THE NO STAND DECISION ON RADULOVICH See Page 4 Y Sir~rg x Da t 14 4 5:Zill l Latest Deadline in the State PARTLY CLOUDY, COLD VOL. LXIV, No. 40 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1953 EIGH'f PAGES Williams Pr Reds Accept Plan To End Deadlock Demand To Interview Chinese Instead of North Korean POW's oceeds on -Daily-Don Campbell "UP 'N' ATOM" DIRECTOR FRED EVANS SHOWS OPERA.DANCING CHORUS A FEW FANCY STEPS Cast Named for 1953 Uuion Opera By JOEL BERGER Principal cast and chorus mem- bers and the road show schedule of the 1953 Union Opera, "Up 'N' Atom," were announced last night by Dick riegel, '55, Opera general secretary. Nearly all parts for the Howard Nemerovski, '54E, written musical comedy have been filled, Fiegel said. However, a few specialty parts, including a double for Pres- ident Eisenhower, will pe deter- mined within the next two weeks. Detroit Reds' Trial Delayed By Objections DETROIT-()-Sustained ob- jections by defense attorneys yes- terday cut heavily into testimony by a key government witness in the conspiracy trial of six Mich- igan Communist leaders. The witness, John Lautner, a former Communist national par- ty officer; under questioning by ° Fred W. Kaess, U. S. District At- torney, sought to tell a Federal Court jury of the indoctrination procedures and party taught classes for "Professional revolu- tionists." ERNEST Goodman, represent- ing three of the defendants, Mrs. Helen Winter, William Allan, and Philip Schatz, objected through, ,out Lautner's testimony. Goodman termed the testi- mony, much of which pertained to party activities in the early thirties "outdated and irrele- vant to the conspiracy charges against the defendants." Lautner; on the stand for the t third day as the government's first witness, told the jury of Com- munist party; training schools which he attended in 1930 and party schools which he taught up to 1941. s * * GOODMAN GOT Judge Frank A. Picard strike from the record Lautner's testimony of his party assignments in Canada. He also, through sustained objections, forced Lautnerto re- late only what could be substan- tiated through government evi- dence. Introduced in support of Laut- ner's testimony and the govern- ment's case were excerpts from the Communist Manifesto, speech- es by Joseph Stalin, and writing of William Z. Foster, former head of the Communist Party of the United States. SDA To Take Poll on Probes A poll to sample campus opin- ion on the right of investigating committees to inquire into per- sonal religious, social, and poli- tical beliefs will be conducted dur- ing Academic Freedom Week by PLAYING locally from Dec. 9 to 11, "Up 'N' Atom" is conduct- ing an all-campus search for any male student who can effectively impersonate the chief executive. Emphasis will be placed upon the Eisenhower victory smile, facial features and gestures, Fiegel com- mented. Principal parts in the musical, which will deal with home brew and atomic fission, will be play- ed by Andy Cooley, '56, Herb Drucker, '55L, Earl Sayer, '57, Ron Poland, '56, John Geralt, '55M, Bob Cutting, '54NR, Gene Bohi, Grad. and ,Russ Brown, '57. Members of the singing chorus will include Dick Anslow, '57, Tom Auch, '54BAd, Marshall Blondy, '55, Bill Baker, '57, Dick Booth, '57, Ray Bahor, '54, John Brad- field, '55, Milt Converse, '56, Ron DeBouver, '56SM and Tom C. Gil- more, '56E. Others in the singing chorus! will be Kevin Keane, .Grad., Pete Kramer, '56, Don Kirkpatrick, '55E, Paul Krueger, '54A, Eugene Moore, '57, Don Seltz, '57, Len Scott, '55A and Bruce Work, '56. * * * APPEARING BEHIND the foot- lights in the dancing chorus will be Dexter Bartlett, '55, Jerry Gray,. '56E, Greg Hooper, '55, Mike Lash- met, '54, Gordon Mars, '56, George McIntyre, '57 and Charles Mayer, Grad. Also named to the dancing chorus yesterday were Erwin Rubenstein, '55BAd, Tom Cham- berlin,s157E, Dave Edwards, '55E, Ralph Glowacki, '55, Len Loren, ',55, Jim Mills, '55, Paul Rich- man, '56, Don Rosenberg, '54, Dean Vane, '56 and Bob Wie- gand, '55. Last night Fiegel announced the performance of "Up 'N' Atom" in. Lansing will be given Dec. 12, the day after the last local per- formance. Toledo will witness the IFC Ball Deadline for handing in peti- tions for IFC Ball committee positions has been extended to 5 p.m. Monday. . The number of posts open has been increased to eight with the addition of music and finance chairmanships. all-male show on Dec. 26, and Buffalo will view it on Dec. 28. The next day, the show will be given in Cleveland and will return to Michigan the 30th for a per- formance in Flint. Detroit will be visited Dec. 31 and the final per- formance of the Opera will be held in Chicago on Jan. -2. Road show general chairman Dick Huff, '55BAd, said this year's tour is the longest since