Q UN Asks Repression End 1B Russians in Hungary 11 Plea Milder Than Past Resolution Proposal Deplores Treatment of Rebels UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The United Nations called on the Soviet Union and Hungary once more yesterday to end acts of repression against anti-Communist Hungarians who rebelled in vain in 1956. By a vote of 53 to 10 with 17 abstentions the 82-nation General Assembly approved a 24-nation resolution aimed at keeping the Hungarian question. alive at the United Nations. The 10 Communist nations-the Soviet bloc and Yugoslavia-voted no. The abstentions included all the Arab nationals and a number of Asian-African members. Haiti' and Morocco were absent. Resolution MildI The resolution introduced by the United States was mildly worded, reflecting the spirit of East-West accommodation that has been characteristic of the. present Gen- eral Assembly. WATER SELLER-A bearded Pakistani sells water from a goatskin bag to people waiting for a glimpse of President Dwight D. Eisenhower who was traveling to Karachi Tuesday to make a speech. Ike Scores Necessary Success Ike Keeps Trip Idea 'In Mind' Congressman Asks Latin American Visit WASHINGTON (P) -President Dwight D. Eisenhower says a sug- gestion that he visit Latin America next year "will be kept very much in mind." His comment was made in ac- knowledging a letter from Rep. Armistead I. Selden, Jr. (D-Ala.), chairman of the House Inter- American Affairs Committee. The President's letter made pub- lic yesterday was dated Nov. 30, the same day in which such a trip was mentioned at a White House conference with congres- sional leaders. Milton S Eisenhower, the Presi- dent's brother, also has said he hopes the President can make such a trip. Believes Productive Selden, commenting on the President's reply, said: "I am happy that the President is receptive to th idea of such a visit because I believe it could be productive of many results of mu- tual benefit to the countries of Latin America as well as to our- selves. "It is my hope that the Presi- dent will be able to arrange a visit next year in such a way that it would be possible for him person- ally to meet in South America with all the headsof the Latin American governments, even if it proved impracticable for him to visit each and every country per- sonally." Selden wrote Eisenhower on Nov. 20 saying that the establishment of a National Advisory Committee on Inter-American Affairs had im- pressed him as "a wise and con- structive act which should ma- terially assist in achieving greater mutual understanding in both the United States and in-Latin Ameri- ca of problem of common con- cern." 'Marks New Step' Eisenhower, thanking Selden, said he believes "the establishment of the committee marks a new step in the further advancement of our relations with Latin Amer- ica. "Your suggestion that I visit the countries of Latin America during the coming year will be kept very much in mind," he added. In his own letter, Selden said: "It Is an unfortunate fact that by many of our good friends in Latin America we are regarded as taking their friendship for granted to the extent of neglecting many of the ties which could bind us even closer in our traditional bonds of friendship. "It occurs to me that one of the most timely, most effective, and most patently sincere expres- sions of friendship and good will would be the undertaking by you during the coming year of a per- sonal visit to our sister republics in Latin America. many of whose chief executives over the years visited the United States. Second Front Page December 10, 1959 QUESTION PRICING: Senate Group Examines Drug Industry £i tift Da * WASHINGTON () - Merck & Co. Inc., one of the nation's big- gest drug houses, charges $170 for the same quantity of an anti- arthritic remedy sold by a Mexi- can firm for $13.61, a Senate in- vestigator said yesterday. John T. Connor, Merck's presi- dent, promptly accused the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee of dealing in myths He challenged the prob- ers to summon doctors and to ask them why they prefer to Merck product to some lower-priced drugs. The clash came after Connor had read a statement saying that Merck, of Rahway, N. J., had will- ingly slashed the price of cortisone from $200 to $20 a gram within three years after developing it in 1949. Made Eight Cuts Connor said eight separate cuts were put in force "as we were able to make improvements in produc- tion effciency." The cortisone price reductions did not come about from any pres- sure by other drug houses, Connor told the subcommittee, but were in line with a Merck policy to make the latest medicine available to the public as quickly and as cheaply as possible. John Blair. the subcommittee's chief economist whose figures have been challenged before, then took the witness chair. He produced evidence which he U.S. Plans Observation Satellite for Weathermen said showed the