GERMAN PROBLEM See Fage 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State D43a ttl y.. dm,. ., -- ,. f _.._ .. ~ < = .1, Yu1l rw . o. PARTLY CLOUDY Vfli i Yvv l T- v.. PARTLY CLOUDY I V UL. LR, NO. 161 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 18, 1952 SIX PA! £f S CI 16 Police Near To Solving Brinks' Case Planner Found; 46 Suspect Slain WEST WARWICK, R.I.-() An ex-convict night club operat was rubbed out by an assassi shotgun yesterday-and late la night police said his killing hE led them close to solution of t long-unsolved $1,219,000 Brink robbery of 1950. Eighteen hours after Carlton O'Brien, 49 years old, was ci down in an ambush outside h home, Rhode Island Attorn Gen. William E. Powers annou ced police had found one of ti architect's of the Brink's raidi Boston-the nation's biggest cas haul. POWERS dictated this stat ment to reporters: "We have located and talked 1 a witness who will testify und oath before a grand jury that , planned the details of the Brink robbery with Joseph F. McGuine; of Boston." McGuiness, a long-time frien of O'Brien, a year younger tha O'Brien, and also a night clu operator, was taken into cus- tody by Boston police lasi night for questioning about the slaying. Half an hour before Powe mentioned his name, Boston pc ce let him go. They said the Were satisfied with his account : his movements yesterday, an could find him any time the needed him. * * * POWERS SAID McGuine could not be placed on the scen of the Brink's robbery on Jan 1' 1950-at that hour he was si miles away talking with a polic Lieutenant-"but we feel certai he can be convicted as an acces sory before the fact." - Powers declined to name his witness but said he was passing the information on to Massa- chusetts Atty. Gen. Francis E. Kelly. Kelly was not home and could not be reached for com- ment. The O'Brien slaying at daw started a chain of developments 1. O'Brien's body was found out side his cottage home about 5 a.m An autopsy showed he had bee shot twice. The first blast wen into his brain and killed him in stantly. The second, after he crumpled, penetrated the heart. 2. POLICE TOOK into custoy as a material witness Julius Ken- ner, 55-year-old Providence jew- eler with a criminal record dating to 1915. They said Kenner was with O'Brien at 9 pm. Friday. Both O'Brien and Kenner were named only last Wednes- day, police disclosed, as among the seven or more men who plot- ted and carried through the daring Brink's foray. * * * 3. McGUINESS was nabbed in Boston-and released. 4. Police, giving new credence to Gagnon's story, which they had previously shrugged off as little more than rehash of newspaper accoints, went through O'Brien's home from cellar to attic. Chief Arthur Groleau said they were looking for Brink's loot, and es- pecially a safe that Gagnon had y mentioned having seen when the loot was divided-but they found nothing. 5. Two shotgun shells from a 16-gauge gun were found 200 yards from the O'Brien doorstep. Ruthven Gives Student Picnic Alexander G. Ruthven hosted West Quad's Allen Rumsey House yesterday afternoon o n t h e grounds of the old Judge Dexter Truman Predicts 'Liberal'T Win Says Voters Will Favor Democrats Due to Fear of GOP Program WASHINGTON-01)5President Truman predicted yesterday the Democrats will nominate a "liberal" for President and win in No- vember because the Republicans will "scare the daylights" out of the voters with their program. Asserting the Democrats must "never, never throw away a win- ning program," Truman said in an address prepared for a dinner session of the Americans for Democratic Action, that there must be no party retreat on foreign policy, civil rights, power development and other issues. * * * * IN AN OBVIOUS reference to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the President declared that even if the GOP nominates a man "with a good record in foreign affairs, he will not be able to drown the raucous -t isolationist outcries of the rest Kiefauver, 1kc Smash Foes In Oregon PORTLAND Ore. - (R) - crushing avalanche of presidentia primary votes carried Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and Sen. Estes Ke- fauver to pledged delegation vic- stories in Oregon yesterday. * The Republicans, on th e rstrength of returns midway in the eslow count, handed the full block Sof 18 GOP National Convention r delegates to Eisenhower with a mighty popular vote. His total was running at about 70 per cent of ithe Republican turnout for Fri- day's balloting. - KEFAUVER, with no active op- tposition, came up with '74 per cent of the Democratic tally as a re- ward for getting out to meet the voters in his folksy way. He also got all 12 Democratic delegates as high man in the preferential poll- ing. Two unwilling candidates, Justice