ON EAST-WEST CRISIS See Page ' Latest Deadline in the State ~Iaii4 rAN COLDER AND WINDY VOL. LXIV, No. 13 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1953 SIX PAGES -own"* Yanks Win, 4-3, To Annex Series Furillo's Homer Ties Tilt In Ninth; Martin's Single Cops World Crown NEW YORK-(A)-The New York Yankees won their unprece- dented fifth straight World Series yesterday by scoring a run in the last of the ninth inning that gave them a 4-3 victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers in the sixth game. . Billy Martin drove in the winning run with a single with one out after the Dodgers had tied the score in the top of the ninth on Carl Furillo's two-run home run. S* * . s HANK BAUER walked to open the Yankee ninth. Yogi Berra flied deep to right field and Mickey Mantle beat out an in- -- field hit, moving Bauer to second. Ea l WThen came Martin, who had tied the World Series record for total hits earlier in the game. He cracked a single straight T kes O at * through the middle of the dia- mond and Bauer raced home. - Carl Erskine started yesterday's Ike W tihes game but was in no way the trim fire-baller who struck out 14 Yanks Friday afternoon. WASHINGTON-(A)-In a sim- ple ceremony witnessed by Presi- CASEY STENGEL, only mana- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower and ger ever to win five straight pen- a host of other dignitaries, Earl For Box Score, see p. 3 Warren became the 14th chief jus- tice of the United States yester- nants, let alone five Series, would day. have been second guessed if he had Right hand uplifted, and his 6 lost this game. feet 2 frame cloaked for the first For old Case lifted Ford, who time in a black judical robe, the was trud alon th 3-1 former governor of California lead after seven full innings. vowed he would uphold the Con- Hank Bauer had just yanked the stitution and administer justice fans to their feet with a sensa- under law to rich and poor alike. tional grab, near the right field wall Boby rg' ln THEN, WITH an air of genial pinh hit fly when S gl md assurance, Warren took his place up his mind to call for Allie Rey- behind the high Supreme Court nolds. bench-holder of the highest judi- The Chief scraped through the cal office in the land, inheritor of eighth, although Bauer had to back the mantle of John Marshall, togth, allhor Bne had hak Roger Taney and Charles Evans to the wall for one catch and had Hughesto run down the foul line to grab Hughes.another. Warren became the second n * * Republican-Justice Burton is THE NINTH, however, was a dif- the other one-and the only ferent story. Gil Hodges went out Californian on the court. He is but Snider, tlhree times a strike- the first justice to be named by out victim of Ford, walked on a a Republican president since the 3-2 pitch. late Benjamin Cardozo ascend- Furillo also worked the count ed the bench in 1932. to .3-2 and then hammered a In the sun-filled courtyard out- home run into the lower right side the glistening white Supreme field seats about five rows past Court Bldg., the flag of the Unit- Bauer's desperately clutching ed States flew at half-staff in hand. memory of the chief justice War- Undisturbed by these heroics, ren succeeded, the late Fred M. Reynolds calmly struck out Billy Vinson. Cox and Labine to break Red Ruff- Inside, in the dimly lighted court ing's Series career record with 62 chamber with its marble pillars strikeouts. and red velvet hangings, a sol- emn hush fell over the more than A 300 spectators as the senior jus- Alt m Po e tice, Hugo Black, eulogized Vin- son-"capable and loyal public S servant . . . congenial and treas- ured friend." WASHINGTON - (RP) - The IF HISTORY repeats, Earl War- Atomic Energy Commission an- ren should be around for a long nounced a new step yesterday in time, as chief justice of the Unit- a broadening study to determine 1 ed States. the feasibility of developing atomic Up until noon yesterday, when power for private industry. Warren, 62, was sworn in, only The commission said it has ap- 13 men had filled the job since proved contracts with two eastern 1789, when the Constitution went firms-the Duquesne Light Co. of into effect. During the same per- Pittsburgh and the Walter Kidde iod the United States has had Nuclear Laboratories of Garden 33 presidents. City, N. Y.