7, JAPAN AND PHILIPPINES END STATE OF WAR (See Page 2) Y Latest Deadline in the State ~E~aii4F f a WAM I- VOL. LXVII, No. 16S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 1956 FOUR PAGES i Drill Sergeant Pleads Innocent Defense Will Attempt To Prove Marine 'Not Acting Unlawfully' PARRIS ISLAND, S. C. () - Marine S. Sgt. Matthew McKeon pleaded innocent yesterday to charges arising from his orders to a recruit platoon to plunge into a black swamp in which six drowned. The defense for the former drill instructor will now try to prove that when McKeon ordered his 74 men into the mud and water for disciplinary reasons, he was not acting unlawfully. McKeon, 31%years old, pleaded innocent to the charges of involun- tary manslaughter and oppression of recruits. His pleas were entered before t his civilian attorney, Emile Zola B louse Votes Construction SBill For Ie WASHINGTON (JP)-The House yesterday heeded an "urgent" call from President Dwight D. Eisen- hower and rushed through a new military construction bill stripped of privisions he had labeled un- constitutional. ' Senators, expressing surprise at the extraordinary speed, said they would insist on "a bit more de- liberate" consideration of the $2,- 138,886,000 "measure. Money features of the bill ate the same as those in one Presi- dent Eisenhower vetoed Monday. But the new version eliminates veto authority previously included for the Senate and House Armed Services Committees over con- struction of Taos missile sites and family housing for military per- sonnel. President Eisenhower had ob- jected that this "would destroy the clear lines of responsibility which the Constitution provides" be- tween the executive and legisla- tive branches of government. Ike Stresses Civil Defense Importance WASHINGTON ()-President Dwight D. Eisenhower said yester- day the nation's civil defense must be made stronger because of "spec- tacular developments in weapons and methods of delivery." He said this means, for one thing, that the federal government must take over "a larger respon- p sibility in our national plan of civil defense.' President Eisenhower made these statements in a letter to Val Peter- son, head of the Federal Civil De- fense Administration. He asked Peterson to sit in on Cabinet meet- ings hereafter "to help ensure that c the Civil Defense program is fully integrated into our national plan- ning." Follows Criticism The letter follows much criti- cism, at congressional investiga- tions and elsewhere, of the present program. President Eisenhower did not specify how he plans for the fed- eral government to take a larger responsibility though he said Pet- erson's agency "must be empower- ed to work out logical pans for possible target areas which over- lap state and municipal boundar- les." To Take Part President Eisenhower also said he would be back from his trip to Panama in time to take part in s the last two days of the Civil De- fense Operation Alert. The exercise will begin at 11 a.m. Friday and end the next Wed- nesday at 5 p.m. During the oper- ation, scores of government offic- labs will leave Washington for secret spots from which they will direct operations. The alert pre- sumes that Washington has been destroyed. President Eisenhower's com- ments on the need for a stronger" Federal Civil Defense Agency were in line with some of the testimonyI heard by a House Government Op- erations subcommittee. - U.S. Air Force Keeping Pace he general court martial board by 3erman of New York City Stands Mute To charges that McKeon had been drinking in barracks and be- for a recruit prior to the tragedy, Berman said, "the accused stands mute." Under the Code of Military Jus- tice, a mute pleading makes it mandatory for the law officer, in this case Navy Capt. Irving N. Klein also of New York, to accept it as a plea of not guilty. Berman has said previously that his defense will rest chiefly on the contention that McKeon, regard- less of Marine orders, was acting in accordance with accepted train- ing methods at his 4,000-acre re- cruit depot. Sentence Disputed There was a disagreement be- tween the prosecutory, Maj. Charles Seiver of Jacksonville, Ill., and Berman over the maximum sentence McKeon could receive if convicted. Berman contends the maximum is four years and nine months, and Seiver says it is six years and three months. The matter will have to be settled later by Klein. The trial of the Worcester, Mass., Marine promises to last two more weeks and be one which will see previous Marine training methods thoroughly exploded. Wants Addresses Berman asked for home ad- dresses of the 1,450 Marines dis- charged from this post since Jan. 1. He said he intended to write them a letter saying: "The charges against him (Mc- Keon) are that it is maltreatment of troops and criminal to train re- cruits by marching them into boondocks, marshes, swamps and creeks at Parris Island. "We believe that it was not an unusual practice to train troops in discipline and to improve morale by such occasional night exercises "If you have ever had such an experience or have seen it occur and you want to see justice done and to assist in the defense of this worthy man, phone or wire collect immediately to defense counsel, Parris Island." Prof. Quarles To Discuss Negro, History Benjamin Quarles, professor of history and chairman of the De- partment of History at Morgan State University, will discuss "Negro Americanisms