THE LECTURE COMMITTEE Latest Deadline in the State A6F Ar :43 a t t]q CLOUDY, RAIN See Page 4 0 VOL. LXii, No. 167 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 25, 1952 SIX S I now 'A!; Illini Share Baseball Crown Corbett Wins Nightcap in Relief, 6-5, After Being Beaten, 11-0, in Opener Special To The Daily MADISON-The University of Michigan baseball team came through in the 11th inning of the second game of its double-header with Wisconsin here yesterday to win 6-5 and wind up the season in a first place tie with Illinois. The Illini, in the midst of their big "win" year, clinched a tie when they split two games with lowly Iowa, winning the first 4-1, but drop- ping the seven-inning nightcap 4-3 to Hawkeye mound ace Bob Diehl. ILLINOIS AND MICHIGAN w. Pro-Fascist YGain Seen For Ital ROME -(P)-Ten million Ital- ians choose between Communism, Neo-Fascism and Western-style democracy in 2,400 bitterly-fought ' municipal elections today and to- morrow. Experts last night predicted sub- stantial gains by the extreme rightist Pro - Fascist - Monarchist coalition. V' * * * HOWEVER, the hard-pressed .:b-American Ch'istian Demo- crats expected to regain control of Rome, home of Roman Catholi- cism and site of a violent Cor- munist campaign. Officially neu- tral, the Roman Catholic Church, through the semi-offiial L'Osser- vatore Romano, pleaded with Ital- ians to rally behind the Christian Democrat-center bloc. A surge of Pro-Fascist strength, dramatized by torch- light mass meetings of up to 100,000, swept the campaign to a climax before a 24-hour pre election truce began Friday at midnight Strength of the Pro-Fascist Italian social movement and its monarchist ally centers in the j poverty-stricken south, where vot- ers disgruntled with the failure of promised reforms to materi- alize reduced Christian Democrat strength by 40 per cent in last year's elections. A nip-and-tuck battle between left, center and right is taking place in Naples, the south's great- est port and headquarters of Al- lied forces, Southern Europe. Even warty leaders will not predict the vutcome. rReds Raise -Flags on Koje IslandAgain KOJE ISLAND, Korea -()- Communist prisoners, shouting, singing and waving defiant ban- Ar and red flags from behind 4rbed wire stockades, gave an un- suly greeting to Britsh and Cana- dian troops on their arrival here today. Red flags were flying again from at least 12 of the 17 prison stockades. They had been hauled down briefly yesterday. It was the latest symptom that all was not yet well with the 80,- 000 well-organized North Korean and Chinese prisoners who are tightly controlled from inside their own barbed wire enclosures by Red commissars. Yesterday morning the flags over 12 stockades were hauled down, but remained fluttering over five enclosures. By late af- ternoon they had reappeared in all but five of the 17 enclosures. The new display of defiance came as Brig. Gen. Haydon Boat- ner fired his deputy commander and shook up the remaining staff. He was welding a tough inter- national security force from five nations. Boatner has given fair warning to die-hard Reds to obey regula- tions-or face the consequences. Unitarians To Play ind up the season with identical .667 percentages. Illinois, having won two more games and lost one more has a theoretical % game lead, but the conference crown is decided solely on a percentage basis. It was the first Western Con- ference title that Michigan had won all year and it came the hard 'way. The Wolverines blew their big chance to rule the Big Ten undisputed when they fell before the pitching mastery of Hal Raether in the first game, losing 11-0. Going into the twin-bill in first place by six percentage points, the Wolverines could do nothing against Raether who held them to * * * Senate Prints 1945 Report, Of RedPlans State Department Reveals Spy Plot WASHINGTON--(P) -A 1945 Army Intelligence report which tagged the Chinese Reds as bona fide, Moscow-directed Commun- ists was published last night by the Senate Internal Security Sub- committee. The report noted that some ob- servers then contended the Chi- nese Communists were agrarian reforms or democrats and not real Communists. It said the investi- gation failed to bear this out. It also concluded "there is rea- son to believe that Soviet Russia plans to create Russian-dominat- ed areas in Manchuria, Korea and probably North China." The 150-page document, pre- pared before Japan's surrender in World War II, gave a detailed ac- count of the history of the Chi- nese Communists, including their political and military activities. The Senatorsnissued it incon- nection with the year-long inves- tigation they have been conduct- ing in a search for any Commun- ist influences on U.S. Far East- ern policies. Meanwhile, Secret State De- partment documents have reveal- ed a cloak-and-dagger story of Russian spies who reached into the American Embassy