Situation in Germany Needs President's Attention See Page 4 cl r Latest Deadline in the State :4E ad I' VOL. LXVII, No. 22S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1956 FOUR PAGES Nixon Made Bad Showig: Stassen Poll Shows Vice-President Placed Last of 8 Possible Running Mates WASHINGTON () -- Harold Stassen said yesterday vice-Presi- dent -Richard Nixon made the poorest running mates for President SDwight D. Eisenhower in a recent confidential sampling of public sentiment. Stassen, trying hard to revive his battered "dump Nixon" cam- paign, discussed an opinion poll which he helped spon or during the past four weeks. He told an impromptu news conference that the results support his contention that Governor Christian Herter of Massachusetts is the strongest vice-presidential choice the Republicans could make. Would Scrap Attempt Stassen said, however, that he "certainly" would immediately scrap his attempt to boom Herter should President Eisenhower pub- licly throw unqualified support to Nixon. The President's 'special assistant for disarmament matters End of Nation ti Steel Today's Strike MVeeting Expected at seemed undaunted by Herter's a Ike Pushes -Civil Rights Bill Passage ' W4 ASHINGTON (*' - President Dwight D: Eisenhower made a new *request yesterday for passage of the administration's civil rights bill but Senate Republican Leader Wiliam Knowland of California told him this "is not possible" at this late date. Een the most active supporters of the House-passed measure con- ceded they would be unable to force Senate action on it in these closing days of the 1956 session. Sen. Paul Douglas (D-I11) said "There is very little we can do." President Eisenhower asked fa- vorable ac-tion on, the civil rights program when he met at the White House with Republican con- gressional leaders. Senator Knowland later told newsmen he informed President Eisenhower that the bill, because Tof- btiter Southern opposition, is subject to almost endless delay and could not be brought to a vote before adjourmgnt. Senator Douglas and other sup- porters of the measure have been stymied in repeated attempts to present a resolution that would dislodge the bill from the Judici- ary Committee. Because the Senate is recessing, rather than adjourning, from day to day, a single objection can block such a maneuver. Senator Douglas made another try yesterday but was stymied ,again. if the Senate does adjourn, in- stead of recess, at the conclusion hof a day's business, the resolution to bring up the bill presumably could be introduced the next day. The bill would set up a biparti- san commission to investigate al- leged infringements of civil rights establish a civil rights division In therJustice Department, and make It easier to bring suits in federal court forviolation of civil rights. Air Force Jet Crashes; No One In jurired NEW CASTLE, Pa. ()-An Air 1Force jet training plane smashed into a combination grocery store and apartment building last night, setting D the structure on fire. No one was reported killed. Only one of the 12 persons who mlived in the four apartments was reportedIn the building when the plane hit, firemen said. She was ? Mrs. Shlvester Bockum and she suffered only shock. The two-story brick building was reduced to a pile of rubble. Firemen said Tlames shot high into the air after the plane made a direct hit in the center of the building. Mrs. Allen Shotzbarger, 20, and her 2dyear-old aughter, Audie, were just about to enter the stru- ture when the plane came down. Both were hospitalized for extreme shock. Several other persons in the vicinity also suffered from shock. Lt. Welling Pulford of the New Castle Fire Department identified the airlane's cewmen s .t. W agreement to personally nominate 4Nixon at the Republican National Convention. Stassen implied that GOP National Chairman Leonard' Hall had begun arranging this when he learned in advance of Stassen's plans. Herter's move creates "some difficulty psychologically," Stas-. sen said, but does not rule him out as a potential successor to Vice-President Nixon. Poll Listed Eight ' Questioned about the opinion poll Stassen said it listed among the vice presidential 'possibilities Nixon, Herter, Stassen himself and five others. He declined to name the others but said. the results probably will be made public by this weekend. At a news conference Tuesday, Stassen kaid he and four or five other Republicans had financed an opinion sampling. He refused to name the others. In publicly endorsing Herter at a surprise, news conference Mon- day, Stassen disclaimed any vice ,presidentail ambitions for him- self. He said opposition to him from the party's "right wing" would make him something less than an ideal candidate. Hints Encouragement Stassen yesterday hinted he might soon get some encourage- ment from President Eisenhower in his pro-Herter campaign. Pres- ident Eisenhower continued to keep silent on the matter but Her- ter said in Boston that Nixon "is clearly acceptable to the Presi- dent." Stassen took the position that a lot can