EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 4 \:I InkAa JA6F or :43 a t t U > sI Latest Deadline in the State aEVY WARM VOL. LXIV, No. 25 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1953 SIX PAGES UN Experts Offer Views In NY Talks Murphy Explains Position of U.S. By VIRGINIA VOSS Daily Editorial Director Special To The Daily NEW YORK-Fourteen interna- tionally minded speakers took the platform of the United Nations General assembly Hall Sunday night and alternately praised and criticized the UN as an agent for achieving peaceful change. Addressing some 2,000 persons at the opening session of the twenty-second annual New York Herald Tribune Forum, Robert D. Murphy, Assistant Secretary of State for UN Affairs, held that strong support of the UN "is fun- damental to our foreign policy" but pot the only instrumentality of that policy. "STRONG popular faith in the UN does not mean that "We as a government or people are blindly committed to some visionary ad- venture" or that "the United States had sacrificed sovereign rights to the UN" Murphy said. Emphasizing the United States' attempt to do its best to fulfill membership obligatiohs in the UN, the State Depart- ment representative deplored the widespread lack of under- standing which results in impa- tience with both the UN and the tactics of the United States r Delegation. In answer to the "more action, less talk" line of criticism directed at the U.S. delegation, Murphy ex- plained that U.S. representatives S"try to act in ways which will be persuasive to other public opin- ions as well as our own". UN General Assembly President Mme. Vijaya Oakshmi Pandit opened the four-session forum l with a plea for acceptance of the UN by all nations. The 'slight Indian diplomat outlined "perma- nence and stability within change," as the UN's not yet realized goal. * * * "IT IS VITAL to our age that we do everything in our power to promote a more thoughtful and patient evaluation of the difficult task which confronts the UN," Mme. Pandit concluded. The present need to "buy time" while the constructive forces working for peaceful progress can gain momentum was stressed in a message pre- pared by UN Secretary General Dag Ham arskjQld and read by Ralph J. bunchi in Hammar- skjoid's absence. In spite of its pessimistic ring, the world's greatest problem-that of "peaceful co-existence"-has a .positive implication, the Ham- marskjold message said. "It gives) us a chance to work for such' peaceful change as is needed if we are to justify the hope for one, world of peace." Forum delegates from 200 col- leges and universities, women's organizations and business, labor, religious and educational groups also heard analysis of specific problems in areas like Africa, Li- bya and Korea. A PANEL discussion of "Public Opinion and the United Ntations" drew the sessions' sharpest criti- cism of the UN from Indonesian representative Soedjatmoko. "To many nations, "the young diplo- mat said, "the cause of the appar- ent failure of the UN lies not in its structure but in the insistence of the major power on subordi- nating considerations of merit and justice to the dictates of power politics." It often seems to Asians that the UN is operating only in the space left to it by the Big Pow- ers, Soedjatmoko held. "New patterns for Mid-Century Living," the theme of the forum Near Tragedy UN Requests Cecs Arab-Israel i Full Report Council Passes J7 LodgeProposal UNITED NATIONS - (AP) - The Security Council approved yester- Reds day a motion by Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., requesting a full report from the UN truce supervisor on To D recent acts of violence between Israel and neighboring Arab states. IKo re, sIt has not yet formally put thisnrPe new crisis in Palestine on the agenda. But the request was dis- patched anyway for Maj. Gen. cine1 Vagn Bennike of Denmark, chief of staff of the UN truce supervi- (inPi sion organization in Palestine, to fly here and tell the Council about TOKYO- the latest events. yesterday ag Diping Poles O K's t, -- -T- --- - - -- -- Agree )iscuss a Issue Delay; Red Walk-out Complicates POWTalks Neutrals Veto Use of Force PANMUNJOM'-- -Angry Czech and Polish members report- edly walked out on the Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission yesterday, a break that may por- tend collapse of Communist at- tempts to persuade 22,400 -*anti- Red prisoners to return home. Reliable sources said the two Communist members stalked out when Swiss and Swedish members and the Indian chairman refused to force North Korean prisoners to attend persuasion sessions. Otteren * * -Daily-Gerry van Ott A BUSY DAY, TOO BUSY-During the mid-afternoon yester near tragedy was avoided in 'Ann Arbor by quick acting pu servants. A woodpile in back of the Gamma Phi Beta house cau fire when a spark from a burning pile of leaves in the Soro backyard ignited the stored wood. Firemen called to the sc quickly put out the flames and little damage resulted. ACROSS YUGOSLAV