I P BEHIND THE LINES See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State Bai4&1 K ~ 7 ,:w V7i. T V *IT l U.. C CLOUDY WITH SNOW v V . L.A1i,, N U. 57 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN. TUESDAY. DECEMBER 2. 1952 EIGHT PAnG U1VJi11 p&(.uSL 10 ichiganCagers 'Go Perigo in Convincing Style Ike Fills Labor, tCommerce Posts. NEW YORK--(A)-President-elect Dwight Eisenhower's Cabinet was completed yesterday with the announcement that he has desig- nated GOP party official Sinclair Weeks of Boston for secretary of commerce and labor leader Martin P. Durkin of Chicago for secretary of labor. Durkin is an AFL union leader and a Democrat who voted for 1Impressive 80-72 Win 'Opens Year Wolverine Rally WhipsMarquette By DICK LEWIS The first win is always the best. Michigan basketball coach Bill Perigo found that out last night when his never-say-die Wolverine cagers came from 10 points off the pace to register a resounding 80-72 verdict over a veteran.Marquette University five. * * * * * * * * I DIA PEACEI RESOLUTID (LEAR' U Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson. He the only member of the Demo cratic party in the Cabinet. * 4 HE IS GENERAL presiden United Association of Journeyme and Apprentices of the Plumbin and Pipe-Fitting Industry of t United States and Canada, Inter national Union, American Fede ation of Labor. In Washington, he told re- porters he was surprised by the appointment but believes Eisen- hower will give full considera- tion to the problems of labor and that he will help all he can to make Eisenhower's administra- tion a successful one. Announcement of the two desig nations for the Cabinet was mad by Arthur S. Vandenberg Jr., wh will be White House secretary i: the next administration. Walt Williams, of Seattle, Wash., h been designated to be under secre tary of commerce, Vandenberg an nounced. SSACPlans YP Review By CRAWFORD YOUNG Daily Managing Editor The Young Progressives wil come up for review before a spec ial meeting of the Student Af fairs Committee at 3 p.m. toda The "responsibility" of the grou has again been called into questior On June 6, YP received a quali fied clearance on this issue fro SAC, after an inquiry at the re quest of the Lecture Committee. MEANWHILE, two YP petition for outside speakers hung fire be fore the Lecture Committee. Th first, a request for controversia author Howard Fast, was submitte a week ago. Yesterday, anothe petition was tossed in the hopper as the group sought quick clear ance for Rabbi Abraham Cronbacl of Cincinnati, tentatively slated t speak Thursday on "The Rosen- berg Case." It was unclear what would happen to the Cronbach petition. The Lecture Committee will not meet until Saturday, so approval before Thursday seemed almost out of the question. The Cin- cinnati Rabbi, a member of sev- eral pacifist groups and partic- ipant in the "Committee to Se- cure Justice for the Rosenbergs," is scheduled to speak at Hillel Friday evening. Lecture Committee sanction is not necessary for the latter ad- dress, as it is not sponsored by a student organization. The Fast appearance had been scheduled for Saturday. It alsc seems unlikely that this will be feasible. It was impossible to ar- drangea meeting before that time, according to Prof. James K. Pol- lock, Lecture Committee chairman. Two weeks notice is officially required on speaking petitions, although this has not always been enforced. It remained possible that the SAC might at today's meeting take some action which would tempor. arily disqualify YP as a sponsor- ing organization. In that case, the Lecture Committee would not con- sider the petitions. Coming in for scrutiny will be YP's activities this fall, and a report on the action taken on several suggestions made by the SAC in June on improving YP internal functioning. . Hatcher Denies s g o Captain ie - '53 Varsity Dick O'Shaughnessy, '54 Ed., erugged 190 pound junior center from Seaford, N.Y., will captain Michigan's football team for the 1953 season. O'Shaughnessy, who has been a bulwark in the middle of the Wol- verines' offensive line for the past * * s New Rules On Lectures V A THREE-POINT spurt immed- L' J P UlfEUUUtI (UUCI iately after the start of the fourth period broke a 56-56 deadlock and By VIRGINIA VOSS put the victors on top for good.ByIGIAVS Sophomore center Paul Groff- Recognized campus organizations sky canned a free throw, cap- will be permitted to sponsor speak- tain Doug Lawrence found the ers of their choice in private meet- range on a jump shot and the ings without prior approval of the Wolverines were on the march University Lecture Committee, it: to 21 more final quarter markers was announced yesterday. and their first opening-season The resolution constitutes a re- triumph in three seasons. vision of past practice wherebyj But the hustling Michigan squad groups petitioned the LectureI had to withstand a late Hilltopper Committee for approval of all bid in the waning minutes. meetings, open or closed. ** DICK O'SHAUGHNESSY new grid captain two years, was unanimously elect- ed by his teammates here yester- day. The selection was officially announced at Michigan's annual' football bust held in Detroit afew hours later. * . * THE 20 YEAR OLD junior suc- ceeds Merritt Green, '53, who cap- tained the