EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 2 , igan . U -- ; L I ! I I i r : a * Latest Deadline in the State T VOL. LXIII, No. 170 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1953 HUNDER SHOWERS, WARMER FOUR PAGES UAWProtests to Air Force on J- ! Cancellation * * * *' * * Union Asks Restoration Of Contract Senate Group Hits High Cost By The Associated Press Calling the Air Force cancella- tion of the Kaiser Motor Corp. cargo plane, contracts "unreason- able and uncalled for," the United Auto Workers lodged a "bitter protest" with the Air Force yes- terday. The union represents more than 12,000 workers at the Willow Run plant now engaged in air craft production. In a telegram to Air Force secre- tary Harold Talbott, the union said, "We demand that you rescind this cancellation and give the UAW, as a representative of the workers whose livelihood you have endangered, an opportunity to be heard." EARLIER yesterday, the Air SForce, in a surprise move cancel- led 220 million dollars worth of aircraft contracts with the Kai- ser interests, target of hot criti- cism on Capitol ill. One of the contracts called for the production of 159 "Flying Boxcar" C119's which Sen. Styles Bridges. (R-NH) charges are costing the government five times as much as the same type of aircraft produced by the Fair- child Engine and Airplane Corp. at Hagerstown, Md. The cancellation blow fell on Kaiser and his son, Edgar, as they were defending their production record before a Senate armed serv- ices subcommittee. * * *. THE SENIOR Kaiser held a news conference later to announce that, as Chairman of the Board of the Kaiser Motor Corp., he wants to "relinquish" anything the gov- ernment does not want him to do. He added the big Willow Run plant, where the aircraft were being produced, "stands as a great living symbol to volume mass production, and it is still an asset to this nation." * * * TERMINATION of the con- tracts, the Air Force said, was a decision taken "completely inde- pendently" of the Senate hear- ings. A spokesman said the Kaisers would be permitted to complete planes now in the final assembly stages. At Willow Run It was report- ed this would involve several planes and several million dol- lars worth of work. In addition to the Flying Box- mars, the Kaisers had a 220 million dollar contract to build 244 C123's, an assault transport plane. This also was cancelled. * * * BRIDGES, chairman of the Senate subcommittee, recessed the investigation shortly after word reached the hearing room the contracts had been cancelled. A brief closed-door session was held with the Kaisers, at which Bridges said they had "informed the committee of certain information which has come to them informally." The chairman said another hearing would be held soon. Before the hearing recessed, Henry Kaiser offered to negotiate a new fixed-price contract for the production of C119's and C123's at Willow Run. His company is now working on a cost-plus-fixed fee basis. * * * FIGHT u TIL ATH' !" h3 F y k 4 "^t E t 7 i TO THRO G -Daily-Felicia Browne LOCAL "NEUROTICS ANONYMOUS" GROUP HOLDS MEETING OF RECIPROCAL INTROSPECTION M SI * * Coed Organizes Local 'Neurotics Anonymous' By ELLI ROSENTHAL Here we go gathering nuts in June! Taking her cue from a newspaper article describing an organi- zation built along the plan of Alcoholics Anonymous, but catering strictly to neurotics, Lue Stinson, '54, decided the founding of such a group here would be of great value to her large number of neurotic friends. * * * * A PARTIALLY cured neurotic, herself, Miss Stinson began to find too many of these friends using her apartment as a resting place, and using visits as opportunities World News Roundup By The Associated Press PARIS-Joseph Laniel, a vet- eran politician who has acquired a lot of friends and few enemies among the deputies of the national assembly, last night agreed to try to become France's next premier. * * .*. LANSING - Gov. Williams yesterday signed two appropria- tion bills totalling $57,507,350, including operating funds for the state-supported colleges and universities, with $18,116,000 al- located to the University. BERLIN - The Russians gave their. puppet East German gov- ernment a chance to save its neck and stay in office yesterday-but kept their guns pointed against any new uprising by German workers. Prime Minister Otto Grotewohl was allowed to announce his gov- ernment will not resign, and thus yield to the "provocateurs" of last week's bloody revolt, but will stay in office and carry out its "duty" of correcting its 'mistakes.' * * * INDIANAPOLIS - Dr. Alfred C. Kinsey, director of the Insti- tute for Sexual Research at In- diana University, yesterday enter- ed an I.U. Medical Center hospital in Indianapolis for "rest and a physical checkup." This announcement followed re- ports that Christine Jorgenson, ex- GI who claims a sex change through surgery arrived in Bloom- ington, Ind. by airplane and was met at the airport by a representa- tive of Dr. Kinsey. to air their troubles. Since listening had become rather boring, she welcomed the chance t. do some talking, and decided to found a group built on the motto "A fair chance to in- trospect for all." When asked about the ailments: with which she has had to deal, Miss Stinson remarked she has found paranoiac tendencies the most prevalent. * * * SHE PARTICULARLY com- mented on the large number of students at