wer Your Subscription oday NO 2-32 :..- -AIF- FREE itr ga ~Iat FREE EDITION EDITION Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom -R m'A 1 0- TWELVE PA G VOL LXIX No. 3 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TRSDAY, SLr vwzi1'"35 _ '# Auto Union, Ford Sign ontract Following Nation -Wide Strik qww t, -Daily-David Arnold, PHARMACOLOGY DEMOLITION-The Pharmacology Building on central campus is the second structure to be razed in that area Jn the last six months. The Romance Languages Building, also constructed of grey brick, was demolished last spring. :Century-Old Pharmacology Building Being Torn Down Razing of the 102-year-old Pharmacology Building on central campus is nQw under way. "For the time being just lawn" is planned for the vacated area,, according to Walter M. Roth, superintendent of plant for the Univer- sity Plant Departmenit. Demolition of the structure is expected to be completed by mid-Oct6ber. The pharmacology department has moved into new facilities in the recently opened Medical Science Bldg. adjacent to University Hospital. The economics wing of the structure being razed will be preserved. The three-story grey brick Pharmacology Building has in, University Prof. Dies Ofcoronary' Prof. Newton' S. Bement of the Romance Languages department,t died yesterday in front of Water-1 man Gymnasium among a gr'oup1 of students waiting to register for3 the fall semester. Carrying registration materials, the 62 year old professor collapsed from a coronary attack. He was pronounced 'dead on arrival at the University Medical Center at 8:20 a.m. Born on April 27, 1896, in Web- berville, Prof. Bement had been on the University faculty for the past 38 years. First serving as an instructor of French, he was promoted to an assistant professorship in 1937. He was appointed an. associate pro- fessor in 1949 and in 1956' was awarded a full professorship. He had previously been a stu- dent at the University' receiving his bachelor of arts degree in 1917, his masters degree in 1922 and his doctorate in philosophy in 1922. Prof. Charles N. Staubach, chair- man of the Romance Language department called Prof. Bement "one of the most useful members. of the departmental staff." Army Shows Missile Cone DETROIT (P) - The United States Army yesterday took the wraps off a Jupiter Missile nose cone the size of an automobile, scarred by a 1,500-mile flight through air and space last May. Lt. Gen. Arthur G. Trudeau, Chief of the Army's Research and Development, said the cone showed it could protect not only a delicate, nuclear warhead, but payloads of many types. FOR CENTRAL DEVELOPMENT: Russell Urges New Education Board I Creation of a central develop- ment agency for higher education' in Michigan was urged in July by John Dale Russell. The director of the higher edu- cation study committee of the Michigan Legislature proposed that the agency play a major policy role in the developimeht of higher education.> Russell also suggested: 1) Transfer of supervision and a "UR Ok's Tr ueTeam UNITED NATIONS (9')-United' Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold was reported to- night to have the consent of the United Arab Republic, Lebanon and Jordan to set up UN Peace Representatives in their countries. Details of the plan for peace in the Mideast were not known but informed sources said it would call for establishment of what has been termed a UN presence in each of the countries. One source said the UAR seg- ment ofsthegroup would be sta- tionedin Syria, and definitely not 'in Egypt.r United Nations officials declined commenton the report. Lebanon's Foreign Minister Charles Malik, who is the new UN General As- sembly President, said he had not had a chance to discuss the situa- tion with Hammarskjold since the UN chief returned from his Mid- east peace mission. Hammarskjold plans to report to the Assembly on his plan be- fore Sept. 30. The Secretary-General's associ- ates said the idea of establishing UN peace representatives in Leb- anon, Jordan and the UAR was at the foundation of the plan he took to the Middle East with him .recently. I Sen. Lodge Asks Detais Of Car Use LANSING (P)-A state senato persisting in criticism of use state cars by three Supreme CoW Justices, vowed today to ask thei individually to justify assignmex of the vehicles. Senator L. Harvey Lodge (F Drayton Plains), heading a legig .tive committee search for gover mental waste, said he also wou informally query Chief Justic John R. bethmers, the court's ac ministrative head. --recent years been the site of nar- cotics research. The 165 monkeys which were used as subjects in this research have been moved to the new quarters, Originally built in 1865 at a cost of $4,500, the structure was the first building on an American cam- pus to be devoted solely to use as a chemical laboratory. N , r accreditation of state high schbols from the University to the State Board of Education and State De- partment of Public Itistruction. Elect Presiding Officer 2) Electing a presiding officer for the governing bodies of the University, Wayne State Univer- sity and Michigan State Univer- sity. Under the present set-up, the presidents of the three schools serve as presiding officers. 