EDITOR'SNOTE See Page 4 L Latest Deadline in the State Da itj O'T 1f d VOL. LXIV, No. 21 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1953 SIX PAGES i Korea Talks School Freedom Radulovich May Enlist May Appeal Neutral Aid VTo President 'Honest Broker' OK If Necessary By The Associated Press The United States will accept a neutral nation as "honest broker" in the Korean peace conference if necessary, a Western .diplomatic source said yesterday. He said the United. States now feels that the conference might in its latter stages need the services of a neutral country, such as India, Sweden or Switzerland, to aid in the deliberations between the UN side and the Communist delegates. s * * IN ANOTHER problem concern- ing Korean peace talks Chinese anti-Communist prisoners refused yesterday to attend "explanations" } at which the Reds hoped to coax them into returning to their Com- munist homeland, an authoritative. source said. The prisoners were moved into 250-man compounds but flatly refused to leave them for tent booths where the Communist 'explainers" were waiting to in- terview them, the source said. The commander of Indian cus- todian troops yesterday issued an ultimatum to demonstrating anti- Communist Chinese war prisoners to listen to Red "explanation" teams or he would send soldiers into the compounds. LT. GEN. K. S. Thimayya told the shouting, bugle-blowing, rock- throwing prisoners he would give them four hours to decide whether to attend the sessions. Thimayya said the troops would try to persuade the pris- esoners to attend, but that "if they do not emerge voluntarily I suppose we will have to use some force. The prisoners were flatly re, fusing to listen to Communist rep- resentatives who hope to coax them back to Communist rule. The long-delayed explanations to the reluctant prisoners were to have started at 8 a.m. yesterday but hours later the Chinese still were loudly refusing. When newsmen were conducted on a tour yesterday of the expla- nation centers, the angry. prison- ers hurled rocks at Russian jeeps, carrying Red visitors. Bowles Opens 1~ t Lectures Wit Talk on Peace. 41 'I ,I r t, a i t r i Substitute Motion Heavily Defeated;l SL Puts Issue First on Next Agenda Attorneys Seek Aid ofFerguson By DOROTHY MYERSI I i For a fourth straight week time prevented Student Legislature U~niversit~v senior Milo . Ra - from taking a vote yesterday on an academic freedom policy stand. dulovich yesterday considered an A complete substitute motion offered by Leah Marks, '55L, and appeal to President Dwight D. seconded by Ruth Rossner, '55, was adopted as the main motion and Eisenhower in an attempt to re- three attempts to amend the new motion were defeated by large ma- verse an Air Force decision which has branded him a "doubtful se- jorities. Byj s vote of 22-8, SL voted to take up the question of an aca- curity risk.d demic freedom policy stand as the first item of business on next Intervention by Sen. Homer Ferguson (R-Mich.) was also week s agenda. sought by the attorneys in the event the4,Secretary of the Ai EARLIER IN THE meeting SL members who attended the recent Force fails to reverse a 10th Air r -_ _National Student Association sum- Force board's decision which ruled AMEN: mer congress dicussed NSA's his- against Radulovich. A~~tIEN: tort' and current activities.* * The sixth annual congress, BF m y which met for 10 days on OhioI State University's campus wasI divined into four main commis- sions-student government, edu- cational affairs, student affairs and international relations. S n NChristine Reifel, '55; Ruth Ross- By JON SOBELOFF ner, '55; Paula Levin, '55; Treasur-. Smiling down at her newborn er Steve Jelin, '55, and SL Presi- fifteenth child, an Ypsilanti wom- dent Bob Neary, '54BAd., gave re- an said yesterday, "A large fam- ports on what each commission ily is a blessing of the Lord." had discussed and adopted. Then she named the baby boy .* "Amen." - AFTER THE reports, AssociateE MRS. ALEX BOW, 43-year-old Dean of Women Sarah L. Healy, mother 'of eight girls and seven who attended the sessions, urged NOT ACCUSED of any disloy- alty himself, the 26-year-old physics major faces loss of his reserve status for "close and con- tinuous association" with his sis- ter allegedly involved in Com- munist activities. Eisenhower Tour Ar( Ike Declares Emplayes Must Testify McCarthy Hunts Radar Files By The Associated Press The government-made two ma- jor moves yesterday to loosen tongues of witnesses reluctant, to testify before congressional com- mittees "because the answer might tend to incriminate" them. President Eisenhower gave agen- cy heads the right to fire any gov- ernment employe who uses the "incrimination" excuse. ATTY. GEN. Brownell said the Administration will ask Congress next year for legislation permit- ting him to grant immunity from prosecution in some cases as a means of forcing witnesses to tes- tify. Brownell did not go into de- tail on the proposed immunity legislation but said it would give him, as attorney general, the EVANGELIST-Billy Graha power to grant immunity per- Ealy Gra haps in conjunction with the nearly 4,000 people yesterda congressional committees. World Dilemma."