-to investigate the pos- There's a simple reason why sibilities of commercial atomic there have been so few openings power. in the chief justice line of work. "These two companies make up A justice is appointed for life; he the sixth team from private in- can be removed only if he misbe- dustry to engage in power studies haves, and -Supreme Court mem- under the AEC's industrial par- bers aren't a mischievous lot. Es- .ticipation program," the commis- pecially chief justices. sion said. .National Newspaper Week. Committee To Restudy, Exam Week Student Opinion To Be Considered By GENE HARTWIG A student-faculty-administra- tion committee headed by Assist- ant to the President Erich A. Wal- ter will be named shortly to re- study the exam schedule, Univer- sity President Harlan H. Hatcher said yesterday. The group will be called to- gether to discuss the schedule in view of the barage of criticism lev- eled at changes made inthe exam period last spring. * * * ACCORDING TO Walter the committee will include representa- tives from all parties concerned, that is students, faculty and ad-1 ministrators of the various col- leges in the University. Walter, who is at present in the process of transferring his office following his appointment as presidential assistant, said he expects the committee can be- gin its work within 10 days. Changes made in the June exam schedule were designed to shorten the finals period in order .that seniors might be officially grad- uated on Commencement Day. * * * aft-Hartley Invoked: Ends East Coast Dockers' Strike f Injunction Orders I.. Men Back 'National Safety Imperiled' Says Federal Judge Weinfeld in New York NEW YORK-L)-A federal Taft-Hartley law injunction was granted yesterday, ordering the termination of the five day strike of East Coast longshoremen. Federal Judge Edward Weinfeld at 7:36 p.m. (CST) ordered dockers from Maine to Virginia back to work. It was a few hours after President Dwight D. Eisenhower made his initial use of the Taft-Hartley injunction powers. * * * * THE ORPHANED International Longshoremen's. Assn. has said it will order its 60,000 longshoremen back to work in accord with the Taft-Hartley law's 80-day - cooling off provision. sc Judge Weinfeld's temporary Clary Says injunction extends to Oct. 15. However, the government will be given a chance Oct. 13 to argue for a permanent injunc- i . "It appears that immediate 'ir- H ave C h ice, reparable damage might be com- mitted before a regular order was, granted," Judge Weinfeld said in PANMUNJOM-(R)-Gen. Mark explaining his decision to grant Clark yesterday complained to the a temporary injunction without a Neutral Nations Repatriation Com- hearing. mission that it was operating on " E Tn the assumption that 22,500 Chi- "IF PERMITTED to continue, Cnese and North Korean prisoners the strike might imperil the na- in its custody "actually desire re- tionhli icalth and safety," he patriation." DATELINE: ANN ARBOR-Th * xr Ar y ,,--4 s~n * - WPAG-TV, presents the first of THE recommendation, adopted television. Participants are stud by executive committees of the and University sources. JamesI University's schools and colleges, Arbor, first guest on the "Dateli required all graduating seniors to * complete their final.exams by June - 6 and moved the starting time of fnuaimf I exams up one day. Student Tet A drop in the University all < campus point average and the By LOUISE TYOR storm of criticism by students generally were results certainly At 6:45 p.m. last night in Rm. not anticipated by the change, 229 Angell Hall, the signal of "on- administration officials com- the-air" innaugurated the first mented. two in a series of student-pro- The group to be named to re- duced weekly television shows study the question will make pub- broadcast over channel 20 in con- lic' its results as soon as it is junction with WPAG-TV. feasible, Walter said. The group of programs. design- -Daily-Chuck Kelsey e cameras move in as the speech department, in conjunction with a weekly series of television shows to be broadcast over commercial dents in speech department television classes and from community Lynch, Grad., left, interviews Mayor William E. Brown, Jr. of Ann ne: Ann Arbor" tri-weekly show, * * * eavis ion.UB roadcacsts Begin 4------ days, Wednesdays and Fridays, is ed with Joan Rossi, Grad., who a news and sports program. The sang "Addio Aria" from La Boh- show also includes interviews with eme accompanied by Joyce Noh, local people in the news. '55SM. Last night, Mayor William E. The show, also directed by Prof. Brown, Jr., of Ann Arbor, was Stasheff, was written by Lee Tut- interviewed by James Lynch, tle. nrvd.,ienewy cJ mentaLyinOther programs to be broadcast Grad., while news commentary ltrti ekae"tr ie" Iwas done by Joel Sebastian, '54, later this week are "Story' Time," and sports by Myron Sha, presented at 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays Grad. and "Studio Sampler" at 7:30 p.m. Fridays. Prof. Edward Stasheff of the -_rdy --- speech department directed the DECLINE: show, which was written and pro-_-_ duced by Wendell Cocking, Grad. Immediately after this program, "229 Weekly of the Air." a half- hour vt hour variety show, was broadcas. I Jean Robinson, '55, was mistress-T of-ceremonies on the program ue o ow featuring a comedy entitled "Cure the Common Cold" by Mimi Gold- i added. President Eisenhower sought the court injunction shortly af- ter