MORNING HEADLINES WHRV MIDNIGHT Li friF itF N 0 Latest Deadline in the State SNOW VOL. LXII, No. 33 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1951 SIX PAGES Royal Pair Welcomed By Truman Half Million Gree Elizabeth, Philij WASHINGTON-(A)-Presidei Truman welcomed Princess Eliza f~ beth to the U.S. yesterday. Judging by the way he and ti 550,000 persons acted who turne k out to greet Britain's Elizabet and Prince Philip, they pretty we filled the bill. THE PRESIDENT, Mrs. Truma and daughter Margaret were wait ing for the Princess when she carr down the ramp from the airplar which had brought her from Mor treal. Behind her came Prine Philip. Elizabeth and Philip shooki hands with this country's first family. Then Cabinet members an their wives and British Commor ' wealth diplomats and their wive came up to meet Elizabeth. The American women shoe hands with her; the Commor wealth wives neatly curtsied. S * * ELIZABETH and the Presider then went to a rostrum for the of k ficial welcome. In a voice calm and firm, Eliz- abeth told the President and the millions more watching and lis- tening by television and radio that Britain and Canada will "work with all our strength for freedom and for peace." Elizabeth read her remarks. Mr Truman had a speech all pre X pared, and then didn't use it. I general, he said about what h had written down, but he adde the homey touch that to knov Elizabeth was to love her. * * * THE PETITE Elizabeth, in dark red suit, black hat and blac] accessories, seemed to hit it of with the President immediately. They chatted away cheerfully as they walked together review- ing the troops. Philip, in his - naval uniform, followed. And when they got into the open car to come into town, the5 continued their animated conver- sation. Philip rode in another car with Mrs. Truman and Margaret. This was about the first chance the common people had to see the Royal visitors. The space at th airport had been almost entirely taken up by assorted dignitaries. The cheers rolled out as th Princess and the President rode by The crowd estimate of 550,000 was made by. Maj. Robert Barrett of the metropolitan police. Many in the crowd were women, and even if Elizabeth had the starring s role, they saved their loude'st cheers for the blond, handsome Philip. SL Member Charges Bias In Sororities Student Legislator David Brown, '53, charged last night that "at least one University sorority and maybe more" have discriminatory { clauses in their constitutions -_ though former Panhellenic Asso- ciation president Jane Topper de- nied this before the Student Af- fairs Committee last semester. Brown claimed he had definite proof of a clause in one sorority. The legislator moved that its Human and International Re- lations committee look into the matter. Present Panhellenic president Beverly Clarke, '52, who attended the meeting, said her group would be willing to work with SL on the problem. "Every campus sorority has al- ready denied having a bias clause on a card handed to Panhellenic { for use by our rushing counselors," Miss Clarke said. Student Legislator Dorothy Wendler, '52, of Alpha Chi Omega, told the SL that though her house didn't have a bias clause, "sorority bias clauses are nobody's business but the sorority's." x Brown replied that he hoped sororities would be "moral and sincere" enough to provide the A bias clause information voluntari- on" Horse Meat Sale Reported in City By BOB KEITH and ZANDER HOLLANDER Ten or twelve shipments of uninspected, unlabeled horse meat have been delivered to Ann Arbor restaurants, a Detroit meat-truck driver told police this week. Stewart Kennedy, 19 years old, a driver for the Belleville Pack- ing Co., told Detroit authorities he picked up meat in a Detroit back- alley on order of the packing firm's head, Theodore Pappas. Kennedy said the meat was transferred to his unmarked blue truck from a vehicle operated by the Michigan Food Co., a legitimate horse meat supply house. "Ten or twelve" shipments of the meat were delivered by him to restaurants and hotels in Ann Arbor and Lansing, Kennedy revealed. THREE LOCAL restaurant owners told The Daily yesterday they had done business with Pappas' outfit, one as recently as Oct. 26. At I I Tito Promises Aid to West In Next War -Bffe2 draw Near J ne " BRIAN AHERNE * * * _ Aherne Here r. nTo Give Hll ie w l Tonight a By DONNA HENDLEMAN k Actor Brian Aherne will take f over the lectern at 8:30 p.m. to- day at Hill Auditorium for a dra- matic presentation of "Great Mo- ments in Great Literature." The stage and screen star will present readings from some of his e own, acting successes, as well as y excerpts from the classics. THIS APPEARANCE will be Aherne's last such performance h for some time. The handsome ac- tor is on his way to New York e where he will go into rehearsal e with Katherine Cornell for "The e Constant Wife." Y A professional thespian