WHICH WAY WILL KASHMIR GO? See Page 4 C, .4c it 4rn1 Latest Deadline in the State A16F :43 a t I M. 40 a a a FAIR, WARMER VOL. LXIV, No. 15 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1953 SIX PAGES U.S. Pushes For Trieste Settlement Fear of Soviet Spurs New Move By STAN SWINTON ROME--(P)-The United States is quietly intensifying its effort to solve the wrangle between Italy and Yugoslavia over Trieste, Fear of Soviet intervention is ._ one reason for the renewed and accelerated move to settle the eight-year-old fight over the fu- ture of the Adriatic seaport and the surrounding area, reliable sources report. * * * PREMIER Giuseppe Pella, who h told Parliament Tuesday night that Italy will not change her de- mated that the future of Trieste r be settled by plebiscite, called in U. S. Ambassador Clare Boothe Luce yesterday to explain the im- plications of his speech. After hearing his views in a 20-minute meeting, the blonde U. S. ambassador was reported to have told Pella the United States is extremely hopeful ac- tion toward a friendly settle- ment on the Trieste issue will be forthcoming soon. Authoritative sources say Tri- este's priority on the diplomatic agenda of Washington, London and Paris has been boosted for these reasons: * * * (1) FEAR that Soviet Union will ldemand inclusion of Trieste among topics for any new Big Four meeting. The Russians then could demand publicly the return of Trieste to Italy. This would slap the face of Marshal Tito and give Italy's two million-member Com- munist party a tremendous do- mestic political weapon. (2) Trieste stands in the way of Italian ratification of the Eur- opean Defense Community Tre- aty. (3) Five thousand Allied occupa- tion troops now are tied up in Trieste. They could be released for duty elsewhere with an agree- ment. Privately, the United States, Britain and France already have decided against supporting either Italy's demand for a plebiscite or Yugoslavia's plea that Trieste city be internationalized and the rest of the free territory turned over to Tito. Britain is reported particularly opposed to a plebiscite, since it would set a precedent for the largely Greek population on the Mediterranean islanti colony of Cyprus. Opera Names SCommittees Fritz Glover, '55E, Union Opera promotion chairman, yesterday announced the members of the campus, alumni, radio and tele- vision and newspaper publicity committees. Jack White, '56. and Polly Kuen- zel, '54, were named co-chairmen of the campus publicity committee. Chairman of the alumni publi- city committee is Howie Boasberg. On the radio and television com- mittee, Opera general secretary Dick Fiegel, '55, and Miriam Buck, '55, are co-chairmen. Newspaper publicity will be handled by Carol Gaeb, '55, Jean Williamson, '55 and Muriel Claf- lin, '55. New Union Office Manageis N anlne1 Managers of the Union student offices have been selected, staff- man Bill Eckerman, '56, said yes- terday. The men have complete charge of the office from 3 to 5 p.m. daily. They are also in czharge of thec tryouts who work one day each week. Those named to positions were Gerry Davis, '56. Jon Collins, '56E, Mark Gallon, '56, Todd Lief, '56, I S and Jack White, '56. Kendall To Talk a.I I Schoot Freedom Vote Postponed SL Cabinet Authorized To Appoint Students to Final Exam Study Group By DOROTHY MYERS Once again time prevented Student Legislature from taking a fnal vote on adoption of a policy stand concerning academic freedom. Crux of yesterday's hour-and-a-half debate centered on whether SL should openly censure certain methods employed by Congres- sional committees investigating subversive influences in American educational institutions which are contrary to methods utilized by United States courts. Before opening the debate, SL authorized its cabinet to appoint five voting student members to a new Unversity committee recently SL Seats Petitions for the 23 elective Student Legislature positions which will be voted on during November campus elections are available from 1 to 5 p.m. Mon- day through Saturday at the SL Bldg. Deadline for returning com- pleted petitions is set for Oct. 17. Twenty-one of the seats available are for full-year terms, two for one semester positions. The campus -.wide general elections to fill these posts have been scheduled for Nov. 11 and 12. Vogele-rSet Ike Asked Indian Troon's Ouster