V IKE'S MESSAGE CREATES ELECTION PRESSURE (See Page 4) YI L 1M Latest Deadline in the State Z43aii4j Ct L k VOL. LXVI, No. 7 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1956 EIGHT PAGES Fraternity Heads Deny Bias Claim Discrimination Ends With Clause Removal Say Zerman, Weinbaum By BILL HANEY Campus fraternity leaders disagree with the charges of Dr. Alfred McLung Lee, president of the National Committee on Fraternities in Education, that fraternities without bias clauses are still biased. "When fraternities remove the bias clause they remove it in good faith," Interfraternity Council President Bob Weinbaum, '56, said. "Once the clause is thrown out there is no more discrimination." Weinbaum Denies 'Underground Bias' Weinbaum said fraternities that have removed the clause would not have been so careful in their decision to eliminate discriminaton fromtheir constitutions if they in- State ol SUnion Debat e Message on Agruc Stirs Press Probe Witnesses, Stay Silent WASHINGTON ()-Four wit- nesses refused yesterday to tell senators searching for Red in- fluences in the press and other news fields whether they had ever been Communists. One of the witnesses, Dan Ma- honey, a rewriteman on the staff of the New York Daily Mirror, said, "No sir, I am not," when ask- ed whether he now is a Com- munist. However, he refused to tell whether he had ever been a dommunist. Three Refuse To Answer' The other three - William A. Price, a reporter for th New York Daily News; Richard O. Boyer, a free lance writer of Groton-On- Hudson, N.Y.; and Otto Albertson, a composing room employe of the New York Times-refused to say whether they now are Communists or have been in the past. Price, in declining to answer questions, refused to invoke the Fifth Amendment's privilege against compulsory self-incrimi- nation. He based his refusals on the First Amendment, which cov- ers the right of free speech. Chairman James Eastland (D- Miss) repeatedly "ordered and di- rected" Pride to answer questions put to him, saying the subcom- mittee did not recognize his re- fusal to answer on the ground of the First Amendment. Fifth Amendment Used Boyer and Mahoney invoked the Fifth Amendment after being told their refusal to answer on the ground of the First Amendment was not recognized. Albertson was the only one of the four witnesses heard yesterday who did not make an issue of the First Amendment. He simply claimed the protection t of the Fifth. The New York Times said edi- torially yesterday that, "It seems quite obvious that the Eastland investigation has been aimed with particular emphasis at the New York Times." Sen. Eastland replied that The New York Times is not under in- vestigation. He has said the in- quiry was aimed at communism r wherever found, and not at any particular newspaper or group of newspapers. Three of the seven witnesses called Wednesday were employees of the Times. Three others were former employes, Salutes Given Bonn Leader On Birthday BONN, Germany (P)-Chancellor Konrad Adenauer was 80 yester- day and his countrymen gave him his biggest birthday party. Tributes and gifts by the thu- sands flowed in to the "grand old man" of Germany from his people and world statesmen of both sides of the Iron Curtain. The Bonn Republic's leaders and foreign diplomats trooped to the white Chancellory on the Rhine to wish him "herzliche glueckwuen- sche - h e a r t y good wishes." Throughout the nation, news- papers printed huge pictures of Adenauer and praise of his states- man ship. It was a geat day for the iron- willed man who in six years has * piloted West Germany from ruin to recovery and a position of honor in the free world. And Adenauer, tend to retain bias as an "under- ground" determinant in choosing members. Lee openly charges in his book "Fraternities Without Brother- hood" that although most fraterni- ties and sororities do not open- ly acknowledge discrimination in their rules, "in most cases it is very much alive, even though underground." Sees Bias As Threat Lee feels this discrimination per- sisting in social fraternities repre- sents a basic threat to democracy in the United States and to the effectiveness of American leader- ership in world affairs. Lee's findings in a recent sur- vey showed that only 10 of the 61 leading fraternities still have written biases against members of certain races and religions. However Lee did not place too much importance in this figure because of "underground discrimi- nation." Zerman Disagrees Assistant Dean of Men William Zerman, who has worked closely with both local and national fra- ternity systems, does not agree with Lee's charges that most fra- ternities without bias clauses have an "nderground" bias. "In all the fraternity systems I know of I can think of only a few that have anything similar to what could be termed 'underground bias,'" Zerman commented. "I admit that though some may have this unwritten discrimination it is certainly not found in the majority," he said. Zerman added that in many cases this was not really discrimi- nation but more a kind of selec- tivity which is only human and not peculiar to fraternities. Detroit Strike Negotiations Yield Progress DETROIT (") - A three-hour bargaining session tonight