4it t au1 D aii4 REGENTS MEETING See Page 4 -p Latest Deadline in the State p VOL. LXII, No. 89 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FFBRUARY 15, 1952 ARTLY CLOUDY AND COLD SIX PAGES Open Meetings DebateLikely President Hatcher Expected To Put Issue to Regents for Discussion By CRAWFORD YOUNG The Board of Regents holds its monthly meeting at 3 p.m. today in the Regents Rm. of the Administration Bldg. amidst a simmering controversy over whether the meetings, now secret, should be opened to the public. It is understood that President Harlan H. Hatcher will probably lay the subject before the Board for discussion and possibly a decision either confirming the present closed-door policy or opening the meetings. * * * * THE CHRONIC controversy, which has been an issue in most Regents elections, but h4s remained for the most part dormant be- tween campaigns, was recently brought into the limelight by the Michigan Press Association. The organization has undertaken a cam- paign to open the meetings of the governing bodies of Michigan and Michigan State College. In East Lansing, the open-doors drive seems to be making headway. Members of the State Board of Agriculture met with an MPA committee after a regular business meeting yesterday ~ and agreed to open negotiations with the press on the subject. > ed ross "The Board didn't make any promise that they would open the meeing."Kenneth R. West. HST~'Uncertain About Candidacy 'A Difficult Decision' Truman Says; Intentions Still Mystery To Nation WASHINGTON-(M)-President Truman, in an apparent turn- about, said in effect yesterday that he hasn't made up his mind whe- ther to run for another term, and he declared: "It is a difficult de- cision for me to make." The President told reporters, at his weekly news conference that he wasn't trying to "confuse" them. But the effect, capping an 11- month drama of riddles, served primarily to heighten the mystery of his intentions. S** * * NEARLY A year ago, on March 29, 1951, Truman had said he knew what he was going to do about running for re-election, but wouldn't say what decision he had reached. He has since repeatedly * * * told his news conferences essen- KING LIES IN STATE--Yeomen of the Guard and Household A QUEEN MOURNS-Queen Elizabeth II, shown veiled in black, troops stand in mournful silence at the Catafalque bearing the sitting in an auto on her way to view her father's body in West- coffined body of King George VI in Westminster Hall, London. The traditional crown and imperial candles may be seen. The minster Hall. The late King George VI was entombed at Wind- body was moved to Windsor castle for the funeral today. sor Castle today. X * :i * * * vC Camp Visits OK'd by Reds MUNSAN, Korea, Friday, Feb. 15--(R)-Communist staff officers, yesterday agreed to United Na- tions terms permitting joint Red Cross teams to visit prison camps d assist in prisoner exchange after a Korean armistice, but on the fighting front new battles flared. The Reds capitulated on the Allied point in submitting a new plan for exchanging prisoners. k; But they still balked at the major issue-voluntary repatriation. The Communists continued to demand that both sides release and repatriate all prisoners with- in 60 days after a, truce becomes effective-forcibly if necessary. The Allies have insisted that pri- soners be given the right to re- ject repatriation. STAFF OFFICERS scheduled a session on the new nine-point Red 'prisoner plan and on truce super- vision terms in Panmunjom at 11 a.m., today (9 p.m., Thursday Ann Arbor time). The main armistice delega- tions will resume their plenary t session tomorrow on recommen- dations to governments, follow- ing the return of Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy from Tokyo. An Allied truce negotiator said today he thinks the Reds are stall- ing until after tomorrow's full dress session by the top envoys. - The Senior U.N. truce delegate conferred yesterday with Gen. John E. Hull, Army Vice Chief of Staff; U. Alexis Johnson, Deputy assistant Secretary of State for the Far East, and Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, Supreme Allied Com- mander. Hull and Johnson flew in from Washington earlier in the day. Hull promptly brushed off spe- culation that he brought instruc- tions from Washington but ac- knowledged that armistice nego- tiations were discussed with Ridg- way and Joy. * * * MEANWHILE, in Seoul, the Communists last night broke the quiet of the Korean battlelines with a 1,100-man attack that was r shattered by a storm of Allied fire on the eastern front. It was the largest Communist attack in four weeks or more. The Communists threw o u t feeler thrusts all along the 155- mile front, testing the strong Al- lied defenses. The struggle in the East raged in Mundung valley for an hour. One Allied unit was almost sur- rounded. It hurled back the Reds without a casualty of its own. Sen. Connally Raps Hungary WASHINGTON -(A)-- Senator connally (D-Tex.