EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 3 Latest Deadline in the State :ai VOL. LXIII, No. 24-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1953 Harvard Crimson Editorials Barred e. Act ion Follows Student Written. Attack on Ike's Administration By HARLAND BRITZ a Daily Managing Editor The summer edition of the Harvard Crimson has been forbidden to publish any editorials. The paper says it will obey the prohibition. The order, from Summer Session head William Yandell Elliot, yesterday closely followed the publication of an editorial attacking the Eisenhower administration for "apathy" in not attempting to take advantage of recent upheavals behind the Iron Curtain. IT IS NOT believed that the ban will have any effect on the fall and spring edition of the undergraduate paper. The Summer Crimson, a weekly, is partially supported by the University while the regular Committee Crimson is independent. I Truce Imminent; Ar Ne Preparations Subpoenas. Clergyan WASHINGTON - (A) - The House Un-American Activities Committee voted yesterday to sub- poena a Methodist minister, the Rev. Jack Richard McMichael, for questioning about testimony nam- ing him as a Red. McMichael has denied being a Communist. * * THE COMMITTEE action mark- ed an apparent milestone in con- gressional investigations of com- munism. So far as could be learn- ed, this was the first time a cler- gyman has been subpoenaed for such an inquiry. Chairman elde (R-Ill.) told newsmen, however, that the committee did not want anyone to infer that "this was an initi- ation of an investigation in the field of religion." It is in keep- ing, he said, with a policy of investigating individual Com- munists or members of Com- munist fronts "wherever they might be found." McMichael is to be heard next Thursday, possibly behind closed doors. He recently became pastor of a church at Upper Lake, Calif. * *, * McMICHAELS NAME was brought into Tuesday's spectacu- lar hearing of Methodist Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam. Committee Counsel Robert L. Kunzig read parts of testimony he said a sub- committee received in New York recently in which former Com- munists identified McMichael and } Dr. Harry F. Ward, former theolog- ical professor, as having been Com- munists. The witnesses said they had known McMichael and Ward as fellow Reds back in the 130s. Both men were described as for- mer officials of the Methodist Fed- eration of Social .Service, which later became the Methodist Fed- eration of Social Action. OXNAM testified he had been a member and then an "official of the federation for a number of years before getting' out of it in 1947. McMichael was executive secretary of the federation from 1945 until earlier this year, At Upper Lake, McMichael told reporters Wednesday he was not a member of the Communist par- ty or affiliated with any politi- cal group. Akzin Speaks Of Israel, U.S. Relationship In an informal gathering, at Hillel Foundation, yesterday, Prof. Benjamin Akzin of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel dis- cussed the United States' relation to Israel and precisely the rela- tioriship on the American Jewish community to Israel- Following his talk, Prof.. Azkin answered a number of questions concerning the present condition in Israel. Of the multiplicity of political parties, he said, "I am not convinced 'that the situation will cause chaos or that the American two party system would be better for Israel than the present multi- party system." l Prof. Akzin also enumerated the factors necessary before Israel would be able to achieve its com- plete economic independence, cit- The Summer Session's assist- ant director, Allan K. Campbell, speaking in place of Prof. Elliot who is in Washington, claimed that since the paper is partially subsidized "we wouldn't want the views of the Summer Crim- son taken as the opinions of the summer school itself. The sum- mer school obviously doesn't have any opinions." The order put a damper on the publication of an editorial attack- ing the Harvard Corporation for the suspension with pay of Prof. Helen Deane Markham, who re- fused to answer congressional in- vestigators of Communism. HOWEVER, Harvard spokesmen maintained thatt the nature of the editorials had nothing to 'do with the suspension of the rights. Worried Crimson newsmen, contacted yesterday by phone, insistently refused to comment on the situation. The Summer Crimson is com- posed both of members of the staff of the regular Crimson and of other summer school students. Edi- torials appearing in the paper are considered the opinion of the en- tire staff. The editorial policy is decided at weekly meetings of the staff in the same manner as the regular Crimson. * * *s BOSTON papers quoted Univer- sity spokesmen as saying