in Mos- cow in 1937 to steal United States secrets, according to a United Press report last night. Amazed American diplomats discovered a tell-tale microphone hidden only a few feet from where Ambassador Joseph E. Davis dic- tated his top-secret reports to Washington. They took swift measures to put the pipeline out of business, but they could only guess at the se- crets that flowed into the Kremlin in the months-and possibly years -it was operating. The papers also showed that President Roosevelt in 1938, on the eve of World War II, person- ally sanctioned a proposal to sell plans for a 62,000-ton super-bat- tleship to Russia. The massive, 1,034-page volume, made public by the State Depart- ment, is a somber chronicle of six years of "frustration" and "disil- lusionment" in which Soviet Pre- mier Joseph Stalin and his lieu- tenants rebuffed President Roose- velt's patient and persistent efiort to make friends. Ukranians Present Plaque to Center The Unitarian Student Group is sponsoring a public tape re- cording playback of the off cam- pus genocide debate at 7 p.m. to- day at Lane Hall. Dean Walter B. Rea, after con- sultation with Prof. Carl G. Brandt, secretary of the Lecture Committee, gave his approval and Dean Erich A. Walter said that student religious groups meeting in church lie outside the jurisdic- tion of the Student Affairs Com- mittee. A discussion period will follow the recording. Wolverine Club Sets Fall Goal French May Halt German Treat Russian Note To U.S. Proposes Four-Power Peace Treaty Talks By The Associated Press New demands by France were reported holding up final agree- ment on a West German peace contract and an Allied Western Defense Army against Communism. But reports from Bonn early today said the Western Big Three Foreign Ministers were overcoming French objections and France would sign the two pacts on schedule. MEANWHILE, a Soviet Union note to the United States today proposed Four-Power talks on an all-German peace treaty without yTdelay "despite existing differ- WOLVERINE AIM-By the creation of a special 1600 seat "Bck 'M'" section between the 35 and 50 yard lines next fall, the Wolverine Club hopes to develop a flash card section to equal or better the best in the country, such as UCLA's pictured above. Students who will be seniors next semester will get first crack at the section from 1 to 5 p.m. Monday and Tuesday at Barbour Gymnasium where stubs will be passed out upon presentation of the student's ID card. The stubs will be redeemable next semester for season tickets. Next fall's juniors will get a chance at the left over stubs on Wednesday, with sophomores going Thursday. RAY FISHER ... back on top * * * a mere five hits while his team- mates jumped all over Jack Cor- bett and Dick Yirkosky, garner- ing 14 safeties. * S.S THE BADGERS won the game in the first inning when they battered Corbett from the mound and scored three runs. Don Ead- dy, whose trio of errors kept Michigan from ever getting close, started things off for Wisconsin when he erred on lead-off batter Dave Hash's easy roller. * * * THE SECOND GAME was the real "clutch" tussle and Michigan came through. With the score tied at the end of the regulation seven innings, Michigan broke the ice in the tenth-only to let Wiscon- sin come back in ttie home half, but on the strength of Corbett's relief pitching they went on to win in 11 frames. The young right-hander from Westfield, New Jersey was charged with the loss in the See BASEBALL, Page 3 World News Roundup- By The Associated Press TOKYO-The newspaper Asahi said the Japanese Government "appears set on informing the 'Soviet mission' here this week that any legal basis it had to re- main in Japan has ceased to exist and that it no longer has any dip- lomatic privileges." * * * WASHINGTON -- A trend to- ward acceptance of the proposed settlement of the Western Union strike developed last night on the basis of late returns from nation- wide voting among the 30,000 tele- graph workers. NEW YORK-Fulton Oursler, 59 years of age, magazine editor and author of the best-selling religious book, "The Greatest Story Ever Told," died of a heart ailment yesterday in his apart- ment here. *- * * WASHINGTON-Farm officials said yesterday the nationwide shortage of potatoes has reached its peak and that housewives should be able to buy normal quantities within three weeks. LAS VEGAS, Nev. -- If the weather is favorable the sixth atom bomb test of the current series will be held this morning. MARQUETTE-Seymour Gil- man had "no comment" here yesterday on criticism of his appointment as a Special Dep- uty Warden at Southern Michi- gan Prison. MADISON, Wis. - A faculty committee yesterday suspended 19 University of Wisconsin students for staging a pantie raid on girls' dormitories last Monday night. MACKINAC ISLAND - Fifteen hundred men and women from 40 nations will come to this northern island in a few