TO THE INTELLECTS See Page 4 C, r Latest Deadline in the State :4aii4t~g F AIR AND WARMER VOL. LXIII, No. 44 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1952 SIX PAGES 'THIS I. BELIEVE': Love Thought Fundamental EDITOR'S NOTE: In conjunction with the lecture series "This I Believe," The Daily is presenting statements of belief of members of the University community. Gretchen Hahn is a member of the council of the Congregational Disepiles Guild. > The third lecture in the series will be given at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at Rackham Lecture Hall by Mrs. Vera Michehes Dean, research director for the Foreign Policy Association and editor of its publications. She will speak on "A Foreign Policy for Peace." By GRETCHEN HAHN There will possibly never be a more difficult and deeply searching task asked of me at the University then to state my beliefs. I found it very hard to put them down on paper because they are ever changing as I continue to have new experiences and become more mature. As a child I feared God and thought him threatening but now I think of God as the creative mind of the universe who loves me and whom I can come to know through love. I believe love is a creative relationship between people. It is happiness. I do not want to love people because I think it is my duty but because I enjoy them for what they are. It is up to me to find the qualities in every person which will make our relationship enjoyable. I further believe that people are meant to be loved and that things are meant to be used but all too often I find myself loving things and using people: That part of God which is the spark of life within me disintegrates when I cease caring about the people around me and think only of myself. I believe that "if I am to know God I must first know love. I cannot say that I hate my roommate and love God for in order to become closer to God, or more whole, I must be consistant in niy love for God and others. My beliefs have been formed through experience. I once sought meaning in life and found it in helping others and thus helped myself. I started out by reading the Bible and other philosophies, spending time meditating about the books I had read, asking questions and searching the answers. I began to feel very warm toward others and secure and neveftdfiely in situations where I would ordinarily be de- pressed. I felt a singular closeness to God which I had never before experienced. Routine things of the day took on a different light. My attitude had changed and I felt that life had purpose and meaning. I discovered that I was capable of doing things which would affect the lives of others and I was more conscious of their feelings. Now I believe that there is a demand for wholeness inherent ;n me and that I was created with a need and capacity to bring all my energies and possibilities together in a purposeful experience -to become closer to God through love for the people around me. I suffer most when I alize that I am not whole. My despair, then, is a result of my brok nness or the barrier between you and me, myself and me, and God and me. It is from being inconsistant within myself. But I am not alone when it comes to inconsistancy. The culture in which I live is also inconsistant. The values which it sets up as good, true, beautiful, and worthwhile are often in conflict with each other. For instance, I should love my neighbor, but the culture adds, unless he is a communist. Therefore I am in conflict with myself because I am torn between the demands of the culture and the demand for wholeness-to be consistant in my love for other people and thus be closer to God. It is through my efforts to continually release my creative energies to love that I can grow out of my brokenness. Through love I lose my self interests and become whole and more consistant. The culture is made up of all the inconsistencies and self interests of the people in it. When I am more consistant and think less of myself I am, in a very small way, helping my culture to also become more whole. TAKES ACTION: Supreme Court To Consider Communist Trucks Act Case By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The Supreme Court in a series of actions yes- terday agreed to review the constitutionality of Michigan's Commun- ist control Trucks act, handed down a ruling condemning "Jim Crow" practices in railroad coaches and denied Frank Costello a review of his conviction for contempt of the Senate. The Trucks Act which was found valid by a lower federal court is of the same general nature as the federal Internal Security Law of 1950 sponsored by Sen. Pat McCarran of Nevada. City Annexes New North CampusArea Township Board Gives Final Okay By ERIC VETTER The 267 acre University North Campus area was formally at- tached to the City of Ann Arbor last night when the Township Board voted unanimously to annex the territory. By their action, the Board gave University officials a go ahead sig- nal on plans for construction of sewage facilities, water mains, roadways and other public utili- ty projects in the area. UNIVERSITY action along this line had been held up for over two months while the Ann Arbor City Council was discussing the issue and waiting on reports. Already under construction on the new campus is the Cooley Memorial Laboratory which is scheduled to open sometime