IT SEEAS TO ME See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State 4br ,frh CLOUDY AND WARMER r VOL. LAIY, No. 7 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29.1953 .RI !'HIIRIS AN-A-O---HIA- TESA.----M FR~ 0 a rur __._ I Plans Set fo Possible TV Center Here Ford Founidatio Backs Research By GENE HARTWIG Plans for the possible esta lishment of a television resear center here under sponsorship the Fund for Adult Education the Ford Foundation were a nounced yesterday. Final okay on locating the pr posed center in Ann Arbor is pen ng a meeting of the resear group's board of directors Octob 8 and 9 in New York City. THE ORGANIZATION, call the Educational Television ai Radio Center, will be headed k President H. K. Kewburn of t] University of Oregon, who h resigned his position at Oregon e fective Thursday 'to take char of the group here. Negotiations have almost bee completed to locate the insti tution in a house at 1610 Wash tenaw Ave. A petition for "change .of us of the property on a year-to-ye basis will be heard by the Ar Arbor Board of Zoning Appea tomorrow. The Board of Regents has agree to purchase the property and lea it to the research organization the change is approved. ACCORDING to Lyle M. Nelso representative for the researc group, the center will have no fo mal tie with the University or ar of its departments. "We are planning to locate here because of the central loca- tion of the University in rela- tion to other educational insti- tutions in the country," Nelso1 commented. Nelson pointed out that the o ganization will be supported large ly by Ford Foundation funds a first, with the hope that simila groups wil contribute later. The research center is an inde pendent non-profit organizatio established by the Fund for Adu Education of the Ford Founda tion, to gather and then dissemi nate educational materials fc television programs. Nelson described the work of the center as highly important in the expanding field of adult education. The question of whether ther will be any charges to televisio stations benefiting from the cen ter's activities will be decided i the October board meeting Nelso said. Gridders Land Fourth Place Michigan's 50-0 rout of Wash. ington's Huskies evidently impress. ed more than just the West Coas gridders as the Wolverines showed up in fourth place in the firs weekly Associated Press poll o 1953. Bennie Oosterbaan's surprising eleven placed behind Notre Dame Michigan State, and Maryland ir the voting which saw the Fighting Irish, by virtue of their 28-21 vic- tory over Oklahoma, wrest to honors from last year's nationa champion Michigan State. * *R THE SPARTANS slipped to sec- ond in the balloting after being held to a 21-7 triumph by Iowa. Notre Dame garned 907 points on the basis of 10 points for first place, 9 for second, etc. to Michigan State's 692. The top *wo were followed by Maryland with 501 points, Michigan with 403, UCLA 391, Ohio State 380, Southern California 346, Okla- homa 316, Georgia Tech 242, and Baylor 188. The "second ten are in order: Mississippi State Duke, West Vir- ginia, Rice, Mississippi, Wiscon- sin, Texas, Georgia, Louisiana State and Holy Cross. Daily Celebrates z J Birthday Today Today marks the 64th birthday of The Daily. British. To Quit SuezZone Soon Area To Be Vacated in 18 Months; Settlement Said 'A Long Way Off' CAIRO, Egypt-OP)-Egyptian officials said yesterday Britain has agreed to withdraw her big garrison from the vital Suez Canal area ib 18 months, but the British envoy in Cairo said final settlement of the old and often bloody feud is still a long way off. Even though there may be agreement on the withdrawal of troops -and Britain has indicated she is willing to do this provided some arrangement is made for defense of the strategic waterway in case of an attack-an official Egyptian source made it clear that the nego- Former Red Calls Manual Propaganda Military Claims Paper Instructive WASHINGTON-(A)--A pair of fugitive Russians and a former top American Red told Senate in- vestigators yesterday an Army re- port used to train intelligence of- ficers is loaded with Communist propaganda. The Army contends the docu- ment, called "Psychological and Cultural Traits in Soviet Siberia" isn't Red propaganda at all and was intended merely to give in- telligence officers a picture of the Russian people for use in event of war. *' * * BUT LOUIS BUDENZ, a hight level Communist party official in this country for 10 years, told a Senate investigations subcommit- tee, headed by Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis.): "In my opinion, this docu- ment . . . is the work of a con- cealed Communist." Cash Ready Unsold books and checks from Student Legislature's Book Exchange must be picked up between 8:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. today in the League Lobby, ac- cording to Betty Magyar, 'S4, bookstore manager. Texts that remain unclaimed at the close of the store's busi- ness today will be retained by the book exchange. 