LECTURE COMMITTEE See Page 4 5kr4b :3 a i4 ~ti Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY AND WARMER VOL. LXII, No. 163 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1952 SIX.PAGES Senate Confirms Attorney General J. McGranery Approved by 52-18; Will Succeed Ousted H. McGrath WASHINGTON-(M)-The Senate approved last night President Truman's appointment of Federal Judge James P. McGranery of Philadelphia to be Attorney General. The nomination of the 56-year-old jurist to succeed J. Howard McGrath in the cabinet post was confirmed by a vote of 52 to 18. * '* * ACTION HAD hung fire since April 3 when President Truman named McGranery just after he had let McGrath out of the cabinet . in a followup to McGrath's firing of Newbold Morris as government corruption investigator. Sens. Ferguson (R-Mich.) and Watkins (R-Utah) led the opposition to McGranery's nomination. They assailed him as a a . Row Settled Over :brazil BPlane Wreck BELEM, Brazil-OP)-Two rival expeditions to the wreckage of a double-decked stratocruiser were reported yesterday to have patch- ed up a peace after taking turns holding each other captive in the dense Brazilian jungle. Col. Sinval Castro, Chief of Staff of the First Air Zone, told newsmen the row had been set- tied by agreement to build an air strip for small planes to fly out the 30 or 35 armed members of a private expedition financed by a wealthy Sao Paulo State politi- cian. * * * THREE PLANELOADS of para- chutists, sent to the area Monday by the Brazilian Air Force to res- cue a Brazilian official and an American held hostage by the Sao Paulo group, were ordered to re- turn to Rio De Janeiro without taking action. The hostages-Scott Magness, U.S. Civil Aeronautics authority official from Miami, and Maj. Miranda Correa of the Brazil. ian Air Force-radioed Monday night that they had turned the tables on their captors and were in command of the situation. The armed Indian guides and newsmen of the private expedi- tion, their own helicopter disabled, apparently feared they were about * to be left behind and took Magness and Correa as insurance for their own rescue. The two parties, one an official Brazilian-American expedition of which Magness and Correa were members, and the 'other an unof- ficial expedition sponsored by Ad- "r hemar De Barros, engaged in a race to the mountainside where the Pan American stratocruiser crash- ed April 29 with a loss of 50 lives. Hope Looms For Quick End To RailStrike WASHINGTON-()-Three big rail unions asked yesterday for "clarification" of the White House plan for settling their labor dis- pute with the nation's railroads, and there were signs that the un- ions might accept the proposals today. Union leaders spent about three hours conferring with John R. Steelman, the presidential assist- ant who worked out the contract plan. IF THE PLAN is accepted by the brotherhoods of engineers, conductors, firemen and engine- men, their members will collect approximately 100 million dollars in retroactive wage increases. But the unions were apparently not' quite ready to take Steel- man's proposals on some highly controversial working or operat- ing rules, even though they ac- knowledged the proposals were better than anything offered before. Changes in the operating rules demanded by the carriers have been the heart of the three-year labor dispute. The railroads themselves snap- ped up the contract proposals a few hours after Steelman made them Monday. It will cost them, Steelman announed . buew.n man of "most questionable" in- tegrity, ability and veracity. They criticized him for past ac- tions on investigation of public officials-a job he has inherited as Attorney General-and for his current views on the emergency powers of the President. CHAIRMAN McCarran (D-Nev.) of the Senate Judiciary Commit- tee and other Democrats spoke out in high praise of McGranery, a former member of the House. McCarran described McGran- ery as an "honest, sincere, God- fearing, fair official" and pre- dicted he would have "a great administration" as Attorney General. "It is easy to select small items in the career of a public official and nmagnify them to make them appear as mountains instead of molehills," the Nevadan said With reference to the whole opposition to the nominee. Watkins and Ferguson were the two signers of a Judiciary Com- mittee minority report opposing confirmation. The committee vote in McGranery's favor was 8 to 4. Allies To Sign Bonn Contract. BONN, Germany --(MP)-- The Western Big Three Foreign Minis- ters will meet with Chancellor Konrad Adenauer Saturday and Sunday to complete the Allied- West German peace contract and probably will sign it Monday. The Bonn government an- nounced this yesterday, even as the West German Socialists and the East German Communists churned up hew efforts to scuttle the agreement linking the United States, Britain and France with the 48 million Germans west of the Iron Curtain. Meeting for IFC Positions Sated The Interfraternity Council try- out meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. 