C I 4r,- ItF4b P43al11 Y- ZT- ': 16.6 STODGY PROGRESS See Fage 4 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXI No. 111 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1951 CLOUDY, SNOW SIX PAGES 'GOP Group1 Opens Drive To KillRFC Influence Deals Hit in Congress WASHINGTON-(4)- Outcries ' against "influence-peddling" mushroomed in Congress yester- day and the House Republican Policy Committee demanded swift abolition of the Reconstruction Fi- t ntance Corporation. Several bills were ready in both houses to liquidate the multi-bil- lion-dollar federal lending agency. * , * DEMOCRATS and Republicans x alike joined in the attack. The House GOP committee = adopted a resolution declaring the RFC has "degenerated into an instrumentfor the peddling of influence" and now engages in distributing gratuities and rich political plums. Simultaneously, Rep. Canfield R-N.J.) told the House that an RBFC request for $17,835,000 for administrative expenses for the fiscal year beginning July 1 will be turned down by the House Ap- propriations Committee. Canfield is a member of the committee. The New Jersey legislator said the House group has refused to consider the RFC request. * s*: ALTHOUGH the RFC has big eunds for lending, the rejection of its bid for administrative funds presumably would mean the agen-: cy's end. A Democratic backfire against eritics of the administration started when Rep. Wayne L. Hays (D-Colo.) took the House floor to accuse Republican Na- tional Chairman Guy Gabriel- son of "influence peddling" with the RFC. Hays charged that Gabrielson obtained $18;500,000 in federal loans for his own company over a three-year period and collected $100,000 for his services. "It seems Mr. Gabrielson has been doing a little influence ped- dling himself," Hays told the House. Hays also declared that two senators put on pressure to get RFC loans for Gabrielson's firm. Group Votes To Separate MilitaryBills WASHINGTON - (P) - The House Armed Services Committee refused yesterday to tie onto the draft and universal military train- ing bill a rule against sending American troops to Europe with- out the direct consent of Congress. The vote was 21 to 14 to table an amendment by Rep. Towe (R- NJ). There is no debate on such a motion. There were strong in- dications, however, that heated discussion of the Republican- backed plan was only postponed until the legislation comes up in the House itself. That may come this week. Chairman Vinson (D-Ga), who announced yesterday's action aft- er a closed meeting, said he hopes to get the bill out of the commit- tee today. The tabling of the Towe amend- ment, presumably killing it as far as the committee is concerned, got r one of the last big obstacles out of the way of final action on the measure by the committee. That group, considering the bill section by section, already has stamped approval on its provisions lowering the draft age from 19 to 18% years, 'extending draftees' service from 21 to 26 months, and setting up a universal training program to take effect when the present emergency need for actual service by draftees has passed. The Senate has passed a gen- erally similar bill for drafting at 18, with those nearest 19 to go first, and a service term of 24 months. McGee Meeting P1 ..1 rTin ht- Crawford Plans fune Retirement Engineering Dean To Move West After 11 Years as College Head Dean Ivan Crawford, of the engineering college, will retire June 30. The 64-year-old dean announced yesterday he will return to his native Colorado to continue as an engineering consultant. He has been dean of the engineering college since 1940. The Regents have given Dean Crawford permission to retire be- fore 1956, when his year-long retirement furlough would normally begin. No successor has been named. ** * * OF DEAN CRAWFORD his colleague Dean Hayward Keniston, * * * Qof the literary college, said: I SChinese To Est~ Forces Fall iblish New DEAN CRAWFORD Mob ilizers Back New Rent Ceiling WASHINGTON - UP) - A rent control proposal broader in some ways than the World War II law was reported yesterday to have won backing from top mobilization officials. Housing expediter Tighe Woods said his plan had been approved by Economlc Mobilizer Charles E. Wilson and Economic Stabiliza- tion Director Eric Johnston. He talked with reporters just after the Senate had passed a 90-day extension of what is left of the present controls. The Senate acted in a flurry of 'talk about close limits of the application on any rent it pass- es for a longer term, with the emphasis all on defense produc- tion areas and those around military establishments. Basic principles of the Woods plan, which would require action by Congress, include: General recontrol, extension of the curbs to commercial rents which were not controlled even at the wartime peak, ceilings for new construction, possible roll- backs for rents not now con- trolled, and elimination of the "lo-' cal option" provisions of the pres- ent law which permit communities to free themselves from control. have known and respected Dean Crawford these 11 years and have worked with him many times. I regret he is leaving but I have known for some time that he wished to be relieved of his