FAULTY FORMULA Lit ian Datip CLOUDY, RAIN See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State . .. VOL. LX, No. 10 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS t Navy Officer Named Key Manin Probe Admits Releasing Of Morale Data WASHINGTON - (P) - Navy Capt. John G. Crommelin, em- battled critic of the Unified De- fense setup, was revealed last night to be the man who gave the press confidential documents charging that the Navy's morale was shattered and the national de- fense imperilled. Commelin's action, designed to get a hearing for a widespread Navy feeling that the Air Force is elbowing the Navy too far out of the defense picture, has started two investigations. THE HOUSE Armed Services Committee has ordered a hearing with top-level admirals as wit- nesses. And Admiral Louis E. Den- feld, chief of Naval operations, has directed an investigation into the release of the docu- ments. He called this release a grave infraction of regulations. Crommelin has indicated he ex- pects a court martial, and specula- tion last night was that he will get it, although Denfeld had no immediate comment. * * * THE ROMMELIN disclosure was the second development of the day bearing on the tug-of-war between the Navy and the Air Force. Ear- lier in the day, the Navy an- nounced that Cedric R. Worth, civilian Navy official who wrote the now-discredited memo blasting the Air Force's B-36 Superbomber program, had quit his job over a month ago. The Navy's disclosure came belatedly a few minutes after the House Armed Services Com- mittee demanded that Worth be fired. The memo, which was circulat- ed anonymously at first, charged that the B-36 was obsolete and that political connivance was re- sponsible for its continued con- struction. The Worth charges blew up when he recanted most of them publicly. CAPT. CROMMELIN, wartime carrier skipper, last Monday hand- ed to reporters letters written to * Secretary of, the Navy Matthews by three admirals. One of them, Vice-Admiral Gerald F. Bogan, commander of the First Task Force in. the Pacific, said Navy morale hAs plummeted "almost to despondency" because of policies followed in the Pentagon, U.S. de- fense headquarters. Dr. Day Asks Joint Action Offers Plan To Defeat Extremist Doctrines In order to defeat forever So- cialist and Communist doctrines, a "working partnership" of bus- iness, political and educational leadership is essential, accordig to Dr. Edmund E. Day, chancellor of Cornell University. } First dean of the business ad- ministration school, Dr. Day spoke yesterday morning at a convoca- tion commemorating the 25th an- niversary of the school's founding. * * * HIS ADDRESS, entitled "The Social Responsibility of Business Education," centered on a "thor- ough understanding of the essen- tials of the private enterprise sys- tem" which could be imparted to Americans if business, education and political leaders joined hands. Dr. Day was awarded by Uni- versity president Alexander G. Ruthven an honorary doctor of laws degree. Post Features Football Coach Coach Bennie Oosterbaan and his career as head mentor of the University's AP poll-leading Wol- verines are featured in an article appearing in the Oct. 8th issue of The Saturday Evening Post. The article, entitled "Michigan's Unexpected Hero," was written by Walter W. Ruch. The magazine first appeared on local news stands yesterday. Students Turn in Tickets FOR DISABLED VETS-Janice Carrier, '53, left and Carol Mo- berg, '53, turn in their tickets to Saturday's Michigan-Army game at the Student Publications Bldg., thereby enabling two disabled veterans to see the gridiron clash. Making out receipts is Nancy Arnesen, assistant to the Board. An Editorial, University students proved yesterday that they had not forgotten World War II heroism by contributing 77 Army game tickets to disabled veterans in nearby hos- pitals. Many of those who turned in their tickets obviously desired to see the game themselves. But they realized how much more it would mean to ,men whose time for the last four or five years has been spent largely within hos- pital walls. The response has been encouraging. But the need for tickets is still great. Certainly there are more students on campus who wish to add some cheer to the monotonous life of these disabled vets-even at some personal sacrifice. However, one more obstacle lies between the vet- erans and the Army game. Student tickets are non- transferable and can be used by the vets only with the approval of the University Athletic Board. The cause is worthy and the technicalities minute. We are confident that the Board will welcome the opportunity to do a little for those who have done so much. -The Senior Editors. Football Ticket Donation House Votes For Social Security Bill Senate Approval Now Necessary WASHINGTON - (P) - The House voted yesterday for a bigger Social Security system-covering more people, paying higher bene- fits and to cost, after 20 years, three times larger payroll taxes. On the showdown, only 14 votes were cast against it. There were 333 for it. Only two Michigan Re- publicans were in oppositioan. ** * THE HOUSE vote sendsthe measure on to the Senate. With leaders aiming for early adjourn- ment of this Congressional session, the Senate plans to put off co- sideration of the bill until the next session, meeting in January. The bill would: 1. Extend Old Age and Sur- vivors Insurance to 11,000,000 more workers, raising the num- ber covered from 35,000,000 to 46,000,000. 