I SfIr igan i~IaiI4 A NOTE TO MISS SNEAD See Page 4 U SNOW FLURRIES Latest Deadline in the State __ VOL. LXH,, Np. 94 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1952 SIX PAGES I Rd SL Raps Ending 'Of Marital Series Hit 'U' Administration 'Influence' In Discontinuing Lecture Course By HARLAND BRITZ Highly critical over the way University officials "used their in- fluence" on the Marriage Lecture Committee, Student Legislature last night moved to recommend continuing the recently suspended marriage lecture series. More incensed over the methods of the Committee than the cancellation of the lectures, several legislators maintained the sup- port of several student representatives for the lectures did not warrant the sudden decision. THE SERIES was discontinued last Thursday at a meeting of the faculty-studded committee because of an alleged lack of interest. * * * OSL Vice-President Bob Baker, '52, Hours' Halt SLCoed's R ightsVote r Student Legislature came close to asserting women's rights on the athletic board last night, but their efforts were snafued by the 10:30 p.m. curfew for women. Just prior to the sudden ad- journment, the group was getting set to vote on a motion by Mike McNerney, '53, which would re- quest the Board of Regents to al- low women to vote for, and serve as members of the Board in Con- trol of Intercollegiate Athletics. The measure seemed sure of ap- proval. * * * AT PRESENT, only male stu- dents serve on and vote for the board, as provided in the Regents' by-laws. However, all University students contribute, through their tuition, $3.50 to the ,.athletic board. This condition was termed by McNerney as a clear case of ' "taxation without representa- tion," He also claimed 'athle- tic board funds certainly do not go primarily for men's activi. ties," pointing to. Athletic Di. rector H. O. (Fritz) Crisler's salary and a retirement fund for Mrs. Fielding Yost. An amendment proposed by Bob Baker, '52, and passed by the leg. islature, also would have the Re- gents discontinue the policy of allowing the student manager of athletic teams to endorse can- didates. Senate Arms Committee Passes UMT WASHINGTON - ()- Univer- sal Military Training for 18-year- olds moved a long stride nearer reality yesterday. By a 12 to 0 vote, the Senate Armed Services Committee ap- proved a bil to permit the start of UMT before the end of the year. THE CORRESPONDING House committee earlier had approved a }similar measure, and theHouse is scheduled to begin debate on it next Thursday. Sen. Russell (D- !Ga.), Chairman of the Senate committee, said the Senate prob ably will delay action on its bill luntil the House has acted. While the bills are similar, there are some differences to be worked out if each house passes the, legislation. One provision of the Senate bill is designed to force an eventual reduction in the strength of the regular Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines. This requires the secretary of defense to make semi-annual re- ductions in the regular Armed #"orces as soon as 300,000 youths have completed the required six months of basic training and go Into the reserves. The reductions would be on the basis of one regular for every three trainees. Sen. Russell estimated this eventually could lead to a reduc- 4tion from, a present planned 'trength of 3,640,000 to 2,006,000. But he said it probably will be five or six years before enough reserves could be trained t bring about such a major reduction. Campus Taft Club ' *r _ - dPO . who attended the meeting, said the announcement was made by Chairman Eric Walter, dean of students, after he had polled both student and faculty members. There were no protests at the meeting. The chairman's decision, Baker related, came after a re- port from Social Director of Women, Ethel McCormick. Miss McCormick reported, Baker said, that women showed "little inter- est" in the program. Miss McCormick based her claim on a poll of the League's Board of Representatives, Baker contin- ued. She reported at the meeting that 95 women voted against continuing the series, he added. However, Baker maintained, minutes of the board meeting showed that 13 voted favorably. This brought an immediate protest from legislator Mary Jo Downer, '54, who maintained that no vote was taken against the ipeasure, it being assumed that all of the other representa- tives were opposed. Janet Netzer, '54, representing the League, then rose to maintain that though she did not attend the board meeting she knew the board had polled .women's resi- dences and found that