3C of the Union for all those interested in positions on the rushing, social, publicity, stewards, office and Big Ten IFC-Panhel counseling com- mittees, according to Sam Siporin, '54, IFC publicity chairman. Band Concert The University Symphony Band outdoor concert, original- ly scheduled for last night, will be held at 7:15 p.m. today on the steps of the Rackham Bldg. Harriman Blasts GOP Candidates By The Associated Press W. Averell Harriman hit at both major Republican candidates yes- terday and bid for labor's support in his own campaign for the Dem- ocratic presidential nomination. At a Boston news conference, Harriman had these things to say about the leading GOP contend- ers: Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower-- "No experience on the domestic side . . . he has embraced the policy of the Republican party which has blocked progress in this country." "Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio- "Taft and I disagree on practically every issue, domestic and interna- tional." * * * ..THE 60-YEAR-OLD foreign aid chief also pictured himself as the only candidate with more experi- South Quad Jerry Parker, '53BAd., newly elected president of Gomberg House, and Marty Suber, '53, president of Van Tyne House, were elected as president and vice-president respectively, of the South Quad Council last night. ence in international affairs than Eisenhower, and he told newsmen: "We can't have a progressive foreign policy and a lookback policy at home." Harriman, a scion of wealth who has been hailed by President Truman as a "great liberal," came up with a bid for the backing of labor unions by declaring himself for a new law to replace the Taft- Hartley Act which he said was enacted "out of vindictiveness." Harriman made the remarks prior to attending two big labor meetings in Boston to confer with APL, CIO and railroad union lead- ers. Meanwhile, Eisenhower said he does not aspire to the presidency and would accept the nomination only out of a sense of duty. Sen. Robert Taft predicted last night on a television 'interview in Washington, that President Tru- man may het be the Democratic candidate for President this year. "I don't mean to question Mr. Truman's good faith in withdraw- ing," the candidate for the GOP presidential nomination said. "But by the time the Democrats look over the field, as they try out this man, and another balloon for somebody else-and find that af- ter all he hasn't got very much strength-they may finally con- clude that Mr. Truman is as strong a candidate as they can come back to." Thuma Tells New Policy On Religion Lack of Funds Halt Program By JIM LABES "A concentration program in religious studies centered around the existing courses is to be estab- lished," Acting-Dean Burton Thu- ma of 'the Literary College an- nounced last night at the last lit- erary college conference of the year. "As soon as we have sufficient funds," he continued, "the pro- gram will be expanded to include such courses as the history of religion and comparative religion. We hope to have the needed funds to set up the full program by 1953." DEAN THUMA added that "A committee has been set up to se- lect men who are qualified to teach the courses recommended by the joint Student Legislature- Student Religious Association committee." He expressed the position the college has taken by stating, "it is not the function of the Uni- versity to compete with the churches. "It is our job to give knowledge about religion while the churches are concerned withinculcating faith," he added. * * * THE ANNOUNCEMENT came at the end of an extensive discus- sion of the topic "Religion in Edu- cation." The conference was opened with a report by Alan Ber- son, '52, chairman of the SL-SRA committee, who emphasized "If religion is recognized as belonging in education, then it should have a more concrete place in the cur- riculum." The group agreed with Prof. Frank Huntley of the English de- partment who noted that "Reli- gion is a complicated area with two sides, knowledge and experi- ence. The more we know, the bet- ter our experience can be. "Belief should be the by- product of the course, not their purpose," Huntley added. Prof. Leslie A. White of the anthropology department present- ed the view that there is a division of labor between the church and the secular which should be pre- served. "To reintroduce sectarian- ism would be a retrogressive step," he stated.- * * * WHITE'S CHARGE was ans- wered by former Dean of the Lit- erary College Hayward Keniston, who said "Education requires the study of all of man's life, includ- ing his personal beliefs, as well as his behavior. Three things basic to understanding his beliefs are his art, his philosophy and his reli- gion. "Because of a fear of sectar- ianism, religion has been left out of education," he added, "but we need to understand reli- gion as a grounds for under- standing man's behavior." A student then asked if such a course in religion would not deny atheism its place as a belief. The group felt that atheism should definitely be included in any type of survey course in a study of religion. The coiference ended with a speech by Sanford Cain, '53, new- ly elected chairman of the literary college conference steering com- mittee. Cain noted that the atten- dance at last night's discussion was the largest of the year. One Hundred -D:a.;-Matty Kessler GENOCIDE DEBATERS IN ACTION ONE KILLED, 85 INJURED: Pusan Prison Riot Stopped by- Guard Genocide Debate Draws Onlookers * * 4*'* By The Associated Press U.S. soldier-guards yesterday stamped out a rebellion in a big Pusan prison camp, killing one Red prisoner and injuring 85 in a wild battle lasting nearly three hours. It was the first bloody prisoner uprising on the Korean mainland. Truman Calls Korea 'Step To Freedo ' WESH POINT, N.Y.