_. Herter Attacks Ac -eign Policy leson Ideas :Says Talk~s On o , At Summit Discusses Mid-East, Atom at Conference WASHINGTON (P) - Secretary of State Christian A. Herter yes- terday accused former secretary Dean Acheson of building up straw men to knock down in his recent attack on administration policy as to Berlin. Herter told a news conference that Acheson had made two wrong. assumptions about the I(erlin sit- uation. He noted that Acheson had de- clared in a speech last week that it was a mistake for the West to negotiate with Russia over the status of Berlin. Acheson assumed, Herter said, that Russia's position had not changed on this issue in the last' year. In fact, Herter argued, the Soviets have backed away from their threat to try to force West- ern'allies out of West Berlin.: Assumption Groundless Furthermore, Herter said, there is no ground whatever for Ache- son's assumption that the United States and its allies will make con- cessions to the Russians in Berlin negotiations.:. On other points, Herter told the news conference: - ) Despite speculation in Lon- don that an East - West Summit conference would have to be put off until 1961, Herter knows of no change at all in plans for a meet- ing with1 Soviet Premier Khrush- chev some time next year. a 2) It is very difficult to envison a complete ban on nuclear weap- ons testing unless scientific talks with the Russians, about to begin at Geneva, demonstrate that it is possible to have an adequate detec- _ tion system through which even underground test explosions might be detected. Makes Difficult 3) Acquisition of atomic weap- ons by nations other than the United States, Britain and Russia would make the problem of con- trol far more difficult than it now is. But Herter declined to discuss the atomic weapons aspirations of any particular country. 4) Herter would like to see Rus- sia and the Western powers adopt "ground rules" for their rivalry in world affairs concerned with such problems as preventi on of surprise attack and disarmament controls. That was his answer when he was asked what. he meant by a refer- ence to working out "ground rules" in a speech he made in New York - a week ago. 5) United States relations with Egypt and Iraq are now better than they were some months ago. On this point, as on many others at his newsconference, Herter did not go into detail. He said the United States is doing everything it can to normalize relations. Denounces Charge 6) Herter denounced as absurd a charge by the Cuban labor fed- eration that the Inter-American Confederation of Workers is an in- strument of American imperialism. The organization has too many "_ member unions in too many coun- tries for there to be any truth whatever in such an accusation, he * said. Herter disclosed that Undersec- retary of State Douglas Dillon will make a trip to Europe beginning Dec. 7-visiting London, Brussels and Paris--to confer with leaders of the six-nation Common Market and a new seven-nation grouping built around Britain and the Scan- dinavian countries. II i REFUTES CHARGES-Secretary of State Christian A. Herter (right) yesterday answered arguments against United States foreign policy made by Dean Acheson, secretary under the Tru- man administration. He called them "straw men" Acheson built up to knock down. DESPITE STRIKE END: U.S. lIndu st ryMust Cteu me on . nule Giu adirent Union Boar d 'With Powers WASHINGTON (C') - A Feder- al judge yesterday armed his monitors with strong legal wea- pons that may help them win a two-year fight to clean up the Teamsters Union and possibly to force out union president James R. Hoffa. District Judge F. Dickinson Letts - acting over the opposi- tion of Teamsters lawyers and the union's representative on the monitor board-granted the three man panel sweeping powers to dig into charges that Hoffa had mishandled money belonging to Detroit Local 299, his home local. The judge took this step eight days after the Supreme Court re- fused to interfere with lower court decisions giving the monitors broad reform authority. The Teamsters Union had raised the challenge before the high court. Letts announced he will back up the monitors by issuing any subpoenas they may ask for dur- ing their probe of the Detroit lo- cal's fund situation. The judge also authorized the monitors to take testimony under oath. In granting investigative pow- ers, Letts said they would enable the monitors to "enlighten the court as to the truth or falsity" of allegations that union, funds were misused.- Last Sept. 14, the monitors filed a report with Letts asking him to hear charges that Hoffa used' soine $400,000 of Local 229's funds as security for loans in connec- tion with a Florida real estate de- velopment. Hoffa is president of that local, as well as heading the over-all union, Geologist T o Study Ice Shelf Antarctica should be kept open as "a huge laboratory" free of conflictin terr "ita claims, ac- cordin to University specialists who leave Friday to conduct gla- ciolgical research in the contin- Under an $18,150 grant from the National Science Foundation, Prof. James H. Zumberge of the geology department and Charles Swithinbank, a University re- search associate from Cambridge, England, will study the Ross Ice Shelf, the world's largest un- broken mass of floating ice. They plan two months of field work. Prof. Zumberge is directing the four-to-six year study of the shelf, collecting data there each summer season and bringing it back to the University for interpretation. - The party plans to place major survey points established a year ago to measure the outward flow of ice since then. Estimate Movement Ice movement along 85 per cent of the entire ice front can then be estimated. The party will also establish several stake networks for purposes of later determining the mechanism of flow of the ice sheet. Swithinbank explained