there was little support. - This condition, Miss Netzer claimed, was due to the general and impersonal technique used by the lecturers, which did not per- mit the airing of more personal problems, * * *. IMMEDIATELY, Baker main- tained that people attending the lectures had filled out question- naires, showing their approval of the course. SL Treasurer Phil Berry, '52 BAd, said that "it was a dis- graceful way for a University committee to handle a subject. The students were mildly in fa. vor of it," he claimed, but high- handed administrative tech- niques defeated the series. In other SL action, Bob Ely, '54E, and Bill Jentes, '53, were named, to vacant seats. Ruth Rossner, '52, was named head of the office staff of the new Ad- ministrative Wing. HST Blasts Withholding Of Immunity Denies Promising Men To England WASHINGTON - () - Presi- dent Truman said yesterday a House group's refusal to give Newbold Morris power to grant immunity to witnesses in investi- gating Government corruption would hamper the inquiry. He told a news conference he assumed full responsibility for recommending such a grant of powerito the special "clean-up" investigator and the Administra- tion has nothing to cover up. * * * AT THE SAME conference, Truman denied making any se- cret commitment to Britain's Prime Minister Churchill to send U.S. troops anywhere in the world. The President's denial came after the House of Representa- tives demanded in a formal resolution that he furnish "full and complete information" on any such commitments he might ,have made in his talks with Churchill last month. This resolution wasn't binding on Mr. Truman. - And when reporters asked him about it at his weekly news con- ference he declined comment, saying the resolution hadn't reached him officially. However, following the confer- ene the President told a report- er he had not committed this country to send troops anywhere in the world, without reference to the House resolution. *' * * CONCERNING the immunity question, Mr. Truman added that without power Morris would be prevented from doing the bang-up job that both he and Congress want. Morris had not requested such power, but had sought authority to subpoena witnesses and docu- ments which the President also recommended. The House Judiciary Committee voted unanimously Tuesday against giving Morris power to grant witnesses iimmunity from prosecution for testimony that might otherwise incriminate them. The President explained fur- ther his immunity request by saying whenever there is an in- vestigation by a grand jury the man who testifies to help catch a criminal is granted immunity. Earlier in the day, the President issued an executive order formally giving Morris authority to require, among other things, any Govern- ment employe to give testimony at the inquiry and all Government departments and agencies to sup- ply information and personnel Morris might request. Mr. Truman also announced he had set up a special commission, headed by famed flyer James H. Doolittle, to investigate the recent wave of air crashes at Elizabeth, N.J. Korean Lull Two Tugs Tow Broken Ships Home I-- Study Underway G.I.'S PAUSE-Two G.I.'s rest during a lull in the Korean ground battle as the fight continues in the skies. In the four days of blazing air action in which the Reds have thrown in as many as 300 jets in one day, jet pilots have shot down eight MIG's. IFC Reports, Red s Renew Cry Russian Seat 327 Men Registered for Rushing By JERRY HELMAN A total of 327 men registered for Spring semester rushing, the Interfraternity Council Executive Committee was told at its regular meeting last night. The figure is above a rough es- timate of the number of men ne- cessary for all houses to open next Worid News SRoundup By The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS-Louisiana re- belled against Gov. Earl Long yesterday and swept into the gov- ernor's office Robert Herron, a homespun country judge who flayed "Longism" and voiced dis- like of Mr. Truman. WASHINGTON-President Tru- man yesterday ordered the assign- ment of draft-eligible conscienti- ous objectors to 24 months of consecutive work in civilian capa- cities approved by their draft boards. DENVER-Representatives of 22 unions in the oil industry met here yesterday to set a date for a strike to back up demands for a wage increase. WASHINGTON -- The Defense Department announced yesterday a new total for American battle casualties in Korea-105,841. BONN, Germany -- Deputy Franz Richter, a leader of the Nazi-like Socialist Reich Party, w a s arrested