p AMBASSADOR TO THE VATICAN See Page 4 Yl r e 0wA& D43ait i CLOUDY, CONTINUED COOL Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXII, No.26 ANN ARBOR, MICMGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1951 SIX PAGES ltaryTraining Deficiencies Told New York Conf erence Brings Out Need for Greater Edu cational Basis By CHUCK ELLIOTT Daily Managing Editor NEW YORK-Special to The Daily: Military training must be better integrated into the general education of American youth, in order that the moral and intellectual energies of the country are not dissipated, Harold Taylor, President of Sarah Lawrence College de- clared yesterdlay. Speaking before more than 2000 college and secondary school students at the second session of the annual New York Herald Tri- ,bune Forum, Taylor keynoted a discussion dealing with topics rang- ing from the draft to academic freedoms. * * * * CLAIMING THAT "ultimately, the strength of this country rests with the moral values, intelligence, and strength of will of our young men, and not merely with their technical equipment to fight a war," Taylor struck out at the present system which causes military train- ing to be a distinct gap in a man's career. "There is a difference between national defense and national security, and if the universities are considered only as training' grounds for military personnel--in science, engineering, technical skills and research of all kinds-we have given up the only means this country has of developjng a critical intelligence about politi- cal and social policies." Backing up Taylor's view, Kenneth Kurtz, a graduate student at Columbia University offered a plan designed to make military service fit into the educational process. After students graduate from high school, Kurtz suggested, they could be required to enter service im- mediately for 12 to 15 months. Out of this group would be selected qualified men to 'go to college, under a system of national scholar- hips. While in college, they would receive further ROTC-type train- ing. * * * * MAJ. GEN. Lewis B. Hershey, Selective Service director, outlined the manpower needs of the armed forces. "For the predictable future" ,500,000 men will be required, possibly more, and of this number not more than 2,000,000 may be expected to be secured through volunteer- ing. Seven hundred fifty thousand men will have to be inducted each year to serve for two year periols. "Only those who by capacity and inclination are able to ae- cept and pursue training that we need in the world" will have to be deferred for educational reasons. George Goodman, a student. at Harvard University who made his way into the East Berlin Communist Peace Rally last summer under the guise of a fellow-traveler told the forum of the heed to recognize youth. The Communists have capitalized on the desire of youth to feel wanted by forming and subsidizing the Free German Youth or- ganization. This could be the core in ten or twenty years, Goodman asserted, of a militant, integrated German state. * * * * YESTERDAY MORNING, a discussion concerning academic free- dom was conducted between college delegates to the forum. Starting off with a general definition of academic freedom as a freedom to -Bear both sides of issue without being branded as disloyal, talk pro- gressed what limitations are justified. Questions of whether in- structors who tell outright lies to put over their ideologies and who distort facts were put down on the basis that they were incompetent teachers. The view that students must be able to decide for themselves about questionable theories such as Communism, and need not be sheltered from them, was generally supported by the assembly. It See DRAFT PLANS, Page Two Communists Accept Armistice Parley Korean Renewals Bloody Mess What started out to be a soothing shower, turned into near bedlam for a near-sighted Stockwell coed last night. Jean Gunderson, 55, in her pajamas, but minus her glasses, brought the whole house scur- rying with her screams when she discovered a pair of nude legs resting by a pool of blood in the shower room. A resident counselor charged to the scene of the murder, sui- cide or whatever it was. But by then the women had investigat- ed: the legs were those of a dis- sectedrmannequin; the blood was Prang Tempera 1351 - paint. While the tittering women herded the dummy into a phone booth, an upset Miss Gunderson and the counselor went off for coffee. Moss adegth Talks oil at White House WASHINGTON-(1P)-president Truman reportedly told Iran's Premier Mohammed Mossadegh yesterday that it is vitally neces- sary to resume the