21Z Soldiers Die In Fatal PlaneCrash LOUISVILLE, Ky-(A)-At least 21 men lost their lives yesterday when a plane carrying soldier trainees from Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, crashed and burned at Standiford Field, Louisville. The plane, operated by Resort Airlines, Inc. of Miami, Fla., car- rying a crew of three and 39 trainees, had taken off from Phila- delphia. Most of the trainees were of Puerto Rican ancestry and were being taken to Ft. Knox, Ky. * *, *- Iniicreased Production Of Latest Jet Planes Planned by Air Force - .7 India Seeks 'Big Power Peace Talks. i tiations still could break down on some other issue. MAJOR questions still ontstand- ing, the informant said in a re- port, were how long British civil- ian experts would remain behindf to see that the great shipping ca- nal runs smoothly and whether, they should be permitted to wear identifying uniforms. Britain wants them uniformed and wants them to stay on for seven years. Egypt is against the uniform and threatens to break off negotiations even on this point. She -also demands that UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.-(A)- India's V. K. Khrishna Memon yesterday called on the UN As- sembly to request formally a per- sonal meeting of the chiefs of state of the big powers in an attempt to solve the world's troubles. Menon said the peace of the world is the responsibility of the great powers-"primarily of the two giants-the United States and the Soviet Union." He said they alone have the means to enforce peace. * * * - HE ALSO urged the Assembly to issue a declaration calling on the United States and Russia to prom- ise never to use atomic and hydro- gen bombs and other weapons of mass destruction. Referring to a meeting of the chiefs of state, he said "this idea is what humanity cries for." Some diplomats here said they looked on the Indian proposal cou- pled with Churchill's statement Monday as twin moves to put pressure on the United States t agree to a top level conference on world problems. MENON apparently meant that Britain, the United States and the Soviet Union should send their chiefs of state to such a confer- ence. The United States delegation said any reaction to Menon's proposal on a meeting of the big powers would have to come from Washington since it in- volved the President. , In Washington, however, the State Department said it failed to see how a top-level conference such as Churchill suggested could "accomplish results different from those being' sought through con-7 ferences that are now in pros- i pect " i they leave after six years, turn- DEPUTY CORONER Harry Ell- ing the whole works over to the Igor Bogelepov, who said he is stone said the dead included the Egyptian technicians they are a former Soviet diplomat and plane's captain, Wharton A. Mol- to train. army officer now under a Kremlin ler, 34, of San Antonio, Tex., and! The negotiations now going on death sentence, described the re- the co-captain, John Dewitt Pick- have been described as "informal" port as "extremely damaging." el, 32, also of San Antonio. talks behind closed doors, aimed "I find there is a lot of delib- Stewardess Dorothy Jean at paving the way for formal ne- erate misinformation that serves Bush, 32, of Miami, Fla., lost a gotiations toward a final agree- the Communist cause," he testi- leg in the disaster, a hospital ment. fled. reported. Present indications are that Bodies, some decapitated, were Egyptians and British are closer A TALL MAN of 49 with a thick scattered as far as 100 feet from to agreement now than they ever Russian accent, Bogelepov saidI the flaming, twisted wreckage. were before In the more than 70 the report is dangerous because * years of bitter wrangling over con- it is confusing and "because itI FLAMES started in the left en-' trol of the canal. gives some things that are true as gine when the ship crashed on the }° * *+*a cover to make you swallow the grass. The flames spread rapidly AT PRESENT, Egypt has agreed things that are not true." to the right engine. Britain could come back to defend The witness said he was "ex- Carl South, a transportation the canal, but only if there was an tremely appalled and frighten. agent for Trans World Airlines, outright attack on the Arab states ed" to discover some parts of saw the crash. He said the plane -including Egypt, Iraq, Saudi the report are almost word for -came into his view at slightly Arabia, Syria, Lebanon, Jordon, word the same quotations from under 1,000 feet altitude.# Yemen and Libya. . such Soviet leaders as Lenin All appeared normal as the craft Britain has demanded the and Stalin. And he said there descended until he noticed that" right to return her troops if is nothing to identify the quo. the left elevator flap on the tail there is an attack anywhere in tations as such, dropped down, he said. As this aneda te lst, Tut .YVladimir PetrovaYale Univer- occurred, the plane straightened and Iran to the list of states. sity faculty member who was im- into level flight. Then it nosed up Egyptians.say agreement has pinmomentarily and plummeted to beenreahedon tesepoits: prisoned in Siberia for six years, been. reached on these points: y"s the earth, he added. 