THE COURT See Page 4 Yl r e Latest Deadline in the State :4Ia ii4 0 LA VOL. LXIII, No. 70 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1952 SIX PAGES U.S. Jury Indicts Owen Lattimore Far East Specialist Held on Seven Counts of Perjury In Hearing WASHINGTON-(IP)-A federal grand jury indicted Owen Latti- more yesterday on seven counts of perjury. He was accused, among other things, of testifying falsely that he had never been "a sympathizer and promoter of communism and Communist interests." Rm nThe chargesagainst the Far Eastern specialist arise from his testimony before the Senate's internal security subcommittee last spring. The president of Johns Hopkins University, Detlev Bronk, said One part Jouralsm Gets Denial Editor Campbell UpholdsHonesty By ZANDER HOLLANDER Daily Feature Editor Charges that a "one-party press" gave the American people a dis- torted view of the recent election ' campaigns drew an emphatic re- buttal last night from Brewster Campbell, executive editor of the Detroit Free Press and a former editor of The Daily. Campbell, who said his own newspaper had been accused of be- ing partial to both Republican and S* * * Alger Ends Vote Concedes Race to he had sent a letter last night to VA Hospital conversion Suggested Local officials yesterday said that they neither knew anything nor had authority to do anythin concerning a proposal to convert the newly-constructed Veterans Hospital into a TB hospital to re- lieve a shortage of beds for ailing state veterans. Statement of the proposal came after a smeeting in which Gov. G Mennen Williams gave a "no mon- ey" answer to pleas for more beds for the State's veterans, charging that Michfgan has been "discrim- inated against" by the VA in th past and that this policy is being continued with recent VA budget cuts. The governor said that Michi- gan has 197 veterans for every bed available compared to the coun- try's average of one bed per 146 patients. JOSEPH W. M1ANN, service of- ficer for the Veterans of Foreign Wars, said that veterans groups State physicians and others have advocated converting the new hos- pital to a TB hospital, but that the VA proposed to devote only 40 beds to TB patients. He claimed opposition by the University had blocked use of the local building for TB pa- tients, according to the Associat- ed Press. Later, Mann told The Daily he did not know which agency of the University had done the blocking. His statement had been made, he explained, on information supplied by the Vet- erans Administration medical staff in Washington. University Vice-president Mar- vin Niehuss had told the Associat- ed Press earlier in the evening that the use to which veterans hos- pitals are put is a matter to be decided in Washington. And University Hospital asso- ciate director Waldo Buss said the matter "has never been discussed.' Donald C. Bachmann, State legislative officer for the Disabled American Veterans, observed, "The situation will be even more con- fused as it goes on." Joint Talks Set By SDA, CLC ? Students for Democratic Action and the Civil Liberties Committee last night progressed in their plans to have joint discussions during the second semester on topics re- lating to civil rights. Among the topics suggested for discussion were "Civil Liberties and Future Employment,' "Was Due Process Used in the Stacy Case?" and "The McCarran-Walters Bill." CLC postponed election of new officers until its first club meet- ing of the spring semester. Train Ducat Sales End Tomorrow 'Tomorrow marks the last day on which tickets for the special Vulcan trains leaving Friday for Chicago and New York will be available. Tickets will be sold from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Ad- ministration Bldg., according to John Knudson, '53E, a member of the Vulcan senior engineering so- Lattimore giving him a leave of ab- sence, with salary, from his uni- versity duties "until the federal court shall have passed upon the charges.". "I have done this with the ad- vice of a committee comprising members of the several faculties of the university and with the approval of the board of trustees," Bronk's letter added. * * LATTIMORE, director of a 3 school of international relations at Johns Hopkins University in g Baltimore, was grilled by the sen- t ators for 12 days about Commun- s ist connections and what influ- - ence he wielded on America's post- war policy in the Far East. "I am, of course, innocent," e Lattimore said at the office of " his attorney here, where he was - informed of the indictment. s "That innocence should have to g be so long defended against such - vengeful harrassment as I have been subjected to for three years is something that can better be commented on by others than by myself." I THE GRAND JURY, after going - over the record of the Senate hear- s ing with government prosecutors, charged that Lattimore lied about seven "material" matters. The - jurors reported: 1. That he testified he had never supported communism, e whereas he "had been a sympa- - thizer and promoter of commun- a ism and Communist interests." 