THE MICHIGAN DAILY .., Russia Wrap Up Walker Quits Army Post To Battle Communism Agreement for U Thant As Secretary- eneral Council Set To Approve Burma Aide No Difficulty Seen In Assembly Assent UNITED NATIONS (JP) - The Big Four powers wrapped up an' agreement last night to name U Thant of Burma interim UN Sec- retary-Qeneral in place of the late Dag Hammarskjold. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin, November Pres- Ident of the Security Council, told reporters the Council would meet today at 11" to recommend an acting Secretary-General. He had just had a 1%-hour conference with United States Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson in the latter's nearby mission. Stevenson Agrees A United States spokesman said Stevenson had agreed to have the Council meeting today. Once the Council recommends U Thant, it will then be for the General As- sembly to appoint him, but no dif- ficulty is expected over this. Diplomats said Zorin would not have scheduled the council meet- ing' had agreement not been reached. But he declined to make any statement on this subject. He would say only, "everything, will be clear today." Earlier, both the United States and the ,Soviet Union showed themselves hopeful of early agree- ment after U Thant handed them his secret formula on the one remaining issue. Sealed Envelopes Delegates of the big four visited the Burmese diplomat in two groups in his temporary office here. He handed each a sealed en- velope containing a typed. state- ment on how many principal ad- visers he would choose and which regions he would choose them from in. case he got the post. Egypt, Syria Plan To Set Exchange CAIRO W) - Egypt and Syria agreed yesterday to exchange 780 Egyptian soldiers in Syria for 960 Syrian soldiers in Egypt. The Arab League was asked to organize the exchange. Syria broke Its link with Egypt in the United Arab Republic last month. Honduras Hurricane WASHINGTON OM-Mal. Gen. Edwin A. Walker announced last night he is quitting, the Army be- cause he feels its action in rebuk- ing him and taking away his divi- sional command destroyed his use. fulness in uniform. Announcing his decision,, Walk- er said he will forego his retire- ment pay of more than $12,000 a year in order to be free as a civil- ian to continue his campaign against what he regards as Com- munist infiltration. The General, a key figure in the controversy over how much freedom military men should have to speak out against Communism, announced his decision in a state- ment to a Senate Armed Services subcommittee. Removed from Command "I have been removed from command of the 24th Division," Walker said. "My career has been destroyed in its usefulness to my country. I cannot accept retirement with its emoluments and benefits. To do so would be a compromise with my principal. "I take leave of military duty with a heavy heart. I must find other means of serving my coun- try in the time of her great need, in order to pursue the dedication of a lifetime. "To do this, I must be free from the power of little men who, in Chrysler, UAW Eye Bargam D E T R 0 1 T VJP)-- Bargaining Both sides were cautiously opti- bers an increase of more th against a midnight strike dead.ee line, Chrysler Corp. and the Unit-*msithtasrkofCrle'cnsanouinaeho ed Auto Workers, virtually wrap- 60,000 UAW-represented employes each year of the three-yea ped up yesterday an agreement on could be averted, but there was no wages and extra benefits. indication how close together, the.tracts. Stlltobereoledbeor tecompany and UAW were on non- Counter. Proposal Stillto be resoled before the economic matters-working-condi- Ina counter proposal, the deadline were thorny non-eco- tions in Chrysler's 46 plants., has insisted that the co nomic matters. MAJOR GEN. EDWIN WALKER ... resigns position the name of my country, punish loyal service to it." New Assignment The Army had admonished the general for his troop training methods, relieved him of his com- mand in Europe, and assigned him to a staff job in Hawaii. Walker's statement was made public by the office of Sen. Strom Thurmond (D-SC) who was in., strumental in pushing for the forthcoming subcommittee in- quiry. WASHINGTON (J)-Nearly 1,- 700 Cincinnati, Ohio, milk delivery driver rebels from James R. Hof- fa's Teamsters Union received yesterday a charter of affiliation in the AFL-CIO, which predicted more Teamsters would switch over soon. George Meany, AFL-CIO presi- dent, was asked at the chartering ceremony whether the Cincinnati