be- tween printers and publishers of Detroit's three strike-bound news- papers was reported to have re- sulted in "considerable progress.' Robert C. Butz, representing the Detroit Newspaper Publishers Association, said "considerable progress" was made and he was "very pleased with the' conduct" of last night's negotiations. A new meeting between publish- ers and printers was scheduled for 11 a.m. today. Woodruff Randolph, president of the International Typographi- cal Union, arived yesterday and sat in on the bargaining. The strike entered its sixth week yesterday and a dispute over union jurisdiction involving the printers, photo-engravers and the Newspapers Guild has been a major bar to settlement. Senate Demand Ike Keep .FarmW 5 Promises{ 'Act or Resign Humphrey Says WASHINGTON (A) - A farm debate flared up in the Senate late yesterday, accompanied by Democratic demands that Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower "keep the promises" he made to agricul- ture in 1952. The argument began a few hours after the President, in his State of the Union message, said he will open a stepped-up attack on the "deep-seated problems" plaguing farmers. Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D- h Minn.) complained that President s Eisenhower "promised more than any other candidate" four years ago and "has delivered less." Now that another election looms, the WORL Senator said, the President is Nearly, adopting many farm proposals address that he, as a Democrat, has push- ed for three years. w In yesterday's message to Con- gress, the President urged that the plight of agriculture be placed "above and beyond politics." By V "Too Much At Stake" Membe "Too much is'at stake," he said. Universit "No group is more fundamental to tinued or our national life than our farm- ruary fun ers." ing in th Sen. Humphrey suggested that day. President Eisenhower call in Sec- Represe retary of Agriculture Benson, read groups re to him the farm pledges the Pres- tribute, w ident made in 1952, and then in- Future is struct him to "carry them out or the work resign." and listn This brought Sen. George Ben- its servic der (R-Ohio) to his feet with a Georgia protest that the Democrats, nO ber at L: in control of the Senate and the group House, "have done nothing" about and con the legislation referred to by Sen. traveling Humphrey. recent ye Administration 'Frantic',Poi Earlier, Sen. Lyndon Johnson ofof tesha Texas, the Senate's Democratic conr leader, said it is obvious that the tripov Eisenhower Administration "has Janet become frantic about the farm Student situation." National Sen. William Langer (R-ND) Committe also took the President to task, erates, ex saying he permitted rye, oats and her comrr wheat to come in from Canada ings of W last year when the prices of these "There' crops were declining in the United giving m States. telling of To Ask Surplus Liquidation will that Without waiting for the de- Anne Wi taied program President Eisen- of WS, hower plans to submit next Mon- housing day, Sen. Clinton Andrson (D- their par NM) announced he will ask Con- drive. gress to order "a complete and "HelpS orderly liquidation within five years" of the government's hold- Reser ings of surplus farm stocks. Some legislators said they were rTik disappointd in what the President nck had to say about the farm prob- lem, which promises to become Student one of the hottest issues in the vations m election-year session of Congress. from 1 to Sen. James Murray (D-Mont) ministrati commented "It is disappointing General and alarming that after three place fro years of deliberate depression of through F farm prices, the administration is Tickets not aware of the serious nature be purcha of the crisis in agriculture." tion Bldg. President Says' No Tax'Cut 'Now Sees Balanced Budget By Midyear, Token Payment On National Debt culture -Daily-Esther Goudsmit I UNIVERSITY SERVICE-Committee members Anne Woodard, '57, co-chairman, Janet '58, Georgiana McLean of the Lane Hall staff and Maung Hlaing, '58, a student from Burma, last night's mass meeting of house representatives in the Union ballroom. JS Organizes February Draive ERNON NAHRGANG rs of the local World y Service committee con- ganization of their Feb- Ld drive at a mass meet- e Union ballroom yester- entatives from housing ceived brochures to dis- watched a film, "Their Our Future," telling of of WUS in South Asia, ed to talks of WUS and es. na McLean, a staff mem- ane Hall and advisor to , told of her experiences tacts she made while in Europe for WUS in ars. nts Out Hardships IcLean pointed out some tdships students in other had to face because of verty. Neary, '58, chairman of Government Council's and International Affairs e under which WUS op- xplained the part which nittee plays in the work- VUS. s more here than just oney," Miss Neary, said, the international good- arises in WUS's work. Voodard, '57, co-chairman then explained to the group representatives rt in the coming fund Students to help them- ved J-Hop yts On Sale s who have J-Hop reser- ay purchase dance tickets 5 p.m. today at the Ad- on Bldg. ticket sales will take m 1 to 5 p.m. Monday Friday next week. for the ski trip may also sed at the Administra- during these