TITO SHOWS COLORS See page 4 ii, Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom !113 CLEAR, COOL .......,....W ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1957 FIVE CENTS I S s T tmster Group peals to Court ge Asked for Hearing Barring Ea from Assuming Presidency 4GTON (P) - A group of New York Teamsters members ked for a federal' court order barring James R. Hoffa aver the presidency of the labor uniion. s for the group conferred twice in chambers during United States District Jurdge F. Dickinson Letts on the court put off a ruling until Monday. have anything to say until then," Judge Letts told re- dicated that the judge asked the attorneys to revise the, oposed temporary restraining order they had prepared ture..There was no indication one way or another how Michigan Awai Cross-State Fo JIM VAN PELT PAT BURKE, ... Wolverine field general . . .,MSTJ captain. WALT KOWALCZYK JIM ORWIG ... to test 'M' line ... leads Blue team SPUTN II 1DUE? rneys - from the ian & Schmidt -; Washington and New York law firms said they also will, go into the federalj -- o +sn 'e n Ya1 11 u ~ ~ r~svioe r I Okays Year's ditjors appeals court Monday morning to have the Teamsters Union cited for contempt of court. Judge Letts two weeks ago is- sued a preliminary injunction against holding the. Teamsters convention. 'The appeals court set this aside, but with the warning that the union should not go, ahead with its convention if ille-' gal delegates were seated. aside, but with the warning that the union should not go* ahead with its convention if illegal dele- gates were seated. The contempt p r o c e e d i n g s would be on the argument that the convehtion was held with il- legal delegates, in the face of the' court warning.. The protesting Teamster men- bers, along with Chairman John McClellan (D-Ark)-ef--the-Senate- Rackets Investigating Committee, have charged many of the conven- tion delegates were seated, de- spite their having been illegally chosen, to rig- the election for Hoffa. McClellan said delegation selection in many cases was scan- dalous, Dave Beck, the retiring union president said in New'York today he was ready to resign and leave the president's chair open immedi- ately to Hoffa., Hoffa. faces trial on a federal wiretap conspiracy indictment and also is to be arraigned on another indictment charging perjury be- fore a federal grand jury. D0cto rs Clim Diet Affects Human Mind "t WASHINGTON (P) - Sputnik may have company very soon. A State Department spokesman said .sterday the department wouldn't be. surprised if. the Rus-. sians launched another earth, satellite at any time. Press officer Jameson Parker declined to elaborate on his s atey- ment elicited at a news conference, other than to say he was not speaking hypothetically. This sug- gests his statement might be based, on secret intelligence. Therehas been speculation that the Russians would choose Nov. 7, the 40th anniversary of the -Bol- shevik revolution, to put a second 'hor' Tes, Qt S uU Qf WASHINGTON (P) - The Air Force fired an apparently highly successful test of its Thor inter- mediate-range ballistic missile yes- terday from the Florida proving ground. Unofficial reports said the Thor took to the air cleanly, zoomed high above the stratosphere and landed several hundred miles be- yond the "'programmed" 1,500-mile1 range for intermediate missiles. This suggested that the fIying was intended to test range. with- out any effort to drop the missile on a specified target area far out in the Atlantic Ocean. ' The test at the Cape Canaveral Missile Center came during a White House conference on the missile program. In this meeting were President Dwight D. Eisen- hover, Secretary of Defense yNeil McElroy, Deputy Defense .Secre- tary Donald Quarles, and William Holaday. the Pentagon missile chief. The session was held prior to a regular Cabinet meeting; which Quarles also attended along with McElroy. The White House meeting fol- lowed an announcement Thursday night by the defense secretary that testing of both the Air Force Thor and the Army Jupiter missile will be continued into next year.+ satellite in orbit. Barker's com- ment was taken to mean the firing could come sooner. The first American satellite is scheduled to go up next March, after some test firings in Decei-t ber., Russia's baby moon was a week old Friday. New calculations at the Massa- chusetts Jnstitute ,of Technology indicated the satellite was being outdistanced' in its racearound the.earth by the third stage of the rocket which launched it. This rocket section, also in or- bit, was estimated to be circling the earth once every 96.03 minutes -and to be picking up speed. An earlier estimate put the satellite's orbiting time at 96.1 minutes. J. Allen Hynek, who is in charge of the optical tracking program for the Smithsonian Institution's As- trophysical Observatory at Cam- bridge, Mass., said the orbit of the rocket was worked out in 21 sec- onds by MIT's electronic "brain." But days of observations and preliminary calculations were re- First Dionne Quin't Marries MONTREAL ;A) - The first of the famous Dionne quintuplets to become a bride was married yes- terday at a simple Roman Catho- lic ceremony. Annette, 23, became the wife of Germain Allard, 24, an agent for a Montreal finance company. Two of the four surviving quints, Cecile and Marie, sat side by side in front pew of the magni- ficent Notre Dame de la Salette in downtown