THE RIGHT TRACK See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State 74kit ij CLOUD, CONTINUED WARM VOL. LXIV, No. 159 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 16, 1954 SIX PAGES U' Plans $7,000,000 Construction Project -Daily-Dean Mgrton PLANNING-Newly appointed members of the 1954 Union Opera student committee talk over plans for next fall's production. Seated from left to right are Bob Hoffman, '56E, production chairman; Jay Grant, '55, general chairman and Bob Gillow, '56, road show manager. Standing from left to right are Howie Boasberg, '56, general secretary; Harold Johnson, '55SM, music chairman; Stu Lerman, '56, program chairman and Guy Moulthrop, '56E, promotions chairman. Union Opera Heads Named U.S. Levels Accusations A t Moscow 'Soviet Gave Help To North Korea' WASHINGTON-()-The Pen- tagon accused Russia yesterday f definitely masterminding the Korean War. It also said Russia put 6,000 to 12,000 troops into Korea in ad- vance of the armistice and still controls the North Korean govern- ment through Soviet citizens. Charges were leveled in a series of documents, in the nature of a White Paper, which the Defense Department said were based on "intelligence research and exam- ination of many sources of infor- mation." The timing, thescontent and the fact that it was the Pentagon which released the documents ap- peared to be an obvious effort to draw a parallel between Soviet ac- tivity in Korea and Chinese Com- munist operations in Indochina. Among other things, the docu- ments stated that: 1) The top officials of North Korea, including Kirki Ii Sung, who became Premier in 1946, and Nam Il, senior Communist delegate at the Panmunjom armistice talks, are "all Soviet citizens by birth" and are "the Russians who run the governmental apparatus of North Korea." 2) By the end of last May-- nearly two months before the ar- mistice-from 6,000 to 12,000 "Rus- sian tactical troops" were in Korea, in anti-aircraft units, med- ium gun regiments and quarter- master and rail outfits. About 1,300 Russians were employed as staff and technical advisors throughout North Korea. . 3. "Right down to the command- ers of line units, orders were trans-, mitted in Russian. 4. "Many Russian 'advisors' were attached to the North Korean ar- my advance headquarters estab- lished in June, 1950. 5. "In the spring of 1951, Soviet troops, together with some medical and support units from other satel- lites, began to filter into Northl Korea.l 6. "In 1946 officers of Korean1 ancestry who had been trained by the Chinese Communist army were sent into North Korea to help form units "being organized, train- ed and equipped by Russian occu- pation forces." I 'o Supply Funds Plans Include Men's Swimming Pool To Be Completed Next Spring By DAVE LIVINGSTON Athletic Director Herbert 0. "Fritz" Crisler yesterday announce& an ambitious athletic building program that will eventually reach $7,000,000 proportions. Immediate steps include construction of a new swimming pool for men and a new athletic administration building. * * * * THE ENTIRE PROGRAM, which also incorporates the recently completed $1,070,000 women's swimming pool and the already-begun nine-hole golf course, calls for further construction of a new By WALLY EBERHARD The 1954 Union Opera student committee has been named by the Opera committee of the Union Board of Directors. Chosen on the basis of petitions and interviews, the committee will direct the various aspects of the production of next fall's Union Opera. HEADING the committee as general chairman is Jay Grant, '55, who was program chairman of the last Opera. Grant, a member of Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity, is a Union vice-president and a mem- ber of Mimes and Druids honorary societies. His home is West Hart- ford, Conn. Bob Gillow, '56, has been named road show manager. A Detroiter, Gillow was booths chairman for Michigras and is affiliated with Beta Theta P1 fraternity. He also belongs to Sphinx and Toastmasters hon. oraries. Bob Hoffman, '56E, from Kan- sas City, Mo., was stage manager for this year's Opera and has been named production chairman. Rare Device To Sell Garg Designed to be used on sales day to offset dwindling numbers of Gargoyle salesmen as finals ap- proach, a machine that spits Gar- goyles and blows smoke rings will make its first local appearance Wednesday, according to Gargoyle managing editor Larry Pike, '54. Product of a depraved mind, this infernal device has been ex- hibited in all the capitals of Ant- arctica and the Republics of the U.S.S.R. Comment has generally been favorable, Pike said. He is affiliated with Zeta