TENCH CABINET FACES CRISIS I p1. Sir Ab :4Iaitll " ALA Se page Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom CLOUDY, SHOWERS I11, NO. 19 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 9,1957 FIVE CENTS SIX i 1 Plans Debate Disarmament ., Reds Agree on Need for Talks; icussion Scheduled for Tomorrow D NATIONS,, N. Y. (P)-At the urging of both the United Russia, the United Nations agreed yesterday to begin im- tailed debate on disarmament. ' tion was taken in the 82-nation Political Committee, where tes Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge declarde "we want no, in discussing disarmament, "the most urgent problem of bly." Soviets Urge Disarming Deputy Foreign Minister V. V. Kuznetsov declared that important, the most urger Otion lem,' [settSay Unis men Is- Stays arm U Tr ng at ' dia' Uni THOMAS BLUES and rent Jepidemic of Asian Hess first began Sept. 30, shows the if decreasing. age. tatistics, released',yester- Morley Beckett, Health rector, indicate that the ll going strong on cam- C 01 en Sept. 30 and Oct. 3, agen e of 227 persons were on at Health Service on n t nt issue before us is a solu- of the disarmament prob- while theSoviet. Unionand the ted States were in rare agree- at on procedure, they remained apart on how to achieve dis- ament. he debate will begin tomorrow. efore the committee acted In- s V. K. Krishna Menon urged he General Assembly that the ted States, the Soviet Union Britain express joint willing- Sto suspend nuclear ,tests as a t stp toward disarmament in new "international planetary U. S. Prepares Resolution Menon said a suspension of tests u 1 d be monitored by a UN mcy. he United States and about 204 pr friendly. nations have pre- ed a resolution reaffirming the nciples of the, Western p ropo- s made at the sessions of the Disarmament Committee in zdon and rejected by the Soviet on. eliable United States sources. I the resolution is being re- rded to put additional emphasis control of missiles and other ect§ being sent into outer space. Will be a general statement of stern objectives on disarma- nt, the sources said. More Students Examined )n Oct. 4, 223 were examined. d 60 were seen in the clinic on urday, Oct. 5, during half-day lie hours. Monday was another' y day with 265 patients exam- d at Health Service. Beckett said an estimated 200 re were examined between 8 a. and 4 p.m. yesterday. Xr. Beckett reported that the irmary is full and has been for re than a week. Substantial Turnover Ee explained that there is a >stantial turnover in the in- nary because the average Asian victim confined to the infirm- , needs only one to, three days treatment. 'However," he commented, "it s not been necessary as yet to Ad patients to University, Hos- al." Previously, arrangements :re made to send students to the spital if Health Service was too wded to handle them. He explained that directors in idence halls, fra'ternities and °orities have done an outstand- job of caring for those patients o did not require infirmary atment but who needed some. e at home. Students Co-operative 'Taany students who were con- ed in the infirmary were asked leave," he added, "although y still needed care that could handled in their residences. ey made no complaints." Dr. Beckett seemed discouraged r the prospects of a substantial pply of Asian flu preventive vac- e. "Pharmaceutical company resentatives have given me ,le encouragement," he said, nd all I know is that we are t getting any vaccine." Aampus Chest eeks New 'articiprnts k n y University organizations shing to participate in the Cam- s Chest' Drive Oct. 27 to Nov. 3 >uld contact the drive office in Student Activities Building, e Sherman, 158, chairman of the ye, 9,nnounced yesterday. q. financial statement, descrip- ni of the organization'sdactivi- s, and the amount desired from drive should be submitted at time of application. [he Allocations Board, .which rsees all charity drives at the iversity, will decide next week various percentages which the rticipating organizations will re- ve. 4 )rganizations participating in Campus Chest Drive" last ing were World University Serv- the Free University of Berlin change student program, and iversity Fresh Air Camp. abel To Star Red Chia Travelers Hold VisasX WASHINGTON (P) - Eighteen American students who defied a State Department travel ban to visit Red China have refused to hand over thei~r passports to American Embassy officials. Authorities who disclosed this yesterday said embassy officials re- quested the passports in order to stamp them valid for return only to the. United States. Sixteen of theestudents were contacted at the Moscow airport, these informants said, but all re- fused to hand over their passports, even after an /explanation was given them.- Two others were located in Ran- goon, Burma, by American Em- bassy officials. These students also spurned the request to hand over the passports. State Department offlpials said that even though the students have refused to hand over their passports, the documents are auto- matically valid only for return to the United States. Foreign governments will be notified of this; if necessary, they said, in order to make certain all return home promptly. Once they reach'American terri- tory, the passports will be picked up in line with previsious decisions. 