THE REPUBLICANS AND RED CHINA See Page Z 4Y Latest Deadline in the State E~aitr CLOUDY AND WARMER VOL. LXIV, No. 14S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1954 FOUR PAGES Major Lattimore Count Dismissed Cleared of Perjury by Appeals Court; Five Minor Charges Remain WASHINGTON (P)-The key charge in a perjury indictment against Owen Lattimore-that he lied when he said he had never been a Communist sympathizer or promotor of Red interests-is too vague to be considered, the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled Thursday. The appeals court, by a vote of 8-1, upheld dismissal of the charge by U.S. District Judge Luther W. Yougndahl in May, 1953. At the same time it reinstated, on 5-4 votes, two lesser charges Youngdahl had thrown out and upheld the dismissal of still an- other on an 8-1 ruling. Lattimore, controversial Far Eastern special- ist, called the net result "clearly a major victory." Lattimore's attorneys, former Sen. Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D- Wyo.), and Thurman Arnold, a former judge of the appeals court, said the decision "has destroyed Hobby Calls Knowledge Freedom Aid Cabinet Member Talks at Jackson JACKSON, Mich. (A'-Oveta Culp Hobby, secretary of health, wel- fare and education, told a Freedom Festival audience yesterday that knowledge is "a weapon of free- dom." Mrs. Hobby said it was the duty of the American people to give the children born in the 1940's the kind of education that has made America great and kept her free. She said: "If we are to give the millions of children already in schoolskor entering for the first time the kind Knowland On Red Sof tens Plan China Seat Issue World News Y i Roundup By the Associated Press WASHINGTON-The Senate Ag- riculture Committee took another slap at the Eisenhower farm pro- I gram late Thursday by ordering mandatory government price sup- ports in oats, barley, rye and grain sorghums, all important live- stock feed crops. Chairman Aiken (R-Vt) said the 8-7 vote reversed a decision earli- er in the day that rejected the proposal offered by Sen. Humph- rey (D-Minn.) by a 9-6) margin. * * * I WASHINGTON-Four Puerto Ri- can terrorists drew the maximum sentences Thursday for what a federal judge called the "atro- cious" crime of shooting up the House of Representatives March 1. The three men involved each were sentenced to serve from 25 to 75 years in prison, while fiery Lolita Lebron 34-year-old brunette, was given a term ranging from 16 years and 8 months to 50 years. The four insisted they were pa- triots, acting for tue freedom of Puerto Rico, but U.S. Dist. Judge Alexander Holtzoff declared their foray was "so heinous, so infs.- Smous, so atrocious" as to justify the severest possible penalty. * " l FALLON, Nev. (2 - This desert farming area was rocked again Thursday by another earthquake even as work crews finished clean- ing debris from heavy tremors of two days ago. Deputy Sheriff Pete Pierson said no new damage was caused by Thursday's quake, felt. in a 40- mile radius at 12:32 p.m. " s , WASHINGTON - The Public Health Service said Thursday the number of polio cases has been about the same this year as last year-4,667 cases in the first 26 weeks of 1954 against 4,676 in the first half of 1953. During the past week 529 new with 499 in the preceding week and 625 in the corresponding week a year ago. CHICAGO - A coroner's patho- logist raised the possibility that Montgomery Ward Thorne was slain when he reported Thursday that the young mail order heir died an "unnatural death from un- due causes." Democrats Plan Activities As the GOP moves out of Jack- son tomorrow, the Democrats will move in. A five dollar a plate dinner and 1 a play will be the Democrat's an- swer to the Republican Freedom Festival Week. Entitled "The Republicans Went' That'a Way; or The Second Hun- dred Years are the Hardest," the play was written by English pro- fessors Arthur Eastman and Alex- ander Allison. The dinner, which will not in- clude speakers, is scheduled for 7 p.m. tomorrow. The play will follow. Governor G. Mennen Williams will be present but will n o t speak. t any substanial case" against Lat- timore. "The remaining counts are triv- ia, involving Lattimore's memory as to unimportant events in his long career which happened 10 to 15 years before the indictment," the lawyers said. Lattimore, a one-time occasion- al State Department consultant, has been on leave of absence as a lecturer at Johns Hopkins uni- versity since his indictment in December, 1952. The indictment followed by al- most a year days of stormy testi- mony by Lattimore during an in- vestigation by a Senate subcom- mittee of the Institute of Pacific Relations (IPR), a private re- search organization, McCarren Subcommittee The subcommittee, then headed by Sen. McCarren (D-Nev.), call- ed Lattimore "a conscious articu-, late instrument of the Soviet con- spiracy." Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) once called Lattimore the top So- viet espionage agent in this coun- try., "Pure moonshine," Lattimore replied. Judge Youngdahl let stand three of the indictment's seven counts, but expressed doubt they would "pass the test of materiality so as to present a jury issue." This ruling was not before the appeals court. The Appeals Court decision! presented the Justice Department with the choice of 1-putting Lat- timore on trial on the two rein- stated counts, plus the three Judge Youngdahl let stand or 2-ask- ing the Supreme Court to put the key count back in force. "Sympathizer" U.S. Atty. Leo A. Rover said he' regarded the "sympathizer" count as the most important from the government's standpoint. But he said he will pass on to the Justice Department the question of whether to appeal to the Supreme Court. The Department said the ap- peal to the Supreme Court. The Department said the ap- peals court opinion will have to be studied carefully before it makes any decision. OVETA CULP HOBBY of classrooms they deserve, we should be building 117,000 new classrooms annually. "Right now only about 50,000 new elementary and secondary class- rooms are being built annually. The nation isfalling behind at the rate of 67,000 classrooms a year. "In far too many schools half- day or even one-third-of-a-day sessions are the rule because the pupils cannot be accommodated any other way." Mrs. Hobby told the audience at the Festival which had been built around the centennial celebration of the first Republican convention, that the aim of the present ad- ministration was to help states and local communities build t h e i r school systems. Local Responsibility "The first responsibility," she said, "lies with the state and local communities. The right to control and manage our schools is their clear traditional and proper right. The federal government has an obligation to help preserve and strengthen this traditional c o n - cept." She said that three Eisenhower proposals to help the nation with the education problem have been passed by Congress. She said they were: 1. The establishment of a Na- tional Advisory Committee on Ed- ucation; 2. The authorization of cooperative research programs be- tween, federal, state, local school departments and colleges and uni- versities, on a matching fund bas- is; and 3. The holding of a series of education conferences to cul- minate in a White House Confer-I ence on Education. Taft-Hartley Act Used in Atom Strike 3-Man Inquiry Board Appointed WASHINGTON (A-The govern- ment Thursday put in motion the Taft-Hartley Law emergency pro- cedures aimed at stopping a two- day strike at plants producing key atomic and hydrogen bomb ma- terials. President Eisenhower named three members to a board of in- quiry to get the facts on the strike of 4,500 CIO union workers at gas- eous diffusion plants at Oak Ridge, Tenn., and Paducah, Ky. The Pre- sident has said the strike could hurt this country's race for atomic supremacy. Production Continues Production is continuing at the two plants. The inquiry board went right to work, taking testimony in closed- door sessions from representatives of the Atomic Energy Commission, and the company and unions in- volved in a wage dispute. Thomas Keith Glennan of Cleve- land, president of Case Institute of Technology, was made inquiry board chairman and he promised that the board will have a full re-' port on the situation quickly for President Eisenhower. Report Necessary The board's report is necessary: under the Taft-Hartley Law before the President may take the next emergency strike step. This is an order to the Justice Department to apply in federal court for an 80-' day, back-to-work injunction. The government may apply for the injunction Friday, because Chairman Lewis L. Strauss of the AEC has said the strike is affect- ing all this country's facilities for separating U235 from uranium. H said the U235 is "essential to the production of atomic weapons, both fission aid thermonuclear types." Only the CIO Gas, Coke and Chemical Workers are on strike. An equal number of members of the AFL Atomic Trades and Labor Council, although involved in the same wage dispute, have not struck two other Oak Ridge facili- ties, Six Cent Limit The employer operating the four plants, for the AEC is the Carbide & Carbon Chemicals Co, It has re- fused to go beyond a six-cent hourly wage increase recommend- ed by a government board several weeks ago but rejected by both unions. The unions are asking for increases ranging from 19 to 21 cents an hour. Present hourly scales range from $1.58 to $2.40. 