Bomb Facts By Kefauver Demanded by Chinese Senator Blasts 0 0 Incoordination Civilians in S.Korea By The Associated Press Sen. Kefauver (D-Tenn.) said. . . . . . . . . yesterday it is "high time" that President Eisenhower or the Na-Y tional Security Council made "a kK oan plain restatement of the facts"ao t e - m e autthe H-bomb menace. Russia's atomic power potentialit is a life a rd death matter, the Incite Tennessee Democrat declared in e' s { '3 > nt nn fn ctnrly thA rovicPri final Soviet Tour Discussed ByHollander, BERLIN -- Oct. 7 -- (P) -- Back from a two week tour of Rus- sia yesterday, former Daily feature editor Zander Hollander said the Soviet people appeared happy with their lot. Warning against "wishful think- ing" about any anti-Soviet under-, ground existing in Russia, Hol- lander said, "they've got a lower standard than we do, but they're well adjusted to it." Hollander arrived in the Russian sector of Berlin with Mark Ed- Imond, one of his two college, jour- nalist companions yesterday after- noon. Their fellow college editor, Daniel Berger, stayed on an extra day in Leningrad. RUSSIANS on the street were "extremely glad" the Korean War ended in a truce, taking it as a sign that "the cold war between East and West is lessening," Hol- lander reported. What had happened to depos- ed Soviet police chief Lavrentia Beria was a touchy question he found. "In all places where pic- tures of the big man Jiung, you would see one vacant place, sometimes with the hook still there." . Guides explained that Beria be-J lieved in the one-man system ex- emplified by Stalin, and so "he had to be removed." The trio found they could wander "rather freely" an even take some pictures on the streetsaof Moscow, although Se- cret Police occasionally asked for their identity cards. Hollander and his friends made. the trip under special visas grant- ed them as college newspaper edi- tors by the Russians six weeks ago. But with prices extremely high and the rate of exchange of four rubles to the dollar, so pooi', the trick was no bargain. Their two weeks cost Hollander and his friends about $1,500 each.7 seup TLsua~LUy LL1e ievisu .InaiO.M - LA .L - W IV V t l examination schedule. AN ACADEMIC freedom stand!Educators introduced two weeks ago by Ruth Rossner, '55, which had been drafted by SL's Culture and Edu- -Robert Vogeler will de cation Committee last year was "Seventeen Months of Despo voted down early in the debate in the first session of the Mic favor of an entirely new motion. Education'Association's meet 9:30 a.m. today in Hill Audit The new motion, which does not Vogeler, an International put a blanket censureship on phone and Telegraph exe methods of any Congressional. was held for 17 months in committee, was drafted at the sum- gary for alleged spying. mer National Students Association * C n mrc h Ti failn t rra h h ._..___.. 't v scribe air" at chigan ing at orium. Tele- cutive, Hun- * * * "THE LACK of coordination among high agencies and officials of the administration in deference to dangers created by Russia's pos- session of the hydrogen bomb isi leading to a confusion of the American. public which may be >y disastrous," he said. Eisenhower probably will be asked at his news conference at 2:30 p.m. today to put the people straight on the danger of hydrogen bombardment. {: Ar PANI civilian strated drawal anti-Ca Korea Only ed to th Korean issued. h.,avroaxue bombuament. I congress, a-ru LU IraI1 me OPENING the two day conven- Reporters undoubtedly will seek incite" floor at any NSA session. tion, Vogeler will address approx- his assessment of the recent round Introduced by Ned Simon, '55, imately 3,000 secondary and ele-1 of statements on Russia's posses- ABO and amended by Leah Marks, '55L, mentary school teachers from sion of the super-weapon and her Seoul's the statement called for protec- Washtenaw, Jackson, Monroe and ability to drop it on distant tar- rying b tion of teachers with the words "if Lenawee counties. getstested an educator be dismissed, it should Arrested Nov. 29, 1949, in Bud- He told his last news confer- -Daily-Betsy Smith patriot be only for incompetence, bi'each apest, Vogeler "confessed" his ence Sept. 30 that he is turning A MOTHER'S FINAL TOUCH BEFORE PERFORMANCE TIME sIndian of professional standards, neglect main business was spying on over in his mind how best to ap- FOR