THE CASE FOR A FILM COURSE See Page 4 Y 1Mwrioa~ D.a11 0 ' f'4 ,.., } i k Latest Deadline in the State SCATTERED SHOWERS VOL. LXIII, No. 144 'M' Engages Gopher Nine Here Today Faces Hawkeyes Twice Tomorrow Currently resting on top of the 1 Big Ten standings, the Wolverine baseball team will attempt to re- tain its lofty position when it takes on the Minnesota Gophers in a single game today and the Hawk- eyes of Iowa in a double-header to- morrow at Ferry Field. The Wolverine diamondmen will be gunning for their fourth straight conference win when they take the field at 3:30 p.m. today for the first of the week-end tilts., * * * COACH RAY Fisher's decision as to who will do the hurling for the home squad will not be definitely decided until sometime today. Poor weather this spring has limited practice to such an extent that many of the Wolverine pitchers have not been able to get in the necessary work to round them into playing condition. t Consequently, Fisher's last minute decision will probably be based on yesterday's practice ses- sion and on who will be the Min- nesota chukker. Although Fisher had previously assumed that Paul Giel, Minne- sota star fast-baller, would be op- posing his squad, he now has rea- son to believe that Dick Siebert, Gopher coach, might save his ace for the Michigan State tilt tomor- row. Taking no chances, however, Fisher has had his hurlers pitch- ing during practices this week from a rubber that was moved up sev- eral feet. The idea of moving up the pitching distance in order to accustom the hitters to Giel's ex- ceptional speed came to him last week-end while the Wolverines were down in Illinois. * * * BRUCE HAYNAM, who has been bothered by a pulled muscle for a couple of weeks, will probably re- turn to the line-up after missing the game with the University of Detroit squad earlier this week. The hustling shortstop, play. ing under the strain of his in- jured limb, nevertheless turned in a remarkable performance last week-end at Ohio State and Il- linois. ! Even with "Brewster" back In the line-up, the Gophers will be no soft touch. Besides the highly- touted Giel, Siebert has six other lettermen back from last year's squad. Included among them is Captain John Wallfred, left-field- er, and shortstop Gerry Cloutier. LAST SEASON, Giel was one of three undefeated five-game win- ners in the Big Ten. The Minne- sota hurler pitched 43 innings and allowed only two earned runs. He struck out 43 hitters, an average See DIAMOND, Page 6 Union Needs Student Help For 'U' Day Union officials yesterday sent out an urgent plea for additional guides to help entertain the 1,400 high school students here for Uni- versity Day program tomorrow. University students who want to be guides may sign up from 3 to 5 p.m. today in the Union Stu- dent Officers. Tomorrow's program, set to get under way at 9:30 a.m. in the Rackham Auditorium, will include talks by University President Har- lan H. Hatcher, Director of Admis- sions Clyde Vroman, Dean James H. Robertson of the literary col- lege and Union President Jay Strickler, '54. Following the talks, smaller groups will go on guided tours through the campus and Univers- ity buildings. have lunch at frater- nities, sororities and residence halls and attend open houses at various schools to receive informa- tion on admission requirements. Steering Positions Open to Students ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 195i EIGHT PAGES U . ... ~uQuadiudic Gets Board Approval Non-Resident Violators Excluded From Residence Hall Jurisdiction By BOB JAFFE and ERIC VETTER The final stamp of approval to a quad judiciary system was given by the Residence Halls Board of Governors yesterday. As approved by the Board, the setup empowers house and quad judiciaries to mete out punishment and discipline to residents, but does not give them jurisdiction over non-residents who violate quad rules. U' Alumni Deny Charge _Sen ower To by Slash * * * * THE SPRING all-campus elections spotlighted the need for clari- fication on the latter point when house election rules were violated by a non-resident. The jurisdictional problem also arose this fall when a fra- ternity member was accused of using a quad meal ticket to gain entrance to a study hall restricted to dorm residents. In regard to infractions committed within residence halls by non-resident visitors, the plan said "penalties should not be imposed by the staff or student government agencies of the residence hall in which the violation occurred, but by some appropriate agency." Under the approved plan, quad residents may appeal cases decided by their house judiciary to the quad judiciary and eventually to Joints Judiciary. Ultimate authority would rest with the Sub-committee on Discipline. * * , * IF CASES "violating general University