Beta Tau fraternity and is a member of Mimes and Triangles. * * * MUSIC chairman for the third consecutive year will be Harold "Red" Johnson, '55SM, from Caro, Mich. A member of Sphinx, Druids and Mimes honoraries, he is affil- iated with Theta Delta Chi fra- ternity. Howie Boasberg, '56, will be the Opera general secretary. Af- filiated with Zeta Beta Tau, he was Opera ticket chairman last year and Michigras stunts chair- Football Receipts man this spring. He is from Buf- falo, N.Y. Promotions chairman will be Guy Moulthrop, '56E, from Bay City. Moulthrop was parade chair- man for Michigras and is a mem- ber of the Engineering Honor Council, Triangles and Vulcans. He is affiliated with Chi Psi fra- ternity. Stu Lerman, '56, will be program chairman. A former Daily assist- ant local advertising manager, he is from Syracuse, N.Y., and is af- filiated with Zeta Beta Tau fra- ternity. -Daily-Don Campbell COACH RAY FISHER ARGUES WITH THE UMPIRE SHORTLY BEFORE BEING EJECTED FROM YESTERDAY'S FIRST GAME 'M'Diamondmen Split Doubleheader With MSC By CORKY SMITH It took five hours of baseball yesterday afternoon for the Wol- verine nine to write "victory" in the record book as the squad fought to the last inning of the second game for a split with Michigan State. Michigan lost the first contest, 8-4; and came from behind in the last of the seventh frame in the second game to win by a 9-8 margin. McCARTHY-ARMY HEARINGS: Conference on Charges To Remain Confidential WASHINGTON-(T)-A high Republican official predicted yes- terday that the Administration will stick by its refusal to bare details of a Jan. 21 Cabinet-level conference that paved the way for Army charges against Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.). The official, who asked that he not be named, said he expects the refusal to bring a fight with Democrats on the Senate sub- committee investigating the Army-McCarthy issue. * * * * SEN. JOHN L. McCLELLAN (D-Ark.) and other Democrats have demanded full information about the conference, which was attended field house and a $300,000 football pressbox. Financed entirely out of foot- ball receipts, the comprehensive building program has been ap- proved by the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics and the Board of Regents. Prof. Crisler said that construc- tion of the men's pool and athletic administration building will get underway this summer with com- pletion expected next spring. He indicated that work on the pressbox and fieldhouse will pro- ceed as rapidly as funds become available. Prof. Crisler also ex- pressed the hope that the press- box, which will be given priority over the fieldhouse, can be started within a year and the fieldhouse within three years. * * * "UNIVERSITY enrollment is in- creasing continually and we plan to keep pace with it," the athletic director said. "Michigan has al- ways had the reputation of having one of the finest athletic plants in the country and we plan to keep it that way. While some parts of our plants have become outmoded, our planned building program will make Michigan second to none in this respect." The new pool, which will have a seating capacity of 3,000 for spectators at varsity meets, and the athletic offices will be one unit located just north of the present athletic administration building, with the office entrance located at State and Hoover. The pool will be built directly against the east side of the Intra- mural Sports Building, enabling the new unit to utilize heating facilities already available in the Intramural Building. To make room for the additions, the Ferry Field track will have to be moved several yards west of its present location. * * * EVENTUALLY razed to make room for the fieldhouse will be the old athletic administration build- ing. Its construction will almost double the seating capacity for basketball by raising it from the present maximum of 8,000 to 15,000. This new fieldhouse will also enable Michigan to holdcham- pionship indoor track meets, as well as provide handball courts and other facilities ° for intra- mural athletics. When questioned, Prof. Crisler indicated that there was a possi- bility the fieldhouse could also be used for hockey, * * * * WITH THE SPLIT yesterday Ohio State passed Michigan in the Ten standings, having won a Big Sus pensions Not on Agenda Discussion of the recent faculty suspensions is not on the agenda for the meeting of the University Faculty Senate scheduled for 4:15 p.m. tomorrow. The subject of the suspensions may, arise during the course of the meeting, however, as members of the Senate may bring up any