TEACHERS' PROBLEM W, Seventieth Year of Editorial Freedom :43 it] MOSTLY FAIR High-83 Low-60 Some risk of thundershowers this morning. See Page 2 DL. LXX, No. 278 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1960 FIVE CENTS FOUR PA U.S. PLANE INCIDENT: USSR Vetoes Inquiry ockefeller Draft, Stron~ Backs rCivil Nixon UNITED NATIONS WP'-The UN Security Council last night deci- sively struck down the latest. Soviet spy plane accusation against the United States. The Russians in turn vetoed an American demand for an impartial, international investigation. The 9-2 vote of the 11-nation Coucil against the Russian de- mands followed a vigorous Ameri- can attack accusing the USSR of attempting to spy on missile and other military secrets off the coasts of the United States. Only Com- munist Poland voted with the Rus- sians. The Soviet Union also used its big-power veto privilege to kill a resolution to permit Interna- tional Red Cross contact with two crewmen held captive by the Rus- sians since the downing of an American RB47 plane. The votes came after a six-hour final session on the Soviet charge that the RB47 plane had pene- trated Russian air space before it was shot down. The United States retorted that the plane was downed over inter- national water on July 1 after a vain Soviet fighter attempt to push it over Soviet territory. The Soviet Union cast its 88th and 89th veto in its history as a Security Council member. The climax of the debate came when Henry Cabot Lodge, chief United States Delegate to the UN, accused the Soviet Union of a long series of air and sea spy incidents, including an attempt to seize the test vehicle of a Polaris missile ed by a nuclear submarine off S .Atlantic Coast Econmomist Traces Red Competio By MICHAEL OLINICK "The implications raised by Soviet technological advances are tough, nagging questions, but no amount of hypnotic-like examina- tion of Russian science is going to provide answers for them," Dr. Hans Haymann warned yesterday. Haymann, a research economist for the Rand Corporation, traced the past American attitudes to- ward science in the USSR, ex- amined the nature of Soviet re- search, and posed the questions that face us as a result of it. Self-Analysis Needed Lodge reserved his bitterest words, however, for the Soviet veto of an Italian resolution which would have called upon the Red Cross to make contact with the survivors of the RB47. Two of the survivors are captives, three are listed as missing, and one died in the incident. "That was a compassionate reso- lution," Lodge said, "and they turned it down. I tell you, it is a sad thing when a people as warm hearted as the Soviet people is represented by a government as cold-hearted, brutal, hard and cynical as they showed themselves to be tonight." Right rf Educational Nixon Said Rhodesian Strikers Construction Continue Campaign Supported By JAMES SEDER I BULAWAYO, Southern Rhodesia (MP - Riotous Negro strikers, pressed their scorched earth campaign yesterday against white domi- nation. Police gunfire killed one, described as a looter. The known death toll from three days of violence in this indus- trial city of the British-run Central African Federation rose to seven, all Negroes. Scores of persons have been injured. The shooting came' in one of Bulawayo's Negro sec- - tions, where fires touched off by the rioters have ruined many homes, shops and cars and terror-, ized moderates in the native com- munity. Even a medical clinic wasM ruined. Of Our Chicago Bureau CHICAGO-One of the major policy reforms which New York's Gov. Nelson Rockefeller has been urging upon the Republican party -increased federal aid to educa- tion-has been obscured by more politically potent issues. However, the New York gover- nor and the conservatives appear willing to agree on the education plank approved yesterday by the platform committee. The com- promise plank also appeared to have the blessing of Vice-Presi- Seal Off Sectors T dent Richard M. Nixon, the GOP's More than 2,000 troops and 1 1lrVITe almost certain presidential nomi- police sealed off the Negro sections nee. in an effort to prevent the trouble Federal Support from engulfing the city's 45,000 LEOPOLDVILLE. The Congo The plank calls for "federal white residents. Many of the --The Congo government appealed support to the primary and sec-' whites have armed themselves in yesterday for money and doctors ondary schools by a program of fear of a full-scale uprising. in its fight for survival. federal aid for school construe- A general strike of the native Finance Minister Pascal Nkanyi tion-tailoring it to the real needs labor force to protest white rule told a news conference the gov- of the individual school district paralyzed most of the city's 450 ernment can meet July payrolls, in the states and territories re- factories. It developed much like but needs between 8 and 10 million quiring state participation." those that crippled industrial cen- dollars in foreign funds to run This was one of the points ins ters of neighboring South Africa through August. the Rockefeller plank, last spring. If it doesn't get it, he said, the The other was federal aid to While thousands quit work on state will collapse. assist in paying teachers salaries. their own, others dropped