A -J WASHINGTON IMERRY-GO-ROUND See Page 4 IQ. "id r r Slit4q 9rn Daitl r 9 CLOUDY, WARMER Latest Deadline in the State r1 VOL. LXII, No. 132 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1952 SIX PAGES NEW PRESIDENT, SECRETARY: N rt Jentes, Ehlers Head Union * * 4 * * * y! t. B Daily-Larry Wilk BILL. JENTES ... new president -t Potter Seeks Senate Post Also Asks Contempt Action on McPhaul Special to The Daily DETROIT - Rep. Charles E. Potter (R), Cheboygan, yesterday threw his hat in the ring for the Republican U. S. Senate nomina- tion. Potter, lone Michigan member of the House Un-American Activi- ties Committee, will compete with State Auditor General John B. Martin and ex-Lt. Gov. Eugene C. Keyes for the nomination. THE 35-YEAR-OLD Congress- man's statement came as no sur- prise to state politicians. He had indicated the possibility of his running for the Senate post dur- ing the February-March Commun- ism probe here. An outspoken opponent of al- leged Red activities in Michigan, Potter recently announced he would ask the House Committee for contempt of Congress pro- ' cee&higs against 17 reluctant Detroit witnesses. Among those accused were two witnesses whose speaking appear- ances at the University under Young Progressive sponsorship were blocked by the Lecture Com- mittee last month. THEY ARE Arthur McPhaul, executive secretary of the Civil Rights' Congress Michigan branch, and William R. Hood, recording secretary of UAW Local 600. McPhaul addressed a private dinner in the Union shortly af- ter being barred from speaking on campus. Circumstances sur- rounding the mysterious spon- sorship of the affair are current- ly being investigated by a stu- dent-faculty committee. Potter will also seek contempt action against two University graduates: Lebron Simmons, De- troit lawyer, and Robert Cum- mins, who refused to state his oc- cupation before the Committee. New Moves To Hit, Uphold Steel Seisure By The Associated Press In Washington last night con- flicting moves developed to chal- lenge and to strengthen President Truman's power to seize a strike- threatened industry. New peace talks went forward in the big steel labor dispute- with "no real progress" but an increased willingness to negotiate reported-amid these develop- ments: 1. On Capital Hill, Chairman Murray (D-Mont) of the Senate Labor Committee announced that public hearings will begin today on a pro-administration bill setting forth the conditions under which the President could seize an industry to avert a strike. In effect, the bill would give the President the legal authority which some of his critics contend he has already "usurped" by seiz- ing the steel industry. 2. Two of the nation's most powerful business organizations, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers. set the state for Bill Jentes, '53, and Jack Ehlers, '54E, were named to the top posi- tions of the Union last night. Jentes will be the new presi- dent while Ehlers will take over as recording secretary. Both men moved up from the Union's Coun- cil. * * * THE announcement was made by Dean Erich Walter, chairman of the selection committee of the Union's Board of Directors. The men will be formally installed at a banquet at 6:15 p.m. Thursday at the Union., Jentes will succeed John Kathe, '52P, and Ehlers will re- place Jim Moran, '52. Jentes is a 19 year old pre-law student from Elmhurst, Ill. He ex- pects to enter the Law School in the fall under the combined cur- riculum. He is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity and has served as an interim appointee to Student Legislature. HE ALSO belongs to Phi Eta Sigma, scholastic freshman hon- orary society and is a former member of ThenDaily's business staff. His duties with the Union saw him as chairman of the Per- sonnel and Administration Com- mittee. Ehlers is a 21 year old indus- trial engineering student from Atlanta, Ga. He is a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, Phi Eta Sigma honorary, the Engi- neering Honor Council, Triangle honor society and is co-chair- man of the Michigras parade. He has served as co-chairman of the Union's House Committee and has sung with the Men's Glee Club for three years. New Jersey Primary Test For Ike,_Taft NEWARK, N.J. - P-- An elec- tion campaign, scorched with bit- terness and deep-seated anger, ended yesterday in New Jersey where upwards of 750,000 voters will ballot In another great test of strength between Sen. Robert A. Taft and Gen. Dwight D. Eisen- hower, today. Eisenhower is the indicated fa- vorite but his backers say they believe the race will be close. The New Jersey primary selects 38 Republican convention dele- gates. Taft, Eisenhower, and ex- Minnesota Gov. Harold E. Stassen are competing for them. Sen. Estes Kefauver is the only candidate in