PUBLIC APATHY IN ATOM BANO 1Mwr Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom :4Iaittjj CLOUDY, THUNDERSHOWERS 9 See Page 4 VOL. LXIX, No.19 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8,1958 FIVE CENTS SIX PAG Pope Pius's Health Weakens CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy (M) -The condition of Pope Pius XII grew worse last night. The 82-year-old head of the Roman Catholic Church, had rallied earlier from a coma and partial paralysis that attended a stroke Monday, but other symp- toms recurred. Then late last night a Vatican official said flatly the Pontiff's condition had taken -a turn for the worse. Pressed to elaborate on the degree of worsening, he replied only: "I stick by what I said." Worse Condition A doctor close to. the situation said the Pope was in worse condi- tion than a medical bulletin issued at 6 p.m. had indicated. This source said the Pontiff actually was still afflicted with partial paralysis that affected his upper body, face and speech. There also were signs that the Pope possibly was delirious. Monsignor Angelo Dell 'Acqua, Substitute Secretary of State, visited the bedside and isaid the Pope had asked "why the audi- ences had been suspended." No Audiences The secretary indicated that he had to insist to the Pope that audiences were for the time being TO REPLACE BURTON: Ike Announces Stewart To Take Court Position WASHINGTON (T) -- Judge' picked by President Dwight D. Eisen Harold H. Burton on the Supreme Judge .Stewart, 43 years old; : Court of Appeals. He is a Republic, The selection of Judge Stewart at a White House news conference Justice Burton is retiring froir on the advice of his physiciarn.] Liit System Thrown Out B French { PARIS (kP) - Premier Charles de Gaulle's government yesterday adopted for France an electoral system like that of the United States and set dates for two elec- tions. The old party list system was junked. A National Assembly for the Fifth Republic will be chosen.Nov. 23, with runoffs Nov. 30 in, dis- tricts where no candidate gets an absolute majority on the first bal- lot. Under the new constitutionpro- claimed Sunday the Fourth Re- puilic's Senate, or Council of the Republic, refrains on for the time being as the Senate of the Fifth Republic. The election of France's first. strong-executive president, to be handled by an electoral college of perhaps 100,000 persons including members of Parliament, was set for Dec. 14. A second ballot, if necessary, 'will be held Dec. 21. It is virtually certain that Pre- mier de Gaulle will be a candi- date. It is almost equally certain that he will be elected on the first ballot, when an absolute majority will be required. A plurality suf- fices on the second round. In its first major decision since the Fifth Republic was pro- claimed, Premier de Gaulle's cab-. inet reverted to the single-seat constituency system used under the Third Republic. Auto Workers Boo Bagwell At Strike Plant Detroit (a) - Paul D. Bagwell was booed yesterday when he car- ried his Republican campaign for Governor to a strikebound auto plant. Bagwell, -rival of the Democrat- ic incumbent Gov. G. Mennen Williams, drove in his station wa- gon to the East Jefferson Avenue plant of Chrysler Corp.. Aides said the plan was to meet workers on their change of shift but instead 300, strife pickets of the United Auto *Workers were encountered. A number of pickets ran toward Bagwell's car, calling out boos. A sound truck broke off playing the union's "Solidarity Forever" song and made noises in place of it. After a short time Bagwell' drove away. Later he joked about it, saying: "This is the first time I've been booed en masse." Health Service To Give Shots Potter Stewart of Cincinnati was nhower yesterday to succeed Justice Court. is now a judge of the .6th Circuit can... for the high court was announced which Judge Stewart attended., n the Supreme Court next Monday President Eisenhower. gave Judge Stewart.a recess appointment which permits him to begin serv- ing onAhe Supreme Court immedi- ately on Justice Burton's retire- ment. A formal nomination, sub- ject to Senate confirmation, will go to congress when it reconvenes in January. The 6th Circuit Court of Ap- peals on which Judge Stewart has been serving Chas jurisdiction in Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee. -* Judge Stewart, a handsome man whose black hair is graying slight- ly at the temples, told newsmen his selection by President Eisen- however took him by surprise. In -response to questions, Judge Stewart said he was telephoned in Cincinnati Monday afternoon by Attorney General William Rogers who: asked if he could come im- mediately to Washington, Judge Stewart replied he could if it was important, and Rogers told him it was. The Judge said Rogers gave him no clue to the reason for the trip. At the time Judge Stewart left. Cincinnati early Monday evening the Burtbn retirement had not, been announced. Alcorn Says Democrats Use Appeasement WASHINGTON (') - Meade Alcorn, Republican