Hoaxes U.S. On Program WASHINGTON tom)-The Senate Internal Security Committee said yesterday the Kremlin's leaders are promoting Soviet-American cultural' exchanges as part of a poisonous propaganda offensive. ."Soviet hoaxsters are playing us, Individually and nationally, for suckers," the subcommittee said in a report on its 1958 investigations. The report, although not pub- lished until now, was written prior to Soviest Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's recent visit to this country. In a section on Soviet-American cultural exchanges, the report said that, from ballet dancers to scien- tists, every Russian is thoroughly screened by Soviet authorities for political reliability before being allowed to come to the country. It also said that every member of a Soviet cultural mission is an observer for Soviet military intelli-. gence and is duty bound to use every contact with the American public to acquire information use- ffl to the Soviet government. "The profusion of Soviet dele- gations to this country, the lavish propaganda for cultural exchanges, and . co-existence, is primarily a phase of Soviet psychological war- fare," the committee said. STEEL STRIKE ROUNDUP: USW, Industry Set To Start Work! By' The Asse.iated Pre Trickles of maintenance workers headed back to long-idle steel plants yesterday under pressure to get the mills into production as speedily as possible. They faced a slow and exacting task. Pickets who stood guard at mill gates throughout the 116-day steel strike vanished quickly after the United States Supreme Court up- held an 80-day Taft-Hartley in- Junction. Big steel producers recalled the first work crews within hours after the Supreme Court decision was handed down. But. it will be weeks before any appreciable amounts of new steel will be ready for cus- tomers. * * ., IN PITTSBURGH, USW Presi- dent David J. McDonalddispatched telegrams to every district director and local union president telling them to comply with the injunc- tion and "resume work forthwith." Later at a new conference, Mc- Donald expanded on his state- ment.. He said the 171-member ,USW Wage Policy Committee will be convened in the next few days to chart the union's future adminis- trative and negotiations policy. Asked if the strike would resume at the end of the 80-day cooling- off period in the absence of a I t { t t f rt c 7 i Conference To Be Held Next Month WASHINGTON W) - President' Dwight D. Eisenhower has set aside three days, beginning Dec. 19, for Western summit talks in Paris on strategy for negotiations with So- viet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. The White House announced to- day that Eisenhower will reach Paris on the night of Dec. 18-19, following a three-day Mediterran- ean cruise on his way back from a tour into the Middle East and Southern Asia. The President's task at the Western summit session at Paris will be primarily to try to find common ground for bringing to- gether divergent policy lines. Ade- nauer stands at one extreme and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan at the other. French President Charles de Gaulle and Adenauer generally favor a very tough line in dealing with Khrush-' chev. Macmillan is known to be con- vinced that the major issue for settlement when Eisenhower, de Gaulle and he meet Khrushchev in Geneva next year is therissue of the future of West Berlin. He believes this is a negotiable issue with Khrushchev. At the other extreme Adenauer has said he thinks the Western powers should negotiate for a dis- armament agreement in the sum- mit meeting. In other words he does not favor negotiations on West Berlin. Eisenhower has laid. down a nrequirement that anything the. West agrees on with Khrushchev must be acceptable to the people of West Berlin. Major Problem m Medicine: Expand, but Retain Quality (Continued from Page 1) q u alit y - not modern medi- cine." But applicants in general aret becoming scarcer, the group re- ported, citing close to a 40 per cent decrease over the last ten years in the numbers who apply to medical schools, which are concurrently trying to expand their student capacities. The people now applying and graduating, were born during the depression, when the nation's birth rate hit an all-time low, he pointed out. and this, coupled with the increasing attraction of other fields of science, has defi- nitely cut down the number seek- ing careers in medicine. Dropouts Increasing While schools have been keep- ing their entering classes fairly full, the dropout rate has gradual- ly increased, suggesting that ad- missions standards have been lowered, he noted. As Dr. Hubbard expresed it, "a so-so doctor is a frightening thought." With this in mind, the consult- ant group recommends more schools that offer only the first two years of study (academic as opposed to the final two of clini- cal instruction) as a way to in- crease the size of graduating classes, Graduates of these in- stitutions, the dean (an alumnus of one himself) pointed out, could act as feeders to the four-year schools. A plan of this type could be im- plemented with comparative ease in many of the nation's universi- ties, such as Princeton, he' said, that could support a two-year program but do not have the clin- ical facilities to offer the full four years. The feeder system would prob- ably result in about 800 more graduates per year by 1975 and with the average graduating class now between 90 and 100, "you would have the equivalent of six. or seven new medical schools." Expansion of existing schools, if funds are forthcoming, could