tn Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom BIaii4 V" SHOWERS, COOLER __ . ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1958 FIVE CENTS SIX MASSU: Mob Seizes Governor In AlIgeria By The Associated Press ALGIERS - A mob of about 40,000 with backing of French army rightist elements seized gov- ernment offices at the big port of Oran yesterday and kidnaped pro- vincial Gov. Pierre Lambert. The leaders identified themselves with French parachutist Gen. Jacques Massu, who with mob support Tuesday seized the main government building here in Al-. giers, the capital. Advocates Force The Massu movement advocat- ing nilitary force to break the nationalist rebellion, as opposed to Paris moderation measures, spread elsewhere in Algeria during the day. Massu apparently was operating his rightist Committee of Public Safety here under the eyes of his superior, Gen. Raoul Salan, while Massu's movement was spreading in demonstrations and violence. Faces Civil War The new French government in Paris, facing the possibility of civil war pitting French against French, told Salan he was in sole charge of Algerian destinies. What he can do here remained in doubt. The ringing support ofthe mobs of Oran for Massu's ideas gave the crisis a grave new turn for the French government. Storm Building The Oran mob stormed the Pre- fecture, battering the building and tossed government papers out of windows. Gov. Lambert was seized and manhandled by the mob. He fell on the Prefecture steps. Then he was hustled into an army car and driven off to an unknown place. Establish Committee The demonstrators set up a pub- lic safety committee of military officers and civilians and sent fra- ternal greetings to Massu in Al- giers from Oran, a Mediterranean city of about 300,000 in the ex- treme west of Algeria. in Paris, the Socialist party agreed to enter Premier Pierre Pflimlin's Cabinet to strengthen his hand in dealing with the Al- gerian situation. ' Agreement Conditional The agreement was conditional. The Socialists asked that Robert Lacoste, long resident minister in Algeria, be sent back to that post, and that the Popular Republican Movement leader, ex-Premier Georges Bidault, also enter the Cabinet. Andre Mutter, designated as La- coste's successor, has not yet gone to Algeria. Asks Time Pflimlin asked for time to con- sider the Socialist demands. The Socialists probably would get several Cabinet posts, dis- placing some conservatives and it was indicated the Socialist party leader, ex-Premier Guy Mollet, would become vice-premier. The second night of rioting in Paris extended from the fashion- able Champs Elysees in the west to workers' quarters around the Bastille in the east. Rioters defied a government ban on public gath- erings. Gen. Charles, de Gaulle, war- time resistance hero, left the city during the day to return to his country home outside Paris. U, Wil Cstruction Prograi < Q', The net result will be to have approximately 3,600 Marines aboard 11 ships in the area, in- stead of only 1,800 aboard 6 ships. Americans Removed Meanwhile, the United States was moving Americans out of trouble zones- as anti-governing rioting raged Wednesday for the fifth straight :day. United States. weapons were being flown in to help authorities cope with the dis- orders. The United States Embassy sent a ship to pick up 53.Americans in Tripoli, the north Lebanese port. where the first rioting erupted Saturday with the sacking of a United States Information Agency office. Other Americans came from eastern Lebanon. Bombings Continue Bombings, shootings and strikes continued in disorders attributed by the Lebanese government to massive intervention by President Nasser's United Arab Republic. A bomb exploded harmlessly outside the United States Embassy. United States Ambassador Rob- ert McClintock told a news confer- ence the 5 United States. is deter- mined to help the government maintain internal security. Send Tear Gas It was disclosed the United States is flying in tear gas bombs, masks and ammunition for the Lebanese police. Lebanon also had asked for rifles, but the United States was unable to supply them. The ambassador said the situa- tion in Tripoli was very serious and the Americans were being urged to leave. Reports from Tripoli indicated police there were quitting their posts, and guards around an American building were leaving. rSGCAppoints Lave to Post; Others Chosen Roy Lave, '58E, was appointed as a student member of the Stu- dent Government Council's Board in Review as SGC made 18 ap- pointments at last night's meeting. He will serve for one semester. Sue Rockne, '60, was recommended as a student member of the Uni- versity Development .Council. Appointed for one-year terms were Karol Bucker, '60, to the position of personnel director and Lynnel Marg, '61, to the position of office manager. Approved as chairman of the Early Registration and Pass Com- mittee to serve for a term of one semester was Harvey Yates, '60. Other members appointed to the committee were Allan Nachman, ,an Kra-l 'R .