the University who lack a fear of failure. Being un- successful in anything they do, they take failure in their stride because they "just expect it." "So much William Faulkner," she moaned. Miss Stinson, in her studies of neurosis- on the campus, has come across one particularly in- teresting sort of ailment, which she labels the "Racoon Com- plex." Characterized by excessive clean- liness, the "Racoon" is noticable at a party for his insistence on drinking only alcoholic beverages. He will usually claim this cleans the germ-laden glassware. ON RECEIVING a bouquet of flowers from a "Racoon," Miss Stinson explains she was amazed to see him first dip them in al- cohol, to avoid having any but dead insects in the house. He is now in Washington, peti- tioning for induction into the Navy, since he feels that the salt breezes will have a disinfectant effect. While extending an invitation to her seminars to all practising neu- rotics, Miss Stinson refused to di- vulge their location. "Neurotics will seek us out," she said. Korea, EPT Issues Pile Up forIke WASHINGTON-(A')-A batch of trouble-at home and abroad- piled up on President Eisenhower's doorstep yesterday. Biggest headache was Syngman Rhee's stubborn refusal to co-op- erate in a Korean truce and the President was understood to have called off his weekly news confer- ence yesterday to avoid a discus- sion of the Korean situation in its present delicate state. DOMESTIC troubles were head- ed by a blockade in the House Ways and Means Committee of the administration's bill to extend the excess profits tax for six months from June 30. Eisenhower wants the 800 mil- lion dollars the extension will raise to help balance the budget. Rep. Daniel Reed, New York Republican, calls the tax "m- moral," however, and said flat- ly yesterday he would refuse to call his ways and means com- mittee together to vote on an extension. House leaders decided to at- tempt the drastic step of bypassing Reed's committee with a petition by a majority of its 25 members to force a meeting. This maneuv- er appeared to have failed late last night when it was reliably report- ed only seven GOP members of the committee were willing to sign. *R S * AN EISENHOWTR appointment went sour when Tom Lyon, 65, re- quested his nomination as head of the Bureau of Mines be withdrawn. Secretary of the Interior McKay seconded the motion after Lyon acknowledged at a Senate hearing Tuesday that he is drawing $5,000 a year pension from Anaconda Copper Mining Co. and that he has no sympathy with the federal safety law he would be expected to administer. More trouble for the President hove into view when the Republi- can-dominated House Government Operations Committee condemned part of his plan to reorganize the Defense Department as "another step on the road toward control by the military." Canif f Slated For Talk Today On Comic Art Art and the Comic Strip will be in the spotlight at 4:15 p.m. to- day when noted cartoonist Milton Caniff takes the stage in Auditor- ium A, Angell Hall to present the first in a series of 13 summer lec- tures on Popular Arts in America. Creator of Terry and the Pirates and Steve Canyon, Caniff was named outstanding cartoonist of the year in 1946 by the National Cartoonists' Society and later served as president of the group. Caniff received the Sigma Del- ta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, bronze medal for his newspaper cartooning. During the last war, he wowed GI audiences with his cartoons of Male Call concerning the fasci- nating Miss Lace. -Daly-Fran Seldon HIGH POINTS FOR BOTH SIDES AND PROPOSED TRUCE LINE * * *'* * * I * * Korean War Three Years Old Today By FRAN SHELDON Three years ago today the Korean War began. One week ago hopes for a sat- isfactory truce settlement faded as South Korean president Syng- man Rhee ordered the release of 27,000 North Korean and Com- munist Chinese POWs, nearly half the total number of 47,000. * * * PRESENT trends indicate the war, until now limited to a UN- Communist struggle, may soon Senate Group Hits Partisan. Tariff_ Board WASHINGTON - tom) - Demo- crats and Republicans on the Sen- ate Finance. Committee teamed yesterday to bat down a plan to convert the U.S. Tariff Commis- sion into a Republican-dominated agency. The committee vote was a vic- tory for Democrats who argued the commission has historically been bi-partisan and should re- main so. * * * REJECTINGONE of two corn- promise provisions to which the administration agreed in its ef- fort to push through Congress a one-year extension of the Recipro- cal Trade Act, the committee then sent the bill to the Senate for ex- pected passage, probably next week. President Eisenhower had asked for a straight one-year extension of the present act, which expired June 12. But when the House Ways and Means Committee seemed bent on writing sharp new restric- tions into the extension, a com- promise was worked out. As passed by the House, the bill would have increased the tariff commission's membership from six to seven-in effect adding a fourth Republican member-and reduced from one year to nine months the time in which the commission. must act on petitions for emergen- cy relief from industries which feel they are hurt by lowered tar- iffs. Fire College To Start Blaze Before the expectant eyes of some 300 firemen and a hoard of Ann Arbor "sidewalk fire fighters," a modest eight room frame house at 306 Hill