Page 8 University Daily Kansan HST Warns Reds Of New H-Bomb Washington—(U.P.)—President Truman solemnly warned Russian Premier Josef Stalin today that the United States has developed a hydrogen superbomb that would mean "ruin for your regime and your homeland" in case of World War III. In his farewell State of the Union message to Congress, Mr. Truman said the recent H-bomb tests at Eniwetok ushered in a "new era of destructive power," and man is now aware of the power of a new order of magnitude, dwarfing the mushroom clouds of Hiroshima and Nargasaki." "But . . . war has changed its shape and its dimension. It cannot now be a stage in the development of anything save ruin for your regime and your homeland." "There is something I would say to Stalin," Mr. Truman said, "You claim belief in Lenin's prophecy that one stage in the development of communist society would be war between your world and ours. In any future world war, Mr. Truman said, millions of people could be killed and great cities demolished with one bomb. The "very structure" of this civilization would be destroyed. Mr. Truman devoted the major part of his 11,000-word message to a review of what he termed the "very great" accomplishments of his administration and a defense of its policies, both domestic and foreign. He made no legislative recommendations, explaining that he did not wish to "infrime upon the responsibility" of his successor, Dwight D. Eisenhower, to "chart the forward course" of the nation. Mr. Truman sent his farewell message to be read by clerks in a Republican House and Senate, instead of delivering it in person before a joint session as in past years. hris grave report on the H-bomb came to the end of his unusually long address. While he never referred in so many words to a hydrogen bomb, he made his meaning clear when he said the recent "thermonuclear tests at Eniwitok" marked the beginning of "another world-shaking development of atomic energy." He renewed his plea for effective international control of atomic energy, and said both Russia and America must remember that neither side can win more than a "temporary" advantage in the atomic arms race. "War today between the ..Soviet empire and the free nations might dig the grave not only of our Stalinist opponents, our world as well as theirs," he said. But he was frankly pessimistic over the prospects of Stalin and the Kremlin recognizing soon that neither Russia nor any other nation could win an all out war in the new H-bomb era. C-46 Reported Missing Carrying 41 Persons Rock Springs, Wyo.—(U.P.)—A civilian C-46 with 41 persons aboard was reported missing today in southeastern Idaho or western Wyoming. The plane, last heard from at 4:58 a.m. (CST) was reported carrying only enough fuel to have lasted until 8:30 a.m. The Airway Traffic Control center at the Salt Lake City airport said the craft, owned and operated by the Associated Air Transport company, and carrying 37 servicemen and a crew of four, was last heard from over Malad City, Idaho, about 100 miles north of Salt Lake City. It was due at Cheyenne, Wyo., at 6:50 a.m. (CST) for a refuel stop before continuing to an unknown eastern destination. It should have reported over Rock Springs about an hour after passing over Malad City, but failed to do so. Officials said the plane was flying under contract to the Air Force, Weather over the area was described as heavily overcast from Malad City to Rock Springs, and unusually violent winds blowing aloft also were reported. (Continued from Page 1) Enrollment permit cards from their deans' offices before Jan. 31. All seniors will enter Strong hall by the east door of the east wing. New graduate students will enter Strong at the center door, go to the Graduate office, 227 Strong, secure registration permits, then to the first floor to register and pay fees. Enrollment in classes will be held after fees have been paid. Enrol- ment hours are 9 to 12 and 1:30 to 5 on Monday and 8:30 to 12 and 1:30 to 5 on Tuesday and Wednesday. College students will enroll at