that the paper's function is to print news of the summer session for the sum- mer school students and not to speak for-them. Until the Eisenhower blast, the paper had printed many contro- versial editorials without interfer- ence from the University. A Crimson staffer reported that some sort of negotiation had been started between the paper and the University but that there was no information yet as to the pro- ceedings. League Slates Beach Ball Beach Ball, the League's biggest dance of the Summer Session, will feature Al Townsend and his or- chestra in a seashore-like atmos- phere of umbrella top tables, palm trees, and life preservers from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow in the League Ballroom. Tickets, for the only late per- mission dance of the summer, will be on sale in the undergraduate office of the League from 1:30 to 5 p.m. today and at the door of the dance. Admission will be $.75 per person and $1.50 per couple. Ike's Plan For Defense Budget Ok'd WASHINGTON-(P)--The Sen- ate last night gave President Eisen- hower a major victory in approv- ing his trimmed-down defense budget of 341/ billion diollars and rejecting a Democratic-led move to bolster the Air Force's atomic punching power. Passage of the big military mon- ey bill-a total of five billion less{ than former President Truman recommended--came after two days of debate. * * * IT WENT through on a shouted voice vote with Sen. Douglas (D- Ill.) protesting he had no chance to present several amendments. Sen. Payne (R-Maine), presid- ing, ruled that the Senate had signified its approval before Doug- las cried out his protest. The House passed a similar measure three weeks ago. The bill now goes to a Senate-House conference to iron out differ- ences in the separately passed versions. Last-ditch efforts of Democrats to restore at least part of the Air Force's funds ran into a stonewallf of virtually solid Republican1 strength despite assertions that Soviet rulers might trigger a new1 war that would find the United States lagging in air strength. * , ,* I I DIRECT HIT-An Army truck and its contents smoke after a direct hit on a mortar position on the east central Korean front. GI's can be seen directly behind the truck still manning their mortar despite the hit on the position. Tires have already burned off the vehicle whose chief value now is for salvage. E. German Parliament Called over Riots IT WAS THE fourth and final test of the decision by Secretary of Defense Wilson, with Eisenhow- er's public backing, to lop more than five billion dollars from new funds for the Air Force and lower the immediate goal from 143 to 120 wings. A wing has from 30 to 75 aircraft. Earlier victories had been scored in the House Appropriations Com- mittee, the House and the Senate purse-string group. President Eisenhower and other administration leaders have said repeatedly that the 34%/2 billion is all that can be spent wisely in the next 12 months. They have also contended that better defense can be provided for less money by step- ping up efficiency and planning. Before final passage, the Sen- ate voted 53-38 to reject an amendment sponsored by Sen. Maybank (D-SC) and eight other Democrats to give the Air Force 400 million dollars more than the administration request- ed. That was the big test, and once it was beaten down the Senate pushed on rapidly through a series of other amendments to pass the over-all bill. The biggest Senate battle, other than about the Air Force, was over a rider that knocks out a recent policy of awarding part of the de- fense contracts to unemployment areas certified by the Labor De- partment. Late Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Piiiladelphia 7, St. Louis 4 9 0 n 17 k7 C d t. k 1 By The Associated Press East Germany's Communist gov- ernment, fighting a billowing si- lent resistance movement, yester- day called the Volkskammer par- liament to meet July 29-30. The Volkskammer will "accept a government declaration and en- gage in discussions afterward," the official announcement said. It did not specify what the leaders had in mind, but the government has been concentrating on efforts to crush what it calls "the Fascist un- derground," the resistance which the Soviet Army itself failed to kill when it suppressed the June 17 rebellion. Ilse Requests Senate To Up ForeignAid WASHINGTON - (A) - Presi- dent Eisenhower, declaring the country's safety is directly in- volved, carried to the Senate yes- terday his thus far losing fight against major money slashes in his foreign aid program. In a letter to Chairman Bridges (R-N.H.) of the Senate Appropri- ations Committee, Eisenhower ex- pressed a conviction that "grave consequences" would follow from a major cut in the $5,138,922,227 he requested for foreign military and