RELIGION AND ETHICS See Pale 4 4P- Latest Deadline in the State :43 a t t CLOUDY AND WARMER VOL. LXIII, No. 107 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN,. TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1953 SIX PAGES Rep. Meader To Introduce Bill for Liu Deportation Case To Go to House Rep. George Meader will intro- duce a private bill requesting per- manent residence for Dr. Vera Hsi- Yen Wang Liu of the University's pediatrics department to the House of Representatives today, Francis Schilling, the doctor's attorney, announced yesterday. Dr. Liu, a native of China, ap- pealed to Rep. Meader, after the Detroit immigration office turned down her appeal for permanent residence and notified her to be ready for "voluntary deporation" in 30 days. * * * THE immigration board turned down Dr. Liu's application for cit- zenship with only an explanation that her case was not "meritori- ous," although her affidavits and requirements were pronounced "favorable," Dr. Liu said. "The decision of the board is high-handed and is not justi- fied by the record," Schilling stated. The attorney claimed that the immigration service has made a mistake in failing to correct its decision. BECAUSE of the national ra- ti dio and press publicity that Dr. Liu's case has received, Rep. Mead- er has decided to sponsor a bill in her behalf, according to Schilling, who received a long distance tele- phone call from the Congressman yesterday. The young pediatrician made application for permanent resi- dence after her student visa ex- pired, but it was denied by the Detroit board in a hearing Jan. 23, 1952. An appeal of the decision was made in April, but was dismissed last October and the order of vol- untary deportation was issued Feb. 5. Since Dr. Liu's native Shanghai is overrun by the Communists, she has no idea where she could go. Her family, including her hus- band, who is engaged in research work at the University's Engineer- ing Institute, Is living in the Unit- ed States. Walter Lauds Mott Lectures The first Mott Foundation lec- ture series "has been 'an extraor- dinarily fine success, "Dean of Stu- denbts, Edich A. Walter said yes- terday. In referring to Barbara Ward Jackson's inauguration of the ser- ies, Dean Walter said that the' high pattern of lectures given by the famed assistant editor of the London "Economist" would be dif- ficult for future speakers to fol- low. Although a definite date for next year's Mott lectures has not been set, Dean Walter indicated that a student committee is already con- sidering possible speakers for the series. Among the top personalities most commonly mentioned for con- sideration are T. S. Eliot, poet, Erich Fromm, author, Aldous Hux- ley, author, Supreme Court Jus- tice William O. Douglas, Lin Yu- tang, philosopher and J. Robert Oppenheimer, atomic physicist. Others mentioned include Al- bert Schwetzer, Europe's foremost man of letters and missionary, and Robert Hutchins, educator. March 16 Deadline For Union Opera Only six days remain until the March 16 deadline for entries in the 1953 Union Opera scenario contest, Mike Scherer, '54, last year's general secretary of the Opera, announced yesterday. Entries; which must include a complete outline of the show, in- cluding musical numbers and sev- eral pages of sample dialogue, may be turned in at the main desk in the Union addressed to Mike Scherer, Michigan Union Opera. rf aft Won't Press Reston Says U.S. World Leader By ALICE BOGDONOFF James Reston "viewed the news" yesterday with what he termed both an optimistic and realistic view point. Speaking before a packed Hill Auditorium audience, the renowned New York Times correspondant claimed emphatically that the United States has not failed to meet the challenge of world leadership. "The time for sacrifice is now," Reston said, "and this country is making that sacrifice." THE FOREIGN correspondant went on to name the two necessary ingredients of a successful foreign policy as the maintenance of power and the readiness to strike at the aggressor's first move. "Since 1945 we have taken these two steps," Reston said. He pointed to such accomplishments as the United Nations, NATO, the Marshal Plan, and the meeting of the aggressor in Korea. Hearings On Thomas Charges Set Examination of Benny Thomas, former University Hospital jani- tor, on twin charges of felonious assault and unlawfully driving away an automobile without in- tent to steal, is set for 9 a.m. today in municipal court.E The 30-year-old prisoner was captured last Monday after a wild chase through Willow Village in the car he allegedly borrowed without permission from a hospital employe. * * LAST WEEK Thomas was iden- tified by X-ray technician, Virgin- ia J. Wrobleski, as the man who knocked her down and tried to choke her in a hospital corridor Feb. 28. Thomas has refused to make any confession or offer an alibi for the attack, but he did ad- mit he "borrowed" the car from an acquaintance, police say. Thus far police officers have failed to find any substantial evi- dence to support a theory that Thomas was the masked gunman who forced his way