Wisconsin .. 24 Michigan State 15 j Indiana . . . . 0 Iowa . . . . . . 33 f Tennessee . . . 14 Texas . . Northwestern . 19 Purdue. . . . . 0 j Ohio State . . . 0 Minnesota . . . 0 LSU. . . . . . . 13 Baylor . « * S S * . " . 12 INTERNATIONAL .WEEK. DISCUSSED See Page 4 eitYit ra Seventieth -Year of Editorial Freedom a it VOL. LXIX, No. 42 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1959 Supreme Court Upholds Back to -Work * * * * * * * * * * * Steelworkers Union Must Return to Mills Record 116-Day Walkout Stopped By 80-Day 'Cooling-Off Period' WASHINGTON.(P)-By a vote of 8-1, the Supreme Court yester- day upheld the back-to-work injunction in the 116-day-old steel strike. As a result, the 500,000 steelworkers who quit work on July 15 must return to the mills for 80 days under emergency provisions of the Taft-Hartley act. "The Supreme Court has spoken," said David J. McDonald, presi- dent of the steelworkers union. "As law abiding citizens the steel- workers union, of course, will comply with the court's judgment." McDonald dispatched. telegrams instructing the strikers to return to work immediately. - At the end of the 80-day cooling off period in late January, the union may call another strike. But before that can be done, workers employed by each of the major steel companies will vote by secret W ould A dont ballot on whether to accept or re- ject management's latest offer. Eisenhower Comments Labor Court President Dwight D. Eisenhower was informed promptly of the court's ruling. He expressed hope WASHINGTON (R)- A power- the steel mills will get started up ful new court to settle nationwide again as soon as possible. labor disputes before they can Although the court's order is lead Io costly strikes like the steel effective immediately, there was walkout was proposed yesterday by no prospect of an early outpouring Sen. George Smathers (D-Fla.). 'of steel. And it may be two weeks Smathers suggested five mem- or so before new collective bar- bers for this court, which he would gaining sessions get under way. designate the 'United States Court Joseph F. Finnegan, director of' of Labor-Management Relations, the Federal Mediation and Con- Such a court, he said in a'state- ciliation Service, said he hopes to ment, would have jurisdiction over know by Monday when contract all national industries and would negotiations will be resumed. They be used wilen collective bargain- have been suspended pending out- ing reached an impasse, come of the Supreme Court appeal. "It would be in the nature of a Steel officials estimated it will supreme court on labor-manage- take up to six weeks to get produc- ment relations, whose findings and Lion back to 90 per cent of capac- judgments would be final and ity. i I 3 '.,. ' ' ' l k -Associated PreMs Wirephoto CAUGHT-Michigan speedster Bennie McRae (48) Is brought down by Illinois defensive back Dejustice Coleman (45), after making a first-period gain. In the background are "Go Team" fullback Bill Tunnicliff (36) and Illinois end Gary eIembrough (86). The Wolverines scored two touchdowns on Stan Noskin passes and another on a Darrell Harper plunge to upset the favored Illini, 20-15, to add a spoiler to Illini coach Ray Eliot's retirement plans in a battle of Elliott vs. Eliot. WORLD'S FAIR: Union To Present .InternatioDnalia binding on both parties -- a court of last resort in this field so to Arthu speak," he said. the un Members of the court would bej against selected in the same way as other court sa judicial appointmenta are made, a rehea Nominations would be made by "The the President, subject to aporoval en," G by the Senate. Cases would be ex- strongly elusively labor-management. ' judgmer What is needed, S m a t he r s' "Unde statement said, is a court with case, no powers as great as the Supreme by filing Court's to step in and settle major A st labor-management disputes be- related fore a strike develops. meats The proposed court's authority the act should come into play, he said , heac when it becomes obvious that a It wa collective bargaining impasse has ever ha been reached. section He said either side should have act, pas, the right to call in the court to Fiftee end the deadlock. The five judges has ask( then would hear the testimony to issue and hand down a decision from section. which there would be no appeal. been gr D PHI E RUNNER-UP: ;Losing Battle .r J. Goldberg, who fought ion's unsuccessful fight the injunction in the high aid he has no plans to seek ring. Supreme Court has spok- oldberg said. "However one may disagree, the 't must be obeyed. er the circumstances of the purpose would be served g a petition for rehearing." ory on page 3 deals with events and includes com- by industry and labor on ion of the Supreme Court. By PETER STUART tional performers represented on The Michigan Union will be the campus. transformed into a virtual show- The