0 SOVIET MASTER PLAN See Page 4 L Liltguau ~Iaitp La; Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXIII, No. 138 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 24. 1953 INCREASING CLOUDINESS SIX PAGES Convocation Honors Top 'U' Students Glennan To Talk At HillAssembly By GENE HARTWIG "This Age of Opportunity" will be the subject of the address by T. Keith Glennan, president of Case Institute of Technology, to the 640 students being honored in the 30th annual Honors Convoca- tion at 11 a.m. today in Hill Audi- torium. Among those receiving special recognition will be the 27 James B. Angell Scholars, students who have maintained an all-A record for the past two semesters. Students maintaining 3.5 grade point averages during the past two semesters and special awards win- S4 ners will also be honored in the program. ONE HUNDRED-TWENTY stu- dents in the under-graduate p schools are receiving special awards. Families and students who have been invited to the convo- cation have been asked to an afternoon tea at the home of University President Harlan Hatcher. Students receiving honors will be excused from 10 a.m. classes. Other classes will be excused at 10:45 a.m. so that students may attend the convocation. PRESENTATION of honor stu- dents will be made by Dean of Students, Erich A. Walter. Presi- dent Hatcher will preside at the & convocation. Guest speaker Glennan is a former member of the Atomic Energy Commission and gradu- ated cum laude in electrical en- gineering from Sheffield Scien- tific School of Yale University in 1927. During the war the scientist was administrator of the United States Navy Underwater Sound Labora- tory at New London, Conn. He be- came fourth president of Case In- stitute of Technology in Cleve- land, Ohio, in 1947. Arrangements for the annual convocation are made by the Hon- ors Convocation Committee headed by Dean Walter and consisting of four other members of the faculty and administration. Announcement of the addition 14 of two student members to the committee was made yesterday by Dean Walter. Dinner Honors 'U' Employees A special service awards banquet honoring 113 University employees was given last night by the Board of Regents in the Union The dinner is an annual affair in observance of the tenth. 20th a 30th, 40th and in the case of J. George Lutz, Jr. 50th anniversary year of the employee's service to the nUiversity. President Harland H. Hatcher, Regent Roscoe O. Bonisteel, Sec- retary Herbert 0. Watkins and the Men's Glee Club took part in the program which Vice-president Wilbur K. Pierpont presided over.1 In tribute to the employees the following message was given: "The University expresses its gratiture to the veterans among its staff members and on this occasion pays tribute to them for their devoted and efficient service." Those honored for 40 years of service were: Bertha L. Beck, J. Herman Greve, Ella M. Hymans, Albert G. Mahlke, Mary A. Mc- Cullough, Katherine C. Murray, Edqard C. Pardon, Ruth A. Rouse and Edward J. Vandawarker. State Debate Test Held HereToday Eight top-ranking student de- baters representing four Michigan high schools will compete in the A and B Divisions of the 1952-53 state championships at 4 p.m. to- morrow in the Rackham Bldg. and Auditorium A, Angell Hall. Tn the A Divioinn Flint Nrth- Ike To Overhaul Key Postttons State, Defense Agencies To Face Efficiency Move, Budget Reduction WASHINGTON - A") - President Eisenhower is working on board-scale reorganization of the State and Defense Departments with a two-fold purpose. He seeks to tighten up their efficiency and to make them less costly. THE PRESIDENT told his weekly news conference he is confident the 46-billion dollar defense budget submitted by former President Truman for the fiscal year starting July 1 can be reduced. He said Particular WASHINGTON -- O')..ft's harder to become a Daughter of the American Revolution. Even having an ancestor who marched with George Washing- ton is no guarantee of DAR membership. These facts came out in a speech by two honorary presi- dent generals of the DAR this week. "In the old days," one said, "we used to accept evi- dence of ancestry we won't ac- cept now. Now we demand proof." "No one can simply join the DAR," the other announced. "She must not only be eligible, she must be desirable. We're getting more particular all the time," she added. he was not ready to estimate by Willens Set To Talky At Graduation Howard Willens, '53, was named by the Senior Board yesterday to represent the senior class as their speaker during Commencement ceremonies June 13. The naming of Willens culmi- nates several years effort by sen- ior classes to have a representative during commencement. In 1951, Chuck Murray, president of the class, was on hand to present a senior class gift to retiring Uni- versity President Alexander G. Ruthven. JACK FLYNN, '53A, chairman of the Senior Board, said details as to what part of the program Willens will appear in are now be- ing worked out. He said Willens was selected from about 15 stu- dents nominated by the Board for the honor. The Commencement Committee gave its official ap- proval to the student speaker three weeks ago. In other Board action, an elaborate entertainment pro- gram was set up