COMPLEX See Page 2 Latest Deadline in the State D~iti r . "._ - > > ', 1 F AI R V0L. LIX, No. 30S Navy Fighter In Collision With Airliner Sixteen Persons Killed ini Crash FORT DIX, N.J.-(P)-A speed- ing airliner and a Navy fighte plane collided high over ths sprawling military base yesterday, killing 16 persons. The tail- and left wing were ripped off the Eastern Airlines DC-3 by the crash. It plummeted to the ground and burst into a tower of flame. Twelve passengers-including a child-and three crew members' were found dead in a tangled heap' of charred bodies. The pilot of the small fighter plane was found 800 feet from his craft some two miles from the commercial airliner. The two - engined airliner. bound from Boston to Memphis, plowed open a wide ditch as it ground into a mass on the farm of Peter Mungus in the Chester- field-Sykesville Road. The crash scene is a flat pas- ture in the sparsely populated farm country some 25 miles north- east of Philadelphia on the route toward New York City. The plane had left Boston with- out any passengers at 7:55 (EST) M this morning. It picked up 15 passengers at Hartford. Nine of these got off at LaGuardia Air- port in New York. Six others, who died in the crash shortly after 10 a'm., boarded the plane at New York. The airliner was headed toward Wilmington, Del., as it passed over Fort Dix. From Milmington, it had been scheduled to go to Wash- ington, then Atlanta and finally Memphis. Maj. William A. Somerby of the Fort Dix public information office identified the military craft as a Navy fighter from the An- acostia Naval Air Station in Wash- ington, D.C. Navy officials there said a Navy F-U-F Hellcat left there this morning for Quonset Point, R.I., and was overdue. The Navy said it cotild not make public the pilot's name until his next-of-kin is notified. Eastern Airlines, Army, Navy and Civil Aeronautics Board offi- cials sped to the crash area to investigate the accident. Somerby said Army investiga- tors had been told by an eye- witness that the fighter plane had tapproached the airliner from the right read and had crashed into the top of the liner. E isler Kinl Claims Red Spies in UN WASHINGTON - (P) - Testi- mony of a self-described former Communist that Russia has used the United Nations to "reinforce" her spies in this country was made public last night by a Senate Ju- diciary Subcommittee. The statement was made by Mrs. Ruth Fischer of New York City, a sister of Gerhart Eisler, the Communist leader who jump- ed bond and skipped the country after being convicted of passport fraud. Mrs. Fischer testified behind closed doors at a meeting of the Senate Committee on May 10. She said she once was a leading mem- ber of the German Communist Party but broke with the Com- munists in 1926 and became a United States citizen in 1947. She testified against Eisler at his trial. In her hitherto secret testimony, she said that Soviet intelligence agents are hidden in the various Russian diplomatic, trade and other delegations that come to this country. Ostensibly, she said, they are assigned to some routine function but their "real job is to report on various phases of American society to Moscow headquarters." "Recently this corps has been reinforced by the UN delegations of Russia and her satellites," Mrs. Fisher said. She also testified that a French woman whom she described as "highly dangerous" had gained admittance to the United States "because her organization was re- ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 31, 1949 PRICE FIVE Ed CENTSm. New Telephone Zone NEW ENLARGED LOCAL CALLING AREA-The white areas on the map show the new towns Ann Arbor phone users may now call without additional toll charges. Ann Arbor now has 16,072 phones. The new area will bring in 14,794 more telephones. * * Ex-tend A A Phone Area; Montthly Rates Increased By DON SIGMAN Ann Arbor telephone users can now call several nearby com- munities without additional toll charges. The Michigan Bell Telephone Co. in announcing this new "ex- tended area service" revised phone rates upward. * * * * EFFECTIVE TODAY the toll charges have been eliminated on calls to Chelsea, Dexter, Manchester, Whitmore Lake, Plymouth and Ypsilanti. The company based the raise on the increased number of phones that callers will be able to reach toll-free. lBritish, Ship Eludes Reds Ont Yangtze LONDON - (I) -- The British sloop Amethyst has escaped down the Yangtze River under the fire of Chinese Communist shore bat- teries and rejoined the fleet with- out suffering damage or casual- ties, the Admiralty proudly an- nounced last night. The escape took place Friday, the Admiralty said. A signal re- ceived from the Amethyst said: "Rejoined the fleet. No damage or casualties. God save the King." * * * THE AMETHYST was fired on at least twice in her downriver run to safety, the Admiralty said. The