the 1920's, when "Cotton Stockings" played in New York City's Metropolitan Opera House and its cast met Pres- ident Calvin Coolidge in Wash- ington during an 11-city tour. SL Week Plans Set Discussions of effects of Con- gressional investigations on educa- tion, addresses by prominent State and local officials and an' all-day conference for midwestern college students will be featured during Academic Freedom Week on cam- pus. Scheduled for November 15 to 22, the week's activities have been planned by Student Legislature's Academic Freedom Commission. PHILIP HART, legal consultant for the State, Prank Blackford, Gov. G. Mennen Williams' legis- lative secretary and another un- named State official will be mem- bers of a forum.to be held Tues- day, Nov. 17. Thursday, Nov. 19, Prof. Paul G. Kauper, of the Law School, Rev. Edward W. Redman of the local Unitarian Church and sev- eral students will debate the question "Have. Congressional investigations contributed favor- ably or unfavorably to the wel- fare of American education?" An all-day conference for stu- dents from the University and other midwestern colleges will be held from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Satur- day, Nov. 22 in the' Union. After a brief welcoming cere- mony, the conference will break into five separate workshops to discusstCongressional investiga- tions, student rights, criteria for judging teachers, American tra- ditions in academic freedom and security and loyalty programs. PANMUNJOM-(/P)-The Com- munists yesterday accepted an Al- lied plan to let staff officers try breaking the deadlock that is holding up preliminary talks on a Korea peace conference. But a short.distance away at an- other meeting, the Reds made a surprise predawn demand that they be allowed to interview balky Chinese POWs instead of the North Koreans originally sched- uled-bringing yesterday's prison-. ers' explanations to a complete standstill. THE preliminary peace confer- ence talks went into indefinite re- cess after a 20-minute session be- tween U.S. envoy Arthur Dean andx Communist negotiators.4 In their 11 sessions since Oct. 26 they have failed to settle an agenda for the preliminary talks. The Communists want to dis- cuss first the question of invit- ing neutrals to the main confer- ence. The Allies want to decide on the time and place of the confer- ence first, then listen to Red ideas on the matter of who will attend. DEAN PROPOSED Wednesday that the talks be handed over to staff officers or advisers, two from each side, who could form two sub- committees and discuss the ques- tions simultaneously, a procedure that was used successfully in the long Korean armistice negotia- tions. The advisers will meet today at 8 p.m. (CST). In the prisoners' explanations, the Reds suddenly demanded that Chinese prisoners left over from Wednesday's sessions be produced for explanations. k An Indian command spokes- man said those Chinese not in- terviewed Wednesday were re- turned to their compounds along with those who hadt refused re- patriation. "It is difficult for us to provide Chinese POWs this morning since they are not separated," he said. The latest stalling tactic came I amidst reports the Communists, embarrassed and frustrated by theI futile explanations, were prepar- ing to break off the explanation program. The Reds were rebuffed Wed- nesday by 134 of 136 Chinese pris- oners interviewed in drawn-out sessions. Hubbard's Demanded DETROIT-UP')-Dearborn may-I or Orville L. Hubbard, at the pin- nacle of his political career, yes- terday was called unfit for office! by a one-man grand jury. Circuit Judge Miles N. Culehan, the grand juror, asked Gov. G. Mennen Williams to set up ousterj proceedings against the irrepres- sible mayor. HUBBARD was re-elected to his -Daily-Don Ca TO THE VICTOR-A. B. Charlip, '54, vice-president o Wolverine Club, presents Harry Panagos, '57E, with a ticke the week-end trip to the Illinois-Michigan football game o Illini Liner, as his prize for winning the "Name the Wolve contest sponsored by the club. Panagos named, the symbolic verine "Victor." The train leaves Ann Arbor at 12:57 toda Champaign. seventh straight term by voters of the suburb only Tuesday. He won a smashing victroy margin of! two and a half to one and car- ried his entire council slate into office with him. 