THE RITUAL OF THE 4TH AND FREEDOM See Page 2 L Latest Deadline in the State .M&MAW lqmp Ar !Jutty CONTINUED FAIR VOL. LXIV, No. 11S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 FOUR PAGES S U July 4th Death Total 501; Less Than Expected Fireworks Kill Only Two; Accidents Are Below Record By The Associated Press The homeward trek of the long Fourth of July weekend holiday was underway late Monday and with it came a mounting death toll on the nation's highways. Violent deaths claimed at least 501 lives as the 78-hour Inde- pendence Day holiday neared its conclusion. An Associated Press survey showed that with less than five hours of the holiday remain- ing, there were at least 290 killed in traffic mishaps, 149 drownings - > and 62 killed in a variety of acci- Nixon Set To Speak In Jackson Festival Honors GOP Founding Vice-President Richard N i x o n will celebrate "Under the Oaks" day today in nearby Jackson. The Vice-President will deliver an address tonight as part of the week-long Freedom Festval cele- bration of the centennial anniver- sary of the founding of the Repub- lican Party in the Michigan city's oak grove. Jackson townspeople will simul- taneously heighten the festival spir- it with a commemoration of the one hundred twenty-fifth anniver- sary of Jackson's own founding. The week-long festivities began Sunday with a mass religious meet- ing attended by a crowd of 4,000 and followed a Boy Scout band concert. U.S Britain I~e May Give Up German Zone LONDON M-The United States and Britain Monday began work- ing on plans to turn control of their zones back to West Germany if France rejects the project for a European Defense Community. Political and legal experts of the two countries met at the Foreign Office and studied proposals which, if approved and applied, would: 1. Give almost complete inde- pendence to the Federal German Republic in the American and British zones, including powers to raise a national army of defense. 2. Wind up the American - Brit- ish-French High Commission in Bonn and set up instead American and British embassies. This would leave France alone in her own zone to face the West Germans. Informants stressed the United States and Britain will not accept any such plan unless an emer- gency arises, such as failure of the French Parliament to ratify the two-year-old EDC treaty. The experts met at the Foreign Office under direct orders from Presid~ent .Eisenhower and Prime Minister Churchill. The two lead- ers agreed in Washington last week West Germany should be giv- en "its place as an equal partner in the community of Western na- tions." American and British officials are trying to figure ways of doing this while preserving friendship and solidarity with France. EDO, signed in Paris in 1952. provides for the limited rearma- ment of West Germany within a six-nation European Army. France and Italy have yet to follow the Netherlands; B e 1 g i u m, Luxem- bourg and West Germany in ratify- ing EDC. Ailen Predicts Flexible Farm Price Support WASHINGTON(R'-Sen. Aiken (R- Vt) predicted yesterday that con- gress will give president Eisen- hower a satisfactory farm bill, with authority to put into operation a more flexible system of farm price supports. If Congress should pass agricul- tural legislation embodying fixed, 90 per cent of parity supports, Aiken said, he is convinced that Eisenhower will veto it. Sen. Aiken, chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, was interviewed on the Mutual Broadcasting System's "Reporters Round-up," a radio program. The President wants authority to support major crops on a range from 75 to 90 per cent of parity. Parity is a standard for fixing farm prices, said by law to be fair to the farmer in relation to the cost of basic things he needs. Bipartisan Farm Bloc A bipartisan farm bloc in Con- gress wants price supports con- tinued for another year at 90 per cent of parity. But the House voted last week ) ~ to give the President limited flexi- bility on a range from 82% to 90 per cent The Senate has still to act. Sen. Aiken reported that butter consumption in the United States has increased "somewhere from 8 to 11 per cent" since Secretary nf A cri rpi i 7ra. T aft Rnm dents. Despite mounting highway toll, it appeared traffic deaths might be lower than forecasted. Ann Arbor authorities were hap- py to report that there were no local fatalities or accidents. Fine Weather Weatherwise, it was a glorious Fourth over much of the nation Monday, and millions of Ameri- cans enjoyed a pleasant windup of their holiday weekend. It was a little too warm for com- fort in the Southeast, the Great Plains and in the Southwest des- ert country where the rising mer- cury reached 105 degrees. And there were scattered showers dur- ing the day, but with light rainfall except in some southeastern lo- calities. Fair and pleasant weather pre nailed over most of the northern half of the country and along the West Coast. In these regions, tem- peratures rangedhthrough the 70s and 80s. But the high 90s were reached in most of the South. Thundershowers dampened parts of west and central Virginia, east- ern Pennsylvania and eastern New York. Other showers were widely scattered over parts of New Eng- land, the Gulf states and the Cen- tral Plains. Council Estimates The National Safety Council's pre-holiday estimate of traffic deaths was 430, which would have been a record. Ned