MR. WILSON AGAIN See Page 2 Y Sias qtarnt Latest Deadline in the State ~Iait1 s r i MOSTLY FAIR AND WARMER VOL. LXIV, No. 47 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1953 FOUR PAGES , 7 Students' Suspension Rea Discusses Judic Sidestep Y By GENE HARTWIG Reinstatement today of the sev- en University students suspended Thursday for wielding paint brushes on the Michigan State College campus Wednesday night has been virtually assured. The seven completed their clean-up project yesterday and said last night they planned to hand over a statement to that ef- fect from MSC Assistant to the Dean of Students Elwood Voller to Acting Dean of Students Walter B. Rea here today. ACCEPTANCE of the statement by Dean Rea will make the four i engineers and three literary col- lege men eligible for reinstate- meait according to the agreement) made when the disciplinary action was handed down Thursday. The seven included James Burke, '55; Joseph Burke, '56; Howard Hall,'54; Robert Luecke, '55E; William Carleton, '56E; Donald Jones, '56, and David Joyce, '55E. Total cost of transportation to East Lansing and materials for cleaning up the, green water color plaint amounted to about three dollars per man several of the would-be artists reported. Answering criticism that the Joint Judic had not been consult- ed in the disciplinary action Dean Rea said, "for convenience and ex, pediency in getting the clean-up job completed by game-time Sat- urday, it was felt that the process of handling the case through Ju- dic could be sidestepped." DEAN REA pointed out that "in emergency cases of this sort there is discretionary authority vested in his office to take disciplinary ac- tion." He said that even under nor- mal circumstances student discip- linary cases are not handled by the Judic. Since the students involved in this particular incident were from both the engineering and literary colleges, representatives of both schools were included on the four-men committee that handed out the discipline. The four were Dean Rea, As- sistant Dean James H. Robertson of the literary college, Assistant Dean Walter J. Emmons of the engineering school and Prof. Axel Marin of the engineering discipli-' nary committee. Dean Rea assured that any more cases of this sort occurring before today's game would be turned over to Judic on Monday. Molotov Seeks Big 5' Talks MOSCOW-(JP)-Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov said yes- terday the easing of international tension is the prime subject for any big power conference and Communist China must take part. After that subject is discussed, he added, the foreign ministers of the United States, Britain and Russia could take up the problem of Germany, "a matter of ur- gency." MOLOTOV made his views known at a news conference-the first held in Moscow by him or any other high ranking Soviet official within the last six years involving foreign correspondents. Molotov accused the Western Powers of blocking a foreign ministers' conference by failing to agree en putting the subject of international tension on the agenda. He refused to answer directly a question from a Western corres- pondent as to whether Premier State Colleges' Probe Proposed Unfair Competition Evidence Sought by Michigan Legislator By The Associated Press An investigation of charges that tax-supported. colleges are un- fairly competing with private colleges was proposed yesterday by Sen. Creighton R. Coleman (R-Battle Creek.) He planned to make the demand at a meeting of a legislative committee studying higher education, but was called away: Presum- ably he will make the demand at the committee's next meeting Dec. 21 in Ann Arbor: HERE UNIVERSITY President Harlan H. Hatcher, who attended Panmunjo0M Peace Talks To Resume, PANMUNJOM-QP)-Top Allied and Communist diplomats yester- day broke a three-week deadlock with agreement on an agenda for preliminary talks to arrange for a Korean peace conference. U. S. Ambassador Arthur H. Dean said the two sides ,reached a "meeting of the mind" by agree- ing that the time, place and com- position of the peace parley may be discussed simultaneously in two subcommittees. * * * DEAN AND the top Red repre- sentatives will meet again tomor- row to work out details for the committee sessions. The top diplomats returned to Panmunjom after a week's recess and in one hour gave for- mal approval to the agenda worked out in six secret sessions by staff advisors from each side. Dean told newsmen after the meeting: "This is just the key that opens the door. The real hard work is just commencing." He added, "at least this is progress." * * .