WILLIE McGEE CASE Is. WaE 4 Latest Deadline in the State :4a ti4 CLOUDY, SLEET I VOIL. IEM. No. 108 ANN ARBOR. MICHIGAN SUNDAY. ,MARCH 11, 1951 SIX PAGES: Senatorial 'Probe Shifts ToNew York Initial Hearing Held Tomorrow NEW YORK-(A)-The biggest and probably the most spectacular open hearing yet held by Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) and his Sen- ate Crime Investigating Committee will begin in New York City to- morrow. A parade of approximately 50 witnesses including "big names" in a politics and the underworld is scheduled to appear. TOP NAME among the politi- clans scheduled to testify is that of William O'Dwyer, former mayor and now ambassador to Mexica, who has promised a "factual pic- ture" of the New York scene. Kingpin among the under- world figures is gambler Frank Costello, whom the committee has described as head of a na- tional crime syndicate. . Th crime probers want to look into possible links between politics and the .underworld, gambling, narcotics, gangster infiltration in- to legislative business, waterfront smUggling and racketeering and the Mafia, secret "black hand" or- ganization. * * * IN CONTRAST with a closed preliminary hearing held by the committee earlier in . New York, the doors will be wide open next week. Newsmen will have front row a seats. So will photographers and television camermen. T)here is a possibility that Gov. t Thomas Dewey and Mayor Vincent - Impellitteri will appear along with Democrat Ferdinand Pecora and -Republican Edward Corsi, defeated in New York City's heated mayor- ~ ality campaign last fall. CORSI SAID he believed Mayor Impellitteri and Pecora to be hon- est. But contended there cam- paigns were backed by underworld figures.' One of the most eagerly awaited witnesses will be Cos- tello. ,Gov. Dewey once said Costello was the behind-the- scenes boss of Tammany Hall, Manhattan Democratic organi- zation. His attorney says Costello "wel- comes the open hearing for at least the public will get a chance to hear his denials." }Senate Will Start New Red Hunt WASHINGTON-()-The Sen- ate Internal Security Committee has started a far-reaching new search for Communists-in-govern- ment, including the, armed forces as well as the civilian agencies. Sen. O'Connor (D-Md.), member * of the new committee, said the group also is "beginning work on the problem of penetration from abroad by Communist agents." He added: "The evidence which we have thus far ,accumlated establishes beyond any doubt that the Com- munist network in the United States is inspired, organized, con- trolled and directed in large part by those foreign agents who are sent here under diplomatic im- munity and who are working fev- erishly to destroy us." As for the new inquiry aimed at finding out whether there are any Reds In Federal jobs, O'Connor said one "task force of the com- mittee has commenced work with reference to Communist penetra- tion or influence in the various agencies of our government." Another group, he added, is working "on the problem of Com- munist penetration of the armed forces.", Until now the plans of the In- ternal Security group, which is a part of the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee, have been a closely guard- ed ,secret. French Form house Approval Seen on UMT Bill Combined Measure Comes Before Armed Services Committee Today WASHINGTON-P)-Chairman Carl Vinson (D-Ga) yesterday predicted speedy approval by the House Armed Services Committee of a bill authorizing draft of youths at 18 and one-half years and a universal military4 training program. The committee will take up the measure today. Rep. Vinson said he hoped to get it before the House Wednesday and expected to see it passed before Mar. 25. * * * * THE SENATE FRIDAY .passed its own military manpower bill calling for eventual universal training but setting the draft age mini- mum at 18. The differences must be reconciled in conference commit- tee after House action. The House bill would extend service of draftees from the pres- * * * Q ent 21 months to 26. The Senate Deferment Of Students' Denounced DETROIT - P) - College stu- dents should not be deferred, Gen. Lewis Hershey, chief of the draft machinery, said here yesterday. "Is there something sacred about students that we have to keep them out of the front lines? We must survive first," he told the Michigan Commercial Secretaries Associa- tion. Gen. Hershey criticized a section of a draft bill passed by the Senate yesterday which he said would de- fer 75,000 students annually. * * * THAT BILL also lowered the draft age from 1 9to 18. But Gen. Hershey said if the House passes the bill drafting of 18-year-olds would be "safe for this surhmer," he speculated. Registration, selection and setting up of machinery to han- dle the new load would be among causes of delay, Gen. Hershy commented. The draft boss said he favored defering Second World War veter- ans but came out against defer- ment of industrial workers. He said there are enough women and veterans over 25 years old "to care for industrial needs." GEN. HERSHEY also advocated "a common source of manpower," presumably