STUDENT LEGISLATURE See Page 4 L dlzrA Dahtli1 aQ 0 o .0 a Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXIV, No. 34 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1953 _I I I FAIR, MILD SIX PAGES 'U' Group Asks No-.xam Debate Student-Faculty Talks Suggested; Crary Proposes Calendar Revision By ERIC VETTER Daily City Editor An unofficial recommendation that students discuss the possibility of the abolishment of final examinations for seniors in student-faculty meetings was given by the special committee studying final examina- tions yesterday. Discussion on discontinuing senior finals was capped with the suggestion that student members of the committee instigate talks on the subject with members of the faculty. S* * s STUDENT REACTION was almost immediate when the Senior Board last night recommended that the various college student-faculty * * * No Exams For Seniors Considered Sounding out opinion on th exam schedule, the Senior Board last night considered recommenda- tions modifying the schedule to in clude dead days and the elimina- tion of exams entirely for seniors Controversy centered. around how the schedule could be modi- fied to avoid crowding exams to- gether, and still retain a sufficient study period between classes and exams without cutting down on vacations or actual class time. SUGGESTIONS by the Board included finals be held two weeks before the end of school, with the last week spent for comprehensive review of the course. Another course of action to be recommend- ed to the University committee studying the problem would be for faculty members to turn in the student's grade before taking the final, with early exams being give to those in danger of failing. A third alternative would be to return to the former method of not being graduated official- ly at commencement. Change in the semester system was considered as another possi bility. Under the proposed plan the fall semester would begin th irst of September and end befor Christmas. After a three week va cation classes would resume, end ing around the first of May. There would be no loss in actual class- room time. Opinion was sharply divided on the issue of eliminating finals en- tirely for seniors, some maintain- ing that it takes away the oppor- tunity to consolidate a course but others claimed a good student can learn a course without a final. The following committee heads were also announced: Publicity, Carol Gaeb, '54A&D and Jim Wong, '54A&D; Senio Ball, Ann Nelson, '54Ed and Bil Wittingham, '54; Class Gift, Joyce Clements, '54 and Bob Golten, '54; Caps and Gowns, Ann Willard. '54 and Martha Seger, '54BAd and Commencement Announcements, Jackie Ross, '54Ed and Mern Man- ning. Jury Selected For Red Trial DETROIT - (IP) - Attorneys, moving with almost unprecedented swiftness, yesterday agreed on a Federal Court jury for the trial of six Michigan communists charged with conspiring to teach and advocate the violent over- throw of the United States gov- ernment, The jury of seven women-most- ly housewives, and five men was sworn in shortly after the third day of the trial of the six defend- ants had started. DEFENSE and government at- torneys agreed to the jury just 13 hours after they started the questioning of 99 prospective jur- ors. Attorneys also quickly agreed on four alternate jurors. The 16 member jury panel will hear the go, ernment's case against the six defendants: Saul Wellman, 48; Nat Ganley, 48; William Al- lan, 46; Mrs. Helen Winter, 45; Philip Schatz, 39; and Thomas DeWitt Dennis, Jr., 35. o committees discussed the idea. (The final examination study committee cannot move official- ly on the matter as changes must be made by the Regents following a faculty recommenda- tion.) If the student-faculty groups recommend the seniors be exempt from final examinations to the e dean of their college, he may dis- cuss it with his executive com- - mittee and the faculty of the col- - lege. - Final approval by the faculty would mean a recommendation to j the Board of Regents for a change. THE EXAMINATION study t group also heard a proposal by Prof. Douglas Crary, of the geog- raphy department, on the possi- bility of revising the entire school calendar to begin classes in late 1 August. s e This plan, used by the Uni- versity of California before World War II, would end the school year in late May and call for the semester break over the r Christmas holidays. e Further investigation of the idea e will take place at the next meet- ning of the committee along with consideration of the quarter, or * four semester, system used in oth- er schools. After lengthy debate, the group agreed to welcome the results of the Student Legislature referend- um on the "dead period" between * the end of school and the begin- e ning of exams, but to neither en- e dorse or disapprove of the idea - The groups attention focused on the proposals calling for the short- e ening of Spring recess to permit "dead period," or the continuation of the method adopted last spring when a "dead period" did not exist. tStudents Sigh