4 Senate Votes To Support Plan DRUGS* Suspend' Senate Hearings WASHINGTON () - Senate hearings on drug industry prac- tices were suspended indefinitely yesterday with a statement by Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.), that slanted advertising claims present an intolerable situation. Kefauver said it was clear from testimony that disagreements be- tween medical and advertising men over advertising claims were not always settled in favor of. the physicians. Situation Bad That this is a bad and Intoler- able situation is recognized by the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Assn. in its own code of ethics, Kefauver said. Quoting the code's declaration that all medical claims in promotional material should have "medical review" be- fore being released, Kefauver said rigorous enforcement of the code "would be a good place to begin." "If they do not do so," Kefauver said, "I have no doubt that the Congress, or an agency of gov- ernment, will do it for them." Kefauver is chairman of an Antitrust and Monopoly Subcom- mittee that has been investigating pricing and other practices in the drug industry. Hearings Impossible He said it was impossible to continue the hearings under pres- ent conditions which forced the subcommittee to meet early in the morning and late at night to avoid conflicts with the Senate debate on civil rights legislation. During the civil rights debate, the Senate is enforcing a rule that committee meetings may not be held while the Senate is in session. Kefauver said that unless the Pharmaceutical Code gives medi- cal men clearcut authority over advertising claims it is just "meaningless double talk" which at best would cause confusion and at worst would present "a source of danger to the patient's health." 0 Break Filibuster OVERCROWDED -- This young live in tenements and packing- constant influx of immigrants, The housing problem, severe no Hong Kong Colony. Discusses Life Of Hong Kon By World University Service Imagine the life and problems of the three million people who live in the 390 square miles of the colony of Hong Kong. Life here has changed so much since 1949 that the inhabitants themselves hardly know what to make ofit. The problem is not only one of housing and feeding- they cannot find a flat piece of land for new houses. CCity blocks are leveled to build 15-story resettlement blocks. Crazy huts, made of packing cases HAL HOLBROOK "MARK TWAIN TONIGHT !" POSTPON E D TO APRIL 12, 8:30 P.M. Tickets issued for February 27 will be honored April 12. g man is one of many forced to -box huts by the pressure of a driven there by many motives. w, is being slowly solved by the Problems [Communi and driftwood, cover the hillsides. In the town, there is no living space but bed spaces which may be occupied by several users in one day and night. Face Problem Hong Kong is not completely bewildered by this problem; it is facing up to it. After its founding, it developed excellent urban serv- ices, and educational facilities in western style. This stable devel- opment ended with the Japanese invasion. After four years of pri- vation and neglect, refugees began to flood in. This flood, which has trebled the population, soon overwhelmed the local community, and with it came the Korean War. New in- dustries and civic projects have been started, but inevitably the development and welfare pro- gramshave lagged behind the situation. In higher education an entirely new problem has emerged. After 1949, if you had been educated in a Chinese-speaking school you had no chance of going to university unless you were prepared to go to the mainland; and probably never return. Start Schools Refugees started new schools in Hong Kong which carry on the traditions of former mainland universities, but they are still new and insufficient. Generally, the 4,000 students, whether refugees or not, range in financial circumstances from poor to utterly destitute. If they receive no education, as laborers they can' expect to earn no more than $10 a month. Furthermore, neither their overcrowded homes or their' inadequate school libraries furnish ample study facilities. Their educational problems are intensified by the necessity in even "Chinese Colleges' to acquire at least a reading knowledge of English. These students have little or no time for relaxation, plus the psychological stresses of being uprooted from their homes and anxiety about their families. Southerners Try To Stall Civil Rights; All-Day Sessions Will Start Monday WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Sen- ate voted 67-10 yesterday to back up plans of leaders of both par-1 ties for around-the-clock sessions aimed at cracking a Southern fili- buster against civil rights legisla- tion. Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Texas) said he forced the vote because "I do not want to have the blood on my hands" if, as he put it, any accident should befall someone during nonstop sessions due to start Monday. The vote was not a clearcut test. The quarterback of the southern forces, Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Ga.), called Johnson's. maneuver "a straw man erected to be knocked down." Vote on Meeting The vote came on the question of whether the Senate should meet only until 5 p.m. on Mon- day instead of staying in session around the clock. Johnson said he made a motion to adjourn at that hour so that the majority of the Senate could express its will. Johnson himself voted against it. On the roll call vote, 45 Demo- crats joined by 22 Republicans voted against the motion. The southern Senators split 8-8, with Russell among those opposing the motion. Two Republicans voted for it. Calls Responsible Johnson told the Senate it had been saidthe leadership would be responsible if an accident should befall someone in any 24-hour sessions. He said he hoped all Senators could remain in good health, but went on to say he didn't want to take all the blame if this should not prove to be the case. Southern forces earlier had adopted a new tactic in their fight a g a i n s t new Administration- backed legislation to help guar- antee that southern Negroes can vote in areas where they say they are now illegally kept from the polls. Sen. A. Willis Robertson (D- Va.), announced he has called off hearings scheduled to begin next Tuesday by an appropriations sub-committee he heads on the annual money bills for the Trea- sury and post office departments. Southerners head a number of appropriations subcommittees. If others follow Robertson's ex- ample, their action would threaten leaders' plans to push the annual money bills through quickly in a drive to adjourn Congress before the July political conventions. Disclaim IHo f fa's Pledges WASHINGTON ( - The Sen- ate Rackets Committee said yes- terday it has shown up as com- pletely dishonest President James R. Hoff a's repeated pledges to stamp corruption out of his Teamster's Union. It portrayed him* as a man un- der deep obligations to the under- world. After making his promises, the committee told the Senate in a re- port, Hoffa set up in Miami what it termed a "Racket Local," No. 320. It said he installed Harold Gross, whom it called a convict- ed extortionist and known fixer, as the local's president. Hoffa has been pumping $3,000 a month sub- sidies from his union's funds into the local, the report said. Committee Charges The committee charged that a purported anti-corruption com- mission set up by Hoffa at the union's expense was a coverup op- eration. Former Sen. George H. Bender (R-Ohio), resigned re- cently as the commission's head. Bender's commission, the report alleged, "was formed merely for purposes of deception - to con- ceal from the committee, the courts and the public generally Hoffa's dependence on and obli- gations to these (racketeer) ele- ments." In sum, it said, Hoffa is con- temptuous of law and order. The report is the first of four which the committee is issuing on its 1958 and 1959 investigations in various labor-management fields. In one section, the report said the committee is unanimous in viewing payoffs exacted by racke- teers from some big metropolitan newspapers and publishing firms as a "potential threat to freedom of the press." Review Findings The findings reviewed testimony that payoffs had been extorted as a price for labor peace, to avert costly stoppages of the wholesale delivery of newspapers, newspaper supplements and magazines. The report said payments ag- gregating $307,136.60 had been made to Gross and Cornelius (Con- nie) Noonan, his labor union ally, by The New York Times, The New York Mirror, The Neo-Gravure Printing Co. of Weehawken, N.H., and the American Weekly, owned by the Hearst Publishing Co., Inc. It said American Weekly paid to protect its deliveries of supple- ments to The New York