0 THE AMERICAN MILITARY See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State 43Iaii4 PARTLY CLOUDY, WARMER VOL. LXVIi, No. 129 Probers Accuse Beck of Evasion Teamster's Head Dodges Questions About Reported Theft of Funds WASHINGTON (AP)-Teamster titan Dave Beck, a Fifth Amend- ment witness, wound up an initial appearance before Senate rackets problems yesterday under scorching denunciation for "arrogant contempt." Before senators talking of "theft" of union funds, the president of the powerful International Teamsters Union had repeatedly sought 3 refuge behind the Fifth Amendment on all sorts of questions. It might incriminate him, Beck declared, to say whether he bor- rowed $200,000 through two business firms to replenish the union treasury after federal income tax agents set out on his trail. He even said it might incriminate him to say whether he used $9.68 of union I money to buy five dozen diapers. "Not for Myself" "Off the record, senator," Beck told Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.), "you are assured it's not for myself." Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.), chairman of the special Senate committee investigating improper labor and industry activities, said -AR-L -L-DY- A-M- ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1957 QTX IDAII-IWCt ANN AI~JSUK, MIUHI(AN, THURSDAY. MARCH 28. 1957 3 'Severe Budget Cuts Futile'- Eisenhower A> Total Strike May Tie Up All England, LONDON () - Union bosses threatened yesterday to bring an- other 500,000 factory workers into a snowballing nationwide strike. Labor Minister Ian Macleod told the House of Commons he had put new proposals to the employers in an attempt to settle the dispute which has already paralyzed many of the nation's dollar-earning fac- tories. A million factory workers have been idle since last weekend. The employers promised to give Macleod an answer today. Thus far they-have refused to meet the unions or to make any cash offer. If the factory dispute can be ended, the door will be open to a settlement of 'Britain's other crip- pling strike, involving the nation's whole force of 200,000 shipyard workers. That has' now lasted 11 days. Industrial sources believe Mac- leod tried to persuade the factory owners to consider an offer by the Confederation of Shipbuilding and Engineering Unions to call off both strikes in return for an In- terim five per cent wage increase. The CSEU, a confederation of forty unions, is masterminding both strikes. Originally it de- inanded ten per cent raises. Present wages for both shipyard and factory workers average twelve pounds, eighteen shillings- $36.40, which is two pounds, $5.60, above the national average. Oscar Given To Brynner For Acting HOLLYWOOD (P) - Yul Bryn- * ner, the regal autocrat of "The King and I," was selected the best actor of 1956 at the 29th annual academy awards yesterday., Ingrid Bergman, who made a stunning return to American films as the Russian princess in "Anas- tasia," was named best actress of the year. "Around the World in 80 Days," the globe-girdling epic produced ' by the dynamic Michael Todd, al- so won the Oscar for the best pic- ture of 1956. George Stevens, veteran award winner, scored again with his! sweeping picture of Texas, "Gi- ant," which was named the best achievement in directing. The writing awards went to Robert Rich for "The Brave One" best motion picture story; James Poe, John Farrow and S. J. Perel- man for "Around the World in 80 Days" best screen-play-adapted; and Albert Lamorisse for the French-made "The Red Balloon" best screenplay-original. The award for the best song in a movie in 1956 went to Jay Liv- ingston and Ray Eans for "What- ever Will Be, Will Be" from "The Man Who Knew Too Much." he did not know whether Beck' ref usal to answer questions con- stituted "actionable contempt" o1 Congress -punishable upon con- viction by a fine and one-year jai term. But Sen. McClellan said he in- tended to find out. Beck, he said, has shown "fla- Igrant . -. disrespect for honest unionism" and arrogant contempt for the one and one-half million s "honest laboring people" in his own union-the nation's largest. Shows'Utter Contempt And, he said, in his opinion, Beck has shown "utter contempt of this committee of Congress, of the United States and for his gov- ernment." All the indications at the hear- ings, Sen. McClellan said, have been that Beck was "taking money from his union. I don't know of any word that would describe it *less than 'theft'," he said, "unless his union knew about it and he replaced it." Took $320,000 The committee contends that Beck took more than $320,000 from the Teamsters Union and that there is no evidence of its being a loan or a gift. Beck contended that when the complete story is brought out-and he thinks it will be in court because of his income tax trouliles-he will be exonerated fully. He said he had been in the trade union move- ment forty of his sixty-two years and hadn't done one single thing which in his mind was wrong. And once there is final judgment in a court, after he faces his accusers, har the right to cross examination, and the rules and evidence apply, Beck predicted that: "I'll be able