THE CONDUCT OF THE COLD W'AR See Page 2 I ,a 4c it iau Latest Deadline in the State Di4444bv FAIR AND PLEASANT VOL. LXIV, No. 19S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1954 FOUR PAGES Vaccine Survey Underway at 'U' Center To Check 1,800,000 Children in Study Of Salk Anti-Polio Shots Given This Spring By ALLEN SILVER The Poliomyelitis Vaccine Evaluation Center at the University, engaged in a study of the Salk anti-polio vaccine, will maintain ob- servations on 1,800,000 children, according to Dr. Thomas Francis, Jr., Director of the Center.- Of these children, about 440,000breceived injections of the vaccine while about 211,000 got placebo, a neutral control sub- stance, during mass administrations of the Salk vaccine last springs Half Got Vaccine In 11 states, each half of the subjects received the vaccine or placebo, but in 33 states the vaccine was given to all the children in the second grade. A total of 119,000 Michigan children participated, 45 per cent of them received the Salk vaccine. The Evaluation Center will receive reports of suspected polio and deaths from all causes among 1,150,000 additional children who received no injections, together with reports on those who did. Altogether, 14,000 schools in 217 test areas-most of them coun- ties-are involved in the evaluation program. The test areas were chosen on the basis of having had a high incidence of polio during gram not to use gamma globulin in the last five years. the test areas. Other public health 150J T n AA - + t,u 1'0ssist., A total of 150,000 persons will assist in the evaluationprogram, while over 100 staff members in Ann Arbor will serve as clerk, coding experts and statisticians. Advisory groups of clinicians, phy- sical therapists, epidemiologists and other experts are available to the Center for 'consultation. Dr. Francis, chairman of the department of epidemiology in the University's School of Public Health, expects the results of the evaluation to be announced "not before the early part of 1955." "We are issuing no interim re-; ports to anybody, not even to our- selves," Dr. Francis said. "The ac- curacy of our evaluation depends entirely on a completely con- trolled study of the new prophy- laxis against poliomyelitis, and it has been agreed that no results will be published until all con-* nected with the Center feel that it is 'justified." departments have promised to "discourage" its use during the test period. Produces Anti-body "It is known that the Salk vac- cine does produce a higher anti- body level than gamma globulin," Dr. Francis observed. The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis will make grants of over $850,000 to the University before the Center's Committee Backs Sen. McCarthy 'Thumbs Down' On Ousting Move WASHINGTON (A-The Senate Republican P ol1i cy Committee turned thumbs down Thursday on a move to oust Sen. McCarthy (R- Wis) from his committee chair- manships, while McCarthy himself blocked an attempt to shake up his investigations staff. At a stormy, closed-door session of his inquiry subcommittee, Mc- Carthy refused to accept a proxy for the absent Sen. McClellan (D- Ark) when it came time to vote on a motion to terminate all staff appointments by July 31 except for those employes especially confirm- ed in their jobs. Angry Exchange The proxy was presented by Sen. Symington (D-Mo). It was learned there was an angry exchange in which McCarthy accused Syming- ton of playing politics and Sy- mington hotly denied it. Earlier the GOP Policy Commit- tee moved in to try to kill a reso- lution aimed at ousting McCarthy from his chairmanships or at least censuring him publicly. The committee announced it had voted unanimously - any absent members being polled - to author- ize Majority Leader Knowland of California to move to table any effort to discharge the Senate Rules Committee from considera- tion of any matter relating to the organization or operation of the Senate. Author of Resolution The announcement did not men- tion McCarthy or Sen. Fland- ers (R-Vt), author of a resolution to strip the Wisconsin senator of his chairmanships for alleged "contempt" of the Senate. But it was plain that the policy group had decided to try to thwart Flanders when he moves next Tuesday to pry his resolution loose from the Rules Committee and bring it back to the Senate floor for a straight vote on the issue. Another development Thursday was an announcement by McCar- thy that he will launch in Boston Saturday public hearings on his charges of Communist infiltration of defense plants "unless some senator wants to move to