the Democratic elec- tion, which names 36 delegates with 32 convention votes. , More important, a preferential section of the ballot-the "popu- larity contest"-is at stake this year, for the first time since 1940. In this, the people vote directly for the presidential candidates, as against the votes cast for dele- gates. Although the results of the pre- ferential poll are merely advisory, Gov. Alfred E. Driscoll has said GOP delegates will be "morally bound" to support a decisive win- ner. v -Daily-Larry Wilkc JACK EHLERS ... will be secretary POW Talks Could Begin AgainToday MUNSAN KOREA, Tuesday April 15-(JP)-A renewal of the vital prisoner exchange talks, which could break the Korean armistice logjam, appeared im- minent today. Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, senior delegate for the United Nations command, and Rear. Adm. R. E. Libby, chief negotiator on the prisoner issue, returned to Munsan yesterday after a week to Tokyo. * * * THE Communists are ready to resume. The talks were recessed April 4 to give staff officers a chance to explore separately new avenues for a solution. The Communists appeared to be stalling on truce supervision, the only issue on which nego- tiations have been conducted in the past nine days, until the prisoners sessions could get go- ing Again. Tunisia Issue Refused by UN UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-(/P)-- The United Nations Security Council refused yesterday to con- sider an Asian-African complaint against France's treatment of Tunisia. This was the first time the council had ever refused to take up a question brought to it by UN members. The test was on a compromise proposal by Chile that the issue be placed on the council's agenda but that discussion of the com- plaint be postponed indefinitely. The vote was five in favor of the Chilean proposal, two against, and four abstaining. Seven af- firmative votes are required to get an item on the council's work sheet. By abstaining, the United States1 departed from its traditional posi- tion, In the past-except in the Moroccan case in the General Assembly last winter-the U. S. has always favored including all items offered for the agenda even when they were attacks on the U. S. Legislature Gives Okay To'U'Budget Earlier Slashes Left Unaltered The State Legislature early Sat- urday morning approved the Uni- versity operating and capital out- lays budgets without restoring any of the slashes made earlier in committee. The bill, part of an omnibus state operatingappropriation measure, now sits on Gov. Wil- liams' desk, awaiting his signature. UNDER THE provisions of this legislation, the University will re- ceive: 1) $16,936,650 in general oper- ating funds. 2) $1,308,403 to complete the Angell Hall addition. 3) $726,000 to complete the Ou-atient Clinic. 4) $325,000 for rehabilitation of the Natural Science Bldg. '5) $16,000 to draw up plans for the remodeling of the out- patient facilities at University Hospital. Overall, the funds obtained from the Legislature amounted to a little more than $19,000,000, or about $7,000,000 less than origi- nally requested from the state last December. , * * THIS AMOUNT, according to President Harlan H. Hatcher, is "below that needed to support ade- quately the necessary services of the University in the present eco- nomic situation. "The University will, of course, proceed at once with a detailed study of how to ac- commodate its services to the resources at its disposal," the President added, stating that the University "understands the dif- ficulties confronted by the Leg- islature." Most of the $7,000,000 cut came in building projects or improve- ments which were not approved this year and thus represent no actual loss. HOWEVER, approximately $2,- 000,000 of the cut represents a slash of operating funds. The Legislature cut the operating fund request by $1,500,000, and dropped an additional $500,000 deficiency request. The early passage of the ap- propriations wound up the Leg- islature's work in record time. University officials could not re- call when the appropriations had been settled at such an early date. Legislators went home last week end, scheduled to reconvene May 14 to settle any problems created by possible Williams vetoes of some of the legislation. Little chance was seen of a veto of the appropriations bill, however. * * * * * * * * * ____ . e Rging Waters 'Thousands in Threaten Md-est HERE THURSDAY: Local Visit Will Chimax Jliana's Tour o State, By DONNA HENDLEMAN Queen Juliana of the Netherlands flew into Michigan yesterday, beginning a four day visit to the state which will culminate here Thursday when the University confers an honorary degree upon her. The degree, Doctor of Civil Laws, will be presented to the monarch at a special convocation to be