r- EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 2 Y -t 43ZU Latest Deadline in the State :43a tj ) ) FAIR. AND WARMER t, VOL. LXIV, INo. 3S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1954 FOURPACS __ - _ i 1'ATR Vr~sm'Qc~ 4a 'U' President Traces Role Of Women Begins Summer *school Program Tracing the evolution of the in creasing role of women in the work of men, University President Har lan H. Hatcher yesterday com mented, "If not a disruptive forc as in Genesis, women are stillf a force to be reckoned with." President Hatcner was keynot speaker for the special summer >~ session program of lectures, ex hibits and related courses on "Wo man in the World of Man." It wa Sthe first in a series of lecturei aimed at showing how woman stands toay idn her co-partnershi x with man. Man's World It was a man's world by defi nition in the first book of the Bible President Hatcher explained. Bu as a final attempt to make the world livable for man, women were created, "and they've been ' somewhat of a disruptive force ever since." He cited Dora in Henrik Ibsen's "A ,Doll's House" asnthe great landmark illustrating the evolution y of modern women. The Victorian 1- d r- e a e r I- Roll'den Bones! Nowadays you can't even shoot pool or dice without competition from a machine. Two automatic computing machines at Willow Run will demonstrate their skills today at pastimes heretofore peculiar to humans, in connection with meetings here of the Association for Computing Machinery. Shooting pool will be the Michigan Digital Special Auto- matic Computer-better known as MIDSAC, while the Michi- gan Digital Automatic Comput- er-nicknamed MIDAC, will roll the bones. House Committee OKs Foreign Aid Pro gram + i .. . I .ke Against n pPension for Alger Hiss n WASHINGTON (R) - The White n House said Wednesday. President e Eisenhower is against paying any government pension to Alger Hiss, sformer State Department official t who was convicted of falsely deny- ing he gave secret information to a Communist spy ring. James C. Hagerty, presidential press secretary, stated Eisenhow- er's position on the matter after commenting on a series of news stories. Those stories Tuesday said gen- erally that the Eisenhower admin- istration had taken the position through the Civil Seryice Commis- sion and the Budget Bureau, the latter a White House agency, that the government is obligated to go through with retirement pay to federal employes even when they are imprisoned for criminal acts. Hiss Eligibility Hiss will be eligible under pres- ent law for a pension of $700 a year at age 62. As a result of Civil Service Com- mission and Budget Bureau views set forth in communications to the House Civil Service Committee, Rep. Clardy (R-Mich) declared the administration attitude "leaves me aghast, enrated, bdiling mad." Clardy is author of a bill de- signed to prevent Hiss from getting a retirement pension. Hagerty said he was unable to understand how anyone could read the views set forth at the Budget Bureau and the Civil Service Com- mission and come to the conclusion that the administration is opposed to legislation that would deny Hiss a pension. Law Unbelievable "When I brought these stories to the attention of the President," Hagerty said, "he remarked that' the existing law seemed unbeliev- able to one." Pressed for a specific answer as to whether the President person- ally feels that Hiss should not be paid a pension, Hagerty replied "yes," that Eisenhower does feel that way about it. Hagerty said that in checking into the background of the news stories of yesterday, he found that both the Civil Service Commission and the Budget Bureau, had "cer- tain requests from the House Com- mittee on Post Office and Civil Service for opinions on bills now pending before that committee.") He added: Honduras Says Airfi eld Bombed Government To Make UN Protest; Arbenz Regime Denies Charges. TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (P) - Honduras charged Wednesday night that Guatemalan aircraft bombed a Honduran airfield Tuesday and said the government is protesting to the United Nations and the Organization of American States (OAS). Guatemala denied the charges. A Guatemalan government radio broadcast heard in neighboring Central American countries said meanwhile that, "At 'this very mo- ment, Guatemalan territory is being attacked by air, by land and by sea." The Guatemalan broadcast gave no further details of the assault by te Dre DsMoines!G G Still, Fights s on bo: HighWaterfr bo DES MOINES (i - Gouged by ta hammering flood waters, Des pl Moines' main levees still were th holding in a touch-and-go battle in against the mounting pressure of Eq the Des Mones River Wednesday ch night. re "I think we've got a chance to to lick it," said City Manager Leonard pC Already 2 feet past the high mark of 26.5 set in 1947's disastrous flood, the river plunged toward a cu: 29 to 30-foot crest expected by un Thursday morning.So Several thousand workers contin- be ued a round-the-clock levee fight to keep the water out of low-lying th residential districts and the east of7 side business area. The main west side business area and the chief be residential districts were notF threatened. ea * bo Flood waters already had cover- inI ed a large area in the southeast