flow of oil from Iran to the western world. Mr. Truman conferred with Mos- sadegh for one hour and 45 min- utes at a luncheon meeting at Blair House in an effort to break the long deadlock over the Anglo- Iranian oil crisis. SECRETARY of State Acheson and Secretary of Defense Lovett were among the top Am ican of- ficials who joined in the luncheon talks. A State Department spokesman told newsmen: "We are trying to get nego- tiations resumed. We are ex- ploring every avenue and leaving no stone unturned." Acheson's aides were reported to have had some suggestions ready for the meeting, but the White House and the State Department both maintained tight secrecy on details of the discussion. * * * INFORMED officials said that in broad outline one suggestion called for: 1. Iran to sell her oil at a "discount" and permit the Brit- ish to market it to western con- sumers at a profit. 2. Iran to own and operate the oil facilities with the help of western technicians. A respon- sible manager, possibly of a third nationality, would direct the op- eration. Officials said that this was not a formal proposal but merely a suggestion, to get negotiations roll- ing again. The suggestions were said to be based on a belief that the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company is dead--so far as British ownership is concerned-and will never be allowed to operate in Iran again. President To Shelve Clark Appointment White House To Wait Senate Confirmation WASHINGTON - () - T h e White House last night called off all plans for diplomatic represen- tation at the Vatican until the Senate can pass on the nomina- tion of Gen. Mark Clark to be the first American ambassador to the Catholic church state. Press secretary Joseph Short announced that President Truman has decided against a recess ap- pointment for Clark. SHORTLY AFTER that, in an- swer to questions, Short said there are no plans to set up an interim embassy to do business until a regular ambassador is confirmed. There was no White House suggestion that the decision was related in any way to the wave of Protestant protest which started rising within minutes after the Clark nomination was sent to the Senate last Satur- day Rather, Short said, the decision was based on two considerations: 1. Legislation is necessary to permit the Geeral to accept the diplomatic assignment and still keep his army status, which he does not want to give up, 2. Clark himself has some work he wants to complete as Chief of Army Field Forces before under- taking the ambassadorial assign- ment. * * * THE SENATE adjourned Satur- day night until Jan. 8, without acting either on the nomination itself or on an accompanying bill to cover Clark's military status. There had been some sug- gestions that the President in- tentionally put out the nomina- tion at a time when he knew it would be acted upon, in order to get the public reaction into the open before the Senate has to act. Protestant c l e r g y m e n and' church organizations have raised vehement protests over the ap- pointment, arguing that: it vio- lates the American tradition of separation of church and state, and it tends to create dissention among Americans at a time when unity is essential. Churchill Sees Tory Win asf Aid to Peace LONDON -(A)- Winston Chur- chill asked the British people yes- terday to give him a chance to help prevent world war III. He said: "it is the last prizeI seek to win." The 76-year-old Conservative leader explained he kept himself in the political arena because he felt he had an important contribu- tion to make for peace. He said if he became prime minister as a result of a Con- servative yitory in tomorrow's general election he would restore American "confidence and good- will" in the British government. 'We have to give our hand gen- erously, wholeheartedly, to our al- lies across the Atlantic upon whose strength and wisdom the salvation of the world at this moment may well depend," Churchill declared in a campaign speech at Plymouth. A few hours later Prime Minis- ter Attlee, leader of the Labor Party, asked for support in his own constituency, Walthamston, a London suburb. Panmunjom Will Be-Site Of, Meetings Red, Allied Talks To BeginToday - MUNSAN, Korea - () - The Communists yesterday accepted the Panmunjom agreement for renewal of Korean armistice talks. The Red and Allied five-man delegations agreed to meet at 11 a.m. today (8 p.m., CST) at the new conference site of Panmun- join. It will be the first meeting since Aug. 22. One day later the Reds. broke of f the discussions after charging an Allied plane had bombed and strafed