WORLD WATCHES LITTLE ROCK Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom iZ~aii1j , 4, See page 4 FAIR, WARMER I VIII, No. 8 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1957 offa Indicted y Grand Jury fL-CIS} Executive Council Levels accusation of 'improper Activities'4 W YORK (P)-James R. Hoffa was hit by a doule-barreled yesterday-a new criminal indictment and a jab by the O-as he readied his bid for top power in the big Teamster federal rackets grand jury charged him with perjury and an O Executive Council accused him of "improper activities" and a clean-up in the union, e perjury indictment was the second federal case launched Hoffa here, concerning an alleged conspiracy by him and to wiretap union headquarters telephones in Detroit, seat of 1e local. ffa, the short, dapper vice-president of the 1,300,000-member ers Union, now is in Miami preparing for the union's conven- Negro Students Attend Classe Crowc Paratroopers Disperse * * 7t * * * * * * Daily in City b next week, at which he is se F Missile lows Apart ver Adan ti ISSILE TEST CENTER, Cape averal, Fla. (P)-The Atlas, an continental ballistic missile blasted from this base yester- and burst into flames two tes later as it swerved out to ie Air Force would say only! ta missile was fired and it 3 not be learned whether the s was destroyed intentionally ew upy e firing was strikingly simi- o the first Atlas test shot 'last 11 here. A missile then rose t, 6,000 feet from this top t base midway between Miami Jacksonville, then 'was de- 'ed in the air. isia ,laimed several weeks, to have fired an intercontin- I ballistics missile but gave on the beach seven of the launching site a tall, cone - shaped slowly, trailing bril- and yellow flame. It light up for an esti- eking its presidency. He aspires to 4succeed Dave Beck, who announced plans to retire earlier this year In furor Aver a Senate committee probe of alleged corruption in the union. Ioff atalso has been a target of charges by the' committee, which claims delegates from some locals have been improperly picked inan attempt to rig the election. The grand jury, naming Hoffa on five counts of perjury, said he lied to the jury in its investigation of the alleged Detroit wiretapping. Also'. indicted was Benjamin Franklin C llins, secretary-treas- urer of Detroit ,Teamsters Local 299, which Hoffa heads. Collins. was named on 12 counts of per- Jury. If convicted, each could get up to five years in prison and a $2,000 fine on each count. aoffa previously was indicted here last May 14 in the alleged wiretap conspiracy. Named with him in that case were Bernard Brennan, president of Teamsters Local 335, in Michi- gan, and Bernard Spindel, a pro- fessional wiretap expert of Holmes, N. Y. Senate Old "Of l'Payoffs' WASHINGTON (P)--Senate in- vestigators were told yesterday that Teamster locals under James R. Hoffa spent around $170,000 in union dues to defend Hoffa men against criminal charges or sup- port their wives while they were in prison. The figures, covering the last three years, were laid before the Senate Rackets Committee by Carmine S. Bellino, its auditor- investigator. Hoffa is the Midwest boss of the Teamsters who aspires to become president of the union at an elec- tion scheduled for Miami Beach, Fla., next week. He was indicted in New York yesterday on per- jury charges growing out of an- other investigation of his union. A surprise witness before the senators yesterday swore he once overheard a conversation men- tioning $1,500 "payoffs" to Hoffa "either two or three times a year" by the Detroit Restaurant Guild., Bellino testified that Teamsters Union records show that more than $85,000 was paid to the wives of four officials of Local 614 at Pontiac, Mich., who were jailed on extortion'charges,. Southerners Seek Parley On Troops REFERENDUM? SGCTo Study Possible Vote on Honor System T ense Reporter's Eyewitness Description :W_4. At that point two outside rock- s - fell off and it appeared for n 'instant that the fire-spitting tiile might continue its journey ut it faltered, then burst into a .gantic red and yellow ,patch of re. A heavy roar and dull explo- on could be heard up and down. te beach. In Washington, the Defense De- artment co fined its comment to he usual statement that a missile as test launched from Patrick Jr Force Base. But authoritative &rces at the Pentagon said the Lissile was an Atlas. ren U.. Fliers iSSin at Sea, rhought Dead WASHINGTON ()-The Navy nnounced last night that 10 nited States fliers were lost and reumed killed in "suspected id-air collisions" off Norway hale taking part in 'NATO ma- euvers., It yeleased the names of eight the 10, members of the crews of wo 82F, antisubmarine killer anes from the carrier Essex. From one plane, the Navy said issing personnel included avia- on electronics technician 3. C. ernard Herman Solfield, USN, ooperstown, N.D. The navy said the second plane