N, ussians Agree To Policing of Nuclea rI Re-Flamine r Explosions Soviets Reverse Position, Avert Conference Collapse U.S. Says 1958 Scientific Data Outdated; Underground Blasts Now Easier To Hide I T Surround Van Doren Requests Medical Increase WASHINGTON (M) - The na- tion was urged Saturday to launch a billion dollar program to expand and extend its medical schools - or face a hazard to the public health. The proposal came from a 22- member group - mostly medical doctors and educators - making up the United States Surgeon General's consultant group on medical education. Under their proposal, the Feder- al Government would be called on for 500 million dollars over a 10- year period while states, indus- tries, private foundations and philanthropies would furnish the rest. Sees Need l -Associated Press Wirephoto FIRED-Charles Van Doren, shown here handing reporters who surround him copies of the statement he read to the HouSe Legis- lative Oversight Committee, was fired yesterday from his $50,000 a year job with the National Broadcasting Company after admitting his TV quiz show performance was rigged. RIOT IN PANAMA: Mob Attacks Embassy; Challenges Canal Control P A N A M A (m - Panamanian demonstrators attacked the United States Embassy here yesterday and stoned United States police- men at the boundary of the Canal Zone in a challenge to American sovereignty over the canal. The American flag was hauled from the pole in front of the em- bassy, ripped and torn. Flying stones smashed windows in the building. Panamanian national guardsmen dispersed the throng. Keep at Bay The attack on the embassy punctuated an hours-long struggle between helmeted American po- licemen and a rock-throwing Pan- amanian mob along Fourth of July Avenue, the unmarked fron- tier between this capital and the Canal Zone. A ri AT&T Plans Twin Cables NEW YORK (R') - American Telephone & Telegraph Co. will start laying the deepest telephone cable in the world today, linking the continental United States and Puerto Yico. Twin cables - about 20 to 30 miles apart - will be laid between .West Palm Beach, Fla., and San Juan, 1,250 miles away. About 751 miles northwest of Puerto Rico, the cables will plunge five miles down into the Milwaukee deep, lowest point in the Atlantic Ocean. The twin cables, -one for each direction of speech ,will be able to handle 48 simultaneous conversa- tions. The Americans kept the mob at bay with fire hoses and tear gas. Eight policemen were reported injured. Four of the demonstrat- ors, estimated to total 150, were" arrested. A platoon of United States mili- tary police stood by in reserve. The fight started at an inter-' section near Panama's legislative palace as this nation of 960,000' persons celebrated the 56th anni- versary of the independence it won from Colombia with the bless- ing and support of the United States in 1903. Two Panamanian nationalists- Ernesto Castillero Pimental and former Foreign Minister Aquilino Boyd - had called for a show of their country's flags in the Canal Zone. Hold Lease This zone, taking in the water- way built by American engineers (1904-1914), is a strip of land 10 miles wide and 40 miles long on which the United States holds a perpetual lease. The nationalists consider Panama should take it over. The day started quietly enough. Castillero and Boyd set out on an uneventful motor tour of the Ca- nal Zone, carrying small Pana- manian flags and posing for pho- tographers. Then a group of about 10 youths carrying a large Panamanian flag headed into the Canal Zone across Fourth of July Avenue, the un- marked boundary. A 16-man Ca- nal Zone police detail, with hel- mets and long night sticks, pushed them back. For an hour the group paraded back and fourth over a three-block area on the Panama side. The group declared there is an1 imperative need for immediate and strenuous action to train more, doctors to keep pace with an ever- expanding population. The report called for expanding existing schools - and building 201 to 24 new schools, some of the four-year variety, some in the two-year category. In a report to the Surgeon Gen- eral of the Public Health Service, prepared at his request, the con- stltants said maintenance of the present ratio of physicians to pop- ulation is "a minimum essential to protect the health of the people of the United States." Must Increase Number And just to achieve this, they said, the number of physicians graduated annually by schools of medicine and osteopathy must be increased from the present 7,400 a year to some 11,000 by 1975 - or an increase of 3,600 graduates. The report recommended new medical schools in or for 20 states -including seven of nine which now have none at all. Gives Proposals Some specific proposals suggest- ed that: 1) New schools be built in Flori- da, Indiana, Michigan, New Jer- sey, Ohio, Texas and Washington. 2) Nine states with small popu- lations might meet similar situ- ations by the development of re- gional schools. These states were listed as Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. 