'Pon TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1951 FOUR TUE 1WICIHGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MARCH 13. 1954 ...- .... .. .. ....x ..: .mow + .a.v vv# 4 Ie Army, McCarthy, Adlai in Four-Way Battle Nixon Gives Republican Reply Today Intra-Party Flare-ups Explode During Week The furious battle currently raging from Washington to New York and back started innocently enough, in Florida when former Democratic candidate for the presidency, Adlai Stevenson charg- ed that the GOP is "half McCar- thy and half Eisenhower." Stevenson claimed the Republi- can Party was using McCarthyism as a "formula for political suc- cess" REPERCUSSONS were felt Mar. 8 when GOP chairman Leonard W. Hall announced that the Republi- can National Committee had re- quested air and video time from the major national networks to answer Stevenson's accusations Vice-President N i x o n was handed the job of presenting the official Republican answer to the Democratic Party. How- ever, Sen. McCarthy while praising the choice of Nixon as "excellent" demanded of the networks free air time to -retort to what he termed. Stevenson's personal attack upon him. However, the networks denied this and McCarthy countered tht "they (the networks) will grant me time or learn what the law is. I will guarantee that." Party leaders differed and Hall maintained "this is not a mat- ter for personal rebuttal by any individual." McCarthy then, be- gan shopping around for air time as the Republican Executive Com- mittee announced that Nixon would speak today at 10:30 p.m. IN THE MEANTIME, on March 9, the strongest attack from with- in the Republican Party against the Wisconsin Senator came in a *speech from the Senate floor by Sen. Ralph E. Flanders (R-Vt.) Flanders said Sen. McCarthy was doing his best to "shatter the Republican Party" and di- vert the nation frop world dan-. ger by stirring up "dust" and "racket." President Eisenhower credited Flanders with "performing a serv- ice" by emphasizing the "great danger" of "personal aggrandize- ment" and a split Republican Par- ty. Ser. McCarthy found radio time Thursday in a question and answer interview with commentator Ful- ton Lewis, Jr. On the broadcast, the Senator accused Stevenson of dealing in untruths and also lash- ed back at commentator Edward R. Murrow, who devoted a 30-min- ute broadcast Tuesday to a round- up of the Senator's investigating activities. Murrow charged that he repeatedly stepped over the line between "investigating and perse- cution." In addition, Sen. McCarthy ac- cused Murrow of being connected with a Moscow school tabbed as revolutionary. The commentator answered yesterday that he had been an adviser to an internation- al education experiment which the Russians cancelled in 1953 be- fore the school started. FREE. DELIVERY SERVICE 9-10'l11 EVERY EVENING. Hamburgers, Sandwiches Home-baked Pies and Cookies Hot and Cold Drinks JEAN'S SNACK SERVICE Phone NO 8-6076 'Unlimited Cuts' Granted To Upperclassmen at NYU Adopting a plan similar to that recently instituted at the Univer- sity of Detroit, the College of Arts and Science at New York Univer- sity has announced that senior honor students are now allowed unlimited class cuts. The faculty has voted to allow seniors on the dean's list to skip classes without penalty, NYU spokesmen have revealed. * * * ALTHOUGH honor students - those having an average of 85 per cent or better-will still be re- quired to take exams, write papers and fulfill other obligations, "they will attend classes, both labora- tories and lectures, at their own discretion." Termed "an incentive to scho- larship in the true sense of the liberal arts," the new plan, it ROBERT T. STEVENS still smarting over his recent run-in with the Wisconsin Senator during the Zwicker affair broke a short silence yesterday when he denied charges stemming from McCarthy that he had pro- mised to smear the other armed services departments if the Sen- ator would soft-pedal his inves- tigations into alleged Commun- ist activity within the Army. SENATOR McCARTHY, at the very center of the hot Cohn- Schine controversy, cried "black- mail" yesterday against an Army report charging he and his chief counsel, Roy Cohn, applied pres- sure for special treatment of° the former McCarthy aide. The Wis- consin Senator reported he was making public documents which would throw a new light on the whole affair. PRESIDENT EISENHOWER re- mained behind the scenes for the better part of the week but was reported to have hand-picked Nixon, to answer Democratic charges of disunity within his party. At a press conference, however, Eisenhower deplored tactics being used by certain per- sons in government and for the most part backed an attack lev- elled by Sen. Flanders (R.