draft boards, for all branches of the armed services, and criticized what he called "pil- fering of our best manpower by the Air Force, Marines and Navy." Mental and physical standards should be lowered to get more men into uniform, the General went on. "I want to get out my hatchet for more 4-Fs. I want to take a fairly liberal bite out of those who fail IQ tests. Lowering intelligence levels, he said, would make an additional 600,000 to 700,000 men available. Soviet Adopts Large Budget MOSCOW -(4)- The Supreme Soviet (parliament) adopted yes- terday a 1951 budget of 451,500,- 000,000 rubles, the biggest peace- time outlay in the history of the U.S.S.R. Finance Minister A. G. Zverev disclosed how the record military budget of 96,000,000,000 rubles will be divided. He announced that 74 billions will go to the Army min- istry and 22 billions to the Navy Ministry. At official exchange rates that would be about $24 billion. voted for 24 months. The House bill throws tighter re- strictions about the training pro- gram which would apply to all youths at 18 and one-half after the emergency buildup has stabil- ized the military forces. It would make control entirely civilian and keep a congressional eye on things. The Senate would begin the training under this program at 18. * * * THE HOUSE BILL puts a 4,000,- 000-man ceiling on the strength of the armed forces. This was writ- ten into the Senate bill over ob- jections of military leaders. The present Defense Deferment De- partment goal is 3,500,000 on ac- tive duty by mid-1951. The bill would terminate the draft itself July 1, 1954. It is presumed then-barring a wors- ening of. the world situation- the size of the armed services will be on a stable basis and the universal training plan will be operating. , Under the House bill Congress retains power to sanction, disap- prove or require changes in the universal training program. It requires that Congress is. to have a detailed report on it every six months. FURTHEIRMORE, the measure gives Congress power by concur- rent resolution to "terminate or suspend for a stated period of time all inductions into the armed for- ces or the national security traip- ing corps." This authority is spelled out even though Congress could exer- cise such power by merely refusing to appropriate money for the draft or a universal military training program. Communists Banish Beran As Archbishop PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia-()-- The Communist Government an- nounced last night it has banished Archbishop Josef Beran, Catholic Primate of Czechoslovakia, from the seat of his archdiocese be- cause of his "negative attitude to church laws." He has been re- placed by a "patriotic and demo- cratic" parish priest. Archbishop Beran, foe of any interference by the Communist government in church matters, was ordered by the state office for church affairs to live outside his Prague archdiocese and to pay a fine. While there has been no word directly from the 62-year-old pri- mate for 13 months the govern- ment announcement appeared to have quieted, at least temporarily, rumors that he might be tried like the primate of Hungary, Josef Cardinal Mindszenty, who was sen- tenced to life imprisonment. Keating Says Mrs. Young Was Fired Administration Denies Report WASHINGTON - (P) - Rep. Keating (R-NY) said last night he had heard Mrs. E. Merl Young, the White House stenographer with a $9,450 mink coat, had been fired by President Truman but White House officials said "there's no truth" to the report. Rep. Keating made his state- ment during a radio interview in which he was questioned by Bert Andrews, radio commentator and newspaperman. "I heard only a few minutes ago that he (President Truman) has fired her," Rep. Keating said. * * * AT FIRST there was no com- ment from officials who are with President Truman at Key West, Fla. But later in response to re- porters' inquiries, Lt. Command- er William Rigdon, assistant naval aide to the President, said he had checked again with WhiteHouse officials on the re- port that Mrs. Young had been discharged. Rigdon told reportrs: "There's no truth to it. It is not under consideration and hasn't been done." * * " A SENATE subcommittee inves- tigating an alleged influence ring said to have brought pressure to bear on the Reconstruction Fi- nance Corporation has developed testimony that Mrs. Young picked out her fur coat last September at a New York furriers. The furrier said it was at first charged to Young but that later the charge was shifted to the ac- count of Joseph Rosenbaum, Washington, lawyer. The sub- committee has charged Rosen- baum enjoyed "unusual success" at getting RFC loans for clients, largely through young's help. Young and Rosenbaum testified that Rosenbaum paid for the coat as a loan to Youngs. REP. KEATING declared last night that if President Truman has fired Mrs. Young he ought to come out and tell the public so. Neither Mrs. Young nor her husband could be reached for com- ment here last night. A maid at their home said they were out of town. Likewise, the White House said there was no one there who could give any