THE POPULAR MINORITY See Page 2 Li Latest Deadline in the State 4a ij I \.. t 4= 'I SCORCHING SCORCHING VOL. LXIII, No. 19-S - ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1953 FOUR 'PAGES G FOU vr sPaGEwSr ww UN AttemptQ To Culminat< Talk Freeze Parley Recesses Until Tomorrow *MUNSAN - (AP) - A new U move to break the armistice dead lock and get a truce signed wa under study yesterday in Peipin and Pyongyang. The surprised Red truce tear recessed the Panmunjom talks ur til tomorrow - undoubtedly fc consultation higher up-after 24 - minute secrecy - surrounde meeting with the UN team yester day. IN WASHINGTON, authorita tive informants said Lt. Gen. Wil liam K. Harrison, chief UN teuc delegate, handed the Reds a fir demand that they agree at onc to take steps necessary . for prompt signing. These sources sai the statement had "an air of fi nality" about it and plainly im plied the UN side was "fed up with Red stalling tactics. But Washington said the Reds were told to think it over a day or two. There was no doubt the Red were caught by surprise. The Re team arrived promptly to open th, talks at 11 a.m. yesterday, the had to stand around for 15 min utes "while a last-minute messag arrived by helicopter for Harrisor THE UN CHIEF delegate re portedly had walked out of Wed nesday's meeting after bluntly tell ing the Reds the time, had com to sign or break off the talks. The the word.,went out that yester day's session would be the show down to "make or break." But the session, after a de- layed start, went off smoothly and briefly with the Reds ask- ing and getting a recess until early tomorrow. In the past, such recesses have foreshadowed a decisive turn in the negotia- tions. Gen. Mark Clark, UN Far Eas commander, flew from Tokyo tc Korea yesterday and was closete in Seoul with South Korean Pres- ident Syngman Rhee. Informants in Washington saic Gen. Harrison is understood tc have carried opt instructions and told the Reds they now have suf. ficient assurances Rhee will co- operate in observance of the truce terms. In east-central Korea, the fight- ing that raged along a 20-mile sec- tor still was looked upon by UN officers as primarily a Red effort to discourage the South Koreans from any thought of fighting north alone after a truce. Strike Stops East German Rubber Plant, BERLIN - (A') - Fourteen thousand workers at East Ger- many's largest synthetic rubbei plants have gone on a new anti- Government strike, the U.S. gov- ernment radio station in Berlin reported last night. The radio, Rias, said the work- ers opened a sit-down campaign Wednesday at the Soviet-owned Buna Works, near Halle, and con- tinued it yesterday despite inter- vention by Communist police. * * * THE WORKERS demanded re- Slease of all political. prisoners, in- cluding those arrested in the East German revolt June 17, resigna- tion of Communist Premier Otto Grotewohle's government, and free elections. "A delegation of workers ne- gotiated without result with the Soviet general director of Buna, Markevich," Rias said. "People's police units appeared at the works after the sit-down started, but did not succeed in compell- ing the resumption of work." A slow-down demonstration against the Red regime was re- ported underway at the famous Zeiss optical plant at Jena. It came after the Soviet command- ant temporarily broke a strike NEW OFFICERS-Fred Pickard, '52 BAd, (left) and Leonard Wil- cox, '52, were both recently commissioned as Ensigns in the U.S. Navy at Newport, R.I. After brief leaves, both will be assigned to shipboard duty. Pickard played end on several varsity football teams while an undergraduate. Wilcox distinguished himself as a two-time president of the Student Legislature. Akzin Tells of Israel's Constitutional Question By FRAN SHELDON "The Law of the Land in Israel is as yet a patchwork" according to Prof. Benjamin Akzin, Dean of the Hebrew University Law School in Jerusalem. In a talk yesterday Prof. Akzin called the development of a work- able constitution the major problem confronting the lawmakers of Israel at the present time. . * HE SAID that the main question to be answered before the construction of a constitutional framework for the republic could U'Professor Valerio Dies After, Illness Noted artist and teacher Prof. Alessandro Mastro-Valerio of the architecture college died at his home yesterday. The 65-year-old professor had' been ill for the past five months. A national leader in the field of mezzo tinting, Prof. Valerio de- veloped the copper plate process similar to half-tone photoengrav- ing into an art particularly rich in black and white gradations.. THE PROFESSOR of drawing and painting also distinguished himself working in oil, watercolor, etching and wood-engraving. In 1951, Prof. Valeria was elected an associate of the Na- tional Academy of Design. His prints were chosen for publica- tion in London in Best Prints of the Year 1936-37. Prof. Valerie