economic aid. The House, ignoring a late-hour plea from the President, voted 288- 115 Wednesday night to cut the program by $1,100,000,000, includ- ing $414,806,298 in leftover funds from previous appropriations. The bill now is before the Sen- ate committee, which may or may not restore some of the cuts which Eisenhower told a news conference Wednesday were too heavy for America's own security. A FOOD shortage is a prime fac- tor in the East German unrest. U.S. High Commissioner James B. Conant appealed to the Rus- sians yesterday "not to place any obstacles in the way" of the delivery of free American. food by West German authorities to hungry East Germans. In a mild letter to Soviet High Commissioner Vladimir Semyenov, Conant described the proposed handling of 15 million dollars worth of food from the United States as a distribution "by Ger- mans to Germans." He said Sem- yenov was completely misin- formed when he charged Wednes- day that American food gifts were being used to incite "Fascist hire- lings and criminal elements" to stage another revolt in East Ger- many. * * * VIRTUALLY all food shipments inside East Germany now are decked with Red banners identify- ing them as "Soviet help." This is done for German domestic prod- ucts in bulk as well as for the trainloads of grain and fats which actually come from Russia. A Communist appeal was is- sued in all East German cities and towns last night for "every hand" to volunteer for agricul- ture harvest work next weekend. Crops are endangered by a grave shortage of farm labor. A tabulation of reports published in Communist-edited newspapers of five provinces showed 250,000 workers in 97 industrial enterprises were staging sitdown and slow- down strikes against the Red dic- tatorship. And these reports did not cover the whole field. * *F *j MEANWHILE, new riots in the Soviet-run uranium mines were reported yesterday as a fresh wave of arrests by Communist police spread over the rebelious Russian zone. The U.S. High Commission newspaper Neue Zeitung said troops of the East German "peo- ples army" have been rushed into the Erz Gebirge uranium min- ing area along the Czech bor- der to put down the miner's new uprising. The paper said 200 miners have been arrested this week for "open rioting." They were demanding re- lease of 1,200 comrades arrested in the big anti-Communist revolt of June 17. * , . * SCHWARZENBERG and Johan- ngeorgenstadt, two mining towns between Aue and the Czech bor- der, were named as the main trouble centers. This area pro- duces rich uranium ore used by Russia to make atom bombs. Immigra ion Bill Approved WASHINGTON-(P)--One more barrier against an administration- sponsored special immigration bill was removed yesterday when the House Judiciary Committee ap- proved a measure substantially along the lines President Eisen- hower wants. Legislation to admit 240,000 special quota immigrants to the United States during the next two years is one of two goals which Eisenhower leaders say must be achieved before Congress adjourns. Secretary of State Dulles, in a letter made public yesterday, cited recent uprisings behind the Iron Curtain and said passage of the immigration bill at this time would be "giving the lie to Soviet propa- ganda which maintains that there is no real asylum in the free world for those who choose to defect and escape from Communist tyranny." 1 i i l Y c t e t 7 s p 0 b s: h s h H tc 0 FAIR AND COOL FOUR PAGES mistice aringEnd Red Radio Hints *Signingin 3Days Rhee Cites Impossibility of Allied Pledges To Fulfill ROK Demands BULLETIN SEOUL - W) - President Syngman Rhee said early today that Allied pledges to the Communists at Panmunjom "render impossible a fulfillment" of some of South Korea's basi under - standings with the United States. Rhee's newest stand in the troubled armistice talks was made in a statement. South Korea has boycotted the talks since mid-May. Last month Rhee threw the truce talks into a new crisis almost on the verge of armistice when he ordered the release of 27,000 North Korean prisoners of war. * * . * By The Associated Press , The Korean armistice appears imminent today-possibly within three days. This was based on. persistant reports, bolstered by a Red broad- cast intimating the final document was ready. * * * * THE REPORTS of a quick signing date lacked official confirmas. tion from either side, but the North Korean radio said: "It appears that preparations for a truce signing at Pan- munjom have been virtually completed." The broadcast cited evidence to indicate that all-or nearly all-. the preliminaries had been taken care of. However, it coupled thi with a warning against possible further South Korean opposition. ALIED SOURCES were more chary Aurthoritive sources in the Allied truce camp at Munsan said one