YI L MATTER OF FACT See Page 2 Latest Deadline in the State ~it :; ' , J; a o ;, O g p p G7 O FAIR AND WARMER VOL. LXI, No. 29-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, AUGUST 5, 1951 FOUR PAGES 'U' Will Continue Financial Probe An investigation of bacteriology department financial affairs which preceded the dismissal and subsequent death of famed Uni- versity bacteriologist Malcolm H. Soule will be continued, University officials announced yesterday. Soule, 54, head of the bacteriology department of the Medical School since 1935 killed himself. Friday evening with a deadly dose of snake venom and morphine after learning that he had been dis- missed from the faculty by the Board of Regents for mishandling University funds. University officials said that the investigation, which has been under the direction of Vice-President Wilbur K. Pierpont included a check of all bac- ' t.; z ; f . 1: S' r'; . n': f t.} teriology department cash vou- chers and a review of annual University audits to determine if any new lines of inquiry can be opened. University President Alexander G. Ruthven last night categori- cally denied reports that he had personally ordered a new inves- tigation of University financial records. He said that the current investigation which is confined to the bacteriology department and which was begun late last spring is continuing. * ir * 4 AFTER A HASTILY convened meeting of all top four University executive officers yesterday morn- ing the following official state- ment was released in explanation of the dismissal: "During the months of March and April, 1951, Dr. Malcolm H. Soule, Professor of Bacteriology and Chairman of the Department of Bacteriology at the University of Michigan, submitted travel vouchers for expenses for two men who presumably had visited Ann Arbor fbr the purpose of being interviewed for positions at the University. These vouchers were signed with the signatures of the supposed visitors, and University checks for the accounts were duly drawn and sent to Dr. Malcolm Soule for delivery. "Later it was learned that the men had not visited Ann Arbor and had not received the checks from Dr. Soule or the University. "The University found that the travel vouchers and the endorse- ments on the checks had been Pennsylvania GOP Delegate Battle Mounts WASHINGTON-(AP)-Sen. Duff (R-Pa.) yesterday issued an an- gry challenge to an opposing GOP group to do battle over Pennsy.- vania's delegation to the 1952 presidential nominating conven- tion. Duff, plugging for Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower as the nominee, -said if a group headed by G. Ma- son Owlett, GOP National Com- mitteeman, and former Senator Joseph H. Grundy want a "knock- down and drag-out fight" they can have it. * * * DUFF'S statement capped a ser- ies of developments showing sharp splits in both major parties as they prepared for the 1952 strug- gle. On another GOP front, all but open warfare was declared between Senator McCarthy (R- Wis.) on one side and Senators Margaret Chase Smith (R-Me.) and Hendrickson (R-N.J.) on the other, over the Maryland election investigation report. On the Democratic side, Sen. Douglas (D-Ill.) continued a bat- tle against two Federal Judge nominees of President Truman. Douglas has been mentioned as a possible Democratic presidential aspirant. forged and that Dr. Malcolm H. Soule had also endorsed the checks with his own name. Dr. Soule was confronted with the evidence of his mishandling of funds and ad- mitted it. He paid a total of $487.05 as financial restitution. A third case was discovered which involved forgery and a voucher for expenses in excess of they amount actually received by a visitor. The amount involved was included in the total restitution. "Previous to the discovery of the forgeries there had been a number of reports of alleged mis- use of University property and funds by Dr. Malcolm Soule. In- vestigation of these reports did not provide conclusive evidence that University property or funds had been diverted to personal use. These investigations, however, led to the cases on which the Board of Regents took action of dismissal of Dr. Malcolm Soule. "Evidence was presented to the Board of Regents at the regular meeting of August 3, 1951, and the Board felt that as custodian of public funds there was nothing that could properly be done . by the Board but dismiss Dr. Malcolm Soule and report the facts to the public prosecutor, despite the Board's great regret that it was necessary." * * * ELABORATING on the "num- ber of reports of alleged misuse of University property and funds" referred to in the statement, a University official said that about half a dozen such reports involv- ing funds or property of minor value had been investigated in re- cent years by the University but that nothing