Sa bottoms. They also had spread outS over the lowlands where the river wh enters the city at Des Moines' er north edge. da Inside Des Moines, recreational tar areas and sparsely settled stretches ' of bottomland were under water. go A dike break, described by an wh Army engineer as secondary, sent ba several feet of water into parts of mi a north central section containing Ca about 500 residences. the No loss of life had been reported du in the Des Moines area as of early Wednesday night. Just two deaths G have been reported in the week- con long floods that have touched near- ing ly all the north half of Iowa. car A cheering note was a forecast a for fair weather through Friday ri after a week of torrential rains. T. President Eisenhower messaged su Gov. W. S. Beardsley his "utmost Sec sympathy" for Iowa flood victims Ho and ordered a federal survey of ma possible emergency disaster fund Am needs.,n A' PRESIDENT HATCHER attitude had ruled that the wo- man's place was in the home. Later on women moved out of the realm of housekeeping through education, according to the Presi- dent. Arguments in attempting to prove that woman was intellec- tually equal to man overcame the traditional attitude that education makes women restless and unable to carry out their original pur- pose, he said. Coed Education Trends The former English professor pointed out two extremes in edu- cation today. One trend aims to- ward preparing women for home- I making with home economics courses and child phychology while the other allows them to enter any ' field which interests them. Objection to the first trend at the University center around the argument that such a course close- ly predetermines the role of wo- men in the future. Women in Professions President Hatcher indicated that many of the professional fields :,closed to women in Queen Victor- ia's time are almost wide open to ' the modern fair sex who have taken over in many cases with distinc- tion. But they must combine this role with the role of mother, too, the President said. When the children grow up, wo- men no longer must assume the capacity of a Helen Hokinson her- oine, he commented, but they may start a second life in the class- " room or some other useful occu- pation. In conclusion, the President ex- pressed hope that this evolutionary trend in the role of women in a "man's world" is still accelerating rather than diminishing. Graduate Enters Not Guilty Plea Richard Spero, '54, yesterday en- tered a not guilty plea before Judge James R. Breakey in circuit court on an armed robbery charge. anti-Communist insurgents empting to overthrow the left egime of President Jacobo Ar uzman. Bombs Dropped The Honduran Foreign Min id several bombs were dro a the airfield on the tiny vil San Pedro de Copan, 18 n om the rebel-invaded Guatem order. Subsequent reports said the ck was made by one or r anes, which swooped downc e airfield near the village of habitants between 1 and 2 ST Tuesday. The mini iarged they came from the ction of Guatemnala and retu that country. No one was rted injured. "Unprovoked Aggression,, The Honduran complaint [sed the Arbenz regime of' iqualified' yiolation of Hond vereignty which could only I en committed by planes of uatemalan air force." It tern e bombing an "unprovoked aggressions." The Honduran charge of mbing at San Pedro followe oreign Ministry report 24 h rlier that unidentified planes mbed the village of Santa R the same department of Co ;nta Rosa is only six miles f. n Pedro, and it was not c hether there had been twos ate attacks or the report Wed .y was merely pinpointing rget of the raiders. The charges against the Ar vernment posed the ques hether Guatemala was slap ck at Honduras for havingp itted the exiled rebels under 7los Castillo Armas to lau eir attack last week from I ran soil. Furnishing Bases? Guatemala last week lodge mplaint before the OAS ch Honduras and neighboring ragua with furnishing bases gression against Guatemalan t ,ry. he Arbenz government withd t charge after getting So pport for an airing in the U curity Council in New York. nduras and Nicaragua have cnded that the five-nation In1 nerican Peace Committee ofI S ask Guatemala to proveI arges. he Security Council presid June, Henry Cabot Lodge , ef delegate of the United Sta ned down a second request aatemala for an emergency m to l4ear charges that aggri " was continuing despite se-fire resolution adopted by uncil last Sunday. he U. N. said it had not yet .ved the Honduran charge of ack by Guatemala. eneral Library ours Announce The General Library will be or ing the following hours dur summer session: MIonday through Thursday, . to 9 p.m.: Friday, 8 a.m. t .; and Saturday 8 a.m to . The library will be closed St r5 )ivisional libraries will norm be open from 8 to 12 a.m. a o 5 p.m. weekdays, with sp Eden Hits U. S. Policy In Far East LONDON (ta - Anthony Eden, in a speech bristling with criticism of the United States, called Wednesday on both the free and Communist worlds to sign an Asian pact designed to stop the Indo- china War and guarantee peace in Southeast Asia. Foreign Secretary Eden told the House of Commons he hoped for a Locarno-type nonaggression agree- ment as part of a general settle- ment at Geneva. He said the free world could still have a proposed Southeast