'IF I WERE DEAN... See Page 4 it 4rn1 Latest Deadline in the State tii CLOUDY, WNDY VOL. LX, No. 45 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 16, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS AIM Acts To Protect Independents Council Agrees Unanimously By JAMES GREGORY AIM's Executive Council last night took action to protect inde- pendent men against "any un- just enforcement of a University rule." The Council voted unanimously that "should any unjust enforce- ment of a University rule concern- ing an alleged wrong of an in- dependent man be brought to the light of the AIli Council, an inves- tigation of the enforcement should be made by the appropriate com- mittee." IF THE enforcement discrep- ancy is found to exist, the motion continued, "an official letter of disapproval should be sent to Men's Judiciary Council, The Michigan Daily and the Univer- sity Sub-committee on Discipline." AIM President Walt Hansen, '50, declared, "I think there's a need for AIM to make its influ- ence felt in favor of independ- ents, who are often unrepresent- ed when they get into tough spots." It was pointed out at the meet- ing that fraternities facing the disciplinary committee often are supported by their alumni groups, while independent men have no similar recourse, due to lack of organization. AFTER THE meeting AIM pass- ed out political handouts to inde- pendent candidates for various student offices. Three forms were distributed. One lists all independent candi- dates and their place of resi- dence. Another lists independent can- didates for Board in Control of Student Publications and Board in Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics, giving information on their qualifications. A third handout attacks domin- ation of student politics by fra- ternities and sororities. The handouts plead for a large independent vote and urge, "Vote Independent!" Varsity Night To Feature VarietyShow Michigan Bands Will SponsorProgram A spirited program to be offered by outstanding professional and student talent at this year's Var- sity Night at 8:15 p.m. Friday, will launch in memorable fashion the final weekend of an unforget- able football season. The traditional program at Hill t Auditorium is sponsored by the University Bands. * * * ROBERT Q. LEWIS, Michigan alumnus and well known Columbia Broadcasting System humorist, will provide the laughs of the eve- ning as the master of ceremonies. Ventriloquist Fred Maher will entertain the crowd with the antics of his wooden "helper," Skinny Dugan, a good friend of Charlie McCarthy. Margaret King, professional ac- cordianist from Detroit, who plans to enter the University's music school next year, will present sev- eral selections. ** * THE UNIVERSITY Concert Band, under the direction of Prof. William D. Ravelli, will have a prominent part in the program. Included in the five student acts will be songs by the Vaughn House Trio, Stanley Challis, Wil- liam Brehmn, and Donald Srull. The Travelers' Quartet will also present some vocal harmony. Robert Elson, Wilber Perry, Gil- bert Vickers and Hugh C. Brown are members of this group. Two other muscial acts will be performed by Carol Neilson, a coloratura soprano, and Carleton S. Ryding, a pianist. * * * TWO MAGICIANS, Robert A.1 Result of Mission Pleases Acheson Secretary Reports On New German Measures Worked Out By Big Three WASHINGTON - (W) - Returning from a week-long visit to Europe, Secretary of State Dean Acheson yesterday expressed himself as being highly pleased with the results of his mission. He reported yesterday to President Truman on new German measures worked out by the Big Three foreign ministers in Paris. * * * * I HIS TWO-DAY conference with foreign ministers Bevin of Britain and Schuman of France, he said, was "entirely harmonious" and the three reached "full agreement." In advance of his call at the White House late in the day, Acheson declined to discuss in detail any of the accomplishments of the Paris meeting or his ITALO TAJO . ..Sings Here Today NVoted Basso Will Sing ~4t fill Tonight Italo Tajo, basso, will sing a program of 15 vocal works in his Choral Union concert at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Opening the program will be three works by Mozart: "Mentre ti lascio, o figlia," "Un bacio di mano," and "Madamina," from "Don Giovanni." "Caro mio ben" by Giordani, "Come raggio di sol" by Caldera and Pergiosi's "Nina" are the next three works scheduled for the concert. NEXT IN THE program is Glin- ka's "The Truth is Suspected" from "Life of the Tsar," Moussorg- sky's "The Song of the Flea" and "The Two Grenadiers" by Schu- man. Two other works to be sung by Tajo are "La mort de Don Quichotte" from "Don Qui- chotte" by Massenet, and "Vous qui faites l'endormie" from Gou- nod's "Faust." Concluding the concert are "Russian Picnic" by Harvey En- ders, "Pilgrim's Song" by Tschai- kowsky, and "Three for Jack" by Squire. * * * TAJO HAS BEEN acclaimed throughout the country by music critics. The "New York Times" called him "a true basso cantante, whose singing will remind you of Ezio Pinza," and Chicago papers termed him "one of the most ad- mirable