NASSER GIVES WEST A CHANCE See Page 4 Lwxt Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom :4Iuii4tl FAIR, COOLER VOL. LXMXNo. 28 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1958 FIVE CENTS SIX PAC Private High School To BegIn Monday Little Rock Corporation To Adnit 500 Students; NAACP Protests LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (P) - A private, all-white high school will open Monday for about 500 senior class students, the Little Rock Pri- vate School Corporation announced yesterday, The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People said immediately it would make a legal test of the segregated school.! Negro attorney Wylie Branton of Pine Bluff, Ark., called the formation of the school a subterfuge to evade previous court orders for integration and said "We will deal with it in due time in the proper manner." Seek Court Action., The court action will be sought at the federal level, he said. Dr. T. J. Raney, president of the private school corporation, made the announcement of the school opening and said the group would keep working for facilities for lower classmen. Chage Men With 600 Little Rock high school students transferred to B other schools in Arkansas and Ih B o mn inother states, and 500 seniors cared - for with the opening of the pri- vate school, 2,500 students will re- main without instruction. This in- cludes 700 Negroes. TAIPEI: Dulles, ATLANTA (P) - Five men were charged yesterday with the bomb- ing of Atlanta's Jewish temple under a law that could bring death sentences. The five, rounded up by police' and a large force of FBI agents, were indicted by a grand jury just five days after the Sunday dynamiting of the Temple. They were charged with destroying a house of worship. Named in the indictment were Wallace H. -Allen, 32; George Bright, 35, Kenneth Chester Grif- fin, 32, Robert A. Bowling, 25, and Richard Bowling. The latter two are brothers. Richard Bowl- ing has not been arrested. Luther King Corley, 26, who had' been held on a vagran'cy .harge during the investigation, was freed at an afternoon hearing. Attorneys for. the suspects at- tempted to gain release of all of the five in custody at the hearing. The lawyers charged the quick idictment smacked of an "under- handed" method. Judge Virlyn B. Moore of ,Fulton Sureme2Court set a hearing for October 22 at 10 a.m., to decide whether the suspects should be granted bail. The Fulton County Prosecutor, Paul Webb, announced he would oppope release of th'e men on bond., James Venable, one of the de- fense attorneys, told the Court that Police Chief Herbert Jenkins "has deliberately sworn a false- hood" in saying the men were be- ing held for bombing a building. Closed Seven Weeks Little Rock high schools havei been closed seven weeks beyond their normal . opening date be- cause of the integration crisis. Gov, Orval 'E Faubus closed them after the school board had delayed their opening to await a federal court action. Faubus' plan for private, seg- regated schools has been adopted by the. Little Rock Private School Corporation. Issue Pendnig The corporation o r i g i n a ll y wanted to lease the Little Rock school plants but a United States Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals order stopped that temporarily. That issue is still pending in the court.. The court moved ahead to open a school for seniors because of their need to prepare for college. The new school will be housed in a building that was originally a Methodist orphanage but more recently was owned by the Uni- versity of Arkansas.. Police .Reveal Bomb T hreats To Temples LITTLE ROCK, Ark. () - Po- lice revealed last night that bomb threats had been made against two downtown Jewish synagogues here. The threats were made late yes- terday. Officers searched the Temple B'nai Israel and the synagogue Agudath Achim but found noth- ing. However, squads of plain- clothesmen and uniformed police- men were posted at both build- ings. The threats were made in let- ters to .the Arkansas Democrat and Arkansas Gazette. Both news- papers turned the letters over to the authorities. Goldman Calls Clarification of By JUDY "To make it clear to both sides Government Council President May SGC Board in Review's decision l Kappa issue. At Thursday's meeting the Bo mittee composed of SGC members tors to attempt the reconsideratio brought forth, I don't see how the new committee can make a de- cision," Goldman said. Cannot Act He indicated that the adminis- tration - Council group could take no action as a body, and that reversal of'SGC's decision, which found Sigma Kappa in violation of University's regulations, would have to come from the Councilit- self or the Board in Review. Goldman envisioned the pro- posed meeting as a closed affair with only the 18 SGC members, Dean of Women Deborah Bacon, Dean of Men Walter B. Rea, and Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis, present. Assistant