Wolverines to a fourth place finish in the Big Ten race this past fall. O'Shaughnessy was named by several selectors to the Western Conference all star team and was also named to the All-Amer- ican All-Catholic squad. When he's not playing football, Dick wrestles with Cliff Keene's Wolverine wrestling team. Last year with his weight scaled down below his football playing weight he won the Western Conference 177 pound wrestling crown. See GRID, Page 7I FOLLOWING a lightning out- burst that saw forwards John THE COMMITTEE prepared the Dodwell, Ralph Kauffman and policy statement in an effort to Milt Mead each dent the twins put into "decent, effective prac- within 58 seconds, the Wolverines tice" a procedure which wouldj were hard-put to protect their embrace the distinction between 68-59 advantage. "public" and "private" meetings Backsourt standout Bob Van made last spring by the Sub-Com- Vooren, the visitors' leading mittee on Student Discipline, ac- point-getter with 22 scores, pac- cording to Lecture Committee ed the thrust that brought Mar- chairman Prof. James K. Pollock quette to within one point of of the political science department. the winners, 68-67, with less Dean of Students Erich A. than five minutes remaining. Walter pointed out that a "pri- The score moved up to 73-70 vate" meeting, according to Of- and then Michigan caught fire. fice of Student Affairs policy, is Diminutive Lawrence meshed a one which is restricted solely to quartet of charity tosses, -guard clubinembership,. Ray Pavichevich funnelled through another one-pointer and Kauff- This definition was b'rought out! man batted in a rebound. in a resolution of the Sub-Com- * * * mittee on Student Discipline fol- THAT MADE the count 80-70 lowing the McPhaul dinner inves- MILT MEA with a little more than a minute tigation last spring. __L__ to play. 'It also represented the * , , highest point total for a Maize QUOTING Webster's Interna- ' and Blue outfit since the Cowles tional Dictionary in its definition P pelr C alls championship era. of "private" as "not open to the Perigo's initial triumph in Ann public" or "publicly known," the Arbor, however, was not achiev- resolution noted that the McPhaul I By DOROTHY MYERS ed without the addition of a few dinner was not "private within The . December issue of "The gray hairs. the ordinary meaning of the American Student" has blasted the Coach Tex Winter's towering word." National Student Association, call-' Hilltoppers jumped off to a fast The sub-committee's statement ing it "the most dangerous of all 10-3 lead in the opening four mm- has been on file in the Office of the many left-wing political pres-t utes, and expanded it to 18-8 at Student Affairs since spring, but s sure groups now operating on tseven-minute mark.oAmicnapue: the sem.* * far no policy distinction has been American campuses." ABOUT THIS time, Groff sky,made between public and private Michian'sti6-5 pio oaperator meetings. one-hand shots and the Marquette ACCORDING TO Student Leg- bulge wa sreduced to 19-12 after islature president Howard Wil- Hits W olverine the first stanza. lens, '53, one of the two non-vot- Playing in his first starting ing student representatives on the T role in a Maize and Blue uni- Lecture Committee, the new policy C u u rp form, Groffsky was one of four statement will clarify the existing See CAGERS, Page 6 See COMMITTEE, Page 2 The Wolverine Club has been -------------- accused by the Airport Cab Com- rP _AMU pany of infringing on their rights1 LD TIPS IN TWO POINTS FOR MICHIGAN ---Daily-Don HURDLE India Peace Plan Handed To Assembly Vishinsky Blasts Settlement Hopes UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - (S - Climaxing the most bitter bat- tle in years, the UN Political Com- mittee last night approved over- whelmingly India's battered Ko- rean peace plan endorsing the Western stand against forced re- patriation of prisoners. The vote was 53 to 5 from So- viet Bloc with one abstention from Nationalist China. THE RESOLUTION now goes to the full UN Assembly, which is, slated to meet tomorrow in a move to speed final approval and rush the UN action to Asia. Just before the vote, Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vi- shinsky doomed any lingering Asian hopes of an agreement on this basis by tongue lashing In- dia and her delegate, V. K. Krishna Menon. In brief, the committee resolu- tion provides for: 1. A repatriation commission made up of Czechoslovakia, P- land, Sweden and Switzerland to Campbeli effect the release and repatriation of all prisoners of war. 2. Appointment of an umpire to serve with the commission ouP and vote in the event of tie de- cisions. 