EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 4, Latest Deadline in the State Da iti, FAIR ANDCOOL VOL. LXIV, No. 14 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1953 " SIX PAGES India Caught JIn Allied-Red PW Dispute Won't Use Force With Prisoners A PANMUNJOM-(M)-Custodian India, caught in a squeeze by Al- lied and Red demands, shied away yesterday from a policy of force y in handling 22,500 Chinese, and North Korean prisoners balking at a return to communism. Shortly after receiving a letter from the UN commander de- manding that these men be guar- anteed "freedom of choice," Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimayya refused to say that his troops would compel the prisoners to listen individually to Red "explanation" teams. The Reds are making this their key demand. * * * AT A CROWDED press confer- ence, attended by both Commu- nist and Allied newsmen, Thi- mayya soft-pedaled the issue by saying: "I think we can ask the pris- oners to listen for 5 to 10 m- utes." The UN Command agreed to start work Wednesday on explan- ation booths at a new sit agree- able to the Reds in the demili-: tarized zone. Indications were that the twice-postponed explan- ations may get started within a week. * * * ON THIS issue Sen. Potter (R- Mich.) said yesterday the Korean truce terms forced the United Na- tions to turn back to the Com- munists hundreds of captured war criminals who would have been put on trial if the war had ended in a UN military victory. "They are now beyond our ' reach," Potter told a news con- ference after questioning four military representatives in pri- vate and getting from them, he said, "shocking revelations of atrocities" committed by the Reds on American prisoners of war. Potter, a legless veteran of World War II, has been desig- nated by Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis.), chairman of the Senate investiga- tions subcommittee as a one-man "task force" to investigate atroi- ty charges. SL Petitioning Starts Today; 23 Posts Open Aiming at a record number of candidates and voter interest, Stu- dent Legislature today opens pe- titioning for 23 seats on the legis- lature, to be filled in campus-wide lections scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday, Nov. 11 and 12. Any academically eligible stu- dent, including first semester ' freshmen, may run for the terms by filing petitions filled with 150 signatures of .students who wish to see him run. Rules, petition blanks and general information about candidacy will be available from 1 to 5 p.m. daily until Sat- urday, Oct. 17 at the SL Bldg. Twenty-one full year terms and two semester-long terms are open, which will bring total SL member- ship to 40 members instead of the present 39. The extra seat was made available because of the fall increase in campus enrollment. Students or campus organiza- tions interested in having a ref- erendum placed on the ballot will have until Thursday, Oct. 29 to submit to SL the question and 600 signatures of students who think the campus should vote on the is- sue. Legislator Submits Resignation to SL Peter Dow, '55, submitted his resignation to the Student Legis- lature this week, it was learned yesterday. Dow, whose term was due to ex- pire in November, said pressure of other activities prevented him from remaining on SL. His resig- nation was the eighth received by SL this fall. At last week's meet- Top Ohi~o Reds Arrested b B Seven Communist Officials Snared In Cleveland, Newark, New York City CLEVELAND-(P)-The FBI yesterday arrested seven alleged Communist officials it described as leaders and former leaders of the party's activities in Ohio. The arrests, on charges of conspiring to advocate violent over- throw of the government, were made in, Cleveland, Lorain and Steubenville, Ohio; Newark, N. J.; and New York City. THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT also placed a detainer against ank eighth alleged Red official, now in the Ohio penitentiary for ficti- ElSE HO ER TELLS ORLD: tious auto registration. Court Order Ends:,5-Day Dock Strike NEW YORK - An uneasy truce settled on the East Coast water- front yesterday, as shipping shook off the effects of a five day, multi- million dollar dock strike. A court order ended the walk- out Monday night. S* * LONGSHOREMEN began streaming back to work in such big ports as New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore. In New York, world's largest port, 52 vessels started inching into piers after the strike isolat- ed them for days at anchor in the harbor. Tugmen were back on the job and big liners were freed from the ticklish