1 - .-,. THE UNIVERSITY.&. AND RELIGION4"tn:3t Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXIX, No. 146 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 1959 FIVE CENTS Soviet 'No'Perils enate asses abo Geneva MeetingW Western Nuclear Suspension Plan Draws Khrushchev's Disapproval GENEVA (J)-Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's disapproval of COOL, SHOWERS TEN P r Bil Vot a Western proposal for a phased suspension of nuclear weapons tests cast grave doubt yesterday on the future of the three-power conference. Information available in Geneva indicated, however, Khrushchev stopped short of killing off the negotiations which have been limping along since Oct. 31, 1958. In a message to Washington the Soviet leader expressed dissatis- faction with the Western plan to get a first step agreement to stop tests on the surface, in the atmosphere to a height of 50 kilometers (30 miles), and under water. Hope No Rejection But there was still hope here that this was not a fiat rejection 4 of the plan urged by President Wolverines, MSU Split Double Bill By DAVE LYON Special to The Daily Dwight D. Eisenhower and British -4prime Minister Harold Macmillan. The American and British delega- tions feel the nuclear talks will note produce any test suspension agree-- ment unless the Soviet Union pc- cepts one of two alternatives either on agreement on a phased suspension of tests or revision of its demands concerning a controlt system to police an over-all sus- pension. If there is no shift by the Rus- EAST LANSING -- Michigan State won the batters' game, but Michigan won the pitchers' game in a doubleheader at Old College Field here yesterday afternoon. Wolverine batters had a field day in the opener, collecting 18 hits, yet lost their second game to the Spartans in two days for lack of effective pitching. State com- bed three Michigan hurlers for 15 hits and a wild 17-12 victory. 1.Bob Marcereau salvaged one game in the weekend series of three when he pitched the Wol- verines to a 2-1 triumph in the nine-inning nightcap. The 5'" sophomore rghthander, in his first route-going performance, al- lowed five scattered hits. Opponent Pitches Well Marcereau had to be good be- cause his mound opponent, Craig Van Sciever, was equally effective. The two hurlers battled to a 1-1 tie through the regulation seven innings, and the eighth. Two errors by Spartan center- fielder John Russell in the ninth proved Van Sciever's undoing. With one out, Russell dropped Dave Brown's deep fly to left- center. Wilber Franklin's ground ball to Van Sciever. resulted in a rundown play on Brown, trapped off second. Russell Errs Again Brown was eventually tagged out, but Franklin meanwhile made, it to second. On John Halstead's solid single to center, Franklin raced around third, then hesi- tated, fearing a throw to the plate by Russell. But Russell let the ball; dribble through him, and Franklin scored easily.- Marcereau then protected his leadl, surviving a two-out double by Mickey Sinks in the home half of the ninth., Michigan scored first in thei See MARCEREAU, Page 10 t FBI Directs d F Large Hunt. For Lynchers By The Associated Press 1 POPLARVILLE, Miss. - The Federal Bureau of Investigation directed a massive two-state search yesterday for a band of men who' seized an accused Negro rapist from his unguarded jail cell here early yesterday. The raiders left no trace and there was little hope of finding Mack Charles Parker, 23-year-old truck driver. He was accused of having raped a young white moth- er. Parker was taken from the un- guarded jail in the pre-dawn hours by 15 or 20 men. Five Negro prisoners watched the kidnaping under a warning to "keep your mouth shut." The raid- ing party took the cell key from Sheriff W. 0. Moody's empty of- fice, but needed directions from other prisoners to open Parker's cell. Sheriff Moody normally leaves the jail unguarded. He continued routine, he said, because he had no indication feeling wa running sians in either direction then there is nothing left in Geneva to nego- tiate, in the Western veiw. When the two Western powers advanced the proposal for a lim- ited agreement they expressed hope this approach would salvage something from the all-but-dead conference. Advanced Proposal President Eisenhower in a letter' to Khrushchev on April 13 stressed this point, saying: "In my: view these negotiations must not be- permitted completely to fail." Surface, atmospheric and under- water atomic and hydrogen weap- onstests are relatively easy to de- tect. For: this reason the control machinery necessary to police a limited ban would not need to be as' extensive as arrangements re- quired to handle a total halting of tests. There could be a marked cut- back, for example, in the number of on-site inspections held by mo- bile inspection teams-a type of control to which the Soviet Union showed particular aversion. The Reds felt such groups would spy for the West. Herter Asks, For Unity WASHINGTON to) -Secretary of State Christian A. Herter was reported resolved yesterday to push for a united Western front next week at his first interna- tional conference as Secretary of State. At the same time, Herter and Sen. J. William Fulbright (D- Ark.