FAUBUS SETS [TEGRATION BACK See page 4 Yl r e Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom :431-at1 CLOUDY, RAIN . . I, No. 4 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDbM SEPTEMBER 21, 1957 EIGHT I 00J s Removed from. School on CQurt Orde ___ * 7C * w * -A * *A imsters Must pear i.n Court [Rion Rig Conspiracy Charge v Cause Postponement by Judge NGTON (A) - The International Brotherhood of Team- ; officers were ordered yesterday to appear in federal Sept. 27 to answer charges that they have conspired to n's election in favor of James R. Hoffa . States District Judge F. Dickinson Letts directed them to why the election scheduled for the Teamsters convention each next month should not be delayed by a temporary year-old judge, a former Republican congressman from on a petition filed for a group of rank and file Team- - sters in the New York Area by - 7 . T Atty. GodfreyP. Schmidt.5 its ISlast Actionsi S Mid-East ITED NATIONS, N.Y. (W) -- ei Gromyko told the United' ns yesterday tlat the Soviet a cannot remain an "impas- observer" while the United s and other, Western powers turn the Middle East into a rbox. e Soviet forei'gn minister out- his country's position on the le East, 'disarmament and East-West issues in a policy Ii of 11/2 hours to the 82-na- Assembly. 'Denies Charges denied charges leveled by d States Secretary of State s Thursday that the Soviet n was risking war by threat- .Turkey and sending arms yria. omyko challenged the United s to raise the charges before Inited Nations. He called on United Nations to "condemn ately the dangerous policy" ,id was being pursued by the ern Powers. blamed the NATO powers reating a tense situation in Viiddle East that bears upon t security. 'Can't Stand By' he Soviet Union cannot place in the position of an impas- observer while the Near and le East, an area close to the ers of the Soviet Union, is turned into a permanent ed of military conflicts," he owing concern in the United in over the Middle East was ;ted ina proposal put before ssembly by Foreign Minister k Aiken of Ireland that a UN aission be named for "promo- Af reconciliation and econom- tterment" in that troubled Opposed Hoffa Schmidt, former counsel for the New York State Labor Depart- ment, successfully staved off Hof-' fa's attempt to swing a New York Teamsters Council election two years ago. In his court' appearance yester- day, Schmidt claimed Hoffa - Midwest Teamsters vice president and leading contender for the $50,000-a-year presidential' post being relinquished by Dave Beck --has combined with Beck and others to rig the Miami Beach balloting. Opens Sept. 30. The convention starts Sept. 30, with the elections due on Oct. 4 or 5. Schmidt, referring to the Teamsters officials as a "swindle- bund," told Judge Letts they ex- ercised dictatorial control over the 11/2-milliori-member union. He said the convention dele- gates have been handpicked, elected without the membership vote required by the Teamsters constitution. Of issile Su.ccessful MISSILE TEST CENTER, Cape Canaveral, Fla. ( -) -- A huge, flame-trailing missile was launched from here yesterday in what was believed to be the first successful firing of the Air Force Thor. Authorities confirmed only that a missile had been fired-the third in two days-but their tone indi- cated they were satisfied with the performance. The projectile rose with a flam- ing tail, traveling upward on an even keel for perhaps 15 or 201 miles before turning in a morel horizontal direction. Observers three miles away heard the sound 20 to 30 seconds after the missile was airborne at 9:25 a.m. - It came as a heavy roar like the sound of bombers flying high overhead. Windows rattled in downtown Cocoa 15 miles away. The Thor, 65 to 70 feet in length and designed to travel 1,500 miles, is an intermediate-range missile developed for the Air Force. , Faubus TV Talk Begins Soon After He Will Comply, But Plans Appeal LITTLE ROCK, Ark. ()-Gov. Orval Faubus last night ordered the National Guard troops away from Central High School a few hours after a federal court ordered him to stop interference with the school's integration plan. The guard left at 6:25 p.m. Faced with the injunction, Fau- bus said, "I will comply." Presumably the nine Negro stu- dents who have been barred from the school by the troops since they attempted to enter Sept. 4, will attend classes Monday. Sev- eral had said they would go if Guardsmen would not bar their way. Closes Chap - The action of the governor ap- -parentlycloses one chapter of the historic struggle between state and federal power but Faubus said he would exhaust all avenues of appeal to overturn the injunc- tion. At President Eisenhower's New- port, R. I., vacation headquarters, press secretary James A. Hagerty said there would be no comment on the action Friday night. ka- gerty said the President was told of the troop withdrawal by Atty. Gen. Brownell, who telephoned from Washington. Faubus spelled out his stand on a three-station television hookup in Little Rock at 6:30 p.m., given minutes after Lt. Col. Marion Johnson had appeared at the high school and called out the guard. Dramatic Climax It was a dramatic, climax to a swift - moving chain of events which started with U. S. Dist. Judge Ronald N. Davies' injunc- tion against Faubus following a five-hour hearing during which the governor's attorneys walked out saying, "We're through." The had challenged the federal government's right to question Faubus' actions and then left. The hearing continued and at the end the judge ruled that Faubus had thwarted the order of the court for integration by his use of the troops and directed him to stop. "Ignored Law" Faubus in his speech said Judge Davies "ignored the law" in re- fusing some of the motions made by the governor's attorneys yester- day. He did not say specifically which ones. He said, "I have instructed my attorneys to exhaust every legal remedy to appeal this order. How- ever, so long as this order is in effect and until its certain rever- sal on appeal, I will comply." The governor then said even as he talked the guards were leaving. He appealed for order and peace in Little' Rock and said, "now is the time for the utmost precaution and forebearance on the part of all persons." He said he hoped the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People would "not be so reckless as to push integration ..until a cooling off period has passed." SIBELIUS: Finnish U. Composer Dies at 91 HELSIKI (A) - -Jan Sibelius, 91, the great, brooding Finnish composer, died last night from a brain hemorrhage at his seclud- ed woodland home outside Hel- sinki. He was best known popularly over the world for the sweeping sonorities of his tone peom "Fin- landia" and to musicians for the craftsmanship of the dark, mysti- cal music that challenged both their wonder and the critical pow- ers. Left a Mystery Sibelius left a mystery for the musical world to puzzle over. His last published works came out in the late 1920s and he is believed to have done some major compos- ing since. He died without saying. The craggy-faced giant long had been regarded as among the world's foremost composers. Shaven - headed, his brooding face lined with age, he remained out of the world spotlight the last 20 years. He had published no musical works after 1929. But the whole world joined in a swelling outburst of praise and gifts for the maestro on his 90th birthday, Dec. 8, 1955. Joved Cigars He was showered with mes- sages, recordings and flowers, and loaded down with his favorite cigars and claret. He once said: "Cigars are my great passion. I smoke them night and day." Sibelius was poverty stricken early in his career. But his genius became so compelling that by 1925 the Finnish government granted him a pension amounting to $2,000 a year. Wrote 'Finlandia' It enabled him to spend all his time composing and to find relax- ation puttering about in the shrub garden of his villa about 13 miles from here. He built the house him- self 53 years ago. A big white rustic house under the trees, he slared it with his wife Aino, for whom the house was named. Great works flowed from his pen. The "Swan of Tuonela," with its dark brooding philosophy of Hades and death, became second to "Finlandia" in the repertories of the West. His symphonies, especially those in E and in D, were: widely played. . His Karelia Suite, his hymns for male choirs, his piano pieces and violin concertos, all made their mark in the world's music. Continue Sale Of Insurance For those still interested in pur- chasing student health insurance, representatives from the Detroit Insurance Agency will be at the Student Activities Building Mon- day, Tuesday and Wednesday, ac- cording to Scott Chrysler, '59. If interest is sustained,, Chrys- ler said, representatives will also be available Thursday and Friday. For '58-559 Buildinl -Photo Courtesy4University News Service. TOP PRIORITY -- The Pediatrics Unit of the Children's hospital has first priority in the Regent'm 1958-59 request of $3,526,500 for University hospital construction. The University is seeking $1,219,- 000 to begin work on the building. Seeks $15 Miilio Regent s Liberalize Rules Governing Loan .Funds ACTION BLASTED: See. Benson fHikes ,Corn ) Se eks By PETER ECkSTEIN Daily Editor The Regents yesterday liberalized the regulations governing stu- dent loans in order to increase their-use by students. At the same time, however, they heard a report indicating that an economic squeeze on students has already done much to put long- dormant loan funds into circulation. The revised regulations permit an extension of the period