THE MICHIGAN DAILY President Meets Kennedy To Conie hneover] TRANSFER TALKS-President Dwight D. Eisenhower and President-elect John F. Kennedy met yesterday at the White House in Washington to discuss the transfer of the administration and the changeover from Republican to Democratic executive policies. Legislators Take Action In Louisian"a NEW ORLEANS (P) -- The segregation boycott of William Frantz School grew steadily weak- er yesterday while new legal maneuvers were undertaken. New Orleans state legislators, the New Orleans States-Item said, prepared to ask members of the Orleans Parish (county) school board to resign. On their part, the school board members filed a suit in United States District Court asking that New Orleans banks containing funds show cause why school board checks should not be honored. The legistlature froze state funds-in New Orleans so the school board could not pay bills, trying to seize ' control of the city's schools. / A statement by state Rep. Risley C. Triche, floor leader for Gov. Jimmie Davis, carried the implied threat that state officials would not in the future release state money for the operation of New Orleans schools unless the state took over control. The quarantine of the school neighborhood reduced the amount of jeering and catcalls 23 white children heard as they returned to William Frantz classes. U.S. Accuses Soviets Of 'Lethal Colonialism' Discuss Domestic, International Affairs WASHINGTON (M)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Presi- dent-elect John F. Kennedy met yesterday to talk about the poli- tical changeover and to seal Amer- ican unity behind the continued search for world peace. The Republican President and the Democratic , president-elect, chatting at a White House con- ference for more than three hours, laid aside the acrimony of a pres- idential campaign in whicli each had assailed the other's policies and proposals.. President Eisenhower and Ken- nedy talked alone almost two hours about domestic and inter- national affairs. Their discussions centered particularly on the trou- blesome imbalance of United States foreign payments and its threat to the stability of the American dollar. Later Secretary of State Chris-' tian A. Herter, Secretary of the Treasury Robert B. Anderson and Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gatesfilled in the president-elect on the details of American prob.. lems in a sorely troubled world. Out of the conferences came a joint statement from President Eisenhower and Kennedy aimed at reassuring the world that the Jan- uary transition from a Republican to a Democratic administrgtioih will be an orderly one in which historic American objectives will remain unchanged. "The American people and their government have consistently sought to protect freedom and have tried to help people through- out the world better their stand- ards of living," the statement said. "These national objectives will be vigorously pursued by the incom- ing administration." Kennedy said President Eisen- hower had stated "he would be happy to serve if the time should come when he could do so use- fully." Kennedy added that nothing specific was discussed. Kennedy will consult with Unit- ed Nations officials in New York today and is expected to announce a new Cabinet selection, presum- ably Rep. Stewart L. Udall (D- Ariz), for Secretary of the Inter- ior. UN Council To Discuss UNITED NATIONS (') - The United Nations announced late yesterday that the Security Coun- cil will meet this morning to take up Soviet demands for the release of Patrice Lumumba, deposed Congo premier now under arrest. The Council meeting was called after Soviet delegate Valerian A. Zorin failed in an attempt to call an emergency night session. Angry Western delegates denounced the move by Zorin, Council president, as arbitrary. ' Wanted Night Meeting Zorin, Council president for this month, wanted the meeting to air Moscow's demands that Congo, authorities grant immediate free-" dom to deposed Premier Patrice, Lumumba. Zorin called on Secretary-Gen- eral Dag Hammarskjold yesterday morning and notified him that he, planned to summon the Council" into an emergency nig1t session. The United States and other Western members learned of Zor- in's plans when the United Na- tions announced Zorin's visit. This set off angry Western charges that Zorin was acting in an arbitrary manner and abusing his powers as Council president. Insufficient Support A poll of the 11 members failed to win sufficient support for a night meeting. Before Zorin's call on Hammar- skjold the Soviet delegation dis- tributed a statement blaming the: United States, Belgium, Britain and France for the latest turn of events in the Congo, including the actions taken against Lumuba. Approach Foreshadowed Foreshadowing the Soviet ap- proach to the Council, the state- ment demanded immediate free- dom for Lumumba and otherof his supporters now in jail; the disarming of Col. Joseph Mobutu's Congo army; the setting up of a special Asian-African commission to investigate how Mobutu's army is being financed. Hammarskold has also appeal- ed to Congo President Joseph Kasavubu to let the International Red Cross examine Lumumba to make sure he has not been mis- treated. TheaSecretary - General asked this at the request of Asian- African delegates who have been aroused by pictures from Leopold- ville showing Lumumba in ropes and being subjected to indignities. PHOTOS by B UD-MOR MOBUTU REINFORCES PROVINCE: Lumumba Troops Attack North Con LEOPOLDVILLE (A) - Col. Joseph Mobutu reinforced Equator province to the north yesterday after troops loyal to ex-premier Patrice Lumumba attacked three villages there. The attackers came from Orien- tal province to the east, strong- World News Roundup By The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO - Prime Minister Mataafa Flame of West- ern Samoa arrived here late Mon- day night en route to the United Nations where he will argue his country's case for independence. Western Samoa seeks nation- hood after a United Nations trusteeship administered by New Zealand. * * . UNITED NATIONS -- The United Nations political