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, agreed there is no point now to including members of Congress in the United States delegation to the East-West Geneva meeting. The State Department said that; after an informal discussion, Her- ter and Sen. Fulbright left the; door open to possible Congres- sional attendance at a later stage if it then seemed desirable. The Paris conference, slated to start April 29, will bring together the Foreign Ministers of the United States, Britain, France and West Germany. -David Giltrow EELES LANDSTROM ... takes title Landstrom1, Relay Team Win at Penn By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA -Eeles Land-! strom broke his own varsity out- door record in the pole vault and an underclassman quartet won the two-mile relay to cap a fine all- around Michigan performance in the 65th edition of the Penn Re- lays here yesterday. Landstrom, with a jump of 14'7", won the college division in his specialty -and bettered the Michi- gan record of 14'6/" which he established three years ago. Landstrom, as he bettered Don Bragg's Relays mark (14'6" in 1957), joined five others in the record-shattering day before 41,- 000 fans. Lions Upset Michigan's young two-mile four- some upset Penn State after fail- ing in three earlier attempts this season. The Nittany Lions led most of the way, but Wolverine anchor- man Tony Seth outlegged Dick Engelbrink by about five yards. Engelbrink took the baton with a lead of a couple of yards and held on right down to the last turn. At that time, e tired and Seth inched ahead. Record Neared Seth was clocked in 1:52.5 and Engelbrink in 1:53.4 for their half-mile legs. Michigan's com- bined time was 7:41.0-about 10 seconds off the varsity record set four years ago. Michigan Captain Mamon Gib- son, last year's vault winner, placed second behind Landstrom with a 14'4" leap. The vault equaled last year's winning height, Gibson's best outdoor effort. Freshman Ergas Leps held his own against some reputable com- petition in the AAU Invitational See TWO-MILE, Page 10 THIS FALL: Delaware Integration To Begin WILMINGTON, Del. (:') - The State Board of Education has been ordered to integrate the races in Delaware's public schools one grade a year starting with the first grade in the fall. The order issued late Friday by United States District Judge Caleb R. Layton III is approximately what the board sought. Several Favor Move jSeveral Negroes as individuals and the Delaware chapter of the National Associataion for the Ad- vancement of Colored People had worked for immediate integration. Judge Layton's ruling on this request said. "Any thought of total and immediate integration of the Delaware school system is out of the question." He spoke in the ruling of dan- gers of "emotional strain . .. ten- sions and the impact of integra- tion on a predominantly Southern society" in Delaware. Stems from Hearings The order stems from a series of hearings he conducted earlier this year. - The state board previously had accepted another court order that it integrate in compliance with a Supreme Court ruling that segre- gation in public schools is uncon- stitutional. The hearings were held to determine the best method of integration. The Negro interests and the NAACP brought suit against seven of" 4" school districts that had segregated schools. idmit News From Office Angry with newsmen, Wash- tenaw County Sheriff George A. Petersen has put a partial black- out on news from his department. "We'll give what news we want," he declared yesterday. Petersen was said to be upset over an Ann Arbor News article which said he had suspended two deputies. He claimed the story should not have appeared,-and denied that he had suspended them. He did say, however, that he had taken them off duty for a time. . He noted, moreover, that the deputies had returned to duty. They had been taken off their jobs during an investigation of an incident in which they are said to have- stood by while another officer fought with acitizen. en Petersen denied the story was the specific cause of his clamping down on the release of news from his office. yG 777, f 4NT AL S1~LawrenceN Seaway Projects II COMPLETED-The 475 million dollar St. Lawrence Seaway was completed in a short