since e the age of ten, Aherne has in- numerable stage and screen suc- cesses to his credit. He has ap- t peared with Miss Cornell several times previously, playing oppo- site her in "St. Joan," "The Bar- retts of Wimpole Street" and "Lucrece." His most recent Broadway role was Marlowe in "She Stoops to Conquer," for which he garnered critics' laurels two years ago. * * * ALTHOUGH he has spent only a short interval of his life dis- associated from the theatre, Aherne is not a man of few in- terests. One of his major enterprises is a commercial vineyard in the California desert country. Sent to dry land on doctor's orders several years ago, Aherne bought a large tract of land and pro- ceeded to have it cultivated. Tickets for Aherne's perform- ance are still available and can be obtained at the Hill Auditorium box office up to lecture time. They cost $1.50, $1.20 and 60 cents. Murder Trial Be ins Here The trial of three 18 year old boys who are accused of the mur- der of an Ann Arbor nurse to get beer money, early this fall, began yesterday in * Washtenaw Circuit Court under Judge James K. Breakey, Jr. Selection of jurors began, but by the end of the day a panel had not yet been selected. With 100 new names drawn for possible service last night, selection will go on indefinitely today. Prosecutor Douglas K. Read- ing is expected to ask for a first degree murder charge against, the trio: William Morev III and least two other eating establish- ments have been mentioned as dealing regularly with the concern. None would admit that their purchases from the Belleville Co. actually involved horsemeat. The disclosures took City Sani- tary Inspector Gilbert Caswell by surprise. Caswell, who learned of the meat dealings from newspaper accounts, said he would begin an investigation today. Caswell warned that violators of health inspection ordinances face a $100 fine in Municipal Court and the loss of their Board of Health licenses. City meat inspector Dr. George Bowler, also said he knew nothing of the horse meat shipments be- fore yesterday. * .* THE HORSE MEAT dealings came to light in Detroit Tuesday afternoon. Acting on an anonymous tip, Detective Lt. Richard Bowen and other police moved in on two unmarked trucks in an alley. Bowen said he found Archie Hogg, an employe of the Michigan Food Co., helping Kennedy load the horse meat into the Belleville Co. truck. The truckers and Thomas J. Barton, head of the horse meat supply firm, were summoned by Dr. R. F. Wilson, Detroit health inves- tigator, to the office of Assistant Corporation Counsel G. Edwin Sla- ter. Barton claimed that he had ask- ed no questions of Pappas, a cash customer, and emphasized that he did not know Pappas. * * * DETROIT prosecutor Gerald K. O'Brien yesterday ordered his chief investigator, James J. Stewart, to see whether any of the horse meat has been illegally distributed in Detroit. Stewart is expected to take statements today from Hogg, Kennedy and Barton. Stewart will also attempt to get a statement from Pappas if he can be found. His home address is not known by authori- ties and he is "rarely seen" at a walk-in refrigerator at 271 Eighteenth, where he reportedly does his business. Kennedy said Pappas has been in Lansing this week taking meat orders. Whether Pappas turns up immediately or not, he will be cited in Detroit's traffic and ordinance court today for failure to have his meat properly inspected, Corporate Counsel officials said. Local meat packers said yester- day that restaurant owners who 'eceived the horse meat probably knew what they were getting. Horse meat, they noted, is easily recognizeable in solid form. It is1 a dark orange and has a character- istic sweet odor and taste.I Yugoslavia Still Won't Join NATO BELGRADE, Yugoslavia-(I)- Premier Marshal Tito held a mar- athon, four-hour news conference yesterday and declared Yugoslavia will be on the side of the Atlantic Pact nations in case of a third World War, Dressed in his gold and scarlet- trimmed Marshal's uniform of gray, Tito anwsered scores of questions covering the whole range of foreign and domestic affairs. HE EXPRESSED these opin- ions: The Atlantic Pact-"On all questions of economic and cul- tural relations, on all questions of international affairs that do not conflict with Yugoslavia, we will be willing to cooperate with the countries of the At- lantic Pact." But Yugoslavia is not planning to join the alliance. A Third World War-"The men- ace of war exists," but the people should not despair of preventing it. In case of such a war "there can be no neutrality for a Euro- pean country."