a At, It POLITICS IN A BUREAU See Page 4 CWE Latest Deadline in the State Da11331] CLOUDY WITH RAIN I VOL. LXIII, No. 141 18 Believed rLiving in GI Plane Crash L Mountain Rescu4 Work Continues SEATTLE-(P)-A chartered as liner loaded with serviceme crashed into the snow covere Cascade Mountains before daw yesterday, killing four persons, bu rescuers fought desperately i1 hours later trying to free some o: the 18 reported survivors from th wreckage. Ten of the survivors have bee rescued. Others are believed si pinned in the wrecked fuselag o: the twin-engined DC3. Eightho the rescues were effected by heli copter and two survivors walke out. * * * COLD AND darkness hampere the rescue workers. The tempera ture is expected to drop belo freezing at the crash site durin the night. Three of the rescues were ef- 1 fected by helicopter as men and machines were pitted against the deep slopes of the mountains, the trees and the snow. Shivering and pain-wracked oc cupants of the plane who rode ou its plunge through hundreds o yards of trees waited about smal fires built near the wreck scen or curled up im sleeping bags drop ped from the air. Crews, including doctors fro McChord Air Force Base and ex perienced mountain rescue work ers, are with the bruised an broken men who were en route t Seattle aboard the Miami Air line plane which crashed 40 mile southeast of Seattle. Comdr. Robert T. Norris. a Coas Guard officer at search headquar ters in the little town of Selleck said the number of known sun- vivors had been reduced from ar earlier count of 19 on the basi of reports from helicopter pilots The plane carried 22 soldiers be lieved bound for Korea after fur loughs at home. He said ft had been establishe definitely that the pilot and co pilot were killed in the smashe nose of the plane, which appar ently hit the earth after a heav growth of towering trees prove a cushion for the crash. Bill for New Judge Raises Controversy Heated controversy arose yes- terday among local lawyers con cerning a State Senate bill po- posing the election of a second circuit judge for Washtenaw Coun ty. The announcement, which was made at an informal meeting of the County Bar Association, came as a surprise to many of the men who expressed diverse sentiments concerning the alleged need for judicial assistance by present Judge James R. Breakey. Judge Breakey, who was un- available for comment, reportedly denied the need for assistance. PROPOSED IN the Senate by State Sen. George Higgins (n,- Ann Arbor) the bill is scheduled t to go before the House of Repre- sentatives sometime next week. If passed, it will provide Washtenaw County with two circuit judges in place of the present one man set- up. William DeHann, Ypsilanti attorney, in leading the opposi- tion to the bill labeled it a "sneak attack" on the county judiciary system. Claiming that an attempt was made to "rail-road the bill through," DeHann said, "although there is a "possibility that a a sec- ond judge may be needed in The future, the Washtenaw County docket at the present time is not behind." He continued the main objection of the Bar Association was the way the situation was handled. He said, "The bili passed the Senate with no notice to the Board of Super- visors, the Bar Association, or Judge Breakey."j IN UPHOLDING the bill, Attor- nev TTihurt Thomnnn mnintains ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1953 MIX PA -7A lGES Wolverines Face Irish NineToday Ritter 'M' Hurler in Home Opener; Fisher Places Cline in Right Field By PAUL GREENBERG Notre Dame's high-flying baseball squad invades Ann Arbor today to do battle with Ray Fisher's disappointing Wolverines as they open their 1953 regular season slate. The contest is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. at the Ferry Field ball park. Michigan didn't turn in too impressive a performance on its southern swing, winning three and dropping the same number, but Fisher hopes his club will be in top form by the time the Western -,Conference season gets underway. Glennan Talk To Highlight 'd 1Convocation T. Keith Glennan, president of g Case Institute of Technology and former member of the Atomic En- ergy Commission, will speak on "This Age of Opportunity" at the Honors Convocation to be held at 11 a.m., April 24. These honored it the convoca- f tion will include the James B. I Angell Scholars, students who e have maintained an all-A average - for their past two semesters at the University. - ALSO HONORED will be those students who have maintained a d scholastic average of 3.5 for the A past two semesters. In addition, there will be two s special awards made, the Wendy Owen Memorial Award for edi- t torial writing, and the Oreon E. Scott Award in humanities, social sciences, the sciences, medicine, and law. s Relatives and friends of those being honored will be present at - the convocation, which is open to - the public. Students receiving honors will be Sexcused from 10 a.m. classes. Other - classes will be excused 'at 10:45 d a.m. to