FACE FACTS OF SPACE RACE fee Page 4 l AkI Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom ~UIIA1 - FAIR, COOL VOL. LXIX, No. 100 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1959 FIVE CENTS EIGHT PA i Prime Minister Asks Nations To Help Redue Danger of War MOSCOW ()-As a guest of the Kremlin, British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan last night challenged the statesmen of the world to reduce the danger of war that might arise through "miscalculation or muddle."a The first British Prime Minister to visit Moscow since the war, Macmillan arrived on the stroke of noon wearing a light grey fur hat that delighted the Russians, and sporting a sense of humor that may h ;ve confused his hosts. He and British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd are here for 10X days of talks they hope will reduce world tensions. But Macmillan Plans Visit WASHINGTON (A>) - United _ States officials look forward to a Washington visit by British Prime Minister Harold Mac- millan about mid-March to re- port on his 10-day visit to Moscow which started yester- day. No special arrangements have yet been named in Washington and no specific. date has been set, officials said. But they added they expect Macmillan to come to Washington after visiting Paris and Bonn. Cagers Lose AsLate Bid Fails, 87-84 By FRED KATZ and BILL ZOLLA Special to The Daily EVANSTON - Time ran out on Michigan's injury-ridden but in- spired basketball team last night and, despite their brililant come- back attempt, the Wolverines dropped a fast-moving 87-84 Big . Ten clash with Northwestern. Forced to play without play- maker-guard Terry Miller, the Wolverines couldn't cope with the Wildcats' fast break as they lost their fifth Conference game. The def eat, coupled with league-leading Michigan State's win over Purdue, eliminated Mich- igan from.further contention for the Big Ten crown. The Wolver- ines dropped to .500 with a 5-5 record and fell another notch from the fourth-place position they had occupied at game time. To Meet Wisconsin + Michigan hosts cellar-dweller Wisconsin tomorrow evening at Yost Field House. The Wolverines 'trailed by as many, as 15 points early in the second half when the hosts took a commanding 57-42 lead. And although George Lee, John Tid- well,-and M. C. Burton took turns in keeping the deficit from in- creasing, Northwestern also kept S up the fast-scoring pace and was still ahead, 83-72, with less than four minutes remaining. Then Michigan's great triple- scoring threat narrowed the count to thiee, 83-80, on four consecu- tive buckets, including two made after the Wolverines' full-court press went into effect. But this was as close as they were to get. Warren Scores With less than a minute left, the Wildcats' phil Warren in- creased the lead to five. Burton came back with two more points, See BURTON, Page 7 Attack. Civil Rights Group, Report Says WASHINGTON (M - An attack :aimed °at scuttling an anti-dis- crimination committee headed by Vice-President Richard M. Nixon appears to be shaping up in Con- gress. The group, called the Committee on Government Contracts, has the assignment of trying to prevent racial discrimination in the hiring policies of government contractors. President Dwight D. Eisenhower established the committee several years ago by executive order. As part of his civil rights program, he asked Congress to give it legal status. The Senate Republican Leader, Everett Dirksen of Illinois, said yesterday such opposition has de- veloped he now doubts the Senate Judiciary Committee will approve President Eisenhower's request. Sen. Dirksen said in an inter- view he has been told southern *made it clear to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev at the very outset that he brought no particu- lar subject, such as the Berlin crisis, on which he wanted to ne- gotiate. A Kremlin palace dinner cli- maxed his first day in Moscow. The text of his address there was released in advance. He said Britain did not fear acts of calculated aggression "and I hope that you do not." 'Suicidal.Folly In this day and age, he added, "such aggression between the great powers, at least, would be suicidal folly. "At the same time it is impos- iible to hide from ourselves the danger of a war by miscalculation or muddle. That, indeed, would be a calamity for us all." Then he issued the challenge: "In such circumstances it is the duty of statesmen to see if it is possible to establish some basis of confidence or treaty or in some other way to reduce this danger I do iot pretend that this is an easy task, but nevertheless let us attempt it." "Meanwhile, let us and other governments try to avoid haz- ardous courses." No Longer Reality He also used the Kremlin as a forum for defending British col- onial polic. He called imperialism "an epi- sode. in history," and "no longer a present reality." "We in Britain still have de- pendent territories overseas. I say nothing about the manner in which these territories were ac- quired - that is a matter of past 'history. "But just as you regard the methods by which the Czarist government extended the princi- pality of Moscow into the Russian Empire as fortunate in their re- sults, we do not feel that our dependent territories need regret their