f k State rust Pay rRising Enrollment L Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom. ~aitjP FAIR, COOL See page 4 ..m ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1957 i ,..... ..... W.r.... t )b Condemned U.S. Menace tle Rock' Violence Undermining ited States Prestige - President INGTON (M)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower, telling the v he sped federal troops to Little Rock, said last night that there menaced the very safety of the United States and the s so, he said in a TV-radio broacast from the White House, loating" Communists abroad are using the school integra- to misrepresent the United States and undermine its d influence around the globe. aly, he called upon Mkansas citizens to help bring an end rference with legal processes, because: "Mob rule cannot be allowed to override the deci- sions of the courts." Even as he spoke, the first of the 101st Airborne Division were entering Little Rock, but the President pledged: "If resistance to the federal court orders ceases at once, the. further presence of federal troops will be unnecessary. ., Today tor Aung Lecture Burma By THOMAS BLUES i Aung, Rector of the Uni-- r of Rangoon in Burma, will at 4 p.m. today in East Con- e room of Rackham on na's position in World Af- Stresses Order The aresident stressed thatthe troops were not sent to relieve local authorities of their ;duty to preserve order, nor to act as school administrators. Their only pur- pose, he said, is to prevent further j interference with a federal judge's order that Negroes be admitted to Little Rock's Central High School. The President, looking deadly serious, said he chose the White House for his address to the na- tion because: "I felt that, in speaking from the house of Lincoln and Jackson and of Wilson, my words would more clearly convey both the, sad-. ness I feel in the action I was compelled today to take and the firmness with which I intend to pursue this course. Explains Action He said he knew that an over- whelming majority of Americans including those of Little Rock- are people of goodwill, but that some few in the Arkansas capital were bent on obstructing justice. In this country, President Eisen- hower said, the basis of individual rights and freedoms is the cer- tainty that the executive branch will insure the carrying out of federal court decisions with all the meansat the president's command, when necessary. "Unlless the president did so, anarchy would result," he said. Once, he said that the running of the school systems is a matter for local authorities,. and the fed- eral government doesn't interfere unless asked. China Questyion Shelved in UN UNITED NATIONS, NY. (P) -- The General Assembly decided last night to shelve for another year the question of seating Red China in the United Nations. The action was a rebuff for In- dia and the Soviet Union which had led an attempt to get the is-' sue placed before the 82-nation Assembly for a full debate. Ltving costs Still Reflect Year's Rise WASHINGTON (P - The cost of living topped off a full year of steady climbing with a Jump of two tenths of 1 per cent during August. , This gain, announced yester- day, was the 12th straight month- -ly advance and left prices 3.6 per cent higher than they were a year ago. The Labor Department's con- sumer price index now stands at 121 per cent of the 1947-49 level. The latest jump in the price in- dex will bring automatic pay raises of two or three cents an hour to 157,000 workers whose wages are tied to the cost of liv- ing in escalator contracts. ' Most of the workers affected are in the aircraft industry. In another report, the Labor Department said the weekly spendable earnings of factory production workers - what they have left after paying federal taxes and social security pay- mients - rose by 33 cents during the month more than offsetting the increase in the cost of living for this particular group. Buying power for factory workers was 'still below last year's levels, how- ever. During August the spendable earnings of a factory worker with three dependents averaged $75.13 weekly. A worker without depend- ents averaged $67.73. These earn- ings were about $2 higher than a year earlier. Asian Tour Plans Altered Plans of Student Government Council and the University to send an eight-man delegation to Southeast Asia next summer have been changed according to Chair- man Margaret Quick, '57, Originally the committee had planned to request $26,000 for an eight man student-faculty group. The figure has now been reduced to $19,000 for six people. The change was made to im- prove' chances of securing finan- cial support from some founda- tion, Miss Quick said. Only two letters have been sent out and of the two, one refusal has been received from the Asian Foundation. No response has been heard from the Youth and Stu- dent Foundation. Plans to send out 20 more re- quests have Just been completed and letters will be mailed later in the week, Miss Quick