Dime Programs I Wil I Hit Campus Y fLit ian ~~Iait3 In Daily' Guise By CRAWFORD YOUNG The ten cent program is returning to campus! But the controversial programs will be scarcely recognizable in their new garb. At first glance, the casual observer will thing it's a copy of The Michigan Daily. * * * * AND HE WILL be absolutely right. For the new dime rosters will be a special edition of The Daily, with an 8x8 inch program on the front page containing an anthology of names, numbers, heights and weights of your favorite players. In addition, the front page, which will be completely remade from the regular "home edition," will be completely devoted to King Football and his queen-for-a-day, Homecoming. The Daily specials will be on sale for one thin dime tomorrow afternoon on the way to the game. THE REST OF the pages will be similar to the regular issue, but these too will be filled with stories on the Homecoming theme. It is hoped that through this the chronic dispute over the sale of the old cardboard ten cent programs can be settled. Presi- dent Harlan H. Hatcher and Associate Dean of Men Walter B. Rea agreed that this special edition should help eliminate this problem. The dispute arose several years ago when students began dis- tributing ten cent cardboard programs to compete with the large, fifty cent University publication sold inside the Stadium. AFTER PERIODIC troubles of one sort or another, the Ann Ar- bor police began arresting the vendors last year if they did not hold the $15 licenses necessary for legal hawking. This, the city claimed, was at the request of the Athletic Department. Student Legislature stepped into the arena, and worked out a one-year settlement by supervising the program sales. But the situation was right back where it started this year, with police arresting many of those who sold. SL again worked on the prob- lem, but no agreement had been reached when The Daily pro- grams were decided upon as a compromise. Anyone interested in selling Dailies may call 2-3241 after 1 p.m. today for further information. k Columbia'U' Lifts 11n ti IIn e~- Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXII, No. 28 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1951 SIX PAGES G Is T * * * * " * Buffer Zone. Pro osed by UN Envoys Next Cease Fire Move Up to Reds By ZANDER HOLLANDER Columbia University has thrown open its campus and rostra to all speakers invited by recognized stu- cent organizations. However, in a policy statement, issued Wednesday, the university reserved a faculty-student-admin- istration committee the right to deny recognition to any campus group whose conduct is "irrespon- sible." South Quaders Beseiged by on Pellets A three-night blitz of mysteri- ous iron shot has left embattled South Quadders with cases of war nerves and a fear of standing in front of open windows. The shots have been fired at the State Street side of the Quad, hit- ting six rooms on four floors of Taylor and Gomberg Houses, ac- cording to local police. The at- tacks, all occurring between 10:30 and 12:30 at night, were heaviest on Wednesday night during a hard rain. * * * POLICE BELIEVE the pellets were probably fired from under cover. One of the beseiged resi- dents said the missiles may have been shot from the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house, which is in direct line with the bombarded rooms. However, George Sipp, '52, j3eta president, said he knew nothing about the incident. Damage from the barrages, esti- mated at more than a hundred dollars, was mostly confined to screens. After penetrating the screens, the shots did not have enough force to break the windows. One Quad man reported that a missile flew through his open window and missed his face by inches. The destructive iron pellets are round and slightly bigger than B-B shot. They are of the type generally used for air rifle am- munition. Ann Arbor police have been brought into an investigation of the mysterious onslaught. 