4.1 m xt _. Sec November 5, 1959 Iidiittg~an 43Aitj Mo III b Stones American Firm and Front Page Panama Anti-U.S. Violence - Page 3 Eisenhower Announces Plans For Nine-Nation Goodwill Trip WASHINGTON (P) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower announced yesterday he is undertaking an unprecedented 20,000-mile goodwill mission next month to nine na- tions on three continents. The pre-Christmas tour will take Eisenhower to Europe, Asia and a corner of Africa. No president ever has attempted anything like this 19-day expedi- epd-tion to the capitals of Italy, Tur- key, Pakistan, Afganistan, India, Iran, Greece, France and Morocco. To Leave Dec. 4 Eisenhower told a news confer- ence he will be off. Dec. 4. He expects to fly back to Washington Dec. 22. He also did a bit of traveling around at the news conference, touching on developments both at home and abroad. For example: The President said everyone was astonished and almost dismayed by the TV quiz show scandals and "nobody will be satisfied until this whole mess is cleaned up." FTC Investigating The Federal Trade Commission, he said, is looking into the possi- bility there was deceitful adver- tising and the justice department will .report before the end of the year on whether laws were violated and new laws are needed. The Communist menace, Eisen-. hower said, was an obvious topic to raise in protesting anti-United States demonstration in Cuba be- cause: "We know that the Communists like to fish in troubled waters and there are certainly troubled waters there." Panama 'Puzzling' - An attack on the United States embassy in Panama yesterday and the ripping, down of the stars and stripes is puzzling, he said, when his Administration has tried with considerable success to build better understanding within Latin Amer- ica. This was really only an inci- dent, Eisenhower said, and should * not be used for breaking up a relationship which he said -has worked so well in the past. But this country hopes, he said, that every civilized government will make certain that law and order are preserved. Not Committed Then there was the matter of. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New Yoik and the way he is eyeing the Republican presidential nomina- tion. Rockefeller spent 70 minutes with Eisenhower last week. *eWithout making any commit- ments, ;the President commented- "it happens that I like Mr. Rocke- feller," who served for a time in his Administration. For a good portion of the time, Eisenhower said, they talked about civil defense, a common interest. But also on that visit "we talked politics all across the , board," Eisenhower said. He added, though, that "I could not' possibly remem- ber any kind of conclusion we reached." U.S. Arrests Ex-Officerx For Cubans Accused of Murder During Plane Raids MIAMI (A) - United States au- thorities jailed Major Pedro Diaz Lanz yesterday on Cuban charges of murder and attempted murder. "I'm thankful to God . . . I'm not in Cuba at this time," the for- mer head of Fidel Castro's revolu- tionary air force said as he was fingerprinted. The murder charges - to be documented with formal evidence within two weeks-apparently arise from an Oct. 21 incident in which snall planes dropped anti-Castro leaflets over Havana. Say Explosives Dropped The Cuban government said ex- plosives also were dropped from the planes, killing Joaquin Fer- nandez of Havana and injuring 24 others. Some Havana witnesses have insisted the death and in- juries were caused by Cubans at- tempting to shoot down the planes. The FBI said Diaz Lanz admitted piloting One of the planes and reported the leaflet-dropping flight originated in Florida. Cuba and Florida are separated by only 50 miles of water. Diaz Lanz fled Cuba in June after resigning as air force chief and calling Premier Castro a Com- munist. Castro in turn branded Diaz Lanz a traitor. Sets Bond A federal judge acting on an extradition warrant in which Diaz Lanz was called a fugitive from Cuban justice, set bond at $5,000. Diaz Lanz' attorney, E. David Rosen, said his client would not be able to post the sum. The Cuban was taken to the Dade County jail. The extradiction was asked un- der a 1904 treaty between Cuba and the United States. By the treaty's terms, murder is an ex- traditable offense. Diaz Lanz was arrested by United States deputy marshals this morn- ing. He has been living here in seclusion since fleeing his home- land but has met newsmen fre- quently at the home of Carlos. Echegoyan, once intelligence chief of the Cuban air force. By DAVID SATTINGER "The terrifying thing is that the horrible is not occasional but institutional," Prof. Gerhard Weinberg of the history depart- ment commented, on German so- ciety during the Nazi era. Prof. Weinberg, having chosen Russian-German relations, 1939- 1941, as his dissertation topic, re- ceived his Ph.D. from the Uni- versity of Chicago in 1951. He then went to Alexandria, Virginia, where under the government- sponsored War Documentation Project, research was conducted on the immense number of docu- ments taken from the files of German military, party and pri- vate agencies. Although most of the resulting studies are classified and are not available to the public, Weinberg's "Guide to Captured German Doc- uments" has been published. Explains Documents Prof. Weinberg went on to ex- plain that "even the evidence of the most sordid aspects of the Third Reich" was not "unrepre- sentative . . . the fuller the rec- ord, 'the deeper the darkness" . . . He went on to give examples: "The 'welfare' organizations get involved in murder through the so-called mercy killing of people entrusted to their care, and the 'cultural' organizations take their members and guests on tours of concentration camps." Mapai Party Leads Israel. Voting Returns TEL AVIV, Israel (A")--Premier David Ben-Gurion's Mapai (la- bor) Socialists strengthened their position as Israel's number one political party in election returns yesterday. They expect to control 47 seats in the new parliament, against 40 in the old. Communists, General Zionists, independent Arabs and the left- wing Achduth Avodah laborites lost ground in a 24-party race. Still short of a majority in the 120-seat, one-house legislature, Ben-Gurion must enlist allies for a continuance of coalition rules. A>. NAZI ERA: Weinberg Talks on German Society .