0 EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State DrntF ,.: .: 1 , ' . 1, , + °°. VOL. LXIV, No. 26 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1953 I&~ T P Ir ti WARMER $IX PAGES New Peace Michigan Mascot Plea Given By Churchill Soviets Criticize. Prime Minister LONDON -(R)- Prime Ministe Churchill appealed to the Sovie Union yesterday to co-operate fo peace. Almost at the same time, the Soviets reopened criticism o Churchill, thereby throwing fresi doubt on the chances for Four- Power meetings. In the House of. Commons Churchill expressed hope the Kremlin would accept the West', bid for a Big Four conference of foreign ministers as "an invalu- able step toward reducing worlC tension." He also. reiterated his wish for talks on a top level in- volving himself, President Eisen- hower and Premier Malenkov. - * CHURCHILL appeared in the House for the first time in four months. He expressed regret he had been unable, because of ill liealth, to go to a Bermuda con- ference with Eisenhower and Premier Laniel of France. Now, he noted, Soviet Russia has been invited to a foreign ministers' session at Lugano, Switzerland, Nov. 9. "I think such a meeting would be an invaluable step toward a reduction of international tension and a solution of major European problems," he said. "We hope Molotov, the Soviet foreign minis- ter will accept. "This involves no change in our outlook," he added with a glance toward Laborites who have accus- ed the government af abandoning proposals for a top-level meeting. OUR VIEW remains that friend- ly, informal and personal talks between the leading figures in the countries mainly involved might do good and could not easily do much harm." Almost as If by design, the Soviet press carried a bitter at- tack on Churchill yesterday. A year or more ago, the Mos- cow papers frequently described Churchill as an archeriminal or worse, but recently they have refrained from attacking him. Red Star, Soviet army news- paper, said Churchill in a recent speech sought to issue an ultima- tum to France on ratification of the treaty for a European Defense rCommunity. "There is considerable evidence of anger with Churchill," an As- sociated Press correspondent re- ported through the Moscow cen- sorship. "These attacks are one more indication, of the Soviet at- titude toward recent Western ap- proaches to Moscow." Famed Boston Concert Group TQ Play at Hill Dulles Tells Press Soviet Significance Odegaard Also Speaks at Forum Special to The Daily NEW YORK-Winding up the four-session New York Herald Tri- bune Forum, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles last night claimed that Moscow's answer to a proposal for a foreign ministers meeting on Germany would be: highly significant. Russia's reaction, Dulles said, will show whether the Soviet Union' is "willing to have a meeting on terms which will provide an actual testing of its intentions in terms sufficiently concrete to be signifi- cant. We hope that the answerl will be affirmative. In any event it E will be revealing."I * .*. .Dulles Designates Envoy ToOpen Korean Meeting -Daily-Malcolm Shatz MASCOT SEEKS FORMAL IDENTITY * * * * 'NAME THE WOLVERINE': Club Offers Free Ticket To Illini Football Game The animal above whose name has been adopted as the emblem of a gridiron squad, a local pep club and a railroad train is now looking for a name all his own. A free trip to Illinois for the Nov. 7 Michigan-Illinois football a~sme hAq bp- of "al ~n~ 1 o .-4L-ts' Reds Blame POWFailure On UNAllies Poles, Czechs Boycott Neutrals I PANMUNJOM-(R)-The Com- munist high command, badly beat- en in its campaign to woo back 22,400 anti-Red prisoners, yester- TWO PRIOR Forum sessions day in effect blamed its failure on Monday night and yesterday aft- the Allies. ernoon gave a critical going over The command's compfaint was to 'the problem of leisure time-- in a note sent to the Allies at a why we have it and what we have time when the situation was so and haven't done with it., Igrave that the Swedish member of I 2 z r r 1 > . . i ' T i tt i g onerea ayone whio can "Namne the Wolverine" and University representative Dean the Neutral Nations Repatriation , satisfy his request to become an individual. Charles E. Odegaard of the lit- Commission conceded "anything . erary college issued an answer might happen." TO ENTER the "Namethe nWolverine" contest, students must of qualified optimism to 'IHon-E* QU; ad submit a name for the wolverine and tell in 25 to 50 words why, day's panel question: "Have the THE COMMUNIST Pole and{ ""Wt - they selected the name intellectuals kept un with the in- Czech delegates were boycotting. Th teststrial designers in making a the commission because it refused econ , sponsored by the etter America?" to force the prisoners to listen to Wovein Club oe tomorrow "Intellectuals have not been Red persuaders. Thus .the expla- STh blind to opportunities for