-Vt.) VICE-PRESIDENT RICHARD M. NIXON is the man who will tonight answer Democratic chief Adlai Stevenson's charges that the Republican Party is being split wide open over the issue of McCarthyism. It has been re- ported that President Eisenhow- er hand-picked Nixon to answer Stevenson, purposely by-passing the Wisconsin Senator. ADLAI STEVENSON the former Democratic candidate for presi- dent, started the ball rolling earlier in the week when he char- ged the current Administration was split in two between the Eis- enhower and the McCarthy fac- tions. Since then the ex-Gover- nor of Illinois has remained si- lent apparently awaiting an offi- cial Republican Party reply is claimed by members of the NYU faculty, will allow superior students to further advance themselves by i n d e p e n d e n t study. At the University of Detroit, a new program inaugurated to "en- courage the excellent student," has exempted 11 students from regular instruction. The NYU plan exempts 77 students, or approxi- mately one-quarter of the senior class. An editorial in the Heights Daily News, student newspaper, noted that, "Students are here by choice, they pay to be here, they are here to learn. Clearly the stu- dent is the only loser if his cuts are not regulated in accordance with his capability." 4>"" Army Center of McCarthy, Stevens Battle; Charges Leveled over 'Privileges' for Private Schine . Stevens and McCarthy First shots in the "war of Mc- Carthy versus the Army" were fired at Fort Monmouth, N. J. last December when the volatile Sen- ator from Wisconsin charged there had been substantial infiltration by Communists at Fort Monmouth during World, War II. Following a series of tangles with the Army over much-decorat- ed Brigadier General Ralph W. Zwicker and Maj. Irving Peress, investigator McCarthy warmed up to his present tilt with'Army Sec- retary Robert Stevens. THE FIRST encounter occurred when Stevens told officers at Val- ley FoIrge, Pa., during a Washing- ton's birthday celebration, "I in- tend to support the loyal mn and women of our Army." Phases of the war: 1) Feb. 18-McCarthy calls Gen. Zwicker to the stand and lashes out at him as unfit to wear the uniform in a private hearing later made public by the Army. 2) Two days later Stevens tells two officers asked to appear be- fore the McCarthy committee not to appear and says he will testify himself as a volunteer witness Thursday (Feb. 25). 3) Feb. 23-McCarthy charged that an Army code clerk, in the pay of the Communist Party dur- ing the '40's is now handling "top secret" messages in the Pentagon. 4) Feb. 25-The showdown meet- ing between Stevens and McCar- thy is called off and the Army Secretary bows to demands by the Wisconsin Senator in the latter's investigation of alleged Army "Communist coddling." 5) March 6-Rumors that the 54-year-old Army' Secretary is about to resign over the McCar- thy feud are quashed by Stevens. 6) March 12--The Senator and Stevens renew the conflict with divergent charges in the case of forymer McCarthy subcommittee staffman G. David Schine allegedly getting special treatment in the Army due to pressure from his former boss. * * * Peress and Zwicker A secret hearing concerning pro- motion and honorable discharge of Maj. Peress, called a "Commu- nist Party leader" by the Wiscon- sin Senator, touched off the whole McCarthy-Stevens controversy. Early in February, Sen. McCar- thy claimed Army officials were in- formed last April that Peress was a Communist, but went on to pro- mote and later discharge the Army dentist after he appeared before the Senate Investigating Subcom- mittee and refused to answer ques- tions about Communist activities on constitutional grounds. . *. * * TRANSCRIPT of a later hear-* ing showed the Senator told Gen. Zwicker of Camp Kilmer, N. J., where the dentist obtained his dis- charge, that. "I cannot help but questioneeither your honesty or in- telligence." It was disclosed after the sec- ond session that the New York dentist was granted a speeded- up discharge at -his own request after appearing before Sen. Mc- Carthy, who sat as a one-man subcommittee. Gen. Zwicker said the discharge was ordered by higher authorities whom he did not identify. Sen. McCarthy claimed Gen. Zwicker, questioned about the "un- cooperative" Peress, testified the dentist's "Communist