Syntex Co. of Mexico City wasclearing a profit selling prednisone, an anti-arth- risi drug, at $13.61 for each bottle of 1,000 tablets. Investigates Drugs Blair was one of the first wit- nesses Monday when the subcom- mittee opened its investigation to determine whether drug makers are charging too much for their preparations at the wholesale level. Blair said Merck charged drug- gists $170 for this quantity of prednisone and that the rate to patients was $283.33. Connor attacked the validity of Blair's reckoning. Among other things, the Merck president said the $13.61 figure represented only an assumed price to a mythical company. Connor was the second drug in- dustry witness to criticize Blair's data, presented _in the early stage of the subcommittee's Investiga- tion. The subcommittee counsel, Rand Dixon, said he believed Blair's fig- ures ,to be accurate. They were prepared "on a very conservative basis," Dixon said. Francis C. Brown, president of the Schering Corp., Bloomfield, N. J., Tuesday disputed Blair's testimony that Schering applied markups up to 7,079 per cent on some of its drugs, including reme- dies against arthritis and female disorders. Brown called Blair's conclusions "severely damaging and most unfair." f Last year a much sharper reso- lution condemning the Soviet By WILLIAM L. RYAN Union and Hungary was approved Associated Press News Analyst 54-10 with 15 abstentions. This year's resolution merely de- NEW DELHI (sn w) - President plored the "continued disregard by Dwight D. Eisenhower has scored pioed he coninud dsreardbyan enormous success for American the Soviet Union and the present rn en an a r wherias Hungarian regime of the General been an ing-aru nd twhe im of Assembly's resolutions dealing with crowded Asia the situation in Hungary.' The success of his 11-nation To Continue Efforts journey is bound to be gauged by It requested New Zealand's Sir the popular enthusiasm it has Leslie Munro, the UN special rep- aroused. By the time Eisenhower's resentative on Hungary, to con- trip is over. it looks as if he will tinue his efforts. It called upon have been received more enthusi- Moscow and Budapest to cooperate astically, in more places, in a short with him. space, of time, than any foreign Munro's task is to see what can visitor in history. be done to gain implementation of He has outshone Soviet Premier previous resolutions demanding Nikita Khrushchev as a political withdrawal of Soviet military salesman in Afghanistan and In- forces from Hungary and restora- dia. He has been received with al- tion of political freedom for the most hysterical approval in Turkey Hungarian people. and Pakistan. The Assembly's 9-nation creden- 'Great Personal Triumph' tials committee also took a slap at It is a great personal triumph the Budapest regime. It voted 7-2 but it can be more than that in for a United States proposal thit United States reckoning. For the committee take no action on Eisenhower has in effect demon- the credentials presented by the strated to the world that the Hungarian UN delegation. United States remains a symbol of FIt's Christmas Time at Collins" r y- LAST-MINUTE SUGGESTIONS 9 for your roommate, pinmate, friends, relatives or family. ROBES SWEATERS PETTI-COATS SWEATERS 9 BED JACKETS BLOUSES LOUNGE SETS SLACKS PAJAMAS BERMUDAS GOWNS BELTS P HOSIERY BLAZERS HOSIERY CASES SLIPPERS MUK-LUKS DRESSES COATS SUITS N APRONS RAINWEAR f LINEN TOWELS UMBRELLAS LINEN PLACEMATS LINEN CALENDARS COCKTAIL NAPKINS PERFUMES JEWEL CASES JEWELRY W SILK SCARVES KEY CASES WOOL SCARVES CIG. CASES LEATHER GLOVES LIGHTERS FABRIC GLOVES BILLFOLDS MITTENS CLUTCH PURSES HANDBAGS STOTE BAGS 9 EVENING PURSES TRAVEL ACCESSORIES BOUDOIR BONNETS a; HAN DK(FRCH I FF .1 Page 3 CAPE CANAVERAL (M) - Thev United States may soon give its weathermen an orbiting station 400 miles in space. Plans call for launching two experimental meteorological satel- lites containing cloud-scanning television cameras. The first, weighing 250 pounds, is scheduled for a mid-January launching by an Air Force Thor-Able rocket. The other will be sent up later next year. If successful, the project-called Tiros--will provide meteorologists with enough pictures to recon- struct cloud patterns over a large portion of the earth. This will enable them to quickly spot devel- oping storms and cold fronts, es- pecially in the vast unmonitored expanses of the world's oceans. The first Tiros will be aimed at a circular 400-mile orbit. Whirling eastward about the earth's mid- section. its passes will carry it over an area extending several hundred miles on both sides of the equator. hope to the peoples of Asia despite all the propaganda, wars and cold war vicissitudes. All this is happening against a backdr:p of Communist Chinese muscle-flexing on this continent. The hopes and dreams of many people whose lot often seems hope- less probably have much to do with their joy at seeing a symbol of the mysterious