EXPERT DISCUSSES BERIA OUSTER See Page 2 St:n Latest Deadline in the State D3a iI4 FAIR VO. L XIII. No. 14-5 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1953 FOUR PAGES ...,..., u , ..... -., . . . S ~1 * * Sec. Talbott Sticks to KF Cancellation Families Ignored Says Union Head Air Force Secretary Harold E. Talbott upheld his decision to can- cel aircraft production contracts with Kaiser Motors Corp. at a meeting with Kaiser union and management officials and State congressmen in Washington yes- terday. Talbott went on to say that there is little hope that the con- tracts will be reinstated and that he does not know if the Air Force will go ahead with plans to build the C-123 assault transport for which Kaiser had contracted. * * * EXPLAINING that the cancel- lation of contracts was the result of "careful and thorough studies" f of plant operations, Talbott forced United Auto Workers officials to admit that C-119 planes,could be manufactured cheaper elsewhere. Talbott pointed out that Fair- child has built its C-119 cargo plane at a unit cost of $260,000. He said the original unit- cost in 1950, under Kaiser-Fraser production of the C-119 was to have been $839,- 955, but that Kaiser's C-119's now cost the Air Force $1,248,586 each. IN A PREPARED statement at the Pentagon meeting, Talbott said that: 1) Kaiser Motors was a year behind schedule on C-123 pro- duction. 2) The Air Force has not reached a final decision on the manufacture of the C-123. 3)If the C-123 is built, "it will not be manufactured at the Willow Run plant." Emil Mazey, acting head of the UAW (CIO), presented the pleas of Willow Run workers who have been unemployed since the an- nouncement was made two weeks ago that contracts were being can- celled because of high production costs .and general plant ineffi- ciency. Mazey accused Talbott of ex- hibiting disregard for the men and women of 18,000 families involved in the Kaiser cancellation. ense Cut Hits Detroit War Industry The Detroit Ordinance Tank ' Automotive Center, the chief ve- hicle purchasing agent for the Army, yesterday announced a half billion dollar cutback in its 1954 defense contract spending for trucks and tanks. According to the Associated Press, the cutbacks are scheduled to take effect next January on contracts for production of 2% ton and five ton trucks, and in March on medium tanks, the M47 and M48, now produced by the Chrysler Corp., and the Ford Motor Company. BRIG. GEN. Carroll H. Diet- rick, commanding officer of the center, said the drastic cutbacks were ordered by the Defense De- partment in Washington. He said a reduction in the Defense De- partment budget and the desire to place all contracts for the pro- duction of a vehicle type with one manufacturer were responsible for the cutbacks. Deitrick said the cutbacks would reduce the center's de- fense spending for 22 and five ton trucks by 50 per cent. Detroit labor and industrial ex- perts predict that the defense cut will not result in serious unemploy- ment in this area, however. Analysts are confident that many workers employed in t SENATOR JOSEPH C. McCARTHY AND E B. MATTHEWS TALK PRIOR TO THE LATTER'S RESIGNATION * * * A McCarthy Aide Resigns A fter Ike's Censure WASHINGTON-(W)-J. B. Matthews, Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's newly chosen right-hand man, resigned yesterday shortly after Presi- dent Eisenhower accused Matthews of violating "principles of freedom and decency" in attacking Protestant clergymen. The President joined a prominent group of churchmen in de- ploring Matthews' statemens that .thousands of Protestant ministers are Reds, fellow travellers or dupes of thae Communists. * * * * , McCARTHY THEN announced that he had "reluctantly" accepted Matthews' resignation from his $11,600 a year job as staff director of the Senate investigations sub- 'U' Anti-Trust Expert Named To U.S. Group As a step to possible revision of existing federal -anti-trust legis- lation, it was announced yester- day that Prof. S. Chesterfield Op- penheim of the law school had been appointed co-chairman of a special committee to study the problem. Dean E: Blythe Stason of the law school termed the appoint- ment by U. S. Attorney-General Herbert Brownell, "recognition of the importance Prof. Oppenheim has gained through teaching and writings in the field of anti-trust regulation over the past 20 years." Working on the committee as co-chairman with Prof. Oppen- heim will be Judge Stanley N. Barnes, the present head of the Anti-Trust Division of the Jus- tice Department. The rest of the committee will consist of lead- ing authorities in the fields of law; economics, government and business. A special staff from Washington will be attached to Prof. Oppen- heim here at the law school from where they will conduct their in- vestigations. Before