to come out of this clean and white 100 per cent." Almpst as often as he pleaded the Fifth Amendment, the witness said he was doing so only on ad- vice of his lawyers, to protect his constitutional rights. The committee backed up with photographed copies of ghecks and other documents its stand that Beck never started putting money back into the union until after the Internal Revenue Service went af- ter him in March 1954. Engman Wins Scholarship To London rtU' Lew Engman, '57, has been awarded a year's fellowship to the University of London, Vice-Presi- dent of Student Affairs James Lewis, announced yesterday. The former Student Govern- ment Council member and treas- urer received the newly estab- lished Alumni Student Leader Fel- lowship which grants approxi- mately $1800 for a year of study in Britain. As part of an exchange program, the University of Lon- don is matching the award and, sending one student to the Uni- versity. Senior Society Taps Members --Daily--John Hirtzel "THE BURNING GROUND"-Oedipus and a shepherd talk Just before the death of the blind king. Oedipus (left) will be played by Arthur Beer, Jr., the shepherd (right) by Phillip Smith in the 1955 Hopwood Award-winning adoption of Sophortes, "The Burn- ing Ground" by Ronald Sproat. The play will be presented with Arthur Beer's "Man in Armour" by the speech department. Speech Dept. Presents Two One-Act Dramas Two one-act plays, one a modern retelling of Sophocles' "Oedi- pus at Colonus", the other a drama based on a post-World War II black market incident, will be presented at 8 p.m. today through Saturday at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Both plays will be presented by the speech department with the cooperation of English department. Ground,' 'written by Ronald Sproat, '55, won the 1955 Hopwood The modernized interpretation of Sophocles, "The Burning Award. The modern lines will accompany stylized ancient Greek costumes. The play retells the end of the wanderings of Oedipus and his final achievement of greatness at his death. The drama of the post- war incident, "Man in Armour," World News Roundup By The Associated Press MEXICO CITY-Two explosions fifteen minutes apart in a fire- works plant yesterday killed or in- jured scores of persons. The scene was near the airport about five miles from the center of the city. The disastrous effect was com- pounded when rescuers moving in to help victims of the first blast were caught by the second. m , * ALGIERS - The Grand Rabbi of Medea, Jacob Chekroun, leader of the Algiers Jewish community, was shot yesterday while leaving his synagogue. His wounds were reported seri- ous. * * * PRAGUE - Olympic champion Harold Connolly faced up to ex- communication by the Roman Catholic Church and married his Protestant sw, etheart, Olga Fiko- tova, in three ceremonies that blocked traffic in ancient Prague yesterday. The East-West romance which budded in the 1956 Olympic games at Melbourne led them through civil, Catholic and Protestant mar- riage ceremonies before sympa- thetic throngs in this capital of Communist Czechoslovakia. * * * WASHINGTON - The Senate yesterday passed a bill to post- pone until next year a scheduled threebillion-dollar annual drop in business taxes. is a suspense play written by Ar- thur Beer, Jr., Grad. Set in Germany, the story is in- volved with the black-marketing of coffee. Peter Wexler, '58 A&S, designed both scenery and costumes for the two plays. Beer, the author of "Man in Ar- mour," will play the part of Oedi- pus in "The Burning Ground." Both plays in the double play'. bill were written while their auth- ors were taking playwriting courses taught by Professor Ken- neth T. Rowe of the English de- partment. Professor Jack E. Bender of the speech department directs both plays. Tickets are on sale at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office. Joint Judiciary Voids Results. In J-Hop Vote Student Government Council President Joe Collins, '58, an- nounced yesterday Joint Judiciary has voided the recent J-Hop Com- mittee elections and that ballots+ would be recounted. Joint Judiciary Chairman Herb; Wander, '57, confirmed this, ex- plaining, "it was felt the procedure1 in counting was wrong and the candidates therefore did not get a fair deal." SGC member John Wrona, '57,1 initiated the petition calling for the action, Procedural error was that "10" instead of "11" had been used in figuring the quota used in the Hare system of ballot count-1 ing. SGC Fights Over Phi Mu IRecognition By VERNON NAHRGANG Student Government Council members yesterday fought over recognizing Phi Mu colony as Phi Mu sorority without a letter from its national agreeing to abide by University regulations. SEC finally voted the sorority unconditional recognition, then considered and tabled, amid gen- eral laughter and inattention, a proposal to "organize a cultural and educational delegation to visit ISoutheast Asia for th summer of 1958." When members stopped laugh- ing and dropped their note-passing volume to return to their weekly legislative work, SGC approved its president's proposa for a fourth Council officer. Discriminate? Phi Mu recognition was ques- tioned by Daily Editor