Y SL ELECTIONS See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State :43 a t ty a 0 ,CLEARING VOL. LXI, No. 113 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1951 SIX PAGES Justice Black Grants Mc Gee Stay of Execution % IAU Withdraws HopwoodPlay Author Claims Pressure of 'U' Group Reason for Abandonment The Inter-Arts Union yesterday withdrew from its program the Hopwood award winning play "War Sky" by Robert Rosenberg, '53,; which was to be included in the IAU Student Art Festival scheduled f(r the week-end of Mar. 23, 24 and 25. Rosenberg said that the IAU decided to abandon the play be- cause "pressure was exerted on the IAU by some University group which believed that production of 'War Sky' would cause trouble. I feel the IAU behaved in a cowardly manner by submitting gracefully." * * * , * THE PLAY was in productio * * * 4 IAU Issues 'War- Sky ' Statement (Following is the statement made public by the inter Arts Union last night in connection with its decision regarding Robert Rosenber's "war Sky". Continuing its past policy of presenting the works of Univer- sity of Michigan students within the fields of the creative arts, the IAU included in its Third Annual Student Arts Festival a one-act flay by a University student. It has become necessary for the IAU to state its position and reasons for canceling the performance of this play as a part of the festival. S 'The play was selected for pro- dluction on the basis of its artis- tic merit over any consideration of controversial subject matter. Permission was secured from the University by the IAU for its pub- lio presentation. However, the play subsequently was given pub- licity of a political nature by the author and a member of the cast. This publicity was unauthorized by the IAU. The IAU is not a political or- ganization, and considers this ac- tion on the part of the author and member of the cast to be in bad faith and destructive to the ob- jectives of the IAT. The perform- ance of this play will therefore, be eliminated from the Student Arts Festival program. The IAU affirms its right and responsibility to choose works for presentation solely on the basis of artistic interest and excellence, but remains a non-political or- ganization. Sawyer Seeks Tighter Credit WASHINGTON-(P)-Secretary of -Commerce Sawyer yesterday spoke out for new restrictions on credit, including tighter rules on consumer buying, to battle infla- tion. Elsewhere in the government's efforts to keep prices and wages in hand during the vast military buildup, there were these devel- opments: 1. Economic 'Stabilizer Eric Johnston gave up, at least for the time being, efforts to bring labor and management together on forming a new Wage Stabiliza- tion Board and said the next move is up to them. 2: President Truman, at Key West, announced an executive or- der calling for a 17-member Na- tional Advisory Board on Mobili- zation Policy to serve under Mob- ilization Director Wilson, but to advise the President. It would include farm, labor and business men. 3. The Office of Price Stabili- sation set specific price ceilings on cattle hides, Officials said they do not expect the order to change the price of shoes. Pursuing Police Wound Teenagers n when the IAU dropped it. Events leading up to the IAU decision included several com- mittee meetings which were called to determine whether or not the play was "subversive," according to Rosenberg. Last Monday William Trous- dale, '52, president of IAU, in- formed him that Prof. Arno Ba- der of the English Department who clears student plays for the University, considered the play "subversive," Rosenberg said. ' , , THE FIRST committee meeting was called to 'discuss whether or not that was actually the case, he added. Prof. Bader said last night however, that the play was re- garded as "controversial but not as subversive." At the meeting the IAU favored going ahead with the play but with the condition that there would be no unauthorized pub- licity. ON WEDNESDAY th'e play re- ceived the approval of the Univer- sity through Prof. Bader. That approval is still in effect, accord- ing to Prof. Bader. That same evening the IAU president received a phone call from a member of The Daily staff Inquiring about the rumors of "subversion" in connection with "War Sky." This call convinced Trousdale that unauthorized publicity had been released, he said last night. ROSENBERG had previously been contacted by the