held a one-man exhibit in the Smithsonian Institute in 1936. His work is represented in per- manent collections of the Library of Congress, Smithsonian Insti- tute, New York Public Library,' Los Angeles Museum and Newark Pub- lic Library: "In the quarter of a century he worked with us, Prof. Valerio built himself solidly into the life of the college," Prof. Jean Paul Slusser, director of the Museum of Art, said yesterday. A native of Foggia, Italy, Prof. Valerio joined the University staff in September, 1924 as an instruc- tor. In 1931 he became assistant professor and in 1938 an associate professor. Prof. Valerio, also a renowned portrait painter, married Nola El- len Manchester of Ypsilanti in 1924. He is survived by his widow and two daughters. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in St. An-{ drew's Epsicopal, Church. be completed is whether a written document is necessary or not. Prof. Akzin stressed the facts that a written constitution pro- vided a higher degree of authority than ordinary legislation, protect- ed the individual against unfair legislation and "provided one short document naming the main princi- ples of government." * * * THE EXISTENCE of the single document he said "makes it easy to rally the people for ideological unity." He questioned whether it was of greater importance to anchor the framework of governmentk "the general political, social and cultural rights which character- ize the state, "into a special per- manent document or.to "leave it free to adjust the law of the land to experience." Pointing out that in Israel the different economic, social and re- ligious backgrounds of the people tended to make them a completely diverse group, Prof. Akzin ex- pressed some doubt that any such rigid national ideology would be able to protect every group satis- factorily. ** * HE USED the American Articles of Confederation as an example of a hastily written constitution that proved unsatisfactory, and brought the problem into the present by in- dicating the upheaval in the Near Eastern countries surrounding Is- rael. "In these countries the consti- tution often seems to be the last stable part of government," he said. "Every time a new man steps into power he abolishes the exist- ing document and enacts a new one of his own. "Constitutions have become fa- shionable," however, Israel does not want one of these fashionable but short-lived constitutions, he said. Instead of stating what the in- dividual can do, it is assumed that he has a right to "do anything not actually forbidden by law," he said. The republic, a uni-cameral par- limentary set-up lacks the Amer- ican governmental tradition of ju- dicial review. This is unnecssary, Prof. Akzin explained, since the country has no constitution by which to judge law. Foreign Aid Request Cut By Solons WASHINGTON - (R) - Appar- ently unswayed by a White House breakfast, members of a House appropriations subcommittee were reported yesterday to have slashed $1,100,000,000 out of President Eisenhower's foreign aid program. The cut, if sustained by the full committee tomorrow, will present the House next week with a $4,- 057,232,500 appropriation bill in- stead of the $5,157,232,500 top lim- it authorized by Congress in a previous measure. THE AUTHORIZATION bill re- ceived the President's signature yesterday, but it merely sets a ceiling above which the appropria- tions committees may not go. The President himself, it was disclosed, has trimmed his for- eign aid requests to $5,124,512,- 132, or $32,720,368 less than the authorized figure. The Budget Bureau said this was accom- plished by a re-examination of uncommitted funds on hand. Eisenhower, whose original re- quest was for $5,400,000,000, had members of the subcommittee in for breakfast Wednesday. HOWEVER, members of the House group said they decided to knock out 800 million dollars of military aid and about 300 -mil- lion in economic and other finan- cial assistance to non-Soviet na- tions- The cut was achieved, they said by eliminating 700 million dollars of new appropriations and cancel- ing 400. million in previously ap- propriated but unspent funds. It was the third financial set- back for the Eisenhower adminis- tration in two days. Wednesday, with some Democrats fighting on Eisenhower's side, the House vot- ed to cut funds for the State De- partment's Voice of America pro- gram and for civil defense. The funds are for the fiscal year ending next June 30. Polio-Stricken Doctor Flown To 'U'_Hospital A trying day for a young polio- stricken Army physician was com- pleted here yesterday. The patient, First Lt. William H. Owens of Detroit, endured a three-hour flight in a new light- weight iron lung from Walter Reed hospital in Washington to the University Hospital. Being a physician himself, Lt. Owens was apprehensive about the disease as well as the new lung, especially designed for air trans- portation. "THE WEATHER was