the old con- ference site of Kaesong, C- - * THE ALLIES denied that charge and the Reds followed up with a long series of similar accu- sations. The Allies admitted they had violated the Kaesong neutral area three' times by mistake. The bickering went on for weeks and. finally the UN com- mand demanded that a news conference site be selected. Both sides agreed on Panmunjom. The Panmunjom agreement set- ting up new security rules was signed Monday by Allied and Red liaison officers and ratified a few hours later by the Allied truce delegation. The Reds delayed their approval 48 hours. * * * THEIR RATIFICATION came after Chinese Communist Leader Mao Tze-Tung had called on the United States to settle the Korean War by peaceful means. A Peiping Radio English language broadcast quoted Mao as saying: "The great struggle to resist American aggression a n d aid Korea is now continuing. It must be carried on until the U.S. gov. ernment is willing to settle the question peacefully." * * * A iVORvE BRISTLING version UNITED NATIONS DAY-Koreans view poster in bomb-battered Seoul on United Nations Day. * 9 4.: 4. *- . - Nation Honors UN on hBirthday Bullets, Tear q s Disperse Egyptian Mobs CAIRO --Police fired into unruly mobs in Alexandria and used tear gas to disperse other crowds which roamed the streets of Cairo yesterday in anti-British demonstrations. One demonstrator .was reported killed in Alexandria, where police charged with clubs and then used their guns when a crowd of several tpousand refused to break up. * * * INTERIOR Minister Fuad Serag Ed-Din Pasha told reporters trai- tors and criminals had infiltrated into demonstrations planned as a day of mourning for Egyptian "martyrs." They were killed in a, week of riots and clashes with the British over the Suez Canal Zone and the Sudan. He said he had given orders to police to fire into demonstra- tions if necessary to break them up, Cairo mobs shouting "give us arms' smashed bottles, burned a signboa~ advertising a western movie and broke a few wilqdows. Two crowds, demonstrating before the British consulate and a movie house, were scattered by tear gas. ANOTHER crowd broke over the Boulac Bridge from one. of the toughest districts of Cairo into Zamalek, a foreign residential dis- trict on an island in the Nile. They were finally chased out after shout-, ing pro-Soviet slogans in front of the Russian legation. For more, than for whous no~~9thevr cron o f, Two Positions Open On IFC Council Petitions for posts on the newly- formed Interfraternity Council bias' clause study committee must be submitted before 5 p.m. today to the IFC office, according to Mark Sandground, '52, IFC secre- tary. Two positions are open; one for a representative from a fraternity with a bias clause and the other for a represenitative from a fra- ternity without one. SL To Meet Today The Student Legislature will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Anderson-Strauss dining room of the East Quad. By ALICE, BOGDONOFF 4 People all over the world will pause today in the midst of inter- national crisis to honor the Unit- ed Nations on its sixth anniver- sary. On campus, recognition of the signing of the UN Charter will take the form of a special United Na- tions Day meeting at 7:45 p.m. in the Union. Prof.' Lawrence Preuss of the political science department will Grid Boost by Administration The University yesterday gave an unconditional vote of confi- dence to Coach Bennie Oosterbaan and his Wolverine football staff. "We believe we have a highly competent coaching staff and ath- letic administration," said Vice- President Marvin Niehuss. "Ath- letics is being handled as we would like to have it handled." Among other speakers before a meeting of about 50 sports writ- ers and publicity men was Michi- gan Athletic Director Fritz Cris- ler. Crisler expressed full support for college football despite the re- cent West Point scandal and other incidents which he termed "brush fires which must be put out." "But I wouldn't abolish colleges football any more than I would abolish religion because of individ- ual abuse," he said. speak on "The United Nations- After Five Years.." ANN ARBOR will also mark the anniversary as the UN's blue and white flag flies over City Hall. However, in spite of Student Legislature's efforts, no UN flag will fly on campus. Last year the SL succeeded in obtaining a UN flag from the United Nations headquarters. Then an auto company, in answer to an appeal from The Daily, gave SL the needed flag pole. BUT THE PROJECT was killed when the Board of Regents turned down University Vice-President