information on the matter. The President is at Key West, Fla. e * - TURNING to another phase of its RFC investigation yesterday, the Senate subcommittee put its spotlight on a Missouri Federal tax collector. It suggested-but did not de- mand-that the Bureau of Internal Revenue look into relations of James Finnegan, Collector 6f In-, ternal Revenue in St. Louis, with RFC affairs. On Strategic Red Position Snappy Comeback Rgepublican Jack Sharland, '52 BAd., was a wiser but sad- der man today after losing an argument with President Tru- man. Sharland, who was born in Mt. Clemens which is just 100 miles from Jackson, birth- place of the Republican Party, treated his Chicago House din- ner companions to a blistering attack on both the Administra- tion's foreign policy and "that, guy from Missouri." Returning to his room, he found the day's mail on his desk. Included was a letter beginning, "Greetings ...""You just can't win,"'sigh- ed Sharland. -Daly-Roggr Reinke TREE TWOSOME-Heading the back to nature movement which occurs each spring here in Ann Arbor are Sally Stickney, '54, and Arnold Miller, '51, who climbed into this tree in front of An- gell Hall yesterday. Why didn't they walk out to the Arboretum? "It's too crowded out there," they said, "no privacy." ROi n Life Jeek Progra To Start Toda U. . Divisions Advance World News .Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Labor union charges that defense mobilizer Charles Wilson dictated wage stab- ilization board policy were de- nounced by economic czar Eric Johnston yesterday as "a lie." * * * DETROIT -Investigators for the Kefauver Senate crime In- vestigating Committee were sent from New York yesterday to pre- pare for a repeat performance here later this month. * * * WASHINGTON-Friends of Sen. Virgil Chapman's 25 years in Con- gress attended funeral services for the Kentucky Democrat here yes- terday. * * * WASHINGTON-Senate Re- publican leaders called yester- day for a specific demand by Congress that the lawmakers' approval be obtained in advance for any North Atlantic Pact troop assignments. * * * Religion in Life Week will getC under way today with regular' Sunday services at all local church- es and special evening programs at student religious guilds. Guest speakers include the Rev. Francis McPeek, industrial rela- Votin Age Poll May Be Asked by NSA The conference of the Michigan Region of the National Student Association meeting in Ypsilanti will vote today on a motion ask- ing that polls of student opinion about reducing the voting age to 18 be taken and the results pre- sented in the State Legislature. However, Student Legislature cabinet members Pris Ball, '51, one of the delegates to the con- ference, said last night that the political implications of the mo- tion made its passage very doubt- ful. A plan which would have each school in the Michigan region com- pile a list of faculty members who would be willing to speak on cur- rent problems at the various cam- puses will aso be put on the floor of the conference. Another proposal which came out of yesterday's committee meet- ings at Michigan State Normal College was for a vote of complete confidence for NSA's national committee which had moved to stop aid being sent tQ students in Communist China. The aid to Chinese students was being sent by the World Student Service Fund. But SL's Leonard Wilcox, '52, who is a member of the commit- tee that is making the proposal, asserted it was felt no funds should be sent to a nation engaged in combat with the United States. tions secretary, of the Congrega- tional Churches, who will preach at 10:45 a.m. at the Memorial Christian Church. Mrs. Harrison Elliott, secretary of the YWCA, will speak at 11 a.m. aVthe First Baptist Church. Student guild programs will fea- ture guest speakers including the Rev. DeWitt Baldwin at the Wes- ley Foundation, Mrs. Elliott at the Westminster Guild, Walter Bellhorn at Gamma Delta, the University Lutheran club; Mr. McPeek at Memorial Christian Church, Dr. Orville Walters at Roger Williams Guild, and the Rev. James Maguire at St. Mary's Chapel. Keynote speech of the week long program of seminars, worship ser- vices and forums will be given by Reuben Gustavson, chancellor of the University of Nebraska, at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at Rackham Assembly Hall. He will speak on "Relevance of Religion Today." Seminars based on the relevance of religion to various aspects of daily living are scheduled for, 4:10 p.m. tomorrow. They are: "Family Life," at the League; "Educational Process," University Elementary school cafeteria; "In- dustrial Relations," Rm. 141 Busi- ness Administration Building, and "Social Sciences: Sociology and Social Work," Lane Hall library. The Rev. Seymour Smith, of Yale University, will speak on "What Difference Does Faith in God Make" at worship services at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow at the Con- gregational Church. Four Power Talk. Makes No Pro gress PARIS-(A)-The western pow- ers tried yesterday tq meet Russian objections to their program for a Big Four foreign ministers meet- ing but