trvgan :43atit , -r CLOSED MEETINGS See Page I Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY, COLDER VOL LXII, No. 123 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1952 SIX PAGES U Daily Editorial Satire Draws Russian Blast' By CHUCK ELLIOTT Daily Managing Editor Daily editorials, long a local tar- get for criticism, finally hit the big time yesterday when theRus- sian magazine Literary Gazette labeled one "a slanderous attack" against the USSR. The editors hailed the an- nouncement as "proving almost beyond the shadow of a doubt that say, on a very unpleasant 'hate' story appearing in a recent Es- quire magazine. That one was called 'I Killed Stalin.' It extoll- ed, in patriotic terms, the ex- ploits of an American agent who sneaked into the Kremlin and heroically murdered Stalin. "Turnabout was the logical thing-so I wrote a piece called I Killed the President,' starting out on the other side of the Iron Curtain and moving westward. In order to make the biting satire more biting, I said the story was translated from the Russian mag- azine called Krashdna Sovietski," Thomas explained. THE LITERARY Gazette angrily made the observation that "no such magazine exists," and claim- ed that Thomas' article was "yet another intentional slanderous at- tack on the Soviet Union." Swing- ing wide, the Russians also hailed the University as an institution which "exists on gifts from Wall Street and U.S. government sub- sidies." Arthur Brandon, University public relations head, was quick to rejoin "Those are two sources we don't get support from." Thomas added the University shouldn't be involved anyway, since Daily editorials don't speak for the Administration. "This," he said, "is somewhat more than can be said for Russian 'free' news- papers." * * * TO THE RUSSIAN statement that the edtorial was "a crude forgery" editor Thomas retorted that it was not crude. Shaking his head sadly, he remarked "Satire would seem to be as dead as Dean Swift, these days...." Contacted in Washington, John B. Penfold, chief of the State Department Press Rela- tions Division said the Literary Gazette and its fellow publica- tions "would have blank pages if they didn't run this kind of stuff. According to them, every- thing here is Wall Street." A look at some old Daily files re- vealed that Radio Moscow attack- * * * I HIS EDITORIAL .. . * * * The Daily's editorial policy is con- sistently ambiguous." 4 * * * RICH THOMAS, '52, author of the attacked article, was somewhat elated that his work had been cho- sen "for special condemnation of Moscow." At the same time, how- ever, he expressed dismay at the fact that they had completely missed the point. "My editorial - 'I Killed the President'-was intended to be a takeoff, a satire, you might ... GOT HIS OBJECTION ed the Michigan football team on about the same grounds in the Summer of 1950. The "bestial in- stincts" of the University athlete were being aggravated at that time by "profit-hungry Wall Street bosses." Daily reaction to the Literary Gazette blast was pretty well summed up by a University au- thority (who asked to remain anonymous) when he said "It's nice to be remembered." Students Riot Over Return, Of Trieste Anti-U.S. Mobs I Clash In Rome By STAN SWINTON ROME-(P)-Thousands of stu- dents battled police yesterday when Fascist and Communist agi- tators turned a demonstration over Trieste into a bloody brawl with anti-American overtones. Shouting for the return of Tri- este free territory to Italy, other thousands milled through Naples, Milan and Trieste. FIERY nationalism swept the whole Italian peninsula. A rash of anti-American slogans appeared. Rioters marched on U.S. diplo- matic missions in Rome and Naples. In Milan, police halted an- other student march against the British legation. Police hurled tear gas bombs and charged crowds in Red riot jeeps before the worst Rome outbreak was quelled. Scores of students were injured, one cri- tically. Thirty police casualties were led away. More than 130 persons were ar- rested in Rome and 70 in Naples. The political office announced "extremist elements" infiltrated the ranks of 'teen-age student demonstrators, forcing drastic po- lice action. REPORTERS mingling in the crowd said older Communist and pro-Fascist agitators were playing key roles among what-until yes- terday-were mobs of truant stu- dent nationalists. The Trieste rioting broke out ast Thursay. In the past six days 160 have been injured and 74 jailed in Trieste. The wave of demonstrations was touched off by Italian feeling that the British-trained Triete police were too severe in quelling Thurs- day's outbreak. NOW IT HAS widened into a fiery new demand that Trieste, severed from Italy after World War II, be returned. The United States, Britain and France in 1948 publicly announced they favored the return. Yugoslavia fiercely op- poses such a resolution. Yesterday's anti-American turn -apparently based on the pres- ence of 5,000 U.S. occupation troops in Trieste free territory- was a new development. Club- swinging police had to charge 10,000 demonstrating Naples stu- dents who tried to reach the U.S. consulate there. IFC To Seek Hatcher's Aid At last night's Interfraternity Council house president's meeting, IFC president Jack Smart, '52, said that an effort will be made to pre- sent the fraternity stand on the anti-bias resolution to President Harlan H. Hatcher. The Student Legislature resolu- tion, designed to remove discrimi- natory clauses from fraternity constitutions, was approved by the Student Affairs Committee and is awaiting President Hatcher's rati- fication. Smart claimed that the action is necessary because the IFC was not given sufficient notice in which to! present their case before the SAC. Truman May Stabilization Controversy Halt Wage Ike Offered ONE