THE ALL STAR. PROFESSIONAL GAM~'E -See Page 2 (ZI e Latest Deadline in the State :43aitt w ", CLOUDY; SHOWERS I .- VOL. LXIV, No. 33S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, AUGUST 5,1954 FOUR, PAGES FOUR PAGES Ike Extolls Marshall's Patriotism Replies to Charge Of Woodring WASHINGTON I( - Presiden Eisenhower ' Wednesday extolle Gen. George C. Marshall as a self less, brilliant and dedicated patri ot who shouldn't have to reap th "worry reward" of, attacks on hi loyalty and character. Eisenhower, "almost emotional' by his own description, was reply ing to the charge originated b former Secretary of War Harr Woodring and circulated by Sen McCarthy (R-Wis) that Marshal ,,,would "sell out his own grand mother for personal advantage." : "I would like to say," Eisen hower told his news conference "and I have been saying that ever since I first knew him well, tha "he to me has typified all that w call-or that we look for-in wha we "call an American patriot. S "I saw many things he did tha were proof, to me at least, of his selflessness. A Sorry Reward "I think it is asorry reward, eat the end of at least 50 years ob service to this country, to say thai uhe is not a loyal, fine American, and that he served only in orde to advance his own personal am } btions. "I Can't imagine anyone that I have known in my career of whom this is less so than it is in h cases." The White House authorized dir- d ect quotation of Eisenhower's trib- ute- during a news conference to the retired Aymy chief of staff, who served-also as secretary o state and secretary of defense. Woodring's charge, made in a ' letter last June 23, was put into the Congressional Record last Mon- day by McCarthyd as part of Mc- Carthy's reply to moves of cen- sure against him. One of the things McCarthy's critics want to er sure him for i18 a Senate speech June 14, 1951 ' when the senator accused Marshall of being "steeped in falsehood" and called him a "mysterious, powerful" figure who sided with Russia in decisions which "lost the peace" for America. Accuse of "Selling out" Woodring's letter said that on Marshall's 1945 mission to patch up a peace in China, Marshall act- ed under orders from the State Department and President Truman even though he was military strat- egist enough "to know that he was selling out to the Reds." Woodringsecretary of warhin 193640, now lives in Topeka, Kan. Marshall, in retirement at Lees- burg, Va., has declined to say any- thing about Woodring's statements- At Wednesday's news conference, the President refused to pass Judgement on the moves by Sen. Flanders (R-Vt.) and others to censure McCarthy. Eisenhower has contended all along that the McCarthy con- troversy, of which the Marshall matter is only one of some 40 over- lapping complaints, is for the Sen- ate to settle. He went further Wednesday, how- Sever, saying it is a problem with which he may have to deal in his responsibility as head of the party *in ower. Preparing for Opening Foreign Aid Bill Given More Funds $319,040,000 Restored To Bill WASHINGTON (' - President Eisenhower won a $319,040,000 re- storation of foreign aid funds .in Congress Wednesday shortly after telling a news conference that Sen- ate cuts were so deep they would hurt this country badly. The President termed the Senate action very unfortunate and added there seems to be a lack of com- prehension about what the Kremlin is doing in the world. Before passing the authorization bill Tuesday, the Senate cut the figure to something under $2,700,- 000,000. This was morethan 700 millions below the President's $3,448,000,000 request and more than 600 millions under the figure approved by the House. Committees Compromise Conference committees $f the; two houses got down to work quicyt- ly Wednesday composing differ- ences. Sen.. Wiley (R-Wis), chair- man of the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee, came out of the. first meeting to report an agree-i ment to restore the total to above three billions. The House voted a $3,368,608,000 authorization. But a Senate com- mittee and the S e n ate itself chopped this by $638,080,000, slash- ng all items except 141 millions fore technical cooperation. Wiley said the Senate-House con- ferees agreed to put back $319,040,- 000 or exactly half of the total senatorial cuts. However, there re- mained many unresolved differ- ences between the Senate and House bills. Asked about the Senate cut of fTuesday at his news conference, the President replied emphatically' he thought the slaw~ was very un- fortunate. t; He said the administration had y cut the foreign aid program as fare as it believed was safe and that u the House 'already had trimmed It1 about another hundred million. He a said he had . no objection to the n House cut because their guess was as good as his. 