BAND WORKSHOP See Page 4 Y L Latest Deadline in the State a :43 it 1~s CUDYSOWR U/ v. V .tr 1.. nn c-..a CLOUDY. SHOWERS I VU~La. I.L~ii, No. 22-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY. JULY 22. 1953 wnyTi2 vAnwoi ANN ARBOR. MICHIGAN. WFDNE~DAV JTTTN 22 1Q~1 S S r~~T W 'JK MAULS~i 5 GILMORE REPORTS: Did Germans P*ullPunches? (Editor's Note-Here is a glimpse back to the days of Stalin's war against Hitler-and some of the questions about it that are still unanswered. Eddy Gilmore, who has Just come out of Russia after serving 11 years there as an AP correspondent, wrote this uncensored article while en route home to the United States.) t Sea Jet SAN DIEGO, Calif- - (R) -- The Navy unwrapped the world's first jet fighter seaplane in a public demonstration here yesterday. Instead of lifting out of the water on floats or boat hull, the new fighter skimmed off San Diego bay on skis and climbed into the air at great speed. Armistice Seems Near; Red Koreans Optimistic 41 fi By EDDIE GILMORE PARIS-(P)-At the end of the Russian-German war I was in Moscow with one mighty conclusion and two huge question marks. f The conclusion-The Russian people love their country, no mat- ter who's in charge. And they'll fight for it and fight well. The questions: 1. Where were all the dead I never did see on numerous visits to the front from 1942 to 1945? 2. Why didn't the Germans ever seriously bomb Moscow? * * , * TIMEAND AGAIN we would read of a tremendous victory a how 25,000 or 75,000 or 150,000 Germans had been killed. Then we'd get to the scene of the battle. Sometimes just a couple of days after it took place. But there were never many bodies lying about, German or Russian. A big fight had been reported for Mozhaisk in the early days of 1942. The mercury was 50 degrees below zero when we were taken by automobiles from Moscow to Mozhaisk. For miles we saw German tanks, silent and abandoned. There were long rows of them. Groups of three or four. Singles. All along the old Mozhaisk Road, for the snow was deep on either side of the road and this was a war up and down roads. We'd get out and look. No dead inside. No bomb craters around. No signs of antitank fire.' No holes in the tanks. Just frozen solidly. ** * * THE BODIES of soldiers along the road, and there were never many of them, were frozen and as far as I could tell, unwounded. But, I'll admit it would be difficult to detect a bullet hole, etc., in that kind of cold. We got to Mozhaisk and listened to a Red army officer describe the battle. It-was gigantic. When he finished we asked to see the bodies of all the German dead he'd been talking about. He said they'd been buried. "Already?" asked one of the party. "Yes," he replied. t "Then let us see the graves." "It has snowed," he said without hesitation, "and the snow has covered the graves. The place would look just like an ordinary snow- covered field." * * * * - ONCE WE READ of a bitter fight for a bank building in Kharkov. A group of Germans, a hundred or more strong, were finally driven to the roof and there the battle finally ended. We read this in Moscow. Three days later I stood in front of this bank. A few windows were broken, but most were intact. One hole looked as if it had been made by artillery fire. "Why isn't it more damaged?" I asked after being taken through1 the building, which looked in fair order for the scene of a battle. J "Our fighters," said my guide, "picked them off the roof, one by one, like you shoot crows sitting on a'telegraph wire." I WANT TO WRITE nothing here that will in any way belittle the Russian war effort, for that would be nonsense as well as unfair. But I just don't understand about the lack of bodies and those stories. I've related this to many a soldier and they haven't given me the answer either.t But I've approached the conclusion that more Germans, R- manians and Italians were taken prisoner on the Eastern Frontf than were killed.- I was at Stalingrad and I saw that line of prisoners. A never-to- be-forgotten sight. Hundreds and hundreds of them filing past all dayq long and into the night. Going east over the frozen Volga to prisont camp.F * . * * AND I'VE SEEN German, Romanian and Italian prisoners att other places around Russia. And Japanese prisoners. They must havei been captured by the thousands, especially in the last days of the war.F I was in Moscow for most of the air raids. Bombs fell and did somea damage. But I had seen London and Plymouth and Coventry, and all 1 the bombed cities of England. And I'd sat through raids in London and Plymouth.a What happened to Moscow was nothing in comparison. Yetb Moscow was the hub of Soviet communications. The seat of gov-b ernment. War traffic had to \pass to and fro. Yet no real raid. Moscow had and still has a great many wood houses