Montreal. The. fourth, Yvonne, was in a hospital with flu. The fifth, Emilie, died in 1954. Only 16 relatives and friends attended the wedding. The doors of the. church were locked before pressed against the stained-glass the ceremony. About 100 persons doors, trying to get a glimpse of the couple. quired before the big computer could go to work. This machine' operates at the rate of 40,000 cal- culations per second. Other data produced by the .computer showed the rocket- was swinging in an orbit which brought it as close to the earth as 143 miles and as far away as 583. "These elements still are, eing checked," Hynek said, "and cannot he regarded as final as the orbit is constantly changing minutely." u~so M0,o, Ready Now ' WASHINGTON (R)-The Ameri- can satellite that this nation hopes to put into the skies by next spring is all ready to go right now, but it will remain earthbound until the rockets to get it up are finished and tested. John P. 'Hagen, director of this country's earth satellite project, told that to the National Press Club yesterday. He said the 20-' inch globe has undergone a 15-day test under controlled conditions in a complete vacuum and is ready for flight. Hagen said Project Vanguard is behind, its working schedule, but not behind in the goal of putting the satellite into the skies during the lnternational Geophysical Year which extends from last July 1 to Dec. 31, 1958. Hagen said the satellite oquld have been launched before now "but to the detriment of our scien- tific goals and nilitary progress." He said American scientists still hope that Russia, a participating nation in IGY, would give other nations a full description of what the Soviet Sputnik is learning in its 16 orbits around the world each day. But this far, he indicated, scien- tific data from Russia has been most scanty. He said the Russians have turned over to the interna- tional group of scientists just one piece of paper. Expect Second Red Satellite Gro upAsks UN Control Of 'Moons' UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. ()-- The United States and 22 other nations called on the United Na- tions yesterday to make another try at, a disarmament agreement that would control such space travelers as the Russian earth satellite. The 23 nations presented a for- mal resolution asking the UN to reconvene the deadlocked five-na- tion subcommittee on disarma- ment "as soon as feasible" -and give first consideration to Western proposals. , r West Supported There was no mention of Indian or Japanese suggestions for break- ing the East-West deadlock, or any' Soviet proposals. The 23 nations made plain they were supporting in principle the Western proposals advanced in London last August and rejected by the Russians.' ' But'it was clear that the Soviet satellite now circling the earth had cast its shadow on the lengthy consultations that produced the resolution. One of the main points called for a "joint study of an inspection. system designed to ensure that. sending of objects through outer space will be exclusively for peace- ful and scientific purposes." Immediate Controls Wanted The United States has suggested the study of control of outer space objects be taken up immediately without waiting for agreement on other phases of initial steps to- ward disarmament. This wad not mentioned in the resolution, and there were indica- tions some of the sponsoring na- tions were approaching this sug- gestion with caution. Informed sources said Britain, Canada and France were still studying the United States sug- gestion. Those four nations and the Soviet Union make up the Disarmament subcommittee. The 23-nation resolution will be debated at length in the UN's 82- nation Political Committee, which must approve before it can be passed on to the General Assem- bly. MSIJ Set as Six-Point Favorite For Contest Before Sellout Cr By JOHN HILLYER Associate Sports Editor Michigan's football season begins today. Facing top-heavy odds and a power-laden Michiga meatgrinder, t'he' spirited Wolverines will give it all got, hoping it's enough when they start today at 1: before 101,001 spectators in Michigan Stadium. Actually, it will be the third game of the season Maize and Blue, but "easy conquests of Southern Ca and Georgia make those encounters look like practicE compared with the battle they'll be waging today. Th tans have won a couple, too, having blasted Indiana, 54-0, . and California, 19-0. Not yet Faiths Pr scored upon,'the Lansing ma- chine must loom all the more potent to Michigan for this, ForRemo the 50th renewal of one of the bitterest rivalries in the na- Of Negro< tion, and the Wolverines' first Conference test. The crowd itself provides a LITTLE ROCK, Ark. pretty strong conversation piece, group, of segregationist and everyone planning to attend ministers invited persomn is urged to get an early start for faiths to' pray last night the Stadium if he expects to view removal of nine Negro the opening kickoff, from Central High Schoo State is loaded. A point in In issuing a Ball for the Michigan's favor is that only 38 ute prayer meeting to be playes aperistton ytrav- the Central Baptist Chi players are permitted on a tran downtown Little Rock, the eling squad, for the Spartans isters said in a joint si boast depth at every position. that the only solution to t Boast Strong Line racial crisis 'i 'for the I They will probably go with Sam gro children to return to Williams and Dave Kaiser at the Mann