Robinson gym; Business school in 210 Strong; Education, Robinson gym; Graduate school, 227 Strong; Journalism, Robinson gym; Law, 108 Green hall; Medicine, 104 Haworth, and Pharmacy, 211 Bailey. Army Prosecutor Rests Case In Smith Murder Trial Tokyo—(U.P.) The prosecution today rested its case against Mrs. Dorothy Krueger Smith for the knife murder of her husband after an army psychiatrist testified she had "suicidal and homicidal manifestations" and she was a drug addict. His first testimony followed that of an army nurse who revealed, for the first time, that Col. Aubrey D. Smith was asleep in one twin bed in their bedroom when Mrs. Smith plunged a 13-inch knife into his right side, fatally wounding him. Lt. Col. Arthur Hessin, president of the psychiatric board which determined Mrs. Smith was capable of standing trial, said Col. Smith indirectly was partly responsible for his own death. He said Mrs. Smith was admitted to Tokyo Army hospital on April 30, 1952 for "simple drunkenness" and emotional instability." Her medical record showed 12 other instances of "emotional instability." 425 Pass English Proficiency Exams However, two army nurses testified for the prosecution that Mrs. Smith told them she killed her husband because he planned to send her back to the United States because she was "a detriment to his profession." The following students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences passed the examination: Yet Smith "begged" to permit Mrs. Smith to remain in Tokyo, the army doctor testified, after he had decided to order Mrs. Smith. When the prosecution finished its case, defense counsel Lt. Col. Howard S. Levie immediately requested dismissal of the charge of premeditated murder against Mrs. Smith on the grounds the prosecution had "failed utterly" to prove it. mother of two children and daughter of famed World War II General Walter Krueger, returned to the United States. His motion was denied. The defense will begin its case Thursday morning. Jane Allivine, Carl D. Amblen, Marianne Asbell, Teddy J. Ayllon, Patricia Aylward, Robert R. Ball, Levi Barnes Jr., Laurence H. Hates, Wayne E. Bates, Kermit M. Beal, Richard Beilharz, Glenn Bethany, William L. Beydler, John Bieger, John A. Billingsley Jr, Joan Bingaman, Jane E. Bock, Jerold A. Bogue, Janet E. Bond, Helen Boring, Richard Bowen, John William Brand Jr., Virginia Brosnahan, Mary Kathryn Brown, Melvin Dean Burkhead, Darrell Cleo Bush, Carolyn Campbell, John Richard Campbell, Nancy Ann Carey, Betty Gail Carmean, Judy Carothers, Gordon G. Carter, Albert Casey, Kelleon Children, John W. Coffman, Kathryn Mae Conrad, Pat Copeland, George W. Cororan, Margaret Ann Coyne, Mary Sue Crum, Maxie Nale Cruse, Richard Joseph Cummings, Gerald Kenneth Davis, Janis P. Davis, James B. Degner, Jean Denman, Charles Howard Dick. William Boyd Dickinson III, Harold A. Dietsch, Allen Ditzen, Charles H. Dockhorm, Mell Lee Duggan, Willis H. Dukelow, William Howard Edmands, William Enoch, Marjorie Errobe, John R. Esther, John H. Evers, Wesley Bruce Ebwbank, Ward P. Ferguson, Lawrence V. Ferrell, Martha Georgianna Flynn, William M. Foster, Lyman H. Frasier, Frances Frech, Harry Fuller, Barbara Allen Gard, William Brooks Gauert, Frank A. Geyer Jr., Richard H. Gier, Wesley G. Gish, Joanne Goodjohn, Jerome Goodman, Lawrence F. Goodwin, Lynden Neal Goodwin, Stewart Gordon, Sindney Gottesmann, John M. Greeley, Clark Alden Grimm, Orinne E. Gray, Margaret Gulick, Eldon Haines, Benjamin D. Hall, Bill B. Hampton, Bernard J. Hansen, Cornelia Harrington, James E. Harris, Wayne Harvey, Marilyn Hawkinson, Roberta Herring, Raymond Robert Hessling, Davidson Hicks, David A. Hills. Lessie Hinchee, Mildred Hobbs, Shirley Holmes, Donald J. Hortor, Fred M. Hows, Frances Hoyt, Marilyn Hudson, Vernon E. Hull, Beverly Hurwitz, Walter Eugene Ims, Marian Jenkins, Johannah Johnson, Larry D. Johnston, Walter Don Johnston Jr., Bernard Allen Jones, Spiros Jones, Barbara Joyce, Richard Judy, John Philip Kassebaum, Charles R. Keith, Eugene E. Keller, Jean Kenison, Walter