i ORIENTATION DISCUSSED Y Sir irn Seventieth Year of Editorial Freedom. :4Iaitt THUNDERSHOWERS High-72 Low-55 Partly cloudy and warmer today, colder with thundershowers tonight See Page 4 VOi. LXX, No.15 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8,1959 FIVE CENTS' EIGHT PAGES 1 I SGC Recommends Changes in Rules t organization Regulations Revisions Requested in Extended Meeting By KENNETH McELDOWNEY Revisions of the new Regulations Booklet were recommended last night by the Student Government Council. In addition, David Kessel, Grad., indicated that this was his last Council meeting. He will leave in the near future to do research at Harvard University. The Regulations Booklet which was written over the summer was given to SGC for their comments and recommendations for changes. The Booklet sets up the regulations which will control the various student organizations on campus. As well as this function, it serves as a compliment to the SGC plan. Jo Hardee, '60, executive vice-president, recommended that the entire area of rules of conduct be reconsidered by the proper govern- Qing authorities. Her motion was DAVID KESSEL. ... last meeting TO RETURN: Lunik Soars Past "Moon MOSCOW MP-Tass announced the Russians' Lunik III soared to a point 78,750 miles from the Moon and kept going yesterday on a course that will swing it past the Earth in 11 days. The little flying laboratory, which some scientists had specu- lated was due back this weekend, will sail on in space until Saturday. and then turn back at a point 291,870 miles from the Earth, the official Soviet news agency said. According to this account, the 614-pound vehicle will make a wide swing around the Earth in com- pleting the round trip it started from a Russian rocket base Sun- day "The shortest distance from the Earth's surface will be about 40,- 000 kilometers (24,840 miles)," Tass said. This is far beyond the minimum forecast by the Russians at the time of the launching. The Tass report - issued after radio contact was established at 9 am. EST - made clear Lunik's looping flight was carrying it away from the moon more sharply than from the Earth. The course, as diagrammed here, flattens out to parallel the Earth after the historic passage behind the hidden side of the Moon. At nine a.m. EST, Tass said, the rocket was 78,750 miles from the Moon and 258,957 miles from the, Earth. "After passing the point-of mini- mum distance from the Moon, the atomatic interplanetary station (a Russian description of the space vehicle), circumventing the Moon, continues to move away from the Earth and the Moon," Tass said. "The data- obtained by the ground telemetering stations dur- ing the transmission session of Oct. 6,,' Tass said, "confirm that the scientific measuring instruments, the thermal regulation and power supply systems continue function- ng normally." Dr. J. G. Davies, chief of the observation team, said the space vehicle appeared to be about one degree higher in the sky than the prediction sent by Moscow three days ago, but that such a minor deviation "represents an amazing degree of accuracy." Hints Summit Meeting N ear MOSCOW - Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev says a sum- passed. Among' specific complaints, Council members pointed out that perhaps it was not within the ju- risdiction of the University Ad- ministration to rule regarding hours that women can be per- mitted 'in the residences of male students on campus. It was also pointed out that fra- ternities have much more leeway than the quads in the periods of time during which women can visit. - Question Liquor Rule The fairness of not permitting frateri'ities with all residents over 21 to have liquor in the house was also questioned. In the section dealing with re- sponsibility, the idea of an organi- zation, rather than the individual members being fined for an olfense was debated. There is no reason why all of the studenits in an organization should be punished for the actions of only a few, it was noted. On the other hand, it was men- tioned that there should be some way to punish an organization when it is clearly in the wrong. After a debate lasting several hours, the Council calendared Hil- lelzapoppin for Nov. 7. The request from Hillel conflicted with a pre- vious one of the International Stu- dents Association to hold their Monte Carlo Ball on the same date. Confusion Arose The confusion first arose last semester when Hillel thought they had changed the date of their pro- gram from March 12, 1960 to Nov. 7.. It was discovered this semester that due to a mixup, this date had not been changed and that they were still calendared for March 7. Finally when the motion to cal- endar Hillelzapoppin for Nov. 7, came to a vote, it was tied to- gether with an amendment which members of the Council said they found objectionable. The amended motion was passed by an eight to seven vote only with the tie-breaking vote being cast by the SGC President Ron Gregg, '60. As it stands now, both Hillelza- poppin and the Monte Carlo Ball are calendared for Nov. 7, and will come up for approval at- the next Council meeting. AWESOME': Universit Dedicates Telescope The future of the University's new radio telescope is "awesome and exhilarating," Rear Adm. Rawson Bennett, chief of United States Naval Research, said at dedication ceremonies at Peach Mountain yesterday. The new $270,000 instrument, put into operation for the first time yesterday, "can give us new detailed