yesterday on charges that he won election to parliament under false name. SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. -- James W. Curran, one of the Do- minion's best-known newspaper- men, died here yesterday after an illness of several years. Big 3 To Let Bonn Make War Material BONN, Germany-(MP)-The Big Three Western powers have agreed to let West Germany start making weapons-baring such things as atomic bombs, guided missiles and battleships-when she enters the European Defense Community, Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, said last night. Back from the Big Three For- eign Ministers' meeting in London, Adenauer announced the Germans also will be permitted to resume atomic and bacteriological re- search though weapons of that kind are out. The authorization takes ef- fect when West Germany rati- fies its membership in the six- nation EDC and the proposed unified European Army, he said. That may be some months away. year, compiled by the IFC from data provided by individual house rushing chairmen. * * * HOWEVER, NO valid conclu- sions can be drawn from this number, according to Pete Thorpe, '52, IFC R u s h i n g Committee .Chairman. The actual condition of fraternities is dependent upon the number of men who pledge and the financial support expect- ed from alumni in maintaining the chapter, among other consid- erations. Actually, 347 men registered, but twenty were disqualified because they failed to meet scholarship requirements set up by the fraternities. The rushing total shows a drop from the number of men that rushed last spring when 393 reg- istered. The latter figure is also lower than the one for Spring, 1950, which 426 men rushed. However, according to Joseph H. Fee, Assistant to the Dean of Students, the drop is consistant with the lowering in University enrollment. A rushing violation was also considered by the Executive Com- mittee, and a $50 fine levied. Formal rushing will continue for the rest of the week with lunches and smokers until 9 p.m. today, and rushing to 6 p.m. to- morrow and Saturday. There will be no rushing Sunday. Sub-Group Asks For Hiss Memos WASHINGTON - The Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, probing for any subversive influ- ences on American policy in the Far East, decided yesterday to ask the State Department for hand- written notes taken at the 1945 Yalta Conference by Alger Hiss. Sen. Watkins (R-Utah) directed the action during testimony by Edna Fluegel, former State De- partment employe. She testified that in 1948 she had been given access to notes Hiss took at the Yalta Conference attended by the late President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill and Marshall Stalin. By Coast Guard BOSTON-(P)-Two tugs start- ed towing the stern section of the storm-broken Fort Mercer toward land late yesterday. The hulk has 13 seamen pass- engers aboard. THE COAST Guard received a message at 4:45 p.m. (EST) that the tow was under way off Cape Cod. Two tugs, the Foundation Josephine and the M. Moran, took the derelect section in tow, bound in the direction of Nantucket lightship. At the New York office of the Moran Towing and Transporta- tion Co., Inc., owners of the M.' Moran, it was said the course of the tow would be to Block Island, R.I., since that was con- sidered less risky than to Boston direct. It was considered pos- sible the ultimate destination would be New York. The tug Ocean Prince was standing by and the Coast Guard cutter Eastwind was escorting the convoy. THE FOUNDATION Josephine got a line abroad the stricken stern section in midafternoon. Shortly after, the Moran trans- ferred medical supplies from the. cutter to the stern hulk. The 13 aboard Were the last of 84 men who were on the Mer- cer and another tanker, the Pendleton, when a northeaster cracked them both in two Sun- day night and Monday. They stayed aboard to help in sal- vage attempts; 21 of their com- panions had been removed ear- lier. Six men were killed in the bat- tle with the elements, eight were missing and presumed dead, and 57 were rescued. WHILE THE latest chapter in the drama of the seas was being written at a point about 90 miles east southeast of Nantucket Is- land, a Coast Guard investigation in Boston heard testimony from crewmen of the Pendleton. James M. Young, Galveston, Tex., chief pumpman, said the tanker had "a bad three-way fracture in the bulkhead be- tween the No. 4 starboard and center tanks" when he inspect- ed her in drydock last month. WINTRY BLASTS: Youngsters Decla"re War Weary of small potato combat- plastering