{ U.S. military aid-Yugoslavia seeks "especially heavy artillery, tanks and planes. We are not so badly off for light arms. We pro- duce some ourselves. We have re- ceived considerable quantities of light arms and ammunition also from the West." Also, "there is no question" of signing a United States-Yugoslav Mutual Aid Pact; "it is simply a question of an agreement by which the United States will supply us with arms." U' Students Donate71 Pints of Blood, University students donated 71 pints of blood yesterday in the Interfraternity Council's two-day blood drive. The drive will continue from 2 to 5 and from 7 to 10 p.m. today at the collection center in the living room of the Zeta Psi fraternity house, 1443 Washtenaw. * * * OF 86 PERSONS who volunteer- ed blood, 15 were turned away for medical reasons. The largest fraternity group to donate blood was Beta Theta Pi with 14 members. Phi Kappa Tau was second with 10 donors. Eight of the 17 women donors were from Pi Beta Phi sorority. Sue Boll, '53,'first of the Pi Phi's to give blood yesterday said she See Picture-Page Six was "panicked" at first. "But there's really nothing to it," she testified later. NON-AFFILIATES accounted' for 18 of the donors. The doctor in charge of the mo- bile four-bed donation center said he was "very pleased" with the first day's results. SCABS?-New York City policemen hold back surging crowd of pickets to permit about 100 long- shoremen wishing to return to work, to enter Pier 9, Hudson River and 50th st., where Liner Queen Elizabeth is docked. This incident was the first rajor breakthrough of a picket line by longshoremen wanting to work since the dock strike started in New York 15 days ago. * ** * * ockC Srike Talks Increased uY NEW YORK-P).-State media- tors stepped up peace talks with wildcat dock strikers yesterday, as an ominous new cloud drifted over the troubled East Coast water- front. Conferences "all through the dayj and probably most of the night" were scheduled to try to get rebelE stevedores to end a 17-day strike that has crippled the ports of New York and Boston. STATE MEDIATION Chairman Merlyn Pitzele seemed unable to report any progress. But he set up a joint meeting of rival longshore groups and said "I am not hope- less." The billion dollar tieup-in protest and revolt over a new wage contract-has idled more than 100 deep sea vessels and HAPPY OVER LIBRARY: Reports on Current Projects High light Routine SL Meeting Reports on several current Stu- dent Legislature projects high- lighted a routine meeting last night. Quiet jubilation followed a re- port by president Len Wilcox on City rCharter TolieViewed Ann Arbor's ancient city charter will be put through the wringer to- night at an open meeting in the City Hall. The session will be held by a special City Council committee on charter revision at 7:30 p.m. in the Council chamber. The meeting will serve to air opinions on the desirability of con- tinuing municipal operations un- der the present charter. the final solution to the library hours controversy. Moderate success- for Tues- day's Literary School Confer- ence was announced by Howard Willens, '53, head of the pro- ject. Willens said that the SL Culture and Education Comittee was con- sidering recommending placement tests in some basic survey courses to allow the qualified student to skip the introductory course. Also under study was a plan falling for two elementary courses in each of the sciences, one for those intend- ing to study the subject further and one for those who are not. Keith Beers, Grad., riported that a University Senate sub-conhnittee is now studying the Student Legis- lature request for voting student representation on the 'U' Lecture Committee. choked off most of New York's trade with the rest of the world. Federal mediators, meanwhile, stepped in to try to head off a strike of 12,000 AFL ship officers which, on top of the AFL long- shoremen's wildcat strike would just about kill off all salt water ship movements from Maine to Texas. * * *C THE AFL MASTERS, Mates and Pilots Union is deadlocked with 40 shipping firms over pension and welfare terms of their contract. The West Coast waterfront at San Francisco also was a scene of hair-trigger tension. CIO ma- rine engineers at San Francisco called off a tareatened stop-work meeting yesterday-. The meeting haw been set to discuss a court injunction ruling the engineers' three-month strike against the Isthmian Line illegal. Harry Bridgm' longshoremen, who had supported the engineers, went back to work and tnloaded cargo from struck Isthmian ships. The wildcat New York strike snowballed until more than 20,000' of the East Coast's 65,000 steve- dores were idle here and in Boston. The only large-scale loading go- ing on in New York-the world's largest port-was at nilitary piers in Brooklyn, Staten Island and New Jersey. They were reopened yesterday when the wildcatters reached a truce with the army. Federal Tax On Cigarettes StartsToday If you buy cigarettes today you'll pay one cent more than you did yesterday. A new increase in federal excise taxes is responsible for the boost, which will also effect gasoline, liquor, beer and wine. Most cigarettes will go up one cent a pack, the amount of the government increase, according tfr Ashley Clague, president of the Washtenaw Retail Grocers and Meat Dealers Association. The hike in taxes on gasoline will raise the price to 29 cents for standard brands, and 31 cents for premium. The half-cent in- crease in federal excise taxes is ina addition to the 1% cent boost in the state gas tax which went into effect last June. The prices of liquor, beer and; wine will be marked up in propor- tion to the alcoholic content, ac- cording to state liquor store offi- cials. The increase will amount to about one cent a fifth for wines, and will range up to 30 r s a f i th ,. 