this summer. The opening of the laboratory will mark the first large campus development since the announcement of the new campus' construction was made on Jan. 17. Ray Wurster, a member of the Township Board, said the Board's approval was in recognition of the urgency of the problem facing the University in beginning work on various facilities before cold weather hinders construction. * * AT THE SAME meeting the Board tabled a proposal to annex three other University land par- cels. These are the University Golf Course, a portion of the Botantical Gardens and the old Ingliss prop- erty. Last week the City Council unanimously approved to an- nex all four pieces of land. It takes both Council the Town- ship Board approval before n- nexation can be made official. Under agreements reached with the city, the University will build the roads, sewers, water mains and fire hydrants, and pay for lighting installations on the campus. In addition, the University will build and equip a new north side fire station if appropriations are granted by the State legislature. Authority was given the City Water Department last week by the City Council to proceed with plans for the installation of mains and hydrants in the campus area when the Township Board ap- proved annexation. University plant supervisor Walter M. Roth said University plans along these lines will be made immediately. The Phoenix Memorial Labora- tory is the next building slated for construction on the campus. Work on this is expected to begin some- time early next year. Other build- ings definitely planned for con- struction are a library stack unit and an automotive laboratory. The new campus is directly north of the new Veterans' Ad- ministration Hospital and touches on the Huron River at one point. By straight line measurement the new campus is a mile and one tenth from the heard of the pres- ent campus. Bromage To Leave City Council in '53 Alderman Arthur W. Bromage, professor of political science, yes- terday announced that he will not be a candidate for reelection from the Sixth Ward to the City Council in April, 1953. Now serving his second term on the Council, the Republican alder- man expects to -be absent from Ann Arbor from early April to September of next year on sab- batical leave. Trygve Lie Resigns As UN Secretary-General Office Watch It COLUMBUS, O. -(A- Ohio} State University officials plan to crack down on drinking at ?v the game with Michigan here Nov. 22. Athletic Director Dick Lar- kins told of the plans in a news release yesterday. : Decision Comes After Red, Stand UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.-(P)-Trygve Lie, buffeted from one side by the Kremlin and from the other by a U. S. congressional com- mittee, last night submitted his resignation as secretary general of the United Nations. In an emotion-choked voice, Lie told the General Assembly he was stepping aside in hope it would help bring peace to Korea. Russia has refused to deal with Lie because of his support of the UN in Korea. CLOSE ASSOCIATES said Lie was "fed up" with the Kremlin at- tacks, with alleged sniping from the U. S. Senate subcommittee headed IFC, IHC Plan Joint D iscuss ions By MIKE WOLFF Inter-House Council members and officers of the Interfraternity Council will begin a series of meet- ings tomorrow designed to resolve the frequent controversy over fra- ternity men entering the residence halls during the two-week formal rushing periods. The decision to hold the meet- ings was reached yesterday at a conference between Dean of Stu- dents ErichWalter, IFC president Pete Thorpe, '53, and Sam Alfieri, '54A&D, president of the West Quad Council. ALTHOUGH DeanWalter would not comment on the discussion, it was learned that the decision was made as an alternative to the IFC's plan of having the Student Affairs Committee rule today on last Tuesday night's propos change in the IFC by-laws. It had been decided at Tues- day's house president's meeting to amend a 1950 ruling forbid- ding personal contact between fraternity men and rushees with- in their residences during formal rushing. The amendment would have allowed Greeks and rushees to meet at will in South Quad- rangle's Club 600 and dormitory common lounges. Thorpe said the reason for the amendment was the "IFC's belief that those facilities which are shared in common during the year with all students should not be barred, per se, to fraternity men during the rushing period." * * * THE IFC MOVE was a watered- down revision of the plan they submitted to the Interhouse Coun- cil last spring. A subject of strong feelings on the part of the quad- rangles, who voted it down, the proposal recommended that new quad men who request the services of IFC rushing councillors be al- lowed to meet 'them in residents' rooms as well as the common lounges and Club 600. The currently planned meet- ings will be held between Alfieri, Thorpe, IFC vice-president San- dy Robertson, '53BAd., and IHC representative to the residence halls' board of governors Ted Bohuszewicz, '54A&D. Alfieri expressed a hope that a solution agreeable to both sides would be reached before the first school week in January which was set as the deadline at yesterday's meeting with Dean Walter. Quadrangle policy regarding the IFC's proposal will be considered at the Interhouse Council meet- ing at 7:15 p.m. today in