conclusive was found against Soule. Regent Murray D. Van Wagon- er, a former governor of Michigan, defended the Regents' action in refusing to accept Soule's resigna- tion, firing him, and turning the matter over to the county prose- cutor. "We rejected Dr.'Soule's resig- nation, which I think was the right thing to do. When a man admits he has misappropriated public funds, the only thing to do is bring the matter to the prosecutor's attention," Van Wagoner said. After Soule's death, Douglas K. Reiding, Washtenaw County pro- secutor said that his office was through with the case unless the University turns up further evi- dence. The coroner ordered an au- topsy performed. The Soule family has an- nounced that there will be no funeral services. The body will be cremated. Prof. Walter J. Nungester of the bacteriology department who has been acting head of the depart- ment for the past several weeks will continue in this position un- til a new department chairman can be selected. Paper Cites. 44 Gridders In Scandal Probe Demanded By Congressmen WASHINGTON - (P) - Con- gressional demands for a West Point investigation multiplied yes- terday as 44 members of the Army football squad were reported to be among 90 cadets accused of cheating on exams. The cadets are in the process of being discharged from the Mili- tary Academy for violations of the honor system. SENATOR Fulbright (D-Ark.) called for a suspension of foot- ball at both West Point and An- napolis, the Naavl Academy. Oth- er Congressmen blamed "big-time" commercialism of athletics for the most shocking scandal in West Point history. They called for a de-emphasis on sports. The Washington Post, said it had learned "the actual number" of football players inovlved-44- from a source closely associated with the Academy whose name cannot be used. Such a wholesale inroad on the army football powerhouse .would leave only a handful of varsity players to form the nucleus of the squad this fall. At West Point, the son of Coach Earl H. (Red) Blaik, Bob Blaik, a star back, used the word "we" in referring to the ousted cadets. Senator Fulbright said it would be a good idea if football were suspended at Annapolis and West See CADETS page 3 Point until the whole question of intercollegiate athletics could be studied. "It's a disgraceful situation," Fulbright told a reporter. "In- tercollegiate athletics have be- come so perverted that it's a corrupting influence on all the youngsters in the big universi- ties." The unexpected housecleaning at the Military Academy sent de- mands for a fuller investigation echoing through Congress. Sen- timent was hardening in several quarters for a "de-emphasis" of football and possibly other inter- collegiate competition at "The Point." Rep. Potter (R-Mich.) said the ousted cadets are victims of a system of athletic commercialism. "They have been instilled with a philosophy that their main effort should be on the athletic field," The Thing OMAHA -(P) -Death came yesterday to a peculiar old bird known as "The Thing." The Thing was a 10-year-old chicken, half hen and half rooster, owned by attorney Ross L. Shotwell of Omaha. As a rooster, it was under bi- ological compulsion to fulfill a rooster's function with the flock, which it did. As a hen, it was under a similar compulsion to lay eggs, which it did often. About ten days ago, the bird, for which carnival folk had vainly offered Shotwell $250, was stolen. Yesterday Shotwell went in- to his yard. There, tossed over his fence during the night, was The Thing. It had been be- headed. Red Troops CHANGING THE GUARD-American troops snap to attention while relieving the Russians during a monthly change of guard outside Spandau Prison, Berlin. The four powers take turns maintain- ing the guard at the ancient structure. Among the prisoners are former deputy Fuhrer Rudolf Hess and six of his comrades serving sentences of from 10 years to life. Boyle Linked, With Cuban Plant Deal ST. LOUIS - A() - Democratic' National Committee Chairman William M. Boyle, Jr., played an important role in an attempt to gain control of a government- owned nickel plant in Cuba, the Post-Dispatch reported last night. Associated with Boyle in the unsuccessful venture, the news- paper said, were James P. Finne- gan, then internal revenue collec- tor for St. Louis, Rex Jacobs, De- troit manufacturer, and E. Merl Young of Washington. THE NEWSPAPER added the' deal fell through when they were unable to interest Shields and Company, a Chicago brokerage firm, in investing $1,000,000 in the project. The Post - Dispatch quoted Boyle as saying in Washington he knew of plans to lease the U. S. owned nickel plant but took no part in the negotiations. The plant was built by the De- fense Plant Corporation during World War II. Production was suspended in March, 1947. Then