y ContourPlowing Patterns in Grass Caused by Spray Dn An gell Hall Lawn? By HERB KRAVITZ Though most universities like to boast of their green lawns, Mich- igan is unique in that here the grass is brown-and growing in symmetrical patterns, too. But those who prefer the old- fashioned green campus have no need for alarm. Green pastures are expected to return in about a week. BROWN GRASS and race track patterns on campus are the result of 2-4-D, a weed killer which the University has been using to elim- inate one of the worst enemies of grass. Sam Wylie, grounds foreman, explained that although the weed killer was mixed in proper proportions (seven pints of 2-4- D to 200 gallons of water), the spray machine used probably put too heavy a dose on the campus. * * * WYLIE POINTED out that with normal rains the grass would never have turned color. The man- ufacturers of the weed killer ad- vise, as a protection to grass, wa- tering the laws about a day after the spray is applied. However, it is virtually im- possible to water the entire cam- pus manually and the past few weeks have generally been dry. Wylie cited the League lawn where the grass had not been af- fected by the spray. He said this was due to the fact that the League grounds are equipped with a sprinkler system. THE SPRAY KILLS the roots of broad-leafed weeds by causing the plants to grow so fast that they die. Though the spray does not af- fect the roots of grass, under cer- tain conditions it may harm the top of the lawn, giving the blades a characteristic brown color. But now that campus weeds are destroying themselves, thanks to a chemical spray, students can look forward to new green lands. -Daily-Norm Steere -Daily-Norm Steere 'TETE-A-TETE' See Page 4 C, r Latest Deadline in the State a iiop e (!"1 SCATTERED SHOWERS VOL. LIX, No. 9S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS Judith Coplon Given 40 Months to 10, Years . Witness Kept From Tellin Story at Trial Judge Repeats Blast at Publicity By ROMA LIPSKY (Snecial to The Daily) NEW YORK-Testimony from xVrs. Hede Massing, former wife of Communist Gerhart Eisler, was ruled out at the Alger Hiss per- jury trial yesterday. The trial, expected to go to the jury by the end of the week, re- cessed until after noon while de- fense and prosecution wrangled in the judge's chambers. AT 12:15 JUDGE Samuel Kauf- man reconvened the court and ruled that Mrs. Massing would not be called. By this ruling the judge se- cured another point against what he earlier in the week called "trial by publicity." The New York World-Telegram, in its first edition yesterday print- ed a summary of what Mrs. Mas- sing is "prepared to testify." Thus, the general public got a preview of testimony which never reached the jury's ears. Defense attorney Lloyd P. Stry- ker had objected to calling Mrs. Massing on the grounds that it was not "proper" rebuttal testi- mony." * *' * MURPHY THEN put Lish Whit- son, FBI special agent, on the stand to relate a March, 1946, talk with Hiss. In the cross - examination, Stryker continued the attempt he had begun the day before to discredit the FBI. Questioning FBI agent Cortland Jones on Thursday, Stryker tried to show that the FBI had used routh methods in their questioning of two former employees of the Hisses. Dog's Status Has Play Cast Confused By PRES HOLMES Play Production is going to the dogs. Before those of you who agree with the rave reviews of Paul Osborn's "On Borrowed Time" start throwing things, let me explain. Osborn included in the show a dog, an ordinary dog of no special breed or temperament, just a friendly, happy, well-meaning canine. THIS INNOCENT LITTLE creature, however, became the center of a bitter struggle which almost made Play Production wish they had never gone to the dogs. Risk of China Trade Up to Shipowners WASHINGTON-MP)-The Unit- ed States Government is leaving it squarely up to commercial shippers whether to risk Nation- alist sinking by sending American ships into China ports held by the Communists. The Nationalist government has ordered the ports closed to foreign commerce but the U.S. has re- jected the order as invalid unless the Nationalists declare and main- tain "an effective blockade." * * * FOLLOWING the arrival of a new note from Canton the State Department said yesterday it is telling shippers who ask for offi- cial advice "neither to go in nor stay out" of the ports. A spokesman said they are being advised, however, thatif an American ship should be damaged by Nationalist planes or warships trying to enforce the closure order "the U.S. re- serves its rights to claim dam- ages." In Canton, the Nationalist cab- inet authorized its navy to sink ships resisting search. The U.S. Navy, meanwhile, said it is not committing itself whether it will or will not keep out Amer- ican warships. O As opening night drew near the property crew had faithfully fulfilled its task of assembling everything from a bone speci- men to dead frogs, and was sitting back contentedly feeling that the job was over and well done. Then came dress rehearsal, and Betty, the dog. Bill Taylor, the Sheriff in the cast, brought his landlady's pooch to perform the part. * * * THE BATTLE BEGAN. The property crew maintained that she was a part of the cast, while the call