passing cars w i t h snowballs-the lads of University Elementary School yesterday de- clared war on campus military and naval forces. Spurred on by the cold-blooded retaliation of East Quadders re- turning from ROTC drilling, the band of courageous kids made dis- organized charges across E. Uni- versity to flush the cowardly Uni- versity students out from behind parked cars. Despite the arrival of NROTC reinforcements, the youths, prod- ding before them a four-year-old curly-headed moll as a shield, eventually reached the walls of the East Quad. Drunk with suc- cess, they spared neither woman nor oldster as they threw at everything that moved until irri- tated mothers arrived to corral them home for supper. MEANWHILE, U.S. jet pilots yesterday shot down two of about 200 MIG-15 jets which the Com- munists sent into the skies of northwest Korea. Five other MIGs were damaged. It was the eighth kil lin four days of blazing air action that has seen the Reds in one day throw in as many as 300 jets from Manchuria. Allied losses, if any, will be given in a weekly summary. Fighter-bombers cut Red rail' lines in 68 places, ripping up the tracks running down from Man- churia to Pyongyang, North Kor- ean capital. * * * ALLIED infantrymen shifted their probing attacks from the central to the western front yes- terday. One raiding party killed 20 Chinese northeast of Panmun- jom, the armistice conference site. Another brief fight developed farther east, where another Al- lied raider outfit tangled with Chinese west of Chorwon. Ac- tion fell off on the central and eastern fronts. The mercury dropped to around zero at some places after several days of spring-like weather. In Tokyo the "Voic of the United Nations Command" radio in a broadcast to Korea accused the Communists of deliberately stalling for time under orders. The Allied broadcast said the Reds were "thunderstruck" by swift Allied acceptance Tuesday of Red recommendations for a post-armistice political confer- ence. At yesterday's staff officers' meeting the Reds refused to be diverted from their campaign for acceptance of Russia as a Korean "neutral" inspector. The UN command tried to speed up progress on truce supervision by cutting its requirement for troop rotation from 40,000 to 35,000 monthly during a truce. The Reds want a limit of 30,000 rotat- ed. The Reds immediately turned turned thumbs down on the Al- lied compromise, saying no re- quirement exists for the UN to ro- tate its personnel at this rate. Angrily, Col. Don O. Darrow, chief UN staff officer, told the. Communists that if they had no intention of making any pro- gress the meeting might as well adjourn for the day. The Communists refused and pressed their support of Russia. Since Sunday the UN command has turned down the Red nomi- nation of the Soviet Union as "not acceptable" on the grounds that both sides had agreed the six neutral nations invited to serve in Korea must be agreeable to both sides. M~etal Quota, Cut by NPA Announced WASHINGTON - (A) - Makers of most important household ap- pliances yesterday faced new pro- duction cuts as their copper and aluminum supplies were trimned 14 per cent, starting April 1. But the National Production Authority, in announcing second- quarter quotas, came to ,the aid of hard-hit firms which produce "less essential" items such as cos- tume jewelry. It announced that their lean metals supply was be- ing fattened. ADMINISTRATOR Henry H. Fowler said that NPA, by making the supply more uniform for all, hopes to minimize the number of firms "which otherwise might have to shut down." If the curtailment of metals for household appliances threat- ens to cause "serious shortages in essential consumer goods, such as refrigerators, ranges, washers and vacuum cleaners-- Fowler said NPA stands ready to provide relief. Supplies were boosted substan- tially, on the other hand, for the makers of venetian blinds, cigar- ette lighters, costume jewelry and other so-called "less-essentials." These lines now are getting as little as 10 per cent of their pre- Korea copper and 20 per cent of aluminum. Mo rris'Law Partner Cited hIShipDeal WASHINGTON -- () - Jdseph E. Casey testified yesterday a high-speed deal in which he and two friends made $450,000 on a $1,000 investment in surplus ships was born in the law offices of a partner of Newbold Morris, chief detective of President Truman's anti-corruption drive. The project was quickly blessed by the old U.S. Maritime Commis- sion, Casey told the Senate Inves- tigations Subcommittee, and from then on things moved so fast