ew included aviation electronics chnician striker Charles Edward orelock, USN, Rt. 2, Blount- lle, Tenn, Identification of two other pi- ts figuring' in a second colision two F4D jet fighters has notj t been released by the Navy De- rtment. The NATO sea maneuvers, mich were being carried out with artime realism, were suspended, Lmediately after the four planes sappeared in early morning rkness. The F4D Skyrays - single-seat t fighters capable of speeds up 1,000 miles an hour-collided ., +he At lm ni. The were Governors To Ask Federal Withdrawal SEA, ISLAND, Ga. UP) - South- ern governors voted 11-1 yester- day to seek conference with Pres- ident Dwight D. Eisenhower ,and Gov. Orval Faubus of Arkansas aimed at the withdrawal of feder- al troops from Little Rock, Ark. Later, the vacation White, House at Newport, R.I., said the President is trying to arrange a meeting early next week with a committee the Southern gover- nors named; James C. Hagerty, White House press secretary, said President Ei- senhower might want to broaden the scope of the conference to in- clude other aspects of the inte- gration question. The Southern governors also, elected Gov. Leroy Collins of Flor- ida, , regarded as a moderate on integration, as their leader for the coming year} although the nominating committee had fa- vored Gov. Marvin Griffin of Georgia, a fervent segregationist. Over the objections of Repub- lican Gov. Cecil H. Underwood of West Virginia, the Southern Gov- ernors Conference acted in closed session to set up a five-man com- mittee headed by Gov.. Luther Hodges of North Carolina to seek meetings with President Eisen- hower and Gov. Faubus in an at- tempt to find a formula to end the Arkansas controversy over school integration. Gov. Hodges told newsmen he had talked to White House staff members about the resolution and "they liked the resolution and the idea" of a presidential conference. Hodges said the committee also had called Gov. Faubus and that the Arkansas governor would be glad to cooperate. The governors, suggested tomorrow as their choice of day for such a confer- ence. Soviet Opens- Industry Drive MOSCOW () - The Kremlin proclaimed yesterday a huge new campaign to surpass the United States in production per capita by 1965. The gpal is to make the Soviet Union the most powerful nation on earth by that date. SOMAGAHARA, Japan (R) - A Japanese scrap collector said yes- terday a brass cartridge case from William S. Girard's rifle whistled by his leg moments before a sec- ond shot killed Mrs. Naga Sakai on the United States; firing range here last Jan. 30. Hidetsugu Onozeki, testifying in a rain-drenched outdoor session of Girard's Japanese manslaugh- ter trial, said he saw the Illinois soldier stuff a cartridge case in the grenade launcher on his rifle. Onozeki said he ran away think- ing he would be shot. After questioning Onozeki for the entire session, presiding Judge Yuzo Kawachi called off the hear- ing in midafternoon because of the downpour. The trial will resume today. Onozeki said- Girard chased six or seven brass-collectors for more than 50- yards only a few minutes before firing the shot which felled Mrs. Sakai. He said the soldier was shouting, "Get out of here." Itsuro Hayahi, chief defense at- torney, said, "It is evident Gir- ard was definitely on duty at the time." October 10 Set As Date For, Insurane By RICHARD TAUB TwoStudent Government Coun- cil committees will "consider the feasibility and possible 'wbrding" of a student referendum on the desirability of an honor system, non-proctored examinations, SGC decided last night. ' he Honor System and Elections committee will study the facets of a referendum on this issue, with the possibility of incorporating in the SGC elections in November. The motion came. after Ron Gregg, '60, chairman of the honor system committee, told the Coun- cil of an experimental honor sys- tem r:rogram, in which half the sections of e a c h introductory course in the. Literary College would be utilized. The committee had asked the Shot Twice administrative board of the Lit- erary College if it would waive a regulation now requiring proctors in al examinations, to put the program into effect. Maynard Goldman, '59, SGC treasurer, told Gregg he thought his committee °"had overstepped its bounds." The Council, he said, had not voted in favor of an honor system; and in fact, it had taken great pains in its motion to set up the honor system committee not to commit itself. either way. Gregg acknowledged his error. Campus Chest Set At the same meeting the Council calendared the C a. m p u s Chest charity drive for Oct. 28-Nov. 2, and approved the Galens, medical honorary, request for a city drive on Dec. 6 and 7. The Campus Chest committee has been charged by the Council to define the city and campus areas at its next meeting, to deter- mine the sections of the city which Galens may cover. Four Forums Don