times. selves" is the slogan which WUS operates under. The international group, not a charity organization, provides aid to students who are able to only partially support themselves. At present, most of the aid is directed to southeast Asia and to Africa. During the last two weeks, the local committee mailed letters to presidents of .,campus housing groups, explaining the work of WUS and inviting them to send representatives to last night'sI meeting,{ WUS Objects Explained j As the letters explained, "Ex- change of mutual assistance and understanding is one of the pri- mary objects of WUS in the 38 countries in which it is active. "It is more than just a minia- ture Marshall Plan because all the 38 countries contribute; some fi- Boston Pops 'To Perform On Sunday Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops Orchestra will appear in the Extra Concert Series at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. Through arrangements with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Fied- ler is conducting the orchestra in cities throughout the country, from Boston to the West Coast, during the 1955-1956 season.. Composed of over, 70 men, the Pops will feature the same pro- gram for its Ann Arbor audience that has given the Orchestra its fame. Popular classics, marches, Broadway tunes, and overtures mix to make the program a ver- satile one. Founded in 1885, the Pops fol- lows the regular winter season of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. When spring time arrives, the Orchestra's concert hall is re-dec- orated, seats are removed and in their place are put tables and chairs. For two months, Fiedler leads the Orchestra six nights a week in popular 'classics and the type of music the Pops is known for, while audiences eat and drink as they listen to the music. Some people say the name, "Pops" grew from the popping of champagne corks which inter-, spersed the music as Bostonians listened to the concerts seated at, tables. Others dispute this saying it is an abbreviation of the word "Popular". nancially, some with physical labor to carry out WUS projects.. such as building hostels and class- rooms ' or mimeographing text' books." WUS members meet at Lane' Hall every Thursday night. Any interested students are welcome atj these meetings. WUS also works' in conjunction with the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization. WORLD' NEWS ROUNDUP By The Associated Press Red Student.. . WASHINGTON-A Chinese stu- dent, alleged by Red China to be held against his will in a Missouri mental hospital, is to be deported to his homeland Sunday. The Immigration Service made the announcement yesterday. It said that after considerable de- lay, the British have come through with a transit visa which will en- able the student, 36-year-old Liu Yung-Ming, to passthrough Hong Kong, described as the only avail- able gateway for delivering Liu to Red China. Mackinac Bridge... NEW YORK-Builders of Michi- gan's $100,000,000 Mackinac Bridge said yesterday it will be opened to traffic in November 1957, as originally scheduled, despite cold weather that has hampered con- struction. They said the target date will be achieved by acceleration of pre- vious work schedules. The five-mile-long bridge will link Michigan's Upper and Lower Peninsulas via St. Ignace and Mackinaw City. Westinghouse Strike.., PITTSBURGH - Westinghouse Electric ' Corp. yesterday turned thumbs down on a Federal Media- tion Service proposal for a three- man fact-finding board to seek a basis for settling a 12-week-old strike. Instead, Robert D. Blasier, West- inghouse vice-president in charge of. industrial relations, suggested the federal agency conduct a se- cret ballot among the striking workers to see if they want to continue the walkout. Ssn'sSon.* * * By The Associated Press WASHINGTON (R)--President Dwight D. Eisenhower laid befori Congress yesterday a massive "program for the Republic" that con- templates a balanced budget, a token payment on the nationa debt, but no tax cuts now. In language paralleling that of some leaders of both parties in Congress, the President spoke against lowering taxes at the expense of "fiscal integrity" and a balanced budget; against "going furthei into debt to give ourselves a tax cut at the expense of our children.' Expects Balanced Budget By Midyear He forecast that government income will match outgo by midyear and said he would propose a continued balance for the year following Many Republicans and some Dem-' ocra.ts applauded that, but the re- action to the message in general was the usual melange of plauditsin gat10R and digs, keyed pretty mnuch to party allegiances in this election- year Congress. The Presidential report encom- passed recommendations - some new, some old, most of them ad- Ruled.Illegal vertised in advance - for a stepped-up, "many-sided attack" BOSTON A') - A federal Judge on the farm problem, for highway,'ruled yesterday that Sen. Josepi school, housing, health and dis- R. McCarthy (R-Wis) acted out- aster relief programs. side the urisdiction' of his corn It Urges Immigration Bills inmittee two years ago n aone. Iurged immigration legislation, man probe of subversion in. de- aid for chronically depressed com-em