out un- Belgium contributed about 6 This point was not mentioned in der the threats of Negro strong- million monthly to pay govern- the platform. However, the ra- arm gangs roving from plant to ment employes while it was run- tionale for rejecting the Rocke- plant. Agitators also persuaded ning the Congo as a colony with feller view was implied in a plat- many servants in white homes to independence June 30, that flow form statement that "primary re- leave their jobs.Cceased sponsibility for education must re- Turn Back Mobs he vrneted.ae t h main in the local school com- A four-mile-long military cor- World Health Organization to help munity and state, The federal don turned back two mobs intent'with what it called an acute health government should assist selec- on breaking through into the situation in Kasai Province. tively n strengthening education white section. No epidemic is threatening Ka- without interfering with full local Not all were hostile. Many terr- sai, but there is a frightening lack control of schools. fled Negroes begged the troops to of doctors, the Congolese said. Federal Control let them out of the tumultuous WHO's regional office at Brazza- "We believe that any large plan native sections. The troops, how- ville, across the river, immediate- of federal aid to education, such ever, were under orders to keep ly cabled headquarters in Geneva as direct contributions to or all within the cordon and refused. to send 15 medical teams. grants for teacher salaries can The supplicants huddled fear- It is estimated only 1' white only lead ultimately to federal fully 'in a no man's land between doctors remain. The Congo has no domination and control of our their quarters and the troops native doctors. schools to which we are unalter- Stones as well as torches were Meanwhile the extensive medical aby ppose.k used by the rioters, staff of the Foreami Mission in This parallels the position taken Leopoldville Province decided to by the Eisenhower Administra- + e isio lion. D:Le Plank return to Belgium. The mission Te Democratic conention membes fel noguarantees of 1tIgh I 'lnlebesfelsigur ne f TeDmcai conventiopledged federal aid for teacher security can protect them, sinceslred welas for school con- most of them work in isolated struction. I C le Ibush country. forces continued to Both the Rockefeller advocatedI ChaledN mtar fces Cont d o proposals were incorporated into fan out over the Congo. Moreth190Dmcaiplfo. HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (AP- than 9,000 were in the country The plank also called for a Sen. John F. Kennedy, the Demo- last night. "federal program to assist in con- cratic presidential nominee, yester- United Nations Secretary Dag struction of college housing" and day challenged the Republican Hammarskjold left by plane last "extension of the federal student Party on civil rights. night to make another survey of loan program and graduate stu- Asked what he thought of the conditions in the strife-torn Con- j dent fellowship program." It did GOP efforts to write a civil rights go. not elaborate on these points. S . J tti 4 . ? k n i i -David Gltrow STRANGER IN TOWN-Mrs. Townsend shakes hands with a stranger in town, H1, in William Inge's "Picnic" presented by the Summer Playbill tonight. Play*bill OffersInage 'Picnic' I Self-analysis is need in the wake of this complex and important challenge, he charged. "We must ask ourselves about the basic prob- lems of science and politics in our nation. Is government mobilizing science too much for national de- 4 , 1 I l E t William Inge's Pulitzer-prize-1 winning drama, "Picnic," opens tonight at 8 p.m. at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The drama, the fourth presen- tation of the speech department's1 Summer Playbill series, is essen- tially about women and is set in the sultry heat of the end of sum- mer when everyone is waiting' lazily for the end of summer and yet not wanting fall to come. The women in "Picnic" are typical of the women in small midwestern towns. They range from young to middle-aged. Main Character1 The main character is 18-year-1 old Madge, the "prettiest girl in{ town" who accepts her femininity gracefully and is both sweet andl charming. Opposed to Madge is her young-I er sister, Milly, who must find compensation for not being as beautiful as her sister. She is an awkward, 16-year-old who has not{ yet found her own personality,{ but she is very intelligent and shows promise of depth and char- acter. Flo, the girls' mother, is a real-j istic and rather hard woman. Shei left a husband she apparently loved because she wanted a higher standard of living than he could provide. Now she realizes that she' may have made a mistake and is{ anxious that her daughters areI successful in life. Frustrated Teacher Restless and frustrated is Rose- mary, the schoolteacher who lives with the family. She has never' paid any attention to her own heart or her feelings until loneli- Thus no one in the town is quite ness started to creep around her. satisfied with her life, so the in- Now she is approaching middle trusion of a strong, muscular, age and realizes that life has left bragging vagabond who is a her behind, shocking and yet appealing person Her storekeeper boyfriend shows is enough