Congress, after the Korean War began, voted $5,500,000 to reha- bilitate the plant. That started the fight for control, the news- paper declared. The plant now is operated by the Nickel Processing Corporation for the Billiton interests of the Netherlands. THE NEWSPAPER gave the fol- lowing version: Young, Jacobs and Finnegan conferred with Government offi- cials about getting control of the plant in a hotel in Washington June 28, 150. Boyle was in another room of the hotel and conferred with Finnegan by telephone fre- quently. The groups met again with Government officials in August, 1950, again with Boyle in anoth- er room. They met a third time Sept. 18, 1950 in a hotel in New York. The group planned to split its earnings from the nickel plant four ways: 5 per cent for Boyle, 5 per cent for Finnegan, 5 per cent for an unidentified man and 85 per cent for Jacobs. But Jacobs Senate Expe Truman Tax WASHINGTON - (I) - Presi- dent Truman's bid for a $10,- 000,000,000 tax increase appears to have little or no chance of rea- lization this year. A check of key members on the tax-writing Senate Finance Com- mittee indicated yesterday that the Senate is likely to reduce rather than increase the $7,200,- 000,000 bill passed by the House. ONE VETERAN member said 'the Committee probably would World News RoundupI By The Associated Press BOMBAY, India-The Tuscon Victory arrived from the United States yesterday with the first shipload of American wheat granted India to stave off famine. DETROIT-United States dip- lomats have brought about the defeat of American troops in Korea, Donald R. Wilson told. American Legion delegates here last night. WASHINGTON-- S e n a t o r O'Mahoney (D-Wyo.) disclosed yesterday that a large "search and recovery" operation is un- derway in Korea to recover and identify the bodies of U. S. sol- diers who died in the fight against Red troops. LOUISVILLE, Ky. -Gov. Law- rence Wetherby dashed out fay in front of Howell W. Vincent yes- terday in their race for Democra- tic nomination for Governor. cted To Cut Hike Bill come out with a total somewhere between $5,000,000,000 and the House figure. The finance group finished six weeks of open hearings on the bill Friday. Tentative plans are for the 131 Senators to begin writing their version of the bill a week from tomorrow. Next week is to be used by the Committee's staff of experts to analyze proposals made by the more than 200 wit- nesses who testified. Final plans are to be made after Chairman George (D-Ga.) returns to the capital tomorrow from a three-week rest at home. But acting Chairman Byrd (D-Va.) and Sen. Millikin (R- Colo.), ranking minority mem- ber of the committee, told news- men they were sure the group would need two or three weeks of closed sessions to work on the bill. That would mean it could not' pass the Senate before Septem- ber. BYRD SAID he expected an extensive rewriting job on the House measure. "There are a lot of hardships and inequities we have to try to do something about," he explained. Byrd was one Senator who thought the tax hike could be made somewhat less than ap- proved by the House. He would not say where cuts might be made, however. Millikin agreed with other Sen- ators there was little likelihood the Senators would approve a federal retail sales tax or a gen- eral manufacturers' excise. 'Tribesmen :1 Help Thrust fs Into Yunnan TAIPEH, Formosa-OP)-Fierce aboriginal tribesmen were credit- ed by a high Chinese Nationalist officer yesterday with helping Nationalists wrest one-third ofe huge Yunnan province from the Communists. The principal tribes in the southwestern Chinese province- are the Lolos and Miaos, highly- individualisticrsemi-savages of non-Chinese origin. THE OFFICER SOURCE cani not be identified but it can be1 said that he knows more about anti-Communist forces on the mainland than anyone else on Formosa. He declared the tribes- men had begun turning against the Reds last February. He said the total "free" area of Yunnan was about one-third of the province's 147,000 square miles. Three different groups control this region, he said: the tribesmen, Nationalist guerril- las and about 15,000 Nationalist regulars under Gen. Li Mi. Li Mi's thrust into Red China from the North Burma border area was disclosed less than a fortnight ago. The main centers of anti-Red resistance used to be Kwangtung province in the Southeast and Szechwan in the West. Now Yun- nan and Kweichow provinces are the "hottest," he said. The officer also said a spe- cial headquarters to handle guerrilla activites was estab- lished in this Nationalist stronghold last November. He said it maintains contact with guerrilla leaders whose forces roughly total 1,500,000. Counting farmers and the tribesmen ,this figure would be 3,000,000 he asserted. He cautioned, however, against any false impression