Dean of the Literary, College James H. Robertson, "said that he hoped that the joint dis- cussion could produce a resolu-, tion acceptable to both Council Chiang To Talk TAIPEI, Formosa (P) - Secre- tary of State John Foster Dulles will fly to Formosa Tuesday for talks with President Chiang Kai- Shek. The meeting is expected to clear up questions tending to portray the two allies at odds. The Na- tionalists, who issued the invita- tion, regard Sec. Dulles' trip as notice to Red China that there is no split in United States-Nation- alist policy for defense in the For- mosa area. Announcements in Taipei and Washington said Sec. Dulles will come here in accordance with the two nations' mutual defense treaty. This calls for periodic meetings of the foreign ministers. The Nationalists have worried about a possible change in United States policy ever since Sec. Dulles and President Dwight D. Eisen- hower criticized the size of Na- tionalist troop concentrations on Quemoy and Matsu, at Red China's doorstep. Sec. Dulles' coming is regarded in Taipei as for two purposes: To weld a solid front making clear to the Chinese Communists they are unable to crack United States- Nationalist solidarity, and to seek Nationalist agreement to some in- ducement that will get Red China to replace its present tentative cease-fire in the offshore islands with a more permanent agree- ment., Plan Raises In Defense HOT SPRINGS, Va.()-Deputy Secretary of Defense Donald A. Quares disclosed yesterday an other rise in defense spending is planned for fiscal 1960. The military budget boost will certainly be less than 10 per cent, he said, and perhaps within five per cent. A 10 per cent increase would mean a rise of about four billion dollars above this year's 40 billion dollar Pentagon spending level. A five per cent hike would be around two billion. Quarles and Asst. Secretary W. J. McNeil spoke to the Commerce Department's Business Advisory Council, made up of the heads of about 100 of the country's biggest corporations. The council's sessions are closed, .and Quarles and McNeil declined to divulge any dollar estimate -when questioned later. Quarles told reporters the Pen- tagon faces continuing pressures toward increased budgets over the next several years because of infa- tion, the rising cost of increasingly complicated weapons systems, and the press of Soviet competition. But he said the department hopes to avoid any drastic rise which would seriously affect the over-all federal budget. Joint Meeting Issues Effort DONER exactly what the issue is" Student nard Goldman, '59, interpreted the ast night to reconsider the Sigma ard in Review appointed a com- and three University administra- n. "Unless there is new evidence Wildcats, In Big T Rival Parties Back Cabinet In Lebanon BEIRUT () - Rival political factions closed ranks yesterday after five months of bloody strife and unanimously voted confi- dence in Lebanon's new coalition Cabinet. The 50-0 vote came in Parlia- ment after Premier Rashid Kar- ami, himself a rebel: against the government only last month, promised to maintain Lebanon as "an independent, sovereign Arab state." With his speech pledging paci- fication and unity, Karami won backing from followers of the man he had fought, Camille Chamoun, pro-Western former president. They held the balance of power in Parliament. National Rescue Calling his government one of national rescue, Karami said the government must remove misun- derstanding among citizens. "The citizen must feel that his ruler is unbiased, that his judge is impartial and that his govern- ment official is above suspicion," Karami said. "Our government renews its de- termination to preserve Lebanon's traditional policy and to defend its independence so that Lebanon will remain an independent sov- ereign Arab state." Guided by Charter His government, he said, will be guided by Lebanon's national charter. The charter of this half.. Christian, halt-Moslem nation promises balance among the re- ligious sects and pledges that Lebanon shall remain an Arab state - but a separate Arab state. Space Group To Ask Help Of Agencies CLEVELAND (P)-Dr. T. Keith Glennan, the nation's space ad- ministrator, said today that agen- cies' of the government will be asked to furnish services to his group "as required and directed by the President." He did not name the agencies and declined to say specifically whether it included the Army's Redstone arsenal in Huntsville, Ala., and the scientific team there headed by Dr. Wenher von Braun. The Army has indicated it will fight any attemept to transfer its missile and rocket scientific team to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the group leaded by Glennan. The former president of Case Institute - of Technology was in Cleveland for a visit to the Lewis Research Center, a key installation of NASA. The remarks were made at a news conference. -Glennan said NASA now was making surveys of its