SEN. McCARTHY See Page 2 No ItP :4I ait * Si Latest Deadline in the State SHOWERS VOL. LXIV, No. 21S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1953 FOUR PAGES 17,000 SENT HOME: Western Powers Plan To Form Pickets ShutDodgePlant Hamtramck Spokesmen Deny Claims ' 'Workers Charge Line Speedup DETROIT 01-Pickets Monday clos e d Chrysler Corporation's Dodge plant, immediately idling 10,000 workers and causing the firm to send 6,900 home from other plants during the day. An estimated 500 pickets ringed the big Dodge plant in suburban Hamtramck. The company termed it a strike in violation of con- tract. Dodge Local No. 3 of the CIO United Auto Workers claimed "each man is being asked to do the work of two." The company denied the speedup charge. Appearance of the pickets fol- lowed by a few hours Chrysler's announcement that its plants would be shut for varying periods, be- ginning in August, for m o d e 1 changeover preparations. The trade paper Automotive News said car assemblies would be halted six to seven weeks. Chrysler said merely shutdowns would vary from plant > to plant. The picket-shut H a m t r a m c k plant, known as Dodge Main, make parts for other Chrysler divisions as well as Dodge. Dodge Truck sent 2,000 home during the day, blaming a parts shortage and the Plymouth plant, 3,500 and Dodge forge 1,400. St. Louis Strike Another auto strike occurred at St. Louis, Mo., where 2,000 quit at the Ford Motor Co.'s Lincoln- Mercury plant in a dispute over production standards. Details of the St. Louis dispute were not immediately disclosed, but a company spokesman said the matter had been under negotiation T for the last three months. Workers there also are members of the CIO United Auto Workers. A Dodge spokesman said the Hamtramck picket line stemmed from disciplinary action against two trim department employes who were sent home last Thursday.The company said they refused to do work assigned them. The vice-president of Local 3,C. Patrick Quinn, said, "The men are being overworked-each man is be- ing asked to do the work of two: A year ago there were 32,000 em- ployes with the plant and now they have only 10,000. But nearly as much work is being turned out." Ask Internat'l for Strike Quinn said the International UAW was asked Saturday for strike ac- tion but approval was not given. Chrysler issued this statement: "This strike has been called by Dodge Local 3 in direct violation of written agreements between the Chrysler Corp. and the UAW-CIO. Proper bargaining procedures are in existence for the voicing of grievances and these procedures have not broken down as charged by the union local and are fully available to carry out the purpose for which they are intended. "The strike is being called...to protest the installation of improved production methods and other pro- cedures which were brought about to effect a more efficient and eco- nomical operation. No employe is being asked to do more work than he should reasonably be expected to do." Soviet Politics Talk Set Today Thomas B. Larson of the United States Department of State and seven professors will speak today on "Soviet Internal Politics" in a Russian Studies Seminar a n d Round Table which is under the auspices of the Russian Studies Program. The professors are experts either in economy, history, political sci- ence, geography, or Slavic langu- ages and literature. Four are visit- ing professors, and three are from the University's summer faculty. Larson, the principle seminar speaker at 3 p.m. and at the Round Table at 8 p.m., is an expert on politics in the USSR. He is part of A ~ h + f i Tlo cimn f la ', ? n- --- Report Cohn Resigns NEW YORK (M)-Roy Cohn, storm center of the Senate Per- manent Investigations subcommittee, was reported Monday to have submitted his resignation as chief counsel. Cohn, a New York lawyer, co-starred with Sen. Joseph R. Mc- Carthy (R-Wis.) in recent Washington hearings in which the Army accused them of bringing improper pressure in behalf of Army Pvt. G. David Schine, former subcommittee aide. The Chicago Tribune and the New York Daily Mirror quoted Cohn as saying he had tendered his resignation. Cohn could not be reached for comment on the reports. His family here said he was out of town. The Tribune in a dispatch from Washington quoted Cohn as saying: "I feel that my helpfulness to the subcommittee has been brought to the vanishing point. In any future investigation in which I appeared as chief counsel, all the slanders voiced against me would be repeated to minimize the evidence presented." In Washington, Sen. McCarthy said: "I have received no resignation. If one was sent, I hope it gets lost in the mails. I have urged that he not submit a resig- nation." Sen. McCarthy said "several" staff members have offered to resign, but that "I have urged them not to" and that he expects them to stay on the job. Sen. McCarthy Opens Defense Plant Probe WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis) went back to hunting Communists Monday, presiding at a brief but lively hearing during which: 1.Charles Wojchowski, who works at the Allis Chalmers plant in Boston, was ejected after making some references to "stool pigeons and informers." 