that "I was puzzled by it, too." CASEY IS AN affluent Wash- ingtoh lawyer and former Demo- cratic member of the House from Massachusetts. He testified it was in the New York office of Houston W. Was- son, Morris' partner, that he first learned that substantial profits were possible and that a decision was made to launch the complicated transaction. Subsequently, he said, the Com- mission authorized the sale of three war surplus tankers to a corporation headed by Casey be, fore the new firm actually was incorporated. Casey stated the authorization was recorded in official records as a formal Commission action, although he expressed doubt that the Commission actually held a meeting to consider it. Casey acknowledged that he had not given a full disclosure of facts to a subordinate Commission On Truce Group Eight Red Fighters Brought Down In Four Days of Fierce Air Battle BULLETIN MUNSAN, Korean, Thursday, Feb. 21-(R )-The UN com- mand told the Reds today that Russia was not acceptable as a neutral truce observer because she has "a record of past partici- pation in Korea." MUNSAN, Korea, Thursday, Feb. 21-(A')-The Communists in a loud propaganda outcry yesterday demanded the United Nations command accept Russia as a "neutral" to help supervise the Korean armistice. At the same time the Red Peiping radio rapped the Allied nomi- nation of Norway and Sweeden to a six-nation neutral supervisory organ for policing a truce. "* * sA 25TH ANNIVERSARY: Norway's SingingBoys g~ w. ~' I - '--w ' LlA A 1 ' 1 U '"~si! re tea E N 53MEV' By SALLY GOULDTHORPE Despite the lure of American bubble gum, yo-yos, paper match covers and neon signs, the 60 Singing Boys of Norway who ap- peared at Hill Auditorium last night still think there's no place like home. The current tour of America, which marks their 25th anniver- sary as an organization, is the first look at this country for the entire group of boys, who range in age from 12 to 25. ALTHOUGH THE lads are im- pressed with everything in the United States from the New York skyscrapers to yo-yos, few will ad- mit that anything here is better than in Norway-evefi though it may be bigger. Noted exception: the coke, which all eagerly drink whenever allowed. Because the bass and tenor parts are sung by boys from 19 to 25 who were formerly so- pranos in the choir, many have had college educations. The boys report that our educational fa- cilities are far superior to those rccarti our Anld admitted he and the other boys have missed skiing and other winter sports they enjoy in Nor- way. All the lads keep close track of Norway's progress in the Win- ter Olympics and constantly tease the American managers who tra- vel with them about America's in- ferior showing. I , Another fair-haired lad could- n't understand why American boys would object to girl's wear- ing knee socks, explaining that everyone in Norway did. Biggest objects of fascination for the younger boys are paper match covers. Norway has only the wooden boxed matches. All have accumulated extensive col- lections illustrated with every- thing from places they have stay- ed to American glamour girls. Another favorite pastime is taking photographs to show their friends at home. The boys were particularly impressed by the elaborate buildings and the vast amount of commercial advertising they have seen. Neon signs, wa- ter guns and bubble gum have CALLS FOR SACRIFICES: NATO Faces Tough Going--A cheson By STAN SWINTON LISBON, Portugal - P) - A grave-faced Dean Aches.on told the Atlantic allies, opening their ninth council session yesterday: "We must take actions that will strain all of us to the utmost." "It is a task for governments and for peoples," the U.S. secre- tary of state said. "We must de- velop the concrete military strength which alone can insure our people against the destruction He blasted Spain's exclusion asS a strategic absurdity, and said de- fense of the Iberian Peninsula was indivisible from European security. ' * * W. AVERILL Harriman, chair- man of the temporary council committee, submitted a resolution to the NATO powers containing concrete proposals for achieving a "maximum of combat-ready forces in 1952 on a balanced collective But he declared the creation of the European Defense Community (EDC), the diplomatic name for a European army uniting Germans and French with the soldiers of four other nations, "has been brought to a point where the ap- proval of this council for its form and authority can be obtained." The planners look"for the Ger. mans to provide 12 divisions in this force. Acheson was fresh