into an Austin Ave. home Feb. 26, to hold four women captive while he ransacked the house for a mysterious object. Two of the women were unable to pick the suspect out of a police line-up last week, and prosecutor Edmond F. DeVine said last night 'there was nothing to indicate Thomas was the same man. In addition to the charges levied against him in Ann Arbor, Thomas also faces an assault and battery charge in Ypsilanti township for an attack on a Willow Village woman the same afternoon as his arrest. Today's examination was asked' by the prisoner after his arraign- ment on the twin count last Thursday. Of course I recognize the great sacrifices in life made in Korea," Reston added, "but this was one of the sacrifices made at the right time." While disclaiming clairvoyant powers, Reston predicted that Cagers Drop 95-71 Game To Buckeyes Ebert Tallies 34; 'M' Falls to Last By DICK LEWIS Special To The Daily COLUMBUS-Lanky Paul Ebert established a new individual Buck- eye season scoring record to spark Ohio State to a race-horse 95-71 triumph over Michigan at the State Fair Coliseum last night. Ebert's 34 point harvest shat- tered the former OSU mark set by Dick Schnittker in 1950 and dropped the slow-starting Wolver- ines into a deadlock with Purdue for the Big Ten basketball cellar. * * * THE AMAZING Buck pivot op- erator dropped in 20 points in the first half, reminiscent of his 40-point effort here last season, as the local quintet played the fast break to perfection to go ahead 47-32 at halftime. In the second half it was mere- ly a question of how many tal- lies Ebert would ring up and whether the high-scoring Buck- eyes would hit 100. Ohio State forward Bill Wilks! opened the ball game with two driving layups in the first 30 sec- onds and the Maize and Blue five never recovered. BUT IT WAS Ebert, the versa- tile Buck center, who paced coach Floyd Stahl's, charges to a 22-10 lead at the quarter and eventually their seventh win in 18 conference starts. Ebert funnelled through sixj field goals in 13 attempts in the first stanza and added eight more markers in the next round for a 20-point total after 20 minutes. Hints He'd Talk 83 Spring Candidates Announced A total of 83 students have filed, candidacy petitions for 48 posts to be contested in the March 31- April 1 all-campus balloting, elec- tions committee chairman Phil I Berry, Grad., announced yester- day. Thirty-four of the candidates are running for 20 Student Leg- islature seats. 19 of which are full-term positions, one of which is single-term. * * ALTHOUGH THE present slate of SL aspirants represents a slight increase over last fall's list of 33 competitors for 23 posts, all-cam- pus candidacy statistics show a sharp drop. First of the training meetings for SL candidates has been sched- AL LOWENSTEIN LOOKS OV uled for 4:15 p.m. tomorrow at * the SL Bldg. Candidates for all 4 posts have been urged by Berry i caaemic Fr to attend SL's current Student Citizenship programs, third of which will be held tonight, ini o e P res order to acquaint themselves withe campus problems. Candidates listings. are as fol- In a double-feature program lows: presenting four notables in the STUDENT LEGISLATURE education field, Student Legisla- ' S~~ ture will hold the third in its -Daily-Frank Barger JAMES RESTON ... views the news four years from now American troops will not be in the Korean front lines. "But," he said, "our boys will never come home." He referred to American military establishments "which must and will be kept in both Western Eu-' rope and in the Pacific." RESTON laid bare the "com- mon illusion" that the Russians are clever diplomats. "Never has a government thrown away so much good will as the Russians have since 1945," he claimed. "If the Russians are clever diplomats," the former sportswriter joked, "then I am Bennie Oosterbaan." Switching from foreign policy to comment on the state depart- ment officials whose loyalty hasI recently been under fire, RestonI said, "If we go on attacking civil servants because they have made the wrong predictions or because they have disagreed with the gov- ernment's foreign policy, such men will be afraid to give back any re- port other than that which suits the present government." Malenkov Pledges Peace; With Ike Larry Bachman. '54Ed;: Lorraine Baldwin, '55; Hank Berliner, '56; Kenneth Bronson, '55, Bob Chig- rinsky, '55; Joan Cooper, '55; His twelve points in the second David Davidson, '54; Bob Ely, 54E; half gave him a total of 14 field Carol Lee Frankensteen, '55; Ricky goals in 31 attempts and 475 points Gilman; Fritz Glover, '55. in 22 games. Keith Gordon; Vic Hampton, '54BAd; Dieter Hanauer, '55; The Wolverines were stone cold Larry Harris, '56: Fred Hicks, from the floor and off the boards 'r4; Mare Jacomson, '55; Phil throughout the first half. Jacobus, '55; Maryalice Jessup, See MICHIGAN, Page 3 '54; Sue Klame,'55; Barry Knoll, '56; Dolores LaFond, '54Ed.; Dominique Loenstein, '56. VS F S e Bob Neary, '54BAd; Janet Net- zer, '54; Herman Raju, '55BAd; Rosemary Rehm, '54; Ruth Ross- ner, '55; Dick Roth, '54; Ethel Schechtman, '55; Ned