added. If a sponsor is found, the pro- ject will only be the third such attempt in the country. Only two other American schools, UCLA and the University of California have similar projects., Miss Quick said, "The purpose of the delegation may have to be changed if we fail to receive ac- ceptance by a foundation." NEW YORK P)-The AFL-CIO Executive Council late last night found the United Textile Workers of America under corrupt influence and gave the union 30 days to clean up. The Council's announcenient came after a day-long meeting during which the labor organiza- tion's top governing body' had studied a report from the AFI,- CIO Ethical Practices Committee condemning financial practices in the textile union. The accused textile union is dis- tinct from the Textile Workers Union- of America, once in the CIO. It is one of three unions under corruption charges by the Ethical Practices Committee after disclosures of financial irregulari- ties by a Senate committeV., The other unions, the Teamsters and Bakery Workers, also are ex- pected to get clean-up orders from the Executive Council, which is meeting in extraordinarysession to ,pass on the Ethical Practices Committee's reports. The Council said action on the Teamsters and Bakers would not come before today. The ethical Practices Commit- tee's reports were prompted by the current investigations of Mid West Teamster Boss James Hoffa. Campus Chest. On SGC Slate The fate of. Campus Chest and its relationship to Galens may be discussed at the Student Govern- ment Council meeting at 7:30 to- night at the Student Activities Building, according to Janet Neary, '58, SGC executive vice- president. Because of SGC's concern about' the success of the Campus Chest drive last year and the conflict with Galens,medical honorary, calendaring of both events had been postponed until further dis- cussion this year. Plans for the SGC forum pro- gram will also be discussed at the meeting, Miss Neary said. The committee has been working to set up a program which would offer speakers discussing impor- tant questions in education, poli-' tics, religion and related areas. Teamsters and other delegates Text 'Union fGiven- Month TO Reform* CALLED ILLEGAL: Senate Challenges Hoffa's Credentials WASHINGTON ()-Senate investigators yesterday challenged the credentials of-James R. Hoffa and 29 other delegates to a Team- sters Union convention at which Hoffa hopes to win the post of president. The challenge came from Robert F. Kennedy, chief counsel of the Senate Rackets Committee and Sen. Karl Mundt (R-S.D.), a member of the inquiry group. They contended the election of Hoff a, Midwest boss of the Ike Orders fra m Locals 299 and 337 in Detroit, Swas not conducted in accordance with the union's constitution. "He's not legally a delegate," Mundt said of Hoffa, whom the committee has had under fire for months. This brought an angry protest from George Fitzgerald, Hoff a's lawyer. Hoffa, described by Chair- man John McClellan (D-Ark.), as "one of the most powerful labor leaders in this nation," had been invited to attend the hearing but did not show up. "I dqn't think Sen. Mundt has any right to sit here and charac- terize anything as legal or illegal," Fitzgerald said. The issue will be threshed out in the U.S. District Court here Friday when Hoffa and other union big- wigs appear to show cause why a temporary injunction should not be issued holding up the election. The Teamsters are scheduled to open their convention in Miami Beach next Monday. Laundry-Union Teamster Tie Draws Fire INDIANAPOLIS (A) - Four' members of Local 350 here filed suit Tuesday to throw the -Laun- dry Workers International Union into receivership and prevent its possible affiliation with the Team- sters Union. Two other suits filed at the same time in Marion County Cir- cuit Court asked that trustees be named for the local union and the social security department of the international. Attorney Nelson Grills, repre- senting the plaintiffs, said the suits are based on a section of the union's constitution providing that the union must remain in the AFL. The union is under sus- pension from the AFL-CIO. Grills said that the union is contemplating moving its head- quarters to Chicago and that it might affiliate with the Team- sters if the latter union is expelled from the AFL-CIO. Girard's Shot Called 'Joke' SOMAGAHARA, Japan () - The only American to see William S. Girard fire at a Japanese wo- man scrap collector testified yes- terday that "actually, I don't think he meant to do it." He said Girard fired as a joke. But the testimony of soldier Victor Nickel, Inkster, Mich., dif- fered on three points with that of Girard's. Nickel shared a foxhole with Girard at the U.S. Army firing range here Jan. 30 just be- fore Mrs. Naka Sakai was fatally wounded by the Ottawa, Ill., sol- dier. Girard is on trial for man- slaughter. This was how Nickel's testi- mony conflicted with Girard's: Girard put the rifle grenade launcher to his shoulder and aimed at the woman as she bent over. Girard said he fired from the hip. Nickel's testimony put Girard about 25 feet closer to the woman at the moment of the shooting. The session of the Japanese court was held at the scene of the shooting. 