deny us the right to investigate commu- nism in defense plants." Potter's Move Thursday's meeting of the Inves- tigations subcommittee was the first one McCarthy has presided over since its 36-day hearing on his row with top Arniy officials. McCarthy stepped aside during this investigation. Demands for a staff shakeup arose from the McCar- thy-Army hearings. Sen. Potter (R-Mich) moved "that as of July 31, 1954, all pres- ent staff appointments shall auto- matically terminate except in those individual instances where a subcommittee majority in formal session shall have voted for specif- ic confirmation prior to that date. Dulles Reported Mendes-France Peace Plan '1 Viet Nam Asked View on Partition Mendes-France Meets Leaders GENEVA (P)-French Premier Pierre Mendes-France asked Viet Nam leaders Thursday whether they would accept the dismember- ment of their country as the price of ending the 8-year-old Indochina war. Mendes-France talked for over an hour 'with Viet Nam Foreign Minister Trang Van Do and his advisers and spelled out for them the details of the peace settlement France is prepared to accept. Can Reject The proposed settlement was known to include the partition-in fact, if not in name-of the coastal state of Viet Nam and the neutral- ization of the two other two Asso- ciated States of Indochina-Laos and Cambodia. The Viet Nam government of Chief of State Bao Dai was suffi- ciently independent to be able to reject, if it wished, the partition solution which has been laboriously hammered out in 11 weeks of nego- tiations. Rejection by Viet Nam would upset all chances of meeting the July 20 deadline which Mendes- France has set himself to achieve a ceasefire or resign. Decline To Comment French and Vietnamese spokes- men declined to give any indication of the Vietnamese attitude to the proposed partition. There was still considerable un- certainty over the lines by which Viet Nam was to be divided, and one conferencehsource said the talks between the two sides were now concentrated entirely on terri- torial questions. The most import- ant of these was the fate of Viet Nam's war capital, Hanoi, already dangerously threatened by Com- munist forces.rTe eCommunists were believed to be demanding Hanoi as the price for a partition line which would leave a larger part of Viet Nam under French Union control. Events Today Harold G. Shane, professor of education at Northwestern Univer- sity, will speak on "Human Values 10 a.m. in Schorling Aud. The talk is under the auspices of the School of Education. * * * "Arabic Historiography: With Special Reference to Ibn Khal- dun," will be the topic of a speech by Franz Rosenthal, professor or Arabic at the University of Penn- Ahoy! DETROIT ()-Mrs. Frank Marshall had a word of rebuke and a word of caution yester- day for a thief who stole her family's rowboat. "I never thought anyone would stoop so low," she wrote in a letter published in the let- ter box column of the Detroit News. She added, "Also a word of warning to the thief who is cruising somewhere in our boat. The bottom is going to fall out for you some day, just as it did for us." Comments on Reports Commenting on conflicting re- ports of the absence or occurence of polio among vaccinated chil- dren in particular localities, Dr. Francis declared, "We have no information on that score. The number of cases to be expected in any given county is small, and we need a large number for purposes of evaluation." Only the Center knows which children received the vaccine and which got placebo, Dr. Francis said. The code by which informa- tion received by the Center is en- tered onIBM cards is kept secret, - and is known only to three mem- bers of the Center's staff. Dr. Francis, remarking that he had helped devise the code, added that he had since attempted to forget it. Clinical records on each case of suspected polio occuring in the total study group, together with reports of cooperating laborator- ies which test for polio virus, are forwarded to the Center, Dr. Francis said. Such cases will be examined by a staff of 67 special- ly trained physical therapists, who will report on the patients' mus- cular strength at intervals of from 10 to 20 and from 60 to 70 days after the onset of disease. Provisions Made In addition, the Center will re- ceive a physician's interpretation of each case. "Provision is made in each community for a person skilled in the clinical aspects of 7' polio to make this diagnosis," Dr. Francis said. polio substances-produced by the vaccine. The use of gamma globulin, an- other recently developed anti-po- lio substance, will