LANDY CASE See Page 2 Latest Deadline in the State 41P :43 a t tly 6,6p O p0 0. o * 0 COOLER ft"W-0-001"m LXV, No. 35S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1955 FOUR PAGES lulganin Says Soviet Still Considering Ike sPlan mier Claims Thursday's i * * * * * * ply to Ike Misunderstood Commission Refused Says Soviet But Willing Union Prefers Own Proposal, To Study Other Sincere Plans MOSCOW OP)-Premier Nikolai Bulganin made a surprise second earance yesterday before the Supreme Soviet Parliament to assure Russian people and the world Moscow still is considering President ight D. Eisenhower's proposal for mutual aerial inspection of imary establishments. Bulganin said he was misunderstood Thursday when his remarks e taken as a rejection of the American proposal. Naturally, Bulganin said, the Soviet Union prefers its own armament proposals, but it would not refuse to consider other ere plans, and still is studying the President's. To 0 Graduate laced under peace bond and told to stop adding to the heat. -Daily-Sam Ching 'U' PRESS BUILDING - A steamshovel empties into a truck some of the earth excavated for the new University Press Building just north of the Student Publications Building on Maynard St. Plane Scouts A U.S. Navy Neptune plane commanded by Lt. Cmdr. R. C. Newman of Virginia, Minn., made ;L scouting flight into the hurri- cane about 500 miles from San Juan this morning. "We flew out expecting to find ;t.small Connie," Newman told reporters upon his return, "but it has developed into a strong hur- ricane." A Coast Guard plane left San Juan this afternloon on a warning message drop mission covering ev- pry island without a weather ob- ;ervation office all the way to the Leeward Islands. Second of 1955 Connie is the second tropical storm of 1955 to reach hurricane proportions. The first was Alice, a small,dout-of-season hurricane ghat developed Jan. ' 2, crossed some of the Leeward Islands and faded out south of Puerto Rico. In between was Brenda, whose peak winds were 60 miles an Hour. Brenda formed off the Mis- sissippi Delta July 31 and moved into Louisiana. The Weather Bureau at 4 p.m. issued a hurricane warning for the United States - owned Virgin Islands, east of this island com- monwealth, Film Star Dies Of Lung Cancer LOS ANGELES ()-Motion pic- ture actress Suzan Ball died yes- terday in a private reside' to which she had been taken ;ntly from the City of Hope Hospital. She succumbed to cancer of the lung. She was 21 years old and the wife of actor Richard Long. World News Roundup By The Associated Press CHICAGO - A Northwest Air- lines pilot who found his giant four-engine airliner had insuffi- cient braking power after landing applied an expert rudder yester- day to, save the 66 persons aboard from possible death or injury. . George Stone of Minneapolis, landing his stratocruiser from the southeast after a trip from Minne- apolis, saw he could not avoid overrunning the field. * * * BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - Presient Juan D. Peron's govern- ment has ordered prosecution of lawyerhMario Amadeo for publicly urging the Argentina army to rise against Peron. In hiding since the naval-air rebellion was put down by the army June 16, Amadeo created a sensation July 26 by issuing print- ed pamphlets of an open letter he sent Gen. Jose Embrioni, under secretary of war, proposing that the army oust Peron. MOSCOW - Premier Nikolai Bulganin yesterday invited all am- bassadors and chiefs of diplomatic missions in Moscow to bring their wives and kids to his country house tomorrow. This is the first time any chief of the Soviet government ever is- sued such a general invitation. DAVOS, Switzerland - The Central Committee of the World Council of Churches yesterday in- vited the Russian Orthodox Church to enter into a "full and free rela- tionship" with the 165 Christian, churches in the Council. KANSAS CITY - The myster- ious disappearance of a pretty, young wife of a wealthy automo- bile dealer, followed within 14 hours by discovery of her blood- smeared automobile and clothing, yesterday set police hunting for her body. Maj. Eugene Pond, chief of de- tectives, said 34-year-old Mrs. Wilma Allen, mother of two small boys, apparently had been kid- naped, forced to drive to an iso- lated spot and slain in a brutal attack. Work Begins On U' Press To Be Complete By First of Year Work has already started on the new University Press Building, in the space next to the Student Publications Building. The building, which will provide a new home for the University Press, is expected to be completed sometime around the first of the year by