'f Guard Units into. Ar NEWPORT, R. I. (P)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday ordered ground and air units of the Arkansas National Guard into federal service to cope with the violence-ridden Little Rock school integration crisis. The President's action placed the 9,900 Guardsmen under Army control and thereby took them out of state control. Ike Not Obeyed President Eisenhower took his1 dramatic action in an executive order declaring that his procla- mation Monday, demanding a cessation to the obstruction of Justice, had not been obeyed. The order authorized and di- rected Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson to order into active military service of the United States such Arkansas Guard units as hesdeemed appropriate to carry out the purpose of the order. Sec. Wilson complied shortly afterward. Told To Integrate Pres. Eisenhower further author- ized - but did not direct - Sec. Wilson "to use such of the armed forces of the United States as he may deem necessary" to carry out a federal District Court integra- tion orders. Gov. Faubus, until yesterday the civilian commander of the Guard, first called up these troops Sept. 2, to-as he said-prevent vio- lence. His orders also were to pre- vent Negroes from entering the school, focal point bf the trouble. He withdrew them in compli- ance with a federal court order whichhe' has appealed. Action Said Legal The White House was emphatic in declaring it had a firm legal basis in taking its action. Gov. Faubus Monday questioned the President's legal authority to use federal troops in Little Rock unless requested by the governor. James C. Hagerty, the Presi- dent's press secretary, told a news conference yesterday that "people quoting the laws on the President's action do not know what they are talking about." He did not men- tion Gov. Faubus. Bomber Falls Into Suburb DAYTON, Ohio (A) - An Air Force B26, twin-engine bomber, coming in for an emergency land- ing at Wright, Patterson Air Force Base plunged 70 feet into a suburban h o u s i n g development yesterday, killing four persons and injuring at least one. The plane ripped sections from two houses and demolished a third. Air Force officials said the me- dium-sized bomber developed en- gine trouble immediately after takeoff and was returning to the base. Flying at "10 feet, officials said, the plane suddenly veered to miss a high steel tower, but got its landing gear tangled in a high tension wire and went plum- meting toward the development, on Dayton's southeast side. Said Robert Cushing, a serv- ice station operator who watched the convoy coning into the city: "T think they ought to have stayed out. In- tegration had to come but they didn't have to shove it down our throats." Many state and federal officials refused comment at this time. Faubus Comments Gov. Orval Faubus said "I feel like Gen. Douglas MacArthur. I feel relieved." A Faubus aide, told of the Pres- ident's action, said, "My God, did he do that?", The high school's handsome stone facade was lighted and the lights from the jeeps and the'2/2 ton trucks, carrying the para- troopers, gave the scene an eerie look. C Troops Enter The Air Force planes carrying the paratroopers from Ft. Camp- bell, Ky., landed at midafternoon at Little Rock Air Force Base. An officer called the City Hall and asked for and got, permis- sion to enter the city and for a police escort to handle the traffic.- A number of Negro paratroops were seen in the trucks. However, it appeared 'that they were being assigned to duty away from the. high school. Battle Equipped A trailer marked "explosives," and a weapons carrier came with the paratroopers. Battalion pennons- fluttered. from short standards attached to the jeeps. The paratroopers wore battle dress. Leaders Confer Col. William A. Kuehn, com- mander of the troops at the high school, conferred with Asst. Po- lice Chief Gene Smith about troop arrangements for last niight. It appeared that the troops might bed' down on the school's football field. Wooden barricades that figured so prominently in Monday's dis- turbances at the school were placed on the sidewalk to permit the paratroopers' vehicles to pass down the street. Htin Aung will be on campus throughout most of this week and will also be guest lecturer in three courses beginning today. His trip to the United States is supported by the Asian Founda- 'tion, whose purpose is to improve relations between Asia and this country. The Foundation set up a program a few yea-s ago with U Nu, Premier of Burma, which would periodically send represent- , ative Burmese to tour the United States and speak at various col- leges and universities. Htin Aung is the second U Nu lecturer to visit this