to turn their world no signs of ever wanting to marry, topsy-turvy. Their reaction to him so Rosemary becomes the aggres- is the substance of the play. sor and wins her man in an anti- romantical, but poignant and yet funny manner, Friendly Neighbor Mrs. Potto is the friendly, lov- able next-door neighbor. Her mar- riage has been thwarted by her possessive invalid mother, and she has cheerfully accepted the fact that she must spend the rest of her life caring for her. Yet she still has' a girl's longing for ro- mance, fense? What are our national goals r in terms of science and technology. Are we doing enough for basic re- search? Do we exhibit, as a nation, a love of knowledge and a respect for' the intellect?" Speaking on "The USSR in the rechnological Race," Haymann de- scribed "a quixotic and irrational attitude toward the consistent, orderly, and predictable Russian technology." The United States has predomi- nantly had two extreme views of Soviet science, Haymann claimed. The first was that of the pre- Sputnik era in which it was re- garded as hopelessly laggard. "We possessed an equal mixture of in- credulity, complacency, and arro- gance," he said. Naive Belief . "We naively believed in the in- nate scientific superiority of the West. We felt that scientific re- search could only flourish in a democracy and that it would be throttled in an authoritarian state." , After Sputnik, the nation swung to the opposite pole. "We engaged in an orgy of self-criticism and breast beating. We regarded our- selves as only a third-rate scien- tific power. The Russians became supermen whose single - minded central planning assured them ultimate superiority. Rapid Growth He explained that Soviet science has grown at a rapid pace under ra system of centralized control augmented by social and financial encouragement. "While overcen- tralization is not good, it must be remembered that the organization The play received its biggest acclaim in the movie version which starred Susan Strasbergas Millie, William Holden as Hal and Kim Novak as Madge. Ticket information for "Picnic,". and also Playbill's last production, Mozart's opera "Don Giovanni," may be obtained at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. daily except per- formance days when the office is open until 8 p.m. To Approve New Plank Ike Presents Russia With New Challenge For Free Elections CONVENTION HAI, CHICA- GO MP)-Republicans rebuilt their defense and civil rights platform under pressure last night and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New Yprk at last,endorsed Richard M. Nixon for President. Nixon combed over the civil rights plank word for word in a lengthy huddle with top advisers' One aide said Nixon considered the new draft acceptable. Another, Press Secretary Herbert G. Klen, added: "The platform problems now ap- pear to be over." Seeks Strong Planks These developments on the fringes of the Republican National Convention were interrelated. Rockefeller wanted stronger and more specific planks, believed they were in sight, and took his pre- viously uncommitted New York delegation and its 96 votes over to Nixon. But he did it with no warm praise of Nixon, the man. The new rights plank was a compromise, hammered out under a virtual ultimatum from Vice- President Nixon that it would hae to be strong enough to hold him or he would turn down the presideow tiai nomination that is all buthis, At the moment the GOP em- barke4 on i it rdhi oventio% - sion- to rally aroi d Pr Dwight D. Eisenhower and he him speak-the consensus of PL*t form committee spokesmen spw peared to be that the new pro- nouncement dealing with racial issues would satisfy Nixon and prevent a floor fight. Ike Speaks The chief executive, as expected, had some not too modest brags about the record of his own ad- ministration and some not too vicious swipes at the Democrats. And he had a surprise for Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. "The Soviet dictator has said that he has, in his recent jour, neys and speeches, succeeded in damaging the prestige of Ameri- ca. "Concerning this matter o con- parative national prestige, I chal- lenge him to make this test: wil he agree to the holding of free elections under the sponsorship of the. United Nations-to permit people everywhere-in every na- tion and on every continenf, to vote on one single, simple issue: "That issue is: Do you want to live under a Communist regime or under a free system such as-found in the United States? "Are the Soviets willing to mea- sure their world prestige 'by the. results of such elections? "The United States would gladly. do so." Cites Prosperity As have other convention speak, ers before him, Eisenhower bored down, on the favorite Republican campaign theme of peace and prosperity. "The irrefutable truths are," he said, "that the United States is enjoying an unprecedented pros- perity; that it has, in cooperation with its friends and allies, the strongest security system in the world, and that it is working cease- lessly and effectively for a peace with justice, in freedom." From the chairman of the plat- form subcommittee oi civil rights, Joseph F. Carlino of New York, came word that the plank is ... "considerably short of what the Vice-President asked for," He said some major provisions Nixon wanted were left out and "I think the plank has been seriously weakened." But the chairman of the full platform committee, Charles H. Percy, said a majority of the things Nixon wanted are in the plank. Vice - Chairman Melvin Laird said he believes it meets Nixon's wishes and that he doubts ,either liberals or mnderate swh plank in their platform, Kennedy told newsmen: "I hope It's as clear and effec-1 tive as ours. It sets a standard for them."1 Kennedy told a news conferencea he had watched some of the Re- publican convention on television and "enjoyed it" But, he said, he had not heard a speech by Sen. Thruston B. Mor- ton of Kentucky, the GOP Na- tional Chairman.