2. That he testified falsely he did not know until 1950 Ch'ao Ting Chi was a Communist. Chi was a man Lattimore worked with at the Institute of Pacific Relations, ac- cused by the subcommittee of be- ing a Red agent. 3. That he swore that he did not know until the late 1930s that a person who used the pen-name of "Asiaticus" was a Communist, knowing this testimony to be un- true. "Asiaticus" contributed to "Pacific Affairs," a magazine Lat- - timore edited for the institute. 4. That he swore falsely that, aside from Russian contribu- tions, he had never published articles in "Pacific Affairs" by persons whom he knew to be Reds. 5. That he testified he lunched in 1941 with a Soviet ambassador in Washington after Hitler's in- vasion of the Soviet Union, where- as the fact was that he met the ambassador before the invasion oc- curred and while Russia and Nazi Germany were still allies. 6. That he swore that he never handled the mail of Lauchlin Cur- rie, an aide of the late President Roosevelt. The grand jury said there is evidence that he did so on occasions when Currie was away from Washington. 7. That he testified he visited the Chinese Communist headquarters at Yenan in 1937 without making any advance arrangements. -Daily-Larry Wilk BREWSTER CAMPBELL Executive City Editor of the Detroit Free Press * * * Democratic candidates, spoke at the initiation banquetrofSigma Delta Chi, national professional journalism honorary. "The majority of American newspapers did an honest job, and a good many did an excel- lent job in covering the cam- paign," the Detroit editor main- tained. Campbell, who graduated from the University in 1922, assertedI that he had looked into the chargesI and knew "there were newspapers' which did a very bad job of cov- ering the campAign." "But I know this in newspaper offices all 'over the country there was a great.deal of soul-searching in the course of the election cov- erage." INDICATING that "newspapers were on trial in the election cam-, paign," Campbell went on to de-, clare the majority of the Ameri- can press stands on "a solid ethi- cal basis.", But he warned the American, press has been "too long compla- cent, satisfied to do a good-] enough job to get by, bound too greatlysby tradition and old concepts." "Whether we like it or not those, days are gone," Campbell said, "and our competition, which has come on a dozen new fronts, has done them in. But journalism is by no means a dying field." Those who bewail the advent ofI radio and television in the news- gathering field will not survive, hec asserted. _ 'U' Alumnus Diest Dr. Earl W. May, chief of the1 pediatric staff at Grace and Her- man Kiefer hospitals and a Uni-1 versity alumnus, died yesterday ats Grace Hospital in Detroit. He was 61 years old.a HOST Makes DiSalle New Price Boss WASHINGTON - UP) - Presi- dent Truman yesterday brought Michael V. DiSalle back into the government as economic stabiliz- er to help maintain a "strong" anti-inflation program until the new Republican administration takes over on Jan. 20. DiSalle made it clear that he feels controls over prices and wages will be necessary to ward off threats of inflation for some time to come. The former price direc- tor added he is sure the new Con- gress will study the situation carefully before deciding to aban- don the program. DI SALLE probably will be sworn in Monday to succeed Rog- er L. Putnam. Putnam resigned as economic stablizer yesterday to re- turn to his private business in Springfield, Mass. DiSalle, in his new post, will have direct super- vision over prices and wages. In a letter to DiSalle, Tru- man said that DiSalle's service as reorganizer of the Office of Price Stabilization should be of great help in keeping the con- trols program going. Immediately after the an- nouncement, administration sta- bilization leaders held a "united front" news conference presided over by Defense Mobilizer Henry Fowler. * * * FOWLER said the purpose of the joint meeting was to make clear that the price and wage con- trol program will be maintained. Besides DiSalle, Fowler and Putnam, others present were Jo- seph H. Freehill, who was sworn -in as new director of the Office of Price Stabilization, and Charles C. Killingsworth, new head of the Wage Stabilization Committee. The group joined in pledging to continue "strong and vigorous controls" in the waning