Y MORSE'S FILIBUSTER See Page 2 Latest Deadline in the State 41P :43 a t t'H 0 ** .%' ;. . CLOUDY, COOLER VOL. LXIII, No. 145 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1953 FOUR PAGES New Driving Regulations Considered j Discussion Held At Conference By HARRY LUNN Liberalization of Univers ity driving restrictions to allow all stu- dents except freshmen to have cars on campus received an informal 4 stamp of approval at the Presi- dent's Conference yesterday. Top campus leaders and Uni- versity officials, gathered to dis- cuss the driving regulation prob- S lem, gave the plan 14 tallies in a straw vote. Twelve votes were cast for a system which would allow all but freshmen and sophomores to drive. PRESIDED over by President Harlan H. Hatcher, the Co fer- ence meets twice a semesters a forum to air administration and student views on current prob- lems. No formal action is considered by the group, although straw votes are sometimes taken to determine the group's views on a question. In yesterdy's meeting the driv- ing ban topic received chief at- tention. Discussion centered large- ly on which students should be al- lowed to drive under a policy lib- eralization. An Office of Student Affairs plan which would permit seniors or students over 21 to drive re- ceived only four votes in the in- formal poll. * '. s REPRESENTATIVES from the Student Legislature presented sev- eral alternative plans which had resulted from extensive study of t r the question in cooperation with the OSA. Most student leaders present backed the proposal to allow all but freshmen to drive, with the plan permitting driving privi- leges to all but freshmen and sophomores receiving their sec- ondary support. A system grantig driving rights to all students received only four votes, but the present -regulations limiting permits to anyone over 26 or to special cases got no support. Necessity for adequate in- surance and safety inspection for student automobiles was emphasized by several Confer- ence members. The Conference also discussed the need for additional student ac- tivities facilities. Jay Strickler, '54, Union president, and Sue Riggs, '54, League president, out- lined progress of meetings be- tween their organizations concern- ipg the problem. University public relations di- rector Arthur Brandon also an- nounced that plans were under way to include two student mem- bers on the University's Devel- opment Council. -Daily-Frank Barger TAG DAY-Dean of Men Walter B. Rea collects Dora Hartwell's contribution to the 33rd annual Tag Day Drive. Funds, which amounted to $2,760.84 at the end of yesterday's drive, will be used to send under-privileged boys from all over Michigan to the Uni- versity's Fresh Air Camp. The drive will continue throughout campus and downtown Ann Arbor until noon today. The final total will not be ascertained until pails for additional contributions. to the drive are collected from the stores Monday and until seven missing pails are returned. COUNTY-WIDE DRIVE: Police Cracking Down On, Obscene Literature By JOEL BERGER In a sweeping directive the Ann Arbor police department has ordered all local book dealers to clear their shelves of "obscene" pocket books within a month or face public prosecution. The order, issued by Detective Sgt. Claude Damron, is part of a county-wide drive to remove a steadily increasing influx of obscene literature from public sale. 0 * * * BASING JUDGMENT on a list of pocket books labeled "obscene" by the Detroit Police Censor Bureau, Damron has included 300 of ' these questionable books in the WQ Busboys To Resume WorkToday No-strike Voted By OtherQuads West Quad busboys will be called back to work today by leader John Curry, '55NR as a result of a 'no- strike' vote taken last night in busboy meetings in East and South Quads. The action was taken pending a tri-quad meting Tuesday with Leonard Schaadt, residence halls business manager. SIX EAST QUAD workers willi meet today to discuss next year's1 wage schedule and other busboyI grievances. Monday -the situationi will be aired at general meetings1 of South and West quad busboys; and, later the same evening, at a meeting of several representatives1 from each quad. Action at last night's meetingsi followed talks at East and South quads by Roger Kidston, '54, East Quad president. Kidston, who had conferred with Schaadt earlier in the day, told the busboys that "no wage increase seems possible at this time." He explained that Schaadt has to plan his wage schedule in accord- ance with the residence halls bud- get which is separate from the University's budget. * * * ACCORDING TO Kidston, Schaadt is "more than willing to discuss wage plans with student representatives." He pointed out that if the strik- ers return to work, outside