coming here to teach in the fall of 1952 Prof. Oppenheim served on the faculty of George Washington University Law School where he worked with the Federal Trade Commission. He currently teaches courses in unfair trade practices and trade regulation. Recently he was chairman of an Institute on Federal Anti-trust Laws held at the University in June. committee. McCarthy's action canze as a surprise, since his subcommittee was to meet this morning to thrash out the Matthews case. Eisenhower said Matthews' at- tack on the ministers, published in the July issue of American Mer- cury magazine, dealt "damage to our nation." The President spoke out warm- ly and at some length in replying to a telegram from the three na- tional co-chairmen of the Com- mission on Religious Organiza- tions of the National Conference of Christians and Jews. "THE SWEEPING attack on the loyalty of Protestant clergymen and the charge that they are the largest single group supporting the Communist apparaus is un- justifiable and deplorable," relig- ious leaders said. Eisenhower opened his reply with this statement: "I want you to know at once that I fully share the convictions you state." The exchange of telegrams was made public by the White House. IN HIS magazine article, Mat- thews stated that while the vast majority of Protestant clergymen were perfectly loyal, 7,000 Protest- ant ministers have been enlisted by the Communist party in the last 17 years as members, fellow travelers or dupes. .Late Scores AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland 9, St. Louis 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia 6, Brooklyn 5 Eruption ANCHORAGE, Alaska - VP) - Mt. Spurr, an active volcano 78 miles west of Anchorage, was erupting violently yesterday hurling solid particles large enough to damage aircraft to an altitude of 20,000 feet, the Air Force reported. The Air Force notified com- mercial airlines of the eruption. Mt. Spurr, which lies direct- ly west of Anchorage across Cook Inlet, is 11,050 feet high. Reds, Allies Meet Today over Truce By The Associated Press Allied and Communist truce delegates are meeting in Panmun- jom today to work out final agree- ment on an armistice in the three- year Korean War despite South Korea's opposition. Convening after a 20-day break, the negotiators are expected to start ironing out details for super- vision of a truce, and possibly soon choose a date for signing cere- monies. PRESIDENT Syngman Rhee, re- ported to have been handed a se- cret letter by Gen. Mark Clark, ap-. parently continued holding his line against United Nations ceasefire plans. The Republic of Korea president says a truce without Korea's unification would mean death to South Korea, unless the United States provides certain safeguards. A highly-placed ROK source told newsmen that talks between Rhee and America's special envoy Walter S. Robertson "remain stalemated." Rhee and Robertson have been secretly conferring 15 days. "President Rhee still is insisting that South Korea must have con- crete assurances from America that Korea will be unified, peace- fully or otherwise," the ROK source reported. * * * HE SAID Rhee was holding out against an armistice despite Amer- ican offers of a military security pact, "substantial" economic aid and four more ROK divisions to supplement the present army of 16 divisions. In the meantime, blazing artil- lery duels carried into the fourth day the battles for two Allied-held bills in Western Korea 40 to 45 miles north of Seoul. Ike Appoints 'U' Alumnus Prof. John A. Perkins, formerly assistant provost at the University and current president of the Uni- versity of Delaware has been nom- inated by President Eisenhower to be the United States representa- tive at the General Conference of the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organiza- tion. Formerly a professor in the Uni- versity political science depart- ment, Prof. Perkins received his doctorate here in 1941. He was made budget director for the State of Michigan in 1946 and in 1948 was appointed controller in the Michigan Department of Administration. 