days to demon- strate a formula for peace at the World Assembly for Moral Re- Armament. By The Associated Press Gen. Eisenhower won over Sen. Taft by a five-to-one margin in Washington State last night in a prolonged battle for 24 votes to the Republican Presidential nom- inating convention. Eisenhower won 20 of the 24 seats, Taft got four. The outcome gave Taft a total of 399 delegates in the Associated Press tabulation, against 359 for Gen. Eisenhower. This represents a count of delegates pledged, in- U' Orchestra T o Perform TOn nrht at Hill The University Symphony Or- chestra's spring concert, featuring Robert Courte, violist, will be pre- sented at 8:30 p.m. tonight in Hill Auditorium. Conducted by Wayne Dunlap, the orchestra will open the pro- gram with Giovanni Gabriela's "Conzona10," the orchestration for which was done by Hans T. David of the music school faculty through the aid of a grant from the Rackham School of Graduate Studies. The program will continue with the well-known "Symphony No. 2 in D Major" by Brahms. The second half of the concert- will include Milhaud's "Concer- tino d'ete," for Viola and Chamber Orchestra and Hindemith's "Music of Mourning," for Viola and String Orchestra. Courte will be featured as soloist in both these pieces. He is a lecturer in Viola and Chamber Music and violist of the Stanley Quartet. Concluding the concert this evening will be "Petrouchka," a ballet in four scenes by Stravin- sky. structed, or willing to express a first ballot choice. Maryland Republicans convened in Baltimore to give expected fa- vorite son backing to Gov. Theo- dore R. McKeldin who is said to lean toward Eisenhower for the nomination. In Minneapolis an Eisenhower supporter was elected Minnesota's Republican National Committee- man tonight over a Taft backer who had held the job 16 years. Another big batch of presiden- tial nominating delegates. will be chosen next week. Republicans will pick 86 dele- gates to the Chicago convention, notably in Texas, New Mexico and Connecticut. Democrats will select even more -- 191 - but their presidential nomination race is wide open and few con- tests are looked for. Meanwhile a speech this week by House Speaker Sam Rayburn supporting the Administration's foreign-aid program strengthened a belief in Congress that he will become a candidate for the Dem- ocratic Presidential nomination. Riot a Idaho Prison Halted BOISE, Idaho-W' -Three hun- dred prisoners rioted at Idaho State Penitentiary for more than four hours yesterday before a tear gas barrage broke the spiirt of their rebellion. The men started two fires, smashed furniture and broke win- dows before state and city police routed them from their stronghold in a barricaded recreation hall. The prisoners had armed them- selves with butcher knives, and other crude weapons. "If anyone tries to go over the wall stop them, and I don't care how you do it," Warden L.E. Clapp angrily told guards. None of the prisoners tempted Clapp's stern order. Ike' Narrows Taft Lead With New Washington Win Senate Set F r or*A id Dispute. WASHINGTON-(IP)-Sen. Con- nally of Texas, Democratic for- eign policy leader in the Senate, said yesterday he would conduct an all-out fight for a foreign aid bill bigger than the House voted. The House, with a coalition of Republicans and a number of Democrats in control, Friday night passed a $6,162,000,000 measure to strengthen foreign nations against Communism. This was $1,737,000,- 000 less than the $7,900,000,000 President Truman asked. - * * TWO SENATE committees have approved a. billion dollar reduc- tion in the Truman program, bringing it down to $6,900,000,000 and Connally will fight to prevent further cuts in the Senate debate opening tomorrow. Advocates of deeper cuts de- clared the solvency of the Unit- ed States is a main considera- tion in erecting defenses against Communism, and that the bill contains plenty of water which can be squeezed out. The Administration was putting on a big campaign to cancel out the House cuts. W. John Kenney, Deputy Director of the Mutual Security Agency, held a news con- ference to declare bitterly: "The House did a wonderful job Friday-it voted for defense, it voted for economic aid, and it voted for economy, and you just can't do all that." * * * THE $6,900,000,000 bill which the Senate willhave before it to- morrow was cleared through two committees - Foreign Relations and Armed Services. An attempt in the latter committee to cut it by 400 million more was defeated, seven to six. Eleven Republican Senators, led by Sen. Welker of Idaho, will seek to chop a full billion from the Senate bill this week. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, chief Taft opponent for the GOP nomination, has publicly warned against cutting funds deeper than the Senate bill. NCAA Announces TV Football Plan CHICAGO - () - A plan of "controlling principles" for tele- vision of 1952 college football yes- terday was announced ready for approval by the 372 members of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The NCAA's Television Commit- tee disclosed it had agreed upon an operating policy which will be submitted to a mail referendum vote by the membership. A two- thirds majority is needed for ap- proval. ences." The Russian note, broadcast by Moscow Radio, replied to American, British and French notes of May 13. The Allies said at that time they were willing to join in talks on unifying Ger- many if the Soviets first agreed to free all-German elections. The Russian reply today accus- ed the U.S. of delaying a treaty and said the impression is being created in Germany and else- where that "the U.S. Government does not really desire" a German peace settlement and unification. The Soviets charged that the Allies "legalize the reestablish- ment of a German Army headed by Nazi Generals and thereby pave the way for a resurgence of West- ern militarism. * * s THE U.S., British, and French Foreign Ministers recessed their closed sessions early today after 11 hours of negotiations. They announced another meeting for 10 a.m. (4 a.m. Ann Arbor time) today. Despite reported progress in meeting French objections, it was still not known whether the French Parliament will be sat- isfied enough to ratify the two pacts, even though Franc's Foreign Minister may sin them. Last night Secretary of State Acheson's official press spokesman said that "as far as the Ameri- cans are concerned, no Frenchman has ever told us they would not sign (the accords). We still feel it will work out and that a peace settlement will be signed tomor- row." Further encouragement was giv- en in a statement by a French Cabinet official in Paris that "un- der present conditions, signature (of the pacts) could come at the appointed time. A main French demand was for a strong British-American secure ity guarantee against any chance of a rearmed Germany's breaking out of the projected European Ar- my framework and again embark- ing on conquest. Martial Law Established Over Pusan By The Associated Press Martial law was clamped tday on Southeastern Korea, including the provisional capital of Pusan, as the result of renewed Com- munist guerrilla attacks. The new move against guer- rilla assaults was announced by the Republic of Korea Defense Ministry. In Washington Gen. Matthew Ridgway told Senators yesterday he believed the possibility of the Russian Air Force entering the Korean war would be increased if the United Nations bombed Com- munist bases in Manchuria. He also said that UN forces were not strong enough to drive the Communists out of North Korea or to begin bombing of Manchurian bases. He concurred with a Senatorial view that it is beyond the military command in Korea to end the war on its own, even if it has the mil- tary power to do so, and also agreed that political decisions must be made in Washington and Europe to end the conflict. Meanwhile, United Nations ar mistice delegates are taking it easy in a week-end recess from the..wnen Pvhm.in n ruiles esin RESULTS COMPILED: ThunacGi vFindings SOn FacultyEvaluation By JIM LABES Associate Dean Burton Thuma of the Literary College disclosed yesterday some of the results on the faculty and course evaluation given by students last fall. The tabulation of the 37,291 blanks computed showed a signifi- cantly high correlation with the results of the survey taken four semesters ago. THE RATING SCALE was based as follows: 1) superior, 2) very good, 3) good, 4) fair and 5) poor.- The average rating by course level ranged from 1.95 for ap- proachability to 2.90 on the Difficulty, which was graded on the basis of one for very difficult to five for poor, received an aver- age grade of 2.41 in 1951 as com- pared to 2.54 in 1950. WHEN ASKED about this sig- nificance of this change, Dean Tuma commented that he didn't know whether it was attributable to the students or to the courses. The average rating by rank of teacher ranged from 1.95 on approachability to 2.64 on fair- ness of exams. On the basis of general effectiveness assistant professors ranked best with a a tin of2 .1 2 nllnwAb y .. FIELD, MEREDITH TO STAR: 'The Fourposter' Opens Tomorrow * * * N' By MARGE SHEPHERD Jose Ferrer, noted director of the New York production of "The Fourposter," Betty Field and Bur- gess Meredith will present a local preview of the prize winning Broadway play at 8:30 p.m. tomor- r win Tvia enn 1gn thrn+r+i Tandy and Hume Cronin in the leading roles. Betty Field and Burgess Meredith will replace the former stars June 7 in New York. No newcomer to Ann Arbor, actor-producer Ferrer appeared been termed by them "the most civilized comedy on marriage in years, and the pleasantest." The fourposter bed from which the title is derived wit- nesses the events of 35 years of married life, the ordinary joys lx .. .. .. .. _ _ ._ .... :<