information about radia- tion from the sun and also serve as a major means of contact with rockets traveling to the far reaches of space," said Adm. Ben- nett. "In this 85-foot, fully steerable radio telescope we have an instru- ment which, unlike much scienti- fic equipment today, should not become obsolete for the next few decades," Adm. Bennett continued. Envisions Progress "Here . . . we will see historic progress made," he added. Prof. Fred T. Haddock, head of the University radio astronomy program, said the telescope's an- tenna, shaped like a huge saucer, is the most sensitive instrument of its kind and the fourth largest steerable radio telescope in tle world., A precision-made, reflecting sur- face and new drive system enable the telescope to chart any portion of the sky, breaking it into 40,000 sections. To Study Planets Among the first uses of the tele- scope will be an. effort to learn more about Uranus and Venus, Prof. Haddock said. The telescope, located 16 miles north of Ann Arbor, was con- structed by the University through an Office of Naval Research con- tract. A public open house at the tele- scope site will be held from 2 to, 4 p.m. Sunday. Visitors will have an opportunity to see a demon- stration of the new instrument. Entrance to the, site is at 10280 W. North Territorial Rd. Art Authority Berenson Dies In Italy at 94 FLORENCE, Italy (M)-Bernard Berenson, generally regarded as the world's greatest authority on Italian Renaissance painting, died yesterday at the age of 94. The American expatriate had lived in Italy for 73 years, but he always thought of the United States as home. He left his estate, including a brilliant collection of paintings and his library-one of the world's greatest sources of information on? art - to Harvard University, his alma mater. Steel Both Sides Await Ike's Decision S Dock Strike 'Inj'unction Seen Today Fact-Finding Panel Hears Testimonies WASHINGTON OP) - President Eisenhower's fact - finders worked at top speed last night to deliver to the White House a report de- signed to send 85,000 dock strikers back to work under a court order. The justice department officials stood ready to seek the Taft-Hart- ley Act injunction today in federal district court in New York City. The three - man fact - finding panel zipped through a public hearing on the week-old inter- national Longshoremen's Assn. strike in one hour and 45 minutes. Ready Report to Ike Then the panel members worked in shirt sleeves to draft their re- port to Eisenhower. A spokesman said the three might toil into the evening or even later, but definitely planned to get their report to the White House in time for the Attorney General to send his lawyers into I court tomorrow. Under the Taft-Hartley Law's emergency machinery, the fact finders' report must precede court action. Gangs May Return If federal court agrees to order an 80-day cooling off period, long-, shore work gangs may start Fri- day to move the piled-up cargoes which have been choking Atlantic ports from Maine to Texas for the past week. The injunction requiresthe 80- day truce for working and negotia- tion. The panel heard sharp conflicts of testimony in its high-speed in- quiry this morning. Then Chair- man Guy Farmer appealed to the parties to seek an early, peaceful settlement. Calls Return 'Useless' But in New York, President Wil- liam V. Bradley of the Longshore Union Said that since the Taft- Hartley machinery is already roll- ing, he could "see no reason why we should resume" negotiations. "In the face of Taft-Hartley, it would be useless," he said. The testimony at the fact-find- ing hearing was brief but acrid. The ILA counsel, Louis Wald- man of New York, accused the em- ployers of seeking wholesale elimi- nation of longshore jobs, of refus- ing to bargain, and trying to "set the labor clock back 25 years." Charges Irresponsibilty Alexander P. Chopin, chairman of the New York Shipping Assn., Inc., charged that the union walked out "illegally and irrespon- sibly." The Oct. 1 walkout of stevedores from Maine to Texas, Chopin said,1 violated an agreement to extend1 the contract for 15 days beyonditse expiration date at midnight last Wednesday. When the firing ended, Farmere reminded the antagonists that theI Taft - Hartley machinery itself won't solve the dispute and urged an immediate fresh start on bar-c gaining.c FEDERAL COURT RULES- Formosan Student Given Reprieve By JEAN HARTWIG Chien-sen Liu, Grad., will not be deported Monday. The mainland-born Formosan exchange student, accused of fraudulently entering the United States two years ago, has received a stay of deportation, probably until he finishes his studies here, according to Harry Kobel, his lawyer. Walter H. Sahle, director of the Detroit immigration service, ex- plained that Liu's stay of deport- ation was a result of a federal Polls Favor Macmillan In Election LONDON 03) - Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's Conservatives, the odds-on betting favorites, ner- vously expected to win another five years of power in a national election today. The Conservatives were just a shade more confident than Hugh Gaitskell's Laborites, who also! claimed they could smell victory in the air. In the two headquarters, cam- paign directors studied last-min- ute reports from canvassers and! privately came up with these con- flicting assessments: The voters will give the Con- servatives a 40-seat margin over all other parties in the new 630- seat House of