'Ensian MOves Photo Deadline THE POLICY was formulated by an ad hoc committee establish- ed when the university denied Howard Fast, author and Com- munist-without-card, the right to speak on campus last January. Strong protests from many quarters of the Morningside Heights campus spurred Dr. Grayson Kirk, vice-president and acting head of Columbia, to set up the committee to recom- mend future policy on guest speakers. Local observers last night saw1 the situation which led up to the policy switch at Columbia as par- alleling events here. AT THE UNIVERSITY, follow- ing a complete ban on political orators, the Board of Regents gave the all-faculty Lecture Committee the responsibility of approving all guest speakers. This committee refused to al- low alleged Communist Prof. Herbert Phillips to speak here in 1950. Persistent demands from stu- dent groups that they be permit- ted to choose any speaker they wish have brought no revision of the Regents' decision. Recently, such demands have taken the course of seeking student representation on the Lecture Committee, which must approve all speakers. Last year the scope of the Lecture Committee was enlarged when the Administration an- nounced that speakers invited by Lane Hall religious groups also must be approved by the committee. This action followed a contro- versial appearance at Lane Hall last semester by Mrs. Willie Mc- Gee, wife of the Mississippi Negro ccnvicted and executed on the charge of raping a white woman. Revision of the present set-up of approving speakers on the Uni- versity campus is known to be un- der consideration. -Daily-Al Reid CRIME-BUSTER - Sen. Estes Kefauver (right) discusses the crime problem with two members of Phi Delta Theta fraternity at a coffee hour given by the fraternity for the Lecture Series speaker yesterday. Joe White and Herb Harrington are the stu- dents. * * * Kefanver Urges Citizens To Wagwe War on Crime MUNSAN, Korea-(A)-A con- crete Allied proposal for a Korean buffer zone, involving cession of about 200 square miles of terri- tory by each side, put the next *-- - cease-fire move squarely up to the Communists yesterday. ATTLEE CHURCHILL The Red reaction to the proposaleATT lEEcUryHin? may come at any time today, offi- . .. end of Socialism? . . . victory grin? cial Allied sources reported. But Reds would respond. Hatcher Cites Problems : 1: * THERE WAS speculation that I some sort of compromise would be O f effected after the Reds made a counter-proposal. Upon this might* depend the speed with which the United Nations and Communist The problems of integrating scientific training and "general cul- negotiators settle t h i s thorny tivation" is becoming more and more difficult as the expansion of question or go into a possible new knowledge is increased, President Harlan H. Hatcher told a crowd of deadlock. more than 400 at a banquet concluding the 75th anniversary cele- The sudden Allied proposal bration of the pharmacy college last night. was introduced at a subcommit- Contrasting the 50 courses offered at Harvard University in 1817 tee meeting immediately after "with the approximately 4,000 of- the truce negotiations were re- fered at a modern university he sumed, ending a 64-day suspen- said "It would take a person more sion. m' Jthan 350 years to take all the A United Nations command courses now offered at the Uni- spokesman said the Allied sugges- F ac-. versity." tion entailed 'a line generally fol- It eS * * * lowing the present battlefront, but THE VAST strides made in with the Reds to give up about 200 pharmacy during the 75 years square miles territory in the west / ccusatton I since the pharmacy college was and the Allies to pull out of a fourlded, are an indication of how similar area in the east. greatly our body of knowledge has A buffer zone two and one-half NEW YORK-(AP)-The Federal increased, he said. miles wide would be created, most government placed a new perjury Now education is faced with of it in North Korea, but dipping charge against economist William t into South Korea at its western Remington yesterday, after flub- the problem of supplying the end. bing a previous attempt to jail ess By DONNA HENDLEMAN America's citizens must rally to break the criminal influences ram- pant within the nation today, Sen. Estes Kefauver asserted here last night. Speaking on "The Citizen's Re- sponsibility for Crime," at the sec- ond Oratorical Association lecture, * * * Dope Traffic Encouraged by Chinese Reds Efforts to control narcotics traf- fic internationally have been made more difficult by the recent open- ing of a heroin plant by Chinese Communists, Sen. Estes Kefauver said here yesterday at a news con- ference. Although the United Nations is doing much to hinder the flow of drugs across national boundaries, it is a difficult problem, he ex- plained. "Narcotics can be made and smuggled very easily in spite of precautions." Turning to another interna- tional problem, the soft spoken Senator from Tennessee endor- sed the creation of an Atlantic Union. "I think our foreign policy will eventually evolve into such a Un- ion," he said. "It would provide a system of permanent law rather than cooperation on an alliance basis." A resolution now before Con- gress would sponsor a meeting to initiate such a union. the Tennessee