Difference in Rewards See Page 2 , i ujtau OA60F t ty ., " r M yI w " Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY, LITTLE CHANGE VOL. LXV, NO. 308 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1955 FOUR PAGES E isen~iho~wer *.*.::~. SaysGOP Should Unite Makes No Personal Reference to Future WASHINGTON (P) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower said yester- day the Republicans would retain control of the national adminis- tration forever if they would unite ,behind the principles he advo- cateS. President Eisenhower addressing a pre-adjournment breakfast rally of Republican senators and repre- sentatives, gave no hint of whether he plans to run for re-election next year but some of his backers ap- peared encouraged by his remarks. Reporters were not admitted to the Statler Hotel room where the breakfast was served, but Presi- dent Eisenhower's press secretary, James C. Hagerty, gave them a summary of his talk afterward. No Mention of Campaign Hagerty said the President made no direct reference to next year's presidential campaign "even in passing." There was a chorus of "We Want Ike" when the President entered the room, and many of the GOP lawmakers wore big red, 'white and blue "Ike in 1956" buttons. All but 11 of the 249 GOP sena- '; ;tors and representatives were pres- ent, along with members of the Cabinet and White House staff. Republican National Chairman Leonard W. Hall arranged the gathering and was host. Stress Peace Hopes President Eisenhower urged the legislators to carry a positive message back to their constituents when Congress adjourns. He sug- gested they stress renewed hopes for world peace and these three parts of his domestic program which apparently will not get through Congress this session: highways, schools and health. Hagerty quoted President Eis- enhower as saying that from the lay he began to weaken in his concept that a soldier has no busi- ness in politics his primary aim has been to do all he could to unify the Republican party behind principles that tle people would accept in trust and confidence. If this is done, President Eisen- lower said he believed the Repub- lican party would "stay here for- ever," because the GOP then would be able to select candidates with one purpose - the best in- terests of the United States. ,Part Payment Promised for Israeli Plane JERUSALEM ) - Communist Bulgaria has promised partial pay- ment, at least, for the Israel air- liner its gunners shot down Wed- nesday, a Foreign Office spokes- man said yesterday. The plane, which carried 12 Americans and 46 other persons to a flaming death- on Red soil, was a Lockheed-built Constella- tion valued at about a million dol- lar. The Foreign Office spokesman said a note handed Israeli Charge d'Affaires Baruch Nir in Sofia Thursday and received here yes- terday declared the Bulgarian gov- ernment's "readiness to take upon itself the respective part of the material damage which has been caused, after it is duly estab- lished." The phrase about "the respective part" suggested Bulgaria might contend the El Al Israel Airlines a crew, d.in crossing thefrontier, shared blame with the Red anti- aircraft gunners for what the Bulgarians called "this deplorable accident." Red China set a new pattern last year for settlement. of com- mercial air incidents at the rim of the Communist spliere. Peiping apologized to Britain and paid $1, 027,600 for the destruction of a British airliner by Communist fighters and- the death of 10 persons aboard it off Hainan Is- land July 23, 1954. SSenators Urge Extra Session WASHINGTON LA)-Een h- Ike R First McCarthy, George Holdv Verbal Row Senators Scrap Over Resolution Ing an WASHINGTON (A)-All at once of -the normally polite, honeyed tone of the Senate vanished. er- There stood white-haired Sen. Walter George (D-Ga.), a senator for 32 of his 77 years. He looked grim, and he spoke bluntly, with none of the usual senatorial flour- ishes. And there stood Sen. Joseph Mc-h Carthy (R-Wis.), who in eight years in the Senate has made more headlines than most legisla- tors do in a lifetime. He, too, look- eveals Space Plan for --Daily-Sam Chi U' EMBLEM-Ripening maize and azure blue are the colors of this new University of Michig flag which was approved by the regents at their last meeting. Designed by Prof. Walter J. Gores the College of Architecture and Design, the flag retains the University's basic symbols as mci porated in the central seal. The bars of color symbolize the various schools and colleges. PHARMACY REVISION: Rowe iscusses Curriculu-m BY MARY LEE DINGLER f The University's College of Pharmacy is planning to add an- other year to its present four-year curriculum. Beginning in the fall of 1958, freshmen who enter the Univer- sity with the intention