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, accused Communist Hungary of "blackmail" and "ex- tortion" yesterday and moved for 1Cu ls , X-11rr1 L. ~ , chairman of the MPA group and managing editor of the Lansing State Journal, said "but at least we can report some progress to- wards arriving at an understand- ing. THUS FAR the Regents have planned no meetings with the MPA. However, the scheduling of such a session might well be an outcome of today's Board meet- ing. Or, if a representative commit- tee from MPA makes a surprise appearance, as has been rumored, it was learned that the Regents wouldprobably be willing to dis- cuss the problem with MPA now. Another rumor has been cir- culating to the effect that some press representatives would try to "crash" the meeting. This happened at the Agriculture Board session yesterday as re- porters from the Associated Press, United Press and Detroit Free Press were refused admis- sion to the meeting. State Attorney General Frank G. Millard declared Monday in re- sponse to an MPA-inspired re- quest for a ruling that the two groups were entirely within their legal rights in keeping their meet- ings closed. There was a possibility that the Regents might not consider the subject until the March meeting. However, it seems likely that at least a discussion of the issue will be held today. Report Cause Of N.J. Crash ELIZABETH, N.J.-(P)-A com- bination of an engine failure and a rare propeller system defect caus- ed the crash of a DC-6 airliner Monday with the loss of 32 lives,. the Civil Aeronautics Board indi- cated yesterday. Joseph O. Fluet, chief CAB re- gional investigator, said prelimi- nary findings showed the right in- board propeller of the four-en- gined National Airlines ship was reversed, The National Airlines plane crashed into an apartment house far to the right of its normal course. T h r e e crashes within two months took a total of 118 lives in Elizabeth. Chinese Say Britain's KingGeorgeBuri West Want a o SAN FRANCISCO - (?) - 15 China's Premier Chou En-Lai y terday charged the United Sta Britain and Japan were prepari for a new, larger-scale war Asia and reminded the world the military alliance between country and Russia. He spoke in Peiping at a me ing honoring the second anniv sary of the Sino-Soviet Treaty Friendship, Alliance and Mute Assistance. The talk was bro; cast in English by Peiping Ra and heard here by the Associa Press. CHOU CITED a long list of legedly aggressive acts by western powers and declared: "American imperialism ar its satellite states are revivi: Japanese militarism, are pro ing hostile to China and tl Soviet Union, are menacih Asia and preparing for m aggressive war on a still greal scale." lHe threatened that the plans the western powers "will in future receive still more tell blows." Then Chou cited the milit: clause of the treaty pledg: China and Russia to aid e= other in event of an attack Japan or any state allied k that country." Tunisian Leader Shot by Assassin TUNIS, Tunisia-(P)-Repo from Gafsa said yesterday Caliph of that South Tunisan c ter, a pro-French leader, has b( assassinated. Two French gendarmes w killed near there Wednesday a French military patrols were fij on yesterday in a renewed o break of Tunisian nationalist v lence. LONDON-()-Britain buried' George VI at Windsor Castle today with the trappings and words of ancient ritual climaxing 10 days of mourning since the monarch's death. The last somber journey from London to the old seat of Britain's Kings was set to begin from West- minster Hall at 4:30 a.m. Ann Ar- bor time, only a few hours after the great iron-studded doors clang homage the closed coffin with the body of "George the Good." The reigning Queen Elizabeth II, unnoticed by the thousands streaming in homage past the bier, stood silently for 10 min- utes obscured in a shadowy doorway of the great hall last Storms Die shut on the public lying-in-state W hie Nr* of the dead sovereign. n' ie .iattoi * * * Upe T0 MIDNIGHT, 283,394 ConsT l peon had filed past the purple-T covered catafalque which for three days has held aloft for public By The Associated Press The weather settled down to a normal wintry pattern yesterday G 1 after an eruption of tornadoes, 'UPuts nd m ny ":ns which claimed at least four lives. Four persons were killed and 100 M arri +were injured in tornadoes which ! £ .hopscotched across Tennessee, Al- Talk Oe'i s abama, Arkansas and Missouri Wednesday. Homes and buildings dio ted al- the The Marriage Lecture Series,' given during each spring semes- ter for the past 14 years, was sus- pended yesterday by the Marriage Lecture Series Committee because of apparent lack of student in- terest. The Committee'srdecision was based on the reports of student and administrative members. A declining interest in the series since 1947-culminating in a $491 deficit last year-also influenced the decision. IN THE PAST, nationally rec- ognized psychologists, sociologists and medical men were included in the series. Tickets, pegged at $1.20 per person, admitted .stu- dents to five discussions on the education of spouses, religion and adaptability, the medical basis for sane sex practice and other related subjects. Reports from the different student representatives on the committee ran from favorable to a strong disinterest. The re- port showing little interest in the series came from represen- tatives of the League. Students from the