'U Physicist Comparisons A 1erica's rather tardy space missile was contrasted unfavor- ably with Russia's by Prof. Rich- ard Sands of the Physics depart- ment last night. Appearing on WCBN's "The Third Programme" at 8 p.m., Prof. Sands declared that the Russians have made some notable advances toward the solution of the main problem in getting rock- ets into the air - that is, the question of propulsion. He explained that it requires thousands of times more energy to send up a 180-pound object, such as the Soviet 'sputnik', than it would to raise the United States' 20-30 pound artificial moon. . The advantages, he continued, are also greater. The 'sputnik' can carry much more optical equip- ment than the smaller American model, thereby providing the So- viets with more of the- informa- tion they seek. Radio Signals Aain .Heard From 'Moon' WASHINGTON ()-Radio sig- nals from the Russian earth satel- lite began coming in again late last night after being silenced for about six hours. The United States Naval Re- search Laboratory said the signals which faded at 4 p.m., EDT, began coming in strong 'at 10 p.m. and were still being heard after mid- night. The laboratory said the signals were the same kind of beeps that had fascinated scientists and ra- dio listeners since the baby moon began whizzing around the earth in outer space last Friday. Dulles, To Confer With Russia* Fo Control of Missile SX Back To Council The Union will recommend that control of the Student Book Ex- change revert from the Union back to the Student Government Council.' The recommendation will be made by Union executive vice- president' Fred Wilton, '58, at the Wednesday, Oct. 15 meeting of the SGC. Wilton said that it was the opirion of both he and the other' Union student officers, president Donald Young, '58, and adininis- trative vice-president Duane Le- Moreaux, '58E ,that it was against Union policy to pay student per- sonnel.' The officers said they felt that the SBX could not be run suc- cessfully without paying person- nel. During the two years in which the SBX was handled by the Un- ion, the SBX manager was paid. Young said he thought that, in order to nake the SBX a success, it would be necessary to pay all the personnel of the bookstore. He said that the work of the SBX was primarily clerical and not, suitable for an unpaid extracur- ricular activity. The' SBX in recent years has only done one-half of one per cent of the total sales of text- books, according to Wilton. SEN. WILLIAM F. KNOWLAND . . . To speak here Monday Kinow land To Keynote Rll Here Sen. William F. Knowland (R- Calif.) will be the keynote speak' er at mass political rally in Hill Aud. Monday. The rally is being sponsored by the University Young Republican Club and will also include Sen. Charles . Potter (R-Mich), State Senator George Meader (R- Ann- Arbor) and. William W. Hanks,'56, assistant to the state GOP chairman. Sen. Knowland will be intro- duced by Sen. Potter, according to YR president Davey Bray, '60. Knowland to, Come Monday Knowland, who has recently announced his candidacy for the California governorship and has been mentioned as a, presidential candidate in 1960, will arrive in Ann Arbor at 4 p.m. Monday. He will hold a press conference' in the Student Publications Building at 4:30 p.m. Tickets for the rally, which will begin at 8:30 p.m., will be, 25 cents and will be on sale at the door. The longtime GOP leader, cur- rently minority floor leader in the United States Senate, will be guest at a dinner sponsored by the YR's before the rally. A reception for the senator will be held following the rally and be open to the public. After spending the night at the Union, he will fly on to New York early Tuesday morning. Knowland, who has not yet an- nounced the title of his speech, was born and raised in California. He started his political career in 1933 when he was elected to the Calfiornia State Assembly. Served As Enlisted Man In 1938 he was named the Re- publican National Committeeman' from California, and in 1940 he was elected a member of the ex- ecutive committee of that body.. He later became its chairman. During World War II, the sen- ator served as an enlisted man and later as an officer., On August 14, 1945, he was appointed by. Governor Earl War- ren of California to fill the sena- torial vacancy created by the death of Sen. Hiram Johnson. Since 1953 he has been Republi- can floor leader in the Senate, suc- ceeding the late Sen. Robert Taft (R-Ohio). The rally is expected to draw nearly as large a crowd as the one which featured former governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York just over a year ago. The Dewey rally was also held in Hill Audi- torium. Red Leader Says War Planes Dated' Says .S. WARNS VIOLATORS: Little Rock ourt Halts Integration Riot Cases MOSCOW (R)-Nikita Khrush-' chev said yesterday manned war- planes are no match for Russia's intercontinental ballistic missile. "The age of bombers is over. "They might as well put bomb- ers and fighters