serv- nation work was stalled indefi- ta tna a tice," Dean Odegaard said. He used nitely. Michigan-Illinois football game. the growing emphasis on art, par- Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimayya, com-, The dark brown, shaggy-haired ticularly in college curriculums, mission chairman, was huddling animal who is subject of the con- and do it yourself" projects to with both sides, trying to make test has become symbolic of the{illustrate his claim , peace. The Communists are m* -Daily-Malcolm Satz University as well as the official "The consumer's growing sisting on talking to balky HOT WEATHER RELIEF-After only a few hours of rain to animal of the State of Michigan. craftsmanship gives him at North Koreans, who threaten a break the Indian, Summer heat wave, temperatures soared to a DETROIT-(IP)-Rep. Kit Clar- All students at the University least some opportunity to im- mass break from Panmunjom's high of 79 degrees yesterday. Students interrupted tedious study dy (R-Mich.) said yesterday he are eligible to enter. Application print his own tastes more large- compounds if they are forced to hours by making frequent visits to campus fountains for refresh- will confer with federal authori- blanks may :e obtained from 10 ly on his environment-the seeds listen. ment from the heat. ties today in Detroit in the first a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5 of greater freedom lie here too,"_ _ phase of a House un-American p.m. Monday through Frid - the literary college dean said. A diplomatic source at the Activities Committee probe into the Administration Bld ay in In answer to an objection by United Nations said the United communism in Michigan. Judges of the Contest are Ted Metropolitan Museum of Art Di- Nations and the United StatesHad atcher P ra is's Stud ent! Clardy said he will discuss final Kress, '54E, Sue Riggs, '54. Pete rector Francis H. Taylor that pot- been urged to talk the North Kor- plans for a sub-committee hear- Lardner, '53E, Duncan McDonald tery 241 B had no place in the eans into listening to avect a ing here Nov. 30 with United '55, Eric Vetter, '54, and Prof. college curriculum, Dean Ode- breakdowoftete mcicotEOR S top R ioters States District attorney Fred W.RuslCHueyoftegooygrdtesdthimranef Te source declared that if thkJLam-J( Kaess and Federal Judge Frank department, developing taste in the consumer North Koreans cannot be persuad- A. Picard. to prevent man's succumbing to ed to listen, the Communists would--- * * * "the tyrannous rule of a mass pro. withdraw from the repatriation By GENE HARTWIG THE MICHIGAN congressman CpiubS duction system." commission permanently and this Action by students to halt Monday night's threatened panty-raid said hearings would be expanded * * would blow up the Korean peace was termed a "splendid display of -student responsibility," by Univer- over original committee plans. THE UNITED STATES' present conference. sity. President Harlan H. Hatcher yesterday. Clardy heads the subcommittee Plan Booklet educational system came in for a The note to Gen. John E. Hull, President Hatcher said he was delighted with the way student which will conduct the hearings. large share of criticism at yester- United Nations commander, charg- leaders handled the problem of dispersing the demonstrators and Ele said he would give Judge Pi- An invitation will be sent to all day afternoon's discussion of' ed that "your side" had planted getting them back to their dorms. :ard and Kaess a list of prospec- recognized student groups to con- "Time on our Hands." large numbers of South Korean * * , Live witnesses. tribute to the booklet on Academic Public opinion pollster George and Nationalist Chinese "agents" "WE ARE LOOKING with serious concern at the development of "One of the witnesses will be Freedom being put out by the Stu- 11. Gallup held that we must re- among the Chinese and North Kor-- this sort of thing on canpus," President Hatcher commented, "and Berenice Baldwin and it is no dent Legislature sub-committee on vise our- whole philosophy of ean prisoners at Panmunjom. future instances will no doubt re- ----- -- - stretch of the imagination to academic freedom, schooling if the problem of lei- The note denied a charge made sult in disciplinary action for assume she will name a few At yesterday's meeting the sub- sure-that of restoring a proper Sept. 24 by Gen. Mark Clark, then those involved." y a Ttn. more people in organized labor," committee, which is under spon- balance between entertainment the Far East commander, that the o e mvo ved- Clardy said. sorship of the Student Legislature, and education-is to be solved. Communists had failed to account So far no students are beingr SaysMove In Germany Soviet Test U.S. I Se.arch Of Red Intentions I WASHINGTON - (P) - Sec- retary of State Dulles yesterday assigned a special envoy to open preliminary peace talks with Chi- nese and