A LETTER TO DULLES Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom, 4hr :43 a t t, -%-Abmm 4E2 See Page 4 CLOUDY, WARMER oN SIX PAGE ,': , a Be Gaulle Asks End of Rebellion - Piromises Algeria More Schools; Proposes Five-Year Plan for Aid COSTANTINE, Algeria (P)-Premier Charles de Gaulle called on Algerian rebels yesterday to lay down their arms. e promised Algeria's troubled Moslems more land, more schools, more jobs. In a speech before at least 50,000 cheering Moslems and French- men, the French premier proposed a new five-year plan that calls for a vast outpouring of French wealth into the revolt-torn North African territory. No Independence But he said clearly there -was going to be no independence for Algeria. At the same time, he told rebellious French colonists in Algeria there would be no integra- tion of Algeria into France under Eis i o a system they have long hoped isenhower would preserve their dominant position there. 'DI " ' No precise words were used' to P-anS Active spell out these stern announce- ments, but at the same time the * " Premier demanded that people stop getting tangled up in their gown words and look to the reali- sties. WASHINGTON () -President "No matter what," he said, "be- Dwight D. Eisenhower i planning cause it is in the nature of things, to take a very active and very ag-Algeria will be constructed on a gressive part in the political cam- double base-its personality and paign now warming up. its close solidarity with Metropoli- In fact, Republican National tan France." Chairman, Meade Alcorn told Urges Rebels newsmen today, it is "a very fair He urged the rebels to become conclusion" that President Eisen- his partners in progress: sower is putting more leadership "Stop these absurd battles and Into this year's campaign than in yu will promptly see hope reborn any other political effort. throughout the lands of Algeria. President Eisenhower, who en- You will see prisons empty, you tered Walter Reed Army Hospital will see a future open big enough yesterday for his annual physical for everybody, and particularly for checkup, already has scheduled yourselves." one Western speaking, tour and the Premier de Gaulle deliberately Whte Huser h saidg thr am thchose this eastern Algerian city to White House has said ter cam- announce his five-year program of paign activities are being worked announphisi areporm of incud miceconomic and political reform de- These may one or signed to end a rebellion that has nationwide radio-television broad- bloodied this North African terri-, casts betwen now and the Nov. 4 tory for nearly four years. election. Here in this city, where the Thechefexeutve, apaenlynearby hills now swarm with The chief executive,, apparently rebes, he first proclaimed his belief confident of getting a favorable in equal right for the Arabs and report from his doctors, is now Berbers Algeria in the winter scheduled to start campaigning in of 1943. earnest the week after next. On Oct. 12 egoes to New Yor f City to take part in Columbus DayU ceremonies, On Oct. 14 he will be Aguest at a birthday breakfastin+ honor of his 68th anniversary at Wants No New a Washington hotel. Then on Friday, Oct..17, he and 4Test Talks Malme Eisenhower leave on a trip - that will take them to Cedar Rapids, Iowa,,Abilene, Kan., Den- WASHINGTON (A') -- The ver Cs Angeles, San Francisco United States indirectly told Rus- and Chicago. sia it is not interested in raising Alcorn, after conferring with to the foreign minister level a President Eisenhower yesterday, planned meeting to work out a told newsmen no limit has been safeguarded nuclear weapons test placed on his campaigning. ban. But the way was left open for " " such a get-together later, provid- Briish Woman ed some progress is made at am bassadoral talks scheduled for Shot on Street Oct. 1 at Geneva. 4 eOfficially the State Department TJEastwas not commenting on the Soviet In E ast Cyprus proposal1of two days ago to ele- vate this meeting to the foreign NICOSIA, Cyprus (')-A British minister's level. The department woman, mother of five, was shot said the matter is under: study. dead by gunmen today on a Fama- But the department disclosed gusta street. Secretary of State John Foster Her 18-year-old daughter saw Dulles plans to attend a Nov. 10 her die. Another Englishwoman meeting at Seattle, Wash., of the was wounded seriously in the bold Colombo plan nations which co- attack in a fashionable shopping operate on economic development center. in Southeast Asia. Authorities said the women had The clear implication was that just left the dress shop when the the answer to the Soviet proposal Igunmenyotsdesdnjas -passed the, turned and opened was no. The Geneva talks are cer- fine..tain to continue for some time, Terror swept the East Coast and Secretary Dulles obviously town as the gunmen fled. Th could not be