Journal- American. There was no comment on the report by the newspapers. Noonan is head of the Inland Terminal Workers Local No. 1730 of the International Longshore- men's Assn. The report also charged that racketeers had extorted large sums from New York area wholesale distributors of newspapers and magazines, and had infiltrated some of the firms and unions with which the delivery firms bargain. THE JOHN BARTON WOLGAMOT PLAYERS in Jarry's savage burlesque UBGO RO (Gopotty Rex) "'The Surrealists invented nothing better." -Andre Gide SAT. & SUN., MARCH 5&6 8:30 P.M. Admission 95c Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg. Buy tickets at Bob Marshall's Princess Tells Nuptial Plans To. Conmoner LONDON () - Princess Mar- garet last night put the shadow of a broken romance behind her and announced her engagement to a commoner, Anthony Armstrong- Jones, photographer for2Britain's royal family. Both are 29. The princess' betrothal came just a little more than four years after she renounced her love for Group Capt. Peter Townsend - and two months after his mar- riage to his Belgian secretary. Armstrong-Jones, educated at Eton and Cambridge in a classic pattern from Britain's upper middle class, has moved for two years in the exclusive set of com- moners around the throne. As a court photographer, he has been a constant escort for the princess. Together they have spent many hours together in the palaces and country retreats of the royal family. Armstrong-Jones is just five months older than the princess. Her marriage will not affect her position as fourth in line of suc- cession to the throne, after Queen Elizabeth's three children. February 27, 1960 TALKS TO WILLIAMS: Chrysler To Remain in Michigan LANSING (A') -- Chrysler Cor- poration"hasnopresen pans to complaints and make a report, moderate rate of move out of Michigan," L. L. (Tex) Miriani said he would do the same. maximum, or both," Colbert, president, declared yes- The meetings stemmed from an tion of discrimine terday. attack on Detroit's property tax Michigan firms doin The auto firm head twice made and the state tax structure last number of states. that pronouncement after confer- week by William C. Newberg, Tax Sour ences on Chrysler's tax worries Chrysler's executive vice-president. Colbert maintaine with Gov. G. Mennen Williams and He said the company couldn't be activities tax was "ba Mayor Louis C. Miriani of Detroit. counted on to maintain the ma- He rejected William He said he will so inform Gov. jority of its operations in Michi- a corporation incon Michael Disalle of Ohio, who in- gan without some tax changes. unstable revenue pr vited the company last week to Colbert made these recommen- tuating in times of shift its operations to Ohio. dations: and bad. Colbert also declared, however, 1) A revision of Detroit's personal Colbert declined that Chrysler suffers from "seri- property tax assessments, which he recommendations fo ous shortcomings" in state and said were "much higher percentage the revenue that w local tax laws. He asked Williams of value than real property." As a his proposals were and Miriani to start action to result, he said, the company paid "We don't propo correct the situation. a tax penalty of $10 million in the tion," he said. "We Names Committee three years from 1958 to 1960. ing the facts." Williams said he had named a 2) Legislation to exempt from Asks Refa special study committee headed by personal property taxation tools, Williams, report his legal adviser, Alfred B. Fitt, dies, jigs and fixtures, -utting progress" from his to port over the company's tax Michigan in line with Ohio. Colbert and other PLATFORM ATTRACTIONS HILL AUDITORIUM Starting DIAL TODAY NO 5-6290 NOMINAED FOR TWO ACADEMY AWARDS AS "BEST ACTRESS" ElLZASET KATHARINE MONTGOMERY TAYLOR HEPBURN *CUF T a r A OLUMIA r 9,CTURES F LDA " TENNESSEE WILLIAMS - JOSEPH L MANKIEWICZ SAM SPIEGEL wFM ts "* S b y o V IDS AY m IE WILLIAMS - " dcti esISa.-OUfLf MESSEt ...r-e. Undergraduate Men are needed .. . to serve in an experiment for 1 1/ hours. Pay $2.00. Please call Mrs. Strong NOI 3-1511 Ext. 2651 or send postcard with name, address, phone and hours available to her at 6627 Haven Hall. TISK SAYS MARTIAN G~o$ °; Gee ... 1 gat a ticket for the I HC-Assembly Shaw " "And mwmmwmm I I Cinema uild TONIGHT and TOMORROW at 7:00 and 9:10 "GUNGA DIN" with only two moons back armstrong His All Stars [1 in ow ... A