WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND See Page 4 Y Ait ta Latest Deadline in the State &ti at!1 r CLOUDY AND COOL VOL. LXII, No. 155 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 11, 1952 SIX PAGES PRESIDENT'S CONVOCAT ION: Hatcher To Give Talk ** * * President Harlan H. Hatcher will take the stage at 3 p.m. to- morrow at Hill Auditorium to talk to the student body. He will deliver a 30 minute speeh which will cover his edu- cational philosophies, his ideas of the student's role on campus and his plans for the University. In addition, he will discuss stu- dent suggested topics which were recently gathered by Student Leg- islature members. Sue Popkin, S secretary, reported that , the two most popular topics were relations between undergrads and graduate students and problems surround- ing the Lecture Committee, ** * PRESIDENT Hatcher will be in- troduced by SL President Howard Willens, '53. Classes will not be excused for the convocation. The president's talk will mark the first time in recent years that the University's president has spoken directly to students. The President's Convocation has been in the planning stage ever since the huge student farewell was given to retiring President Alexander G. Ruthven last May. At that time SL leaders thought it would be an excellent idea if students could informally meet the new president. Due to President Hatcher's crowded schedule last . fall, it was impossible to make definite plans for the giant meeting until early this spring. Dave Brown, '53, is general chairman of the assembly and has been assisted in planning and publicity by numerous campus organizations. Brown emphasized that "many students have not had a chance to hear President Hatcher's views, and the convocation should pro- vide a fine opportunity for them to do so." Administration Turns Down ThreeAppeals Three students who were placed on probation for "failure to co- operate" with the Joint Judiciary Council in the McPhaul dinner investigation revealed yesterday that their~ appeals for a rehearing have been turned down. Although the other two had not received formal notices there were indications that the verdict re- mained the same in their cases. THOSE WHO received letters from the Office of Student Affairs were Dave Luce, Grad., Valerie Cowen, '54, and Myron Sharpe, Grad. The other two students are Ed Shaffer, Grad., and Steve Smale, Grad. The notices stated that the Sub-Committee on Discipline reaffirmed the students' proba- tion and saw no reason for changing their decision. The only change came in the case of Sharpe. The Committee re- moved the charge of "misrepre- sentation of facts." However, as in the case of the others, the charge t of "refusing to answer reasonable questions" remained. According to Luce, the five plan to consult the Administra- tion in order to find "the best possible channels of further ap- a peal." Although the students filed sep- arate appeals, all five centered around the protest that "we have been found guilty of a charge on which we were not tried." The original charge against the students was that of having vio- lated a Regents by-law which in- volves the use of University pro- perty. They were acquitted on this count. HEAR YE: Gargoyle Is Ieumeii In Jumping gleefully from his perch on top of Burton Tower, Don Malcolm, '53, freshly hatched managing editor of the Gargoyle, landed in the midst of a group of friends and well-wishers clustered below. "Hear ye," he murmured as he set his broken bones with the dex- PRESIDENT HARLAN HATCHER . . . will speak to students tomorrow Union, Industry Prepare' Briefs for Steel Case WASHINGTON-(P)-The steel industry and the Government squared off yesterday in the great constitutional battle over Presi- dent Truman's seizure of the.nation's eight billion dollar steel industry to prevent a strike. The two antagonists formally presented the Supreme Court with thick legal briefs bristling with arguments which each side hoped will convince the nine High Court Justices. * * * * THE CIO STEELWORKERS, all but lost in the court battle but with a vital interest in the outcome, gave the court their version of the legal issue: that their futile wage talks with the industry wereE a "sham"; that the real fight is Reds Block over how much of a price incrrase the Government would grant the Allies From industry to offset higher pay. ti e The industry contended seiz- ure was "wholly illegal and Berlin Entrance wholly unconstitutional." Its brief, signed by John W. Davis and other attorneys for the na- BERLIN-P)--The Western Al- tion's major steel companies, lies were back in a familiar posi- said the Government was at- tion last night: wondering what tempting to impose "compulsory arbitration under force of seiz- ure"; that it was trying to settle