Marvin Niehuss's suggestion that the flag be flown on top of the Ad- ministration Building. The Board based its decision on the state legislature's resolu- tion against flying the UN flag. The outstanding achievement of the United Nations, according to most observers, has been the in- tervention in Korea stemming from the Security's Council's reso- lution to "restore international peace and security in the area." Behind the scenes, however, the United Nations has set up innum- erable funds and committees to aid the undeveloped parts of the world. At the same time the UN has met hosts of natural disasters,, fighting droughts, floods, and plagues all over the world. I Wor ld News By The Associated Press TOKYO-A special Korean mission to Tokyo yesterday sought to reach an understanding with post-treaty Japan on 800,000 Koreans in this country who face possible deportation to their own war- shattered land. NEW YORK--Federal Media- tion Director Cyrus S. Ching sent his chief aide, Clyde Mills, to New York yesterday to try to untangle a wildcat dock strike that is choking the east coast, * * * WASHINGTON - Myron M. Cowen resigned yesterday as Ambassador to the Philippines, to become a special assistant to Secretary of State Acheson on Far East affairs. of the same broadcast, translated from Chinese to Japanese to Eng- lish by Tokyo monitors, quoted Mao as saying Chinamust carry on the resistance movement "un- til America accepts our peace pro- posal." Mao declared that "so long as the U. S. government is willing to settle the (Korean) question on a just and reasonable basis, and will stop using every possible shameless means to wreck and de- lay the progress of negotiations, as it has done in the past, the success of the Korean armistice negotiations 's possible; otherwise it is impossible." UIN Bombers Clash with Reds Over Korea U.S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- UARTERS, Korea -(P)- Nearly 250 Allied and Communist jets tangled yesterday in history's big- gest jet battle. It swirled around a force of B-29 Superforts pressing home the second bombing attack in two days against new Commun- ist air bases in northwest Korea. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway's headquarters in Tokyo said today the Allied pilots destroyed or dam- aged 20 Communist jets. The Far East Air Forces said three Superfort bombers and one Thunderjet fighter were shot down. The Communist jet pilots roar- ed outeof Manchuria to defend a nearly-completed air field at Nam- si near the Yalu River boundary. They pressed home the attack against the big Superforts while LAWYERS' CHOICE: 'Law Students for Taft' 'Club Established at U' HAMBURG, Germany-North Germany's two biggest ports were paralyzed last night by a wildcat strike which trade union leaders declared to be Communist-inspired. 'A MATTER OF PRINCIPLE': Unaffiliated Women To Eat with Greeks By TOM ARP The 1952 presidential campaign became a campus reality last night when a small but loyal con- tingent of law students met in the lounge of the Lawyers Club and placed themselves squarely behind Senator Robert A. Taft. After some preliminary heckling from an Eisenhower supporter, who was laughingly branded by the group as a "pink," the lawyers settled down to the business of establishing a "Law Students for they tentatively planned a recep- tion for him. There have been several uncon- firmed reports that Taft would be invited to speak in Ann Arbor since his recent announcement that he would seek the Republican nomination. CLAIMING THAT the "Law Students for Taft" is the first of any such organizations to appear on a major college campus, Joe Neath, one of the leaders of the :'> By CAL SAMRA Independent women are finally going to get an opportunity to eat with a Greek. The University yesterday gave an official green-light to dormi- tory women desiring to hold ex- change dinners with fraternities. Moreover, independent men have been extended the privilege of planning dinners with campus sor- fringement on their rights. Claim, claim and counter-claim resulted in a clarification of the matter yesterday by Service Enterprises Manager Francis C. Shiel. ACCORDING to Shiel, who says that the entire incident was a "misunderstanding," there has never been a University regula- tion forbidding affiliated-indepen- ago, it caught us by surprise. I hope things are cleared up now." SHIEL ADMITTED that the University was concerned over a possible increase in exchange din- ners which he feared would prove costly. On the other hand, he denied the women's charges that the University's chief concern was