Democrat enpha- sized the need for concerted popu- lar effort in the battle against crime. * * * "THE FIGHT must be waged on every level of government," the former chairman of the Senate Crime Investigating Committee said, "but in the end it is primar- ily a local problem." Pointing to the widespread power which racketeers wield throughout the nation, Sen. Ke- fauver remarked, "Their size and influence makes Capone of the 20's look like a tough school boy. "Today gangsters wear the best clothes, live in the best neighbor- hoods and seek niches in respect- able businesses and social circles.' The investigating committee un- covered the fact that rackateers are engaged in more than 85 bus- inesses, he went on, and hold poli- tical jobs ranging in importance from sheriffs to mayors. "IT IS TIME the American citi- zens became concerned over these facts," the senator continued, out- lining a program of action for the individual: 1. More crime commissions must be set up to combat the syndicates. Since the Senate investigation, 102 such groups have been initiated throughout the country. "It is hard for one person to crusade, but groups of persons can pool their money and their ener- gies to keep the spotlight on crime and get criminals exposed," he said. 2. There must be a rejuvena- tion of interest in political par- ties and in voting. "While peo- ple are apathetic, criminals and gangsters work the game of poli- tics and get into positions of in- fluence. Young men and women could do much to bring new vigor to our political parties." A LONG-RANGE program of crime prevention is needed, he in- sisted. While jail must be used as a remedy for many criminals, the senator pointed out that such a short-range cure is not enough. "We must work with our young people, also," he re- See KEFAUVER, Page 2 Illini Trip Ticket Sdale Closes Today i i r i Labor Trails At Halfway Vote Return Churchill Victory Almost Certainty LONDON --(P)- The Conserva- tives dealt Socialism a smashing blow in the national elections, and yesterday were within reach of a victory sending Winston Churchill back to the Prime Ministry at the age of 76 after six bleak years on the sidelines. Results in nearly half the 625 parliamentary districts pointed to a political and personal triumph for the old warrior who led Brit- ain to victory ,in World War II only to be brushed aside when the war-weary people adopted the So- cialist Party's promises of a bet- ter life. THE CONSERVATIVES wrested 11 House of Commons seats from Prime Minister Clement R. Att- lee's Laborites. The Liberal Party ousted a Laborite in still another district. That made a net loss of 12 seats for the Laborites, who had an overall majority of only six in the last Parliament. The Laborites, at the halfway point in tabulation, had failed to take a single seat from Chur- chill's men-and by all normal standards the full Conservative strength was yet to appear. Final returns from yesterday's elections are not due until this morning but Labor Party leaders privately conceded the early trend meant the end of Britain's era of Socialism. One predictedChurchill might have a majority of 35 seats or so in the House of Commons. For the last few months, the Labor- ites have struggled along with a majority of only a half dozen seats. A swing of Liberal Party strength to Churchill's Tories was a deci- sive factor. * * * THE POLLS CLOSED last night at 9. First returns began coring in an hour later, and approached the 320-mark expected to end the preliminary counting. The remain- ing 305 seats will be accounted for in later tabulations. By last night Conservative Party headquarters had an air of "we're in." But party spokes- men declined to make any state- ment except "we're very happy." Labor spokesmen likewise were silent-officially. Returns from 300 districts gave Labor 158 seats, the Conservatives 140 and the Liberals 2. But these preliminary figures did not tell the story-the real story was in the net gains made by the Con- servatives. -* * * THE FIRST 275 districts re- porting gave the Conservatives 47.9 per cent of the total popular vote, as compared with 43.5 in those districts in 1950's election. The comparison for labor was 50.5 per cent of the total this year, against 43.2 last year. The Lib- erals had 1.7 per cent of the total in these districts, against 8.3 per cent in1951. Attlee himself was re-elected to Parliament in the London suburbs of West Walthamstow, polling 28,021 votes for an 11,- 574 vote margin over a compara- tively unknown Conservative, E. D. L. Duncann. Foreign Secretary Herbert Mor- rison was re-elected in the Lewis- ham South District of London, ANEURIN BEVAN, left wing So- . 