help will remain to relieve the busboy's burden. East Quad 'workers cast votes during the day yesterday on a slow down strike. The vote wag not counted after the decision reached after Kidston spoke. DANCE: IFC Initiates Semi-Formal Dress Rules After 12 years of strict formality, the IFC Ball has gone the way of similar dances throughout the na- tion, and turned semi-formal. The change, announced yester- day by retiring IFC president Pete Thorpe, '53, is designed to increase the popularity of the dance by re- laxing formal dress rules. BY DEFINITION, women may wear either a ballerina or full length gown while men may at- tend the dance in either a dark blue suit or white dinner jacket. As a formal dance, the IFC Ball has fallen on bad times in recent years with a $600 loss being sustained last year. Tickets for the Ball, to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday, May 9, at the Intra-Murl Bldg. may be purchased for $3.60 in the lobby of the Administration Bldg. The dance will feature Ralph Flanagan and his orchestra. Board To Rule On EQ Action East Quadrangle resident direc- tor John E. Bingley and Quad president Roger Kidston, '54, met last night to discuss the outcome of the reception several East Quad residents gave Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity members when they ser- enaded quad coeds Wednesday night. Kidston said that the East Quad council would decide Tuesday night what actiontotake about the men who appeared in white sheets to welcome the 20 serenad- ing fraternity members. AFTER SINGING for five wo- men's dorms, the singers moved to the sole coed housing unit on cam- pus only to be met in the court by jeering Quad men clad in white sheets. The names of the Quad resi- dents involved were not divulged. Kidston expressed hope that such a thing "won't happen again." "I'm sure the men who 'Romeo?' It finally happened! A gay Lothario last night placed a ladder against a win- dow sill of Taylor House, one of the women's residences in the East Quad. Whether or not his purpose was accomplished is not known. The prospective eloper was not available for comment. Peron Hits 'Imperialist Subversion' BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - (P)-Addressing Congress on a May Day opened with a series of bomb explosions, President Juan D. Peron charged yesterday that imperialist forces abroad were trying to weaken his government and block South American unity. He denounced the United States by implication-and former U.S. Ambassador Spruille Braden, the Christian Science Monitor of Bos- ton and three American news agencies by name-in a speech of two hours, 10 minutes on the po- litical state of the nation. SIX BOMBS had been fired- mostly harmlessly in open spaces -before Peron made his 2%-mile ride to the Capitol along a route lined by policemen at 10-yard in- tervals. The seventh, apparently bur- ied in a sandpile at the building under construction less than a block from the capital, went off while he was speaking. It did some damage and rattled win- dows for several miles. Peron accused The Associated Press, United Press and Interna- tional News Service of spreading lies about him and said "I will ask the honorable Congress for a quick complete and urgent investiga- tion, as well as deserved punish- ment." Argentina's economic crisis has been overcome, Peron delared, but the three have tried to show that the nation is in the midst of an emergency to demonstrate that the Peronista party's "social justice" is nothing but a slogan. When a million workers rally at the Plaza de Mayo, he said, the news agencies "can see only 100,- 000 public employes who, accord- ing to the agencies, were forced to attend." Bishop Backs Birth Control "Birth control is not a sin if used wisely and soberly," the Rt. Reverend Richard Emrich, Epis- copal Bishop of the Diocese of Michigan said last night at the Canterbury House in the third of a series of five lectures sponsored by the Episcopalian Student Foun- dation. Speaking on the subject "Birth Control, Sin? Christian?" he ex- plained that planned parenthood knowledge like any other scientific or medical knowledge should be used by man to eliminate human suffering. Bishop Emrich cited the fact, however, that knowledge of birth control like knowledge of atomic energy places upon man the "re- sponsibility of not using it against the will of God." Childlessness is against God's will, and we must not use birth control to commit this sin. He maintained that planned parenthood was not against mar- riage's divine purpose, to propa- gate the race, as it enabled parents to give their children a more se- cure and happy upbringing. -Daily-Don Campbell BOB WOSCHITZ FAILS IN SACRIFICE ATTEMPT * * * * 'NI' 'Baseball Team Nips Gophers, 10-6 