THE REAL DANGER- MC CARTHY'S ISM' See Page 2 pY Latest Deadline in the State :43 t IV FAIR ANDWAR1MER VOL. LXIV, No. 4S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1954 FOUR PAGES US. Officials Brush Aside British Plan Proposal Widens u Asia Policy Gap WASHINGTON (M-Top Ameri- can officials coldly brushed aside Thursday a surprise British pro- posal for a Western agreement with the Communist world to guar- antee peace in Southeast Asia. The British plan, publicly pro- posed by Foreign Secretary An- thony Eden Wednesday, appeared to have widened sharp differences between the two governments on the eve of Prime Minister Church- ill's meeting with President Eisen- hower. Their talks open Friday at the White House. Decline, Open Comment The White House and State De- partment declined to comment openly on Eden's plan or answer in any way his criticism of Amer- ica's Asiatic foreign policy. But, privately, top officials made no effort to disguise their indigna- tion that Eden should have aimed this volley of public criticism at the United States just prior to a conference which was set up to harmonize British-American Far East policies. Eisenhower is reported to have discussed Eden's remarks with k Secretary Dulles at the White House. Dulles was reported angry and surprised that Eden had not told the State Department in advance about the nature of his proposal. In addition, the secretary was said to regard the Eden plan as Simpractical and another obstacle to his 3-month-old drive to organ ize an anti-Communist united front t" including Britain, as the best means of blocking new Red aggres- sion in Southeast Asia. Widens Disagreement Eden's speech appeared to have widened his disagreement with Dulles to the point where Ameri- can officials wondered whether any substantial progress could come from the Churchill-Eisen- hower conferences. Echoing a belief Churchill long has held, Eden suggested a "re- ciprocal arrangement in which both sides took part, such as Locarno." In the 1925 Locarno treaty, G e r m a n y, Belgium, France, Great Britain and Italy joined in guaranteeing peace in Western Europe in a move to ease tensions. In rejecting any such idea now, American officials made it clear they believed any pledge by Rus- sia and its Communist partners would be worthless as a major fac- tor in maintaining Asiatic peace. In another development bearing on trafficking with Communists, Sen. Knowland (R-Calif) said X Thursday that French Premier Mendes-France and Premier Chou En-lal of Red China "are prepared "~to negotiate a Far Eastern Mu- nich." Just as Hitler gained what he wanted at the pre-World War II Munich conference with Prime Minister Chamberlain of Britain, Knowland said, Chou is bidding for all the Tonkin Delta in Viet Nam. Cole Urges Atom Agency Without Reds ,8 American initiative should be used toward creating a peacetime atomic energy agency-even with- out Russia's participation, W. Ster- ling Cole (R-NY), chairman of the Joint Congressional Atomic Energy Committee, urged yesterday. In a speech which which was read in his absence to the Inter- national Congress of Nuclear En- gineering convening at the Uni- versity, Cole backed President Eisenhower's atomic pool proposal, maintaining it would help set in motion a "peacetime atomic cru- sade" against poverty, hunger and disease. He stated that military planners are convinced that tactical atomic weapons-those applicable for use in ground warfare and favoring defensive forces-can deter the Russians from ever attempting a sweep through Western Europe. Cole asserted that while there can be no weakening in the United States' resolve to increase the RUSSI CUBES U.S. OF SHIP t j:, f" i'x¢ ex s .-Y '3 y.F= R R. ay$ . 1 i L A ' * * * * * * * * Guatemala Honduras May Break off Diplomatic Relation. u N Mr#n T f' A n asfUomag L i <1 soIe C _ _ 1T his 0 "0JI lI T uFuus I mix" Claim New Ground Gains Battle Continues At Chiquimula TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (P- Guatemala's army boasted Thurs- day that it was advancing on "all fronts" and promised a speedy end to the week-old anti-Commu- nist invasion. But the "Liberation" forces of Guatemalan Col. Carlos Castillo Armas, leader of the revolt to overthrow the leftist regime of President Jacobo Arbenz Guzman, claimed they were holding 16 towns inside Guatemala. 0 The fifth rebel communique of the day declareda battle was con- tinuing in "bloody fashion" for Chi- qu mula, a little over 20smies in- side the border and less than 70 miles northeast of the capital city. Seven Wounded Meanwhile well-informed sources reported that Honduras is about to dem: nd the expulsion of Amadeo Chinchilla, Guatemalan ambassa- dor, on the grounds that he insti- gated leftist students here to stage a demonstration in the Honduran capital Wednesday. Seven persons were wounded when police opened fire. There were signs of a possible break in diplomatic relations be- tween the two countries. Guatemala has charged Ho- duras with aiding the rebellion against her government, and Hon- duras Thursday protested a bomb- ing of her territory allegedly by Guatemalan planes. The Guatemalan radio Thursday reported "many dead and wound- ed" in