1. Britain will pull out her es- described the report as "extreme-the sth.cke ae. ly biased in favor of the Soviet The stricken plane was one of timated 80,000 troops from the regime in Russia." five bringing soldiers from Camp Suez base within 18 months of the As a training manual for Amer- Kilmer. The first landed safely. signing of the agreement. ican intelligence officers, he said After the second plane crashed,' 2. Four thousand British ex- cthe pamphlet would be "definitel the three others were directed to perts remain to run the instal- harmful." Bowman Field, also in Louisville. lations for-three years. They will _ -Daily-Chuck Kelsey NEMEROVSKI STUDIES MASTERPIECE AMID REGAL SPLENDOR * * * * 1953LIonOpera, Script Announced By JOEL BERGER Atomic energy, bgreaurcracy, the simple hill folks of Tennessee and good home brew-these add up to the basic plot for the 1953 Union Opera, Mike Scherer, '54, general chairman of the Opera, an- nounced yesterday. Written for the second consecutive year by Howard Nemerovski, '54E, this year's Opera, which has as yet received no title, will be pre- 11 ad u lvich I sented from December 9 to 11. ** * Scherer said that "Nemo's" F.Mlitary script had been chosen during the acessummer from 15 or 20 submitted to the Opera script committee. BoardToday Three English professors, one journalism professor, Harry University senior, Milo J. Radu- Blum, '54BAd, and Scherer chose lovich accused by the Air Force moski aserte he script of being a "poor security.risk" for was finished on the first of July. closely associated with his father Previously he worked it over to and sister-allaged Communists- bring it to the high quality of his will face a military tribunal today show last year, "No Cover Charge." to meet the charges. . Scherer has expressed hopes of The hearing is scheduled to take'giving the opera a name soon. Of Tlace at Selfridge Air Force Base several titles the central commit- and will be closed to the press. tee has considered two were copy- d hrighted for shows to be produced WASHINGTON -O) - The Air Force announced yesterday step- ped up production of giant Boeing B-62 jet bombers and North Amer- ican F-100 supersonic jet fighters. Exactly how many planes will be ordered under the new program has not been decided, Secretary of the Air Force Talbott said. HIS ANNOUNCEMENT stressed that the additional bombers will be turned out by Boeing's aircraft plant at Wichita, Kan., "to elimi- nate" the danger of a single source for this important aircraft." Boe- ing's Seattle plant now produces all B-52s. Talbott said Boeing will be given sufficient time on deliver- ies to tool up its Wichita plant at an estimated cost of 250 mil- lion dollars. He said the expanded fighter and bomber production was order- ed only after "extensive tests" of the planes, a precaution taken to avoid major modifications of new aircraft after they have come off the production line. * * * TALBOTT SAID the F-100 has exceeded the speed of sound in level flight during initial tests, has completed its first and second phase tests and "all indications ar that it will meet its final tests successfully." The huge B-52 is powered by eight Pratt and Whitney J57 jet engines, has a wing span of 185 feet, is 156 feet long and has a tail weight of 48 feet. Talbott said he hopes the Air Force cutbacks have bden com- pleted and the Air Force can con- centrate on accelerating produc tion of planes which show Most promise. The Air Force recently announc- ed plans to cut aircraft engine production 400 to 500 million dol- lars-all in spare engines and parts. Brownell Trip May Herald Appointment WASHINGTON - (/) - Atty. Gen. Brownell kept it a tight sec- ret yesterday night whether his hurry-up trip to the West Coast heralds the appointment of Cali- fornia's Gov. Earl Warren to the U. S. Supreme Court. Brownell conferred with Presi- dent Eisenhower at the White House, reporting on his weekend talk with Warren, but declined to tell newsmen whether he recom- mended.Warren for the high court post. * * * LATER, informants at the Jus- tice Department said Brownell had not yet made any recommendation to Eisenhower.* High government officials said Brownell has had a series'of con- ferences with Eisenhower on the question of filling the vacancy left by the death of Chief Jus- tice Fred. M. Vinson, who died of a heart attack Sept. 8. The situation has' now become urgent because the high tribunal begins its 1953-54 session in less than a week. The attorney general flew te Sacramento, Calif., late Saturday night and conferred with Warren in secret for three hours Sunday morning before flying back to Washington. Pole Ousted From Position VIENNA-(IP)-Radio Warsaw said yesterday the Polish Govern- ment has relieved Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, Roman Catholic Arch- bishop of Gneizno and Warsaw, of his post. A communique said the- Cardi- Daily On Air The Daily is back on the airwaves with a five minute news summary at 11:55 p.m., Monday through Friday, over station WHRV. Featuring campus news in addition to -items of local and regional interest, the program originates from the newsroom of The Daily. Late bulletins off the Associated Press wire are also presented. The newscast is written, pro- duced and delivered by Daily staff members. "Morning Head- lines" will be beard through- out the school year. i ( I f I be under the command of the Egypttian army commander in chief, who will have a British advisor. 