VAN DAILY SALE SALE *"SALE. complete catalogues FORD SETTLEMENT: UAW Ends Strike; Approves Contract DETROIT (R) -, The United Auto Workers 180-member Ford Council overwhelmingly approved yesterday a new three-year labor contract with Ford Motor Co. and agreed to end the 10-day national strike of 120,000 Ford production, workers. Only four delegates opposed approval. UAW President Walter P. Reuther then called his executive board into session last night to take up the problems of 25 local unions "which do not have agreements Products of. LONDON. RECORDS HUNDREDS OF SELECTIONS THE WORLD'S GREATEST ARTISTS THE WORLD'S GREATEST MUSIC 98 LP $L98 LP Included in this sale are such outstanding items as: B 19001 I Ravel: BOLERO; Berlioz: BENVENUTO CELLINI OVER- ___ TURE; THE CORSAIR OVERTURE-P.C.O.-CharlesMunch B 19002 ( Tchaikovsky: SYMPHONY No. 6-"Pthetique"-Munch B 19004 ROSSINI OVERTURES La Gazza Ladra; William Tell; Semiramide; La Scala Di Set-C.O.A.-Edward van Beinum B 19008 | Stravinsky: THE RITE OF SPRING-O.S.R.-Ansermet B 19009 1 Rachmaninoff: PIANO CONCERTO No. 2 Julius Katchen-New Symphony Orch.-AnatoleFistoulari B 19010 1ijBerlioz: SYMPHONIE FANTASTIQUE-Eduard van Beinum B 19011 Tchaikovsky: VIOLIN CONCERTO _______ I Ruggiero Ricci-New Symph. Orch.-Sir Malcolm Sargent B 190141 1 Tchaikovsky: 181 2OVETURE; HAMLET-L.P.O.-Boult B 19015 _J Stravinsky: PETRUSHKA-O.S.R-Ansermet B 19017 Beethoven: PIANO CONCERTO No. 4 Wilhelm Backhaus-Vienna 'hilh. Orch.-Clemens Krauss B 19019 1 1 Grieg: PEER GYNT-Suites 1-and 2-L.P.O.-Cameron B 19020 1 I Brahms: SYMPHONY No. 2-L.P.O.-urtwangler B 19021 Mendelssohn: VIOLIN CONCERTO Bruch: VIOLIN CONCERTO No. 1" - Campoli-van beinum-Kisch 0 19026 BEETHOVEN OVERTURES Leonora No. 3; The Consecration of the House; Egmont; Fidelio; Coriolan-L.P.O.-Eduard van Beinum B 19032 f Borodin: POLOVTSIAN DANCES . _ Falla: EL AMOR BRUJO-L.P.O. Collins-van Beinum B 19034 ( j Beethoven: VIOLIN CONCERTO-Ricci-L.P.O.-Boult B 19035 1 Mendelssohn: A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM f[ Schubert: ROSAMUNDE-Incidental Music Concertgebouw Orch. of Amsterdam-Eduard van Beinum ,9 19037 1 I Beethoven: SYMPHONY No. 6-L.P.O.-Kleiber B 19038 Brahms: HUNGARIAN DANCES, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 10 Dvorak: SLAVONIC DANCES, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 16 Hamburg Radio Orchestra-Hans Schmidt- Isserstedt B 19040 Prokofiev: PETER AND THE WOLF Frank Phillips, Narrator-London Philh. Orch.-Malko Britten: THE YOUNG PERSON'SGUIDE TO THE ORCH. 1oncerr aam-d u irsantBo B19042 Wagner: TRISTAN UND ISOLDE-Preue and Liebestod f Wagner: PARSIFAL-Good Friday Music-Krauss B 19049 EIERNA SACK RECITAL" B 19051 Beethoven: SYMPHONY No. 3-"Eroica" V.P.O.-Kleiber B 19053 Sibelius: FINLANDIA; Grieg: LYRIC SUITE; Tschpikovsky: MARCH SLAV; Liszt: HUNGARIAN RHAPSODY No. 4 [Danish State Radio Symphony Orchestra-Erik Tuxen B 19054 1 Beethoven: SYMPHONY No. 7-C.O.A.-Kleiber B 190561I Vivald: THE FOUR SEASONS __19__ Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra-Karl Munchinger B 19062 Schubert: SYMPHONY No. 8-"Unfinished" Mozart: SYMPHONY No. 35-"Haffner" Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra-Carl Schuricht B 19063 Beethoven: PIANO CONCERTO No. 3 . IWilhelm Backhaus-Vienna Philh. Orch.-Carl Bohm B 19064 1 Suppe: POET AND PEASANT-Overture Suppe: PIQUE DAME-Overture r Suppe: MORNING, NOON AND NIGHT IN VIENNA ' Suppe: LIGHT CAVALRY OVERTURE London Philharmonic Orch.-Georg Solti B 19065 I Tchaikovsky: NUTCRACKER SUITE, No. I and 11 ___ _ II The Paris Conservatory Orch.-Anatole Fistoulari B 19069 I Sibelius: SYMPHONY No. 1 j I London Symphony Orch.-Anthony Collins B 19072 I Beethoven: PIANO CONCERTO No. 5-"Emperor" _ I Wilhelm Backhaus-Vienna Philh. Orch-Clemens Krauss B 19073 1 Moussorgsky-Ravel: PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION L'Orchestre de ta Suisse Romnde-Ernest Ansermet Ravel: LA VALSE (Poeme Choregrophique) Paris Conservatory Orch.