I Y L Sir. an Y :4Iaittj POINTED PEN See Page 4 i CLOUDY, SHOWERS Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY, SHOWERS VOL. LXII, No. 51 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1951 SIX PAGES SIX PAGES Allies Offer Revised Red Truce Proposal _- C U.S. Accused Of Violating Red Frontiei Claim Infractioi By Lost. Airplan BELGRADE, Yugoslavia--()- Hungary and Romania charges yesterday their frontiers were vi r lated by a U.S. military plar which vanished Monday after re. porting it had been fired upon 1 border guards of the Soviet sate;. lites. The charges were the first ac" knowledgment by the two goverr ments that they knew anythin about the incident. FOG OVER THE craggy mour tains and woods of the Yugoslav, Italian border region yesterda hampered the air search for th plane, a C-47 transport carryin diplomatic cargo to Belgrade which is believed to have mad a crash landing in the area. The two officers and two en- listed men of the crew set out from Erding Air Base, near Mun- ich, Germany, Monday morning for the U.S. Embassy in the Yugoslav capital with an eight- hour fuel supply. The Embassy said a Yugosla government check of its borde stations and other authorities in dicated the plane got lost and mis took the Drava River, which run along the Hungarian frontier and close to the Romanian, for th Sava, which marks an air corri- dor to Belgrade. The Sava almost parallels th Drava, but flows 40 miles or so to the southwest of the Drava. The last repoit from the pilo was at dusk, the Embassy said when he apparently was trying to retrace his course all the way across Yugoslavia, to Italy. Inauguration To Attract 55 College Heads Presidents from 55 colleges and universities will be among the 435 official delegates attending the in- auguration of Harlan Hatcher as president of the University next Tuesday. The inaugural ceremony, sched- uled for 3 p.m. in Hill Auditorium, will be open to the public, as will be the reception which will follow in the League. * s * PRESIDENTS of four Big Ten Conference universities will be among the guests. Howard L, Bevis, president of Ohio State University, will speak at the in- augural ceremony. Other Western Conference pres- idents attending will be Herman B. Wells of Indiana, James L. Morrill of Minnesota and John A. Hannah of Michigan State College. Besides Michigan State there will be 19 other Michigan insti- tutes of higher learning repre- sented at the inauguration by their presidents. These include Kalamazoo, Al- bion, Hillsdale, Olivet, Adrian, Michigan State Normal, Hope, Emmanuel Missionary, Calvin, Fer- ris Institute, Michigan College of Mining and Technology, Central Michigan, Northern Michigan and Aquinas Colleges and Wayne Uni- versity. Junior colleges at Flint, Port Huron, Jackson and Grand Rapids will be represented by their chief executives. Dertoit Institute of Technology * will be represented by Dean Virgil Loughheed while its president, Archie Raymond Ayres, acts as ' official delegate from the Univer- sity of South Carolina. Book-Cadillac Sold To Sheraton Chain NA TO Prepares Channel Patrol Chiefs Clear Way for Appointment Of U.S. Admiral to Organize Fleet ROME-()-The North Atlantic allies were reported set yester- day to create a five-nation naval fire brigade to guard English Chan- nel ports and bases along the British and European coasts. Western military chiefs simultaneously cleared the way for ap- pointment of an American admiral to organize allied navies to be committed to the defense of the Atlantic. * * * * A THIRD QUESTION reported settled after months of inter- national wrangling was on the standardization of arms. Informants said the Allies are ready to adopt the United States .30-caliber M-1 Clause Concerning Troops Inserted Provision Calls for Troops to Remain At Line Until Final Armistice Signed MUNSAN, Korea, Thursday, Nov. 22-(')-Allied truce negotia tors at Panmunjom today offered the Communists a revised version of the Red proposal submitted yesterday. The Allies inserted a positive clause providing that troops would not be withdrawn from any demarcation line until the full armistice is signed. MUCH OF THE original wording of the Communist proposal was retained in the UN command version. The Reds and Allies met for almost two hours Thursday and then recessed until 3 p.m. (1 a.m.