By DICK LEWIS Michigan used a silver platter and a versatile relief pitcher to pound out its fourth consecutive Big Ten baseball triumph yesterday, a 10-6 walkathon over invading Minnesota. The first-place Wolverines meet Iowa today in a double-header scheduled for 1:30 p.m. at Ferry Field. * * * * THE SILVER PLATTER in yesterday's single game was provided by four Gopher moundsmen who served up ten walks, two hit batsmen and a wild-pitch to figure in every one of the Maize and Blue's four scoring innings. The versatile Michigan relief pitcher was Garby Tadian, unsung junior right-hander who hurled and batted his way UN Suspicious of Red Motives in Panmunjon As Futile Week Closes Dulles, Stassen Plan Asian Tour WASHINGTON-(M)-Secretary of State Dulles and Harold Stassen, the mutual security director, will visit the Middle East, India and Pakistan this month. Stops also will be made in Greece and Tur- key. The State Department announc- ed their plans yesterday. The two will leave Washington May 9 and return May 29. Ann Arbor file. Although the present drive is aimed solely at pocket books, Damron expects his department to start a clean-up drive against "girlie" magazines soon. Within a month, book dealers refusing to comply with the order will be prosecuted, Damron said. "BY GIVING dealers time to remove these books from their stands, we are trying to be as fair as possible," he added. "However, we expect their cooperation in re- turn. We realize that it takes some time to check through book stocks in order to remove objectionable material." The police department's order is authorized by an old state law con- trolling the sale of obscene litera- ture. Wayne County has made full use of the statute in recent weeks by banning many pocket books, "girlie" magazines and "indecent" comic books. Locally, the Washtenaw county sheriff's department and Ypsilanti and Michigan State police are co- operating in the county-wide cam- paign. This will ensure against prospective buyers travelling out- side the Ann Arbor city limits to purchase obscene literature. Reds Refuse To Nominate Neutral State Sabres Hit City Ini Quick Attack By The Associated Press The UN Command today was growing more and more suspicious of Red objectives at the Panmun- jom truce table as the reborn talks rounded out a week of futility. The long-recessed discussions got going last Sunday after seem- ing Communist peace overtures from Moscow and Peiping but so far the .overtures have failed to bear fruit. At another session, the Com- munists today discussed four Asian nations in the revived armistice talks .but refused to nominate any as a neutral. The Reds said that among the Asi- an nations they would consider neutral were India, Pakistan, Burma and Indonesia. The Reds said they would not nominate any of the four until the Allies agree first to send prison- ers to such a neutral state. Earlier, Rear Adm. John C. Dan- iel said he had "indisputable evi- dence" that the Reds still hold 375 disabled Allied prisoners, despite their assurance that the 684 al- ready returned cleans the slate. The trade now is a one-way af- fair. The UN was turning over probably its last batch of 500 ail- ing Red captives today, running the total to nearly 7,000. NORTH KOREAN Ma. Gen. Lee Sang Cho, the Red liaison chief, pushed aside Daniels' de- mand for 375 more ailing Allied POWs, saying the admiral's claim was "a willful slander." He said the Reds do hold an -undisclosed number of Allied sick and wounded but these are "not fit to travel because of their physical condition." In Tokyo, a returned prisoner, Sgt. James F. Daniel, a medic from Alameda, Calif., said he had access to Red medical recods showing that 2,538 captive Allies died of starvation and diseaseIn less than a year. Meanwhile, fifty U.S. Sabres ID their deadly new role of dive bombers hurled destruction yes- terday on the North Korean capi- tal at Pyongyang. The Fifth Air Force did not say what damage was wrought by the lightning raid. POW Victims Of Propaganda In California TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif.-(P)-A planeload of re- patriated American prisoners of war from Korea, designated by the Air Force as "victims of Com- munist propaganda," arrived here yesterday under a cloak of mili- tary secrecy. The Air Force did not announce the arrival and it didn't become known until one of the POWs, Cpl. Paul Schnur Jr. of San Francisco, was taken to Letterman hospital in that city 40 miles southwest of here. The cloak of secrecy was clamp- ed down Thursday when the plane left Tokyo. The Air Force said it was ordered by the Pentagon and issued this statement: "We are co-operating with the other military services in main- taining security over this partic- ular operation, because of the posi- tion taken by the Army and others that these men may have been misled under conditions of duress and hardship during the period of their captivity." R ohbers Eseane < to his initial win of the 1953 I v St. Joseph's Hospital Plans New Addition Festival Youth Chorus To Perform In Concert Two Ann Arbor newcomers and a chorus which has become a 41-year-old Festival tradition will highlight the two May Festival concerts at 2:30 and 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Under the direction of Prof. Marguerite Hood of the music school the 400-voice Festival Youth Chorus chosen from Ann Arbor's public schools will perform contemporary English composer Benjamin Brit- ten's "Suite of Songs." French-born violinist Zino Francescatti will play Beethoven's "Concerto in D major, Op. 61, for violin and orchestra" in the third of six con- . f!1T7 T' \T /f'{l1TT Plans for a seven-story $5,000,- 000 addition to St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital were announced yester- day by The Sisters of Mercy, Cath- olic nursing order which operates the hospital. The X-shaped structure will be built in the near future on the property now used as the hospital parking lot at the corner of N. In- gall and E. Catherine Streets. S* " THE ADDITION will accommo- date 200 beds and when completed will give the hospital a total of 490 beds. . Plans for the hospital, which will probably take 14 months' to build, include a parking area east' of the addition and also behind the present hospital, capable of accom- modating a minimum of 235 cars. Hospital officials say the need for additional beds prompted the move to enlarge present facilities and abandon plans for a separate hospital. season. Tadian came on the scene as' the third Wolverine thrower in the sixth inning with his team holding a slim 7-6 advantage and a Gopher runner dancing off sec- ond base. He proceeded to get out of that frame and went on to limit the Minnesotans to a lone single over the next three innings. * * * BESPECTACLED right-hander Don Streeter got the starting as- signment for the visitors instead of the previously announced Paul Giel, but Streeter didn't get past the third inning as Michigan jumped to a quick 5-0 advantage. With one out, the Gopher hurlerhwalked five straight Wol- verine batters to chase home twowruns and himself to the showers. His replacement was southpaw Bob Jonason, and left-fielder Paul Lepley immediately greeted the newcomer with a line single to center which knocked two runners across and left men on first and third. * * * AFTER Jack Corbett walked to reload the bases and Gil Sabuco popped up for the second out, Dick Leach topped a roller to- See BASEBALL, Page 3 certs. OTHER NUMBERS to be per- formed tomorrow afternoon by the Philadelphia Orchestra, guest con- ducted by Alexander Hilsberg, will include Rossini's overture "Ital- iana in Algeri" and Tchaikovsky's overture-fantasia, "Romeo and Juliet." Tomorow evening Metropoli- tan Opera bass Cesare Siepi will make his Ann Arbor debut sing- ing Mozart's "Mentre ti lascio" (K.513), Gomez' "Di sposo di padre" from Salvator Rosa and Verdi's "Ella giammai m'amo" from Don Carlo. The Orchestra, under the direc- tion of Eugene Ormandy, will play Richard Strauss' tone poem, "Don Juan," Hindemith's "Mathis der Maler" and Weinberger's "Polka and Fugue" from Schwanda. VIOLINIST Francescatti made his first western hemisphere ap- GUIDED TOURS High School Students To See University Today By GENE HARTWIG Among the more than 1,400 high school students taking part in today's University Day program may be a future Phi Beta Kappa and the captain of the University's 1956 football team. Coming here from all parts of Michigan, Indiana and Ohio, the high school juniors and seniors will open their day at the University with a welcome session at 9:30 a.m. in Rackham Auditorium.I * * * ON HAND TO greet the potential University students will be University President Harlan Hatcher, Director of Admissions Clyde Vroman, Dean James Robertson of the literary college and Jay Strickler, '54, president of the Union. Included on the intinerary for the day are the laboratories of the Medical School and pharmacy department as well as Bur- ton Tower, and new Angell Hall addition and Randall Physics Laboratory. SCIENTIFIC MARVELS: Engine School Holds Open House # < ) Magic and differential calculus, electronic brains and ship engines from the Spanish-American War, 1908 Runabouts and racing cars for the future vied with each other for interest yesterday in the first day of the Engineering School's bi-annual Open House. Scheduled to run from 9 a.m. to noon, and from 1 to 5 p.m. to- day, the event features numerous exhibits depicting the many ad- vances that have taken place in limalligg: ', * :