'U' TV STATION (See Page 2) C, 1,4 r Latest Deadline in the State ~ait1 HT LXV, No. 34S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1955 FOUR,.PAGES Eisenhower May Recall Congress Lands Lawmakers' Foreigin Record But Ternis Domestic 'Deficient' WASHINGTON ()-President Dwight D. Eisenhower said yes- erday he "has not by any manner of means dismissed the possibili- y" of recalling Congress for a special session. In a news conference review of "successes and failures" of the ession that closed Wednesday morning, President Eisenhower laud- d the lawmakers for a "bipartisan approach" and a "commendable" ecord in the field of foreign affairs. But in the domestic field, he said, it failed to enact some bills 'absolutely vital to our future." Poissible Special Session So, he said, in response to questions, "there is always the pos- Bulganrn Proposal Calls Ike's Unfeasible airmen Rest [n Hospital Before Trip MANILA (A') - Eleven jubilant United States airmen - released from 21/2 years in Red China's prisons - reached here yesterday after defying Community "spy" charges and telling of ordeals of questioning. Well-fed on steaks since their release at the British colony of Hong Kong yesterday afternoon, N they rested in an air-conditoned hospital at Clark Field, just north of Manila. To Leave for Tokyo They leave late today for Tokyo on the next leg of their long- awaited journey home and a res- union with relatives. They will- have a news conference in Tokyo Saturday. The men, although lean, were pronounced "in fairly good health." They told of better food and treatment just before their release Sunday from a Peiping prison - a release that came as a complete surprise to them. Bamaer on Crutches Maj. William H. Baumer, Lewis- burg,-Pa., was on crutches. His left leg was hurt when the air- men's B29 was shot down over North Korea Jan. 12, 1953. The leg also has been badly frost- bitten. The men was not permitted to talk to newsmen at Clark Field, but they told their stories briefly at a news conference in Hong Kong during which they spoke bitterly of their "trial." 4 Arnold told newsmen "we were on a routine leaflet mission against six targets in Korea." Arnold said the men bailed out and became scattered. He was picked up by Chinese Communist troops the next morning. Profits Zoom As Chrysler Recuperates NEW YORK (P)-Chrysler Cor- poration riding hard on the come- back trail ,earned more than three and half times as much money in the first six months this year as in all 12 months of 1954 when its sales were slipping. Reporting yesterday, K. T. Kell- er, chairman, and L. L. Colbert, president, announced that the big automaker racked up a profit of 1 $70,010,642 for the first half of 1955, equal to $8.04 a share. This compared with $15,791,660, r. or $1.81 a share, for the first six months of 1954 and with $18,517,- 000 for all of last year. Contrary to expectations in some quarters, directors at a meeting in the towering Chrysler building r here failed to raise the dividend rate and declared the same divi-. dend of 75 cents a share that had been paid in the four previous quarters. It is payable Sept. 13 to holders of recordl Aug. 15. It was just a year ago that the directors cut the dividend to 75 cents from the previous rate of $1.50. The mid-year report to share holders bristled with statistics re- flecting Chrysler's recovery from last year's doldrums. Sales of all Chrysler Corp. products for the first six months totaled $1,884,- 638,006, against $1,085,382,902 a year earlier. sibility" of a special session. But he also said, and repeated, that he has made no definite decision on summoning the legislators back to work later this year. Of 13 measures President ti- senhower listed as desirable a few weeks ago, he said Congress en- acted only four-military reserves, housing, foreign aid appropria- tions, and a minimum wage boost. He listed four others that Con- gress didn't pass as absolutely vi- tal-school aid, health reinsur- ance, highway construction, and water resources. Calls Congress Lax On domestic legislation, he said, Congress didn't make the prog- ress it should have and he in- tends to call the matter emphatic- ally to its attention when it meets again. The next regular session would start Jan. 3, 1956. The conference wheeled rapid- ly from one subject to another. It covered: Bulganin-Soviet Premier Bul- ganin did not, in President Ei- senhower's view, close the door to disarmament in calling the President's armaments inspec- tion plan impractical. Bulganin did so in a speech to the Russian Parliament-his first official reaction to President Eisenhower's proposal for an ex- change of military installation blueprints and aerial inspection. President Eisenhower laid down that plan at the recent Geneva conference.' The President also told a news conference he does not think