* ASKED IF he thought his mis- sion to arrange for the peace con- ference would be successful, the envoy replied: "I have always been optimis- tic, and am even more optimis- tis now.", Dean told newsmen the approv- ed agenda "is substantially what I proposed" in his Oct. 31 meeting with the communists. The diplomats in 11 earlier meetings had failed to find an ap- proach for setting up the confer- ence. The Reds had insisted that the question of admitting Asian neutrals, one of their demands, be taken up first. U. S. Envoy Arthur H. Dean, representing the Allies, insisted that the time and place of the conference be settled first. The Allies have taken a stand that only the belligerents should be invited to the peace conference. They are willing, however, to per- mit Russia to sit in on the Red side. the meeting, said yesterday the is- sue was of little importance among those discussed at the conference. He saw no competition exist-. ing between public and private colleges. He said that, after World War 1I, private schools took more students percentage wise than state institutions and the relationship between num- bers enrolled has remained con- stant. Making further statements on the issue Sen. Coleman privately said that he understood that "the state colleges and universities are vigorously recruiting new students among high schools and at the same time crying about their enor- mous enrollments." He said he was informed the 10 state-supported institutions offer scholarships to virtually every high school in the state. * * * "I SEE no objection to offering scholarships out of funds donated to the colleges for that purpose," Coleman said. "But I am informed that many of these scholarships are simply a waiving of tuition by the institutions with no money in- volved. "That must amount to a con- siderable expense for the col- lege to absorb and it makes it very difficult for the private colleges, which can not do that, to compete for students." Commenting on Sen. Coleman's statements, Clyde Vroman, direc- tor of admissions, said the matter touches on a current practices of institutions throughout the na- tion to help needy students. He pointed out that the present scholarship program was begun before the era of low enrollment and is "not a recent move in view of lower enrollment." He called the scholarship pro- gram a "normal development of American Education to help wor- thy students profit from college. Ivan Parker, assistant to Dean of Students, said the GI Bill may be working hardships on the pri- vate schools who have a higher fees because the GI Bill grants a set amount for education. Also under consideration at the meeting was the setting up by the Council of College Presidents of detailed studies of unwarranted duplication of courses in the state- supported colleges. On this issue President Hatcher indicated the studies are to re- veal to what extent duplication is needed. He said all basic courses are necessarily duplicated but when.the range of such as atomic physics is reached duplication among the state universities is un- necessary. Clark Slows Investigation Temporarily Velde Act Called 'Bad Business' By The Associated Press Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark refused to testify yesterday before government probers and the Harry Dexter White "Soviet espionage" case sank into a week- end congressional eclipse. Further details in the sensa- tion-packed case may break into the light Tuesday. Attorney Gen- eral Herbert J. Brownell is sched- uled to appear then before the Senate internal security subcom- mittee. * * * JUSTICE Department officials said Brownell plans to give the sub-committee a "comprehensive statement" about the case. Brownell lit the fuse for Washington's biggest political explosion in many a day with charges last week that former President Trumnan promoted White from assistant Treasury secretary to U.S. director of the International Monetary Fund in 1946 although FBI reports to the White House had shown White to be a spy. In the House Un-American Ac- tivities Committee, which vainly issued fast subpoenas for Truman, Byrnes and Clark, plans for hear- ings on the case were i n 4tate of indefinite suspension. * * * AT A SECRET post midnight meeting yesterday a representative of the Republican National Com- mittee warned Rep. Velde (R-Ill.) of the House Un-American Activi- ties Committee that his attempt to subpoena former President Truman for testimony in the Har- ry Dexter White "Russian spy case" was "bad business." White House staffers were al- so reported to have taken a hand-either directlyor through intermediaries - in trying to block the move. In New York' Fred Smith, a former Treasury department aide, concerning the White case said yesterday that President Eisen- hower met Harry Dexter White in a tent in England in 1944. President Eisenhower, question- ed at his press conference last Wednesday about the controver- sial White case, said he had never met White and knew nothing about him. In Canada where Eisenhower is visiting, an aide said there would be no comment on Smith's article. New Numbers .All Ann Arbor telephone numbers will have the prefix NOrmandy added at 11:59 to- night. Other exchanges in the vi- cinity will also be changed. The University number will be- come NOrmandy 3-1511 but the extension numbers will remain the same. -Daily-Dick Gaskil, GO MICHIGAN!