in the museum," he commented, citing Soviet scien- tific achievements. Britons Hear "Our intercontinental ballistic rocket shows that it is no good sending humanly controlled ma chines against missiles." The Communist party chief's words were reported by two Brit- ish membersof Parliament who talked with him 80 minutes. They quoted Khrushchev as say- ing "it is dangerous" for the United States to take the view it is dealing with a peasant country. Planes Now Obsolete The British MPS, Conservatives Cyril Osborne and Capt. Henry Kerby, said Khrushchev told them ICBM is "only one of the many things we are doing." Asserting this missile has made warplanes obsolete, Khrushchev said: "This all points to the fact we have even more things up our sleeves. You can't send human flesh and blood to fight things like that." No Comment on U.S. Missiles Osborne, who visited the United States two months ago, told Khru- shchev the United States has rockets capable of hitting a base- ball field from 3,000 miles. The Communist boss made no comment on that. The Soviet leader, who returned last weekend from his vacation near Yalta, added his own words to this thousands being piped abroad 'by Moscow radio on the Soviet success with an earth satel- See KRRUSHCHEV, Page 6 Eisenhower Holds Talks On .Rockets . WASHINGTON Cam) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower held two hurriedly scheduled conferences with civilian experts on missiles and satellites yesterday. The President and seven aides met for an hour in the morning with four government scientists. Late in the day President Eisenhower again sought sien- tific counsel on the problems faced by the United estates in its race to unravel the mysteries of outer space. He met for half an hour with Dr. Detlev W. Bronk, president of the National Academy of Sci- ences. James C. Hagerty, White House press 'secretary, would say little except that the meetings dealt with Russia's satellite launching and United States plans to follow suit. He said he would prefer to let President Eisenhower discuss the matter himself at his regular news conference today. In reply to a question, Hagerty said that so far as he knows Pres- ident Eisenhower received no in- formation that would lead to a speedup in this country's satellite program. SGC To Talk On Honor Vote LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (A')-Some five criminal cases growing out of last month's integration disorders at Central, High School were postponed yesterday until late November. "Stay away from the school," Municipal Judge Harry Robinson cautioned five defendants before him Tuesday. All the cases involve such charges as disturbing the peace, unlawful assembly and resisting arrest. - Delay Granted Robinson, an appointee of Gov. Orval Faubus, granted a delay in the five cases at the request of defense lawyers. He set hearings for Nov. 26 and 27 and said he would do the same as other defendants come before him. The FBI, meanwhile, continued ven to dig into the background of the Sept. 23 riot by white adults out-Se np side Central High. There have Y ear been no federal indictments in this probe.s Announcement was made that a ail t erm defense. fund is being set up to "raise money for the legal defense of those who have been arrested NEW YORK W) - Jack Soble, and who may be arrested in con. who for a decade headed one of nection with the Little Rock Cen- Russia's biggest spy rings in this tral High School situation." country, was sentenced yesterday Central High Campus to seven years in prison. The "Freedom Fund for Little He could have gotten 10 years. Rock" identified itself as anoff- But Soble, after his arrest last shoot of the Freedom Fund Inc. of Jan. 26, underwent an apparent- Nashville, Tenn. The latter was ly complete 'change' of heart. He set up to aid defendants in the said he deeply regretted betray- Clinton, Tenn., school integration ing his adopted country and case. helped federal authorities trace As the federal forces began their the far-flung web of the espion- third week of integration patrol age ring. duty, the Central High campus Soble's wife, Myra, 53, and Ja- was as outwardly serene as though cob Albam, 64, another conspira- the bitter dispute had never ex- tor, had previously been sen- isted. 4r i;tofi a ; e s T G a V ".t Y'- Willi WASHINGTON (A)-- Secr of State John Foster Dulles closed yesterday a f t e r me with President Dwight D. E hower that the United Stat ready to talk with Russia a international control of space siles. However, Sec. Dulles held t United States position that such talks would have to be within the United. Nations. Sec. Dulles told newsmen at White House the United Stat hopeful Russia will accept a V6 ern proposal to study mean making sure objects sent thr outer space will be used onl peaceful purposes. U.t S. Reyerses Policy In what appeared to be a m reversal of United States p Sec. Dulles offered to cor space control apart f r o m highly controversial questio the West's Aug. 29 disarma package plan. Sec. Dulles made this offe: than six hours after State De ment spokesmen had said talks with Russia about inti tional control of space