I WAS A COUNTERSPY, I THINK See Page?2 Y Latest Deadline in the State a1 4 i SHOWERS VOL. LA No. 36S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1954 FOUR PAGES Postal Pay Hike Passed ByHouse Hint Eisenhower May Veto Bill WASHINGTON(M - The House Monday passed with a resounding 351-29 roll call vote an Adminis- tration-opposed seven per cent pay hike for half a million post office workers. It sets the minimum boost at $240 a year. Quick approval came after a heavy lineup of Democrats and Republicans overrode the GOP leadership and forced the measure out of a Rules Committee pigeon- hole, where it had gathered dust for months. The bill was backed on passage by 181 Democrats, 169 Republicans one Independent. The vote against it was 23 Republicans and six Democrats. Ike May Veto Administration leaders predict- ed the bill will never become law in its present form. They hinted that President Eisenhower would veto it if it is not changed. It now goes to the Senate, where ISouse members predicted it would be amended to cut the pay boost to five per cent. The AFL National Association of Letter Carriers said the aver- age sAational wage of regular let- ter carriers is $4,050 a year with an hourly average of $1.96. Following is the way Michigan representatives 'voted Monday as the House passed and sent to the Senate a bill giving postal workers a seven per cent pay raise: Republicans for-Bennett, Don- .idero, Knox, Meader, Oakman, Shafer. Democrats for-Dingell, Lesin- Republicans against-Cederbert, Ford, Hoffman., Absent or not voting-Clardy, Wolcott, Bentley, Thompson, Re- publicans; O'Brien, Machrowicz, Democrats. Conste laion Crashes; 30 Aboard Dead TERCEIRA ISLAND, Azores (M) -A Colombian Avianca Air Line Constellation plunged into a moun- tain peak and burst into flames on this island' in the Atlantic early Monday, killing all 30 persons aboard. Three were listed by the airline as Americans. They were New York residents. The Constellation crashed about 100 feet from the summit of Mt. Illha Terceira minutes after tak- ing off for Bermuda from Lagens Air Field, one of two big fields built in the Azores in World War II. Thick fog had prevented the plane from making its regular landing at the Azores' main inter- national airport on Santa Maria Island. Insufficient Altitude T'ie plane landed here for a rest stop and took off again at 1:37 a.m. (2:37 p.m. CST Sunday) for Bermuda. Apparently failing to gain sufficient altitude, it plunged into the mountain peak about 2 2 miles north of the field. The plane carried 21 passengers and a crew of 9. Most of the passengers and crew members were Latin Americans and Spaniards. There were two in- fants among the victims. The plane left Hamburg Sunday morning for Bogota, the Colom- bian capital. Rescue parties made their way to the scene in the Caldeira da Aqualva Mountains shortly after the crash, but found only the r charred bodies in the wreckage. Terceira Island is in the central group of the mountainous Azores. Representatives of the airline were reported en route from Lis- bon to investigate the accident. Union Trial AdJ'ourned DETROITJ-Recorder's Judge Joseph A. Gillis Monday adjourned until Aug. 16 trial of five AFL Teamsters Union officials who were indicted in an alleged shake- down of contractors in the Detroit area. The indictments were handed Public McCarthy Hearings Slated Court Proceedure To Be Followed Cross Examination of Witnesses, WASHINGTON (P)-Full-scale public hearings on the official conduct of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis.), starting Aug. 30, were ordered Monday by a special Senate investigating committee. The committee is considering 46 overlapping charges brought against McCarthy by fellow senators as the basis for a possible Senate vote condemning the Wisconsin senator's actions. Some of these charges, ranging from alleged abuse of witnesses to inciting government workers to break the law on secret informa- tion, probably will be discarded before the hearings get under way. The SE TE O YS FLEXIBLE i R 4 ,.r ik i f . 4rc' : ^ SYST No Other Way To Turn-- Finals s i x - man committee combed Yugoslavia Jloins Forces With NATO BLED, Yugoslavia (A-Commu- nist Yugoslavia linked herself in- directly to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Monday by signing a 20-year military alliance with Greece and Turkey for col- lective action against akgression. Marshal Tito's government, which before' its ouster from Mos- cow's cominform fold six years ago was aiding a pro-Kremlin re- bellion in Greece, bound itself in the historic new pact to stand with the Greeks and Turks against the threat of aggression from Russia or her Balkan partners. Alliance Signed Foreign ministers of the three nations signed the alliance in this resort town which is Tito's sum- mer diplomatic capital. The agree- ment was hailed abroad as a con- tribution to defense of the free world., Greece and Turkey are NATO members. Yugoslavia is not. But by signing the new pact, Tito's regime of national communism agrees to join