hea- vy duties." During the administration of Dean Crawford, fifth dean since the college was founded in 1895, three major additions were made to the college's plant. They are East Engineering Building; structural, hydraulic and sanitary laboratories in the civil engineering department and revamped mechanical en- gineering laboratories. Dean Crawford was dean of the engineering and architecture school at the University of Kansas for three years before he came here. He had been dean of the engineering college of the Univer- sity of Idaho since 1923. THE RETIRING dean received a bachelor of science degree from the University of Colorado in 1912 and a civil engineering degree in 1915. .He joined the Colorado fac- ulty in 1912 and had risen to asso- ciate professor by 1923. Twice the dean's academic career was interrupted. Between graduation from high school in his native Leadville, Colo., in 1906 and entrance into the uni- versity he worked as a miner, teamster and railroad surveyor. In 1917 he went on active duty with the Army. Dean Crawford served as a major for 18 months, 10 of them in France as comman- der of a combat engineer battal- ion. * * * LAST YEAR Dean Crawford ad- vised the Defense Department on curriculums at West Point, Anna- polis and the proposed Air Force academy. During the Second World War he advised the Army ordnance department and the Navy personnel department. Dean Crawford served as Ida- ho's state engineer in 1933 under the Federal Emergency Adminis- tration of Public Works. He was consultant to the Natural Re- sources Board in 1936. The University of Colorado awarded Dean Crawford an hon- orary doctorate of science in 1944 and the Norlin distinguished alumnus award last year. The American Society of Industrial Engineers gave him a fellowship in the Academy of Engineering in 1950. Dean Crawford was director of the American Society of Civil En- gineers from 1935 to 1938 and vice-president of the Society for Promotion of Engineering Educa- tion in 1936 and 1937. Union Okays Wage Board Adjustment Formula Would EnlargeGroup WASHINGTON-)-A formu- la for bringing union leaders back into the mobilization program has been approved by union repre- sentatives and is being studied by management, informed sources reported yesterday. The compromise was described as a proposal to double the strength of the Wage Stabiliza- tion Board, giving it 18 members and empowering them to settle a broad field of labor disputes. At present the board is only a policy- making group. * * * { 'gU' Hea, Interview... By WENDY OWEN "If the economic problem be- comes more serious in India, the Communists will be able to step in," Mme Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, Indian ambassador to the United States declared yesterday. The illiterate peasant of India has no knowledge of the differing ideologies of Communism and democracy, she explained. "I don't even find a knowledge of Com-' munism in this highly civilized country." "And the Communists can ap- peal strongly to hungry, illiterate people by promising them food." THOUGH the standard of living in Russia seems low to members of the Western nations, Mme. Pandit pointed out that conditions there were good compared to her own country. "It's all a relative mat- ter," she laughed. She insisted that India does not view Communism or Communist China as a threat. "We recognize Communist China, but diplomatic recognition involves the national necessities, not approval of foreign policy." "In India we have had sabo- tage troubles with members of the Communist party, which has resulted in thousands of Com- munists being jailed." But the Communist Party has not been banned nationally, Mine Pandit explained. "Some of the autono- mous Indian states, where the problem is acute, have banned the party. So today most Com- munist party activities in India are underground." She expressed her government's pleasure over the friendly message of President Truman to Congress * * * Lecture.. Mme. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit yesterday emphasized the strong influence of the teachings of Ma- hatma Gandhi in shaping India's present foreign policy. Addressing a large audience in the Rackham Lecture Hall, the Indian Ambassador to the United States recalled Gandhi's advice to "concentrate on human and moral factors and strive for peace through conciliation." * * * ON CAMPUS to dedicate a new library of works relating to the as- sassinated Indian leader, Mme. Pandit declared that while Gan- dhi was a strong pacifist, he was well aware of the issues of war. "While violence is bad in the abstract," she quoted Gandhi, 'It is the duty of the believer to decide between the aggressor and the defender, and then side with the defender in a non- violent manner." Gandhi was a man of peace, she said, but "not peace at any price." He advocated "truthfulness, hu- mility, tolerance and a reliance on spiritual forces. "Stressing man's responsibility to man, Gandhi's humanitarian nationalism encompassed the well- being of the entire world." Mad- ame Pandit said. "He suffered for truth, and he would rather have seen his peo- ple suffer too than profit at the expense of others.