THE BURDEN ON HIGH SCHOOLS See Page 4 C, r Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 4kr :43 a t t COLDER, SNOW FLURRIES ic*zrcsm DA ni VOlL~ . IX.No. 69 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1958 FIVE CENTS EmHT F 1"V..Wi. v, vx Charge Goldfine With Contempt Refusal To Answer 22 Questions In Congress Causes Indictment WASHINGTON (-) - Bernard Goldfine, the supposed friend of Sherman Adams, was indicted yesterday on a charge of contempt of Congress. Goldfine, who protested he was being smeared when the charge first was raised in the House, had no immediate public reaction to the indictment. Arraignment on Friday He is to be arraigned in federal court here next Friday morning. The 18-count indictment was based on Goldfine's refusal to answer Elect Leader Of Assembly In France PARIS (MP) - Jacques Chaban- Delmas, one of Premier Charles de Gaulle's earliest political support- ers, yesterday became president of the first National Assembly of the Infant Fifth French Republic. The 43-year-old mayor of Bor- deaux was elected on the second ballot as a representative of the dominant Gaullist Union for a New Republic. A general in World War II and later Minister of Defense, he polled 355 votes against 132 for Socialist Max LeJeune and 16 for Communist Fernand Grenter. Reynaud Withdraws 'Former premier Paul Reynaud of the Independents, who trailed in the inconclusive first round, withdrew to give Chaban-Delmas the five-year post. Chaban-Delmas holds de Gaulle's coveted order of "The Companions of the Liberation" - the same which Winston Church- ill received last month. He was a leader of the French underground during the German occupation, He was one of 'the first adher- ents to de Gaulle's political party, the Rally of the French people, when it was formed. Elect Officers While the 546-man assembly was electing its officers in the ancient gold and rose Palats Bour- bon, the senate named Gaston Monnerville, a Radical, to his 16th errn, as its president. De Gaulle is expected 'to be elected president Dec. 21 by the French electoral college. A new premier likely will be named from the rightist ranks of the Union for a New Republic. Created Assembly De Gaulle was a silent witness to the baptism of the assembly which he had helped create in the past six months. Sitting quietly on the govern- ment bench, he remained through the opening speech by the assem- bly's dean, 82-year-old Canon Fe- lix Kir who called for world peace and an end to the Algerian war. Then he withdrew from the As- sembly before the deputies began electing their officers. Tension Eases In Venezuela CARACAS, Venezuela tAP)-Ten- sion eased late today after an out- burst of rioting against president- elect Romulo Betancourt, The ruling Junta warned it would stand with the voters' choice in Sunday's elections and threatened to suspend constitutional rights if necessary. A few brief flurries were reported this afternoon. A band of youths attacked the neighborhood head- quarters of Betancourt's Demo- cratic Action Party in the La Pastora section of Caracas. Two persons were reported in- Jured. A few cars carrying shouting teen-agers raced through down- town streets, Police announced 17 young people were arrested in the rioting which brought out thous nds of anti- Betancourt demonstrators. The rioters, supporters f lcsing presidential candidate Rear Adm. Wolfgang Larrazabal, tore up cam- paign signs and smashed store windows. '22 questions put to him last July in a sensation-filled House inves- tigation. This inquiry turned up, among other things, evidence that he paid $3,096.56 in hotel bills and did other favors for Adams. Adams, then serving President Eisenhower as his number one aide, and Goldfine, Boston mil- lionaire who was born in poverty in Russia 67 years ago, were friends of long standing. Adams acknowledged putting in some queries to federal agencies with which Goldfine was having difficulties, but he denied apply- ing pressure. Ike Backs Adams President Eisenhower backed up Adams, while remarking that he hadn't been exactly prudent. Pub- lic agitation continued, however, and last September Adams re- signed his White House Job and later went back to New Hamp- shire, where he had once been governor. At his home In Lincoln, N. H., yesterday Adams declined to com- ment on the indictment. The special House committee on legislative oversight ran into trouble with Goldfine when the n o r m a 11 y t a 1 k a t i v e witness clammed up on the financial af- fairs of one of his firms, the Bos- ton Port Development Company. Refuses to Talk On the advice of counsel, Gold- fine refused to talk about this firm. He said the committee was in- quiring into something that had no connection with its assignment -to check cn federal regulatory agencies. In putting questions, commit- tee counsel Robert Lishman pic- tured Goldfine as milking the firm to the detriment of minority stockholders. The committee took the stand tthat it needed the answers to see whether existing law sufficiently protects investors. SGC Groups To Report Action on either the Free Uni- versity of Berlin or the Faculty Senate's decision in the area of SGC and Sigma Kappa will not be taken during the Student Govern- ment Council meeting at 7:30 p.m. today, according to Mort Wise, '59, SGC's executive vice-president. Among the items on the