ENTRY: Crack Italian Troops Move Into Positions By The Associated Press Camouflaged units of Italy's crack Folgore Lightning mf division moved into positions yesterday near the strategic elbi Yugoslavia, Italy and the Allied-occupied zone of Trieste Free ritory. Troops, tanks and artillery of the division moved under co of early morning darkness into the area a few miles north of ship-building city of Monfalcone on the Gulf of Trieste. T were the first Italian troops known to have been thrown acros possible Yugoslav entry route toward the narrow neck which c nects British-American occupied Zone A of Trieste with /It jTHE COUNCIL will meet again today to settle how the question shall be listed on the agenda. It eren is not expected to hear Bennike day until late in the week. blic The United States, Britain fght and France called the council )sis' into an urgent session yester- ene day. They had sharply de- nounced an Israeli attack .last - Wednesday on the Jordan bor- der village of Kibya. The Jordan government report- ed 66 Arabs were killed and nine wounded. Israel claimed tension in the area was Jordan's fault and began steps for an inquiry into all border incidents since the 1949 Israel-Arab armistice agreements took effect. Meanwhile, the United States fantry notified Israel it will withhold ow of American financial aid until the Ter- Israeli government stops trying to divert the'Jordan River along the ver Syrian frontier. Syria has com- the plained about this diversion to the ,hey Security Council and that com- y plaint is slated to be heard Thurs- ss a day. on- * * * aly. AT YESTERDAY'S session talian Lodge sat quietly through a bog of U. S. envoyr munjom tos rean peacet scheduled to But in ac nists in a no ping radio o discussing w tend. This i has balkeda momentouss ese Disagree articipants j -W)-TheCCommunists greed to meet with a next Monday at Pan-: arrange for the Ko- conference, originally begin Oct. 28. cepting, the Commu- ote broadcast by Pei-' nce more insisted on hich nations shall at- s the very issue that all efforts to get the session started. A U. S. SPOKESMAN at theE United Nations said the U. S. rep- resentative, Arthur Dean, would fly to Panmunjom later this week for the talks. Dean, special State Department consultant, will be ac- companied by a half dozen ad- visers and will pick up others in Tokyo and Seoul. The United States, after con- sulting its allies in the Korean War, sent the Communists a note last week proposing a meeting at Panmunjom to select a time and place for the peace confer- ence. The U. S. note said the Allies would be ready to discuss the ques- tion of neutrals attending the peace conference "to the extent consistent with" previous decisions made-by the United Nations. In yesterday's note Premier Chou En-lai of Red China made clear he believed the question of neutral nations participating was' more important than settling the time and place. ,... E E --Daily-Gerry Van+ D~TI'K O'RH~A TT(vJj E-'OgV ALI MS RPTERRP " A.11 '' " ^tS"fa *iL1S 7 .b''^ THE SWISS government backed up its delegate, announcing in Bern it ,had given, him "categori- cal instructions with which Switz- erland seeks to avoid the use of force under all circumstances." It By Organized Students said use of force would violate the Geneva Convention. A NNRC spokesman refused By FRAN SHELDON Then the prospective rioters to confirm or deny the walkout" and MARK READER marched down E. Madison, turned report. An aimless, shifting mob of stu- + onto Thompson and went on to The hour for the regular daily dents exploding fireworks and Chicago House. Many of the stu- repatriation commission seseton mildly threatening a panty-raid dents turned back before reaching passed yesterday with no delegates milled outside the co-ed occupied their destination when a police car on hand for the meeting. Chicago House, West Quad, for 45 cruised by. A spokesman said it was not cer- minutes last night before being * * * tain there would be a meeting, but dispersed by an organized group of IN THE MIDDLE of the mass declined other comment. fellow students. could be heard talk of being draft- Ordinarily the NNRC would The demonstration marked the ed if the incident got out of hand. have met at 7 p.m., yesterday but second time in ten days bands of The demonstration was finally an hour later no delegates had ar- men have marched through the squelched when a group of stu- rived. campus. The previous outburst oc- dents led by football captain Dick All curred following a "Beat Iowa" O'Shaughnessy, '55Ed, and Dick Al Red explanation sessional urrd w'Balziser '54E fullback for the were canceled yesterday, as they pep rally * Wolverine team asked the men to were Sunday. The Communists *l.