-a ,an T a-.~i a n Nixon Ends Riot-Ridden Latin Tour CARACAS, Venezuela (JP)-Vice- President Richard Nixon cut short his riot-ridden South American good-will tour and took off late yesterday for Puerto Rico. He is due in Washington at 10 a.m. today. Venezuela's government sent out troops, tanks and armored cars to 'Deliberate' Mob violence aimed at Vice- President and Mrs. Nixon may have been incited deliberately by the governments of Peru and Venezuela, a University of Chi- cago Latin American specialist said in Ann Arbor yesterday. "Either these governments are considerably more ineffec- tual than there was reason to believe until now or this is deliberate pressure for more financial aid and trade from us," Prof. J. Fred Rippy com- mented in a prepared state- ment. give Nixon and his wife, Pat, a safe sendoff. Limousine Provided A bullet-proof limousine was provided for their trip from the U.S. embassy to Caracas airport. It was at the airport that anti- United States demonstrators launched their spitting and ston- ing attack when the Nixons arrived Tuesday from Bogota, Colombia. Meanwhilelin Washington Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower blamed the anti-Nixon demonstrations in South America on economic diffi- culties, envy of the United States and probable Communist agitation. Plan Ceremony The President told a news con- ference he'd like to do something special for Nixon on the vice-pres- ident's return to the capital Thurs- day-because he admires Nixon's calmness and fortitude and his courage under mob attack. The President likewise defended sending troops into the Caribbean, for Nixon's possible protection, as the simplest precautionary meas- ures in the world. He said the troops were made available in case Venezuela asked for them and that is all there was to it. The four companies of Marines and paratroopers flown to the Caribbean are due to be returned soon. This was reported Wednesday night by White House press secre- tary James C. Hagerty, after things had quieted down in Ven- ezuela. The vice-president told a news conference he feels Venezuela's junta now has the situation in Caracas under control. By RUTH BERS Jordan Hall will be closed for one year in order to facilitate a complete renovation of the plumbing system, according to As- sistant Dean of Women Elsie Ful- ler. Jordan residents will move as a unit into Seeley and Bush Houses in Markley Hall. The houses, located in the southwest wing of the Hall, will be given the name Jordan for the coming year, Dean Fuller said. Plumbing Old "Jordan plumbing is nearly 30 years old," explained Francis C. Shiel, manager of Service Enter- prises.'"It is good to start Mark- ley with a full house, and this is a good time to do the work which has to be done," he added. Jordan women were informed of the move which they will have to make at a house meeting last, night, according to Jane E. Mur- phy, '59, president of Jordan. Move Discussed The Jordan Council discussed the move with Dean Fuller at din- ner last night. "The Council felt badly," Miss Murphy said, "but this is a University- decision." Jordan Hall in Markley will be governed by present officers of Jordan, and the hall will be in- cluded in the central government of Markley, Dean Fuller said. Bill To Raise. Posta1 Rates WASHINGTON R) - Senate- House conferees yesterday fin- ished work on a compromise bill increasing postal rates 530 mil- lion dollars a year and raising pay of the500,000 postal employes 257 millions annually. The bill would boost the first class letter rate to, four cents as compared with the present three- cent stamp which has been in ef- fect since 1932. President Dwight D. Eisenhower had as~ced for five cents on out of town mail. Air mail would be raised from the present six to seven cents. Post cards would go up from two to three cents. These hikes in first class rates would take effect one month aft- er the end of the month in which the bill is signed by the President. Indiana representatives voted 7-4 against the foreign aid bill. Those votgng for the measure were Reps. Denton and Madden, Demo- crats and Halleck and Nimtz, Re- publicans. The opponents were Reps. Adair, Beamer, Bray, Brownson, Harden, Harvey and Wilson, Republicans. 