National. Chairman, yesterday accused the Democrats of following a policy of appeasement in the Formosa crisis. Alcorn made the charge in commenting on aanew campaign pamphlet issued by the GOP com- mittee discussing the basic phil-, osophies of the two parties. It hit particularly at the Democrats on, foreign policy, saying during Dem- ocratic administrations "World Communism has made its greatest gains." "Democrats, who are quick and loud to criticize the conduct of foreign affairs by! others," the pamphlet said, "seek to cover up their own tragic mistakes and blunders. "Besides involvement in three, wars, they agreed to some of the biggest giveaway deals in history at foreign conference tables." impossible. The Pope has received millions of people in audience during his 19-year reign. Another indication that the Pontiff's condition had become more grave was the announcement that the Vatican press office planned to remain open through- out the night. A slight deterioration had been reported in the Pope's condition earlier in the evening. Urinary Difficulty Vatican sources said members of the Papal household disclosed the return of a urinary difficulty. His physicians had reported it cleared up this morning. i Other indications of deteriora- tion were a quickened pulse-a beat of 102 per minute - and a slight fever at a temperature of 99.5 degrees. Normal body tem- perature is about 98.6. The ,Pope's condition improved markedly during the day. Reserved Optimism There was reserved optimism over the rally shown by the 82- year-old Pontiff. The Tuesday morning medical bulletin said he had come out of the coma, thrown off the paralysis and taken some nourishment. The Tuesday evening medical bulletin said his general condition remained satisfactory but it re- ported the high 'pulse and fever. Doctors said a kidney block.had been overcome. This urinary con- dition set in Monday night, and a urologist was summoned to help relieve it. , Staf f Post By Persons. WASHINGTON (I)-Gen. Wil- ton B. (Jerry) Persons took over yesterday as President Dwight D. Eisenhower's No. 1 assistant. Sherman Adams, who resigned the top White House staff job under fire, is staying around for a while to help out. Adams solemnly looked on from the back of the room as Attorney General William Rogers adminis- tered the oath of office to the lean, . 62-year-old retired major general. And Adams didn't stick around to join thk line of well- wishers congratulating Gen. Per- sons after the ceremony. President Eisenhower was at the front of the White House confer- ence room beside Gen. Persons. After Rogers administered the oatl, President Eisenhower hand- ed Gen. Persons his commission, smiled and said: "Well Jerry, here is a new di- ploma. This is one of the many capacities in which we have been together." Gen. Persons, a long-time close associate and personal friend of President Eisenhower, served with him in the army. A member of the White House staff since President Eisenhower took office in 1953, he has been Deputy Assistant to the President. - The White House said Adams will stay on until there has been an orderly transition. Press Secre- tary James C. Hagerty said be did not know how long that would be. Adams resigned the $22,500-a- year role of right-hand man to the President on Sept. 22 after there was no letup of the con- tinuing criticism of his relations with Boston industrialist Bernard Goldfine, the gift-giving million- aire.* SGC Places Study Book OntA genda To Discuss Athletic Board, 'U' Relations Student course evaluation and communication between the Uni- versity and*- its intercollegiate athletics board will be discussed at tonight's Student Government Council meeting, according to SGC Executive Vice-President Dan Belin '59. Chairman Ron Gregg, 60, of the council's Education and Student welfare Committee wfifl report on progress in plans for a booklet. giving course information not available in literary school cata- logs, Belin said. Belin- will introduce a motion calling for a committee to study advantages and disadvantages of various methods of choosing stu- dent- members of the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics, he continued. He pointed out that with athletics becoming more .and more important such a' study could benefit both the athletic department and the Uni- versity as a whole. No action can be taken on the status of. Sigma Kappa for two weeks, Belin said, until the Board in Review of SGC meets and re- considers the decision finding the group still in violation.'Of course if the decision "is reversed no fur- ther action would be necessary, he said. Plans for the Nov. 11 and 12 council elections will be presented by 'Elections Director Richard Erbe, '61, and a recommendation concerning adjustment of library hours will be heard. Discussion on filling the vacant ,seat of the council now as opposed to. waiting for,. the election. five meetings away is scheduled, Belin said. UAW Gives CanelNotie ,DETROIT,(AW)-- The United Auto Workers served 10-day con- tract cancellation