sRelief; Garg r On Sale Today Young Anthony Eden confi- dently faces the world. He was not a contributer or subscriber to Gar- goyle. Today an older and wiser Eden will hurry to buy his copy of Gar- * * * Ike To Back GOP Slate In Elections Might Participate I '54_Campaign WASHINGTON - () - The White House disclosed yesterday that President Eisenhower - far from remaining completely aloof from partisan politics-favors the election of all Republican, candi- dates for office. The White House made it clear that goes for Paul Troast, Republi- can candidate for governor of New Jersey, who sparked a controversy when it was disclosed he sought clemency for a convicted New York labor racketeer. THE LATEST clarification of Eisenhower's views came from White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty in elaborating on a discussion of politics at the President's news conference Wed- nesday. Hagerty said he had received numerous inquiries whether Ei- senhower was taking a slap at Troast in commenting on a. recent incident in New Jersey in which the President posed with Troast for pictures. Hagerty then went on to shed new light on Eisenhower's attitude toward the political wars. Some Republicans have expressed dis- may at what they interpreted as a hands-off policy ever since Ei- senhower remarked at his Oct. 21 news conference that he wasn't going to use the presidency as an agency in partisan elections. * * * THE STATEMENT was widely regarded as meaning Eisenhower planned to keep almost entirely away from political campaigning -an outlook that disturbed some GOP leaders girding for next year's battle for control of Con- gress. However, Eisenhower told his news conference that of course he was interested in keeping the Republicans in control of Con- gress. Moreover, he indicated he might take part in the 1954 elec- tion campaign on a limited scale. . The President gave the impres- sion that at least he would make some speeches to set the GOP rec- ord before the people, even if he doesn't get out and stump for in- dividual candidates. * *.* HAGERTY said Thursday Ei- senhower was speaking of the nec- essity, as he put it, of electing Re- publican members to Congress on the' record the administration has built. "Just so there is no misunder- standing, that applies to other candidates who are running for office on the Republican ticket," Hagerty said. Hagerty agreed that was the same position Eisenhower took during last year's presidential election campaign. 'Morse Lashes GOP Oil Stand DETROIT-(P)-Senator Wayne Morse (Ind.-Ore.) yesterday ac- cused the White House and "Sen- ate Republica-n managers" of kill- ing a proposal giving offshore oil revenues to defense and education. Morse said that "the White House intervened to switch crucial votes" and "Senate Republican managers killed" a compromise be- tween the Senate and the House that would have achieved that end. AN INDEPENDENT since he bolted the Republican Party dur- ing last year's presidential cam- paign, Morse said that the test came on an amendment by Sen. Hill (D-Ala.) to the continental shelf bill, passed by Congress ear- lier this year. The "oil for education" amendment had been adopted by the Senate 45-37 and would have slated revenues from the off- shore oil lands for defense use for three years and for educa- tion thereafter. The continental shelf bill pro- vided for federal development of mineral resources in submerged lands outside historic state bound- aries. Speaking to Detr'oit teachers, Morse said that a Senate-House conference called to compromise Ensian 'Ensin senior picture proofs may be returned from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 6 p.m. every day except Saturdays and Sundays through Nov. 13 to the Student Publications Bldg. Gas Tanker Blast Kills One Sailor CHICAGO-(P)-A big lake ten- ker carrying 580,000 gallons of gas- oline blew up in Lake Michigan yesterday. One crewman died and two others were injured when the 253- foot Blue Comet burst into flames in Calumet Harbor, a mile off shore at 92nd Street. Eight other crew members and the tanker's skipper, Capt. Charles E. Quarry, 36, of East Lyme, Conn., were res- cued uninjured. * * * KILLED IN the explosion was Edward Survilla, 30, of Kingston, Pa. The injured, both hospitalized, are Axel Aanson, 45, Brooklyn, N. Y., a deckhand and William H. Rice of Anderson, S. C., first engineer. The blast sent gasoline fed flames leaping high into the pre- dawn darkness. Fog hampered fireboats and three Coast Guard boats that went to the aid of the Blue Comet's crew. About 80,000 gallons of fuel went up in flames before fire- men extinguished the blaze which was confined to a forward hold of the tanker. Quarry said the crew was pre- paring to lift anchor and head for St. Joseph, Mich., when the ex- plosion occurred. The tanker had taken on its gasoline load Wednes- day at the Shell Oil Co., plant at Indiana Harbor. The cause of the blast was not determined. The ship is owned by James McWilliams Blue Line Inc., of New Jersey. 