3) Akppointment of the Univer- sity's and other governing bodies by the governor. Russell said that election of board members is not causing any particular difficulty. But election of governing board members on a partisan basis may leave out well-qualified people who are not connected with a political party, Russell noted, The report'-suggested that the Legislature take immediate steps to establish a central development' agency. Collect Data The proposed board would: 1) -.Collect, analyze and report data concerning programs, facil- Group Plans. S e r lo OfSchools By The Associated Press Six citizens of Little Rock formed a corporation yesterday to operate private schools-an apparent fol- lowup to Governor Orval E. Fau- bus' plans to make private institu- tions'ofrthe city's four high schools. Three more schools in Virginia faced apparent closing on orders of federal judges favoring inte- gration. One school already has been closed because of a state law against integration. Still another Virginia school area-this one at Norfolk-faced the integration question yesterday. United States District Court Judge Walter E. Hoffman called a special session to consider a request by the Norfolk School Board to knock out a state injunction against local assignment of pupils. The "Little Rock Private School Corp." became a business when a circuit judge signed corporation papers. Gov. Faubus, who ordered the schools closed to prevent forced integration, had no com- ment on the action. It could not be learned whether the group will move immediately to open private classrooms in Little Rock's high schools. However, ob- servers expect the corporation to wait until after a special referen- dum Sept. 27 before taking any action. ities, finances and operations of all the state-controlled institutions of higher education. 2) Take a firm hold on the. purse strings of state higher edu- cation. "The State fiscal authori-' ties and the Legislature should ex- pect to follow the advice of the coordinating agency in appropri- ating funds to the individual insti- tutions. If the full amount of the grand total requested cannot be provided, the Legislature shonuld divide the available funds accord- ing to a reconsidered recommenda- tion of the coordinating board," Russell said in his report.. , 3) Advise the Legislature and See RUSSELL, page 6 Quemoy Hi By Artille'ry TAIPEI, Formosa (M)-The Chi- nese Communists opened up on' Quemoy with heavy artillery and deep-penetration shells yesterday in what appeared to be a new attempt to smash Nationalist gun positions. Previous heavy shellings were aimed at blasting supply vessels coming ashore at Quemoy or at' Nationalist troops. By Nationalist count, the Reds dropped in 8,333 shells on the Na- tionalist offshore islands up to 6 p.m. The last 52-minute bombard- ment of more than 1,200 shells was aimed at Quemoy. Other targets were Little Quemoy and the Tan Islets. The Nationalist military infor- mation service said, meanwhile, that Tuesday's heavy bombard- ment of Quemoy killed 11 civilians and wounded 22 others, 9 seriously. The bombardment did not halt the Nationalists' trickle of supplies to Quemoy. Two LSTs (Landing Ship, Tank) unloaded cargo yes- terday and backed off the beach undamaged. Bargainers Term A reement Fair' Three-Year Settlement Includes Salary Raises, Increased Pensions DETROIT OP)-The United Auto Workers and the Ford Motor Co. agreed yesterday on a new three-year contract several hours after some 98,000 workers walked off their jobs in plants across the nation. Announcing the settlement, the bargainers said in a joint state- ment that the contract was "fair to workers, the company and the. American public." UAW President Walter Reuther said the union would get "atop the strike situation as quickly as we can" but explained that local problems would have to be settled' in certain plants before the walk- out is .ended completely. Boosts Pay Thenew Ford contract called for pay boosts, increased pensions, act severance pay, cost-of-living and improvement factor" allowances,. compensation for those on short