dining room No. 1 in the West Quad- rangle, Alfieri concluded. --Daily-Alan Reid POTTERY DEMONSTRATION-Skilled craftsman Shoji Hamada is shown demonstrating his Oriental training in pottery as part of his lecture last night in Angell Hall Auditorium D. Potter Hamada, dressed in his traditional village work garb of a loose black shirt and balloon pants, with getas, or clogs, on his feet, sat cross-legged before the potter's wheel and demonstrated the use of a foot-operated potting machine while Bernard Leach, his English associate operated the foot pedal., EXPERTS COMMENT: Reuther Seen As Likely, Successor To MurrayI By HARRY LUNN As labor and management leaders all over the nation prepared to. pay their final respects to CIO president Philip Murray who died Sun- day, speculation was rife as to who would be selected to succeed the long-time head of 33 CIO unions when the union's annual conclave gets under way Monday in San Francisco. Top contenders seemed to be dynamic Walter P. Reuther, head of the powerful 1,250,000 member UAW, and young, vigorous James B. Carey, president of the CIO- by Sen. McCarran (D-Nev.) and with actions of the UN's Budget Committee slicing big bites from expenditures Lie thinks necessary. The resignation will take ef- fect when the General Assembly, acting on a Security Council recommendation, appoints a suc- cessor. Lie's present term runs until Feb. 1, 1954. He did not set a dead- line for appointment of his suc- cessor. * * * MEANWHILE Andrei Y. Vishin- sky said flatly the Soviet Union will "not budge" from its demand for repatriation of all prisoners of war in Korea. He rejected two compromise pro- posals and renewed his appeal for a new commission to settle the Korean conflict. An American spokesman said immediately that the UN never would consent to driving pris- oners of war back to Commun- ist countries against their will. Other delegations gloomily agreed that the Korean stale- mate continued unabated and that Vishinsky had done nothing to point the way to a solution. The red-faced Soviet foreign minister insisted time and again in a two hour and 32 minute speech to the 60-nation UN Poli- tical Committee that a prisoner of war is a soldier and h1as no choice about repatriation under the Geneva Convention. LIE'SANNOUNCEMENT, made with no advance warning, burst on the 60-nation Assembly. The audience included U. S. Secretary of State Dean Ache- son and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky. Speaking slowly, Lie said: "I am stepping aside' now because I hope this may help the United Nations to save the peace., "The United Nations has thrown back aggression in Korea. There can be an armistice if the Soviet Union, the Chinese People's Re- public and the North Koreans are sincere in their wish 'to end the fighting." Vote Recount Decision Still. Awaited Here Official notice of a state recount in the gubernatorial race has not been received by the County Clerk's Office, Mrs. Luella Smith reported yesterday. "It will probably be several days before we will be given notifica- tions if a recount will be held," Mrs. Smith, the county clerk said. Right now the county ballots are under the custody of city and . township clerks. EACH CLERK is charged with the safety of the, ballots and is instructed to report any irregular- ities that are found. In addition, the state police have .started an inspection of all ballot boxes and will submit reports to the State Director of Elections on the con- dition of the boxes. Final figures in the election will not be in until all counties submit their totals to the state canvassers office in Lansing. If a candidate desires a recount on the basis of these figures he may make a request for the check. This Is usually granted by the state canvassers board. LAST NIGHT the unofficial re- turns gave Williams a 7,020 lead over Alger. The count stands at 1,429,955 for Williams to 1,422,953 for Alger. It is expected that a re- count request will be made by Al- ger if the final margin is less than 10,000. Democratic leaders are also con- sidering asking a recount in the senatorial race between incum- bent Blair Moody and Rep. Charles Potter. At this time Pot- ter leads by approximately 37,000 votes with Moody declining to comment when asked about a re- count. World News Roundup By The Associated Press SEOUL, Korea-United Nations forces threw back Communist at- tacks at points all along the rain- swept war front this Armistice Day in a land where there is no armistice. * * * AUGUSTA, Ga. -- Striking technicians removed picket lines from the site of the Atomic Energy Commission's huge H- bomb plant last night, and radio appeals were broadcast for work- ers to return to their jobs. * * * WASHINGTON-Latest returns from the congressional elections give the Republicans 220 House seats to 211 for the Democrats. One independent was re-elected, and three seats still were in doubt. JOHANNESBURG, South Af- rica - Violence erupted agaiA last night in the riot-torn east coast port of East London, where police fired for the second day on Negro demonstrators. YESTERDAY'S test case was in- itiated by the Communist Party of Michigan who challenged the law requiring registration of "Com- munist-action" organizations on three sections. Ruling on "Jim Crow" in railroad coaches the court de- clared that railroads may no longer require colored