William 0. Douglas and Illinois Goy. Adlai Stevenson, shared what was left of the Demo- cratic vote. California's Gov. Earl Warren, a friendly neighbor who-cam- paigned up and down the green- hilled state, 'was the only other Republican hopeful tor make any kind of ashowing-and he was far behind Eisenhower. Sen KRo- bert A. Taft of Ohio did not en- ter the primary, and drew a little write-in support he did not seek, Eisenhower delegates rebuffed eight others who dodged the cus- tomary pledge to cast their con- vention ballot for the popularity poll winner. These eight suppos- edly were friendly to Taft. Three said they were. EX-GOV. Harold E. Stassen made a poor showing compared with the 107,000 votes he got in his 1948 Oregon primary fight against winning Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York. In fact, both Gen. Douglas MacArthur and Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon, who op- posed their candidacies, topped Stassen. of the party." - He avoided making any choice of "liberals" among several available aspirants, three of whom were present at the din- ner. They were Senator Estes Ke- fauver of Tennessee, W. Averill Harriman of New York, and Sen- ator Hubert Humphrey of Minne- sota. Senator Brien McMahon of Connecticut, who had addressed the convention earlier in the day, was called back to Connecticut be- fore the dinner. Calling the Republicans "the party of reaction and the party of special privilege" Truman said "this was just what I proved in 1948 and the people believed me and they will again." * * *. THE PRESIDENT, greeted with shouts of "give 'em hell Harry" said at one point he believes the steel companies "want a strike." This was in connection with his charge that the steel unions had "proved" their case for a wage increase but the companies had refused to submit theirs for con- sideration on its merits. He said the companies just want to pre- serve profits that have been run- ning "close to record levels." For himself, Truman made it plain that he intends to veto the bill passed by Congress Fri- day to give the states title to the oil-rich submerged lands off the coasts. Asserting that the "oil lobby" wants to exploit these areas to suit itself, he added: "Talk about corruption. Talk about stealing from the people. This would be robbery in broad daylight-and on a colossal scale." * * .* Stassen Blasts' Truman Talk COLUMBIA, Mo.--(P)-- Harold E. Stassen, candidate for the Re- Troops Sent To Enforce KoleGuard Hope To Prevent Mass Outbreak TOKYO, Sunday, May 18-(A)- The battle-tested U.S. 187th Air- borne Regiment is on Koje's Island to bolster the tightened guard over tough Communist- war prisoners. Gen. Mark W. Clark, announc- ing the assignment last night, said the reinforcements were sent to prevent any mass outbreak. He ob- served that in past violence the Red prisoners were "obviously . acting under instructions from outside agents of the international Communist power conspiracy." * * * THE NEW UN top commander said the Reds would be required to behave at all times. Red flags still fluttered in some of the prison compounds on the rocky island 30 miles off the tip of southeast Korea. Cor- respondents reported yesterday the prisoners watched sullenly while troops built new sandbag pillboxes and armored guard towers. Brig. Gen. Francis T. Dodd, then commander of Koje, was seiz- ed by prisoners in compound 76, May 7 and held hostage 78 hours. He was freed after concessions were made by Brig. Gen. Charles Colson. * * * RELIEVED OF their commands, both generals were called on the carpet by Clark who repudiated the concessions granted by Colson. Among them was Colson's agree- ment to stop screening the POW's. Clark assigned Brig. Gen. Hayden L. Boatner, assistant commander of the U.S. Second Infantry Division, to run the camp and ordered Dodd and Colson back to previous duties behind the lines in Korea. "I do not propose to counten- ance for one moment unlawful acts on the part of these Prison- ers of War and civilian internees," Clark said in a statement. Moore Moved To County ,jail Richard C. Moore, alias "Rick James," former South Quad dish- washer who was shot while trying to escape arrest May 6, was trans- ferred to County Jail yesterday from St. Joseph Hospital where he has been under guard for the last 11 days. I- -Daily-Alan Reid READY, AIM - A 75 mm. recoiless rifle does its part in the "storming" of a pillbox at Stadium Hills Golf Course. The Committee is expected to clarify its stand in a statement to- morrow. Mrs. Shore is director of or- ganization and a charter mem- ber in the Michigan branch of the Civil Rights Congress. She joins Arthur McPhaul, executive secretary of. the CRC, Abner Greene of the American Com- mittee for the Protection of the