ACACIA PLAN See Page 4 :Y SirF AO ~IaitPF ! 4 'V Latest Deadline in the State PARTLY CLOUDY VOL. LXII, No. 150 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1952 SIX PAGES degaard Named Dean of Literary College 4 i -Daily-Don Campbell OWNER SURVEYS FORMER HOME . * * * ire Destroys Several ' Vet Village HousMg Units A fire, apparently started by a gas explosion, completely destroyed two and one half housing units at 5:30 p.m. yesterday in Willow Village. The first unit at 1106 Goshen housed Willis Pitts, Grad. and his mother. Pitts who is working on his doctors degree in speech was away with his mother when the fire occurred. S * * s THE FIRE STARTED in the second apartment while Glenn Tay- City Police Wound SQ Dishwasher Leads Model Life Before Arrest By RUSS AU WERTER A South Quad dishwasher want- ed for jumping bond in Chicago was shot in the leg at 2:30 p.m. yesterday when he attempted to escape arrest by city police. The six-foot plus, 230 pound quad worker was known to his friends and co-workers as "Rick James" but police records showed his real name to be Richard Moore, Jr. Moore was wanted by Cook County, Ill., police on two counts: assault with intent to murder and bond forfeiture. He was also want- ed by the FBI for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution. Students who knew Moore were shocked with the news of arrest and many were in sympathy with the statement made by quad direc- tor Leo Vogel when he said "Rick was an exceptional worker and well liked by everybody who knew him." Local police first got word that Moore might be in Ann Arbor early in April when they received a des- cription and picture from Illinois police. By last week police had deter- mined that Moore was either em- ployed by the University or was in attendance as a student. Last Saturday police received a fugitive warrant from Chicago. Yesterday Detectives John Wolters and George Simmons questioned quad director Vogel as to the whereabouts of Moore. He then took them to where Moore was working. Though Moore denied he was a fugitive he agreed to go down to the station to have his finger prints checked. He asked if he could take his washing out of a machine and put it in his room before he left. He took the washing to his room and started to unlock the door but then made a sudden bolt away from Wolters and Simmons and escaped out a side entrance. T h e detectives chased h i mn around the west end of the build- ing firing two warning shots into the air. Moore didn't stop and a third shot hit his right leg, fell- ing him. Moore is being held at Saint Jo- seph Hospital under police guard to await extradition. Cassidy Lake Quiz Yields No Clues Continued questioning of in- mates at the Cassidy Lake Train- ing School failed yesterday to pro- duce any new leads in the slaying of young Anthony Bedard whose body was found in a camp septic tank weighted down by a concrete block. bor, a Kaiser Frazer employe, his Oil Strikers Still Remain Off Job Union Hints Terms May Be Reached Well Below Their Initial Demands DENVER-(.P)-The leader of a striking oil union dropped a broad hint yesterday that the strike could be settled on wage terms well below the union coalition's initial demands. O. A. Knight, president of the CIO Oil Workers International,j which has its headquarters in Denver, said in a statement: "Anytimej an oil company will offer us 182 cents in cash, the strike at that company's plant would undoubtedly end in a short time." * * * * KNIGHT WAS commenting on reported terms of a settlement in California involving a union which is not among the 22 CIO, AFL i "and independent unions which w HIST Asks For Flood fInsurance WASHINGTON-(AP)-A system of government insurance against flood damage, backed by a one and a half billion dollar fund, was urged upon Congress yesterday by President Truman. Proposed legislation which Tru- man sent to Capitol Hill would allow the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to issue such insur- ance directly or reinsure policies written by private companies. * * * TH1E RFC initially would be authorized to commit up to 500 million dollars. With Presidential approval, it could be increased by 500 millions on July 1, 1953, and by a like amount a year later. "The lack of such an insur- ance system," Truman said in a special message, "is a major gap in the means by which a man can make his home, his farm or his business secure against financial loss. "The reasons for enacting such legislation are very clear. At pres- ent, insurance against flood dam- age is virtually unobtainable from private insurance companies, nor, does it seem likely that the pri- vate companies by themselves will find it possible to write flood in- surance