PRIZE WINNING REVIEW See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State Dzzi4* 0a Q S . , FAIR, WARM VOL. LXIII, No. 152 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 10, 1953 SIX PAGES W. Germany Will Reject Unification Neutrality Plan, Disarmament Hit STRASBOURG, France-()-A spokesman for the West Germa government today turned thumbs down on any East-West settlemeni of the cold war based on a reuni- fied but disarmed and neutralizec Germany. Heinrich Von Brentano, parlia- mentary floor leader for the rul- ing Christian Democratic Party at Bonn, told the European consul- tative assembly that any accorc among the major powers obliging the Germans to renounce a policy of peaceful cooperation with other European states would be "com- pletely unacceptable." A * * * HIS STATEMENT referred to speculation that Soviet Russia may Y soon offer free elections in Ger- many, the formation of an all- German government and the end of the occupation there in return for Germany's departure from the 'v Schuman-plan steel and coal com- munity, the six-nation European Defense Community (EDC) and the projected Continental Politi- cal Union. Such a step, he said, "would iso- late the German people and gpfe rise to a new wave of nationalism in Germany." This, he added, would make Ger- many "another parcel in the So- viet domain" and open a new dangerous phase of the world's struggle for liberty. Van Brentano asserted "an im- mense majority" of all Germans want to collaborate with the free peoples of Europe. CITING THE thousands of re- fugees from the Soviet zone, Von Brentano said this flood was proof enough that the 18 million Ger- mans in the Soviet zone support v the West German government's policies. Von Brentano was defending a section of a proposed six-nation constitution which would extend the European community to the Eastern zone in the event the two parts of Germany were reunified. Large Cuts In Treasury Budget Told WASHINGTON - (P) - The Treasury Department proposes to cut its operating budget by 50 mil- lion dollars-12.2 percent-and its * payroll by 3,766 persons, a House Appropriation Subcommittee re- vealed yesterday. a The subcommittee released re- vised budget estimates showing a decrease of 1,528 men in the Coast Guard and 908 persons in the Bu- reau of Internal Revenue. Both agencies are under the Depart- ment. Secretary of the Treasury Hum- phrey said the personnel cuts would mean 4,326 fewer employes than planned in the budget re- commended by former President Truman. i ,Humphrey proposed a $50,883,- 000 slash in the Truman requests for new appropriations to meet the Department's flexible require- ments. Truman asked for $655,- 328,000. This would be $40,568,000 under appropriations voted by Congress last year, Humphrey said. The Treasury is requesting a total revised budget of $16,587,- 4 000,000 for the fiscal year starting July 1, but most of this goes for such fixed expenses as paying in- terest on the national debt. "To some extent," Humphrey t said, "these reductions are predi- cated on our ability to develop during the next 15 months meth- ods of accomplishing savings which are not now clearly in sight. It may be that further methods of savirg can be found, and this ob- jective will of course be vigorous- ly pursued." The Appropriations Subcommit- tee, headed by Rep. Canfield (R- s NJ), is still considering the Trea- sury budget. Calling KB7938 Official DETROIT - (A) - President Eisenhower has made it offi- cial now - he endorses and thoroughly approves of the game of golf. The President put his enthu- siasm for the links into a mes- sage from the White House to sponsors of the annual Profes- sional Golfers' Association (PGA) Tournament, to be held at the suburban Birmingham Country Club July 1-7. Addressed to "Golfers and Fellow Duffers," the message said, in part: "While I know that I speak with the partisanship of an en-. thusiast, golf obviously pro- vides one of our best forms of healthful exercise, accompanied by good fellowship and com- panionship. Reds Say 'Explanation' Would Bring Voluntary POW Return .;) Plant .Depart ment Uses Two Way Radio Set-up Calling KB7938. Calling KB7938. This code call is neither an urgent message to a cabbie to pick up a stranded fare nor to one of the many police cars cruising the streets of Ann Arbor. * * * , THE UNIVERSITY'S Plant Department has installed a two way radio' system to facilitate its business day. Used for communication between the department's two dispatch cars and the dispatchers office in the home building the system comes in handy by getting men and materials to out of the way jobs quickly. Labor Gains 350 British Local Seats LONDON - (AP) - Laborites, chalked up big gains in this week's local elections, but both sides claimed today their popularity has increased. Jubilant Laborites took more than 350 Conservative seats in voting for nearly 3,000 places on t o w n and borough councils throughout Britain. LABOR SAID the outcome showed public dislike of the con- servative government. Prime Min- ister Churchill's Conservatives pointed out they polled more votes than the Laborites, and said the -Daily-Don Campbell JOE KRALL 148) TRIPS UP BLUES' DICK BALZHISER * * * * * * * * * Blues Rout Whites in M Grd Windup By DAVE BAAD Scoring two touchdowns in the first four minutes of play, the Blues smashed to a one-sided 54- 12 victory over the Whites in the annual intra-squad football game played yesterday in Michigan Sta- dium, The contest concluded the 20, B raun Case Terminated ByApology After six months of charges, counter-charges and negotiations, the long-smouldering case of Bert Braun, '54, was finally brought to a close yesterday as West Quad Council president Sam Alfieri, '54 A&D, issued a statement of apol- ogy to Braun and Michigan House. In a statement to the Inter- House Council judiciary commit- tee, Alfieri, speaking for the Quad Council, expressed "regret" at "the hasty manner" in which Michigan House representative Braun was expelled from the West Quad Council last November. Braun was ousted from his post for "acting to the detriment of therCouncil." Michigan House then withdrew its representatives from the Council,tbut returned them April 15, on the basis of an agreement that Braun would re- sign from the Council and that the Council would publicly apologize to Braun and Michigan House. Recognizing that "the propri- ety" of the expulsion is "an in- soluble question, the Quad Coun- cil also agreed not to oust any of its representatives" as long as the present constitution is in effect. IHC judiciary committee head Pete Firmin, Grad., said yester- day his committee considered that a satisfactory settlement had been agreed upon and that "the case is now closed." The West Quad Council state- ment was the result of continued negotiations with Michigan House representatives. Alfieri's statement also offered "sincere apologies to Michigan House" and Braun for several "de- rogatory and defamatory state- ments" which appeared in the De- cember 16, 1952 issue of the "Dial," West Quad newspaper. Awards Won By Reviewers Taking first place in The Daily sponsored movie review contest Don Potter, '55, will receive five large Toulouse-Lautrec posters for his prize winning review of the movie "Moulin Rouge," which ap- pears ondthe editorial page today. Second prize, a portfolio of smaller prints went to William Himelhoch, '54, while Clarence Incoming telephone calls which request Plant Department Service swing really was toward the gov- pass through the dispatcher's of- ernment. fice where they are relayed to the T.-- dispatch trucks.i The truck driver with a radio installed in his vehicle usually' makes an average of 35 calls back to the central office during a working day. THE CALLS vary in purpose Independents, Liberals and Communists all showed net loss- es.I Neutral observers, without min- imizing the Labor gains within the local councils, doubted whether these elections*were any accurate guide to how Britain would vote! cay spring practice session terminated football activity next fall. and uintil and may include orders to an..QnoW if .House. of Commons seats _ _ ._ _ , other truck to haul away some green grass seed to, in rare in-I stances, calling for an ambulance if an accident has occurred on the job. A dispatch truck may be dis- tinguished from other Univer- sity maintenance vehicles by a special adornment-a huge whip antennae with a bright colored ribbon tied to the top of it. Joe Swanson, originator of the PlantDepartment's radio system, says that the ribbons were once colored maize and blue but forE inexplicable reasons have been re- placed. C-ieto To Speak On Lati nCulture Prof. Carlos Cueto, Dean of Edu- cation at San Marcos University, Lima, Peru, will speak tomorrow and Tuesday on topics of interest to students of Latin American cul- ture and civilization. "The Legend of Peru" will be the subject of the first talk to be given in Spanish at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. Suggestions Course suggestion and criti- cism sheets for the engineering college will be available tomor- row and Tuesday at the aero- nautical and mechanical en- gineering offices. I were at stake. Many editorial writ- ers were frankly puzzled. T h e Liberal News Chronicle' said: "taken at their face value, the figures show that the Labor Party has