happen between now and convention time. Some other Republicans agreed with him - but they were think- ing about the possibility that Stas- sen himself might be dumped be- fore then from his cabinet-level White House assignment. Denounce Stassen Some Republican leaders who 'favor Nixon have bitterly de- nounced Stassen and called for his resignaiton. Answering questions, Stassen re- ported he tallied twice by tele- phone with Herter before he made his Monday announcement. He said Herter at no time tried to dissuade him but took the po- sition that "he will do whatever the Republican convention and the President want him to do." Stassen said he decided some two weeks ago to endorse Herter and implied that Hall learned of this and immediately began work- ing on Herter to nominate Nixon. Problems most mothers of three growing children, Mrs. J. B. Marshall Jr. has- her problems. Only she fell for the tempta- tion. She left her milkman this note: "The way we drink milk, we fell it best for you just to leave one cow instead of our normal delivery." Yesterday the milkman, with nary a smile, delivered a Jersey cow named Cybil's Bossy, a bill for $400. Appended was a note that the Marshals could return Bossy if they weren't satisfied. That seemed the likely course. Report New Arab-Israel Skirmishes JERUSALEM (') - Jordan and Israel forces exchanged heavy fire yesterday in the Judean hills west of Jerusalem. Six Jordanian soldiers, one ci- vilian and the Jordan member of the mixed Jordanian-Israel Ar- mistice Commission were wounded In a series of four clashes -in the Jerusalem area, center of Arab- Israeli incidents. There were no reports of Israeli casualties. A United Nations truce observer, Swedish Col. Erik Helge Thaalin, was wounded. He is the third UN casualty in two days of efforts to ,end shootings along o the tense frontier that marks a narrow neck of Israel jutting into Jordan ter- ritory in Palestine. Jordan reported its member of the Mixed Armistice Commission, Capt. Mohammed Barghouti, also was wounded. Israel, blaming the Jordanians for the incidents and for the shot which struck the UN observer, pro- teste4 to the commission. Jordan blames the Israelis for the outbursts. A Jordanian mili- tary spokesman reported that Is- raeli positions opened the fire early in the morning with small and medium automatic weapons. Reports from both sides on the events of the day: An Israeli army spokesman said Jordanians started firing on Is-, raeli laborers from Arab Legion; buildings across the border. Is- raeli frontier police returned the fire, he said, and there were no casualties. Fire broke out at Beit Surik, a village six miles west of Jerusa-! lem. The UN rushed two teams of observers to investigate. An Israeli official said Jordanians fired on the teams, wounding the Swedish member. The UN team brought about a cease-fire after several hours. Thent a heavy exchange was reported in the area of Kastel near the Jer-c usalem highway to Tel Aviv. It isc in the same general area as Beit Surik. An Israeli Army spokesmanE said the incident started when. "strong fire was opened from Jor- danian positions on a group of Is-i raeli soldiers."1 Trial Raises 'Drunkeness Possibility Intoxieation Blood Test Unevaluated PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. (P)-The possibility S. Sgt. Matthew C. Mc- Keon was drunk when he marched his recruits into Ribbon Creek was raised at his court-martial yes- terday for the first time. Six young Marines drowned on the April 8 death march.j The startling prosecution evi- dence, not hitherto r e v e a l e d, brought Defense Atty. Emile Zola Berman to his feet, his face pur- ple with anger. But in the end the evidence-a blood test for intoxi- catin-went into the record, but without evaluation. "The offense of intoxication creates prejudice," Berman roared. "It is our contention of overwhelm- ing predujice by this evidence to the rights of this defendant." Lead Platoon It was 8 p.m. the night of April 8 that McKeon marched Recruit Platoon 71 in the dark into Rib- bon Creek. He is undergoing court- martial for the death of the six drowned recruits. In another moment of high drama in this biggest court day thus far, McKeon's own account of the death march was read into the record for the first time. He made it in a statement April 9 to a Marine legal investigator. McKeon in the statement, told of his difficulties with undisciplined members of Platoon 71. He con- tinued: McKeon's Statement "About 1300 (1 p.m.) I got the idea to take them out into the swamps that night, thinking I could teach them some discipline . All during the afternoon I had some drinks from a bottle, I think three of four drinks. Three-fourths of the platoon were squared away but the rest were foul balls." The drill instructor told of marching the platoon into Ribbon Creek and later taking them into deeper water. He continued: "I heard some men to my right, out towards the center of the stream, yelling for help. I would say that there were about six or seven men out there. "At this point, I