Simon, '55; I A general meeting for all stu- Richard Spero, '54; Al Strauss, '53; dents interested in working on the Imre Zwiebel, '54E. b~mnt hrnh f Wnrr fid rlt d1*1,* FAR EASTERN POLICY: CBS Reporter To Speak On Asian Problem Today campus rancn of ori OUaenL Service Fund will be held at 4:15 p.m. today at the Student Legis- lature Bldg. Purpose of the meeting is to es- tablish a committee of campus personnel to study the problems of foreign universities and to set a date for next year's all- campus WSSF fund drive. Cadillac Business Block Hit by Fire CADILLAC, Mich. - (P) - A $300,000 fire raked Cadillac's main business block last night, destroy- ing a building housing offices of three doctors and a restaurant and burning second-story apart- ments off buildings housing a jewelry store and a shoe store. It started at 7:15 p.m. and was not brought under control by Cadillac, Lake City and Traverse City firemen until 10:30 p.m. LITERARY COLLEGE SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS-Janet Netzer and Mike Scherer for president; Tom Dyckman, Mort Friedman and Bob Golten for vice-president; Dave Goldstick and Fred Hicks for treasurer; Betty Magyar and Bet- sy Smith for secretary. ENGINEERING COLLEGE SEN- IOR CLASS OFFICERS-Howard Nemerovski and Stephen Qua for president; John Munn running un- opposed for vice-president: George Gryka and Larry Reger for treas- urer; Henry Moravec running un- opposed for secretary. See SL, Page 6 SPA Meeting The Society for Peaceful Alter- natives will meet at 7:30 p.m. to- day in Rm. 3M of the Union. Election of officers will take place along with a discussion of the semester's activities. Student Citizenship series at 7:30 p.m. today in Auditorium B, Mason Hall. A talk on student rights and World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Sen. Taft (R- Ohio) said after a White House conference yesterday that chances appear good for making "substan- tial" changes in the Taft-Hartley labor law. * * * SEOUL-Allied Thunderjets spewed a fiery trail of destruc- tion along the Communist main supply route to the Western Korean Front yesterday and Sabre jets reported destroying three MIGs that tried to inter- fere. WASHINGTON - Chairman Velde (R-Ill.) said last night his House Un-American Activities Committee may investigate alleged communist influences in churches -but probably not this year. RANGOON, Burma-The Unit- ed States is putting strong pres- sure on Chiang Kai-shek to order the surrender of an estimated 12,000 Chinese Nationalist guer- rillas reported fighting the Bur- mese Army, reliable sources said yesterday. DETROIT - Former Governor Alex J. Groseback was reported critically ill last night of conges- tive heart failure. -uaiy-un Campbell ER MATERIAL FOR TONIGHT * P anted by SL responsibilities by Yale law stu- dent Al Lowenstein, former presi- dent of the National Student As- sociation, is the first billing. The second half of the program will be devoted to a panel discus- sion on academic freedom with Lowenstein, Prof. Preston Slosson of the history department, Prof. James K. Pollock of the political science department and vj.yiting Prof. Henry D. Aiken of the phil- osophy department. * * * WITH A LIST of presidencies and chairmanships to rival any student politico, Lowenstein is a qualified participant for both phases of the program. Starting out as an active mem- ber of the University of North Carolina's tri-partite student government, the 24-year-old law student in 1947 served as presi- dent of the Encampment for Citizenship, a summer European travel program. Lowenstein became both na- tionally and internationally mind- ed as president of the National Student Association in 1950-51. The national chairmanship of Stu- dents for Stevenson is his latest political venture. « * ALL THIS HAS led Lowenstein to a point where he can talk ex- temporaneously on "student rights and responsibilities" forgetting neither philosophical foundations or widespread, vivid examples. Student government, to Low- enstein, is more than an extra- curricular activity, a "basic in- gredient of education in a de- mocracy." Like many democratic govern- ing bodies including NSA, student government faces a dual problem of apathetic citizenship and a lack of effectively outlined jurisdiction, Lowenstein felt. Television discussions with House investigator Rep. Harold H. Velde have given Lowenstein past experience on academic freedom panels. On the question of whether Congressional investigations of colleges are justifiable, Lowenstein has taken a negative stand. Not a single Communist has made his voice heard at NSA meet- ings, Lowenstein said, and from knowledge of most national cam- puses, he felt that "educational in- stitutions have not demonstrably been influenced by Communism." AA May Get Five New Supervisors A bill to increase Ann Arbor's Gives Eulogy At Stalin's Last Rites Dulles Sees New Hope for Peace By The Associated Press Premier Georgi Malenkov hint- ed yesterday in a peace plea spiked with a warning of Soviet prepared- ness that he would view favorably a meeting with President Eisen- hower. Malenkov