FARM FACTS See Page 4 itsthn La test Deadline in the State DaliP e S r ate' - <.,y /i FAIRS AND WARMER I VOL. LIX, No. 20S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 17, 1949 PRICE FIVE CEM.' .1 a avaVa1 a av - V-- a" Off for Europe Daily Reporters Begin Summer Jaunt (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a series of articles on the National Student Association summer tour of Europe by Barnett and Dolores Lasche- ver, Daily staff members. Mrs. Laschever is the former Dolores Palanker, night editor of The Daily.) ABOARD THE S.S. VOLENDAM-(Delayed)-This Dutch-Amer- ican ship left Wolfe's Cover, Quebec, today for Europe where some 1,400 American and Canadian students will spend the summer in travel, work and study. Aboard are 600 American students participating in the National Student Association sponsored tours of western Europe, including Home on Wheels Two High Army oMen Suspected Of Irregrularities Feldman, Waitt Suspended Pending Hearing on Congressional Charges WASHINGTON-(A)-The Army yesterday suspended its Quarter- master General and the chief of the Chemical Corps because of evidence turned up by a Senate committee investigating alleged influence in Army contract awards. Those relieved of duty were: Maj. Gen. Herman Feldman, 57, who enlisted as a private 42 years ago and rose through the ranks to head the Army's quarter- master section. Maj. Gen. Alden Harry Waitt, 56, who has served most of his 26 years in the Army as a chemical warfare specialist. SECRETARY OF THE ARMY Gordon Gray, who announced the suspensions, said in a statement that a Senate investigating Com- groups heading for work-camps New SpeecI in Finland, - Germany, I Netherland: Great Britain, France, Switzerland and the [s. Department PlayToOpen Kane Featured In 'White Steed' Whitford Kane, noted Broad- way and Hollywood actor, will direct and star in Paul Vincent Carroll's "The White Steed," the fourth presentation of the summer by the Department of Speech. The play, a comedy, based on clericalism in Ireland, will open next Wednesday night at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre for a four- day run. KANE, WHO WAS born in Ire- land, created the part of Canon Lavalle in the pre-Broadway try- out of "The White Steed" and took the role in the Theatre Guild production which toured the coun- try. One Chicago critic said of the performance, "My hat is off to veteran Whitford Kane, whose Canon Lavelle is a joy, read with immense unction and understand- ing." Ruth Livingston, who played Ann Rutledge in the depart- ment's presentation of "Abe Lincoln in Illinois" last spring with great success, will take the role of Nora Fintry. ;,Miss Livingston is a 1949 grad- uate and' is taking special work in speech this summer. She has been in play production for two years. WILLIAM BROMFIELD, who enacted Clarence in "Life With Father" last week is Father Shatighnessy in the latest offering of the speech department. Jeanette Grandstaff will play Rosieanne; Earl Matthews will take the role of Denis Dillon; Arthur Fleming will be seen as Phelimr Fintry; and George Cre- peau will play Patrick Hearty. Others in the cast are Robert Holston, Ruth Mohr, Aurelia Gu- towski, Bruce Huffman, Betty Lou Robinson, Craig Tenney and Mor- ris Winer. THE PLAY, which in 1939 won author Carroll the New York Drama Critics Circle. Award for the best play by a foreign author, opened on Broadway January 10, 1939. Carroll was the recipient o the same award in 1948 for his play, "Shadow and Substance." Termed a "beautiful, richly elo- quent and immensely moving" play, "The White Steed" is sym- bolic, though not mystical. Deal- ing with the problems of the church of Ireland, it is important enough to have universal appli- cation. Oren Parker is in charge of the set and will be assisted by Har- old Ross. Both are members of the Yale Drama School. Costuming is by Helen Forrest Lauterer, while Jack Bender is the technician. Legislators Hit HissTrial WASHINGTON - (IP)-Two Re- publican House members con- demned Supreme Court Justices Frankfurter and Reed yesterday for testifying in the Hiss trial and said they will urge a law against such appearances. Rep. Keating (Rep., N.Y.) said the nation has been shocked by what he calledthe impropriety of the two justic~es. So he said he will introduce a bill Monday to forbid U.S. justices from being OTHER STUDENTS are travel- ing under the auspices of the Ex- periment in International Living, the Westminster Foundation, the University Travel Company, the International Student Service, the American Friends Service Com- mittee and the Northampton School for Girls. While no head count has been possible yet, University of Mich- igan students are everywhere evident. A Michigan club is in the process of formation. Living quarters