attend the convocation. y . d THE GUEST speaker was grad- uated cum laude in electrical en- gineering from Sheffield Scien- tific School of Yale University in 1927. Following graduation, he worked with an electrical researchI company in the installation of sound equipment in theaters. From 1934 to 1942, he held top positions in three Hollywood movie studios. In 1942, Glennan became Ad- ministrator of the United States Navy Underwater Sound Labora- tory at New London, Conn. The laboratory, of which he later be- came director, was part of the war research of the University of Col- umbia. After holding an executive posi- tion with a film corporation inI June 1945, Glennan became thei fourth president of Case Institute, of Technology in 1947. In addition to this position, he is director of a1 savings company and trustee ofI the Cleveland Clinic Foundation. President Truman appointed the scientist to the Atomic Energyi Commission in August 1950, at position from which he resigned in November, 1952. Glennan holds honorary degrees of Doctor of Science from Clark- son College of Technology and from Oberlin College. He received- a Doctor of Engineering degree from Stevens Institute of Tech- nology. Engineering Group Sets Petition Close Petitions for positions on thea Engineering Steering Committeec are due Tuesday.a According to Thad Epps, '53E, o they can be filed at the Honor Council bulletin board in the lob- by of West Engineering Bldg. or can be given to any member oft the committee. Information regarding petition- ing has been posted on the bulletin board. '1 THE IRISH of mentor Jake Kline swept four straight contests in the South and beat Indiana upon their return to South Bend. BILL MOGK ... Wolverine Captain * * * Outfielders Roger Braun and Joe Ridge and Shortstop Hal Reilly paced the squad in the hitting de- partment. Braun slammed out 11 hits to post a .523 average while driv- ing in 12 runs. Reilly hit .428 and Captain Ridge batted an impressive .375.1 Tomorrow, Kline plans to start his number two hurler, righthand- er Jim Gibbons. Rated only be- hind fastballer Stan Kanopka, the 6-2 Gibbons pitched six innings of shutout ball against Arkansas state to get credit for the Irish victory. * * * FOR MICHIGAN, it will again be Jack Ritter toeing the slab in an inaugural performance. South- paw Ritter opened the Wolverines southern jaunt with a well-pitched 6-3 win over Delaware. Fisher intends to stick with the same lineup that he went with in the South and most of last season, except for the in- sertion of stocky Dan Cline, left handed hitting outfielder. Cline will hold down the right field spot and bat sixth. The Brockport, New York sophomore hit .400 while seeing limited ac- tion on the southern swing. The Wolverines own a sizeable 43-17 lifetime bulge over the Irish. Last year Jack Corbett stopped them with five hits to earn a 3-0 verdict. Today's contest is one of a two game series, Michigan jour- neying to South Bend on May 14 to play them in their own ballyard. * * * THE GAME with Notre Dame opens a week of intensive action for the Wolverines. Tomorrow they journey into Detroit to meet Wayne University and on Friday See FOUR, Page 3 Ho-Hum SALT LAKE CITY - (') - Do you feel that just waking up is a real physical shock. Science finds you may be right. The evidence comes from a brilliant new method of meas- uring the amount of potent hormones turned out by the adrenal glands. It finds these glands put out a surge of hormones when peo- ple wake up to face a new day. It isn't yet proved that just waking up is a stress that kicks up hormones. There may be some other reason for the higher level of hormones when thealarm clock goes off or you naturally come awake. A li-Camipus Study May116 End Today By VIRGINIA VOSS A marathon, four-month study of the campus organizational pic- ture by a 30-member committee may be culminated today with a proposal to reorganize the com- plex student governmental struc- ture. In what is intended as the last meeting of the Student Committee to Study Campus Organizations, two alternative answers to dis- satisfaction with the present or- ganizational set-up will be brought up for final committee considera- tion. BUT A positive decision on the reorganization question need not come from today's meeting, ac- cording to group chairman Bill McIntyre, Grad. Neither of the plans, he said, has been worked over to the satisfaction of a ma- jority of the members. Committee action may come in the form of tentative approval of one or the other proposal with recommended further study or a motion to make a purely factual report to the Student Legisla- ture on the plans considered and the jurisdictional conflicts found in the group's study. Set up in November, the organ- ization committee consists of Stu- dent Legislature-appointed per- sonnel from SL, the League, The Daily, the Union, the Interfra- ternity Council, Panhellenic, As- sembly, Inter-House Council, and Joint Judiciary as well as repre- sentatives from the campus