the army's advance, and said seven rebels wee captured. Claim Communications Cut The rebel "Liberatio. army 's" communique claimed that com- munications had been cut between Guatemala City, the capital, and Zacapa, and between Zacapa and the chief Caribbean port, Puerto Barrios. Zacapa is midway on the main railroad between the capital and the port. The general opinion here ap- peared to be that the rebel drive has lost its momentum and that failure of the Guatemalan peas- ants to join in a spontaneous up- rising upset the invaders' plans. The government broadcast said the army made advances "on all fronts" despite bad weather. Col. Carlos Castillo Armas, the rebel chief, said Wednesday the rain had slowed down his forces. Radio 'Plugs Hard' There was little information from the clandestine rebel radio, which heretofore has reported daily gains and the capture of various towns. The government radio has been plugging hard to keep the peas- ants behind the leftist government, addressing the overwhelmingly il- literate Indian population. The radio reminded the peas- ants the Arbenz regime was re- sponsible for the present land re- form law and asserted it had been bitterly opposed by the U.S.-owned United Fruit Co., which has ex- tensive holdings in Guatemala. The chief objection voiced to the government's expropriation of land for distribution among landless peasants has been that there was no satisfactory arrangement for compensating -the former owners. Steel Employees' Strlke in Detroit Company Charges 73 Contract Violations Committed by Union DETROIT-P)-Great Lakes Steel Corp., in a president-to- president telegram, charged the CIO United Steel Workers of Ameri- ca with 73 contract violations which led to a general strike yester- day at the firm's 10,000-employe plant in suburban Ecorse. Paul Carnahan, president of the steel firm, said the strike was an outgrowth of two illegal work stoppages Wednesday. His telegram to David J. McDonald, steel workers president, saidj the union would be held respon- sible for "the great damages" suf- to the statement, followed a re- fered by the steel firm. fusal by a six-man crew ordered 14 Suspended to make repairs on a company Two disputes at the plant Wed- train in the slab yard. Supervis- nesday resulted in suspensions for ors said the men claimed a sev- 14 workers, two of whom are re- enth man was required to com- presentatives of the union's local plete a crew for the job. A dis- 1299. pute followed; the statement said, In the face of "work stoppage" and five of the men were suspend- charges, union district represen- ed.- VISITOR - Prime Minister Winston Churchill left Lon- don last night for a flight to Washington and weekend talks with President Eisenhower about how to contain Commu- nism without touching off an atomic war. The 79-year-old Premier was accompanied by Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and other advisers., Dea'n Urges Peace Uses For Atom :.:::::::.::::::::.::::::: : " : ".,.,...:.:...,...... M AGENT WATKINS SPEAKS AT UNIVERSITY tative Thomas Shane accused Great Lakes of attempting to pro- voke trouble. He said the company was trying to impose slave con- ditions on its employes. The union is bargaining nation- ally for a wage increase from all major steel companies. Its present t .. Y - - -. - ^ - r 1 "Today we are on the threshold contract expires June 30 and na- of a new era," said Gordon Dean, tional leaders have warned that former chairman of the Atomic the rule after that date will be no Energy Commission, last night at contract-no work. the banquet which concluded the Major Steel Supplier 1st International Nuclear Engineer- Great Lakes is a major steel ing Congress held here during this supplier for the automotive indus- week, try. Its officials said it has been Speaking on "Atoms for Peace" operating at 75 per cent capacity to the scientists and w~iters who, for the past several months. came here from all over the Carnahan issued a prepared! country and world to attend the statement describing the two inci- Congress, Dean said, "Today we dents which led to the walkout. have much knowledge but we do One, according to the statement, not have a monopoly on that involved a refusal by three em- knowledge-the secrets of atomic ployes to accept assigned jobs on energy are in the hands of nature. the grounds they were physicallya Must Change Policy * unable to do the work. Since we do not have a monopoly Supervisor's orders for the men! we must make certain changes in to take a company physical exam- weurstomaky eanee changs in ination, the statement said, also our oliy, eanfees. irs wewere refused. The refusal led to a must out stockpile Russia in hope ive-a usension fte which of deterring further agression, he thvea suspension after which said. the men are subject to dismissal. Then, we must nave an inter- Picket Line Established change of information of a "non- The second incident, according The Great Lakes firm has con-N eluded that its employes must re- turn to work in accordance with e the terms of the contract and that through the orderly grievance procedure set forth in the pact. Meanwhile, a strict picket line By ALLAN SILVER barred even plant protection men "Literary agents often know more about their authors than the from entering Michigan's largest authors' wives or husbands," commented Ann Watkins, New York steel producing plant. literary agent, speaking yesterday afternoon in Angell Hall. Her lecture was the second in the University's special summer Site program, "Woman in the World of Man." "It's a doctor-patient relationship," added Miss Watkins. "Agents must have a sense of responsibil-9 ity and authors must have com- couldn't get a publisher between 4 Or '"'n ' plete faith in their agents." and 5 p.m." Tells Agents Duties Agents have had to overcome i $ _ _ _ .. _.. ., ,...some.1nos...