aboard the ship are austere with men and women students sleeping in separate dormitory style holds on canvas bunks. A note of luxury in the form of a thin mattress distin- guishes the accommodations from the conventional troopship. * * * BUT THERE are no complaints. Food is ample and tasty and a varied program of ship's activities including cultural lectures, movies, one-act plays by a Dutch student group, language classes, dancing and a ship's newspaper promise t.o make the voyage lively and enter- taining. On schedule tomorrow is a pillow fight and a. turtle race. Also slated are group singing sessions and discussion groups. There will be a classical music hour and library facilities. The daily programs are organ- ized by George Vogelaar, head of the economic information division of the Dutch Ministry of Eco- nomics, who serves as Dutch gov- ernor of the ship, and Robert Stanforth, of UNESCO, acting as American dean of the ship. * * * VOGELAAR was chosen for his position by students of the N.B. B.S., Dutch equivalent of the NSA, while Stanforth was asked to serve by NSA leaders. Their suggested programs are presented at the daily staff meet- ings where leaders of the various groups aboard ship vote upon and approve them. Problems which arise each day are also brought up and ironed out at these meet- ings. Official Criticizes U.S. Visa Policy WASHINGTON- (P) -Senators were informed yesterday that the State Department repeatedly has overruled its visa division and or- dered the admission to the United States of foreign officials whose entry had been questioned on se- curity grounds. Herve J. L'Heureux, chief of the visa division, told a Senate Judi- ciary Subcommittee that he had appealed such decisions of the de- partment's "political desk" three to five times in the past five years. In each case, he testified, "high- er echelons" rejected the appeal, permitting entry of the officials. 140,000 MILES IN ONE PLACE-Don Haynes, Oregonder traveling across the country eight times in a welded and barred sedan, stops in Ann Arbor for a haircut. The dark round circles on the sides of the car are seals of all the states that Haynes has gone through. The stunt started out strictly as a stunt, but turned into a dead earnest effort after a skeptic bet Haynes $25,000 he couldn't do it. Besides traveling the 140,000 miles, part of the bet stipulates that Haynes visits the capitols of the 48 states. * * * ., , , Most of GOP Will Suport Atlantic .Pact WASHINGTON-P) - Informal checks yesterday indicated that more than two-thirds of the Sen- ate's 43 Republicans will support the North Atlantic Treaty next Thursday. They will be casting their lots with Sen. Vandenberg (Rep., Mich.) in a foreign policy split be- tween the two top GOP leaders. * * * OHIO'S SEN. TAFT has said that he will oppose the pact, and nearly a dozen Senate Republicans seemed likely to go along with him, judging from yesterday'sl check. Chairman Connaily (Dem., Tex.) of the Foreign Relations Commit- tee told a reporter he doesn't think there will be more than 15 votes against the treaty. Ratifica- tion requires two-thirds approval of those balloting. Thus the Re- publicans will supply the bulk of the expected unsuccessful opposi- tion. Taft's decision last week to op- pose the treaty because he said it can't be separated from the pro- posed $1,450,000,000 foreign armsI program may have repercussions in the 1950 Congressional cam- paign. Canned Man' Stops in Ann. Don Haynes, the "canned-in-a- car" man from Oregon, possed through Ann Arbor yesterday and got a haircut. Haynes got his weird monicker as a result of a bet that he could- n't drive 140,000 miles in 14 months. That wouldn't be so bad, but he's literally sealed up in his white Kaiser sedan--the doors are welded and the - windows are barred. THE BET came when he started to have himself sealed up in a car simply for a cross-country pub- licity stunt, but one man, a former Oregon champion rodeo rider, did- n't believe it and offered 25 to 1 if he could do it. So Haynes put up $1,000 and the skeptical rider's $25,000 is in a bank in Ashland, Haynes' home town. Haynes has been on the road for almost five months, with 20,000 miles under his tires, and I'm holding up fine," he said. He doesn't look any worse for wear-he's 39 years old, red- headed, married and has two children, one born in Ashland after he had been sealed. Local citizens built a special hoist to lift Haynes and his car to a hospital window to see his wife and new-born. The 140.000 miles that Haynes has to travel is eignt times across the country (one way). One part of the bet is to visit the capitols of every state. He plans to go south for the winter. ** * FINANCES for the trip are be- ing raised through nation-wide Arbor radio and television