of major- ing in pharmacy will be required to participate in a five-year pro- gram. However, the revision will not apply to transfer students with advanced standing until 1959. Commenting on the change, Dean Thomas D. Rowe of the College of Pharmacy observed that the additional year would enable students in the College to obtain a broader education. Increase in Electives Instead of the 12 'hours of elec- tives allowed for pharmacy majors at the present time, the new World News Roundup By the Associated Press SHENANDOAH, Iowa - Soviet farm delegation chief V. V. Mats- kevich said here Friday the United States and the Soviet Union "must look forward and not backward" in order to have good relations. "If we go into the question of who wrote what about whom in the past," he declared, "we'll never get anywhere." Matskevich was speaking in private after a news conference he gave at the soil conservation experimental farm near here. ( * * * Adams Still Not Talking WASHINGTON (AP)-Chief pres- idential aide Sherman Adams re- fused for a second time yesterday to testify in an investigation of the, controversial Dixon - Yates power contract. Replying to a request that he reconsider an earlier refusal, Adams wrote Sen. Kefauver (D- Tenn.), chairman of a Senate Ju- diciary subcommittee: "In my letter I made my posi- tion clear, and that position has not changed." Yesterday's hearing also brought a charge from Kefauver that a Securities and Exchange Commis- sion hearing on Dixon-Yates fi- nancing was "a fraud and a sham." Adams first refusal'to testify in; the inquiry was made in a July 21 letter to Kefauver. He said Chair- man J. Sinclair Armstrong of the SEC and other government offi- cials had testified or would testify to all facts known to him. He also cited his confidential relationship to President Dwight D. Eisenhow-I er. Kefauver's insistence that Ad- ams testify grew out of disclosure by Armstrong thatat Adams' re- quest the SEC in June postponed for three days the hearing on Dix- on-Yates financing. Armstrong ,related that Adams wanted the delay to give Atty. Gen. Brownell and other government lawyers time to decide whether to intervene in the case. Waiting to testify before the SEC at the time was Adolpie Wenzell, who figured in the Dixon- Yates negotiations as a Budget Bureau consultantatthe same time as he was a vice president of the First Boston Corp. Kefauver contends Wenzell played a dual role, since First Boston, a New York investment house, later be- came the Dixon-Yates fiscal agent. WASHINGTON - Congress, at long last, appeared content yes- terday .with a site the Air Force has chosen for a jet fighter base in northern Michigan. Capitol Hill sources said the months-old controversy e n d e d with the Air Force's decision to build the base in Kalkaska 'cotnty. ** * WIESBADEN, Germany - All 18 passengers and crew of a U.S. Air Force C47 transport were res- cued Friday after ditching in the Mediterranean, Air Force Euro- pean headquarters announced. An amphibious SA16 rescue plane from Wheelus air base near Tripoli, Libya, located the down- ed transport and made the rescue about 50 miles at sea, reports said. * * * DETROIT (UP) - The gigantic CIO United Auto Workers union today pleaded innocent to four counts of violating the federal corrupt practices act. The formal plea before Federal Judge Arthur A. Koscinski was en- tered by Walter P. Reuther, UAW- CIO President. He started with a flourish of oratory which Judge Koscinski cut off, saying, .'This is no place for talk of that nature." curricula will include 25 hours of electives., "In his first year of college," Dean Rowe noted, the student will be registered in the College of Literature Science and the Arts. Then after completing a year of pre-pharmacy he will enter pro- fessional school." The Dean expressed the beliefj that the extended program which will include courses in the social sciences and humanities would lead to the graduation. "not only of better citizens, but *of better. pharmacists as well." A lessening of the students aca- demic load is expected to be an- other result of the new program. "During some semesters," Dean Rowe observed, "many of our students are carrying 17 credit hours and a total of thirty clock hours." He explained that the new program would cut the num- ber of hours to an average of 15 per semester. Hopes for Higher Grades The dean said it was hoped that the lighter work schedule would result in higher .grades and "a lower mortality rate" in the Col- lege. He added that it would also provide more opportunity for the students to participate in extra- curricular activities. Dean Rowe revealed that at the present time only seven CollegesI of Pharmacy. including those at Ohio State University and the University of Minnesota employ the five-year curriculum. Housing Bill Stripped Down WASHINGTON (!)