TELEVISION POTENTIA BEING IGNORED L Sixty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom ~IaitF See Page 2 CLEAR, WARMER VOL. LXVII, No. 6S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1957 FOUR PAGES Invite Red China To Peace Talks British Group Says Orientals Should Join Nuclear Negotiations LONDON ()-Leaders of 10 British Commonwealth lands agreed yesterday that Red China, as a potential nuclear power, should join final negotiations for a treaty to end the world arms race. At the same time, qualified informants reported the United States stands ready to announce two important modifications of its proposals for a nuclear weapons "truce" with Russia. One modification envisaged a ban on nuclear weapon tests late in 1957 or early 1958 -if Russia agrees to negotiate' arrangements %to cut off nuclear weapon produc- tion by some time in 1959. e re FPreviously the Western Allies had thought in terms of a timelag of only a few months. Used To Buy Big Three Edict l The other modification envis- ages a declaration by the United Int States, Britain and Russia - the nuclear three - Simiting the uses of atomic and hydrogen weapons WASHINGTON (') - House in- to self-defense against major ag- vestigators found .out yesterday gression. - that money from Secretary of Previously the West had refused State John Foster Dulles' confi- to consider spelling out any form dential "emergency" fund has of prohibition on the use of these been} used for liquor store pur- weapons. chases. Harold E. Stassen, the Amer- International operations sub- can disarmament delegate, will committee members pricked up present the nuclear component of their ears when Rep. H. S. Reuss the American plan for a limited (D-Wis), reading from State De- disarmament treaty tomorrow partment vouchers, wondered out when the five-power subcommit- loud about $223.49 paid to the tee of the United Nations Disar- Gold liquor store last January. mament Commission resumes its But Chairman Porter Hardy talks in London. (D-Va) shunted aside the question In the conference of British for the time being while the com- Commonwealth statesmen yester- mittee looked into some $350,000 day, the leaders were said to have worth of State Department con- agreed broadly that the Commu- tracts for public opinion polls nist Chinese' should be brought since 1954, into the final negotiations for any Officials Agreed world disarmament arrangements. Even administration officials Might Be Meaningless agreed yesterday the emergency They argued that to exclude fund wouldn't be used for public Red China would render any glo- opinion polls.'Whether it's legal to bal disarmament treaty meaning- buy liquor from the hush-hush less. fund wasn't touched on. Informants said the Common- At the State Department there wealth chiefs realized that the was no official explanation avail- United States - which does not able immediately. recognize the Peiping regime - At the liquor store, partner would find it difficult to accept Harry Goldman said he wasn't too Red China as an equal negotiator impressed by the 'congressmen's at this time. disclosure. Current East-West disarma- Particularly at issue yesterday ment talks, however,sprovide that were payments to the National when an accord is in sight a world Opinion Research Center, Univer- disarmament conference should sity of Chicago, totaling $36,- be called under UN auspices. 318.75 between June 27, 1956 and last February 27 for conducting public opinion surveys on foreign aid.T Contracts Terminated' T Be, , The contracts have since been terminated. Comptroller General Campbell By VU Group testified that spending out of this ,J fund is exempted by law from the A normal checkups made by his An opportunity to become mare watchdog General Accounting of- familiar with Chinese culture and fice.traditions will be offered at 8 p.m. Campbell said the $36,318 was today in the Rackham Assembly not "properly payable" from Dul- Hall, third floor of the Graduate les' confidential fund because a public opinion survey does not The program, second in a series seem to be an "unforeseen emer- of eight presented by various gency" Asian student groups on campus, is in conjunction with the Sum- mer Session theme, "Asian Cul- Senate G roup tures and the Modern American." Invitations may be obtained free of charge at the Information Votes .To eep Desk in the Administration Build- ing from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today File, Secrecy As the Assembly Hall has a seat- Fie ing from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today. will be given on a first-come, WASHINGTON (M)-An admini- first-served basis. stration-backed bill curbing ac- Also in the Asian Cultures