an ts.n munities, labor law changes, an fense plants. atom - powered commercial ship, In handing down his length3 water and power projects, equal opinion, Judge Bailey Aldrich ac- pay for equal work for women and quitted Leon J. Kamin, 28, former an investigation to determine research assistant at Harvard, of whether Negroes are being depriv- charges of contempt of Congress eo of their right to vote and are Aldrich said the Senate Com. being "subjected to unwarranted mittee on Government Operations economic pressures." -of which the Senate Permaneni President Eisenhower loo k e d Investigations subcommittee is a back approvingly over what he part--had no powers to investi- termed a three-year "record of gate the general subject of corn. progress" by his Administration to- munism; that government opera. ward building "an ever-better, ever tion meant the operation of gov- stronger America." ernment departments, not private The 8,500-word document was operation of private industry, ever plunked down in the Senate and though under government con- House and read to the legislators tract. while he continued recuperating Kamin, now connected witlh from his September heart attack Queens University, Kingston, Ont. at Key West, Fla. refused to answer Sen. McCarthy Second Term Still Puzzle as to whether he knew any Com- Nowhere in it was there a defi- munists in defense plants. nite clue as to how long President Kamin had admitted being a Eisenhower proposes to stay around member of the Communist party to give stewardship to his program at times between 1945 and 1950. --the biggest political puzzle of a politically minded Congress. Evidence had been introduced But in tone and content it was that Kamin worked in Harvard's r L.^ For the condensed text of President Eisenhower's State of the Union message see page 5. much like the message a year ago which a number of Democrats, at least, interpreted as something of an announcement for a second term try. Senate Democratic Leader Lyn- don Johnson of Texas expressed "deep disappointment and great regret" at what he termed "politi- cal overtones" in the message. Domestic Situation Not Rosy a "Most Americans know that the domestic situation is not as rosy as it has been pictured and that the international situation is one of deep concern," he added. "It is obvious that this Admin- istration has become frantic about the farm situation. The deep con- cern--which somehow did not find expression until an election year- is welcome even though it is tar- One of the few Republicans step- ping up with criticism, Sen. Wil- liam Jenner of Indiana, accused the Administration of "continuing appeasement of Communism." While he endorsed most of the message, he declared, "I cannot in the least share the optimism ex- pressed by the President in the field of foreign affairs." He said he regretted deeply that President Eisenhower "has not warned us more clearly of the tremendous strides that the Soviets have project at Beavertail Point, James- town, R, I., on radar equipment. And a Harvard official had testi- fied Kamin did not have "author- ized access" to classified material or contracts. "It seems to me," Judge Ald- rich's opinion said, "that, as a pure matter of language private operation of private industry is not 'activity performed by the gov- ernment' on an operational level, and that the general economy and efficiency of such private opera- tion is beyond the scope of th committee. I cannot believe that Congress intended otherwise." Air Force To Use Willow Run Facilities Air Force officials have notified the University that Air Force planes will occupy Packard Hang- ar at Willow Run Airport in the near future. This is the latest move on recent proposals that commercial airline operations be moved from Willow Run to Wayne-Major Airport, and that Willow Run be turned over to military use. Although the airport is Univer- sity property, the federal govern- ment has owned Packard Hangar and the immediate land around it since a motor car company gave it up several years ago. GRACE KELLY TO WED MONARCH: Monacans Breathe Sigh of Relief MONTE CARLO, Monaco (A') - All Monaco heaved a sigh of relief yesterday. Their monarch, Prince Ranier III, is going to marry American actress Grace Kelly-and maybe have a family. It's a serious matter for Mon- acans. Unless the Prince has an heir, the 370-acre principality will come eventually under French rule -which means French taxes and military service. The statuesque blonde actress, was here for the Cannes Film Fes- tival last spring and to make the movie "To Catch a Thief." Newsmen Arrange Visit She met the handsome Prince when newspapermen arranged to get her to visit the palace to have some photographs made. The showed her his private zoo. His subjects watched the proceedings with hope. Later, she was often seen on the home-an event which sent hun- ( dreds of newsmen and photo- graphers, film cameramen and television technicians to the scene. Both Miss Kelly, 26, and the Prince, 32, head of the tiny Euro- pean principality and considered one of the most eligible bachelors in the world, were in high spirits, indeed. Wedding Date Not Set Miss Kelly said the actual wed- ding date has not been set, nor I