at reasonable rates." The RFC would be barred from issuing insurance in cases where it is available from private firms "at reasonable rates." MacArthur To Give Short Speech Here In a brief, ceremonial Ann Arbor visit, Gen. Douglas MacArthur will speak for five minutes at 10 a.m. May 16 in front of Hill Audi- torium, City Council president Cecil 0. Creal announced yester- day. * * * rife, and four children were visiting Sneighbors. An illegal coil heater was found in the unit but was not believed to have caused the fire. The third apartment which was not completely destroyed but was still uninhabitable was empty when the fire broke out. Neighbors said that they became aware of the fire when they heard a terrific explosion and saw flames leaping 70 feet in the air followed by a huge cloud of smoke from the second unit. The fire spread, en- veloping the two adjacent units. The fire department arrived quickly and was able to keep the fire from spr~eading further. Af- ter twenty minutes the fire was completely under control. Court Evicts Wiliam_ Allen* DETROIT-(P)-William A. Al- lan, correspondent in Detroit for The Daily Worker, was ordered evicted from a public housing pro- ject today. Eviction proceedings had been brought against Allan subsequent to his being named a Communist leader in Michigan before the House ' Un-American Activities Committee. iNew Officer *. * * " e Steel labor Dispute Still Unsettled WASHINGTON -('P) - The big steel labor dispute remained stuck on dead center yesterday with ne- gotiations suspended and a solu- tion apparently as far off as ever. All sides seemed to be waiting for an eventual Supreme Court ruling on the questioned legality of President Truman's steel in- dustry seizure nearly a month ago. It may be weeks before the high court decides the case. Its hear- ings start next Monday. * * * THE STEEL industry, mean- time, slowly returned to full pro- duction of the vital metal after last week's three-day strike. Even though negotiations have G, - lapsed, the men remained at work as the union president, Philip Mur- ray, had promised. Thirteen Republican Senators introduced legislation to direct Secretary of Commerce Sawyer, government boss of the seized industry, to give up the steel plants and return them to their private.owners. Sen. Hugh Butler (R-Neb), one of the sponsors, urged early Sen- ate consideration. It seemednun- likely, however, that the Senate would act while the issue is before the Supreme Court. * * * WHILE THE mills generally re- ported good progress toward re- sumption fo production, a com- plaint was made by Orval Kincaid, a union sub-district director at Gary, Ind., that the U.S. Steel Corp. was dragging its feet. "U.S. Steel is not making a genuine effort to get people back to work," he said. "Some people have reported for work at the sheet and tin mill and have been told to go fishing for a week. "We feel it is an organized move on the part of industry to make the government look bad in its op- eration of the mills." World Newsf Roundup By The Associated Press MUNSAN, Korea - The United Nations Command maintained strict silence yesterday on the secret, top-level Korean armistice talks, but it was apparent that no progress had been made. Both sides agreed to meet again today at Panmunjom, at 11 a.m. (9 p.m. Ann Arbor time.) Meanwhile, Allied fighter-bomb- ers, using a new strategy of satur- ation bombing, ripped gaping holes yesterday in an important segment of the Communist rail system in Korea. WASHINGTON-Lt. Gen. Al- bert C. Wedemeyer claimed yes- terday that Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur has thrown his support to Sen. Robert A. Taft, of Ohio, in the race for the Republican Presidential nomination. In New York, a MacArthur spokesman said that the former called the strike last Wednesday. The strike was ordered to back up the union's demands for a wage increase of 25 cents per hour plus higher extra pay for night work. The current scale averages $2 to $2.10 per hour. The Los Angeles agreement be- tween the Independent Union of Petroleum Workers and Standard Oil of California included benefits worth 182 cents an hour, a union spokesman said. But at San Francisco, a com- pany official said they figured it amounts to a 15-cent boost in base pay. The Standard Oil agreement covers. 