FRATERNITY NATIONALS CONTROL LOCALS See page Y L Lwn Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom q I W VIII, No. 13 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1957 ,: [offa Opponents ee Gain i Race- Midwest Teamsters' Boss Leads; Delegation Qualifications Reviewed WIAMI BEACH, Fla. (') - James R. Hoffa's foes for control. te giant Teamsters Union claimed yesterday they had stopped cold, but Hoffa forces insisted their man is a sure winner. t appeared'Hoffa's three opponents were gaining some ground hat Hoffa, 44, the Midwest Teamsters boss linked to labor scan- still was well ahead in his race to become Teamsters president. 'onvention sessions of the scandal-rocked union meanwhile idled, on routine business awaiting the outcome of delegate chal- s voiced in proceedings before the convention Credential Corn- hat committee some 68 locals Committee Revises was reviewing the qualifications of delegates whom Chairman John L. McClellan (D-Ark-) o of the Senate Rackets Investigat- Hamsters ate Allowed Warren WASHINGTON (/P)-Chief Jus- tice Earl Warren refused yester- day to halt the election of a new slate of officers by the scandal- scarrd TeamstersUnion. . He denied a petition for an in- junction brought by 13 rank and file members who 'charged the election had been rigged td give the $50,000-a-year post of presi- dent to James R. Hoff Justice Warren agreed with the United States Circuit Court of Appeals that a temporary injunc- tion would go "beyond the neces- sities of the situation" and "is not required in order to prevent irreparable injury." Drastic Action "To enjoin the election of offi- cers of an international union of 891 locals and one and one-half million members during the ,course of its 'convention proceed- ings, on allegations of conspiracy supported by the affidavits here, without testimony having been taken, would indeed be drastic action" he commented. Balloting is scheduled to begin at the Teamsters convention in., Miami Beach Thursday. With the loss of their suit in the Supreme Court, the 13 dissident Teamsters from the New York area appear to have come to the end of the road in their attempts to halt the election by legal process. They can still challenge the re- sults of the election, however, in injunction . p rioc e e d i n g s they started in the United States Dis- trict Court here last wee. Decision Cheered Justice Warren's decision , as greeted with cheers at Miami Beach. The Supreme Court does not begin its fall term until next Mon- day but the Chief Justice agreed to hear the Teamsters' case im- mediately.. It came to him on appeal from the United States Circuit Court of Appeals which had stayed a temporary injunction issued here last Saturday by United States District Court Judge F. Dickinson Letts. Justice Warren in a brief printed statemen't, noted that the New Yorkers instituted their suit only 10 days before the union's convention was scheduled to open.. "Many of the allegations in the papers are based on events known by the petitioners to have oc- curred months and years ago," he ing Committee, has charged were illegally selected. Chief Justice Earl Warren in Washington turned down the plea of a rank and file Teamsters' group to ban convention elections on the ground the great bulk of delegates weie hand-picked to rig, the balloting for Hoffa. This group got a federal injunc- tion last week only to have it lifted by an appeals court. They ,sought unsuccessfully to have it reinstated by the Supreme Court. 1,500 Seated The. convention has tentatively seated about 1,500 of the nearly 1,950 delegates. Some of those al- ready seated are among those questioned by Sen. McClellan. Retiring Union President Dave Beck, himself charged like Hoffa with misusing union funds and powers, was presiding at conven- tion sessions. He announced the convention Credentials Commit- tpe was reviewing qualifications of all delegates questioned by Sen., McClellan. French See. In Decade IN HAITI- U.S. Irked By Death Of Citizen PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti (- The United States lodged a sharp protest with Haiti's government yesterday over the death -of an American citizen in police custody. The edgy military junta depu- tized the. people of Haiti in an effort to head off a possible politi- cal rebellion growing out of the presidential election more than a week ago. Private citizens were told they have the right to shoot on sight any of the men and wom- en the junta proclaims to be enemies of the state. United States Ambassador Ger- ald Drew handed the formal note of protest to Haiti's foreign minis- ter, Col. Louis Roumain. Contents Not Disclosed Contents of the note were' not disclosed but informed sources said it made clear that the United States considers that Shibley Tala- mas, 30, American textile mer- chant, was murdered while in cus- tody of Haitian police. It also is reported to have said the United States stands ready to protect its citizens in Haiti. , In Washington, the State De- partment said Talamas appealed to the United States Embassy in Port au Prince for protection against "police and others" a few hours before he died. t Joseph Reap, a member of the department's news division, said consbiar authorities turned Tala- mas over to Haitian police on as- surances he would not be mis- treated. Beaten to Death? Reap said State Department reports from Port au Prince show that the body bore bruises and Talamas "could well have' been beaten to death." Reap said there appeared to be a question of dual' citizenship in Talamas' case; apparently he was considered by the Haitian govern- ment to be a Haitian citizen and by the United States government to be an American citizen: Talamas was picked up in a round up of suspects in the slayingr Sunday of four policemen