A SOCIAL ,SCIENCE AND CONGRESS See Page 2 i:l Latest Deadline in the State Lai a 1 l FAIR AND PLEASANT VOL. LXIV, No. 2S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 1954 FOUR PAGES . - r s n nr ni Studebaker, kPackard Plan Combination Stockholders Vote in August NEW YORK (M-Two of Ameri- ca's oldest independent auto mak- ers-Studebaker and Packard - will combine forces in their fight for a bigger share of the car mar- ket, if their stockholders approve. Shareholders will vote on Aug. 17, on whether the two companies shall be joined in the Studebaker- Packard Corp. Plans for the consolidation were announced Tuesday by James J. Nance and Hugh J. Ferry, respec- tively president and board chair- man of Packard, and Harold S. Vance and Paul G. Hoffman, hold- ing the same positions with Stude- baker-. The two concerns reported a net worth, as of last April 30, of ap- proximately 189 million dollars and Y working capital of about 87 mil- lion. Their combined assets are 253 million. Hoffman Chairman If approved by shareholders the new company will have Hoffman as board chairman and Nance as president and principal executive officer. Ferry will retire from the post of Packard board chairman, and Vance will become chairman of the executive committee. Technically the proposed consoli- dation involves the purchase by Packard of the Studebaker assets. Packard shareholders will vote on a plan to reclassify their common stock holdings on the basis of one share in the new company for five of their present holdings. With this agreed upon Studebaker stockholders will receive one- half shares of the new com- one-half shares of the new com- pany's stock for each share of present Studebaker stock they own. Officials of the two companies said executive offices will be main- tained at both South Bend and De- troit. They added that "employ- ment at plants of both companies can be expected to increase as the Studebaker-Packard Corp. success- fully achieves a larger penetration n of the market." Approvement Nance told newsmen he was confident stockholders will approve the proposed consolidation. He em- phasized it was designed with the idea, of winning "an increasing share of the automobile business." The two companies together pres- ently account for slightly more than half the four percent of the production volume provided by the six smaller companlies. Studebaker has plants in South Bend, Ind., Los Angeles, Calif., New Brunswick, N.J., Hamilton, Ont., and Mexico City. It employs 15,000 workers and has 2,500 deal- ers. Packard has plants in Detroit and Utica, Mich., and also one of the industry's most extensive proving grounds. It normally em- ploys 9,000 workers, and has 1,200 dealers. Law Change Slows Claims Of Workers Students who have applied for unemployment benefits may have longer than usual to wait this month, according to Rex Notting- ham, manager of the local branch office of the Michigan Employment Security Commission. In addition to an already heavy claim load for this area, the new unemployment law which goes in- to effect Sunday will necessitate reviewing many old claims. Ap- plication. and individual explana- tions of the new law will also create administrative difficulties, Nottingham explained. New Law Under the new law, benefits have been raised to a maximum of $42 a week for 26 weeks in contrast to the former maximum claims of $35 a week for 20 weeks. Nottingham said that the many unofficial explanations of the Act have resulted in misunderstand- ings which will have to be ironed out individually. Ilendes-France To Meet Chou Premier Pierre Mendes-France announced yesterday he will meet Chinese Communist Premier Chou En Lai in Bern, Switzer- land today in a one day attempt to end the war in Indochina, the United Press reported. Mendes-France announced the meeting after holding the first cabinet session of his five day old government. The French premier has promised to resign if he does not end the war by July 20. * "Our talks will bear on thep VU'Meeting Told New Atom Method A Belgian, J. Van Impe yester- day told a meeting here of the In- ternational Congress on Nuclear Engineering about the Belgian process for converting crude ura- nium ore into pure uranium metal, the key fuel of atomic energy. Van Impe is a consultant to the Belgium Atomic Energy Project. Whether or not the process matches or in any way resembles the process currently used by the United States remained a ques- tion, because Uncle Sam's current methods in that line are still on the hush-hush list. Atomic Furnace Van Impe also said a Belgian is already constructing an atom- ic "furnace" for research purposes and is investigating the possibili- ties of developing a reactor to fur- nish atomic power. Such reactors require uranium metal as a fuel. He said that the uranium met- al production method, while still on a laboratory basis, was consid- ered "applicable to an industrial production level" and that plans now are underway for large-scale output. He also said it differed, in a key respect, from processes that have been reported by France and Great Britain-and he indicated that in that particular respect the Belgian method was less expensive and more easily handled. The difference, he