mi would have to be part of the p age plan. Khrushchev Suggests Coni Khrushchev said in. a Mo interview that Russia was w to bring the earth satellite space missiles under internal control as part of a general U States-Soviet agreement. Except for agreeing to cut control out of the disarma package, Sec. Dulles clung t United States viewpoint that talks should be multilateral within the United Nations. He said Stassen will go bi the UN General Assembly tod outline the Aug. 29 disarma package. Manfeld Asks Speciv Rocket Sta"i West Seel Outer Sp1 Parley in P Depart ent of Makes Policy C SGC Offers Applications For Positions Petitions are how available for the five 'Student Government Council positions now open. Three of the five council mem- bers who will be up for re-election have decided to run again, while one is uncommitted and one will not run. Joe Collins, '58, president, May- nard Goldman, '59, treasurer and Jo Hardee, '60, council member, will run again. Dan Belin, '59, council member would not commit himself at this time, and Janet Neary, '58, execu- tive vice-president will not run. Other people who have taken out petitions to date are Gail Al- len, '60, and Burt Getz, '59, BAd. Petitions. can be picked up at the Student Activities Building at the SGC elections desk, acgording to Phil -Zook, '60; elections direc- tor. The desk will be open from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Petitions will close October 17, and election will be held in No- vember. rencea w ive ana anau years in prison. Federal Judge Richard Levet yesterday reduced Mrs. Soble's sentence to four years, and Al-; bam's to five. Levet said "There is, I believe,' strong indication of remorse on the part of these defendants in varying degrees . . . Rehabilita- tion is not a factor here . . . In this instance we must aim at pro- tection of society and deterrence." "I. have weighed these factors, studied presentence reports, con- sidered security. I have examined a medicalre- port regarding Jacob Albam, sent from Lewisburg Prison, and he does have physical difficulties, but they can be capably treated while he is confined." Health Plan Still Available, Students still desiring Student Health Insurance must register before 5:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Student Activities Building ac- cording to Scott Chrysler, '59 BAd. Mail orders will be accepted if postmarked no later than mid- night of the same day. A total of 5,000 students are now protected by the policy. 'Freedom of Irresponsibility' Debated "Resolved: that the greatest value of a university education lies in one's freedom to be ir- responsible." This was the subject or "mo- tion" for debate for the year's first International Student Debate held last night at the League. Speaking in support of the ques- tion, which passed by an 11 to nine margin in the vote taken at the end of the debate, were Beverley Pooley, Grad., from England and Michael Bentwich, Grad., f r o m Israel. Debating against were Virendra Pathik, Grad., from India and Le-Anne Toy, '58, from the United States. The debate which was carried nnin'{ri .h tvewia hereby all Stdent Groups Set Plans, For Forum Programs By JAMES BOW Lectures and forums sponsored by student organizations are now in the tentative planning stage. Proposed programs are being considered for scheduling through- out the school year by Student Government Council, Inter-House Council, Young Democrats and Young Republicans. In comparison with last year and the Sigma Kappa open forum, the trend in lecture and forum programs seems to be toward political talks and discussions, with further emphasis on religion. SGC Plans Program So, far, there have been few programs proposed to discuss cur- rent University issues. Student Government Council is planning a WASHINGTON (M)-Sen. Mansfield (D-Mont.) calle Congress yesterday to, strip separate armed services of sponsibility for developing siles and satellites. He said a new super-orga tion should be created to do Job. 'Complains of Red Advane Mansfield joined other con sional Democrats in a grc chorus of complaints that ri among the services may have en Russia priceless lead in re ing into space with deadly rc and trail-blazing baby moon The Montanan, assistant:1 ocratic leader of, the Senate, in an interview that he ui stands hundreds of millior dollars have been wasted on lapping projects- by the I Navy and Air Force. He said an agency like th that developed the atomic during World War II would vide "coordination and conc' tion" on the problem of mast space for peace and war. Demands New Approach Mansfield demanded a nei proach to the multi-billion lar scientifichrace with Rus. Senate investigators looked the whole missile-satellite tion. Secretary of Defense Char Wilson told reporters yesterd hblieves the united States program of four forums, covering' areas in education, politics, and religion. One proposed SGC forum is en- +4a mrrz tThpMatu enR1o ef Cnm- SGC forums, and the programs have yet to be approved by the University Lecture Council. 'rENV.. rntodFumsn The possibility of an honor sys- ::- ti ,, '*'; ''' ;''; : ;> ; %.h .> :.> :;:aft': ,::z ::