INCENTIVE FOR LIVING See Page 4 C I 4c Sir Latest Deadline in the State :4Iazt3ty CLOUDY, SNOW VOL LXVI, No.38ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1955 SIX PAGES Ike to Leave For Capitol On Friday Political Future1 Remains Hazy DENVER (A')-President Dwight D. Eisenhower will leave the hos- pital for Washington Friday-but two of his doctors said yesterday , it will be "late January of Febru- ary" before he can decide on trying for a second term. Dr. Paul Dudley White and Maj. Gen. Howard M. Snyder told a news conference President Eisen- hower's mending heart must be "exposed to considerablysmore strain" before the President can decide on his "physical future and whole life." That did not rule out the possi- bility that President Eisenhower already may have made up his mind on seeking or foregoing an- other four years in the White House. But White and Snyder said the President had given them no inkling on that. White, the eminent Boston heart specialist, Snyder, President Eisen- hower's personal physician, and other doctors who have been at- tending the President sincehis Sept. 24 heart attack appeared at ,, the news conference after thor- ough, lengthy examinations of the Chief Executive Sunday and yes- terday. However hazy the political fu- ture might be, White said that he had "only good news again" on President Eisenhower's physical condition at this point. And he added: "We have all, myself included, decided that Friday, in the morn- ing, will be the time for his takeoff here. So he will arrive in Wash- ington in the afternoon." Then, he said, the President plans to go on to his farm at Gettysburg, Pa., Monday to cele- brate Mrs. Eisenhower's 59th birth- day, To a question whether he would run again if he "were in the presi- dent's shoes," White replied that ' "I haven't enough information yet." "I would want to know how I would face the problems of the next few months," he said. "I might have made up my mind al- ready." "Do you think he has?" a re- porter inquired. "I don't know," White answered. At one point White gave a mea- sure of support to the idea that President Eisenhower may recover sufficiently to feel physically able to seek a second term. At another, he dashed a bit of cold water on it. "By the large," he said, "A car- diac patient not only usually can work but he should work ... "Complete invalidism from heart disease is uncommon. Idleness breeds unhappiness and is bad for health." But as for applying that gener- alization to President Eisenhower, the heart expert remarked: "The President is in a unique situation, at least so far as my experience goes, since he is the first President of the United States that I have examined with cono- nary thrombosis. Druids Tap From the Stonehenge circle Aided by the witches' cauldron, Mystic plans were brewed in dark- ness, Many twigs were examined, Many rocks were overturned, Subjected to heat from blazing torches Observed by men of knowledge and magic, Most decayed, were burned, were destroyed. Finally from the murky grove, From the cave where Fingal per- ished, The order of the Mighty Oak emerged, Causing the earth to shake and shiver, Causing nations and peoples to cower All to bend the twig and sapling And to capture the sturdy aywend The almighty DRUIDS have spoken! So came: Harlan Highest Hickory H*atcher. Scroll Society Taps 5 Coeds Police Dispute Newsmen Still Unsolved City Council Approves Pay Raise Submitted By Budget Committee A cloud of uncertainty still shrouds the Ann Arbor city concil- police department crisis. Last night the city council voted unanimously to adopt budget committee recommendations for police pay increases, but these raises are substantially lower than the police commission had re- quested, and the resignation question remains in the balance. The police department recommended raises ranging from $220 to $604 for all ranks from rookie patrolman to chief. The budget committee's figures run generally four or five hundred dollars lower. During the weekend one man was added to the resigning 37, bringing the, total to 38 out of 45 patrolmen and detectives. Then, late Saturday the resignations were. Democratic 'Repudiation' Seen at Polls WASHINGTON (AP) - GOP Na- tional Chairman Leonard W. Hall said yesterday the Democratic- controlled Congress faces "repudi- ation" at the 1956 polls unless it corrects what he called its "miser- able failure" to back Pres. Dwight D. Eisenhower's domestic program. But Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D- Minn.) replied that "the Demo- cratic Congress will support its own program." He added that "it isn't the Democrats who will be repudiated at the polls." Writing in the Republican Na- tional Committee's publication "Straight from