} "I ask you, my friends, to think in your own hearts whether the world has a need for such a man today." rs Mie. Pandit ACCEPTANCE has been voted by the United Labor Policy Com- mittee, the sources said. This body speaks for the CIO, the AFL and some other major labor groups. Economic Stabilizer Eric John- ston is reported to be in favor of the compromise. One source said the compromise had been approved by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce but that the Na- tional Association of Manufac- turers had balked. A statement issued by the Chamber of Commerce last night, however, said it was in complete agreement "on principles" with; the manufacturers association and other business representatives. It said the businessmen were still in session, drafting a policy state- ment for presentation to John- ston today. IF JOHNSTON is successful in gaining general agreement, the im- passe caused when union repre- sentatives withdrew from the Wage Stabilization Board last month will be removed. Settle- ment of this area of dispute, how- ever, would not necessarily mean the immediate return of labor rep- resentatives to other mobilization agencies. There is still a quarrel between the United Labor Policy Committee and mobilization boss+ Charles E. Wilson. The compromise proposal, it' was reported, would give an en- larged wage board authority to+ handle disputes arising from its own policy or decisions as well as those certified by the president as causing a national emergency. Ticket Sales For Marriage Lectures Start Tickets are now available for a long-awaited lecture series on marriage and family relations, running intermittently from March 26 to May 1. The series, sponsored by a joint faculty-student committee, will feature a variety of specialists in the connubial-family relations field, according to Ivan Parker, chairman of the committee. * * * ALL OF THE lectures will be delivered at 8 p.m. in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall on the following dates: Monday, March 26. "Contem- porary Setting for Marriage." Prof. John Useem, of the sociol- ogy department at Michigan State College. Monday, April 2. "Psychologi- cal Factors in Marriage." Prof. Ernest G. Osborne, of Columbia University. Monday, April 16. The Mc- Graw Hill marriage films will be shown. Monday, April 23. "Court- MME. PANDIT urging wheat for India. "The mes- sage has made the United States many friends in India." * * * "GETTING FOOD is our first step in making India a strong na- tion," she said. "Secondly will be giving everyone an opportunity to rise in status according to his own abilities." She pointed to the need of in- creased technical development in India. "That is why we send so many students to the Ub ited States., Here they can gain tecipi- cal knowledge, and bring it back to us." The Indian student population at the University this year is 55, one third of whom are govern- ment-supported. In previous years it was well over 100, but the dollar- exchange has forced it to slip. C Back 'ront rnAllied Planes, Artillery Hit,,, Communists East-West Road Defense Seen TOKYO-()-Chinese Commu- nist forces yesterday traded space for time to build a new mountain line in central Korea, breaking off contact along most of a 70- mile front. Allied air and artillery hammer- ed the retreating Reds. Allied ground troops moved up to with- in 22 miles of the 38th parallel, without determined opposition. .* * * HEAVY CQMMUNIST supply movement from both northwest and northeast Korea toward the battlefront were reported, how- ever. More than 1,500 vehicles were sighted in the past 48 hours, hinting that a big new battle still may be brewing just south of the 38th parallel. Front dispatches said the Reds seemed intent on defending an east-west lateral highway run- ning from the battered Com- munist-held capital of Seoul in the west, through the central Korean base of Chunchon to the east coast. Chunchon is eight miles south of the old political boundary be- tween North and South Korea, and 14 miles northwest of Hong- chon. Hongchon is the Red army corps headquarters and assembly area now menaced by three con- verging allied columns from the right, left and center. IN PULLING back the Chinese yielded without a fight a strate- gic crest of ridges and hills south of Hongchon. It was from this line that the Reds tried to burst through at Wonju and Chipyong into southeast Korea in a bloodily repulsed mid-February offensive. They pulled out of their front line so rapidly yesterday that they abandoned- pack animals used to haul artillery and sup- plies to the front. Dispatches indicated the Reds had decided not to defend Hong- chon-once headquarters for the Chinese 66th Army Corps. British Commonwealth troops, including the famed Canadian Princess Pats, moved up to within four miles of that Red base against no resistance. The U.S. First Cavalry and the U.S. First Marine Division were striking at the Red bastion from the left and right. The dismount- ed cavalry swept- toward Hong- chon from the southwest and the leathernecks from the southeast. Cavalry troopers hurled back three Chinese counterattacks. Anti-Inflation Policy Rapped By McCracken "The government has failed to pursue direct