task of maneuvering themselves into berths. First to ar- rive in New York after the strike's end was the Swedish-American liner Gripshom. The Italian Line's Andrea Doria was first to sail. At its height the strike tied up more than 100 vessels in 12 har- bors from Portland, Me., to Hamp- ton Roads, Va. * * . A TAFT-Hartley lav injunction Monday, the first of the Eisenhow- er administration, forced the strik- ing International Longshoremen's Assn. back to work. A railroad embargo on freight shipments into New York was lifted. It was placed in effect last Thursday to prevent a tieup of freight cars during the strike. Many of the 60,000 longshore- men on the East Coast answered shape up hiring whistles in the gray light of a damp autumn dawn. However, the ILA said 'it will take until today to get them all back. SDA Temp0rary Oficers Elected Students for Democratic Action elected temporary officers at their first meeting yesterday. Dave Kornbluh, Grad, was elect- ed president; Fran Leffler, '55, vice-president; Ann Lawther, '55, recording secretary; and Iris Leja, Spec., corresponding secretary. John Leggett, '54, and Arthur Cornfeld, '56, were elected as exec- utive members at large. At the meeting plans for the year were discussed and commit- tees appointed. A Justice Department an- nouncement said the arrests were part of a drive to round up "second-string" Communist of- ficials for prosecution similar to that which brought prison terms for the 11 top leaders of the party in 1949. Starting with the arrest of that 11 in 1948, a total of 99 party officials have been arrested or de- tained. The FBI gave these descriptions of the persons arrested yesterday: ELVADOR CLAUD Greenfield 63, write-in candidate for Ohio governor on the Communist ticket in 1952, arrested at a Cleveland, rooming house; David Katz, 40, former treasurer of the Commun- ist Political Association of Ohio, picked up while driving a bakery truck in downtown Cleveland; his wife, Frieda ucker Katz, 41, one-, time organizational secretary for the party in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, arrested at her home here; Lucille "Bethencourt, 26, a leader of Communist activities in the Lorain, Ohio, area isince 1949, taken into custody at her home near there. Joseph Michael Dougher, 56, alias Joseph Michael Walsh, ac- tive in Communist affairs in Ohio and Pennsylvania and former member of the party's national committee, arrested at a Steubenville, Ohio, rooming house; Joseph Brandt, 43, form- er organizational secretary for the party in Ohio, apprehended in Newark, N. J., on his way to work; and Robert Alfred Camp- bell, 41, former educational dir- ector of the party in Ohio and currently active in Communist activities in the New York City area, picked up on his way to work. F1I records further show that: Greenfield had been a Commu- nist since 1931, was publicist for the Ohio Communist party in 1952, ,and has served as secretary of the Civil Rights Cngress in Cleveland. Frieda Katz had been linked with Red activities as early as 1940, as a former executive secre- tary of the Ohio Bill of RightsI JCngress. Ensian From 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today, representatives from the 'Ensi- an will be on the "Diag" to sign up seniors who have not made arrangements for their senior pictures. According to 'Ensian officials, those who have not signed up forstheir pictures should do so immediately. USE Wilson Says 'o.Quick Red Threat Russo-German Relations Aire WASHINGTON - (I) - Se tary of Defense Wilson saidy terday it is "perhaps stretchin a bit" to say that the Russ have a hydrogen bomb "ready drop and planes ready to d: them." At the same time Secretar3 State Dulles reported that United States is considering joint move with its European a to offer Russia formal guaran against the rebirth of German itarism. IN CONTRAST to some re official expressions of urge Wilson told a news conference believed the Russians are "t or four years back of us" in at ic weapons development. "The Russians are certai not going to deliver one bo with one plane and have not ing to back it up," he said. The defense chief's statei came a few hours after Pres Eisenhower spoke out against1 threat of global H-bomb sui involving "the possible doom every nation." Wilson said there is no rea to believe the Russians want start a war now, but he declare "I PERSONALLY feel sure t if the Russians did precipitate through miscalculation or ot wise, while they might have a initial victories, the going we be very tough and they ultima could not wi. "We really have grown qu strong in a military sense." Wilson