country across the world whose people are happy, strong and prosperous. Considers Leaders But the role their leaders play has much to do, too, with their reacticn to the visitor. In Afghanistan a king worried about his deeply religious people's distrust of Soviet economic infil- tration saw to it no obstacles were put in the people's way in their' turnout for the visitor. When Khrushchev visited there four years ago the reverse was true. In India, Prime Minister Jawa- harlal Nehru - now disillusioned about the brotherly intentions of his Communist Chinese neighbors after their truculent incursions in- to territory India claims, and their suffocation of Tibetan indepen- dence--let his people know clearly he considered Eisenhower a "mes- senger of peace." Wants Big Turnout The Indian government obvi- ously wanted a big turnout and put hundreds of buses, trucks, and other vehicles at the disposal of tht public to bring in spectators from villages and transport people in Delhi to the area of Eisenhow- er's motorcade route. Even at that, the vastness of the crowd and the wildness of its Steel Dispute Plan Rejected WASHINGTON (P) - The steel industry yesterday formally re- jected Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell's proposal to submit the steel-labor dispute to a third party for settlement recommen- dations. R. Conrad Cooper, head man- agement negotiator, said the in- dustry could not"agree to shift its bargaining responsibility into the rands of a third party. That in essence is what the industry has been saying all along with regard to the over-all dispute. welcome perhaps startled Nehru. But it has helped him serve clear notice on the Communist world that India still has hopes in the future of an unregimented way of life. Welcomed Soviets Four years ago Khrushchev and Nikolai Bulganin received a big welcome in India. Nehru at that time seemed to consider it his role to become referee in the East-West cold war. He was preaching his panch sheel (five principles) interpreta- tion of how nations should coexist. This concept has attractions for Asian intellectuals. Storm Brings Raging Seas; Two Ships Sink LONDON (P)--Two more ships went down, and the death toll mounted to 109 yesterday as one of the worst winter storms in 23 years battered Europeans for the fifth day. Mountainous seas threatened scores of ships fighting for survival in waters along the coasts, and radios crackled with appeals for aid, reports of seemingly hope- less searches and occasionally with news of a rescue or of a ship that had reached safety. Worst of the disasters was loss of 1,719-ton Norwegian freighter Elfrida. She capsized near Lista lighthouse off the south coast of Norway. All of her crew of 20 were believed to have perished. As their troubles mounted they radioed: "We are going down. Thanks for all assistance. We have launched our starboard lifeboat and will try to leave the ship." Other vessels laboring in the storm rushed to the scene. The motorship Buffalo of Oslo found six bodies in the water. The Nor- wegian liner Oslofjord, with 315 passengers aboard, sighted the El- frida floating keel up and re- ported: "Now running before wind searching for survivors." But the liner's search was in vain. A hunt for survivors by four Catalinas sent out by the Norwe- gian Air Force's air-sea rescue service was called off at nightfall. I ~ .... C P You can pick a handsome pack of gifts for her - "and friends ... Especially for those in line for "Something Special" ... We know What she likes .. we've seen her shop for herself, and for gifts .. . So we've collected a Santa Pack of all her favorites in the world of fashion. JEWELRY BLOUSES WALLETS SCARFS * SWEATERS * SKIRTS * LINGERIE * HOSIERY * * * * GLOVES KNEE SOCKS SLACKS DUSTER LENGTH ROBES SPECIAL GROUP BETTER JEWELRY Rhinestones- Gold-Silver 98c -1.49 49c or 3 for 1.00 Main Store at 530 Forest Just off So. Univ. Corner opposite Campus Theatre and The Campus Toggery (for separates) 1111 So. University (Just 17/ blocks from Main Store) f 4 r i x ,: t" ":'. , j II .. ^ . _ _ _ __ SEVERAL DRYCLEANING DAYS UNTIL CHRISTMAS Roommate of Girl in Picture: Think your mom will like Time is running out! This is absolutely THE LAST WEEK to buy your getting that box of dirty clothes for Christmas? Girl in Picture: Who's giving her dirty clothes? These things just came back from Greene's. Roommate: You mean you're going home with all of your things clean? Girl: Sure, that's my Christmas present to Mother. Roommate: She'll flip. Say, how did you pay for it? Girl: I didn't. Just charged it. Roommate: You mean Greene's will give you credit? Girl: Credit where credit is due. Greene's likes my busi- ness. Sure they do... and they'll like your business too. Matter of fact, Greene's has a free Travel Case for home-going students just to prove how much they like your pre-Christmas business. If you'd like vmir ~ct~1Pan-d t i- to stav neat o n the trio ..