2. Lawrence W. Parrish, an employe of the Bethlehem Steel Co. at Quincy, Mass., was excused as a witness because the subpoena Southeastern Asia Organization AEC -TContract Declared 'Crooked Sen. Gore Blasts Plan; Knowland Predicts Administration Victory WASHINGTON (A) - Sen. Gore (D-Tenn.) Monday described a proposed Atomic Energy Commission power contract involving the Tennessee Valley Authority as "a crooked deal." If former President Harry Truman had proposed such a contract, Gore said, "The top would have been blown off the Capitol" and impeachment proceedings would have been started. But the proposal is not less "scandalous" because it was offered by a different Administration, Gore said in a Senate speech. "It's a crooked deal," he ------------------- 'Sen. Flanders Waits Motion WASHINGTON U-Sen. Flanders (R-Vt) Monday postponed until July 30 his attempt to force a showdown Senate vote on his resolution to condemn the investi- gative tactics of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis). His decision not to introduce the censure m o t i o n Tuesday as planned, Flanders said, stemmed primarily from a desire that the vote "be as massive and biparti- san as possible." In a statement, Flanders linked the postponement to three factors: 1. A request by Democratic Sen. McClellan, who is campaigning in Arkansas for reelection, that con- sideration be delayed until he can be present. Flanders said McClel- lan had suggested July 30 in a weekend conference with him here. The Arkansas primary will be held July 27. 2. To give other senators "an opportunity to examine thoroughly the significance of the proposal and to make the necessary arrange- ments to be present." 3. Concern expressed by "the Re- publican leadership" that debate on the motion would delay for sev- eral days President Eisenhower's legislative program. Flanders said he was "most unwilling to be a party to such delay." t served on him was meant for an- other man with a similar name. 3. Two former undercover agents for the FBI ticked off the names of nine industrial workers, includ- ing Wojchowski who they said are Communists or had been members of the party in the past. Knows 133 Red Names Sen. McCarthy repeated at the hearings that he has the names of 133 persons who are apparently Communists and who work in de- fense plants. He said he used the word "apparently" because some of them may be FBI agents. It was the first time in four months that Sen. McCarthy has presided at a public session of his Senate Investigations subcommit- tee. He yielded the chair to Sen. Karl Mundt (R"-S.D.) during the McCarthy-Army hearings, in which he was involved as a prin- cipal. Monday's leadoff witness was James W. Glatis, who testified he worked his way into the inner cir- cles of the Communist apparatus in the Boston area as an FBI agent. After Glatis had referred briefly to Wojchowski being a fellow Red, Sen. McCarthy interrupted him to inquire if Wojchowski were pres- ent. A short, stocky young man with a crew haircut arose and identi- fied himself as Wojchowski. The Senator asked him if he would like to be sworn as a witness so he could affirm or deny his Commu- nist affiliations. declared. Sen. Knowland of California, the Republican floor leader, said after a meeting of GOP Congressional leaders at the White House that he hoped the voting could start Monday, but there was no imme- diate sign of any letup in the oratory. Knowland declared there would be no compromise on the bill and predicted an Administration vic- tory, Gore's hours-long discourse, cen- tered on President Eisenhower's directive to AEC to negotiate a contract with a private utility known as the Dixon-Yates Group, for 600,000 kilowatts of power to be delivered to TVA at Memphis. TVA would use this power to serve customers in the Memphis area and would continue to deliver a similar amount of power to the atomic plant at Paducah, Ky. The proposal is a substitute for TVA's plan to build a power plant at Fulton, Tenn., 30 miles north- east of Memphis, with funds it asked Congress to appropriate. Both the Budget Bureau and Con- gress so far have refused to ap- prove the appropriation. Gore, who among others has charged that the AEC does not have authority under the law to execute the proposed contract, at- tacked an amendmenthby Sen. Fer- guson (R-Mich) which would spe- cifically authorize a contract for replacement power to be supplied to the TVA instead of directly to an atomic plant. ,Justice Dept,. OK's 3-Mile Oil Boundary WASHINGTON (An-The Justice Department has advised the In- terior Department to continue re- garding three miles as the extent of a state's ownership rights to submerged lands off its border- even in the case of Texas. J. Reuel Armstrong, acting In- terior Department solicitor, told a reporter Monday that the Justice Department's position is to leave it to the courts to determine whtat the boundaries are. In the past, three miles-actually 3.4 miles-has been considered the limit of State ownership in sub- merged lands, but Texas claims three leagues-10-miles-instead. Florida has indicated it may take a similar claim toward potentially rich offshore-oil and gas lands. Armstrong said the Interior De- partment had been advised by the Justice Department not to attempt a new interpretation of the law administratively but to leave the matter to the courts. Only last Friday, the White! House said President Eisenhower believes the historical boundaries of Texas extend