record" was fully known to the Army. Gen. Zwicker said after his sec- ond hearing that Sen. McCarthy had "slanted" his account of what transpired in the closed session. When Gen. Zwicker reported to his Washington superiors that Sen. McCarthy had insulted him. Sec- retary of the Army Stevens moved in and accused the Senator of un- dermining military morale with "unfair attacks" on Army officers. * * * Cohn and Schine Sen. McCarthy cried "blackmail" yesterday at an Army report which claimed he and his chief counsel, Roy Cohn, had pressured the Army for special privileges in behalf of Pvt. G. David Schine, a former Mc- Carthy sub-committee consultant. Included in the 34-page docu- ment were many references to Cohn's threats that Army Secre- tary Stevens would be "through" and the Army "wrecked" if Schine were sent over-seas after he com- pleted his basic training. ALSO IN the report were state- ments that Sen. McCarthy and Cohn had attempted to secure a direct commission for Schine be- fore the investigator was drafted. Frosh Weekend Tryouts for Blue Team floor- show of Frosh Weekend will be held from 9 a.m. to noon today in the League. All freshmen women interested in being in the show, April 16-17, are re- quested to attend the tryout meeting. Later Schine was rejected as Cohn and Schine first gained unqualified by the chief of trans- controversial news prominence last portation, the provost marshal spring when Sen. McCarthy sent general and the commanding them to Europe for an investiga- general of the First Army. tion of United States information . and propaganda agencies abroad. Sen. McCarthy was pictured as:! playing a dual role with regard to Because of the methods used by h the two youthful committee con- sultants in conducting the inves- quoted as telling officials repeat- tigation Sen. Mike Monroney (D- edly to treat Schine as it would Okla.) said they acted like "Key-I any other private, and also as try- stone Kops" during a vociferous ig to.have the Army assign Schine Senate debate with Sen. McCarthyI to the New York area and suggest- over whether they had hurt Amer-I ed that Schine be assigned to check ican prestige abroad with what; West Point textbooks for subver- Sen. Monroney called "their an- sive material. tics." --- I Is Now Accepting STUDENT ART WORK, STORIES * POEMS * ESSAYS For the Spring Issue DEADLINE APRIL 12 Leave Contributions at the Generation Office Student Publications Building IR Ed ,' I I J 10:00 A.M.: Unitarian Adult Group-Mr. Douglas Williams on: "Problems of Race Relations in Ann Arbor." Unitarian Church School. 11:00 A.M.: Service of Worship. Sermon by Ed- ward H. Redman: "Are Our Civil Liberties Intact?" 7:30 P.M.: Unitarian Student Group-transpor-, tation from Lane Hall at 7:15 P.M.-Movie on "Prejudice." CAMPUS CHAPEL (Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan) Washtenaw at Forest Rev. Leonard Verduin, Director Res. Ph. NO 5-4205. Office Ph. NO 8-7421 10:00 A.M.: Morning Service. 7:00 P.M.: Evening Service. THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY in Ann Arbor presents Series of Introductory Talks on Theosophy every Wednesday at 8 P.M. Place: 736 So. State St., Telephone NO 2-6295 Topic for next Wednesday, March the 17th: "Man't Place in the Universe." Public is cordially invited. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH State and Huron Streets, Phone NO 2-1121 Wi. C.' Bennett, Pastor Thirteenth Annual Missionary Conference Sunday- 10:00 A.M.: Sunday School. Classes for all ages. 11:00 A.M.: Rev. R. E. Thompson. 7:00 P.M.: Missionary Pageant. Speaker: Mrs. Helen Western Gould. Monday, 7:00: Rev. Spiros Zodhiates. Tuesday, 7:00: Rev. Gordon Houser. Wednesday, 7:00: Mrs. Helen Western Gould and Rev. Gordon Houser. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Sts. Masses Daily at 7:00 A.M., 8:00 A.M., 9:00 A.M. Sunday at 8-9:30 A.M., 11-12. Novena Devotions, Wednesday Evenings 7:30 P.M. Newman Club Rooms in Father Richard Center. FRIENDS (QUAKER) MEETING Lane Hall 11:00 A.M.: Sundays. Visitors welcome. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH William and State Sts. Minister-Rev. Leonard A. Parr 10:45 A.M.: The second in a series of great Sav- ings, "The Dice of God Are Always Loaded." 7:00 P.M.: The Student Guild will meet in the Mayflower Room to hear the Reverend Bill Baker, director of- the Presbyterian Student Guild bring us a second in a series of Lenten programs on "This is the Christian Faith." Mr. Baker's topic will be "Who Was Jesus?