men's organizations were more favorable toward continuing the marriage lecture series. Erich A. Walter, Dean of Stu- dents, expressed the feeling of the committee in a comment, "I don't believe we should attempt to press the series on the students unless there is a widespread interest." After the meeting, Ivan Parker, Assistant to the Dean of Students and chairman of the Marriage Lecture Series Committee, indi- cated that if sufficient student in- terest was shown toward the lec- tures within a week it might be possible to continue the series this spring. Registration Still Open For Rushing' Rushing registration will con- tinue through Wednesday in the Interfraternity Council's booths on the first floor of the Adminis- were smashed, telephone cables! ripped down and power linesI snapped. Hailstorms were reported in Mississippi and inhthe tornado area, with some hailstones de-' scribed by witnesses as "as big as! baseballs." There were thunder- storms in the southeast. Colder weather moved into the" northern tier of states yesterday' and appeared set to remain for a few days at least. Widespread~ light snow fell yesterday from the northern and central plains east- ward into the Central Mississippi valley. Sleet which struck central Illinois and Indiana early yester- day had ended, leaving a number of power and telephone lines down in Indiana and many roads haz- ardous. Little change in temperatures was expected, except for some- what cooler readings in parts of the southeastern section of the country. Senator Charges ' New Tax Fraud WASHINGTON - (: - Sen. John J. Williams (R-Del.) said on the Senate floor yesterday a $636,000 government tax bill against a midwest brewing com- pany was, changed to a $35,000 refund after former U.S. Tax Commissioner Joseph D. Nunan! Jr., got a special permit to repre- sent the firm. The Senator asserted that a spe- cial waiver allowing Nunan to act< as attorney for the company was; granted by the treasury.I ed Today night, joining in the people's reverent farewell to her father. She came in a surprise visit to the hall just after nightfall with her sister, Princess Margaret, and her husband, the Duke of Edin- burgh. Shortly before midnight, the widowed Queen Mother Elizabeth also visited Westminster hall on a pilgrimage of sorrow. MEANWHILE the Duke of Windsor was driving 20 miles to Frogmore Village to get his ad- miral's uniform out of mothballs. The ex-King appeared as an Admiral of the Fleet-a rank he still holds-when he walked in the royal funeral procession for his brother. The uniform is the one he wore when he was Kirig Edward VIII. Preparations were quickly and efficiently completed last night in Windsor as slopes leading up to St. George's Chapel, where King George VI was entombed, we're being converted into a garden of colors. There were flowers from the ends of the earth. Within the chapel, lights gleam- ed. Some choir singers were prac- ticing softly. Workmen were plac- ing seats and covering the stone floors of the chapel with mauve colored carpets and strips of white canvas. Student Hurt In Smashup A three-car crackup in front of the Natural Science Building last night resulted in head injuries for a University student, Littleton Bachus, '52. The accident occurred when Bachus stopped short before the building's door to drop off Orville Van Eck, Grad. A car driven by Dale Westfall, a high school stu- dent, smashed into the double- parked Buick, propelling it into the rear fender of another parked car and causing Bachus' head to hit a sun-visor. Neither of the other men were hurt and Bachus was discharged from the Health Service after treatment. Morse Raps Taft WASHINGTON -P)- Senator Morse (R-Ore.), in language plainly directed at Senator Taft (R-Ohio), yesterday denounced attacks on the Joint Chiefs of Staff as "a great public disser- vice." President Asks Power For Morris WASHINGTON -- ) - Presi- dent Truman, countering charges that his clean-up-the-government program is really a "whitewash," asked Congress yesterday to give cleanup chief Newbold Morris the power to subpoena witnesses and records from outside the govern- ment. The President announced his action at a news coiference in which he also said, giving no de- tails, that the question of his seeking another term in -the White House is a "difficult deci- sion" for him to make. . IN NEW YORK, Morris said he accepted the cleanup post on three conditions, all of them acceded to yesterday by Mr. Tru- man. Morris said he demanded subpoena powers for witnesses outside of government. He said he did not need them for gov- ernent employeebecause they could be fired if they refused to testify. Morris said he also insisted on moving out of the Justice Depart- ment and into a commercial building. Finally, he demanded an inde- pendent budget for his operations. "All of these things show. I'm independent and not acting under the Attorney General," Morris ex- plained, * * * . THE PRESIDENT announced at the outset of his news confer- ence that he was asking Congress to vote subpoena powers for Mor- ris so that the New York Republi- can lawyer can make a thorough search for any "illegal or impro- per conduct in the transaction of