-Unversit duced Graham. He said, however, that the at- * torney general should have the AS 4,00LISTEN: main say because, as the gov- A 4,00 IT N ernment's chief legal officer, he might have access to knowledge 'Spiritual I about a witness' background notI known to the committee. *~~ *(~ll~2 d Fmi mud Midwest on 5 State boys, gave birth to the nine pound SB to make more clear the close six ounce infant at University relationship between its local pro- Hospital Monday. jects and those of NSA. ":Chat's the last word ,in the She also discussed the recent; Bible " Mrs. Bow told Dr A. attacks charging Communist- , Gordon Reynolds. And she add- domination of NSA made by Stu- ed "Amen! That's all. Fifteen dents for America, a groupI children is enough." which she said grew out of the Her husband Alex, telephoned MacArthur Clubs. Mrs. Healy at home in Ypsilanti, laughed and commented that the last meet- said, "I just hope it is." ing of deans of women and deans * ** of men determined that "the THE BOWS' other children slanderous attacks made by SFA range in age from two to 26 years. on NSA" should be reviewed, and Th e four oldest girls are married,' that after the review NSA was but it still takes "a lot of mik"- "entirely cleared" of the SFA about eight to 10 quarts a day- charges. to feed his brood, Bow said. N ed Simon, '55. urged serious The Bows named their eighth consideration of SFA by SL be-I child Hope. "I guess we hoped :cause, he said, "SFA's charges a',e that would be the last, too," Bow more widely circulated than are explained. NSA's refutation of the charges." An $85-a-week mason's helper, A REPO *T on a Japanese- Bow admitted the children still American seminar sponsored dur- at home "keep him busym." ing thesummer by NSA was given Dr. Reynolds, who delivered the by Rose Marie Hussey, Grad. Missf infant, said Mrs. Bow's latest Hussey, who attended the Japa- blessig was a "good healthy boy" nese conference, discussed Japa-i and added the mother was n "fine nese student organizations and shape." "I haven't seen a fifteenth student problems. She urged SB to in a long time, Dr. Reynolds consider furthering plans° already commented. initiated by NSA which would en-, The baby's name is pronounced able Japanese students to study in with a long "a" with the accent Alerica next year.n on the first syllable, the doctor Herb Zimmerman, '56, and1 explained, so it's really "sort of David Grosse, '56, were named to musical._f ill seats left vacant by the resig- nation of Pete Dow, '55BAd., and Student Director Gene McCracken. OhLee Abrams, '55, was appointed One-hundred eight Student Di- by the legislature to fill a post rectories remain for sale at the opened by the removal of Sam Student Publications Bldg. on Davis, '54, who was forced to drop Maynard St. from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. off SL because of lack of attend- today. ance at meetings. I 1 !l 1 , , i ' 1 1 i J M Radulovich has maintained throughout the hearing that an adverse ruling would wreck his future career as a physicist and meteorologist. ."If I'm kicked out of the Air Force it means I have lost seven years of my life," Radulovich said. "I'm 26 now and that is pretty old to start over again. That's why I have to fight this." Sen. Ferguson indicated earlier in the proceedings he would take an interest in the case if Radulo- vich did not get a fair hearing. Both Radulovich and his at- torneys have claimed the hearing held at Selfridge field was unfair and that one of the three colonels listening to the testimony was pre- judiced against the defendant. Italian Youths Raid Trieste -Daily-Don, Campbell m, evangelist and lecturer, addressed y in Hill Auditorium on "The Present y Regent Roscoe O. Bonisteel intro- * * * Renaissance' b G h NlYlik v In New York, Sen. Joseph Mc- .aIe rU my ra V ' a m Carthy (R-Wis) said yesterday a yI scientist pal of atom spy Julius ----- .Rosenberg admits taking 43 secret By MARK READER TRIESTE-1P)--A band of 200 documents from Army Signal A hushed audience listened to Evangelist Billy Graham yesterday pro-Italian youths raided offices orps files some years ago. Army call for a "spiritual Renaissance" to save the Western World from of the Yugoslav economic delega- agents later recovered them i a destruction and the onslaught of a "fanatical" Communist religion. tion here yesterday, smashed win- 1946 raid on the scientist's home, Speaking before a crowd of 4,000 students and townspeople .who dows and hurled out the furni- c ypacked Hill Auditorium, the lanky preacher accused mankind of hu- ture. There was no evidence the se- manizing God and defying man, thus leading America into its pres- * **crets ever got beyond the sci- ent "tqrtnented, empty, thirsty age." / THE VIOLENCE flared after a entist, although McCarthy said * * * week of uneasiness