Richard Snyder, '57, who pointed out that although the group's constitution contained no bias clause, such a group could still discriminate. Snyder's substitute motion to recognize Phi Mu pending a week's investigation and report failed to pass. A second substitute motion granting recognition "pending a letter from the National agreeing to abide by University regulations" also failed, but gained support of five Council members, SGC granted unconditional rec- ognition of Phi Mu with only one "nay" vote. Foreign Visit Proposed Anne Woodard, '57, National and International Affairs Committee chairman, proposed the delegation to visit Southeast Asia in 1958. The news that such a program would cost about $30,000 led to the eventual tabling of the motion. Questions about whether such a trip would conflict with the busi- ness of local travel agencies added to general hilarity over the pro- posal. Rationale for the proposal was to "build a feeling of mutuality and understanding with the stu- dents of South East Asia ..." Beginning Friday, SGC will have an executive committee of four officers-president, executive and administrative vice-presidents, and treasurer. Add Executive Officer SGC decided yesterday to add the administrative vice-president on a motion by President Joe Col- lins, '58, who also asked that standing committee chairmen no longer necessarily be Council mem- bers. Next SGC meeting will be at 4 p.m. Friday when new officers will be elected. Collins is the only presidential candidate. Vice-President Janet Neary, '58, is running for executive vice-pres- ident. Scott Chrysler, '59, is a nominee for administrative vice- president and Maynard Goldman, '59, is the treasurer candidate. 'AT RACKHAM Harvard Dean To Talk On Fifth Amendment Prof. Erwin N. Griswold of Harvard University, respected both in legal and academic circles for his study of the Fifth Amendment, will speak at 4:15 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. Prof. Griswold, dean of the Harvard Law School, will discuss "Academic Responsibility" in the Second Hayward Keniston Lecture on Liberal Education and Democratic Institutions. His longtime friend, Prof. Frank Huntley of the English depart- ment, termed him a brilliant lawyer who compiled an outsanding record both as an undergraduate at Oberlin college and later at Harvard Law School and has im- ;- proved it ever since. "Prof. Griswold has a very high reputation not only among law- yers, but also among academician ffor his strong stand on academic freedom'and responsibility," Prof Huntley said. The Harvard dean was among the first to take a liberal stand on the Fifth. Amendment, speaking out at a time when many Ameri- cans believed that anyone taking the amendment was automatically guilty. Three speeches that he made on the subject were published by the Harvard' University Press under the title, "The Fifth Amendment Today." Dean Griswold is also known among lawyers for his textbooks "Cases and Materials on Federal Taxation" and ''Spendthrift Trusts," which have gone through more than one edition. UProgress In Research Progress of University doctors engaged in cancer research was viewed by 150 representatives from Michigan's county chapters of the American Cancer Society at a gathering of the Society in Ann Arbor yesterday. A film made at the University demonstrating the killing of hu- man cancer cells on a micro- scopic slide was shown at 250 times magnification. Doctors said although the kill- ing of human cancer cells exists on a test-tube level, application of the process has not yet been made to treatment of human can- cers. The movie showed action of an- tisera, serum contained in fluid, on human cancer cells grown in tissue culture. Researchers used the HeLa cervix cancer cell strain and produced antisera which killed HeLa cancer cells in test tubes. The HeLa cancer cells strain has been growing in tissue cul- ture continuously since it war re- moved from a patient in 1951. The antisera is produced by in- jecting laboratory animals with live cells, then taking the antisera from the animals blood after anti- bodies have been manufactured by the animal's system. h College Cost s e Is Doubled In 17 Years WASHINGTON ()-The cost of going to college has about doubled since 1939.40, the Office of Edu- cation reported yesterday. Commissioner of Education Law- rence G. Derthick said the expens- es of full time undergraduate stu- dents attending public colleges this year averages about $1,500. He added a student in a private col- lege pays about $2,000 a year. In contrast, the average ex- penditures in 1939-40 were $747 for a student in a publiccollege and $1,023 for a private college student. Derthick said the survey is the first comprehensive study of how much it costs an undergraduate to go to college, and where he gets the money. Spending can vary widely from student to student. The study showed that expenditures per student ranged from $200 to $5,500 a year. Outlays included such living costs as clothes, room, board, trav- el, recreation or entertainment and educational costs such as tuition, fees, books, supplies and equip- ment. The survey was based on the 1952-53 school year. Estimates