fai' will open its gates 7-12 place of the folklore of far-off p.m. Friday and 1-12 p.m. Satur- lands Friday and Saturday. day. The talent show will be staged As site of the annual World's Fair, three floors will be crowded with displays representing 18 na- tions of the world, manned by University students who are citi- zens of those countries. The exhibits, painstakingly pre- pared by campus nationality clubs, will offer attractions which run the gamut from Latin American jazz and Turkish coffee to travel slides of India and one-the-spot making of crude Japanese paper. Highlighting the two-day event climaxing International Week will be three presentations of an en- at 9 Friday evening and at both 8 and 10 Saturday. evening in the Union ballroom. Visitors to "Crossroads of Cul- ture," the theme of this year's Official Lauds Newly-Built' Post Offce By JEAN SPENCER "I'd say there are no better World's Fair, are in store for a number of novel treats. The Chi- nese Student Club as part of its display has made arrangements-to have an elegantly sculptured copy. of a lion's head, believed to be 200 to 300 years old. The wonderland of foreign folk- lore also will include: demonstra- tions of primitive African drum beating, Arab palm reading, Thai folk dancing, intricate hand-made models of,,ai Turkish mosque and minaret and Venezuelan music in- terpretation. The talent show boasts a pro- gram of music and dancing by per- formers hailing from all parts of the globe. Heading the list of fas- cinating national dances are an Indonesian umbrella dance, a Ukranian folk dance, an Arabian ballet, a Philippine bamboo stick dance and an African ritual. Proceeds from the World's Fair will be apportioned among the 18 participating nationality clubs 'on campus, the International Student Assn., the International Student Emergency Load Fund and funds for the Foreign Student Handbook. Hurst To Give Law Series This Week Prof. James W. Hurst of the University of Wisconsin Law School will discuss "Law and Pro- cesses of Social Change in United States History," in the Law School's Cooley lecture series, Nov. 9-13. The series, open to the public, will be presented daily at 4:15 P.m. in Rm. 100, Hutchins Hall. s the first d ruled on 208 of th sed in 1947. n times t] ed a federa an injunc Each time anted. time the court the validity of e Taft-Hartley . chantingly unusual talent show, postal facilities for a community he government which will be, in effect, a survey of this size in the nation," Ann Li district court of entertainment the world over. Arbor Postmaster Oswald Koch tion under this Aptly designated "World Festival said, glancing around the spacious the request has of Talent," the show will gather main floor area of the new post together the cream of interna- office building at 2075 W. Stadium Blvd. Built by a private corporation ! and leased to the government on a 20-year basis, the new building has T' 'N s Q0n1A -u-u U----f.fl,.. .,, QUANTITY, QUALITY: Medical Schools Face Problem A E Phi Wins Hillelzapoppin Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority took first place in the annual Hillel- zapoppin last night. Their skit titled "Chaos in Cos- metics was a take-off on the strike in the steel industry. In second place was Delta Phi Epsilon soroity's skit, "A Friend Is Someone Who Likes You." In' this act a girl has no friends and wishes to find out how she can find some. The independents walked off with an honorable mention with 62,219 square feet of1floor space .L s %/'%.W W vW VW w u 1- - - compared with 19,970 at its former headquarters.ByAHENOR Facilities include attractive, mod- By KATHLEEN MOORE ern offices, stock and supply rooms, The basic problem facing the nation's medical schools is how to a huge sorting space and a loading "increase our educational resources in medicine without diluting dock area with its own lubritorium Equality. andservice trucksto Ann Arbor "There is no room for mass production and there are no short cuts," Dr. Williali Hubbard, dean of the medical school, insisted yes- The sorting space incorporates terday. many innovations and improve- ments over the old quarters. Must Increase Rate One-way lookout stations over- According to last week's report from the United States Surgeon looking the sorting area make close General's medical education consultant group, the nation's schools surveillance of the sorting process must turn out an additional 3,600 graduates per year by 1975 to possible. merely maintain the present ratio of physicians to population. It is estimated that of the 900- 1350 pounds of mail handled in a Dr. Hubbard disagreed somewhat with the group's assumption typical working day at the post that this ratio is "a minimum essential to protect the health of the office, 60 per cent is accounted for people" because "this bit of mathematics dodges the basic question of ,. ;;