the Shoulder," Hall said President Eisenhower's 1954 prediction that a Democratic ma- jority in Congress would "cause a, legislative stalemate" has proved true. Program Ditched "Despite wholehearted support from his own party, his legislative program was ditched," Hall .de- clared. President Eisenhower said dur- ing the 1954 campaign that elec- tion of a Democratic Congress might bring on a "cold war" be- tween the parties. He later ac- knowledged he might have gone a little too far in this prediction. Hall acknowledged that there had been bipartisan support on foreign policy and most of the Eisenhower defense program. But, he said, when the last session clos- ed nine of the President's 13 'must' bills lay in House and Sen- ate pigeonholes and wastebaskets. Democrats Failed To Act Hall said the Democrats failed to act on Eisenhower proposals for highway building, school con- struction, health reinsurance, wa- ter resources, Hawaiian statehood, votes for 18-year-olds, aid for low income farmers, postal rate in- creases, atomic peace ship, immi- gration law changes, health insur- ance for government employes, ex- ecutive pay raises, military surviv- ors benefits, custom simplification and Talft-Hartley Act amend- ments. Humphrey said he doesn't think the Democratic Congress is going to "rubber stamp" Eisenhower domestic proposals. "The people are going to repudi- ate the Eisenhower farm program of collapsible price supports," he said. withdrawn, after a plea by com- missioner Rudolph E. Reichert, until after last night's council meeting. At the meeting Reichert, a for- mer council president, returned to the rostrom to speak in the crowd- ed council room at city hall. He made a plea for both sides to consider the question in an at- mosphere of "calmness and de- bate." He stated the main reasons for resignation were that the re- signing men "contend that their services are constantly -compared with other employees of the city, who, however, are on a forty hour week and receive overtime for addi- tional time spent." Police are on a 44 hour week, and receive no overtime pay. In addition Reichert cited the fact that free Saturdays, Sundays, and evenings give other city employees a chance to augment their incomes, policemen work, "the clock around." He added observations of his own, the first being the clean re- cord Of the police department. Since he has been on the commis- sion, he stated, there hasn't been one case of proven dishonesty, which, he said, "I believe speaks very well for the high character and integrity of these men." Many of the policemen met af- ter the meeting in an informal gathering at one of the patrol- man's homes. They had no com- ment to make, but said a definite step would probably not be taken until after a meeting planned for tonight. Police Chief Casper M. Enke- mann, said he supposed the resig- nations would be carried through. "All I can do is wait, though," he said. When asked whether he thought the force would go through with the resignations, one patrolman replied, "I think most of us made a promise, and made up our minds." At the council meeting Mayor William E. Brown, Jr. suggested a committee be appointed to study four possible sources for increased income. 1) Negotiate with the Univer- sity for payment of taxes for po- lice protection. 2) Make the higher consumer bracket pay higher percentage of taxes on those utilities. 3) Consider putting amusement tax back on the ballot, and insti- tute a program to educate citi- zens about this tax. 4) Study other excise taxes that might be in order. "If we expect the best of ser- vices," he emphasized," we must be willing to pay for them." Claim Facts Suppressed 'Impairs Public's Right to Know' WASHINGTON () - Some of the nation's top news specialists told Congress yesterday that in- formation about government ac- tivities is being suppressed or "managed" to an extent that seri- ously impairs the public's right to know what is going on. This was the unanimous verdict of a dozen editors, publishers, writ- ers and others who gave informal testimony as a House Government Operation subcommittee opened an inquiry into freedom of in- formation. Chairman John E. Moss (D- Calif.) promised "a long, hard look at the amount of information available from the executive agen- cies for both the public and its elected representatives." James B. Reston, chief of the Washington bureau of The New York Times, told the committee news suppression is not the only problem - that "a growing ten- dency" by government officials to slant or "manage" news may in the long run do more harm. For example, Reston said, a "considerable effort" was made by United States officials at the Big Four conference in Geneva last summer to give "'an optimistic fla- vor" to conference developments- although later the word went out that "it might be a good idea to frown a little." Columnist Joseph Alsop Jr., de- clared Washington newsmen are subject to reprisals including fed- eral investigation when they pub- lish, against the wishes of some officials, news they consider of "life or death importance" to the American people. Alsop said it has become "infin- itely more difficult" in recent years to get information from critical agencies even when the informa- tion is well known tounfriendly foreign governments. "If it goes much farther," Alsop said, "the facts won't be got at all." Basically, all those who gave their views contended too many officials misuse various "secrecy" classifications to prevent publica- tion of news which actually would not endanger national security. Trespasser Helps Widow With Story MINEOLA, N. Y. (P-A prowler admitted yesterday he was blun- dering noisily atop Mrs. Ann Woodward's bedroom roof at the very moment she shot herhusband to death. She had blamed a strange noise for her panicky gunfire. The prow- ler, Paul W. Wirths, was quoted by police as saying he broke a tree branch, wrestled noisily with a door and dropped a lohded shot- gun over Mrs. Woodward's bed- room early on the morning of Oct. 30. His revised story appeared to support Mrs. Woodward's claim that a noise in the night led to the accidental shooting of 35-year- old William Woodward, Jr., multi- millionaire owner of the great race horse Nashua. Detective Inspector Stuyvesant Pinnell quoted Wirths as saying he heard the roar of Mrs. Woodward's shotgun. The 22-year-old German refugee added: "It sounded like a cannon. I didn't wait, I got the hell out of there." Mrs. Woodward said her nerves were on edge because of her "fear- ful dread" that the prowler would return and invade her home. He already had broken into a swim- ming pool cabana and the six-car gara-e on the Woodwards' 60-acre Oyster Bay. N. Y. estate. The beautful 39-year-old blonde told police she fired blindly into a darkened hallway outside her bedroom when she awakened in the night and heard a noise. Ear vyBird Saves High 4 Caught, Sunday there was a "break- ing and entering of room 2443 Mason Hall and the doer of the evil deed is dead. The culprit, a cock pheasant, didn't bother to pry the window open; he flew right through. Yesterday at 6:30 a.m. a jan- itor found a classroom littered with glass splinters and a badly cut up, but still alive pheasant. The coup de grace was Immedi- ately given. USSR Hints New .Plans At Geneva GENEVA (MP-New Soviet offers on German unification and dis- armament were hinted by Russian officials here yesterday as the Big Four powers reached virtual agreement to hold another confer- ence in Geneva next spring. The present slow-moving foreign ministers' parley-recessed 5 out of 12 days - will resume today when Russia's Vyacheslav M. Mol- otov flies back from consulations in Moscow. The only uncertainty about the next conference appar- ently is the date-March or April. Molotov's diplomatic lieutenants, who remained behind in Geneva, guardedly indicated these moves are under consideration: Considering New Moves 1. A softening of Molotov's op- position to free elections in re- unifying Germany. But the Soviets- still demand a united Germany bound to complete neutrality, and propose a unification process by gradual stages which would pre- serve the Sovietized institutions of East Germany. Free elections would be the last step-not the first, as the Allies demand. 2. An approach toward accept- ance in principle of President Dwight D. Eisenhower's proposal for American-Russian exchange of military blueprints and aerial in- spection. But the Russians have no in- tention of accepting the Presi- dent's timetable for the proposal. He offered it here last July as something the two powers could put into operation immediately as a prelude to a general agreement on disarmament. Jury .Reopens Considerations Of Till Case Court Gives Ruling' On Military Trials 1 No Court Martials for Ex-G-s; Affects Turncoats, Korean Killer WASHINGTON (R)-Ex-servicemen cannot be subjected to Mili- tary trial for crimes committed while in service, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday., By a 6-3 vote, the court struck down a key provision of the 1950 Uniform Code on Military Justice. It permitted the armed forces to put civilians back into uniform and court-martial them for serious crimes occurring before their discharge. - The ruling. with potential implications to millions, applied toi Robert W. Toth of "Pittsburgh. As a result, the Air Fbrce cannot bringX Toth. an honorably discharged veteran, to trial for the slaying of ac South Korean civilian. To Affect Turncoat The decision was expected to have a direct bearing on the fate of three turncoat GIs arrested at San Francisco last July 29 under the code of military justice. The trio-Otho G. Bell of Hillsboro,1 Miss., William A. Cowart of Dalton, Ga., and Lewis W. Griggs of Jack- sonville, Tex.