here about re- there was a possibility. IN R EFi ERE in the Koran War. the evano'elis tol dthe Ike Defends Farm.PolEy During Tour Dispute Rages In Farm Belt- WASHINGTON-()-President Dwight D. Eisenhower set out on a five-state swing through the Mid- west farm belt yesterday in the face of a stormy controversy over his administration's farm .policies. Heavy political repercussions rolled up as an aftermath of a sur- prise Democratic election victory in Wisconsin, where the predomi- nately rural 9th District elected a Democrat to Congress for the first time in its history. * * * DEMOCRATS took pains to point out that the Republican los- er, State Sen. Arthur L. Padrutt, pegged his campaign to "four square" support of the Eisenhower administration. The winner, Lester R. John son, had denounced the admin- istration's farm policy. Some Republican leaders brush ed the episode aside as having little significance in the national political picture. Others reflected serious misgivings and admitted it was a "jolt." (Democratic leaders, gleefully cheering the outcome, hailed it as a bellwether for Democratic vic- tory in the 1954 congressional ele- * *ions. SSENESES. Kefauver (D Tenn.), who campaigned for the winner, said the result showed " a j general dissatisfaction with the farm, power and money policies of the administration." Sen. Olin Johnston (D-S.C.) called for'the ouster of Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Benson, de- claring that farmers are "red hot" about what he called Ben- son's "do-nothing-ness." "If President Eisenhower doesn't change his secretary of agricul- ture, and do it soon, he will sink witlh him,"" Sen. Johnston said. Benson, who is scheduled to speak with Eisenhower at a meet- ing of the Future Farmers. of America in Kansas City sent word to newsmen that he would have no comment on the Wisconsin vote. Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell, a major GOP strategist in last year's presidential campaign, told news- men at a National Press Club luncheon that the Wisconsin re- sult did not necessarily foreshadow GOP losses in next year's election. Prof. Joiner Speaksto Crib "Poised, confident and ener- getic," the trial lawyer, as Prof. Charles Joiner of the Law School describes him, "is ready for any- thing and fears nothing." Speaking to the Michigan Crib, pre-legal society, yesterday, rof. Joiner outlined the qualities of the ideal advocate. He admitted the merits of office law, but insisted j that 'nothing holds quite the same excitement as trial law. Poised, confident and energetic himself, Prof. Joiner described the perfect advocate as much by his mariner as by his speech. A 13- year law practice has initiated him to the unending list of practital details that distinguish the ex- perienced lawyer. It takes more than hard work to make a successful advocate, but Prof. Joiner feels that it is one of the ' most important factors. Nevertheless, h advises, "Don't mistake aspiration for inspira- tion." Hauser To Speak Chester A. Bowles, former Unit-+ ed States ambassador to India, will discuss "Our Best Hope for Peace in Asia," at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium, opening this year's Lecture Series. Due to years of study in national and international'affairs, as a bus- iness leader and as U. S. ambassa- dor to India,' Bowles occupies a position of distinction on the American scene, and is frequently called upon to interpret the U. S. position in national and interna- tional affairs. APPOINTED ambassador in 1951, Bowles served in New Delhi and Nepal until April of this year. During that time, he traveled rex- Ptensively throughout Asia, and in the past year has visited most of the countries of the Far East. During World War II, Bowles was OPA administrator, a mem- ber of the 'War Production Board and the Economic Stabil- ization Board. Following the war, he was sent to Paris as American delegate to the first conference of UNESCO. Following Bowles' lecture, the India Students Association is ar- ranging a reception to be held at approximately 10 p.m. in Lane' Hall. The public is invited to this informal gathering, according to Jagdish C. Bagai, Grad., presi- dent of the Association. SDA Discusses Freedom Issue { : percussions from the decision of the United States and Britain to withdraw their 7,000 occupation' troops from Zone A of the Free, Territory of Trieste, including this' port city, and turn over the zone's administration to Italy. Persons of both factions in the long dispute between Italy and Yugoslavia over the territory's future violated an order by Maj. Gen. Sir John Winterton, Brit- ish commander of the Allied oc- cupation forces, temporarily banning "public meetings, par- ades and demonstrations by po- litical parties and associations." About 2,000-strong, Slovenes and pro-Yugoslav Commumists battled territorial police with fistsI and umbrellas in an angry demon- stration in the center of Trieste to I back Tito's protest against the transfer of Zone A to Italy's rule., "We will give our lives, but not Trieste," they shouted, a slogan voiced for days by Yugoslav dem- onstrators in Belgrade, the Yugo- slav capital. "Comrade Tito, give us guns." However, the senator claimed audience: a number of top secret radar doc- -------- ------ uments-not necessarily the same1 ones the witness was talking about: --eventually fell into CommunistF hands in East Germany. In Washington, the Army said a Be Halted it had no information on the find- ing of any such papers in Ger- _ OPENINGS: IFC ToHold Try DOl S 2 t s ar 11\ ~ r,.' ' A L'Pf . rUV 11C17,1 CV I YYd~le b1C v t*AZ,.lltu L'JUt4 vl "I have asked myself,. 