1 f lnn - rsf m 1-d ' eccord Reds Block Settlemnent On Kaesong Weather Slows Battle Activities By The Associated Press Allied and Communist truce ne- gotiators today drew closer to agreement than ever before on a buffer zone across Korea, but the s t a t u s of Red - held Kaesong blocked speedy settlement of this issue. The Communists made a major concession yesterday, abandoning demands for a line from five to 15 miles South of the battleline. They proposed a buffer zone which ap- proached that asked by the Alies M * * BUT THE REDS wanted to keep Kaesong, site of the futile first cease-fire talks. The United Nations command considered Kae- song essential to guard the mili- tary approaches to Seoul, 34 air miles to the southeast. Sub-committees went to work on the problem at noon (9.m. Ann Arbor time) at Panmun- jomn. On the battlefield, Communist gunners knocked out two Allied tanks an dtwo tank retrievers yes- terday as a UN command armored column thrust into Red hill posi- tions west of Kaesong on the Korean East Coast under cover of a snow storm. * * C' SOUTHEAST OF Kumsong, on the Central Front, Chinese Reds twice pushed Allied infantrymen off an advanced position. Three Communist attacks were repulsed by UN command forces west of the Punchbowl area north of Yanggu. Light snow blanketed the East Central and Eastern battle- fronts yesterday for the second time this fall, while torrential rain drenched other sectors of the line. Allied airflights also were cut sharply by rain storms and low clouds over most of Korea. Even if the buffer issue is set- tled, the truce negotiators still have three ohter major agenda items to consider before a military armistice can be arranged. THESE INCLUDE arrangements for the exchange of prisoners, truce supervision of areas behind the. opposing armies, ana recom- mendations for the ultimate with- drawal of foreign troops from Korea. Each item could be shot with controversy. After a week of fruitless talk, the Communists broke the log- jam on the buffer issue yesterday by abruptly making a "final" buf- fer proposal. They said it was their best of- fer. Air Force Col. Andrew J. Ken- ney, Chief UN Liaison Officer told newsmen the new Red proposal was the "biggest step I've seen toward ending the buffer zone quarrel." ' The Reds suggested a 1.25-mile- wide de-militarized zone on either side of what they claim is the present line of contact-the shoot- ing line-in Korea. Ypsio Settles Dope Scandal Special to The Daily YPSILANTI - Michigan State Normal College cooled off a hot controversy over rumored 'doping' of football players yesterday by reinstating Merrill Hershey, the trainer who was the center of the short-lived storm. In a prepared statement, Chair- man Ralph Gilden of the Board of Athletic Control said that the re- instatement "was made with the full concurrence of Coach Henry Ockerman and the football team. moi.krmn, hn- r zatar T , riix HELSJE TH, COME HOME! Stockwell'Coeds Bemoan Display Theft By GAYLE GREENE Three Stockwell Hall coeds are sadly lamenting the theft of a dummy used in their Homecoming display-clothed in one woman's skirt, another's sweatshirt and a third's "gay deceivers." The dummy, whose stylish fem- inine attire was supplemented by a football helmet and the face of a teddy bear, was removed from the porch last Saturday. The house council has just voted, how- ever, to start a campus wide in- vestigation in hopes of discoveringr the culprit. 'HELSBETH,' AS the women af-} fectionately dubbed the dummy, was far from a lightweight andr many of the women said they sus- pect that several thieves are in- Trnltn7 iv, 1 .. 1-. 44T+ .- IA - -1- * * * day night, but in the usual con- fusion grabbed the dummy in- stead. (This often happens to me, she explained). "A victim of over-emphasis on football might have been the1 thief," Elaine Friedman, '54, sug- gested. Some puny young male, in a fit of jealousy over the ac- claim received by some athleticj fraternity brother, may have sto- len Helsbeth in order to gain pos-I session of the football helmet and padded sweatshirt, to supplement his bony shoulders, she pointed out. THE JANITORS might have pus Helsbeth in the basement, a third coed suggested. Her state- ment was drowned out by cries , I