Y Lw iitga ,Iaii4 1 IFC POLICY See Page 4 CLOUDY, COOLER Latest Deadline in the State VO. LXI, No. 110 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, MARCH 13. 1951 SIX PAGES Allied Troops Roll Against Retreatin g Reds Greenglass Tells AtomnI 4Spy Activity A-Bomb Secrets ' Given to Russians Madame To Spea Pandit k Today A Y 1 Madame Vijaya Lakshima Pand States, will speak at 4:15 p.m. today Place of Gandhi in the Modern Worl Her speech will follow the pre to the University. NEWYORK - (R) - A former . * atomic employe testified yesterday PRESIDENT RUTHVEN said ye he gave an alleged Rusian'spy ring to have Madame Pandit at the Univ a description of an atom bomb that "took a leading part in her countr superseded the Hiroshima model-" and that the ring also obtained in- ence. formation on a fabulous space ship. David Greenglass, 29, himself a , '- confessed spy, related the space FC Steel project story just before the end of yesterday's surprise-packed session} of the nation's first atom bomb trial.Fraud Told spy trial. 1 THE DEFENDANTS, Julius Ros- enberg, 33 year old, his wife, Ethel,e years old, are charged with con- B spiring to spy for Russia in war- time-an offense carrying a pos- WASHINGTON - (P)--- Joseph, sible death penalty. Rosenbaum, Washington attorney,, Greenglass said it was only a disclosed yesterday that a firm month after the first atom bomb which he and E. Merl Young held was dropped on Hiroshima that an option to buy made a quick he gave Rosenberg a description $75,000 to $80,000 profit on a steel of a newer type atom bomb. deal last fall. He said he obtained the informa- Senator C a p e h a r t (R-Ind.) tion while working on the highly- shouted it was a "pay-off" and secret atomic project at Los Ala- somebody got $75,000 for doing mos, N.M. nothing." THE NEWS that alleged Russian ROSENBAUM described the in- spies possessed American informa- tricate transaction to a Senate tion on a post-Hiroshima bomb Banking subcommittee investigat- was only one of a number of sur-. ing Reconstruction Finance Cor- prises in Greenglass' testimony. poration lending policies which, Rosenberg told Greenglass that the subcommittee charges, were he had taken a *proximity fuse swayed by outside influence. Both while working as a signal corps Rosenbaum and Ydung, husband of inspector at a radio plant and had a White House stenographer, have given it to the Russians, the spy figured in the inquiry. said. Before Rosenbaum took the Greenglass said he gave con- stand, former Rep. Joseph E. fessed atom spy Harry Gold and Casey (D-Mass.) told of making Rosenberc sketches of a highly- a tax-free profit of $250,000 on crnfidential °°ith explosive len. a .20,00G investment in a plan roud vitel in the manufacture of of buying ships from the U.S. > i bombs. Maritime Commission and leas- ing them to Standard Oil of New P Jersey. onse But Casey, now a Washington te Cplawyer, swore he had no part in} _01W7" 9any "web of influence" operating' e sUJMT in in the government. * * * it, Indian abassador to the United in Rackham Lecture Hall on "The Id." esentation of the Gandhi Library * * sterday that he was highly pleased versity. "Madam Pandit," he said, Y's struggle for political independ- "This is not her first-or we trust her last-visit to Ann Ar- bor, so that we know her not only by reputation but by our own experience, as a most en- lightened, gifted, and thorough- ly delightful representative of her people. Madam Pandit, a sister of In- dia's Prime Minister Jawaharial Nehru, is arriv:iig at Willow Run by ptane from Washington, ac- companied by Prof. M. S. Sun- daram, First Secretary of the In- dian Embassy's Education Depart- ment. * * * UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS are planning to give her a warm re- ception. At 10:30 a.m., Madam Pandit will be greeted by Presi- dent Ruthven and Provost James P. Adams. This will be followed by a re- corded interview with the In- dian ambassador over WUOM. Members.of the faculty will then conduct Madame Pandit on a sight-seeing drive around the campus. Later, Madame Pandit will meet other University officers at a luncheon in the Union. Some stu- dents will have the opportunity of meeting Madame Pandit at a din- ner in 'the Union, sponsored by the Indian Students Association and the StuderA -Religious Asso- ciation. And at 8 p.m., Madame Pandit is expected to .meet with. Indian students at the Interna- tional Center. Ike Predicts Reds May Face Revolt Satellite Uprisiiig Seen If War Hits WASHINGTON - (P) - Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower has told Congress that Russia may face re-, volt within her satellites if she starts an all-out war. Eisenhower said in testimony at a closed session of the Senate For- eign Relations and Armed Services Committees Feb. 1 that "our