-Daily-David Cantrell GERMAN DOCUMENTS-Prof. Gerhard Weinberg of the history department said that collections of Nazi papers reveal the terror and bureaucratic waste of the Hitler regime, 'IKE VOTES - The nation's number one citizen records his vote. Eisenhower revealed plans at a press conference yesterday to tour foreign capitals.,He will begin Dec. 4 making the rounds of nine nations' capitals on three continents. - Nineteen-Day Goodwill Tour Heraldedb World Diplomats The German government, ac- cording to Prof. Weinberg, was a maze of "bureaucratic waste and fuiiy"Anarchy and "internal struggles for power" reigned throughout, "The organizational structure .. was so complex that the people originally involved often cannot themselves have known their position in the hier- archy," he observed. Advice on Mushrooms As the rule-proving exception to anarchy, he cited the well-de- fined duties of the "Pilzfachber- ater:" "to advise the district chief on all matters pertaining to mushrooms." "The Germans were w grim lot and saw no humor in anything," said Prof. Weinberg. "All was ac- cording to order." The corruption was "fantastic," he remarked. Huge fortunes were made over- night, and "business placed profit above all national considerations." When the American Historical Association received funds in 1956. to microfilm the documents, Dr. Weinberg was asked' to conduct the project. At present, some five million frames have been produced, and, it is hoped that in the future 5,000 pages ofn "Guides" will lead the way through 11 million frames. Prof. Weinberg observed that the project provides an "excellent basis for scholarly study." RECESS: Steel Talks Dead-locked WASHINGTON iP-Steel indus- try and union negotiators met face-to-face yesterday but parted as deadlocked as ever in the 113- day-old strike. Federal mediation director Joseph F. Finnegan, who called the negotiators together, told newsmen "the eyes of both sides' are focused on the Supreme Court." He recessed the talks in- definitely. The court has under study a Steelworkers Union appeal from a distdict judge's order that 500,000 strikers return to the long-idle steel mills at least for 80 days. There was no word when the court may announce its decision. At issue is the order itself and the emergency machinery of the 12-year-old Taft-Hartley law un- der which the injunction was is- sued two weeks ago. The union has challenged the constitutionality of that section of the law. While the. Supreme Court considers the case, the back-to-work order remains suspended. Note Claims United States Responsible Demonstrators Also Set Fire to Car PANAMA P-) - Demonstratora stoned the offices of the Ameri- can-owned light and power com- pany yesterday in Panama's cap- ital city in the second day of anti- United States violence. They also set fire to an automo- bile parked in front of the offices on the city's central avenue. Panama army troops broke up the demonstration. Panama's government said meanwhile in a note the United States was at least partly to blame for the current trouble. Give Counter-Protest A counter-protest over Tues- day's rioting was delivered by Foreign Minister Miguel Moreno Jr. to United States Ambassador Julian Harrington. Moreno said the tearing down of an American flag at the United States embassy Tuesday came after similar acts against a Pan- amanian flag in the Canal Zone. He gave no details in his refer- ence to the Panamanian flag. Harrington handed Moreno a note from Washington Tuesday p rote st i ng destruction of the United States embassy flag and American property. More than 80 persons were injured in Tuesday's incidents during= celebrations of the 56th anniversary' of- Panama's independence. 'Laments Occurrences' Moreno's note said Panama "la- ments Tuesday's occurrences and ihi no way can accept or approve the acts of the type that motivat- ed your protest." "Nevertheless," the note added, "I must say that in relations toa the ocurrences Tuesday at the Canal Zone boundary, my govern- ment has information about cer- tain unjustifiable acts, such as fir- ing on groups of unarmed Panla- manigns and throwing tear gas bombs on various sectors of the city. "These have left more than 40 Panamanian citizens wounded by actions of the armed forces of the United States." LONDON R) -, Diplomats of free nations last night viewed President Dwight D. Eisenhower's coming journey to India as a bold stroke on the world political front. The visit, some said, will dem- onstrate America's friendship and support for India's uncommitted role at a moment of national crisis in the face of mounting pressures from Red China. The 19-day good will tour, the most extensive such trip by a United States President in office, could'have far-reaching effects on U.S. Launches. Space Capsule- From Rocket WASHINGTON'(R -- A Mer- cury space capsule was hurled 35,- 000 feet high yesterday by a Little Joe rocket "- moving America one step nearer getting a ran into space. Within 45 minutes of the firing, the one-ton caplsule was scooped from the .Atlantic by the Navy salvage vessel Preserver about five miles offshore from the takeoff point on Wallops Island, Va. It .was the second such test in perfecting the escape mechanism it's hoped will save the Astronauts' lives if they run into trouble dur- ing launchings. relations with the non-Communist nations in that area, these ob- servers said. Anticipate Talks And the smaller countries in the Western alliance looked for- ward to the opportunity of dis- cussing their problems with the President on their , own home ground. Italy's premier Antonio Segni said the news of the Eisenhower visit was received with enormous satisfaction by the Italian govern- ment. "This meeting is highly import- ant as it will be held when all ef- forts are doubled to foster com- prehension among the various na- tions of the world," Segni added. Welcome Ike, The Greek government an- nounced it would welcome Eisen- hower with great pleasure. The independent Athens news- paper Ethnos said: "It is useful and correct for the U.S. President as leader of the free world to conme into direct contact with the gov- ernments of smaller allies, and other countries exposed to the Communist threat, in order to hear their views ." Need Cash? Be a Tutor! Apply Union Student Offices between 3-5 - a44- 0 hM#M p .1 4-Day S PECI L. tI t w- eA lop WEDNESDAY thru SATURDAY Casual Datewear Campus and Dresses from y A ate 'G. , . (.. i.. } i{y{,.,. ,; .. j r )}y^ , { "?"n.. -. '. 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