THEFINDO-CHINA FAILURE See Page 2 Latest Deadline in the State Da111ii FAIR; MODERATE VOL. LXIV, No. 20S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 17, 1954 FOUR PAGES Quartet Prepares for Coming Concerti -Daily-Duane Poole QUARTET REHEARSES-Four School of Music faculty members rehearse the Racconto No. 1, writ- ten by the Danish composer Jorgen Bentzon for the unusual combination of flute, saxophone, bas- soon, and string bass. Left to right are: Nelson Hauenstein, flute; Clyde Thompson, bassoon; Lewis Cooper, bassoon; and Sigurd Rascher, fgmous concert saxophonist and visiting faculty mem- ber for the summer. The work will be played during a regular concert of the University Wood- wind Quintet, Monday, July 26. FBI Cheeks Alleged Post' Wage Bribe WASHINGTON 0P)-Reports that a $500 bribe was offered to a mem- ber of Congress to influence his vote on a postal workers' pay rate bill were under investigation Fri- day night by the FBI. Atty. Gen. Brownell said the matter was brought to the Justice Department's attention by Rep. Joel T. Broyhill (R-Va), a member of the House Post Office Com- mittee and a wealthy real estate contractor of suburban Arlington, Va. Neither Brownell nor Broyhill would say who was involved in the alleged bribe offer,' a $500 cam- paign contribution, nor when it was made. The heads of two AFL unions which have been active in efforts to obtain a pay raise for postal workers called the bribe report "preposterous" and "impossible to believe." The postal workers unions op- * posed the job reclassification plan on the ground it would transfer authority over pay rates from Con- gress to the postmaster general. Postmaster General Summerfield contended the present system is antiquated and uneconomical. France Lauds U Graduate An Ann Arbor woman and a graduate of the University has been made a member of the Order of the Legion of Honor, France's Am- bassador Henri Bonnet has an- nounced. She is Prof. Elizabeth R. Sunder- land, of Duke University, t h e daughter of University Law School Prof.-Emeritus and Mrs. Edson R. Sunderland. The French Ambassador said the high honor was awarded Prof. Sunderland for her research and publications dealing with medieval French architecture. Dr. Sunderland graduated. from the University in 1931 with a bachelor's degree. She went on for her doctorate at Harvard, getting it in 1938. Now ranked as an as- sociate professor of art at Duke. ',M Alumnus' Cops Award The Michigan Alumnus maga- zine, official publication of the University of Michigan Alumni As- sociation has been hono;ed for sig- nificant editorial achievement in the field of alumni publishing. The Alumnus was named as one of the "Top Ten" alumni maga- zines in the United States by judg- es of the 1954 Alumni Magazine Contest sponsored by the Ameri- can Alumni Council. It also was PRIVATE MEETING HELD: Geneva Conference Still Stopped on Indo-China GENEVA (AP)-East-West negotiators met for three hours Friday in hard bargaining for an Indo-China armistice but made no progress. French Premier Pierre Mendes-France, Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Moltov and British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden conferred. in private in the showdown stage in an effort to reach an agreement on a division of Viet Nam. The delegates were working against a Tuesday deadline when, Mendes-France has declared, he will resign if he has not achieved cease-fire. Documents putting down in black and white French proposals, which were reported to divide McCarthy Oust Attempt Abandoned Flanders To Ask Formal Censure WASHINGTON () - Sen. Flan- ders (R-Vt) announced Friday night he will abandon his attempt to oust Sen. McCarthy from his committee chairmanships and seek instead to have the Wisconsin Re- publican formally censured for conduct which "tends to bring the Senate into disrepute." Meanwhile McCarthy yielded to pressure from the Senate's Repub- lican leadership and canceled plans to open an investigation of alleged Communist infiltration of defense plants in Boston Saturday. Flanders issued a statement say- ing he would introduce his censure motion in the Senate next Tuesday and that it will "permit a clearcut vote on McCarthyism." Against Tradition The resolution condemns McCar- thy's conduct as chairman of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations as "unbecoming a member of the United States Senate" and "contrary to senator- ial traditions." A test on the ouster resolution had been scheduled for Tuesday, when the 73-year-old Vermont sen- ator planned to get it disinterred from the Senate Rules Committee, where it has reposed since June 15. The Senate Republican Policy Committee has turned thumbs down on this move, however. Flanders said he has asked Sen. Knowland of California, the ma- jority leader, what he thought about an alternate censure motion but that Knowland hasn't told him yet. Confusion of Issues In his statement, Flanders said he decided on the switch in tactics to avoid "confusion over the is- sue" at stake, because some sena- tors disliked his idea of stripping a senator of chairmanships ob- tained through seniority. "When I introduced my resolu- tion concerning the junior senator from Wbiconsin, my purpose was to give the Senate the opportunity to repudiate the conduct of Mr. McCarthy who has brought dis- honor and disrepute upon the Sen- ate of the United States," he said. Four Removed At Monmouth; Two Cleared WASHINGTON (R) - The Army announced Friday that four civil- ians have been removed from their posts in the Ft. Monmouth, N.J., radar laboratories as security risks and two others cleared and rein- stated. A spokesman also said there will be action before the end of the month on some of the 16 employes remaining on the security suspen- sion list. The two men reinstated, Bernard Martin and Jerome Rothstein, were told they had been given full clearance and that they should re- port back for duty at the Ft. Mon- mouth electronics plant. The names of the four who failed to satisfy the security review board in Washington were not an- nounced. But the dismissed men were informed that their continued employment in the highly sensitive Signal Corps laboratories was "not clearly consistent with the national security." TeMore Suspensions The Army said that, acting on its own information and reports from the FBI, it started the wave of suspensions among civilians at Ft. Monmouth last August. The suspension rate jumped after an investigation was started by the Senate Investigations subcommit- tee headed by Sen. McCarthy (R- Wis). By the end of last October the list had reached 35 out of a total of 6,000 civilians employed at the signal center. One man was reinstated several months ago with full clearance. Nine were restored to nonsensitive positions pending further investi- gations. Three resigned before the investigations into their cases were completed, leaving 22 on the sus- pension list as of June 11. Ike s Cuti * BATTLEOFTHEBUGE_ oROTTRDAM ENGLAND STARTED DEC.17 - R"GERMANY _______ONDoN /.-. EH OSSE - -- r . . v , , tl ER CLOGNE -_ULOGNE RQ BELGIlMV AACHEN STiLO BREAKTHROUGH JULY26I -<- -j DRGSE U EPP.; _______ R W " UXEMBOURGO CHERs0URs - - - Ir ;0 ______CHANNEL ISLANDS T - ENRE ,o RROUEN "rA '" , - AE-.,V SAARBRUECKEN "....:....- S . L O " ,,4 2 METZ ST . iFALAISE %% 10 ST. 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