en- lightened 150,000,000 people can still whip 190,000 i00 backward people" in Russia if war comes. * * * URGING the approval of Ameri- can participation in a Western European Army, the general said that if 12 American divisions were given sufficient air and sea sup- port, they could hold the Breton Peninsula of Southwest France against any Russian attack. The two Senate committees will reconsider today resolutions okaying the sending of more United States ground troops to join the North Atlantic Pact forces Eisenhower commands. Supporters want to clarify the! resolutions to approve specifically the dispatch of our divisions and! to provide for Congressional con- sideration of any future troop as- signments. ONE OF THE arguments against sending any United States troops has been that Russia could over- run the continent and might thus destroy a large segment of Ameri- can forces. The five star general told com- inittee members that the Soviet imasters in the Kremlin would be "really fools' to start a general war now, Instead of getting expected help froi satellites, Eisenhower said -Daily-Burt Sapowitch LAWYER DISSENTS-William B. Lynch, '52L, didn't agree with the conclusions of the Committee to save Willie McGee. Yesterday at an open meeting at Lane Hall s.ponsored by the committee, Lynch rose and defended the United States Supreme Court for refusing to review McGee's case. Urged on by the audience, Lynch took the platform. Asked what his name was, he replied, "My name is Lynch." The reply evoked such an uproar that it was several moments before Lynch cofld continue his arguments. * Mc eei itR * * * * * Mrs. Mc ee HeardI inSormy Rll Foe's Losses Hit 35,000 In Offensive UN Only 25 Miles From 38th Line- TOKYO - (A) - Three United Nations columns pushed within sight of the Chinese bastion at Hongchon yesterday as Red re- sistance melted along the Korean front. Allied officers were at a loss to explain the sudden Red withdraw- al. Both Chinese and North Kor- ean troops pulled back from com- manding high points they had fought bitterly to hold last week. The Communist pullback was general along a 75-mile line ex- tending from the Pukhan River in the west. to allied-occupied Soksa in the east. IT BEGAN gathering impetus yesterday under allied blows which included a record of 774 sorties by U.S. Fifth Air Force fighters and bombers. Fighter-bombers caught 1,000 Reds retreating northwest of Changpyong. Pilots estimate they killed 80 per cent of them. Spokesmen estimated that the losses of the Reds in six days of the new allied offensive mounted to 35,000 men. * * * ON THE EAST-Central front, U.S. Seventh Division troops cap- tured stony, mile-high Mount Taemi without a shot. The Amer- icans had been forced to with- draw from the same heights Sat- urday by withering Red gunfire. This was one of the three points where United Nation's troops were within 25 miles of the 38th parallel. In the West, American 25th Division armored flame-throw- er patrols lashed out more than ten miles north of the Han River without contacting organ- ized Red forces. Their sector was 15 miles east of Red-held Seoul. U.S. Marines in the center of the 15-mile-wide front seized tthe last iidgeline before Hongchon. They spent Monday night on a 3,000 foot hill commanding a vital pass leading into the Hongchon Valley. Leathernecks had ex- pected "quite a battle" before pushing 5,000 yards from the southeast into the mountain pass area, front dispatches said. * * * Ridgway Sees Victory if War Ends at 38th By BOB KEITH "My husband didn't attack Mrs., Hawkins and I know he didn't." With these words, spoken calmly* but firmly, Mrs. Willie McGee defended her husband yesterday afternoon and asked for help in saving him from Mississippi's elec- tric chair.k Addressing an attentive but par- tially skeptical audience in a sec- ond floor Lane Hall lecture room, Mrs. McGee said she was "touring this country for all the Negropeo- ple, for this Jim Crow justice is happening all over the land." SOME 200 PERSONS crowded into the room to hear Mrs. McGee and to "get the facts" surrounding her husband's sentence to death March 20. Orderly at first, the meeting had moments of. chaos toward the end as members of the audi- ence engaged in 45 heated min- utes of argument among them- selves and with the speakers. Getting off to a late start, the meeting was opened at 4:30 p.m. by Lee Winneg, '51 of the Student Religious Association, who assert- ed that McGee, convicted of rape in Mississippi, had suffered a "mis- carriage of justice." Valerie Cowen, '54, chairman of the campus "Committee to save Willie McGee," then told what she said were the facts of the case and urged the audience to sign some mimeographed post cards to President Truman ask- ing him to intervene. * Lane Hall director DeWitt C: Baldwin spoke briefly. He said he wanted "to see justice done" and emphasized the need for viewing the case without emotion. * * , * IT WAS not until 4:50 p.m. that Mrs. McGee arrived from Detroit, accompanied by an official of the Civil Rights Congress, a group pro- viding legal assistance for McGee. When both had addressed the group, two ladies rose from the audience, walked to the stage and placed dollar bills at Mrs. McGee's feet. A total of $26 was collected at the meeting. After the speeches the audience took over and engaged in a verbal free for .all. * * * THE MEETING reached a peak of confusion when a group of law students, headed by Bill Lynch, '52L, and Bob Porter, '52L, charged that persons questioning McGee's guilt are in fact denying the worth of the American judicial system. "The issue here should be whether McGee deserves the death penalty, not whether he is guilty," they asserted. "His guilt ** * I' New Draft Bill CASEY APPEARED voluntarily before the subcommittee as a self- styled "injured party," contending WASHINGTON - ()-- The his reputation had been damaged House Armed Services Committee by references to him by the sub- yesterday approved Universal Mil- committee. itary Training as a part of the * new draft bill. The committee also went on Re .istration record in favor of drafting young { men at the age of 181/2-instead T l s, tee' srvie t 26monhs. To Cdose TodayT of 19, as now-and extending draf-y tees' service to 26 months. Also approved was a provision Today is the last day Ann Ar- to give draftees six months of bor residents may register to vote training before they are assigned Irn the April 2 election. to combat areas outside the Unit- itye rkp r edtJ. ed States. City Clerk Fred J. Looker has Chairman Visoannounced that his office in the nChairman Vinson (D-Gat told City Hall will be open until 8 p.m. newsmen he expects to get the otkcref atmnergi- legislation through committee by to take care of last minute regis- tomorrow and passed in the House before the Easter recess begin- Students from out of state ' ping March 22. should write to their county clerk The Senate has already passed for information concerning absen- its own draft bill, permitting in- tee voting. All states will not hold duction at 18, with 24 months their elections on April 2-this is service. Differences between the the date for spring voting in Senate and House versions will Michigan. go to a conference for settlement. , On the ballot locally will be Vinson said the House commit- candidates for mayor, council tee today will consider the pro- president, and representatives to posed 4,000,000-man ceiling on the the county Board of Supervisors. armed forces, along with a pro- The statewide balloting will be vision saying that the draft is to for two members each to the end by July 1, 1954. Board of Regents, the Board of * * * - Agriculture (MSC's governing * * * the Russians might find these THE IDEA for a Gandhi Li- border states "one of their great- brary was originated by the In- est sources of weakness." dian Students Association after * * * the death of the Indian philoso- "I DO NOT THINK the Russians pher and leader. in five short years have been able The Indian students with the to put all of this stuff together and help of Indian Nationals in De- feel quite happy about it," the troit and Chicago as well as the general said, referring to the mili- staff of the Indian Embassy in tary potential of Iron Curtain Washington collected, s o m e countries. books about Gandhi in addition Eisenhowere said he thinks "dis- to obtaining $500 to add to the sident elements all the way from library. the Balkans right up to the Baltic ..K. N. Sahaya, president of the will rise." India Students Association, will "The Latvians hate the Russians present the check to Madame like the devil hates holy water- Pandit, who will in turn present pardon me, I didn't mean that," it to President Ruthven, he testified. *~ * * } r t 1 1 pY L Y 60 POSITIONS OPEN: Election Machinery Starts As Ten Petition for Offices w. THE PURPOSE of the Gandhi Memorial Project is to present to the University the books written by Gandhi and his colleagues and the books written in many langu- ages about his life and works. Books about the various aspects of Indian culture are also includ- ed. The Gandhi Memorial Library will be a self-perpetuating project. It is hoped that new Indian stu- dents to the University will con- tribute to the Library funds, while those students returning to India are expected to promote the proj- ect among their countrymen. Madame Pandit was appointed U.S. ambassador on March 16, 1949. Prior to that time she served as chairman. of the In- dian delegation to the United Na- tions and later as Ambassador to the Soviet Union. World News .Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The Supreme Court condemned Alger Hiss to a five-year jail term yesterday by rejecting his appeal from a perjury conviction. * * * GRAND RAPIDS-The con- dition of . Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg took another turn for the worse yesterday. * * * TEHRAN, Iran - Hussein Ala, the little diplomat who defied Russia's first aggressive move in Azerbaijan after the second world war, stepped in yesterday as prime minister of fearful Iran. A total of ten petitions for var- ious student offices went out yes- terday, as the spring campus elec- tion machinery began to roll once again. According to Spider Webb, '52, chairman of the Student Legisla- ture Citizenship Committee, ap- proximately 60 offices must be fill- ed in the election, scheduled for, AprV 24 and 25. Deadline to pick up the petitions, available at the SL House, 122 S. Forest, is March 21. They must all be turned in by March 23. * * ' * ALTHOUGH the figure is not certain yet, about 25 SL seats will be open. The SL constitution calls for a member for every 800 stu- dents on campus. Nine sophomores will be cho- sen for next year's J-Hop Com- mittee, in the first J-Hop elec- tion to be held in the spring. Inste.ad of the us'ual Hare Sys- tem, used for the SL race, the J-Hop Committee will be picked by straight nine-X ballots. Class officers for each engineer- ing college class and the senior literary college class will be se- lected. Six union vice-presidential posts are to be filled by men rep- resenting each school or cWabina- tion of schools in the University. * ,: * A STUDENT position on the Board in Control of Inter-Colle- giate Athletics is also open. SL petitions must be filled with 150 signatures, those for the Board in Control of Inter-Colle- giate Athletics with 300, and all others with 50. -Daily-Burt Sapowitch MRS. WILLIE McGEE ... asks help for husband * * * was determined in three trials, the last of which even the U.S. Supreme Court refused to call, unfair." A number of those present con- tended, however, that even the third trial was conducted in an at- mosphere of mob violence, and that McGee deserves a new trial. Spectator Annette Silk asserted that a government of laws and not men such as ours doesn't mean the people should never intervene. " The gathering broke up at 6 p.m. but some stayed around awhile to listen in on scattered arguments in the hallways and on the front steps. Units Called By AirGuard WASHINGTON-(A')The bulk of" the Air National Guard will be on active duty by the end of this year, wbm the last aircraft control and warning, group reports for service. The Air Force outlined yesterday the recall program for the Air Guard, listing 19 non-flying units with a strength of about 10,000 officers and men which will be brought into service gradually over the next nine months. The Air Force had previously body), the state Supreme Court and on three amendments to the constitution. CENTRAL FRONT, Korea-(A) -Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, United States Eighth Army Com- mander, said yesterday he felt an end of the Korean War at the 38th parallel "would be a tremen- dous victory for the United Na- tions." Ridgway quickly added he knew of no plan for ending the war on that onetime dividing line between Communist North and Republican South Korea. Communist China's failure to drive United Nations forces from Korea, he also told a news con- ference, "would be a defeat for her of incalculable importance." Ridgway's statements appeared to contrast with one only last Wednesday by General MacAr- thur, who said that under present conditions, "the battle line cannot fail in time to reach a theoretical point of stalemate." MacArthur said the Chinese Reds had no more than "an al- most hopeless chance of ultimate military success." MacArthur al- so said that further allied ad- vances "would ; militarily bene- fit the enemy more than it would ourselves"-if the UN did not put more forces into the field and con- - tinued to ban 'air attacks on the enemy's Manchurian "sanctuary." Ridgway told corresepondents, "The allied ground, sea and air forces have let a lot of air out of t< 'IS RELIGION RELEVANT TO LIFE?' Gustavson Gives Keynote Address for Religion In Life Week * * * 1 Talk Relates Science, Religion Seminars, Services Scheduled for Today E By CARA CHERNIAK "Man must relate his basic de- sire to create and share to his pro- gress in the physical, biological and He must use the assumption that life is of high value when making these decisions," he added. Religion in Life Week observ- ances will continue today with a program of seminars and services. ertson, assistant dean of the Uni- versity, Mrs. Harrison S. Elliott, see- Grand Rapids will lead the latter seminar. These meetings will take. place .F FxWw, 'T