GROUP OPPOSED: V ote Splitup SRA Requests Student With Stassen Speaker Responsibility PhfotOoby Jack Bergstrom KICKING CUTIES OF THE CHORUS WITH STREETCLOTHED LEADING MAN Union Opera To Open Tonight By The Associated Press In an unprecedented bid for votes, Harold E. Stassen last night offered to throw half of his Wis- consin strength to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower on the first ballot of the Republican national conven- tion in July. t iStassen thus topped an earlier offer by supporters of Gov. Earl Warren of California in the hectic campaign for votes in the Wiscon- sin primary April 1. s* s r EISENHOWER is not entered in the Wisconsin race, and write-in ballots are not counted there. Stassen and the Warren camp had previously announced they would throw their support to Eisenhower if convinced they could not win the GOP nomina- tion themselves. The effect was an invitation to Eisenhower admirers to vote for either Stassen or Warren rather than for the other GOP entry, Sen. Robert A. Taft. Stassen.went that one better last night. The former Governer of Minnesota said if his 30 Wiscon- sin delegate candidates are elect- ed, 15 of them will vote for Eisen- hower on the first ballot at the Chicago convention. In Paris, close associates of Gen. Eisenhower said yesterday they be- lieve he will soon ask President Truman for relief as NATO com- mander so he can return to the United States in May to campaign for the Republican nomiiation for President. Queen Juliana Confirms Visit University officials have re- ceived official notification that Queen auliana of the Netherlands will visit here on April 17 during her tour of the United States. Word of the acceptance was re- ceived from Willard Wickers, director of the Midwestern Divi- sion of the Netherlands Informa- By DONNA HENDLEMAN The Student Religious Association last night went on record as favoring "student responsibility" for choosing speakers who appear before campus groups. The Newman club simultaneously recorded its formal opposition to the-SRA resolution. * * * * IN A LENGTHY council meeting in which several amendments and counter-proposals were introduced and subsequently voted down, the council finally decided to ma ke the statement SRA policy. O The resolution read: Big Three Ask' East German Elections Now WASHINGTON - (A') - The United States, Britain and France challenged Russia yesterday to lift its iron curtain around East Ger- many if it sincerely wants to talk about a peace treaty for all of Germany. At the same time the three na- tions firmly turned down Russia's proposal for allowing' a unified Germany to revive its army, navy and air forces. * * IN IDENTICAL notes delivered yesterday, they told Moscow it must allow "free elections" in East Germany before they will discuss a four-power peace treaty with the defeated Reich. The American -British -French notes, drafted after two weeks of careful consultation, replied to a surprise Russian note sent March 10. This Soviet note called for a German peace conference "in the nearest future" but specified its boundaries must be limited to those agreed upon at the Potsdam Conference in 1945, The three-power answer in turn insisted Russia must first permit a United Nations investigation commission into Eastern Germany to check on whether conditions for free elections exist. Dulles Quits Post "We, the SRA, believing that the students of this University must learn to be responsible citi- zens . .. believe that the stu- dents should themselves, in their recognized organizations have the responsibility of choosing the speakers whom these groups feel may be able to further the mental and moral development of their members within the re- striction of state and national law." At the same time, they squelched a sister resolution which would have set up a standing committee to investigate the speakers' ban situation "on this and other cam- puses." * * * BOTH resolutions were effected n'egatively when the council voted down an SRA Executive Commit- tee recommendation which sug- gested dropping the proposals. They had been tentatively passed last week. The action represented a com- promise between the SRA and the Newman club. The two reso- See FAVOR, Page 5 By ALAN LUCKOFF Many changes have taken place since the first Union Opera open- ing night, 46 years ago, but amidst the Broadway premiere festivities tonight, the footlights will reveal the same kind of traditional all- T ruman Policy iscussed at YD-YRDebate Four student speakers echoed domestic and foreign arguments last night in a forceful Young Re- publican-Young Democrat debate on the Truman administration. Agreed that the issues were neither black nor white, the de- baters tried to determine which party could be trusted with the succeeding administration. YD speaker Lyn Marcus, '53L, cited Greek recovery, the Mar- shall plan and NATO as several Democratic victories in the foreign policy field. Concentrating on Asiatic policy, his YR opponent Bill Halby, '54, said that blockad- ing China and bombing Manchuria should be permitted to solve the Korean muddle. In the domestic field, the debate hinged on government corruption. While Republican Ned Simon felt that the Truman administration has been "inefficient, corrupt, and hopelessly wrong on rearmament," YD speaker Jim Nopper answered that 100 dishonest politicians did not corrupt a whole party. male musical that Michigan alumni and students expect. The curtain will raise at 8:30 p.m. on the 1952 version, "Never Too Late," a song and dance sa- tire of modern American movies and radio. OPENING NIGHT festivities will be at their zenith, with an on-the-spot radio commentator ready to interview visiting celeb- rities, such as Governor and Mrs. G. Mennen Williams and former President Alexander Ruthven and