Booted Russian border guards a labor dispute by "executive refused yesterday to let Allied' fiat"; and that it bypassed a military patrols enter the Berlin- specific law-the Taft-Hartley Helmstedt Autobahn from the Act-which Congress had in- eastern end. They gave no rea- tended for deadlocked labor dis- son, although the patrols along putes. the single highway linking Ber- The nub of the argument made lin and the West across the Sov- by the Justice Department for the iet zone are daily routine. Administration is this: U. S. British and French com- The President "brought to solu- mandants said they had "called tion of the emergency the sum of Gen. Vasily I. Chuikov's attention his powers" and that these pow- to the matter." Chuikov is com- ers, set forth in the Constitution, are a "grant of all the executive man of Russian forces in Ger- powers of which the Government many. is capable." Some Allied officials admitted 'Favorite Son Slate Given To Williams State's National Delegates Chosen By The Associated Press The Michigan Democratic State Convention meeting in Grand Rapids yesterday sent 128 dele- gates and alternates .to cast 40 "favorite son" votes for Gov. G. Mennen Williams at their Nation- al Convention-thereby muddling the status of the entire delegation. The convention, adopting a com- promise slate, chose 12 delegates at-large to cast four votes and four more alternates at-large with no votes in a move to give recogni- tion to all factions of the party. WILLIAMS was the unanimous choice of the convention as a fa- vorite son candidate for the Pres- idency, but no one took that too seriously and Williams' nominat- ing petitions for reelection as Gov- ernor were being circulated dur- ing the convention. The National Committee had allotted Michigan 36 Congres- sional District delegates with one vote and eight delegates at-large with half a vote each. Instead the convention elected 62 district delegates, some with full votes and some with half votes and 12 delegates at large, each with a one-third vote. In addi- tion it chose 54 alternates. This threatened a row in Chi- cago, since the National Coin- mittee does not expect sufficient seats to, be available for all. Party leaders were careful to al- low no open commitments to any Presidential candidate except Wil- iams, but there was an undercur- rent of top-brass support for both Senator Paul A. Douglas (D-Ill.) and Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illi- nois. * * * IN DETROIT, Harold Stassen declared yesterday that if he were elected President he would "eim. inate those who have pushed a soft policy toward Communism" from State Department jobs. Stassen, candidate for the GOP Presidential Nomination and form- er Minnesota Governor, said he also would advocate independence and sovereignty of such groups as Ukrainians, Armenians, White Russians, and other nationalities under Communist domination." On the national political scene Vice President Barkley was be- ginning to attract attention as a possible Presidential nominee among Democrats who oppose Sen. Estes Kefauver of Tennes- see. When Barkley speaks at a Jef- ferson-Jackson Day banquet in Kentucky Saturday, it may be the signal for the beginning of a "fa- vorite son" move to line the state's 26 Chicago convention votes up behind the Vice President. U.S., Britain ; Request Global Aviation Cut By The Associated Press Global restrictions loomed last1 night for aviation as fuel short- ages stemming from an 11-day' strike of 90,000 United States Oil Workers. Contract negotiations over de- mands for higher wages were stall- ed as Britain and the United States issued a joint appeal to all, nations to conserve fuel.-, Beginning Monday, Britain's nationalized airlines will cut by 30 per cent consumption of avia- tion fuel, most of which it imports, from the U. S. Military flying by} both U. S. and Royal Air Force, has been trimmed. A UNION charge was hurled that "government interference" may make the current halt in settlement negotiations "critical and insolvable." Efforts to reach local settlements that would send the 90,000 strik- ers back to refineries and other oil facilities have been suspended until a meeting of union and in- dustry representatives in Wash- ington Tuesday. They were summoned by the Wage Stabilization Board (WSB)1 for a hearing on the union de- mands for 25 cents an hour wage .POW's -Daily-Matty Kessler WOLVERINE BILL BILLINGS OUT AT HOME ON MSC DOUBLE PLAY * 1* * * * *l *o * MichganMSC inesSpli TwoTilt Release Get Minor concessions By PAUL GRtENBERG Tom Lawson, ace Michigan State right-hander, turned in a sparkling two-hit 4-0 shutout over the Wolverine baseball team here yesterday to earn a series victory for the Spartans. In the first game, Michigan won handily 10-2, as Jack Corbett coasted