-Ernest Ansermet B 19077 I Mozart: REQUIEM IN D MINOR, K 626 Josef Krips conducting The VienntHofmusikkapelle. B 19078 | Schubert: SYMPHONY No. 9 in C MAJOR (Great) _ Concertgebouw Orch. of Amsterdam--Josef Krips B 19083 I Beethoven: SYMPHONY No. 9 "Choral" f___ Vienna Philharmonic Orch.-ErichKleiber BA 42001 I Tchaikovsky: THE SLEEPING BEAUTY-Complete Paris Conservatory Orch.-Anatole Fistoulari (2 records) BA 42002 Bach: BRANDENBURG CONCERTOS-Complete _ _I' Stuttgart Chamber Orch.-Karl Munchinger. (2 records) BA 42003 1 Tchaikovsky.: THE SWAN LAKE-Complete I I London Symphony Orch.-Anatole Fistoulari (2 records) BA 43001 Bach: ST. MATTHEW PASSION-Complete- (3 records) Kathleen Ferrier, contralto; Elsie Suddaby, soprano TELEFUNKEN TC 8002 1I1Respighi: THE PINES OF ROME; THE FOUNTAINS OF IROME Sym. Orch. of the Belgian Nat'l Radio-Franz Andre TC 8018 WALTZES OF JOHANN STRAUSS Artist's Life; The Blue Danube; Emperor Waltz; Wine, _ Women and Song. Bamberg Sym. Orch.-Keilberth TC 8019 Wagner: DIE MEISTERSINGER-Prelude to Acts I & 3 Wagner: LOHENGRIN-Prelude to Acts 1 & 3 Hamburg State Philh. Orch.-Joseph Keilberth TC 8020 GERMAN OVERTURES Gluck: IfHIGENIE EN AULIDE; Weber: OBERON; Nicolai: THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR; Humperdinck: HAN- SEL AND GRETEL-Berlin Opera Orch.-Rother TC 8021 I JOHANN STRAUSS OVERTURES i Die Fledermaus; Der Zigeuerbaron; Eine Nacht in Venedig;-Walmeister-Berlin OperaOrch.-Rother TC 8028 Offenbach: THE TALES OF HOFFMAN-Highlights Humperdinck: HANSEL AND GRETEL-Hghlights Soloists, Chorus& Orch. of Berlin Municipal Opera TC 8029 Lehar: THE MERRY WIDOW-Highlights Benatzky: THE WHITE HORSE INN-Highlights Zeller: DER VOGELHANDLER-Highlights TC 8030 Lehar: THE LAND OF SMILES-Highlights Lehar: DER ZAREWITSCH (The Crown Prince) -Highlights Strauss: THE GYPSY BARON-Highlights IStrauss: A NIGHT IN VENICE-Highlights TC 8033 THE MUSIC OF JOHANN STRAUSS Perssoian March; Morgenblatter; Tritsch-Tratsch Polka; Roses From The South-Bamberg Sym.-Keilberth TC 8036 Mozart: SYMPHONY No. 41-"Jupiter" 4. Mozart: SYMPHONY No. 40 Bamberg Symphony rch.-Joseph Keilberth TC 8042 Rimsky-Korsakov: SHEHERAZADE NorthGerman Radio Sym. Orch.-Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt TC 8043 Bruckner: SYMPHONY No. 9 IN D MINOR ____ Hamburg State Symphony Orch.-JosephKeilberth TC 8045 Mozart: CONCERTO IN C FOR FLUTE AND HARP, K 299 Mozart: CONCERTO No. 2 FOR FLUE, K 134 Mozart: ANDANTE FOR FLUTE AND ORCHESTRA, K 315 Rose Stein, harp; Arele Nicolet, flute The Munich Bach-Orch.-Karl Richter TP 2508 1MARCH TIME IN GERMANY-Band of the Berlin Guard TP2509 1 IENCHANTED TANGOS-Bela Saunders apd His Orchestra Sees Drugs As Pote ntial Cancer Cure CHICAGO OP)-A double-bar- reled cancer treatment melted away the tumors in eight patientsj with localized cancers diagnosedI as Incurable, a medical researcher reported yesterday. The treatment embodies simul- taneous injections of a dangerous drug and its protective antidote. The technique, used by Dr. Rob- ert D. 'Sullivan of New York on 52 patients suffering from incur- able head or neck cancers, is known as continuous infusion therapy. Heavy doses of a potent anti- cancer chemical are fed directly into the blood stream nourishing the cancerous area. At the same time injections of the drug's anti- dote protect the remaining un- infected parts of the body. Eight of these patients still are apparently free of their tumors 20 months after treatment. Hoffa Requests Joint Union Action LANSING (R) - Organized La- bor "must fight side by side," Teamster President, James R. Hoffa told an AFL-CIO group which gave him a standing, hand- clapping ovation at the end of a speech here yesterday. Hoffa emphasized what he said was the necessity of fighting to- gether in the fields of politics and legislation, and told his fellow unionists to "organize politically as you do for security." with plant management