days of the Truman administration. Fowler said that instead of quitting as he had planned to do Jan. 1 he will stay on until -Jan. 20, or until President-elect Eisen- hower names his successor as di- rector of thehOfficeof Defense Mobilization. Fowler plans to re- turn to private law practice in Washington. Sabre Jets Shoot Down Four MIGs SEOUL-(/P)-Sabre jet pilots clashed 13 times with Communist MIGs high above Northwest Korea yesterday and shot down at least four Red jets, probably destroyed another and damaged one, the Fifth Air Force announced. Ground fighting along the frigid 155-mile frot was the lightest in several days. The Eighth Army reported only brief patrol contact at most points. GO A-WASSAILING--While officials of the U.S. weather bureau predicte north of a line from the Texas Panhandle to Virginia, a contingent of Unive coming Yule season with carols and holiday greetings on a tour of campusi LAST OF 39 CREWMEN: Navy Rescues 13 from Suppi LEGHORN, Italy-(2P)-Four I. S. Navy helicopters starred yester- day in the last act of a drama of the sea, removing the last of 39 crewmen from a broken, storm- swept U. S. supply ship to safety after 36 tense hours of rescue op- erations. The helicopters snatched the fi- nal 13 of the crewmen from the wave-lashed decks of the Groin- Roundtable' Discusses Detroit Area A discussion by a four man panel of the findings obtained from a recent study of political behavior in Detroit, highlighted the Poli- tical Science Roundtable meeting last night. Participants in the panel talk were, Prof. Samuel Eldersveld of the political science department, Prof. Ronald Freedman of the so- ciology department, Richard W. Dodge, Grad, and Sid Belanoff, Grad. PROF. ELDERSVELD said in- formation derived from the survey met Reefer and flew them to shore. Breeches buoy and small boat op- erations earlier had rescued 23 of their fellow sailors, and three oth- ers swam ashore. * * * TRUE TO THE tradition of the sea, the last to leave the 3,800-ton Navy refrigerator ship was her skipper, Capt. Henry P. Saukant of' Brooklyn, N. Y. A helicopter set him down in safety just 36 hours after the ship, battered by gusts of wind up to 110 miles an hour, crashed on the rocks in Leghorn Harbor and broke in two Monday 200 yards off shore. Bus Trips Students may sign up for reservations aboard Friday's Wolverine Club sponsored busses to Willow Run Airport from 1 to 4 p.m. today and to- morrow in the Administration Bldg. Busses will leave from the Union at 12:15, 2:45, 4 and 5:15 p.m. and arrive at -the airport in time for major flight departures. Additional buses will be run at 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. if enough students need transportation at those times. Recount; illiams U M ecount off As Williams s Gets Office SInciu mbent Takes 10,586 Margi .< B theAssociated Press X Republican Fred M. Alger, Jr., late yesterday called off the re- count of votes in the Nov. 4 guber- natorial election, conceding de- feat by Democratic incumbent G. Mennen Williams. Alger threw in the towel as Wil- liam's margin swelled from the of- ficial canvass margin of 8,618 votes to 10,586 after 1,654 pre- cincts had been re-tabulated. ALGER'S statement conceding defeat was announced shortly be- fore 11 p.m. from his recount headquarters in Detroit. In his prepared statement Al- ger said, "With the margin so close, we felt there was good purpose in a recount of the votes cast for governor so there would no doubt in the minds of the people and so every last step -Daily-Larry Wilk would be taken to give people a ed a white Christmas final determination of the elec- rsity students hails the tion results. residnce hlls."I do not believe now- that a residence halls. continuation of the recount is warranted. A pattern has been set, and I am sure there will be no major changes from the original ulating' Gov. Williams on "his y Sh1P THE GOP Secretary of State went on to thank the many citi- _ . - - - . -__ . _ _ . _ . _ _ _ . _ . _z e n s w h o d e v o t e d t h e i r t i m e a n d 9 crew members, all civ- effort in the recount of votes ere in good health. Some and ended his statement congrat- ated for exposure. ulating Gov. Williams' on "his ur helicopters which ar- personal victory." the climactic stage of the The announcement came only Mme from the U. S. air- a few hours after Alger had said merom thdey Und LS. no decision would be made un- iers Midway and Leyte. til today on halting or continu- ing the recount. r1d e ws"It alsocame close on the heels rrld News of a rejection by the State board of canvassers of a Democratic pe- O nd p tition demanding that Williams' election to a third term be certi- fled. the Associated Press Williams. in Detroit, issued a, NGTON-Lt. Gen. Lewis statement saying, in part: :hief of Army Engineers, "With the long period of inde- edgonethe kicklnes bye cision over, we can all buckle down ped on the knuckles by now to the many big problems of the Army Pace in con- gpolm ith the huge North Af- which confront the state. It will bas costucton obbe my purpose to work with the base construction job legislatureand all citizens of good ngressmen sharply crit- will regardless of partisan poli- * .