k. ^r' PARADOX OF SPECIALIZATION See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State &4 tti ,-77 4 D4 1 THUNDERSHOWERS THUNDESHOWER VOL. LXHI, No. 34-S Progress To Date Reviewed by Ike Declares Dispite Unsolved Problems He will Adhere Firmly to Goals WASHINGTON - (A) - President Eisenhower reported to the people last night the administration is adhering firmly to the goals it set six months ago although it has not yet "conquered all the prob- lems of our nation." The chief executive spoke to the people over all radio networks, to take a look with them at the record of the past six months. * * * * AS HE analyzed things: "The future, both immediate and distant, remains full of trial ',and hazard.F ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1953 FOUR PAGES " .. a av ~ava . AN RB R.fIC I(A .. FRTDa {>fl ATTG171I f1OT l ' F~R #. A(E1iYW E A:f Rhee-Dulles 'Talks May End In Pact By the Associated Press Secretary of State Dulles calle on President Syngman Rhee la night for a third meeting whic may wind up their current discu sions of post-armistice problem A mutual security pact appa ently was ready for signing. O the agenda was the explosive ques tion of unification for Korea. - * - DULLES WAS accompanied bc other high State Department offi cials who came here with him fro Washington. : .t was the last conference schedjled, although Dulles said he might see Rhee a fourth time before he departs for home to- morrow. Dulles still has to give Rhee hi views on the all-important ques tion of unification of North an South Korea and the strategy the two nations will follow at th, forthcoming political conferenc on Korea. " s * * SOUTH KOREAN governmen sdurces said both these matter S we're touched on in the conversa tions yesterday and appear to b the principal topics left to b thrashed out, .. Dulles said the meeting was devoted largely to discussion of economic aid planned by the United States to rebuild South Korea. The other major objective o Dulles' mission-to negotiatef security treaty between the Unite( States and South Korea-seeme near settlement. s s ^ SUBORDINATES of Dulles an Rhee on a special committee re- porped their work nearly finishe and the pact could be concludec before Dulles and his party leave The treaty, which must be ap- proved by the United States Senate, would commit the Unit- ed States to come to the aid of South Korea in the event of a new Communist attack. On the question of unification, Dulles has repeatedly emphasized that the United States would work with South Korea to achieve it by "peaceful means." Desertions Up As E. Germans QuestFood BERLIN-(MP)-Communism took a new beating from defiant East Germans yesterday. The Red blockade of free Amer- ican food in West Berlin was breached by 60,000 from five Rus- sian-occupied provinces and 70,000 from East Berlin and its suburbs. DESERTIONS from the Soviet L" zone army and people's. police set arecord-51 in a single day-and the total for the year rose to 2,606. Communist Premier Otto Grotewohl assigned a flabby deputy premier, Christian Dem- ocrat Otto Nuschke tc take on the odium of announcing his government's refusal of a chance to buy emergency food in the United States with $1,400,000 of its funds now frozen in Ameri- can banks. "No self-respecting state can accept the insult which the United} States insinuates in saying that the "The end of our staggering economic burden is not yet in sight. "The end of the peril to peace is not clearly in view." But he said there is in sight a firm and binding purpose guiding all objectives and deeds. ,. * * "THIS PURPOSE," the Presi- dent said, "is to serve and to strengthen our people, all our peo- ple, in faith in freedom and in * * * Ike Vetoes Movie Ticket Tax Repeal Suggests Overall Cut in January WASHINGTON -- () - Presi- dent Eisenhower yesterday vetoed a bill to repeal the 20 per cent federal tax on movie tickets, but promised to ask Congress for a re- duction in the admissions levy next January. * * * THE President's action blasted the hopes of film industry officials who had contended that if the movie tax were allowed to die-as approved by Congress-it would save about 5,000 theaters a year from going out of business. Movie spokesmen generally blamed the swift growth of tele- vision for distress in their in- dustry. The President's veto narked the first time he has refused to ap- prove a major piece of legislation. Declaring that the repeal mea- ure would cost the U.S. Treasury at least 100 million dollars a year, Eisenhower said in "memorandum of disapproval"; "WE CANNOT afford the loss of revenue, and it is unfair to single out one industry for tax relief at this time." The President also noted that even if he signed the repeal bill into law, many movie patrons gen- erally would not benefit through lower admission prices through the tax cut-off. Many theater executives had al- ready indicated they planned to hike admission prices to the pres- ent admission-plus-tax level - if Eisenhower signed the bill. They said this would save them from ,ruin. Skipper Cited For Disaster WASHINGTON-(P-The Coast Guard yesterday blamed a vet- eran Great Lakes skipper for the sinking of his ore carrier last May during a violent storm on Lake Superior. CoastGuard officials said steps will be taken to strip Capt. Albert Stiglin, of Vermillion, O. of his license. According to