-MP)-Presi- dent Truman said yesterday Kor- ea has put the free world on the right, track "to preserving our freedom without paying t h e frightful cost of world war." "I believe we are well on the way," he said with sober but un- mistakable optimism. "We are on the right track." He held out hope there may still be an armistice in Korea but insisted "We must also be alert and ready to meet treach- ery or a renewal of aggression if that should come." * * , THE PRESIDENT spoke at the U.S. Military Academy's 150th an- niversary celebration. He told West Point cadets-the nation's future generals-that "as a result of Korea, the free countries are infinitely better prepared to de- fend themselves than they were two years ago." But he tempered his optimism at points and, in'words as grim as the gray, dripping sky above this Hudson River redoubt, told the ca- dets: "But I don't want anyone to get the impression that there is any basis for relaxing or letting up. No one should assume that the possibility of world war has become remote." At the sametime, Army-Secre- tary Frank Pace told the nation's future generals that a peacetime army such as America knew in the 1930's will never return. It came as the U.S. Eighth Army disclosed that two minor revolts had been squelched without blood- shed on nearby Koje Island last week. * * * KOJE IS the main prisoner camp for hard-core Communists. They staged two riots and kidnap- ped the camp commander recent- ly. The Pusan fighting broke out at a prison hospital enclosure where both Communist and anti-Communist prisoners are treated. Senator Hits PrisonPolicy LANSING-(RP)--Sen. G. Elwood Bonine (R-Vandalia) accused that Gov. Williams' administra- tion apparently "still is follow- ing the steak and ice cream philo- sophy" toward troublesome in- mates in Southern Michigan Pris- on in the State Legislature yes- terday. Meanwhile, speaking at Michi- gan State College on being ousted from the prison, Vernon R. Fox, assistant deputy warden of Jack- son prison, was debating over a "resign or be fired" ultimatum. "I haven't made up my mind yet whether to resign or let them try to fire me," Fox said. The army said a small group of fanatical Reds who served as hos- pital attendants defied orders to leave the compound for transfer elsewhere. * * * COMBAT-SEASONED U. S. In- fantrymen went into the com- pound to get them, and the fight- ing erupted. The infantrymen were armed, but they fired no shots in the battle of clubs and fists. One soldier was injured slightly. About half of the 85 prisoners injured received only minor hurts, the Army said. It did not say how the one prisoner died. Possibly he was bayoneted. For two and one-half hours the fighting swirled across the com- pound. The soldiers used riot tac- tics in rounding up the prisoners. The Army gave few details, and correspondents were not permit- ted to enter the camp, known as Compound 10. It was not known whether the prisoners were North Koreans, Chinese or both. The hospital enclosure at one time housed 10,000 prisoners. Some rabid Communists have been mov- ed since to Koje Island. It is pos- sible the rebellious prisoners were resisting transfer to Koje. Meanwhile in Munsan, Allied negotiators yesterday told the Communists voluntary repatria- tion of prisoners was base'd on United Nations principles from which there could be no retreat. Students Fill Local Chapel For Session Shore, Slosson Present Views By VIRGINIA VOSS Nearly 100 students crowded in- side a small Unitarian Church chapel last night to hear banned speaker Mrs. Ann Shore. take the "pro" stand in a debate: "Is the United States Practicing Genocide Against the Negro People?" Other groups of students clus- tered around windows and stair- ways as attractive Mrs. Shore and a Detroit attorney Lebron Sim- mons set forth the genocide charge opposing Prof. Preston Slosson of the history department and John Ragland, a local lawyer. 