regained some, though by' no means all, of the ground it lost in recent comparable elections. But only a month ago the Gallup Poll showed that the Tories were well ahead in public favor." Scholarships Won National By the Associated Press HEBRON, Neb. - A tornado' struck Hebron in southeastern Nebraska yesterday, causing many injuries and extensive property damage. . E. H. Wellman, manager of the telephone company, said the hos- pital was filled but he could not estimate how many were hurt. He had no report of any deaths. he said. ED HICKEY, who alternated with Tony Branoff- at right half, and Ted Kress both dashed for two touchdowns to pace the pro- ductive Blue team attack. Bob Topp, Dick Balzhiser, Branoff, George Corey and Duncan McDon- ald added the remaining scores. Following the scrimmage, Don Dugger, hustling junior guard, already the recipient of. two var- sity football letters, and sopho- more Branoff were named the joint winners of the Meyer W. Morton trophy. The trophy is annually presented to the play- er who shows the greatest im- provement in spring practice. Dugger's share of the citation was due primarily to the outstand- ing progress he has made this spring in mastering the rudiments of offensive play. Strictly a defen- sive performer last year, the 185 pound lineman's offensive im- provement has earned him a first string two-way guard post. BRANOFF, an outstanding half- back as a freshmannhas pro- gressed both defensively and of- fensively. Last year he was slight- ly slow picking up speed on run- ning plays, but seems to have cor- rected this weakness in spring practice. Law Revised By 'U' Center By 'U' E i nEc4 WASHINGTON - Prospects of practically no red tape for mil- lions of income tax payers-and of The engineering college has an- jail for those who try to cheat-; naunced the awarding of four jwereoutlined yesterday by the na- scholarships to chemical and elec- tion's new tax-collectinig chief. trical engineering students. T. Coleman Andrews, the Eis- The electrical engineering schol- enhower administration's Commis- arships recipients are Arthur T. sioner of Internal Revenue, talked Bublitz, '53E, the $2,000 Westing- about his policies in an interview house Fellowship; William W. and in testimony, made public to- Sherman, '54E, the $500 General day before a House Appropriations He also has taken over the first string kickoff job and is an excellent possibility for the reg- ular punting duties. Both Dugger and Branoff drew high praise from Coach Bennie Oosterbaan and the rest of the coaching staff for their concen- tration and hustle this spring. Kress sent the Blue team, which consisted of the first and second stringers, into a 6-0 lead on the third play of the game. The shifty tailback skirted right end and broke into the clear for a 45 yard touchdown gallop. After failing to gain in three, plays following the ensuing kick- See TROPHY, Page 3 Typographers Hit in NLRB Case Decision WASHINGTON - (P) - The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) said yesterday the AFL's International Typographical Union (ITU) seems to be still trying to obtain illegal closed shops condi- tions "by one device or another." The NLRB's accusation came in a decision holding the ITU guilty of refusing to bargain in good faith because it insisted during five months ending in March, 1948, on trying to negotiate contracts which could be canceled on 60 days no- tice. THE NLRB ruling, which was unanimous, just about rang down the curtain on the nearly six-year- old case. It was brought against the ITU by the American News- paper Publishers Association (ANPA) in September, 1947, short- ly after the Taft-Hartley Labor Law went into effect. The law bars the closed shop, which had been a traditional "union security" condition in the printing industry for years. Un- der the. closed shop a company may employ only workers who are union members. In its ruling yesterday the NLRB noted it had pointed out in previous ITU cases that the union was seeking to use the bargaining process with commercial and newspaper printing owners "as a means of obtaining 'closed shop' conditions by one device or an- other." The NLRB ruled that the de- mand for contracts which could be canceled on 60 days notice was a device to keep closed shop condi- tions. Vulcan alls To Followers Mighty Vulcan, holding court in Allies Doubt Communist Proposals Ask Clarification Of All Truce Aims PANMUNJOM - () - Com- munist truce negotiators today in- sisted that all the, 48,500 Red pris- oners held by the Allies would be willing to return to their home- lands after explanations were made to them by their own peo- ple following a Korean armistice. * * * THE