got a rebuff from Andrei Gromyko. After a full week of conferences among the foreign ministers' depu- ties from t h e United States, France, Britain and Russia, it was generally agreed there had been no progress. They'll start talking again at 10 a.m. tomorrow. ALL OF THE TALKS center on words and the meaning of the words used. The deputies can only set up a list of points for the ministers to discuss. Discussion of the matters themselves is sup- posed to be left to the ministers. Russia has repeatedly insisted in the past week that the originalE agenda submitted by the western deputies does not cover the items which Russia considers para- mount. So yesterday he west- erners put forward a new version of one of their items. The original proposal of the three western powers called for "examination of the causes of present international tensions in Europe and the means to secure a real and lasting improvement in the relations between the U.S.S.R., U.S., United Kingdom and France." Yesterday to this wording they added "Such as: measures to elim- inate the fear of aggression, fulfill- ment of present treaty obligations and examination of the existing levels of armaments and questions concerning Germany in this sphere." Cabbies Ask HigherRates Inadequate wages for cab driv- ers and increased cost of equip- ment and repairs were the main reasons for asking an increase in cab rates, a spokesman for the cab company operators has revealed. Two proposals before the city taxi board would raise the rates from 40 to 50 cents for one person to travel a mile. One proposal would increase the "flag drop" from 25 cents to 35 cents. The flag drop covers the first quarter 'of a mile. Each ad- ditional quarter of a, mile would cost five cents. The other proposals would in- crease the flag drop to 30 cents and set the rate at five cents for one fifth of a mile. Communist Losses Hig 91,In UN Ata, Assault Mounts On 19-mile Line TOKYO-(P)-Three U.S. divi- sions yesterday pushed close to a Chinese Red fortified line, 19 miles long and five miles deep, de- fending the key enemy position in central Korea. The Communists rushed in re- serves to replace losses of 30,000 in four days. * * * THE ENEMY defense line ex- tended from a mountainous area south of Hongchon, aiRed army headquarters, west for 19 miles to the Pukhan River. The U.S. First Marine Divi- sion, moving methodically over ridges within eight miles of" Hongehon, rammed for the first time into the Chinese 298th Di- vision. Officers said this was the only reserve division of the Chinese 86th Army which has headquarters at Hongchon. Its other two divisions already were in the line. * * * OPERATING west of the Mar- ines, the U.S. First Cavalry and 24th Divisions neared defenses In depth still being hastily fortified by the Reds. In Western Korea, the U.S. 25th Division expanded its bridgehead north of the Han River. Flame-throwing tanks in the bridgehead poured a fiery death on Reds hiding in caves. Other Redls who chose flight were mowed down by machinegun crews. * * * THE U.S. EIGHTH Army esti- mated 4,988 Reds were killed or wounded in ground action across Korea yesterday. It earlier listed enemy casualties for the previous three days at more than 25,000. Red losses mounted in all see- tors of a 70-mile front where the, United Nations * divisions were carrying the fight to the enemy. A field dispatch yesterday from east-central Korea-the trackless mountain area east of Hoeng- song-said the U.S. Second Divi- sion has closed a trap on an un- determined number of Commun- ists. EIGHTEEN MI L E S east of Hoengsong the U.S. Seventh Divi- sion stormed Mt. Taemi, a height of more than 3,000 feet. The Allies' primary purpose still was the destruction of en- emy forces rather than con- quest of territory. For Wednes- day, Thursday, and Friday, the first three days of the current drive, the U.S. Eighth Army es- timated enemy casualties at 25,- 000. Yesterday's high toll still was to be tabulated. The 25th Division troops were more than five and one-half miles north of the Han. Government Plans Change In Food Prices WASHINGTON-(IP)-The Gov- ernment is almost ready to put America's 500,000 retail food stores and about 2,000 food wholesalers under a new system of price con- trols which will bring higher prices on some foods and perhaps lower prices on others. The Office of Price Stabiliza- tion said yesterday it expects to issue three big food orders before the end of the coming week. It was learned that the orders will set specific "mark-up" per- centages for about 40 categories of FOR SPRING ELECTIONS: Petitioning for Campus Posts Starts Tomorrow The starting gun will be fired tomorrow for the spring all-campus elections April 24 and 25. Petitions for 61 seats in various branches of student government will be available starting tomorrow from 3 to 6 p.m. daily at the Stu- dent Legislature Building, 122 S. Forest. AT LEAST 25 Student Legislature seats will h nnen .everl nra ~-:- WEDNESDAY DEADLINE: Registration for Local, State Elections To Close TXJi-h . f-.,nrin~ Re.,-'ij-mtime' 1 C .. ..H..a.,v,+ .,n Yr, n+ hn , a.'ri ai-ns+nti l n