+ y; as . n e~.. ir 1U i nvCL f I E weaponous" nature, he continued. Lastly, there must be an inter- national exchange of information on atomic energy for peaceful means and here we must be bold. "We have only begun to capi- talize on, or harness, the atom," he elaborated. "The most cannot be realized until there is a free exchange, but our present laws make cooperation impossible." "Penalty on Creative Thought There is no security risk in peaceful exchange, he emphasized and a program will not work if there are many restrictive details. "We must completely unshackle ourselves from bonds of secrecy in the non-weapons field." "If we- don't cooperate on the peaceful atom," he added, "we may aggravate the destructive atom." "The world today places not a premium but a penalty on creative thought," he continued. "We must release the enquiring mind, for fear can be an awakener and de- stroyer." If there is a war, he speculated, all the art, wisdom and culture of the 'past will be destroyed. It will require all our energy to work for peace. Group Vetoes Support Plan WASHINGTON '(-The Eisen- hower administration's plan for flexible price supports for farm products took an 8-7 beating in the S e n a t e Agriculture Committee Thursday. Chairman Aiken (R-Vt) predicted the Senate ultimately would reverse the decision. A bare majority of the commit- tee voted-as the House Agricul- ture Committee had previously voted 21-8-to keep the govern- ment support prices at a high, fixed level for another year on the basic crops. These are wheat, corn, cotton, rice, tobacco and pea- nuts. For more than a week, the 15 Senate committeemen had been on notice that the crucial vote would come Thursday. Sen. Young (R- ND), an unrelenting critic of the flexible system asked by President Eisenhower and Secretary Ben- son, proved to be exactly right in come out. Colorado Springs Named by Talbott } WASHINGTON (R) - The Air, Force announced Thursday that the nation's Air Force Academy, counterpart of Annapolis and West Point, will be built at Colorado Springs, Colo., in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains. In making the anouncement, Air Force Secretary Talbott said a temporary academy home in Denver will be used to house the first cadet class of 300 which is scheduled to start July 1, 1955. The permanent home at Colorado Springs is not expected to be ready for use until July 1, 1957. Consider Three Sites Three possible sites had been un- der consideration, the other two being Lake Geneva, Wis., and Al- ton, Ill. Although Talbott made no mention of it in his announcement, citizen groups from Lake Geneva and Alton had publicly objected to having the academy built there. Pentagon speculation as to the choice of the site had been heavily in favor of the Colorado Springs site. It is located near the head- quarters of the Air Defense Com- mand and a favorite spot of many Air Force generals. It was reported that President Eisenhower had a private choice for the home of the academy, but he didn't make it public. However, 60 miles north of the academy site, is Mrs. Eisenhower's home town and the President took a va- cation near Denver last year. In commenting on the Colorado Springs choice, Talbott described it as "admirable for the establish- ment and development" of the school. Describing the functions of the literary agent, Miss Watkins point- ed out that a thorough knowledge of the market is essential to the author. "If the author tried to fol- low the market, he wouldn't have time to write." The job of the literary agent is to be informed as to what sort of material is in de- mand by particular publishers and magazines, she said. Agents are sometimes consulted by editors and publishers, accord- ing to Miss Watkins, in search of authors for particular assignments. The assignments of Arthur Miller to do a piece on the University, re- cently published in "Holiday," wad at her suggestion, she related. Authors often consult agents with ideas for proposed novels, said Miss Watkins, citing the case of the recent best-seller "King's Row," which she was able to sell on the basis of its synopsis. Business 'Unpredictable' Outlining the unpredictability of the publishing business, Miss Wat- kins emphasized that "there's no guessing as to what will and can happen to a book. I don't know how many books were lost during the McCarthy-Army hearings. Ev- eryone ran to television. You Heart Attack Strikes Moody Former Michigan senator Blair Moody was reported yesterday in critical condition after suffering a sudden