the new nuclear weapon tests by the Soviet Union - announced early yesterday by the United States Atomic Energy Commission-ne- cessarily mean any change in what he called the more or less conciliatory attitude shown by the Soviets in recent months. Hope for Cool Weather Seen. Cooler air from the Pacific Northwest pushed into northwest- ern sections of the Midwest today as deaths attributed to the mid- continent's long heat wave reached 58. The slow-moving cold front, only hope of relief for millions of sweltering Midwesterners, stretch- ed from Lake Superior southwest- ward through central Minnesota and southwestern Nebraska. The U. S. Weather Bureau said there was a chance it might reach Chicago by tomorrow and a chance it. would move eastward north of the city. Chicago, meanwhile had a mid- day reading of 96, the 10th straight day of plus-90-degree tempera- tures. -Daily-Sam Ching RECIPE-For cooler exam study period, a minimum of clothing, open windows, a cool drink and a fan are highly recommended. Student Conference Plans Full Program for Next ear The Fifth International Student Conference, which recently con- cluded 11 days of lively debate in Birmingham, England, has agreed upon an ambitious program for the coming year. Two recent University graduates were, present at the meeting. Crawford Young, '53, directed the publicity for the conference and Harry Lunn, '54, president of the National Students Association headed the United States' delega- tion. One of the hottest debates of the conference centered on the .Plane Crash bills "Thirty FT. LEONARD WOOD, Mo. (M- An American Airlines plane, one engine afire and desperately try- ing for an emergency landing, crashed in flames on this military reservation yesterday with 30 per- sons aboard. No hope was held that any survived. Maj. Warren Pauley, aviation officer of Ft. Leonard Wood; said at the scene there was no hope for any survivors. "I walked all around the plane," said Pauley, "and there's not a soul alive." Pauley said eight bodies, some of women and children, were strewn in the wake of the crash. Ft. Leonard Wood is 130 miles southwest of St. Louis, on the edge of the foothills of the Ozark Mountains. The big Convair had taken off from Springfield, Mo., only a short time earlier. It was winging its way from Tulsa, Okla., to Syra- cuse, N. Y., under clear, blue skies. Suddenly one of the engines caught fire. Veteran pilot Capt. Hugh Barron of Tulsa radioed that the plane was afire and he was going to attempt an emergency. landing. Pauley said the plane barely cleared the reservation adminis- tration buildings at a hieght of about 200 feet. One wing was tip- ped downward. Seconds later it was torn off. And then the flam- ing crash. question of admitting the Spanish delegation to the group. The conference accepted the Credential Committee's proposal that the question of Spain's en- trance be left pending until until next year while an investiga- tory commission visits the country. According to Young, the Span- ish question is very important as it intertwines with the problem presented by the Iron Curtain countries. The conference mem- bers believe it would be desirable for the Iron Curtain groups to attend, but present organization of the conference makes their par- ticipation impossible. Young said that this was the reason for the ' delay on the Spanish question, as delegates sought to find a method of ad- mitting the government dominated groups. The problem was also complicated by the threat of a number of the Latin American delegation to walk out if Spain was admitted in any capacity. The conference decided that in- ternal political questions, insofar as they affect the student as a student, are within their scope. Decisions on these questions will be made on the basis of unpredju- diced evidence gathered by the Conference's five member Research and Investigation Commission. In the field of travel and ex- change, approval was expressed for three student travel aids that were made available for the first time this year. These new aids were an International student identification card, a handbook on student travel and a booklet on student hostels and restaurants. Trouble Inlaw ZION, Ill. ()-Zion Police- man Mel Bedford got a batter- ing from his mother-in-law yes- terday. Bedford was standing nearby when his mother-in-law, Mrs. Eunice Michael, attempted to park her car in front of her home. As she swung the car around, it hit a tree, glanced off and pinned Bedford to an- other tree. Bedford suffered a fractured leg. Strike Trend On Upswing Could Increase Through Year WASHINGTON (P)-Strike ac-. tivity is increasing and the trend may continue through the rest of the year. The reason is this: Labor un- ions say their members rate a big- ger share in the nation's prosper- ity, while many employers say they can't afford to meet