explained, had to do with the particular kind of fluorine compound used at a key stage in the process of con- verting the crude ore into pure uranium metal., He said the material used by the French-a solution of hydro- gen fluoride - involve d "much care" least the quality and yield of metal be lowered. British Method And he said the British used hy- drogen fluoride gas. The Belgian process, he said, uses an ammonium compound of fluorine which he described as "an inexpensive material which can be recycled after recovery, is not toxic and can easily be handled." The process, he added, does not involve "highly expensive, corro- sion-resistant alloys for furnace linings as necessary when one uses hydrofluoric acid gas, and a high yield of metal * * * is obtained." He was referring to furnaces used in converting the ore to metal. K. T. Compton NEW YORK () - Dr. Karl T. Compton, 66, a top American sci- entist and one of the most brilliant minds behind the wartime develop- mentof radar and the atom bomb, died Tuesday. present state of the Geneva Con- ference," he said. The conference is now deadlocked. This first meeting between such high-ranking French and Chinese officials will take pace on "French soil," that is, in the luxurious French Embassy in Bern. Chou will leave immediately to visit Prime Minister Nehru in In- dia. Paris newspapers speculated that Nehru may be given the chance of playing the' role of mediator in Indochina. Mendes-France will deal only with Red China, the "big broth- er" of the Viet Minh rebels, and informed sources said he would sound out Chinese terms for end- ing the 7/2-year-old war. No Major Decisions Official quarters said the meet- ing does not mean any major bargaining for an Indo-China peace, such as final burial of plans for a European Defense Community, or hastening French recognition of the Peiping regime. They said France is not going to pull out of Indochina if the peace negotiations fail. Meanwhile, the French High Command reported from Hanoi that Vietnam troops routed 3,000 Communists attacking the coastal base of Tuy Hoa in the biggest test of the fledgling loyalist army. Hatcher Talk Starts Series On Women President Harlan Hatcher will open the summer session program "Women in the World of Man" at 4:15 p.m. today in Lydia Men- delssohn Theater. His talk, which will center around the general aspects of the subject and the nature of the pro- gram, will be followed tomorrow by the first lecture of the series, "Literature for Sale." Giving the lecture will be lit- erary agent Ann Watkins, of New York, whose list of authors in- cludes University Prof. Alan Sea- ger of the English department. Prof. Seager's most recent novel is "Amos Berry." Program Aims The summer program is aimed at showing how women stand to- day in their co-partnerships with men. Paying attention to woman's role in contemporary times, the session will include such subjects as: should woman's education dif- fer from man's, and what status do men ascribe to women? In addition to the lecture ser- ies, the art museum is sponsoring a. display on women in art (see page four). An axhibit centered around women as authors is lo- cated in the first floor corridor of the General Library. Farmers' Choice ' WASHINGTON () - The House Agriculture Committee voted Tues- day to let corn belt farmers choose between rigid and flexible price supports on their 1956 corn crop. Term Report On Tobacco 'Preliminary' I dustry Group Calls for Study NEW YORK (P)-The tobacco industry said Tuesday more. study is needed to determine the causes of cancer and heart disease. It described as "preliminary" a report by the American Cancer Society that indicated heavy smoking tends to reduce the life span, at least for men aged 50 to 70. The tobacco industry research committee said data in the re- port "would be more useful when all the work has been completed and fully analyzed and set forth as is established custom in scien- tific journals." More Research It declared the report "points up the need for further extensive research to discover the causes of cancer anid cardio-vascular di- seases." The committee set up by the industry, to determine effects of tobacco on health, issued its statement through Dr. Clarence Cook Little, its scientific direc- tor, after first declining comment. Little said he had the greatest respect for Dr. E. Cuyler Ham- mond and Dr. Daniel Horn, who drew up the Cancer Society re- port, and expressed belief "their completed data" will be in inter- est to science. But Little called attention to a "simultaneous statement" by Dr. Charles S. Cameron of the Cancer Society "to the effect" that the "Hammond-Horn theory" is not "entirely proved." Study Results Hammond and Horn reported that a survey of almost 200,000 men showed that cigarette smok- ers have a death rate, from all diseases, as much as 75 per cent higher than that of nonsmokers. The study showed that deaths in the 50-70 age group were most- ly from cancer and heart disease. Little said he subscribed fully to Cameron's assertion that "one can not at this time exclude the possibility that heavy cigarette smoking and the tendency to can- cer are both expressions of a more fundamental cause of a constitu- tional or hormone