Eby Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell, Deputy Atty. Gen. William Rog- ers, Ambassador Henry Cabot! Lodge, White House chief of staff Sherman Adams, presidential as- sistant Gerald Morgan and Army counselor John G. Adams. John Adams testified that at the meeting held in Brownell's office, Sherman Adams suggest- ed he put in writing incidents of alleged pressure by McCarthy and his aides, A Republican official said he expects the Administration to stand on the grounds that execu- tive department business was lie- THE GARGOYLE-selling ma- topic for discussion, ing discussed. chine, designed to print a Gargoyle - - - complete. with cover and cigaret ad for each person who drops a DRAMA SEASON PLAY: quarter in the slot, uses wood pulp,, members as raw materials. This is to offset any criticisms that the Gargoyle is "stale" by the time itT reaches the news stands, the edi-O m O tor was quick to point out. T Each Gargoyle produced will have different jokes, selected to By PHYLLIS LIPSKY please the purchaser. This will Taking its name from the spook Ann Arbor audiences saw ar's be accomplished by means of a who haunts a Gramercy Park in the leading role of last year's top-secret electronic computer house in New York City, "Gram- Drama Season production of "'he section. - ercy Ghost," the second produc- Hasty Heart." He has also ap- There was a great deal of excite- tion of the 1954 Drama Season, peared on the New York stage in ment during the assembly of the will open at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow "Dear Ruth" and "The Heiress," machine. Sparks flew and the edi- in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. with his film career including roles tors were radiated with lambda The comedy stars June Lock- in "The Corn is Green" and "An- rays when the machine was dem- hart as the heroine who inherits other Part of the Forest." onstrated before the staff, Pike a haunted house , and John Dall In the cast as "unbelievers" who commented. as a young newspaper man, the deny the existence of the "Gram- Authorized by a grant from the only member of the cast to be- ercy Ghost" are Nydia Westman,7 Federal Research Council and run lieve that Miss Lockhart has real- Iggie Wolfington, Tom Tyrrell and by atomic power, the machine will ly seen a ghost. University alumnus Truman Smith.; be placed in front of the General Center of the controversy is Na- Holm, who is co-author of "Three* Library. Since the machine ac- thaniel, a spirit whose history Men on a Horse," will have a newj World News Roundup By The Associated Press WILLIAMSBURG, Va.-United States efforts to negotiate' for a world atom pool for peaceful pur- poses have wound up in a dead- lock, Secretary of State John Fos- ter Dulles said here yesterday. But, Dulles said, "We shall per- sist in our efforts to negotiate in relation to Germany, Austria, In- dochina and atomic energy." * *' * WASHINGTON-President Eis- enhower's new housing program faces its most critical test next week in five days of closed-door sessions of the Senate Banking Committee. The legislation, a key part of Eisenhower's domestic program, passed the House with little diffi- culty. But that was before the White House and two congression- al committees launched probes of scandals in the Federal Housing Administration. WASHINGTON - Air Force spokesmen said yesterday a So- viet transport plane made three low passes over America's float- ing ice island near the North Pole 10 days ago, apparently taking photographs. t 3 i 1 f R pair of games front Minnesota yes- terday afternoon. The Wolverines slipped to third place. Wolverine leftfielder Howie Tommelein's last-minute blow over the right field fence brought hundredt of fans to their feet and happy Wolverine players from the dugout as he circled the bases and touched home plate to salvage a win for the Michigan team in an aft- ernoon filled with hits, runs, er- rors, and ejections. . Coach Ray Fisher was ordered from the game by the plate um- pire in the first game when he disputed a pop fly dropped by Spartan shortstop, Johnny Mat- sock. Wolverine player Mick Bel- lows was also thrown out in the first of the seventh for -heckling the plate umpire. * * * TOMMELEIN'S blast in the sev- enth inning culminated a five-run drive matching State's rally of five runs in the top half of the in- See WOLVERINE, Page 3 Hatcher Talks; At Dedication1 President Harlan H. Hatcher expressed hopes yesterday morn- ing during the dedication of the1 new $3,500,000 Kresge Medical Re-I search Bldg. that the research carried on in the building would contribute to the health of the people of Michigan, the nation, and the