H. Dearborn, council presi- dent, said it was possible the ac- tual number killed in highway traf- fic may be 50 to 100 lower than the estimate. He warned against a "surge of carelessness" by weary motorists intent on ticking off the last few miles home. "Experience has shown," he said, "that the final day of a holi- day recreation period is usually the most costly in terms of accidental death and injury. It is then that the traffic is heaviest and the driv- er is most irritable. Irritability causes many accidents." Fireworks Fireworks, once counted a major hazard of Independence Day cele- brations, killed two youngsters. Carol Hayward, 12, was struck by a rocket which shot along the ground Sunday at Harvey, Ill. Homemade fireworks took the life of David Colby, 13, at Augusta, Maine. The victims were among those listed as miscellaneous. The record number of July Fourth traffic deaths-for a three- day (78 hour) period-was 366 in 1952. The all time accident toll for the three-day July 4th holiday, in all types of mishaps, was 676 in 1949. Last year, the two-day holiday, the July 4th traffic deaths num- bered 262, with 121 drownings and 31 miscellaneous accident deaths making the combined toll 434. Vogeler Spoke Robert Vogeler, American nessman imprisoned by the in Hungary for nine months busi- Reds on a trumped up espionage c h a r g e, spoke yesterday which was Human Rights day in Jackson. Last night initiated the nightly Freedom Festival pageant with - a cast of 1700 performing on a 350 foot stage. But today is "Under the Oaks" day in Jackson. Vice-President Nixon will land in the Willow Run Air Port sometime this afternoon and may travel through Ann Arbor in a motorcade before going on to Jackson, according to George Wahr Sallade. The Vice-President will speak tonight in Cascades Park. Sallade said that all republican candidates for Governor-D. Hale Brake, Pat Cleary, Donald Leonard and Eugene Keys-were expect- ed to attend today's celebration. Hobby, Bunche Expected Thursday, Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Oveta Culp Hob- by will attend Agriculture and Education day festivities. United Nations Trusteeship Com- mittee Chairman i.,alph Bunche will speak on Good Neighbor day Friday to wind up the week's celebration. Vogeler Talks At Festival JACKSON OP)-"I am sorry I had to be the one to set the prece- dent that an American citizen had to be ransomed from a foreign power. "I hope the day will soon come when we can demand justice for all mankind and not pay tribute to tyrants." Those were the words yesterday of Robert A. Vogeler, American businessman seized in 1950 by Hungarian Communists and who spent 15 months in prison on a trumped up espionage charge be- fore being freed. Vogeler addressed an estimated 5,000 persons at the Jackson Fair Grounds on the second day of the Freedom Festival honoring the centennial of the founding of the Republican Party and the 125th birthday of the city. Vogeler said the United States faces its most formidable foe in the Communists of the Soviet Union. Vogeler told the story of his confinement. He said there were times when he feared he was los- ing his mind. Gambling WASHINGTON (A) - The Revenue Service said yesterday merchants who operate wager- ing pools,punchboards or "sim- ilar types of lotteries" to stim- ulate trade are subject to the wagering and gamblers occu- pation tax. In its current bulletin, the Revenue Service said that al- though the merchant may de- rive no direct profit from the sale of tickets or chances, the lottery is operated for profit in the form of increased sales. .Accordingly, the ruling said, the operator of such pools or lotteries must pay the 10 per cent wagering tax on the full amount collected from the sale of tickets or chances, and must also buy a $50 special occupa- tion tax required of gamblers. Clerks or others who receive wagers on behalf of the opera. tor, the ruling said, must also have the $50 gamblers tax stamp. Reds Seize Captain, Six GI's HEIDELBERG, Germany (- Six U.S. soldiers and a captain on leave were reported Monday to have been seized by commu- nist Czechoslovak border police when they strolled too close to the Iron Curtain. West German border police said they had heard unofficially the communists planned to return the men Tuesday. No Names Given U.S. Army headquarters here would not identify the men nor name the unit to which they were attached. The only information the Army would confirm was that: 1. The half-ton weapons carrier truck in which they were driving was found abandoned late Sunday near the village of Weiden, about 15 miles from the Czechoslovak border. 2. The men were on leave and were not on border duty. "They weren't there on business." 