'i Eisenhower Terms U. . Not Leader, But Partner Cites Need To Combat Propaganda Less Shoutin' Of Role Asked -Daily-Marj Crozier SCENE FROM THE PRODUCTION, "MARRIAGE OF FIGARO" Marriage of Figaro Will Start Tonight By SUE GARFIELD Mozart's opera, "The Marriage of Figaro," will open at 8 p.m. today at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, as the 20th opera to be presented on the University summer playbill. The musical production, which is the last in the series of speech department presentations this summer, will be given in conjunction with the School of Music tomorrow, Saturday and Monday evenings. The stage production will be directed by Valentine Wihdt, who also was in charge of the 1947 presentation of the same opera. The orchestra will perform under the baton of Josef. Blatt, director of < opera production, who will also .N-{ play a spinet piano in the orches- K insey Report tra pit as part of his conducting. .lyOne of the great masterpieces of sy comedy in music, "The Marriage of Figaro" goes back to 17th cen- , tury Spain and is a direct con- erie Paneltinuationof "The Barber of Se- ville," Rossini's opera. Playing the leading roles in the By WALLY EBERHARD performance are Paul Hickfang The University special summer as Figaro; Delores Lowry, Susan- session program, "Woman in the na; Robert Kerns, the Count (who World of Man," closed last night appear in the picture): and Phyl- with a panel discussion on the lis McFarland and Joann Rossi Second Kinsey Report before a as the Countess. capacity crowd in Aud: A, Angell Dance director for "The Mar- Al Five he 5 yester exami univer The ctivit nese how t s tea They Michig questic freedo They campu md c Servic r 'WASHINGTON(0P) -Pr'esident Eisenhower called Wednesday for *less "shouting" about American leadership in the world because. he said, this country is merely "try ing to be a good partner" Eisenhower told a news con- ference, too, that America must be "more imaginative" and "less niggardly" sin finding ways to m combat propaganda, subversion and bribery on which he said Rus- :::' <> >::: sia is spending billions, Against Communist Chinad Once again Eisenhower spoke out strongly against admitting '' ':a ":::: . tCommunist China to the United Nations - under pr'esent cni cod-tions. But by saying," we always -Daily-Duane Poole are ready to see whether a sinner AT THE JAPANESE STUDIES CENTER A LOOK AT INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION reforms and comes into the fold," he held the door open for eventual entry. ,y GS O' n a ist . .The President said he would be a little bit off his rocker to say -- he knows what conditions will be By DIANE AuWERTER five years from now. Daily Managing Editor they talked to others interested in little attention is paid to poet Walt communications, including such Whitman in America, they cited Eisenhower was obviously hot journalists from Japan took people as director of University Hemingway and Faulkner as par- under the collar over Marshall's :26 p.m. tram to Chicago Relations Arthur Brandon and ticularly popular authors in Japan. having been injected Monday into day after spending two days Prof. Wesley Maurer, chairman of "Gone with the Wind," both in the Senate scrap over censuring ning life at an American the journalism department. novel and in movie form, won McCarthy. sity. h their unanimous approval, as did two days were packed with Three Moth Tour the movie, "Shane."His conern was underscored by .y. They visited the Japa- The University visit was part Pleased at finding their judg- permission for direct quotation, s t u d i e s center and saw of a three month tour of the United which usually is forbidden at news he University of Michigan States which began in June and ent orsonins hey whconferences. ching students about Japan. will end in September. Their localtaofmodt ericans, theyUi o- He defended Marshall warmly. ching studentsd y Ttsjnounced their visit to the Univer- took a tour through The Aoyamas trvelled wthi sity "thoroughly enjoyable" and The Senate's controversy over gan Daily and asked Aoyama, 54 who travelled with hurried away for a glimpse at the condemning McCarthy, he said ons about freedom: academic them as interpreter. Chicago Tribune Tower. earlier, is its business and he isn't m and freedom of the press. With journalistic backgrounds' _going to attempt to evaluate its y looked over most of the varying from that of Hideo Sasaki, effect on the Republican party is, saw the studios of WUOM who is president of the Kanagawa M oss Again; until the Senate decides what it arefully scrutinized Health Press in Yokohama, to the chief wants to do. e. At a luncheon yesterday, of the professional training section 1 Yet he said that anything that of the Yomirui Shimbun, Michio uspendeci tends to divide the party is some Karakubo, the newspapermen thing that must concern him and boo Board weredinterested in all phases of he must take whatever measures United States communications me- WASHINGTON (w - Mrs. Annie are available to try to avoid and dia.jLee Moss, who swore before Sen. arelaaiae t ' ~~~~McCarthy's subcommittee that she aeirt t verses Rule dThe other three members of the never had been a Communist, was Leading up to the bid for less party were Sukeshizu Yamada, suspended for a second time chest beating about America's 3HINGTON (N" - The Na- assistant chief of the city desk on Wednesday from her job with the leadership in the world was a Labor Relations Board, re- the Chubu Nippon Press; Kosuke Army Signal Corps. question on "where we go from g a long-established rule, de- Sakaida, head of the board of here" with the Eisenhower plan 3-2 Wednesday that an em- directors and chief editor of the The Army reopened the case, it may legally question his Gifu Times; and Toshic Kase, said, "on the basis of information for international poling of atom- may ifu imes an Tosio Ksewhich was not previously available ic information and materials for rs about union affiliation or editor-in-chief of Chiba Shimbun. and which has not been satisfac- peaceful purposes. ies if no implication of re-s Literature and Moviess or benefit is involved.es torily resolved by an investi- Again, the White House okayed majority cpinion empha- Speaking through an interpreter, gation." What the information is, quotation of most of the reply, however, that the decision the travellers had little but praise the Army didn't specify. Eisenhower said the Soviets ot grant employers any blan- for the United .States, although The Negro woman was given 30 didn't receive the idea favorably ense to interrogate their em- Yamada said educated Japanese days to present her side of the case but he doesn't propose to be de- people did not have a high opinion to a security hearing board. feated by'that. He said he hopes test is whether, under all of American movies, McCarthy told newsmen he had it will lead to conditions in which rcumstances, the interroga- Sasaki cautioned that his coun- not heard of Mrs. Moss' new sus- we and our cold war enemies easonably tends to restrain tryman spoke only for himself, pension until reporters told him "could begin to talk decently and erfere with the employes in adding that for him, the high and about it. intelligently and constructively" cercisetof rights guaranteed low spot of his U.S. visit had been , "This is a good healthy indica- instead of calling names and cre- pe Taft-Hartley Act," it a Coney Island rollercoaster ride. tion they are tightening pP securi- ating "further division in the Expressing amazement that so ty regulations," he said. !world." r r l , t !. i i World NewsI Na1 B f, c a Hall. Using Dr. Kinsey's report on sexual behavior in American wom- en as a starting point, the panel touched briefly on the content of the report, its strengths and weak- nesses and its specific effects in several areas including education and legislation. Dr. Sophia J. Kleegman, New' York gynecologist, pointed out that the study covered a larger number of subjects than any other work done in the field. Fifty percent of the personal interviews were done by Dr. Kinsey, she said, and the rest by his carefully trained assistants. riage of Figaro" has been Esther ; Pease of the Women's Physical I Education Department, while arty director was Prof. Jack E. Ben- By the Associated Press der and costumier. Phyllis Plet- WASHINGTON - T h e House! cher, both of the speech depart- passed overwhelmingly Wednes- ment. day a bill designed to force re- Tickets may sill be purchased luctant witnesses to testify on na- from Bruce Nary, Business man- tional security matters by grant- ager for Play Production, at $1.75, ing them immunity from prosecu-1 $1.40 and $1 from 10 a.m. untilton.( curtain time at the box office, But the House bill, approved1 293-55, differs sharply from a measure on the same subject Linguistics passed by the Senate last year, and neither will become law unless the two houses can agree in the D isplay OW1 fewdays before adjournment. La Re WAS tional, versing cided ployer worker activit prisal The Prof Univer tionsN check lies." cessful he, rem hThe piecec Anything that tends to divide the party concerns him, he said, and he must take steps with respect to it. What. steps, he didn't say. Russia Complains LONDON (R)-Russia has com- plained to the United States again that American military planes are systematically flying over Soviet merchant ships in the Formosa area in violation of the freedom of the seas, Moscow radio report- ed Wednesday night. Dougla ern Ur be ren fact it out fa activit moral mentet The) help it existin but tha in sexu on sex eralize reports "Lies Impossible"1 . George P. Murdock of Yale An exhibition of recent publica- 'sity added that the ques- tions and of work in progress in were carefully made up to linguistic geography and dialect- on evasive answers and ology is featured this week in Rm Its's impossible to lie suc- 3015 of the Rackham Bldg. Ily to a good interviewer," Open from 2 to 5 p.m. daily ex- narked. cept Saturday, when the hours are Report is a monumental