at large. Originally scheduled to give a comprehensive summary of its findings to SL March 4, the com- mittee a week later presented a progress report outlining four possible organization alterna- tives and resumed its study. Two of the possibilities were those which will be considered by the group at 3:15 p.m. today in the SL Bldg. They are: an admin- istrative council consisting or or- ganizational vice-executives sitting in an advisory capacity to SL end a student congress plan which would place both organizational and directly elected representa- tives on a new type of legislature. Other alternatives included re- tention of the status quo and a bi- cameral legislature with one house directly elected an the other com- posed of organizational represen- tatives. The latter has since been rejected. Pow Despit IHC Votes To Establish JudicialUnit To Hear Election Infringements At a special meeting of the In- ter-House Council yesterday, a mo- tion was unanimously passed to set up a six man judiciary body to. rule on violations of residence hall election rules in the recent all-campus elections and on fu- ture violations. The action followed charges in the individual quadrangle coun- cils that three students had brok- en house electioneering rules. The house councils had recommend- ed that the IHC take judicial ac- tion on the violations. The three students accused of violations were Al Strauss, Grad., Student Legislature candidate, Bob Perry, '53, Union vice-presi- dent candidate and Fred Hicks, '54, candidate for SL and senio class treasurer. Strauss, who is not a quad resident, and Perry, a resident of East Quad who was accused of the same violation last fall, were named for "door to door" soliciting and slipping campaign literature under quad room doors respectively. Hicks, who lives in East Quad admitted to members of the East. Quad Council that he had put campaign literature in the wash- rooms of several of thehouses. The action of the IHC judiciary board, which will be composed of the two senior members from each of the three quad judiciaries, will be binding on quad residents who violate the election rules. In the case of violators living outside of the residence halls, disciplinary recommendations will be made by the judiciary either to Dean of Men Walter B. Rea or to men's Judiciary. In other action at the IHC meet- ing, the first draft of the body's constitution was submitted to the individual houses for considera- tion. The group also decided to purchase a booth at the coming Interfraternity Council dance. Mackinac Ferry Service Sopped ST. IGNACE - (A) - All State ferry service across the Straits of Mackinac was cut off last night when the ferry Munising was forced by a lack of crewman to tie up at the dock here. The tie-up left more than 100 motorists stranded at St. Ignace and the southern terminus of the ferry system,. Mackinaw City. Meanwhile, Rep. Victor A. Knox (R-Mich) planned to fly to Lan- sing last night from Washington to help push the Straits of. Mack- inac Bridge Bill through the Leg- islature. ;eWeatherChange Daily-Frank Barger ANN CORDILL AND JEANNE DOERR SEARCH FOR TREASURE *** * Treasure Seekers Given New Clue; Continue Hunt An intensive search for the $100 treasure buried somewhere in Ann Arbor enters its third day today with a new clue added to the two hints of its location already revealed. Today's new information on the secret cache reads: "The traffic near my place of rest is loud and long and full of zest." TAKEN ALL together the versified hints run as follows: Convoy Not "I'm in the ground with about a foot to spare, nearby I hear the traffic blare "My round case, bright metal four inches by two, inside this case I wait for you "The traffic near my place of rest is loud and long and full of zest." Sponsored by a State St. drug- gist, the treasure hunt will result in a $100 cash prize for anyone lucky enough to trace down the lo- cation of the buried metal case. Inside the container is a $100 certificate which is redeemable in cash at the drug store. IN CASE no one finds the treas- ure hoard by Thursday, April 30, the exact spot will be divulged an'1 the contest ended. Meanwhile, a new clue will be published each day to provide fresh information for, searchers. Thus far several students have been seen, mostly in the State St. area, looking over the ground for possible signs of fresh digging. From the first clue some rea- soned the prize must be hidden near a main traffic artery. To- day's additional hint would bol- ster that idea. Since there are few burying spots in Ann Arbor's busi- ness district, the campus area has seemed a more likely hiding place to these treasure hunters. Seen C' - -~ - - --- - - Marital Series Ticket Sales Start Tuesday Tickets for the 15th annual Marriage Lecture Series will go on sale Tuesday, according to assistant dean of students, Ivan Assistant Dean of Students Ivan series. The series, which will consist of four lectures by three noted ex- perts in the field, will cover all