in a mountain guardpost in the village of Kenscoff, 14 miles. from here. He was charged with possessing a pistol and shotgun. ! = Baby Born Sunday In itte CHASE Three Die, Four Hut In Gunfighit NORTH VERNON, Ind. ( )- One gunman died and his partner surrendered meekly yesterday at the end of running gun battles in two states that killed two police- men and wounded four others. Ralph Walker Taylor, 36, Ken- ova, W. Va., came to the end of his bloody trail with three fatal police bullets in his body. His partner, Victor Wayne Whitley, 26, Granger, Texas, gave up in terror a4 some 250 grim-faced law officers formed a human chain to flush him from a tangled thicket. Before the fantastic 12-hour chase was over, state troopers Du- gald A. Pellot, 23, Clinton, Mich., and William Kellems, 27, Scotts- burg, Ind., had died before the pair's guns. Weird Chase The weird chase began Monday night when trooper Douglas A. Vogel stopped two cars in a rou- tine traffic violation check near Clinton, Mich. One of the drivers -Whitley later said it was Taylor -whipped out a pistol and shot Vogel. Although wounded seriously, Vo- gel, radioed for help, and Pellot was killed when he tried to ap- prehend the pair. Again, Whitley accused Taylor of the shooting. The two men headed south across the Indiana border after stealing another car, dumping it in Jackson, Mich., and taking still another vehicle. Bound and Gagged They bound and gagged the last 'car's owner, Mrs.. Gordop Lecro- mier, 35. Near Bristol, Ind., they stole an Indiana license plate and put it over the Michigan plate. Kellems reco'gnized the car at Scottsburg but was shot as he ap- proached it. Taylor also did that shooting, Whitley said, and they fled in a rain of bullets from Kel- lems' riot gun before he died. The pair headed back north and ran into a police roadblock at the junction of Indiana 3 and Indiana 7 at the south edge of Vernon in southeastern Indiana, 70 miles southeast of Indianapolis. Japan*Elected To UNCouncil' Federal PARIS (A) _Fr--Fance yesterday was dealing with what generally was agreed to be the nation's gravest crisis since World War II. The government of Premier Maurice Bourges-Maunoury, de- feated Monday night in a confi- dence vote over Algeria, was serv- ing only until a new premier could be found. The Algerian rebellion,' after three bloody years, still had no end in sight. The franc was slipping and prices were going up. Strikes were breaking out or threatening. Man in Street Disgusted, As the politicians began their usual shuttle in and out of Presi- dent Rene Coty'spoifice in the quest for a solution, the man in -the strqet seemed openly disgusted. The realization was being brought home to many that this might not be just another government turn- over like the others which have studded the 10 years since the Fourth Republic was foundeti. Bourges-Maunoury's government was the 23rd since the war. Some of the questions raised in- cluded: Does the constitution real- ly work? If it doesn't, what is to be done about it? There were some 'who talked of a possible appeal to Gen. Charles de Gaulle, who has remained in the background since stepping down as provisional president in the early day of 1946. His wife, formerly of Ashtabula, Ohio, gave birth to a baby daugh- ter on Sunday. After a hasty autopsy, Haitian doctors said Talamas died of a heart attack. Junta officials ex- plained that he' collapsed after struggling to reach a machine gun in the room where he was being questioned. Talamas was the son of a wealthy American textile mer- chant of Syrian extraction. His death brought expressions of re- sentment from the Syrians and American quarters of this capital. Trouble Brewing After a period of calm on this turbulent Carribbean island re- public, trouble began brewing anew last week when returns from presi- dential elections Sept. 22 indicated the winner was Dr. Francois Duva- ier. Supporters of his opponent, for- mer Sen. Louis Dejoie, vowed they would burn down Port au Prince if Dejoie lost. Dejoie, who is now missing, charged the junta rigged the election and warned of blood- shed. AT MENDELSSOHN: UNITED, NATIONS, N. Y. (R)-- Japan was elected to the United Nations Security Council yesterday to the delight of the United States and against the angry protest of the Soviet Union. The vote in the General As- sembly. was 55 for Japan and 25 for Red Czechoslovakia, Moscow's candidate. Canada and Panama were elected to the other two-year terms at stake. The Soviet delegation, smarting from a setback it had fought energetically to avoid, charged the vote was an "open discrimination against the countries of Eastern Europe . ." "The, relief sought at this late date would call for an extraordi- nary exercise of judicial power that onlyw the most compelling considerations could warrant." Union Offered Inform ation~yC 'imet e By Commnittee WASHINGTON (AP)-The Sen- ate Rackets Committee offered yesterday to furnish the Team- sters Union the information on, which it based its charge that many delegates to the union con- vention were improperly selected. Robert F. Kennedy, committee counsel, at the same time added Terms Are High' But his terms are high. They call for a drastic change with establishmentof a strong execu- tive on the United States model. Few Frenchmen appeared ready to take that step yet. Coty called in the legislative chiefs, the head of the National Economic Council and former pre- miers and party leaders for ,cop- sultations. Their silence As they left the President's office empha- sized the gravity of the situation. The 279-253 vote against Bour- ges-Maunoury was short of the absolute majority of the 596 As- sembly which would have forced the Premier to resign. Council ESeeks 'Teahouse' To Begin Civic Theatre Season Tomorrow .7*. A~S1 . ~ '7' .'