4' *s STANDING in direct contrast to the famed Slosson-Phillips debate in April 1950, the two-hour sessio proceeded in a calm, good-natured manner. Prof. Marshall Knappen of the political science department moderated the discussion. Mrs. Shore, organizational dir- ector of the Civil Rights Con- gress, maintained that the fed- eral government is practicing genocide with "a deliberate in- fliction of conditions of life cal- culated to bring about physical destruction" to the Negro people. She cited statistics from a CRC document entitled "We Charge Genocide." * * * IN ANSWER to Mrs. Shore's charge, Prof. Slosson explained that "whatever happens in the United States is not the sole re- sponsibility of the government." Prof. Slosson, citing decreased lynching rates, added that the trend is away from genocide to- wards a "constant betterment with which the government is unconnected." In his colorful arguments, Prof. Slosson recalled the several times the University has "banned" him from campus-in the 1938 cam- paign, in the Phillips debate and in last night's session. RAGLAND, supporting Prof. Slosson on the negative side, held that only an "attitude of gradual- ism" towards discrimination could uphold the democratic legal sys- tem. Explaining that he ws "not ready for gradualism," Simmons charged that the "U. S. govern- ment has done nothing toward changing representation which places Southerners in commit- tee control" or toward enforc- ing equality laws. He felt the problem could only be solved through action by the United Nations. Mrs. Shore thought it unlikely that UN meas- ures or recommendations would affect existing conditions. Opposing police power for elim- inating discrimination, Prof. Slos- son cited constitutional and po- litical obstacles to rapid allevia- tion of the problem. "Perhaps my opponents are better acquainted with powers of totalitarian gov- ernments," he added. IN AN INTERVIEW later in the evening, Mrs. Shore told The Daily: "Genocide is a conscious policy by the United States gov- ernment to keep races and classes disunified so the Wall Street forc- es can keep control of the coun- try." She also stated that "there is a tie-in between American do- mestic and foreign attitudes and actions toward the colored peo- ples of the world." Mrs. Shore declined to answer whether she was a Communist on the grounds that "It's none of yours or anybody else's business." She added that "Ten years from now I'd be glad to answer it." Keniston To Speak KLEIN CONDUCTS: 'U' Choirs To Present Program Today at Hill The University Choirs, composed of the Michigan Singers, Men's Choir and Women's Choir, conducted by Maynard Klein, professor of choral music, will present a program at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Audi- torium. Opening the concert will be the Michigan Singers doing three 16th century motets, "Judas, Mercator Pessimus" by Tomas Luis de Victoria, "Surrexit Pastor Bonus" by Orlando di Lasso and "Jubilate SPRING MADNESS: Student Riots Continue On Nation's Campuses By The Associated Press Spring madness swept another batch of college campuses Monday night, turning thousands of feverish young men into baying, brawling panty raiders. Nearly a dozen schools witnessed riots or near-riots as the males stormed co-ed dormitories in search of sexy sourvenirs. It was the biggest outbreak yet in the snowballing, weeks-old fad. It was good clean fun in some spots. But not in Columbia, Mo., where the National Guard was called out to cope with rioting University of Missouri students. And not so at Colorado University i Issu e where one youth broke his hip. Some 3,000 Missouri students Deo" by Giovanni Gabrielli. {. * * * FOLLOWING their performance the Women's Choir will sing "The Blessed Damozel" by Claude De- bussy, the music for which was adapted to a tone poem by Gabriel Rosetti. Soloists will be Norma Heyde, soprano, and Arlene Sol- lenberger, contralto. The Michigan Singers will end the first half of the program with "Festund Gedenkspruche" by Johannes Brafhms.. Following intermission, the Men's Choir will sing "The Agin- court Song" by Healey Willan with Donald Van Every, '52SM, and THREE ALTERNATIVES: SLDivided on Speakers' Bai By HARRY LUNN When the Student Legislature takes its long awaited action on the Lecture Committee tonight, members will have to decide be- tween three controversial courses of action, any one of which may meet violent opposition from var- ious factions of the group. SL to condemn the Lecture Com- mittee in principle and advocate removal of the Regents' by-law concerning student -sponsored speakers. Herb Cohen, '53, made such a motion at last week's meet- ing, but it was tabled. Only last week, the Legisla- ture succeeded in getting two non-voting student renresenta- main schools of thought on the stand SL should take: 1) Ask the Regents to remove their by-law and abolish the Lec- ture Committee. 2) Propose that no Commit- tee approval need be given if a student group is willing to take responsibility for its speak- school, financied by taxpayers' money. Many legislators agree that the Lecture Committee is basically un- desirable, but they point out that the University has a responsibility to the public, and, in the current campaign against Communism in this country, the public would not accent Communists as sneakers went wild on their own campus and then raided two nearby girls' schools, Stephens and Christian College. At Boulder, Colo., Robert Bako, 20 years old, of Des Moines, Iowa, broke his hip as 1,500 Colorado men stormed girls' sorority houses and dormitories. Several others were less seriously injured.' Firecrackers exploded during a