standards are serious or special personal or psychiatric factors are involved," as in theft cases, the Board gave the Quadrangle Director the power to route the case directly to the Dean of Men or disciplinary authorities on the Univer- sity level, without formal hearings.E Another proviso of the committee report requires that cases of discipline by the administrative staff be appealed to the next highest staff member. This was included to avoid crossing of jurisdictional lines. The report also said that violations of state law, city ordinance or University-wide standards of conduct that occur outside the buildings and grounds of the residence halls "must be dealt with, as they are now, by the police or through the general disciplinary procedures of the University." Of RedTies McCarthy Group QuizesKaghan Two University alumni, singled out by government authorities this Iweek for Communist affiliations have emphatically denied charges against them. The first, Theodore Kaghan, told members of Sen. Joseph McCar- thy's Senate Investigations sub- committee that a decade of fight- ing Communism had qualified him to direct this country's psycholog- ical warfare in West Germany. KAGHAN, acting Deputy Direc- tor of the Public Affairs Division at the U.S. High Commissioner's Bonn Headquarters, had been re- called for questioning regarding allegedly Communistic plays writ- ten around 1930, an alleged Com- munist with whom he shared an apartment for five years, his sig- nature on a Communist Party New York city council candidate peti- s tion in 1939 and meetings he hadI attended. Meanwhile, Walter Gerald Berg-I man, who was employed here in the educational psychology depart- ment between 1925 and 1929, has been accused by the State Depart-j ment of being a Communist. Pres- ently director of research for De- troit schools, he has been ordered to answer a lengthy list of ques- tions regarding his activities. Bergman has mailed affida- vits to the superintendent of Detroit schools stating that he is a Socialist, but has never been a member of any other political group, "including the Republi- can, Democratic and Commu- nist parties." East Quad To Support WQfiusbo/ys A meeting of East Quad busboys voted unanimously to support the present West Quad strike for high- er wages in a closed meeting last night and indicated that a "slow- down strike" may be planned for tomorrow. After hearing arguments pre- sented by John Curry, '53NR, lead- er of the West Quad walkout, and Leonard A. Schaadt, business man- ager of the residence halls, 52 of the East Quad's 131 student work- ers decided to push for a dollar an hour wage and to cast ballots today to decide whether the stu- dents want to go on strike. * * * CURRY reported that a general meeting of South Quad students help will be held tonight while organization of Alice Lloyd Hall workers is being attempted. Defending the administration at last night's meeting, Schaadt said that since 1939 student wages have been adjusted to the room and board rates so that students have always had to work about two and one-half hours a day for their meals. Curry replied that the present wages are unfair with respect to the work that the busboys do andC to the higher wages given to full time help replacing the students.' Budget 81V2 Billion No Balanced Budget Seen DespiteCut TaxReductions Remain In Doubt WASHINGTON-0IP-President Eisenhower dramatically junked yesterday what he called the Tru- man "crazy quilt" defense blue- print and announced in its stead a more gradual military-foreign aid program pointing toward an 8'%2 billion dollar slash in appro- priations for the next fiscal year. President Truman had asked $72,900,000,000 in new appropria- tions. Under the Eisenhower plan this would be cut to $64,400,000,- 000. * * * EISENHOWER told a news con- ference he doesn't expect his new policy, which he described as a "radical" change, will make pos- sible a completely balanced bud- get for the year beginning July 1. But he declared his administra- tion is making progress in that direction-and thus toward cut- ting taxes-every day. The President made his an- nouncement, billed in. advance as a momentous one, on his 101st day in office, a day on which he also sent Congress a plan for reshuffling the Defense Department in the twin interest of economy and of strengthen- ing civilian control. e Reading from a prepared state- d ment, Eisenhower blasted in em- phatic terms the Truman admin- t istration's striving for maximum B Western defense strength in 1954 or 1955 on the theory that the Russians would have the air y strength by that time to launch ,an attack. This, the President said sharp- ly, is "artificial arithmetic"-part of a "crazy quilt of promises, com- mitments and contracts" which has put his administration in