-The House yesterday passed, 396-3, a stripped down housing bill minus the new public housing President Dwight D. Eisenhower requested. The measure then headed for conference with a Senate measure which has liberal public housing provisions. Expectation was that a compromise would emerge with some public housing in it - perhaps close to the 35,000 units a year for two years that Presi- i dent Eisenhower sought. ed grim. Bitterness in Congress4 Before they had finished, the SIX-WEEK EXODUS-Two students load text Senate heard some of the bitterest a talk of this rather placid session' car and prepare to leave their. less fortunat of Congress, including a curt com- behind to finish off the remainder of the eight ment by George that "I shall not- perjure myself" by referring to POSSIBBLE DEATH: McCarthy as a good senator. It began when McCarthy intro- duced a resolution calling for they Senate to resolve that Nationalist! China should be included in the r talks with Communist China that begin in Geneva Monday. eturning Turn George Heads Committee The resolution naturally would SAN FRANCISCO (P) - Three American f go to the Senate Foreign Rela- war in Korea came home yesterday not to heroes tions Committee, of which George immediate arrest for betraying their country and th is chairman. These were the men who had elected to stay McCarthy said he was in a hur- Communists at the end of the Korean War, in1 ry for action on his proposal. life with the Reds Geore: "f te comitte jtheir minds after two years ofliewtthRds reachesgthe resolution in regular= Otho G. Bell, William A. Cowart and Lewis W. order. I shall be glad to take it up. 90.minutes of joyful reunion with their relativ Otherwise, I will not." President Cleveland docked at the end of the lo McCarthy: "The senator indi- Kong. cates a certain amount of hostility- Arrest Within Minutes toward the resolution. I know the Then, within minutes after they had cleared1 senator from Georgia has sug- scanty possessions, the United States Army arres gested that we hold these meet- - - - them in the b ings without our Allies being pres- ' to the stocka ent." s (N r across the Gol George Denies Suggestion lCoIJurt C ~.. Itars Fiancisco. S atellite. x.'Experts* See' H' Sa Hig-Speed ' Basketball' SPerfection De In Three Years WASHINGTON ) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower disclosed yesterday that the United States ' plans to launch history's first manmade. earth-circling satellites by the end of1958. Still not perfected, the satellites are envisaged by government 9 scientists as small globes, about the size of basketballs. They would be launched by rockets and circle the earth once .every 90 minutes at a speed of 18,000 miles per hour and a height of 200 or 300 miles. They are expected . to remain aloft for days and perhaps weeks, -Daiy-Sam Ching then spiral back down and disinte- books into their grate as they hit the heavier at- contmporries mosphere. wek sonessiornr. sFor Scientific Purposes In announcing that President Eisenhower has appved the sat- ellite project presidential press secretary James C. Hagerty em- phasized that it is for "entirely iree scientific purposes." Scientists of all nations, includ- ing Russia, he said, will be able to coats observe the space objects and will receive all the scientific facts de- veloped in the program. ormer prisoners of Some members of Congress im- s' welcomes, but to mediately objected to cutting Rus- heir countrymen. sia in on grounds it might provide y with the Chinese the Soviets with valuable informa- 1953, then changed tion for the race to develop inter- continental guided missiles, Griggs had a short Challenges Imagination es when the liner Some applauded the project. ng trip from Hong Others called it fantastic and said. it challenges the imagination. '1The satellites won't be in the customs with their nature of much-discussed space ted them and took platforms that might be used for ack end of a truek both scientific and 'military pur- de at Ft. Baker, poses. But they are expected to den Gate froni San j.provide information of practical value to mankind - information,' fo xmple, that might lead to inst the turncoats improved weather forecasting and possible death sen- improved radio transmission, They know it. Al- Scientists taking isly shaken, none Scetssakn part in the asoy prteshtk wnnprogram said that little is known Leahy of tethn about the regions beyond the . Leahy of the 6th Earth's close-down, denser atmos- Marshal's office, pheric layers, which act as a off the charges. partial shield against light, ultra- ittle Emotion ' violet rays and cosmic rays from ggs had perhaps the outer space, as well as