Asian setup like the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the Communists could retain the Soviet-Chinese mutual defense treaty. "I hope we shall be able to agree to an international guarantee of any settlement formulated at Gen- eva," Eden said. Hits U.S. Policy Eden's frequent, thinly disguised slaps at American policy in Indo- china came on the eve of his de- parture with Prime M i n i s t e r Churchill for weekend talks with President Eisenhower in Washing- ton. Eden declared: "My belief is that by refraining from any precipitate move toward the formation of a NATO system in Southeast Asia we have helped to create thebnecessary conditions under which both systems can pos- sibly be brought into being." Secretary of State Dulles has favored quick moves to organize a Southeast Asian military alliance. Britain has held back, believing that early action would torpedo any chance for a settlement in Indo- china at the Geneva peace confer- ence. English Go-Ahead The Churchill government is now understood to be ready to commit itself to go ahead after the Geneva conference closes. The Locarno Treaty of 1925 com-t mitted Britain, Germany, France,I Belgium and Poland to go to thei help of any signatories whose soil might be invaded. Churchill hasI recently suggested a similar ar-( rangement between Russia and theE West for Europe.- Funeral Services For Davis Today Funeral services will be held ats 4 p.m. today for Calvin Davis,t professor emeritus who died latei Tuesday after a short illness.- The 83-year-old professor serv- ed as secretary of the University education school during the first« 21 yeas of its existence, from 1921v to 1941 when he retired from theb faculty.a Receiving a bachelor's degreep from the University in 1895 and a master's in 1905, Prof. Davis also attended the University ofg Chicago and received a PhD fromh Hatvard in 1910. . He first joined the University faculty in 1905 as an instructor in education and was made a profes-c sor in 1915. He is the author of sev- l eral books, including the "History of the North Central Association l >f Colleges and Secondary Schools." ,, -Daily- CONFERENCE-TIRED VISITORS AND JUST PE RELAX AT LOCAL NIGHTSPOT AEC SCIENTISTS: Report Atom Reacto Prod uces Cheap Poi By ALAN SILVER The design of an atomic power reactor producing pow ly as conventional methods was reported by two Atomic E mission scientists at a meeting here yesterday of the Ir Congress on Nuclear Engineering. The scientists, Clarke Williams and Francis T. Miles laboratory at Brookhaven, N.Y., said that it might be pos dustry to begin construction of the new reactors in fo years, if the AEC approved an experimental reactor1 test the design. The proposed power plant, they said, is intended to p for its own operation, in addition - to valuable by-products and elec- tric power. For fuel it would utilizeA gentT uranium mixed with a liquid metal. Williams and Miles described preliminary experiments which in- dicated that the reactor, in full op- -u eration, would yield electric power" at between four and six mils per "Literature for Sale" kilowatt hour. Orthodox methods topic of literary agen of power production, such as those kins as she delivers utilizing coal, average about five lecture of the "Won mils. World ofoMan" series The Congress, which is sponsored today in Auditorium, by a division of the American In- Her talk will center stitute of Chemical Engineers own experiences as a lit turns its attention today to the as well as the history impact of the atomic age on relig- developments in the ion, health and society. Watkins is the agent of Social Impact Seager of the Englishc A series of sessions titled the Miss Watkins' lectu "Social Impact of Nuclear Energy" listed as part of the Wi will be held at 9:15 a.m. and 2 p.m. ference. She will deliv today in Rackham. The meetings address in this confere are non-technical and open to the row. public. A third generation Ni During the morning sessions, Miss Watkins has be speakers will discuss nuclear ener- for 20 years to the histo gy in relation to safety and Burlingame. Her soni health. Stephen Withey of the son represent the fam University Institute for Social Re- and fifth generation Ne search is scheduled at 10:25 a.m. According to Miss Wa to report on "The Impact of Nu- formal education termi clear Energy on Individuals." Fol- early age" when she lowing, Elton Trueblood, profes- abroad for two years o: sor of philosophy at Earlham Col- Much of her time wa lege, will lecture on "The Impact Germany, France, Ho: of Nuclear Energy on Religious land and Switzerland. Thought." The theme of woman: University President Harlan Hat- of literature will be car cher will begin the afternoon ses- a General Library exhi sions with a talk on nuclear en- at the time of Miss Wa ergy's effects in education. Suc- Arranged by Miss Ella N ceeding speakers are slated to deal curator of rare books with military tactics and scientif- men as Authors" disp ic research as affected by nuclear shown in the library's energy. corridor. Ike's Budget President's Words Spur Group Action Bill Must Still Pass Other Tests WASHINGTON ( - The House Foreign Affairs Committee late Friday approved President Eisen- hower's 3%-billion-dollar foreign aid p r o g r a m without major change. It