in both Geneva and towas tmhe gnraw menfmdh ey ofSeattle at the same time. Michigan Oppose oiverineS Seek ~MSU pset AUTO STRIKE: - Local Disputes Halt GMProduction Plns DETROIT (AP) - Hoping for change by Monday, General Motors yesterday approached the weekend with its massive array of car-making plants paralyzed by, the backwash of a 12-hour na- tional strike. Local disputes kept 126 plants in 71 United States cities shut down despite a new three-year master contract agreed upon Thursday night by GM and the United Auto Workers. The UAW's 250,000 GM employes Gov. Faubus Defies Court, On Schools LITTLE ROCK (M---Gov. Orval E. Faubus bluntly defied the power of the United States Supreme Court to compel him to integrate Little Rock high schools, saying yesterday, "I will never open the public schools as integrated insti- tutions", The spectre of Federal troops again being used in Little Rock also came into his comments at a news conference. Reporters asked what would happen if the high schools are. reopened-in defiance of federal court orders-on a private, segre- gated basis. He replied: "The only recourse the Federal government would have would be to send inMarshals and the army to forcibly eject teachers and stu- dents." Gov. Faubus issued a prepared statement on his position yester- day in the narrowing battle with the Federal government overthe schools. He said he would assist the Little Royk Private School Corporation in obtaining money and other facilities for a privately- operated school system. Police Thwart Paint Attempt Early .yesterday morning the Ann Arbor Police stopped James Gerlach and David Robbins, two Michigan State University stu- dents, for making an improper turn. When the police looked in the car they discovered three cans of green paint. At first Gerlach said that they were from Michigan State but were merely here to visit friends, when further ques- tioned they could not think of the names of their friends. After questioning they admit- ted that they had come here to paint green "S's" on the streets and to paint the Lions green. walked off their'jobs when a strike deadline passed without an agree- ment. Settlement Reached Then, when a settlements was reached, they stayed out with the blessing of UAW President Walter Reuther to back up their local demands. GM said it hoped the trickle of workers going back to their jobs would start Monday, putting the world's largest manufacturing con- cern back in the race for produc- tion and sale of 1959 model cars. Local meetings of UAW and GM officials were to continue coast to coast over the weekend in efforts to iron out differences that have tied up since old contracts expired four months ago. Must Ratify To become effective, the national contract must be ratified by UAW locals by Oct. 20. Only one GM manufacturing plant remained in operation - a Delco-Remy battery plant in Ana- heim, Calif., where the 233 em- ployes are -non-union. In past national strikes in the auto industry, one to two weeks have been needed to clear away local disputes and put all plants back in operation. Ford Motor Co., which came to terms with the UAW two weeks ago after a seven-hour company- wide strike, only now is nearing full resumption of production. Plan Fails At Norfolk, RICHMOND, Va. (-) - The withering of a 'program designed to provide private class facilities for 10,000 integration-idled white pupils in Norfolk and the forecast of further court action next week marked Virginia's troubled school front yesterday. Amid these developments there was no further word from Gov. J. Lindsay Almond Jr. on what next moves he has in mind to try to reopen nine closed schools - six, at Norfolk, two at Charlottesville and Warren County High School at Front Royal, Va. The inability of the Tidewater Educational Foundation in Nor- folk to sign up a single public school teacher led to the suspen- sion of the operation which, the foundation claimed, had regis- tered 2,630 pupils.' James G. Martin IV, foundation president, called the attitude of the teachers "inscrutable." As a result of the lack of teachers he said the foundation would cease enrollment and return the tuition fees already paid. Only about $450 in $20 fees had actually been paid, he said. Raivary enewed AtEast Lansjng Flu To Keep Noskin Out of Action; Quarterback Duties Rest on Ptacek By CARL RISEMAN Associate Sports Editor Michigan faces its first Big Ten opponent of the 1958 season, arch-rival Michigan State, today in, the 51st renewal of one of foot- ball's traditional. classics. A capacity crowd of 76,000 is expected to be on hand at Spartan Stadium at kickoff time: 1:30 p.m. Both teams have each won a game against non-conference foes: The Wolverines were able to squeak by Southern California, 20-19, while the Spartans were downing California, 32-12. But to the prog- nosticators the comparison