the DeKoning Construc- tion Company of Ann Arbor, at a most of $119,000. Part of the excavation has been finished and forms have been made for pouring parts of the foundations. University Vice-President Wil- bur K. Pierpont has also announc- ed that contracts have been let for several other construction porjects in the new North Campus area near the Phoenix and Cooley buildings. The total cost of the North Campus work which includes side- walks, parking lots, roadways and sewers, will be approximately $118,000. Senator Calls Ike Economic Tool of Aides AP Special Washington Service WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Pat- rick V. McNamara (D-Mich.) said yesterday President Dwight D. Eisenhower is an "economic inno- cent" in the hands of Secretary of the Treasurer Tumphrey and Joseph M. Dodge, Special Assistant to the President on foreign eco- nomic policy. "These two men," McNamara said, "dictate the money policy of the country and with active co- operation of the unchecked Fed- eral Open Market Committee they are saddling new burdens of usury on the millions of people who must borrow money." McNamara made his assertion in a statement charging the Eisenhower Administration is us- ing the current national prosperity as a "bankers' raid" on the econ- omy. farm products at prices below those prevailing in this country. These lower prices would, of course, be necessary under world competitive conditions. Speech Led to Prediction A development which led the officials to predict early reviews of the trade problem was a speech made at East Lansing, Mich. Thursday night by President Char- les B. Shuman of the powerful AmericanFarm Bureau Federa- tion. Advocating a resumption of trade relations with the Russians, he said this would contribute to world peacesand would be a major step in expanding markets for United States products. Other developments which were said to be exerting an influence toward trade reopening included: Canada's Action 1. Recent action of Canada, an ally of this country, in selling sur- plus butter and grain to Iron Cur- tain countries. 2. Easing of tensions between East and West as a result of the recent Geneva conference and the exchange visist of American and Russian farmers. A third factor influencing gov- ernment thinking is the desire of the administration to find new outlets for the mounting farm surpluses. Russia, because of lag- ging agricultural production at home, is known to be in the mar- ket for grain, butter and food fats - items in this country's surplus. Benson To Visit Europe In this connection, Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson an- nounced yesterday that he will go to Europe this fall to confer with United Nations representatives there and with foreign govern- ments on disposing of farm sur- pluses. Benson's visit will take him to England, the Netherlands, Den- mark, France, Italy and Switzer- land. The department announced that its export of wheat under the inter- national wheat agreement for the marketing year ended Aug. 1 fell about 56 million bushels short of its quota of 195 million bushels. Other exporting countries also failed to fill their quotas. Good crops in importing areas held down the international movement of the grain. Freed U.S. Airmen Arrive In Tokyo on Journey Home TOKYO ()-Eleven United States airmen arrived last night on their way home to loved ones after 32 months of imprisonment in Red China - one bearing the leaked-out secret that his wife married another man because she thought he was dead. Airman 2/c Daniel C. Schmidt, 22, of Redding, Calif., chanced to hear on a broadcast in the Philippines of what the Air Force was still reluctant to tell him, because of possible shock coming after his ordeal. He appeared relaxed and smiled with the other ten for camera- men at Tachikawa Air Base after Dixon-Yates, Ike Backed WASHINGTON {41) -- R ep. Charles A. Halleck (R-Ind) said iesterday public power advocates are making "a desperate attempt" ;o use the Dixon-Yates controver- >y to discredit President Dwight D. Eisenhower but that "the at- tempt is doomed to failure." Rep. Halleck, in a statement prepared for the Congressional Record, said, "The Dixon-Yates contract was a good one, honestly arrived at, which would have ben- efited the government, the people :f the Tennessee Valley and the taxpayers of the whole country." Balloon Launched By 'U' Engineers A radar test balloon was laun- ched by the University's Engineer- ing Research Institute yesterday near Hamburg and is expected to descend somewhere near Oak Park. The metal-foil covered balloon is about six feet in diameter, ac- cording