'U' Experts Call Purge PowerFight Non-Stalinists Present in Party By FRAN SHELDON The purge of Beria is primarily a. "power struggle" that has erupt- ed sooner than expected, accord- ing to local political experts. Pointing out that the removal by the Soviet of the head of the Russian secret police has followed a traditional path, "denunciation followed by a trial for something done against the authorities,"Prof. Fred W. Neal of the political sci- ence department said that this new move illustrates several sig- nificant factors. * *' * IT HAS PROVEN 1) that "Stal- in dictartorship was not as in- stitutionalized as has been com- monly assumed, 2) that there did exist, and perhaps still exists, within the Politbureau some kind of group that is not in accord with Stalin's policies, and 3) that there has been a very definite struggle for personal power." Prof. Neal emphasized this struggle and pointed out that "Beria had been Stalin's man from the beginning, claiming that he had been hand picked after the purge of 1938 to head the NKVD." For this reason, he felt it quite likely Beria had conceived of him- self as a "mentor of the word," and that the word was quite close- ly tied to some of Stalin's adminis- trative policies. Prof. Neal warned, however, that to consider the entire area of dis- agreement, one of ideology would be dangerous, agreeing that if this were so, the whole move would be away from Stalin and his con- cepts of international Communism. He said that it would be more accurate to call the event "a power struggle with ideological overtones." According to Prof. Neal, the viewpoint that the struggle is "tactical with theoretical justifi- cation used only where convenient might prove more accurate." He said that Malenkov, "who has succeeded to the titles of Stal- in, also wants his prestige." He See SOVIET, Page 4 NY To Join Power Project WASHINGTON-()-The Pow- er Commission has unanimously approved New York's application to join with Canada in construc- tion of the St. Lawrence river power project, it was learned last night. The power project in the Inter- national Rapids section of the river is held to be a necessary pre- liminary to the proposed St. Law- rence seaway. A wholly reliable source told a reporter that the commission acted yesterday on the applica- tion which has been before the FPC since 1948. Official an- nouncement of the action is ex- pected possibly by today. Under the proposal, New York's power authority would join with the Ontario hydroelectric com- mission in constructing the esti- mated 600 million dollar project. Completion of the power pro- ject would give Canada an op- portunity to build the long-pro- posed St. Lawrence Seaway by itself on its own side of the river if this country persists in re- fusal to participate in the 27- foot-deep waterway. The Public Power and Water Corp. of Trenton, N. J., antici- pating a commission award of the license to New York state, has petitioned the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals for an order preventing the commission from granting the GEORGI MALENKOV ' . . . still rules E. Germany Liberation Ho Rise BERLIN - P) -- East Berlin's sullen workers continued their loafers' strike yesterday as West Berlin Mayor Ernst Reuter de- clared the grassroots rebellion eventually would liberate all East Germany from the Reds. The sit-down and slow-down tactics by thousands of workers Wednesday forced the Russians to lift their armed barricades along the city's East-West border and Western newsmen got their first peek into the Eastern sector since Russian tanks broke the June 17 revolt. reo. . 4 * THE LIFTING of the restric- tions on intersector travel at mid- night permitted train, subway and automobile traffic to return to normal. At the Stalin Allee housing project, where the uprising started, as many workers were loafing as were hammering and plastering. National. NEW YORK-Sen. Taft (R-Ol isfactorily yesterday at the hospit formed to check on his hip ailmer WASHINGTON-Sen. McCarth floor yesterday that the hush-hush blocking him from an investigation tributed $400 to the Alger Hiss defe McCarthy named Allen Dulles, tary of State John Foster Dulles, an inquiry by his Senate investigat .1* * ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.-Dr. Alvin C. Graves, director of scientific tests for the Atomic Energy Commission, last night estimated the number of atomic bombs held by Russia at 200 to 500. * * MIDLAN-The Dow Chemical of America local 12075 bargaining LAVRENTI P. BERA . . . darkness at noon * * * Molotov Remains n PowerFight Secret Police Leader Replaced By Virtually Unknown S. N. Kruglov LONDON - () - Lavrenti P. Beria, head of the Soviet blood purge police under Stalin, has been fired as deputy premier in Moscow, booted out of the Communist party, and branded a traitor to the So- viet Union. That left Premier Georgi M. Malenkov and Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov in the grim struggle yesterday for power over the Soviet Union, its satellites and its captive countries. * * * THE THREE were a post-Stalin triumvirate until now, although Beria had been reported heading for a purge himself. Malenkov in person formally laid the treason chargesagainst Berta before the Soviets. Beria's downfall may have been quickened by the failure-of his' security forces to avert uprisings in East Germany, the satellites, and the Soviet Union itself. THE SOVIET government announced on Moscow Radio last night that his job as home minister-in charge of the Secret