11 Jordan will try to exist as an entity ° in itself. "We will try not to become immersed in Markley," Miss Murphy said. She explained that when the dormitory system was opened in the spring, girls had the oppor- tunity to move into Markley. Those who-had chosen to stay in Jordan would be disappointed by the decision. Miss Murphy said that the plumbing was certainly faulty. "If the dormitory didn't need the work, they wouldn't push us into Markley," she said. Difficult to Move Dean Fuller said that it will be difficult for the girls to move, but she is sure "the girls will be anxious to have the house in top notch condition." She explained that Mosher al- most did not open last fall be- cause of the plumbing repairs be- ing carried on. Mosher plumbing has still not been completely ren- novated. Dean Bacon'"Grateful!" Dean of Women Deborah Bacon said that she was extremely grate- ful that the plumbing in Jordan held out for a year so that the girls could move as a unit.' "We've been worried about it all year," said Mrs. Ruth Marker, ResidenceHall director of Jordan. She added that the whole of Jor- dan would try to co-operate with the decision. Planned by Students The mechanization of the move will be, for a large part, planned by students, according to Pat Marthenke, '59, Presidentof As- sembly. The officers are as enthusiastic as can be expected, she said, "they, were very co-operative.'' HousT-Ose Attempts To Cut Ike s Foreign Aid Program By The Associated Press The House defeated all attempts to cut deeper into President Dwight D. Eisenhower's foreign aid program yesterday and finally approved $3,603,000,000 for the fiscal year starting July 1. Passage was on a rollcall vote of 259-134. The bill now goes to the Senate. Final passage climaxed three days of sometimes hot debate over America's foreign policy. Below Minimum The bill is still 339 million dollars below what President Eisen- PLUMBING OUT OF ORDER: Jordan Hall To Close for Repairs. hower said was the minimum need world strong. The administration planned to push in the Senate to get back some of the money. The recent wave of anti-Ameri- can demonstrations in South America and the Middle East,. where millions in United States aid has been distributed over the years, apparently cost the pro- gram little, if any, support. Cites Economic Difficulties Most House members appeared to agree with President Eisenhow- er, who told his news conference yesterday that many developing1 countries have economic difficul- ties and have to .have aid. Voting for the new measure were 150 Democrats and 109 Re- publicans. Seventy-six RepubliJ. cans and 58 Democrats opposed it. The House refused repeatedlyj to go beyond the reductions rec- ommended by its Foreign AffairsS Committee." Security Funds Cut Mutual security funds- were cut one billion dollars in 1957 anda more than that in 1956. More cuts may be made, how- ever, when Congress considers the money bill for foreign aid. The bill passed today is only an au- thorization measure, - setting the ceiling for foreign aid spending. [I ed to keep America and the free World -News Roundup By The Associated Press Bill Expect&a To Provide Large Grati Passage May Come Today or Tomorro4 In State Legislature By THOMAS HAYDEN special to The Daily LANSING-The University is a sured of receiving nearly two mi lion dollars for continuation4 present construction as the legisli ture opens sessions this mornin according to a source close to Go G. Mennen Williams. The bill, calling for a state-wic appropriation of approximately s million dollars for capital-outla will be passed today or tomorrol he said. May Receive Largest Sum The University is scheduled i receive the largest portion of t funds-$1,815,000. Of this sum $1 175,000 is being sought for th completion of the Medical Scien Building. University hospital is,set to r ceive $340,000 for renovatioi and electrical repairs. An add tional $300,000 is earmarked fi the Mental Health Research buld ing, to be supplemented by a pr vate grant of $600,000 A feder grant to match the state appr priation will also be used to con plete this building. To Complete Classrooms The bill provides $67,500 for t completion of a classroom at Co tral Michigan College in Mo Pleasant. Michigan State Unive: sity and Wayne State Universi will receive no funds. Hospitals and institutional di partments ofcorretion will r ceive the remainder of the apprw priation. "There shouldn't be too mu trouble in securing the bill's pas; age, since almost all the funds a: to complete unfinished buildings the capitol official pointed ou The legislature has already r fused to finance new buildin next year. Passage Smooth The only struggle which cou possibly delay the bill's smool passage is the clause concernhx the construction of the boy's voci tional school at Whitmore Lak according to members of the legi lature. A version of the bill giving ti board of supervisors of Livlngst County the authority to choose ti location of the school was ove whelmingly voted down in ti house recently. A newly-worded bill which mi or may not eliminate the clau entirely is expected from tle coi ference committee on capital-ou