the un- ion's demands. Government experts expressed belief yesterday that this haggling over the fruits of the industrial boom is likely to grow more in- tense in the remaining months of 1955. May Match Present Agreements They feel that unions all over the country will be trying to match the early summer settle- ments in the auto and steel in- dustries and that smaller and perhaps less prosperous employers may put up more resistance. Secretary of Labor Mitchell re- ported at a news conference yes- terday that there were 2,075 work stoppages during the first half of this year, causing 11,200,000 man- days of idleness. This compared with 1,930 strikes and 9,010.000 idle days in the first half of 1954. Figures Higher in Recent Years The 1955 figures ,although high- er than last year's postwat low, ay'e well below most otne;"- recent yearb. The 11,200,000 los, man- days so far this year -.o Apare, for example, with 32,700,fl00 during the first six months of 1952. What nave the strikes so far phis year cost the wo:ker? t's hard to say, but a rough esti- mate, figuing averag., earnings and average strike idleness, puts the lost wage figure in the neigh- tcrhood of 200 million dollars. The government probably lost 20 to 25 million dollars in income taxes due to the lost earnings. P'rkers Benefits What did the workers gain? In many cases they woa pay in- creases or other benefits they might . ot have obtaqeci other- wise. Ho ever, long strikes often result in wage losses a w iker can never make up. There's a saying that, "Nobody gains from a strike." On the oth- er hand, it's also said that bar- gaining relationships are some- times strengthened or straight- ened out by strikes so that in the future there is more understand- ing and mutual respect, less fuss and more determined bargaining to reach agreement without a walkout. What have the 1955 strikes cost employers? This is another intan- gible, but it's safe to say the cost has run into hundreds of millions of dollars in lost business and profits. -Daily-Sam Ching GUEST SPEAKER-Prof. Charles Issawi, United Nations' eco- nomic expert, at right, chats with Arabic Studies instructor Prof. George F. Hourani. CURRENT TRENDS: Issawvi Discusses NV.ear East's Economic Future By KEN JOHNSON "Leaders able to carry out the necessary economic reforms are the most important factor in the future of the Near East," Charles Issawi commented in a lecture here yesterday. Issawi, a United Nations economic expert, and part-time professor at Columbia University, covered the problems, recent trends and future of economy of the Near East during his lecture sponsored by the Near Eastern Studies Department. "Correct use of tne labor resources of the area is one of the keys to economic health," Issawi said. He pointed out the loss of labor resources due to seasonal unemployment is a great problem in all of Art Museum Shows Prints Featured at the Museum of Art located in Alumni Memorial Hallf galleries are four selections from1 the University's permanent art collections.- They are contemporary paint-t ings; contemporary drawings; French drawing; and an exhibi- tion of American contemporary prints entitled "Life in America."] the agricultural countries of the middle east." Issawi suggested that another way to raise the national product from the present low point of about $200 per capita in the most advanced countries is through the elimination of illiteracy and im- proving the skills of the popula- tion. Iwassi also recommended a large scale rural electrification program that would bring small industry and modern conveniences to the villages and hamlets of the Near East. Rejects U.S. Peace Plan, Backs Reds' Scorns Blueprint Swap Program MOSCOW (P-Premier Nikolai A. Bulganin yesterday dismissed as unworkable President Dwight D. Eisenhower's dramatic proposal for mutual air inspection of mil- tary establishments and exchange of military blueprints. He said Soviet proposals for disarmament and nuclear weapon control were more realistic. The 1,500 deputies of the U.SS.R.'s Supreme Soviet Parlia- ment laughed when Bulganin said President Eisenhower's proposal" would be ineffective because both countries had vast areas in which anything could be hidden. Speaks in Great Hall Bulganin spoke in the Great Hall of the Kremlin Palace, report- ing to a special Supreme Soviet session on the Genea summit conference. He said all four powers - Britain, France, the Soviet Union and the United States - displayed at Geneva a desire to put an end to the cold war. But he said the arms race still was going on, "es- pecially that of atomic weapons.' As Bulganin spoke, the Atomic Energy Commission in Washing- ton announced the Russians had resumed testing nuclear weapons within the past few days, possibly "the beginning of a new test sesies." Ike Proposed Exchange At Geneva, President