governmentbusiness." T he proposed legislation which the President sent to the capitol also would give Morris what Mr. Truman called "the power to compel testimony by granting immunity in appropri- ate cases." - In essence, it provides that in cases where Morris forces wit- nesses to give self-incriminating testimony, they shall not be pro- secuted, except for perjury or contempt, on the basis of it. Any witness who refused to testify de- spite the immunity could be pros- ecuted for contempt. And a wit- ness could be prosecuted for per- jury if he gave false testimony. Senator Mundt (R-S.D.) de- nounced the immunity proposal as "an outrage" and said "Congress never will grant it." The Senate Judiciary Committee must pass on the legislation. Mr. Truman told a reporter his action would answer newspapers which have charged-as many Republican nembers of Congress also have done-that the cleanup program actually is an attempt to "whitewash" the Administration. tially the same thing. But yesterday he clearly in- dicated that he still doesn't know himself the answer to the big question. The White House underscored the importance of the President's remarks - by authorizing direct quotations on the subject. Ordin- arily, his news conference re- marks may not be directly quoted. "I don't want to confuse you," Truman told newsmen. "I have told you it is a difficult decision for me to make, and as soon as it is time for the announcement to be made, you will have the infor- mation promptly." TRUMAN also sought to dis- courage newsmen from taking too much stock in what visitors to the White House say about his plans. Some 'of them have carried out widely varying impressions. The point arose when a reporter asked about quotations attributed to the President by one of yester. day's White House visitors, Ben- jamin Browdy, New York Zionist leader. Browdy had quoted Tru- man as saying he would make up his mind "within 10 to 15 days" about running again; ' "Well," Truman said, "you know everybody is entitled to have his say when he comes out of the 'President's office, but I wait to tel you fellows that whenever I get ready to make an announcement I will make it to you. The President refused to en- gage in a debate at his news con- ference over Robert A. Taft's statement that the Korean con- flict is a "Truman war." The chief executive said the public would have to come to its own conclusion about that. Meanwhile, Taft continued his stumping tour through the North- west after telling overflow crowds in Portland, Ore., that he is the Republican party's best bet for the presidency. Place Lecture Ban on Ballot, Group Asks In an effort to mobilize student opinion against the University Lecture Committee, the Civil Lib- erties Committee voted last night to circulate petitions resulting in placement of the issue as a refer- endum on the, spring Student Leg- islature election ballot. According to SL regulations, the committee must have 600 signa- tures by March 1 if the referen- dum is to go on the SL ballots early in April. Students will be asked to sign the petitions if they favor place- ment of the following tentatively worded question on the spring bal- lot: "Do you oppose the power of any administrative committee (such as the Lecture Committee) to restrict any recognized campus organization in their choice of speakers and their subjects as log as such speakers and subjects do not lead to direct violence." The- Civil Liberties group also voted to send letters to. several newspapers deploring the presence of the House Un-American Acti- vities Committee in the event that that body comes to the Detroit area. The Un-American Activities Committee has made known that it intends to inkstigate two uni versities in the Detroit area at the end of the month. 'Ensian Price Will t' World News Roundup I 3 1 By The Associated Press NAPLES, ITALY-Hundreds of warships and warplanes of the United States, Britain, France and Italy will open a nine-day test of their fighting power in the Mediterranean Feb. 26. * * * * VIENNA-Austria's five-day Alpine disaster claimed its 29th vic- tim last night, raising to 33 the number killed in avalanches since the beginning of the winter. WASHINGTON-Senator Humphrey (D-Minn.) says "we cannot afford further delay" in joining with Canada to build the St. Lawrence seaway. WASHINGTON-A presidential board recommended yesterday that the nation's railroads grant the union shop and dues check-off to 17 unions representing a million non-operating railworkers. WASHINGTON-National Commander Donald R. Wilson, of the American Legion, endorsed Universal Military Training yes- HAMBURGER HEAVEN: Horse Shy Chicago Offered Free Beef CHICAGO --(R)-- Horsemeat- wary Illinoisans yesterday were in- vited to eat hamburgers at a 20- hour free-loading marathon. The stated purpose is "to re- store faith in the traditional will be served "absolutely free to the public" from 6 a.m. to- day until 2 a.m. tomorrow. "Preparations," the announce- ment said, "are made to serve up- ward1 0f 0 nnn enleAnnuiing+h Chicago Board of Health has quit. Two food inspectors on his staff have been suspended.. Charges of peddling unlabeled horsemeat have been filed against n Amnn m' n