needs for the job to provide "leadership in the space age." WORDS OF WISDOM-Coach Bennie Oosterbaan briefs his squad on what is needed today to spill 'orthwestern from the ranks of the unbeaten. Michigan meets the Wildcats in Dyche Stadium at 1:30 p.m. in an effort to gain its first Big Ten win after a 12-12 tie with Michigan State. The Wol- verines are a slight favorite. Host Wolverine 'n Gridiron Batti SIMILAR TO GM: American Motors, UAW Agree on Three-Year Pact DETROIT (A') - American Motors Corp. and the United Auto Workers union yesterday agreed on a new three-year labor contract. It paralleled roughly agreements reached previously with Gen- eral Motors, Ford and Chrysler. These carry wage increases estimated to total 24 to 30 cents hourly over the three-year span.I Yesterday's settlement came approximately seven hours after AMC's 13,000 plus production workers left the job in Michigan and Wisconsin. The contract climaxed negotiations which. began at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday and went to 5:05 p.m. yesterday -except for occasional and usually brief recesses and " caucuses. Extend Benefits Supplemental unemployment benefits for laid-off workers was extended from 26 to 39 weeks. Except for 2,600 employees of the old Hudson Motor Car Co., workers on pensions were raised immediately from $2.25 per month for each year of service to $2.35. Yesterday's strike came as American issued glowing reports of both its auto and appliance business. The company said orders for 1959 model Ramblers up to Nov. 30 total 72,400 - almost double last year's figures. American operates three main plants. Its body plant has 5,364 employes at Milwaukee. The as- sembly plant at Kenosha, Wis., has 7,726 workers and another 1,700 are employed at the Kelvi- nator Appliance division in Grand Rapids. Making Headway America's labor troubles hit when the big three automakers appeared to be making good headway in returning to full pro- duction after shutdowns over con- tract disputes. The 2,000 unskilled workers at GM's Fleetwood plant in Detroit voted by a 2-1 margin yesterday against ratification of the new UAW national agreement with GM. Nick Cervelli, president' of Local 15, led the move against ratification. Chrysler got through the day with only one strike -a local one at one Detroit plan. The 150-man UAW Chrysler council voted yesterday to ap- prove the national settlement with Chrysler. The unior said the council approved the pact by "an overwhelming" show of hands. Seven Petition For Council Seven students have taken out petitions to run in the November Student Government Council 1 I UN Reporters Oppose shift, In Program UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (')- The United Nations Correspond- ents Association yesterday ex- pressed strong opposition to changes in the U.N. information program recommended by a com- mittee of experts. It acted after Secretary Gen- eral Dag Hammarskjold had taken issue with the findings of the six- nation committee issued earlier this week. A major recommendation of the expert committee called for a shift of emphasis from the dissemina- tion of information through mass media to "the selective approach of putlic relations." The correspondents called the recommendations dangerous. Cardinals In Vatican For Election VATICAN CITY (A)-All but a handful of the Cardinals who will elect a new Roman Catholic Pope were on hand in Rome last night.. As they gathered, Communists were 'attempting to cast popular suspicion on the forthcoming con- clave. The Communists appear to have been astonished at the vitality, of the catholic faith, underscored by tributes to Pope Pius XII This show of vigor seems to worry the world communist com- mand. The line European Com- munists will take-a cautious one -has been laid down openly by the Moscow Press. Izvestia, the Soviet government paper, charged today that Ameri- cans, French, Germans and Ital- ians would negotiate over the can- didate to be chosen, and that the American Cardinals were trying to organize the outcome. This propaganda is attempting to put over the idea that the choice of a new pontiff will be dictated by world political considerations, with the United States .xercising powerful pressure. Up to now, the Communist press of Europe has been circumspect in its treatment of the death of Pius XII. In predominantly Catholic countries, the Communist press had given almost an objective pic- ture of the events surrounding the pontiff's death. M Favored To Coniquer Unbeaten NI Strong Northwestern Off to Fastest Start Since 194$ Season By AL JONES Daily Sports Editor special to the Daily EVANSTON, Ill. -- Northwes ern's surprising football team w be the host here this afternoon Michigan takes the "big" steps in the bulk of its 1958 Big T schedule. ,The Wildcat outfit that Mic1b gan will face is without a dou the toughest in years. As oppos to last season's record of no wir the present NU