Jeff Kennedy Jr., Mary Kiehl, Gwen Kimball, Doris Koker, Judith Koontz, Frank K. LaBan, Landron E. Lacy, Kay Lambert, Nancy Landron, Betty Ann Landree, Martha Lawrence, Herbert Lechner, Patricia Lloyd, EugenE M. Loehr, Barbara Logan, Robert C. Londerholm, Rita Colleen Long, Ellen Jane Lupton, Robert Frank Lytle, Sadako Matsushita. Shepard, John P. Shields, Rita Shipp, James E. Stankard, Mendel Small, Jerry Lee Smith, Robert Moore Smith Jr., Barbara Sue Spaulding, William Spomer, Richard Lane Spretitzer, Sara Ann Starry, Donnalea Steeples, Edwin Stene. Charles Marino Jr., John D. McBride, Ben D. McCallister, Lynn Ronald McDougal, Richard M. McEvers, Harry Richard McFarland Jr, Patricia Jean McGinnis, Wallace Richard McGehee, George Robert McKemey, Sally Ann McKernan, Arthur Guy McLoughlin, Mary Emma Middlekauff, John L. Millard, Donald Montgomery, Edwin Moore, Kenneth G. Moore, Mary Beth Moore, William Earl Moore, Demetrius Motsandins, John David Moxley, Nancy Munger, Patricia Munson, Ella Mae Murphy, Janis Marie Murphy, Virginia Nalley, Carolyn Lee Neff, Nanette Nelson, Frank Newby Jr, Bill Nullon, Jill Ogilvy, Carolyn Oliver, Keith Donald Ornduff, Rosalee Osborne, Truman Page, William B. Payne, Helen Pendleton, Janice Perry, Wesley Peters, James Francis Peterson, Mark Fenninger, Jack Edward Pickering, Ray Pierson Jr., Joan Piller, C. Richard Powell, Ann Price, Joe Robert Pulliam, Margaret Quinley, Sue Quinn, Bernice Radovich, Ben Alfred Raines, Robert Edgar Reed, Kay Roberts, Martin Rogoff, Richard Lee Roshong, James Adair Ross, Ronald Sammons, Charles Scanlan, Reinhold Schmidt Jr, Charles Schroff, Mary Louise Scott, Nancy Sue Coot, William Richard Scott, Jean Ann Scupin, Richard Searl, Richard Sears Jr., Burwell Charles Stewart, Merlin Cronin Stickelber, Clyde E. Stone, Shirley Ann Strain, Chester Herman Stehlow Jr., Robert L. Stutz, Jack E. Taylor, Robert Earl Taylor, Ronald Thomas, LeeAnn Thompson, Suzanne Thompson, Shirley Tinsley, Stephen Tkach, Robert Frank Toalson, Barbara芭 Alice Trotter, Nancy Tuck, Max Urban, Jim Van Pelt, Denni Diane Wade, Virginia Walker, Robert Walker, Ann Rita Werth, Frederick Alfred Westerneyer, Charles Whitham, Holly Wilcox, Robert Wildin, Terrence Williams, Mary Williamsman, Nan Julia Windle, Clarence Winer, Keith Woolpert, Robert S. Wunsch, Shirley Young, Nick Yovetich, Frederick George Zahn, Wayne L. Zeigler, Helen Zimmerman, Reba C. Zimmerman. Students in the School of Medicine (Nursing) who passed the examination are: Kathryn Bauersfeld, Helen Burson, Kathryn Cook, Barbara Garberich, Anna Marie Grayson, Theeres Hannon, Joanne Hartell, Jane Henry, Jo Ann Luck, Marijane Lynch, Lynne McMillan, Ann McVay, Marilyn Miller, Haven D. Moore, Margaret Moore, Margaret Newton, Kathineh Omo, Cynthia Quick, Mary Joanne Schauvliege, Luella Schmalzried, Donna Schmid, Marietta Shannon, H. Charlene Smith, Carole Stout,Jo Anne Wampler, Dorothy Williams. Students in the School of Education who passed the examination are: Georgeann Ankron, Iris Jean Barsby, Margaret Black, Heidi Bloesch, Norma Bradley, Dorothy Brown, Sidonie Brown, Alta Bryan, Joyce Buck, Nancy Canary, Stella Carlson, Joan Marie Carter, George L. Chaney, Lois E. Clough, Anne Conway, Erleta Covalt, Donna Davis, Jean E. Dawson, Mary Ann Deines, Tom Donnelly, DeWayne Englert, Jeanee Fischer, Keith Gallehug, Nancy Gill, Mark S. Gilman, Edyth LaVonne Godwin, Betty Jean Grone, Mary Lew Hardman, Larry L. Lavicek, Joyce Henry, Marilyn Hentzler, Patricia Houston, Richard Perry Howard. Patricia Howell, Dana Hudkins, Jessie Ann Hunt, Thelma Iden, Patsy Jeffers, David D. Johnson, Joan Alice Johnson, Billie Jones, Lloyd H. Koby, Joyce Laybourn, Ronald C. Lett, Lloyd Lockwood. Billie Loffin, Joyce A. Lundry, Kathleen Mahoney, Mary Ann Mahoney, Nancy L. Malone, Veryl Mayberry, Avis McIrvail, Marilyn Muelebach, Dolores K. Myers, John Newton, Catherine Newman, John Newton, Mary Lou Penfold, James Albert Phillips, Robert Pulliam, Oakie Robison, Patricia Roney, Harry K Schanker Jr., Joanna M. Schrag, Martha Jane Shaw, Donna