nature." Administration' OK's Pension For Alger Hiss WASHINGTON () - The Eisen- hower administration took the po- sition Tuesday that Alger Hiss has a legal right to a $700-a-year gov- ernment pension despite his con- viction of falsely denying that he gave secrets to a Communist spy ring. Both the Civil Service Commis- sion and the Budget Bureau, a White House office, held that the government is obligated to go through with retiremet pay to federal employees even though they are imprisoned for criminal acts. They opposed pending legis- lation to deny the pension to Hiss. Clardy Angry Rep. Clardy (R-Mich) author of one of several bills designed to make sure that the imprisoned ex- official gets no retirement bene- fits, said the administration atti- tude "leaves me aghast, enraged, boiling mad." Hiss, who'll be 50 next Nov. 11, rose to an influential post in the State Department in the 14 years 9 months he worked for the gov- ernment. That length of service would qualify him for a $700 pen- sion starting Dec. 1, 1966. On Jan. 15, 1950, after leav- ing the government, he was con- victed of perjury in denying he ever slipped government secrets to Whittaker Chambers, a courier for a pre-war Russian spy ring. Letters For Hiss The administration attitude was expressed in letters to a House Civil Service subcommittee which is considering bills applying spe- cifically to Hiss and generally to all federal workers convicted of felonies involving moral turpitude. Chairman Philip Young of the Civil Service Commission, basing his argument on 30 years' opera- Guatemala D/ MEMBERS OF THE MICHIGAN DAILY STAFF FIND Would-Be Journalists II ,OVernment, "0 ortVictories Honduras Says Border City Bombed Security Council Asked to Meet TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras R)- Official spokesmen for Guate- mala's leftist government claimed Tuesday their forces are beating back the anti-Communist invaders in all areas, but the rebels dis- puted this. Meanwhile the Honduran gov- ernment said late last night it's country has been bombed by uni- dentified planes near the border of rebel-invaded Guatemala. The Foreign Ministry announc- ed the bombing of the town of Santa Rosa de Copan, an import- ant road junction about 21 miles from the Guatemalan frontier. Santa Rosa de Copan has not previously figured in the invasion of Guatamala by anti-Communist "liberation" forces. The Foreign Ministry gave no other details and it was not known whether there were any casualties. Despite the government's claim of victories, the Guatemalan dele- gate to the United Nations, Ambas- sador Eduardo Castillo - Arriola, announced at U.N. headquarters in New York he was asking for an- other urgent meeting of the Secur- -Day-Mar crozier ity Council to deal with continuing PLACE IN THE SUN aggression. He acted after the U.N. had re- leased a cable from Guatemala stating officially "acts of aggres- Gie Osion" were continuing despite the Security . Council's resolution Sun- _ _ _ day calling for a cease fire. gram of The Daily for the sum- Earlier, the Guatemalan delega- mer. tion at the U.N. had said the gov- Photographer Wanted ernment forces were driving the The Daily also has openings for invaders back on all sectors. a photographer. Experience is Protest Withdrawn necessary for this job, but press It was also disclosed in Washing- cameras and a darkroom are pro- ton Tuesday that Guatemela has vided. Although The Daily is pri- withdrawn the protest of aggres- marily an extracurricular activi- sion previously lodged with the In- ty, photographers are paid a flat ter-American Peace Commission, rate by the picture. apparently to give the Security Prospective business staff mem- Council a freer hand. However, bers may talk to Dick Alstrom, there were indications the five-na- business manager, during any aft- tion commission might not be will- ernoon this week. ing to drop the case immediately. People who are looking for "a Meantime, the Soviet press un- place in the sun" this summer leashed a bitter attack on the can find it at The Daily. United States today, accusing it of touching off civil war in Guate- mala and conspiring to start a new world war. Pravda. Izvestia, the Trud all carried articles blam- To Go Before ing the fighting on Washington. In Buenos Aires, Argentine Pres- 9 lident Peron's government unoffi- U ar(Ly , "Group cially indicated sympathy for the Arbenz regime in its fight against Former University student Fran- the invaders. Semi-official news- cis X. Crowley will testify next papers accused the United States week before the Un-American Ac- of "imperailism" and mixing in tivities sub-committee headed by Guatemala's civil war. Rep. Kit Clardy (R-Mich), Rep. Clardy revealed last night. -mtreeino Crowley attended the University Computor during the 1948, 1949, 1950 school Matdfo T fdr years.e'To a When called before the Clardy committee in March Crowley re- The annual meeting of the As- fused to testify and was cited for sociation for Computing Machin- contempt by Congress. ery will start with a general ses- He has now indicated his wil- sion at 9:30 a.m. today at which lingness to talk and is expected S. B. Williams, president of the to be a friendly witness before Association for