'Does every generation ha've to fight it out? Is there no end to war?' "I think our troubles all, started about 50 years ago," he continued, "when we kicked God out the win- dow" and substituted an "era many. Then it amended this statement to say it had "no infor- mation to give out." Deadline Seniors and graduates are re- minded that Friday is the final deadline for making Senior Picture appointments. Pictures for the '54 Ensian are being taken through that day only. Appointments may be made from 2 to 5:30 p.m. today and tomorrow at the 'Ensian offices in the Student Publications Bldg. and from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today on the Diag. WIN IN WISCONSIN: illiams Hails Democrati Construction of a prison camp 0f fraud, rationalism, natural- ism, idealism and positivism." near the National Music Camp "We have taken a moral plunge," at Interlochen may be abandoned, Graham charged. "We have pro- it was learned yesterday. , gressed materially,. but morally Joseph E. Maddy, founder of and spiritually we have not pro- the camp, commented that con- gressed." He pointed to the in- creasing divorce rate in the coun- struction of the correction camp ;try as evidence of this. must be discontinued in order to "When a home crumbles, a way protect the young people who at- of life crumbles," he maintained. tend Interlochen each summer. * * Maddy obtained an injunction GRAHAM TOLD'the attentive againyt construi nastu audience he had conferred with against construction last Satur- Secretary of State Dulles recent- day. ly who felt the Western World The Corrections Commission is was in a decline-a sunset, and expected to discuss the matter at doomed, unless a spiritual rebirth their meeting Oct. 21 and then occured. decide whether to dispute injunc- Viewing Communism as a tion proceedings and obtain a test menace to Christianity, Graham of law.. lashed into this, "fanatical re- ligion that knows what it is about." "I have seen Communists all over the world," he went on, "and [c V ictory I want to tell you students that we're only going to lick them with a stronger concept. In my opin- ion-Christianity." I upon the dangers of the hydrogen * bomb, she added. . THE SOUTHERN preacher saw * three things which mankind has "WE ARE TOLD to believe we not been able to explain. He list- have twice as effective an Air ed them as: 'Force with one third the money 1) Human iniquity-"the tend- scientists consider necessary, and ency to do things that are wrong" greater national security with less and of which "we are all guilty." defense," the former Treasurer re- 2) Human sorrow-"which the marked. psychiatrist can only disect." "We "They promised tax reduc- find this in rich and poor alike,"f tion but in, effect have raised Graham said. taxes, in addition we are threat- 3) The problem of death-"You ened with a federal sales tax can't put it in a test-tube. You . . . that benefits the rich and can't work it out mathematically. hurts the poor," she claimed. It hangs in front of. us like a She also charged the Adminis- shadow," the evangelist declared. By ARLENE LISSj Hailing the Democrat congres- I sional victory in Wisconsin as a' definite indication that the peo- ple are "repudiating RepublicanE farm policy, Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liams claimed last night that the country is "profoundly disillus-1 ioned" with the Administratio'. Speaking before a Democrat second congressional district rally and dinner at the Union, the gov- ernor charged that Republicans were surrendering to "blind eco- nomic forces" and are "more in- terested in maintaining the law of supply and demand than ad- justinsg the farmers' standard of full employment and no creep- ing Hooverism." Georgia Neese Clark Gray, form- er Treasurer of the United States, who shared the speaker's plat- form with Williams, accused the Eisenhower administration of "muddling through." "The lack 'of leadership in Washington" is causing much comment in political circles Mrs. IGray said. This indecision and confusion is characterized by Re-' publican leaders' failure to agreet -Daily-Malcolm Shatz MAIL GOES OUT-IFC office manager Frank Vick (left), Mike Lynch (center) and- Richard Little ready some publicity for' mailing. Rea To Explain '13 'U V C l 11 '3' -n1k' no Jb3~£ I tration was openly operating in1 "There is no answer to these ! ___ _°