FRATERNITIES: AN EVIL FORCE ON CAMPUS? See Page 4 as Latest Deadline in the State. :43 a tty COLD, WINDY VOL. LXVI, No. 52 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1955 EIGHT PAGES Fraternity Ike Will Run IfReds I Fined $650, Ameri On Probation A b le, Hall Says At Gu Women, Liquor GOP National Chairman Optimistic East Ber Cause of Penalty Over Eisenhower's Future Plans Inspires BERLIN ()- A stiff $650 fine and probation GETTYSBURG, Pa. (A)-Republican National Chairman Leonard. congressmen an for the remainder of this semes- W. Hall came out of a 45-minute political huddle with President were held at gun ter was levied on Alpha Delta Phi lnSna na tn connlecti on withptheiolationDwight D. Eisenhower yesterday with the prediction Eisenhower will n Suay isi of state and city laws on the pre- run f he feels hab Soviet sector of sence of women and intoxicants Hall gave that to newsmen as his personal opinion, city. in a fraternity house. He said he and President Eisenhower didn't discuss the President's The impicati The penalty, most severe of five second term plans as a specific situation, but Hall reported he felt ment of the levied at Joint Judiciary Council "very much encouraged" and would continue making campaign plans escorted by Un meetings. Oct. 25, Nov. 1, 10 and on the prospect that President men, were sos 15, was announced yesterday and Eisenhower will run again for Gen. Charles L, is contained in the list of discip- President in 1956. E isenh ow er commandant in linary action in today's Daily Of- Feels Better advisers worked ficial Bulletin. " I feel better about it after the the draft of a p No Social Affairs meeting this morning," Hall said. sassksAid h a ft The Alpha Delts are prohibited, And he said he felt more optimis- It Das nothe except in cases where rushing is tic about the chances of President becausDahsr interfered with, from holding any Eisenhower running than he didr choolsWork To group social affairs through this when they last met, in Denver, two Work will be semester. weeks before the President's Sept. Dsr lern Fraternity president Lawrence 24 heart attack. WASHINGTON () - President Dasher personal Brown, '56, had no comment on "Insofar as I am concerned," the Dwight D. Eisenhower said last protest. thePInsoar sad tersnoohrThe general's theJoint Judic action which was GO leader said, "there is no other night the federal government will issues are at st approved, with the other cases, by candidate." have to step in if necessary to pre- Americans tov the University Sub-Committee on Hall said it was his personal vent "a lack of schools in certain without being Discipline. opinion that President Eisen- important areas." whether an offi In one other group penalty, an hower's decision will be based on Hr ar eas." heranioffdi unidentified fraternity was dis- the findings of his physicians when He cautioned, however, that "if hicle equipped cte ciplined for presence of women he undergoes what Hall called a we dependh . . . o t Communisteoli and. intoxicants. A $150 fine and "final examination" at the end of federal government, we will lose US. officials fi wrigwsise.January independence and initiative" USfiil arigwas issued.auay in the four-po Hall reported the President told The President's remarks were zone are in jeop Two Individual Fines him he was "feeling good." On his sound-filmed at his Gettysburg,z o cured: Heaviest individual penalty was own, Hall said: "He looks a mil- Pa., office for presentation at the occurredE > $15 in fines and a warning for lion per cent, and I have never White House Conference on educa- shrty incident aid offered two fraternity alumni seen him looking better." tion, which opened yesterday Harold C. Oste in stealing a trophy from another Peppered With Questions with the issue of federal school his wife, and E fraternity houge- Their conference, to which Hall aid pushing to the fore. Mass) visited th In cases of conduct unbecoming drove from Washington, took placeLCemetery tn an1 a student involving intoxicants, in the President's offices in the Reviews Lead-up A ry in an two students were fined $10 each Post Office building. Reviewing the lead-up to the Army officer esc Communist p and warned. Hall was peppered with ques- conference, President Eisenhower y Joint Judic voted to take no tions. Among the first: "Did you said: party, declaring action in three other cases refer- ask him if he was going to run?" "In the last 10 years our popula- two-way radio i red to it. "No," Hall replied. "Of course, tion has increased by 26 million been violated. all of you know that the question souls. During that increase a The Russian of the final examination - the similar increase in the number of dant, Col. I. A.] S=D D ay et physical examination some time at schoolrooms and qualified teach- ed the German Y the end of January must be had, and naturally I wouldn't ask that ers available for teaching our but released th question at this time." young has not come about . . . hours. Td-He added: I think he will. The "There are many conflicting U.S. officials nis whether or not he opinions as to how to provide these tom as well as a would be a candidate. My answer things. 