3) In four other states - Cal- ifornia, Connecticut, Minnesota and New York - there is "prob- ably a need for additional schools on the basis of lack of opportunity, although each of these states has an above-average supply of physi- cians." Surgeon General Leroy Burney said the school construction and other recommendations of the re- port were fine ones. GENEVA (A)-The Russians un- expectedly agreed to a Western demand for reexamination of methods to police undergroundf nuclear explosions. This was a complete turnaboutt from the previous Soviet position in negotiations for a nuclear test ban being carried on here by the Source Says Ieke To See U.S. Allies WASHINGTON (A4) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower is reported to be planning a tour to several' countries in Europe and Asia starting early next month. The trip now shaping up is likely to take the President out of the United States for about three weeks. The word is that he also is contemplating visits to Italy,, India, Pakistan, Turkey and Greece. Other countries also are, said to be under consideration. 'On official said yesterday the tour will be by far the most exten- sive trip abroad Eisenhower has undertaken. Visits Europe The longest time he has been out of the country heretofore was when he visited West Germany,' England, France and Scotland for 13 days last August and Septem- ber. He was enthusiastically re- ceived on that trip. The President is understood to be planning to disclose his travel plans, at least in part at his news conference today. Thr White House already has announced that Eisenhower will attend a Western summit confer- ence in Paris starting Dec. 19. He still intends to be back home in time for Christmas with his fam- ily. To Return for Christmas As plans are now developing, Eisenhower actually will have been away from Washington for about 20 days when he returns from Paris a day or so before Christ- mas. The goodwill tour he is arrang- ing reportedly will take him first to Italy for conferences in Rome, probably Dec. 4-5. The timing on the rest of the tour still is being worked out. The President is known to have decided some time ago that he would like to do a good bit of trav- eling abroad before he leaves of- fice in January 1961.. three nuclear nations-the United States, Britain and Russia. Since early this year the West- ern powers had tried to persuade the Soviet Union that much sci- entific data the talks are based on is outdated. Set Basis The scientific and technical basis for the negotiations was set by an East-West group of sci- entists who met here in 1958. An American scientific report compiled later said that under- ground explosions could be more easily concealed than the scientists had believed in 1958. The United States and Britain have repeatedly insisted that no trustworthy system for control of a nuclear test ban could be devised unless information in the United States report-including the data on underground blasts-was taken into consideration along with pos- sible new Soviet data. Secretary' of State Christian A. Herter and British Foreign Min- ister Selwyn Lloyd told Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko here last July that a scientific re- appraisal of underground blast data was necessary for any further progress in the test ban negotia- tions. Rejects Demand The Soviet foreign minister re- jected the Western demand, call- ing it a device to delay agreement on a test ban treaty. Chief Soviet Delegate Semyon 'K. Tsarapkin unexpectedly noti- fied the United States and British delegates of the change in Rus- sia's stand at yesterday's session of the year-old conference. Tsarapkin 'later told an im- promptu news conference that United States Delegate James J. Wadsworth had threatened "to bring about the collapse of the negotiations" unless the Russians agreed to the reexamination. "In the fact of this threat, and to save ,the conference from col- lapse, we agreed," Tsarapkin said. Calls Step'Forward A spokesman for the United States delegation said the Soviet move was "a definite step forward and quite a departure from the previous Soviet position." Tsarapkin submitted a resolu- tion calling for the convening of a new technical working group by Nov. 16. Wadsworth and British Delegate Sir Michael Wright told Tsarap- kin they would study the Russian resolution and formally reply to- day. While indications are the West will accept the Soviet resolution, it is doubtful the experts can. be brought together by Nov. 16. MEDIATOR-Joseph F. Finnegan, head of the federal mediation service, has been holding separate meetings with David J. McDonald, left, president of the steelworkers union, and R. Conrad Cooper, right, head of the industry bargaining group in an attempt to solve the 112-day-old steel strike. r 'I COEDS: Our hairstyling will enhance you. 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