St. will be set on fire at 4:30 p.m. today. This demonstration is being held in conjunction with the 25th an- take a new direction with the Re- public of South Korea as poten- tial aggressor. With his announcement Tues- day that an armistice under pres- ent conditions would necessitate the withdrawal of all ROK troops from the United Nations com- mand, Rhee, political experts say, almost certainly blocked any pos- sibility that this so-called police action be terminated early in its fourth year of existence, * * * PHASE ONE.. - Begun June 25, 1950 when a North Korean column crossed the 38th parallel, the war, has con- tinued for 'three years, a struggle accomplishing little of any prac- tical value. ** * * ALMOST immediately United States forces were ordered into action by President Truman, and the UN Security Council called on member nations to aid in re- pelling the aggression. For six weeks the combined UN forces were pushed back un- til they held only a small beach- head at Pusan. Six more weeks of desperate fighting, despair, and finally reinforcement faced the allies before they were able to take the offensive in the form of an amphibious landing on Inchon and a push toward the South Korean capital of Seoul. The U.S. Eighth Army began a simultaneous push out of Pusan. Under pressure from two fronts the Communist armies were forc- ed to fall back. * * * IN OCTOBER the ROK troops of South Korea crossed the 38th parallel into Communist North Korea. They were followed shortly by the United Nations forces, auth- orized by the UN General As- sembly under the leadership of General Douglas MacArthur. By November of that year the UN troops were grouped close to the Manchurian border and there was talk of a speedy end to hos- tilities. See KOREAN, Page 4 Auigust Draft Cal Shows Slight Rise, LANSING - (P) - Col. Arthur A. Holmes, state selective service director, yesterday called on state draft boards to induct 1,274 men for military service in August. The call is 37 more than that in July, the lowest of the year and also the lowest since June, 1952, when the call dropped to 449. Theo August call is still well be- low the year's high of 2,650 called in May. Wayne County will furnish 469 of the August call and outstate counties 805. A TRUCE now might doom South Korea to "the same disaster suffered by the peoples of Czecho- slovakia, Poland and China," Rhee told the flag-waving multitudes. In cities throughout South Korea, huge throngs expected to total more than a million, jam- med the streets in response to a government call for a mighty show of defiance of any truce that would leave the country di- vided. Hundreds of rifle-carrying Ko- rean policemen guarded the.capi- tol grounds in the heaviest pre- cautions yet seen here against pos- sible assassination attempts or dis- order. * * * IN AN ANNIVERSARY state- ment issued before his public ap- pearance in the Capitol Plaza, Rhee reiterated that his country could not accept the present truce terms. He said it would allow a mil. lion-man Chinese Army to re- main in North Korea and per- mit "pro-Communist troops" from India to enter South Korea to supervise "explanations" to balky Communist prisoners who have said they do not wish to re- turn to Communist territory. Rhee has also opposed the truce on the grounds it would leave Ko- rea divided and has said his troops would go north alone if need be to unify the peninsula. * * * EARLIER dispatches said Rhee' left the door ajar for compromise as President Eisenhower's special envoy hurried here to face the balky South Korean President and try to win him over to a truce. But Rhee, just before his scheduled meeting with U. S. Assistant Secretary of State Walter S. Robertson on this third anniversary of the Korean War, showed by new word and action his government still was prepared to fight on alone. Rhee said so in a letter to Gen. Mark Clark, UN Far East com- mander, and in an interview. He also formed a "war cabinet" to help him work out plans should the UN Command sign a truce, with the Communists over South Korea's protest. Guild To Use New Screen New sound and projection equip- ment and a large new screen will be in evidence at the Student Legislature Cinema Guild summer program. The Cinema Guild will provide Angry Mobs Demonstrate t Capitol Rhee Reiterates 'Go-it-alone' Plan By The Associated Press "e want tofight until death,"' President Syngman Rhee shout- ed yesterday to screaming hun- dreds of thousands demonstrating against a truce on this third an- niversary of the Korean War. The 78-year-old leader flung his defiance against an impending ar- mistice out over the tightly packed throngs thunderously cheering his dramatic appearance on the steps. of the war-scarred capitol. ,. PROPHESIES EXODUS: Willow Run Village Hit by KF Blow gny By PAT ROELOFS Pessimism and gloom linger in the air in Willow Run Village and Ypsilanti after the sudden an- nouncement that some 12,500 la- borers may be jobless as a resiAlt of Air Force cnce1ltions: f con- when the huge bomber plant be- gan operation in World War II. Anticipating the next move is like walking on glass for these workers because of the uncertainty of plant changeover to peacetime and all of Ypsi's 17,000 people will eventually be seriously effected. * * * ACCORDING to Prof. Harold Levinson, teacher of courses in labor and collective bargaining in the University economic deDart- Ensame .. x . .