PROPOSED UNION ADDITION See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State 7i4at PARTLY CLOUDY. COOLER VOL. LXIV, No. 8 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1953 SIX PAGES Yanks, Dodgers Open 50th Series Reynolds Faces Erskine in Stadium; Yanks Eye Fifth Straight World Title NEW YORK-(M)-Allie Reynolds opens the proud New York Yankees' bid for an unprecedented fifth straight world championship today at Yankee Stadium against Carl Erskine, 20-game winning ace -of the fence-busting Brooklyn Dodgers. Despite the Dodgers' gaudy batting averages and 4 their 208 home runs, the Yanks remain 6 to 5 favorites to do it again in the 50th World Series. THE DODGERS, who took the Yanks to seven games last fall, never have won a series. This is their seventh try. The Yanks stand 15-4 in series competition with the American League out front 32-17. - t Warren Said Set for Top JudicialJob WASHINGTON-(P)-President Eisenhower's first appointment to the Supreme Court is expected to go-perhaps today-to Gov. Earl Warren of California. Reports persisted, and were widely published, that Warren would be made chief justice of the United States, succeeding the late Fred M. Vinson. * * * THE ANNOUNCEMENT could come at Eisenhower's scheduled news conference today. The way torney General Brownell submitted a formal recommendation to the President. An appointment, this week would put the court back at full strength for the start of its regular fall term next Monday, although the appointee still would be subject to Senate con- firmation when Congress recon- venes in January. Reports that Warren would get the post gained strong impetus over the weekend when it became known that Brownell had flown to Sacramento to talk with the Cal- ifornia governor. Warren would be the 14th chief justice of the United States. He would become the second Repub- lican on the high bench. * * * AT THE White House, Press Secretary James C. Hagerty was asked whether Eisenhower will an- nounce the court appointment at his news conference at 11:30 a.m. today. x "When we have appointments to announce, we will announce them," Hagerty said. Since Vinson's death, Warren has been the forerunner in spec- ulation for the highest judicial position in the nation. TV Education Center Plans Move Ahead Plans for the establishment of the Educational Television and Radio Center went ahead yester- day as H. K. Newburn, president of the University of Oregon, con- ferred with members of the newly organized research center's staff. President Newburn arrived in Ann Arbor Monday night to meet with Robert B. Hudson of the Uni- versity of Illinois, George W. Over- ton, Chicago attorney, and Lyle M. Nelson, respresentative for the center who has been here three weeks taking preliminary steps in getting the organization started. The center, to be located in a former residence on Washtenaw near Baldwin will be designed to keep track of the main sources of . educational television programs and to arrange with these sources for national distribution of, some of the best programs. Final approval of Ann Arbor. as a cite for the television center is pending a meeting of the board of directors of the group Oct. 8 and 9 in New York City. The research group had received a $1,500,000 grant from the Ford Foundation one year ago. The series gts under way at 1:05 p.m. before 70,000 fans and millions more on television and radio. Carl Furillo, Brooklyn's right fielder and National League bat- ting champ, and Gene Woodling, Yankee left fielder, both reported fit for duty after testing their in- jured left hands in final batting practice. * * * FURILLO, who broke his little finger in a fist fight with Leo Du- rocher Sept. 6, wore a bandage on his left hand and used a bat with a foam rubber pad taped to the handle. Woodling also used a bat with a rubber pad about four inches' up the handle. Cy Young, )vho won two games for the Boston Red Sox against Pittsburgh in the first series back in 1903, is to throw out the first ball Wednesday after the usual opening day ceremonies. This is the 11th all-New York series and the fifth between the Yanks and Dodgers. The Yanks played the Giants six times, win- ning four. THE SERIES schedule calls for the first two games at Yankee Stadium with lefthanders Eddie Lopat of the Yanks and Preacher Roe of the Brooks meeting in No. 2. The third, fourth and fifth will be played at Ebbets Field then back to yhe stadium for the sixth and seventh, if neces- sary. Vic Raschi is expected to pitch No. three for the Yanks, and Man- ager Chuck Dressen may gamble on 21-year-old Johnny Podres. See GOLDEN, Page 3 Rules Made For Prisoner 'Persuasion' PANMUNJOM -(MP - The Ko- rean repatriation commission an- nounced yesterday the "ground rules" under which the Allies and Communists will seek to persuade reluctant war prisoners to return home. The rules- providing for individ- ual interviews and requiring all prisoners to listen to the "expla- nations' regardless of their wishes -evoked bitter comment from a United Nations Command spokes- man. "THE COMMISSION bought ev- erything the Communists wanted," he said. The UN Command has vigor- ously opposed both points. It contended