Foreign Born, and Wi l i a m Hood, of Ford Local 600, in be- ing blocked this year from speaking on campus. At yesterday's meeting the Lec- ture Committee approved three other speakers to take part in the debate, originally scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the League. They are: Lebron Simmons, Detroit at- torney who appeared in the recent Un-American Activities Commit- tee probe and was cited by .Rep. Charles Potter for possible con- tempt charges. Simmons, a Uni- versity law graduate, was to ac- company Mrs. Shore in support- 'Union Slit In Oil Issue DENVER-(W)-Oil union offi- cials reported "a mixed reaction" from their members yesterday toward efforts to settle the 18-day strike on the basis of a 15-cent hourly wage increase and other benefits Workers at some United States refineries have agreed to the of- fers.. and returned to work since the strike was called April 30 by a coalition of 22 CIO, AFL and independent unions. At other plants, difficul- ties in negotiations have cropped up regarding retroactive pay and union demands that wage negoti- ations may be reopened every six months. Committee Bars C.R.C. Member Ann Shore Refused Permission To Speak Because of Affilation Issuing its fourth denial of campus speaking privileges since early March, the University Lecture Committee placed a flat ban yesterday on the scheduled appearance of Civil Rights Congress offi- cer "Annie" Shore in a campus debate on the issue of genocide. The Committee announced its decision to leaders of the Unitarian Student Group and the Students for Democratic Action, who planned to sponsor the debate, following a noon session yesterday. * * * * PROF. CARL G. BRANDT of the English department, secretary and spokesman for the group, could not be reached later for comment. THE TANKS ARE COMIN'-A heavy an Ann Arbor street as a part of Day Parade. -Daily-Alan Reid U.S. Army tank rolls down Testerday's Armed Forces * * . * Parade, Assault' Mark Gala Armed Forces Day By BILL CORTWRIGHT The third annual Armed Forces Day was celebrated impressively in Ann Arbor as it was all through the United States and on two continents yesterday. Townspeople and students here witnessed a colorful, though wet, parade, including 1,200 ROTC cadets and midshipmen and later on a realistic military assault. ing the "pro" side of the ques- tion: "Is the U.S. Government Practicing Genocide against the Negro People." Prof. Preston Slosson of the history department, was to take the opposing side. John Ragland, University grad- uate and Ann Arbor lawyer, also taking the negative stand. Mrs. Shore was refused permis- sion to speak because of her mem- bership in' the Civil Rights Con- gress, according to Len Wilcox, '52, outgoing SL president and since last week a student representative to the Lecture Committee. CRC has been branded a subversive group on the Attorney General's list. ALTHOUGH the debate itself was approved by the Lecture Commit- tee, the sponsoring groups last night formed plans for going off campus so that Mrs. Shore could speak. According to chairman'ef the Unitarian group, Dick Phillips, '55, members are now attempt- ing to secure space in' some of the larger local churches. "I believe that the only thing that would stop the debate would be the groups' lack of funds," Phil- lips said. Both Ragland and Prof. Slosson have indicated willingness to make off-campus appearances. * * * THE DECISION to ban Mrs. Shore marked the first time the Lecture Committee has exercised its jurisdiction over student reli- gious groups. It was given power over such groups following a Lane Hall appearance of Mrs. Willie McGee in March, 1951. Mrs. Shore and previously banned speaker McPhaul, said last night in a joint statement they were "shocked" at what they termed the "latest thought control measure taken by policy makers at the University." Further comments also indicat- ed disapproval of the Lecture Committee's move. SDA PRESIDENT Ted Fried- man, '53, opposed the decision as "a dangerous extension of the at- tempt to sterilize the University community for contact with any allegedly Communist ideas." Friedman also hit what he called "bumbling contradictions inherent in the Lecture Com- mittee's interpretations of vague Regents wordings." Prof. Slosson said he was un- able to understand why "any stu- dent group shouldn't be free to invite anyone at any time to speak on any subject on campus." * * * ACCORDING to Phillips, "reli- gious groups, above all others, should be exempted from special restrictions regulating their free- dom to hear speakers of their choice." Phillips said last night he was told by Prof. Brandt that the d ec ision "was unanimous." There were indications, howev- er, that an active role was play- ed by only two of the