world. More than 100 persons, amongl them University officials and doc- tors along with nationally-known medical men, attended the cere- mony. Sebastian S. Kresge, found- er of the Kresge Foundation whose gift to the University made the building possible, accepted the thanks of University officials. In November, 1951, ground was broken for construction after the gift was presented to the Univer-1 sity in November, 1949.1 West To Bid For Cease In Indochina Vietminh Invade Key Delta Post of Phuly By The Associated Press The Western Big Three huddled secretly yesterday in Geneva to prepare a firm bid for a quick cease-fire i Indochina. U.S. Under-Secretary of State Walter Beddell Smith met last night with Bfitain's Foreign Sec- retary Anthony Eden after an ear- lier conference with Eden and French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault. * * * NO INFORMATION was releas- ed concerning the meetings, but they were known to be mapping strategy for the secret sessions to be held with the Communist dele- gations next week. In Indochina, Vietminh mor- tar and heavy machinegun fire poured in on the key Red River Delta defense post of Phuly, 30 miles south of Hanoi. A French High Command spokesman said yesterday the Vietminh were heavily "harass- ing" Phuly and were under in- tense attack by French fighters and bombers. MEANWHILE in Paris, France ordered three of her top generals to Indochina to build a new strat- egy to meet the expected onslaught of Vietminh troops spurred by their victory at Dien Bien Phu. At the Geneva conference the United States and France pro- tested in letters to Soviet For- eign Minister V. M. Molotov that the Vietminh was going back on its promise to release all wound- ed, regardless of race and na- tionality. The French High Command an- nounced last night it has "stopped" all evacuation of French wounded from Dien Bien Phu until the Viet- minh repair the. fallen fortress' main airstrip to permit Dakota transports to land. Joint Judiciary Appoints Five Appointments of five Joint Ju- diciary Council members for the coming year were announced yes- terday by Judic chairman Lee Fiber, '54. Chosen from more than 40 ap- plicants, the new Judic members are Christine E. Reifel, '55, Elia- beth Garland, '56SM, Georgiana Davidson, '56, Richard E. Balz hiser, '54E and Howard N. Nem- erovski, '54E. ON THE UN SCENE: Israel-Jordan Dispute Aired By SAM REICH It was fairly quiet this week in the United Nations as most of the world focused attention on the Ge- neva Conference and reflected on the fall of Dien Bien Phu-. Almost ignored was the bitter strife between Israel and Jordan which once again exploded into violence. The UN sought to act on this pressing problem, and also on flt nthr mtt'P in the fialc of several hours. The commission de- nounced Israel's actions as being "inconsistent" with their armis- tice agreement. * *~ * IN FURTHER developments of the Israel-Jordan dispute, the Se- curity Council adjourned Wednes- day to give its members time to consider an Israeli demand that Jordan accept in advance the ob- ligations of a peaceful setlement. The UN charter provides that all non-member nations of the UN who submit complaints must agree to accept the obligations of a peaceful settlement. However. Jordan has not filed mates, the cost of building the new laboratory in New York would be $90,000, while in Geneva it would be only $11,000. However, estab- lishing a laboratory in Geneva NEW YORK control of the tral Railroad court decision3 a set-back for1 ent manageme --Th Fgh fr wo o ner ma ers inn e ieds of - The Fight for LW JI~ ILV~ilLI Ii~V New York Cen- health and social legislation. brought another AU yesterday, this one A RESOLUTION adopted this the Central's pres- week by the UN Jordanian-Israeli1 nt. Mixed Armistice Commission con- 1 demned Israel for invading Jorda- inn +m,'itnr.m nnr-n vfo x 0 df would entail moving the tNarcotics Drugs Division of the UN Sec- A MEMBER of Student Legis- retariat from New York. During lature, Miss Reifel is affiliated the debate, Athens was also sug- with Chi Omega. Miss Davidson gested as a site. has served this year with the For many years nations have Women's Judiciary Council, while been faced with problems arising Miss Garland is a member of Kap- from families who are stranded pa Kappa Gamma. without support when their Balzhiser, one of the two stu- breadwinner goes to a foreign dent members of the Honors country. International legislation Convocation committee, partici- to cover such cases has been pated in the Economic Develop- lacking, and the UN has taken ment Council and the Engineer- . _.. , me tCo r-