aspects of marital relations. The lectures are open to all University students and student wives, and the cost for the series is $1.50. - ** * DR. EVELYN Duvall, past exec- utive secretary of the National Council for Family Relations, will address the first meeting, April 29. A frequent speaker at the series in past years, he is the author of the textbook "When You Marry." Dr. Allan C. Barnes, chairman of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Ohio State University hospital will be the speaker at the second and third lectures. He did part of his studying at the University and has addressed the series three times. The last speaker of the series will be Rev. Henry Hitt Cane, the pastor of the Central Methodist Church of Detroit. He is well known for his marriage counseling. The lectures are being sponsored jointly by the faculty and stu- dents. Student groups which are supporting the series are the League, Union, Student Legisla- ture, Student Religious Associa- tion and The Daily. Coi ty Planners To Hold Meeting Four subdivision plats will be considered by the Washtenaw County Planning Commission dur- ing its monthly meeting tonight Red Radio Announces Departure Unmarked Truck Procession Seen By the Associated Press Clouds lifted over North Korea shortly before noon today but United States warplanes reported no sign of convoys which the Reds say are bringing sick and wound- ed Allied prisoners south for an exchange at Panmunjom. Fifth Air Force said the pilota reported vehicles were spotted crawling along the convoy route but that none bore the red mark- ings the POW convoys were sup- posed to be using. A Peiping broadcast heard In San Francisco said all three con- voys left the prison camps at 6 a.m. yesterday, Chinese time, or2 p.m. Monday CST, and would reach Kaesong tomorrow. a *s THE COMMUNIST high com- mand notified the Allies of the exact route and point of departure of three Red convoys. But thee was no inkling of what nationali- ties were included. The Reds agreed to turn over 120 Americans, 20 Britons, 15 other non-Koreans and 445 South Kor- eans in groups of 10, oeginning Monday. The Fifth Air Force flew a watchful aerial guard of honor over the winding "freedom road" route to make certain that none of the covoys was attacked by Allied warplane. The three convoys were due to reach the Communist armistice base town of Kaesong tomorrow after an overnight stop near the Red Korean capital of Pyongyang. MEANTIME, Allied officers speeded plans and set up some facilities to handle an overall ex- change of prisoners after an ar mistice-if and when true talks are resumed and an agreement is reached. At Cheju Island, where Chi- nese war prisoners are held off Southern Korea, about 700 sick and wounded were loaded yes- terday on Allied landing ships on the first leg of their journey home. Although Red Chinese prisoners of war staged a sitdown strike aboard the ship, they moved off the ship when United States sol- diers armed with bayoneted rifles went aboard. High speed Sabre jets-used for the first time as fighterbombers -devastated a big Communist troop concentration area in West- ern Korea yesterday blasting 21. buildingsandsleaving huge fires. The pounding handed the base at Chongdan was one of a num- ber of furious air blows dealt de- spite the imminence of the first prisoner of war exchange. World News Roundup By the Associated Press WASHINGTON-President Eis- enhower yesterday asked Congress to denationalize the government's 550 million dollar synthetic rub- ber industry by authorizing the sale of the plants to private en- terprise. The President's recommenda- tion, in a special message to Con- gress, marked another move to- ward restoring the nation to a free-wheeling economy. WASHINGTON-A former gov- ernment economist, who got a high recommendation from former Sec- retary of State Acheson in 1947, refused yesterday to say whether he was a Communist then or at islature. ADIEU LA VIE EN FISHBOWL: University Bows to Professor's Pleas for Sanctity By GAYLE GREENE The University is taking steps to replace the clear glass sections in the doors of Haven Hall with opaque glass on behalf of the profes- sors who have complained of office life in a "fishbowl." After experimenting with opaque paint and finding it undesir- able because "it wears off too quickly," Walter M. Roth, superintendent of the plant department, sent for samples of frosted glass. Roth has already submitted one sample to Prof. Burton D. Thuma, associate dean of the literary college. * * * * AS SOON AS all the samples are received, Dean Thuma will meet with the heads of the several departments housed in Haven Hall and the best and most practical glass will be chosen. Both degree of transparency and price will be a consideration, The re-lettering of the glass itself could amount to a great ex- pense, the dean warned. Meanwhile, the members of the faculty wondered why the glass hoa hPan lf Panzfarl of - sfrl - - ; - ;, L_;.. - -PP;--- ,,.., *. * * * IN f . . . . . {~