passen- gers to travel in separate coaches and rejected an appeal from a lower court ruling that separa- tion of white and colored pas- sengers is a constitutional bur- den on interstate commerce. Segregation of coach passengers has been most prevalent in south- ern states, the chief exception be- ing North-South through trains. International Union of Electrical Workers- ON CAMPUS last night two labor experts saw Reuther as a probable choice for the top CIO office. Prof. William Haber of the economics department com- mented that. "Reuther is undoubt- edly the most outstanding of the people who might be considered." However, he indicated that if the huge union decides to steer clear of politics in the next years, Reuther's chances could be lessened, since he has always stood for an active political ac- tion program. Prof. Harold M. Levinson 'of the economics department also saw Reuther as an outstanding candi- date for the post. * * * SEVERAL news commentators yesterday speculated that the change in CIO leadership might bring about new- efforts to bring the AFL and CIO back together into one organization. Results in last week's election had also brought up this possi- bility as some analysts saw in the Democratic defeat motiva- tion for the unions to reunite in one strong body. However, these speculations were largely discounted by both Prof. Haber and Prof. Levinson. "The obstacles to a merger are much deeper than leadership," Prof. Haber said. "Jurisdiction be- tween the two groups is the main problem and until this matter is solved, a merger is unlikely." Prof. Levinson also considered the possibilities for amalgamation as slim. "Differences in opinion and animosities which have grown up over the years would make mer- ger unlikely," he said. Armistice Day Neither the city nor the Uni- versity have planned official cere- monie in heranceo nf Armistier LECTURE COMMITTEE SURVEY: Private Colleges Impose Few Rules Key Election Picks Several Former Nazis FRANKFURT, Germany-(IP)- A surge toward the right swept several former Nazis back into local offices in three key West German state elections. Returns from Sunday's voting indicated that the federal govern- ment-already controlled by a conservative-rightwing coalition- may veer even farther right in next year's parliamentary election. SRA SERIES: Editor to Discuss 'Policy for Peace' EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the sec- ond of two articles summarizing the results of a Daily survey of 24 of the. nation's colleges and universities on methods of regulating campus speakers. Today'sarticle deals with privately-supported institutions. By VIRGINIA VOSS On the majority of privately- supported campuses where stu- dent politicos are interested in bringing controversial speakers, neither the administration nor faculty makes any consistent ef- fort to stop them. All but one of the six private schools contacted in a Daily sur- vey of 24 of the nation's universi- ties indicated that their adminis- trators often give active support to speakers barred from state-sup- ported campuses, as part of a broad, non-restrictive concept of "academic freedom." IN CONTRAST to the complex regulatory laws and systems of schools supported by public funds, private colleges place relatively This set-up gives the adminis- trations only one contact with the matter of approval or disapprov- al of speakers-the office comp- arable to this University's Office of Student Affairs which officially "recognizes" groups. * *, * AT DARTMOUTH, there has been "no occasion on which a speaker properly sponsored and properly entered on the college calendar has been forbidden a hearing," according to the cam- pus newspaper's editor. Although one Dartmouth or- ganization was "advised" a few years ago not to sponsor a concert by Progressive Party leader Paul Robeson, the Council on Student Organizations in issuing the ad- vice explained that the independ- ent sponsorship of a concert would jeopardize the regular college con- cert series. At Harvard, any "recognized" campus group can schedule speakers to talk in university the New York campus took one and a half years after a controver- sial banning to formulate. * * a THE DISPUTED speaker, How- ard Fast, an allegedly left-wing author, also figured in the aca- demic freedom picture at Yale. At the Connecticut college, how- ever, the controversy centered mostly within the student-admin- istration Political Union, Yale's omnibus of political clubs. The several student members of the Union opposed to Fast's talk were critisized sharply in the Yale News' editorial pages and subsequently Yale's presi- dent A. Whitney Griswold issued a statement reemphasizing the administration's non-interfer- ence policy. "The University will not prohib- it the invitation or deny the use of its facilities" to Fast, Griswold said. He left it up to undergradu- ate members of the Political Union to decide whether or not they n By BILL RILEY Vera Micheles Dean, editor of the Foreign Policy Bulletin, will speak on "A Foreign Policy for Peace" at 8:30 p.m. today at the Rackham Lecture Hall. Mrs. Dean is the third in a series v' l has written are "Europe and the United States," "Europe in Re- treat," "The Four Cornerstones to Peace," "Russia: Menace or Promise" and "United States and Russia." Her latest book "u- to Win Fri.;ntic f.r+t. I I