BEHIND THE LINES See Page 4 iE r itest ujau Latest Deadline in the State Daiti CLOUDY AND WARMER VOL. LXIII, No. 104 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1953 SIX PAGES * * * * * * Thirty- Yearule nde Ike, Others State Views On Crisis Eisenhower . . . No Successor Named as Yet SBy The Associated Press LONDON-Joseph Stalin died last night behind the 12-foot-thick walls of Mos- cow's Kremlin. Stalin, whodominated a third of the world's peoples as Prime Minister and dictator of the Soviet Union, succumbed at 9:50 p.m. (1:50 a.m. yesterday Ann Arbor time) four days after suffering a brain hemorrhage stroke. By The Associated Press The most powerful dictator in history had been in a coma since he was stricken Sun- WASHINGTON-President Eis- enhower last night instructed the day night, and his condition had been growing progressively worse. Yesterday his 10 Secretary of State to transmit the physicians said his heart was faltering. "official condolences" of the Unit- ed States government on the death The announcement of Stalin's death was broadcast from Moscow at 4:07 a.m. Mos, MARSHAL STALIN REVIEWING RED ARMY PARADE of Premier Stalin. The President directed Dulles to send this message to the American Embassy in Moscow for transmission to the govern- ment of the U.S.S.R.: "The government of the United States tenders its official condo- lences to the government of the Union of Soviet Socialist Repub- lics on the death of Generalissimo Joseph Stalin, Prime Minister of: the Soviet Union." Vishinsky .. . GLEN COVE, N.Y.-Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei Vishinsky said last night the death of Joseph Stalin was a blow to all humanity. Reached by telephone at his country retreat on Long Island, the Kremlin's diplomatic chief said: "With great sorrow I confirm the death of Prime Minister Stalin. It is a great blow to all of the Soviet people and to all humanity. The name of Stalin is immortal." Vishinsky, who was prosecutor for Stalin at she purge trials of the 30's which eliminated many of Stalin's enemies, said there were no changes in his plans to leave for Moscow today. * . Eden . . . WASHINGTON-Britain's For- eign Secretary Anthony Eden yes- terday held out a co-operative hand to any new Russian regimel desiring a real, enduring peace. The British leader, in a speech made here before the news of 4 t f _._. - World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-President Eisenhower told newsmen yesterday that he would not interfere with any of Senator McCarthy's investi- gations unless they threatened to disrupt the activities of the gov- ernment. Eisenhower would not say what these activities might be but left observers with the feeling that he is becoming wary of McCarthy's probes and would step in the minute the Wisconsin Senator became too critical of the Administration. WASHINGTON-Senate Republican leader Robert A. Taft Yesterday asked for a "cooling-off period" in the rift over the wording of a resolution attacking Russia's violation of World War II agreements. The resolution, which was blasted by Democrats, was origi- nally submitted by President Eisenhower. It challenged the validity of pacts negotiated by Roosevelt and Truman during their presi- dential tenure. * * * * CHAMPAIGN, II1.-The Big Ten's prolonged football schedule deadlock was broken late yesterday when the University of Illinois agreed to play Michigan State in both 1955 and 1956, giving the Spartans the minimum conference schedule of six games both seasons.: * ,4 * the .country, but the announce- ment was issued in the name of the Communist party's Central Committee, the. Council of Min- isters and the Presidium of the Supreme Council. All these are' organs which Stalin dominated. At present, the machinery of control of the sprawling Communist Empire is believed to be technically in the hands of Georgi Malenkov and V. M. Molotov. As if appealing for unity, the official statement said: "In these sorrowful days all the peoples of our country are rally- ing even closer in a great fra-. ternal family under the tested See POWER, Page 6. for Stalin biography leadership of the Communist par- ty created and reared by Lenin and Stalin." "The Soviet people have boundless faith in and are per- meated with a deep love for cow time today, more than six hours after his doctors had given .up their struggle. The official announcement said: "The heart of the comrade and inspired continuer of Lenin's will, the wise leader and eacher of the Communist party and the Soviet people - Joseph Vissarionovitch Stalin -- has stopped beating." There was no immediate indication fro m Moscow who was taking over control of i, SEOUL-U. S. Air Force and Navy planes sowed flaming ruin in their Communist party for they Northeast Korea yesterday climaxed by a redord-breaking 1,000-mile knowg hav the sctrvit of th- .erning ta h urm aagv all the activity of the Thunderiet raid only 50 miles from Siberia. party is service in the interests At Wonsan, the "Mighty Mo" steamed boldly into harbor and of the people," the announee-