for seniors dur. See PROFILE, Page 6 how much, however. Plans for streamlining the [ rgiT fJ x- State and Defense Departments P were outlined at a White House breakfast conference with Con-gls gressional leaders prior to the To BGiven session with newsmen. Sen. Robert A. Taft (R-O) af ter hearing the plans for reor- o ents ganizing the Defense Department said, "Broadly speaking, it would substitute individuals for certain By ERIC VETTER boards, effect a greater efficiency Plans for a University television and cut down on personnel." broadcasting channel will go be- Eh fore the Board of Regents today ONE OF THE boards that may with indications pointing to fa- be abolished, Taft said, is the Mu- vorable reception on the part of nitions Board, which is in chargeteoardp of the Government's program of the Boasd. stockpiling strategic materials. If approved by the Regents, the suockpiggst cag e iUniversity will receive the go' Suggestedchae ncude these ahead in applying for channel 26 bateepartmentinde eseon the ultra-high-frequency ban possibilities Taft said: set aside for Ann Arbor by the 1-Taking the Voice of America Federal Communications Commis- and information programs out of sion. The UHF channel is reserved the department and setting them for educational instittitions or oth- up as an independent agency. er groups for non-commercial use. 2-Transferring the Point Four program of providing technical IF THE REGENTS do not act skill to underdeveloped areas of today they will have until their the world to the Mutual Security May meeting to pick up the Uni- Agency. versity channel option which ex- The President also declared pires on June 2. Other groups may himself in favor of some Ameri- submit bids to the FCC for the can participation in a St. Law- channel if the University does not rence Seaway project. meet the June 2 deadline. He said he received a report from the National Security Coun- cil which expressed the opinion it would be advantagious to national security for the United States to take part in some way in con- struction of the project along the St., Lawrence River. In addition he said he is not necessarily against any change in the Reciprocal Trade Act but feels that a simple one-year extension beyond June 12 would be the best move at this time, pending fur- ther study of the situation. World News Roundup j i ing the time lag between final exams and commencement. The lag was created when plans to Iofficially graduate seniors at commencement caused final exams to be moved up and sen- iors to complete their exams earlier then usual. Included in the week-long pro- gram are projects which Flynn said "will take up nearly all the seniors time." A movie in the ar- boretum, a dance on the diag- onal, parties and more dances are included in the plans. * * * THE BOARD ALSO announced that the senior class project of a bronze University seal was cast yesterday and is slated to be placed in the diag during the first week in May. '.The seal is about four feet wide and will take the place of the one removed from the diag during resurfacing last summer. Committee Heads Named for J-Hop Bob Dombrowski, '55, was named as chairman of the 1954 J-Hop committee and Jay Martin, '55, was named to head the publicity for the dance yesterday. Other chairman are Nancy Ste- vens, '55 booths, Donna Hoffman, '55 building and grounds, Red Johnson, '55, fiinance, Betsy Sher- rer, '55, decorations, Pete David- son, '55, music, Dorothy Fink, '55, tickets and Mary Sue Shoop, '558M, programs and patrons. By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-The UN Assembly recessed indefinitely Thursday after calling overwhelm- ingly for an impartial investiga- tion of Red germ warfare charges and unanimously urged joint ac-' tion to get 12,000 Chinese guerril- las out of Burma. WASHINGTON-Fred M. Al- ger Jr., prominent Michigan Re- publican leader, is expected soon to be nominated as ambassador to Belgium by President Eisen- hower, administration sources said yesterday. . Alger, former Michigan secre- tary of state and unsuccessful GOP candidate for Governor last November, would succeed Myron Cowan, who was named envoy to Brussels by President Truman. DETROIT-Thousands were left stranded in Detroit and its sub- urbs yesterday by a walkout of maintenance workers of the Great Lakes Greyhound Bus Line. HANOI, Indochina - French Union forces yesterday stopped cold a rebel Vietminh invasion spearhead driving south toward the Laos kingdom's royal capital at Luangprabang. The findings of a special com- mission set up by the adminis- tration to study the problem will be presented to the Regents in addition to the recommendation that the Regents approve the channel option. The UHF channel differs from regular television which is on very- high frequency ban. Television sets presently in operation will be able to pick up the UHF programs by the addition of a special adap- ter to the set. Sets now being built include the UHF adapter. WPAG-TV AnnArbor commer- cial station, also is on the UHF ban. ** * SERVING ON the special 35- man special committee on Tele- vision Development were members of all the schools and colleges, the University broadcasting service, the extension service and the ad- ministration. Dean Earl