that prisoners could be intimidated in individual in- terviews and that no prisoner should be forced to hear a sales talk on returning home. The explanations were sched- uled to begin today, but a further postponement appeared likely be- cause of a dispute over the loca- tion and design of "explanation centers." The explanations had been postponed from last Satur- day. The centers, in the demilitar- ized zone, were built for the proc- essing of nearly 23,000 prisoners, 22,600 of them prisoners of the Allies who have repeatedly refus- ed to return to Red rule. The rest are Allied POWs. S* * THELATEST snag is the de- mand by each side that the other build better "explanation centers" in the neutral zone. The five-na- tion Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission said yesterday that both sides have agreed to improve the facilities. -Daily-Dean Morton REFRESHING PAUSE-Two University co-eds seek relief from the unseasonal heat that hit the state yesterday. The tempera- ture of 89 degrees seemed to warrant student's complaints that "it was too hot to study." But in Jackson and Battle Creek the thermometer rose to 94. However the Weather Bureau says that a similar heat wave will probably not occur again this year. Cardinal Under A rrest Western Sources Sayv ROME - ),- Stefan Cardinal Wysznski, the Roman Catholic primate whom Communist Poland has declared relieved of his church- ly duties, was described by Western sources yesterday as under arrest. The Vatican City newspaper L'Osservatore Romano said armed police raided Cardinal Wyszynski's residence in Warsaw last Fri- day night, made a minute, all night search of the premises and arrest- ed the Cardinal Saturday morning. AUGUST ZALESKI, president of the Polish government in exile in London, said the 52-year-old primate, archbishop of Warsaw and -'-Gneisen, was arrested at the War- saw residents "and taken by sec- Hoover H eads ret police to an unknown monas- tery in the country, where he is overnm entnot allowed to communicate with the outside world." 1 Zaleski declared the action Ta aSK Orce (was part of a Communist plot to provoke a revolt which could WASHINGTON -- be crushed by a blood bath. He -(A' - Former urged the Polish people, virtual. President Herbert Hoover, appear- ly all of whom are Catholics, to ing robust at 79, yesterday accept- remain calm. ed a new public service-heading, L'Osservatore Romano said the his second commission to reor- Communist police compelled all ganize the "appalling" maze of ;persons found in the Cardinal's ganie th "apallng"mazeof~residence to face a wall during the federal agencies. Friday night search. With President Eisenhower look- * * * ing on, Hoover and 11 other mem- IT DENOUNCED the action bers took the oath of office at the against him as "an attempt to White House. justify legally what cannot be * ,justified." THEN, presiding at a three-hour The Warsaw radio reported closed-door meeting, Hoover got last night that the cardinal, the authority to set up nine "task last free prince of the church forces" of distinguished experts to behind the Iron Curtain, had do reorganization spadework. been relieved of his post on a A major goal, Hoover an- charge of violating provisions of nounced, will be to eliminate, the 190 church-state agreempnt by merger or otherwise, some and "allowed to withdraw into of the 70 or 80 agencies which a Polish monastery." report to the White House-to L'Osservatore said Cardinal Wy- "get them out of the President's szynski sealed his fate when he hair." spoke out against the recent trial at Warsaw of the Most Rev. Cze- Congress gave the new commis- slow Kaczmarek, bishop of Kielce, sion of seven Republicans and five and three other priests sentenced Democrats greater authority than Sept. 22 to prison terms ranging the first Hoover commission which from 6 to 12 years on charges of filed its report and recommenda- spying for the Vatican and the tions in 19 volumes in 1949. United States. No Decision Reached On Radulovich Friday To Mark Second Hearing By MARK READER After five hours of a secret Air Force hearing yesterday the case of University senior Milo J. Rad- ulovich, accused of being a "poor security risk" for close association with his allegedly Communist father and sister, was recessed until 9 a.m. Friday. The investigating board com- posed of three Air Force colonels granted the adjournment to per- mit defense attorneys. to call ad- ditional witnesses. However, only one witness will be called Radulo- vich said last night, a character witness for his father. RADULOVICH appeared satis- fied with the way the hearing had prograssed on the first day. Both he and his wife, Nancy testified concerning his "political intimacy" with his relatives. Although not accused of dis- loyalty himself, Lt. Radulovich, a 23-year-old physics major, faces loss of his Air Force commission if the board decides against him. "The Air Force presented its entire case and it amounts tol nothing-absolutely zero," Rad- ulovich claimed last night. "There is no case," he went on, "and I have nothing to hide." THE AIR FORCE charges against Radulovich's father are that he had read a Communist in- spired Serbian