Greece and Turkey in determining what action should be taken if any NATO member is attacked. This article ,of the pact does not commit Yugoslavia to direct par- ticipation with armed forces. It says the three nations will "con- sult on the question of measures which should be undertaken in ac- cord with the aims of the United Nations to face the situation cre- ated in the region" should any NATO member be attacked. Collective Defense The three partners agree to col- lective defense if any one of them is attacked, and to peacetime col- laboration to perfect their de- fenses: Military observers said the alliance terms probably will result in more advantageous strategy planning and open the way for freer exchange of military infor- mation among the three. The armed forces of the three countries together may total more than a million men. Turkey has a standing army of 450,000; Greece has more than 125,000, and while there are no official figures on Tito's forces, he is believed to have about 60000 men under arms. Rhee Says U.S. Leaving Korea HONOLULU IA-President Syng- man Rhee said Monday he be- lieved plans were being made in Washington to withdraw U. S. forces from Korea and added: "We want the Americans to go' home. We can do our own fighting after we get the materials." The South Korean President told a news conference he was grati- fied by the results of his trip to Washington and felt that President Eisenhower "is aware of the need to increase the defenses of Korea." Rhee arrived Sunday on his way home from Washington. SPORTS 2-30 through all of them at a closed session Monday. Like a Trial Chairman Watkins (R-Utah) told a news conference the hearings will be conducted much like a court trial. McCarthy, or an attorney for him, he said, will have the right to cross-examine witnesses. Rules of evidence used in federal courts will be followed, Watkins said. Most of these rules are stricter than those of congressional com- mittees. Members of the coimittee, the chairman said, will be able to ob- ject to any evidence not relevant to the issues before them. "The testimony will have to be relevant," he said. "It will have to be given by competent witnes- ses. Hearsay evidence will be barred, unless it comes within the exceptions of the rules. I antici- pate little of it. "We intend to conduct the hear- ings as a judicial inquiry. The charges are rather grave. It is a serious matter and we want to conduct the investigation in keep- ing with the dignity of the Senate." A prior decision against live tel- evision, radio or newsreel cover age still stands, he said, but news- men and spectators will be allowed at the hearings. That doesn't pre- clude closed sessions now and then in the interests of justice or se- curity, the chairman added. The reason for putting off hear- ings until Aug. 30, Watkins said, is to allow members time to fin- ish legislative chores and rest up from night sessions of the Senate before tackling the McCarthy in- quiry. No target date for complet- ing the hearings was even men- tioned, Watkins said. McCarthy and various commit- tee members have expressed a hope the committee and the Sen- ate, too, can act on the censure issue before the November elec- tion. Drive To Kill Wire Bill Fails WASHINGTON (R - A Demo- cratic drive to kill in committee the administration's bill to legalize the use of evidence obtained by telephone wiretapping in the trials of alleged subversives and kidnap- pers failed Monday by a 7-7 tie vote. Sen. Langer (R-ND), the Judic- iary Committee chairman, with- held his vote with an explanation that, "I'm so prejudiced against wiretapping it would be unfair for me to vote" on the issue. Commit- tee sources said this left the other seven Republican miembers voting against the motion to table, and its seven Democrats voting to table it. Langer told reporters he voted "present" in the roll call "because of my experiences as governor of my state." Langer contends that investigators for the Interior. De- partment "wiretapped my office in late 1933 and the early part of 1934 when I was governor." Two Democratic senators who had backed the motion to kill the bill by tabling it, said they con- sider the legalizing of wiretapping to get evidence a dead issue for this session of Congress. -Daily-Marj Crozier Mareantonjo Dies In N.Y. Yesterday NEW YORK (A---Formers Rep. Vito Marcantonio, 51, a noisy, col- orful left wing congressman dur- ing his 14 years on Capitol Hill, dropped dead on the street Mon- day. He always denied he was a Com- munist, although he said he was not beyond taking their political support. His heart failed him as he plod- ded through a drenching summer -rainstorm toward his Lower Man- hattan law office. He had been diabetic for years. Independent Bidder Marcantonio, short, wiry and dark-complexioned, gave up his long time leadership of the leftist American Labor party last year. A month ago he launched a come- back bid to run for Congress this fall as an Independent. A protege of the late Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, Marcantonio