THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY,, FEBRUARY 20, 1952 NON-MEMBER BUREAUCRACY: SL Creates New AduMinistrative Wing By HARLAND BRITZ *.'f.- Bureaucracy has hit the Stu- s dent Legislature. The SL variety of the species has been initiated with the or- ganization of a new department- the Administrative Wing. . ... ...: . THE NEW GROUP, composed :::.r.. of non-SL members, will have the broad assignment of helping thel over-worked legislators with their '< duties. This means wing mem- bers will find themselves doing office work, aiding in SL projects, working out details in SL's com- mittee organization, and giving :.... advice. At present, the wing is littlef more than a plan of action with a chairman, in this case called a coordinator. But within two .r days the program should be roll- Ing. . In fact, at 4:10 p.m. tomorrow p the SL will hold a'tryout meeting in room 3D of the Union to which all interested parties have been invited. John Vincent Exonerated Of Charges WASHINGTON - (P) - The State Department yesterday "com- pletely cleared" career diplomat John Carter Vincent of all charges involving his loyalty and security. They included testimony by Louis F. Budenz before a Senate! committee that Vincent was once a Communist. 'U' of Chicago Implicated In Ship Investment Deal AS SOON as a staff is gathered,' and Coordinator J o h n Baity claims he could use 60 students, the group will undergo an exten- sive training program. At the same time they will be fitted in to a variety of tasks that the SL has waiting for them. The administrative set-up of the wing, which was okayed at last Wednesday's SL meeting, calls for a chieftain, the coor- dinator, who is not a member of the legislator and who is chosen by the SL cabinet. The office staff of the wing is headed by a regular assistant to the SL's recording secretary. His -Daily-Malcolm Shatz PILED UP-SL Vice-President Bob Baker, (right) shows new Ad- ministrative Wing Coordinator John Baity some of the accumu- lated work the SL has prepared for his new group. * . ( ' * 'I, staff assists with the secretarial and managerial problems of SL. IN ADDITION six wing mem- bers will act as secretaries to the regular committees of the Legis- lature and each cabinet member will receive an assistant. Another group in the wing will be the projects committee which will be composed of sev- eral regular members, and the coordinator. The program is not a new brainchild of the SL. Non-SL members have long worked for the group, and last semester a similar program without such elaborate trappings was experi- mented with. The specific terms of the new program are the creation of Leah Marks, '52, member-at-large. Coordinator Baity promises try- outs a good chance for promotion and a useful place in campus life. "They won't be just atministra- tive robots," he maintained. Along with the verdict that there was "no reasonable doubt" of his loyalty, Vincent received an expression of confidence from Secretary Acheson. The finding, by the Department's loyalty-security board, was turned over to the Loyalty Re- view board of the Civil Service' Commission. The review board has authority to reverse a decision on an agency board. Senator McCarran (D-Nev.), Chairman of the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, which re- cently questioned Vincent, told re- porters: "It is difficult for me to see, with all the information our com- mittee has before it, how the State Department could arrive at that conclusion and especially how the Secretary could congratulate Mr. Vincent." Weaver Wil.. Talk About Washington The birthday of the first Presi- dent of the United States is the occasion for an address by Prof. Bennett I. Weaver, of the English department, on "George Washing- ton." Prof. Weaver's talk, which will highlight the speech department assembly at 4 p.m. today in Rack- ham Lecture Hall, will deal with three phases of the General's career. Read and Use Daily Classifieds WASHINGTON-(A)-The Uni- versity of Chicago was named yes- terday aS one of the three major investors in a richly ,profitable deal in war surplus ships now un- der Senate investigation. It was disclosed that the Uni- versity had a $15,000 investment in a ship deal. AT THE SAME time, a govern- ment investigator testified that three men with $1,000 capital made a profit of $450,000 in a war surplus ships deal negotiated in part by a law partner of Newbold Morris, President Truman's anti- corruption chief. William Leece, staff counsel for the Senate 'investigations Panel To Discuss Arts Theater Play The Arts Theater Club play, "A Man Equals a Man" by German playwright Berthold Brecht, will be discussed after the 8:30 p.m. performance today. Those is the panel will be Alfred Neumann of the German depart- ment, Prof. Ross Finney of the music department and Ralph Rai- subcommittee, identified Morris' partner as Houston Wasson of New York. Wasson will be called as a wit- ness in the broadening inquiry, and Morris, too, may be asked to testify. Two members of the sub- committee, Senators Nixon (R- Calif.) and Mundt (R-S.D.) said "Morris has got to be called" to tell about "some big fees" which his law firm allegedly collected in the ship deal. The 450 to 1 profit went to Jos- eph E. Casey, Washington lawyer and former Democratic member of the House from Massachusetts, and two associates who acquired three surplus tankers from the old maritime commission after the war. Casey put up $300, Leece testi- fied, while $400 was invested by E. Stanley Klein, New York bus- inessman, and $300 by Julius C. Holmes, minister in the