newspaper and the Daily Worker. The young lieu- tenant indicated that some of the charges leveled against his father and sister may have been dis- credited at yesterday's hearing. Over the protests of Radulo- vich'secivilian counsel, a Tenth Air Force Board conducted the hearing behind closed doors at Selfridge Air Force Base. Maj. Gen. Richard A. Grussendorf said this was being done "pri- marily for the protection of the lieutenant and his family." When questioned about his 'at- tendance at classes at the Uni- versity since the charges were made last week Radulovich said: "I'm so doggne upset that I can't sit down to study. I told some of my instructors that I won't be around for a few weeks. My wife and I are getting more nervous every day." THE proceedings have aroused wide attention. A television cam- era was set up at the base head- quarters building to film Radulo- vich's entry into the hearing room. However, he and his wife entered the building by another door. "A hint was dropped at the hearing that the publicity this case is receiving wasn't apprec- iated," Radulovich told The Daily, "but I pointed out that it was my counsel who got the baIl rolling." Radulovich is represented by Charles C. Lockwood and Kenneth M. Sanborn who is Chairman of the Macomb Young Republican club and a college friend of the defendant. Sanborn said the defense ob- jected particularly to the Air Force procedure on the ground "it is con- trary to any system of American jurisprudence that ever existed." "The presumption of innocense," Sanbor concluded, "is reversed and the burden of proof is placed upon us." REGENT LELAND I. DOAN ** * Engineers Will Hear DoanSpeak! Regent Leland I. Doan, President of the Dow Chemical. Co. will ad-; dress the Engineers Rally at 8 p.m. today in Rackham Auditor- ium. Also speaking at the rally will be University President Harlan H. Hatcher and Dean George G. Brown of the Engineering School, ACCORDING TO Bob Richard- son, '55E, a member of the rally planning committee the meeting will serve more than one pur- poses. Besides serving as a prelude to the Engineering Centennial Celebration which will take place Oct. 22 to 24, the rally will be a meeting "for engineers, about engineering, which we hope will succeed in promoting a broader outlook toward the entire pro- fession by the specialized engi- neer," Richardson said. Before the rally Regent Doan, President Hatchereand Dean Brown will attend a dinner of 15 Presidents of Professional and Honorary Engineering Societies. Regent Doan, who will deliver the major speech at the rally is a graduate of both the University and Ann Arbor High School. He has been associated with Dow Chemical Co. since 1917. HE HASHELD several positions in the sales department of the company, has served as a Director, a Vice-President and in 1941 was i chosen Secretary of the corpora- tion. He was elected to its Presi- dency in April 1949. Regent Doan is also a Director in the Michigan Bell Telephqne Company and holds positions in I several other firms. In April 1951 he was elected a Regent of the University. Russia Makes Bid For Peace Parley Offer Means Including Red China; U.S. Denounces Move as 'Evasive' WASHINGTON-(A')-Soviet Russia yesterday offered to tak over world tensions with the Big Three Western powers at two separate diplomatic conferences-provided Communist China is also invited to one of them at least. The State Department promptly denounced the Kremlin's offer as "exasive and a continuation of dilatory tactics" that have pre- vented earlier East-West meetings. * * * * THE SOVIET proposal, set forth in a formal note, ignored a pre- vious Western invitation for Russia to attend a foreign ministers meeting at Lugano, Switzerland, on Oct. 15. Informed diplomats in Mos- Pro- Wester1 cow and Washington said a pre- liminary study of the note indi- cated Russia proposed: Berlin Chief 1. A meeting of representatives of Russia, the United States, Brit-Re ain, France and Red China to dis- cuss "a lessening of tensions in in- ternational relations." 2. A Big Four European con- BERLIN - () -- Lord Mayor ference, presumably without Com- Ernest Reuter, militant leader of munist China, to tackle the dead- West Berlin's fight, against Com- locked German problem plus "all munism, died at his home last pro sals introduced in the course night of a heart attack. of preparing the conference." He was 64. S* A Social Democrat who once THE RUSSIANS appeared to dabbled in Communist party af- condition the European confer- fairs, Reuter was world famed for ence on a Big Five meeting which his defience of the Russians who would include Red China. surrounded the war-ravaged Allied . Apparently no specific dates sectors of Berlin, isolated within for either meeting were propos- the Soviet zone. ed by the Soviets. * * * A top American official, talking HE RALLIED the people to re- to newsmenr made it clear the sistance against the Russian block United States remains opposed to ade of 1948-49. bringing Red China into any dis- Often mentioned as a possible cussion of general European ten- next president of the West Ger- man Republic, Reuter worked Secretary of State Dulles be- closely with the