authorities, a report on the sinking, compiled by a Coast Guard board of in- quiry, will be forwarded to the Justice Department" as the re-. port contains evidence of prob-. able criminal liability on thet part of the master of the Henry1 Steinbrenner."t Seventeen crewmembers lostt their lives when the Steinbrennerc floundered May 11 off Passage Is- land in Lake Superior. Guard vessels and other freight-r ers. Williams Asks 1 SeawaySupport SEATTLE-(P)-Gov. G. Men- nen Williams, Michigan Democrat, made a bid for the support of the national governors' conference for I the St. Lawrence Seaway and pow- v er development yesterday. o He told the governors the na- o tional administration is "strongly b behind this program, as it has b been every year for 20 years." C Williams said Canada is fullyw prepared to go ahead with the pro- a posed project in short order and, as a matter of good neighborness Z and national self interest, "we h hould join hands in this project." t Nearing Agreement Reds Exchange 100 Allied POWs Ninety GIs Scheduled for Release; Freed Americans Appear Healthy By The Associated Press In a smooth operation that clicked along well ahead of schedule, the Communists yesterday handed over 100 Allied Prisoners of war, including 25 Americans and 25 British, in 24 minutes. The other 50 were South Koreans. THEY WERE the vanguard of 400 prisoners promised in today's return, including 90 Americans, 25 British, 35 Turks, 12 Filipinos, 7 Ifolombians and 250 Sduth Koreans. The Americans and British appeared to be in good shape, in contrast with the wretched condition of many returned on the * * * * UN Guards Quell Koje Is land Riots first two days of the big Koreas armistice POW exchange. They waved and smiled from the trucks that carried them to Panmunjom from the north. They shouted greetings to correspond- ents as the trucks ground to a halt. The men answered with rousing "Heres" as their names were called. Many jumped, grin- ning, to the ground. RHEE SEEMS HAPPY-South Korean President Syngman Rhee (second from right) seems elated about something at his Seoul residence as he met with Walter Robertson (left), an assistant sec- retary of state; U. S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, and representative to the UN assembly. Henry Cabot Lodge (right), U. S. PRESIDENT EISENHOWER ... spoke to the nation last night * * * quest of peace; and to strengthen all other peoples who share with us that faith and that quest." Eisenhower ticked off a dozen actions of Congress and said they seem bewildering at first glance. Yet, he said, they have been the result of exhaustive work and careful planning in accord- ance with a clearly defined pur- pose. Eisenhower said it was sense and honesty which dictated a de-1 lay in the lowering or removing taxes in a critical time of transi- tion. He said the revenue was es- sential "if the tide of debt is to be turned." "WE DID not delay," he said, "in cutting deep into governmental ex- penditures." He said the administration isf striving to bring the budget un- der control, because every fam- ily in the land is vitally affected by the budgets' influence on theE buying power of -the dollar. In the field of foreign relations, Eisenhower said that the Korean truce has produced "two precious victories." * * * FIRST, he said, it has been shown that the free world can andn will meet aggression in Asia-"orn anywhere in the world."n Second, he said, we' have wone the chance to show that free people can build in peace ast boldly as they fight in war. Eisenhowerwent back to the b State of the Union message he de- livered to Congress six months ago p to describe the major purposes of p his administration and then to re- a port, as he sees it, what is being a done to carry out these purposes. s Go All Out If, Armistice' Fails -- Clark' WASHINGTON - (P) - Gen. Mark W. Clark said yesterday that if the Communists break the truce in Korea he would favor using "any and every weapon" in the nation's arsenal to strike back at them. Clark did not specifically men- tion atomic weapons, but presum- ably his words would cover such weapons. * * * THE FOUR-STAR general, soon to retire as supreme Allied com- mander in the Far East, made the statement at a Pentagon news conference. Clark expressed neither exal- tation for the truce he signed nor much beyond a glimmer of hope for the recovery of all Al- lied prisoners who fell into en- emy hands during the 37-month Korean War. He said he had been "directed" to get and sign an armistice. As for POW's he expressed belief that the Reds hold 2,000 or 3.000 more Americans and "thousands upon thousands" more South Koreans than the Communists agreed to ex- change under the truce terms. SPEAKING with disciplined military restraint, the 57-year-old veteran of both world wars had this to say about any renewal of hostilities: "If the enemy breaks the ar-I mistice, he might not find him- self fighting under restrictions imposed upon the United Nations command in the past." This was a reference to high- evel restrictions designed to pre- vent the Korean War from devel- oping into World War III. Among other things, Allied planes were barred from striking at enemy bases across the Korean border in Chinese Manchuria and Allied warships were not used to block- ade Red China. Clark said he plans to return to Tokyo in a few days to wind up is command