5,000 employes in oil fields, refineries and offices in Los Ange- les, San Francisco and Bakersfield, Calif. The union had not been on strike. * * * AS THE controversy went on, Michigan cautiously gauged its waning supply of gasoline yester- day. Levels were falling and a crisis point was expected by mid-week. Already, the strike had stopped See OIL, Page 6 Fox Facing Investigation By Governor JACKSON -(P) -Dr. Vernon Fox at times felt like he was "deal- ing with Hitler" in the peace ne- gotiations with mutiny leader Earl Ward in the Southern Michigan Prison riot. The removed Assistant Deputy Warden and .prison psychologist gave this as one of his impressions in testifying yesterday before Gov. Williams'- investigating commis- sion. S* * ON THE eleventh day after the riot the big prison, although quiet for the most patt, was still being watched carefully. Fox appeared as a witness be- fore the investigating group a day after the disclosure that his cri- ticized congratulatory speech to the mutineers was a part of a pact with Ward. THE FACT-FINDING panel al- so told yesterday of friction within Fox's individual treatment depart-. ment. Meanwhile Dr. Julio Olavarria, Director General of Prisons in Chile, declared yesterday an out- sider should have conducted ne- gotiations with rioting convicts at Southern Michigan Prison. CHARLES E. ODEGAARD, LITERARY COLLEGE DEAN Accused Students File AppealsForRe-hearing The five students put on probation Saturday for "failure to co- operate" with the Joint Judiciary Council in the McPhaul dinner in- vetsigaton yesterday filed separate appeals for a rehearing with the Office of Student Affairs. There were indications that all would be granted full hearings shortly. THE STUDENTS involved, Valerie Cowen, '54, David Luce, Grad., Edward Shaffer, Grad., Myron Sharpe, Grad., and Stephen Smale, Grad., applied for reconsideration of the penalty which will force p Ru Leysthem to drop out of extra-curricu- Ia elar activities until Jan. 31, 1953. Mahoney Win In Maryland BALTIMORE -(P)- George P. Mahoney, an oppenent of the Maryland Democratic organiza- tion, was in sight last night of the nomination for the U.S. Senate in a primary election which also saw Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) win easily in the presidential pref- erence. Kefauver was the only one run- ning. * * * AN APPARENT Republican vic- tory for Rep. J. Glenn Beall n the Senatorial primary didn't give much of an inkling of how Mary- land may stand as against Gen. Eisenhower and Sen. Taft. Beall was supported by Gov. Theodore R. McKeldin, who has professed Eisenhower leanings. McKeldin likely will go to Chi- cago as a favorite son for a bal- lot or two but then release the 24 delegates. McKeldin said last night it would be up to the delegation to swing one way or the other, but the Governor personally will have a lot of influence in naming the state's representation at Chicago. Union Opera Tomorrow is the deadline for Executive Committee positions on next year's Union Opera. All petitions for finance, pro- duction, promotions, programs, music and general secretary should be turned in at the Un- ion main desk by 5 p.m. T h e i r objections centered around the protest that "we have been found guilty of a charge on which we were not tried." Saturday's decision dropped the charge of violation of a Regents' by-law. The five students protest- ed the Judiciary ruling which stat- ed: "The misconduct penalties levied by the Council are based either on misrepresentation at the dinner or conduct before the Coun- cil . . * * * LUCE FELT that it was "gross- ly improper procedure for a Uni- versity disciplinary body to an- nounce the verdict prior to an- nouncing that any charge had been made." Shaffer and Miss Cowen ob- jected that they had received no prior notification that "refusal to answer questions would be, considered misconduct." Smale urged reconsideration of what a University press release called "reasonable questions" put to the students by the Judiciary Council. As a result of the McPhaul de- cision, two campus political groups planned immediate dis- cussion of the issue. Young Pro- gressives will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Union to pass on a report prepared by the exe- cutive committee on the basis of open testimony given last week by four YP members in- volved in the investigation. Two Judiciary members, Barb- ara Buschman, '53, and Dave Brown, '53, will be present at a Civil Liberties Committee meeting Thursday to answer questions as to why the five were penalized. Will Assume Job in Fall Dean To Takq Keniston's Post Charles Edwin Odegaard, execu- tive Secretary of the American Council of Learned Societies in Washington, D.C., was named yes- terday to succeed Prof. Hayward Keniston as dean of the literary college. President Harlan H. Hatcher an- nounced the appointment after Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Nie- huss had informed the literary col- lege faculty at a meeting yester- day afternoon. " *ss PROF. KENISTON has been de- voting full time to teaching ro- mance languages in this, his last year