said it was his "sac- red duty to continue Stalin's peace policy." As the late Premier Joseph Sta- lin was reported to be in favor of meeting with Eisenhower, Malen- kov was assumed to hold the same view. * * * THE NEW Soviet premier's first public address was the main ora- tion at the funeral services for the man whose place he took in a sweeping reorganization of the government Friday night. Malenkov spoke from atop the red and black granite mausoleum in Red Square where Stalin was placed at the side of Nikolas Lenin after the soleum and im- pressive funeral rites. With the stately Chopin funeral march, Stalin had been borne on a gun carriage in his red-draped coffin from the, Hall of Columns to a bier below t.,enin's tomb. Accompanied by the stompingof thousands of feet A the c stones in the 12-degree cold, Mal- enkov, Interior Minister L. P. Ber- ia and Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, in that order, pronounced eulogies. * * * AND AS Malenkov was an- nouncing his "policy for the preservation and stabilization of peace," Secretary of State John Foster Dulles said in New York yesterday the removal of the "ma- lignant power of Stalin" has given the world a better chance for peace. Answering quetions at his first conference here since becoming secretary of state, Dulles said Sta- lin's desire to be a world-wide despot put a damper on peace as- pirations of peoples and nations. Dulles also said the U. S. gov- ernment does not at present plan any new tactics or strategy in the cold war. Piano Concert To Be Given By Rubinstein Distinguished pianist Artur Rubinstein will appear in the ninth Choral Union concert at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Hill Audi- torium. Presented to the Concert So- ciety of Paris by famed composer Saint-Saens, Rubinstein was guid- ed in his studies by such other musicians as composers Claude Debussy, Maurice Ravel and pian- ist Paderewski. OUTSTANDING composers have dedicated compositions to the bril- liant pianist: Igor Stravinsky, Serge Prokofieff, Darius Milhaud, Manuel Ponce, Heitor Villa-Lobos and John Alden Carpenter. Rubinstein began studying piano at three in Warsaw. At 11 he made his formal debut in Berlin. Five years later after success in Europe, the pianist came to America. Since then he has travelled more than two million miles to play in Inearly every country in the world. Tickets for the concert will be on sale from 9 to 11:45 a.m. and from 1 to 4:45 p.m. this week at the University Musical Society of- William Costello, Far Eastern News Bureau Chief for the Colum- bia Broadcasting System, will speak on the Asian Problem at 4:15 p.m. today in Rackham Am- phitheater. Costello, who has spent fifteen years reporting and analyzing the Asian problem, just returned from Korea and other Far Eastern trou- ble areas. Four years ago he was assigned to Tokyo as CBS's News Bureau Chief. During undergraduate work at the University of Minnesota, Cos- tello worked on the Minnesota Journal and Tribune and after graduation became city editor of the Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Later he was promoted to editorial writ- er and director for the paper's CBS station. In 1940, Costello traveled in the Far East and returned to be farm service director for CBS's Chicago radio station. Continuing in radio, Costello joined the Air Edition of the Chicago Sun in 1942 and then became a member of the CBS news staff. The lecture, open to the public, will be followed by an informal coffee hour in Rm. 1443 Mason Hall. FIFTH ANNIVERSA RY: Masaryk Death Shrouded in Mystery By CRAWFORD YOUNG Daily Managing Editor "A good patriot and a friend of our people, a man who just a few days ago said that he was going on by the side of the people, has voluntarily put an end to his life." This announcement of Jan Masaryk's death, made five years ago today to the Czech Parliament by Communist police boss Vaclav Nosek created one of history's darkest enigmas. Was it suicide or murder? Documentary details of what took place in Prague's chill dawn of March 10, 1948 have remained obscured behind the Iron Curtain. * * * * HOWEVER, some accounts have seeped out-lending strong cred- ence to the suspicion that Masaryk, a name that symbolized democracy and was therefore anathema to the new Red regime, was murdered. A" .n hn nr nnnf arln nr - nmai itc i t Pi-llY1 P 'f.}'..1, V diplomatic corps. He worked with Masaryk from 1939-1945 with the government-in-exile in London, teamed with him at several UN conferences after the war. Prof. Benes also was closely associated with Masaryk during the fateful period of December, 1947 and January, 1948, when the hand- writing was on the wall. * * * * TWO MAIN REASONS were cited by Prof. Banes in rejecting the official Communist explanation of "suicide." First, he pointed out that the details as reported by the Reds were highly unlikely. The bathroom window from which he al- legedly jumped, accoriling to Prof. Benes, is oblong and six feet above the floor. Why, he asked, would Masaryk choose the window which was unlikeliest for his purposes? * * . *. ..::::