Korean Reds in Korea beginning Monday. A few hours later he bluntly no- tified the Kremlin that a new Western proposal for negotiations on Germany constitute, in the United States' government's view, a critical test of Russia's intentions about dealing with the free world. THE FAST paced developments, designed to feel out Communist readiness to do business on. con- crete issues, highlighted a lay of great activity for Dulles in the wake of his return from the West- en foreign ministers meeting in London. Dulles announced at a news conference his assignment of Ambassador Arthur Dean to go to Korea and also officially dis- closed suspension of aid alloca- tions to Israel for its defiance of a United Nations commis- sion ruling on use of Jordan river waters. Dean will leave by air today and meet with the Reds Monday. Dulles announced that they had accept- ed an American proposal for the session and he called this one more practical step towad a Ko- rean settlemens. The Reds served notice in a mes- sage which Dulles received yester- day through the Swedes that they will insist on including neutral nations in the talks. Dulles said Dean cannot prevent them from bringing up the subject but that the question has been decided by a UN ruling excluding neutrals. * * i, IN RESPONSE to reporters' u _-tin~ D llaehmaft,+ 7c , questins unes borought out toe following foreign policy develop- ments and views: 1. The United States has in effect suspended a 60 million dollar aid-to-Israel program be. Mrs. Baldwin, a Detroit house- wife, infiltrated Communist or- ganizations for the Federal Bur- eau of Investigation. She has testi- fied before the House committee in Washington. CLARDY SAID sub-committee investigators have uncovered evi- dence indicating that Michigan's communist picture is much worse than the committee originally be- lieved- made up a tentative list of ques- tions it plans to present to studentt groups, members of the facultyt and individuals interested in con-! tributing to the booklet. I 'II I - - - -1. - I - - -- i I Senior Pictures Today is the last day for sen- iors to make picture appoint- ments, according to 'Ensian staff members. 1 Contending that "our educa- for 3,421 Allied ,prisoners. considered for University disci- tional system has failed us over- plinary action in the Monday the past- fifty Years," President Solo night disturbance, President of Maryland's St. John's College ourteTo Solo1Hatcher reported. Richard D. Weigle pointed to the oncert 371'Rumors that pledge activity. persistence of American peopleint. around the State Street fraternity proclaiming their anti-intellectu- houses touched off the demonstra- alism. "Consider the epithets of Robert J. Courte, violist for the! tion were denied by Norm Canty,; brain-trusters or egg-heads," he Stanley Quartet, will be featured '54BAd., Sigma Chi president., noted. as soloist in the University String Canty pointed out that a number1 Prof. C. Wright Mills of Colum- Orchestra Concert at 8:30 p.m. to- of unidentified students were bia University's sociology depart- day in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. creating considerable noise in thej ment held that "the most signifi- Prof. Gilbert Ross of the music area of State and Madison justl cant fact about work and play in school will conduct the Orches- prior to the larger disturbance. modern times is that as the hours tra. Courte will play the Telleman * * * aC.. Seniors may sign up from 1 Minus the checkerboard atmos- Clardy said the hearings, orig- to 5:30 p.m. today in the Stu- p er on ops inally, were to be confined to "a dent Publications Bldg. They " Orchestra, the Boston Symphony few situations." He said he de- have been reminded by the will come to Ann Arbor for a con- cided to expand the hearings in 'Ensian staff to return their cert at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Michigan as a result of investiga- proofs immediately. Hill Auditorium. tions he conducted in Europe. the Orchestra will make its 32ndA return appearance in Ann Arbor, TRAFFIC BUREAU REPORTS: as part of the University Musical Society's Choral Union Series. THE PROGRAM will include FStudents InvolvedI Handel's "Concerto in F majoir, for Two Wind Choirs, with - Strings," Brahms' "Symphony No. By MARK READER 2, in D major," Honegger's "Sym- The Ann Arbor traffic bureau revealed yesterday a sudden up- phony No. 2 for String Orchestra," surge in automobile injuries in the city but at -the same time said Ravel's "Le Tombeau de Couperin" few students were involved in mishaps although more of them owned and excerpts from Wagner's "The and drove cars on campus this year.# Mastersingers of Nuremberg. Harrison Schlupe, chief of the traffic bureau, also reiterated a Founded by a young Boston- request to the University to provide more "off-street parking facili- ian banker in 1881, the orches- ties for students owning vehicles." tra grew in a town that had for- o *eile. merly been more literary than A UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE is now studying the question ofj musical.