'ADVENTURE: Trophy Letters Ask Ceremony Be Planned Athletics Board's View Still Secret By GENE HARTWIG Gov. G. Mennen Williams forged ahead yesterday with plans to pre- sent his Michigan-Michigan State football trophy at the Nov. 14 game, -despite a refusal to date on the part of University athletics board members publicly to ap. prove or disapprove the idea. According to Associated Press reports the governor has written the presidents of both institutions asking them to arrange presenta- tion ceremonies between halves of the game one week from tomor. row. UNIVERSITY President Harlan H. Hatcher said last night that he had as yet received no letter from the Governor. mpbenl Members of the Board in Con. I the trol of Athletics continued to et for cling to the fence last night in in th the developing confusion of what rnte" stand to take on the proposed rine" trophy.,- Dwol- .y for A spokesman for the Governr's office said, "because of the time element, we found it necessary to commence preparation of the tro phy nearly a week ago, and as a consequence are, unfortunately, unable to take full advantage of Im S any further suggestions offered." SOME QUESTION arose over tge whether "further suggestions" re fers to the contents of the report ___-submitted Wednesday to the Gov- An Ad- ernor containing recommendations Ideas," of the joint meeting of the Univer. sity and MSC athletic boards ghat the Monday. Pva Contents of the report remain a voca- knw ney, or ukon s in the The same executive office spokes- s a way man said that Gov. Williams has ing life. commissioned a Chicago sculptor to carve a sizable figure of Paul f facts, Bunyan out of Michigan pine for its and the trophy. t-these It will carry plates of Michigan copper for the inscription of each law "A year's winner. Gov. Williams' vent on name will also appear on the s is not trophy. learn- * * * fe, and CONFLICTING stories of just what action has been taken by the a law- University athletic board cropped dwards, up last night in comments from dn't ad- various members. e he has esort." One student member of the in the board said he knew of no meet- Judge ingrTuesday until he read it in can do the paper. Another member re- ct and fused to comment on the Gov- ernor's action and would not say with the whether the report had been punish- handed to Gov. Williams Wed- eer rem- nesday, ds. Still another board member said definitely that a report had come out of the joint meeting and had been' submitted to the Governor ge hasWednesday morning. ren to Prof. Herbert O. "Fritz" Crisler, renowi University athletic director de 'rowingclined to say whether the board College has taken any further action in t night either direction on the trophy. egisla- a tro- aa fIWagLman Tells. Judge Edwards Clai Law Presents Challen Zonal Police Shoot'Italians In Trieste Riot1 TRIESTE -- OP) - Pro-Italan demonstrations got out of, hand in this disputed city yesterday and territorial police, shooting to break up a riotous, hostile crowd, killed 2 persons and wounded 15. Scores of other demonstrators and police were injured in other battling around the strategic port, a part of the Trieste Free Territory's Zone A that Britain and the United States proposed Oct. 8 to turn back to Italian ad- ministration. About three dozen were hospitalized. THE SHOOTING came in latei afternoon near the Roman Catho- lic church of St. Anthony in downtown Trieste. A priest wasI reconsecrating the church becauseI of blood spilled in it during a melee between students and po- lice earlier in the day. As hundreds of students crowded around the church for the ceremony, a riot police jeep moved into the throng. Students began hurling paving blocks and sticks at the occupants. Witnesses said the police tried to fight free of the crowd, but failed. Before the fight ended it was estimated 1,000 demonstra- tors, all apparently students, and 200 police were involved.1 The crowd smashed several po- lice jeeps and trucks.! IT ~mI -& ~t 'T-1;.t c"-.,-u Judge. Culehan, after a long investigation of the Dearborn city. administration, accused Hubbard of malfeasance, non- feasance and willful neglect of duty. His 35-page petition demanding the mayor's removal contained 20 specific charges. * * * HUBBARD struck back by say- ing he would petition for a 23- man grand jury to investigate the conduct of circuit court-especial- ly the grand jury and the court's handling of funds. "This.petition is a confession by Culehan that he has not been able to find cause for indict- ment," Hubbard asserted ang- rily when he was presented a copy of Judge Culehan's docu- ment. Gov. Williams said he could not comment on the case until he has had a chance to study the peti- tion over the weekend. COMPLICATING the picture was - Hubbard's re-election to a two-year term. Observers noted that the question, of whether pos- sible removal would apply to his present term, the new term,. or both. The 20 charges revolved main- ly around the alleged loose purse strings held by Hubbard's ad- ministration. One accused him of accepting a gift television set from a Dear- born department store whose tax assessment had been lowered $120,000. Fresh Air Project Fraternity and sorority pledges affected by yesterday's cancella- tion of the Fresh Air Camp may go out today or Saturday with the assigned groups. t I 4 E j .