'Hamlet' Tickets Remain on Sale Tickets for the f i r s t speech department play, Shakespeare's, "Hamlet," are still available at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow. Both performances will start promptly at 8 p.m. Tickets are priced at $1.75, $1.40 and $1. STEVENSON TIMEOUT-Adlai Stevenson, 1952 Democratic pres- idential nominee and former Illinois governor, leads a horse out for a ride during his vacation in the mountains. He will speak at an Oregon Democratic rally Saturday. NEEDS SENATE O.K.: Federal Insurance Bill Gets House Approval WASHINGTON (R)-The House Thursday voted 309-36 for a bill expanding unemployment insurance coverage, after beating down a Democratic drive to increase weekly benefits. The bill, which now goes to the Senate, would add about 4 mil- lion workers to the 36 million already covered by the federal-state jobless insurance program. It adds about 2112 million federal government employes for the first time, and extends coverage to firms hiring four or more employes for 20 weeks in a year. The present law, enacted in 1935, cov- --------4>ers firms hiring eight or more em- Speaking for the 8-1 majority1 in the key ruling. Judge E. Barrett Prettyman said the Constitution's 6th amendment requires that in all criminal prosecutions the ac- cused shall be informed of the na- ture and cause of the action against him, adding: "We are of the opinion the first count of the indictment is void for vagueness. ey Factor Ike, Dulles Assurance Proposal May Amend Foreign Aid Bill; Bi-Partisan Support Sought WASHINGTON (A)-An Eisenhower-Dulles pledge to fight to the end against a United Nations seat for Red China yesterday headed off a congressional proposal for- automatic withdrawal from the in- ternational organization in case it admits the Peiping regime. Sen. Knowland of California, the Republican leader who was spearheading the drive, softened his proposal. He offered legislation which would: 1. Place Congress on record anew against the seating of the Com- munists as the representatives of China in the U.N. 2. In the event of Red China getting into the U.N. General As- sembly or Security Council, request President Eisenhower to inforin Congress of the international implications of such a development. and recommend a course of action." Gen. Ely Gives All-Out Hanoi Defense Order Denies Rumors of Abandoning City HANOI, Indochina (A -Gen. Paul Ely, French Union commander in chief in Indochina, said yesterday he has ordered an all-out defense of Hanoi, the seaport of Haiphong, and the vital supply route connect- ing them. Ely denied emphatically to news- men rumors that Hanoi would be abandoned to the Communist-led Vietminh without a fight. He returned from conferences in Paris last Sunday. Predicts A Decision Ely predicted a decision will be reached within 12 days on whether there will be war or a ceasefire in Indochina. This obviously was based on French Premier Pierre Mendes-France's pledge to achieve peace in the nearly 8-year-old In- dochina War by July 20 or resign, While the fate of a ceasefire pended, Vietminh guerrillas leap- frogged deep inside the shrunken Delta defenses Thursday in efforts to pick off remaining French out- posts. The French hit back with strong rocket and napalm attacks from the air. ployes for 20 weeks. -Six Million? President Eisenhower had re- quested coverage for six million more persons, including firms with one or more workers without re- gard to length of service. The Ways and Means Committee trim- med down the President's proposal before bringing it to the House floor. A determined band of Democrats denounced the House bill as inade- quate and fought for amendments to increase payments to the job- less and extend payments for at least 26 weeks. Vote 241-110 They were beaten on a roll call vote of 241-110. Supporting the move were 18 Republicans, 91 Democrats and 1 independent. Against were 173 Republicans and 68 Democrats. Benefits and payment periods now vary according to state laws, with the minimum in some states as low as $5 a week for six weeks. The average is less than $25. An amendment by Rep. Forand (D-RI) would have set the mini- mum benefit Air Defense Test WASHINGTON (4) - The larg- est air defense test ever held on the North American continent will take place this month Canada and the United States announced yes- terday. Knowland said the new proposal would be formally introduced as an amendment to the 3% million dollar foreign aid authorization bill when it comes up in the Senate later this month. He said it would have wide bipartisan backing. Knowland has served notice that he will resign as the Republican leader and fight to get this country out of UN if the Reds are ad- mitted. That notice is not affected by his softened amendment. Plan Softened The proposed amendment, giving1 the President the opportunity to call the signals, is a far cry from1 Knowland's first demands. Origin- ally he called for prompt Ameri- can. withdrawal from the U.N. if Red China came in, with the policy7 established by Congress before- hand. Apparently the administra- tion urged him to change his ap- proach to the problem. The development came as Sec- retary of State Dulles declared the Cnited States still has powerful cards to play and that "I do not believe Communist China is in fact going to be seated". "I don't think there is going to be any American withdrawal from] the U.N. or any occasion for it," Dulles told a news conference. Knowland's new amendment was outlined by Acting Chairman H. Alexander Smith (R-NJ) of the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee, who said he expected the com- mittee to approve it Friday. Even to assume that Red China will obtain admittance to any of