'use distinguish W arn N ation 'would be - this is my personal But there are two points, l of Berlin from opinion - I think he will, if he think, on which we all agree as Allied persom eels he is able." "The first thing is that the edu- Might Und While Hall said the president cation of our young should be free. If this has b WASHINGTON P)-All over the had not told him what to tell re- It should be under the control of said, the entire world today this fact must be porters, Hall conferred before and the family and locality. It should four-power city faced: Few weapons are more after the meeting with James C. not be controlleocality. It shoul r-power city dangerous than an automobile Hagerty. authority . . . The American when it's loaded with a careless Must Have GoodEducation pistol point and driver. Tm tiseHhisGpoiEttheheld in a guard To dramatize this point, the r ers "At the same time, we know surveillance of a President's Committee for Traffic that everybody must have a good tommygunner. Safety has set aside this Thursday . education if they are to properly I The congressic as S-D Day, National Safe Driv- Conduct Code discharge their functions as a Army sedan of ing Day. citizen of America." equipped with r It wants everyone to be especially This, President Eisenhower said, that the occupa careful and not get himself killed GETTYSBURG, Pa. ()-Presi- T the heart of thisewhole prob- in touch with Thursday, to show what can be dent Dwight D. Eisenhower issue m: quarters. done when safety is practiced by a conflict-of-interest order requir-n ds h The U.S. Mil everyone. ing "high standards of ethical We want good facilities on the Gloomy Facts conduct" for government "WOCs" one hand, and we know there are Potsdam, create The committee is stressing such -business and industry experts many areas in which people can- mission in Wes gloomy points as: serving the government without not afford to build the schools. this type of rad 1. Last year 36,000 persons wer compensation. He spoke of the dilemma in and has never b killed in traffic accidents in this The order follows up legislation which many educators find them- country. If we keep our present passed by Congress just before selves today: bad habitsxnore will die this year. adjournment last August requiring "If we depend too much on out- 2. Every 25 seconds someone is "-uch defense production specilists side help, too much on the federal or hurt in an auto accident. to file information on their finan- government we will lose inde- 3. The cost is staggering - cial connections, and to keep the pendence and initiative.e $4,400,000,000 each year in medi- file up to date.aout 1000 WOCs in "But if the federal government cal bills and property loss, The re a out On "Bu doesn't step in with leadership Destructive Blows fense contracts and the like. Sev- and with providing credit and Communist The automobile was invited in eral cases alleging that some of money where necessary, there will this country, and here it has got them had conflicts of interest be- be a lack of schools in certain im- FORT LEW in its most destructive blows. But tween the government and their portant areas. And this cannot be broadcasts attri wherever the wreck occurs, safety congressional committees. allowed." American prison experts agree on this: The chances West Pointer's c are that a little ,more care and The recordi consideration for the other fellow Tms-here-codin could have prevented it. Otherwise, transcriptions pr there would be no point in an S-D ra D en estancrhtiraonspCrc Day. I r mD u e sn wahara of Chevy In stressing safe driving the im- The transcri portance of safe walking often is * in evidence subjf forgotten. Yet in the larger cities Profanity A 0bout N1xo Ala., career soldi more than half the fatalities are recordings inimic walkers.o h ntdS LOS ANGELES (/P) - Former President Harry S. Truman, who of the United St has made it abundantly clear he is not exactly fond of Vice President Bur lars H it Richard M. Nixon, nevertheless denied yesterday that he had called Reversal, Nixon a profane name. BUENOS AIRE Asked in a news conference how the profanity business came House sources City Twice about, Truman said: President Pedro "I can't understand how it came. about. My secretary, Mr. David ernment is issuin r old cans n point fin Affair U.S. Protest Two United States d the wife of one point in East Ber- n incident threat-; rn rights in the the still-occupied ons of the treat- American party, ited States Army serious that Maj. Dasher Jr., U.S. Berlin, and five all afternoon on rotest to the Rus- elivered, however, still was dissatis- e and content. Be Resumed esumed today and ly will deliver the advisers said two ake: The right of visit East Berlin molested and cial U.S. Army ve- ith two-way radio d to East German ce patrols. ear all Allied rights wer city's Soviet ardy. Before Noon occurredSunday noon when Reps. rtag (R-NY) and dward Boland (D- e Soviet Memorial Army car with an cort. olice detained the the laws of the republic against n foreign cars had deputy comman- Kotsibua, support- Communist view e group after four reasoned that cus- greements long in the Soviet sector the regulations of n Republi as far nel are concerned. ergo Clange een changed, they character of the could undergo far- too. s were detained at for 2 hours were shack under the Communist police nal party used an a type that is adio telephone so nts are constantly Vest Berlin head- litary Mission at i by mutual agree- nts the Soviets a t Germany, uses io