girl, who already had to look after the two boys in the show, claimed rather exasperatedly that the dog was a property. Remaining in full command of the situation throughout, Mrs. Claribel Baird, the director of the show, stepped in and set- tled the argument. Betty is now classed as a property. The second play of the season, "Life With Father" which opens next Wednesday at the Lydia Mendelssohn, also has a dog in it, and the third play contains a whole menagerie. THEY ARE WATCHING, how- ever, with raised eyebrows, what will happen when the fourth play k of the season, "The White Steed," goes into production. "I refuse to take care of a horse," was the comment of one crew member. But despite the trials and tribu- lations caused by this menage of animals they grow to be really liked and loved. GentleHint! PASADENA, Tex.-(P)-Mo- torists won and then lost a battle for removal of a fireplug. It took businessmen four years to get the city council to remove a plug which they said interfered with parking. Thursday a fire broke out a short distance from the former site of the plug. Firemen had to lay a hose across a railroad track and the city's main street. The fire gained such headway that it did $15,000 damage. After it was controlled the council met in special session and ordered the plug restored. W orld News Round Up By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Legislation was introduced in Congress yes- terday to permit $4,000,000 of Eco- nomic Cooperation Administration funds to be used in aiding 3,700 Chinese students in the United States. * * * TOKYO - Japanese Commu- nists are turning out to welcome home prisoners of war long held in Siberia. Most of the prisoners show pro-Communist leanings. * * * RENO, Nev.-A record-breaking horde of migratory grasshoppers covering some 3,000 square miles is eating its way into Oregon and California. The State Department of Agriculture said yesterday the band of hoppers in northern Wa- shoe and Humboldt counties is 75 miles long and 40 miles deep. MACKINAW CITY - State ferry officials were prepared last night to handle a rush of tourists to the Upper Peninsula for the Fourth of July weekend. The state ferries were operating without schedule to clear the backlog of cars. * * * MUNICH, Germany-A German Denazification court ruled yester- day that all property left by Eva Braun should be confiscated to aid victims of Nazi persecution. The blonde who reportedly married Adolf Hitler a few hours before 'both committed suicide left a bank account of 35,000 marks (about $10,500) and a mansion in Mu- nich. ROME - Prince Tortorici Di Raffadali, 70, a member of the Palermo aristocracy, was shot to death yesterday on a Palermo street, the Italian News Ageny Astra reported. *' * * FRANKFURT, Germany - The Western Powers took the shackles off Germany's merchant marine yesterday. German ships may now sail to any port. Previously Ger- man vessels could carry cargoes CIO Refuses Second Ford WageOffer Auto Company Asks Pay Freeze DETROIT-(P)-The CIO Unit- ed Auto Workers turned down yesterday a second Ford Motor Co., proposal that wages be left as they are for 18 months. UAW Ford Director Ken Ban- non said in reply: "We are sticking to our present demands despite the attitude of the company." . * * * FORD HINTED that the com- pany could reduce prices if the UAW would agree to a wage freeze. Meanwhile, negotiators work- ing on a new contract for Ford workers reported an agreement to extend the current pact on a "day-to-day basis" if necessary after July 15, its expiration date. That move was seen as reducing the likelihood of a second UAW strike this year in Ford plants. THE UAW EXECUTIVE Board has called for a strike vote in Ford plants, and several locals al- ready have reported approval. A 24-day speedup strike that shut down the Ford system was settled about a month ago. In a letter to UAW President Walter Reuther, the company said: "We are convinced that this two-point pattern offers the best-possible answer to our problem-that of steady, well- paid jobs at Ford in the period ahead." Bannon declared that Ford's proposal would make the com- pany's 106,000 production workers vote "even more overwhelmingly" for a strike. UAW Ford locals all over the country are preparing to hold strike votes in advance of the July 15 deadline when the present contractruns out. The wage freeze suggestico-, echoed a similar Ford proposal of two weeks ago. It indicated that current talks on economic phases of a new contract are getting no- where. Attorney May Fight To Supreme Court WASHINGTON-(/P)-Scorning a mercy plea, Judith Coplon was sentenced to serve 40 months to 10 years in prison for attempting to betray her country as a spy for Soviet Russia. The 28-year-old former government girl took the sentence with- out a quiver. But in a bitter outburst, immediately before Judge Albert L. Reeves pronounced sentence, she cried out: "I UNDERSTAND I could plead for mercy. That I will not do. To me, pleading for mercy would be an admission of guilt." Then, referring to prosecutor John M. Kelley, Jr., and Ray- mond P. Whearty, she went on swiftly: "I am innocent .. . I am innocent before all the Wheartys and * tall the Kelleys and all the gov- ernment, whatever they want to do against me, and they