lay tomorrow. Bill Compromise The committee's capital - outli bill is a compromise between aj propriations bills passed in t House of Representatives and the Senate. The Senate bill previously pas ed alloted a total of $4,666,000 f construction in the state. TI House bill for the same purpe appropriated $6,483,723. Residenceal Appications Now Available expenditures was not the way to increase income, especially since "the trend on campus is toward smaller functions." Move Said 'Impractical' In answer, SGC Treasurer Mort Wise, '59, maintained that Chrys- ler was being "totally impractical." Wise said profits on Homecoming went up this past year, to which Union President Barry Shapiro replied that although the income might have been up, the attend- ance at the Homecoming Dance was down. All suggestions made by SGC will be considered by the J-Hop central committee. A final budget is to be considered at a future Council meeting. Calendar Debated The Council also passed a mo- tion by Administrative Vice-Presi- dent Jo Hardee, '60, to commend the University Calendar Commit- tee and inform them of the objec- tions SGC members have raised to their recommendations. "Many students object to cutting the exam period," League Presi- dent Bobbie Maier, '59, declared. Taub labelled the possibility of having three final examinations on the same day "a horrible idea.". Shapiro objected to greater use of noon hours. Constitutions of the Venezuelan Students Association, forestry honorary Xi Sigma Pi and Evan- gelical United Brethren group Stamm Foundation were accepted. CementPlaza NI 1 T I Z A. STUDENT DIRECTED:' Speech Department Presents 'Operation Telerad' NEW Y6RK-The stock market had its sharpest break of the year Wednesday in heavy trading. Profit taking on the recent climb to new highs for 1958 combined with unsettling news from abroad and about the American economy were cited as factors in the decline. WASHINGTON-Two Republi- can congressmen Wednesday asked their GOP colleagues to join them in endorsing Vice-President Rich- ard M. Nixon for the Republican presidential nomination iii 1960. A letter from Reps. Albert Mo- rano of Connecticut and James Fulton of Pennsylvania went to all Republican members of the House and Senate. WASHINGTON -President Dwight D. Eisenhower Wednesday approved purchase of three high- speed jet transprot planes for use by himself and other top govern- ment officials,-perhaps by theend of the year. The planes, which will cost five. million dollars each, are Boeing 707 types. The White House said no such models have been pro- duced as yet for commercial or government use. * * * MONTREAL - SerVice on the 17,000-mile Canadian Pacific Rail- way System returned quickly to normal todlay after a three-day strike that disrupted some opera- tions. CHICAGO -- James Caesar Pe- trillo blew a sudden, startling note at the music world Wednesday by an announcement that he 'will step out as president of the Ameri- can Federation of Musicians. Then he told newsmen: "I kept it quiet. It's tough to get to the top. And I'll tell you it's tough to get out." ( T T T)----- By JEAN HARTWIG The speech department's third annual "Operation Telerad" was "on the air" yesterday. Last night, the 250 studlents of the speech department's radio and television classes presented a stim- ulating day's programming over a closed-circuit broadcasting system in the Frieze Building. The programs, divided into both network and local shows, were en- tirely student-directed and pre- sented. All Students Participate "Each student studying radio or television was in at least one show, and sometimes six or eight, de- pending on the number of speech classes he's taking," student staff member Don MacLennen, 58, said. P2P.amntir nn .r an stin n Jones, '59, announcer for the pro- gram, uncapped a special coca- cola bottle that was "rigged" 'to produce a large quantity of fizz. Nothing happened. The intended "flop" had flopped. In spite of a few minor difficul- ties such as this, the current "Operation Telerad" is thel smoothest operation of any of the previous years' programs, Mac- Lennen said. This is the first year television has been included in the operation, he added. Facing the glaring spotlights and crouched behind huge audio booms and television cameras, stu- dents were engrossed in last-min- ute studying of scripts. Directors wearing bermuda shorts and ear- phones wildly signaled from glass- 1 nrlmA nnnrnl r f.lml Graduate students may now p up applications 'for admission the University residence halls, cording to Assistant Dean of M Karl D. Streiff. - The blanks are available in' student affairs office on the thi floor of the Student Activil Building. The Residence Hall Board Governors recently approved conversion of Frederick Hou South Quadrangle, and Tyler a IM ;'TI ' 'u-. -- I