Sintz, Shirley Smith, Charles Stanfield, Janet Lynne Stewart, Joan Anita Stewart, Mary Ann Strumillo, Marjean Sullivan, Durian Swaher, Mariain J. Sweet, Marguerite Terry, Betty Thies, Margaret Jane Thompson, Rosalie Thorne, Georgia B Bipton, Barbara Tweet, Georgann Vandenberg, Coralyn Wahlberg, Dorothy Lee Wandling, Max Whitson, Christine Wiley, Kathleen Mae Wiley, Susan E. Wilson, Julie York. Students in the School of Journalism who passed the examination are: Clark Akers, Rozanne Atkins, James Baird, W. Thomas Breckenridge, Charles Burch, Kenneth Coy, Philip Dangerfield, Kenneth Davis, Ronald Dobbins, Dean Evans, Gladys Henry, Jacqueline Jones, Robert Kobler, Ronald Kull, Donald Landes, Jane Megaffin, Charles Morelock, Donald Nielsen, Shirley Pintel, Gerrald Renner, Arthur Schaaf, Elbert Spivey, Jack Stonestreet, Wendell Sullivan, Donald Tice, Patricia Vance, Arthur C. Wahlstedt. Students in the School of Fine Arts who passed the examination are: Jo Ann Anderson, Wanda Jean Anderson, Patricia Aurel, Margaret Calvert Barr, Ann Bonecutter, Marion Clyma, Elinor Joyce Cox, Twyla Sue Cox, Nancy Dennen, Georgia Anne Drake, Rosanne Drake, Elsie Jeanne Esch, Sally Maurine Freeman, Nancy Lou Hampton, Mary Harder, Ann Hyde, Maureen Kelley, Nancy McCammon, Elizabeth Marshall, Dale Moore, Haroldel Murray, Rose Marie Novotny, Marilyn June Polllom, Helen Priddy, Marilyn Reed, Doris Roenbaugh, Barbara Slough, Kathryn Jean Scott, Phyllis Blakeslee Scott, Barbara Thompson, Marguerite Unrein, Irma Claire Wagner, Barbara White, Jane Shackelford Whitmore, Richard Wright. Seoul, Korea—The battleship Missouri and the British cruiser Birmingham shelled Communist North Korean west coast defenses today as scattered clouds curtailed Allied fighter-bomber raids. Planes from the British carrier Glory broke through the clouds and blasted coastal gun caves and fortifications which the Reds recently had constructed opposite the islands of Chodo and Sokpo. Chinese and South Koreans continued to trade punches in the simmering Kumhwra ridges area last night and early today. Some 80 Chinese stormed down Sniper ridge from the northwest to attack Pinpoint hill. The ROKs threw them back in a 70-minute fight that cost the Reds 19 casualties. The shower of 16-inch shells announced the "Big Mo" had returned to the Yellow sea for the third time since 1950. A delayed report from the eastern front said 83 Communists were counted killed after a bitter two and one-half hour fight east of the Pukhan river Tuesday morning. The Chinese tried for the second straight successive night to drive the South Koreans from their south slope toe-hold on Jane Russell hill. The ROKs knocked back the attack in 30 minutes. Although cloudy weather kept Allied planes away from enemy supply and troop centers, UN fighter bombers continued to hammer at Communist battletie positions where Tuesday they had knocked out 40 troop bunkers and nine gun positions. Ships Shell North Koreans; Weather Curtails Air Raids Uruguay won its independence from Spain in the early 1800s. House Replaces Radio,TV Ban Washington—(U.P.)—A 10 - month blackout of television, radio, and newsreel coverage of House committee hearings has ended. House Republicans promised today to give TV-viewers a boxseat for at least some of the pending congressional investigations in search of Communists and government corruption. The blackout was imposed last Feb. 26 by Speaker Sam Rayburn (D.-Texas). He contended that House rules forbade coverage of committee meetings by radio, TV or newsreels. The new Republican speaker, Rep. Joseph W. Martin Jr., said he would leave the decision to each committee. The House armed services committee took Rep. Martin at his word and lifted the blackout yesterday. Rep. Dewey Short (R-Mo.) new head of the armed services group, sent word to TV newsreels that their cameramen were welcome at his group's hearing into the causes of recent Air Force crashes. Two of the three TV newsreels showed up and shot part of the hearing on sound film for use on TV newsreels.