made it plain hev thinking of Russia's ability wage sustained H-bomb warfar saying it would take three m Syearsfor the Kremlin to be abl deliver such an assault. CONCERNING the contemp ed move for a pact against Russ militarism Dulles made it clea a news conference that he fa such assurances only if Ru agreesbat the same time to an ceptable plan for a united Gi many.. The secretary's words appea ed aimed at slowing down w; he regards as a growing Weste European interest in offeri Russia a non-aggression pa before any of Europe's -cruci East-West problems are solv His remarks also were app ently intended as an indirect a swer to former Gov. Adlai Stev son's plea for "a European syst of durable non-aggression Russia as well as France, for G many, and the rest of us." HPOO ERS FOR t? Arms Race Blame Laid To Soviets Doom of Society Seen by Ike ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. - (T) -- PE CE i -Daily-Malcolm Shatz TIGHT SQUEEZE-Two students take part in a typical campus squeeze-play as they detour between two parked cars on State St. near Betsy Barbour. Utilizing this space for cars may alleviate the city traffic problem, according to one coed, "but it sure has student traffic blocked." PROGRAM VENDORS:- Sale of Dimte Rosters To Cease <:' By PAUL LADAS The athletic department's long battle to eliminate amateur foot- ball program sellers at Saturday games finally met with success when Larry Wellman, '56M, and Ronald Karp, '54, sole enterprisers of the dime rosters on campus, dis- closed yesterday they would dis- continue the sale of programs for the remainder of the season. The decision was reached after a meeting with Prof. Herbert 0. "Fritz" Crisler, Director of Ath- ment" caused them to decide "to end their dime program enter- prise." "Crisler reminded us," the two students said, "that we might be in jeopardy of violating the copyright of the official football program, or that if this legal action had no effect 'other al- ternative steps could be taken'." "The legal brief prepared by our attorney Frank Devine," Wellman and Karp said, "and stating that our enterprise was completely le- us to discontinue the distribution of dime programs." "We hope that the withdrawal of our competition will speedily return the selling of the official souvenir football program to fi- nancial stability," Welman and Karp concluded. Prof. Crisler declined to com- ment on the ceasing of operations by the two amateur program mak- ers. NP I P "tien "ts letics, last Thursday when the gen- gal, made us confident that there 1 l j j Il44/C eral implications of the controver- was no danger from Crisler's sy were discussed. threat of legal action."Ia * * * "However," the students con- WELLMAN and Karp said the- tinued, "our consideration of the!D meeting with Crisler, where they financial status of the athletic de- were informed about the "views partment, and our high respect fort '" ' lnr f+-nnh nirA n + lnIT i- i-Taa itlln ainl. rake Ride President Eisenhower warned a di- vided world yesterday to put the atom to constructive use, or risk H-bomb suicide with "erasure of cities. windrows of unidentifiable dead." He blamed Soviet Russia for a nuclear artns race, in which the free world must stockpile A-bombs and.H-bombs "assuring us reason- able safety from attack." CONCERNING the threat of atomic warfare the President said: "In its wake we see only sud- den and mass destruction . . the possible doom of every na- tion and society. "This horror must not be. "This titanic force must be re- duced to the fruitful service of mankind. If it is in the power of. your leaders, with God's help, it will be done. * * * "THIS CAN come to pass only as o'e .of the results of shaping a firm and just and durable peace." "Such a peace," the President added, would come "only slowly and tortuously"-notby force or edict or treaty or dark threats or glittering slogans, but by courage,rknowledge, patience and leadership. Some 5,000 listeners sat awed as Eisenhower spelled out the world's atomic future in solemn alterna- ties. They were members of the United Church Women of the Na- tional Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., meeting in Atlantic City's Convention Hall. The President's speech was bill- ed in advance. as a discourse on spiritual values. But it went much further. EISENHOWER apparently took another step to drive home to the American people the threat posed by Russia's progress toward the H- bomb. "The mysteries of the atom are known to Russia," he said at one point. It was the third time in two weeks Eisenhower referred to the nuclear thret that faces the world -in