and build- ings. A setup for a fire raid. Yet no fire raids.. Was this a case of the Germans not wanting to devastate or burn A down the city they felt sure they were eventually going to occupy? Even after Zhukov threw them back from the gates? Did they feel A sure they'd come on again and take it? It was a bitter winter and w maybe they wanted a city, not a shell. i * * *w I VISITED some of Moscow's prize antiaircraft stations. They c were adequate. One showed an award. It was for shooting down two f planes.,s I never had any near misses in Moscow, but we almost got killedt at an American air base in Poltava one night. In the days of the bestT cooperation that the Americans and Russians achieved, we had threei shuttle bomb bases in the Ukraine, e Russia Asks, U.S. Tlo_ stop High E. German Chiefs Arrested -Daily-Lon Qui FAITHFUL WIFE, PLAYED BY DOROTHY GUTEKUNST, COMFORTS HUSBAND JERRY McDONOUGH * * * * 'Country Girl' To Opent In MendelssohnToday Clifford Odets' "Country Girl" has been described as "a pla about people who play in plays." Coming to the Lydia Mendelssohn stage tonight, the third pres entation of the speech department's summer playbill will feature Jerr McDonough, Grad., in the role of Frank Elgin, the down and out ac tor who has taken to drink. Dorothy Gutekunst, Grad., will play his wife, Georgie, Whos long, unpleasant life in the back. stage background has almost oblit K orean Airerated her own personality. Korea Air,* * * * s * * Land Fighting Eased by Rain SEOUL-(W)-Rain fell across the relatively inactive Korean battle line Monday night and fighting has eased, both on the ground andin the air. The U. S. 8th Army communi- que reported the only major ac- tion during yesterday was in the Kumsong sector of the East-Cen- tral Front. South Korean troops there hurled back an early morn- ing assault by about 750 Chinese Reds south of Lookout Mountain and gained five of six hill objec- tives in small attacks. The 5th Air Force in a special announcement reported that two U. S. Sabre jets were shot down by Russian-built MICs on Mon- day. They were the first Sabres destroyed in combat by Red jets since May 17. Sabres downed 131 MIGs during the same period, the Air Force said. From May 16 through July 17 Air Force records showed 10 Sabres were lost to other causes, includ- ng engine failure, and 13 more were shot down by Red antiair- raft fire. The 13 hit by ground ire were on fighter-bomber mis- ions and not hunting for MIGs. The announcement of Monday's wo combat losses was unusual. The Air Force normally reports ts lossesonly in a weekly summary ach Saturday. HAILED by critics as Odets' bes play in years, "Country Girl" "rep resents a genuine comeback for man who knows the theater, live it and loves it." Analogies have been drawn be- tween Odets' career and that of Frank Elgin. The author him- self experienced success early in his career, and like the hero of his drama, he fell into a slump in the mtiddle of his career. His come-back with "Countr Girl" has been termed similar t that attempted by Elgin in th play. The dramatic character, upon offered a big part in a new pla; faces the problem of, pulling him self together. UNDER the constant watchful- ness and encouragement of Geor- gie and the director whose entiri reputation depends on Elgin's per formance, the actor works to make his come-back. Directed by Prof. Monroe Lipp- man, here for three weeks on leave from Tulane University where h is Chairman of the Department of Theatre and Speech, the play wl run through Saturday. FEATURED in the cast are Don Shanower, Grad., James Briley Grad., William Taylor, Grad; Joe: Sebastian, '54, and Beverly Blan- cett, '54. All performances will begin at 8 p.m. Tickets for the play are on sale daily at the Lydia Mendelssohn boxoffice. Prices are $1.20, $.90 and $.60. BERLIN-()-Russia demand- , ed yesterday that the United States stop supplying free'food to hungry East Germans. And at the same time six im- portant officials of the East Ger- man Justice Ministry now ruled by hardboiled "Red Hilde" Ben- jamin, were reportedly arrested on her direct orders. The announce- ment came from the Norwest Ger- man radio. * * * THOSE ARRESTED in the Jus- tice Ministry included two depart- THE T ment chiefs, Dr. H. Reinartz and by reti Fritz Boehme. In addition, the medita Communist prosecutor at Halle, aid sta Wetner Kampsrad, was reported munist dismissed in disgrace for having shown leniency to the strikers Halle was the scene of some of the heaviest anti-Communist fighting G June 17. On the food battle line, the Russians charged the American y charity was aimed at stirring up an anti-Communist revolt. - Soviet High Commissioner Vla- Wid 'y dimir Semyenov dispatched a 'aWcd - bristling note demanding that U. draft ca S. authorities take "immediate Hershey e measures to stop these illegal and Wils - inadmissable actions." draft cal - s* * * THE COMMUNISTS both In BUT Moscow and satellite East Berlin not have t spurned President Eisenhower's in draft - offer of 11 days ago to send 15 mil- range vi a lion dollars worth of American the natio s food to ease conditions in hungry East Germany. He de Eisenhower renewed his offer Wilson's July 20 just a few hours before Wilson the Communist East German necessary government announced that and 18,0 Russia had agreed to supply an the natio extra 57/2 million dollars worth 3 to 3% of food, but that East Germany y would have to pay for it with 0 manufactured goods. AS FO e Meanwhile, the United States truce, the n and West German officials con- it looks r y tinued to make every effort to get as good a food to hungry East Germans de- past two spite the Red ban on direct ship- Draft ments. about 23 1,450,000 e OXnam, House up since sumedi after the Korea Group Clash' Kra - Wilson e over Charges about 90 ed before f substant I WASHINGTON - (A) - Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam and theHouse T Un-American Activities Commit- JAZZ C 1 tee clashed yesterday in an hour's- , long session in which committee I members sought to identify him/ with Communist causes and he re- torted by accusing the commit- tee of "bearing false witness" against him. Time and again, an overflow crowd of 500 applauded the Meth- "The odist bishop and jeered at the of the Bl committee. Seven * * * BISHOP OXNAM acknowledged teak bad that he had belonged to some or- tl ae ganizations the committee said had been cited as subversive. Bu, COM he said they hadn't been cited Handy wi when he was connected with them thrown a and that if any of them were sub- the songs versive, he had no knowledge of their mel it when he joined. time and And, the bishop said, a lot of Borna things about him in the com- 17, 1873, mittee files just aren't true. lie the Ema had plenty of sharp words for Handy w the committee, asserting that it dist mini had been playing "into Commu- to perfor nist hands ... by bearing false except thl witness against fellow Ameri- But Ha cans." together $ * * * tary-valve THE BISHOP made this remark play with in a highly unusual 15-minute edge. THINKER-A wounded Chinese Red Soldier, left behind reating buddies on Korea's east central front, seems to be ting his fate as he sits in a UN jeep which took him to an tion behind the lines for treatment. Meanwhile the Com- s agreed to begin preparations for signing a truce. rshey, Wilson Differ er Post-Truce Draft By The Associated Press eAy differing estimates on the effect of a Korean truce on lls came from national selective service director Lewis B. and Secretary of Defense Charles Wilson yesterday. on said that a Korean truce may make it possible to cut is by 5,000 to 8,000 men a month. * * * * GEN. HERSHEY said in Cheyenne, Wyo., that a truce would much effect on draft calls. He added that while a "breather" requirements would be nice" it was necessary to take a long- ewpoint in maintaining n's military manpower. lined direct comment on statement. said it would still be to call up between 15,000 00 in Qrder to maintain n's armed forces at from million. DR the prospects of a Secretary said, "I think reasonably good, perhaps as it has any time in the years." calls are now running ,000 a month. More than men have been called selective service was re- i September 1950 soon outbreak of fighting in estimated it would be days after a truce is sign- draft calls could be cut ally. Denounce West Balloon Action. MUNICH, Germany - (A) - Communist Czechoslovakia yes- terday denounced a recent free- dom balloon barrage from the West as a "provocative action designed to increase the cold war." American sponsors of the bal- loon barrage were delighted at the reaction.' "This shows that the 'Winds of Freedom' operation was very effec- tive," said a spokesman for Ra- dio Free Europe. "We always get such a reaction when we hit the target." Thousands of leaflets urging the Czechs to resist their Red lead- ers were ballooned eastward into Czechoslovakia from Bavarian soil the night of July 13 by the Amer-* ican-sponsored Crusade For Free- dom committee. Discontented ROKs Want Guarantees Reds Say Peace May BeUneasy PANMUNJOM - () - The task of ironing out last details for a Korean armistice was narrowed yesterday to one meeting of staff officers, underscoring prospects that the actual signing could take place within a week. Red North Korea's radio exuded optimism, saying only four points remained to be threshed out be- for "a very early armistice sign- ing." IN SOUTH KOREA there were rumblings of discontent. Red China cocked an ear for each rumbling and amplified it over the Peiping radio by way of warning that