to engineers at the Insti- tute. It was followed by a light plane and radar. they arrived from Manila in two C-54 transports, one of them the famed Bataan, former personal plane of Gen. Douglas MasArthur. Hoped to Phone Wife Schmidt hoped to talk by tele- phone today to hs wife, Una, in California. She was reported to be weighing the idea of leaving both him and her No. 2 husband, Alford Fine, a logging tractor driver, so that both of them might court her to a decision. She is the mother of Schmidt's 2%-year-old son, Daniel, whom the airman has never seen. After the airport reception, the 11 were taken to the base hospital for complete physical checkups. Official word here on their stay in Tokyo was that it would be "for several days." To Leave Japan Wednesday In Washington; Air Force head- quarters said the 11 would fly out of Japan on Wednesday, Japan time, and arrive about 30 hours later at Travis Air Force Base north of San Francisco. The Air Force said families of the fliers would be reunited with them at Travis. The fliers, who left Red China Thursday, have denied Commun- ist charges that their B-29 was shot downi over Manchuria Jan. 12, 1953, and that they were "spies." They said their plane was shotI down 35 miles south of the Man-1 churian border in North Korea while on a routine leaflet-dropping mission. Mother's Old Communist Ties Cause To Try Again For Commission KINGS POINT, N. Y. (/P)-A 21- year-old midshipman was gradu- ated yesterday with second high-. est honors in his class at the United States Merchant Marine Academy. But he was denied a naval re- serve commission because his mother once was a Communist. "I wish they'd punish me in- stead, of him," the mother said. Cadet Eugene Landy, a hand- some athlete and would-be law- yer, stood with the rest of his class in dress white uniform as the ensign's oath was administered. But his hand was not raised. He took no oath. Will Reapply He has a six-months period dur- ing which he may reapply for the commission. He said he would do so. Landy's own loyalty was not questioned. The Navy merely said he was "extremely close to his motherand she has been a Com- munist." The mother, Mrs. Deborah Lan- dy, 54, of Bradley Beach, N. J.. said her son talked her into quit- ting the party about 1947 after she had been a member for .10 years. She added: Gave Her Ultimatum "He sort of gave me an ultima- tum that I quit or he would leave home. He reformed me and yet he is suffering for it. I'd rather go to jail than have him suffer." Young Landy expressed fear his career in admiralty law might be endangered. Without the com- mission that merchant marine graduates normally receive, he will be liable for the draft. He intends . to enter Yale University on a scholarship this fall to study law. In Landy's class of 96 cadets; only two other graduates were de- nied commissions. Both flunked physical examinations. One of Best Students An academy spokesman called Landy "one of the brightest stu- dents we have ever had." He also was a football and tennis star. Landy called his own political views "pretty conservative." After the administration of the oath, Landy marched to an out- doors platform to receive his scholastic honors, his degree and his license as a merchant marine officer - all the academy had the power to bestow on him. To Show Last Movie Monday "Ten Days That Shook The World," Eisenstein's dramatic film about the Russian Revolution, will be the final offering of Gothic Film Society's "Man at War" series Monday, The film depicts the Bolshevik overthrow of Kerensky's "Provi- sional Government" in October of 1917. Originally titled "October," the movie solidified the director's international reputation which had been established with the re- lease of the famous "Battleship Potemkin." Monday's showing begins at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Amphi- theater. <+> 111100AV11. Boyle Family Leaves Capital Canadian Cold Front To Bring Heat Relief to City's Populace The heat wave is over at last in Ann Arbor - at least for a while. A cold front is set to arrive in town today, bringing temperatures down to the mid 80's - not necessarily the coolest, but still consider- ably less than this week's mid-90's temperatures. The exact duration of the colder weather is uncertain, although Willow Run Weather Station reports it may last through tomorrow. Showers No Help Yesterday's weather, which whizzed up to a sizzling 95, was not alleviated by afternoon showers. Ann Arbor residents are expected to welcome the lower temperatures happily. The mass of cooler air has spread down from Canada and ;: ;: m:m - " :F :: --2