the principal U.N. organs, Dulles said at his news conference, "weakens our case and strikes a note of defeatism which I think is entirely unjustified." UN Not a Reformatory "The United Nations was not set up to be a reformatory," he as- serted. "It was assumed that you would be good before you got in and not that being in would make you good ... "The Communist regime is dis- qualified by its consistent record of opposition to the principles of the United Nations." Dulles pointed out that it carried on war against the U.N., in Korea and continually denounced the in- ternational organization at the Geneva conference. "All of these facts combine to make such a case that we do not believe that the requisite votes can be found to admit the Communistl regime to represent China in thea United Nations."4 woman's Peace Role Discussed' By DUANE POOLE The emergance of woman in public affairs is a "great reason to hope for peace and a growing world understanding," according to Alice Leopold, director of the U. S. Women's Bureau. Speaking as part of the "Woman In the World of Man" series, Mrs. Leopold said that woman has been the "heart of the home," and that she can bring peace and better understanding to the world if she can "carry with her into public life the warm human relationships which she has nurtured in family life. More Freedom Stating that woman has always held a position of prominence as a mother and homemaker, Mrs. Leopold noted that our society has ALICE K. LEOPOLD - -- --~~--- ANTI-PROTON? Atomic Particle from Outer Space Captured SEATTLE (R)-An atomic parti- cle apparently from outer space, capable of annihilating ordinary matter in hair-raising fashion, has been captured at the top of the earth's atmosphere, a widely known cosmic ray scientist report- ed Thursday. Moving at the incredible speed and energy of 10 million billion volts, the particle converted mat- ter into energy and the energy turned back into another form of matter. Nothing remotely approaching this energy ever has been reported before fromtdirect observation of a single particle. "A Pipsqueak" By comparison a fissioning ura- Marcel Schein of the University of Chicago and reported by him to a meeting here of the American Physical Society. The project was sponsored by the Office of Naval Research. Anti-Proton? Although the final proof is lack- ing, the supposition is that the par-' ticle is an anti-proton. This would be the counterpart or "opposite number" of a proton, The proton, as werknow it, is the core of a hydrogen atom and one of the com- ponents of every kind of matter. The behavior of the particle and the circumstances of its discovery pose the question, "What else can it be if it isn't an anti-proton?" Dr. Schein said he had no other P nnnnn +4.nn 4 nt noan+t NPn fnraAi JOBLESS NUMBER 500 OVER '53: Unemployment Total Reaches 1,600 in Ann A rbor Sixteen hundred people are at present unemployed in Ann Arbor, as were laid off last year at this time," he continued, "and it is not according to Rex Nottingham, branch office manager of the Michigan seasonal." Employment Security Commission. saoa. One of the main reasons for the large unemployment in Local The large number of unemployed, approximately 500 over the 959, which is for unskilled laborers, was the importation of Detroit figures reported at the same time last year, is mainly due to a labor when General Motors took over the Kaiser Motor Corp. plant, gradual decline in manufacturing, Nottingham asserted. he pointed out. The gradual cutback in industry and slackening of the defense Many of the people who lost their jobs then couldn't find other pace with cancellation of government contracts in industry are the employment, he continued. "Factories are just not taking on people main factors in the high non-seasonal unemployment, he explained, like they usbd to." "However, the number of unemployed has been going down for Many of those unemployed now are not receiving unemploy- the last two years and we feel that the bottom was hit in June. ment checks and some of those people are destitute, he concluded. evolved to a place where woman has more freedom. "Accompany- ing this freedom," the speaker said, "it is the responsibility of woman to be responsive to the needs of humanity." Drawing attention to the com- paratively few women in promi- nent positions, Mrs. Leopold said, "we socially have not caught up with the times. The industrial re- volution changed our way of living by bringing women out of the house, but we haven't quite caught up with it in our thinking." the speaker continued. Important Positions Pointing to the large number of women now occupying important positions, Mrs. Leopold listed such national figures as Clare Boothe Luce, Ambassador to Italy, Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, Secretary of the Department of Health and Senators Margaret Chase Smith and Eva Bowring. More than 5,000 women are now serving in important state appoint- ive posts, and more than 12,000 are county officials, the speaker Student Directory Names, Ann Arbor and home 3 ' I I 7 1 e i