Young,'58, Union president, told the Council that the forum committee' is. now planning four programs. At the same meeting, it was an- nounced that Sue Rockne, n60, was named chairman of the Public, Relations Committee and P h i 1 Zook, '60, has been chosen to chair the Elections Committee. Janet Neary, '58, executive vice- president- of the Council, and Judy Martin, '59, council member, were appointed to the Regional Execu- tive Committee of the National Student Association. It was also announced at 'the meeting that stwo students would be chosen to sit on the University Lecture Committee. Reuther Told- Auto Prices Up to Makers Airborne Replace By 'National Guai Massive Force Displayed at Sc] 1,000 Soldiers Remain in Little] LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (M--Crack paratroopers wit bayonets yesterday held back crowds of white pert Central High School and escorted nine Negro stud( and out of the integration-racked building. More than 450 white troops of the 101st Airborne I ringed the sprawling, buff brick school throughout t but were relieved last night by units of the Arkansas N Guard, now in federal service. However, the regulars remained In bivouac behi school, and an Army spokesman said there were nc to relieve the airborne troops permanently. They we of a 1,000-man task force air-" By JAMES ELSMAN, JR. Daily Editofa1 Director special to The Daily LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - As this day begins, Little Rock maintains a quietness that is nearly as heavy, close and suspenseful as its weather. Law has come in the form of at least 1,000 combat-ready troops of the 101st Airborne Division bivouacked on or near Central High School. These stern soldiers yesterday set the pattern in citizen-soldier relations when they rifle-butted one man in the head and pricked a bayonet cut into another's shoulder. Both men had challenged the 101st picket line. No Interference In the Central High School auditorium, Major General Edwin A. Walker told pupils, "Those who interfere ... with the proper ad- ministration. of the school will be removed.. ." Pupils reported "there were federal troops all over in the halls," and that "three or four guards followed every nigger to class." Inside the school, a pupil who called himself Joe Doaks said that if federal troops had not been inside the building, "They (the Negroes) ,would have been hurt bad." Got Up and Left Asked if he had seen any of the Negro pupils, the same pupil said, "Yeah, one of them sat near me. in lunch. I got up and left." The only incident in school came in the morning when classes were held up for more than an hour by a bomb scare. The build- ing was emptied while troops searched for the alleged bomb. No bomb was found and classes were resumed at 9:22 a.m. The Negro students went back into the school under the protection of bayonet-armed soldiers. Guardsmen on Duty The only troops now on guard around the high school are Ar- kansas National Guardsmen. Al- though some Negro soldiers ar- rived in Little Rock, none are onz duty around the school. Rumor in the city said Little Rock's mayor, Woodrow Wilson Mann, asked the federal govern-' ment to send in the troops. When asked if he had, Mayor Mann said, "I cannot confirm or deny, I cannot answer that ques- tion." When a pupil from the all- Negro Saint Bartholomew school was, asked by The Daily If she would like to have been one of the nine of her race to pioneer inte- gration in Little Rock schools, she said ,"I wouldn't want to mess with the white trash that is mak- ing the headlines today." She said that, because of the events of the lagt few days, herr Negro school was only half full yesterday. Parents, she said, were See LITTLE F*OCK, page 2 lifted to Little Rock Tuesday from Ft. Campbell, Ky. One white civilian was clubbed with a rifle butt and another man suffered a bayonet cut on the arm as the paratroopers broke up clusters of sullen spectators. About 1,200 white students-out of an enrollment of 2,000 - had entered Central Hjgh and'classes had already started when an Army station wagon brought the Negro students - three boys and six girls - to the campus at 9:20 a.m. Soldiers Guard Negroes A detachment' of paratroopers, about 20 strong, surrounded the Negroes as they got out of the See story on 14th Amendment Page 8 vehicle. The students and soldiers marched up the front steps and went inside quickly. Inside, soldiers in full battle dress guarded doors to the class- rooms in which the Negroes stu- died. They marched alongside each Negro pupil through corridors when classes changed. At about 3:30 p.m. the nine were escorted by about a dozen soldiers to the same Army station wagon parked at a side entrance and were driven away. An Army spokesman said use of the side entrance had no significance - it simply was convenient. Massive Force The evidence of massive force was everywhere around 'the school. Jeeps