2. Boost benefits by 70 per cent or more. 3. Create new disability in- surance. 4. Increase payroll taxes grad- ually over the next 20 years to three per cent on both worker and his employer. Some of its sponsors voiced hope the legislation would ease the de- mands of some labor groups for special pension plans financed wholly by employers. WHEN SENDING the bill to the House, the Ways and Means Com- mittee said in a report that pri- vate company-financed programs endanger the Federal Security System. Congress now will watch to see what effects the House ac- tion will have upon strikes and threatened strikes over com- pany-financed pensions. Pen- sions are the issue in coal and steel walkouts. For President Truman, it was a big step toward enactment of what he calls his "Fair Deal." The Pres- ident, however, had asked that 20,000,000 more workers be brought under the insurance program. The House made it 11,000,000. Among the major groups still left out by the bill are farm op- erators, farm hands and profes- sional people-doctors, lawyers and editors. Songwriters Needed for UnionOpera Songwriters by the score are needed by Union Opera for its 1950 production. A meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 3R in the Un- ion for all persons interested in composing hit tunes for next year's opera, which will go on stage early in the spring term. WHILE UNION OPERA will not guarantee fame and fortune to all its songwriters, some of the tunes from past performances have won wide acclaim in the world of music. For example, "Til the Dawn," written by Ed Chudacoff, '49SM, for last year's production of "Froggy Bottom," was played twice by Fred Waring and his famed Pennsylvanians on their coast-to-coast broadcast. And many a recently pinned coed has been serenaded with the lilting strains of the "Friars' Song" or "When Night Falls Dear." * * .* Government Calls Peaci Lewis, Operators to Talk s SL Supports Daily Plea for ArnyDucats 14 Legislators Donate Tickets Fourteen Student Legislators2 donated their Army game tickets to disabled vets at SL's first meeting of the year last night, raising the total to 77. SL, quickly recovering from first-session jitters, unanimously passed a resolution supporting the Daily campaign to Collect tickets to the Army game Saturday. SL MEMBER Mary Lubeck re- newed an invitation to all dona- tors to see the game on television at the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity at 715 Hill Street. Wym Price, Grad, was ap- pointed chairman of a special fund-raising committee for theE World Student Service Fund, to, be sponsored by SL for the year.< The "Beat Army" Pep Rally Fri-< day at Ferry Field is a possibility having been underwritten by SL. In addition, the Minnesota Home-; coming rally will be supported by the Legislature, and possibly a third before the Ohio State game. SL will bring a new kind of movie to campus, "The Changing Times" made by the Harvard Un- dergraduate Players, a student movie-making group. The movie, a satire on labor-management re- lations, is the first of its kind. The Legislature also authorized NSA to bring to campus a special, NSA art exhibit, with the Univer- sity as co-sponsors. Judic Positions Now Available Eligible men wishing to serve on Men's Judiciary may apply for petitions from 3 to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Union, room to be posted. Four positions are open on the Judiciary, which is composed of seven members, three appointed one semester and four the next. Petitions will go before Student Legislature. Petitioners will be in- terviewed by SL members and po- sitions will be granted according to ability to think on judiciary problems, campus activities and field of study. The Judiciary body handles all mn's cases of refraction of SL rules of conduct and many re- ferred by the University subcom- mitttee on discipline. Inter-Arts Union To Hold Tryouts Inter-Arts Union will hold try- outs for its production of T. S. Eliot's "Murder in the Cathedral" at 7:30 p.m. today and tomorrow in Rm. 240 Temporary Classroom Building. Tryouts should bring their own copies of the play, Strowan Rob- ertson, Grad., director of the play, advised. Radio, TV Damage Opera,_StarSays Grand opera in America has been damaged by the coming of radio, television and the movies, Mary Garden, for 30 years the toast of two continentsand the first speaker in this year's lecture series, told a Hill Auditorium audience last night. Operatic popularity has always gone in cycles, 'and now the American opera has temporarily been eclipsed, Miss Garden explained. But she was confident that this situation would not last. She has returned from a 15-year retirement for lecture appearances. * * * * "THE YOUNG PEOPLE of this country are wonderful, and some- thing great must come from them. The future of the opera rests with the youth." Kaiser Signs Union Terms Reminiscing about the days of her own youth, when Amer- ican and European audiences acclaimed both her singing ac- complishments and her remark- able stage personality, Miss Garden declared