work weeks and extended Sup- T oc ny plemental Unemployment Pay. Both sides agreed at a packed The United Auto Worker-Ford news conference that the new pact, agreement has, cleared the way for which will be ratifieddand signed further recovery from the nation's later, was a "sound economic depression according to Prof. Wil- package.""Atabrothecnmsd- The Ford settlement was expects hpam Haer of the economics de- ed to set a pattern for new con- "Brtetn tracts in the entire auto industry. "Both thecompany and the union should be congratulated on Appears at Sessions reaching this agreement," he said. Reuther told newsmen that he "It emphasizes the solid character would appear at bargaining ses- of an industrial relations system sions later this week but declified based on collective bargaining." to say whether he would join the talks with General Motors or "Darn Good", Chrysler. Prof. Russell A. Smith, of the As with Ford, Reuther said, "We economics department said that will not hesitate to set a strike the contract reflects "a darn, good deadline with the other members set of. negotiations - pretty fair of the big three auto companies" from both points of view. if it becomes necessary." "Basic wage increases provided 'In an atmosphere of cordiality by the contract do not seem ex- marked by hand-shaking, Reuther. cessive." and John S. Bugas, Ford vice- These increases include a ten- president and head of its bargain- cent hourly improvement for most ing team, agreed that .the new UAW workers this year. contract was "non-excessive' Management Gains Asked if it was also non-inflation- "E i nt ge r . t h cos ary, Reuther replied that it was "Evidently," Prof. Smith con- and Bugas said "practically." tinued," the contract fell within the enrd S C4S . 9. u nL&tUwi by theLL Pushes Query Lodge decided to push the query after State Controller James W. Miller testified he could see noth- .ing wrong with honoring a requesi- tion by Judge Dethmers for the three cars. Dethmers wrote Miller last Nov. 29 that he was authorized by court resolution to request cars for Jus- tices Eugene F. Black, John D. Voelker and Talbot Smith to use in performance of official duties. Asks for Details The senator asked for details concerning the specific use of the three cars. Miller said he didn't have any, and considered it sufficient to rely on certifications provided monthly' by the three justices and Dethmers to the effect they were put to, proper use. After some heated exchanges, Miller received Sen. Lodge's prom- ise to supply him with the sub- stance of a dozen or so complaints the Senator had alleged concerned improper use of state cars. Negro School Won't Admit Segregationist HOUSTON, Tex. (P)--Two mem- bers o~f the board of directors of Texas Southern University said today a white segregationist pastor should not be permitted to enroll Monitors Ask Court Support Against Hoffa WASHINGTON () - Monitors of the scandal-scarred Teamsters Union asked. the United States District Court yesterday to enforce their orders for a union house- cleaning. They also moved to block the plans of James R. Hoffa, union president, to hold a convention next February, get the present slate of officers re-elected and push the monitors out of the pic- ture.' In a petition filed with Federal Judge F. Dickinson Letts, it was contended that reforms inside the Teamsters Union haven't pro- gressed nearly far enough to dis- pense with the monitors. Redstone Combat Missile Hits Bull's-eye on Test' CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (P)-A powerful Redstone, the free world's only combat ready ballistic missile and reportedly the first to explode a nuclear warhead, blasted away today on another successful space test. s The Army announced it was the 33rd bulls eye scored by the 250-mile war weapon in two years. Only three Redstones have gone awry in that time. Used in Europe The shoot was part of the closeout phase of tests for the Army's workhorse medium range ballistic missile which already is deployed 'with NATO forces in Europe. It 'hos hn rentorte1 thattheh relih1e' UOpposes UN Talks Over Formosa, China UNITED NATIONS (A')-Secretary of State John Foster Dulles will tell the United Nations tomorrow the United States is opposed to United Nations consideration of the Formosa crisis as long as there is any chance of reaching agreement with Communist China in the, Warsaw talks. Informed sources disclosed this late today as the United Nation's powerful steering committee postponed for 24 hours debate on whether it should recommend assembly consideration of admission of Com- munist China. The committee approved a big list of