THE MICHIGAN DAILY COHAN'S 'LAR KIEST THING': 'Pigeons and People' Opens Wednesday; Cast Announced "Pigeons and People", the second of the Department of Speech Reper- tory Plays, will be given Wednesday through Friday this week at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The cast of 12, announced yester- day, includes Ray Pederson, who will play the lead role as Parker; Robert Thompson will be Joseph Heath; Pat Meikle will be Miss Giles; Rowland McLaughlin will be Franklin Chase; and John Babington, Gilroy. Others cast are: Richard Shafer in the part of Bata; Judy Greengard as Elinor Payne; Marilyn Miller as Winnie Lloyd; Ed Gifford as Mc- Guire; Ken Garlinger as Dr. Fris- by; and Audrey Lawrence and Rober- ta Seibert who will be Miss Graham, and Mrs. Dunlop. Meredith Directs Director of "Pigeons and People" is Cllarles Meredith, visiting producer from Le Petit Theatre du Vieux Carre in New Orleans. Herbert Philippi is designer-technician of scenery; Miss Lucy Barton is costumiere. Described as "the- larkiest thing Cohan ever wrote" and "the most spectacular stunt ever seen in a theatre", the plot revolves about a stranger, received in a swanky house- hold, who prefers the society of pig- eons. "Parker", who travels under an assumed name, astounds his hosts, un-nerves and frightens a round of callers, dismays police and airs his opinion of people and his preference for the pigeons he feeds in the park. Comic State of Mind The play is described by Cohan, the author, as "a comic state of mind in continuous action." Seats for the four evening per- formances and the Saturday matinee are on sale at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office, phone 6300. Fraud Vote' --Mikolajczk Polish Leader Shows Partly Burned Ballots WARSAW, July 13 -(A') - Vice Premier Stanislaw Mikolajczyk, head of the. opposition Polish Peasant Party, declared today that he would demand that the Provisional Govern- ment nullify the referendum rof June 30 on the grounds of irregularity in voting and in counting of ballots. At a news conference for foreign correspondents he exhibited a thou- sand partially burned and destroyed ballots he said were salvaged from sewers and refuse heaps. He charged that many partially de- stroyed ballots with negative votes were dumped into the sewers and that around Warsaw alone "thou- sands" of ballots were burned or partially destroyed. Yesterday referendum Commission- er Barczikowski said in a statement that previous charges made by Mink- olajczyk of irregularities and fraud in the voting and counting were not confirmed by an investigation. The commission admitted that in some instances ballots were removed to other places for counting and that some provincial committees had bar- red Polish Peasant Party members from election commissions. (A Moscow Radio broadcast said tonight that the results of the refer- endum proved beyond question that the Polish people are behind their government and that "no fresh man- euvers by the Mikolajczyk group and its patrons abroad can minimize the significance of the fact that Polish reaction has lost.") Mikolajczyk charged that before, during and after the referendum gov- ernment security police arrested more than 5,000 Peasant Party members. VETERANS' NOTES The Veterans Administiation has announced that it has no authority to pay any benefits to a veteran for injury, or aggravation of a previous condition, while he or she is enrolled for educational or training benefits of the Servicemen's Readjustment Act. This is based on a decision of the Solicitor for the Administrator of Veterans Affairs. It also states the VA does not have the authority to pay benefits where an injury is the result of hospital or medical, in- cluding surgical, treatment furnished by the school or training institution as an incident of the education or training under this act. However, under Public Law 16 pro- viding vocational rehabilitation for disabled veterans, the VA is author- ized certain benefit payments to a veteran injured in the course of training. CHARLES MEREDITH ... Direc- tor of Le Petit Theatre du Vieux Carre in New Orleans, will direct the next Department of Speech Re- pertory play, "Pigeons and People." Negro Voters Purged From Primary Lists ATLANTA, July 13-(/P)-The Fed- eral Courts and the Justice Depart- ment moved today to consider the mass purging of Negroes from the voting lists in politically embroiled Georgia. Hundreds of Negroes registered for the first time to vote in the July 17 Democratic primary-the actual elec- tion-have been disqualified. The purging in some counties is still un- der way. The latest unofficial figures show that 134,351 Negroes have registered to vote for the first time in Georgia. This compares with a white registra- tion of 1,017,036. White outnumber Negroes 3 to 1 in Georgia. Federal Judge Frank M. Scarlett at Runswick ordered a halt to whole- sale disenfranchisement of Negroes in Atkinson County in South Georgia. Registrars of three other South Geor- gia counties were ordered to appear for a hearing Monday. Two Yugoslav Soldiers Killed TRIESTE, July 13-MA)-Two Yu- goslav soldiers were killed by an American patrol last