( aE I By LEE MARKS "Law is a profession to be proud# of," Hon. George Edwards, judge of probates, juvenile division, in Wayne County, said at a meetingI of the Michigan Crib last night. Snow-Recalls Ills LossON THE Inportance Judge Edwards said, "B pieces, information, fac Although a slight upward climb are the tools of the lawyer. in local temperatures is predicted Judge Edwards called for today the appearance of snow challenge to living." He v flurries in this area yesterday and to say, "The legal process Wednesday has given Wolverine just learning rules. It's fans headed for Illinois this week- ing about people and lit end cause to be wary. how to find out facts." The memory of the Michigan Obstinacy is a virtue in eleven going down to defeat in an yer according to Judge E Illinois snowstorm two years ago who said, "A lawyer shoul has not faded. ' mit defeat until he is sur THE WEATHER bureau has in- passed the court of last re jected a note of promise into the There is anew idea legalprfsinclme scene, however, with warmer Edwards. Human beings weather predicted for Champaign Ewads abeings on Sturay.something about conduq on Saturday.cartr. Higher temperatures are just character. around the corner for Ann Ar- "e ow the ot bor residents also, but students idea of finding the proper venturing out into the winter ment, but rather the prop air for 8 a.m. classes today are edy," said Judge Edwar still likely to feel like going back 'inside.e The predicted high for today is 40 degrees, only three degrees An East Lansing Colle above the high mark of 37. which University the thermometor reached at 3 compete in a beard g p.m. yesterday. contest. Last night, snow ranging from The Michigan State+ a trace to a foot gave way to student government last the coldest weather df the sea- contacted the Student L son in the state. Heaviest of the ture here and promised ssnowfalls was in Port Huron, phy for the winning to where asbout 12 inches accumu- beards at the pep rallyi laed before the sun came out Lansing a week from to to melt some. Firmness, richness and - Just across the St. Clair River, I-ss richnesslan Sarnia, Ont., reported seven inches stada ds of udgm nt of snow. I Talking on "The Law- venture in Facts and Judge Edwards stressed t legal profession offers a g portunity, not simply as tion, a place to make m a means of gaining statuw community; but rather as to lead a full and interest * * * in East day. X thick- be the Library Use World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON -- A mock air attack on the Nation's capital yes- terday left the President "uninjured" as he hurried to the safety of a secret bomb-shelter on the White House grounds. However, some of the nation's key military leaders might have been eliminated had a genuine raid taken place. * * 1* * * * i . s i 1 i t t f i II r7i arsn ry+ Buses will take as many as pos- sible. Frederick H. Wagman, director of the University Library, traced ELECTION ISSUES: SL Candidates Eye Cu DETROIT - The wind was cold but the reception was warm last night as King Paul and Queep Frederika of Greece ar- rived in Detroit for a 22-hour stay. MT. CLEMENS, Mich.-Turn- ing his disabled, rocket-laden Sabrejet fighter from densely populated Detroit toward Lake St. Clair, an Air Force pilot died '(Editor's Note: This is the fourth{ In a series of articles on major is- sues involved in next week's Stu- dent Legislature elections.) By DOROTHY MYERS If Student Legislature candl- dates have their way, women's hours on campus will be greatly extended during the coming year. have mounted during the pastI year in spite of a half-hourt lengthening of weekday permis- sion for senior women on campus. One student summed up what seems to be majority opinion by saying "It is ridiculous for a 21 .or 22-year-old senior woman to be told she must come in at 11 the historical development and modern use of the college library at a meeting of the American As- sociation of University Professors last night. r feI IChange Wagman noted' the historical change of attitude of the librar- Ian from that of a guardian to the towns where formal or informal modern conception of serving the curfews still exist, would have a pubihc. Imore difficult time adjusting to. Whereas the modern librarian college life if permitted to stay is happiest when he can bring the out until midnight every night. most people to his library, Wag- It hs aso eenarged hati man said, "the earlier librarian It has also been argued that if was more custodial and there to women had later hours conserva- see that the books were used as tive-minded parents would be re- little as possible." luctant to send their daughters toliteapsbe i I1 I i