3. The men were definitely miss- ing and believed to have been ar- rested by the Red border guards. Czech Police Contacted West German border police were more positive. They said they had contacted the Czechoslovak border post at Tachov and a Czech ma- jor said the seven men were being held. The German police said the Czech major declined to give any other details. i The police reported the men had been seen Sunday by a West Ger- man farmer near the border. The men asked the farmer where the border could be found because they wanted to take a look at it. The farmer told them they were veryhnear the border and should be careful, the police said. The men then got down from their carrier, police quoted the farmer as saying, and started walking toward the border. That was the last he saw of them. State Congressman. Shafer's Wife Dies BATTLE CREEK(A-Mrs. Paul W. Shafer, wife of the Michigan Republican Congressman, died in Leila hospital here yesterday. She was 57 years old. DEVIL ON THE LOOSE-The Devils River boils over the lower dam, six miles north of the Rio Grande and approximately 10 miles northwest of Del Rio, Texas. The raging river joins the Rio Grande above Del Rio, adding to the flood that is the greatest in the modern history of the valley. AT GENEVA: Ca bodians Ask Red us ter F(IR CTS ES IC RUSSIA ACT s GENEVA GR)-A six-man Cam-' bodian military group arrived here Monday prepared to demand the retreat of Communist-led Viet- minh troops from the Indochina kingdom's territory. The group headed by Gen. Nhiek-Tioulong of the Cambodian general staff, told correspondents on arrival Cambodia's only aim was the "protection of our frontier from invading forces." The general and other members of the delegation to the nine-party Indochina conference said the French, Reds Discuss Details Of Cease-Fire Talks Concerned Technical Problems HANOI, Indochina !M - - French Union and Vietminh delegates end- ed their second meeting Monday on details of a cease-fire agree- ment to end the Indochina war. Informed sources here said the talks concerned technical questions relating to regroupment of forces in event of a cease-fire, but gave no details. There was no official statement on whether progress had been achieved. The talks opened Sun- day in the village of Trung Gia, a cluster of straw and bamboo huts about 25 miles north of Hanoi. The "peace" village is in a neutral zone carved out of territory held by the Communist-led Vietminh. The delegations at Trung Gia will refer their recommendations here to the Indonesian conference at Geneva. Monday the military representa- tives met for two hours and 15 minutes, after which the chiefs of the two delegations, Col. Marcel Lennuyeux for the French and Vietnamese and Gen. Van Tien Dung for the Vietminh, had a pri- vate talk. Meanwhile, the French High Command in Hanoi announced that the reorganization of its military forces in the Red River Delta area was complete with a strong protec- tive ring formed around the cities of Hanoi and Haiphong and the road and railroad connecting them. The announcement said the re- grouping organization "was carried out in good conditions and our losses were extremely light." In carrying out the reorganiza- tion. French and Vietnamese troops group expects to meet with Viet- minh m i1 i t a r y representatives Tuesday or Wednesday to study the withdrawal of foreign troops from Cambodia. The Cambodian and Vietminh of- ficers make up one of the confer- ence's special commissions. It is due to report by Saturday on the possibility of a withdrawal. The term foreign is understood to mean both Vietminh and French troops, except for a limited num- ber of French military technicians and instructors. A Cambodian official said if the Vietminh demonstrates "good will" the commission can outline general plans for a troop withdrawal, in two or three sittings, leaving de- tails to be filled in on the spot. "In Cambodia, the problem is very simple," he said. "The inva- sion forces have only to pull back." The Vietminh maintains, how- ever, that opposition to Cambodian troops comes from local resistance forces, fighting to establish a "truly free" regime. The Cambodian military group was met at the airfield by Philip Bonsal, head of the American State Department section fo the Philippines and Southeast Asia, and other U.S. officials. This was sig- nificant since Cambodia has been pressing Washington for guaran- tees against further Communist aggression. Western s o u r c e s predicted, meanwhile that other military com- missions dealing with the situation in Laos and Viet Nam would not be able to have final reports ready Saturday. They said these panels would probably have interim re- ports, however. The conference proper was to hold another session at 8 p.m. Tuesday. Small Loans System Faster WASHINGTON(M-Regional of - fices of the Small Business Admin- istration were authorized yesterday to make loans up to $50,000 without prior approval of the Washington headquarters. The authority was limited, how- ever, to loans in which private banks provide at least one-quarter of the loan. The policy, SBA said, will speed up financial aid to small firms while encouraging private bankers' participation in the pro- gram. Heretofore all SBA loans have had to be approved by Administra- tor Wendell B. Barnes. Barnes said his agency has approved 462 loan applications to date, averaging $60,000 each, and has turned down 728. Another 269 requests have been withdrawn by the applicant. [mproper Activities Charged Soviets Retaliate, Oust Americans WASHINGTON () - The United States disclosed Monday it has ex- pelled three Russian officials from this country for "espionage and improper activities." Two of the three were ejected months ago, but the State Depart- ment had kept all three cases se- cret in what was explained as an attempt to keep the Russians from retaliating. The attempt failed, and the Rus- sians are now ousting two Ameri- can attaches from Moscow. Russia accused the two Ameri- cans, Lt. Col. Howard L. Felchlin and Maj. Walter McKinney, of making use of their stay in the Soviet