~ , ,tics to solve those problems in the -The Atlantic Allies yes- best way possible. There are some Tmed British Adm. Earl legal questions as to procedure for ten boss of the Mediter- terminating the recount. Until our alaes butef thepdiow-attorneys have had an opportunity a lanes, but left the pow- to consider these questions I can- in that sea under U S not say what the next step will ert B. Carney. _ _be." EGAS Nev Another HST orders st series in Nevada, pos- y' in 1953, was indicated by an Atomic Energy Loyalty Plan En announcement.o y RKy Pa n " * NEW YORK - (A) - President A. Switzerland-The In- Truman has ordered that a plan al Red Cross released cor- be drawn to provide a maximum ice yesterday in which it guarantee that disloyal Ameri- he UN command in Ko- cans are not employed by the iolating the Geneva con- United Nations, Atty. Gen. James n war prisoners by using p. McGranery announced last iwithholding food and night. Koje Island. McGranery told newsmen Tru- ters included replies by man had ordered the State and k Clark, the UN com- Justice Departments and the Civil who said "the control Service Commission to collabo- ... have been necessary rate in working out the plan. illy justified." The attorney general said Tru- man issued the directive as a re- sult of the recommendations made to UN Secretary General Trygve Lie by a panel of three interna- in tional lawyers, but gave no other i Samedetails. The lawyers recommended that S - - - -disloyal Americans in the UN be bitants make the long fired and any other UN em- unch than those in Alice ployes, whether Americans or not, is might be attributed to be dismissed if they were guilty y greater distance to the of subversive activities of espio- m, Schaadt speculated. nage against the U.S. and May were chosen f " The 39 ilians, we were trea The fou rived for t rescue ca craft car W( R By WASHI A. Pick, c and two been rape Secretary nection w rican air which co: icized. PARIS- terday na Mountbat ranean se erful Ame pendent i Adm. Rob LAS VE atomic tes sibly early yesterday Commissio 'LEAGUE' PRESIDENT COMMENTS: Stat us of Japan's Women Improving By VIRGINIA VOSS "The greatest change in post- war Japanese society has been the improvement in the status of wom- en," Japanese League of Women Voters president Fusae Ichikawa claimed yesterday. In the middle of a four-month tour of the United States spon- sored by Columbia University's East Asia Institute, Miss Ichikawa said that since Japanese women were first given the vote in 1945 they have made big strides in pol- itics. Twenty-one women now have litics is not quite respectable," she noted. The problem of improving the status of Japanese women is an economic and educational one, Miss Ichikawa said, reflect- ing the state of Japan as a whole. Japanese politicians must con- cern themselves with decreas- indicated a great degree of in;- GENEV stability in party allegiance by the Reuther Rests ternationa Detroit voter. The newly collected responder data revealed voters tend to over- A fter charged t evaluate their party allegiance, he rea with v claimed. -vention or Dodge concluded the program DETROIT - (A) - Walter Reu- force and with a general survey of the rela- ther, the CIO's new president, was water on] tive participation of labor unions operated on yesterday for the re- The let 'in politics. He said the survey moval of his gall bladder. Gen. Mar showed the greatest Democratic An official report afterwards mander, union strength came from the CIO said the operation was successful measures rather than the AFL. and that Reuther was resting well. are are fu DESPITE FOOD GRIPES: Meal-Skipping Trend Rema i ing Japan's crowded population By MIKE WOLFF through such means as birth con- n The spasmodic agitation for bet- trol if- the economic crisis is to ter dormitory meals appears to be cleared, she explained. have little bearing on the number The League of Women Voters of students who skip meals, ac- president felt this must be done cording to Leonard A. Schaadt, of the residents missed breakfast, 10 per cent cut lunch and slightly less than 20 per cent failed to show up for dinner. These totals, however, are well inha climb to l Lloyd. Thi the slightl latter dor March