a special inquiry board told' him an early settlement of the strike was "exceedingly: un- likely." Enterin'g the boiling dispute over handling prisoners who have said they do pot want to return to Com- munism, the UN Far East com- mander said these men must be as- sured "freedom of choice." *~ * * " * * DEGREES HAD formerly been presented on Commencement Day until 1949 when the practice was discontinued to allow faculty mem- bers more time in grading finals. Particularly loud sentiment on the move to change the exam schedule was voiced by the Stu- dent Legislature last spring when former SL President Howard Willens, '53, expressed strong disapproval over the lack of stu- dent consultation in the decision. Discussing the possibility of Uni- versity personnel being called to testify before the House commit- tee investigating Communist acti- vity in midwestern educational in- stitutions, President Hatcher said that he had received no indica- tion that anyone on the faculty had been called to give testimony, yet. The committee headed by Rep. Kit Clardy (R-Mich.) is scheduled to make a swing through the state in November holding hearings in several cities including Detroit. UN Requested To Admit 14' - a NwNations { UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - A) -Gov. James F. Byrnes called on the UN yesterday to admit 14 West-sponsored states as members. He assailed Russia for standing pat on heroft-presented "pack- age deal" as the price for lifting the Soviet veto. * * . BYRNES, South Carolina Dem- ocrat and former secretary of state, made the statement in his maiden speech before the present Assembly. He told the special Political Committee that acceptance of the Soviet lump proposal would put theiUN in the position of discarding its own principles by admitting five Soviet-sponsored states it has repeatedly linked with the forces of aggression. Byrnes' speech came in the wake of Russia's blast against the West for consistently opposing admis- sion of five Kremlin-backed coun- tries-Albania, the Mongolian Peo- ple's Repblic, Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary. ed as a laboratory course for speech department students of? television is intended to serve the community not only in a civic. but also in an educational and social vein. "DATELINE: Ann Arbor," air- ed from 6:45 to 7 p.m. on Mon- Prof. Muehi To Testify Prnf Jnhn R Miihl of t E~n R It was the first time President IN A LETTER to Gen. K. S Eisenhower used the strike-ending Thimayya, Indian head of the re- provisions of Taft-Hartley since partiation commission, Clark said he entered the White House Jan. his command believes the 22,500 20. President Truman invoked the "made their choice many months law 10 times-once against the ago" not to go back. ILA in 1948. He reminded Thimayya that * * * ' Allied blood was shed for more UNTIL YESTERDAY, the ILA than a year while the principle had promised the 50,000 strikers of freedom of choice was argued would return to work once a Taft- prior to a truce and said the Hartley injunction was obtained. command would not compromise However, Patrick J. Connolly, ILA on it now. executive vice-president, cast doubt Clark's letter, handed at 8:07 on restoring shipping operations a.m., to Gen. Thimayya, sought even with an injunction. I to make clear the UN position in Connolly said in New York a raging dispute which has held stein, '53. In the cast were Bev- erly Blancett, '54, Mary BeDell, Grad. and Bobbi Snyder, '54. rroi. joii nr. muen oz e1 g-i lish department will testify today VIOLA STEIN, a member of the in the Detroit court trial in de- American Federation for Handi- fense of Robert Lowry's book capped People and Leonard Greg- "Find Me In Fire." i1ory, head of personnel of the Wil-j The book was.charged with ob- low . Run Research Department scenity by the Detroit Police- De- partment's License and Censor Bureau folloiving its publication by a national book house. According to Prof. Muehl, his job will be to summarize Lowry's book, describe the intention of the; author and the novel's effect on the reader. He reported that he felt that no serious critic would call the book pornographic. Prof. Muehl went on to observe that editors are usually anxious to bring cases to trial because they feel this is a fairer hearing than when they allow the power of cen- sorship to remain in the hands of police bureaus. "When publishers get the chance to take the stand with a piece of literature, they take ad- vantage of it," he explained. were interviewed along with Ted Baugh, manager and vice-presi- dent of WPAG-TV and Everett W. Ardis, new superintendent of Yp- silanti public schools. Prof. Garnet R. Garrison of the speech department also ap- peared. The show was conclud- 'Esian A campus sale of the 1953 'Ensians will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today on the Diagonal. This