country. Studies Law Htin Aung, who -became the first Burmese rector of the Uni- versity of Burma in 1946, has an extensive educational and military background. As a scholar in Eng land, he first qualified as a ba- rister after completing his law studies in London. He then went to Queen's Col- lege, Cambridge where he earned his doctoate in anthropology. Further studies in law took him to the University of Dublin'where he gained his second doctor's degree,' this time in law. He practiced at this profession from 1934 to 1936 when he became the first Burmese professor) at the University of Rangoon. Has English Faculty At that time Burma was under the rule of Britain andsall the faculty were English. It was not until 1948 that Burma ggined in- dependence and br'oke away from the British Commonwealth. With the advent of World War II, the educator turned soldier fought the Japanese, invaders in the British Army and remained to fight with Burmese resistence Local Resident Shocked at Mo Negro Children Reported Prept To Enter School Again if Prote LITTLE ROCK, Ark. M - Helmeted paratroopera the famed 101st Airborne Division took up stations a Central High School last night while hundreds of Littli people looked on. The troops roled in convoy from Little Rock Air Base, 'shortly after dark. The force, said to be 500, split one group going high school and the other to the National Guard Arm Little Rock. A National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored official, Mrs. L. C. Bates, said, "If federaL troops are th protect the children, the Negro children will go to schi morrow." Men on the street in Little. Rock as well as off icials were shocked by the action federalizin Guard and sending in troops.4' z 1861 ILaws b Allow Troo To- Step I' WASHINGTON OP) - Amer presidents have been using tr to enforce the law and pre order since the earliest day the republic. In such historic instane the Whisky Rebellion, i Brown's raid at Harper's Fi the bonus. march on Washin fnd the 1894 Pullman str presidents ordered troops'*Into tion- An O, In Arkansas itself, w President Eisenhower steppe Tuesday by summoning the National Guard into federal 'vice, there have been at least t precedents for summoning troops to preserve or restore or There is one major pont of ference between President Ei hower's decision yesterday to Guardsmen and. federal troop Arkansas and actions of o presidents in the past. Ordin the president has sent troop scenes of riot or threatened ,order on the request of a govei Few Instances turn up in the tory books-one is the Pll strike-in which a president acted against the expressed of the governor of a state. Federal legal authorities the laws under which Eisenhi acted date back to 1861. Provision for use of fec forces within a given state made during George Washingi administration. However, t h laws originally required a req by a state's governor or leg: ture. The laws were change delete the request feature See HISTORY, page 2 Court Nleifs Judgements' WASHINGTON (VP) -The ernment moved yesterday to out two convictions under "knowing 'membership" claus the Smith Act. The Justice Department sid Supreme Court decision -in Jencks case requires reversa the first two convictions obta -under the provision of the which makes it a crime to be to the Communist party v knowing the party advocates lent overthrow of;the govenr "The men concerned: Juni Scales, Communist leader in 'J nessee and the Carolinas Claude M. Lightfoot, Chicago, served as executive secretary ol Illinois Communist party. The Supreme Court last Ju directed a new trial for Clii E. Jencks, former labor union ficial convicted of filing a WELCOME MAT OUT: Daily Tryout Meeting Scheduled Today The Michigan Daily is one of the finest college newspapers in the country. It has earned many awards for editorial, and technical excellence. It can claim the enviable record of sixty-seven years of editorial freedom. In order to maintain and in- crease this reputation, The Daily needs staff members who like to write, sell advertising, take pic- tures and meet people. If you fit any or all of these categories you have a place at The Daily. The Daily can offer you excite- ment, adventure and thrills in WITH VARIED REACTION: Little Rock Observers, Uphold Need for Order. By The Associated Press JOHNSTON CITY, Tex. -- Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson (D-Tex.) said in a written statement from his home yester- day he thought "there should be no troops from either side patrol- ling our school campuses." Voicing his concern over the Little Rock situation which he said was filled with dangerous emotional tension and marked by ex- tremely complex questions, Johnson said: "I believe the great majority of our people look to the governor and the President to exercise their responsibility in such a way that normal governmental processes will be restored and I think there should be no troops from either side patrolling our school campuses." * * * I }