even a signed armistice might prove an uneasy one. Even so, liaison officers were ex- pected to meet shortly and.ar- range for the session of the full truce delegations at which the signing date would be picked. Allied an Communist staff offi- eers mappingout a cease-fire line met again last night. It was the only session scheduled. SOUTH KOREAN government leaders close to President Syng- man Rhee said South Korea "may change its attitude" about not ob- structing a truce unless some awaited assurances are forthcom- ing from Washington., After 16 days of conferences, President Eisenhower's special truce envoy, Walter S. Robert- son, got Rhee's written promise not to obstruct a truce. But South Korean government lead- ers said Robertson took back to Washington two questions which could only be answered on a higher level. One, the officials said, related to what the United States would do in event a post-armistice political conference failed to unify Korea. The other related to what guar- antees the United States. would make to stop possible new Red aggression. IN WASHINGTON, Secretary of State Dulles told a news confer- ence he was unaware of any 'quali- fications in Rhee's promise not to obstruct a truce. Red North Korea's Pyong- yang radio said last night that the truce line was one of four unsettled points. It listed them as: "1. Straightening out the Ko- rean, Chinese and English transla- tions of the armistice document. "2. Recharting the military boundary and buffer zone as a re- sult of Communist forces' recent ground gains. "3. Security assurances for In- dian troops to supervise the pris- oner exchange. "4. Minute details relative to armistice signing." The Pyongyang radio said, "There are perceptible signs pointing to the likelihood of a very early armistice signing." Peiping again emphasized that one thing which must be settled before any armistice signing was the safeguarding of Indian troop: * * * UN on Alert For Armistice UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - M - UN delegates are making ready for a full meeting of the 60-na- tion General Assembly on Korea; beginning Aug. 12 if a truce is signed at Panmunjom this week. The diplomats also were shap- ing up plans yesterday for the Ko- rean political conference to be nnlon riOfl A , I.. +. -,fa a .rn I I' i Soviet Meeting Postponement Called by Reds MOSCOW - (R) - The Soviet press announced yesterday that the Supreme Soviet meeting sched- uled for July 27 has been post- poned until Aug. 5. The announcement gave no rea- son for the postponement. r- THE CALL for it to meet was dispatched by the Kremlin July 15. It was expected then that a chief pnrnn nf the metino wourl 'REDS FEAR NATO': Gross Calls Containment Wise Idea COMPOSER: r. C. Handy To Discuss irth of Blueps' Today St. Louis Blues" man, W. C. Handy will discuss the "Birth ues" at 8 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. nth lecturer in the summer symposium on Popular Arts in Handy will provide his own musical illustrations for the on the spirit and folk roots of jazz. POSER OF "Beale Street Blues" and "Memphis Blues," ll trace jazz back to its African origin. He will explain how, mong workmen of the South, he caught the significance of of railroad men, field hands, miners and stevedores, weaving xdies into "blues," rag-' * * * even spirituals.+ at Florence, Ala., Nov. only eight years after ncipation Proclamation, as the son of a Metho- ster who forbad his son m on any instrument e church organ.' ndy managed to scrape: $1.75 to purchase a ro-, cornet he learned to out his parents' knowil- <" "Let's not be overenthusiastic, but the patient philosophy of con- tainment seems to have been wise," Prof,. Feliks Gross, of the sociol- ogy dept. of Brooklyn College, said in a lecture yesterday. Pointing out "wars, conquests, and aggression have always: been planned years ahead," Prof. Gross warned that "we can no longer afford not to plan peace. Peacemaking is a continuous pro- cess." European democracies in a con- sultant body." In looking to the future, Prof. Gross said, "We must plan for the integration of the liberated satel- lite nations of Europe into a func- tional unit of cooperation." National committees which rep- resent the satellite nations of Cen- tral and Eastern Europe are giv- ing serious consideration to the future of their enslaved home- lands within the European com- EUROPE'S Coal and Iron Au- thority, which does away with tar- iffs and taxes, creating a coal and iron community, is an important step in the movement of European Cooperation, he said pointing out that it is almost impossible to im- prove the living conditions in Eu- rope without a change in the eco- nomic system. This type of cooperation is an example of a functional region- al unit working in the best in-