that they hope to learn the relation- ship between snow accumulation, contributions of land glaciers, and the loss of ice into the sea as they affect the general climatic trend i n A n tar c ti ca and sea level changes. Has Doubts Prof. Zumberge endorsed the current attempt by the United States, Russia and ten other na- tions to establish an Antarctic treaty but adds, "I have personal doubts that an international treaty would hold if something of considerable value were to be dis- covered eventually." He continued, "The future of the 'Antarctic right now is an uin- known quantity. We don't know enough about its history and de- velopment to speculate. As a con- tinent, it should contain the nor- mal supply of minerals, but they are inaccessible now." -Associated Press wirephotO THIS ONE MADE IT-A commercial airliner comes in for a landing on the same path a taking-off Trans-World Airlines cargo plane was on when it crashed yesterday. Chicago firemen battled the fire which gutted the residential area, still smouldering from the tragedy. Nine persons were reported killed including the plane's crew of three. Plane Plows int oe WASHINGTON (P)-The com- merce department said yesterday that, despite a rapid pickup in steel production, many industries must continue holding down out- put "until the renewed flow of steel reaches volume proportions." The department did not indicate when it believes this will happen. This comment on developments GM To Resume Car Assembly In December DETROIT () - General Mo- tors will.resume passenger car as- sembly Dec. 7 after nearly a month-long shutdown because of a steel shortage. John F. Gordon, president, said yesterday lines will be started up again at the Cadillac plant in Detroit, the Corvair plant at Wil- low Run and the Chevrolet plants at Flint, Janesville, Wis., and Nor- wood, Ohio. since the steel walkout was halted by court order on Nov. 7 was con- tained in a department summary of economic developments in Oct. Meanwhile, the Federal Media- tion Service prepared for efforts to resume negotiations in the steel dispute soon, after Thanksgiving. - Mediation service chief Joseph F. Finnegan planned to have his staff confer today with President Dwight D. Eisenhower's steel fact finding board. Another meeting was arranged with Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell for later Wednesday. The court order, which sent 500,000 steelworkers back to the mills after a 116-day walkout, ex- pires on Jan. 26. In the absence of an agreement, the union will be free to strike again then. The commerce department re- port said over-all economic activ- ity last month changed little from Sept. It said losses caused by the steel strike were offset by advances elsewhere. The report said a feature of the business situation in Oct. was a rise in retail sales inspired by de- mand for 1960 autos. CHICAGO P -- A four-engine Trans World Airlines cargo plane plowed through four .homes and an apartment house and then ex- ploded while attempting an emer- gency landing early yesterday,- bringing fiery death and terror to a sleeping neighborhood. At least nine persons were killed, including the plane's crew of three, 11 were injuredsand sev- eral persons were reported miss- ing. The plane, out of control and its engines sputtering, was trying to return to Midway Airport after a takeoff for Los Angeles only minutes before. It wheeled down from low over- cast in light pre-dawn rain, three blocks short of its goal on Chica- go's populous southwest side. The $2,500,000 plane struck the roof of a two-story home, ripping off the chimney and shearing the tail off the craft. Then it spun across Knox Ave., shattered the northeast corner of a two-story brick home and tore the roof away from a neighboring home. Careening nearly a block far- ther, the plane tore out the back wall of a building housing six apartments, exploded and landed in a belching sea of flame atop a one-story. dwelling across the street. The dwelling collapsed. "It seemed like the end of the world," several residents of the neighborhood said. Burning gasoline s h o w e r e d down on adjoining homes, garages and parked cars, setting them afire. Terrified residents ran into the streets in night clothing. One of the injured, George Me- h a 1o v, 57 - year - old mechanic, didn't even know parts of the plane had hit his home until fire- men told him while taking him to the hospital. Mehalov's wife, son and daughter are among the missing. "I heard the explosion and saw the bedroom roof caving in," he said. "I don t know how I got out or what happened to my family; he sobbed. Second Front Page November 24, 1959 Page 8 U STARTS TONIGHT \ rYj,, DIAL 8-6416 "A 'REAT FOR MOVIE-GOERS! Great pictorial excite- ment and cinematic vitality!" -N.Y. TIMES X <.>:.: _ motion picture in Color- ; <<:> :>:<" >Grand Prize winner, S. HUROK Cannes Film Festiuvr presents oROMEO and JULIET Msarc ay PUOKOFIEV aarrisg ULANOVA and she Dancers, Corps da Butter asd Orchestru of ie BOiSUOI THEATRE, Macow "Stunning! Ulanova is magnificent!" --N.Y. Herald Tribune GIRLS: pictured are two of the best fitting, smartest looking and most comfortable styles made. Priced at $9.95 they represent extra fine values on today's market. SQUARE CUT BLACK or BURNISHED BROW N Looks real good with knee socks I COURIER All filter cigarettes are divided into two parts, and... l "Weni, widi, Winston!" Thus did Caesar (a notoriously poor speller) hail the discovery of Filter-Blend-light, mild tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for filter smoking, He knew that a pure white filter alone is not enough. To be a com- ptete filter cigarette, it must have Filter-Blend up front. And only tells us he'd glower at the extended pack and sneer, "Et tu, Brute?" In a stirring peroration to his legions, Caesar put it this way: nwoI v KJv. r. iw im'irnwi~rnUi JNAJ I I'