meteorites. charge read against ng a general officer States Army to de- e were charged withV fellow prisoners in , 'ove their own situ- US uiRu S eak Korean prisoner Certificate d when he heard d of depriving fel- WASHINGTON, (P)-The Civil of food. Otherwise Aeronautics Board yesterday post- uany emotion. don poned the planned Sept. 1 revoca- turncoatsstood td tion of the operating authority of hey hadn't sgreeted four large nonscheduled airlines rs. Relatives of all making up North American Air- rs Reaties f al °lines. re. Te ome of Bell. Griggs The CAB said it recognized aves 17 Americans orth American' right, and an- ina' of the 21 who nounced intention, to seek Judi- there rather than cial review of the revocation order. he end of the Kor- of last June 30. It postponed the effcativeness of the revocation "Pendizg review by the appropriate court of appeals," providing North American files a court appeal petition before Aug. 30. and prosecutes it "expeditious- Resign' ly and without any un'due delay." l The CAB refused to postpone ON ( P)-Two high- beyond Aug. 30, however, the ef- epublican Senators fectiveness of its orde rto North the resignation of American to cease its "knowing, bott as Secretary of and wilful violation of the Civil is "imminent." but Aeronautics Act." If said that wasn't nators, both mem- Degree Candidates )P policy committee To Be Recognized e, declined use of e n connection with Candidates for the master's de- ched by phone at gree at the end of the University the report "wasn't Summer Session will be honored is'j iut a Tumor T tomorrow at'.the annual Masters I Here came a rather heated dis- cussion over whether George eveh had suggested such a thing. George1 insisted he hadn't, and he wound up with : "I care not what the senator' from Wisconsin may thiik of the senator from Georgia." McCarthy: "I think he is a good senator. I have always said that." Union Head SAN FRANCISCO (A - Harry Bridges was cleared yesterday of a government charge that when he obtained United States citizen- ship in 1945 he committed fraud by swearing he wasn't a Commu- George: "Very well. I wish nist could reciprocate the compliment, Mr. President, but I shall not per- Federal District Judge Louis E. jure myself with such a statement Goodman, W/ho heard the civil ac- as that." tion without a jury, handed down Mcarthy: "I think we are clear his .verdict in . a jammed court- on this. The senator chooses to room. engage in personal insults. I do The black-robed judge com- not. I wish to make it clear that mented that the government had when I offered the opinion that the to meet "an exacting standard" senator from Georgia was a good to cancel Bridges' citizenship senator, I was referring to morals, He' said the government "did character, and such things. not meet this standard by the kind George: "I thank the senator. I of witnesses it produced. Particu- thank him very much. On the larly is this so, after abortive ef- question of morality, I suppose I forts to prove the same issue in can agree that the senator from different proceedings and after Wisconsin is a good moral man." the passage of many years." Charges aga could lead to a tence for each. though obviou uttered a worl Capt. Walter R Army Provost formally read Shaw Li Bell and Grig most damning( the --"solicitir of the United sert." All thre betraying their efforts to impr ation in the ble of war camps.. Bell blinked himself accuse low prisonersc no one showed Earlier, the' their ship's su the families th five or six yea three were the The return h and Cowart le still in Red C] chose to goi come back at t ean War. Talbot( WASHINGT ly placed Re said yesterday Harold E. Tall the Air Force Talbott himse] true. The two Se bers of the GO in the Senat their names i the report. Talbott, rea his home, said true at 1I T MEN IN THE KITCHEN: Campus Cooks Concoct Cuisine Most of the male students who are doing their own cooking this summer think the situation is pretty sad. "It is almost enough to make man think about re-enlisting in ( the army," Andy Haigh, '58, commented. "I used to think that C-rations were bad, but they can't hold a candle to some of the stuff that I've whipped up this summer. Len Schwartz, '57, claimed to be a fairly great cook. "I can eat my own cooking and not starve to death," said Schwartz. Before he left for dinner in a South U. restaurint, Schwartz revealed one of his favorite dishes. "You cook a handfull of the instant type rice, then mix in a couple of eggs and a fistfull of shredded lettuce leaves. Fry the whole thing until it is slightly scorched around the edges and then serve." Cal Sandifer '56, observed "the chow in the co-ops is pretty good." One of Sandifer's favorites is kiebasa and beans. "You boil the . .-.*... .: ..'v . . XOO.."U