." BACK TO THE PITS-Miners of the Peabody Coal Company, Springfield, Ill., return to work until Nov. 30 along with some 380,000 soft coal workers. The order was issued by John L. Lewis, president of the UMW, for the "public convenience." * * ,* Coal Disputes eadlocked, The potent coal dispute remained deadlocked yesterday and the government hinted that it is getting ready to take a hand in promot- ing a settlement. A crisis also appeared imminent in Atlantic and Gulf Coast shipping. The Federal Mediation service said last night a widespread strike of shipping in the two areas seems probable at midnight tonight. The strike threat involves a dispute between ship operators and the AFL Ship Officers Union. * * * * THE STEEL STRIKE continued to fade slowly. Additional small firms settled with the CIO Steelworkers' Union on the Bethlehem formula of company-paid pensions<- WellStacked Fame seeks out those whom it chooses to honor in strange places. Deep in the stacks in Clem- ents library word came to Cath- erine Drinker Bowen that her new book "John Yankee" has been chosen as a Book-of-the- MonthaClub selection. It was the author's first visit here. Previously she had re- ceived photostatic copies of rare books andhistorical mater- ials to aid her research. The book, a biography of John Adams, will be issued next spring. FBI Relates. Account Of Coplon Nab NEW YORK - (IP) - An FBI agent testified yesterday that Jud- ith Coplon and Valentin Gubitchev were arrested because they tried to shake off FBI men in a pursuit rivalling a Hollywood spy thriller. Agent Robert R. Granville was the witness. He traced move by move theseven-car and 21-agent dragnet that finally closed in on the government girl and the Soviet engineer last March 4 in the sha- dow of New York's Third Avenue elevated railroad. MISS COPLON, 28, a former Justice Department employe, and Gubitchev, 32, now suspended from his United Nations post, are charg- ed with conspiring to steal secret U.S. documents for transmittal to the Russians. Their trial was scheduled to begin yesterday. Federal Judge Sylvester A. Ryan agreed, how- ever, to a pre-trial hearing on a defense motion to force return of papers and other property taken from Miss Coplon. Her lawyer, Archibald Palmer, contends that the arrest was il- legal. * * * GRANVILLE, the first witness, said: "Because of their attempts to elude surveillance . . . it was my opinion that they had passed or attempted to pass classified (sec- ret) material. "It was my opinion that the safety of the United States was involved and that their arrest was justified." Student 'Dies After IM Bout Eugene Potter '52L, 23 years old, died yesterday at the Intramural building shortly after a round of boxing. Cause of Potter's death is not known. Dr. E. C. Ganzhorn, Washtenaw County coroner, said an autopsy would be held today. * * * DR. CHARLES NORD, Potter's brother-in-law, said the athlete was in "excellent health" before he died. Police reports said Potter was cooling off after practice spar- ring with an instructor when he collapsed. This was Potter's first year at the University. He transferred from Drake where he was a mem- ber of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Nord said the funeral would be held in Des Moines. Officials reported there was no indication Potter had suffered any blow during the workout. Urge Drive- Austin Offers Twelve Point Plan of Peace Group Approves Parley on Atom LAKE SUCCESS - W) - The United States and Western Pow- ers called on the Soviet Union yes- terday to stop its "campaign of hate" and cooperate in a 12-point program for peace. Warren . Austin, chief United States delegate, put before the 59-nation Political Committee of the U.N. Assembly a joint U.S.- British resolution reaffirming be- lief in the U.N. Charter and list- ing 12 essentials for peace. France quickly endorsed the resolution. AUSTIN DEMANDED that the' political committee kill forthwith a three-point resolution presented by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky. Austin said if Vishinsky want- ed to cooperate with the world the Soviet resolution was not necessary; if he did not intend to cooperate, another peace pact among the five Great Powers- the United States, Russia, Bri tain, France and China-would be a mockery. Speaking solemnly and with ob- vious feeling, Austin gave this peace recipe to Vishinsky and the Soviet Bloc. * * * "IF THE SOVIET government wishes to. undertake measures fqr strengthening peace, the means are at its instant command. Stop your campaign of hate against the non-Cominform world. For- sake your doctrine that the non- Cominform world is your enemy. Let your people meet withours and discuss together our common problems. Lift your Tron Curtain and you will strengthen peace." In the 59-nation special Politi- cal Committee of the Assembly, the Western-backed proposal by France and Canada for the six atomic powers to continue talks was approved, 48 to 5 (the So- viet Bloc) with five abstentions. It now goes to the Assembly, where final approval is certain. The committee turned down the Soviet proposal for the 11-nation atomic energy commission to re- sume its suspended meetings and work out atomic conventions along lines of the Soviet plan. The vote on the principal part of the Soviet resolution was 43 against, 6 for and 9 abstaining. This plan has been turned down before by the Assembly and the Atomic Energy Commission. Fraternity Put On Probation The University Sub-committee on Discipline yesterday fined Theta Delta Chiyfraternity $500 and placed the chapter enproba- tion for an indefinite period for "numerous violations of Univer- sity regulations" at a TDX party. The committee found that the charges made "are substantiati- ally true" and that "the house of- ficers entrusted with the responsi- bility for the proper conduct of such affairs were very lax and in- competent in the discharge of their responsibilities." Because alumni members pres- ent at the disciplinary hearing gave "assurance of a desire and a detF-mination to cooperate in see- ing to it that violations of Univer- sity regulations shall not occur in the future," the committee ruled that termination of the probation- ary period may be applied for on March 1, 1950. Issue Urgent Call and contributory insurance. A number of firms still have made no move to end the steel strike, but they were expected to fall in line before long, In the coal stalemate, Cyrus Ching, head federal mediator, con- ferred yesterday with John R. Steelman, President Truman's la- bor assistant. Afterwards Ching said the government probably would not take any action for 24 or 48 hours. * * * IF THE GOVERNMENT steps into the coal picture, it may be President Truman's appointment of a fact-finding board to recom- mend a settlement. John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers' Union, let it be known he was waiting in Washington for overtures from coal operators. Meanwhile, coal production went ahead at full speed under Lewis' order of last Wednesday. The order sent 380,000 striking soft coal diggers back to the pits until Nov. 30 so that empty coal bins might be filled against severe win- ter weather. Keniston To Talk Dean Hayward Keniston, of the literary college, will address the Undergraduate Psychology Club at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. 3G of the Union. Dean. Keniston will speak on "Obtaining a Liberal Education in a Specialized School." Ta o To Sing Fifth Concert Tomorrow Italo Tajo, basso, will give the fifth Choral Union concert 8:30 tomorrow at Hill Auditorium. Well known in this country through his appearances in the opera-movies, "The Barber of Se- ville," "Lucia," and "Elisir d'Am- ore," Tajo has also been dubbed "a singer of distinction" for his recordings by the "Saturday Re- view of Literature." * * * MAKING HIS debut at the Tea- tro Regio of Turin in 1935, he was engaged by conductor Fritz Busch to sing at the Glyndebourne Opera Festival in England. He first appeared in this coun- try with the Chicago Opera in 1335, singing all the major roles in his limited engagement. Returning to Italy to fulfill op- eratic engagements, he was re-en- gaged for the Glyndebourne Fes- tival. * * * HE RETURNED to the U.S. in 1948, appearing as Ba.ilio in the "Barber of Seville" with the San Francisco Opera. Tickets for the concert may be purihaset at the Choral Union of- fice, Burton Tower. VOTES TO DECIDE: Twelve Students Seek Executive Board Seats Twelve students will be vying for four positions on two Univer- sity executive boards in the stu- dent elections Nov. 21 and 22. Biggest chance for election will be for the eight candidates for the Board in Control of Student Publications, with three available positions to campaign for. THE FOUR candidates for Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics will have the greatest odds to buck for the one seat with appointments, sees who gets paid and settles any squabbles that come up between the publications and outside organizations, Krauss added. THE BOARD even provides for and approves publications parties, he said. The Athletic Board has two students, each elected every other year for two-year terms. This Board, like the Publica- PERSONALITY PLUS: Coloredookmak To Make Debut Bookmarks designed to fit your personality will make their debut on campus today. add spice to the dryest of books," Dick Webber, '52E, Society public- bookmarks colored to suit the personality of the reader would