ROBERTA PETERS POWs. of teaching obligations, moral tur- Hungarian military weapons and proach the subject. Eventually, he ; * * * Simi pitude, violation of academic fnder atomic developments. said, he will be very frank in tell- obert staged the law of the land, and then only He was sentenced to a 15 year ing the people the conclusions he Korea after a fair hearing in accordance prison term but released by Hun- has reached on the relationship chon t afetarhain nacrac gary April 28, 1951 of world tensions to the growing~ ni with methods utilized by the Unit- y * * * 'destructiveness of armaments. U I en rt Indi a ed States courts of law." pe a D partmentthree ed Sate corts f lw."VOEGLER LATER said there Meanwhile Eddie Gilmore inm rae Such wording was not strong was "some truth" in the confes- Detroit, former chief of the Asso- POW r enough for five SL members who, sion which he said was forced out ciated Press bureau in Moscow, By BECKY CONRAD during course of debate, introduc- of him during several sleepless j said yesterday night "it doesn'thk.t ed seprate mendmnts wich IWith the experience of working with Prof. Josef Blatt of the mur-poe embodied or were similar to the days of grilling by Hungarian po- make sense to underestimate your sic school when he served as metropolitan opera assistant conduc- ident I stronger language contained in the lice. enemy, but I fear America is over- tor, Roberta Peters yesterday praised musical training in the Univers- Preside stogrlnug otie nte Also speaking at the first ses . estimating Russia's strength." k , . h.~~a orteyug pr om original Culture and Education sion will be Richard Barnes Speaking at the Central Metho- ity' opera department as "a good background for the young opera Comm Committee report. Kennan and Edgar L. Grim. dist Church, Gilmore said, "It's singer. Although four of these substi- Kennan, secretary of the Na- possible that Russia has the hyc;no- The young coloratura soprano explained that Prof. Blatt, now man of tute amendments were soundly de- jtional Commission for the Defense gen bomb, but somehow I doubt director of opera production, has taught her Mozart's "Cosi Fantutte." deman( feated, one lacked a single vote of Democracy through Education, it." One of the few in the' country, the opera department forms a good dian cu of becoming part of the main mo- will discuss "Some Marks of Pro- --- foundation on which to base an operatic career she pointed out.- Whi tion. gress." ", "Many times a young singer ar- chante Prior to beginning the long dis- Grim, State assistant superin- riakesives in New York without any for- ost cussion, SL President Bob Neary, tendent of public instruction, will mal training in opera and finds AF Claimis Won '54BAd, introduced Klaus Dehio, tell why "Good Teachers Make ! himself at a loss for job experi- thatI international vice-p1 esident of a Better Communities." iNo Com m e11t ence," the 23 year old Met singer break German Student Union group to At the- afternoon session today said, "so the excellent practical ex- Detroit Airm an ,toners. the legislature. Dehio, now on a Milburn P. Anderson, president 0About Troph perience givenin Ann Aibon 15 ce-- tour of America after attending of the Michigan Education Asso- ; a/ tainly an asset."Se rt Risk iEas the NSA summer congress, praised ciation. will speak on "Lookinga Aside from the ballet, fencing, Syin ast activities of NSA and called for Ahead." Prof. Garnet Garrison. Prof. Herbert 0. "Fritz" Crisler, language and dramatic training; Press, more student exchange programs Donald E. P. Smith and Michael director of athletics, had no com- an opera singer needs, Miss Peters In a security case paralleling enough as means of promoting further in- Church will also address the 2 p.m. Iment yesterday on the desirability noted "I believe in luck because Ive that of Lt. Milo Radulovich, '54, And ternational understanding. session. i of establishing a trophy for the had some myself, but the most Rep. Thaddeus M. Machrowicz Ministr Bernd Rissmann, the student - winner of the annual Michigan- important requisite is intense study;(D-Mich.) disclosed yesterday he no knot whom SL brought to study at the F Michigan State College football and the love for hard work." had interceded for a Detroit Air tary m University in a newly-initiated cul- Our Parties game, such as Gov. G. Mennen Although