in History" at 4:15 P.m. today in Rackham Amphitheatre. Prof. Quarles is a visiting pro- fessor at the University this sum- mer and will speak as part of the University series, "Patterns of American Culture: Contributions of the Negro." He is the author of two books on the history of the American! Negro: "Frederick Douglass," pub- lished in 1948 and "The Negro in Civil War," 1953. Also Prof. Quarles is now con- ducting reserch on 'Negro Pol- icy' in the Armed Forces, 1750- 1850 under a Social Research grant. Two Biology Talks Slated Seventh Summer Biological Sym.. posium, under the auspices of the Division of Biological Studies, will Senate OK's Social Aid Revisions Women Get Benefits *At 62; Disabled Draw Payments From 50 WASHINGTON (P)-The Senate voted last night to change the social security law to permit women to obtain old age insurance payments starting at 62 and total- ly disabled persons to draw bene- fit payments beginning at age 50. Rebuffing the Eisenhower ad- ministration, which opposed both provisions, the chamber wrote the earlier retirement for women into the social security bill by an over- whelming 86-7 vote. At present, women, like men must wait until they are 65 before drawing old age insurance payments. Victory for George The disability payments-a new concept in the U.S. social security system-were championed by Sen. Walter George (D-Ga) and the 47-45 vote approving them was a personal victory for that veteran senator, who is retiring from Con- gress at the end of the year. Both provisions were in the bill which passed the House last year 372-31. But they were largely stripped from the measure this year by the Senate Finance Com- mittee at the request of the Eisen- hower administration. The provision of age 62 retire- ment for women would make re- tirement benefits available to about800,000 additional women in the first year. These would include 200,000 widows, 300,000 working women and 300,00 wives of retired hus- bands, who get half of their hus- band's benefit. SurvivingMothers Benefit Surviving dependent mothers also would be entitled to full So- cial Security benefits at age 62 under the Kerr amendment. . Debate on the lowered retire- ment age for women was desul- tory after the bitter fight over the George disability amendment. After the vote the Senate turned its attention to other aspects of the Social Security measure. Dem- ocratic leader Lyndon Johnson (Tex) announced the chamber would stay in session until 11 p.m. or midnight in an effort to reach a final vote. As it emerged from the Senate Finance Committee, the bill pro- vided the age 62 retirement only1 for widows. The Kerr amendment" would give this benefit to working women and wives of retired hus- bands, but provides that they would get retirement payments atE a lower rate if they elect to re- tire at 62. The widows would get the full benefit rate at 62. Under the Oklahoman's amend- ment, a woman worker retiring1 at 62 would receive 8 per cent of1 the amount to which she would be entitled at 65. She would receivef a proportionate increase, five- ninths of 1 per cent, for eachc month she delayed retirement after 62. The, wife of a retired workerf going on the rolls at age 62 would receive 75 per cent of the benefit to which she would be entitledl at age 65. She would get increases amounting to 25-36 of 1 per centl of her benefit for each month shet delayed retirement after reachingi 62. -Daily-Don Watkins PROF. DANIEL WIT ...speaker Communist Party Not Puppet-Wit' By DONNA HANSON The Communist parties in west- ern Europe do not regard them- selves as mere "puppets" of the Soviet Union, Prof. Daniel Wit, of the Political Science Department said yesterday. Speaking on Soviet Union world affairs, Prof. Wit defined specif- ically the French and Italian Com- munist parties' connection as a "voluntary subservience," because they can "pull out" any time. These parties regard the Soviets as the senior member in a partner- ship, Prof. Wit continued, where ultimately their welfare is tied with the Russians. Reformist Movements While fellow travelers define the European Communist parties as just active reformist movements, Prof. Wit said, the fact remains that the party leaders themselves have frequently declared their fidelity to the Soviet Union as "the homeland of the international proletariet." They do have, however, sources of strength withintheir own coun- tries, two of which Prof. Wit named as the frustration of the industrial working classes and the countries' inadequate agricultural activities. "These people are wide open for Communist appeals, and the ap- peals are clever," Prof. Wit said. "They draw upon l e g i t i m a t e sources of unrest." The professor also pointed to the frustration of the intellectuals as another source of strength be- cause little has been accomplished compared with what can be done." Vitality An Attraction The main attractions of these European Communist parties are their vitality and good leadership. These well-organized parties can attract the younger elements of society "as long as they can be convinced that the parties aren't puppets of the Soviet Union." Prof. Wit commented that these Communist parties only have a "particular" type of loyalty to the Soviet Union, but not that of pup- pets, he emphasized. He described, however, how these parties did and do closely follow the Soviet Union policies, consider- ing them "for their own interests as well as the Soviet Union's."1 .. i i V si V " r ' .f / v Democracy Freedom Declared For Capitalists To 'Plunder Workers' MOSCOW (0P)-Nikita S. Krush- chev ridiculed the West and its freedoms yesterday night at a Kremlin banquet for East German Communist leaders. It was reminiscent of the cold- er cold war days. The party chief called Western democracy a sham, said its free- dom was only for monopoly cap- italists to plunder workers "and shear them like sheep," and charged that the Western press and radio served monopolists. 