Coun- cil's agenda will be reports from the standing committees and the Forum Committee. Appointments to the Evaluation, and the Inter- viewing and Nominating Commit- tee appointments. The report from the Nationala and Irnternational Committee will probably deal with student ex- change programs. Economy University sports car fans may soon feel less persecuted when paying parking fees if a Wash- ington parking lot operator has his way. L. B. Doggett, Jr., has come up with a daring idea. He has decided that since smaller cars use a smaller space they should pay a smaller parking fee. "It's Just pure economics," Doggett said. "Why should any- one be expected to pay for an extra yard of valuable down- town real estate they never need for parking their automobile?" And now 42 of the little fel- lows are roosting cozily on a lot where only 20 big cars had been parking, he said. It all started, William G. Barr, executive director of the Na- tional Parking Assn. said, when a St. Louis parker took one look at the sizeof the 1959 Cadillac, let out a horrified squawk and said he would have nothing to do with the car." Reds Blast Ex-leaders In Moscow L0NDON (MP-Moscow followed up the transfer of Gen. Ivan A. Serov from his job as Russia's top policeman with a fresh blast yes- terday at disgraced former leaders it calls the anti-party group. Pravda recalled the downfall of a half-dozen one-time strongmen chased from power by Premier Nikita Khrushchev and said th Communists have consistently smashed those who "oppose the measures which had become due, through the exigencies of life." The attack by the Soviet Com- munist newspaper lent color to a belief growing among diplomats that Servo, wiry, 53-year-old vet- eran of party purges, is booked for relegation to the bleak fringes of Soviet life-if nothing worse. The opinion was widespread that he was being kicked downstairs. One argument in support of this was the fact that, as "top cop," he could go no higher in his chosen field. But this opinion was not unani- mous. A dispatch from Moscow said varous observers in the Soviet capital believed the former chief of state security is perhaps headed for an even more important job, though there was nothing in the announcement to pinpoint it. The announcement said Serov was being relieved "in connection with his transfer to other duties." Contrary to normal precedure, it did not name his successor. Serov has been described in the west as a "squat, grinning gun- man" and "odious thug," and there has been little doubt to many that he conforms to the classic mold of the secret police official. He has long sought the silent background, but emerged unwill- ingly to the view of the public in 1955, when he was sent to south- east Asia and later in 1956 when he was sent to Britain. Khrushch( USSR Said To Oppose Total Ban GENEVA OP) - American and British diplomats put their heads together last night trying to gauge Russian resistance to unhampered controlof a ban on nuclear weap- ons tests. The initial studies convinced the Westerners the resistance will be strong. The Soviet Union regards the secrecy which cloaks its vast territories as a great national as- set. Whether the Russians will aban- don part of that secrecy to obtain an end of atomic and hydrogen weapons tests remains to be seen. The American and British dele- gations examined sentence by sen- tence the long Russian proposals on controls introduced in the nu- clear conference by Soviet delegate Semyon Tsarapkin. Their study is expected to con- tinue for several days. Session Postponed This afternoon's conference ses- sion was postponed to give United States Ambassador James J. Wads- worth and British Minister of State David Ormsby-Gore time to begin their meetings. The Russians at the same time went over Western views on the subject. The Western delegations found that some aspects of Tsarapkin's document seemed to parallel their own views. But on other aspects the Russian plan - particularly Russia's desire for a veto on all operations of the control system- ran contrary to western views. The United States and Britain feel that sweeping, built-in veto arrangements would make the whole control concept meaning- less. Thus far the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union have approved two draft treaty articles. Disclose Wording Wording of the articles disclosed the three powers undertook obliga- tions to stop tests and to give un- limited cooperation and assistance to the planned control organiza- tion. But the control organization it- self - its machinery, duties and powers-still must be worked out. It is on that portion of the treaty draft that the hard bargaining will come, conference sources said. Tsarapkin himself said in an interview that an inspection sys- tem must be based on agreement among the three powers and made to work by the pressure of world public opinion. IN MONTGOMERY: 3Start Action To Force Evidence on Negro Vote By The Associated Press MONTGOMERY, Ala.