V. Moore of the Schdol of Music headed an 11- man sub-committee of the group which sifted information and suggestions to present to the Re- gents., Actual operation of the chan- nel will not begin until an esti- mated $200,000 transmitter ca- pable of sending programs to De- troit is constructed. Emphasis will be on educational shows but special features and sports events will be included to give a bal- anced production. University ad- ministrators said development and expansion of the program will proceed slowly at first. Positions Open On Steering Board Petitioning is now open to all literary college students for po- sitions on the Literary College Steering Committee. Petitions may be picked up in Rm. 1010 Angell Hall and must be turned in by Friday, May 8. House Votes To Abandon Rent Control Compromise Bill Goes To Senate WASHINGTON - (P) - The House voted yesterday to kill near- ly all federal rent controls on Jul 31. The bill now goes to the Senate where its fate is uncertain The bill, a last-minute compo- mise between the Eisenhower ad- ministration and House Republi- can leaders, was approved by a standing vote of 187 to 66. * ..PROTECTED BY rent ceiling under the law are some five mil- lion housing units in 32 states. All rent control will die at midnight Thursday unless an extension is passed by Congress and signed by the President be- fore then. The Senate, however, is in de- bate over offshore lands legisla- tion and just when it will get around to rent controls is very un- certain. * * * THE HOUSE bill would continue controls until April 30, 1954, or about 600,000 units in the most critical military housing areas. The others would end on July 31 of this year. President Eisenhower has ask- ed for an extension to Oct. 1, to give local governments time to replace federal ceilings with lo- cal controls if they wish. Democrats chided Republicans for not supporting a White House request to extend controls to Oct 1, but Majority Leader Charles Halleck (R-Ind.) assured the House the July 31 date would be agreeable with President Eisen- hower. * *#* THE EISENHOWER Adminis- tration originally had proposed an extension of general rent controls to Oct. 1. Led by Chairman Jesse Wolcott (R-Mich.), the House Banking Committee last week ap- proved a bill to kill Federal ceil- ings April 30 except in critical housing areas.; Wolcott has agreed to the compromise July 31 date, Hal- leck reported late Wednesday. Rep. Spence (D-Ky.), senior Democrat on the Banking Com- mittee, indicated many Demo- crats would go along. Federal ceilings also are in ef- fect on about 1,300,000 additional units in areas designed as having a critical housing shortage be- cause of defense installations. Tau Beta Pi Welcomes 34 New Initiales "Modern society looks to science and engineering for the solution to more and more of its problems, from unraveling traffic snarls to providing methods for the com- mon defense in an age of push- button weapons and nuclear war- fare," C. J. Huebner, Jr, a De- troit automobile executive said last night: Speaking before the initiation banquet of Tau Beta Pi, engineer- ing honor society at 6:30 p.m. in the Union, Huebner stressed tech- nical know-how and a regard for human relations as essential in handling the complex problems of today. IN ADDITION to the 34 new ini- tiates from the engineering col- lege, four executives who have dis- tinguished themselves in the field of engineering were given honor- ary memberships. The four were Herbert A. Browne, James II. Campbell, William Deans and William H. Graves. The 35 initiates accepted into Tau Beta Pi last night were: Les- ter Arquette, '53E, Charles Averill, '53E, David Ayers, '54E, Richard Balzhiser, '54E, Harry Butler, '53E, James Cline, '53E, and Paul Cole- man, '53E. Others initiated were Harry Criel, '53E, George Davidson, '53E, Francis Dawson, '54E, Donald Firth, '53E, Ka Lun Fogg, '53E, Paul Friedmann, '53, R y :, s t Y t f a More Korean Soldiers, Ask -Daily-Don Campbell TIME OUT-Little inducement was needed yesterday for students to take time out to enjoy the balmy spring weather. Here two coeds bask in the 70 degree sun in front of Angell Hall. The outlook for today is for continued warm weather but rain is expected to arrive by evening. B aseb ll u d first to be scheduled since Oct. 8 chn saa when the Allied delegation walked out of the meeting with a state- s ment they would return only when F hio t te Todthe Communists were prepared to FehSedaccept the United Nations' propo- By DAVE LIVINGSTON sal on voluntary repatriation of Coach Ray Fisher's Michigan nine plunges headlong into the job prisoners or submit something sub- of defending its Big Ten title this weekend. stantial of their own. The Wolverines, with a 4-4 reocrd thus far this season, open con- THE;,ARGEST group of Amern- ference action against Ohio State in Columbus this afternoon, and cans to be liberated in one day- then move to Champaign tomorrow for a double-header with power- going through this ful Illinois, co-champions with Michigan last year. front-line processing center yes- * * * terday. BOTH THE BUCKEYES and Illini are rated strong title-contend-' Meanwhile, three American ers with hurling strength the forte in both baseball camps. destroyers