issues, including Algeria, Cyprus, disarmament and control of outer space. Dulles will deliver I the general policy address of the tUnited States, to the 81-nation Eleven Visiting Specialists To Lecture at'U' This Year The campus will welcome eleven visiting professors and lecturers to-the University this fall. The classical studies department has two guests-Prof. Alfred Haefner of Waitburg College, who will teach a course in elementary Greek 1, and Prof. Thalia P. Howe of Brandeis University who has Classical Studies 121, Introduction to Greek Archaeology. The anthropology department will also have two visiting 'pro- fessors. Lectures in Anthropology 165, Physical Anthropology will be given this semester by Prof. Marshall Newman from the Smithsonian Institute. Prof. John B. Cornell of the University of Texas will lecture' for Anthropology 134, Peoples and Culture of Soviet Asia and An- thropology 197, Field Methods in Ethnography acid will teach An- thropology 293, Peoples and Culture of Japan. Visiting professors in the German department are Prof. Puchwein of the University of Graz, Austria, who will have classes in German 11, German 31 and German W165, Intermediate Composition and Conver- sation and Prof. William H. Bennett of the University'of Notre Dame, to teach a section in German 31 and German 211, Gothic and German 213, Introduction to Middle High German. ieciaVU1 LiVIUU Ueuii iii VAe iU 'a u~cu Redstone was the msile na urau two nuclear warheads high above the Pacific during the summer series of atomic tests near 'John- son Island. The Redstone tests, part of the Atomic Energy Commission's "Pro- ject Hardtack," resulted in violent nuclear explosions about 50 miles above the ocean and were con- sidered highly successful. Fires on Time The 63-foot Redstone shot sky- ward at 1 p.m. from a backblast of orange flame and smoke. One of Redstone's reliability characteris- tics includes launching at the ap- pointed time, the Army said. The huge rocket twisted toward the southeast after a brief vertical climb and disappeared in about two minutes when engine burnout occurred. At that point is started the bal- listic phase of its flight through space.' Pushes Satellites 'T'his is the missile that Dnovided l l r E . ITWT 1 1'I& T I World News Roundup j By The Associated Press N NEWPORT, R. I.-The White House denied anew yesterday that Sherman Adams has resigned, and Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said he knows of no plans for the top presidential aide either to quit or be fired. These new denials came amid a growing Adams-must-go clamor from many Republicans along with published reports that a resignation is imminent. The New York Times reported a decision on Adams' status was imminent. * * * -* LITTLE ROCK, Ark.-Governor Orval E. Faubus discussed the Little Rock integration crisis in a televised speech last night. * *' *'$ PROVIDENCE, R. I.-Governor Dennis J. Roberts won renomi- nation last night in a bitter Democratic primary in which he trounced Lieutenant Governor Armand H. Cote. He will be seeking his fifth term. Cote conceded defeat late last night. viet Foreign Minister Andrei Gro- myko will speak in the afternoon. In Tokyo, Red China's official mouthpiece today rejected the idea of a cease-fire in Formosa Strait while American and Red Chinese ambassadors confer in Warsaw on the crisis.. The rejection came in an article in. the Peiping People's 'Daily, signed by "Observer," frequently a pen name in communist countries of a red bigwig. The article was broadcast by the Peiping radio. Truce, Talks Will Continue company in non-econoipic areas Management appears to have got. ten some tightening of contrac1 provisions." Prof. Smith serves as the co- director of the University's and Wayne State University's Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations Last week he was one of threi persons named by Michigan's Gov- ernor G. Mennen Williams t observe the negotiations in casi a deadlock was reached. Prof. Haber said the contrac indicates retirement plans, layoff4 and technological changes "nor occupy an exceedingly high pri- ority in the minds of wage-earn ers." Union-Ford Pact Hailed By Williams DETROIT W) - Governor C Mennen Williams yesterday hail ed the new Ford - United Aut Workers contract agreement. a indication that "Michigan is go ing back to work." Michigan, he said, now wi "lead the nation back to pros perity." "There will probably be som hard bargaining at Chrysler an General Motors before .everythin is settled," he said. "But the For settlement undoubtedly means tha Michigan is going back to work." At the 'same time, he said - would retain his special four-ma