Commons. Would Be Loss1 This would represent a drop of 13 seats, but would be ample to keep Macmillan comfortably in the saddle as Prime Minister. The Laborites will win with a 20-seat edge. This would put Gait- skell in as Prime Minister and send him instead of Macmillan to represent Britain at any new sum-' mit conference. Behind their facade of optim- ism, the two sides conceded that the election could produce a photo finish. Liberals May Decide In' that event the handful of liberals in Parliament would be able - by throwing in with one side or the other - to determine* whether Britain's top executive job went to Macmillan or Gait- skell. Both Liberal and Conservativej party workers set doorbells ring- ing in a final effort to win support of a huge bloc of uncommitted voters. The three-week campaign1 closed with many signs indicating1 it could go either way. 'However, the bookmakers, whose business is legal in Britain, viewed the Conservatives as the hottest election betting favorites since; World War II.'. But fully a fifth of Britain's 35,- 400,000 eligible voters have re- fused to tell poll takers and partyI workers how they will vote. I The trend of this group un-I doubtedly will determine the out- come. court decision Tuesday that people of China cannot be deported to Formosa because it is not a coun- try. As a result of the ruling, no Chinese ?persons in this country can be deported until further de- cisions are made. Consequently the 200 Formosan students in the United States who are accused of similarly defraud- ing the government will be al- lowed to remain in the country. Liu, who is studying engineer- ing at the University, is accused of violating the "financial respon- sibility" clause of the immigration code by borrowing from various sponsors $2,400, which he put in four banks in the United States. Upon arriving in this country, he immediately returned the money and financed his studies by part-time employment and $1,200 in University loans, schol- arships and grants-in-aid. Explaining that . he was con- cerned with Liu as an individual, Kobel said he thought the original decision on the legality of Liu's action could have gone either way. Kobel said he had appealed the case to Lt. Gen. Joseph Swing, Commissioner of the Washington immigration and 'naturalization service, on the grounds that Liu should be allowed to finish the education he has started here. Kobel said he wanted an offi- cial statement of the length and conditions of the stay of deporta- tion. A second consideration of the legal status of Liu's case may also be asked. Liu himself is very happy about the decision. He plans to remain at the University and continue his studies as long as possible. Series Play To Resume CHICAGO (')-Pleasant weath- er and a crowd of 48,000 are ex- pected for the sixth game of the World Series today. The Los Angeles Dodgers, who have won three games thus far, will be out to clinch the world baseball championship in the best- of-seven series. The Chicago White Sox, who have won two games, will aim to win to keep their chances alive. The Chicagoans are an 11-10 betting choice to take today's game. But the Los Angeles team is a 21/2-1 favorite to take the series. The White Sox have chosen their ace, Early Wynn, as starting pitch- er. The Dodgers have given thei pitching assignment to Johnny Podres. Both are winners in this series. Wynn won the first game, which the White Sox took by an 11-0 score. Podres was the winner of the second game, taken by the Dodgers by a 4-3 score.' The White Sox figuratively will have their backs against the wall. But it will be the wall of their home grounds, Comiskey Park, scene of the first two games of the series. 1 r t i t t { CHIEN-SEN LIU .. . receives stay Negotiations NEAR BAY CITY:; Plan New Institution In State Plans are being. made for an educational institution that will serve Michigan's tri-country, area of Bay, Midland, and Saginaw counties. Tax and philanthropic monies will be combined to provide a four- year college= for. this~ area with a potential college student popula- tion of 5,000. The new college, will be com- posed of a two-year community (junior) college supported by a 1.5 million dollar tax levy ap- proved in 1958 by the voters of the three counties, and a senior school founded as a private, non-profit corporation, later to be supported by tuitions. There is a prospect of the addi- tion of a state-supported. college of medicine. Structure Unusual "The structure is unusual, and, to the best of my knowledge, no comparable .pattern exists in the United States," Samuel D. Marble, president of the college, said. The two year junior. college is also 'unusual because it will be governed by its own board of trus- tees, and not by the local board of education as are most junior colleges. The area has the second largest population concentration in the state, after Wayne County. The new school will supplant Bay City Junior College, which has been rapidly outgrowing its facilities. High entrance requirements and academic standards will be estab- lished. The trustees aim to prepare men and women not only. for jobs that exist, but also for jobs that do not. In this way the school hopes to attract interested research groups and industries who need ,the serv- ices of such people. Eventually Four-Year. The tri-county college will even- tually become a four-year univer- sity even if present plans to rush the four-year program fail. College trustees currently