pro- cess to FBI files by criminal case gram, Prof. Max Loehr's lecture is defendants won unanimous ap- scheduled for this afternoon. proval of the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday. The measure, sponsored by Sen. A T HILL A UDITO Joseph O. O'Mahoney (D-Wyo) and five other senators of both y a parties, was designed to limit the jf £t I'iou r effect of a June 3 Supreme Court OS decision. The bill was prompted by the court's decision in the case of Clin- ton F Jencks, accused of filing a false non-Communist affidavit. The majority opinion held that a defendant in a criminal case is entitled to see reports made to the FBI by informants against him.' The bill, drafted in conjunction with Justice Department lawyers would let a federal trial judge de- cide what FBI material a defen- dant was entitled to see. Arthur ean J ' Takes New Job Farce To Open Authorities Count 246 Dead In Hurricane-Hit Louisiana; Fear Total May Climb to 500 Sanitation, '1 -Photo Courtesy Robert Logan CHAPERON AND CHARGES-Anne Woodard, left; John Szucs, center; and Jean Whitehurst, in scene from "Charley's Aunt." The rib-tickling farce by Brandon Thomas opens at 8 p.m. today in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. NORTH CAMPUS: City Council Endorses U' Water Tank Project By JOHN WOODRUFF Ann Arbor City Council last night approved purchase of a half-million-gallon elevated water tank for North Campus as the first move in a projected master plan for supplying water to the rapidly developing area. Purchased under agreements Company, and Bendix Corporation, Prof. 1Nlelson Gives Music Instructions By CHARLOTTE DAVIS Methods of teaching two and three part songs to elementary students were demonstrated by Prof. Geneva Nelson of the music school, in a lecture of "Singing Activities in the Upper Elemen- tary Grades" yesterday at Audi- torium A, Angell Hall. Prof. Nelson was assisted in her demonstration by a group of sixth and seventh grade students from Eberwhite School. She spoke of the important role music plays in student's lives and said nearly all children can learn to carry a tune and stay on pitch if given proper instruction. Learning to sing, she com- mented, will often give a student confidence and a feeling of achievement which can help him in all his school work. After explaining the necessity of using a variety of songs, Prof. Nelson led the students in two songs with instrumental accom- paniments. Prof. Philip Duey of the music school will speak on how to build tone quality in high school boy's voices, at 3 p.m., Monday, in Audi- torium D, Angell Hall. with the University, Parke-Davis who have created the greater part of the immediate demand for the water, the tank is to cost $122,500. The agreements stipulate that the two companies will pay a to- tal of $50,000, the University 46 per cent of the cost, with the city to pay the remaining charges. It was also agreed that the City water system must have sufficient water supply in operation by Aug- ust 15, 1958. In unveiling the rest of the long-range plan to the Council, a representative >f Ayres, Lewis, Norris, and May, the Council's consulting engineers in the pro- ject, revealed plans for an addi- tional two-million-gallon ground reservoir and a $300,000 to $400,- 000 main to be laid across the City's old Fifth Wart; which is expected to be a sufficient supply to the area for about five years. The Council also approved sev- eral appointments made by Mayor Samule Eldersveld. Dr. D. E. Lichty was accepted for membership to the Health Commission, Bernard Harkins to the Market Board, and Mrs. Ruth Williams and Dean W. Coston to the City Planning Commission. League Plans Dance Class Intermediate dance classes will be offered tonight from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in the League Ballroom. The charge for men will be $4.00 for six lessons. Women will be ad- mitted free of charge. Explosion Marks IGY Beginning WASHINGTON (M - A new giant explosion on the sun was seen yesterday as scientists stu- died the effects of one which reached the earth Sunday in the form of magnetic storms in the high atmosphere. The first explosion disrupted some radio and telegraphic com- munications but its effects were exrected to taper off to normal in a dayor two. There were no indications yet whether the xiew solar flare would bring more magnetic disturbances to the earth. The solar pyrotechnics occur periodically - reaching a maxi- mum intensity in 11-year cycles, but those this year are of parti- cular interest because they coin- cide with the opening of the In- ternational Geophysical Year. In fact, IGY's start yesterday was timed to conform with the peak of the current 11-year cycle of solar