fine," re- ported Capt. G. B. Schroering, flight surgeon of the School of Aviation Medicine at Randolph Field, Texas. "But it was as rough a trip as I've handled because of Lt. Owens' apprehension." Lt. Owens, son of Dr. Clar- ence Owens, chief pathologist at Grace hospital in Detroit, was transported in a military air transport service plane and rushed to the respiratory center at University Hospital on arri- val at nearby Willow Run air- port shortly before noon. He was transferred into a con- ventional iron lung, where he will rest for a "couple of months," be- fore transferral to a Veterans Ad- ministration hospital in this area. The new type lung weighed about 150 pounds, compared to %the 1,800 pounds of regular models. R Chinese SPACE MAN IS MONKEY - Dr. W. A. Mickle, anatomy professor at Emory College in Atlanta, Ga.' (Right), examines the body of what was alleged to be a "space man." It all summed up to the fact that the creature was just an ordinary earth monkey from which-the hair had been removed by the use of hair remover. Two Atlanta barbers and a butcher, who is looking on, reported the wierd look. ing creature had been killed by the car in which they had been riding. Kremlin ShakeupStrikes Ukraine aliantly LONDON -(i')- The Kremlin's big shakeup already jolting East Germany, spread to the Soviet Ukraine yesterday. Another lieutenant of Lavrenty P. Beria, the ousted Russian dep- uty premier and police boss, was purged. * * * PAVEL Y. MESHNIK lost the job of interior minister, with its control over Ukranian security forces. He was appointed only last April. * * *N. NE WS HELD UP: Repulse Counter-Attacks There were signs, meanwhile, that the Red Army might be backing Premier Georgi Malen- kov in his bid to secure the- reins of power. The role of the army since Premier Josef Stal- in's death has been vague and open to all sorts of speculation. Marshal Nikolai Bulganin, So- viet defense minister, addressed a recent meeting of the ministry's Communist Party workers at which a report on Beria's ouster was read, it was disclosed yesterday. * * * Soviet Press Announces Two Personnel Changes BULGANIN was "warmly greet- ed" a M6scow broadcast reported without stating what he said. Other military leaders also ad- dressed the meeting, .including Marshals Georgi Zhukov, Leonid Govorov, Semyon Budenny, and Adm. Nikolai Kuznetzov. The course of the purge indi- cates the Communist Party, with the aid ofwhat 'ravda now calls "the Army Communists" is in the saddle. More than 80% of the Soviet Army officers are nominally mem- bers of the Communist Party, but many cannot be considered mem- bers who put party affairs ahead of their professional jobs. * * * A TERSE broadcast by the Kiev radio announced that the Ukran- ian Supreme Soviet had replaced Menshik with Timothy A. Stro- kach. Strokach had held the post of Ukranian interior minister from 1946 to last April. It was the second major shake- up in 24 hours. The Moskow radio announced Wednesday the ouster of Vladimir G. Dekanozov, inter- ior minister in Beria's home re- public of Georgia, from the Com- munist Party. Presumably he was fired as interior minister as well. Dekanozov was accused simply of being a Beria follower. The same charge presumably applied to Menshik. One Surge Kills 300 Americans Chinese Continue Great Offensive SEOUL - (P) - Chinese Reds hurled a 17,000-man counter- punch at the vital Kumhwa road junction of the Korean Central Front yesterday, but valiant South Korean soldiers checked it by mid- night. The Chinese made their new at- tempt after falling back in the bloody Kumsong bulge just to the east, where American officers said therewere unconfirmed reports of Russia~n uniformed officers advis- ing some Chinese division com- manders. * * * THE KUMSONG bulge pull-back by the Reds was forced by Repub- lic of Korea troop counter-attacks and devastating air strikes. Be- fore they back-tracked, the Red forward progress had been so pow- er-packed that in one instance an American artillery battalion was overrun with 300 men killed or missing. The Reds, recklessly spending manpower, still maintained their pressure in the greatest Com- munist offensive In two years. The Chinese, estimated at near- ly two divisions, swarmed. dwn Sniper Ridge and hills to the east in their new assault toward Kgm. hwa last night. They rolled .into the valley that leads to the ruined and deserted town sitting in the center of the 155,-mile hattleline. * * * MAJ. JOHN Eisenhower, the President's son and a staff officer at the front, said the renewed Chinese attacks "can be taken care of all right." But he added: "You can't tell what might happen." The ROK push in the Kum- song bulge made steady gains after a day of heavy support from Allied warplanes. The 5th Air Force said Allied pilots flew 1,250 sorties yesterday dumping more than' 1,000 tons of bombs in the bulge area. * ** * { SECURITY regulations would not allow disclosure