75 FOOT: ]Dragon Runs Loose In AA Ponderous pachyderm petrifies perplexed purveyors! A monster out of the past (or someone's nightmare) ran foot- loose and fancy free through the streets of Ann Arbor last night. Apparently a well-educated fel- low, possibly even a college, grad- uate, the dragon left behind notes several feet high on the diag, where he was first spotted at 11:30 p.m. last night. "He was at least 75 feet tall, with green scaly skin, and fire coming out of his mouth," was the report gained from Judy Bettison, Grad., who spotted him from her window at the Kappa Delta house. This description agrees with one supplied by Herb Johnson, '54, who reported that the dragon was blocking traffic on Washtenaw. Last call to the Daily was from a man identifying himself only by the last name of St. George, who wanted to place a classified ad for a lost dragon. The Ann Arbor police, however, were unable to find any trace of the elusive fire-breathing monster. Plane Crash Pianist Kapell Among Victims SAN FRANCISCO-(P)-A big British airliner, nosing down for a landing at San Francisco after a trans-Pacific flight, plunged in- to redwoods on a fog-bound moun- tain ridge yesterday, killing all 19 persons aboard. The victims in- cluded the American pianist Wil- liam Kapell. Kapell was the only U. S. citi- zen aboard. Most of the others were from Australia or the United Kingdom. Kapell, who was a close friend of Eugene Ormandy, had frequent- ly appeared with the Philadelphia Orchestra at the May Festival. * * * THE SCENE was 25 miles south of San Francisco on the rugged shoulder of King's Mountain at an altitude of 1,700 feet. The airport control tower re- ported the four-ejgined DC6 was on a direct approach to the landing , strip at 10:42 a.m. (CST) and should have landed two minutes later. Although immediate intensive search began by air and ground, the countryside was so rough it was two hours before the still flaming wreck was sighted from the air. The scattered ruins lay among centuries-old redwood trees and giant boulders. The ground parties found fires burning over a half-mile area. The plane was torn to bits. The pieces were strewn over a wide area of' timbered land. * * * IT WAS the tragic end of an overseas flight that began in Syd- ney, Australia, and was resumed yesterday from Honolulu. An airline official in Honolulu said Kapell was on the point of stopping over for a few days in Hawaii, but at the last mo- ment deelded to continue his trip home to New York. He had been on a two-month concert tour of Australia. Kapell, 31, had been famed as a concert pianist since the age of 19 and had toured throughout the United States and South America in addition to Australia. Advance Seen In EDC Talks PARIS-(')-Foreign Minister Georges Bidault said yesterday negotiations are preceeding satis- factorily to link Britain closely with the European Army plan. He said the French Parliament would be called on to ratify the plan when these three conditions are fulfilled: 1. Explanatory protocols by the other European Defense Commu- nity partner - Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, The Netherlands and Belgium. 2. A basis for settlement of the dispute with Germany over the Saar. 3. Negotiations that will bring a closer political and military re- lationship between Britain and the continent than has ever existed. Bidault spoke before the Coun- cil of the Republic, advisory upper house of the French Parliament for ratification. -Daily-Betsy Smith. NO STONE WALLS-Peaceful Prison Gate after Costello left.' Frank Costello Released, Faces Possible*Deportation. By JON SOBELOFF Special To The Daily MILAN-A big, black 'Cadillac rolled through the gates of the Federal Correctional institution here yesterday morning, and Frank Costello was a free man. The 59 year old rackets operator was released from prison just 12 miles south of Ann Arbor after serving one year of an 18 month sentence for defying Senate crime investigators. * * * REPORTERS and photographers who gathered at the prison gates chased the. hired, chauffeur driven car which whisked Costello, his wife and an unidentified com-' 19 Killed In Reds Reject Dean Plan West Coast For Peace Conference; UN To Hear Atrocities By the Associated Press The Communists today flatly re- jected U. S. envoy Arthur Dean's proposal to settle the time and place of the Korean peace confer- ence before discussing the matter of inviting neutral nations to the top-level meeting. Dean proposed yesterday that the Reds "stop the nonsense" of angry debate at the preliminary talks, set a time and place for the main conference, and then ex- change views on what nations should be invited to sit in on the big meeting. Today North Korean Delegate Ki Sok Bok said Dean's proposal and suggested agenda "are abso- lutely unacceptable." STIRRED BY American pub- lic horror, the U. S. delegation to the UN said last night it will place before all the 60 United Nations the Army's documented, photo- graphic record of Communist atro- cities in Korea. Whether it will call on the UN . General Assembly to pass judgment and condemn the per- petrators of the deeds was not disclosed immediately. A terse announcement from chief U. S. Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., said: "The United States is placing on the agenda of the General Assembly the Unit- ed States Army report on atroci- ties committed against captives in Korea by Communist forces." * * * IN WASHINGTON several Sen- ators asked that the UN take note of the crimes and vote at least a resolution of condemnation. Sen. Mike Masfield (D-Mon.) wrote the U. S. delegation ask- ing that It do all in Its power to have the guilty punished. "We've just got to make the ef- fort to bring' those criminals to trial," Sen. Hendrickson (R-NJ) agreed. But he conceded that pros- pects of bringing any Red war criminals to justice are not bright, inasmuch as Communist leaders would 'be unlikely to surrender them. * * * IN KOREA the chairman of the Neutral Nations Renatriation Com- mission said yesterday that bit- terly anti-Communist North Kor- ean prisoners of war have agreed to begin listening tomorrow to Red pleas to come home. The chairman, Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimayya of India, said he plan- ned to have at least 500 North Koreans ready for interview by the Communists tomorrow. He said the number may be increased to 1,000. IHC Urges No 'M' Men , panion toward Detroit, but lost it in early morning rush hour traf- fic. Just where Costello was head- ed was uncertain, but Milan war- den David Heritage said Costel- lo planned to leave the state by plane, reportedly heading east. Costello will not be out of the state for long, though. He is scheduled to appear on December 7 in Detroit Federal Court to face civil and criminal actions for al- leged evasion of more than $200,- 000 in income taxes.. The government is also trying to take away Costello's citizenship and deport him to his'native Sicily. AT THE PRISON, routine went on as usual, and no one seemed much interested in the departure of the underworld kingpin. "Why should there be any fuss," com- mented a turnkey, and went back to sorting the mail. Warden Hermitage explained that Costello "conformed" and didn't forfeit any "good time," so he only served one year of his year and a half maximum sen- tence. The most infamous of the cor- rectional institutions 625 inmates received very few visitors, and saw his wife and lawyers for only two hours each month during his stay in Milan. House Group To Investigate Reds In Navy WASHINGTON - (A') -- The House un-American Activities Committee announced yesterday it is making a full investigation "to determine the extent of" Com- munist infiltration in the Navy Department during World War II. Chairman Velde (R-Ill.) said some leads already uncovered by a subcommittee "tie in with the expose of Morton Sobell," one of those convicted in the Julius Ros- enberg case. S* * ROSENBERG and his wife, Ethel, were electrocuted last June 19 on charges they had acted as atomic spies in this country for Russia. Sobell, Velde said eight witnesses al- ready have been questioned about Communist infiltration of the U.S. Navy Department. Sev- en witnesses, he said, declined to answer "pertinent questions" on the grounds of possible self- incrimination. 'JOHN BROWN'S BODY': Civil War Dram a Will Open Today ** * * * * * * In.TMNTrack The Inter-House Council last night voted unanimously to ask Intramural sports authorities to think again about their policy of letting freshman varsity track- men participate in IM competi- tion. Comments accompanying the move stressed the "IM sports for IM athletes," theme and com- plained about competition with "ringers." * * * KEITH POUL, '56, surprised the council members by annoul~olng that Rodney Grambeau, assistant IM sports director, had assured him that varsity freshmen will be withdrawn from IM competition. Pohl added Grambeau had told him records made by the varsity men would not be allow- ed to stand. With little opposition, a move to appoint a formal representative of the residence halls council to the Student Legislature sponsored Academic Freedom Commission was also approved by the group. * Appointed to the IHC judiciary were Joel Margenau, '54BAd, chairman; Gordon Britz, '55BAd, and Harold Lynde, '55. Laughter-producing parliamen- ANTHONY EDEN . . . before Gargoyle * * * goyle so he may be prepared for the latest conflicts on the inter- national scene. Students can buy their copy of Gargoyle today on campus, priced at only 25c. Local Republicans Plan YD Debate The first of two performances of# "John Brown's Body" will be given at 8:30 p.m. today at Hill Audi- torium. The Stephan Vimcent Benet epic poem stars Tyrone Power, Anne Baxter, and Raymond Massey. The Walter Schumann Choral Group of 20 members -will support the leading characters. Amongst the three stars, 17 characters are given voice in the Civil War drama. The political climate of the times and the part of Lincoln is taken by Raymond Massey. The feminine viewpoint of women in war are Anne Bax- l . } .-. .: