LE~rURE DEBATE MISNOMER See page 4 'we Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom Dali 1r CLOUDY, POSSIBLE SNOW YOL. LXVIII, No. 33 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1957 FIVE CENTS EIGHT PAGES Hopes Fade For Solution. In Mid-East AFL-CIO Suspend Executives Teamsters Arabian Rejected Mediation by Syria POINTER OF INTEREST-British Prime Minist er Harold Macmillan looks Interested as Secretary of State John Foster Dulles points out somethin g at Washington, D.C., airport. f U.S., dBritain Decide On1 M1ss1 ie Pooling Eisenhower, Macmillan Continue Secret Talks on World Problems WASHINQTON (M)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Prime Minister Harold Macmillan met for 21/2 hours yesterday to chart combined American-British action in development of new atomic and missiles weapons. . With 12 Advisers With 12 of their top advisers at their side, the two western leaders considered concrete moves recommended by two teams of experts who reviewed the problem during the day. No announcement was made after the session, the third between President Eisenhower and Prime Minister Macmillan since their Unions- Riot In'France; PARIS ()-Two shipyard strik- ers were 'tkilled and 200 injured in a destructive clash with authori- ties at St. Nazaire yesterday on the eve of a nationwide 24-hour walkout by many unions. They are protesting high living costs. At N a n t e s, several hundred striking m e t a 1 workers hurled stones and iron bolts at police in a flare-up symptomatic of labor tension in this country without a government. The strikers at St. Nazaire were angered by a management lock- out after almost a month of ro- tating wildcat work stoppages. They smashed nearly every front window in the huge shipyard com- c pany's main office, ransacked of- fices and overturned a police van. Police reinforcements finally re- stored order. The incident at Nantes came jwhen police tried to disperse a crowd returning from a strike meeting. One passerby was slightly in- jured before police scattered the strikers with tear gas. ~>The nationwide strike threaten- ed to upset the' lives of Frenchmen fora second time in little over a week. Meanwhile, the lame-duck gov- ernment of Maurice Bourges-Mau- noury seems powerless to do any- thing about it. And Socialist Guy Mollet, latest candidate to succeed him, has run into serious trouble in his efforts to form a government. Beckett Warns Flu Victims At University Health Service Director Dr. Morley Beckett, yesterday issued a, warning to recent Asian Flu victims. "Students just recovering from the virus," Dr. Beckett said. "should not be overly exposed to the current damp, cold weather.. Weakened by influenza, these' people are especially susceptible to relapse." He said a few students have re- turned to Health Service, follow- ing recovery, because they tried to be too active immediately fol- lowing illness. "In this type of weather it is certainly not ad- visable," Dr. Beckett said. At Health Service the number afar-ranging global review began Wednesday. A tight secrecy curtain around the talks was, lifted long enough earlier in the day to disclose an Eisenhower-Macmillan order to draw up immediate plans for a pooling of British-American atom- ic and missile resources. The stated aim was for "greater service to the free world." On Science The Eisenhower-Macmillan talks thus far were reported concentnt . ing on the scientific-military field, with discussion of Russia's threat to the Middle East left over for the final conference scheduled for this afternoon. The final Eisenhower-Macmillan conference was set for midafter- noon today. Afterward, an official communique on the sessions will be issued. The joint announcement at the White House yesterday said Presi- dent Eisenhower and Prime Min- ister Macmillan had named two high level committees to make recommendation for action in these important fields: 1. Nuclear relationship and co- operation. 2. Problems dealing with missiles and rocketry. IFC To Seek Local, National Relationships, Inter-Fraternity Council's exec- utive committee will forward ques- tionaires to each fraternity on campus in an effort to find out their relationship with the na- tional fraternity. Ken Shaw, section chief of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, pro- posed the action at the IFC's exec- utive council meeting last night. Shaw said it would be to the best advantage of the fraternity system as a whole to "find out where the percentage of voting strength is during the national convention." According to IFC Executive Vice-President Mal Cumming, '58, fraternities will be asked to sign the questionaire concerning their national affiliation. The signa- tures, he said, would be necessary for the executive committee to have a "check"'on which fraterni- ties had filled out the inquiries. Shaw cited an editorial that ap- peared in The Daily as an example of the public's misconception of the national fraternity's power. The editorial argued that the individual chapter policy was dic- tated by the ,fraternity's national council. UNCelebrates 12th Rirthckav MILK DEALERS: Call Hat To Fights On Strike DETROIT (P) - A court order to halt interference with move- ment of milk was issued yester- day after the day-old milk strike erupted into violence. Nine strikers were arrested aft- er five separate outbursts, includ- ing pitched battles. The order, aimed at tle Dairy Farmers Co-operative Association, restrains the strikers from inter- fering with collection and distri- bution of milk by the Michigan Milk- Producers Association. Strike Explodes The temporary restraining or- der was issued by Lapeer County Circuit Judge Timothy C. Quinn. after the strike exploded into driver-beatings and milk dump- ings. Despite the violence and the re- fusal of some of the 12,000 farm- era in the 22-county Detroit milk shed to sell their milk, the strike appeared to be having little effect on supplies here. A spokesman for the MMPA said 90 per cent of the milk need- ed for doorstep deliveries today would reach Detroit. Officials of two of Detroit's largest dairy companies said their supplies today would be normal. That same report came from Samuel Angott, president of the Detroit Retail Milk Dealers Asso- ciation. He said association mem- bers were in good shape. The strike was called Wednes- day by the DFC in an attempt to increase the price paid farmers from $5 to $6 a hundredweight for drinking milk. Homer Martin, one-time UAW presidentand DFC strike direc tor, vowed Detroit would be a milk-dry city by tomorrow. Strike Effective Despite the reports by Detroit- area dairies and the MMPA, M~ar- tin claimed the strike was "65 per cent effective."~ "By Friday, 75 per cent of the farmers will withhold their milk and by tomorrow, Detroit should feel the strike's full effect," he said. Martin was served with Judge Quinn's injunction by Lapeer County Sheriff William Porter at DFC heaaquarters at Imlay City. Imlay City was the scene of violence during a milk strike staged in the spring of 1956 by a group of rebel dairy farmers known as the Fair Share Bargain- ing Association. Martin also helped lead the 1956 strike but later the fair sharers quarrelled among them- selves and the dairy farmers co- operative emerged as another splinter group. . UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (4A)- Most delegates to the UN General Assembly abandoned hope last night of mediation in the Syrian- Turkish crisis. They prepared for a second round of bitter Middle East debate. Declaratioris in Damascus and statements by Syrian representa- tives in the UN made clear that mediation by King Saud of Saudi Arabia is not in the cards at present. Syria pressed instead a demand that the Assembly appoint a UN inquiry commission as quickly as possible to investigate the situation on the Syrian-Turkish border. Reconvene Today The Assembly, which has been in recess since Wednesday pending possible mediation efforts, is set to reconvene this afternoon. Foreign Minister Salah Bitar and Ambassador Farid Zeineddine of Syria met for an hour with UN Secretary General Dag Hammarsk- jold on the Middle East. There was talk that Hammar- skjold might be asked to make a personal visit to the troubled area. An Arab source said this possi- bility was discussed by the Syrians with Hammarskjold. Bitar Disagrees But Bitar said afterward he did not extend any invitation to Ham-, marskjold to 'visit in Syria, and Zeineddine added that he did not think a visit would be useful "in the present circumstances." Akram Hourani, speaker of Sy- ria's Parliament and a member of Bitar's Arab Socialist Resurrection party, had suggested in Damascus on Tuesday that a Hammarskjold visit might be helpful. As for mediation, Bitar declared "there is none." Zeineddine said Syria is pushing its demand .for the Assembly to name an inquiry commission which would visit the Turkish-Syrian border and report back to the UN as quickly as pos- sible. FUNDS CLASH: Stockholm Coalition Collapses STOCKHOLM, Sweden ()-The Swedish government, a coalition of Socialists and Agrarians, col- lapsed yesterday in a clash over social welfare and economic policy. It had ruled for six years. At the same time the Swedish military headed by Gen. Mils Ewedlund, the commander in chief, demanded that the armed forces be provided with costly modern weapons such as atomic bombs and missiles for the national de- fense. Domestic Crisis Although not outwardly con- nected, the two things were related in a sharpening domestic crisis. The issue has boiled down to this: higher prices for food ob- tained by the Agrarians to please the farmers, and higher taxes ex- acted by the Socialists to pay for their social program have set the man-in-the street to grumbling. The Swedish army, navy and air force have concluded that scientific advances in warfare have gone be- yond their present equipment. Demands Pensions In effect, they demanded that the nation make up its mind be- tween pensions and modern weap- ons, saying: give us atomic weap- ons and guided missiles or prepare to defend Stockholm alone. The four Agrarians in the Cab- inet of Socialist Premier Tage Er- lander quit, leaving the Socialists with a minority in the 231-member lower chamber of Parliament. The Socialists have a majority in the Senate. VANGUARD LAUNCHED--The Vanguard shoots skyward from the missile test center at Cape Canaveral, Fla." United States Sends Up Host of Guided Missiles WASHINGTON (P)-The United States is hurling aloft a virtual fusillade of mighty missiles and rockets, ranging from a record-shat-. tering shoot into outer space to spectacular destruction by a robot weapon of a target plane a hundred miles out over the Atlantic Ocean. Obvious Challenge In obvious challenge to Russia's claims of leadership in the race of scientists and weaponeers, this country had chalked up by last night these new achievements: 1. The launching of two research rockets by the Air Force from balloons. One of these seems to have swooshed straight up to not less than 1,000 miles. This height dwarfs the previous farthest-out record, set by Russia when she put her^ Rnu tnik cateilitp int . nt n bit,.4 t_ _ f MEMBERS BUSY: 'U' Calendar Group To Hold First Meeting in November The University. Calendar Committee will meet "sometime ,-in early November" according to Prof. John Kohl, of the civil engineer- ing department. The group has not met yet this year. Prof. Kohl explained that many members of the committee had been very busy and that "October was just not the month" to call a meeting. There's no real urgency in meeting, Prof. Kohl said. The com- mittee has taken care of the Christmas vacation problem, he ex- phlained, and now "we have some r;PU1K Se1le ln all roL aL 560 miles. Set Record 2. The firing of an Air Force Bomarc long - range antiaircraft guided missile Wednesday from the Cape Canaveral, Fla., Missile Test Centgr which 'ferreted out, collided with and knocked down- without benefit, of warhead- a drone bomber a hundred miles out over the Atlantic Ocean. 3. Another successful shoot yes- terday of an Air Force Thor inter- mediate-range ballistic missile -- IRBM-from Cape Canaveral. Yesterday's missile "flew its pre- scribed course and landed in the preselected impact area," said an Air F o r c e announcement. The Thor was understood to have gone more than 1,500. miles and hit its target.' Senate Delays First Meeting The first meeting of the new Union Senate, which was to have been held last night, has been postponed until Wednesday, ac- cording to Duane LaMoreaux, '58, Union administrative vice-presi- dent. The Senate, a body represent- ing the men's housing units on campus, was set up as an addi- tional means of obtaining cam- pus opinion through student gov- ernment. The meeting was postponed be- cause the many cases of flu on campus would have cut into at- tendance, LaMoreaux said. major principles to grapple with." Two days at the end of the Christ- mas vacation were dropped at the committee's request. The University Calendar Com- mittee was set up by Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs James A. Lewis at the request of Student Government Council last year. The group has been studying many phases of calendaring. In- formation now has been obtained from many colleges and Univer- sities concerning their calendars, and Prof. Kohl said that effort is being made to get the informa- tion to the committee members as soon as possible. Prof. Kohl said there were a great many areas of the calendar to be examined. For instance, he explained, some people are now unhappy about orientation week. Faubus Sees End of Dispute LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (P-Gov. Orval Faubus yesterday said "cer- tain moves are under way" which could lead to mediation on the Little Rock integration dispute. Gov. Faubus said that he did not expect these "moves" to pro- duce any new developments "in the next week or 10 days. "There is a definite possibility that there will be a change in the attitude of the administration." SGC Unable To Finance in-0 Asianr irp By TOBY CHAPMAN SGC's Southeast Asia Delegation Committee has been thus far un- able to obtain funds for the pro- posed student tour, according to Margaret Quick, '57. The group has received one neg- ative reply in response to the grant appeal for the estimated project cost amounting to $20,000 or the donation of a portion of it. The first of two replies received by the SGC committee was a re- jection from the Asia Foundation. The Foundation for Youth and Student Affairs received the re- maining appeal for funds from SGC. Change Program Although FYSA could grant the