-- His Relationship"to God." FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH AND STUDENT CENTER 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Henry Kuizenga, Minister Charles Mitchell, Assistant Minister William S. Baker, Student Pastor Donna B. Lokker, Program Assistant 9:15 A.M.: Breakfast Seminar. The group will meet with Michael Liuzzi to discuss "The Na- ture of God." 9:15 and 11:00 A.M.: Morning Worship, Dr. Kuizenga preaching a Lenten Sermon, "On the Credit Side." 6:45 P.M.: Westminster Guild will hear Dr. W. F. Stolper, of the Economics Dept., speak on, "The Responsibility of the Individual in Na- tional and International Affairs." 9:45 A.M.: The Student Class discusses "What Students Can Believe About the Economic Order." 11:00 A.M.: Morning Worship Service. "Christian Stewardship"-Rev. Loucks. 6:45 P.M.: Roger Williams Guild. Student panel on "Academic Freedom." THE CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 West Stadium (Formerly at Y.M.C.A.) Sundays: 10:15, 11:00 A.M., 7:30 P.M. Wednesdays: 7:30 P.M., Bible Study. G. Wheeler Utley, Minister Hear: "The Herald of Truth" WXYZ-ABC Net- work Sundays: 1:00-1:30 P.M. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 306 North Division St. Rev. Henry Lewis, Rector Dr. Robert H. Whitaker, Chaplain for Student Foundation Mrs. Elizabeth M. Davis, Social Director 8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M.: Holy Communion and Commentary (Both services followed by Student Breakfast, Canterbury House.) 11:00-12:15: Church School. 11:00 A.M.: Morning Prayer and Sermon. 4:30 P.M.: Student Confirmation Class, Canter- bury House. 6:00 P.M.: Student Supper Club, Canterbury House. 6:00-7:30: Youth Group. 7:00 P.M.- Adult Confirmation Class, Lounge. 8:00 P.M.: Evening Prayer and Commentary. During the Week: Daily 5:15 P.M. Evening Pray- er, Chapel; Holy Communion Tuesday (Chap- el) 10 A.M., Wednesday 7 A.M., Thursday 7 A.M., Friday 12:10 P.M., Saturday (Chapel) 8:30 A.M.; Student Tea 4:00-5:15 Tuesday and Friday; Wednesday Lenten Luncheon 12:10-12:50 Canterbury House; Thursday, Lenten Mission on Life of Prayer 7:30 P.M. in church; Friday, Canterbury Club 7:30 P.M., Dom Maurus Benson, O.S.B. will speak on "Monasticism and the Episcopal Church"; Saturday, Quiet Day for Men 8:30 A.M. to 5:45'P.M. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 9:30 and at 10:45: Two Worship Op- portunities, with the pastor preaching on, "I Believe in God the Father," first in sermon series on the three Persons of the Trinity. Sunday at 6:00: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, Supper and Program. Discussion on "Teaching The Bible to Adults," with audio- visual aids. Tuesday at 8:15: Chapel Assembly Meeting. Wednesday Noon, 12:30 to 12:55: Lenten De- votion. Wednesday at. 7:30 P.M.: Lenten Vespers, with sermon by the pastor, "Art Thou the Christ>" Friday at 6: Married Couples Potluck Dinner and Evening. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 9:30 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services. Mar. 14-Substance. 5:00 P.M.: Sunday Evening Service. 8:00 P.M. Wednesday: Testimonial Service. A free reading room is maintained at 339 South Main Street where the Bible and all authorized Christian Science literature may be read, bor- rowed, or purchased. The Reading Room is open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11 to 5. Friday evenings from 7 to 9, and Sunday afternoons from 2:30 to 4:30. t' . i e ORREFORS ® LEERDAM r SUSSMUTH and now, a shipment of * NOTSJO beautiful Finnish crystal JOHN LEIDY 537 East Liberty * NO 8-6779 I Ti SAFEGUARD YOUR MONEY Carry your cash by means of TRAVELERS CHEQUEnS 9 CONVENIENT eSAFE 0 PRACTICAL L--- _- _. &TI - ,7, N 44 : 1 ' ? s t i4 c ". Es w You can C an-C ant IN A FROU-FRIOU PETTICO makes your prettiest skirts outstandi AT ing! ns X2.95' Nylon taffetas, embossed cotto with frou-frou ruffles, from $5.95 Crinolines and cottons from $ I I 7 LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION (National Lutheran Council) Hill and Forest Avenue Dr. H. 0. Yoder, Pastor Sunday-9:00 A.M.: Matins Service. 10:00 A.M.: Bible Study. 11:00 A.M.: Main Worship Service. 7:00 P M.- "A Critinu on Lituraienl Wnrshpin" MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tappan Streets Rev. George Barger, Minister 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. Sermon: "Christianity: Opium or Optimum." Nursery for children during service. 9:45 A.M.: Church School. CONGREGATIONAL-OISCIPLES STUDENT GUILD 7:00 P.M.: Meetina at the Conareaational I "TI OWMV I I I