notice yesterday on' American Motors Corp. as the two resumed wage talks recessed almost four months ago. The UAW has wrapped up over- ,Streak Excite, Across Nationa. Quemoy; list Guns ". Says Truce Will Cause Pressures WASHINGTON (M)-The new Commander of Allied Forces in South Europe said yesterday he expects renewed Communist pres- sure in the Middle East if the cease-fire continues in Formosa Strait. Vice Adm. Charles R. Brown, Commander of the United States 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean the past 26 months, made the predic- tion at a National Press Club luncheon. He said United States military leaders were not surprised at the eruption of Communist violence in the Far East last Aug. 23 after tension began to ease in the Mid- ^dle East. "When trouble quiets down in the Far East," .Adr. Brown said, "it is very liable to break out again in the Middle East." The Admiral said he does not think an atomic war ever will come except as some "last wild act of despair by a desperate, tot- tering dictatorship." But, he add- ed, the free world must be ready to strike back. Meanwhile, Adm. Brown said, the Communists will stir up trouble which could lead to limited non-nuclear warfare. Adm. Brown said the 6th Fleet is being maintained'in a state of constant readiness to meet what- ever threat may develop. He pre- dicted it would remain in Medi- terranean waters for a long time to "encourage our friends and dissuade our enemies." Adm. Brown said the fast-mov- ing 6th Fleet would be no sitting duck in the face of an- atomic attack. He said it is probably one of the least vulnerable targets in the world today. 'Chinese Warn U.S. TOKYO (da) - Red China said today an absence of American intrusions into its 12-mile ter- ritorial waters and air space yes- terday was worthy of notice. Radio Peiping, however, broad- cast a 24th so-called serious warn- ing to the United States, charging that seven American warships in- vaded China's territorial waters in the Amoy area, and United States planes flew 26 sorties be- tween 6 p.m. Oct. .6-first day of the ceasefire-and 6 a.m. Oct. 7. The warning with the worthy of notice broadcast came more than four hours later than usual. Any enemy aircraft seeking out the fleet for an atomic attack "is going to have to run a terrible gauntlet to find and get at the particular ship he really wants," Adm. Brown said. ALGERIAN QUESTION-Prof. Henry Bretton of the political science department and Jean Carduner of the French department contemplate the implications of the new French constitution before speaking at a meeting of the Political Issues Club held last night in the Union.. Vi e Algera As threat To Stability in Frant'e'. By BARTON HUTHWAITE Algeria was viewed as the major threat to the success of the recently approved French Constitution at a meeting of the Political Issues Club last night. "As.long as the Algerian problem is not solved, the French political scene will continue to be unstable," Jean Carduner of the French department emphasized. 'Wait and See' Carduner, a French citizen urged a policy of "wait and see" in reference to the new constitution. "Do not hope that it is a miracle for France . . . we shouldn't be blinded by the overwhelming , vote," he said. h uA Prof. Roy Pierce of the political busepProbe scienxce department warned that ,-, after the passing of de Gaulle, . the new strength of the constitu-B ri sS t tion might "wither away." "We would probably see a reversion to ' old constitutional habits," he said. Investigation A Tunisian student, Ahmed Bel Khodja, Grad., commented that - neither de Gaulle or the new con- COLDWATER, Mich. (M) - They stitution is the solution for Al- chairman of a legislative investi- geria. gating committee y e s t e r d a y 'Empire Dying' angrily asserted that a patient at- "France cannot believe that Coldwater State Home and Train- their empire is dying," he said. ing School had been 'injured criti- Khodja' urged "liberation" of all cally in a brutal beating. countries under foreign powers in Rep. Harry J. Phillips (R-Port Africa, including Algeria, as the Huron) said two days of investi- only reasonable solution. gation has failed to identify the Prof, Henry Bretton of the po- assailant of Joseph Kibiloski of litical/ science department called Bronson. this concept of nationalism an "We have established that this "old adage which saw freedom man was dragged up. and down and independence as being iden- the stairs," said Rep. Phillips, who tical." heads a house committee that is "Freedom requires some con- checking into Michigan's mental cessions and compromises," he hospital system. added. , "His feet were swollen to twice Khodja countered this by saying their normal size, he has a broken it is a "plain fact" that Algeria rib, he is unconscious and has will be independent "some day." black and blue spots on his feet, "It is the only Arab state not legs, arm's and hands," he said. independent today . . . and de Charles F. Wagg, State Mental Gaulle realizes this," he added. H