began his congressional career in 1934 as a Republican. Over the years he also had Democratic backing on occasions, although both parties finally shook him off their backs. In 1950, the two major parties combined with the Liberal party to defeat Marcantonio. William Z. Foster, n a t i o n a l chairman of the Communist par- ty, issued a statement on Marcan- tonio's death in which he said: "In the passing of Marcantonio the American people have lost one of their best and most fearless leaders.," Puerto Ricans Political opponents often blamed Marcantonio for the plight of many Puerto Ricans who have come to New York. He was pictured as importing them in great numbers, berthing them on relief and then cornering their votes in his dis- trict. ST. LAWRENCE PROJECT: Dirt To Fly Today on Power Darns MASSENA, N. Y. (R-)-At the touch of a button Tuesday, dirt will begin to fly in a 600-million- dollar project to put the St. Law- rence River's might to the beck and call of electric power con- sumers in nine states and Can- ada. By 1959 New York state and the province of Ontario expect to reap the first sparks from huge gen- erating plants that eventually will turn out 12,600,000,000 kilowatts a year-more than the Hoover Dam, the world's largest man-made waterfall. Kelvinator Pickets Turn Away Movers Protest Transfer To Grand Rapids DETROIT (f)-Pickets, variously estimated at 500 to 1,000 Monday turned back 200 AFL riggers and teamsters preparing to remove machinery from the Detroit Kel- vinator plant of American Motors Corp. to Grand Rapids. Sixty policemen were sent to the scene when a clash threatened be- tween the AFL unionists and picketing members of the inde- pendent Mechanics Educational So-j ciety of America. No incident de- veloped, however. MESA pickets are protesting Kelvinator's announced intention of transferring manufacture of ice' creamnfreezers, beverage coolers and home freezers to its Grandj Rapids refrigerator plant. The contemplated move would cut 600 off Kelvinator's Detroit work force. Picket Lines Picket lines were set up follow- ing the transfer announcement July 30. The Detroit plant current- ly is closed for vacations and in- ventory taking. The company had no immediate comment. A conference between AFL un- ions and MESA was called to at- tempt to work out a solution-to the problem. Teamster Boss James Hoffa, said he ordered the withdrawal of teamster's at the plant Monday "because we didn't want any physical rumble with the fellows out there. "We don't have any quarrel with the MESA. All we're doing is Gov. Dewey is to set off a dy- namite blast here that will mark the official start of construction of the hydroelectric project by the State Power Authority and the Ontario Hydroelectric Commission. Later Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent of Canada and Premier Leslie M. Frost of Ontario will lead a similar ceremony across the river at Cornwall, Ont. The explosion also will signal a vital first step toward building a St. Lawrence Seaway to carry ocean-going ships to the indus- trial ports of the Great Lakes. become links in the water route- The power dams and their pools become links in the water route -an entirely separate project- when it is built jointly by the federal governments of Canada and the United States. The power to be shared between the two countries will give an economic lift to the region with- in a 300-mile radius of here, which has been plagued by shortages for more than a decade. Electricity Costs Local water power will reduce the difference between the cost of electricity here and in other parts of the country. The power author- ity estimates it will make possible a 60-million-dollar annual cut in electric bills in New York state alone. END OF A STEAMER : The power development itself will consist of a huge dam stretch- ing from the American shore to Barnhart Island, in American ter- ritory opposite Massena, two pow- erhouses between the island and the Canadian shore, and a control dam 27 miles upstream. Nationalists Sink Gunboats' TAIPEH, Formosa (,) - Chinese Nationalist warships sank eight Communist gunboats in a brief but furious battle in Formosa Strait early Monday, the Defense Ministry announced. Central News Agency said four other Communist ships were dam- aged in the 75-minute engagement in the early morning darkness. All Nationalist ships returned undam- aged, the ministry said. The ministry reported the Na- tionalists ships in undisclosed strength were on patrol off Tung- shan Island-160 miles west of For- mosa-when they ran into the Communist flotilla. It was the largest naval engage- ment yet fought in Formosa Strait. Earlier naval battles this summer have been fought off the Chekiang coast, 250 miles or more north of Formosa. I1ke's Farm Bill Passes Major Test Continue 75% Parity On Dairy Products WASHINGTON UP - Administra- tion forces won all major tests in the Senate Monday night on the controversial farm bill. The Senate voted 49-44 to install the principle of the flexible price support