a straitjacket woven from 81 billion dollars appropriated for military purposes in the past and still ur- spent. Still uncertain was whether Y the Eisenhower administration f would signal for a tax reduction 1 this year, as many members of Congress hope. Speaker Martin (R-Mass.) said budget cuts so far outlined are "not enough yet to assure a tax reduction" but he has not yet abandoned hope s for such a reduction this year. d Eisenhower asserted his pro- posed 81,? billion dollar reduction in appropriations would not re- duce the effective military strength this country has planned for it- self and its allies in fiscal 1954. -Daily-Frank Barger THOR JOHNSON LEADS A REHEARSAL Brailowsky Opens First May Festival Program The almost-legendary rumor of rainy May Festivals came true last night as pianist Alexander Brailowsky played to a capacity crows in the first program of the six-concert series. Conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony, Thor Johnson, will direc the University Choral Union in a presentation of Bach's "Mass in I minor" at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. i Assistant Dean of Women, Elsie R. Fuller, said the new quad set-' An admitted pacifist, Bergman up will not affect the present judicial arrangements governing coeds. ran for Detroit mayor, state su- Some discussion took place as to whether the women's setup would perintendent of public instruc- receive study similar to that of the men's. 190snd governSocalist ticket.l IN OTHER ACTION, the Board gave the Student Affairs Corn- UN D em ands mittee the right to formally approve quadrangle constitutions. The I k Board reserved the right to final approval, but will rely mainly on NR l a e SAC recommendations in its decision. In explaining the review of quad judiciary decisions, the committee report cited the need for both the right of aneal for y The Associated Press Sixty busboys will remain on strike at the West Quadrangle today, but outside help is hand- ling meal service smoothly. Kit- chen administrators complain, however, that residents are not bussing their dishes and are leaving messes at their tables. t jf{{# fj +1 i They report that at the noon h * * * meal yesterday, residents left din- SINGING with the 325-voice chorus will be soprano Doroth3 ca hall floors littered with milk Warenskjold, contralto Janice Moudry, bass Kenneth Smith and teno cartons. The IHC is remaining neutral; -v- ---Prof. Harold Haugh of the musi on the issue, according to Roger CLC Plan Ball Ischool. Kidston, '54, president of the East .s Prof. Haugh is the sole local residents upon whom a penalty is imposed and a post-audit of all disciplinary cases heard by any student judiciary committee. It was pointed out that any fines levied by the quad courts will go into a residence hall education fund, while those imposed by Joint Judiciary go into a 'Good Will Fund.' Student representative to the Board, Ted Bohuszewicz, '53A, asked the Board to consider the IHC constitution at its next meeting. ISRAEL DEBATE: Ram--zi Sayls Palestine Problem Caused Korea "Decisive UN action in the Arab-Israel conflict would have pre- vented a Korean War," Prof. Taulic Ramzi of the political science department said in a panel discussion last night. Prof. Ramzi, one of the four man panel discussing the Palestine- Israel situation, asked the return of Israel to its original status as The UN Command early today in Punmunjom demanded the re- lease of at least 375 more sick and wounded captives whom it charged the Reds were holding back in their North Korean prison camps. In a blunt warning the UN said that Communist failure to live up to its pledge on exchanging dis- abled captives would throw a shad- ow over the broader armistice negotiations. THE FULL truce teams met later for 35 minutes and adjourned until 9 p.m. today (EST). There was no immediate re- port of what happened in the main armistice talks. Meanwhile in Tokyo, two big military transport planes fleW over the Pacific early today carrying homeward 63 more exchanged U.S. sick or wounded soldiers in the I second phase of the freedom air- lift. Quad, because the matter does not, concern quad men as a whole, but only those who work in the din- ing rooms. Professors Cited By Health Group MADISON, Wis.