of time covered by a loan and lift the former limit, $250 a semester or a total of $500, to an unspecified figure based "upon a number of factors which the committee - (will) take into account." Interest rates of three per cent aN e were retained. The new regulations were pro- H l p0 nvrre 1 wStudent Help .posed by the Committee on Stu- 4u etdn onwihudroka dent Loans, which undertook an extensive study of the problem Michigan's campus humor maga- last February, a time when many zine, the Gargoyle, will not be loan funds were not being used. published this year unless addi- Vice-President for Student Af- tional student support is shown fairs James A. Lewis expressed by an increase in the number of concern that the present supply staff members. of loan funds might not "carry us Last May, the Board in Control through the year." Vice-President of Student Publications decided to for Business and Finance Wilbur "postpone" the appointment of K. Pierpont assured the Regents, Gargoyle senior editors for this however, that there were other school year, explaining their ac- available funds "within the tion did not reflect upon either the framework of the University." outgoing editors or the new peti- 65 Per Cent Used tioners for the vacated positions. Committee figures showed that Nor is the Board's action to be the last academic years saw $637,- interpreted as a ban on the humor 000 or 65 per cent of the funds magazine itself, Maurice M. Rin- available, put into use. This con- kel, secretary to the Board, ex- trasted with 50.5 per cent of the plains. funds in use the previous year. A tryout meeting for the Gar- Lewis said that many of those goyle will be held-Thursday students who had b o r r ow e d money in the spring have not NEW U.S SYSTEM: been able to pay '.t back this fall, "_____________ due to a worsened summer job picture, and that applications are R ar H u Radar Hiw heavy for funds this fall.r Medical and engineering school funds have been practically ex- WASHINGTON )-The Air: hausted, the Regents learned. try's first major breakthrough in Commenting on the general intercontinental ballistic missiles. problem of student economic wel- It is a superradar system car fare, University President Harlan figuring the precise course of a we Hatcher expressed concern over niles away. an attitude which would raise mie" wy tuition in public institutions on Gen. Thomas D. White, Air7 the premise that "'a student is new development in ,space warfare buying himself the capacity to claims of having successfully test produce in the future" and there- reaching any target on earth. fore should pay the full cost. Workir "Social Necessity" White, declaring Communist The ability to receive a college neutralize our retaliatory capabilit education, President Hatcher de cally new radar system will be ope clared, should not be based solely The Air'Force then said it is p on one's ability to pay or willing- mile-range radars would be install ness to go into debt. -Canada and either Labrador or Gre Inexpensive public education, two more sets. Together these c 1 S , s r WASHINGTON ( W),- Secretary of Agriculture Benson moved yes- terday td strengthen corn markets in an attempt to head off what he called unwise expansion in the production of hogs and other live- stock.; He announced that 1957 crop, corn, not heretofore eligible for government price support, will be extended such assistance. This is designed to keep corn prices from ,dipping to levels which might en- courage farmers to produce ex-. cess ,livestock. In Chicago The president of the world's, largest grain market-The Chicago Board of Trade-termed the action "planned insanity." Robert C. Liebenow said, "The department has given the old 'double cross' ' the poor innocent farmer who complied with federal acreage controls this year." Corn grown in a designated commercial area comprising 894 major producing counties in 24 Midwestern, Eastern and South-' eastern states by farmers who did not comnply with federal acreage allotments will be eligible for sup- ports at an average of $1.10 a bushel. Supports Regnts OI Long Rang New Construction Will Accommodate Future Enrollment By MICHAEL KRAI? Resubmitting its building j gram to the Legislature, the ! versity will request a 1958-59c ital outlay appropriation of $ 517,000 for educational facili and $3,426,500 for University A pital. Announcement of the req was made yesterday as the gents approved a five year cal: outlay program totaling $125,4 987 to meet the needs of proje rising enrollments. Limited Funds At the last egislative sess lawmakers rejected attempts start the University's future b ing program wl1Ile appropri seven million for educational ciiities and $1.4 million for 1 versity Hospital. TlI funds v sufficient only to complete bu ings already under construct In attempts to start its year building program, the t versity will request for 1958. 