on work- ing conditions. The board has announced it will authorize local strikes in plants where there are valid dis- putes. The council's vote to recommend ratification of the contract by rank and file members came aft- er a nearly four hour session. Reuther described acceptance of the contract as enthusiastic. He said the "four who objected made it clear they were objecting to production standards and not to the national contract. South African Defends Talk. After Censure UNITED NATIONS (4) - South African Foreign Minister Eric Louw assailed the Western powers yesterday for failing to defend him when the General Assembly voted an. unprecedented censure of his policy speech. Obviously smarting over the fact that the United States, Brit- ain and France had registered no objection before the 67-1 censure vote was cast, Louw told reporters a statement by United States Am- bassador Adlai E. Stevenson to the press came too late -to do any, good. The foreign minister warned that the censure vote which fol- lowed a bitter attack on his gov- ernment from a host of enraged African delegates was certain to trigger demands at home that South Africa pull out of the United Nations. African delegates were angered by Louw's charge that their gov- ernments were attacking his re- gime to divert attention from piti- ful economic conditions and il- literacy in their own countries. Bonn Ready To Increase Active Duty BERLIN (M)- West Germany yesterday was reported prepared to extend the service of draftees and there were indications that it will oppose any concessions to the Soviet Union in the Berlin crisis. The Bonn government stiffened its stand against any form of Western recognition of the East German Communist regime just as Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev demanded recognition for East Germany as a condition for a peaceful settlement of the Berlin dispute. Khrushchev declared in letters released in Moscow that the So- viet Union would guarantee Wes- tern access to West Berlin on con- dition that East and West agree to two Germanys, both neutraliz- ed, in the United Nations and demilitarized. He said only such a Gerfman peace treaty "can re- move the danger of a new war." West 'German Defense Minister Franz Josef Strauss told fellow Christian Democratic. members of parliament in Bonn that draftees in the Army, Navy and Air Force probably will serve 18 months, in- stead of the present 12-~after the first of the year. The move would parallel Com- munist action across the border. The East German regime Tues- day ordered some of its troops to serve up to six months extra to "increase combat readiness." The Berlin sector border mean- while seethed with unrest. East German police hurled tear gas bombs and turned powerful jets of water at a West Berlin crowd gathered near the Communist wall in the American sector. Earlier in the day a squad of 10 East Berlin police broke into a West Berlin house, apparently in search of one' of their com- rades who defected. Union Protests Porter Bias NEW YORK (P)-Organized la- bor's high command yesterday de- nied laxity in enforcing racial equality among union members as charged by a top union leader. The-AFL-CIO Executive Coun- cil overwhelmingly rebuffed accu- sations leveled by President A. Philip Randolph of the Brother- hood of Sleeping Car Porters, the council's only Negro member. Randolph's fellow council mem- bers charged him instead with practicing racism by employing only Negroes on his own union's staff and refusing to let white workers get jobs as railroad car porters. Randolph in turn denied the charges. 1 Dean Warns UN Group Soviets May Force U.S. ----- Friday INITIATION BALL After Initiationof New Nemanites 8:30-12:30 Band ... Dressy.. . Free to Members Saturday DUNKER'S HOUR After Game, Cider & Donuts ... U of Mvs MS U . NEWMAN CLUB 331 Thompson World News Roundup I I I I I Jan. 8: FARREBIQUE (dir. by George Rouquier, I Hardy, U. 5., U I