same re- porter and after confirming the rumor that a committee was meet- ing to decide whether or not the play was subversive referred the reporter to Trousdale. Trousdale revealed nothing to the reporter. Another meeting was then called. yesterday in Prof. Bader's office at the re- quest of the IAU. Trousdale informed Rosenberg that the play was being removed from the Festival program because of the unauthorized publicity that had reached The Daily. Rosenberg's "War Sky" was first published in Generation, an IAU publication. The play to be pro- duced was a revision of the orig- inal. McCabe Quits Reserve Board WASHINGTON - () - Thomas B. McCabe, Republican industrial- ist, stepped out of the hot-spot post of Federal Reserve Board Chairman yesterday and William McChesney Martin, 44-year-old Treasury official, was named by PresidentmTruman todsucceed him. It came just 12 days after the Federal Reserve and Treasury had broken off a long public feud over governmental financial policy and its relation to inflation by pro- claiming an "accord" of still-un- certain duration and scope. * Decries Use Of Pressure By Defense Tuesday Set As AppealDeadline WASHINGTON-() - Supreme Court Justice Black yesterday granted a temporary stay of ex- ecution to Willie McGee, Negro convicted of rape, but angrily de- nounced "pressure" tactics used in the defendant's behalf. McGee, *a three-time loser on previous appeals to the Supreme Court, was convicted of raping a white woman in Mississippi six years ago. He was scheduled to die next Tuesday. *. * * IN GRANTING the stay, Justice Black rebuked those who attempt- ed to influence the decisions of judges by sending them telegrams. "The courts of the United States are not the kinds of in- struments of justice that can be influenced by such pressures," Black said. Black pointed to a five-inch stack of telegrams on his desk. GOV. FIELDING Wright of Mississippi has said that hundreds of protests against McGee's exe- cution originated from Commun- ist sources. Justice Black specified that the stay of execution should re- main in effect until the full Supreme Court rules on a new appeal to be filed by attorneys for McGee: He said the appeal must be filed on orcbefore next Tuesday.dThe high court could then decide at its next formal session, on March 26, whether it will grant McGee a hearing. Black's denunciation of propa- ganda messages came at the end of a 90-minute hearing in his chambers. He did not make the wires public. Most of them came from New York City; some were from the west coast. S * * Local Group Will Continue McGeeFight On campus, members of the ad hoc Committee to Save McGee said last night that the group will not let up in its efforts to prevent Mc- Gee's execution. Co-chairman Valerie Cowen, '54, announced that the committee still plans to post a petition on the Diag asking President Truman to intervene.- The petition was to have been ready today, but in view of Black's action it will now be re-worded, Miss Cowen said. THE PETITION will call on the President to ask the Supreme Court to definitely review McGee's case. If the high court again fails to take such action the commit- tee then will make every at- tempt to obtain clemency for McGee from Gov. Wright, Miss Cowen said. She indicated that the commit- tee's ultimate appeal would center on the inequality of McGee's death sentence, should efforts to get a new trial fail.' Meanwhie yesterday the Young Republicans voted to have a repre- sentative on the committee, with the stipulation that YR support would be later withdrawn if the committee "acts in a manner ad- verse to YR beliefs." * G u F0 RCES * STRIKE RED RESTT CE, Costello Bolts Senate CrimeQuiz NEW YORK-()--- Racketeer Frank Costello risked arrest yes- terday by defiantly stamping out of the Senate Crime Committee hearing. "I am going to walk out," he croaked in his hoarse voice aftera refusing to answer any more com- mittee questions. * * * THEN HE stood up and strode from the hearing in the Federal Court Building in downtown Fo- ley Square. "I am going directly home to bed," said the 60-year-old Cos- tello, star witness as the Senate Committee-television and all- moved through the fourth day of its sensational open hearings in New York. Committee Chairman Estes Ke- fauver (D-Tenn) said Costello can escape arrest if he comes back by next Tuesday-the last day of the hearings. However, contempt pro- iceedings will be started at