THE MICHIGAN DAILY I11l PROTESTS-A pacifist boards the nuclear-powered submarine, Ethan Allen, after swimming out to the newly launched ship. He was quickly removed from the vessel. The Ethan Allen, the first of four new missile-carrying submarines, is equipped with a new type of Polaris missile which has an in- creased range of 1,725 miles. Nuclear Sub Launehed Despite Pacifists BATON'ROUGE ()-Gov. Jim- mie Davis said last night New Or- leans public school teachers will be paid immediately. In an announcement from the executive mansion here, Davis said checks will be prepared beginning today and will be delivered by or before the end of the week. Prior to Davis's statement, Rep. John Garrett, chairman of the joint legislative committee on seg- regation, said at Baton Rouge: "The legislature wants to see that New Orleans teachers are paid. We know the vast majority are not in sympathy with integration." Garrett spoke after James Red- mond, public school superinten- dent, said no money was in sight for 'the teachers' November checks. Sen. Wendell Harris, a member of the State Sovereignty Commis- sion, qualified Garrett's announce- ment by saying only teachers who teach in segregated schools will be paid. Harris also said those who taught in the two integrated schools are subject to dismissal. Redmond had urged Gov. Jim- mie H. Davis to "rise above the noisy emotions of some state legislators" and make the money available. Many teachers said the an- nouncement of a payless Novem- ber came as no surprise. The, con- sensus seemed they would con- tinue to work and eventually re- ceive their salaries. Most teachers, attempting to avoid the segrega- tion hassle, refused to comment. Veteran teachers recalled the depression of the 1930s when they had been paid in negotiable script or bonds. There were unconfirmed reports a group of local businessmen would advance $2 million for the teachers. "The nation is watching the state of Louisiana," Dr. Redmond said. "It has been made clear by state actions that Orleans parish (county) school board officials cannot be considered responsible for this plight." Cubans Continue Property Seizures HAVANA ()-The Cuban gov- ernment has seized the American- owned Havana Dock Corp., worth an estimated $9.5 million, a Unit- ed States embassy spokesman said yesterday. Thus far the Castro regime has intervened in or nationalized more than $1.5 billion worth of Ameri- can-owned property. GROTON, Conn. (P - The Navy's most powerful Polaris-mis- sile submarine, which will have increased firing range, was launch- ed yesterday and had its first skirmish-with a group of pacif- ists. Two of the pacifists swam to the nuclear-powered Ethan Allen and boarded it minutes after the gaily, decorated craft slid down the ways into the Thames River. They were removed quickly. The Ethan Allen, named for the WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP: Soviets Blast Western Plan To Increase NATO Atom Arms American Revolutionary War hero, is the first of a new line of fleet ballistic missile subs that will have a firing range of 1,500 miles or more. It displaces 6,900 tons. The $110 million craft, and the rest of her four sister ships, will carry the new A-2 Polaris missile, which is expected to have a range up to 1,725 miles. The older FBM subs have the 1,380-mile A-1 Po- laris. Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, chair- man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a crowd of about 5,000 at the launching ceremony that the United States must maintain and increase its military strength in all its forms. "The Communist leaders have respect for only one thing-mill- tary power," he said. "I believe that the only effective restrainf now or in the future on the lead- ers of the Kremlin and Peking is fear of the consequences in the exercise of military power." The Ethan Allen's power will come from her sixteen A-2 mis- siles, each of which will carry an atomic payload. By The Associated Press LONDON-Moscow radio said last night Western proposals for turning NATO into a nuclear pow- er raises a new and dangerous threat to the peace. The "notorious Eisenhower-Nor- stad" plan, said a Soviet com- mentator, aims .to tie NATO na-, tions "ever more firmly to the United States war wagon so that in the event of a military conflict a counterblow could be diverted from the USA." WASHINGTON - Clergymen urging the release of imprisoned Morton Sobell took petitions Mon- day to the White House and the United States Pardon Attorney. Sobell has been in prison since 1951 following his conviction of conspiracy to commit espionage. He was tried with Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were convicted and executed as atomic spies. So- bell, who was given a 30-year pris- on sentence, pleaded innocent; he did not testify at his trial. MEMPHIS-White citizens ac- cused in a suit of using economic pressure to keep Negroes from vot- ing in Haywood County, Tenn., are invoking the Fifth Amendment, federal court records showed Mon- day. Depositions taken in the gov- ernment suit to break an alleged conspiracy contain numerous re- fusals by defendants to answer questions about their associations with Negroes. ' , , NEW YORK-Novelist Norman Mailer, accused of stabbing his wife, was taken to Bellevue Hospi- tal yesterday for psychiatric ob- servation. A physician said he ap- peared to bo having a breakdown and was "both homicidal and sui- cidal." ... for your thantksgiving dinner date. When you care eough to send the vary b~t -x A1O FUN, #() irk FaNPA~ go-u cdA~iEuaS? I F Go steady with G ane s Gray or brown lustre 13.98 Matching bags 10.50 / v is truly a fairyland Champagne and candlelight. 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