-alleviating parking problems before submitting its recommendations ing in Vienna, realized the poten- on the much discussed driving ban to the Board of Regents. ials ofian orchestral group. The bureau chief said one of the key aspects to student From unpretentious beginnings, driving in Ann Arbor was the lack of adequate parking space. He Higginson engaged the finest mu- maintained many student-owned cars were parked on city streets sicians he could find in Europe for days at a time without being moved. aind a young conductor, Georg Schlupe warned that under an abandoned car ordinance the city Herschel to lead the orchestra. had the right to remove cars from the streets after they had been Since 1881, 10 conductors have parked in. one spot for over 48 hours. led the famed Boston group. In the. The owner of the vehicle, he. continued, will be fined $5 plus the early '20's, Serge Koussevitsky, the cost of removing the car if the city is forced to tow the auto away. 1 r cause of what Dulles called Isra- j / el's ruling against diversion of Jordan River waters. Syria had Councu i Ideas protested Israel's development ofteriver. 2. The foreign ministers meet- Student members of the Stu- .ing in London agreed that in deal. dent Affairs Committee will. pre- ing with Russians it was import- sent their recommendations on ant to take one step at a time and means of selecting students for the to avoid detracting in any way Development Council Board to the from a proposed meeting with the Council's - executive committee at Russians on Germany by injecting its Nov. 22 meeting, it was decid- other matters into the situation. ed yesterday. 3. In a general way Dulles sup- Ea'lier this fall a majority of ported unofficial reports of the the students had submitted a reso- last few days that the United lution to the Regents asing that States and Britain will be slow the appointment power be given to withdraw their troops from to Student Legislature. Zone A of Trieste where they * * "stand between embittered Ital- SINCE THE resolution was re- ians and- Yugoslavs. ceived too late to place on the Re- He endorsed the idea of a Five. gents' September agenda, it was Power conference on Trieste as a withheld until a decision could be useful step toward a settlement reached on its disposition.j and said it was being explored Meeting yesterday with Uni- among the governments concern- versity Public Relations Direc- ed, the United States; Britain, 4-- -___ ,__ ,_ __.._ 1France. Italy and Yugoslavia_ organized by work have decreased, the remaining hours have been in- tensively organized for commer- cial purposes." Concerto. The pqublic is invited to attend the concert, which is free of charge. "IT'S TOO BAD this sort of thing has to happen wheneve- the weather is a little warm and the campus is in the midst of a period of hour exams," Acting Dean of Students Walter B. Rea com- mented. Assistant Dean of Students Peter A. Ostafin said he "was disappointed in the lack of sta- bility and maturity shown by I th stuentsparticipating in ] 1 ' f t S I n Rise of Traffic Injuries *' * * * " tor Arthur L. Brandon, the stu- ; "'«"""""" "a'su :, 1 ".pe k the incident." dent members decided to submit Commenting on disciplinary ac- a majority and minority report Purvis Speaks against students who violated t h xctv cmite quad regulations during the dem- They also will request that rep-jO , , onstration, Ostafin said, "any stu- i resentatives of both views be al- d ht A chivssi dent who is out of line will be lowed to present their position be- subject to disciplinary action, in- fore the next full Development The usefulness of ecclesiastical cluding probation." He indicated Council meeting Jan. 17 archives in the study of economic, that action will be taken against When the original recommenda- social, educational and legal his- several quad residents. tion was submitted to the Regents, tories was emphasized by the Rev. Assistant to the Dean of Men five members signed the report Dr. John S. Purvis, English auth- William S. Zerman pointed out asking that the appointive power or and historian, in a lecture yes- that local draft boards are quick be given to SL, while two -others terday in the Rackham Amphi- to make capital of such 'incidents dissened feeling th por should theater. on university campuses and that remain with SAC student repre- Speaking on "The Use of English pressure to revise .present draft sentatives. Archives for Historical Research," deferment procedure for college-~~~~-~~~---~~~~~-~~~ --.the archivist of the Archdiocese of students could easily result. Pof.O Broad Ntes York explained that only recently *p*. were all available documents of Bishop Explains Decline in England the Archbishop of York turned .--------