*_* Wolverin. _eamas e m'n1- 4 An C . Dulles Back From Parley. WASHINGTON-(M)-Secretary of State Dulles returned to his desk yesterday with a new stack of troubles piling up over the pro- posed Korean peace conference and the potentially explosive cris- es in Trieste and Palestine. The secretary was greeted by these rapid-fire developments: They also are the first I soldiers to move within a few miles1 of Zone A, on which Yugoslav President Marshal Tito has threat- ened to march if a single Italian1 soldier enters the zone after Brit- ish and American forces withdraw. Meanwhile in Belgrade, Borba,1 the voice of Communist leaders of Yugoslavia, warned last night that Italian occupation of Trieste's Zone A "with or without troops is, the same thing" and is unaccept- able to Yugoslavia. The declaration "with or with-: but troops" was significant in that' there has been much speculation! as to what the Yugoslav attitude1 technicalities touched off when Charles Malik of Lebanon, the only member of the Council rep- resenting an Arab League state, demanded that the three Western powers put a specific complaint before the Council. Malik objected to the proposal that the Council discuss the "Palestine question." He want- ed the agenda to read: "The question of Palestine: recent acts of violence committed by the Israeli Army against Jordan." At the end of three hours of talk, Lodge told the Council thef APPROXIMATELY 700 men 1) Communist China agreed to would be toward control of Zone reports from Palestine were mo meet with the United Nations al- A by Italian police instead of and more serious and were not lies, at Panmunjom next Monday. troops. laughing matter. 2) Mounting tension between Is- For the second day Belgrade- rael and the Arab states, stem- remained in puzzled anxiety as ming from bloody Israel-Jordan the government clamped a rigidlSewell Treated border incidents, came under dis- ban~ on any official reaction to cussion at an urgent meeting of the Western foreign ministers' lI ' ' H o ital the United Nations Security Coun- proposal for a five-power confer- p cil in New York. ence.° Tnive sit H 'nnitnl nffi nilc re a i P- from the South and West Quad- Atom Group rangles gathered in front of the entrances of the dorms and march- ed on Chicago House only to be met by barred doors which had been closed by the occupants of neighboring Lloyd House. The American Bar Association's special committee on atomic en- Two students admitted to The ergy will meet tomorrow and Daily following the incident Thursday at the laW' School to they had given direction to the prepare a report of recommenda- group as it hesitated in descend- tions, requested by the Joint Con- ing 'on the women's residence. gressional Committee, on Atomic Energy, relative to amendments They claimed their ieason was to the Atomic Energy Act of 1946. to carry out a "cinical experi- Dean E. Blythe Stason of the ment" to prove that an uncertain, law school, chairman of the com- group could be led by a few men mitte said that if the recom- with a purpose." Both students re- mendations were approved by the Association's Board of Governors * * * he would then present them to the ACTING Dean of Students Wal- joint committee in Washington ter B. Rea said the entire inci- on Nov. 1. dent was "not worthy of com- ment." Academiuic Freedom Shortly after 10:30 p.m. yes- terday the demonstration began Group To Meet as the quadders descended into the streets. However, many of . Student Legislature's Academic the men remained in their rooms tFreedom Sub-Commission will calling, "knock it off." meet at 4 p.m. today in Rm. 3-KLf of the Union to discuss plans for IFC f ll II t an academic freedom week sched- -'C Ba"' Pos"s uled for Nov. 15 to 21, a pamphlet Petitions for the general chair- presenting many divergent views manship of IFC Ball are due today on the topic, debates and an all- in the Interfraternity Council of- day conference. fice, Rm. 3-C in the Union. E disperse because they were acting insisted on talking to 1,000 like "MSC students." North 'Korean prisoners. India said the prisoners could not be As the two gridiron stars spoke persuaded to attend. the girls in Chicago House who Some Allied quarters said the had previously been silent and Reds might be using the dispute had doused the lights in their over North Korean prisoners as an rooms peered through the cur- excuse to stall off for the time be.. tained windows. ing and perhaps ultimately aban- "We felt locked in and safe and don their explanations. only a few girls got excited," said These sources pointed out the Mrs. Lois Kemph, resident direc- Reds had been taking a propagan- tor of Chicago House. da beating so far. They have talk- ed to 921 Chinese and only 19 agreed to return to conimunism. It is believed the Communists had expected a much higher percent- *age. i i i . i ) l e F CAMPUS DEVELOPED: . i Engineers' Centennial To Show Do-All Motor By FRAN SHELDON Nearly hidden in the maze of machinery typifying the College of Engineering is the capaciter motor, a small machine that reduces the cost of running electrically driven household appliances. This motor, which will be on display in the electrical engineering laboratories during the engineering college Centennial celebration uivr~ ynospuai oiciais