before retiring from he Army at the end of October. Cold History ATLANTA - (A) - Plans for a multimillion-dollar national historical shrine to be erected on Pine Mountain ncar the late President Roosevelt's vacation retreat at Warm Springs, Ga., were announced last night, The announcement came from harles F. Palmer of Atlan- ta, organizer and chairman of the Hall of Our History, Inc., a non-profit co-educational .cor- poration organized in 1952. Palmer said the fabulous granite memorial, on which will be inscribed the chronological history of the United States, would cost between 25 and 40 million dollars. Gaston Given Research Post A former chief of the Univer- ity's Veterans Administration guidance center, Hugh P. Gaston, has been appointed a senior staff associate of Science Research As- sociates, one of the nation's larg- est publishers of guidance and testing materials. - Gaston, who has served on the staff of SRA the past two years, will supervise distribution in three states, Michigan, Indiana, and 11- linois. Gaston receive dhis master's de- gree from the University. Fie has acted as counselor for the Kellogg Foundation and has developed special counseling projects for the Detroit Board of Education. Hope Wanes For Airmen Lost at Sea LONDON - (R) - Time was running short yesterday for 14 American airmen missing in the storm-lashed North Atlantic since their 10-engine reconnaissance bomber crashed before dawn Wed- nesday. Hopes for their survival dimmed among sea and air searchers. FOUR of the giant craft's 23 crewmen have been found alive by ships directed to the area of the crash 500 miles south of Ice- land and 300 to 500 miles west of Ireland. The bodies of five others were recovered from windswept waves that reached 15 feet in height. The survivors and the recovered bodies were being carried back to British ports. The 180-ton RB36-sister to the atom bomb carrying B36-was on a training flight to England from Travis Field, Calif., when it was fatally crippled by an engine fire. SEARCHING U.S. Air Force planes - 25 in number from Brit- ish bases - brave foul weather to criss-cross a 200-mile area at low level in quest of survivors. Hopes that the missing airmen could survive another night in the icy sea dimmed, even though they may be afloat on one-man din- ghies, rafts or in 32-foot lifeboats dropped by the rescue crafts. KOJE ISLAND, Korea - (AP) - United Nations guards quelled with rifle fire and gas three riots by 12,- 000 North Korean prisoners who demonstrated Wednesday as their compounds were being emptied for the big armistice exchange. The UN Prisoner of War Com- mand said yesterday one prisoner had been killed and four had been killed and four had been wounded. NONE of the Allied guards was injured. There were three "eve of free- dom" riots in the North Korean 'compounds on this big prisoner is- land off Southeast Korea, the POW Command said. The casualties all came in the first, which was put down with rifle fire and tear and vomiting gas. Guards quelled the other two demonstrations with gas alone. Chanting, screaming North Ko- reans threw rocks and barricaded themselves in their compounds. In one case they attacked a UN guard with a board. County To Get Resuscitator v Although it remains uncertain as to who will supply Washtenaw County with an additional resus- citator has netted over $1,000. to be used in water mishaps was assured the local area yesterday. David W. Killins, who has been spearheading a drive to raise funds to buy the machines, made the an- nouncement and at the same time discussed the possibility of two groups furnishing the resuscitators -the Board of Supervisors or pri- vate individuals. *~ * * KILLINS SAID his fund raising campaign to purchase a resus- citator has netter over $1,000. However, its continuation will de- pend on decisions reached by the Board of Supervisors Tuesday at their August meeting. According to Killins the county is in a more advantageous posi- tion to furnish the machines than private citizens since it is able to administer the resuscitator service more readily. If the Board decides to purchase the machines the money previous- ly collected will be returned to con- 1 r i t PVT. EDWARD R. Achee of De- troit was the first American in the group. The first 100 men came back to freedom wearing faded blue prisoner garb. There were no bright new clothes such as had been issued to the first Allied prisoners exchanged Tuesday. The South Koreans did not show the same alacrity and spirit as the Americans and British. The gaunt faces and emaciated frames Ronald D. Underly of Kalama- zoo and Edward R. Achee of Detroit were the only State pris- oners of war in yesterday's ex- change. National Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Marine Corps announced yesterday that it is planning to stretch out the tour of duty for -its men in Korea, in view of the truce, from 11 to 14 months. Gen. Lemuel C. Shepherd, Jr. corps commandant, said in a statement, by about March, 1954, it is anticipated that most Marines will be serving on 14 months tour in Korea. A 16 months tour may finally be established if necessary, he said. The Army has also announced it will lengthen its tour of duty of some told of malnutrition. Some wore dirty gauze masks, the sign of tuberculosis. One was suffer- ing from influenza. * * * MANY HAD TO be helped from the