of their abil- ities. For example, 1,000 tribes- men fighting the Communists might have no more than 20 or 30 rifles among them, with very limited ammunition. [n Kaesong Dause Break UN Envoys Wait For Explanation TOKYO - (P) - Gen. Matthew . Ridgway broke off Korean arm- tice talks with the Reds yester- lay. They will be resumed only if the ommunists can give a "satisfac- ory explanation" of the presence f Red troops near the Allied staff louse in the truce town of Kae- ong and promise it will never iappen again, the Supreme UN ommander declared. * * * THE TROOP incident was veri- ed by eyewitnesses and still and iovie photographers, Ridgway aid. His sharp radio message, ad- dressed to the Chinese and North Korean Communist Com- mander, Pen Teh-Huai and Kim I Sung, was made public at 3 p.m. yesterday (Ann Arbor time). It followed a six-hour confer- nce in Allied Headquarters in 'kyo, during which Ridgway was n communication with the Penta- on in Washington. THE BREAK-OFF came as UN nd Communist truce teams still ere deadlocked - as they have )een for nine meetings - on the ssue of where to draw a cease-fire uffer zone. The presence of some 100 to 150 Red infantrymen near the UN conference house was re- ported by the Allied delegation that returned from the 19th armistice meeting. Ridgway broke off the talks nce before, partly because armed Reds were in and around Kaesong. Communist troops on July 12 barred 20 war correspondents from traveling to Kaesong with an Al- lied convoy. The entire convoy turned back. Ridgway then informed the Reds he would not permit a re- newal of the talks until they bar.. red Communist troops, excepting police, from the Kaesong area, and agreed to let him choose members of the UN truce party including newspapermen. The Reds agreed. Like the jury ultimatum, Ridg- way's newest message was broad- cast to the Communists. * * * RIDGWAY'S secret huddle with his top aides at General Head- quarters-to which Chinese inter- preters were summoned hurriedly -followed a new statement about Allied wishes for a buffer zone in North Korea between the present battle line and Manchuria. The statement threw the arm- istice drama into a state of con- fusion. It came from an unex- pected quarter-the Civil Infor- mation and Education Section of Allied Occupation Headquar- ters in Tokyo. This outfit usual- ly concerns itself with picturing to Japanese the American way of life. It could not be learned whether the Information and Education Section's announcement-made in the form of a press release to Jap- anese newspapers-had full offi- cial approval for publication or was intended merely as back- ground material. * * * MEANWHILE, U.S. Eighth Army Headquarters reported sharp pa- trol clashes on the western and A LA HOLLYWOOD: Sorority Life Viewed In Controversial Film New Attempt Over Niagara NIAGARA FALLS, Ont.-(IP)- By this afternoon William "Red" Hill hopes to be famous. He might be dead instead. Or he might be just another man who wanted to go over Nagara Falls in a barrel but didn't. The 38-year-old self-styled ex- pert on the Falls has built his By MIKE BOOM Campus sorority women-and all other interested personstoo- will get a chance today to see how Hollywood treats college sorori- ties, when the motion picture "Take Care of My Little Girl" op- ens at a local theatre. The film, which ' has been called "anti-sorority" and is ad- vertised as "an expose of what happens when girls live away from home," holds special interest for University sorority members be- cause it was adapted from a book written by a former University coed, herself an affiliate. sity bore any resemblance to -the sorority in the novel. Dean of Students Erich A. Wal- ter called the book "a fair presen- tation of sorority life, realistically drawn." He also said that he doubted a movie could be taken from it without being propaganda. * * * FORMER ASSOCIATE Dean of Women Mary C. Bromage said the book is "valueless as a fair picture of campus life because it presents only the weak points of sorority life." The film, which has adhered WASHINGTON REPORT: A Ilied Move Seen as Warning to Reds By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON-VP) - General Matthew B. Ridgway's suspension of the Kaesong truce talks because of the presence of Red troops in the city is regarded here as a stern warning to the Communists that the Allies do not intend to surances against any more truce violations. It is felt that the Reds would not like to be very long in the position of causing the disruption of the negotia- tions. The basic belief of authorities between the Washington and the Tokyo versions has been furtherr pointed up by Communist radio claims that the UN negotiators have been demanding a line deep inside north Korea-which would require a considerable retreat of Communist Forces.