ALLIES SAID that was "more than doubtful." The Red statement was made at today's 59-minute truce ses- sion by the top Red negotiator, North Korean Gen. Nam II, as he answered some of the many questions asked of the Commun- ists yesterday by the senior UN command truce delegate, Lt. Gen. William K. Harrison. Harrison sought amplification of the Communists' latest proposal for settling the balky POW ex- change issue. The meeting ad- journed until 9 p.m. today. * 34 * NAM INSISTED that all the 48,500 North Korean and Chinese prisoners, who have said they don't want to retun to Red territory, would go home after they had matters explained to them in a neutral camp. Nam insisted, too, that the disposition of any prisoners still balking after the explanations should be decided at a political conference to be held after a truce is effected. Nam said that,,differences in the five-nation neutral commission which would be set up under the Red plan for handling the left- over POWs, could be settled by majority vote. * 1* THE RED proposal to leave to the neutral commission the fate of prisoners who can't be "per- suaded" over a four-month period of custody is a key point in the Red eight-point plan-one that may draw a flat thumbs down from the Allies. Yesterday questions by Harrison strongly indicated that his com- mand would not accept such a proposal. He said then the Red proposal contained "no final so- lution." Meanwhile, at the scene of tie fighting an American Starfire Night Fighter pilot today reported the first victory for that new type jet over a Red Mig-15 in the Ko- rean War. A U.S. Fifth Air Force pilot said two Red jets were engaged by the F-94 night fighting Starfires over northwest Korea's Mig Alley last night. Except for two sharp, hand-to- hand patrol clashes in no-man's land, fighting on the ground was generally light. Dedication Set For Diag 'M' The large bronze 'M' which has just been' set in the center of the diagonal will be presented to Pres- ident Harlan Hatcher and repre- sentatives of the, alumni associa- tions by John E. Flynn, '53 A&D, at 12:45 Monday. Flynn, chairman of the Senior Board, will represent the Class of 1953 in making the dedication. The gift of the Class of 1953, the 'M' is replacing the old brick design which was removed last summer. The design was planned through the cooperative effort of several architecture students. It is of semi-polished bronze and inlayed in a four feet blue tinted concrete block. Forty-six inches high and 53 inches wide, the 'M' costabout $400. Electric Scholarship and Frederick Subcommittee. Five Law School professors of Marshall Waltz, '54E, the $500 1 * the University's Legislative Re- Louis Allis Scholarship. WASHINGTON -- Managing search Center finished work yes- James McKee Ryan, '54E, has Editor J. R. Wiggins of the Wash- terday on a revision of the Cloon been awarded the $500 Universal ington Post said today nothing in State Taxation Bill, making the Oil Products Company Scholar- the history of parliamentary bill conform with the federal In- ship. bodies inspires "confidence in ternal Revenue Code. _-____them as safe judges of freedom of The revision, retaining all major the press." policies of the original bill and Co-op oHolIn obvious reference to activi- providing for a two per cent tax Barbecue Tdayties of Senate committees headed on all corporate and personal net O~cy by Sens. McCarthy (R-Wis) and incomes above $10,000, was drawn Jenner (R-Ind) and Rep. Velde up after a week of concentrated The Inter-Co-op Council will (R-Ill), Wiggins said some con- effort by the Research Center and hold an all-campus barbecue from gressional committees have per- dispatched to Lansing yesterday in 2:30 until 10 p.m. today -at the formed "essentially judicial func- time to beat the May 19 deadline Island Park. tions." on tax measures. INTERNATIONAL PAGEANT: SLGroup An international cast will pre- sent their combined interpreta- tions of what international rela- tions can be in "The Rainbow," a program scheduled for 2:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Planned and directed by the Student Legislature International Committee, the program will fea- ture Rajesh Gupta, Grad., who will shed his American clothing in favor of his native Indian cos- tume. To Present 'The Rainbow' * 4 * 4 torium as the cast, group by group, takes over the stage. In- cluded op the program will be a Mexican Hat Dance, Philippine Island dances, a Thailand (Siam) dance, a Manipuri Dance of India, a Chinese dance and song, Hawaiian dances and songs, songs by the campus Rus- sian Chorus, a Ukrainian dance, a Japanese "Coal Miner's Dance" and India's "Dance of Shiva." .~ ~ ~