British connection." SHAH: Old Regime To Survive TEHRAN ()-"I am sure our regime will survive to attend the funeral of many other regimes," the Shah of Iran said yesterday. That was his reaction to Soviet propaganda assertions that Shah is unpopular in his- own country. Moscow broadcasts have hinted he may share the fate of Iraq's King Faisal, slain in last July's military revolt. Will Sign Pact The Shah's remarks came at a news conference at which he an- nounced Iran will sign a military pact with the United States de- spite threats from the Soviet Un- ion, Iran's powerful northern neighbor. The ruler of Iran emphasized the pact is defensive and the mili- tary agreement will be invoked only if his country is attacked. ' As for Soviet charges that Iran might be converted into a plat- form for an attack on the Soviet Union, the Shah said he will grant no foreign country the right to erect missile bases here. For that matter, no one has asked for such bases, he added. Peaceful Policy Once again the Shah said Iran will continue a peaceful policy and is willing to maintain friendly relations with all its neighbors. A foreign ministry spokesman told newsmen Iran will not sever diplomatic relations with the So- viet Union in spite of the violence of the propaganda campaign. The campaign had lapsed until. negotiations between Iran and the Soviet Union on a nonaggression pact collapsed earlier this month. Cuba Receives U.S. Diplomat HAROLD MACMILLAN ... speaks to Russians Taylor Says Can Resist If Mobilized WASHINGTON (MP)-The Army Chief of Staff says the United States has all the strength neces- sary .to resist force in Berlin "if we are willing to mobilize it and do so in time." "Mobilize the entire nation?" asked Sen. Russell B. Long (D- La.). Unlimited Poker "Yes," replied Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor at a secret hearing on Feb. 2. "You cannot play around in this business unless you have a lot of blue chips in your pocket. This is unlimited poker." / The exchange was included in testimony made public last night by the Senate Disarmament Sub- committee. Sen. Long, questioning Taylor about Western ability to maintain its position in West Berlin, re- ferred back to earlier testimony that Soviet block conventional forces greatly outnumber those of the West and said: No Extra Chips "But I heard you make'the statement a moment ago that as it stands now, you do not have any blue chips to give away." Taylor replied that "we do not, with standing forces," but "we have a mobilization base, in proved reserve forces, and so on." This was an apparent reference to re- serve and guard forces in addition to the Army's own regular divi- sions. Sen. Long brought up the crisis created by the Soviet Union's call for removal of foreign troops from Berlin by May 27, saying: Several Situations "It seems to me that there are a number of situations that are likely to arise where the Soviets can seek military solutions. Ber- lin is the easiest example. "Once a military solution to this question becomes necessary, we don't have the conventional forces to follow through with." It was at this point that Taylor replied "we have all the strength that is necessary if we are willing to mobilize it and do so in time." Government Ends Revolt In Panama Rebel Council Forced To Abandon City Hall PANAMA ()-A municipal re- volt in this capital apparently collapsed yesterday under vigorous strokes by the national govern- ment. The government named a city council to supplant a rebel council and sent armed troops to city hall in a show of force, The revolutionary junta, its selected council, including chair- man Carlos Enoch Adames and about 80 supporters, filed out of city hall under the watchful eyes of the troops. Had Held Out The Junta had held out in city hall since seizing it Wednesday. The junta demanded the ouster of the 15-man council elected in 1956, accusing it of mishandling city funds. The ,uprising won a partial victory, because the elected council stepped aside pending investiga- tion. The rebels tried to keep the flame of revolt burning. The junta marched down the street and was joined by a leaderless band of several hundred demonstrators who had made a half-hearted at- tempt to push through the troop cordon. Three blocksadown the street, they stopped at a plaza for an impromptu rally. Guillermo Mar- quez Briceno, chairman of the junta, admitted "this is the begin- ning of the end" as he addressed the crowd. Cut Off Radio Marquez Briceno said the main reason the junta decided to quit city hall was because the troops had cut off the radio the rebel leaders had been using to summon the people to their support. Taking a page from the Cuban revolution Marquez Briceno told the rally the "18th of February movement" had been born. He showed a red and green armband as an insignia of the movement. Marquez Briceno said he had hoped to turn the movement into an uprising against the national government. He and others blamed this failure on what they termed the defection of radio commenta- tor Ramon Pereira, who launched the movement Wednesday. Texas Debates Withdrawal From NSA A proposal for the University of Texas to drop its membership in the National Students' Association was introduced to the Texas Stu- dent Assembly