'Can't Strangle Us' Krushchev said the West "could not strangle us in 1917 and 1918 when we stood alone. How can they do it now?" he demanded. "I won't underestimate their strength but on the socialist side the strength is not negligible." Krushchev turned to Marshal Georgi Zhukov, Soviet minister of defense, asking, "is that not right, Comrade Zhukov?" Zhukov nodded. Soviets Applaud A picked audience of Soviet of- ficials and members of satellite and neutral embassies several times interruputed the 45-minute tirade with appreciative laughter. Krushchev himself frequently bubbled over with mirth. "The Western powers, that is the capitalist powers, like to call themselves free countries, the free world (laughter), but this is the free world we liberated ourselves 'from 39 years ago (more laughter) and we wouldn't be tempted back if they offered it to us on a plat- ter," he said. He scored what he said was the crushing of a legally elected gov- ernment in Guataemala and re- fusal of the free world to allow elections in Indochina. East Germans Linked A half hour before the recep- tion the Soviet Union and East Germany signed an economic and political declaration linking the two regimes even closer than be- fore. Krushchev commented on the speed of the agreement: "We un- derstand each other well and we don't have to waste time." But he told East German Pre- mier Otto Grotewohl and his dele- gation they would have to be pa- tient on their goal of reunifying Germany on Communist terms. "Don't Worry" He told the East Germans not to worry because West Germany refuses to sit at the same table with them. "The time will come when they will come knocking at your door," he predicted. "The United States did not recognize us for 13 years." Luce Returning ROME (P) - The secret of her illness finally out, Clare Boothe Luce is returning soon to the 17th century Villa Taverna where ar- senic poisoning has sickened her through much of her work as U.S. ambassador to Italy. To Reach 3100 in Fall; No Poli Change Seen Khrushchev'Ex ect Freshman lass Hits West -Daily-Don Watkins LINGUISTICS PANEL-Professor Albert H. Marckwardt (stand- ing) addresses members of a panel on "Linguistics and the Teaching of Composition." Other members of the panel were (1. to r.) Seymore Chatham, ,James Downer, John H. Fisher, William Schwab and John H. Hagopian. Linguistics Panel Debates Applications in Writing There are no courses in any university subject to so much tinkering as the introductory courses in English, Professor Albert H. Marckwardt of the English Department said in his introductory remarks before the linguistic forum last night. Prof. Marckwardt was the moderator of a panel discussing "Lin- guistics in the Teaching of Composition," part of the Linguistic Forum programs sponsored by the Summer Session Linguistics Institute. Another member of the panel, John H. Fisher, from Duke Uni- versity, claimed, "The concept of usi English has grown gregtly since- the successful application of lin- guistics theory to the teaching of foreign languages in World War I. . ng linguistics in the teaching of National Roundup By The Associated Press Estimate One-Third Out-SMate Still Too Early To Sense Trend By LEE MARKS Daily Managing Editor Fall semester's incoming freseh- man class was estimated at 3100 yesterday by Clyde Vrooman, di- rector of admissions. This compares with 2900 last year. Vrooman said it was too early yet to sense any trend or drift from processed applications. Tentative admissions have been granted to 4400 but only about 1500 applications have been cleri- cally processed, he reported. The estimate is based on in. creased numbers of students graduating from high schools across the country and represents what Vrooman termed a "normal" increase for colleges. There has been no change in admissions policy or standards Vrooman said. Despite a slight trend to reduce out of state stu- dentsin state-supported Institu.: tions the University will continue to admit roughly a third of its freshman students from outside Michigan. "No change in our out-state policy is being made now," Vroo- man reported. He noted, though, that if con- tinued expansion was not met by increased appropriations, the "fun- damental question" of where the University's obligation lies, would have to be faced. So far the State Legislature has stood behind the University in recognizing the advantages of a, diversified University community.. There has been speculation, however, that if Michigan's col- lege population continues to ex- pand as it has been doing, the Legislature might be reluctant to increase appropriations propor- tionately. In that case the Univer- sity would have to cut its out- state population. Vrooman said no action of that sort was anticipated now. The University is believed to have the largest out-state and for- eign populations of any state- supported