Amethyst has been at an- chor in the Yangtze River since last April 20, when she was shelled by Chinese Communist shore,-batteries and ran aground on Rose Island, 60 miles down- stream from Nanking. This was before the fall of Nan- king to the Communists. At that time British casualties aboard the 1,490-ton Amethyst included 17 dead and 20 wounded. NORMALLY the Amethyst car- ries 192 men but only 86 were aboard when the sloop made its dash to freedom. The Amethyst was one of four British warships that were fired on in the Yangtze last April. The gunfire killed 44 British sailors in alt- 2 A total of 30,826 telephones are in the new local calling area com- pared to the 16,072 phones that could previously be reached toll- free. Telephone calls to all towns in the area except Plymouth and Ypsilanti may be dialed directly without help from the operator. Calls to these two towns still re- quire an operator's assistance. To dial directly, Ann Arbor call- ers will merely dial the number "3", followed by the first two let- ters of the name of the town he is calling. Then the telephone num- ber desired is dialed. * * * TO CALL YPSILANTI or Ply- mouth the number "3" followed by the first two letters of the name of the town is dialed as before, except the caller will then give the operator the number desired. Under the new schedule, month- ly rates for residence phones have been increased 25 cents a month. Business rates have gone up $1.00 a month for one party phones. The. 10 cent toll charge to Dex- ter, Whitmore Lake and Ypsilanti have been eliminated. The 15 cent charge for calls to Chelsea, Man- chester and Plymouth have also been eliminated. Telephone directories of com- munities in the enlarged calling area have already been distrib- uted. If you have not received yours to date, they are available at your nearest telephone com- pany office. The Michigan Bell Telephone Company in Ann Ar- bor has offices at 324 E. Huron. New equipment and trunk lines have been installed since company spokesmen claim that the number of calls have increased greatly between towns that have become toll-free. Military Foreign Compromise May Speed MlitaryAid Senate Group Blamed for Lag By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The Adminis- tration was reported working yes- terday on a proposal to reduce the size and scope of President Tru- man's $1,450,000 foreign arms pro- gram, to speed up Congressional action. At the same time, a determined effort to clip some of the vast powers wielded by the 21-member Senate Appropriation Committee appeared under way. * * * * IT WAS THE legislative ques- tion that sent the $5,647,724,000 foreign aid bill back to the Senate Appropriations Committee during the week, and caused the worstO snarl in regular money bills in 25 OPERA years or longer, for the Although the new fiscal year working is a month old, nearly $30,000,- waiting 000,000 worth of appropriations enginee now are piled up waiting Sen- ate action. A Democratic compromise may R ad follow the downward revision of the military assistance program. Such a compromise may: 1. Reduce the proposed over- all cash outlay to about $700,- 000,000. "Organ 2. Cut out a provision of the the fouri Administration Bill giving Presi- next Tue dent Truman authority to trans- ning. fer arms to any nation in the The ra world, restricting such transfers partment to North Atlantic Pact signers, "Operatic Greece, Turkey, Korea and one or has been two other nations. ing of f 3. Provide specifically that the closed-cir program must be fitted into a mutual defense plan to be draft- MORE ed under direction of a defense will part councilcto be set up by the North which is d Atlantic Treaty signers.wihha 4. Specifically limit the program with wha to one year, thus giving the North Atlantic Council about six months to act and Congress about sixHot months to review the situation af- terwards. split A COMPROMISE in these gen- eral terms is known to have been Jjm discussed by legislators in confer- ences with Secretary of State Acheson and Gen. George C. Mar- RICHM shall, former Secretary who is tak- ia's hott ing an active part in effort to get paign ne a program enacted by Congress. and each Meanwhile, Philip C. Jessup, candidate one of Secretary Acheson's right ing but v hand aides, said that complete mary eec development of an integrated The rac defense of the North Atlantic all - out area under the Treaty would charges o take five or six years. tics andc The military assistance pro- side labor gram, he said, would create ef- the choic fective forces to give support to the Council's strategic planning. SINCE * * * Byrd left ALTHOUGH President Truman 1930 no D called his $1,450,000,000 proposal a his backin "minimum" program, checks by handily.. Administration leaders have raised tor John grave doubts in their minds that chairman they can