-are now held by the Tribunal Kills 1liC Segregation Pub Court Gives Unanimous New Ruling Public Facilities Opened For All WASHINGTON (IM - The Su- preme Court yesterday seemingly sounded the death knell for racial segregation in all places supported by public funds. In separate, unanimous actions the court affirmed a decision hold- ing racial segregation illegal in public parks and playgrounds, and ordered Negroes admitted to pub- lic golf courses. This, in effect, swept away whatever remained of the historic "separate but equal" doctrine as applied to tax-supported facili- ties. Army at Ft. Baker, Calif. The three were captured by the Communists in North Korea and while held prisoner were said to have betrayed this country by in- forming and aiding the enemy in exchange for favored treatment. They later rejected the Reds and came home. When the three first elected to stay in Red China, Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson desig- nated them as deserters. Then, in January 1954, Secretary Wilson ordered them dishonorably dis- charged. Black Gives Opinion Justice Hugo Black, who spoke for the court majority yesterday, said Congress exceeded its con- stitutional authority in enacting legislation, to subject civilians like Toth to trial by court-martial. Hhe said: They, like other civilians, are entitled to have the benefit of the safeguards afforded those tried in the regular courts authorized by Article III of the Constitu- tion." During congressional considera-, tion of the Uniform Code of Mili- tary Justice, some argued for biv- ing federal civil courts jurisdiction to try civilians for crimes com- mitted while in service. Within Congressional Power "It is conceded that it was wholly within the constitutional power of Congress to follow this suggestion and provide for federal. district court trials of discharged soldiers accused of offenses com- mitted while in the armed serv- ices," Black wrote. "That conces- sion is justified." The decision left the way open for Congress to provide for civil, instead of military trials in cases such as that of Toth. Such legis- lation, however, could not be made retroactive to include offenses which took place before its pas- sage. Red Chinaj May Omit Force Use Banishes Old Doctrine The major blow to that doctrine, of course, came in the court's unanimous decision in May, 1954, holding segregation in public schools unconstitutional. scUntil then, the "separate but equal" doctrine, originally laid down in 1896, had largely governed the legality of segregation in tax- supported facilities. It meant that segregation was permissible when separate but equal facilities, such as schools, were provided for dif- ferent races. Using only 11 words, the high court affirmed a decision by the United States Court of Appeals in Richmond, Va., that segregation in public parks and playgrounds is illegal. All the court said was: "The motion to affirm is granted and the judgment is affirmed." GENEVA (A1) -- Western diplo- mats said yesterday the United States and Red China are con- sidering carefully issuance of a declaration in which Red China would renounce the threat or use' of force in its relations with other states. The wording under considera- tion would be in line with United Nations Charter provisions pledg- ing UN members to refrain from the threat or use of force. As a UN member the United States is already so pledged. Red China is not in the .United Nations. United States officials declined any comment on the negotiations being conducted here between Am- bassador U. Alexis Johnson and Ambassador Wang Ping-nan of Red China. The United States and Red China do not have diplo- matic relations. Russia Hails 38th Birthday MOSCOW ()-The Soviet Un- ion celebrated the 38th anniver- sary of the Bolshevik Revolution yesterday with mild words and a mild show of its military might. Defense Minister Marshal Georgi K. Zhukov set the tone of the giant ceremonial parade with a mild address that made no men- tion of "capitalist threats," or "United States aggressors." The parade itself played down military aspects. There were an estimated million demonstrators. Richmond 'Tribunal Rules The Richmond tribunal had said the separate but equal doctrine for white and Negroes was dead. The Supreme Court took =only 58 words to reverse decisions by two lower courts upholding segre- gation in city-operated golf courses in Atlanta, Ga. The lower courts-United