trucks. One South Korean muttered a few sullen words to a nearby Red Korean officer before he was help- ed away. As the freed Allied prisoners moved along to the comforts awaiting them, long lines of Chinese and Korean Red pris- oners were going back to their Communist homelands. Prisoners returned to the Allies Side in the past two days told of torture and mistreatment by their red captors. WITH THE RETURN of Fri day's 300, the Reds will have given back 1,192 of the nearly 13,000 Allied prisoners they said they hold. A total of 221 of the 3,313 Americans named on- the Com- munist list will have returned. With yesterday's scheduled turnover of 2,752 North Korean and Chinese war prisoners at Panmunjom, the Allies will have returned a total of more than 8,000 of the approximately 74,- 000 Red prisoners held in UN camps. A story of fire and ice torture ,by his North Korean captors was told by Lt. Col. Thomas D. Har- rison, a jet fighter-bomber pilot, of ,Clovis, N. M. HARRISON, second cousin of Lt. Gen. William K. Harrison, the ,senior Allied armistice negotiator, hobbled across the freedom line at Panmunjom on crutches,..minus his left leg. He lost the leg as the result of injuries when his plane was knocked down by Red anti- aircraft fire May 21, 1951. Lt. Samuel E. Massinberg, a B29 co-pilot from Detroit, said "I understand communism now - I hate it more" as the result of his treatment by the Reds. He bailed out of his plane after it was down- ed by a Red MIG jet last Jan. 11. Staebler Suffers InjuryIn Austria INNSBRUCK, Austria -- Neil Staebler of Ann Arbor, chairman of the Michigan Democratic State Central Committee, was recovering yesterday from a fracture of his left ankle suffered on the Nord- kette Mountain, according to the United Press. First reports of the Innsbruck mountain rescue said Staebler's injuries were "serious" but officials of the Innsbruck Hospital said yesterday that his condition is "ex- cellent." READY-MADE DREAMS: Art Seen Representative of Wishes By GAYLE GREENE to the defense of the right, ac- The truly pop.ular artist pro- cording to Rosenberg. vides the public with ready-made As "an apprentice in the guild dreams, according to Milton Ros- of tight lipped, human punching enberg, instructor in the psychol- bags; including Kerry Drake and ogy department. Sam Spade, Kirby answers the Just as the individual's dreams reader's wish for punishment." may be examined to ie' a pictur * * * I of repressed wishes, so the contents of popular art may be symbolically reduced and translated to give a picture of the unconscious life of the mass of individuals who make popular art popular, he explained. * *i * ~ VT' A, Tm , . ... - and loving, he pointed out. "Be- hind our response to thv tender realists is the unspoken (and part- ly unconscious) conviction that "things ain't what- they used to be." * * * THE APPEAL of the Rockwell- Dohanos theme testifys, according to Rosenberg, to the persistence of real feelings of social isolation and rootlessness in many modern Americans. A full length cartoon of near Ci'}+al Ni-Al,_ ,, s i+A - 6 c t t Y . y f s . in Korea to 16 months. HAGERSTOWN, Md. - Rep. Clare E. Hoffman (R-Mich.) comes up for a long-delayed tri- al in City Court here today on a charge of exceeding 50 miles per hour in his automobile on route 40 east of the city. The 77-year-old congressman was arrested April 2 by State Police, but at the time he in- voked his Congressional immu- nity and the hearing which had been set for April was dropped. MILAUKEE - Delegates to the 54th national encampment of the veterans of foreign wars yesterday overrode committee recommenda- tions on three main resolutions: The encampment urged state- hood for Alaska and Hawaii, fa- vored making ex-presidents ex-of- ficio members of the Senate and supported a house resolution which seeks to create a committee to in- vestigate atrocities in Korea. ** * LOS ANGELES - Crooner Dick swas rrQ -i vj-,s , all By BECKY CONRAD The secret of Gandhi's magnetic personality lay not in the power of action behind him, but in his char- acter, according to Prof. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of English from India. Speaking last night to the Stu- dent Religious Association and the Committee for Student Fellowship of Reconciliation, Prof. Chakra- varty explained Gandhi's was a character "built up by a man who puts one brick on top of another to create an astounding structure." * * * THE INDIAN professor noted Gandhi started with very little in the way of physical assets and con- structed a very powerful inner tion of a lifetime," the professor indicated. GANDHI succeeded in quieting the expressions of mob violence in India "because he was willing to suffer with both sides," according to Prof. Chakravarty. Contrary to certain sociologi- cal principles, Gandhi felt the crowd doesn't behave according to the lowest common denomi- nator, but depends on the qual- ities of leadership, the profes- sor continued. He stopped leading when some- thing was wrong, "unlike a dic- tator who is expected to be infal- lible." he noted. "The Indian people soon realized Gandhi Character, Source Of Power -- Chakravarty ROSENBERG pointed out that we all feel vaguely, but deeply, some guilt. "As we identify with Rip Kirby the punishment we vicariously receive is sufficient to make us feel less guilty," he ex- plained. C I