aggregation. h gone through its first three gam without defeat. Second Conference Game Meanwhile, Michigan has ma ,aged only a single win, plus one i and one defeat. This actually isi the start of the Conference seas for either team, as Michigan has tie with Michigan State whi Northwestern has a victory ov Minnesota to its credit. However, at 1:30 Pm. todi when. the Wolverines 'Meet ti Wildcats here on the turf of Dyc Stadium, the Conference dock will open as far as 'M' coat Bennie Oosterbaan is conceme This game, and the remining,fie on the Michigan ,schedule are ;a Big Ten affairs, and it is over tl span that the present 'MI' qui will "make or break." Why NU Better? The most pertinent question day in the Wolverine camp is. what makes this Northweste team so much better than la year? There are a number of answei The most basic is a crop of sophomore- almost two-thirds Coach Ara Parseghian's varsi squad-that have provided h the team's starters and lmosta of the needed depth that is so i protant in Big Ten play. Regulars Demoted This yearling group is so mmu better than former NU crops, th there are four of last year's star ers that have had to take ba seats - on either the second- third-string units. It is obvious that Parseghia now in his third year here, is jii coming into his own. This is tJ first year, that all of the Wild See MICHIGAN, Page 6 r ; Rise in Rate Of Production Near -Weeks .HOT SPRINGS, Va. (P)-Secr tary of .Commerce Sinclair Wee: yesterday predicted the count will pass the 450 billion doll production rate before New Yea Day and will move on to set l production records in 1959.: Weeks gave reporters hise a praisal after a lengthy closed co ference with government econonm officials and the nearly 100 t corporation heads who compri the Commerce Department's Bu ness Advisory Council. Reporters were told that V great preponderance of /the i, dustrialists who took part In t round-robin discussion of busine prospects held the view that ti recovering economy will contin its upsurge at least for the ne six months. "I can tell you one thing-ti boys are feeling a lot better thi they did six months ago," Week grinned. The Secretary gave newsmen briefing on the day's discussio with help from T. V. H~ouse Chairman of the Council's Ecc nomic Policy Committee. Hous is a director and former boa: chairman of Sears, Roebuck an CHARLES MUNCH ... to direct tonight Boston Group To Perform Here Tonight The Boston Symphony Orches- tra, under the direction of Charles Munch, will present a concert at 8:30 p.m. tonight in Hill Audi- torium. Program for the second concert of the University's Choral Union Series includes "Haffner" Sym- phony by Mozart; "Symphony No., 5" by Honegger and "Symphony - No. 6" by Beethoven. Munch has been with the or-, REFUSES COMMUNIST EXPANSION: President Eisenhower Begins Nationwide Campaign Tour CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (P) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower, starting a six-day campaign tour, pledged yesterday American for- eign policy under his direction al- ways will be based on a firm re- fusal tq countenancecommunist territorial expansion by force. The President spoke to a crowd of at least 85,000 in the country fair atmosphere of the National Cornpicking Contest just after Democratic Sen. John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts declared admin- istration policies have driven four your corn-hog ratio is from yours, then I will count it a most suc- cessful effort." The President then lauded the production of food on the nation's farms for America and for fast- expanding overseas markets. Pres- ident Eisenhower said the Amer- ican farmer is "one of our strong- est fighters in the cause of peace." Flys 805 Miles In glorious indian summer weather, President Eisenhower dropped in on the cornpicking con- National Roundup By The Associated Press PROVO, Utah - Vice-President Richard M. Nixon said yes- terday a firm policy to contain communism is necessary, but not enough fr -survival of the free world. He said the United States must "unceasingly wage peace around the world." He said this could not be done by the usual methods of salesman- ship. Billions of uncommitted people in the world "want to hear the Voice of Indonesia, the Voice of India" and not the Voice of America. "We must associate ourselves with the legitimate aspirations of these people," the Vice-President told 12,000 students and faculty members at Brigham Young University. * * * SEATTLE - Pilot Charles F.Banfe Jr. flew over the Alaska pen- insula yesterday and reported engine trouble might force him to cut short a projected nonstop record-seeking flight from Tokyo to Miami. Northwest Airlines picked up a report from Banfe that he was over Cold Bay, near the tip of the Alaska peninsula, at noon (5 p.m. EST), with his plane's single engine running rough. W.n* * *i WICHITA - A crude dynamite bomb exploded in the Municipal