and vigorous mea- sures to curb excess buying pow- 'er," Prof. Paul .W. McCracken of t h e business administration school, told members of the Amer- ican Veterans Committee last night. As a result he showed that we are now in an inflationary per- iod, featured by loose credit con- trol and a tax policy that is em- phasizing the wrong thing. , Stiffer taxes are necessary, not primarily to balance ,the budget, he pointed out, but to cut civilian spending. He suggested a greater personal income tax and a possi- ble excise tax on the federal level. The government also needed to move more quickly on monetary I World NewsI RoundupI By The Associated Press PARIS - Alexandre Parodi of France told Soviet Deputy For- eign Minister Andrei Gromyko plainly last night that the Korean war and a "great fear of the Soviet Union" are the real causes of world tension. * LONDON-Britain urged Italy yesterday to negotiate a Trieste settlement with Yugoslavia, of- ficial sources said. The informants said Prime Minister Attlee conveyed Brit- ain's views to Premier Alcide De Gasperi and Italian Foreign Minister Carlo Sforza in a day- long discussion of world and Anglo-Italian problems. * * * WASHINGTON-The Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services Committees yesterday approved President Truman's plan to send four more Ameri- can divisions to Europe, but they reserved the right of Con- gress to authorize all future troop assignments abroad. V, * DETROIT-In a formal charge of unfair labor practices, the CIO United Auto Workers contended yesterday that Briggs Manufac- turing Co. was responsible for the beatings of five unionists in 1946. TV-SHY GAMBLER: Costello Dodg-es Revealing Income at Senate Inquiry NEW YORK - (P) -Television shy Frank Costello, jittery lest he lay himself open to income tax charges and deportation, yester- Vandenberg Still Very ill GRAND RAPIDS.- ()- Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, veteran Michigan Republican, still lay gravely ill at his home last night. His family said there was "no change" in the last 12 hours in the Senator's condition and point- ed to a carefully worded state- ment issued earlier yesterday. That report said "unless a fa- vorable change occurs soon, his future condition must be con- sidered grave." The champion of a bi-partisan U.S. foreign policy suffered a re- lapse last month while recuperat- ing from a series of operations that started 18 months ago with removal of half his left lung. Vandenberg, who is 66 years old, has failed to rally since the relapse, his physician, Dr. A. B. Smith, said. day refused to reveal his wealth to Senate crime probers. At the end of the second day of the Senate Crim Committee's all- star hearing, Costello was asked to think it over and open up. Otherwise, the committee said, he will be cited for contempt. Costello--who refused to let TV cameras show his face while tes- tifying - spoke quite freely of money he made last year. But he refused point-blank to say what he's worth as of now. "Mr. Costello, what is your net worth?" Committee Counsel Ru- dolph Halley asked several times. "I refuse to answer on the ground that it may tend to in- criminate me," replied Costello just as often. He estimated his 1950 income at more than $168,357-from ren- tals and sales of property, oil leases and gambling coups. Costello attributed his solid fi- nancial status these days to his early beginnings in the slot ma- chine racket in New Orleans. ' He testified the late Huey P. Long invited him to take over the slot machine business in Louisi- ana when Long was Senator and controlled the legislature of that state in 1935. RELIGION IN LIFE: Speaker Stresses Need For Ethics in Disputes By DONNA HENDLEMAN The ethical implications in the field of labor-management rela- tions should not be overlooked, Rev. Francis McPeek, Industrial Relations Secretary for the Con- gregational Christian churches contended yesterday. Speaking at a Religion in Life Week seminar meeting, Rev. Mc- Peek pointed out the relevancy of religion and the need for Chris- tian ethics in the everyday bus- iness world. But these ethics are not to come on purely a ministerial level, he the field of psychology. A fifth seminar on religion and Com- munism was slated, but Rev. Duncan Littlefair, seminar lead- er, adjourned it so that the group could attend the lecture given by Mme. V. L. Pandit, In- dian ambassador to the United States. The seminars, will take place again at 4:10 p.m. today. "Is Re- ligion Relevant to the Educational Process" will be held at the Uni- versity elementary school cafeter- ia. The seminar on religion and family life will take place at the ODD FIDDLES RECALLED: SHeifetz To Play Rare Violin at Hill v- Jascha Heifetz, distinguished vi- olinist, who will perform at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium has held a wide variety, of violins in his hands ranging from his own Stradivarius to an almost legend- ary aluminum violin which Hei- Heifetz has come across, was made of 2,750 matches. He discovered it in Capetown on his fourth world tour and demonstrated that it could be played extremely well. In Paris as a boy Heifetz nicked un a violin in a walking emmonom u