is also the last week for seniors to sign up for picture appointments according to 'En- sian Business Manager Bob Wells, '55. DETROIT (P) - The auto in- dustry is scheduling production of a little more than 1,400,000 cars during the current final quar- ter of 1953.j This is a downward revision ofI earlier projections. However, if the schedules are realized the indus- try easily will achieve its predict- ed total of 6% million cars this year. THROUGH the quarter ended last week United 'States vehicle output for 1953 came to 4,840,610 cars and 944,975 trucks. Much of the credit for making 1953 the second biggest year in auto industry history will go to Ford. The big family-owned company is maintaining a post- war high in car assemblies. Carrying out its determination to build more cars in the final half of the year than it did in the first half, Ford has been running con- trary to the general trend. At the same time, however, it has stepped up its sales efforts in most sec- tions. NEVERTHELESS, nationwide there appears to have been anoth- er decline in retail deliveries. Ac- "tual figures for September sales will not be available for several weeks. Preliminary tabulations in- dicate stocks of unsold new cars will show another high mark. As of right now that suggests .an outgoing cleanup problem is in the making for a large part of the retailing organization. One of the big disappointments for the car retailers is their in- ability to get one of Chevrolet's new plastic-body Corvette cars for their , own purposes. Chevrolet which has produced fewer than 100 of them so far is screening deliv- eries so finely that no one dealerI can put one in his showroom. YR Fills Posts; his members would not work alongside of dock workers who are members of a new, rival AFL longshoremen's Union. The old ILA was ousted by the AFL because the union failed toI kick out leaders accused of con-I sorting with criminals and hood-f lums. The ILA earlier was a target of state and congressional crime probers who charged it with mix- ing racketeering with union af- fairs, particularly along the New York waterfront.{ The strike began last Thursday when the ILA's contracts expired' without a new agreement. Em- ployers, besides being unable to come to terms with the ILA, ex- pressed doubt as to ILA's bar- gaining rights since the new AFL union now claims to represent the workers. r r' t 1 up the start of explanations to these men for two weeks. , DURING that time, two riots have broken out in the demilitar- ized zone with Indian custodian troops killing three prisoners -and wounding 10 before they were put down. Clark bluntly denied a 'charge by the repatriation commission that the UN Command -had mis- informed the "prisoners as to their rights. Clark wrote that the UN Com- mand "cannot now condone any abrogation or compromise" of the Korean War truce terms., He .obviously was referring to a commission ruling that all the prisoners are required to attend the explanation sessions by Red teams even if they do not want to listen. World News Roundup State Official Defends Caution with PolioDrug LANSING - (A) - Michigan tween the ages of one and nine in health officials yesterday heated- the county last July, he said. The ly denied a charge made by a na- Gamma Globulin was released by tional magazine that Michigan was the ODM. one of the states which failed to *a « use all the Gamma Globulin it THE MAGAZINE article said' could have. that Michigan had epidemics in In answering the charges, the counties which would have been Michigan officials revealed for the combatted with mass innocula- first time that they are develop- tions. The magazine did not name ing fears thatithe polio-fighting the counties. Gamma Globulin has some dan- "It is possible we had county gers of its own.,, - - - E~ By The Associated Press OTTAWA-The Canadian Press said 'yesterday it has learned, without any detail as to place or time, that Russian reconnaissance aircraft have, been seen flying over Canadian territory on a number of occasions. The news agency said Defense Department officials refused to confirm or deny reports that Soviet aircraft have been seen flying over Canada's far north. The Canadian Press said its information came from "unquotable but most reliable sources." PARIS-France is considering joining Finland and Russia in a three-nation trade pact.proposed by the Soviet Union, a Foreign Office spokesman said yesterday. * * * * LONDON-A British force of warships and troops raced yesterday toward restless British Guiana, where Britain's governor reportedly is thinking of sacking the left-wing government. Government informants here privately supported suggestions that the force is intended to strengthen the hand of colonial Gov. Sir outbreaks that were rated as epi- demics by the National Founda- finfn ilnni~ %.CCf _ . I IN AN ARTICLE, the Look mag- i