h w ,f Health Dire VYJt hohiAJdL t~ ommunist ChineRse I I ljlk I Ao""v -0 Ah I w all, national agreements General Motors,. Ford and ler, except for the latter's ized office workers. - Jet with Chrys- union- But labor unrest was evident over. a far greater portion of the automotive industry than Ameri- can Motors' 18,000 employes and Chrysler's 8,000-plus office work- ers. General Motors, which reached its UAW national settlement last Thursday, had gotten back only about 11,000 of its 275,000. The rest are UAW employes staying out over local-level grievances. Only seven of GM's 126 plants were operating or ready to oper- ate. The Rochester Products Plant at Rochester, N.Y., employing 2,100 men settled yesterday.' A GM spokesman reported agreement reached on an over-all national pact with the Interna- tional Union of Electrical Work- ers yesterday, but IUE negotiators denied it. The IUE represents em- ployes in six GM plants and went on strike simultaneously with the UAW 12 hours before the latter won a new contract. ,r a First shots SineStart Of Truce Jets Cross Island Twice; Race Home Without Attacking TAIPEI, Formosa (M - Com- munist planes swooped over Que- moy and touched off a hail of Nationalist antiaircraft fire yes- terday, straining the Red-pro- claimed cease-fire in Formosa Strait. The Nationalist firing was the first since Red China proclaimed a week-long halt in its artillery pounding of the offshore island effective early Monday. No further clashes were reported, and the Nationalists took advantage of the truce to push in more supplies by air and sea. Eight planes in'three formations approached Quemoy at 4:25 p.m., the Nationalist Defense Ministry said. They streaked over the island, then raced for the mainland with antiaircraft shells bursting around them and machine gun tracers probing the sky. The Red planes made two passes through a high overcast but did not open fire. Maj. Gen. I Fu-En, Nationalist Air Force Intelligemce Chief, said both jets and propeller planes may have been involved. This raised speculation the slower propelled craft may have taken photographs while MIG fighters provided cover, The Red flights did not neces- sarily violate the truce pledge. Peiping's original announcement said only that artillery shelling of Quemoy would be suspended for seven days. One condition, how- ever, was that the United States cease convoying Nationalist sup- ply ships -to Quemoy. Air drops were carried 'out at Quemoy Monday night and twice yesterday: Six Nationalist cargo planes landed in quick succession yesterday evening. Part: of -the United States escorted sea convoy that appeared three miles off Que- moy on Monday unloaded the rest of its equipment. Kramer reported from Quemoy that no supplies came :in from the sea yesterday,. The Communists also were re- ported busy. Gov. Almond Not 1Charged By NAACP RICHMOND, Va. (A') -- TlEl National Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People de- cided yesterday not to name Gov. J. Lindsay Almond Jr. in an action to reopen Norfolk's six integration- closed schools. This was the key announcement in a day of strategy planning on Virginia's far-flung school integra- tion front which also saw these developments: 1) The Norfolk City Council-re- vealed plans for a referendum to determine the sentiment oan whethernschools should be re opened on a segregated or an inte- grated basis. 2) Virginia's Attorney General conferred with legal advisors on how to meet the \challenge of an NAACP petition to be heard in Federal District Court in Harr- sonburg today. Th6 petition asks Federal Judge John Paul to reopen integration-closed schools in Front Royal and Charlottesville. 3) Gov. Almond conferred with a Negro minister on the proposal that a biracial commission be set up to discuss the school problem. In Norfolk, where 10,000 pupils remained locked out of six second- SAN WALL RED: anas ra-paint'Undergraduate 'Lrary By BRUCE COLE During the Labor Day Weekend, red and green ink was splashed on several marble blocks, and broken glass was found at the main entrance of the Undergraduate Library, Mrs. Roberta C. Keniston, head librarian, said. She did not feel the job was done by University students as a ..- very minimum were on campus. Yesterday, a four-inch wide line of red paint was found painted across the length of the side entrance of the library. No Student Hostility "Although we do not know who could have done the painting, I have not detected any hostility on the part of the students to the library," Mrs. Keniston said. nein nc ior wn nurrieu Lo the Coldwater institution- on learning of the incident, said there was no evidence the patient had been abused or manhandled. He said it was possible he had fallen down a flight of stairs. Wagg acknowledged the man's condition "is not good." Attendants were unable to question Kibiloski who was com- mitted to the mental institution last Friday. His injuries appar- ently occurred on the weekend; Rep. Phil-lips said. Meeting Slated A meeting for all University