hookups. The loser of the bet also has to pay for some of the expenses. Just returned from Atlantic City, Haynes attended the Ki- wanis International Convention there-it was the first time a member had attended a meeting in a car. And he's breaking rec- ords as he goes along, too. On his last trip across the coun- try, he will attempt to break the world's cross-country speed record for an ordinary automobile. The record stands; at 46 hours and 48 minutes, in the same type car, but two men drove. * * * HAYNES is onw getting per- mission from the governors of each state from New York to San Fran- cisco to get clear passage all the way across the states. Haynes' car has all the com- forts of home-almost-at least he has a bathtub and a chemi- cal toilet, record player and two- way radio, fan and of course a bed. He eats at drive-in eateries and keeps up with the movies at drive- in theatres. * * * THE CAR started its long jour- ney a gleaming white, with a green and orange map of the United. States showing where he had been, but since then it's turned a light grey with the signatures of anyone in the United States who wanted to write his name. Also beginning to cover the car are the gold seals of each state he's been in. Besides the signatures and the seals, the car fairly shouts in big black letters Haynes' pseudonyms -"The Marvel" (he isn't masked), "The Seaman of the Sealed Car" and "Eight Times Coast to Coast Charlie." cates that Gen. Waitt improperly furnished personnel data to an in- mittee "has evidence which indi- dividual not in the military serv- ice and who was not entitled to receive such data; and that Gen. Feldman furnished to a contrac- tor's representative procurement information under circumstances which appear irregular." Gray said that he was "not attempting to draw conclusions on the basis of an incomplete investigation" but that he had ordered the officers' release pending the outcome of a com- plete inquiry by the Inspector General of the Army. He acted, he said, "because evi- dence secured to date indicates that each officer had exhibited a lack of that judgment and sense of propriety which must be ex- pected of persons in their posi- tion." THE SECRETARY added that "each officer would be given ample opportunity for a full hearing." Shortly after Gray's an- nouncement, Waitt left the Pentagon saying he had no comment at that time. Feldman, reached by telephone later, also said he had no statement. The suspension order first was disclosed by Chairman Hoey (Dem., N.C.) of the Senate expen- ditures subcommittee which has set out to find out about persons "who hold themselves out as peddlers of influence" in obtain- ing government contracts, with particular attention to large com- mission fees. THE SENATE PROBE was touched off by a story last month in the New York Herald Tribune about a contract that James V. Hunt, a former officer in the Quartermaster Corps, had with Paul Grindle, a Framingham, Mass., furniture manufacturer. Grindle was quoted as saying he gave Hunt a $1,000 fee, to be followed by $500 monthly payments for a year, plus 5 per cent of the gross on any government contract he received. Grindle said Hunt had men- tioned several government offi-' cials, implying he had consid- erable influence. Both Feldwan and Waitt were listed by Grindle as among those Hunt had mentioned as contacts in the Army. Both officers denied "influence" figured in the award of contracts. 'U' Professors Author New Book Prof. Chester O. Wisler, profes- sor of hydraulic engineering, and Prof. Ernest F. Brater of the civil engineering department have co- authored a new book, "Hydrology," which has just been published. The book presents the funda- mental principles of hydrology, as applied to engineering, forestry and agricultural practice. Czech Reds Launch War On Catholics 'Church Or'der' Is FightAttack By The Associated Press PRAGUE - The Communist Party called yesterday for a no- quarter fight to crush the Czecho- slovak hierarchy of "our greatest enemy-the church." A party manifesto which reach- ed western hands declared victory was necessary to complete Com- munization of the nation, espe- cially the collectivization of farms against peasant resistance. "WE WANT to give good Catho- lics the opportunity finally to get rid of elements which are damag- ing us," the manifesto ad"I is not a question of liquidating churches entirely, but of liquidat- ing the church order." About three-fourths of Czech- oslovakia's 12,000,000 people are Roman Catholics. The archives of the national parliament list three ministers of the Commun- ist government as Catholics. One of the three is justice min- ister Alexi Cepicka, who Friday accused Czechoslovak bishops of treason, termed the Vatican a foe of the state and threatened to prosecute anyone