told the men to keep cool and go onto the beach. I at this point swam out to the men in the middle of stream. If grabbed one man and took him to the beach, to a point where he could stand up. I asked him if he could touch ground and stand up. When he gave me an affirmative reply I headed back into the stream to help the others. The re- mainder of the platoon who had gone onto the beach were helping others who had been on the rear end of the column to get ashore." The sergeant sat motionless, eyes closed as the statement was read by the man who took it from him, T. Sgt. Samuel L. Cummings, a beribboned investigator for the! provost marshal's office. Bohman Talks to Group Agreement Hinges OnMinor Details Union Sources Express 'Delight' At Terms Put Forth by Industry NEW YORK (R})-An end to the paralyzing national steel strike appeared yesterday to hinge on only minor technical details of a new union contract, and formal union approval of the pact. Approval is expected at a meeting late today of the union's 170-member Wage Policy Committee. High optimism surrounded both sides in negotiating sessions yesterday, and union sources unoficially expressed delight at new terms put forward by the industry. Give Guarded Comments Publicly, officials of both parties made only guarded comment after negotiations recessed yesterday afternoon. John A. Stephens, United States Steel vice president who heads the company negotiating team, -Daily-Harding Williams SPEECH ASSEMBLY-Prof. George V. Bohman addresses the Speech Assembly on "Democracy in Colonial American Speaking" yesterday. Prof. Bohman is chairman of the Department of Speech at Wayne State University. CRUCIFIES HIMSELF: Ventriloquist To Stay On Cross Fifteen Days REYNOSA, Mexico (AP)-Tagare, 25-year-old ventriloquist who was voluntarily nailed to a cross in the bullring here three days ago, said yesterday he hopes to stay' on his cross for 15 days. He's doing it for money, he said, and will give 10 'per cent to the Roman Catholic Church. Tagare, dressed in a white silk suit, lay on the cross as he talked with this reporter through an in- terpreter. The cross was supported by two carpenter's saw-horses. Small electric fans stirred the hot air in the room. The cross never has been up- right. Tagare said the wounds in his bulletin BOSTON () - The Coast Guard yesterday reported an Italian luxury liner and Swed- ish vessel, both carrying pas- sengers, collided off Nantucket Island. There were no immediate reports of casualties. The Coast Guard identified the vessels as the Andrea Doria, out of Italy, and the vessel Stockholm from Sweden. Coast Guard vessels were dis- patched to the scene immedi- ately. feet and hands hurt, but he gavel no indication of suffering great pain. He did not appear to be in a trance. His hands were still nailed to the cross. His feet had been re- moved from the wood, but the nails were still in them and they were bandaged on the bottom. The nails were about six inches long and slightly larger than a wooden match in diameter. The wounds on Tagare's hand and feet appeared to have been treated with mercurochrome. Nailed Sunday Tagare, whose real name is Ijenio Garcia Carmona, was nailed to the cross before a capacity crowd of about 5,000 in the build- ing here about 7 p.m. Sunday. About an hour later, four men lifted the cross from where it lay in the bullring and carried it on their shoulders to a room Tagare had rented about 2% blocks from the Reynosa square. People from Mexico and the United States visited the room and paid about 25 cents to see the actor on the cross. Father Jose Castillinas, a Rey- nosa priest, said neither he nor the church had given permission for the exhibition and that as far as he knew the church would not get any of the money. He said that local civil officials authorized the exhibition. ,z told newsmen only: "We have not yet reached an agreement. We are continuing to make progress," David J. McDonald, president of the United Steelworkers, nodded in agreement. Hopeful Signs Further hopeful signs were seen with the arrival of all or nearly all of the presidents of the 12 largest steel firms involved in the talks, and union calls for meetings of both its Executive Board and Wage Policy Committee today. Key features of the new com- pany offer were understood to be a three-year, no-strike agreement calling for a 50-cents-an-hour "package" boost over the period, with no wage reopening possible in the final two years but provi- sions for a cost-of-living wage hike if living costs rise. The union had sought an un- specified but "substantial" pay in- crease, but talked at previous company offers of lesser "pack- age" benefits and longer contract duration. Strike Idles 750,000 The strike began July 1 after a breakdown in contract talks in New York. A federal mediator brought the parties together again in Pittsburgh, without result. The 25-day strike not only has idled some 650,000 steelworkers, who produce 90 per cent of the nation's vital steel, but it also has cost the jobs of more than 10,000 others in