of the width of the ROK effort to regain ground lost when the Reds steamrollered south early this week. The ROKs were whipped into fighting spirits by a message from their President, Syngman. Rhee, and visits by top ROK and U. S. Army commanders. Rhee told his fighting country- men "not to yield even one inch of ground regardless of its im- portance." The ROK chief of staff, hard- boiled Gen. Sun Yup Pak, made helicopter descents on ROK posi- tions and tongue-lashed any offi- cer or soldier he considered slop- pily dressed or inactive. "I say stay, fight," Gen. Paik barked. "We must fight and throw them back." Gen. Mark Clark, United Na- tions commander in the Far East, flew over from Tokyo. He and Gen. Maxwell Taylor, 8th Army commander, visited the Kumsong sector and talked with Gen. Palk. FBI Gets Thief DETROIT-()P)-The FBI said last night that Harold Loyd Mock, 32 years old, of Pontiac, had been picked up in New York as he alighted from a plane and had admitted the $42,000 one-man holdup of the Auburn Heights branch of the Pontiac State Bank on Tuesday. MOSCOW - (A') - The Soviet press. appointment of Vyacheslav Malyshev as ministry-that of medium machinery. yesterday announced the head of a new Cabinet It was announced two days ago that Malyshev had been re- lieved as head of the ministry of transport and heavy industry. * * * 4 HE WAS replaced by Ivan Isidorovich Nosenko. f Yesterday's announcement recalled the previous disclosure of the shift in the transport and heavy industry ministry. Another official announcement told of the appointment of Ana- toli Lavrentiev as Soviet ambassador to Iran, replacing I. V. Sadchikov. THESE PERSONNEL shifts seemed of considerable significance, even though they were in very different fields. BETTLEHEIM LECTURES: Psychologist Deplores Popular Arts A. By BECKY CONRAD The funeral-baked meats of great art seem to lose quite a bit of their flavor when they become the cold cuts of popular art, Prof. Bruno Bettelheim of the educa- tional psychology department of the University of Chicago asserted yesterday.' Speaking at the fifth lecture of the summer symposium on Popu- lar Arts in America, Prof. Bettel- into a consumer's product," he noted, "the same art object ex- perienced in a different way." For the masses it becomes ego- deflating; while it had enhanced the ego of the elite for which it had been created, he said. In this manner, art which could have been lived up to becomes escapist art, the professor ex- plained. Yet the purpose of education is to teach a child what emotions he must control and what he can let out, to strengthen the mastery of his ego, Prof. Bettel- heim explained. Commenting on censorship, the professor remarked that when demonstrations of sex were scored as tabu in movies, acts -of sadism and violence were thrown in as an 1 t r i 1 t c The Moscow dispatches telling of Malyshev's ouster from his other job last Monday had been held up for hours by censors and several sections of them never penetrated through the iron cur- tain of censorship. There had been no mention in those dispatches whether Malyshev had been dismissed in. disgrace or would be shunted into some other job. Nevertheless, the original an- nouncement, coming so soon after the downfall of Secret Police Boss Lavrenty P. Beria, naturally raised questions among Western diplo- mats as to whether it was part of a wider purge. It now appears to have been no worse than a demo- tion THE MINISTRY of Medium Machinery is a new one. Maly- shev's old job was one of the 10 top-ranking in the Soviet Union. Observers felt that the fact that Malyshev heads it indicated it is of considerable importance as a ministry. Earlier yesterday the Kremlin announced that, while almost all industrial. ministries had made at least 100 per cent of the goal for the first half of 1953. Malyshev's old ministry had reached only 99. SENATORS BALK: Democratic Trio Asked Back bySen._McCarthy WASHINGTON - (RP) - Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) figuratively lit the lamp in the window yesterday inviting the return of the three Democrats who quit the Senate investigations subcommittee in angry protest over his "one-man rule." McCarthy dispatched the hatchet-burying appeal in letters to the Democratic trio, but he told newsmen: "I don't think they will come back." *. . * -* THE DEMOCRATS strongly indicated that McCarthy was right. Sen. McClellan (D-Ark), who led the walkout last Friday, told reporters he has not yet read McCarthy's letter, but he declared with some finality: "The chapter is written so far as I am concerned, and I am not going to write a new chapter." Another of the trio, Sen. Jackson (D-Wash.) said he agreed with * * * McClellan and was sure that the third member, Sen. Symington (D- Mo.) did too. Symington could not be reached immediately for com- s~f..,. : ' er. This developed when McCarthy, presiding over a meeting of the --'N.-- I i