not interfere with the Center's evaluation, Dr. Francis said. If gamma globulin is used on a child in the test pop- ulation, he pointed out, the fact will be recorded at the Center. Ar- rangements have been made with amany state public health depart- ments participating in the pro- Pilots Postpone A Threatened Strike CHICAGO (R -The AFL Air Line Pilots Assn. Thursday night post- poned its threatened strike against American Air Lines. The union agreed to meet Fri- day with a government mediation board and company representa- tives in an attempt to settlet he dispute. DR. FRANCIS ... Directs Work study is completed. Dr. Francis stressed the complete independ- ence of the Center, noting that this money is contributed to and accepted by the University. Dr. Francis is assisted by Dr. Robert F. Korns, on leave from the New York State Department of Health, and Robert B. Voight and Morton Boisen, statisticians on leave from the U.S. Census Bureau. The Center, in addition to its own facilities, is utilizing the services of the University's tabu- lating department, the Institute for Social Research and the Sur- vey Research Center. as Favoring Group Votes Bill To Punish Conspirators Would Remove Citizenship Rights WASHINGTON (f - A congres- sional committee Thursday ap- proved a bill to strip citizenship rights from Americans convicted of conspiring to advocate over- throwR of the government by force or violence. The measure, sent to the House by the House Judiciary Committee, amends the Naturalization Act by providing automatic loss of citizen- ship to anyone convicted of viola- tion of the Smith Act. The Smith Act outlaws any con- spiracy to teach and advocate the violent overthrow of the U. S. government. Simultaneously, the committee definitely shelved two administra- tion proposals vesting powers in the president, or in the attotney general and the Subversive Activ- ities Control Board to: 1. Bar from defense facilities anyone there was reason to be- lieve was a spy or saboteur. 2. Dissolve any organization, labor union or business firm found to be "Communist infiltrated." The citizenship measure was ad- vocated by President Eisenhower and is part of the anti-subversive program sent to Capitol Hill by Atty. Gen. Brownell. It applies to both naturalized and native-born citizens. Lowest Bridge Bid announced A Lansing construction firm was low bidder on the new US 23 bridge out of Ann Arbor, State Highway Commissioner Charles Ziegler an- nounced yesterday. The firm's bid on the bridge, which will carry both US 23 and later US 12 traffic, was $1,238,328. Completion date for the structure has been set for Aug. 15, 1955. The bridge will be located just east of the present span and will have two roadways, in addition to a sidewalk on each side. Al- though the -bid has been submitted, the contract has not yet been let and no date for the start of con- struction has been set. Recreation . . Co-recreation night will be held tonight at the Intramural Building from 7:30 to 10 p.m. for all Uni- versity students, faculty members, their families and guest. All general sports facilities of the building will be available dur- ing the evening. Red Forces Hammer At Hanoi HANOI, Indochina (P) - The rains came to the Red River Delta in torrential force Thursday. But the Vietminh kept boring in to- ward Hanoi and plucked off two more of the dwindling French Un- ion outposts. Communist-led rebels overran a small Vietnamese post 35 miles northwest of Hanoi, a French briefing officer said. At Chiqhan,' 25 miles west of Hanoi, the Viet- namese garrison withdrew after a brief fight against 400 to 500 at- tacking Vietminh. Troops from both posts were re- ported cutting through guerrila- infiltrated territory inside the French lines toward Son Tay, French post 25 miles northwest of Hanoi. The French reported some suc- cesses elsewhere. A garrison of fewer than 100 men at Camp of planes that strafed the attackers and hit them with napalm bombs. French bombers blasted three guerrilla bases north of the vital Hanoi - Haiphong supply line, dumping 50 to 70 tons of high ex- plosives on rebel concentrations in the northern Delta. The heavy rains, which oldtim- ers said marked the real begin- ning of the delayed monsoon sea- son, may slow the fighting. In past engagements, however, the rebels sometimes have found an ally in rains which bogged down heavy French armor and grounded the air force. ARTISTIC SYNTHESIS: Panel Discusses- Dane A s Combination of Arts ' By RONA FRIEDMAN Modern dance is not only an exposition of energy channeled into rhythmic form but has