-UP)-Two Uni- versity faculty members were hon- ored yesterday by the Midwest Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation today. Prof. Elmer Mitchell of the physical education department was named to the Association board and Prof. Laurie Campbell, also of the physical education de- partment, was honored by an award for outstanding leadership. Prof. Cambell's award was pre- sented Wednesday night. Reliuion Panel Plans were made both for a panel discussion on the placeof religion in schooling ark for the forthcoming Declaration of Inde- pendence Ball at last night's Civil Liberties Committee meeting. The committee, organized to provide an opportunity for inter- ested students to share their ideas on the maintenance of civil liber- ties, also plans to work on a pham- phlet on academic freedom. The next meeting of the com- mittee will be at 7:30 p.m. Thurs- day in the Union. At the meeting a tape recording of a House Un- American Activities Committee will be heard and work continued on the party. part o Lne AraD i-aiesuine. He went-f on to say that if the UN had tak- en "a fair and firm stand in the Arabs' request to keep Palestinej intact, the Communists would not haveadared to begin aggression in Korea." * * * PROF. PRESTON Slosson of the history department and Prof. Wil- liam Haber of the economics de- partment took a stand opposite to that of Prof. Ramzi and Prof. Clark Hopkins of the mathematics department. The discussion centering around problems of Arab refu- gees trying to enter what is now Israel, and the territorial boun- daries between Israel and the Arab lands. According to Prof. Slosson, the entire problem can be resolved in- to the two issues of whether or not a particular community should have control over its own popula- tion, and what would become of the Jewish refugees unable to rr.- main in Israel who fled Europe under Hitler's regime. "The problem is resolved when one realizes that these persons REDS MOVE INTO LAOS: Indo-China conflict Becomes Acute performer to be starred in the Festival series. He sang in the recent music school production of Bach's "Passion of Our Lord According to St. Matthew." Miss Moudry, still in her early twenties, received the plaudits o New York critics for her 195 Town Hall recital. Famous for her radio and tele vision appearances, Miss Warensk jold has performed under conduct ors Dimitri Mitropoulos, Darius Milhaud, Erich Leinsdorf an Bruno Walter. British-born Kenneth Smith, cast member of the NBC televis- ion Opera Theater, has appeared in half a dozen roles during the past season. A few tickets are available fo each of the five remaining con certs. They are priced at $2.50, $ and $1.50 and will be on sale from 9 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. and from7 p.m. until performance time daily in the Hill Auditorium box offices. TwleQuad Men Honored West Quadrangle's Quadrant held their annual installation ban quet last night with Dean Walte B. Rea officiating during the mit iation. The organization, designed to honor quad students for service initiated 12 students and two Uni versity officials in the ceremonies Leonard A. Schaadt, residenc halls business manager, and Ray mond J. Dean, West Quad residen director, became members of th honorary. Students installed into Quad fc #r ,, F 4f 3 A+1t d -i L4~;~4,. By MARK READER As hopes for an armistice lull the Korean battlefronts into a muffled silence, Southeastern Asia has become the scene of an acute, full-scale war. The seven-year-old Indo-China struggle assumed increasingly violent proportions last week when a two-pronged Communist attack, led by the forces of Ho Chi-Minh, swept through large sectors of the kingdom of Laos. * * * * ACCORDING TO reports issuing forth from the jungle area, thej Vietminh (Communist) forces have marched virtually unopposed to within 25 miles of Luang Prabang, the country's capital. While French garrison troops busily fortify the threatened area with the hope of checking the advancing Red columns in a pitched battle before the city, Western diplomats are openly worried about the significance of the latest Communist offensive. Aside from the immediate strategic importance of Laos, officials in Washington are beginning to view Ho's attack as an indication that the latest Red "peace offensive" is merely a propaganda move. However, there is the possibility that the Reds will use their new- est gains in Indo-China as a bargaining point in future peace talks. * * * * r7 2 7 s. -s r 1- ;o e, i- s. ;e -t t I- World News Roundup By the Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Senate voted 59 to 22 yesterday against a proposal that the federal gov- ernment retain control of all min- eral riches in the ocean beds three miles offshore and devote any revenue to reduction of the na- tional debt. WARNER ROBINS, Ga. - At least 11 persons were killed yes- terday and an estimated 108 in- jured when a tornado leveled sev- eral blocks of this Central Georgia city of 8,000. * * * SEOUL - Allied troops were alert today for May Day fire- works from the Comni;mists on the Korean front, which has been quiet for three days. HANOI, Indochina - Vietminh spearheads slashed their way from the north and east yesterday through the jungle and banana and coconut groves of Laos to within about a day's march of I' I I I