push it through Con- Committe gress. ganization As the Administration bill Contest: stands, the President could send Francis arms to "any foreign govern- scholar an ment or country," any group of wcho is th countries or any group of people ganizatior he might designate as a nation. Horace Critics have said this authority Horaof is so broad that Germany and Mayor of Japan could be rearmed if the cratic Sto President chose to take any such years wh course. leadership * * * Remmie THE STATE DEPARTMENT pen manu denied the reports that a com- his firstl promise was being considered. office. "The Administration feels-as Secretary Acheson said earlier OPEN in the week-that it has a good case for the full amount and believes that when the case has been fully presented to Con- U gress, Congress will approve and vote the full sum." State De- partment press officer Michael Collabor Leaders Arms B To Discuss Western Bloc Defeenses Tour -Daily-Ray Okonski TION 4006-Radio students in the Department of Speech are shown rehearsing a program simulated broadcast which takes place Tuesday. From left to right, Pres Holmes is shown g on sound effects, Bob Hawkins announcing, and Doris Medina and Virginia Varland to get "on the air." In the control room behind the studio are Sheldon Gates and Fred Remely ring and directing the show. * ** * * * * io Classes'Plan To Reproduce )ial Day in a Broadcasting Studio ized chaos" will reign on th floor of Angell Hall sday afternoon and eve- adio classes of the De- of Speech are staging on 4006," the name which given to the undertak- ive hours of simulated cuit broadcasting. * * * THAN 100 radio students icipate in this operation designed to acquaint them t a regular broadcast day Campaigyn ts Virginia iocrats IOND, Va .-U)-Virgin- test -gubernatorial cam- -ared its finale yesterday Eof the four Democratic ,s professed to see noth- -ictory in Tuesday's pri- ction. ce quickly turned into an slugging match with e "vicious machine" poli- counter blasts of "out- forces trying to dictate s of governor." SENATOR Harry F. the Governor's office in emocratic candidate with ig has ever failed to win This time, State Sena- LS. Battle, 59-year-old of the Senate Finance re, is carrying the or- n banner. ding with him are: SPickens Miller, Rhodes id former Army Colonel he out-and-out anti-or- standard bearer; H. Edwards, former Richmond and Demo- ate Chairman for eight o broke with the party to run on his own; L. Arnold, Petersburg facturer, who is making bid for a state public Europe in Seen eductic is like tion. on a commercial radio sta- The broadcast time to be cov- ered is from 11:00 in the morn- ing to 9:00 at night. The opera- tion will be squeezed into two small periods, however-from 3:00 to 5:30 and 7:00 to 9:30 -a total of just five hours. This necessitates cutting the ac- tual program times in half. Cramming three station breaks, "Food and Fashion Fads," the news, and a Man-on-the-Street program, for instance, into a half hour would seem more than enough to make any organization chaotic. TWO ACTUAL broadcast studios (see cut) plus two converted class- rooms will be used "for the dif- ferent programs. Room 4203 will be turned into a listening room mainly for students not on the Edwin 1NTourse To Give Talke Ont Resources Edwin G Nourse, chairman of the President's Council of Eco- nomic Advisers, will speak at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The lecture will deal with "Na- tional Resources and Maximum Production." - * NOURSE HAS been chairman of the Council since 1946. Before that, he taught economics and sociology and was vice-president of the Brooking Institution. He is the author of a series of volumes on agricultural market- ing and pricing and on indus- trial policies. Nourse will give a second lec- ture at 4:15 p.m. Thursday, also in the Rackham Lecture Hall. His subject then will be "National Re- sources and International Secur- ity.'' The two lectures will be the last in the Summer Session lec- ture program on natural resources. air at the time, but the public' may attend. Getting the programs ready for this unique operation, which takes its name from the roomj number of the radio studio, is causing a noticeable increase in aspirin consumption in student radio circles. There are 26 different programs on the schedule ranging from the ever-present soap opera to live talent and audience participation shows. The. big job lies in trying to get enough people free at one time to produce the show, since some are rehearsing, others han- dling the controls; some waiting to broadcast, and still others "on the air" at the moment. AS ONE harassed female put it, "It's kind of like a human scav- enger hunt trying to find every- thing you need around here." It will surprise no one, except perhaps the unsuspecting listen- ing audience, if Stella Dallas ap- pears on the "Money for Madness" show or if Little Orphan Arnie gives the Washington commen- tary. "There will probably be mis- takes made, but that does not matter a great deal, said Prof. Garnet R. Garrison, who is in charge of the affair. It is the educational value and experience the students will get from this experiment that is important." Senate Checks Customs, Deal WASHINGTON - RP) - John Maragon was questioned for the third day by the Senate's "five percenters" investigators yester- day, then sparred with reporters who asked whether he was in- volved in a 1946 customs duty incident. Maragon who held White House pass early in the Truman Admin- istration, spent more than two hours behind closed doors before a sub-committee which set out to study whether influence has fig- ured in the awarding of govern- ment contracts. Will Survey U.S. Troops Abroad FRANKFURT, Germany-(P -. The United States military chiefs of staff flew in from Washington yesterday for a get-acquainted survey of western Europe's de- fenses. Top-secret conferences with of- ficers of Italy and Luxembourg and with American military lead- ers in Germany are docketed Mon- day. The party-including Army Gen. Omar N. Bradley, Air Force Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg and Adm. Louis E. Denfeld of the Navy-has a dual mission on its 10-day tour: 1. To discuss the proposed mill- tary organization provided by the 12-nation North Atlantic Treaty. 2. To mke a first-hand study of American troops in Europe, the bulk of whom are concentrated In western Germany. * * * THE CHIEFS arrived this af- ternoon in President Truman's personal plane, the Independence. They will move on next week to London, Paris and Vienna for con- ferences with military leaders of the Pact nations. They will confer here with John L. McCloy, the American military governor; also the army navy and air force commanders in Germany and the Luxem- bourg and Italian military rep- resentatives, who have not been identified. They may take time out for a quick flight to Berlin. Denfeld told reporters there would be no talk about military aid. President Truman's proposal for the appropriation of $1,450- 000,000 to arm friendly nations is before Congress. * ** * ..THE THREE TOP American military strategists will make a first-hand check next week on United States bomber forces based in England. The inspection of B-29 bases by the joint chiefs of staff is given increasing significance in light of their emphasis on U.S. strategic bombing and use of the atom bomb in event of war. Their conception of defense strategy if western Europe is as- saulted wras given to Congress just before they left for meetings with military chiefs of the member na- tions and visits to U.S. installa- tions in Europe. * * * IN THAT OUTLINE, Army Gen- eral Omar Bradley said the re- commendations of the three-Air General Hoyt S. Vandenberg, Ad- miral Louis Denfeld and himself- assumed that priority centered about our ability to deliver the atom bomb. Meanwhile, evidence grew that a substantial amount of the defensive planning will be directed at stopping Russia's mighty tank forces should she launch upon a push toward the west. The Joint Chiefs plan to be in England on Wednesday and Thurs- day. They will confer with the British Chiefs of Staff and rep-- resentatives of other Pact na- tions who are there and, at the same time, make inspections of U.S. air installations on the is- land. THE THREE BRITISH bases used by the USAF compose the largest overseas concentration of strategic bombing power. It is from those bases that the initial retaliatory air strikes presumably would be launched in event of attack. Minority Groups Do People Agree With Their Friends? EDITOR'S NOTE-This is the fourth of seven articles on the survey Re- search minority group report. Clip them-they will serve as the basis for student and administrative action in the fall.) By CRAIG WILSON (co-Managing Editor) The fourth section of the University Survey Research Center's report on "Campus Attitudes Toward Minority Groups," deals with discrepancies between self and friends on attitudes toward minority groups. Students were asked not only how they themselves felt about room with, dating, or living in the same house with, members of other group, but also: HOW DID THEY THINK "the people they went around with" felt on these matters? Composite "social distance" scores were computed for each student's friends' attitudes as reported by the student, in order to determine the difference between the two. "In general, sudents report that they feel much the same as their friends do on the advisability of rooming with. dating, and living in the same house with members of another group." * * * * RA TIC FAVORITE: ccini's La Boheme' To Be Presented i rating with the School of g'ay and sad life of the Bo-, ! S('.hntinarr3_ A mimirian .Tack Wii_