ends here. The Spartans, who are nationally Today; Victory BOB PTACEK STAN NOSKIN ... on the spot ... out of picture GOVERNMENT ORDER: Declassify Millions' OfMilitary Papers WASHINGTON (A)'-The secrecy label was lifted today from millions of military papers dating back to Jan. 1, 1946 and beyond. This was at the order of Secre- tary of Defense Neil McElroy and it drew praise from Chairman John E. Moss (D-Calif.) of a House subcommittee which has been working 'against unneeded secrecy in government. Some of the documents which now may be freely seen deal with things that happened before Amer- ica entered World War I in 1917. Goes Past 1946 The mass declassification order applies to almost all ;military docu- ments stamped Top Secret, Secret and Confidential before 1946. It is the culmination of 18 months of work by a group headed by retired Vice Adm. John M. Fans To ee Game on T V Football fans in six cities will view the Michigan-Michigan State game today on Pay-TV. However Ann Arbor is not one of these cities. Grandview Corp. which is tele- casting the game said that no one in Ann Arbor would sponsor the telecast and that they could not get any place to show the game. Hoskins.. Charles E. Wilson was Secretary of Defense when this attack against unneeded secrecy was started. . There are exemptions from the order, ftems which still must ,re- main secret include papers giving details of United Sta'tes and allied war plans and information on in- telligence and counter intelligence. Personnel Private Also, for reason of individual privacy, secrecy still must apply to. personnel and medical records 'of" those who have performed military service. Rep..Moss,In a letter to Secre- tary McElroy, expressed pleasure at the action "to.remove the obso- lete secrecy labels on countless documents, stored at great ex-, pense in government warehouses; out of reach of historians, scien- tists and the public." Accuses Air force However, in another action to- day, Rep. Moss accused the Air Force of violating the law by with- holding infoinationjfrom the gen- eral accountihg office on manage- ment of the Ballistic Missiles Pro- gram. The accounting office is an arm of Congress. It had complained that the information the Air Force was willing to give out "does not include specific data on the oper- ating conditions and management controls or a summary of the factual information on which the conclusions are based." ranked, are rated as a 13-point favorite at game time. Neither team was hurt by in- juries in last week's initial contest but the Wolverines suffered a severe setback when their number two quarterback and leading pass- er on the squad, Stan Noskin, was unable to make the trip with the rest of the 38-man traveling squad because of an attack of flu. The rest of the team is intact. MSU Big, Mobile Michigan State will have a big, mobile line. with its traditional shifty backfield. Sam Williams (218), State's' candidate for the Al)-American squad will start at left end. with Francis O'Brien (228) at left tackle. John Middle- ton (195) and Jim Chastain (214) will probably get the starting as- signments at left guard and center, respectively. Two mammoth linemen, Ellison Kelly (231) and Palmer Pyle (240) will start at right guard- and right tackle for MSU. Dick Barker (200) will start at right end. Small Backfield Back of this huge line State will have a comparatively small but speedy backfield. The Spar tan's backfield averages 177 lbs. as compared to the Wolverine's 200 pounds. All four backs, but especi- ally highly-touted halfbacks Dean Look (175) and Art Johnson (178) can fly. Fullback Bob Bercich has power. State's passing attack will be handled by quarterbacks Mike Panitch and Greg Montgomery. Williams, Barker and the half- backs will bethe leading receivers. Michigan will counter with an extremely hefty line with eft end Gary Prahst (222)", right guard Jerry Marciniak (236), right tackle Don Deskins (239) and 'left end Walter Johnson (214) looming as the largest of the Michigan line- men. Some Light Linemen Other Michigan starting linemen who are a bit on the lighter side are left guard Alex Callahan (195), center Jim Dickey (191), and left tackle. George Genyk (200). Michigan's backfield contrasts with Michigan State's because of its heftiness and power. The 'M' attack, which will be predomi- nantly centered on the single wing, is spearheaded by the running of giant fullback John Herrnstein See LOSS, page '6 Ike Enters. Walter Reed For Checkup WASHINGTON (A - A jaunty President Dwight D. Eisenhower, just 11 days from his 68th birth- day, went to Walter Reed Army Hospital yesterday for his annual ?hysical checkup. President Eisenhower announced Wednesday that he was going, explaining that he was telling about it in advance so reporters wouldn't think he was in a new health crisis. He looked