that she was an "absolute operatic being." She described her art as "oper- atic drama." Taking a page from her owna experiences, she advised aspiring1 young singers not to make their debuts before they are ready. She attributed her over-night rise to fame at her Paris debut in the role of "Louise" to the fact that she was 'ready with Louise." "IF THEY had played the Star- Spangled Banner that night, I would have sung 'Louise'." Miss Garden, who was born in Scotland and raised in Amer- ica, spent many years in France studying French opera and learning the language.' "The rhythm of a language must be learned in the native country-you can't get it any- where else," she said. SPEAKING OF her retirement in 1934, Miss Garden said that leaving thestage is a decision which every artist must face. "Once you go, you can't come back.,I hate good-bye perform- ances." Having lived in Scotland since her retirement, Miss Garden was enthusiastic about her return to America. Phoenix Talk To BeGiven Hardin Jones Speaks At Rackham Today First event in the 1949-50 series of Michigan Memorial-Phoenix Project public meetings will be a talk by Hardin Jones at 4:15 p.m. today in Rackham Amphitheatre. Jones is assistant professor of medical physics at the Donner Laboratory, University of Cali- fornia. A specialist in the use of radioactive isotopes as used in physiology, he will lecture on "Contributions of Isotopic Studies to the Study of Dynamic Meta- bolism." A $6,500,000 fund-raising cam- paign for the Project will be launched Homecoming weekend, when 200 regional drive chairmen will gather here. Meanwhile, actual work on the Project has begun in sev- eral University departments. Members of the physics and an- thropology departments are working on a method of deter- mining the age of ancient arti- 'cles by radioactive processes. A botany professor is studying the effects of radiation on pla~it life. World News .Round-Up By The Associated Press LAKE SUCCESS-Jakob A. Ma- lik, Russian delegate to the United Nations Security Council, said yes-' terday the Soviet Union has a new proposal on the question of a world armaments census. He said he would submit it at the next meeting of the 11-nation Council, Oct. 11. * * * BERLIN-A 14-man cabinet was nominated yesterday for the new Communist East German government-with Gerhart Eis- ler as Minister of Propaganda.' -* * * WASHINGTON-Undersecretary of State Webb said yesterday the United States may abandon its lone wolf role in atomic research and revive its wartime atom part- nership with Britain and Canada. * * * WASHINGTON-The Veterans Administration yesterday can- celed its month-old restrictions on theeducational rights of war veterans. It installed a more liberal set, but called on Congress to pass leggy islation to "prevent grave abuses" of the benefits granted in the G.I. "Bill of Rights" law. VA Administrator Carl R. Gray warned that unless the law is cinched up, educating ser- vicemen may cost the taxpayers $60,000,000,000. PARIS-Premier Henri Queuille resigned yesterday as a result of wage and price problems growing out of devaluation of the frant. out of devaluation of the franc. nounce today whether he will ac- cept the resignation. Set Up A.S.P., Branch'Here About 42 graduate students and faculty members met last night at the League to take initial steps in organizing a local branch of the National Council of Arts, Sciences and Professions. The group is made up of per- sons of all political opinion who wish to express themselves in issues involving civil liberties, ac- cording to the group's head, Ezra Stotland, Grad. Lecture Postponed Floyd J. Miller's University lec- ture in journalism, scheduled for yesterday, has been postponed un- til Oct. 12. Miller, publisher of the Royal Oak Daily Tribune and active in inter-American press work, was unable to speak because of illness. For Pension Coal Parleys Will Start Tomorrow By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH - Henry Kaiser last night agreed to contract de- mands of striking CIO Unitet Steelworkers, soon afterthe gov- ernment told John L. Lewis and coal operators to come in and talk peace. Kaiser Steel Corporation of Fontana, Calif., signed an agree- ment to give four cents per man- hour for insurance and six cents an hour for pensions paid com- pletely by the company. * * * KAISER'S FONTANA plant em- ploying 3,500 has not, been on strike. But CIO and steelworker chief Philip Murray proudly an- nounced Kaiser's acceptance of the union's demands. The Kaiser contract expires Oct. 15. John L. Lewis and coal opera- tors negotiating in West Vir- ginia were summoned to Wash- ington for a meeting tomorrow with Federal mediators in an ef- fort to end the walkout of 380,- 000 United Mine workers. George Love, spokesman for Northern operators, accepted the call to Washington. So did Harry M. Moses, negotiator for coal mines owned by the United States Steel Corporation. CYRUS CHING, director of the Fedaral Mediation and Concilia- tion Service, called the peace par- ley. It is his first attempt to set- tle the coal strike. He made three futile stabs at ending the steel dis- pute. Ching said "no formal moves" are planned now in the five- day-old walkout of 500,000 CIO United Steelworkers. The White House added "no action is