activity. IGY is a cooperative scientific effort by 62 nations - including Russia and most of her satellites -to glean new information about the earth, its oceans, its atmos- phere and the sun. The first "intense" flare erupted three days ago but its effects were not noted until early Sunday. It was first spotted by Rus- sian scientists. WUOM Sets auditioning For Series WUOM has scheduled auditions for actors, speakers and broad- casters for a new documentary ra- dio series on nationalism. Bill Stegath, production direc- tor, reports the series will depict life in foreign countries with an emphasis on nationalism as a step toward internationalism. Programs will chronicle nation- alism in Ireland, Ghana, Egypt, India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Japan and China. Auditions for the series - 13 programs in all, sponsored by a grant from the Educational Radio and Television Center in Ann Ar- bor and the National Association of Educational Broadcasters - will be held this week from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.. at WUOM, fifth floor of the Administration Building. Stegath emphasizes that no acting experience is necessary. WUOM, he said, is seeking per- sons with authentic foreign ac- cents. as well as those who have learned languages other than their own. WUOM hopes to complete re- cordings of four programs this summer. I 1 course." She advised teachers to develop their own reading and experience by exposing themselves to popular media such as TV, films, paper- backs and magazines. In the classroom, teachers should "slow down and teach more," she said. The entire text should not be covered. "Leave something for, students to read by themselves," she urged. A. V. Williams, Traverse City High School, reported that special techniques at his school have nur- tured "enthusiastic students, cur- ious enough to be eager for wider viewpoints." Having students expand endings to short stories has met with con- spicuous success, he informed. He mentioned that junior high school students indicated the most interest in short stories involving teen-age problems, and those con- cerning modern science. Prof. Clara Laidlaw, Michigan State University, said that teachers should be watchful of the "ap- parently brighter students" who practice the cult of "rejection versus appreciation." Such students, she explained, develop stock responses to any literature denoting "standards of sentiment or piety." Chinese Art' Lecture Set Prof. Max Loehr, of the fine arts department, will give the second in a series of nine lectures on Asian Cultures and the Modern American, at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow, in Auditorium B, Angell Hall. His topic will be "Aspects of Chinese Art." -Daily-Allan Winder ENGLISH PANEL-Miss Eva Marie Van Houten, left; A. V. Williams, center; and Prof. Clara Laidlaw yesterday discussed problems of "Teaching the Short Story" in an English department sponsored panel discussion. English Teachers'xPanel Discusses Short Story By ERNEST ZAPLITNY "Teaching the Short Story" was discussed here yesterday by a panel of three chaired by Prof. A. K. Stevens of the English depart- ment before an audience of college and high school teachers and students, in the second of a six-week series of conferences. Opening discussion. Miss Eva Marie Van Houten, of Mumford High' School, Detroit, suggested ways of improving current English instruction. "We need a more delightful type of literature," she said. "A fresh, short story unfamiliar to students should be selected as the introductory piece in the- - National Roundup By The Associated Press 1 LANSING - Gov. G. Mennon Williams yesterday signed into law .the 1957-58 school aid bill impos- ing higher state taxes on whisky, and cigarettes. At the state's 1,700 retail liquor outlets, the price of a $4 fifth of whisky rose 16 cents, and ciga- rettes began selling at two to five cents a pack higher. The new law slapped an excise tax of 4 per cent on whisky. It boosted the state cigarette tax from three to five cents, or two cents a package. Cigarette vending machine oper- ators in many cases jumped their price from 25 to 30 cents, generally scorning the problem of making penny change and in some cases taking into account a price in- crease of one cent ordered by manufacturers. WASHINGTON -The H o u s e. Foreign Affairs Committee yester- day voted 22-6 for a bill authoriz- ing $3,242,333,000 in foreign aid for the coming year. The figure is 600 million dollars less than President Dwight D. Eise nhower requested. PHILADELPHIA-The president of the NTational Education Assn. estimated yesterday the nation will be short at least 150,000 teachers when school opens next