Eisenhower proposed on July 21 an exchange of "a complete blueprint of mili- tary establishments" to ease the fear of war, adding he was ad- vancing the plan to convince everyone of "the great sincerity" of the United States in approach- ing the problem of world tensions. Bulganin's plan, presented at Geneva, calls for withdrawal of the bulk of foreign forces from both East and West Germany, pro- hibition of nuclear weapons, and a systeom of controls at key ports and transportation cents to guard against violations. U. S Asks Inspection The United States wants fool- proof inspection, but the Soviet Union has shied away from that, and has held out for supervision of. nuclear disarmament in the United Nations Security Council, where the big powers have'a veto. Bulganin's report on Geneva oc- cupied 95 minutes. Among the diplomats in the gallery was Rus- sian-speaking U. S. Ambassador Charles E. Bohlen. On the problem of divided Ger- many, Bulganin said: "When dis- cussing the German problem, two different approaches were display- ed at the Geneva conference. The problem is whether the develop- ment of Western Germany will answer the interest of peace or if it will adopt the policy of militari- zation. The three Western powers did not conceal the fact that they wanted to draw a unified Germany into a military bloc." Tree Blight Perils Elms The Huron Clinton Metropolitan Authority Is calling for full parti- cipation by every land-owner in the fight to save Michigan's elms. The Authority is spending more than $70,000 a year to save the elms surrounding Detroit from Dutch Elm disease. "In spite of all that is being done to protect public lands, the disease will not be blotted out without protective enforcement in unincorporated districts," Hugh A. Lamley, chief landscape architect said. Lamley emphasized that unless land-owners in rural and fringe districts comply with the State Department of Agriculture Regu- World News Roundup By The Associated Press BONN, Germany - The Russians have offered to establish diplomatic relations with West Germany with no strings attached. A Soviet note published yesterday suggested Chancellor Konrad Adenauer should come to Moscow to sew up the details at the end of this month or the beginning of September. If Adenauer agrees, as expected, to go so soon, his visit would "take place before the Big Four foreign ministers meet in Geneva STATUES, MELTING GLUE: Costume Designer 'Unsung Heroine' > BY ERNEST THEODOSSIN One of the "unsung heroines" of the theatrical world is the costume designer. Performers, directors, producers, choreographers - all get their share of attention and remain alive in the public's mind. But the costume designer is some- times grossly overlooked. Costumiere Phyllis Pletcher, who has done work for the speech department for several years, ex- plains it by saying, "It's a lot of work, but we enjoy it." Miss Pletcher generally begins by reading the play through - about three times to be exact. "After I have a feel for the characters, the play and the period, then I spend a great deal of time with the director to check our impressions," she said. After some two weeks of designing, dur- ing which time Miss Pletcher pours over fashion magazines, paintings, illustrations - even an occasional statue, she' is ready for a four week construction stint. Miss Pletcher is aided by her class which she lectures and instructs in laboratory periods. When Miss PJletcher begins her work, the performers are often not yet selected. Therefore, there are numerous changes - "I try to. mak the costumernfit bh theh the University at the end of the summer for a much-needed rest, and her chores, including teaching and stage work, will be taken over by Marjorie Smith, with whom she has worked on the current music school and speech department pro- duction of "Fidelio," an eighteenth century Bethoven opera. Although Miss Smith has de- signed the actual costumes. Miss Pletcher has served as a sort of behind-the-scenes helper. The ladies had especial difficulty with the prisoners' tattered cos- tumes. At first sprayed with scene paint, it was soon discovered that the glue in the paint melted under on Oct. 3. WASHINGTON - The Idaho Power Co., a private concern, was authorized yesterday to undertake a giant water power development in the Hells Canyon country, where public and private power interest have been fighting for dominance for years. In a unanaimous decision reach- ed on July 27 and made public yesterday, the Federal Power Com- mission granted the company a 50-year license to build three dams along a 100-mile stretch of the Snake River on the Idaho-Oregon boundary, * * .* COPENHAGEN, Denmark - Scientists were told yesterday they must not rule out the possibility of space ships some day whizzing among the stars at speeds thou- sands of times faster than the -f-