3. While the experts remain, Britain will not remove any equip- ment from or dismantle any in- stallation in the base. But a point of disagreement was that Britain wants 3,000 of the ex- perts to stay on an additional two and one-half years after the three- year period is up. Egypt wants only a "few hundred" to stay on1 only a year and a half after the end of that period. Judge Maintains Secrecy in Trial DETROIT-(')-Federal Judge Frank Picard yesterday denied a motion to compel the government to disclose the nature of its case against six Detroiters accused Qf being top Michigan communist leaders. i A SLENDER MAN of 37, with a stiff pompadour haircut,7Petroy said the author of the document "twists and distorts" and tries to prove that C6mmunists are loved by the Russian people. McCarthy said an Army major, whose name he withheld, is re- lrCn4 1 fn r n i n t ,. Labor Party Rejects Moves 'AgainstU. S. 11 0 C a }iIA 1 ti I Ip a sponsime for preparing the re- MRAEEgad-(P e-MARGARET, England - UP) - port and will be called before the Britain's Labor p'arty yesterday sub-committee later. rejected a left-wing resolution The senator said the report lists I aimed at pinning the blame on the in its bibliography such source United States for the cold war material as books by Ernest J. and the armament race. Simmons, a Columbia University Aneurin Bevan, long an advo- professor; Corliss Lamont, weal- cate of arms reduction in Britain, thy New Yorker' and Sir Berpard took no part in the debate. Pares of Great Britain. * * Bundenz said Lamont was a SOME OF his followers support- communist party member when ed the measure from the floor, he was, and that he was ad- but most remained quiet. vised on a number of occasions Thus the debate did not rep- that Pares "was a secret mem- resent, in any sense, an organ- ber, under discipline of the ized attack by Bevan's faction British Communist party." on the policy of the party's lead- The subcommittee recently ques- ership. tioned Lamont behind closed doors The rejected arms cut resolution in New York. declared "our dependence on the United States commit n tra OFFICIALS AT the base con- tacted yesterday could give theI Daily no indication as to the time the closed hearing would be held. Radulovich, a physics major has not been charged with being a Communist himself. ~ On Sunday, Radulovich's broth- er, a Detroit resident, reported to police there having received sev- eral threatening phone calls in connection with the case. "I'm going to get all you Com- mies," the unknown caller is re- ported to have said. later in the year in other parts of the country and had to be dis- carded. Scherer said that committee try- outs for the opera would be held tomorrow and Thursday. Positions open include student director, pro- duction, publicity, costume and makeup committees, song writers, ney.spaper writers, advertising salesmen, radio and televisionj staff, program editors and typists. Cast tryouts will be held from October 13 to 15, Blum said. He concluded "Because of the variety of parts, there will be many open- ings for new talent." PLEDGE GRADES DEFENDED: Fraternity Rushing Registration To End, Registration for fraternity rush- ing will end at 5 pm. tomornow.7ci--s Interfrater nity Council officialshi yesterday reported about 820 men already registered for rushing. Rushing committee co-chairman Jay Martin, '55, also pointed out that a man must be registered in order to pledge. There is no charge for registration. "The fraternity system is inter- ested in encouraging the scholar- ship of men who pledge," C. A. Mitts, '54, IFC president, said yes- terday. "The fact that last spring's fra- ternity pledges, who were all uaalcu otctlC C11111s us to a vested interest in the cold war.?' Bevan's silence spotlighted the atmosphere of :sweetness and har- mony which has been unheard of in Socialist conclaves of recent, years. But veterans were not con-I vinced that the efforts to present the appearance of a unitedhfront would last all the way through next Friday, when the convention* ends. * * * THE PARTY'S Executive Com- mittee placed a proposed policy statement before the delegates for approval. Titled "Challenge to Britain." it is anything but a radiI cal document, laying stress mainly on the need fro Britain to improve' her financial position in the world, make her industries more effi- cient and use her land better. There is hardly more than lip service to the pet socialist theory of nationalizing industry. The statement is assured of ul- World News Roundup By The Associated Press TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-Florida's Gov. Dan McCarty died in a hospital yesterday after serving less than nine months of his four- year term. The 41-year-old governor, weakened by a heart attack that struck him down six weeks after he was inaugurated in January, was un- able to fight off a case of pneumonia. NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.-Agriculture Secretary Benson said yesterday his department was reorganizing to give states more control of the nation's farm program. CINCINNATI-The United 'States Rubber Co. followed other major rubber manufacturers and signed yesterday a new wage agree- ment with the CIO United Rubber Workers. The accord calls for an increase in wages of 5 cents an ;our and other fringe benefits for the 35,000 employes in 19 plants. * * * * WASHINGTON-Prospects of American parents being allowed to go to Korea to see their sons who have decided to cast their lot with the Communists appear extremely dim yesterday. . a<