States District Court in Atlanta and United States Circuit Court in New Orleans-had taken the view that the separate but equal doctrine still could be applied in public recreation. -Court Grants Admission t 4 L R 9 l EXPECT RECORD VOTE: W ell In formed Students To Run For SGC Posts (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last in a series of articles on the reason Student Government Council candidates give for running for SGC.) By BILL HANEY Student Government Council is expecting a record vote for their elections next week. One of the reasons may be there are more students eligible to vote than in any recent year. However, no small part of their optimism is based on the SGC candidates training program and the lessons in campaigning the candidates received. This year's candidates are possibly the best informed students ever to run for student government at the University. Present SGC members are expecting an intelligent campaign. Some of the reasons for running are incorporated in campaign platforms. Feels SGC Important One of the reasons Andy Knight, '58, is running is the importance she attaches to a well-organized student body. Miss Knight said, "The ability of a student body to govern itself, i.e., coordination with administration, seemed important to me because of its direct reflection of the maturity of the student body." Miss Knight felt SGC's most immediate concern lies in its internal! GREENWOOD, Miss. (P) - The Leflor County grand jury, work- ing through a heavy docket, de- layed until today consideration of kidnap charges against two white men in the famous Till case. Witnesses scheduled to testify yesterday were told to return to- day. The kidnap charges grew out of the disappearance of Emmett Louis Till, 14-year-old Chicago Negro boy. Jury Begins Work A 20-man, all-white grand jury began work yesterday morning with the Till case its hottest busi- ness. Action on the kidnap charges won't be known until the grand jury makes its report, probably tomorrow. The jury. will decide whether half brothers Roy Bryant and John W. Milam will stand trial on a charge of kidnaping the Negro boy who disappeared while vaca- tioning in Mississippi. Wright Waits Testimony Mose Wright, 64-year-old share- cropper, who says he fled to Chi- cago for safety, waited in the Le- flore County sheriff's office to ,.--if Til vac .hdiirf.d frnm Governor, Mayor Races Highlight Voting Today By The Associated Press Off-year elections today in 12 states feature contests for governor of Kentucky and mayor of Philadelphia, and an Ohio referendum to make operative a supplemental layoff pay 'plan for the auto industry. Unless the Democratic candidates suffer unexpected defeats in the. Kentucky and Philadelphia voting, political leaders see little in the scattered state and local elections to provide a weathervane for the 1956 national campaigning. However, they will be looking for clues. A referendum of national interest is one in Kentucky to lower the minimum voting age from 21 to 18. Congressional Seat at Stake Only one congressional seat is at stake. One Michigan district will hold Democratic and Republican primaries to nominate candidates to fill the seat left vacant by the death of Rep. John'D. Dingell (Dem.) The final choice will be made Dec. 13. City elections, many of them nonpartisan, will be held in Boston, Cleveland, Indianapolis and dozens of smaller cities in Arkansas, Connecticut, Indiana, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, s,..an. a, .tah and Wvomina. In reversing the lower courts, the Supreme Court directed that an order - be issued granting Negroes admission to Atlanta's public links. In Atlanta, city officials de- clined to express any opinion about the court's ruling or say what they would do, pending further study. Georgia's attorney g eneral, Eugene Cook, an ardent segrega- tion advocate said yesterday's de- cisions amount to another step in what he called a campaign to bring about intermarriage of the races. To Test Marriage Law The Supreme Court now has be- fore it a case testing the validity in a Virginia law that bans inter- racial marriage. The Richmond appellate court ruling affirmed yesterday specifi- cally applied to public beaches and bath houses operated by the city of Baltimore and the state of Maryland. Alternatively, the city and state had asked the court to give. in- structions on how and when to end park and playground segrega- tion. This plea the court ignored, leaving the question in the hands of lower courts. This is the same method the high court used in ordering an end to racially segre- gated public schools. F Mighty Sphinx Grabs Slaves Once again the Pharaoh has commanded his legions to cross I -1-. -. r.Crt.a nd inivade the