communication een challenged. ;Top Soviet Leaders Still SWooing 74 Canadians Well Aware, Of Location Foreign Secretary Admonishes Soviets OTTAWA (41) - Foreign Secre- tary Lester B. Pearson says he was told by Soviet Communist Party Secretary Nikita Khrushchev that, in event of a new world war, Can- ada would have no geographical immunity from attack. Pearson made the statement Sunday night in a radio broadcast on the Canadian Broadcasting Co.'s special speakers' series. The minister, who visited Russia in early October and conferred with Premier Nikolai Bulganin and Khrushchev, said: Russians Not Unaware "They, the Russians are not un- aware, I may say, of our strategic location as their neighbors across the pole. "Mr. Khrushchev, for instance, averred that if there were ever another world war, Canada would have no geographical immunity from attack. He thought that this should make us all more anxious to be on good terms with both our neighbors. "I replied that we were well aware of our strategic position and also of the tact that we could never feel rp1.ly secure if either of our two neighbors were hostile to us-or' to each other. Pearson said there is a "great gap of ignorance and misunder- standing" which divides the Com- munist world from the West. Not on One Side "This ignorance and misunder- standing is not, of course, all onj one side. But on their side it is colossal; almost pathetic, and cer- tainly dangerous. "Western--and especially Amer- ican-policy and purpose is judged! on the basis of cabled newspaper stories which give only one side and the most lurid side of life in free countries. "It seems quite impossible to convince Soviet leaders-who seem to base their alleged fear of us: on such information-that these stories are distorted and unrepre- sentative, I told Mr. Khrushchev that we found the truth out of the clash of varying opinions. It didn't make sense to him. "$ -Daily-Hal Leeds DANCER ANDY WHITE .. . only one more week for practice. Opera Actors, Dancers Ready Takeoff on Movies By BILL HANEY Union Opera actors and dancers have suddenly found themselves in their last week of rehearsal for their fall show, "Film-Flam," a parody on the heated competition in the Hollywood movie industry. The script of this fall's humorous production was written by Russ Brown, '56, Bill Russell, '56, and Chuck Reynolds, '56. The all-male cast which has been rehearsing for six weeks, is. called by Opera officials "one of the best arrays of talent we've ever seen." In past years such men as Thomas Dewey, former governor of New York, Robert Q. Lewis, television star, Chester Campbell, president of Chicago Tribune, and band- 4 leader Bill Mills appeared in Union CS Operas.1 The Opera was originated in, Idia Big Crowds Hail Touring Red Leaders Russian Praises Indian Poliy MADRAS, India ()-Soviet Pre- mier Nikolai Bulganin yesterday praised India for its "wise decision In refusing to enter any kind of military grouping." It showed, he said, the Indian government's understanding that "the same powers wlich supported colonialism . . . threaten a new war" through extension of military pacts. Addressing a civic reception for himself and Communist Party Chief Nikita Khrushchev, Bulgan- in said : Understand Dangers "We note with satisfaction that many Asian states are now fight- ing the use of their territory for the installation of foreign bases or the stationing of foreign troops. "They understand these great dangers - turning their territory into fields of war and annihila- tion .. . "There are still some who at- tempt to push the Asian people off the path of independence and de- velopment and onto the path of militarization and preparation for a new war. "Different kinds of pacts and blocs in Southeast Asia and the Middle East serve these purposes. These military groupings arouse suspicion in Asians because they are started by the same people who fought on the side of the colonial powers." Cheered Wildly The touring Soviet leader was cheered wildly when he said Rus- sia supports India's "right to oust" the Portuguese from Goa and the other Portuguese posses- sions on India's west coast. Bulganiri and Khrushcliev re- ceived another tumultous greeting when they arrived in Madras and drove through the streets wearing garlands of jasmine and carry- ing bouquets. About 60,000 lined the route and more than 200,000 attended the civic reception. Local Trotskyites, however, plas- tered walls with posters demand- ing: "Why . was Leon Trotsky murdered by Stalin's stooges?" Lewis SeeKs Fund Misuse Crackdown WASHINGTON 1 - John L. Lewis called on Congress Monday to crack down on the "human jackals and scoundrels'" who Its said misuse union welfare funds. The 75-year-old chief of the United Mine Workers Union sug- gested a congressional resolution urging the attorney general to step up prosecutions in all such cases. Union leaders themselves did not escape his wrath. "If some of the leaders of or- ganized labor would abandon their holier-than-thou attitude and for- get what they are going to do with the rest of the world and put their own house in order, wel- fare funds might have a better chance to live," Lewis told a Sen- ate Labor subcommittee. The subcommittee is making a study of the need for new legisla- tion to protect union welfare funds, now growing at the rate of about five billion dollars a