< * ** ~~~-~* British Seek Agreement On A-.Bomb LONDON---gP)-Prime Minister. Winston Churchill is expected to ask President Truman for assur- ances that United States bombers will launch no atomic attack from their British bases without prior consultation with Britain, infor- mants said yesterday. The Prime Minister Monday re- fused to promise left-wing Labor- ites that he would seek similar assurance that no atomic attack would be made in Korea without consultation with the British. He said it was not proper to dis- cuss what he might talk about with the President when he visits Wash- ington in January. s * * THE INFORMANTS said Chur- chill will link a demand for as- surances concerning use of the British bases with his wish for a full exchange of atomic secrets with the United States. The war- time exchange of information stopped in 1945. Churchill rejected yesterday a demand of Emrys Hughes, a left- wing Laborite, that Britain turn the United States out of its atomic bomber bases in this country. U.e said arrangements forbthe U.S. Air Force to use its bases "will continue so long as required in the general interests of world peace and security." Hughes asked Churchill in the House of Commons if he would not cancel the bases agreement be- cause it exposed the British peo- ple to the danger of retaliatory bombing. Daily Publication The members of The Daily staff plan to be so full of tur- key that they will be unable to publish a paper tomorrow. Pub- lication will- resume Saturday. Garand as the standard Army rifle. - - - --- - - A changed British attitude ap- parently made possible these tentative agreements., They were reached by the military commit- tee of the 12 Atlantic Allies. France, Belgium, the Nether- lands and Denmark will work un- der British leadership to keep the waters of the English Channel and the North Sea safe in wartime. The military committee is made up of chiefs of staff of 11 nations and a civilian representative of Iceland, which has no army. It is preparing recommendations for a joint session of the foreign, defense and finance ministers of the pact partners opening Saturday. * * * GEN. ALFRED M. Gruenther, Chief of Staff to Gen. Eisenhower, talked to the committee about the progress and prospects of the Su- preme Command, Allied Powers in Europe (Shape). In a conference room guarded by scores of Special Italian Police, Gruenther set forth Shape's recipe for West European security in terms of men, guns, planes, tanks and ship§. Gruenther emphasized that the long-range plans for a big North Atlantic army have not been scaled down. He said the fact Eisen- hower wants to have a smaller army completely ready for com- bat by the end of 1952 does not mean he has lowered his sights for 1954. Detroit Stove Plant Signs with Union DETROIT -0JP)-- The Detroit Michigan Stove Co., involved in charges of union-busting at its two plants, signed a contract with the CIO United Auto Workers yester- day. Assistant Prosecutor Joseph Ra- shid said the agreement will have no effect on the criminal proceed- ings. (Five men have been charged with conspiracy to discourage un- ion activities at the company's subsidiary, the Metal Fabricating Co.) One of two missing men sought on the charges, Santo (Sam) Per- rone, surrendered yesterday. -Daily-Bruce Knoll TURKEY TREATMENT-Mrs. Sarah Churchill, head cook at Stockwell Hall, stuffs a turkey ii. preparation for Thanksgiving dinner. Six twenty-pound birds will be placed before an estimated 175 hungry Stockwell residents today. Ordinarily 450 eat their meals in the Stockwell dining hall. Turkey Dinners Lure Students Home By MIKE SCHERER The prospect of a delicious Thanksgiving turkey dinner today with parents and friends has lured students by the thousands from Ann Arbor. Despite the fact that turkey with all the trimmings is on the menu, University residence halls officials predict that only a little more than one-third of their resi- dents will pick up their steaming trays. ** * STUDENTS staged a mass exo- dus from Ann Arbor yesterday after and sometimes before their last classes, leaving by bus, train, automobile and thumb. Many are going home to spend their Thanksgiving holiday with par- ents; others with roommates and friends. The Michigan Central Rail- road reported more than 500 students departing on east and westbound trains last night. The University residence halls all promised a tempting bill-of- fare for the minority of students who will remain in town. The menus include roast Tom turkey with dressing and gravy, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, and a choice of mince or pumpkin pie. FACED WITH the prospect of nearly empty board tables, most campus fraternity and sorority houses decided not to serve meals today. Local restaurants were busy this morning preparing for the anticipated rush of students > T r who were left without a place to eat their Thanksgiving dinners. Union Chef Narcisco Apriz promised that the main dining room would be ready. He pre- dicted about 500 turkey dinner orders, and has at least 50 tur- keys ready to meet the demand. "Last year," he chuckled, "the League ran out of turkey early and had to turn customers away. But at the Union we