qualifications for the Foirce sergeant according to De- Ano tural-student exchange program Williams has proposed. Met remain essentially the same as troit Fiee Press report . seeme' with the Free University of Berlin, 1R ule BThe Boaid in Control of Ath- in the past, a new requirement, has Now stationed at the Moulins mistic wase alsod nintroducedAthatn yestestrday'srequremenlhasvehicle subdepot in Bellerives -flight was also introduced at yesterday's leuics will decide whether to ap- been added. "Singers must not only meeting. prove the plan at its next meet- sing the role now, but must look Alier, France, M/Sgt. Victor Havjis from BONN, Germany - 0P) - Chan- ing," he said. No. date has yet the part too. No more robust so- of Detroit, cleared of disloyalty mosa. cellor Konrad Adenauer has de- been set for the next board meet-, pranos singing the engenue roles," charges in a 1951 Air Force in- They cided to form a four party coali- ing. the petite brunette commented. vestigation, is again under ques- day to tion to govern West Germany dun- * * Currently in the midst of a 20 tion as a security risk. and s R ing the next four years, informed IT WAS reported yesterday that city tour of the country, Miss Pe- h uavan political sources said yesterday. Ralph Young, director of athletics ters expressed a preference for E A sred W s m igton newsmen the sergeant is atea PressThe 77-year-old Chancellor, who at Michigan State College is en- younger audiences. Performing for scheduled for discharge Oct. 20.- THE ent of the Indochina state of Viet won a sweepig election victory thusiastic about the plan, which college students is especially en- ates that it will speed up creation on Sept. 6, plans to bring the Ref- has already met with the approval couraging, she said, "since they "I interceded to get him more gneral mnmunist-led guerillas.. ugee party into his new coalition of MSC's athletics board. have such a great interest in opera time' to prepare his defense,"' Commu m pledge In a formal note deliver- with the Free Democrats, the Ger- Proposed design for the trophy nowadays." the representative explained. ers wei man party and his Christian Dem- includes Paul Bunyan standing on The Bronx-born singer credited "The Air Force has assured me I dent : * * ocrats, these sources said. a map of the State of Michigan. this increased enthusiasm to the he will be granted all the time a globulin-originally considered enauer has been ruling with The design plan, however, is still recent introduction of operas in he needs." -South a three party coalition of Christian subject to further revision. It was English. Sgt. Havnis wrote the lawmaker arms" eing in "surplus" a consultan~t to aSthreeapartywcoalitionlofmChristian" Democrats, Free Democrats and also reported yesterday that Cris- A three-year veteran with the that he is regarded a risk because came the German party. The Refugee ler will meet with the trophy's Met, Miss Peters cited her debut his father, who died in 1932, was ing o * * prywnsathnteIisftewodein13,ws!igf iarty won seats in the federal designer to look over the present with the Company as a last-minute accused of being a Communist. Comm Pieck, 77, was re-elected presi- Parliament for the first time in plan at 1:30 p.m. today in Ann replacement in "Don Giavanni" The letter reported that as a Maj. for as the high point in her career. boy 12 years old, Sgt. Havris had Commu sie 'To Reach 'mistice Group MUNJOM -- UP) - Chinese s in South Korea demon- anew yesterday for with- of Indian troops guarding ommunist prisoners in the neutral zone. Tuesday India- complain- he UN Command that South - government leaders had statements "calculated to the civilian population. UT 1,000 Chinese rallied in Pagoda Park yesterday car- anners and signs which pro- "Indian atrocities against ic POWs," and said: "Stop killing of anti-Communist ilar demonstrations were by Chinese in the South n ports of Pusan and In- the past two days, an guards last week killed prisoners in quelling two iots in neutral zone camps. SEOUL demonstrators ap- messages to be sent to Pres- Eisenhower, South Korean nt Syngman Rhee, Allied ander Gen. John E. Hull, Ime, Pandit, Indian chair-, the UN General Assembly, ding withdrawal of the In- ustodial forces from Korea. ile the ralliers milled and ed, the South Korean pro- marshal general, Lt. Gen. Yong