fit to reporters as he shook hands briskly with Maj. Gen. Leonard D. Heaton, com- Red Chinese Jets Attack Supply Lines TAIPEI (PA) - A sudden attack" by four Comunist MIG17's on Chinese Nationalist supply planes off Quemoy heightened the dan- ger yesterday of the offshore is- land war entering a new, deadlier phase. One Nationalist C4. cargo plane was heavily damaged by the swooping Red Jets yesterday afternoon but mana g to la on Quemoy, the Defense Ministry said. Two crewmen were wounded, The' MIG attack dampened op- timism about the growing air and sea supply line to Quemoy. Su- cess in resupplying the artillery. blockaded island and the p'omise of bigger supply efforts soon had prompted American officials to predict publicly and privately yes- terday 'that Quemoy could hold out at the present level of supply runs, sea and air. But these predictions were based;on the Reds using only ar- tillery fire agairist the supply line and withholding their Air Force MIG attacks against supply planes and ships could bring re- newed Nationalist demands for American approval to bomb new- ly activated Communist jet bases on the mainland near Quemoy. The attack was apparently the closest Communist jets have penetrated to Quemoy since the second -day of the offshore war, Aug. 24, when eight MIG's strafed the island. Exact location of yes terday's attack, "south, southeast of Quemoy," was not given. Cotton Seeks Definite Stand On Quemloy WASHINGTON (JP)-Sen. Norris Cotton (R-N.H.) said yesterday "it is imperative that the Administra- tion declare quickly and with cry- tal clarity just what it will or will not do" about Quemoy island. He urged an early statement on whether United States troops will be used if the Chinese Communists attack the coastal islands. "For the past six years," Sen. Cotton said, "the Administratlon has done a good job of doing just what President Dwight D. Eisen- hower said it would-say in ad. vance of a crisis just where this country would fight. "That policy may not have changed, but it isn't clear to me and I therefore assume not clear to the rest -of the world what our firm intention is regarding these islands. "Naturally," Sen. Cotton added, "there is the element of face sav- ing of Chiang Kai-Shek, but face saving is of little moment If inde- cision and lack of clarity can lead to world war." National Round p By The Associated Press MONROVIA, Calif.-A huge brush'fire moved back up the canyons last night and the danger to foothills homes lifted. The blaze destroyed eight expensive homes at its height Thursday. Fire-fighters reported the situation considerably improved on the* lower front near inhabited areas. But the flames were going strong in the canyons. "We'll be fighting in here for another five days," said - William Dresser, supervisor of An- J ~geles National Forest.? The fire has burned 3,400 acres since it broke out Thursday after- 1 noon. Eoka, the Greek Cypriot under- ground fighting, British yrule on Cyprus. An official spokesman said both - imen were shot in the back. In the Greek Cypriot sector, frightened' townspeople rushed to their homes as British troops ar- rived to start a large-scale search for the killers. A curfew was clamped down on the whole town minutes after the shooting. Detroit Area Polio Outbreak Shows Letup DETROIT (M) - The polio out- break in the Detroit area appears to be easing off. Dr. Albert G. Molner, health officer for Detroit and Wayne County, said yesterdays report of AND THE BAND PLAYS ON: Students Give Team Sendoff in Rally Hundreds of students led by the cheerleaders and the Anderson House Band yesterday cheered Michigan's football .team off in a loud and spirited pep rally. About 2:30 p.m. the Anderson House Band formed at East Quad and marched through the Engine Arch and across the Diag drawing Wolverine fans with their spirited playing of the familiar rousing Michigan fight songs. With an ever growing crowd they marched across State Street and gathered in front of the Union. Teachers in Angell Hall who could not compete with the yelling and singing outside were forced to join the crowds in the street. Finally at about 3:00 p.m., with WASHINGTON - The Russians apparently have developed a more precise satellite - tracking system than that of the United States, a consultant to the Naval Research Laboratory said'yesterday. The scientist, Dr. Robert Jas- trow, also said the Soviets have so far declined to give out details. He told a symposium of labora- tory staff scientists his basis for believing the Russians have such a superior system is a report made by Soviet scientists at a recent meeting in Moscow which he at- tended. The Russians' report said in essence, he related, that they have been able to compute the orbit of Sputnik III to within 80 meters of error. That means, he said, that they would be able to tell the posi- a.