patrolled in and out among the soldiers. A helicopter hovered over the scene during the morning, spot- ting clusters of whites and radio- ing their location to ground troops. - Soldiers, in tight, military for- mations, double-timed with bay- onets at port arms position to in- vestigate trouble spots. By noon the determined troops had the area clear of whites ex- cept those with identification. When classes ended, small groups of whites 'ere in the area but a considerable distance from the school. Last night, all appeared quiet in Little Rock. GARGOYLE: Tryouts T onight Gargoyle, the University's hu- mor magazine, will open its 52nd year of publication with a try- out meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard St. Jean Willoughby, '59, acting managing editor, encourag~es all interested students to seek posi- tions on the art, lit'erary and busi- ness staffs. Plans for the maga- zine's coming season will be dis- closed at the meeting and an Russians ( Propagand Out Of RIt LONDON (A) - The RP built a somewhat fictiona drama around a real-lifen girl of Little Rock and * it yesterday to schoolrooms Soviet Union. This was the sort of em tion President Dwight D. hower has said can be e from gloating enemies d United States. U ie Stts_ The Soviet radio told listeners that lawless mob taken over in Little Rock, The program was a drar account of racial violenceA (zing a, Negro school girli Elizabeth Eckford, the rea: of one of the Little Rc trying to get into a deseg school at Little Rock. Russian Actor A Russian actor took th ing part in the drama. [ Elizabeth got her first shoc walking to school. "She stopped in fright, d her satchel with her boo] felt her hair stand on eni radio said'. "A .corpse h from lamp post swung fro in the win. "On its chest was a boar the inscription: 'This will1 to all who dare to sit on a bench next to a white pers "No, it's a dummy and corpse.. . and the girl he sigh of relief." In another program for Russian 'listeners, Moscow "It is hard to believe t: this (the Little Rock troul taking place in the 20th c in a country pridingitself civilization, in a countr claiming its democratic lit for all to hear.' Blast Faubus In Europe this side of ti Curtain left-wing papers out all the stops in blasti kansas Gov. Orval E. Faub his white supporters in Rock. But the gravity of Pr Eisenhower's intervention recognized in more mil comments than those of le and Communist newspaper London Daily Telegraph SE use of federal troops wo "fraught with grave conseq for the American union." In Paris, French polie w the United States Emba apologize for "Vive Faubus which were painted on h bassy walls during the gig 'Never Tolerafted' The extreme right wing ] newspaper Aurore declar Lincoln, a Roosevelt or a T would never have toleral President Eisenhower no permits it. "But durini the time h Daily Conducts Meetings For 'Potential Staffers October 10 has been set as the signup deadline for Student Gov- ernment Council's health and ac- cident insurance --n' App-:imately 5,000 students have signed up for the program already, according to Scott Chrys- ler, '59E airman of the SGC health committee. He estimated that those who 1 ad already sent in mail applica- bonsl should receive their plastic ID cards within seven to 10 days.. They will be sent to the address given on the application. He said he was "well satisfied" with the response so far. "We may ver- well rr- 7,000, a figure that we thought we'd have only an out- side chance to attain. Subscrip- titns are still coming in at the rate of 150 daily." SGC members will answer ques- tions on the plan from 3 to 5:30 p.m. at the SGC offices in the Student Activities Bldg. They will also accept policy applications and WASHINGTON, ( P-Secretary of Commerce Sinclair Weeks yes- terday told Walter Reuther, presi- dent of the United Auto Workers that automobile prices'are a mat- ter for the manufacturers to de- cide. Reuther had asked the secre- tary's support for a UAW proposal that the automotive industry cut prices on its 1958 models by an average of $100 in return for pos- sible union concessions in next year's bargaining.-. Secretary Weeks declined to an- swer Reuther's request for sup- port directly, but he did tell the union leader: "The management of business enterprises has many factors to consider in setting its prices. It is the best judge when it comes to maintaining the delicate balance between profitable and unprofit- able operation. If management's judgement is in error, the con- sumer will soon render his ver- dict.' World News Roundup By The Associated Press . WASHINGTON-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover estimated Wed- nesday that 1,399,670 major crimes were committed in the United States during the first six months of 1957. This was 'the highest total for any half-year period on record. ...ae . e _ _ _. _ .. . z. . . - _ _ 1. _. ._ _ - auma m o w n