fall. . * GRINNELL, Iowa - Two hun- dred of the 1,800 youths and their advisers at a national church meeting are ill of influenza, the State Health Department reported yesterday. The outbreak at the Westmin- ster Fellowship National Assembly' began with 12 cases last Friday including 11 delegates from Cali- fornia and a Nevada boy who ac- companied the California delega- tion. By noon Monday, the number of cases had risen to 200. *. * * WASHINGTON-Defense attor- neys in the bribary-conspiracy trial of Jimmy Hoffa moved for a mis- trial yesterday, saying "racial views" expressed by the prosecu- tion's star witness constituted pre- judice for the jury. United States District Judge Burnita S. Matthews said she would rule today on the motion and ordered the trial to continue. Anthropology m 3 - "'9.7 Facilities Destroyed Bodies Brought Out Of Stricken Area By Aircraft, Boats LAKE CHARLES, La. () -A seemingly endless cortege of hur- ricane dead moved north yesterday from coastal Louisiana. The silent cargo came out of a land so greviously devastated that it can no longer sustain human habitation. The death toll from Thursday's great storm, it was now feared, would reach 500. Val Peterson, President Dwight D. Eisenhower's personal representative on the scene, so reported by telephone to the chief executive before flying back to Washington. 246 Bodies Counted At receiving centers here 246 bodies had been counted. Not until Sunday was a road opened to the stricken Cameron area of southwestern Louisiana so that a mass removal of victims could begin. Until then, only air and water craft were able to bring out the dead. Publichhealth authorities de- clared the Cameron area unin- habitable, probably for three weeks at least. "Every disease is a threat If the people return now," said Don Stout, of Atlanta, Ga., director of the Red Cross operations in the area. Before Hurricane Audrey, the season's first, struck last week Cameron counted some 3,000 resi- dents, with another 3,000 in its surrounding parish, or county. It is a center for fishermen, trappers and rice growers. 'Disease a Threat' But the furious storm and a 20- foot tidal wave destroyed every building in the area but the court- house. Cameron lacks fresh water. It has no workable sewage system. Broken glass and protruding nails endanger human movement. Mosquitoes are breeding by the millions in pools of stagnant, un- receded flood water. There are no facilities for re- frigerating food. Poisonous snakes slither through debris. Refugees returning to this deso- late land would face the menace of typhoid, tetanus, malaria and food poisoning. Waters Must Recede Officials said Cameron's flood water must recede further before it can be cleaned up thoroughly. Then fresh water sources must be opened and a sewage system re- installed. This may take weeks. Only then could the job of rebuilding begin. Meanwhile, the housing of thou- sands of refugees in cramped quarters posed its own threat of pestilence. The health problem was com- plicated in the disaster area by 50,000 to 70,000 head of dead cat- tle bloating in the relentless heat. A mass grave was prepared in sandy soil east of Lake Charles for unidentified Negro victims of the hurricane, their passing marked by a common headstone. Asian Films To Be Shown Four Asian films are being shown at a local theater during the summer session as a supple- ment to the University's "Asian Cultures and the Modern Ameri- can" lecture theme. "S a m u r a i", "Chandra" and "Madame Butterfly", the three re- maining films in the program, will be shown on Wednesdays and Thursdays, beginning next week with "Samurai". "Magnificent Seven," shown last week at the Campus Theater, RI UM: ins Give Native Dance Presentation By FRED KATZ A deep, deep trance was evident at Hill Auditorium last night. It was "Indonesian Night," and the men and women who are staff members of the Indonesial Embassy in Washington, augmented by some University students, presented an evening of authentic danc- ing and music from their homeland. The warmly receptive audience was held spellbound from the mo- ment narrator Mr. Prahasto introduced members of the traditional Gamelan orchestra. The instruments were painted bright red and cream. Some were made of brass or wood of natural color. When played individually, they gave tones that are not present in Western music. When played in concert the audience visualized it- self in Jakarta and other Indonesian communities, and there it re- mained during the dancing. "Tani Piring," or candle dance, performed by Gandasari Abdullah, a girl 'of poise and gracefulness, as well as beauty created an effect which was decidedly different from the rest, for it was accompanied dim