night in brief skirmishes near the Morgan Line, and today American troops in the area of the zonal boundary were placed on the alert. The U.S. 88th Division announced that two separate Yugoslav patrols opened fire on the American patrol investigating a Yugoslav violation of the Morgan line. The line divides Yu- goslav and American-British zones of occupation in disputed Venezia Giu- lia. Women Vets Plan Social Organization A plan to form a social organiza- tion for the women veterans on cam- pus will be discussed at a meeting to be held tomorrow at 8:00 p.m. in the Michigan League, Anne Dearn- ley, head of the preliminary planning committee, announced. The proposed organization would enable the 126 ex-service women to become better acquainted, being es- pecially helpful for those who will live at Willow Run in the fall, Miss Dearnley added. The first social activity planned for the group will be a picnic at 6 p.m., July 19, on the "Island." Senate Passes Bureau Merger By Close Vote Proposal Is Fought By Republican Group By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 13 -One of three presidential plans for merging and streamlining government agen- cies squeezed through Congress today when the Senate heeded a plea of Democratic leader Barkley (Ky.) to "scrape some of the barnacles from the ship of state." The Senate, by a ballot announced as 37 to 30, voted down a resolution disapproving a plan which proposed that the Grazing Service and Gen- eral Land Office be combined into a single Bureau of Land Management in the Interior Department. Fought by Republicans, that was the biggest of a dozen-odd shifts in "Reorganization Plan No. 3." The House already had rejected the plan, and two other President Truman sent to Congress on May 16. Under the Reorganization Act, all three go into effect automatically at midnight Monday - 60 days after submission - unless both Senate and House turn them down. Battling against time, Republicans maneuvered to shove the remaining two plans to a showdown in the Sen- ate before Monday's deadline. They complained that the Truman plans would not do the reorganization job Congress intended, and that Sena- tors had not had sufficient time to study them. Byrnes Reports On Conference Monday Night PARIS, July 13-(/P)-Secretary of State James F. Byrnes said today he would report to his nation Mon- day night on results of the month long Foreign Ministers Conference in which he said the United States accepted some compromises on Eur- opean treaty proposals td avoid a "clash that nobody wants." Byrnes, last of the three visiting Foreign Ministers to leave France, flew from Orly Field on the presi- dential plane, "The Sacred Cow," at 1:55 p.m. (7:55 a.m., EST) bound for Iceland and Washington. Those ac- companying him included U.S. Sena- tors Tom Connally, (Dem., Tex.) and Arthur H. Vandenberg (Rep., Mich.) and their wives. British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin departed two hours earlier. The Soviet Foreign Minister, V. M. Molotov, took off for Moscow early in the morning. Byrnes told a news conference be- fore leaving that he would press for a new.meeting of the Foreign Minis- ters of the four powers after the forthcoming European place confer- ence here July 29, and before the meeting of the United Nations in New York, tentatively set for Sept. 23. Russian Espionage Trial In Last Phase SEATTLE, July 13-01)-A gov- ernment attorney today told a jury trying Nicolai G. Redin on espion- age-conspiracy charges that the Rus- sian naval lieutenant "could have become in his own land a greater hero than the man who guided the Russian hordes into Berlin." In the government's opening final argument, Victor E. Anderson, a special assistant to the U.S. At- torney General, from St. Paul, Minn., said that "this courtroom would nev- er have heard this trial if Redin had obtained all the secret information he requested" from Herbert Kennedy, shipyard worker. "The government could not have afforded to disclose the situation if Redin had obtained the informa- tion," he said. "We, would rather have lost the trial but we caught him before these documents saw the light of day." ASSOCIATED \ T A L I A N N A V Y U N I T S--The submarines Zoea and Galatea and the corvette Folaga (left to right) are serviced at Naples preparatory to treaty disposition -of the Italian fleet. DANCER -Mary Raye (above) and her husband, Naldi," will dance for Princess Elizabeth In London this summer. PUCTURE NEWS PRESS AT-W O R K ON. U R A N'IU M-Randall chines uranium on a lathe at the University of Chicaj uranium continues to oxidize after cutting, sparks linj part of the process in making an atomic bor iz maa Because This is a III K I N G-The former Prince Phumiphon Aduldet, 18,' was named king of Siam following the fataF shooting of his elder brother, the 20-year-old~King Ananda Mahidol.' S I A M 'S R 0 Y A L P A L A C E-The slender-spired royal palace of the new King Phumi- phon Aduldet in Bangkok, Siam, is partly modern and partly Siamese in design, fIINIE WATCHIES and WATCH TWO WEEKS SERVICE. FOUR SKILLED REPAIRMEN. .... . :* '. . . . ..... .......... .... .": " ..i ? . .: :.:?}L} {"r?"X :s.