elements of drama, can create its own music and uses three dimensional decor, commented Walter Terry, dance critic for the New York Herald Tribune, in a panel discussion yes- terday. Entitled "Modern Dance--A Synthesis" the program was a part of the special Summer Session ser- Viewpoint Changed After Paris Visit Formerly Opposed Any Partition Settlement for Indochina Struggle WASHINGTON (P)-Secretary of State Dulles reported to Presi- dent Eisenhower yesterday that France's Premier has assured him he will not agree to a surrender peace in order to end the Indochina War. Highly placed informants who disclosed this said Dulles, heart- ened by France's views, has recommended that the United States associate itself with any reasonable Indochina settlement, even though it may not like it. This new Dulles attitude represents a change in policy because until his conferences in Paris with Premier Mendes-France he favored denouncing any partition settle- ment and refusing to associate in stood to believe it may be neces- any way with it. sary for the United States to join The secretary after two days of 'other non-Communist nations in i secret talks with the French leader and British Foreign Secretary An-I thony Eden, however, has decided the U.S. should go along with a settlement if it is deemed reason- able. But he -has made it clear the U.S. will continue to refuse to lend formal backing in writing to any likely truce, since it would mean Red domination of millions of Indochinese. Dulles is reported to have made these points in reporting to the White House and the National Se- curity Council on his flying visit to Paris. Urges Caution Dulles has cautioned the Presi- dent and top advisors that even though Mendes-France is optimis- tic over prospects for negotiating an honorable truce, negotiations could break down in disagreement. In such an event, he is under- Acceptance Problem Still Acute fo N egro: Jones ies "Woman in the World of Man." Stands Alone "Because the instrucent of danc- ing is in the body itself, it can stand nude, in essence, without the dressing of the other arts, the author of "Invitation to Dance" continued. Dance need not depend on the other arts but it is better with them, pointed out Esther E. Pease, associate superivsor in the pro- gram of physical education for women, who has done much chor- eography at the University. New York Composer and chore- ographer, Manuel Galea, pointed out, "the synthesis between tone and body movement has always existed. "The finest synthesis results when the musician sees emotional quality rather than something con- crete in dancing," he continued. The ideal would be a synthesis of the arts, agreed Terry. Because of its desire to show independence, modern dance became overly stark, he explained. Whether dance can be a pure abstraction was discussed by the panel at length. It is easier for the painter or musician to be abstract for they are dealing with foreign or neutral objects, pointed out Myra Kinch, a modern dancer from New York who will be arranging the chore- ography for the "Festival of Faith" sponsored by the World Council of Churches. "Theoretically, abstraction in dance is impossible," asserted Ter- ry. Audience Necessary Unlike the musician, an aud- ience is necessary to the dancer, commentedt Prof. Marvin Felheim of the Eiesh department. He does not dance for, or appreciate the performance himself, he said. Prof. Oliver A. Edel of the School of Music and celloist in the Stan- ley Quartet, interjected, "Though it is commonly thought otherwise, music is an art of communication, not self-appreciation." Terry also disagreed. The art of experience of dancing can be felt without an audience. "The in- hibitions of our age stop us from dancing around the house. Child- ren dance without audiences." "Dancing is within us, just like singing and reciting," he conclud- ed. Moderator of the panel was Prof. Irving M. Copi, of the phil- osophy department. quick action aimed at protecting the rest of strategic Southeast Asia. Dulles has emphasized to Men- des-France, it was said, that the United States will never intervene in Southeast Asia alone, but only with other nations and after prior congressional approval. Improved Relations He takes the view that the emer- gency conferences with Mendes- France have averted a potentially disastrous split in the Western front and has greatly improved aa SECRETARY DULLES ... Home from Paris French-American relations at a critical time in dealings with the Reds. The talks with the new French leader, who has said he would re- sign unless he succeeds in