always have plenty to go around." The Union cafeteria will also offer a special Thanksgiving turkey dinner, with appropriate trimmings. PRESIDENT AND Mrs. Hatcher will enjoy a quiet Thanksgiving dinner, their first in Ann Arbor, in the President's home with their two children. At Key West, Florida, President and Mrs. Truman also planned to observe the day with a small fam- ily dinner. In formally proclaim- ing the Day of Thanksgiving, Mr. * * * Community Truman called upon his fellow Americans to "pause in their au- tumn labors and give thanks to Almighty God." Even on the far-off Korean battlefront, m a n y American combat troops were able to heap their mess kits with turkey-day fare. The frontline menu, wherever possible, will include stuffed cel- ery, olives and pickles, young Tom turkey, dressing, giblet gravy, cranberry sauce, buttered peas and whole grain corn, fresh snowflake potatoes, candied yams, coleslaw, hot rolls, mince pie, fruit cake, pumpkin pie, fresh apples, fruit punch and assorted nuts. Some men will have to eat their turkey and pumpkin in foxholes from vacuum cans. Since neither the Communist army nor death are taking a holi- day today, mess sergeants or Kor- ean bearers will have to brave Communist fire to get the turkey and trimmings up to front line fighters. HERE IN the United States, EST). There appeared to be two principal differences in the Communist and UN command proposals~ One was the specified time for tha shooting to end. The other was a formula for evolving a new provisional cease-fire line if agree- ment is not reached on other agen- da items within 30 days. An Allied spokesman said the UN command version was based on the proposition the Reds made He added: "Where the meaning clauses." He added: "where the meaning was clearer in the Communist draft, no change was made, even though the language was not com- pletely idiomatic English." THE RED proposal, submitted during a two-hour subcommittee session Wednesday, resembled in most respects an Allied formula for truce by Christmas proposed last Saturday. While the Reds agreed verb- ally not to demand a pullback of troops until the final truce was signed, sealed and delivered, the UN command wanted that assurance down in black and white. The official United Nations spokesman, Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols told correspondents Wed- nesday night he was "more opti- mistic" than he had been for some time. The long debate on the cease-fire line began July 27. THE ALLIED command long has argued that ground, sea and air fighting must continue until full agreement is reached on an armistice. Both the Allied and the Red cease-fire formula provide adjust- ments in the buffer line if agree- ments are not reached on these remaining agenda items within 30 days after the cease-fire proposal is adopted by the full delegations of both sides. * * * MEANWILE relative quiet set- tIed across the Korean battlefront as t h e Thanksgiving holiday brought Allied forces a bite of tur- key and thoughts of home. The U.S. Eighth Army communi- que Wednesday night noted a slowdown in fighting. It reported largely patrol actions on the west- ern, central and eastern fronts. Veep Yisits Japan En Route to Korea TOKYO-- (P) - Vice President Alben Barkley, en route to Korea, arrived here by plane today. On hand to greet him at Haneda Airport were Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, Supreme United Nations Commander, Prime Minister Shi- geru Yoshida of Japan, Ambassa- dor William Sebald and other dig- nitaries. "This trip is not remotely con- nected with politics," Barkley told 1Vandenberg Tells of Red Air Growth WASHINGTON--P)-The chief of the United States Air Force yesterday spelled out the "sobering lesson" of swiftly expanding Soviet air power as revealed in Korea, where American control of the air is being "seriously challenged" by Russian-made planes flown by Russian-speaking pilots. In a remarkably detailed and frank news conference based on his recent visit to Korea, Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg read a 4,000- word formal statement and a- swered a barrage of questions. Of the air situation there, he said there had been a significant and. "even sinister change." HE SAID THE Chinese Com- munist air force has deployed in North China and Manchuria about 1,500 planes, approximately one- half of which are MIG-15 jet fighters. "The MIG in many respects can outperform our own F-86; it has out-climbed the best air- planes that have been tested against it and performed in com- bat at altitudes approaching 50,000 feet," Vandenberg stated. "Overnight, China bis become one of the major air powers of the world." Vandenberg explained that while Red China lacks indiri n technical resources she is the "di- rect beneficiary of another power" which possesses those resource. The Communists are trying to push their airfield building pro- gram southward toward the place where the ground armies are lock- e in battle, he said. By continuous bombing effort, the United States Air Force has managed to keep three new enemy fields of this type inoperational. BEAT OHIO! Gov. Williams To Lead Rally University alumnus G. Mennen Williams, of Lansing, will be the target of "roll 'em up" chants to- morrow night at the pre-Ohio State game pep rally. Sharing the spotlight with pres- ident of the Union, John Kathe, '53 and J. Fred Lawton, co-com- poser of "Varsity," the governor will attempt to radiate some good old "never-say-die-Michigan" spir- it. Corky Gibbon, '52, president of the Wolverine Club will emcee the rally at which students will be cheering for a fourth conference win. Although the torchlight proces- sion to Ferry Field will meet in front of the Union as it has in past weeks, meeting time has been changed to 7:30 p.m. And for the first time the en- tire Michigan Marching Band will be on hand to lead the parade to Ferry Field and the waiting bonfire. House Clears King World News Roundup 1' By The Associated Press -11 NEW YORK-Newsweek Maga- zine says Soviet Russia has pro- tested that an American recon- naisance plane penetrated her bor- deis and flew over the city of Vladivostok. The magazine quotes acting For- eign Minister Andrei Gromyko as saying Soviet fighters immediately took chase and fired at the plane, which was last seen disappearing toward the sea. S * * KEY WEST, Fla.-President Truman returned to Florida yes- terday with Fred M. Vinson, Chief Justice of the United States, who has been mentioned frequently as his choice for President if he does not seek re-election. Five persons were killed in holi- day accidents yesterday, all of them in traffic mishaps. HOUSTON - A brilliant high school student, nicknamed by his teacher as "My Exploder" because of his great interest in explosives, blew himself to death yesterday. He was trying to make a rocket. formula in a pickle jar. The resulting tremendous ex- plosion blew the hand off another brilliant student and possibly blinded him for life. It seriously injured two other chemistry pu- pils in Lamar High School. WASHINGTON-The govern- ment yesterday approved an al- most 50 per cent expansion of domestic newsprint production facilities. But officials said it may be some time before necessary ma- terials can be made available. SAN FRANCISCO - Governor Earl Warren was reported in good condition yesterday after an open- Senate Group Reveals zees. Diplomat-Spy WASHINGTON - (,P) - Senate Internal Security investigators said yesterday a Czechoslovakian dip- lomat trained in spying and "si- lent killing" has been permitted to remain in this country for more than two years. They identified him as Jiri Stary. * ,* * * THEY SAID Stary, accompanied by his wife, Olga, left for Paris October 31 as a member of the Czech delegation to the United Nations assembly there. Senator O'Conor (D-Md.), chair- Offered All turkey dinners we sive than ever befl largest crop of the Faith Worship birds in history. z estimated the tra for a family of fo Students and Ann Arbor resi- ton would cost ab dents of all faiths will give thanks cents more than i together today at a community- Swide Thanksgiving Day worship Po River] service at 10:30 a.m. in the First Congregational Church. Coiu e IT Rev. Dwight S. Large, pastor of C ti e R the First Methodist Church of.Ann Arbor, will give the sermon "Born MILAN, Italy- to Be Thanksful." Several other len tributaries sent local pastors will assist in the ser- still rising Po Ri vices, which will be broadcast over rampage of destr radio station WHRV. day. A baritone solo by Archie Wiles, Hamlets and tow Grad., will be featured at the de- vastated by the un votions. waters faced additi St. Mary's Student Chapel willj as millions of gall hold Thanksgiving Day masses at waters poured into 8 and 9 a.m. inundated. FOURTH COSTLIEST WAR: ere more expen- fore, despite the temperamental The government aditional dinner ur in Washing- out $6.16, or 34 t cost last year. Floods Iampage (P?)-Rain-swol- the raging and iver on a new ruction yester- wns already de- controlled flood onal destruction lions of muddy ;areas already reporters at the airport. American Casualties Reach 100,000 WASHINGTON - () - The American casualty toll in 16 months of battle in Korea passed the 100,000 mark yesterday, es- Not until the campaign is over will all the Korean casualties be known in this country. Military regulations forbid publication of OF THOSE who have died in Korea, the bodies of more than 10,000 have been returned to the U.S. for burial in national or pri-, I .