Union "to carry out espion- age work." The Russians Who were expelled were: Cmdr. Igor A. Amosov, assistant naval attache at the Soviet Em- bassy here. He was declared per- sonally unacceptable to the United States on Feb. 3 and left on Feb. 8. Alexander P. Kovylov, second secretary with the Soviet delega- tion to the United Nations. He was told to leave Feb. 3 and left Feb. 10. Lt. Col. Leonid E. Pivney, as- sistant air attache at the embassy. He left on June 6 after having been told on May 29 he would have to go. Col. Felchlin was the assistant U. S. military attache in Moscow and Maj. McKinney was assistant air attache. Red Charges 'Ungrounded' "No foundation whatsoever" ex- ists for the R u s s i a n charges against them, the State Depart- ment said, adding: "It is obvious that the Soviet au- thorities have taken this action in retaliation for the expulsion in re- cent months of three Soviet offi- cials for espionage and improper activities in this country." Officials said the ejection of Mc- Kinney and Felchlin was the first such action since the Kremlin barred Ambassador George Ken- nan in Octob-r 1952 in protest over critical remarks he made about life in Moscow, He was in Ger- many at the time. McKinney, who arrived in Mos- cow in December 1952, is now on vacation outside the Soviet Union with his family and the State De- partment announced that he will not return there. Felchlin went to Moscow in May 1953 and he will leave with his family in Ambassador Charles Bohlen's airplane in July. State Department Press Officer Henry Suydam declined to give any detail whatsoever on the "espion- age and i m p r o p e r activities" charged against the three Russian officials. "We got the goods on them and out they went," was all he would say. Chinese Officer Seeks Asylum SAN FRANCISCO (P-A Chi- nese Nationalist Marine officer, seeking political asylum in this country, was being held by naval authorities here yesterday, pending the determination of his status in the United States. The officer, Capt. Hsuan Wei, 25 years old, was arrested in Ev- anston, at the request of the Unit- ed States Department after being charged with desertion by the Chinese Nationalist government, the Navy Department said. Friends of the officer said he had renounced Chiang Kai-shek's government and had sought polit- ical asylum in the United States. Hsuan was sent to the United NEW REGIME: Gua tema ans Round Up 2000 Suspected Reds HIT OPPENHEIMER CASE: Scientists Ask Security Reassessment WASHINGTON (M - The Federa- tion of American Scientists, critic- izing the handling of the Oppen- heimer case, called on President Eisenhower Monday to appoint a board to re-assess the govern- ment's security program. "Whether the security of the United States has gained or lost will depend upon the degree to which the lessons of the Oppen- heimer case are appreciated by officials and the public," the Fed- eration's Executive Committee said in a statement released by Ernest C. Pollard. Yale physicist and Oppenheimer based itself on a handful of incidents, relating in large part to events of over 10 years ago, taken out of the context of a distinguished career and a record of brilliant, loyal service to the nation almost unmatched in importance. "Yet the allegations of 'defects in his character' and 'his Commu- Truman Reported Making Progress nist associations' growing out of these incidents were considered controlling." Asserting the effects of the case cannot yet "even be estimated," the statement said: "Procedurally, the Oppenheimer case appears to have run its full course. But the verdict which cir- cumstances dictated has not re- moved the doubts and apprehen- sions widely held by many thought- ful citizens who have examined the issues in this case. "A program which, in the quest GUATEMALA W - Leaders ofv Guatemala's new military govern- ment announced Monday 2,000 sus- pected Communists have been rounded up in the revolt-freed Cen- tral American republic. The hunt is continuing for still more Reds. Results of the giant Red-hunt were disclosed at a heavily guarded news conference in the Presidential Palace by Cot. Elfego Monzon and Carlos Castillo Armas, key colonels of the five-man junta that finally took control after the ouster of Communist-backed Pres- ident Jacobo Arbenz Guzman. Other important points made by Monzon and Castillo were: 1. The new regime will have no dealings with Soviet Russia or any other Iron Curtain nation. Guate- mala now has diplomatic relations with Communist-ruled Czechoslo- vakia and the Arbenz government rDpepji o 1a..millinn i11ar arms pared freezing the assets of "all Communists and criminals." 4. Application of the nation's land law will be suspended pend- ing the drafting of a new consti- tution. The Arbenz regime began about two years ego a policy of seizing "uncultivated" land under this law and distributing it to the landless. One of the biggest losers was the United Fruit Co. of Boston which gave up 400,000 acres. Political Asylum Recognized 5. The junta will recognize the right of other Latin-American na- tions to give Arbenz' followers political asylum in their embassies here. But the regime will carefully screen each case in order to bar the departure of "criminals." The junta has blamed Arbenz police for torture-killii.gs of at least 60 anti-Reds in the weeks preceding his government's overthrow and haves air the nll may nnov en