before retirement furlough. Burton Thuma, associate dean has acted as the chief administrator of the college since Sept. 1, 191. Odegaard, 42 years old, the youngest dean ever to head the literary college, will assume his duties on Sept. 1. Noted as one of the leading writers and speakersoneduca- tional problems in the field of the humanities and liberal arts, Ode- gaard became executive director of" the American Council of Learned Societies in 1948, one of the most important positions in the educa- tional field. ODEGAABRD IREGAN his teach- Eing career in 1933 as an assistant in history at Harvard. The next year he spent as a traveling fel- low in France and Germany, re- turning to become an assistant in history at Radcliffe College. Joining the University of llI. nois faculty in 1937 as an In- Istructor in 1937, Odegaard was rapidly promoted, becoming a full professor in 1943, when he left the staff for his post in Washington. On leave for nearly four years from 1942 to 1946 on active duty with the U.S. Naval Reserve, Ode- gaard was one of the first offi. cers assigned to duty on board Navy chartered transports and participated in three amphibius invasions in the Gilbert, Marshall and Palau island areas in the Pa- cific. * * * CONCENTRATING on mediev- al history during his teaching ca- reer, Odegaard has written "Fide- les and Vassi in the Carolingian Empire," published in 1945, A member of Phi Beta Kappa, Beta Theta Pi, the Medieval Academy of America, and the American Historical Association, he serves on numerous commit- tees and commissions, including the Selective Service scientifi advisory committees and has See 'U', Page 6 Bank Accuses Vice-President PERTH AMBOY, N. J.-(P)-A mild-mannered bank vice presi- dent held in high trust by church the community was accused last night of embezzling about $40,000 to plunge on thueStoci Market. The First Bank and Trust Co. entered the complaint against William C. Horley, 50, an employe for 15 years whose regular salary was $8,500 a year. THE TALL dignified vice presi- dent-warden of St. Peter's Epis- copal Church and chairman of its trust fund-stood with bowed head as he was held in $25,000 ball to await action by a grand jury. His attorney entered a plea of inno- cent and the bank said Horley was cooperating fully to try to recover a substantial portion of the lose completely covered by insurance. Married and the father of three children, Horley is former chair- man of the Community Chest, a Red Cross Director, fund-raising head for the Boy Scouts and form- er president of the local chapter of FRESH AIR CAMP: U', Community To Begin Tag_ Day Fund Raising A city wide fund drive will be- gin tomorrow as the 32nd annual Tag Day gets under way in a camgpaign to raise money for un- derprivileged children. .The project is a joint Univer- sity-community affair designed to raise $4,000 for the University Fresh Air Camp which provides a summer vacation for needy chil- dren. SPECIAL EMPHASIS is being placed on this year's drive to al- low faculty, administration and local towns people to assist in the collection. This idea originated many years ago when The Daily printed special Goodfellow edi- tions of the paper which faculty ABOUT ONE-THIRD of the camp's operating expenses are supplied through contributions from the drive. The rest are met by funds from the University Summer Session Budget and the Institute for Human Adjustment. The camp, located on Patter- son Lake, 24 miles norihwest of Ann Arbor, serves about 240 boys between seven and 14 each sum- mer. Some of the children come from institutional placements or foster homes. Others are from broken homes and some have delinquent records. University graduate students in the education school and the psy- chology and sociology departments staff the camp. This provides them wuithh tal vneriene in thei TAXES TO TANKERS: Capital Investigations Continue WASHINGTON-(P)-Joseph D. Nunan, Jr., former Commissioner of Internal Revenue, told House investigators yesterday he thinks there are "possible crimes" for which he could be indicted. The acknowledge came as Nu- nan sparred with members of a House Waye and Means Subcom- mritteep Aovrdetails of his six-figurev~ Meanwhile a row over use of a tape recording machine yester- day broke up a scheduled pre-trial hearing in the two million dollar libel and slander suit which Sen. McCarthy (R.-Wis.) has filed against Sen. Benton (D.-Conn.). Benton, on the advice of his attorneys, refused to testify as sympathizers while in the State Department. * * * IN ANOTHER Washington in- vestigation witnesses before a House inquiry committee testified yesterday that former Attorney "General J. Howard McGrath and Newbold Morris were notified that