High School wbg're ends; Pat Burke and Fran O'Bri- gally and morally bel6ng.' en, tackles; John Middleton and Horace Mann is a Neg Ellison Kelly, guards, and All- school whieh the nineE American candidate Dan Currie prior 'to this year. They at center. going to Central High cla Their backfield will consist of. der the protection of fe Jim Ninowski at quarterback; troops ordered into Little Blanche Martin and Walt Kowal- President Dwight D. Eisen czyk at the halfs,- and Don Gil- The Baptist minister's bert, fullback, with Kowalczyk the is akin to that of Gov. Or real key to the strong running ast- bus, who told. a news co gro att no asse e d RC nhc pc val nfe -Daily-wesley Kar AN WILLOUGHBY * managing editor -Daily--Wesley Kar' LUCIEN LOVEWELL . .. business-manager he Board in Control of Student ications last night approved appointments of senior editors Gargoyle, campus humor mag- e. rnfirmed. were Jean Willough- '59, as Managing Editor, and ien Lovewell, '58, as Business ager Both had been serving heir positions, pending official >intment. he action was taken after a- -ing at which both Lovewell Miss Willoughby described r plans for the publication. he appointments had been de- d since last May when the 'd "deferred" confirmation of t o r i a 1 appointments. They ed at that tine that their ac- was not to be taken as dis- 'oval of the publication or the orial applicants. COLUMBIA, Mo. (P)-It may be that human deficiencies in physi- cal efficiency a ii d intelligence sometimes attributed to heredity are in fact caused by diet defici- encies, researchers.said yesterday, This possibility was advanced by Dr. Albert G. Hogan at an Ameri- can Medical Assn. Symposium on "nutrition in pregnancy.". Dr. Hogan, professor emeritus of animal nutrition at the Univer- sity of issouri, said experiments he has conducted show that rats receiving inadequate food tend to produce, an unusually large num- ber of defective offspring. Dr. Ray H Eepner, associate pro- fessor of pediatrics at the univer- sity, said there should be investi- gation- of the likelihood that poor diets of expectant mothers may cause abnormalities in new-born babie He mentioned Dr. Hogan's experiments with animals at the university's college of agriculture. Any type of defect that occurs in humans can be produced in animals by regulating the diet,' Dr. Hogan said in discussing a paper presented by Dr. .Joseph Warkanv, professor of pediatrics at the University of Cincinnati. tack., Both squads- operate with the so-called "m u l t i p 1 e 'offense,"' See WOLVERINES, Page 3 Brucker Says Taylor Issue 'Riot' Orders WASHINGTON (P)-Gen. Max- well 'D. Taylor was identified by Secretary of the Army Brucker yesterday As the man who sent out the quickly rescinded order for special training of troops to handle civil disturbances of the. Little)' Rock type. That was one day after federal troops had moved into Little Rock to enforce a federal court order for racial integration in the city's Cen- tral High School. Brucker said it called for four divisions of the regular Army to form special task forces of 1,000 to 1,200 men. Three' of the divisions were located in the South. The order mentioned the possibility of "situations similar to that now current in Little Rock." The directive was personally.. killed by Brucker Sept. 26, within hours after it became; publicly known. Amid much confusion, the Army clamped on a tight lid of secrecy, hoping thus to avoid fan- ning the controversy over use of troops to enforce integration. Thirteen Enter Election Race Thirteen petitions have been is- sued by Student' Government Council to date fbr its five .open- ings. Elections director Phil Zook-, '60, reports that three SGC members Wednesday he thinks- the on lution to the crisis is withd of the Negroes from Central Faubus called out the Na Guard at the opening of s saying he did so to preserve He ordered the guard to pr the nine Negroes from eni the school. Other prayer services w held today under sponsorsl 85 or more churches of all f Other churches throughou state. and nation will take Rev. Dunbar H. Ogden Jr., ident of the Greater Little Ministerial Assn., .said mc the city's large churches wil part. He said the approxir 85 participating ihclude 15. Negro congregations. World New Roundup By The Associated Press LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - Orval Faubus said last nig would cost approximately 24 Ilqn dollars to keep federal' stationed at Central High S f or the rest of the school yE Gov. Faubus told= a report is not much concerned abou cost, and is leaving that to dent Dwight -D. Eisenhowe "It's his responsibility," governor said. "He got hi into this mess. Let him get self out." * * - SAN MARINO - The 12 reign of West Europe's only munist government endedy day. The Red regime vacate grey, stone governnent cas the tiny republic of San M peacefully, vowing that "So ideas willtriumph again." * I~* IT HAPPENS EVERY FALL: Rally, 'Raid, Varsity Night Arouse Fans A feeble attempt to stage a panty raid last night was quickly brought under control by "M" Club members and University of- ficials. Approximately 150 students rocked cars and blocked traffic in their march to the women's residence halls. Any car bearing M i c h i g a n State stickers was rushed by the shouting, cheering crowd. One, "daring: group" attempted to enter a local theater. Milling about the entrance, they knocked Cuban Rebels' i' t - I I giii: 11111:411111