year. Angelo Inciso, a Chicago labdr union leader, did ftot answer when called as a witness, although he had been subpoenaed. Chairman Douglas (D-Ill.) said he would ,move later that Inciso be cited for contempt of Congress. The senators seek an explana- tion of how the health and acci- dent insurance program works in Inciso's Chicago Local No. 286 of the AFL United Auto Workers. This is different from the CIO ld News Roundup By The Associated Press Propaganda... IS, WASH. - Recordings of communist propaganda buted to Lt. Col. Paul V. Liles, and other former ers of war in Korea were played yesterday at the! ourt martial on collaboration charges. rgs, unintelligible to the untrained ear because of editions and other noises, were supplemented by repared by a trained radio monitor, James T. Kashi- y Chase, Md. ptions, presented by the prosecution, were admitted ect to their being connected with Liles, Birmingham, er who is charged, among other things, with making 1907 to raise money to build a new Union. While achieving that goal the Opera gaineasuch popularity it has remained as an annual Union eveny for almost fifty years. In keeping with a tradition es- tablished many years ago the Opera will stage a road show. This year Flint and Detroit have been scheduled on the tour. Bill Stone, '57, publicity chair- man, said, "We started planning for this year's opera last Decem- ber, only a few days after last year's opera closed." Stone agreed with other officials "This year's opera has the makings of being the greatest ever staged. Over two hundred students have been working on costumes and props for next week's production. Male leads who will do take-offs on famous actors are: Tom Lewy, Dick Booth, '57, Beorge Bashara, '56 and Bob Berner. Playing the part of female actresses are Ken Smith, '56, John McCrea, '56, Mike Palazzola, '56 and Bruce McClelland, '56. IN ears .inirng CHICAGO (W)-Agreement aim- ed at ending the bitter, violent four-month strike of CIO United Auto Workers at the New Castle, Ind. plant of Perfect Circle Cor- poration was reached yesterday after a month of mediation. The settlement proposal will be submitted to 229 UAW employes in New Castle today at 9 a.m. Ratification by the members of UAW Local ,370 would bring the dispute to a close. Federal mediators and union officials declined details of the settlement proposal, but a com- pany statement said it called for a two-year contract ending July 1 1957, embodying a 10-cents-en- hour wage increase which the company put into effect last July, and an additional increase of seven cents an hour, effective July 1 next year. cal to the interest rates. FALSE CHARGES GIVI * * ___________ ES- Government Deceptio said last night Aramburu's gov-. ag a decree, prob- WASHINGTON (P) - Three out EN Burglars continued to plague Ann Arbor's understaffed police force this weekend as two robber- ies netted thieves $55. Employees reporting to work at the Washtenaw County Tubercu- losis Association Office yesterday morning discovered $35 taken from a file cabinet in a ransacked office. An empty cash register greeted' workers at tho Modern Beauty Salon yesterday' morning, but bur- Lloyd, was with me and he didn't hear it. No such statement was ably today, returning La Prensa of every four persons the govern- ever made." to Dr. Alberto Gainza Paz, its ment fires under its security pro- The Los Angeles Times said that upon arriving from Seattle last former editor and publisher. gram are never told they are night, Truman was asked what he thought about Nixon being the This action, they said, will be suspected security risks, Chairman based on the grounds that seizure Philip Young of the Civil Service 1956 Republican presidential candidate and replied; of the big independent newspaper Commission testified yesterday. Terse Language by the Peron regime four years The official reason given for "I don't like the---- -- ------and I don't care who knows it. ago was unconstitutional. The de- their dismissals, he told the Sen- The Los Angeles Examiner quoted Truman as saying, "I don't cree already has been prepared. ate sub-committee on Constitu- even want to discuss that --- ---------. Don't even mention his k_ * tional Rights is some other charge, name to me." such as excessive drinking. An indication of Truman's feeling toward Nixon came in Mon- I uC Offered.. But in each case there are addi- acv's news eonference when a renorter asker about his remark in WASHTNGTON - nmncratic tional "serioAsq estinns nf s- r h in Used for Security In a new report today, he told' Young insisted he makes no the subcommittee 3,685 persons claim that all of those fired were have been "actually fired" under "security risks," and said that is I the program from its start on May a term he avoids unless he uses Ithe 5, hog ls et.3. . 128, 1953. through last Sept. 30. It inadvertently as he did at times I This is an increase of 99 over during the hearing. the last report, which covered the "Frankly," he said, "I don't period through June 30, 1955. know the definition of a security Young acknowledged that three- risk, and I never use it." quarters of the 3,685 may not know, Young disclosed his agency has until this day that there were se- maintained since 1940 a big card curity risk as well as other charges index file which now contains the against them. names of about two million per-