-The Federal Civil Rights Commission, with assent from southern members, started legal action yesterday to com- pel defiant public officials to produce evidence about Negro voter regis- tration in Alabama. In a dramatic announcement which abruptly ended' a two-day hearing, the commission unanimously asked the justice department to seek a federal court order,, against registration officials who refused to testify or to surrender voter records. Shortly afterward, a spokesman for Attorney General William Rogers said in Washington the matter will be handled through Hartwell Davis, the United States District Attorney at Montgomery. The United State District Court in Alabama will be asked to issue the order. Cite Penalty The spokesman noted that if the court order is issued and is not obeyed, a contempt situation will be presented for handling by the federal court. Contempt penalties are fixed at the discretion of the court in- volved. Six voter registrars, protesting what they called an invasion of their rights as judicial officers, declined to talk about the func- tions of their office when called as witnesses at the outset of the hearing Monday. Five of them refused even to testify under oath. Judge Doesn't Appear Another subpoenaed witness, Circuit Judge George R. Wallace of Clayton, Ala., didn't even show up. He had been instructed to pro- duce voter registration files he has subpoenaed in two of the six coun- ties into which the civil rights agency's first public hearing ex- tended. Begin Strie NEW YORK (A) - Newspaper deliverymen last night rejected a tentative contract with New York's nine major daily newspap- ers and immediately went out on strike. Picket lines were set up around the newspaper plants by 11 p.m. Some early editions of morning newspapers alreadyhad been de- livered to newstands, but the late press runs were bottled up in the plants. The deliverymen had struck for. eight hours Monday before the tentative agreement was ham- mered out, but that walkout was too short to greatly affect deliv- eries. Barney G. Cameron, president of the Publishers Assn. of New York, said the newspapers planned to continue publication as, long as they could and sell copies over the counter at the plants. ev Says Surpass Russian es Atlas Soviets Top Air Force's Cross Sees Little Ba At Meeting By THOMAS HAYDEN The lone Negro delegate to the Atlanta meeting of the Nation- al Interfraternity Council was 'warmly received" although Geor- gia laws barred him from attend- ing banquets or living with other delegates in the Biltmore Hotel, Assistant Dean of Men William Cross said yesterday. Dean Cross said the Negro, a Kappa Alpha Psi from the Uni- versity of Youngstown, "sat right down with fthe rest of the dele- gates," at discussions held during the three-day conference which opened Dec. 4. The NIC took care of the Ne- ro's meals and lodging at a near- by motel, he added. No Animosity "I was delighted with the fact that no animosity was shown." Atlanta and Georgia laws pre- vent Negroes from lingering in the calls, eating in the dining rooms, ar using the hotel's lobbies and rest rooms. Dean Cross said there were some fears of racial incidents be- fore the annual convention, but no troubles erupted. Atlanta newspapers did not dis- cuss the incident. Not a Test Case There were no test case over- tones in the affair, Dean Cross continued, although he admitted he could not recall whether any Negroes had been at the several conventions he has attended. The city of Miami, Fla., where Negroes would have been allowed to live with other delegates, had been mentioned by the NIC as a possible location for the meeting. Dean Cross could offer no defi- nite reason for choosing Atlanta as a meeting site. "No Premeditation" "I didn't ask for any reasons," he explained, "but I feel there was no premeditation." Prof. Huston T. Karnes of Loui- siana State University, chairman of the conference, refused any comment with regard to the de- cision to meet in Atlanta There have been demands that the convention be moved around the country instead of being held in the East each year, Dean Cross added. I a 5 r t DEAN HAROLD DORR ... favors plan Group -Plans Adult Study Coordination By ROBERT JUNKER A "singly-administered" system of adult education and extension U.S. May Use Nuclear Rocket in Five Years DETROIT UP) - Nuclear-powered rockets, which would mean more payload for outer space and less dead weight to get the job done, may be no more than five years away. That was the opinion expressed last night by R. E. Schreiber, head of Project Rover which is working at Los Alamos, N. M., on the courses will be instituted by Mich- igan's nine state colleges and uni- versities Jan. 1, their presidents announced yesterday. Wayne State University Presi- dent Clarence B. Hilberry, chair- man of the State Council of Uni- versity Presidents, said the coor- dinated effort will be made "to avoid any possibility of duplica- tion" as the program grows in the coming years. Single Servicej The group recommended "a single integrated extension serv- ice" to accommodate the state's estimated 160,000 persons who are enrolled in credit and non-credit courses at extension centers. Ap- proximately 28,000 are enrolled in University extension courses. "We hope that through joint ef- forts and coordination a better planned adult education program can be provided for the entire state," University Dean of State- wide Education Harold M. Dorr said. "It is hoped that the new sys- tem will be particularly helpful to those who want to do out-of- school studying in the more sparsely populated areas of the state," Dorr commented. Continue Courses Each school will continue to provide courses in