to his fifth win of the sea- son behind an eleven hit attack sparked by Paul Lepley, Frank Howell and Don Eaddy. B U T COACH Ray Fisher's southpaws couldn't h o 1 d the righthanded MSC lineup down. Mary Wisniewski followedthe ex- ample of his fellow port-sider Dick Yirkosky, in losing the seven-inn- ing nightcap. "Corky" Ghise, Ray Lane, and Dick Moser got all eight of the hits off the young lefthander. In the third inning, lead-off bat- ter Moser got the second of his four hits, a two-out single to left. Whereupon Ghise unlimbered on a fast ball and sent a towering home run over 400 feet into left, for the first two Spartan runs. E Publications Dodd, Board Names MOSER SPARKED the MSC rally again in the fifth when he New Staffs singled pitcher Lawson, who had walked to third and took second Six new night editors were ap- pointed to the editorial staff of YP Requests the Michigan Daily yesterday by the Board in Control of Student SAC Hearing Publications. I on Howell's throw to Eaddy. Ghise then was given an intentional pass to load the bases whereupon Lane promptly knocked in State's last two tallies with a clean base hit into left. Lawson pitched brilliantly ov- er the seven-inning distance, giving up only two hits-both by Wisniewski, and not allow- ing anyone to reach third and only two men got as far as sec- ond base. The opener saw the Wolverines run rough-shod over Coach John Kob's charges. Lepely batted in five runs, scored two, got three hits and walked twice to lead the at- tack. IN THE THIRD inning after Mogk, Howell and Eaddy had sin- gled to fill the bases, Lepley clean- ed the bases with line-drive double between left and center field. The young freshman from Warwick, Ohio, came through again with the sacks full in the fourth when he singled home the fifth and sixth Michigan runs. The Wolverines ended that scor- ing spree by tallying four times in the sixth. Three Spartan pitchers absorb- ed the pasting, starter Bob Carlson getting charged with the loss. Carlson gave up five hits and four runs before he was replaced by southpaw Don La Pointe in the third. LaPointe yielded four more runs and gave way to righty Bob Dangel in the sixth. Michigan got to Dangel for two more runs in the sixth frame but he hung on to finish the contest. Corbett had an easy time of it with the lads from East Lansing, yielding only six hits. He had clear going except for the sixth inning See BASEBALL, Page 3 UN General Unharmed By POW's Prisoner Terms To Be Announced SEOUL, Korea, Sunday, May 11 -(R)-Brig. Gen. Francis T. Dodd was freed unharmed and in good spirits last night by his Commun- ist captors on Koje Island. The price of his freedom-con- cessions made to thousands of Red prisoners of war-probably will be announced later. In a dramatic, late hour an- nouncement to correspondents, the U.S. Eighth Army said Dodd was released at 9:30 p.m. (7:30 a.m., EST, Saturday)-78 hours and 15 minutes after he was dragged bodily into a compound of 6,000 surly North Korean prisoners late Wednesday afternoon. * * * DODD WILL BE flown to Eighth Army headquarters for a news con- ference sometime today. Details of Dodd's release were not announced immediately. The Eighth Army said it came after a meeting of Communist ringleaders of the com- pound-a conference attended by leaders from other prison com- pounds on the rocky island. Dodd, 52, commander of the island prison, was seized as he conferred with the prisoners at the gate of compound 76. He and Lt. Col. Wilbur Raven of New- ton, Tex., were grabbed by the Red leaders, but Raven fought his way out of the group. Dodd was held hostage inside the compound, where he negotiat- ed with the Reds for settlement of some of their grievances. Dodd asked camp authorities to refrain from using force to free him until the Communists had completed listing their demands. The Army said yesterday some "minor requests" of the Reds had been granted. * * * ABOUT 80,000 Communists now are held on the island, including most of the 70,000 who have said they yish to return to Communist rule. Koje was the scene of two bloody riots, both of them instigated by die-hard Korean Red prisoners. Seventy-five prisoners were killed and 135 wounded Feb. 18 when American guards were forced to fire on prisoners attacking them with crude but deadly weapons. One guard was killed and 38 wounded. Another riot erupted March 13. Twelve prisoners were killed and 26 wounded when South Korean guards fired into a compound af- ter being stoned by the prisoners. Korea Confab Still Snarled MUNSAN, Sunday, May 11-M -Korean armistice delegates- sidetracked by angry debate on Communist seizure of an Ameri- can General on Koje Island-meet again today, still tightly dead- locked. A charge by the Red truce dele- gates that the Allies planned "an- other massacre" of