Duk, denied reports he has a plan for mass outs of the anti-Red pris- n if we had one," he said atement to the Associated "do you think I am foolish to disclose such plans?" a South Korean Defense y spokesman said he had wledge of any planned mih- ove to free the POWs. ther development that -d certain to reach the Ar- e Commission was the of 63 Chinese ex-prisoners Pusan to Nationalist For- landed in Taipen Thurs- a welcome of firecrackers peeches and were spun h the city's streets in a car- f open cars. 63 ESCAPED from Allied camps last June in the uproar when 27,000 anti- unist North Korean prison- re freed on order of Presi- yngman Rhee. / I World Ne W1 By The Asso WASHINGTON -The governme Nam has pledged to the United Sta of 135 new .battalions to fight Con The Viet Nam embassy gave th ed to the State Department. * * MIAMI-Polio-fighting gamm scarce-now has the prospect of b the government said yesterday. * * BERLIN-Communist Wilhelm dent of East Germany for another to keep "working for the unity2 of our fatherland." *, * WANT 'NO LEMON' GUARANTEE: attended Communist meetings1 with his father and been enrolled WASHINGTON - A polio-like mystery disease which hit the " nursing staff of a nearby sanitai- Financial Fears Block IFC Central Buying Plan ium is baffling Public Health Ser- vice scientists. -__ The health service announced By JON SOBELOFF buying plan because their alumni connections already get them yesterday that the disease, first The possibility that fraternities might get stuck with a financial "good deals" on meat or other items. reported last July, has struck again lemon seemed yesterday to be the biggest obstacle to setting up an But Zermtn pointed out that a house would not be forced to among nurses and other personnel interfraternity cooperative food buying program. buy any kind of food it didn't want from the central buying office of the Chestnut Lodge Sanitarium, "The fraternities want a guarantee of successful operation," In- if the plan went into effect. a private mental institution in terfraternity Council president C. A. Mitts, '54, said. IN SPITE of the belief of some fraternity men that the food proj- Rockville, Md. NPT fteble fsm rtriymnta h odpo- * **vFATENMTY Cue W m Zect was dying of malnutrition, Zerman said yesterday the central buy- * * *AE FRATERNITY Counselor William ghrZernan said failure to prro-ining program "has definitely not been abandoned." WASHINGTON-John E. Peur- i vide for enough alumni participation and support in the plan as or- IFC president Mitts agreed it was "a possibility" that cen- ifoy, a South Carolina Democrat, iginally proposed was another big problem. tral buying would be set up this year. "It's entirely up to the IFC ambassador to Guatemala. e cooperative buying scheme was so seriously considered executive committee and the fraternity presidents," he said. that a proposed constitution for "IFC Purchasers, Inc.," was mim- Mitts said the executive committee will decide whether to go * * eographed last November and distributed to fraternity presidents ahead with the buying plan two weeks from now when it hears a coi- WAHNGO--l~o f 32 nn.- mnAnAnea z,1.i... +, .~.,,-----,---,.,.1 -1 ..1aedwt h uyn-lntowesfo nwwe thasacm Ini th±e Yung communii.ist ULea~gue. NOW 32 YEARS old writh 14 years in the Air Force, Sgt. Havris argued he had simply followed his father "as any young boy, would do." Mrs. Havris said in Detroit thather husband, Michael, had never been a Communist to her knowledge. "I have never been a Commun- ist and neither has my son Vic- tor," the mother pointed out. "We're both loyal Americans and intend to be as long as we live," according to Mrs. Havris. J f f t , mission ference the der "seriou Pek Of Henr rector Project had all fear, sc peacful ergy. Speal lunchec Americ mmunist protests over Korean talk of "taking up against Indian troops at a long and angry meet- f the Military Armistice aission. Gen. Lee Sang Cho, senior unist member of the com- , ddclared that any inter- by South Korea troops in militarized zone would have s consequences." aceful Use Atom Seeni by The Associated Press y J. Gomberg, assistant' di- of the University's Phoenix , said yesterday the atom but blinded America with o that we couldn't see the 1 possibilities of atomic en- .king at a Rotary Club on in Detroit, Gemberg said ans overlook. the fact that Rnnf,* m IQtQ