recently. The action follows the recent withdrawal of Harvard University from the NSA. According to local NSA commit- tee members, the proposal is a result of primarily structural mat- ters-increasingly poor communi- cation between the natonal office and the University of Texas, a rebellion on the part of the local committee against "busy work," and some philosophical disagree- ment with the tone and procedure of the national congress itself. Opinion on the matter is not' unanimous. The Daily Texan is against the move since vital con- tact with other American schools through NSA would be "junked overnight." For April Wunsch Picke Regents' Race JUKEBOXES McClellan Justif ies Boycotts WASHINGTON (P) -Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.) said yester- day phonograph record manufac- turers would be justified in refus- ing to sell to outfits that supply gangster - ridden jukebox opera- tions. McClellan, chairman of the Senate rackets investigating com- mittee, told newsmen that if such action could be termed a boycott, he thinks it would be a legitimate one. McClellan's comments were prompted by testimony about the operations of the Lormar Dis- tributing Company of Chicago, described by committee counsel Robert F. Kennedy as , gangster- run. To Probe Further The committee plans to explore the company's activities further when it resumes public hearings Tuesday in a widespread investiga- tion of the extent to which mob- sters and shady union officials have muscled in on the jukebox business. McClellan said the committee intends to wind up the Chicago phase of the investigation with two more days of hearings. Then it will recess for 10 days or two weeks. A staff investigator testified Friday that Chicago jukebox oper- ators have to pay more than $100,- 000 a year to maintain peace in the industry and keep from losing the locations for their machines. To Call English . One of the witnesses to be called next week is Charles English, de- scribed by the committee as owner of the Lormar company. Kennedy said English will be questioned, among other things, about testimony that the company last year distributed counterfeit records to jukebox operators at cutrate prices. These reproductions are stamp ed with counterfeit labels of the original record manufacturers, Kennedy said, and no royalty pay- ments are made on them. The committee was told that the Lormar company began distribut- ing counterfeit records after in- timidating jukebox operators into buying its records for five cents apiece above the price charged by other distributors. To Give Talk On Religion John Crowe Ransom, Prof. Emeritus of English at Kenyon College, will speak on "Religion and Poetry" tomorrow at 4:10 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium.1 The lecture is sponsored by the Committee on Studies in Religion and the English department. ELLIS A. WUNSCH WILLIAM K. McINALLY ...from Traverse City ... from Jackson WIN IN LAST EVENT: I llini Trackmen Edge wolverines in Thriller By JIM BENAGH Special to The Daily CHAMPAIGN-George Kerr scored a tiring double victory in the quarter- and half-mile runs, then came from behind to anchor the final mile relay team to the decisive triumph as Illinois' track team nipped Michigan, 642/2-58,/2 here yesterday afternoon. Kerr, a junior from Jamaica, had to outdo a brilliant final leg in the relay by Tony Seth-second to Kerr in an earlier thrilling 880 duel. But the Illini star, who had a :46.10 quarter last summer, left no doubt as he, sped through his 440 in an unofficial :47.8 to end what both coaches-Leo Johnson of Illinois and Don Canham of Michigan- agreed was the finest meet in their eight years of opposition.' Record Shattered The Illini quartet was clocked at 3:15.7 - almost two 'seconds better than a Big Ten team had ever recorded. Michigan's four- some of Bryan Gibson, Don Chal- fant, Marsh Dickerson, and Seth had a 3:16.1, also well under Ohio State's Conference best of 3:17.3 last year. Kerr,'s leg of the relay came after Chalf ant and Dickerson, Michigan's second and third man respectively, had gained and held a three yard margin for Seth. The Wolverinq held Kerr off until the final turn, but the latter blazed down the stretch to win' by three yards. The Illinois runner won the 440 in :49.0, and set a school, dual and fieldhouse mark with a 1:52 half mile. Seth was a close second in that run at 1:52.4 and Michigan's Fred Montour placed third in 1:53.9. Three Marks Fall Kerr's half mile record was only one of four dual meet marks to fall. Tom Robinson's school record of :30.6 in the 300-yd. dash, Les Bird's 24'9%" broad jump and, of course, the mile relay, were the others. Robinson's triumph in the 300 bettered the former Michigan best, held by Bob Ufer (1943), Bob Brown (1956), and Robinson (last week) at :31.4. Robinson See ILLINOIS, Page 7 Rift Denied -By Nasser CAIRO (AP) - President Gamal Abdul Nasser, with President Tito of Yugoslavia beside him, yester- day angrily denied there is any rift between the United Arab Re- public and the Soviet Union. He said Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev has promised to stay out of the internal affairs of the U.A.R. In a speech celebrating the first anniversary of the Syrian-Egyp- tian merger, Nasser disclosed an exchange of letters with Khrush- chev. He said the letters reaf- firmed their mutual friendship despite Nasser's internal anti- Communist campaign. 