immi- nent." And he stated that any report of progress in coal negotiations, won't be definite enough for hie to drop his call for tomorrow's con- ference. * * * MEANWHILE IN Detroit, union demands on Chrysler Corp. were tailored yesterday to fit in with re- cent pension settlement with Ford. Union representatives of Ford's 115,000 production workers mean- while approved that settlement. Phone Book Delays Trial Of Communists (EDITOR'S NOTE-This is the third in a series of interpretive ar- ticies by a Daily staffer who spent' severaldays covering the Commu- nist trial in New York.) By ROMA LIPSKY Often a whole day at the Cm- munist trial is taken up with questioning which has absolutely no connection with the substance of the indictment. Such was the case when Carl Winter, director of Communist Party activities in the state of Michigan and one of the 11 de- fendants, was on the stand. * * * stand, most of which involved at- tempts by prosecuting attorney John F. X. McGoey to shake his credibility as a witness, and by de- fense lawyers to re-affirm it. Consequently, the testimony centered on names, addresses and phone numbers about which the prosecution claimed To Veterans Totals 77 The request for student and faculty tickets to Saturday's Army game, going into its last phase today, metrwith overwhelming response from student and student groups yesterday. Seventy-seven tickets, all from students and the promise of aid from five student groups were the first results of yesterday's appeal. PLEDGE OF A SIZABLE block of tickets today has come from WestQuad Council president George Roumell. Ducats will go to disabled vets at Percy Jones General Hospi- tal in Battle Creek, to the Battle Creek Veteran's Hospital and Dearborn Veteran's Hospital, where men are still recovering from injuries sustained more than four years ago. Daily and Union offices took in 63 tickets yesterday and 14 student legislators last night turned in their ducats. DEADLINE FOR what students have tagged, "the great sacrifice" is set for 6 p.m. today because officials at the three southern Michi- Tickets for the disabled vets may be turned in at: The Daily--from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.1 Union Student offices-from 3 to 5 p.m. League undergraduate offices-from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. gan veterans' hospitals must know early tomorrow how many men will be coming to Ann Arbor for the game. Union officials promised to reserve seats around the television set in the cafeteria for both men and women students who give up their tickets. A ticket receipt from the Daily, the Union or the League will entitle students to one of the choice seats. League social director Miss Ethel McCormick said students would be welcome to use the TV set on the second floor. Video outfits in the East and West Quadrangles will be available for residents. AIM AND IFC officials are waiting only for a final count on the number of disabled veterans coming up for the game before making eating arrangements for the men. The hospitals will provide transportation to and from the game. A Daily campaign three years ago for tickets to the army game met with overwhelming success. ASIDE FROM the SL members, the following students gave their tickets last night: R. G. Gilliland, Charles Doan, Phil Dawson, David Vance, Mary Bradfield, Harriet Lax, Janice Carrier, Leon M. Jaroff, Winifred Moore, Clara M. Behringer, JoAnne Misner, Kenneth Peterson, James Lang- don, John Ryder, Frank I. Smith, Harry Reed and John Goodyear. Gene Wentz, G. A. MacDonald, G. A. Newpang, L. A. Brown, Daily Tryouts A Daily tryout meeting will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Student Publications Building. Those unable to attend may come to another meeting at the same time tomorrow. r r s BOTH were first of bygone OF THESE favorites heard in Union Operas years. Since 1908, Union Opera has been a big tradition on the cam- pus' entertainment scene, and much of its success has sprung from the high calibre of its music. To insure a bevy of top-flight tunes for next year's show, the Opera staff is planning this early start on the music writing end of the work. For this reason, it is quite important that all local com- posers attend tonight's meeting, according to Jim Ebersole, '50, opera manager. HARRY WISMER TO SPEAK: 'Beat A rmy' To BeCryof PepRally _________ "Beat Army' will be the cry of the year's first pep rally when stu- dents leave the Union at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow and parade to Ferry Field, led by the University band. Marry Wismer, sports director form the Ameri can Broaidcasting~ the Sporting News award as "The Nation's Outstanding Sportscas- ter" for the past three years. As Sports director of ABC since its inception in 1942, for the past four years, he has de- will speak at the rally on "Football of the Past and Present." * * * A PERSONAL friend of Fielding H. Yost, the University's immortal football coach and athletic direc- tpr,. Trevor knows Michigan foot- Winter had lied while he was living in Los Angeles. McGoey introduced as evidence to contradict Winter's testimony a Los Angeles phone book with a listing of Winter's address for an H. CarL WINTER HAD previously de- nied using that name but, to sup-