once, he added. * * * KEFAUVER had warned Costel- lo before he left he'd be arrested if he took tle walk and cited for contempt as well. Allies Take Hone n New Gain Reds Grouping Near Chunchon TOKYO-)P-Advancing Allied forces today hit stiffening Red resistance on Korea's central front. The steadiest Chinese artillery fire of the war hit them east and west of newly-won Hongchon. THE COMMUNIST retreat northward appeared to be ending at a line along the looping Hong- chin river on which the ruined town of Hongchon hangs like a pendant 20 miles below the 38th, parallel. Hongehon, defended by 40,00 Reds only last week,a fell to U.S. troops yesterday by Chinese de- fault. The Reds lifted nothing larger in its deense than sna°1 arms-C-n p~alled out: The capture of Hfcntciun gave United Nrt sns arms anc her key pivot pcmt on their 100-mile front eastwa d from liberated Seoul. * * * 5F12 are believed na', ir. at Crunehon, 16 air miles northwest cf Hongchon and 45 air miles iortheast of Seoul. Field correspondents said it seemed log- ical that the Chinese would make a determined stand at Chunchon. Chunchon, on main highway routes to North Korea, is eight air miles south of the 38th par- allel, old political boundary of North and South Korea. Allied air power continued to * * THE OLD hEAVE-HO-Alert Union officials yesterday in'ercerted a sr'iad of ,ich:.Tish attezrpt- ing to enter the Union's strictly male front door. The scmewbat chilly merma's, who will rer- form as part of the annual Union open house on SaturCzy,'tcxk the fortidden ent:ance as the quick- est way to get to a pool practice session. (See story, page five). Forum Spieakers Ouhlin? ev Z/ Pre req u is ies forPee ovG.e nteic -- 1 d' 1 But Costello said he'd had enough and his attorney said he'd "reached the limit of his physical endurance." The racketeer-whom the Sen- ate committee calls one of the nation's biggest crime syndicate leaders-has suffered from laryn- gitis ever since he first took the stand Tuesday. Costello took his walk just after the former Virginia Hill.one-time girl friend of the slain mobster, Benjamin (Bugsy) Siegel, pout- ingly told the committee she never took money from "gangsters or racketeers." SL Petitions GoingSlowly Petitions for student offices in the approaching spring election are moving out of the, Student Legslature offices at a slow pace. To date only 23 people have re- quested petitions to get in the running for one of the 25 SL seats to be vacant. Only one Board in Control of Inter-Collegiate Athle- tics and eight J-Hop Committee petitions are now being circulated. Nine members of the J-Hop Com- mitteeare to be elected, and one student will be chosen to fill a Board position. The spring balloting will also be held for class officers in all engineering college classes, the senior class of the literary col- lege, and six Union vice-presi- dents. Petitions may be obtained from 3 to 6 p.m. through next Wednes- day at the Student Legislature Bldg., 122 S. Forest. They must be turned in by the following Fri- day. F i By DONNA HENDLEMAN Negotiation, disarmament and cooperative effort to raise the un- versal standard of living are the prerequisites to world peace, three forum participators contended last night. Speaking on "What Prospects, for Peace" at the last event of Religion in Life Week, B. Rajan, of the Indian delegation to the United Nations, Brendan Sexton, of the UAW and the CIO and Prof. William R. Murphy of Ohio State University, each outlined differ- ent plans for preventing war. THE PLANTS all embodied the three essentials, but often empha- sized different aspects of them. The need for a higher stand- ard of living was given an im- portant spot in each plan. Raj an, speaking for the Nehru .proposal based on *Gandhi's pacifism said, "there will be trou- ble as long as resentments of peo- ple over frustrated nationalism and low standards of living exist. We must stop exploiting people's problems for war purposes and harness existing revolutionary spirit for peace." "WE MUST be willing to spend as much for peace as we do for war," Sexton asserted, outlining the Reuther plan. "Our best hope for peace is economic development which gives people hope that they can build a life better "than be- fore." Prof. Murphy, putting forth Quaker proposals, stressed the need for cooperative effort in this connection. "The only an- swer to Communism is not vio- lence, but removal of the condi- tions which