or two minor points remained to be settled and one or two more meetings of staff officers at Pan- munjom conference site might be Ike s Ex erts required E.e t These sources conceded, how- To Examine ever, that the remaining matters would be quickly decided. There was strong unconfirmed specu- UM T Question lation that a tentative signing date already had been mention- WASHINGTON -- (i - Presi. ed in the secret Panmunjom ses- dent Eisenhower yesterday direct- sions yesterday. ed his manpower' experts to re. The North Korean radio, in a examine the question of univer- broadcast last night saidstaff of- sal military training to see if it ficers apparently had completed is feasible and desirable. drawing the buffer zone. He said in a statement le was The Red announcer noted that anxious to correct "inequities officers yesterday appeared to have which have long characterized our taken up final discussions, indi- military manpower policies." cating they might be through. * * * * * * UNDER the present system, the THE NORTH Korean broadcast- President said, the only effective er said: "As long as the United military reserve is made up of States does not deliberately inter- men who have already served the fere with the truce effort, there is nation in the Korean War, World no mistake about the establish- War II,' or both. ment of an armistice in Korea:" At the same time there.are Despite frequent previous slip- thousands of fit young men who ups and renewed rumblings of Iive not yet assumed any mill- South Korean opposition, allied tary obligations at all, he point- officials appeared to be proceed- ed out- ig on the assumption that Pres- Eisenhower noted that in the ident Rhee would abide by his past he had expressed doubt that pledge of non-obstruction. there was enough manpower in the Rhee - said Wednesday that country to supply the needs of South Korea would be forced to Selective Service and at the same select her own course if Chinese time allow for an effective program Red troops were still in Korea six of Universal Military Training. months after an armistice began. * * * While 'this cast some doubt on BUT HE SAID he had reviewed his non-obstruction promise, it the manpower problem in the light was noted here that Rhee had of the recent reduction in the size spelled out no open threat to an of standing forces and was hope-- armistice. ful that a remedy might be found * * * for the inequities. MEANWHILE, an advance par- The National Security Training ty of four Swiss and four Swedes, Commission gave Congress a blue- who will serve on the neutral sup- print for universal military train- ervisory commission for an armis- ing in 1952, but it died in the tice, reached Munsan by air from House. Tokyo. Polish and Czech delegates were said by the Reds to be in:Bi To Peiping, awaiting word on the s South Korean underground ri s L os sources hint that Red North Korea's dictator, Kim 11 Sung,nOut in House may have been fired. Reports sifting across the 38th ---- parallel say that if the 42-year- WASHINGTON - (P) - The old Communist leader has not House, backing the Eisenhower been axed he at least is in con- administration, last night killed a siderable trouble and his cabinet bill to increase tariff protection has been shaken up. for American industries against * * * competition from foreign goods, IN ACTIVE battle, Chinese Reds A 242-161 roll call vote slapped smashed South Koreans off three down a determined drive, led hills and three outposts in Central by insurgent House Republicans, Korea yesterday in bloody hand- against the administration's policy t-hand fighting and attacked two of promoting freer world trade.. )utposts in the west. In the showdown, after four Radar-equipped Allied bomb- hours of hot debate, Democrats ers roamed the battle line last supplied most of the votes against SEA GER FROWNS ON LEGAL MEANS: Experts Clash over Censorship of Literature * * * * * e By BECKY CONRAD Widely-diverse opinions sparked a many-sided debate on "Cen- sorship and Popular Literature" yesterday. Given in conjunction with the symposium on Popular Arts in America, the five-man panel discussion centered around principles, legislation and enforcement of literkry censorship. PROF. ALLAN SEAGER of the English department and Michi- }k gan State Press editor Lyle Blair came out strongly in favor of placing responsibility on the shoulders of the people to educate their children instead of using legal means to stamp out obscenity. "Professional writes of obscene material use the mails for _____________________________distributioe h dio ad "and federal government is perfectly ' ~ able to take care of that." A ~~-.---~~Prof. Seager noted that the "serious novelists of the country fhave largely been concerned with, moral issues. Even authors who