re- ported last night that Robert Sew- ell, '56, involved in a serious auto- mobile accident early Sunday morning, was "resting comfort- ably," but could not receive visit-. ors for at least the next five days. Sewell suffered a fractured neck when the rear left wheel of the auto that he and Robert Camp- bell, '56, were driving at Ford and Plymouth Roads suddenly lifted off the road. Campbell was treated for face lacerations and released. Campbell pointed out that Sew- ell would appreciate letters from friends. Petitions for the 23 elective Student Legislature seats which will be voted on .during Novem- ber campus elections are avail- able from 1 to 5 p.m. today through Saturday at the SL Bldg. Deadline for returning com- pleted petitions is set for noon Saturday. Twentyone of the seats available are for full- year terms, two for one-semes- ter positions. Campus-wide general elec- tions to fill the posts have been, scheduled for Wednesday and3 Thursday, Nov. 11 and 12. 'U' Experts Give. Views On Benson By WALLY EBERHARD Commenting on the controversy centering about Secretdry of Ag- riculture Benson, Prof. George A. Peek of the political science de- partment said yesterday the "farm slump didn't take place overnight and it is just unfortunate for the Republican party they happen to be taking the burden. The same i bhn be naly trild ha ha~. Gopher Tickets Friday and Saturday was-develop- ed by two University professors. * * * THE JOINT work of Benjamin- F. Bailey and the late Prof. James S. Gault of the electrical engi- neering department, the capaciter motor furnishes the power to drive, small machines including many household appliances. COUNSELING SERVICE: Bias Clause Removal Plans Underway ting pro agiy wouia nave nap- pened if the Democrats were kin Still onSale power." * * * fe places are still left on SENATOR Young (R-N.D.) said the Gopher-Goer, the special train Saturday that Secretary Benson to Minneapolis for Saturday's foot- ought to quit the cabinet because ball game against the University farmers." The Senator interpreted of Minnesota, according to Deane I the election of a Democrat in Wis- Dixon, '54, Wolverine Club special consin usua epbcan Wts tripschaiman.consin's usually Republican 9th trips chairman. Congressional District as a sym- All pamentsw fbol *of widespread farmer discon- due tomorrow. tent. were further examined late yes-z terday by seven speakers including University representative Charles1 By JON SOBELOFF h t E. Odegaard, Dean of the College' According to Prof. Alfred H. With most campus fraternities scheduled to hold national conven- of Literature, Science and the Arts. Lovell of the electrical engineer- tions next summer, the fraternity system is beginning to get its bias The two remaining sessions to- ing department, an increased ef- clause removal plans underway. day will be concluded with a talk ficiency and a better power fac- Interfraternity Council executive vice-president John Baity, '55, by Secretary of State John Fos- tor (amount of work done on a said yesterday that within another week members of a special IFC ter Dulles.I certain amount of current) al- lows such household appliances ommittee under his direction would begin visiting campus houses to C gm answer questions about Big Ten Counseling Service. Camp End orsed1 as washing machines, vacuum * p cleaners and automatic dish- The building of a prison work washers to consume less elee- .BAITY ADDED, "If a house wants to remove its bias clause camp near the National Music tricity in operation thereby re- next summer, it should begin working now." Camp at Interlochen has been en- ducing operating costs. Set up to help any big 10 school fraternity sound out the opin- They previously used the service in the spring of 1952. Alpha Tau Omega vice-president Dave Netting, '54, said use of the service would be discussed at next week's chapter meeting. Net- ting termed the service "a very good thing that fraternities should use to find out how other chapters feel." * ** * The total cost of the trip to Min- neapolis, including transportation and football tickets, is $42.50. The deposits of students who do not DELTA CHI has already used the service and is still tabulating re- 'make final payments will be for- plies from its September questionnaire. feited, Dixon said. The local chapter of Delta Chi voted to support clause removal Reservation payments for the last year. But nationally the removal outlook is not good. trip may be made from 10 a.m. Bill Courtwright, '54, Delta Chi president, reported the trend of to noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. to- questionnaire replies was about 85 per cent against abolishing the re- day and tomorrow at window 7 in Prof. Peek pointed out that it is nothing unusual in govern- ment for one person such as Secretary Benson to take the blame for a crisis. "Benson is doing an honest job," he. ex- plained, "but is not very politi- cally adept." Few radical changes to the pres- 'ent farm policy-the Anderson