period of five years after being discussed for over fifty. Shown are some of the projects that went into completing: this joint United States and Canadian project. The seaway was bitterly opposed by the railroads and Atlantic coast businesses when first proposed. St. Lawrence Seaway Opens to Ships. Changes Anti-Racke nl MONTREAL ()-The St. Law- rence Seaway, a giant system of canals and locks that reaches to the Great Lakes and the heart of the America continent, was opened yesterday to ships from the seven seas. The 475 million dollar project had been debated by the United States and-Canadian governments for 50 years but was completed by 15,000 workers in five years. The 5,678 - ton Canadian Ice- breaker D'Iberville, a veteran of the Arctic, carrying officials, Ca- nadian Parliamentarians, United States Senators and Congressmen and newsmen, raised anchor short- ly after 8 a.m. yesterday and moved into the Seaway entrance at Montreal's Jacques Cartier Bridge. The D'Iberville was not needed to crack ice. Flew Flags She led at a stately pace a 35- mile-long queue of 55 ocean-going ships flying the flags of many na- tions, and 23 canallers. Car horns honked, ships blew their whistles and hundreds of on- lookers waved as the D'Iberville inched into the St. Lambert Lock, the first of seven that will lift the convoy a total of 224 feet to the level of Lake Ontario. "It's a great thing to have a deep-water canal going right to the center of the continent" Ca- nadian Transport Minister George H. Hees said, as he waved back at the -spectators. Parade Moved Planes and helicopters, many carrying photographers, flew up and down the seaway as the ma- -rine parade moved along. At Ogdensburg, N.Y., at the Western end of the Massena Locks, another flotilla of 33 Canadian cargo ships started their east- bound passage of the Seaway. There were no formal cere, monies to mark the opening of traffic to Great Lakes ports as. far as 2,400 miles inland. Dedicated in June The formal dedication will be June 26 when President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Queen Elizabeth II of Britain will participate. The Seaway, a joint United States-Canadian venture, opens a n To elect Senate In National Elections Today PARIS UP) - France gets a brand new Senate today - with new faces, new importance and even a new official name. The only thing that will not be changed is the meeting place- the historic Luxembourg Palace, whose marble halls have withstood the changes of political regimes for some 340 years. Election of the Senate will be the final step in installation of the new French Fifth Republic. A new president, a new government and a new National Assembly - all with revised powers and duties - Qalready are functioning under new era for ports ringing the five Great Lakes, which are in effect transformed into the world's eighth great sea. Eighty per cent of the. world's shipping may now reach these ports. Before the Seaway they were blocked by 21 small, rock-lined locks with wooden gates which lifted or lowered ships of less than 250-feet length to the water. levels between Montreal and Lake On- tario. 'Surrender, China Warns Tibet Rebels TOKYO P)-Red China warned Tibetan Rebels yesterday to sur- render at once or be "wiped out lock, stock and barrel." then. Fu Chung, Deputy Chief of the Red Army's political de- partment, sounded the warning in a speech before the National Peo- ple's Congress in Peiping. Another Peiping'broadcast said Chinese Communist troops were sealing off the borders of Tibet to keep the rebels in and to block any outside help. Peiping announced earlier this week the uprising-that erupted in' March had been crushed. But Fu said "a handful of remnant rebel bandits" fied to remote mountains and were being wiped out. Fu declared any "imperialists and foreign expansionists . . rash enough to contemplate invasion of our country's Tibet will be crushed with the iron fists of the united people. He mentioned no nations, but Peiping propaganda in the Tibetan uprising has warned India and the United States against intervention. One Peiping broadcast accused P. N. Menon of India's Foreign; Ministry. of acting "outright as a spokesman for the Tibetan rebels in India.", The broadcast assailed Menon. for releasing the statement of the Dalai Lama, Tibet's fugitive God- King, at Tezpur, India, on April 18 denouncing Communist rule.- Another speaker before the Na- tional People's Congress seemed toj lend substance to Chinese Na- tionalist' reports , of trouble in Sinkiang, Red China's northwest- ern province north 'of Tibet. Appointmenuts Win Ap roa (P Val, Arizona's Goldwater Casts Sole No Vote On Regulatory Act WASHINGTON W)-The Senati yesterday passed by an over- whelming 90-1 margin the Ken. nedy labor regulation bill aimec at routing racketeers and thugs from unions. Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.) cast the lone negative vote. Passage came a few hours aftea approval of a toned-down substi- tute for the McClellan Bill of Rights amendment.- Sponsored by Kennedy The bill sponsored by Sen. Johr F. Kennedy (D-Mass.) now goes to the House, where similar legis- lation died last year. But its back- ers there said ;it 'has a better chance this session. House hear- ings on bills along the same line already are under way. The similar bill which the Sen- ate passed last year was sponsored by Sen. Kennedy and former Sen. Irving M. Ives (R-N.Y.). It was killed in the House. During the succeeding months of the political campaign Republicans and Demo- crats sought to place on each other the blame for its death. The measure passed yesterday makes the most extensive changes in the Taft - Hartley Law since that pact passed in 1947. Desired by Labor Some of these changes are strongly desired by organized la- bor. The AFL-CIO had said it would fight the measure if the changes were not retained. The Senate adopted 35 amend- ments and. defeated 15 in nine days of floor debate on the bill. Kennedy succeeded in fighting off all major amendments he op- posed head-on except the Bill of Rights proposal in its original form. Amendment Passed This amendment, offered by Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.), chairman of the Senate rackets committee, was put in Wednesday by a dramatic 47-46 vote. But the provision was consider- ably toned down today by adop- tion of a substitute which Sen. Kennedy said protected the oper- ating procedures of unions, but still offered guarantees of basic rights to union members. McClel- lan also approved the substitute. Sen. Kennedy told a reporter he believed the bill had been strength- ened and improved in the floor debate, and that its chances of final enactment into law were en- hanced. At the outset of the debate, he had declared that if too many major changes were made on the floor, the measure might well die again this year. KAPPAS, DELTS FINISH SECOND: 7RTQ- ThofnQ nin ucrWpJrrALPnIV-i4fn L/ A.LP1A. 121 A. ...L4&2O .J .J'Kli LXn VV XU I V L"L Grand winners of Spring Weekend trophies, announced at last night's dance, are Zeta Beta Tau and Kappa Alpha Theta, with a} total of 330 points. Second place winners, with 227 points, are Kappa Kappa Gamma and Delta Tau Delta. Only seven points back are the third place winners, Phi Sigma Delta and Kappa Delta. Rue des Cafes, the Spring Weekend dance, opened with a funeral procession from the Theta Xi and Collegiate Sorosis Wake PaIrlor, but continued with a gaity belying its somber beginnings. The John- ny Harberd Orchestra played against a background mural of New Orleans, surrounded by the colorful booths and nightclub-like atmos- phere. Somethin' Smith and the Redheads provided entertainment. Booths JudgedI Assistant Dean of Men John Bingley, Profs. Gerome Kamrowski and Frede Vidar, both of the architecture and design school, judged the booths and selected Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Delta Phi Epsilon as first prize winners for their Fishmarket. Wenley House and Victor Vaughn House took second place with the Saloon. A garden booth President Charles de Gaulle's constitution. Elect Senators In all 267 Senators will be elect- ed today, 255 from metropolitan France and 12 from overseas ter- ritories. A full membership of 307 is to be attained later with elec- tion of representatives of Algeria, the Sahara and French residents. living in areas formerly adminis- tered by France. There has been no outward evi- dence of any campaigning by the 1,254 candidates in metropolitan France. The Senate is chosen in indirect elections, with about 80,- 000 municipal councillors, region- al councillors and deputies parti- cipating. The electors will cast their b a11o t s in departmental (county) prefectures.. Favors Old Hands This system favors old political, hands who have spent years cul- tivating the friendship of local{ AAUP Acts To Remove 'U' Censure The Ameuican Association of University Professors has author- ized removal of 'the University from its censured list when all conditions causing the censure ,have been removed. The action occurred at the 45th annual AAUP convention Friday in Pittsburgh. The University was originally placed on the censure list last year after the dismissal of Prof. Mark Nickerson of the phar- macology department and H. Chandler Davis of the mathe- matics department. Both had refused to tell the House Un-American Activities Committee about possible affilia- tions with the Communist Party. . _... :}:. ...... ,ice 0.