- A newsman told Kennedy that! Morton had referred to "young Senator Kennedy" and had de-' scribed the Democratic platform as offering "charity for all" Kennedy chuckled. "That's all right," he said. Answering questions of reporters on the lawn of his summer home, Kennedy also took a dig at the Republicans in general while prais- ing New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller as a "valuable public servant." Rockefeller, he said, has been "effective in persuading a majority of Republicans to accept his views reluctantly" j Kennedy added of the Republi- cans: "Progress is not their business, and he's moving them ahead." Faubus Leads A rkansa Poll The UN Secretary plans to con- The plank also endorsed crea- fer briefly with Belgian officials in tion of a "permanent top-level Brussels and then continue on to 'commission to advise the Presi- Leopoldville tomorrow to study dent and the Secretary of Health, technical and economic assistance Education and Welfare" on edu- needed by the new republic. cational matters. AT SPEECH COLLOQUIUM: Politicians' Speaking Styles Ei Cuban Revolution Example. Seen Repeated by Others LAS MERCEDES, CUBA {Pk' - Fidel Castro, obviouply still a sick man, said yesterday the example of his revolution is attracting other Latin American peoples "toward the same plan." The bearded prime minister, wearing a floppy straw hat and cape to protect him against a rain that began soon after he started to speak, looked drawn and haggard as he addressed a mass rally to celebrate the 7th anniversary of his revolutionary movement in the mountains of eastern Cuba. In his opening remarks he said his poor health had prevented his taking part in pre-rally ceremonies. He was stricken with what his doctors called pneumonia July 9.Ca Tired Castro Against the backdrop of the Sierra Maestra mountains where he launched his first drive for power, a tired Castro told a throng of Tabout 200,000 that "the principle reason for aggression against our country is to prevent our being an example for these peoples (in Latin America)." va n a e1He vowed to meet every attempt to destroy his regime with re- doubled efforts because of the im- al oratory were the criterion for other countries. ited States, Rep. Walter Judd of "It would be egotistical to think White House and Harry Truman only of ourselves. We feel obliged to think of the rest of the people political figures were discussed by of Latin America," he said. ees at a speech colloquium yester- He promised "We will continue making our fatherland an example of. William Densmore. that will convert the Andes range idd, said the man "has had a fan- into the Sierra Maestra of the ig," citing the congressman's lec- coninent." ised Judd for his clear and articu- Castro called the United States any gestures. "The sworn enemy of progress and point well" in his keynote address happiness of the people." and said nding speech of the political cam- it has committed "barbarous and t nd eechinaofdthe ,,pc cam cowardly" acts of aggression es and eliminated the preaching" against Cuba. Charges Bribery cording to theory" was not a good He repeated a charge that the or voice and ineffective pauses did United States was trying to bribe er, but nevertheless he was a very other Latin American countries to oppose his revolution by offering xon's speeches are patterned after a new aid program. oints. His debating experience has '*The United States says to them organized, Ruth Vigna explained. 'We will buy you. We are disposed to pay your price to join us against ce. Coined phrases and rhetorical ithe Cuban revolution," Castro de- of this fine orator, she said, al- clared. rsonality." Growing ttnoanio hnomrcp +,m ctn l If the formal style of politic selecting the President of the Un Minnesota would be occupying the wouldn't even have come close. The speaking styles of current eight candidates for advanced degri day under the chairmanship of Pro Melvin Donaho, speaking of Ju tastic experience in public speakin ture tour several years ago. He pra late speech and excellent use of ma The Minnesotan "used everyp which would have been "the outsta paign" if he had cut it by 15 minut in the weak ending, Donaho said. Former President Truman, "ac speaker, Peggy Palmer said. His po not make him a good formal speak effective orator with his directness. Vice-President Richard M. Nix debate talks, including numbered pi helped his speeches become more He can adapt well to any audien questions are other characteristics thmuio'h ha y m l cka "television ner, .,:: ______________________ -Y G