Computing Ma- the committee which will hold hear- chinery, and the technical direc- ings Monday in - Washington on tonof Bendix Research Labora- alleged Communist infiltration in tories, A. C. Hall, will speak. Michigan. Other sessions of the meeting Crowley, who lives in New York will be held this afternoon and could not be reached for comment. tomorrow. John Spellman of Ar- thur Andersen Incorporated will give today's luncheon address and George J. Huebner of Chrysler Corp. will speak tonight at a din- ner meeting. . f tThe sessions are conducted un- der the auspices of the engineer- ing college. age. Resident driving privileges They roll up the streets at 9 p.m. in Ann Arbor during the! summer. But, there's one place wherej life and activity goes on pastI the early hours, where people are working hard, meeting celebrities and making their summer more worthwhile. It's the Student Publications Bldg., at 420 Maynard St. That's the place where The Michigan The Daily, which is famous for "the latest deadline in the state," has one of the finest college plants in the country, with a high speed rotary press, Associated Press wire and automatic tele- type setter, four Linotype mach- ines and other valuable equip- ment. This year, The Daily won the Inland Type Setters award in competition w i t h professional newspapers from all over the nountv. Daily is created five nights a! week. Although there are always op- Everyone Invited portunities for people to join the! Any student interested in the Daily staff, things are particularly business or writing end of news- advantageous in the summer. With paper work can add his name to fewer people and a more relaxed the roster which has included schedule, newcomers are given such famous names as Prof. John immediate opportunities to start Dawson of the Law School, Stan writing and page makeup. Swinton, head of the AP bureau Alice Silver, managing editor, in Rome, Governor Thomas Dew- will talk to interested students ey of New York, and Arthur Mil- from 1 to 5 p.m. today and to- ler, author of "Death of a Sales- morrow and there will be a meet- man" and "The Crucible." ing of all present and prospec- No previous experience is neces- tive staffers at 5:15 p.m. today, sary to become a member of The which will cover the general pro- Daily staff. It's major n'eed is for people who are interested inI learning all the aspects of put- IkeLauds ting out a paper and who want z LIKES HIS JOB: Felheim Contentment Leads to $1,000 Award to write. Directory Summer Student Directory editor Bob Wells, '55, has re- quested that all students who wish to change local addresses or telephone numbers in the di- rectory do so by 5 p.m. today at the Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard St. This is the absolute deadline for changes, he said. Chase Victory WASHINGTON (N - President Eisenhower Tuesday expressed pleasure over Sen. Margaret Chase Smith's resounding renomination victory in Monday's Maine Repub- lican primary. The President did .not refer to the fact that Mrs. Smith's op- ponent is a strong supporter of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis), or to Sen. Smith's claim that McCarthy ap- parently planted Jones in the race deliberately, Contentment of the type held by Prof. Marvin Felheim of the English department recently spell- ed success in the form of a $1,000 teaching award. Recipient of the annual literary college alumni award, 39-year-old Prof. Felheim says that the only thing he can attribute his teach- ing success to is that he likes to teach, likes students, and likes the University of Michigan. Dean Charles E. Odegaard of1 the literary college class of 1923 donated the award. Commendation Theaward commended Prof. "I can teach a variety of things to a lot of people, and I don't merely get pushed into a special- ty." New Book One of the editors of "Modern Short Stories," a text book used by English 31 classes, Felheim has recently finished a book on the American theatre from 1865-1900 which he expects to be released next spring. An inveterate movie-goer, Prof. Felheim inovated a course in the film as art, reportedly the first of its kind taught in the country. 'RECREATIONAL PERMITS' Relaxed DrivingRuei By WALLY EBERHARD ByeaLLofsEBerrax dents wishing to use their cars for The heat of summer relaxes participation in outdoor sports University driving and automobile such as golf, tennis and swim- regulations-but there are pitfalls ming. Picnics and outings also to be avoided despite the liber- fall in the "sports" category. I Aeccordiummer uiulations es-es To obtain this driving permis- I tablished by the Office of Stu- sion, the license number of the automobile: the number of the dent Affairs, any student with driv e : l e nd the proner credentials can be certi- ;drivers license; and the name, are extended to students living at Bandits Sentenced home, and those living beyond a one and a half mile radius of the Up to SixtY ears campus may apply for a com- P S muting classification. A Federal judge in Detroit and Business and health permits are a Circuit judge here handed pris- also available at the Office of on sentences Tuesday up to 60 Student Affairs. Those who have years to Thomas Cox and James I I , I ,i