pro- vide facilities for an additional 1,200 students per year by then. The University, "a school in tran- sition," has already increased its enrollment considerably, now has a potential graduating class of 200, and has long-range plans for "a program to take care of this very large student body," Dr; Hubbard said. After possibilities for expansion and two-year programs are con- sidered, a "hard core" of roughly 1,800 more students are left "that have to be provided for," he not- ed. Need Quality Dr. Hubbard estimates that es- tablishment of 10 large medical schools, the size of the University's would round out the facilities needed to handle an annual grad- uaitng class of 11,000, but reiter- ated the need to fill the places with students of quality. "The acute problem of recruit- ment of excellent students," Dr. Hubbard insisted, may remain crucial after the expected boom in college enrollments. Solving it will ,'"probably require' the kind of graduate fellowships that are of- fered in all other disciplines," particularly those from- state and federal sources now lacking in medicine, he suggested. SET TO SMOKE-Stacks of the big furnaces and air heaters at most of the nation's steelmills have been smokeless for over three months during the nation's longest steel strike. With the Supreme Court decision, sending the men back to the mills, the stacks will again spew their accustomed iron red and black smog into the air, and the fiery sparks to light up the night. Second Front Page NOVEMBER 8, 1959 Page 3 negotiated settlement, McDonald said that decision would be made by the Wage Policy Committee. The union president was angered by a newsman's question as to whether union members would be likely to engage in work slow- downs. He said the steelworkers are "loyal citizens." McDonald said no new negotia- tions have been scheduled with the steel industry. * * IN WASHINGTON, Joseph F. Finnegan, director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Serv- ice, said he will get in touch with union and management negotia- tors to arrange for resumption of collective bargaining. "{i4'y tfdfh':4%aErt??Sf , +M :.." w ..' 4. F r c t c a ,. . . , . t ; t F F f { +'A . { t MQR 7Pa U-LAR, Bravo for the coats! More character, more design, more value than ever before. Consider our smashing new entries: the greotcoat, the ottoman, the chesterfield. . . many lavished with fur. Priceless? You're in for a surprise. MANAT LE LTT AN Axi Ann Arbor's Most Fashionable Address ei +i J:':' {f J> }1 ~jti std f z ti: No meetings were scheduled. Other comments were mixed: * * * "What good will it do to go GIANT United States Steel back for 80 days and walk back1 Corp., the world's largest steel pro- out in the middle of Winter?,.. . ducer, began the costly and com- I'm tired of loafing . . . . Nobody, plicated process of putting its likes to be ordered back to work plants back into operation this way . . . . This should give us A spokesman said workers will a lift for the holidays." be recalled as needed. "How would Pres. Eisenhower3 The big question facing produ- like it if they told him he couldn'tY cers, customers and workers was: play golf for 80 days," a Buffalo how much steel can be produced striker said., during the 80-day operating period In Cleveland, Williard Taubee, specified by the Taft-Hartley in- 52-year-old Republic Steel Corp. junction? No one could be found employee, remarked: to even make a guess. "I'm as tired of loafing as any- Steel firms expect it will take "I'mbus tre is ong.Ity- up to six weeks to get mills, back one but the order is wrong. It should have been settled once and That would be about 2,600,000 t for all of ingot steel a week or about 90 Melvin Hampton, employed at per cent of the nation's steel pro- Republic for 14 years and the duction capacity. father of seven children, said: It will take fully as long for all "The companies seem to be of the 500,000 striking workers to going all out to break the union be recalled. but the union is no weaker for the S* . strike. Nobody likes to be ordered REACTION on the picket lines to back to work this way." the decision was that the 80-day At Homestead, Pa., Joe Dudas, cooling off period would not con- employed at the United States tribute to settlement of the strike. Steel Corp. Homestead Works, was shopping with his wife, Veronica, and their 7-year-old son, Larry. Pick Dowling "What good will it do to go back for 80 days?" he asked. As Am bassadorj"Well at least the children will have something for Thanksgiving and Christmas," interjected his To Germany wife. At Buffalo, N. Y., several strikers WASHINGTON (') - Georgia- wore black armbands as a symbol born Walter C. Dowling, a career of mourning. A man wearing a diplomat with nearly three decadesblcar ansid of experience, is returning to West "'They've done something to us Germany as United States am- the companies could never do." bassador, "We don't want to go back," said The White House yesterday con- another, "but what are we going firmed Dowling's appointment to to do? They'll hold us With con- succeed David K. E. Bruce, who is tempt." resigning from the Bonn post ef- fective Nov. 1. The shift was re- ported unofficially yesterday. The 54-year-old Dowling, who has served in a number of world capitals since he entered the for- eign service back in 1931, will be on familiar ground in his new as- signment. Diplomatic sources reported West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer had sent word that he% was delighted with President Dwight D. 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