esti- mate the school can be completed for approximately $200,000 less than the $8,000,000 to be raised in the tri-country tax levy. A million dollars have already been spent for land and utilities. Building construction contracts awarded last week total $5,373,780. Heart Attack Takes Singer Mario Lanza May Invoke T-H Ruling Halt Strike Union, Industrial Leaders Meet Again, But Without Success PITTSBURGH ()-Steel nego- tiators despaired yesterday of a strike peace pact on the eve of President Eisenhower's apparent deadline for government interven- tion under the Taft-Hartley Law. President David J. McDonald of the United Steelworkers Union, saying a negotiated settlement seemed hopeless, sent the union's 170 - man wage - policy committee home. The group would have to approve any new contract. Set No Meetings I The on-and-off negotiations were again suspended with no further meetings in prospect to end the crippling 85-day strike, worst In steel history. Neither the industry nor union would. budge from their stands after a "summit meeting" between McDonald and top industry execu- tives got nowhere. Eisenhower said a week ago be wanted a settlement by the time he returns to Washington today from a rest trip in Palm Springs, Calif. Will Fight Injunction McDonald said that if Eisenhow- er invokes the Taft-Hartley Law and seeks to stop the strike for 80 .days under a court injunction the USW will fight the Injunction at- tempt in' thecoz. "But if an injunction is issued the United Steelworkers of America will obey the law of the land," the union chief said. McDonald said ,the union still wants Eisenhower to steer clear of Taft-Hartley and, instead, name a public fact-finding board to recom- mend settlement terms. He said it would end the historic dispute more quickly and fairly. Ike Dislikes Plan Eisenhower, however, has ex- pressed distaste for McDonald's plan unless the industry joins the union in supporting it. Under the T-H Law an inquiry board would merely report strike facts without suggesting a solution. The strike has idled 500,000 di- rectly in the basic steel industry and some 200,000. indirectly in other industries, and the steel shortage was growing rapidly. Union chief McDonald, after a 25-minute meeting with his policy group, took occasion to minimize the industry contract offer. He stressed again that the union is willing to settle on the basis of the same- degree of economic gain as contained in the expired 1956 contract. World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-A delegation of U. S. atomic energy specialists will leave today for a 10-day tour of Russian nuclear installations. A Russian atomic energy group will return the visit later in the fall. This was announced yesterday by Chairman John A. McCone of the Atomic Energy Commission, who will head the American group. McCone told a news conference it's possible the visits could be the forerunner of increased exchange of nonmilitary atomic information between the two countries. BEIRUT, Lebanon-A gunman 3hot Abdel Karim Kassem yester- day on a Baghdad street but aides 'reported the Iraqi strongman emerged with only a shoulder wound. The purpose of the attack, Kas- sem declared, was to leave the Iraqi people divided and without leadership. Deadlocked Russian Space Proposal. Cheered byU.S.,Britain UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (P)-The United States and Britain yesterday welcomed a Soviet proposal for an international scientific conference on outer space. This boost from the West virtually assured that such a conference would take place. Vasily V. Kuznetsov, Soviet deputy foreign minister, disclosed the proposal in a speech to the United Nations General Assembly' Tuesday. He said the Soviet Union' would seek a conference under UN auspices as soon as possible. It would be along the lines of the UN conference on peaceful uses of atomic energy-a plan advanced originally by President Eisenhower. Lodge Pleased "We welcome this new departure' in Soviet policy and hope that it4 means cooperation in the future? work of the United Nations in the field of outer space," United States Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge said in a statement. He declared the United States still supports strongly the estab- lishment by the present Assembly of a special UN Space Committee. The Soviet Union boycotted a committee set up last year on the grounds Communist and neutral' nations did not have sufficient representation. Kuznetsov said the Soviet stand was unchanged. NEW ATTRACTION ON DIAG: World-weary Platform Sitter Seeks Record By NORMA SUE WOLFE. A six-foot-three, black-haired, bearded University student, cover- ing his torn khakis and black sweater with a raincoat and sniffling with great gusto, ascended a wooden platform near the Diag at 2 p.m. yesterday. Known only as "Maledonia," the isolated student claims he is trying to break the national flagpole sitting record, which is reportedly 85 days. Meanwhile, he hopes to be fed by thoughtful students who sym- pathize .with his desire to be alone. Maledonia says he'll eat almost anything. Food can be passed to him on the end of a piece of lumber. "I hate brown beer bottles," he bleated from the platform. The platform sitter screamed he was tired of the living world. Classes Forgotten "What'll you do about classes?" several witnesses chorused. ROME (P) golden voiced - Mario Lanza; a boy from Philadel-r phia's "little Italy;" died yesterday. ... ..: t W.