1) $1,175,000 to finish the I unit of the Medical Scienc'e Bu ing. 2) $2,500,000 to begin a , School of Music building at N Campus. Fluids Engineering 3) $1200,000 for the second 1 of the Fluids Engineering Bu ing at North Campus. 4) $1,500,000 for Physics and tronp my Buildings. 5) $1,700,000 for a North C pus Heating Plant and Ser Building. Wilbur K. Pierpont, vice-pr dent in charge of business and nance said risingbuilding e will make the buildings nines cent more explnsive to the s than if the funds were grante the last session of the legislat Matching Funds The appropriation request $3,436,500 includes $846,000 fc Mental Research iBuilding,' Federal'Government had grar a matching amount but the I versity was unable to pick it without the legislative approp tion. Pierpont said the size of federal grant can't be incre and the nine per cent rise in b ing costs will have to be bornm the state. Since the legislature appro ated no money for planning new buildings, the University quests for 1958-59 will also inch 1) $368,000 to plan the se unit of the Medcal Science bu Mng. 2) $370,000, to plan a''63 building costing $8,895,000. Education School 3) $175,000 for a School Education building at North C pus. 4) $194,000 for a College Architecture building, also North Campus. ,5) $'175,000 to begin plani a mathematics and compu center..Bt 6) $240,000 to plan a NC Campus materials and metall building. Additional planning funds also be requested in succeed years of the five year prograrn Of the total program, $102,9 000 will go for educational fa ties and $22,479,987 will go University Hospital and Med fe Access r Children Stone School Parent Teacher ganization is' considering four thods of providing safe access ross to the school for children, inton Heimbach, chairman of egroup's transportation com- ttee, said last night. The four plans consist of con- ucting a walkway' either along ckard Rd. or through the city Columbia Ave., purchasing or rting a bus, or forcing the hool district to provide one, imbach said. The problem arose when Stone hool was incorporated into the, in Arbor School District last ar, and the district refused to >vide bus service for children ring the present school year. ; parents sought an injunction, prevent the Board of Education >m ending service. The injunc- n is now pending in circuit art. A meeting will be held at 5:30 n.. Tuesday to consider the plans CALENDAR REVISIONS: SGC To Review Several Programs By RICHARD TAUB The fate of the Campus Chest will be one problem of Student Government Council in the near future, according to Joe Collins, '58, SGC president. The rCampus Chest, a give "once for all" charity drive Was insti- tuted on campus last year. A con- flict with Galens, medical honor- ary. and some dissatisfaction of council members with the drive, have kept it from being calen- dared again until further consider- ation., Another important area for the Council, Collins said, would be the Southeast Asia Delegation plan and comparable programs. An SGC committee has drawn uD a vros- be expansion of the cinema guild program. Greater utilization of the SAB is another goal of the Council, Collins said. Right now -the group is considering some kind of pro- gram with the University Bureau of Placement office. Rising enrollments and the costs as well as quality of education is another area of concern for the Council. A rising enrollments, com- mittee is studying the problem, and will report back to the Coun-=: cil with suggestions for treating the problem. The committee is made ,up of students, faculty and administration. Academic Interest Interest in academic areas is honor system program (non-proc- tored examinations) and making' efforts to extend library hours. The Council is also looking for- ward to further work and. study of the school calendar, Collins remarked. A committee, requested by the Council, has been at work on calendar revisions. Re-evaluate Projects The Council also plans to re- evaluate projects it has assigned to other campus organizations. This includes such things as the Student Book Exchange and the Air-Flite to Europe, as well as the rushing study program. Extension of leadership pro- grams is another program for the ats Missiles Force yesterday revealed this coun- efforts to set up ,a defense against pable of detecting, identifying and eapon speeding through space 3,000 Force chief of staff, disclosed the e and linked it directly to Russian -fired a ballistic rocket capable of. hg Soon progress in airpower "does not ty," said the complicated and radi- rating in the near future. probable that the first of the 3,000- ed in Alaska and that north-central eenland could serve as locations for ould cast an electronic detection iI .j i(i -i i