U.S. Em- bassy in London. RUSHING CHAIRMAN HAVE YOU ENOUGH PLEDGE BUTTONS? IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WHERE NATIONAL REGULATIONS PERMIT. Invitations Monogram Matches Place Cards Pledge Dance Programs L. G. BALFOUR CO. 1319 S. University Phone 3-1733 r 'U' Given Flint Radio Station University broadcasting facilities developed into a network of sorts yesterday, as the acquisition of a small FM station in Flint was announced yesterday. The transmitter, tower and all equipment of station WAJL-FM were given to the University by an anonymous donor, according to Waldo Abbott, director of the University Broadcasting Service. University operation of WAJL-FM will begin as soon as the Federal Communications Commission approves the license trans- fer. The station will be used as a relay point to improve Flint and Saginaw Valley area reception of programs originating in the campus studios of WUOM-FM. Reception previously had been spotty there, Abbott said. A- mi of ment. ALL-COLLEGE TOUR 52 Days, 10 Countries Ireland, Scotland, England, Holland, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Monaco, France ALL EXPENSES ...$1,295 Sail June 25th in the All One CLASS M. V. GEOR- GIC with famous Cunard Line service and cruisine .Enjoy Fun, Romance, and Adventure Aboard and Abroad on this wonderful ALL-STUDENT Trip to the Great Capitals and Famous Attractions of the Old World. Accommodations Limited RE- SERVE NOW. Get complete information today. the mathematics depart- OLSON'S TOU R S Preview in I Slides to b Tour Rep Picture Color e shown by resent'tive PHOTOS COPIED I TONIGHT 7:30 Conference EVERYBODY WELCOME Room - The League 20 for $1.0 w I FA I Campus Calendar Events Today INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS - The Industrial Relations Club of the business administration school will hold its first meeting of the spring semester at 7 p.m. in tihe Union RUSHING SMOKER - Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business administration fraternity, will hold its final rushing smoker at 7:30 p.m. in the chapter house, 1325 Washtenaw. * * * EXTENSION SERVICE - The University Extension Service an- nounces the first session of Gar- dening' I at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 176, Business Administration Bldg. Events Tomorrow MUSIC DEPARTMENT - a vis- iting lecturer from Harvard Uni versity, Prof. Otto Gombosi of the music department, will speak on "The Beginning of Renaissance Music" at 4:15 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheatre. AMERICAN ORDINANCE AS- SOCIATION - There will be a meeting df the American Ordi- nance Association to discuss sta- tistical quality control at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 3B of the Union. PERMIAN FOSSILS - G. Ar- thur Cooper, curator of the United States National Museum, will talk on "Permian Fossils from the Glass Mountains" at 4:15 p.m. in Rm. 2054, Natural Science Bldg. Cooper is speaking under the aus- pices of the geology and mineral- ogy departments. Corning Events UNIVERSITY MUSEUMS-The motion pictures, "The Cell-Struc- tural Unit of Life," "Cells and Their Functions," and "Life in a Drop of Water" will be shown at 7:30 p.m., Friday in Kellogg Audi- torium. The films are sponsored by the University Museums. New Citizenship Course To Open A new course, Political Parties and Political Activity, in the series on Positive Citizenship will be opened at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. 165 of the Business Adminis- tration Bldg. Registration fee is $4 and can be paid at the first session or at Rm. 4524 of the Admiinstration Bldg. READ and Korean Truce Hopes Bright, Chances for Peace Still Dim DeLuxe Wallet-size Prints Send any size photo or negative No Proofs . . . Original returned IDEAL FOR COLLEGE, ROTC, OR JOB APPLICATIONS FEDERAL WALLET-SIZE PHOTO CO. P.O. Box 2448 Dept. C-7 Kansas City 6, Mo. (No COD's Please) I . I I (Continuedi from, Page 1) would talk about was worked out early in the conferences and has provided the basis of all subsequent meetings. . 2) Truce line-There is no formal agreement on this at the moment but presumably if a cease-fire could be established at once it would mean the delineation of a buffer zone along the present battle line. 3) Supervision of a truce-Many details have been worked out but there are a couple of issues remaining which could wreck the conference. One of these is the new insistence of the. Reds, against UN opposition, that Russia be one of the "neutral" na- tions on a proposed supervision commission. The other is that the Reds should agree not to build up airfields in North Korea while an armistice prevailed. 4) Prisoners of war-This has provided the most serious sticking point: whether all POW's should be repatriated, as the Reds insist, or whether only those who want to go home should be returned, as the UN demands. L THE MEN OF GOMBERG HOUSE IN THE NEW SOUTH QUAD wish) to anotnce RUSHING HOURS for all AFFILIATES who desire to pledge. - Generation Soliciting for if k l l !Tt .. k., . 4i s .t 'T PHONE FOR APPOINTMENT I, I Fiction, Poetry, Essays, Photography: WE'LL CONSIDER ANYTHING YOU'D LIKE TO SUBMIT. Student Publications Building i L' TRY Varsity's "ALL DRY"'Laundry Service POUNDS OF LAUNDRY Washed, dried & Folded fl C each added POUND All of your LAUNDRY, white and colors, clothing and flat work, or just clothing WASHED, DRIED and NEATLY FOLDED Regular SHIRTS finished upon request 17C each additional 1' .3 a4 ' ( I 1, I ft *1 Call 231 23 AGENCIES - 000* i Cor. 5th & E. Liberty for delivery service GOLDMAN CLEANERS