industries dependent on steel. Experts believe it would take at least two weeks to bring the in- dustry back to full production. There were estimates that a price increase to cover wages and other benefits granted in the new contract would be at least $9 or $10 a ton. This would add about 850 million dollars annually to the nation's steel bill. Ike Critic, Harry Cain, Resigns Post WASHINGTON ()-The White House announced yesterday that Harry P. Cain, crusading critic of the administration's employe se- curity program, had resigned from the Subversive Activities Control Board. Cain said a month ago he would be delighted to serve another three-year 'term but that he sus- pected President Dwight D. Eisen- hower would not renominate him. Yesterday the White House said his resignation had been accepted. Cain made the resignation effec- tive on the expiration of his term Aug. 9 although offering to stay on beyond that date, until his suc- cessor is qualified. In a brief letter, couched in formal terms of good will, Presi- dent Eisenhower asked the former GOP senator from Washington to stay on until a successor takes of- fice. Cain's letter of resignation, dated July 17, called again for reforms in the government's loy- alty program. Full Blame Shouldered By Auditor SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (I)-Orville E. Hodge, resigned Illinois state auditor, shouldered full blame for the embezzlement of more than half a mililon dollars of state money, a prosecutor said Tuesday. State's Atty. George P. Coutra- kon summarized for newsmen a 176-page typewritten interview with Hodge, including a statement' from the former state official that "I must have been temporarily in- sane" to arrange the cashing of 46 fake state warrants or checks. The warrants have been valued at $637,465. Additional fictitious warrants and evidence of $356,000 manipu- lation of a property trust fund involving state banks was revealed after Hodge's statement was made, raising the total in dissipated funds to more than a million dol- lars. Motive in Doubt Coutrakon could throw little light on Hodge's motives except to say: "He said he needed more money because he had never gotten any kickbacks from payrollers." Coutrakon read the statement of the once influential Republican state officer to a Sangamon Coun- ty grand jury two days ago. The jury returned 46 indictments against Hodge, each based on one of the warrants. Hodge is to appear today for arraignment on the charges. Hodge Contradictory The prosecutor described Hodge as vague and contradictory at times and said he once asked Hodge during the interview why he could not tell complete details. "You had so many warrants you can't remember them. That's the situation, isn't it?" Coutrakon in- quired. "I was very busy trying to do a good job in the auditor's office and this particular part has always been hazy to me. My mind does not function when it comes to this angle," Hodge said. After releasing Hodge's story, Coutrakon said it "sounded like Hodge was shielding someone" be- cause of inconsistencies in the statement. Coutrakon said the im- plication of Hodge's statement was: "I'll take full responsibility." Suspect Shielding "He could be shielding Epping. He could be shielding Hintz. It could be somebody we don't know about," Coutralkon told reporters. Edward A. Hintz recently re- signed as president of the South- moor Bank and Trust Co. of Chi- cago. In accounting for the money, Hodge, known as a lavish spender, said: "Well, I foolishly bought bad in- vestments and I paid my expenses which were very high and put, some. of the money in invest- ments." HARLEM'S DR. BISHOP: Segregated, Church Adds to Ignorance By ADELAIDE WILEY The church, a regenerative agent, fails when it no longer is on the side of the afflicted and disenfranchised, Dr. Shelton H. Bishop said yesterday in a speech, "The Negro and the Christian Church." Dr. Bishop is rector of St. Phil- lips Episcopal Church in "the heart of Harlem." He gave the tenth lecture in the University summer series, "Patterns of American Cul- ture: Contributions of the Negro." Referring to slavery days, Dr. TUOnnCOO W orn orrmn -. f mandatory to integrate Christians: there must be a spirit of accept- ance and encouragement, and a master plan to build it. "Salvation is not a matter of race," he re- marked. Moral Inspiration In the last half of this century, "integration may be the moral in- spiration of our national life," Dr. Bishop predicted. The church, which had a large part in the unanimous decisions of the Supreme Court, must not let segregation within its walls "eighty-four years of one dynasty is enough." On the Job Describing an event in his daily work, Dr. Bishop said, "One day a woman called me and said there were twenty-six people living in five rooms next to her. There were seventeen children and no food or money. "Within an hour, I was there with some of my other workers. We work closely with the Depart- ment of Welfare, and when some- thing like this happens, I go to them to inauire why these neople I