his wife over station WPAG at 8 p.m. Club Cancels FloridaTrip. The "Sunland Special," Wolver- ine Club student train to Florida during the Spring vacation has been cancelled, "because of an un- expected lack of student interest." According to Bob Golten, '54, special trips chairman of the club, only six people have signed up to date, making the trip financially unfeasible. He emphasized that the Wolverine Club was still prepared to make housing arrangements in Fort Lauderdale for Florida- bound students, through their Ad- ministration Bldg. booth. The trip had met with some criticism in the last few days as being discriminatory against Ne- groes, since it would have had to abide with segregation rules in Florida and other states en route. The play itself, written by Jim Kemper, '52, is the story of a housewife who is granted ful- fillment of her fondest wish as a contestant on a radio, quiz show. She becomes beautified and sets off for a Holywood career. The complications that arise are many and hilarious, as she gets entangled with the workings of her husband's sweater factory. FOUR ORIGINAL songs, includ- ing the title tune "Never Too Late' and two ballads, combine with solo and chorus dances to round out the musical. "Never Too Late" will continue at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow and Friday at a local theatre. Friday's per- formance is sold out completely, but a few tickets for today's and tomorrow's show will be on sale MVanagement, Labor Split Over Issues Check on WSB Voted by House WASHINGTON - (P) - Presi- dent Truman was expected yester- day to intervene soon to halt a bit- ter free-for-all over steel wages- a fight which threatens to wreck the government's price-wage con- trol machinery. The row split top echelons of of- ficialdom, and found labor leaders swapping hot statements with in- dustry. It also prompted the House Rules Committee to vote, 7 to 4, for an investigation of the Wage Stabilization Board, center of the controversy. * ** * THE FIGHT started when the Board, with industry members dis- senting vigorously, proposed 171/ cents an hour pay boosts plus other major benefits for 650,000 CIO steelworkers. This aroused Defense Mobiliz- er Charles E. Wilson. Returning Monday night from a talk with Truman at Key West, he de- clared that the proposals were a "serious threat" to the anti-in- flation program. Then these developments fo- lowed in swift order: 1. CIO President Philip M urray, who also heads the Steelworkers Union, called Wilson a "biased and uninformed" big businessman and refused flatly to meet with him 4n the steel dispute. The uniQn is threatening to strike April 8 un- less a settlement acceptable to it is reached. 2. Industry members of the 18-man wage board said the Board "should go out of busi- ness." They said it was "causing inflation and creating disputes." 3. Labor members of the indus- try-labor-public board said that if Wilson does not "reconsider" his "untenable position" on the steel case proposals "he most cer- tainly has made the heaviest blow at the wage and price stabilization program struck thus far." 4. Wilson's office said he still hoped to talk to the Steelworkers Union and the industry in an ef- fort to reach a settlement and head off the threatened nation- wide strike. 5. The House Rules Committee voted to send to the House a reso- lution by Rep. Allen (R-Ill.) call- ing for an investigation of the Board. The aim would be to find out whether the Board has violated national labor policy as spelled out in the Taft-Hartley Labor Act, or has made recommendations "in- consistent with the intent of Con- gress with respect to stabiliza- tion." Chairman Sabath (D-Ill.) in- formed reporters the resolution was "forced through" by Repub- lican members and Reps. Cox (D-Ga.) and Smith (D-Va.). He said he would "delay as long as possible" before sending the mea- sure to the House. A&D To Vote For Officers 1 1001 For the first time in recent years, the School of Architecture and Design will hold elections for senior class officers, the newly formed Senior Board announced yesterday. The voting will take place at the time of the all-campus elections, April 1 and 2. The Senior Board, composed of the presidents of the University See Pictures, Page 6 tween 1 and 5:30 p.m. today at the Union ticket counter and from 1 p.m. to curtain time today and tomorrow at the theatre box of-9 fice. World News -Roundup By The Associated Press, LANSING-In a letter to Attor- ney General Frank 'G. Millard, State PoliceCommissioner Donald S. Leonard yesterday asked for a grand jury investigation of Com-! munism in Michigan as "the most effective way to establish proof of the adherents and practitioners of Communism." * A - WASHINGTON - The Red Cross reported yesterday a sur- vey of the tornado - ravaged Sokith has disclosed that 238 persons died and 1,202 were in- jured in the six-state disaster last Friday. * * * WASHINGTON-Testifying yes- terday on the Foreign Aid Bill, 'APARTHEID' SEEN BIG ISSUE: South Africans Riot Against Malan Riots erupted in several of explosive South Africa's cities this week against the Apartheid advocating government of Prime Minister Daniel F. Malan. In Pretoria, Johannesburg and Capetown mobs clamored for Malan's resignation as a result of his threat to curb the powers of the South African Supreme Court because of its invalidation of his pet Voter's Act. out of approximately 12 million South Africans, only 2.5 million-the white Europeans-have the right to vote. In South Africa, anti-Malan organizations are split as to what action to take. The African National Congress, a colored group, plans to go ahead with a civil disobedience, campaign, while Cyprian Solomon, the paramount chief of the Zulus, advo- cated nlacing grievances before the proner authorities. i