complete cost of the trip, they replied that if SGC would revise some of its itinerary, chance of securing the grant would be more favorable. This organization requested the tour plans be changed allowing specific universities to be attended during the tour and additional sites be placed on the trip sched- ule. The requested revisions h a v e been made and SGC is now await- ing a second reply from the New York foundation containing their final decision which is expected within 10 days. If Funds Granted If the fund is granted, the first SGC tour delegation selection will be made in November and further detailed plans for the excursion will begin. If the grant is rejected within the next few days, the Steering Committee may possibly submit plans for expanding the tour pro- gram to SGC for approval. Union Told To Remove Hoffa Soon Meany Says Group Fails To Take Action WASHINGTON () -The APL CIO Executive Council esterday suspended the Teamsters Union until James R. Hoffa and other allegedly c o r r u p t officials are ousted from the truckers union. The suspension was announced by AFL - CIO President George Meany who said the Teamsters, largest AFL-CIO unit, had failed to rid itself of corruption. Meany said the vote for suspen- sion was 25-4. He declined to name the dissenters. Voted Against Suspending "However, it was learned those v o t i n g against suspeiding the Teamsters were council members John F. English, secretary-treas- urer of the Teamsters; Maurice Hutcheson, Carpenters Union president; Herman Winters, for- mer Bakery Workers president, and William Doherty, Letter Car- riers Union president. Doherty was reported to have felt more time should have been given the Teamsters for a cleanup. The Teamsters would have, had to have 10 votes in order to block the required two-thirds vote, for suspension by the 29-man council. For Correction Asked whether the Teamsters had done anything at all to cor- rect widespread corrupt conditions, as previously charged by the AFL- CIO and the Senate Rackets Ir- vestigating Committee headed by Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.), Meany replied with a flat "No. Meany said the suspension ac- tion means that the 1-million- man teamsters organization can- not be accepted back in good standing in the parent federation unless it completely boots out Teamsters President-elect James R. Hoffa. Meany and the council ruled that unless the Teamsters prompt- ly consent to ousting Hoffa and meet other cleanup conditions, complete expulsionof the unl5n from AFL-CIO ranks will be rec- omrended to the AFL-CIO con- vention in December. Meany also said other newly elected Teamsters officials should stand a rigid Teamsters Union in- vestigation. Anti-Union Spy Tells Activities To Senators WASHINGTON (P)-Charles Li- tell testified yesterday he organ- ized spying and other anti-union activity at the Whirlpool plant in Marion, Ohio, at the direction of/ an aide of Nathan W. Shefferman. Shefferman, head of Labor As- sociates, Inc., Chicago, has been described by Seifate Rackets Com- mittee counsel Robert Kennedy as a "union-busting specialist," and has been under committee fire for acknowledged financial dealings with Teamsters Union President Dave Beck. Litell told the committee yester- day that while he was an employe of Whirlpool he was recruited for the antiunion work by Dr. Louis Checov, a psychologist of Sheffer- man's staff. Litell said Checov told him pri- vately in 1955 his job was "to keep any union out of Whirlpool" and that/at Checov's instructions he helped organize an antiunion com- mittee of employes. He said Che- cov gave him $20. a week for com- mittee expenses, but that some- times he pocketed most of this. UFD Reaches 7$132,550- FOR CAMPUS CHEST: FUB, WUS Offer Educational Funds (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a series of four articles describ- ing the charities which will receive funds from the Campus Chest drive be- ginning Monday.) By JAMES BOW World University Service and the Free University of Berlin stu- dent exchange program are two charities which represent the Uni- versity abroad, aiding students. in .Germany, India, Southeast Asia, and Africa. The Free University of Berlin program is sponsoking two Ger- man students at the University and is financing two University gible to give donations - many gifts coming from students in Europe as well as in America. The headquarters for WUS is in Switzerland. The Free University of Berlin exchange student program's pur- poses include not only "academic education, but also contributions to the University community - the exchange of ideas and cultures." Charity 'Needs Help Katherine Johnson, '60, head of the program at the University, said that the University sends junior students to Berlin who then have an opportunity-to return to the University for their last year with the experience fresh in their minds.