acted several hours after the President sent a message' to Con- gress declaring that any cuts would be "unjustified and unsafe" in the light of the threat from world communism. Rep. Vorys (R-Ohio) described the committee's vote "a mark of confidence" in the President. The bill still has a long way to go, however, and Eisenhower ad- dressed his appeal to the whole Congress. His message described the program as a comparatively cheap bulwark against ' 1e con- Marj crozier tinued ruthless drive of ( -mmu- OPLE nist imperialists for world domi- nation." Ask 3 Billion Eisenhower asked for an author- ization of $3,477,700,000 for the fis- cal year beginning July 1, plus or some additional funds for the o r American share of European mili- tary work during the two follow- ing years. He spoke of it in round UV er numbers as a 3 billion dollar program. The committee approved a total of $3,470,608,000 for the year be- er as cheap- ginning July 1. In addition it ap- nergy Com- proved $198,300,000 dollars for the nternational U. S. share of building European air fields and military roads dur- of the AEC ing the proceeding years. sible for in- It sliced 71/2 million dollars from ,sibl o r n -funds earm arked for defense sup- ur to seven port to back up military buildups that would in Europe, putting this sub-total at $52,500,000. But it added $500,000 roduce fuel for a refugee program, bringing the net cut to 7 million dollars. The House may act this week on the bill, which merely author- izes a foreign aid ceiling, with the actual appropriation to be voted later. The Senate has not taken it up. The President's message to the Capitol noted there already has twill be the been a 40 per cent reduction in t Ann Wat- mutual security spending in two the second years, and added: an in the "Further reductions in the au- at 4:15 p.m. thorized program at this time, in Angell Hall. view of the continuing threat to around her our national safety, would be un- erary agent justified and unsafe." and recent "Recent events in Southeast Asia field. Miss have created grave uncertainty," Prof. Alan he said. "The security of that re- department. gion !and the interests of the ire is also United States and its allies there riters Con- are clearly endangered." ver another Eisenhower offered two break- nce tomor- downs on the program, one by functions and one by geographical Jew Yorker, areas, of how the foreign aid en married money would be used. ian, Roger He said about $2,748,400,000, or and grand- 79 per cent, would go to programs lil'sfouththat are essentially military. Of w Yorkers. this, $1,580,000,000 would be for atkins, "my mutual defense assistance. Another nated at an 945 million would -go principally was taken for supplies and equipment in f "culture." Southeast Asia. s spent in By areas, approximately 900 mil- Iland, Eng-flion would go to Europe, 570 mil- lion for the Near East, Africa and in the world South Asia and $1,770,000,000 for ried out in the Far East and Pacific. iit running The remainder would be divided atkins' visit among lesser programs, M. Hymans, the "Wo lay will be Prof. Lapr te first floor Made Attache Prof. Otto Laporte of the physics department will leave for Japan « next. October to become the first r : science attache with the United States embassy in Tokyo. His appointment, made by the t prove a State department, will hold dip- ionship, he lomatic rank. He will advise the State department on any matters REPLACES POOL METHOD: Army To Send GI's Abroad As Part of Unit WASHINGTON (R) - The Army, giving the loriely GI a break, is planning to send him overseas as part of a unit with which he has trained instead of as an individual drawn from a replacement pool. The plan, still in course of de- velopment, will begin operating next year. It will be substituted for an overseas replacement pro- gram which has been used since the start of the Korean War. Probably starting at the platoon level, about 80 men, it is to be expanded until battalions, 880men. and regiments, 3,600 men, move overseas as units. Two-Fold Proposed The purpose is two-fold: to in- crease over-all omha tfficienev: contained in an Army announce- ment on steps being taken to im-. prove career service. The other plans already have been announced and some of them are in operation. In practice, the replacement pro- gram will involve some of the pro- cedure used in the recent return of two divisions from Korea, the 40th and 45th. Into those divisions were put all the men whose overseas service tours of duty were about to expire. The divisions then were brought back to the United States and men either discharged or as- signed to stateside outfits. Under the new replacement plan. men whose overseas duty tours are completed would be assnmbled re- Felheim Award The $1,000 teaching award which went to Prof. Marvin Felheim of the English department was do- nated by the class of 1923 and a presented by Charles Odegaard, Dean of the Literary School. 'CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE: Neel Comments on Cancer Repo By RONA FRIEDMAN "One more link in a chain of evidence" is how Dr. James V. Deaths from lung cancer, the re- onstrates but does no port pointed out from its present cause and effect relat statistics, were at least three times commented. I Pe-