negotiat- ing an Indochina truce by Tues- day, persuaded Dulles that Mendes- France is not a "peace at any price" advocate but one who would insist on honorable terms. Mendes-France, it is believed by officials here, would continue to fight on in Indochina rather than agree to disastrous concessions and would recommend that French conscripts be sent into the battle. So far French draftees have not been used. Official Attitude The official U.S. government at- titude toward any partion ar- rangement which might be nego- tiated to halt the bloody 8-year-old war can be summed up as follows: The United States is not happy over the terms because it enslaves millions of Indochinese. But, as the same time, it will not go to war to upset such a settlement or en- courage other countries to fight to block it. It is argued that such a peace, while far from perfect, does halt the actual fighting lessening the chance that it will explode into a worldwide atomic war. Mendes-France reportedly gave Dulles a full account of the maxi- mum concessions his government is prepared to make to the Reds. But Dulles is reported not to have pressed him for specific pledges since the secretary felt France must do what is best in her own national interest. President Eisenhower and the National Security Council, it was reported, have advi~ed Dulles that the understandings reached are satisfactory from the American view. By PAT ROELOFS sylvania, at 4 p.m. in Aud. B., An- Although the Supreme Court outlawed segregation in schools gell Hall, as part of the Near, in a decision this spring, the Negro still has the acute problem of East lecture series presented by being accepted as an American citizen, members and guests of the the department of Near Eastern campus chapter of the National Association for the Advancement series. ** * of Colored People were told last night. A student recital of John King, John Jones, instructor at Alabama State Teachers College, asked tenor, will be heard at 8:30 p.m. the audience "How long will the Negro have to face this problem in Aud. A, Angell Hall. of being considered something other than an American?" Jones and John Zimmerman, former Kansas and Colorado school A seminar on "Trends and Op- teacher and now a Ph.D. candidate at the University, agreed that portunities in Speech Education" the high Court decision was a tangible move toward improvement will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the West of internal conditions in the United States. Bldg., with five qualified persons Negroes can look toward higher professions than teaching in h s h the South as a result of the decision, Jones predicted. Both men The Fifth Summer Biological felt that it will be only a matter of time before Negroes do receive Symposium, under the auspicesof better treatment in this country. the Division of Biological Sciences, 'Political Expediency' will feature Sol Spiegelman, from Panel members Jones and Zimmerman, and several members of the department of bacteriology of the audience asserted that, although it cannot be proved, the Supreme the University of Illinois, in a Court ruling against segregation in schools was probably a matter speech on "Properties of the En- of political expediency. Russian propaganda reporting Negroes re- zyme Synthesizing Mechanism." at ceive poor treatment in this country may ,have strongly influenced 4:15 p.m. in Aud. C, Angell Hall. the decision when it came, several persons surmised. However, the moral issue of segregation must have played a part Postponenent in the thinking of the judges on the Court, according to some NAACP members.Municipal court examination of members. Floyd C. Zimmerman, 19-year-old Panel members observed that, "By looking at history, we can see student charged with trying to kill that changes in religious and racial discrimination have taken place his two-month-old daughter, was i INTERNATIONAL COMEDIENNE: Anna Russell Concert at Hill Monday International c o n c e r t come- dienne, Anna Russell, will make her first Detroit area appearance on Monday, July 19, when she pre- sents a program at 8:30 p.m. at Hill Auditorium. The coneert will he given in con- musical scores for her shows, in- cluding that for each individual musician in the orchestra. Among the varied roles Miss Russell as- sumes are: a powerful Wagnerian soprano dying on a funeral pyre; tive London, specializing in voice, piano, composition and cello. She turned to her present field upon discovering the audience re- action to such accidents as break- ing up a performance of "Cavaller- ia Rusticana" by sliding into and i