Police-- would be taken by the little-known Sergei Nikiforovich Kruglov. The purge of Berta indicated that Premier George Malenkov now may be firmly In the saddle and had disposed of his chief rival for the job. Beria apparently was made the scapegoat for the waves of re- bellion which has been sweeping the satellites. HE ALSO was in charge of Russia's atomic energy program, but there was no indication whether shortcomings in that department may have contributed to his downfall. Moscow dispatches said the news of Beria's dramatic dis- missal was greeted with wild rejoicing at a Communist party meeting in the Kremlin's Hall of Columns. It broke on the world first through broadcasts and later by dis- patches quoting the Moscow press. * * * * THE FORMAL public action in Moscow was taken last night at a meeting of some 2,W0O Communist dignitaries who denounced the mild-appearing, bespectacled Beria as an "international imperial ist agent" and an "enemy of the Communist party and Soviet people." The Soviet government charged him with trying "to under- mine the Soviet state in the interest of foreign capital." The' spectacular finale to the long-rumored showdown between Beria and Malenkov took the Western world by surprise. No one had expected it so soon. The reason for cutting down Beria so quickly apparently is found in the satellite revolts, for which he probably will be given all the blame, PRAVDA said his recent activities had led the increasing success of international imperialist plots against the Soviet Union; it had pre- viously given these revolts as an example. Beria's fall was foreshadowed by an editorial in the govern- ment newspaper Izvestia Monday which declared an unnamed official was headed for the scrap-heap. Yesterday's news apparent- ly showed who was meant. The Communist party voted to expel him at a meeting of the Central Committee for the same reasons, adding that he had also tried to place the interests of his ministry above those of the Soviet government itself. JUST HOW ALL THIS was done without Secret Police Chief Beria finding out about it and taking counter-measures was not known. For many years Beria has been the most dreaded man in ._ ._T:-.«i***.#r ha ben in Russia and its satellites. His entire partry c the Secret Police dating back to early post-revolution days, He has extended his empire to include bossing the Soviet espionage network overseas and the control apparatus in the satellites. The fall of Beria is expected to have elecrtifying consequences both in Russia and the satellites. Beria's fall came while top Russiaps officials from riotous East " Germany were in Moscow to report and while Russia's top diplomats from Western capitals also were d- home in Moscow. AMONG those present in Mos- cow is Andrei Y. Vishinsky, now hio) was reported progressing sat- chief Soviet delegate to the UN, tal where an operation was per- but who won his fame fas both- nt. prosecutor and judge, at the famous; n4. Russian purge trials of the late ty (R-Wis.) charged on the Senate.1930s. h Central Intelligence Agency was Whether he will resume that role of a key CIA official he said con- in the spectacular trial of Beria as nse fund. an imperialist agent was a subject CIA chief and a brother of Secre- for speculation in the West yes- as the prime obstacle holding uptedy ;ions subcommittee. Beria's successor, Kruglov, was * * . virtually unknown to the West al- WASHINGTON - The Army though he was in charge of secur- yesterday issued a draft call for ity at the Potsdam conference in 1945 when Stalin met with Presi- 23,000 men in September. dent Truman and Prime Minister The quota is the same as the Atlee. In that capacity he was ones Oreviously announced for awarded the U.S. Legion of Merit July and August. by U.S. Maj. Gen. Floyd Parks in , * , one of the last gestures of East- Co. and the United Mine.-Workers West amity before the cold war committees will sign a new 33- set in. TAX PAYERS OR BURDENS: Conference Discusses Retirement Receiving the first social secur- ity check does not automatically reduce a man to rocking chair status, but this assumption is all too prevelant among his younger tax paying friends. This point was stressed over and over again in yesterday's session of the Sixth Annual Conference all day looking at handicraft exhibitions and displays set up by government and University departments. If you want to start a small farm or operate a local retail or manufacturing concern, be care- ful that you are well suited for the field you have chosen, older their doctrine of work as an end in itself. Dr. Martin Gumpert, editor of Lifetime Living Magazine told con- ference-goers provided "mankind is spared from the humiliation of self destruction," the aged person of the future will live in an age free from want, as a healthy ac-