and severe heart attack in the town of Hancock, at, the be- ginning of a campaign swing through the Upper Peninsula. some hostility as their functions developed, Miss Watkins reminis- ced. She told how a magazine edi- tor some years ago, about to re- tire, instructed his son "never to have anything to do with a liter- ary agent." The son, said Miss Watkins, "is in the audience and he is my hus- band. But he didn't marry me until after his father died." Flood Fighters Battle Waters In Iowa Crisis DES MOINES (R)-Flood fighters stayed ahead of the swollen waters of the Des Moines River on all major fronts here Thursday night as a record crest of just over 30 feet surged through the city. "We have every reason to be- lieve we shall be able to ride out the flood but we can't let down un- til this crest drops several feet," said City Manager Leonard How- ell. After reaching an apparent peak of 30.19 feet at 7 a.m. CST the river held almost steady for hours. The crest was far higher than the 26.5-foot peak reached in the 1947 flood when a major levee broke. Far downstream Ottumwa, last' major point before'the Des Moines joins the Mississippi, girded for high waters over the weekend. A crest of 161/2 to 17 feet is due in Ottumwa Sunday night but officials there said they were confident their defenses could handle such a flood. Intercepted Off Formosa Note Demands Return of Vessel BULLETIN PEARL HARBOR (!)-Adm Felix B. Stump, U. S. Pacific Fleet commander,said yester- day "no U. S. warship seized any Russian ship." Stump made the statement after he was read an Associated Press dispatch about Russia's protest of the alleged incident. MOSCOW (Friday) MA-Russia, in a stiff note to the United States, reported a Soviet tanker carrying paraffin was intercepted in the China Sea off Formosa Thursday, and accused the U. S. Navy of seizing the vessel, its crew and cargo. The note, made public Friday, demanded the immediate return of vessel, crew and cargo and "se- vere punishment of the American officials responsible for this unlaw- ful act." It threatened to take "appropriate measures for safe- guarding the security of Soviet merchant ships sailing in that area." Could Mean Patrols (This threat could presage pos- sible Soviet naval patrols in the water approaches to Indochini, and Southeast Asia. (The U.S. State Department In Washington acknowledged it, had received such a note from the Kremlin. Department Press Offi- cer Lincoln White said the note gave ''no evidence that the United States had anything to do with the ship seizure." He said the United States will reply to the note in due course.) U.S. Ambassador Charles E. Bohlen was summoned to the Soviet Foreign Ministry late Thurs- day to receive one of the toughest notes yet exchanged between the two countries. It threatened to plunge U.S.-Soviet relations to a new low. Forced at Gunpoint The note said it received a re- port at 4 a.m. from the skipper of the Soviet tanker Tuapse that it was being forced at gunpoint to fol- low a destroyer-type warship in an area about 300 miles south of the Nationalist Chinese island of For- mosa. "Further fate of the Soviet ves- sel and of its crew is unknown," the note said. "It is obvious that seizure of the Soviet tanker by a warship in waters under control of the U.S. Navy could be brought about only by the naval forces of the U.S.A." Senate Passes Foreign Trade Agreement Act WASHINGTON (A') - The Senate Thursday night passed a one-year extension of the 20-year-old recip- rocal Trade Agreements Act de- spite Democrats' cries that the ex- tension was "an empty gesture." The vote was 71-3. Sens. Butler (R-Neb), Malone (R-Nev) and Mc- Carran (D-Nev) voted no. Before the final decision the chamber beat down, 45-32, a Dem- ocratic move for a liberalized, three-year extension, as originally favored by President Eisenhower, The one-year bill now goes back to the House for consideration of minor Senate amendments. Its passage complies with the latest stand of President Eisenhower, al- MAN IN AN AGE OF ATOMIC DEF ELOPMENT: Experts Discuss Social Implications of Nuclear Energy By BECKY CONRAD and BAERT BRAND Social impact of nuclear energy took the spotlight yesterday in the all-day non-technical session of five-day international c o n a r e s s ic war is so great that our safety standards now are the lowest in1 all the history of the country, ac-: cording to safety speaker Robert i J. Hansen.I 'Na- -nca '*a mmn af the ' M itary men believe some of an at- tacking enemy air force or guided missile fleet would certainly reach their target. Hansen said this sit- uation makes it imperative that plans be develoned. for rapid evac- promise for the future in medical research. Professor of pathology at Har- vard Medical School, Dr. War- ren discussed the impact of nuc- lear enerav on health. ren said better and cheaper diag- nosis is also proveded by products of atomic energy. Impact of atomic energy on the health of workers in atomic energy plants has led to the development waste fission products is still a significant hurdle to be met in the large scale use of atomic energy. Dr. Warren commented that the declassification of some atomic energy data has permitted the pro-