EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State 3aitjj r1~ WARMER, AND SUNNY o VOL. LXIII, No. 69 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1952 SIX PAGES European Unity Discussed by Ike Weighs Korean Plans with World Picture as Seen by Dulles, McCloy NEW YORK-0P)-President-elect Eisenhower, just back from his Korean "look and learn" trip, plunged yesterday into talks on European unity against communism. Eisenhower conferred with John L. McCloy, former United States high commissioner in Germany, and John, Foster Dulles, who will be his secretary of state. * * * * THE NATURE OF the talks indicated weighing whatever plans he might have the President-elect was concerning Korea with Alger Waits For Wa ye Retabulation By the Associated Press Secretary of State Fred M. Al- ger Jr. Yesterday awaited recount results in 53 key Wayne County precincts while Democrats readied plsans to demand today that the State Board of Canvassers certi- fy the reelection of G. Mennen Williams as governor. Alger, Republican candidate for governor, is expected to base his Sdecision on whether to continue the recount on retabulated re- turns in the 63 East Side De- troit precincts which gave Wil- liams heavy margins in the elec- tion. Meanwhile, James C. Allen, re- count attorney for Williams, said he will appear before the State Board of Canvassers at 2 p.m. to- day to demand that Williams be certified to his third term in of- fice. ALGER both slipped and gained as big chunks of votes changed hands today. In Washtenaw County, the recount was completed yester- day with the exception of two Ypsilanti Township precincts where an irregularity concerning inspection officials arose. On the basis of the other 30 coun- ties checked, Williams gained a total of 61 votes. The question of the inspectors will probably be decided tomor- row when the County Board of Canvassers will hold a hearing on whether the inspections had taken the oath of office before assum- ing their duties. If the ballots af- fected are invalidiated Alger will gain a net of 186 votes. * * * ALGER received a boost when the Wayne County Board of Can- vassers credited 300 votes due to an error in the official canvass. The error was uncovered in an adding machine audit of the Wayne County canvass, which showed Alger had been short- changed 100 votes and Williams given 200 votes too many. This shift changed Williams' official canvass lead over Alger to 8,318. Detroit Editor To Talk Today Brewster Campbell, executive city editor of the Detroit Free Press and former managing editor of The Daily, will speak at the initiation banquet of the profes- Ssional journalism fraternity, Sig- ma Delta Chi, to be held tonight in the Allenel Hotel. Campbell, who graduated from the University in 1922 was a mem- ber of Sigma Delta Chi while in school and is now vice president of the Detroit chapter. Political Science Roundtable to Meet The Political Science Round- tble will meet at 7:45 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheater. The topic for discussion will be, "Political Behavior Research in the Detroit Metropolitan Area." Participants will be Prof. Sam- uel Eldersveld of the political the rest of the world picture. McCloy, who lunched with Eisenhower and Dulles, said "we talked about the steps that might 'be taken in relation to European unity, a subject we have all been engaged in and in- terested in for a number of years." McCloy was high commissioner in the former enemy country for three years marked by tension be- tween Soviet Russia and the West, with Berlin as the focal point. He retired last August. NO DATE was announced for Eisenhower's expected meeting with Gen. Douglas MacArthur, former Far Eastern commander who was fired by President Tru- man. MacArthur said recently there was a "clear and definite solution" to the Korean fighting, and Eisen- hower messaged to MacArthur an expression of interest in his plan. Prior to his luncheon meeting witheMcCloyand Dulles, Eisen- hower conferred with Harold E. Stassen, former Minnesota gover- nor who has been designated as foreign aid chief in the new ad- ministration. Court Kills LoyaltyOath WASHINGTON-(RP)-The Su- preme Court knocked out Okla- homa's loyalty oath law yesterday on the ground that it does not pro- vide adequate safeguards for the innocent. Justice Clark, who wrote the court's 8 to 0 decision, said that under the act association alone determines loyalty-"it matters not whether association existed in- nocently or knowingly." * * * "INDISCRIMINATE classifica- tion of innocent with knowing activity must fall as an assertion of arbitrary power," Clark said. "It offends the due process of law." The Oklahoma law required state officers and employes to swear, among other things, that they had not belonged to any group listed by the U. S. attor- ney general as subversive or as a Communist-front for five years prior to taking the oath. In Oklahoma City, the author of the law, Rep. Bill Shibley, said he will introduce a new loyalty bill in the Legislature next year, draft- ing it to meet the Supreme Court's requirements. IN OTHER cases yesterday, the court: 1. Ruled for the first time that use of wire-tap evidence in state courts does not violate the Federal Communications Act. 2. Refused to interfere with a federal grand jury investigation of an alleged world oil cartel. Ike Elected WASHINGTON - (P) - The nation's Electoral College yes- terday chose Dwight D. Eisen- hower as the 34th U. S. presi- dent-presumably by a 442 to 89 count. This carries out the mandate. of last Nov. 4, when the na- tion's voters chose the electors in casting 33,927,549 votes for Eisenhower, the Republican presidential candidate, to 27,- 311,316 for Gov. Adlai Steven- son, the Democratic standard bearer. But Eisenhower's selection as the next president still won't be official until Jan. 6 when Congress meets in joint session for the Electoral College vote to be counted by the president of the Senate. No Decision On Lecture PlanFound No decision was reached yester- day on the Student Legislature's Lecture Committee proposal which is being discussed by the lecture group, according to Prof. James K. Pollock, Committee chairman. Although reliable sources indi- cated an impasse had been reached in the talks.