system President Eisen- hower asked for farm products. Another test came on 'the ques- tion of how strongly the price of dairy products must be supported. The Senate first defeated 48-44 an effort to raise the price sup- ports on dairy products, from 75 to 80 per cent of parity, as passed by the House. Then it voted 49-43 to allow Secretary of Agriculture Benson to continue to support milk, butter, cheese and other dai- ry products at 75 per cent of par- ity. Final Passage Today But' final passage of the farm bill was put over until Tuesday The Senate vote on the flexible price support system was on a compromise plan to support the basic crops-cotton, corn, wheat. rice and peanuts-at a scale rang- ing between 82% to 90 per cent of parity. Parity is a standard designed to give the farmer a fair price in relations to his costs. Present law stipulates a flat 90 per cent sys- tem of supports. The Senate range is exactly that adopted earlier by the House in a vote Eisenhower called "a great and sweeping victory." The President originally asked for a range of 75 to 90 ptr cent but the chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, Sen. Aiken (R-Vt), changed this to 80 to 90 per cent. Dairy Products With the price support issue de- cided, the Senate plunged into a second major battle over the level of price supports on dairy prod- ucts. Faced with multimillion dollar surplus stocks of butter, cheese and dried milk, Benson lowered dairy supports April 1 from 90 to 75 per cent of parity. The House voted to restore part of this cut, by raising dairy sup- ports to 80 per cent of parity Sept. 1. Senators from dairy state. had won approval of the Senate Agri- culture Committee for'a boost of 85 per cent on the same date but abandoned this in an effort to write in the House-approved level. They were beaten on this 48-44, then the Senate backed an amend- ment of Sen. Aiken to hold exist- ing levels plus authority to sup- port milk and butter fats as well as their products. Aiken asked that this lower lev- el be retained, saying it has re- duced retail prices of butter and cheese, increased consumption, and encouraged farmers to cull their dairy herds of non-productive cows. With the flexible price supports and the dairy issue out of the way, Majority Leader Knowland (R-Calif) announced that no ad- ditional major votes would be ta- ken Monday night. He said the Senate would resume at Tuesday morning. Before getting to the vote ap- proving the 822 to 90 range, the Senate brushed aside 81-12 a pro- posal by Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis)) for government price supports of 90 to 100 per cent of parity. Adoption of McCarthy's amend- ment would have reversed the ad- ministration's program. The 90 per cent system has been in effect since World War II and under it the government has amassed huge stores of foodstuffs that farmers couldn't sell at the support price. Historical Life in Ann Arbor Found in MHC ISHAFERHINTS AT I Proposed .J WASHINGTON ('P)-Rep. Shaf- er (R-Mich) Monday hinted the Air Force might have trouble get- ting congressional approval for land purchases if it puts a jet plane base within earshot of the National Music Camp at Inter- lochen, Mich. Shafer a member nf the T-Tnas nounci Homes withou tee's o Shaf ices S the se ty site FROUBLE: Base a nter ochen Hit ng selection of a site at Other proposed sites near Cadil- tead, Benzie County, Mich., lac and Kalkaska-both in the t first getting the commit- same General Traverse City area okay. -are just as well adapted to the :er headed an Armed Serv- proposed Air Defense command ubcommittee which, after base as the one in Benzie County, lection of the Benzie Coun- the subcommittee concluded. was announced, flew overo By MERLE MAYERSTEIN The Michigan Historical Col- lectiona recently published a sup- plement bulletin which describes the final adventures of a temper- amental Toledo Steamer. The bulletin is a supplement to The Staebler Papers, the largest body of business papers received during 1952-53 by the Collection., Staebler and Sons were an Ann Arbor company which dealt in coal, bicycles, farm machinery, and automobiles between 1872 and 1915. In fact, they were the first automobile dealers in the city. Joys and Harships Beginning with the purchase of the Toledo Steamer in 1908, Wirt M. Covert, author of the supple- ment, describes the joys and hard- fire. The car was totally destroy- ed." 'Those good old days' also come alive in James Shearer II's "Rec- ollections of Les Cheneaux Club" and the reminisces of Mrs. Arthur G. Walsh. They recount some in- teresting summer vacations dur- ing 1890 and 1900, "when living was less complicated by gadgets than it is now." Information on the University in past years is also contained in the 1952-53 collection. From the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications, came twenty-six volumes of the Michigan Daily, eight vol- umes of the Wolverine, six vol- umes of Gargoyle, and two vol- umes of Chimes. Ruthven Addresses I rir~~en tieruo ntcme n ou p-