A NOTE TO PRESIDENT HATCHER See Page 4 Y ,J"tr4tn n 404& 4 CLOUDY, COOLER Latest Deadline in the State .I. VOL. LXII, No. 20 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1951 SIX PAGES ' Plans Research Project Near Huron River * * * * * * Medical School Blank Changed. Questions Called 'Discriminatory' To Be Eliminated from Application By DONNA HENDLEMAN The Medical School application blank, subject of a prolonged campus controversy, has been revised. Absent from the new form are several questions which were termed "potentially discriminatory" by a conference of University deans last January. STRUCK FROM THE blank are queries on religion, nationality and former name if changed. A picture is still requested, but it is House Votes Against Tax Increase Bill WASHINGTON - (k) - The Rouse rejected the compromise $5,732,000,000 Tax Increase Bill yesterday in a stunning upset that left key lawmakers questioning whether any revenue measure at all will be passed this year. The 203 to 157 vote against the bill surprised even the unusual combination of Republicans and northern and big city Democrats who made up the bulk of the win- ning side in the roll call. THE FORCES who turned it back were composed principally of two groups: (1) Those who op- pose a tax increase until govern- ment spending is slashed and (2) those who said the bill nit too hard at low income groups and too lightly at large incomes. "It apparently was i combi. nation of extreme left wingers and right wingers who outnum- bered the middle," commented Sen. Taft (R-Ohio). The bill, worked out by a Sen- ate-House conference committee after both chambers had passed it in differing form, would have raised individual income taxes $2,- 333,000,000 a year. Yesterday's vote threw a big monkey wrench into the machin- ery that had been spinning smoothly toward adjournment of Congress at the end of this week. UN Troops Close Trap On Chinese KOREA-(P)--American troops yesterday caught Chinese forces in a giant trap on the blazing Central Korean front where three Allied divisions have smashed within four miles of the big Red base of Kumsong. The Americans snapped shut their trap less than 24 hours after U.S. airmen handed the Commun- ist Air Force ;its worst jet licking of the war. The Fifth Air Force said U.S. fliers shot down nine Russian-type MIGS and damaged five others in two swirling dogfights over North- west Korea. It reported only one F-86 sabre jet damaged in the flashing battles between 70 U.S. and more than 150 Red jets. * * s t MEANWHILE Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway announced considerable progress was made by Communist and Allied negotiators yesterday toward resumption of Korean arm- istice talks. The announcement about the seventh meeting of Allied and Red liaison officers in Panmunjom, Korea, was released by Ridgway's Public Information Office. It cautioned, however, that there were some unresolved issues which must be settled before full-scale meetings can begin. These were described as the size of security zones around Kaesong, former site of the truce talks, Pan- munjom, the new site, and Mun- san, site of the UN peace camp. Alleged Grid Pool 4 compulsory only if an applicant -is to be interviewed. StudentwLegislator Bob Baker, '52, who worked on the problem as head of the Campus Action Committee last year, expressed hope, that the new blank would put an end to the discrimination controversy. "With the questions removed, the goal of SL's work has been reached. We hope that the school will soon follow the spirit of the action in their admissions policy." * * * KEN BABCOCK, '52, current CAC chairman, said that the me- dical school move would close the issue of applications discrimina- tion as far as SL is concerned. "We will ha'e a routine follow-up investigation, of all the schools," he said, "but we trust that no further action will be needed." But while student legislators seemed confident that the changes were in keeping with the spirit of the initial requests for change, Dr. Wayne L. Whit. aker, Medical School secretary, emphasized only the mechanical aspects of the new blank. "This is merely a routine new printing," he said. "The revisions are simply part of a program to improve admissions procedures all along the line. They do not con- stitute a change in policy." The Medical School is the last school to revise its applications since the Deans' Conference suggested the- elimination of certain questions from admis- sion blanks. At the time of the deans' meet- ing Frank E. Robbins, assistant to retired President Alexander B. Ruthven, announced that the deans' statement would stand as regular University policy. The fight