held at 11:15 a.m. Thursday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Classes will not be suspended S . fefor the event. LOCAL proceedings will come I 1 1 110 oorow at the end of a visit include two days in city and short stops Rapids and Holland. which will the motor in Grand Final arrangements for Sen. Robert A. Taft's Hill Auditorium speech tomorrow were announced yesterday by the campus Taft for President Club, sponsors of the talk. . The campaigning senator from Ohio will arrive in Ann Arbor from Detroit at 11:45 a.m. tomor- row accompanied by party asso- ciates and newsmen. Sen. Taft's open address in Hill Auditorium is set for 12:15 p.m. EASTER SCENE -A Coast Guard helicopter hovers over two churches which had to can- cel services on Easter Sunday as flood waters from the Missouri put them on their own private little island at South Sioux City, Neb. Many persons have been evacuated from the city. Football Ticket Prices Raised For All Seats "Greatly expanded operational costs" have necessitated a forty cent increase on the price of re- served seats for Michigan home football games. Athletic Director H. 0. 'Fritz' Crisler announced the adoption of a price schedule of $4.00 for the reserved ducats and at the same time announced a $5.40 levy for box seats. The new prices, which include federal tax, represent a ten per cent rise over the 19511 admissions. Crisler pointed out that costs in the athletic plant have risen more than 200 per cent in the past 12 years. During that same period, ticket prices to Michigan's home games have risen only 20 per cent, Crisler said. Season tickets for the six-game home schedule will be priced at $24.00, while box seats for the same slate will go for $32.50. Stu- dent admissions are still free of charge. Flood Relief Funds Sent By Truman Iowa, Nebraska Cities Menaced By The Associated Pres Three-quarters of the city of Council Bluffs, la-with 45,000 population-last night had been moved out of threatened areasda flood disaster hung by a slender thread over the Bluffs and, across the Missouri river, the sister city of Omaha. Seventeen square miles of the two cities had a ghost town as- pect as the maurauding Missouri came pushing down after merci- lessly punishing Pierre, S.D., and Sioux City, Ia., along with a host of smaller towns. In Council Bluffs an estimated 30,000 persons had been moved out of their homes and- in Omaha an estimated 5,000. *' * * FROM South Dakota down through Nebraska and Iowa, and into Kansas and Missouri the riv- er was tirelessly punching away. In two other rich midwest valleys, the Mississippi and the Red River of the north were creating misery. It all added up to one of the worst combinations of midwest flooding in modern times-a rush of water that the Red Cross trans- lated into terms of 18,939 families -perhaps 75,756 persons or more -made homeless in an area em- bracing the Dakotas, Nebraska,. Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Kan- sas and Missouri. TO AID THE stricken are, the President yesterday allocatd $250,000 each to Iowa and South Dakota from his emergency fund for flood relief. At St. Paul, the Mississippi had driven an estimated 5,000 persons from their homes and at Winona, one-third of the city faced inundation if a dike broke. The Red River hit hard at the twin-cities of Fargo and Moor- head, routing an estimated 2,000 from homes and pouring over about 50 blocks of ground. TO MEET the threat there Gov. Norman C. Brunsdale of North Dakota ordered out three state guard units. And the Red Cross rushed out a call for volunteers to work through the night building sandbag dikes to protect the men- aced Fargo Veterans Hospital. For frightful depredations, the Missouri was taking the lead. Army engineers reported one and a quarter million acres of land, some of the richest in mid- dle America, under water along the Missouri and tributaries. * * * MEANWHILE, flood troubles arose again yesterday to harass parts of Michigan. Four Rivers-the Grand and Red Cedar and the Shiawassee and Tittabawassee-were threat- ening a rampage in the wake of the Easter weekend rain storms. The State Highway Department reported M-20 was closed at Mid- land because of high water from the Tittabawassee River with 15 inches of water over the roadway. It was the second time this year that high water forced closing of the road. ONE FOOT of water was report- ed over M-78 and US-27 near Mil- lett west of Lansing. Traffic was still getting through. Half a dozen cities, including Lansing, Midland and Owosso, were warned to be on guard. The Red Cedar at East Lansing was already over its eight-foot flood stage and the Shiawassee at Owosso was all but touching its seven-foot flood mark. After 48 hours, intermittent rain conditions eased in the Detroit and Southern