3. All prisoners remaining with- were abso- in the jurisdiction of the repatri- ation commission at the end of Lt "the pres- (90 days after the armistice agree- eost rhep- meht has been signed shall be re- e most rep- ferred, with recommendations for ie history of their disposition, to a political maintamied conference set up in the armistice t individual agreement at Panmunjom to work epresented out the Korean peace plan. assistant BULLETIN o attended ngress, be- ATLANTIC CITY-(IP)-The on of NSA Rubber and Oil Workers unions the Com- early today threw their strength ternational to Walter S. Reuther, Auto Convention, Workers president-just about er the NSA assuring the 45-year-old Reuther hat official of becoming the CIO's new pres- ainst Com- ident. lthough' the ZheWorl News was attend-i W rd N w st youth or-{ r CongressesR u rship of the' ;ed, and def- " By The Associated Press - - SEOUL, Korea-U. S. B29 Sup- erforts yesterday bombed a sprawl- ing, camouflaged Red troop camp and a nearby supply center in ers Northeast Korea. Meanwhile, cold, i 1 wet weather slowed ground fight- ing to its lowest pitch in months. ruses ROME, Italy-Vittorio Eman- uele Orlando, last surviving mem- ber of the Big Four architects of wever well- the peace of Versailles, died at harm. He his home last night at the age s generally of 92. IFC's who. g a motion LONDON - Britain accused ng clauses. Russia last night of nearly doub- ,bled mainly ling the size and firepower of a n passed in modern East German land, air fraternities and sea force within the last six but at their months. - d *. NSA 'Left-Wing' Gr The newspaper, official publi- cation of the Students for Amer- lca, of which Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur is honorary president, listed nine conclusions relating to actions of the NSA, a federationI of student organizations from ap- proximately one-seventh of thej nation's 1,470 colleges and uni- versities. that many of them lutely not true. Willens claimed tha ent organization is th resentative NSA in th the United States and that it constantly orie students ,to insure tha campuses are fairly r Sarah 'B. Healy, 'DEATH' CENTRA. SPECIFICALLY, the major dean of women, wh charges levelled against NSA, of ( the recent NSA Cot which the University Student lieved that "the acti Legislature is a member, we'e that in refusing to attend it, "milks about $37,790 a year munist-dominated In from students who are ignorant Union of Students C of its very existence; (2) wants held a few weeks aft to eliminate fraternities which do Congress,. indicated t not conform to its.desires; (3) ad- NSA sentiment is aga vocates letting Communists teach; munists." and (4) refuses to ban admitted Communists from being off icers, She added that alt of NSA." most recent Congress ed by more Communis Student Legislature President ganizations than othe Howard Willens '53, said +that have been, "the leade he felt the charges were made organization is balanc completely out of context, and I initely not infiltrated. ILJ I iiI1152A; Arts Theater One-Act Plays To Open! -' * * * * when the club chartered buses to bring students back to Ann Arbor i By JON SOBELOFF Integrating four one-act plays into a single presentation built around the central theme of death and romanticism, the Arts Thea- ter production "Landscapes and Departures" will open its two week run today at 8 p.m. Interpreted by the same actors and using virtually the same sim- ple set throughout, the four short plays move "from straight drama, through stylized movement, to ac- tual dancing," according to Strow- an Robertson, the show's director. FIRST of the four one-acts to be performed before the theatre- in-the-round audience will be William Saroyan's straight drama, "Hello Out There." Gertrude Stein's "In the Garden" and "The Man with the Flowerin HisrMouth," by Luigi Pirandello, form the sec- from1 . W rw un 6uudy nignt1. The club 'had planned to have buses to meet the major flights Sunday, making four trips be- tween the airport and Ann Arbor. While waiting for the second trip. scheduled to leave about 9 :20 p.m.. Bud Charlip, Spec., report- ed that Roy Milligan of the cab{ company told him he could not solicit the business of those need- ing transportation. Milligan said that the NN'ol- verine Club buses "had no busi- ness out there under the Michi- gan Public Service Ruling." This ruling, he said makes the pro- vision that company, 'after pay - ing for a permit, has the right to operate on the highways. is cab company, he continued, had such a permit and thereby is al - lowed a monopoly on the trans- protation from the airport. After complaints by Milligan the remaining two chartered bus runs were cancelled. The dispute will be investigated by the Michigan Public Service Commission. No action has yet been taken. "nl~i itn " FRATERNITY MEET: National IFC Consi Discriminatory Cha By MIKE WOLFF The discriminatory clause re- moval controversy was given ani airing on the national level Fri- day and Saturday as 500 frater- nity delegates convened in New, York's Waldorf Astoria hotel for the forty-fifth annual National Interfraternity Conference. Dean of Students Erich A. Wal-' ter, Assistant to the Dean Bill Zerman and Interfraternity Coun- cil president Pete Thorpe.'53, were! the local representatives to the Conference which serves as an ad- visory body to its 60 member fra- } ercive legislation, hoa meaning, could only said this viewpoint wa accepted by Northern cooperated in tabling to recommend removi The motion was ta because of a resolutio 1949 suggesting that remove their clauses b own speed, Thorpe saic IFC delegates from:I other New England s ported a recommenda up an advisory body Rutgers and chools sup- tion setting that- would 'WASHINGTON - Rep. Daniel A. Reed (R-NY), who is slated to head the tax writing House Ways and Means Committee, announced w I a aadirbo that.- woul a#ndMeans Comh .mite, nnne