for 1957 took into account the cost- of-living index of the Bureau of Labor Statistics and also the rise in tuition, fees and other college costs. Average tuition and fees at pub- lic colleges in 1952-53 totaled about $175 and at private institutions about $550. Students living with their par- ents at that time spent an aver- age of about $1,000 a year. It cost about $350 more for a student to live in some other private home or dormitory and another $300 to live in a club, fraternity or soror- ity. Iran Troops Surrounding Desert Gang TEHRAN, Iran OP) - Imperial troops with camel cavalry and po- lice yesterday were reported clos- ing in on a desert bandit gang that killed two American aid offi- cials and kidnapped the wife of one. Officials speculated that some of the gang may already have been captured. Government officials identified the bandit leader of the remote southeastern desert area as a no- torious sixty-year-old named Dad- shah who lives by occasional hold- ups and camel breeding. Two Iranians with the Ameri- cans were kliled in the bandit am- bush on the Americans' two-jeep convoy Sunday. The dead Americans were iden- tified as Kevin M. Carroll, 37, of Issaquah, Wash., and Brewster A. Wilson, 35, Portland, Ore. All four _ men were fnind knifet on eanth On Economy Helicopter Remark Causes President's Temper To Flare WASHINGTON () - President Dwight D. Eisenhower said yester- day it is futile to talk about mak- ing "severe" cuts in his $71,800,- 000,000 budget. It is futile, he said, if the United States is to maintain its position in the world and provide its citi- zens with programs "agreed to be necessary," President Eisenhower spoke out with vigor and sharpness, telling his news conference: "This bud- get was not only made carefully, it was made intelligently." In earlier discussions of con- gressional maneuvers to whack in- to his spending plans, President Eisenhower has been more re- strained, and his attitude has been one of rather mild agreeableness to the possibility of cuts. Would Like to Save He went along with that stand yesterday to the extent of saying that of course it would be possible to "save money here and there, and I am all for it to the last dol- lar bill." But, with a trace of annoyance, he said that with some people it has become a matter of becoming "economy-conscious and not re* alizing what they are talking about." Tartly, he observed: "I must say it is a very great satisfaction to me to find out there are so many economy-minded people in Washington. They didn't use to be here." Irked at Criticism While President Eisenhower seemed irked at criticisms of his budget as too high - and turned truly angry at a question dealing with his personal expense to the taxpayer - he was relaxed and easy most of the hour and a half reporters spent batting questions and answers back and forth. The question that got under his skin and made him as coldly fu- rious as anybody around the con- ference had ever seen him, was this one from William McGaffin of the Chicago Daily News: "Do you feel there are any economies you can make in the executive branch of the govern- ment to help cut government spending? Do Without Helicopters? For instance, would you be will- ing to do without that pair of heli- copters that have been proposed for getting you out to the golf course a little faster than you can make it in a car?" President Eisenhower turned red, and he seemed to make a positive effort to control his tem- per. Then, biting off his words, he said tartly: "Well, I don't think much of the question, because no helicopters have been procured for me to go to a golf course." McGaffin tried to go on, but got out only one word - "Well" - before the President cut him off curtly.: "Thank you. That is all." The White House said recently two helicopters are being bought at about $60,000 apiece to carry President Eisenhower between the White House and National Air. port here. Press Secretary James C. Hag- erty said there are no plans to use the machines to get to the golf course. Scroll Takes 18 Members M J Press Finds Ike Touchy FESTIVITIES ONLY HALF OVER: Greek Week Activities Called Resounding Success By WILLIAM HANEY This year's Greek Week festivities are only half over, but already Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Association officials are calling the project "one of the most successful ever." Emphasis this year has been placed on self-evaluation and study of the Greek-letter systems co-ordinated with the traditional enter- taining events. Last Monday discussion sections talked over the problems of the new spring rushing system, while in another room of the League, two people from each fraternity and sorority competed in the Greek Week Bridge Tournament. "Kick-off" event this year was Tuesday's box supper at Yost Field House. Fraternity team races, comical sorority girl races and a keynote speech by former Assistant Dean of Men in Charge of Fra- ternities Bill Zerman comprised the evening's program. Voicing their traditional song, Senior Society, independent senior K ickh h Speaks women's honorary, tapped 17 new Kluckho h Speaks members last night. SA Selected on thehebsis of ler-I 7 t w :.t x t