from 10 to 12 a.m.. the exhibit of work in its area," Prof. includes linguistic atlases of vari- as N. Morgan of Northwest- ous European countries, recent niversity, said, "but it must monographs on linguistic geogra-e membered that no isolated phy and dialectology and journals mplies anything." Bringing devoted to research in this branch cts on the range of sexual of linguistics. y does not relieve us of any Also included . are samples of responsibilities, he com- field records and of maps in manu- d. script. The exhibits are furnished panel agreed the report will by the University library, and by n taking "another look" at linguistic scholars of many coun- g laws on sexual behavior, tries. at it will not cause a change The exhibit is sponsored by the aal behavior, although views International Center of general ual behavior tend to be lib- Dialectology, the Linguistics Soci-; d as a result of Dr. Kinsey's ety of' America and the Univer- sity Linguistics Institute. giant security pact. * * * WASHINGTON - Senate-House conferees failed to reach expected agreement Wednesday night on a compromise for disputed patent clauses in a bill opening atomic power to private industry. BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - The official Belgrade radio reported Wednesday night there may be a settlement soon it the bitter dis- pute between Yugoslavia and Italy over Trieste. I. * * WASHINGTON - Progress was reported Wednesday in the search for six senators who will agree to investigate censure charges against Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis). There was no definite announce- ment, however, and it was in- definite just when the committee would be filled. PARIS - French Parachute i troops battled a band of 50 Nation-I alists Wednesday in the Kasserine district of Tunisia, breaking the uneasy calm which had settled over that North African protector- ate since France offered the Tuni- Spanish Society tion n or int the ex by th said. * * * WASHINGTON - Russia, in a sized, surprise move Wednesday called does n for a new Big Four foreign min- ket lic isters meeting to consider Mos- ployes. cow's plan for joining Eastern and "The Western European nations in a the ci UNEXPECTED SUPPORTERS: Leopard Victory Indicates Strength - Concluding 'Woman in the World' E Y t V : a d u 0 a f r (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is an inter- pretive article on the State GOP Leonard, who ran second to .gubernatorial candidate. It repre- Harry Alger for the nomination sents only the views of the writer.) two years ago, conducted a long By BAERT BRAND campaign which finished with a sudden spurt. Donald S. Leonard didn't knowI He made it known that-he sought his own strength when he fought the gubernatorial nomination last his victorious battle for the Re- April. Late in May, Leonard re- publican gubernatorial nomination signed his position as Detroit Po- against three political veterans. lice Commissioner to devote full Leonard, although confident of time to his campaign, victory throughout his campaign, From this point on, spontaneous not only carried the metropolitan Leonard for Governor g r o u p s areas around Wayne county but sprang up throughout the State drew heavily from voting seg- 1which gained enthusiasm steadily ments deep in the heart of terri- until the primary. These were an tory expected to go to D. Hale outgrowth of campaign tactics Brake and Owen J. Cleary. used by Leonard which took him Consequently, he has racked up throughout the State consistently a better than 50,000 vote margin working as much as fourteen hours over secrnr nlaceB ke and I a day meeting voters. minding them that Leonard was seeking the GOP nomination. 1 The rewards of these and other efforts netted Ann Arbor for Leon-1 ard and better than one-third oft the county's votes.1 The keynote of Leonard's cam-' paign was that he could pullt enough more Republican votesf from Wayne county this November3 to beat fourth-term-seeker G. Men-c nen Williams. Victory Key7 Leonard has made clear that' he believes Democratic Wayne County holds the key to a Re- 1 publican victory for governor. Al-1 -though two years ago Williams1 won by only 10,000, he wrapped up the Detroit area by a high margin.1 with a year of graduate work at Michigan's Law School. Also, candidate Leonard has held numerous positions in De- troit which have included not only Police Commissioner but also member'sh ip on the Wayne County Board of Supervisors, on the Executive Committee for the Detroit area of the Boy Scouts and on the Mayor's Committee for Neighborhood Conservation and Improved HousinL. State Level Positions In addition to the job of State Police Commissioner, Leonard has held many other governmental positions on the State level. These include State Fire Mar- shall from 1947-1952; State Fuel Administrator, 1943-48; Admin- I s s e y s 1 y s . .. ..( Leonard has concluded that for istrator-Michigan -Council of De-