committee yesterday defeated an African- Asian bid for immediate redis- tributidn of UN Security Council seats. With the defeat of the resolu-. tion, a European-Latin American campaign for charter amendments to increase the size of the council also died.. BONN (A) - Foreign Minister Heinrich von Brentano emphati- cally repeated yesterday the West German government position that it will not pay toward the costs of maintaining United States troops in the country. Such payment had been asked by United States Secretary of the Treasury Robert B. Anderson in talks here last last month. hold of Lumumba's supporters who are threatening to set up a rival regime in Stanleyville, the provin- cial capital. The raid tended to discount . a st'atement by Mobutu, the Congo army chief, that the Lumumba faction held only part of Stanley-- ville and had no strength in the rest of Oriental. Attack in Reprisal The attack on the Equator bor- der villages apparently was in reprisal for Mobutu's arrest of Lumumba, captured in the in- terior last week after he eluded army surveillance i this capital. Advices from the province said the raiders attacked villages in- habited by the Bumbas, Mobutu's tribe, and at least two villagers were killed. Mobutu sent a company of troops by plane from Leopoldville to re- inforce the garrisons in Equator. Wrangling between Mobutu's backers and the UN continued. A UN official promised vigorous ac- tion if-as reported--the Congo- lese Transport Corporation carried' out a threat to halt the transport of UN supplies by rail between the. port of Matadi and Leopoldville. Troops Withdrawn UN troops guarding the resi- dence of President Joseph Kasa- vubu, a Mobutu backer, were ab- ruptly withdrawn. They had on guard duty there for a months. UN officials said Kasa security has now become a : Congolese matter. The UN mand is embittered by the al of any apology or offer of pensation after Congolese sc made savage assaults on Ul' sonnel recently. Mobutu called newsmen army camp and told themr Lumumba had not been br assaulted in jail, as report Lumumba Examined He said Belgian doctors ex ed Lumumba and pronounce in satisfactory condition. He ceded that Lumumba h sprained wrist and a swolle from the beating, by the sc who captured him. At the height of the UN-M/ quarreling, E d w a r d Ker youngest brother of the Pres elect, and two Democratic sei arrived from Elisabethville African fact-finding missior They are Sen. Frank Chu Idaho and Sen. Frank Mi Utah. The group was greet Mobutu's interior minister, Nussbaumer. The Americans joined in Leopoldville by Ser W. McGee, (D-Wyo), who a Friday. O TODAY'S SPECIAL: TWO EGGS with TOAST and JELLY... 35c 1241 South University c gcyc c - o mcc ce o c ccyt rnc c UNITED NATIONS (P) - The United States yesterday accused the Soviet Union of hiding under the x "false banner of liberation" while heading the largest colonial empire in the world. In a slashing attack on Soviet anti-colonial activities, U.S. Am- bassador James J. Wadsworth told the United Nations General As- sembly that the Kremlin is "the arch practitioner of this new and lethal colonialism." He called the Soviet role "cynical and hypo- critical." Joins Debate Joining in the long and bitter debate on colonialism, Wads- worth said the Soviet Union had appeared in its true colors last Sunday morning when it vetoed the membership application of the new African country, Mauritania. "This veto, a bare-faced at- tempt to blackmail the Security Council into accepting a package deal," he said, "has effectively pre- vented Mauritania from achieving: its full status and rights in the community of nations." Wadsworth suggested that UN members should consider the im- plications of this veto the next time the Soviet Union "takes the floor to champion, with hollow oratory, the independence equal rights of all peoples." Claims Violation andI The United States delegate said the Communist colonial system is "as complete a violation of the rights of man as any that ever existed." The entire system, he said, is disguised by censorship, by ruthless thought control and by an elaborate misuse of words like "democratic" and "autono- mous." "But," he added, "its tragic reality is attested by the millions who have escaped from it and by the tens of thousands who died in their vain efforts to shake it off." Labor Urges ennedy Move To, Cut Taxes WASHINGTON (A) -- A major segment of organized labor yes- terday urged President-elect John F. Kennedy to sponsor a broad, temporary tax cut as a "direct attack on economic stagnation." That is the top item on a long list of objectives proposed for the incoming national administration at a meeting here of the executive committee of the AFL-CIO indus- trial union department. Declaring the nation is again in a "full-blown recession," its policy statement said a direct at- tack on economic sluggishness is the "best way to reverse current unemployment, budget and growth trends. "To this end the IUD urged a broad-based, temporary tax cut aimed at increasing the net spend- able income of America's great mass of wage and salary earners. Such a temporary reduction of taxes for the lower and middle- income groups would be reflected almost at once in rising retail trade and in the services. It would do much to clear the shelves of excess inventory and again start goods moving through the nation's pipelines." The Labor Department report- ed, meanwhile, that most employ- ers expect a net decrease in job levels by mid-January. Americans Committed to World ResponSibility p resent- A Symposium on the PEACE CORPS & WORLD RESPONSIBILITY, Friday Night Speakers: Gilbert Bursley - Prof. Samuel l 7:30 Rackham - Rep. (elect) to State Legislature Hayes - Professor of Economics and A Top Democrat HILLELZAPOPPIN Interfraternity - Sorority and Independent Skits Need * Stage Hands * Actors * Writers * Artists COMMITTEE MEETING Thursday, Dec. 8 7:15 P.M. Hillel I I , I I I FW MJ'rlSPi, i'Fw'A J +/+ {,JWi' ~4 1Mrd A /i4 lrYi t ]w"dd +W"1 " 1MV/i '"f 1\ Say "Merry Christmas with Hallmark or Contemporary Cards from Chester Roberts Gifts open 8:50 A.M. till 9:00 P.M. ~1 I I 'I U .~. ~ U