who tried to enforce the decree of Pope Pius XII excommunicating Commun- ists. IN ROME, a vatican source yes- terday gave a sharply worded an- swer to Cepicka's threat. The Czech justice minister's remarks were described as "laughable nonsense." According to the Vatican, fellow travelers as well as Communists of the Roman Catholic faith incur excommunication under Pope Pius' new decree. * * * THE DECREE, it was said, clearly includes all who support Communism. Furthermore, the order needs no physical enforce- ment. "The consciences of the guilty take care of that," the Vatican said. Czech archives also name De- fense Minister Ludvik Svoboda and trade minister Antonin Gre- gor as Catholics. Most of the other ministers are listed as "without religion." These include President Klement Gottwald, Ce- picka's father-in-law. * * * THE MANISFESTO said there would be no compromise in the. fightdagainst the church. It laid down these directives: 1. Sever all ties betwen the Czech Catholic hierarchy and the Vatican. 2. Build a wall between Czech bishops and archbishops and the people. 3. Turn the people against Archbishop Josef Beran, the na- tion's primate (who is under po- lice guard in his palace). "As long as they (Catholics) are not completely divided, we will not be able to liquidate the church CORPUSCLE CAPERS: 'U' Research Workers Find Better Anemia Treatment World News A t A Glance By The Associated Press CLEVELAND-Death came yesterday to A. F. Whitney, 76 year old labor leader and political liberal. He had gained his greatest public notice in his celebrated 1946 feud with President Truman. But he was Mr. Truman's most promi- nent labor backer in the last election. The tall, broad-shouldered man with a plume of white hair had been president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen since 1928. . . . .* By HERB KRAVITZ University medical researchers have developed a compound con- taining factors essential to the building of red blood cells. The compound, which can be taken by mouth, is composed of an extract from the duodenum of hog intestines and the recently isolated, vitamin B-12. IT HAS BEEN found valuable in the treatment of pernicious (deadly) anemia. Present treatment of this type of anemia involves the intra- muscular injection of liver ex- tract. Large doses of this ex- tract can also be administered by mouth, but this method is much less effective than injec- tion and some patients do not respond to it. However, researchers have found that Vitamin B-12 and duodenal extract given by mouth are an effective treatment in the build- ing of red blood cells. , * , VITAMIN B-12 alone is only effective in treating perniciouzs anemia when introduced into the body through injections. Pernicious anemia is a type of red blood cell deficiency. Normal stomach juices contain substances (the intrinsic factor) theblood forming activities of the body in this type of anemia. But upon the addition of Vita- min B-12 to these extracts, the compound becomes an effective treatment. Thus, it has been concluded that the vitamin and the extrinsic food factor are either identical or close- ly related. * * VITAMIN B-12, a member of the B-Complex group, was isolated last year from liver extract by a New Jersey chemical company. The vitamin has been found to be so powerful that treatment with even one microgram doses per day is successful. SOUTH BEND, Ind.-The re- appointment of the Rev. John J. Cavanaugh to a three-year term as president of Notre Dame Uni- versity was announced yester- day. NIW YORK - The Federal Bureau of Investigation was de- nounced yesterday at a 'bill of rights" conference whose spon- sors have been a target of Pres- ident Truman. One of the speakers was City Councilman Benjamin J. Davis, Jr., a defendant in the trial of JOHANNESBURG, South Af- rica-Peter Chandler Pringle is set to blow out 119 candles on his birthday cake today. He claims to be Africa's oldest white man, maybe the oldest in the world. * * * ATLANTA-Georgia today set up a school program under the GI Bill of Rights for veterans serving time in the state peni- tentiary. Prisoner-veterans will be given regular courses in first through twelfth grade work. Later, voca- NATURAL RESOURCES: Oil Magnate To Give Lecture Here The next in the summer session lecture series will be a talk at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham lecture hall, by Robert E. Wilson, chairman of the board of the Standard Oil Co., of Indiana, on "America's Future Oil Supplies." Wilson is a graduate in chem- ical engineering from the Massa- * * * has been awarded both the Chemical Industry Medal and the Perkin Medal. The general topic of the lec- ture series is "Natural Resources in World Affairs." The second lecture of the com- ingr w axcwill h rivn n-T hnr I I