for revision of the medical school blank began in 1949 when the Committee to End Discrimination started a campaign to have certain questions removed f r o m the applications. ,CED charged that the queries Were po- tential aids to discrimination. Last year the Campus Action Committee took up the problem and'after investigation also pe- titioned for the revisions. After the SL stand was indi- cated by the Dean's Conference, a series of applications revisions were put forth, and by late last spring the medical school was the only University school which had not yet acted on the deans' recom- mendations. Three questions will remain on' the blank which were also on the deans' "black list." These are place of birth, and mother's and9 father's occupation.1 Regents Yet To Approve Development Officials Refuse Any Comment By CAL SAMRA and l HARLAND BRITZ University officials are now~ working on plans for a giganti new research and developmen center northeast of the Huron River, it became known last night The center, which might eventu- ally house 14,000 people, is being planned on a long-range basis and is destined to accomodata ex- pansion of research facilities in future years. INITIAL PLANS call for eec- tion of an Engineering Research Institute building at an early date with a structure to house the multi-million dollar Phoenix Pro- ject scheduled to follow. No specific details of the cen- ter have been announced, and University administrators were reluctant to speak about it openly. The plans are still in an unfin- ished stage and have not yet keen approved by the Board of Re- gents. The Board will next meet Oct. 26, but is not expected to re- view the plans until its following meeting late in November. * * * THE RESEARCH center would cover a 200 acre area bordering on Glazier Way and Plymouth Road, in the rolling hills overlooking the Huron River a short distance from campus. The land has been purchased by the University over a several year period. Hints of the new project have been prevalent in recent weeks. Speculation mounted when Dean Ralph A. Sawyer, of the graduate school, who is also a Phoenix director, published a progress report which said it was "likely" the new Phoenix Proj- ect building would be erected in the area. Dean Sawyer also mentioned the Engineering Research Institute. It was learned yesterday that plans for this building are in an advanced stage. Early this week, Ann Arbor city engineer George H. Sandenburgh told the City Council he had been approached by a University "plan- ning consultant" who was check- ing into sewage facilities in the vicinity of the proposed research center. Sandenburgh said the consult- ant told him the University was planning on an eventual popula- tion of 14,000 persons in the area. IT BECAME evident at the council meeting that plans for re- locating U.S. 23 were being held up because of the new project and the University's reluctance to give out details. Yesterday, University spokes- men added their confirmation. They admitted that the research center was definitely in the off- ing, and that architects and sur- veyors were already at work. But they emphasized that noth- ing positive would be done until the Regents gave their approval. Pi iKI STA? EGYPTI CHIEF CR0 OS RIOT h British Meet t Angry Mobs With Bullets Troops Pledged To Stay in Egypt eCAIRO, Egypt - VP)- British troops fired on rioting Egyptians in two cities on the Suez Canal yes- terday. From seven to seventeen persons were reported killed and scores in- jured. A * THE BRITISH commander pledged that his troops will remain in the canal area despite the ef- forts of King Farouk's government *to oust them. Britain announced that reinforcements are on the, way. CA British army communique mssaid "a small number of rioters" were killed and a British enlist- ed man was wounded in clashes at Ismailia and Port Said. Egyptian officials at Ismailia said seven Egyptians were killed and 74 injured. Cairo newspaper dispatches said a total of 17 were killed, including two Britons, and at least 80 injured. The British communique said the situation at the headquarters city of Ismailia is now under con- trol after a morning in which "a canteen and cars were burned and British troops opened fire to clear the mob." A LARGE MOB attacked a Brit- ish camp at Port Said, it added, and "British troops and Egyptian police opened fire." Egypt too was reported sending in troops and police to preserve order, by account of the pro-gov- ernment newspaper Al Balagh. Unconfirmed advices said six Egyptian troop trains have head- ed for Ismailia, the British head- quarters city at the center of the canal 70 miles northwest of Cai- ro, where looting