breed Communism. This must come through mutual aid." On disarmament, Sexton andf Prof. Murphy agreed also. "It is silly to suppose tensions can be lessened when the parties con- cerned are armed to the teeth," Prof. Murphy declared. *. * * AND SEXTON gave a long- range plan for a disarming pro- cess. "Nations should undertake a gradual disarmament program. Eventually the USSR would be left isolated as the only nation dependent on force of arms," he suggested. The question of negotiation brought controversy to the fore. Rajan contended that there is always a chance for accomoda- tion and negotiation. "We must determine to negotiate even when success seems impossible. War is inevitable only if we make it so." But Sexton placed less faith in this process. "There can be no negotiation if the parties are not equal in strength or do not rec- ognize a common moral standard. Negotiations based merely on an appeal to fair-mindedness will not work." Prof. Murphy concurred with Rajan. "We cannot dismiss ne- gotiations as impossible until we attempt to negotiate," he declared. uontroi TEHRAN, IRAN-gp)--By una- nimous vote, Iran's Parliament decided tentatively yesterday to nationalize a British oil industry which would be a prize of any search out and blast Red supply war between the West and Soviet dumps, barracks and gun em- Russia. Britain's 50-year control of the Iranian oil fields was repudiated. SPECTATORS in the gallery of Parliament cheered the prospect that the government will take over the powerful Ariglo-Iranian Oil Company, which pipes millions of tons of fuel yearly to the armies, navies and air forces of the United States, Britain and other Western powers. Cold war implications were evident. Soviet Russia has ac- cused past Iranian governments of being subservient to the "Western warmongers." The vote came eight days after Premier Gen. Ali Razpara, a foe of Nationalization, was shot to death by a Moslem fanatic who accused him of selling out this country to foreigners. ,,,. ...a .t.,, .,.,.,......,...,, .... ,., a.., .,. .. RELIGIOUS ORIENTA TION LA CKING: Littlefair Stresses Practical Side of Religion a __ . World News Roundup By The Associated Press GRAND RAPIDS-The serious condition of ailing Senator Van- denberg (R-Mich) remained un- changed yesterday. WASHINGTON-Senators who want to limit President Truman's power to send American troops abroad claimed a preliminary vic- tory yesterday when Administra- tion leaders agreed to let the issue be, debated by both houses of Congress. PARIS-The Big Four nego- tiations to set up an agenda for a Foreign Minister's Conference remained bogged down over the ; - a fm.. raN..mof placements. B-29s pounded rail yards and bridges on the main supply lines leading southward from Manchuria. Fifth Air Force fighters and bombers flew 732 sorties up until 6 p.m. yesterday and kept wham- ming away at the Reds into the night. Most of the fifth's effort was in strafing and bombing ahead of the ' slowly advancing allied line. 18-1- Year old Draft Passes House Group WASHINGTON - (A') - The House Armed Services Committee, by an overwhelming 32-3 vote, yesterday approved a bill for drafting men at 181/2 years and setting up Universal Military Training later. Members wrote in an amend- ment giving draftees a choice of serving in racially segregated or nonsegregated units. * * THIS PROVISION, by Rep. Winstead (D-Miss), would permit a draftee, when he "registers, to write in whether he has a prefer- ence. It states this choice would be respected as far as military necessity would permit. The vote on this amendment was 21 to 12. It is not in the draft bill which passed the Sen- ate last Friday. There are many differences in the bills which will have to be settled in con- By RON WATTS "I don't want to prepare men for heaven, I want to prepare them for this world," Rev. Dr: Duncan money and supporting petty pro- jects." "I am appalled by the lack of religious orientation that I en- to aid the students in learning to think for themselves. And if they can't learn it here, where else will they learn it?" he remarked. "Th-t Rsmir-n in MP.WP.Pe "I DID FIND that a good deal could be accomplished by meeting with small discussion groups, such as fraternities,' he remarked. "Ci~.nirallu +hir annrnaoh In va- "WE MUST DEVELOP a religion for everyday living if we want to overcome the Communist charges that it is an opiate of the people. "TI has hen nrnven historicallv