and a cruiser came At Columbus today the Maize and Blue diamond crew will face under heavy Communist shore ___ _ _big Paul Ebert, the Buckeye fire at Wonsan Thursday while l mound star who turned his blaz- trying to remove wounded from Uni} n Council ing fastball into seven victories an Allied-held island, the Navy without a defeat as a sophomore reported yesterday. Posts Filled last year. The Navy said carrier-based * * ; Panther jets came to the aid of THE BIGGEST threat at the the ships. Bombs from the planes Announcement of the appoint- plate for Jack Ritter, who is slated and counterfire from the ships si- ment of nine councilmen to fill to pitch for the Wolverines, figures lenced the Red guns, the Navy posts on the Union Executive to be Jack Gannon, Ohio catcher said. Council for next year was made who pounded the ball at a .409 clip x C to rank third in last year's confer- It was the first time in many last night by Union President Jay ence hitting department. months that more than one Amer- Strickler, '54. 1 ican warship had come under Those appointed to positions on Fisher plans to use Jack Cor- Communist shore fire at the same the recently organized executive bett and Marv Wismewski or time. council include Tom Leopold, '55, Dick Yirkoski on the mound There were no reports of- social; Stan Bohrer, '55, public re- against the Illini in tomorrow's whether the ships were .dam- lations; John Munn, '54E, student twin-bill. Illinois mentor Lee aged. services; and Dick Pinkerton, '55, Eilzracht will counter with his Ground fighting was at a mini- secretariat. pair of aces, Clive Follmer and mum but in the air, U.S. Sabre Other council appointments in- Gerry Smith, in an attempt to jets probably destroyed one Com- Ohlude Dave Smith, 56, house; Bert turn the tables on a Michigan munist MIG and damaged two Shapero, '55, publicity. See WOLVERINE, Page 3 more over Northwest Korea. HIGH POINT OF YEAR: Busboys I I1 Truce Talk Delay Like Action Planned by AlliedHeads Reds Attack U.S. ShipsYesterday By The Associated Press The Allies yesterday said thanks to the Reds for agreeing to return more sick and wounded prisoners than pledged originally and an- nounced the UN command would do likewise. That meant that more disabled captives would be returned to both sides than the 605 Allies and 5,800 Communists promised in the his- toric *Korean War exchange agree- ment. THE ALLIES stressed that in accord with Geneva Convention principles, the exchange of dis- abled prisoners should continue. At the same time, the Reds asked a one-day postponement until Saturday for the resump- tion of full armistice negotia- tions. No immediate reason was given by the Communists for their re- quest. The plenary session was the Reds Agree To Return I L ~ Student Representation Re-emphasize Expanded in SL Drive Strike Threat l IFC, PANHEL: Students Work on Fresh Air Camp One of Student Legislature's four constitutional functions - to appoint students to University committees - has been given a significantly expanded interpreta- tion by the current Legislature. The new SL theory goes beyond the past practice of merely filling existing student posts and creates additional student positions where they are warranted. WITH 100-ODD groups to work from, SL's Campus Action and Culture and Education commit- tees have this semester advanced their cause of student representa- tion on five University committees and have working members seated on two. SHE CITED as particularly im- portant the new faculty-student' liason committee with the Uni- versity Senate. Besides bettering faculty-stu- dent relations, the now-function- ing liaison group will Serve as a "means of getting faculty opinions and information," Miss Marks pointed out. She conjectured that students would probably have known about this semester's final exam schedule change sooner than they did had the committee been in operation. Other than the liaison body. SL has put working student represen- tatives on the UndergradIuate Ad- visory Committee of the educa- West Quad busboys last night reiterated their intentions of walk- ing off their jobs Monday unless their demands for increased pay and better working conditions are met. 'John Curry, '53NR, spokesman for the busboys, said he will try to arrange a meeting with Leon- ard A. Schaadt, residence halls business manager, for Monday aft- ernoon. Curry plans to ask Schaadt for a pay increase to one dollar an hour. The busboys are now making 80 and 85 cents an hour. At. a meeting earlier in the week, Schaadt told Curry a pay raise was being considered for next semester. Curry also said that 70 busboys out of the total 84 will difinitely walk out next Monday if their de- By ALICE BOGDONOFF The University Fresh Air Camp will take on a new spring look by the end of this weekend under the guidance of the Junior Interfra- ternity Council and the Junior Today a group of 80 will spend the afternoon painting the main lodge, digging post holes and cleaning up more of the camp. Getting an early start Saturday, 150 energetic students will leave sorority and fraternity pledges members since last fall. Originally organized as a vaca- tion' opportunity for underprivi- leged boys from Michigan, the camn took on sociological func-