their present fields of study, he remarked. The new plan means the several schools "will take pains" to avoid duplication of courses. Referring to the cooperative programs already underway in extension teaching, Dorr added, "the plan will simply accelerate this program of consolidation." The University currently cooper- ates with Wayne, Michigan State University, and Eastern and Northern Michigan colleges in of- fering Joint extension courses in certain areas of the state. Won't Divide State "The program will not divide the state either geographically or by function among the several universities," Dorr commented. Jointly planned and administered adult education will prevent one school from entering a new area currently being handled by an- other. Thus, Hilberry said, the plan will take advantage of "unique" extension services of- fered by an institution - the University's medical courses, for example. Petitions Due ITo orrow Best Effort Humphrey Told Red Weapon Betters U.S. By 2,000 Miles WASHINGTON () - Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev was reported yesterday to have told Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn.) that Russia has an intercontin.. ental ballistic missile capable of firing a warhead 8,694 miles. Achievement of such a range would surpass the best 'United States ICBM effort so far - the Atlas which the Air Force hurled 6,325 miles on Nov. 28. It als would put almost all the Unitd States within reach of Soviet weapons. &n. Humphrey gave President Dwight D. Eisenhower an 80-minute oral briefing yes- terday on his long face-to-face talk with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. Remain Secret The White House said the de- tails may remain secret if a study shows they're overloaded with Russian propaganda. Sen. Humphw' rey, saying it is up to the admin- istration to decide whether the public should be informed, agreed Khrushchev was doing some boasting to him, Senate sources tOld of Khrush- chev's "secret" message to Sen. Humphrey. The Minnesota sena- tor himself declined to give dew tails of his talk with Khrushchev. Sen. Humphrey told reporters he passed on to President Eisen- hower a confidential message from the Soviet premier dealing with Russian nuclear explosions of a very substantial size. Cites Development He also told President Eisen- howernabout secret Soviet evel- opments in the missile field, the Senator said. The White House said it would not be released if it contained too much Soviet propaganda. White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty stuck by that stand after Senate sources report- ed what Sen. Humphrey told President Eisenhower abott mis- siles. Evaluate Information Hagerty said the government would have to evaluate the infor.. mation before deciding. The Pentagon had no comment on the report either. Sen. Humphrey, en route to Minneapolis, was not available to confirm or deny the accuracy of the report. However, the version frn Sen- ate sources was similar to that given a reporter by an official in a government department. And it corresponded with a re- port in the Dec. 15 issue of a pop- ular magazine published yester-; day. Students Riot, Hang Effigy After Protest Students at Monmouth College, West Long Branch, N. J., saw red late Monday night over their pres- ident's plan to beat the Russians in the field of education. It seems his idea is to intensify study and lengthen the school year and the first thing to go is the traditional two-week Christmaa vacation. Disregarding the Christmas spirit of good will, over 500 stu- dents first stoned an effigy of the president, then burned it while serenading the live one with , rendition of "Come down, come down from your ivory tower." The president, however, was im- movable. His only comment to the Very Big Snow Job 'job of putting the atom to work in space travel. "The time it takes will depend on the national will - how much we want to hurry it up," he said. "With a pretty ambitious program, maybe we could do it in four or five years." Schreiber is here attending the winter meeting of the American Nuclear Society. May Harness Power A major step in harnessing nu- clear power for rockets will be taken next month when Project Rover scientists begin testing the Kiwi-A, a nuclear reactor. Like a namesake, a flightless New Zealand bird, the Kiwi-A never will go any higher than the platform it stands on.C But Schreiber hopes the gadget- covered six-foot-by-six box willj tell scientists how to solve theirI j World News Roundup By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-The Soviet Union cast the veto twice' yesterday to bar South Korea and South Viet Nam from UN member- ship but agreed to admit independent Guinea, The West African Negro nation voted itself out of the French overseas community in September and will become the 82nd United Nations member. ' ,* , , , POINT MUGU, Calif.-Launching of a Regulus II guided missile from a ship in the Pacific missile range was postponed for 24 hours yesterday because a part of the missile's recovery system failed in the final minutes of the countdown. TAIPEI-Chinese Communists yesterday let go with their heaviest bombardment of Quemoy in a month and the defenders struck back shell for shell, the Defense Ministry said. The duel was regarded here. however, as a flurry in the fitful i E_ i I