for three leagues. The Administration's position on the issue has become involved in the TexasDemocratic primary. Ralph Yarborough, an Austin at-C torney who seeks to wrest the Governor's chair from Allan Shiv- ers, contends Shivers has been "taken in" by the Republicans and that the GOP is "welching" on 1952 tidelands promises. Shivers supported Eisenhower in 1952. Blackford Heads icrinr Contron Phony Wire Launches Investigation WASHINGTON (R) - The Senate Banking Committee disclosed Mon- day that someone signed the name of Chairman Capehart (R-Ind) to a "phony" telegram which brought two St. Louis court officials here to testify about a 1916 larceny case against Clyde L. Powell, a former federal housing official. Atty. Gen. Brownell and the Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation were requested to launch an inquiry at once to find out who sent the wire asking the St. Louis men to come to Washington. They were James McAteer and T. J. Kavanaugh, clerk and chief deputy clerk of the criminal division of the St. Louis Court. Interrupts Probe The incident interrupted the com- mittee's investigation of a "wind- fall" of nearly a million dollars to backers of an Ohio housing project. The group went into a brief executive session beforenan- nouncing the discovery of the false telegram. Powell, former assistant commis- sioner of the Federal Housing Ad- ministration, resigned about the time the housing investigation broke in April. He has twice re- fused to answer Capehart's ques- tions, either about his official ac- tions or his record of arrests be- fore joining the FHA 20 years ago. He pleaded his constitutional im- munity from self incrimination. Two witnesses were questioned Monday about their backing of the 17 million dollar Page Manor apartment house project near Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio. Link Cowen of Shawnee, Okla., who was brought to the hearing room by Sen. Kerr (D-Okla) and introduced to the committee as "one of his state's outstanding businessmen and citizens," and David Muss, New York builder, were heard, They said the $908,000 cleared on the 2,000-apartment project has not been distributed finally among the stockholder-owners, pending a tax decision on the treatment of this type of profit. Col. Ready, he said, was to get five per cent of the profits on any job he brought to the builders' group, and five per cent of the stock in the corporation. -Daily-Duane Poole CONCERT COMEDIENNE ANNA RUSSELL GAVE ANN ARBOR DEBUT LAST NIGHT DEAN BROWN ANNOUNCES: Plan Industry-Engineer Information Program Industry and the College of Engineering and Engineering Re- search Institute will be involved in a new program just announced by George Granger Brown, Dean of the engineering college. The objective of the plan, to be known as the Industrial Pro- gram, is to provide direct channels between industry and University personnel for the communication of pertinent scientific and engi- neering information as follows: 1. The University will provide summaries of non-confidential cor- Srent research and development ac- Williams Asks College Plan LANSING (R - Gov. G. Mennen Williams prodded the presidents of Michigan tax-supported colleges Monday to come up with a long- range expansion program. Gov. Williams said the college heads were agreed that their en- rollments will at least double by 1970. Their current enrollments are close to 100,000. He noted that last year the same group estimated they will need 44 million dollars in the next seven years for expanded facilities and 132 million more between 1960 and 1970. The cost is higher now, he said. Report Due Dec. 1 Gov. Williams told the presidents to have their-report of needs ready by Dec. 1 so that it could be thoroughly aired before the public and the legislature, which meets in January. After Labor Day, Gov. Williams said, he plans to sit down with the presidents again and get their ideas on the part junior colleges should play in the state educational program. He asked the presidents to re- port by Aug. 15 on what business, industry, science and government feels it needs in the way of trained men in the future. tivities within the college and the Engineering Research Institute. 2. Technical bulletins, reprints of research papers, and other per- tinent data will be distributed to all subscribers. 3. Technical meetings for the discussion of scientific topics will be arranged and an annual sym- posium will be held for the presen- tation of recent scientific and en- gineering advances and investiga- tions. These services will enable indus- try to meet more effectively the challenges presented by industrial competition and by new products and processes. "Through an enrichment of the educational and research functions of the University, the Industrial Program will promote higher standards of engineering educa- tion, thus, in the long run, assuring industry of ever-increasing returns on the investment," Dean Brown said. Industry will be asked to par- ticipate in all phases of the pro- gram through a subscription of $5,000 per year for a period of three years. Publisher Dies Publisher of the Coldwater Daily Reporter L. Earle Davidson, 54 years old, died yesterday in Uni- versity Hospital. He had been ill for ten weeks with a heart ailment. t To Stop Red Penetration Cease-Fire in Indo-China Seen