100,000 Assemble Nasser told a crowd of 100,000 in Republic Square he had sent a letter to Khrushchev so that "im- perialists will not be able to sow dissension between us." He said Khrushchev's reply ar- rived Friday and reaffirmed his solidarity and friendship, despite the ideological differences between the two countries. "There is an ideological differ- ence between us and Russia," Nas- ser said. "Every country has its special social system and its spe- cial ideology. That is why I talked frankly and sent a personal mes- sage to Khrushchev." Repeats Policy At the same time Nasser re- iterated a U.A.R. policy of 'neu- trality. "Some people say we are pro- east, others say pro-west," Nasser added. "But they forget there is an Arab republic and an Arab na- tionalism." Nasser assailed the Western press for reports he said asserted Russia might put pressure on the UA.R. by withholding arms, stop- ping economic aid or refusing to implement the Aswan Dam project. See Progress. In Marshall FT. BRAGG, N. C. (I)--An army surgeon voiced encouragement yesterday for Gen. George C. Marshall in his > fight against a second stroke complicated by mild pneumonia. Col. George M. Powell said un- less the 78-year-old retired sol- dier-statesman suffers another stroke "he has a better than 50-50 chance of getting through this. Before, I didn't feel this way." Col. Powell said Gen. Marshall Democrats Onr Select Two 9. Renominate Jartlett For Education Post In Grand Rapids By JAMES SEDER Special to The Daily GRAND RAPIDS-William Mc. Inally and Ellis Wunsch were nom-; inated here yesterday as the Dem- ocratic candidates for the two Regents' posts at stake in the April 6 elections. Superintendant of Public In- struction Lynn Bartlett, ex-officio member of the Board of Regents, was renominated for a second two. year term. He was unopposed. Wunsch is a Traverse City school teacher and apple-grower. He is a former Fulbright scholar-at the Sorbonne in :Paris. Mcnally is chairman of the board of the Na- tional Bank of Jackson. (His cam- paign was run by Joe Collins, '58, former president of Student Gov- ernment Council.) Two Withdraw The other two participants in the four-man race for the two Regents' nominations were James Hoff and Dr. Ira McCoy. Both withdrew from the race after the voting had been completed, but before the votes had been tallied. The convention passed, by ac- clamation, a resolution commeid- ing Governor G. Mennen Williams "without reservation to the na- tion as the man most qualified to lead the Democratic Party to vic- tory nationally in 1960." Urged No Increase A resolution saying the party urged that there be "no increase either directly or -indirectly, of student fees and, if possible, a re- duction of such rates for at least the first two years of college," was also passed. Mrs. Mildred Jeffrey, chairman of the resolutions committee, said that reference to "noi ncrease directly, or indirectly, of student fees" meant that party opposes the Bowerman bill. The Bowerman bill would require students to pledge $45 a semester, payable after graduation, as security for a state bond issue to finance a build- ing program for state-supported colleges and universities. She added that any reduction in tuition would be dependant on a satisfactory resolution of the state's financial problems. The convention also approved Gov. Williams' budget and tax proposals now before the Legisla- ture, and loudly applauded the Governor's attack on the Republi- cans. Calls "Sullen Sulkers" Calling the Republicans a bunch of "sullen sulkers," Gov. Williams criticized their proposal of a one- cent increase in the sales tax as a "soak the poor" proposal. State Central Committee Chair- man Neil Staebler was re-elected to that post. Grace Marckwardt, wife of University Professor Albert Marckwardt of the English de- partment, was elected to the Dem- ocratic State Central Committee. Foot To Seek Plan Ending Cyprus Crisis NICOSIA (M)-British Gov. Sir Hugh Foot returned to Cyprus last night and said he is working on practical steps to end the emer- gency that has gripped the island for four years. Foot said he would make an- nouncements "from time to time as various steps toward finishing with 'the emergency go quickly forward." He also appealed for help from the islanders to put Cyprus--virtu- ally bankrupt from four years of civil strife-back on its feet. "We have a wonderful task of establishing a self-governing. in- 450 MEN SIGN UP: Spring Fraternity Rush Begins Today Slightly more than 450 under- graduate men will begin spring rushing from 2 to 5 p.m. and from 7 to 9:30 p.m. today with a series of open houses. Although presently this year's total is approximately 150 lower than last year, sign up for spring rush does not close until Wednes- day. It is expected that at least 500 men will have signed up at. that time, Howard Nack, '59BAd., Interfraternity Council rushing chairman said. Anyone may rush today who has' not yet signed up. However, Nack added, one cannot pledge unless he has signed up. Men may sign up from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. at the l