4 .allied Planes Score Record Blow on Reds U.S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- QUARTERS, Korea -(p)- Allied planes smashed the Korean war's record blow at Communist rail transport yesterday. Pilots estimated they destroyed or damaged 36 locomotives and 289 rail cars in a series of bomb- ing and strafing attacks centered in the northwest. FOR THE FIFTH straight day, Russian-built MIG's made determ- ined efforts to break up the Allied' raids. A total of 80 enemy jets pressed three aggressive attacks against 63 or more Allied planes. The North Korean Army com- munique, broadcast by Pyong- yang Radio, claimed a bag of six Allied planes without specifying the date. It said one B-29 Sup- erfort was shot down in the Wonsan area and two others were damaged. In the ground war, U.S. Patton tanks speared to the western out- skirts of Kumsong and shot up the former Red supply base, set- ting new fires. him. Remington's lawyer at once rais- ed a cry of "double jeopardy" - the forbidden practice of trying a man more than once for the same crime. * * ,* SAID ATTORNEY Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., in Washington: "We cannot believe that this vicious device to avoid the time- honored rule against double jeo- pardy will be sanctioned by the American people or the Ameri- can courts." In the new indictment, a Fed- eral Grand Jury accused Reming- ton of lying five times from the witness stand while being convict- ed of perjury. He upset the con- viction on an appeal. While perjury is the charge against the former $10,000 a year Commerce Department econo- mist, the heart of the case all along has been the allegation that he was a Communist who stole government secrets for a Soviet spy ring. The same legal device of a per- jury charge was used to put Alger Hiss, the former high State De- partment aide, in prison for pas- sing government secrets to a spy ring. Conviction on the new indict- ment could cost Remington a max- imum of 25 years in prison and $10,000 in fines. knowledge in addition to giving specialists "a sense of what it means to be a human being on the surface of the world," Presi- dent Hatcher said. Earlier, addressing a public con- vocation which was part of the celebration Charles H. Rogers, '13P, dean of the pharmacy college at the University of Minnesota, had said, "A new era for the pro- fession of pharmacy," was marked in 1876 by the founding of the college. See PRESIDENT'S, Page 2 Red, Egyptian. ParleyHeld CAIRO-(AP)-A Soviet-Egyptian meeting in the midst of the Brit- ish-Egyptian crisis over the Suen and the Sudan won the headlines in Cairo newspapers yesterday. A meeting yesterday between King Farouk and U.S. Ambassador Jefferson Caffery was reported at the same time in the Official Ga- zette. The newspapers s pl a s h e d front pages with pictures and stor- ies of the 90-minute talk yesterday at the foreign office between Rus- sian Minister Semen Pavlovitch Kozyrev and Egypt's Foreign Min- ister, Mohammed Salah El Din. EGOCENTRIC WRITER: Boswell's Life Marked By Wmine, Women, Song By CYNTHIA BOYES Throughout his life, James Bos- well's greatest desires were for "wine, women, song, the cultiva- rion of celebrities and thprmn The deadline for Ensian senior ence of James Boswell," Sidney pictures has been extended to Fri- C. Roberts, vice-chancellor of day, Nov. 2, Sales Manager Dave Cambridge University, said yester- Palmer, '52BAd., announced yes- day. terday, Lecturing on "The Discovery of The move was the result of a James Boswell," Roberts exposed serious lag in enrollment of seniors two widely-held fallacies - one planning to have their pictures in that the writer Samuel Johnson y f f ) have the peasants and soldiers regard him as an English am- bassador, and "quite willing to apologize for English politics and Protestantism." Boswell, whose great ambition in life was for social and literary prominence, was entirely uninhi- bited in proclaiming his own mer- its, Roberts explained. In a letter to Rousseau, h e m. f pnh.innnhor ho " VARSITY NIGHT: Talent To Highlight Evening This is the day of "The Night." At 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Audi- torium the Symphony Band will join forces with campus talent and professional performers to present the traditional "Varsity Night" Roberts who will narrate the story of the Little Brown Jug, symbol of rivalry between Michigan and Minnesota. SPOTLIGHTED in the campus the meanings of their dance move- ments. * * UNDER THE direction of May- nard Klein, the Michigan Singers will nerform excerpts from "Die II ! I