persons authorized to -serve on the five- man committee, Prof. Brandt and Prof. William Wirt Blume of the Law School. Position o f t h e other three members stacked up as follows: publican presidential nomination, Ann Arbor police indicated that slapped back] last night at Presi- Moore will remain in their custody dent Truman's attack on Con- until he is picked up by Cook gressional action to put tidelands County, Ill., police to meet an as- oil in the hands of the states. sault charge in Chicago within the President Truman's charge that next few days. the "oil lobby" wants toexploit Hospital authorities denied ru- tidelands oil is "the typical kind mors that Moore had tried to es- of unfounded charge that the cape a second time. They main- President very often makes," Stas- tained that he had been handcuff- sen said. "The states, with honest ed and kept under guard in the governments are much better hospital merely as a routine meas- equipped to handle the matter ure after his initial escape at- than is President Truman." tempt. t n a SET FOR TUESDAY: 'Come Back Little Sheba' To Open Y- s t t 1 r t a t t THE PARADE began at 2:30 p.m., led by the Michigan March- ing Band. It was followed by the National Guard Infantry, the three ROTC units,, including the Army and Air Force ROTC bands, local veteran groups, the colorful Zal Gaz and American Legion Drum and Bugle Corps, local union float, and trailed by four tanks from the Monroe Tank Corp. The parade lasted for about 45 minutes and ended at 3:15 p.m. at the Rackham Bldg. After the parade disbanded attention shifted to the Stadium Hills Golf Course, where spec- tators, predominated by chil- dren, gathered to watch a weap- on display and demonstration, featuring a live weapon pill box attack. The demonstration was per- formed by the local and Monroe National Guard units as demon- strated procedure for such an at- tack, beginning with light artillery and ending with infantry and tank movement. * *. - AFTER MORTARS, grenades, ight machine guns, and auto- matic rifles were used from a dis- ance, the tanks caire in to closer ange making room for the infan- ry and flame throwers. This led o the distined destruction of the .-_ - a e - - - - - By DIANE DECKER and HARRY LUNN Special To The Daily DETROIT-Sen. Richard Nixon (R.-Calif.) yesterday warned that the GOP Presidential candidate will have to capture several mil- lion Democratic votes to have any chance of winning in November. Speaking before several hundred State Young Republicans assemb- led in Detroit, Nixon advocated a party platform which, "will cause' Democrats to vote against their own party's nominee." He empha- sized that this platform must be built around the issue of national survival, * * * IT MUST BE A definite, positive and intelligent program, Nixon stressed. "The people are tired of the negative destructive criticism which has characterized too many Republican speeches," he said. Hitting on the specific prob- le that w ilfrm +ha r . policy spokesman like the late Sen. Vandenberg and John Foster Dulles were consistently critical of Far Eastern policy," he main- tained. STRIKING AT Truman's steel industry seizure, Nixon said Re- publicans should not allow creep- ing socialism to be effected under the guise of a national emergency. Nixon criticized the Admin- istration's investigation of in- ternal security and corruption, commenting that "the Morris fiasco was the most flagrant, deliberate fraud ever perpetrat- ed upon the American people and is conclusive proof that this Administration can and will not investigate itself." Nixon wound up his speech with a plea for party unity, adding that "the candidate we criticize today may be the man we will l-t- +n atrr-- i. - 1- ' AT YR CONCLAVE: GOP Candidate Needs Democrat Votes --Nixon "Come Back Little Sheba," Wil- liam Inge's intense drama of a squalid midwestern home, starr- ing Joan $londell, will open at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre as the second Drama Season production. Miss Blondell plays the role of Lola, a sloppy, lazy, middle- aged wife of a hopeless alcoholic, Doe. nlaved by Wilson rnnk with her careless, adventurous spirit. Marie's love affairs occupy the attention of the childless couple and they watch as she chooses between the steady and upright Bruce, played by William Hadley and the handsome javelin throwing-BMOC, Turk, played by Chris Hofer. Mice 1uraehha r-con1.....yn flic that have been lost by Doe and Lola. Doc had started as a pre- med student in school, but was forced to quit college to marry the then attractive Lola. He has become a small town chiroprac- tor striving constantly to keep the household on an even keel. He attempts to escape his haunting realizations of what Mi~h ho.e ann n-_nF .>71. A., I I