STUDENT,YOUTH CONGRESSES1Kwi a S"e Page & 2r Sixty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom COO 71u, No. 26S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1957 L, PLEASANT FOU Morse To Ta Foils ble * * * * Four Nations Approve Ike s Plan LONDON (MA) - Western diplo- mats agreed last night to offer Russia shortly an up-to-date ver- sion of President Dwight D. Eisen- hower's open skies plan for guard- ing against surprise attack. United States Secretary of State John Foster Dulles won approval by representatives of three some- what hesitant allies - Britain, France and Canada -- for this move to promote -the plan which President Eisenhower first ad- vanced at the Geneva Big Four summit conference two years ago. Dulles also won their approval of continuing the slow negotia- tions with the Soviet Union in the five-power subcommittee of the United Nations Disarmament Coin- mission. After fout months of largely futile talk, that subcommittee has to report to the parent body to- morrow. Western officials said no new plans were decided upon in a 41%- hour meeting among the four Western disarmament delegations which Dulles attended. The strategy session was called specifically to enable Dulles to consult about the next steps with British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd, French delegate Jules Moch and Canadian delegate David Johnson. Meeting Set Dulles, along with United States delegate Harold Stassen, arranged to get 'together with their col- leagues again today. Dulles, who flew to London Mon- day at President Eisenhower's re- 'GROWING EDGE'o Prof. Van Dusen Declares Speech Therapy Recent By CLAUDIA BRIGGS Prof. C. Raymond Van Dusen yesterday said "growth has been phenomenal" in the development of speech and hearing therapy in the 20th Century. Prof. Van Dusen in a lecture entitled "The Growing Edge of Speech Re- ducation," gave a short history of developing speech emphasis in the United States and pointed out problems still facing professional people jn- speech and hearing fields today. Speech therapy, he said, is newer than the airplane. The first pro- fessional organization for speech improvement, he indicated, was formed in 1925 and still guides the nation's programs today under the new name American Speech and Hearing Association. Wisconsin First The University of Wisconsin was the first to include a speech de- partment, and it granted the first PhD in speech in 1925. The total number of Master's Degrees and Doctorates given in the field of speech in 1954 exceeded the sum of such degrees bestowed before 1940. Much progress has also been made by the public schools, with Detroit and Chicago leading the field. Aid Teachers Prof. Van Dusen reported that today speech, hearing and class- room teaching are becoming inter- woven, but that there is a need for the speech therapist to help teachers to understand the im- portance of speech. The early years of World War II ,saw intensified investigation in an effort to help speech defects pro- duced in battle. Since then, pro- gress has been steady. Cites Stabilization Stabilization of the quality of research and scientific investiga- tion is one of these. He further encouraged profes- sional people in speech and hear- ing therapy to keep abreast with developments in such cognate fields as medicine and psychology and to remian flexible in their approach to problems of therapy. T -Daily-Richard Bloss PROF. RAYMOND VAN DUSEN ..cites speech advances rMAN:* J ets Attack Fort Farq, MANAMA, Bahrain (I)-British jet fighters strafed Fort Farq yes- terday in the air war against tri- bal rebels seeking to unset the Sultan of Muscat and Oman. Pilots reported the tower of the fort, in the south of Oman, was damaged in the attack with rock- ets and 20 mm. cannon. There apeared to be no resist- ance. Leaflets containing a warning to keep away from the fort had been dropped in that vicinity Sun- day. A communique said 10 planes, operating from Sharja airstrip, took part in the attack on the fort. Similar strikes were made yesterday at other rebel positions. The air action supplements round operations by troops and tribesmen loyal to Sultan Said bin Taimur, and is intended to crush the 12-day-old rebellion. Florence Kitson, 66 years cide yesterday morning, Ann Miss Kitson was admitted late last evening to have bee M. P. Strickland, of 135 Kitson unconscious in her be He told police that he h her home if the shade on a I w I ' Korean Students Give Dances, Songs By ERNEST ZAPLITNY W ? ". Three of her students last night demonstrated that what im - poverished Korea lacks, in quantity is more than made up by good. performance.{ Michael Surh (master of ceremonies) deftly manipulated the<: three towards a successful "Glimpses of Korea," perhaps reminding the audience of another time when Koreans had little to go on in the tiny republic's darkest hour.{ The untiring Myong Ok Raymond gave a trio of dances picturingx life in her country. In male masquerade, she danced the story of a old, of 1349 eddes Ave., attempted sui- Arbor Polic reported. d to University Hospital and was reported n placed on the hospital's "Danger" list. 2 Geddes, said that he discovered Miss edroom upon entering her home. had been asked by Miss Kitson to check front window was not up by noon yes- terday. When he noticed at 12:30 that the shade was not up, he' called Ann Coller, a registered nurse, who entered the home with him and found Miss Kitson in normal condition except that she was in a sleep from which she could not be aroused. In searching Miss Kitson's bed- room upon arrival, police found her last will and testament, a note asking'that she be cremated and a note asking Strickland to dis- pose of her property. Miss Kitson is a secretarial em- ploye of Slauson Junior High '' I School.