exponents of bass roles seen and heard in recent years." Tickets for the concert can be purchased at the Choral Union offices, Burton Tower, and at the Hill Auditorium Box Office one hour before the performance. U Committee Places Phi Chii On Probation The Univesity Sub-committee on Discipline yesterday fined Phi Chi medical fraternity $200 and placed it on probation for the rest of the semester, for holding a par- ty at which liquor was consumed. Dean of Students Erich A. Wal- ter defended the committee's ac- tions in this and other cases, claiming it acted "in the interests of the students." DEAN WALTER'S statement said. "The University's policy in regard to liquor is strict, and we attempt to enforce it in the inter- views on the situation in West Germany. Shortly before his arrival, how- ever, Chancellor Conrad Adenauer announced at Frankfurt that the three Western Powers had agreed to slow down dismantling of key German industries and laid out other measures which would have the effect of building up the Ger- man economy and giving the new German state a greater voice in its internal and international affairs. * * * ADENAUER said that the three Western governments had agreed to invite Germany into many in- ternational organizations, to per- mit a bigger German merchant fleet, to allow German trade con- sulates in foreign countries and to study the problem of easing the consequences of the continued ex- istence of a state of war between Germany and the Western allies. At his regular weekly news conference this morning, Ache- son is expected to discuss his European mission and go into other matters awaiting his at- tention here-notably Far East- ern questions. Acheson was met at the airport by President Truman and a score of top State Department officials and western European ambassa- dors when his four engined special plane, a double decked stratocruis- er, set down at 1:30 p.m. FDR's Son Will Run For Governorship LOS ANGELES - (A) - James Roosevelt, the late FDR's eldest son, last night announced his can- didacy for the Democratic and Republican nominations for Gov- ernor of California in the 1950 pri- maries. At the same time he made a move for White House support. HE SAID he will do his best to bring President Truman's "fair deal" to California. Asked at a press conference if that meant that he approved of the "Fair Deal" program in its entirety, Roosevelt said he did. He also told the press confer- ence that while he disapproved of the California law which per- mits a candidate to file for the nomination by more than one party, he will do so. Thus he will be running not only as a Democrat-with the par- ty his father restored to power in 1932-but as a Republican. *. * * HE SAID his mother, Mrs. Elea- nor Roosevelt, will not be asked to participate in his campaign, Announcement of his candidacy was to be repeated on two radio broadcasts later last night, In this speech, he said: "Every resident of California who is willing and able to work has the right to find a job at a fair wage and under desirable working conditions." Senator Taft Blasts Entire Truman Plan 16 Million Dollar Deficit Forseen WASHINGTON - (') - Senator Taft (R-Ohio) said yesterday that adoption of President Truman's program next year would add more. than $16,000,000,000 to the federal deficit and lead America to "stag nation and austerity." Taft attacked "the entire Tru- man program" in a statement from his office here. The Ohioan, chair- man of the Senate Republican policy committee, was in his home state pressing his campaign for reelection in 1950. * * * "WE FACE a deficit of $5% bil- lion," Taft said. "Yet the Truman program would add to that $6 billion for compulsory medicine, $6 billion for the Brannan plan, $4 billion for UMT and other bil- lions for services of all kinds." His references were to the sys- tem of compulsory health insur- ance frequently advocated by the President, to the "production payment" plan for keeping up farmers' income sponsored by Secretary of Agriculture Bran- nan, and to a long-pending pro- posal for universal military training - "UMT." Taft asked in his statement: "How can we increase our fed- eral tax 50 per cent without chok- ing the development of all busi- ness expansion and creating vast unemployment?" PRESIDENT Truman, Taft con- tinued, argues that anybody who "objects to the expense of any of his plans is a reactionary." Disputing this, Taft said op- ponents "are convinced that only a continuation of our present system of liberty and particular- ly liberty from government con- trols can reach the goals of the Utopia which he describes." "The Truman program based on dictation by government of the daily lies of the American peo- ple can only turn America back to stagnation and austerity," Taft added. * * * THE REPUBLICAN Senator said anyone who "reads President Truman's speech in Minneapolis on November 3 must realize that he intends in 1950 to ask for a Congress which will adopt the en- tire Truman program." World News Ro id-U By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - President Truman served notice last night that there will be "no retreat and no retirement" in