prisoners to free Brig. Gen. Francis T. Dodd was punctured last night by the prisoners themselves. Saturday's truce session lasted only 12 minutes. Eleven minutes were taken up by debate on the Koje island incident, the -Allies c o 1 d ly rejecting Communist charges of planning a "slaughter" to free Dodd. On the fighting front, Al- lied patrols raidEd Communist frontline positions Saturday with one unit chasing the Chi- nese Reds in a two-hour clash on the east-central Pukhan River sector. A thick overcast hid Commun- ist targets from Allied warplanes. The Eighth Army reported 18 * * * MEANWHILE three big railroad unions today won the right to tell the Supreme Court how issues in the steel industry seizure case af- fect President Truman's 1950 seiz- ure of the railroads. The high tribunal in an unsigned order late yesterday granted un- ion attorneys an hour to preseht arguments, after the Justices hear five hours of legal debate in the steel case. The railroad unions, in an ap- peal filed with the Supreme Court yesterday, assailed presidential seizure of the railroads and the steel industry. frankly they were bewildered by the abrupt move, which came on the eve of the third anniversary of the end of the Soviet blockade of Berlin. Others termed it just another stitch in the needling process the Russians often give the West in Berlin. But all seemed determined to avoid stress on the incident. For a time Russian guards re- fused to let patrols enter from the Helmstedt end of the 110-mile stretch. Later they permitted Helmstedt patrol cars to enter. This added to Allied confusion. The new editors are: Diane Decker, '54; Alice Bogdonoff, '54; Alan Luckoff, '53; Virginia Voss, '54; Harry Lunn, '54 and Eric Vetter, '54. Also appointed by the Board were seven assistant night editors. They are: Bob Apple, '54; Helene Simon, '54; Cynthia Boyes, '54 Mike Wolff, '54; Joyce Fickies, '54; Jerry Helman, '53 and Marge Shepherd, '54., THE BOARD appointed the fol- lowing editors to the women's staff of The Daily: Elizabeth Barber, '54; Marilyn Campbell, '54; Beat- rice Johnson, '54; Roberta Mac- Gregor, '54; Nancy Reganall and Katherine Zeisler, '54. At its meeting the Board in Control named next year's junior editorial staff for the Michigan- ensian. The new junior staffers are: Conrad Giles, '54, Features Editor; Vonda Genda, '54, Organi- zations Editor; Jeanne Doerr, '54, Copy Editor; Maureen Sweeney, '54, Schools and Colleges Editor; Joni Marlow, '53, Office Manager; See BOARD, Page 6 City To Mark MilitaryWeek Ann Arbor will join the rest of the nation today in officially be- ginning Armed Forces Week. A week's program is planned featuring a series of talks, Thurs- day, on 'what the University con- tributes to the Armed Forces.' These will be broadcast over three Ann Arbor and Detroit stations. At a meeting yesterday, the Young Progressive executive com- mittee drew up a petition request- ing a hearing before the next Stu- dent Affairs Committee meeting. According to Gordon MacDoug- all, chairman of the YP education committee, the officers plan to ask why the Lecture Committee has not passed on the YP's peti- tions for speakers Arthur McPhaul, Lorraine Meisner and William Hood. "It has been two weeks since the petitions were submit- ted." MacDougall protested. The statement which the group plans to submit to SAC also claims that the Lecture Committee has defied SAC's directive to deal im- partially with the YP's. W'or ld News By The Associated Press TOKYO-Gen Matthew B. Ridgway, the soft-spoken paratrooper who steeled Allied forces to fight back from their greatest defeat in Korea, leaves today for his new job as Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in Europe. * * * * DURBAN, South Africa-The provincial governments of South Africa's four provinces may soon take a slap at the race segregation policies of Prime Minister Daniel F. Milan. Natal councilmen are calling a nation convention of legislatures to protest the Union Government's policy of going over the heads of the appellate court after it ruled an act restricting colored voters' rights unconstitutional. W-s* *r WASHINGTON-Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) said yesterday the OUSTED WARDEN: Jacks on Psychologist Will . Speak Tomorrow Vernon Fox, who was relieved of his duties as Deputy Warden following the Jackson Prison riot, will speak here at 7:30 prm. to- morrow in the Natural Science Auditorium. The speech, "Prison Adminis- tration and Riot Control," is one of a series of lectures beig given by Fox since his dismissal. Thus far, he has appeared in Detroit,1 Flint, Jackson, Lansing and overt a Detroit television station. Fox's speech is expected to cover his views on the causes of 4 the riot and to defend his handl- ing of the negotiations which <' {