of a British canteen set off widespread dis- orders. The British commander, Lt. Gen. George Erskine, told his detach- ments in a broadcast "we are not going to be turned out, forced out or knocked out" of the canl area. "We are not looking for trouble," he said, "but we shall deal with it quite firmly if we meet it. Executives of' IFC Ask Biasj ClauseStudy The Interfraternity Council Ex- ecutive Committee last night vot- ed to recommend to the House President's Council that it set up a special committee to investigate the controversial bias quiestion. The committee would "look in- to the present IFC policy on dis- crimination and report any chang- es it finds necessary." * * * THE COUNCIL is slated to dis- cuss the recommendation at itsl meeting tonight in the Union. The present IFC policy is in the form of a resolution, passed by the house presidents Nov. 21, 1950, which states that any fraternity' with a discriminatory clause must attempt to have it removed at its national convention, or the fra- ternity shall be denied recognition by the IFC. The seven-man committee, re- commended by the executive board would include the chairman of the IFC's Human Relations Commit- -Daily-L. Wilk LONELY WOMEN SCRAMBLE FOR NEW DIRECTORIES * * * Directory on Sale Today; Quick Sell-out Expected The, 1951-52 Student Directory will go on sale today, and editor Ron Watts, '52, expects a quick sell-out. "There has always been a big demand for the directory in the past. Although we hope we've planned our supply to take care of everyone, we can't guarantee that there will be enough." * * WATTS NOTED that with leap year in the near future, he expects the feminine demand to be greatly increased. "I understand that many women on campus are going dateless because up to now no one knew their phone numbers. I sug- gest that they take matters into World News Roundup By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Russia lined up with Iran last night against UN Security Council action in the ex- plosive Iranian-British oil contro- versy and forecast a Soviet veto on compromise proposals calling for resumption of oil talks. NEW YORK - Strong-arm dock warfare was threatened yesterday to break a wildcat stevedores' strike that has im- perilled the Army's supply life- line abroad. LAUSANNE, Switzerland - The Swiss Federal Court yesterday con- victed Charles E. Davis, 23 years old, Pasadena, Calif., of political espionage. He was charged with spying on Communists and United States diplomatic personnel in Switzer- land on behalf of U.S. agents and Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis.) SL I " their own hands and buy a direc- tory today." Long a University stand-by as a reference book for well-filled social calendars, this year they're even better, according to Watts. "The phone numbers are correct." The gray-covered books will go on sale early today in front of the Union, League, Engine Arch, Angell Hall and at other strate- gic campus spots. They will also be on sale in most local book- stores. Included in the directory are names, classes and schools, home and Ann Arbor address and phone numbers of nearly 18,000 students. Also listed are phone numbers of dormitories, house groups, student and administrative offices, with names of the officers. Index letters in the corner of each page have been added to facilitate finding names. "And with our stress on accuracyj in editing the new directory, we feel that it is well worth a dollar. That's as much as they asked in past years when costs were lower." Watts said the money value alone should move the directories like hotcakes. "But we'll sell them as long as they last-which probably won't be past today." Accused Killers Mute at Hearing Three 18-year-old youths ac- cused of the Sept. 16 mallet slay- ing of a nurse near the University's new women's dorm stood mute at their arraignment in Circuit Court yesterday. After Ann Arbor attorney Ralph C. Keyes made an unsuccessful re- quest for adjournment of the case, Circuit Judge James C. Breakey, Jr., ordered not guilty pleas en- tered for the trio and set the trial for Wednesday, Oct. 31. Losers' Club Membership in an exclusive club -- the society of college presidents whose teams don't win football games -- has been awarded to University President Harlan H. Hatcher. Introducing President Hatch- er to the Economic Club in De- troit Monday, Wayne Univer- sity President David Henry ad- mitted that he, himself, was a charter member, but added, "After what Michigan did to Indiana Saturday, I believe that President Hatcher should be given only probationary mem- bership." Taft Certain Will Get GOP Nod in '52 WASHINGTON-(P)-A broadly smiling and apparently confident Robert A. Taft formally threw his hat into the presidential ring yes- terday. The Ohio senator made the long- expected announcement of his can- didacy at a jam-packed, steaming- ly hot news conference. He pre- dicted the Republicans would nom- inate him and the voters would elect him to the White House on a platform pledging: * * * 1. RESTORATION of . progress "within the principles of liberty rather than the principles of So- cialism." 