conservative gan conferences with Ambassador Bonn government in trying to Charles E. Bohlen, who returned reunite a free Germany. from Moscow Monday for. consul- Expressions of tne grief for- his tations, before discussing Russia's loss and the esteem for the figure new note with President Eisen- he made in the postwar world be- hower. gan to pour in after the sudden * ** fatal attack. THE SOVIET note, intended as Chancellor Konrad Adenpuer a reply to an American-British- said the death "is a great loss for French message of Sept. 2, appar- the German cause," ently foreclosed any possibility the * * Big Four foreign ministers could THE DEATH was announced meet in Switzerland on schedule over West German radio; stations, to go over the German andhAus- which then played solemn music. trian issues. The heavy-jowled mayor, who American diplomats In Moscow liked to wear a black beret, vis- said the note indicated skant pros- ited the United States last Spects for any East-West agree- March and conferred with Presi- ment on the German issue in the dent Eisenhower in Washington. near future. On a speaking tour of the coun- American officials here said the try,he enlisted aid for the thou- Russian proposals seemed to be a sands of East German refugees rehash of previous arguments of- who continue to pour into West fered Aug. 4 and Aug. 15. Berlin for asylum. National Roundup. By The Associated Press DETROIT - Federal Judge Frank A. Pickard yesterday granted a two weeks postponement to attorneys representing six Michigan persons accused of violating the Smith Act. Judge Picard said he would rule on the dismissal motion Thursday at 11 a.m. * * * # #* * LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Civil Aer- WASHINGTON - The Small onautics Board investigators sift- Business Administration yester- ed through wreckage of a shat- day announced higher interest tered C46 yesterday as the death of Stewardess Dorothy Jean Bush rates will be charged on loans raised the toll in Kentucky's worst made directly to small business aviation disaster to 23. men. * * * * . * * WASHINGTON - Secretary Harold E. Talbott, noting Com- munist indoctrination of some American prisoners in Korea, called yesterday for intensified citizenship education in the Air Force. SL Bookstore By special request Student iv er n q fi T'Legislature's Book Exchange WITHOUT PAUL BUNYAN: 'U' Foresters To Observe An AS MAYOR of a city of more than two million people 100 miles behind the Iron Curtain, he be- came the living symbol of Berlin's defiance of Russia and her Com- munist underlings in the East. It'was his unswerving spirit that held the West Berliners together during the fearful 327 blockade days in 1948-49 when Russia tried to force the Western powers out of the former Reich capital. Union Opera Committees Seek Tryouts Committee tryouts for the 1953 Union Opera, to be presented lo- cally from Dec. 9 to 11 and later on a road trip, will be held at-.4 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday in Rm. 3D of the Union, Richard M. Fiegel, '55, general secretary of the Opera, said yesterday. Posts open for the all-male musi- cal comedy include student direc- tor, production, publicity, cos- tume and makeup committess, song and newspaper writers, advertis- ing salesmen, radio and television staff, program editors and typists. THIS YEAR'S Howard Nemor-. ovski-produced Opera will be the latest show in a Michigan tradi- tion dating back to 1908. As yet unnamed, the musical will deal: with atomic energy, home brewed corn liquor and bureaucracy, a highly volatile mixture. Although the Opera is writ- ten, produced and acted by Uni- versity men, some posts are open to women, Fiegel said. One of the most important posts open to tryouts is that of student L .. T L J.. L K../%X X ;.. By JANET FORD No one knows if Paul Bunyan will be there, but other alumni of the School of Natural Resources will be on hand tomorrow to help celebrate the School's fiftieth an- niversary. The three day convocation spon- sored by the University of Mich- igan Foresters' Association will open tomorrow afternoon after re- turning alumni and their wives have registered at the Rackham Bldg. * * * SCHEDULED FOR 4 p.m. is an alumni association meeting. Bruce RuP3_ nP~ii~n oftheacBruce * * * * square dancing, group singing, re- freshments, door prizes and color movies of the School's summer camp in the Upper Peninsula, Camp Filibert Roth. Presiding at the University Con- vocation at 10:30 a.m. on Friday will be University president Har- lan Hatcher. RICHARD - McCardle, '23NR, chief of the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture's Forest Ser- vice, will speak on "Public Service in Forestry." will remain open between 1 and 5:30 p.m. today in the Lea- gue Lobby to return unsold books and checks to students upon presentation of receipts, according to Betty Magyar, '54, bookstore manager. Texts that are unclaimed at the close of the store's business today will be retained by the book exchange. Canada May Use Aircraft Warning OTTAWA, Ont.-(P)-Canada is testing a low-cost device to give warning of approaching aircraft Four honorary degrees will be awarded to alumni and others