defection meant the beginning of the end for Hoffa's huge 1.5-mil. lion member Teamsters organiza- tion--ousted from the AFL-CIO four years ago on corruption charges. "I would say this indicates there are considerable numbers of work- ers in the Teamsters who will vote for a clean decent union if they are given a chance," Meany re- plied. At Teamsters headquarters, Hoffa had no comment. -AP Wirephoto HURRICANE HATTIE-The storm left the city-of Belize, British Honduras, flooded and rubble-strewn after it struck yesterday. Gusts up to 240-miles-per-hour hit the central Caribbean coast leaving thousands homeless. West German Party, Rej ects AdnursCoalition Offer BONN MP)-The Conservative Free Democratic Party last night rejected a coalition agreement offered by Chancellor Konrad Ade- nauer's Christian Democrats and demanded negotiations on a new government start -again. The surprise rejection came only a few hours after leaders of both parties announced that a coalition soon would be formed to put Adenauer in office for a fourth term. The Christian Democrats had attempted to change the coali- tion terms originally worked out by the 85-year-old Chancellor and 0 the Free ,Democrats' chairman, National Roundup By The Associated Press NEW YORK-A more vigorous NEW YORK-James Thurber, spirit made its appearance on the whose writings and drawings kept New York Stock Exchange yester- day as Standard and Poor's 500 a generation of Americans laugh- Index closed up .38, with 425 in- ing, died yesterday at 66, of pneu- dustrials up .41, 25 rails up .07, monia and respiratory complica- and 50 utilities up .28. American tions which followe a brain oper- Telephone and Telegraph was up a full 3%18. ation.__ I * * * r. No Breakthrough Seen for Cancer WASHINGTON (M-A note of "cautious hopefulness" was sound- ed at a big conference of cancer specialists yesterday. But the pub- lic was told that no "break- through" is in sight m the fight against the disease. More than' 1,000 physicians and surgeons gathered for a two-day review of methods in treating cancer with chemicals. Progress has been attained since the last conference two years ago, experts said. Work is being pushed in testing drugs on animals, and cautiously introducing promising ones into treatment of human beings. Erich Mende. After eight hours of debate be. hind closed doors, the Free Demo- crats announced that acceptance of the original terms was a nec- essary condition for their support of Adenauer. The announcement gave every indication that the Party was de- termined to stand fast against moves to cut down its influence in- a new government. Speculation sprang up immedi-' ately that Adenauer was in real trouble after 12 years in office, during which he has run West Germany almost single-handedly. Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard was being talked of as a possible successor to end the political dead- lock. WASHINGTON-Indian Prime Minister Jawarahal Nehru will confer privately with President John P. Kennedy for more than five hours in two meetings next week. * * * BALTIMORE -- The Maryland Legislative Council has approved by voice vote a proposed bill which would require restaurants and ho- tels in the state to serve all races. EXCITING EXHIBITIONS from 20 lands at WORLD'S I FAR Nov. 101 MICHIGAN UNION L _ _. _____f. r 74e CHUCK WAGON LUNCHES and DINNERS FINE SALADS and SANDWICHES Specializing in Roast Beef Serving Wines and Beers from all over the world QUICK LUNCH SERVICE recommended by Duncan Hines and Gourmet CA*ERING SERVICE AVAILABLE OPEN 7 DAYS 2045 Packard Hours 11 A.M.-9 P.M. NO 2-1661 LARRY DAVIS, Proprietor ENJOY THIS V A GOOD DEL RIO BAR Freshly Remodeled -- New Management Beer, Wine, Liquor and Cocktails- Specializing in Delicious Pizza Pie Sandwiches FREE PIZZA DELIVERY from 6:00 P.M. Till Closing Hour Phone NO 2-9575 122 W. Washington 341 S. Main St. NO 3-2401 Incomparable cuisine from around the world in a warm and intimate atmosphere SPECIALTIES: International Dishes, Live Lobster, Steaks, Sea Food, Poultry, Homemade Desserts. THOMPSON'S RESTAURANT offers you a taste treat of a traditional Italian dish [PIUZAI will be served daily from 12 Noon to 2 P.M. and 5 P.M. to 2 A.M. I DEE MED CrIEDV 1 (E EKEND1 ~ ~ 3 3 U3 pac~o~ac~~a o aoao oac0 0 oJ O Enjoy the Finest -0 a 10p CANTONESE oFOOD o0 TaeOtOrders Anytime SMORGASBORD WEDNESDAY 6:00 to 10:00 P.M. LUNCH: Monday Through Friday: Businessmen's Buffet Lunches menu at 11:30 A.M. and a rich SATURDAY: A Tempting BRUNCH at 11:30 A.M.