GENEVA (A)-The three Western Powers have agreed to form a Southeast Asia Treaty Organiza- tion to seal off that region from further Communist penetration, Western diplomatic sources said Moraday night. This information was given as a high Western source declared the "best advice" was that French Premier Mendes-France, barring an unforeseen last minute snag, would achieve a cease-fire in In- dochina by Tuesday midnight (5 p.m. CST), the deadline he has set. Western informants said Britain, France and the United States have rejected outright Communist de- mands that they give up plans for SEATO as part of an Indochina settlement, and will go ahead with the Southeast Asian defense sys- tem regardless of whether the Ge- neva conference achieves an arm- istice. Bow to Molotov However, Mendes-France and IBritish Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden were reported to have bowed to Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov's demands that the three Indochinese states-Laos, Cambo- dia and what is left of Viet Nam- be left op.t of SEATO. But officials said this "neutrali- zation" of the three states would not prevent SEATO from guaran- teeing their frontiers. Molotov and Chou En-Lai, Red Chinese Premier-foreign minister, were said to have agreed that some French military personnel could remain in the three states to ad- vise on their defense. Whether the Communists would demand in re- turn the keeping of Chinese Com- munist personnel in Ho Chi Minh's northern part of Viet Nam was not yet known. Vietminh Confident Pham Van Dong, foreign minis- ter of the Vietminh rebels, said he is "absolutely sure" an armi- stice will be signed in Geneva. This statement was made in a news conference limited to French newsmen, who related Dong was in a friendly mood. Western sources disclosed that Mendes-France has submitted a new compromise partition plan based on the 18th Parallel as a clearcut line across Viet Nam. Un- der this plan, the French would evacuate Hanoi and Haiphong, but gradually enough to give anti- Communist civilians time to leave. The two cities and the Roman Catholic areas of the Red River Delta would be demilitarized. Sim- ilar areas in rebel hands would be demilitarized south of the paral- lel. A neutral armistice commis- sion would supervise the demilitar- ization. This was believed to be the high- est price Mendes-France is pre- pared to pay to get his ceasefire in time. He promised the French Parliament a month ago that he would win a ceasefire in Indochina by midnight July 20 or resign. Quartet Set To Play Today The Stanley Quartet will present the second in the series of Sum- mer Session concertsat 8:30 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. Members of the quartet are Prof. Gilbert Ross and Prof. Emil Raab, violinists; Prof. Oliver Edel, cellist; and Prof. Robert Courte, violist; all of the music school. Included in the program will be Beethoven's "Quartet in B.-flat major, Op. 18, No 6," Heitor Villa- Lobos' "Quartet No. 14" and Beet- hoven's "Quartet in A minor, Op. 132." The second number, which was commissioned by the University and dedicated to the Stanley Quar- tet was first performed in March in An. Ar,. STARS PROF. BAIRD: 'Mrs. McThin g'Slated To Open Tomorrow When the curtain goes up on the Department of Speech pro- duction of Mary Chase's "Mrs. McThing," at 8 p.m. tomorrow night, Prof. Claribel Baird of the speech department will be observing her 20th anniversary of her first acting in Play Prodiction's summer playbill. Prof. Baird acted for the University Repertory Players for the first time during the summer of 1934, when she was a graduate stu- dent writing for a master's degree in speech. Prof. Baird returned to the University campus for two more summer sessions before receiving her degree in 1936. During that period she acted in "Moor Born," "Merrily We Roll Along," "Othello," "The Kingdom of God," "John Gabriel Borkman," "Juno and the Paycock" and "Chalk Dust." One a Summer < In the decade from 1937 to 1946, Prof. Baird appeared in at leastf one University play production each summer.- It was at the beginning of the spring semester in 1948 that Prof. Baird became a full-time mem-, ber of the sneech denartment fac- AFOUL OF THE LAW: Chrome Penny Protest 'Tarnishes' NEW YORK AP)-Brooklyn thea- ter manager Albert Greene is pleading Monday for the return of 24,000 shiny, chromium-plated pen- nies, a bright tax protest gone tarnished. The pressures of the Secret Serv- ice, a tot's tummyache and a few other things were, frankly, too much. Greene posted a notice in front of his little neighborhood theater change at his box office window and by cooperative merchants. Greene set up a three-foot imi- tation of a whisky bottle at his door and asked patrons to toss the city tax, 3 cents in this case, into the bottle, using the chrome pen- nies. The idea jingled along smoothly for a few days. But the U. S. Treasury became disturbed by its pennies' new But added Brisach: "We did give Greene an oppor- tunity to rectify the error because of the technical nature of the of- fense." Greene has gotten back some of the pennies via the bottle, but, he isn't sure how many. A young bicyclist swerved to avoid a pedestrian the other day, and found the bottle in his way. Chrome pennies spilled in all di-, I, a%-a LAL"IL l A"JLXLL "X f