apparent resolve to awaken the American people more fully to the perils of an H-bomb age. Eisenhower flew here from Washington for his address, then returned to the capital. * * *. HE LAUNCHED his discussion of atomic horrors by pointing out that America has lost its former immunity to the devastation of war. "While our homes have wit- nessed scarcely any of the hor- rors of the battlefield that are so familiar to Western Europe," he said, "we know that their unique physical security has al- most totally disappeared before the long range bomber and the destructive power of a single bomb... "The mysteries of the atom are known to Russia. Russia's hostili- ty to free government-and to the religious faith on which free gov- ernment is built -- is too well known to require recital here." Williams Suggests FootballTrophy Gov. G. Mennen Williams has proposed that a trophy be estab- lished this year as an award to the winner. of theaannual Univer- sity-Michigan State College foot- ball game. and ieelings of the athletic depart- the University Family las caused Coloratura Roberta Peters To Entertain at Hill Today By BECKY CONRAD Although two weeks late to make her local debut with the coming of winter, Metropolitan Opera soprano Roberta Peters will appear for the first time in Ann Arbor at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium1 opening the Diamond Jubilee season of the Choral Union. The 23 year old coloratura will sing Scarlatti's "Qual farfalletta amante," Caccini's "Amarilli, mia bella," Mozart's "Der Holle Rache" from The Magic Flute, Handel's "Sweet Bird" from Il Pensieroso, Ros- sini's "The Alpine Shepherdess,' Viardot's "Dites, Que Faute-il Faire?" and Bishop's "Lo! Here the Gentle Lark." Two youthful runaway patients' from the University Neuropsychia- tric institute took a 19-mile ride yester'day, clinging precariously to the outside of a cr'ack streamliner hitting speeds up to 80 miles an hour. 3 The two girls, 14 and 12 years old, sneaked aboard the train at Ann Arbor after escaping from the institute. They clung to the canvas-like windbreakers which protect persons going from one car to the other and miraculously managed to keep a toe hold on the speeding train. The emotionally-disturbed girls' claimed they ran away because they were "kept in a ward with 27 boys," but Dr. Raymond W. Wag- goner, director of the institute, termed their story "fanciful." The girls, one from Midland and one fr'om Benton Harbor, Mich., were returned to the insti- tute. Lowry's Book Trial Delayed LIBRARIAN'S EULOGY: Powell Tells of Passion for Collecting Literature i I ., 1 i By DEBRA DURCHSLAG3 Black tie and satin gown assembled yesterday in Clements Mem- orial Library to hear Lawrence C. Powell, library director of the Uni- versity of California at Los Angeles, speak on his three loves: col- lecting, keeping, and giving books. In the wood-uaneled. book-lined Main Room of one of the HER PROGRAM will continue with Adam's "Bravura Varia - tions," Schubert's "Der Hirt auf demo Felsen," Debussy's "Ro- mance," Moret's "Nelumbo" and Poulenc's "Air Vif." Miss Peters will also sing Rachmaninoff's "Songs of Gru- sia," Scott's "Blackbird's Song," Watts' "Little Shepherd's Song," Stravinsky's "Quietly, Night" from The Rake's Progress and Because of a "defect in the case," world's foremost historical libraries, Mr. Powell discussed his "life- Strauss' "Grossmachtige Prin- the prosecution in the Detroit cen- time passion for books." zessin" from Ariadne auf Naxos. sorship trial of Robert Lowry's * * * * Whnteyugclrtr o "Find Me in Fire" has asked to HE SPOKE of himself as a man who has always lived with books, oWhenrsth young coratlsf" a ont and who has constantly been impressed with their unique symbolic as a last minute replacement in Prof. John F. Muehl, key defense as witness said yesterday. power. "Don Giavanni," the New York i Mr. Powell acknowledged his debt in bibliographical education Times called her "a hit, delightful Prof. Muehl, slated to testify to Randolph G. Adams, first director of Clements Library. In a in every way." yesterday,'said the trial postpone- warm eulogy, Powell described him as a guiding man, who knew But the overnight success of the ment probably won't affect the3 and loved books as few men do. Powell said he was proud to claim young Bronx-born singer climaxed case inethe least. himself as a "loyal disciple" of Adams. many years of intensive study. She He went oan to say he did not # know what the "defect" was that The attentive audience was as receptive to Mr. Powell's wit as began work under the direction of wcaused the drosecution's sudden s