may gloat in the glory of their hollow empiric victory .. . * * * "THEY WANT TO break me. They will never break me!" A few minutes later, with Miss Coplon staring coldly up at him, Judge Reeves pronounced sentence as the climax of a sensation- studded trial that ran for nearly 10 weeks. Sternly, the 75-year-old jus- tice denounced Miss Coplon with an allusion to the revolu- tionary war traitor, Benedict Arnold. Judge Reeves ordered her con- fined in Federal prison for 40 months to 10 years on the first count in the two-count indictment, which charged Miss Coplon with stealing government secrets "with intent" to injure the United States and aid a foreign power, Russia. ON THE SECOND COUNT, in- volving unlawful removal of con- fidential papers from the Justice Department, Judge Reeves sen- tenced her to one to three years. LATER YESTERDAY Palmer filed a formal notice of appeal, citing 26 alleged errors in the trial -most of them on rulings by the judge. Simultaneously, Miss Coplon was released from the lockup in the federal courthouse when a profes- sional bondsman posted her $20,- 000 bonds. Then she and Palmer left for New York, where she and Russian Valentin Gubitchev face trial on espionage conspiracy charges. Soviets Open Berlin Rails; TrafficSlow Only Four Trains Get IntoCapital BERLIN-(/P)-The Berlin rail- way system started freight flow- ing yesterday-ike molasses in January. The Russian rail management gave the go ahead signal after a six-weeks shutdown caused by a strike of non-Communist union men and then found they were too short of locomotives to do the job. AS A RESULT, only four loaded Western trains came into Berlin during the day and 12 empty ones left. Western transport men said' the Russian-run railway obviously was not geared to clear the chaotic rail jam in anything less than a week, so long as the Russians in- sist on using only their own equip- ment. * * * MOST OF THE 14,000 West Berlin anti-Communist workers who went on strike May 21 were back at their jobs with a guaran- tee of full pay in West Marks. The city's elevated passenger trains, all electric, started to hit normal efficiency toward si- down. But inter-zone freight lines still were clogged. With extra crews, the management cleared up the West Berlin trainyards in good shape, Western engineers said. However, outside the city and around the Potsdam area the shortage of Russian locomotives prevented movement of cars stalled all the way along the single track to the West zonal borders. June Jobs Hit 7-Year High WASHINGTON -- (P) - More Americans had jobs in June than in any previous month of 1949. Unemployment too hit a seven- year high of 3,778,000 as vacation sent school-agers pouring into the labor market. THE TOTAL number of Amer- icans gainfully employed last month was 59,619,000, the Census Bureau reported. This was a rec- ord for this year, although the total was about 1,500,000 less than in June, 1948. For the first time since Decem- ber, there was an up-turn (204,- 000) in the number of people working on jobs outside of farm- ing. * * * JUDITH COPLON "..I am innocent" Budget Ready By Mid -July The University's revamped bud- get will probably not be finished before mid-July, University offi- cials revealed yesterday. Provost James P. Adams andl Vice-President Robert P. Briggs have been working withndeans and department heads_ on the budget for the. past week. Announcement of new promo- tions will be held up until de- partment budgets can be straight- ened out, officials said. Earlier in the trial, Raymond Catlett, one of the brothers, tes- tified that Jones offered him $200, to find the old Woodstock type- writer on which the government claims secret State Department documents were typed. Jones flat- ly denied making the offer. THE DEFENSE claims that the Hisses disposed of the Woodstock by giving it to the Catlctts before 1938, the time when the docu- ments were taken and retyped. Murphy alsotquestioned Paul Solandt, who stated that he did not "see, meet, or hear of the Hisses" when he occupied an apartment in a house owned by Mrs. Lewin Wickes in Chester- +ow n d. rinz the *summer TAFT ON TAFT: Few Revisions in T-H Likely, Professor Says The recently passed Senate la- bor bill probably represents the major changes that the 81st Con- gress is likely to make, according to Prof. Philip Taft of Brown Uni- versity. Prof. Taft, no relation to Ohio's senior senator, is a visiting pro- fessor in the economics depart- ment for the Summer Session. He cn-nnli.nc +n ta iPMof . ley Law itself, Prof. Taft described it as a "potentially bad one, hav- ing many clauses that could harm labor a great deal." HE POINTED out that the amount of harm done, if any, de- pended upon the administration of the law by the National Labor Relations Board. The wording of ENTHUSIASTIC RESPONSE: Si cipsSbmte to Uno LOpeBr By PAUL BRENTLLNGER Campus playwrights and would- be playwrights have responded en- thusiastically to U'nion Opera's call for scenarios for its 1950 pro- post-war revival of the tradi- tional Union Opera, after an eight year absence from the campus scene. Trn n-ws, av Trnn onra York have shown interest in bring- ing the show to those cities, prob- ably during the University's spring vacation period. During the course of the years,