Michigan area. The rains let up and watchers The Queen, her husband, Prince Bernhard and the royal party arrived at Willow Run at 5:45 p.m. yesterday. They were welcomed by more than 300 per- sons, including Governor G. Mennen Williams and Detroit's Mayor Albert Cobo. The Queen's Ann Arbor visit will be short and concentrated. Due to arrive here about 10:30 a.m. Her Majesty and the Prince will gc directly to the president's office in the Administration Build- ing to be introduced to President Harlan Hatcher, Mrs. Hatcher, the Regents and their wives. IMMEDIATELY succeeding this, an informal reception limited to some faculty members and Uni- versity officials, will be held. The degree will be conferred upon the Queen by President Hatcher. THE CITY BEAT: Amusement Tax Meets Defeat in CityElections, DEMOCRA TIC NOMINEE? Don't Overlook Senator Douglas, Moody Warns By TERI YOUNGMAN AND CRAWFORD YOUNG ASpecial to The Daily WASHINGTON-"Don't forget Illinois' Paul Douglas when specu- lating on the next Democratic presidential nominee," Sen. Blair Moody (D.-Mich.) told The Daily last week in the Senate Press Conference Room. Despite Sen. Douglas's repeated statements that he is not a candi- date for the nomination, Sen. Moody felt the Illinois Senator would not refuse to run. The two are close friends. ** * * "IT WILL BE A WIDE OPEN convention," the former Detroit News Washington correspondent pointed out. Sen. Douglas might be a logical choice in the event of a convention deadlock between the two leading contenders at present, Sen. ( Estes Kefauver of Tennessee and last year and a candidate for re- Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois. election this fall, declined to And if the economics pro- comment on whether he would fessor turned Senator should re- prefer to run against a GOP ticket ceive the nomination, Senator headed by Taft or Eisenhower. Mooddecaloaed mnhoatieall h Despite spring vacation, which prevented many students from voting in the city elections, the controversial amusement tax pro- position was defeated by a great- er than 4-3 margin. It would have empowered the City Council to tack an excise of unspecified percentage on all en- tertainment tickets. The vacation-shuttered Univer- sity had little effect on the rush of other local events, with a coun- ty suit against Washtenaw's West- ern Union offices, a new over-ceil- ing pay prosecution and a district victory for Eisenhower backers making the headlines over the past ten days. *5 * * BIGGEST ITEM was the April 7 election which saw Republicans make a clean sweep of seven Ann Arbor Council posts and twelve seats on the county Board of Su- pervisors. The one exception to the pre- election form sheets came in the proposal to annex the Ann Ar- bor Hills area which got heavy approval from city voters but the State Supreme Court in Lan- sing today as attorneys for the giant communications outfit seek to have the high court overrule Circuit Judge James R. Breakey's order that the firm open its books to inspection by the prosecutor's office. The case began June 24, 1950, when Prosecutor Douglas K. Read- ing charged that Western UnionI was accepting horse race bets for transmission to outstate bookies. HARD ON THE heels of Satur- day's National Wage Stabilization Board Enforcement Commission's decision against the J. D. Hedin Construction Co. for paying wages above WSB ceilings to laborers on the new University Hospital Out- Patient Clinic, WSB officials an- nounced a new over-ceiling case against a subcontractor on the project. The WSB had postponed pro- secution of the second case, against the Anchor Fireproof- ing Co., pending the outcome of the Hedin violation. The new hearing will take place NO DOUBLE STANDARD: 'U' Senate Denies Rules Differ for Athletes Here The alleged "double standard" treatment of athletes and non- athletes on matters of eligibility has been flatly denied by an investi- gating committee of the University Senate. After an extensive six-month study, the Advisory Committee on University Affairs erased the hotly-debated issue from its docket with this answer to the literary college faculty's protest, filed last October: *1 * 1 * "STANDARDS of academic achievement required and maintained for participation in intercollegiate athletics by students at the Uni- versity are the same as those required by academic authorities for participation in non-athletic extra-curricular activities." The committee's findings in- 0 cluded a judgment that "the evidence is clear that a C aver- age is required for both types of activities." The literary college faculty, however. hoA ncentrated its fire while the Dean of Women or Dean of Students do so for other stu- dents." The pattern of procedure fol- lowed by the agencies concerned ae thea en. the cnmmittee ad-