-A baby in a stroller and other Michigan rooters send off the Wolverine team with a rousing cheer as they prenared to devart, via bus, for East Lansing yesterday. Trophy To Be Presented Before Big Game Toda Presentation of Gov. G. Mennen Williams' highly-controversial Paul Bunyan football trophy to be awarded the winner of today's Michigan-MSC game will take place between 1:29 and the kick-off at 1:30 p.m. today. Eight-feet high, the carved pine trophy pictures Michigan's mythical lumber-jack standing astride a hemispherical map of the 'Wolverines Hope For Upset Victory Sellout Crowd Set To Witness 46th Meeting Between Traditional Rivals By IVAN N. KAYE Daily Sports Editor Special To The Daily EAST LANSING-Underdog Michigan goes against the mighty Spartans of Michigan State here at Macklin Field this afternoon in the 46th football meeting between ancient intra-state rivals. A sellout crowd of nearly 51,000 will watch Bennie Oosterbaan's twice-beatenWolverines attempt to end a three game losing streak at the hands of Biggie. Munn coached teams. Millions more across America will witness the, struggle, which is being televised as the Game of the Week. THE SPARTANS rate as two-touchdown favorites, but in this as in so many other Big Ten games, the past record can be thrown out in trying to predict the winner. This will be Michigan State's final conference game, while Michigan has yet to play Ohio State. Last Saturday the Spartans, with the flashy LeRoy Bolden racing for three touchdowns, smashed Ohio State's title dreams before 80,000 in the big horseshoe at Columbus. Bolden will carry the brunt of the Michigan State offense this af- ternoon, but his running mate, Billy Wells, has been sidelined with pneumonia. MSC Editor Sees Rising Game i Srit By PHIL GUNBY Michigan State News Manager Special to The Daily EAST LANSING -- Normally East Lansing becomes almost a ghost town on Friday afternoons, State of Michigan. Included on t Quick Count Sets Near SL Time Record By DOROTHY MYERS Election workers completed tal- lying Student Legislature ballots in near-record time yesterday, with final results coming about 2:30 a.m. Early Thursday evening short- handed referenda workers had pre- dicted the setting of a new record for long-lasting counts topping even that set last spring, when fi- nal returns were tallied at 5:30 a.m. the day after elections. * * * CANDIDATES who won SL seats after The Daily went to press at 2 a.m. yesterday were Bob Hen- derson, '56, Fred Furth, '56, Carl Eckert, '55, and Larry Levine, '56. Eckert and Levine will fill one-se- mester positions. Several Legislature members termed voting on the final exam referendum a "clear mandate" for exam study committee mem- bers to work for returning to un- official graduations and a long 'dead' period before exams begin, as well as maintaining the pres- ent 10-day Spring Recess. Results of the "Fair Play" stick- er referendum were generally con- sidered indecisive, however, be- cause of the scant difference be- tween proponents and opponents of the sticker. Loud boos and hisses accompanied yesterday morning's announcement of the bare major- ity in favor of the anti-discrimina- tion plan. MEANWHILE, several SL mem- bers and other students who were disappointed in the defeat of sev- eral candidates whom they consid- ered unusually able leaders hinted that strong attempts would soon be made to establish a 'student government party' on campus. Students proposing the party say it would be neither conserva- tive nor liberal, but would work to promote election of qualified campus leaders who backed cer- tain plans for strengthening stu- dent government. The plans would be embodied in a party platform which may be written within a few weeks. In a Daily questionnaire sent to all candates prior to elections, nearly half replied they would be in favor of having one or more campus political parties to point up issues involved in elections. ri m i Xum m -n he three-foot base of the statue is 4 bronze plaque for registering win- ners of the annual football rivalry. TELEVISION cameras will prob- ably not show the one-minute un- veiling of the $1,400 trophy, sched- uled to be presented by the Gov- error to captains of the two teams in center field. Usually, television officials say,. cameras are trained on bands, student cheering and crowds rather than on presenta- tions and awards. Previously, State Republican leaders had claimed one of the main reasons for the Governor's presentation was so he could ap- pear not only before the football crowd, but also before an estimated 54,000 nation-wide television view- ers. CONTROVERSY over the tro- phy began almost immediately af- ter announcement of the plan, with charges that political motiva- tions were foremost in minds both of those in favor and those in op- position to the trophy. Although MSC athletics dir- ector Ralph Young and MSC's athletics board gave quick ap- proval to the plan, the Uni- versity's Board was accused of stalling making any decision so the trophy, which required con- sent of both schools, could not be presented at this year's game. More recently raised was the question of who would pay for the trophy. Originally it was reported that the Governor was paying for it "out of his own pocket." Wed- nesday; however, William Present, Lansing jeweler who arranged for carving the statue, said Gov. Wil- liams had asked him "to raise a certain sum in Lansing toward the cost and said some of his friends in Ann Arbor would also con- tribute." Present said the Gover- nor would give money toward the total cost also. No Monmouth Spies - Stevens WASHINGTON-(P)-Secretary of the Army Stevens said yester- day that none of the 33 persons; suspended from jobs in the radar laboratories at Ft. Monmouth, N. J. was suspected of spying. Stevens said all the suspensions were based on loyalty charges. He told a news conference that some of the charges are "serious," but refused to go into details. Several workers suspended re- cently-one a victim of mistak- en identity-have been reinstat- ed in their jobs. Stevens said he would personally see to it that First string tackle Randy Schre- but iate yesterday it was bustling. cengost is also ailing and will miss Au la ayit wa tlink. today's game. Thus the Spartans As usual, a number gave thanks are not in good physical condi- it was Friday and headed for their tion, whereas Michigan should be favorite haunts, but most seemed in good shape with the possible content to stick around the Micht- exception of Tony Branoff, who gan State campus and watch some had a' sore shoulder during the of the spirit of busy preparation week. for today's game. BERT ZAGERS, a 5-11, 140' A WILD and wooly freghman pound junior from Cadillac will intersquad football game drew a probably get the call to replace crowd of more than a thousand Wells at right halfback. Zagers is yesterday afternoon, while others one of the top pass defense men on' viewed the annual touch football the Michigan State team, but in contest between student govern- the one-platoon system he was overshadowed by Wells' terrific ball-carrying abilities. The rest of the Spartan back- field will have veteran Tom Yeweic at the quarterback post and the rugged Evan Slonac at fullback. Yewcic is from Cone- maugh, Pennsylvania, while So- nac is from St. Michael. The Spartans will be hoping to combine a victory over Michigan with an Illinois loss to Wisconsin today to throw the conference race into a deadlock. SHOULD ILLINOIS and Michi- gan State wind up with one con- ference defeat, they would share the Big Ten title. Since Illinois Today's Michigan-Michigan State game will begin at 1:30 p.m. instead of the usual 2:00 starting time. The television broadcast of the game will be- gin at 1:15 over WWJ-TV, chan- nel 4. was tied by Nebraska, Michigan State would have a superior sea- son record and would be in the best position for a Rose Bowl invi- tation. What effect, if any, the recent disciplinary action taken by the conference against Michigan State would have on its Rose Bowl chances is not known at this time. It is our guess however, that if the conference race ends in dead- lock, that Michigan State would get the Pasadena bid due to the See MSC, Page 3 !McCarthy Alleges GE Spy Evidence ALBANY, N. Y.--(P)-Sen. Mc- Carthy (R-Wis.), exploring the possibility of communism in .de- fense plants, declared yesterday a two-day closed hearing here had turned up "strong evidence" of spying at the General Electric's sprawling Schenectady works. Amid charges from union men that the probe' was aimed at stif- ment and student publications workers. The weather may have had something to do with it, too. The mercury stayed around 50 degrees most of the day, and the weather man cheerfully predicted 60 degree plus temper- atures for today. Most likely, however, the activ- ity was evidence of the peak of football enthusiasm at MSC. Preparing 'for some real compe- tition with the famous Michigan Marching Band today, the MSC bandsmen worked until after 6 p.m. -to put finishing touches on the formations they will step off this afternoon. * ,* * DUSK brought renewed activi- ty on the part of campus police, police administration students and volunteers as patrols were again set up in an attempt to prevent painting or damaging of campus property. There was some talk that a "heavy attack" from paint buck- et brigades of Michigan fans might come during the early dawn, but if any major assault on the Ann Arbor campus was planned it was well kept under wraps. A full scale, $1,500 student gov- ernment entertainment program got under way about 8 p.m., as a crowd of around 8,000 moved from the Union Building to the band- shell for an outdoor pep rally. Johnny (It's in the book) Stand- ley and the Four Lads sang at the rally, and then moved into the au- ditorium across the street for a two hour "Spartan Review" fea- turing the MSC Glee Club and other student talent. A large percentage of the crowd moved from the rally to the re- view, and then most of the crowd headed for one of several dances scheduled, for home to do some studying before the big weekend, or for a restaurant to do some more talking about State's chances ,for making it four in a row over the UNDER CROSS-EXAMINATION: Lautner Gives Additional Testimony By BECKY CONRAD Special To The Daily DETROIT - Going into the second phase of his testimony in the trial of six Michigan Commu- pist leaders, government witness John Lautner yesterday admitted under defense cross-examination he agreed to meet Party commit- tee members the day after they denounced him as an "enemy agent." After being charged with dis- nv. + +to th + P art n 4t n t+h ciples of Marxism-Leninism de- pend on historical conditions of time, and place?"' Goodman querried. And then again, Goodman ask- ed if the witness had been taught the "fight for socialism can never be separated from the fight for political liberty." The ex-Commu- nist replied that he had been taught such principles. He told the jury the CP always took a position against the out- while." Later Lautner worked with the Internal Security di- vision of the Justice Department for $25 a day. As a Party functionary, the wit- ness had received pay ranging from nothing "when there was no money, only a bowl of soup," to $60 a week. Issuing another reminder of the New York hearings, Goodman asked Lautner if he had ever stat- ed in a report "persons who were I i