the fight for his civil rights program. The American people, he de- clared, "are awakened as never be- fore to the true meaning of equal- ity." "We are going to continue to advance in our program of bring- ing equal rights and equal oppor- tunities to all citizens," he said. * * * AMBALA, India-Two Hindu Nationalists were hanged secret- ly at the century-old Ambala jail yesterday for the assassina- tion of Mohandas K. Gandhi, the Hindu spiritual leader they regarded as a bar to a united India. * * * LAKE SUCCESS - Red China yesterday disowned Nationalist China's delegation to the United Nations in the opening move of a campaign apparently aimed at taking over the big power seat as- signed to the receding Chungking government. Shipping Extend resent -Daily-V ENGINEERS-Speakers at the meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Enginee night in the Bus. Ad. Bldg. Left to right are Hen 'y Walker, chairman of the Detroit sec A.SME., Dean Carr of Wayne University, Dean Fr aund of the University of Detroit, Dea of the University, Dean Miller of Michigan State, and Alfred Pasina, regional director of t Moe Opportunity or Engineers Strike "Engineers can look forward to increased opportunities as com- peting industries demand their services to improve productioti methods," Dean L. G. Miller of Michigan State College's School of Engineering said yesterday. Addressing the American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers; Dean Miller pointed out that in- creased complexity in technology has created a higher demand for engineers. DEAN IVAN CRAWFORD of the University engineering college pre- sided over the meeting at which C. T. Freund, Dean of the College of Engineering, University of De- troit and Arthur R. Carr, Dean of Wayne University's College of Engineering were also present. Varied Platforms to Highlight Approaching Student Elections By PETER HOTTON Platforms advocating everything from more appropriations from the University to the Student Leg- islature to no hours for women are carrying candidates forward to the fateful Monday and Tuesday of student elections. More than 100 students are fighting their way into less than 40 positions available on SL, J-Hop Committee, and Boards in Control of Student Publications and In- tercollegiate Athletics. * * * OTHER SOMEWHAT less im- probable candidate promises in- clude a long Thanksgiving holiday, the removal of the liquor ban, more cooperation and correlation within SL itself and representation of different campus councils in Student Legislature. As a service to the students, the Legislature,. representing 400 students for each member, has come a long way in the three short years of its existence. At the beginning of its fourth year last September, the Legisla- ture was responsible for block seating at football games. A dele- gation was appointed which per- suaded the Athletic Administra- tion to drop its "You can't sit with your friends" policy at the games. * * * ONE OF THE biggest recent SL accomplishments has been the Michigan Plan. Through SL's original measure and further agi- tation, the University Student Af- fairs Committee passed a resolu- tion to bar all future organizations from campus if they had discrim- ination clauses in their constitu- tions. The idea supports an educa- tidinal process by which new non- discriminatory organiza- tions would help teach others to follow suit. The Human Relations Commit- tee, an outgrowth of the measure, is now discussing ways and means of getting different racial and re- ligious groups, as well as campus organizations, together in a step toward further elimination of dis- crimination. THE IDEA spread to National Student Association, which passed it at its national Congress last August. This year, in addition to the student experts, Homecoming Dance and underwriting all pep rallies and Tug Week, SL has worked for a seat on the Calen- dar Committee in an attempt to give students a break in holi- days, especially over Thanksgiv- ing. The long weekend cannot be a reality this year, but SL hopes to change things next fall. Another innovation of the Leg- islature this year is to control and approve signs and sign-carriers at football halftimes, to prevent il- legal or unattractive signs from swarming all over the field. All students are eligible to vote in the coming elections for the 59 SL candidates. Election officers emphasized that all graduate stu- dents can vote, as well as any stu- dent in the University. The necessity of e quiring more libera was also emphasiz Miller. Citing the MSC compels all students ing to enroll for two liberal arts curriculu centrating on techn the MSC dean stre portance of such a p engineer's subsequen life. * * "CLOSELY ALIGN problem of liberal ed question of just how tical or job training ing student should Freund said. "It is imperative gineering student quainted with the1 he will be dealing v kind of work he wi he declared. "In order to ach cooperative plan of gineering work give first hand informa field," Dean Freund * * BUT AN enginee does not necessarily receiving a Bachelo degree, according to f ord. Opera S( Compose] A meeting for pc writers for the 1950 will be held at 5 p.m Rm. 3G, Union. "Students who at ous meetings as wel ers with songs in t hearts are invited to Wyant, Union Opera man, said. * * BROADCAST MU offered to publish th of the 1950 Union O form, according to "There is also a p of the songs may b( sheet music form,"l Delayed; Contract Miners Pay yw Government ~ Assessment steel Production Starts to Pick Up By The Associated Press A threatened shipping strike by 2,000 AFL deck officers was post- poned late last night. Shortly before the midnight strike deadline, an agreement was . announced by government medi- ators. It extends for 30 days the con- tract between ship owners and the AFL Masters, Mates and Pilots Union. The ships affected operate from Gulf and Atlantic ports. THE GOVERNMENT, mean- Waly Barth while, collected $1,420,000 in fines rs, held last rom John L. Lewis and his United tion of the Wine Workers for prolonging their n Crawford 1948 strike. he A.S.M.E. Lewis also was confronted with )ossible White House action unless "e quickly settles the 1949 dispute. Seeii steel production picked up steadily as more furnaces went back into operation. Virtually all of the 500,000 striking CIO ngineers ac- United Steelworkers are expect- d educations ed to be back on the job within ;ed by Dean 10 days. Joining the back-to-work move- plan which ment yesterday were 17,000 more of engineer- workers employed by five firms. years in the m before con- THE CIO'S new International ical subjects, Union of Electrical, Radio and ssed the im- Machine Workers asked the Na- rogram in the tional Labor Relations Board for t professional collective bargaining. el tiQtI .at all major electrical ma nufacurin firms. It was a challenge fora test ,ED with this of strength with the left wing ucation is the United Electrical Workers Union, v much prac- recently expelled from the CIO. the engineer- The shipping strike was set by have," Dean 2,000 members of the AFL Mas- ters, Mates and Pilots Union. It that the en- would tie up at least 500 passen- become ac- ger and dry cargo vessels on At- type of men lantic and Gulf coast ports and with and the make 25,000 ship crew members ll be doing," idle. The major issue is rotating jobs. ieve this, the The union is asking that the pres- part time en- ent preferential hiring arrange- s the student ment be broadened so officers are tion in this chosen in rotation from a hiring explained. hall, spreading employment. r's education THE AGREEMENT announced end with his by the mediators is subject to ap- )r of Science proval by the Union's rank and file Dean Craw- and by 38 companies making up the employers' group. If either party rejects the peace plan, a strike is still possible as early as 0eKS noon, Nov. 22. Attorneys for the Mine Work- ers Union paid their 1948 strike fine in Federal District Court in Washington. The Union was atential music fined $1,400,000 and Lewis $20,- Union Opera 000 for contempt of court. How- i. tomorrow in ever, the Union previously had voted to pay Lewis' share. tended previ- j The Supreme Court recently de- ll as newcom- dined to hear the Union's appeal. heir heads or The fine was assessed by Fed- attend," Don eral Judge T. Alan Goldsborough. Music Chair- SIC INC. has ne entire score pera in albumOperation by Wyant. T) ossibility sometlj Surgeo e published in he said. A four-day-old baby boy under- went a three -and-one-half-hour operation yesterday afternoon at University Hospital for a "dead- end" esophagus. Dr. Cameron Haight, of the medical school, who performed the serious operation, reported the baby, Timothy Allan Roche, in "satisfactory condition" after the rumor that surgery. osing money, s * * * TWO PROBLEMS OBSCURE SOLUTION: Willow Village Disposition Under Discussion (EDITOR'S NOTE: In light of the present controversy surrounding dis- position of Willow Run Village, this article attempts to explain actions of Federal officials, county authorities and Village residents, in addition to supplying background information.) By DON KOTITE Two fundamental problems lay behind the welfare of Willow Run and village residents, the rumor was squelched. Several ideas for disposition were aired; the Commission suggested demolition "as soon as possible" and destruction of the waiting lists. Nothing definite was decided. local governmental units and the Willow Run Resident Council the opportunity to appear before its executive commitee to outline their proposals. THIS COMMITTEE, the "offi- cial negotiating body," would then county outline a policy for liquida- tion of the area. And we as a county realize it should be or- derly, keeping in line with the best interests of the county and the residents as well as other inter- ested groups," he added. * * * REPLYING to a Willow Run is 1 Schwartz said that to determine this one must take into account the fact that the government does not determine amortization and interest in its accounting. "All it does is balance the in- BORN AT Deaconess Hospital in Milwaukee last Friday, the baby was brought 400 miles by automo- bile in an incubator to Ann Arbor yesterday morning. He was ac- companied by two doctors and two