school. Although the freshman class . will increase only 200 over last fall total University enrollment is expected to be up 1600. Enroll- ment is expected to increase in average increments of 1200 until, by 1970, it reaches 40,000. Importance Of Intellect Emphasized Let's educate out of this country all criticism of the intellectual ex- pressed by such words as "egg. head" and "long-hair," an educa- tor declared at the University yes- terday. Roma Gans, professor of Edu- cation, Teachers' College, Colum- bia University, gave the opening address at the 27th annual Sum- mer Education Conference on cam. pus July 17-19. She spoke on "The Importance of Reading to Whole- some Child Life." Professor Gans claimed, "This country needs every 'egghead' it- can get. Russia is financing every brain from the ground up. There will be no wasted I.Q's in Russia. "But in this country 50 per cent, and more drop out before the com- pletition of high school. Among the 50 per cent who drop out there is certainly a great deal of wasted "However. the problems of teaching English composition are different than those in teaching a foreign language and thus.lin- guistic principles have no applica- tion." Another objection t(. the use of linguistics principles in the teach- ing of English composition was offered by John H. Hagopian of the English department, also a member of the panel. He said linguistics could not be used directly to teach composition because "Linguistics is the study of spoken language while the study of English composition involves only the written language." Conviction Of Reporter Set .Aside WILKINS COMMENTS: Atom Plant May Replace Coal By ADELAIDE WILEY The use of atomic energy plants in underveloped countries may increase when it is possible to build small plants economically, accord- ing to J. Ernest Wilkins, Jr., who spoke in the University series, "Patterns of American Culture: Contributions of the Negro." Wilkins said yesterday afternoon that certain countries such as Australia have enough coal reserves distributed evenly to last for 50 years for power plants, thus making atomic plants impracticable. The other "conventional" method of generating power-hydro- electrically-would probably be the most reasonable in India, which "has ample water, but only 2% of it is developed." India's power plants are behind the time4 only because hydro- electric plants require big dams. In time, Wilkins commented, this country will construct enough hydroelectric plants to throw atomic plants out of the question. Brazil, Wilkins explained, will probably not use atomic energy plants because of extensive oil fields recently discovered which will reduce expences in importaing oil. However, Argentina is a country that may "have ten million kilo- watts of atomic plants by 1980 and is very optimistic about the use of atomic power." Argentina has some deposits of uranium, thorium and graphite. Eighty-six per cent of its thermal plants are fired by coal and oil presently. READING, Pa. ()-The Berks County Court yesterday set aside the conviction of a Reading, Pa. Times reporter fined $50 for cre- ating a disturbance in connection with a dispute between the city administration and the Reading newspapers. Charles H. Kessler, Times re- porter, was arrested July 9 on the order of Mayor Daniel McDevitt. Kessler was fined $50 by a police magistrate on a disorderly conduct charge. The reporter was arrested for posing on the City Hall steps with a typewriter after the mayor had closed the press room. McDevitt accused the Times of "descending to yellow journalism." The newspapers said McDevitt's action was prompted by recent news stories which led to slot machine raids on more than 20 places, among them was a tavern operated by the mayor's brother. Besides arresting Kessler, the mayor ordered police to ticket newspaper trucks for stopping in NEW YORK-The 73-year-old Metropolitan Opera announced last night it is cancelling its 1956- 57 season because of labor trouble. The Metropolitan Opera Assn. said the decision was made be- cause of failure to reach agree- ment with the American Guild of Musical Artists, representing some 220 opera singers and ballet dancers. It was not wage scales, how- ever, but a fight over the dual role of an opera official which led to the opera association's action. AGMA said an 11th-hour pro- posal to the Met, aimed at post- poning the issue while a contract was signed on all other matters, had been rejected by the opera management. SPRINGFIELD, II.-Orville E. Hodge yesterday offered to make restitution at least in part of missing state funds, while Demo- cratic leaders called for a "top- to-bottom" investigation of Illi- nois Republican administration. Hodge, who resigned as state auditor Monday at the insistence of Gov. William G. Stratton, said he would reimburse the state "to the full extent of my resources" and make a full disclosure of his activities before a grand jury. Later yesterday, Stratton, named Lloyd Morey, president-emeritus of the University of Illinois, to serve out the balance of Hodge's term as state auditor. Morey, 70, was U. of I. president from August 1953 to September 1955. He pre- viously was comptroller of the school NEW YORK-A cancer expert said yesterday that 14 Ohio State Penitentiary inmates have ex- perienced marked reactions to live cancer cell injections. The 14 volunteers were injected! nearly a month ago. The purpose