2. Restoration of "honesty and integrity" in government, with an end to corruption and influence- peddling, For Taft, son of late President William Howard Taft and regard- ed by many as the Senate's "Mr. Republican" since his dominant role in the GOP-run 80th Con- gress, this was the third all-out bid for his party's presidential nomination. YP's To Give Controversial Hopwood Play "War Sky" the Hopwood Award- winning play by Robert Rosenberg will be produced under the spon- sorship of the Young Progressives, it was decided at a YP meeting last night. Rosenberg's allegedly pacificist play was scheduled for production last semester as a part of the Inter-Arts Union student art fes- tival, but was withdrawn by the IAU on the grounds that it had received unauthorized publicity. "War Sky" had previously ap- peared in "Generation," the IAU magazine. The University never directly banned the production, although Prof. Arno Bader of the English department, who clears all stu- dent plays for the University, called it "controversial." Ivan Gluckman will direct the YP's production of Rosenberg's play. Lia quat Shot By Moslem Warmonger Assassin Killed On Spot by Mob KARACHIPakistan-( )-Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan was as- sassinated yesterday by a Moslem extremist who wanted a holy war with Hindu India. The Assassin, Sher Akhtar, was killed by a mob which surged on- to the speaker's platform at Ra- walpindi, 30 miles from the seeth- ing Punjab border of disputed Kashmir state. Official sources said the mob caught the killer and "tore him to pieces." THE 56-YEAR-OLD Liaquat, long a conciliatory influence in the embittered relations with neigh- boring India, had just started to address a meeting of the Moslem League. He was shot twice at close range, in the chest and head, and died in a hospital after an opera- tion. The Pakistan cabinet was ex- pected to meet at once to consider the dangerous new state of Pak- istan-Indian relations that may arise from this newest instance of terrorism in the Moslem world, the scene of 13 such assassina- tions 'since early in 1945. Some of the assassinations-notably in Egypt, Iran, Jordan and Syria- have had far-reaching results in relations with Western powers. Foreign Minister Sir Mohammed Zafrullah Khan, a possible choice to succeed Liaquat as prime min- ister, hurriedly prepared to come home from United Nations head- quarters in New York. Pakistan has no deputy prime minister so it is still uncertain who will succeed Liaquat. * * * NO DISORDER was reported in the Moslem nation of 80,000,000 people. But preparations were be- ing made for a hasty funeral here today. In Bombay, India, truck loads of heavily armed police began inten- sive patrols for fear that false re- ports might set'off Moslem-Hindu rioting. False reports that a Mos- lem assassinated Mohandas K. Gandhi set off murderous attacks against Bombay's 400,000 Moslems in 1948. SL To Confer About Library HoursDispute A settlement of the long-stand- ing library hour feud appears pos- sible today, with Student Legis- lature president Len Wilcox sche- duled to confer with the top Uni- versity officials concerned with the problem. Conferees in addition to Wilcox will be President Harlan H. Hatcher, Vice President Marvin L. Niehuss, Director of University Relations Arthur L. Brandon and Director of Libraries Warner G. Rice. * * * WILCOX EXPRESSED high hopes that a satisfactory settle- ment could be reached at this meeting. Although he warned that the library in all likelihood would not be open the next couple of Sundays, he felt that through the conference some arrangement might be made by which the bud- get would be adjusted to eventu- ally reopen the library on Sun- Scene of Assassination PREMIERES SCHEDULED: Concert To End Composer 's Festival By MARILYN FLORIDIS Bringing to an end the Univer- sity Composer's Festival, the Uni- versity Symphony Orchestra un- drv the ,direction oa-f "WXa'jr,..Thin-, are students of Prof. ney's composition class sic school. * * * Ross Fin- in the mu- tonight will include "An April Overature" by Eitzen, "Fantasia for Orchestra" by Cogan, "Sym- phony in Two Movements" by Beglarian "Adagin f o Strins THREE WORLD premieres will