,: EDUCATION BY TELEVISION See Page 2 JL Sixty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom iE~aii4 .00 0. @00 FAIR, WARM VOL. LXVIL No. 22S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1957 FOUR PAGES H ouse Votes' School Bill Amendment Final Vote, Defeat Predicted Today WASHINGTON (P)--The House adopted an amendment to the school construction bill yesterday saying it is the intent of Congress there shall not be federal control of schools. Voting on the issue of segrega- tion in the classroom was delayed until today. Final voting on the one-and-a-half-billion-dollar mea- sure also is expected today with cloakroom talk inclined to fore- cast its defeat. -The bill would authorize $300 million a year for .five years in federal grants to help the states build needed classrooms. States Match Distribution would be half on - the basis of state needs, half on the basis of school-age population. The states would match the federal' outlays. Opponents of-the measure talked of the program's cost and danger of federal control again in yester- day's second day, of debate. The amendment adopted by voice vote was offered by Rep. Jim Wright (D-Tex), who said it was needed so the intent of Congress would -not be misconstrued. Congress Recognizes The amendment says Congress recognizes that responsibility for administration and direction of public school policies lies wholly with the states and local commu- nities and adds: "It is expressly not the purpose of this act, to provide or to per- mit control, direction, supervision or interference by federal author- wchool personnel, curricula, text- books and instructional materials, or local school administration poli- * ies." The House killed a school aid bill last year after adopting an amend- ment by Rep. Adam Clay Powell (D-NY) to bar aid to districts practicing segregation. Wedemeyer Says 'Lindy' K Flew in War WESTBURY, N. Y. (A)-Lt. Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer (Ret.) said yesterday a "plush curtain of bureaucracy" hid the fact that Charles A. Lindbergh flew 50 com- bat missions and shot down at least one Japanese fighter plane in the Pacific in World War II. Wedemeyer, foi'mer commander of United States Army forces in China spoke at the dedication of a plaque marking the take-off point of Lindbergh's solo flight to Paris in 1927. Public Should Know "I think the public is entitled at least to some of the unpublicized contributions in the Lindbergh oddyssey," Wedemeyer said. "When the Japanese hit Pearl Harbor, Col. Lindbergh found it impossible because of the political climate to participate in the war as a member of the armed forces. "So he went to war as a techni- cal representative of the aircraft industry. He went on many mis- sions with Corsairs; he took part in strafing raids; he flew cover for bombers and did some special1 bombing to prove what the Cor- sair could do... . Facts Recorded "All the pertinent facts are on the record, but that closely guard- ed government record is unavail- able to the public. Let me push aside the plush curtafns of bu- reaucracy for a, moment and talk Sabout the man and the facts." Wedemeyer s a i d Lindbergh spent six months in the Pacific, made 50 combat missions, had 178 combat hours, shot down at least one Japanese fighter plane, and took up probably the heaviest bomb load ever carried. Wedemeyer said Lindbergh went to the Pacific to study fighter plane performances under conbat conditions with a view toward im- proving plane design. Center Span Completed Senate Strips Rights Bill; Ui Enforcement Except, for V( Power Cut M~ing Rights MACKINAC STRAITS BRIDGE - The final section of span of the five-mile bridge was lifted into place early this week, presenting the structure as it' will appear upon completion in November. Clinton Case New Motions Deadline Set, KNOXVILLE, -Tenn. (R) - De- fense attorneys yesterday were given until Aug. 14 to file motions for a new trial for seven persons convicted of interfering with ra- cial integration of Clinton High School. United States District Judge Robert L. Taylor set the date for filing the briefs following a con- ference with defense lawyers. The attorneys served notice aft- er conviction Tuesday of North- ern, segregationist John Kasper and six Clinton area residents that they would seek a new trial. Kasper and the "Clinton six" were convicted of criminal con- tempt of court for violating a fed- eral injunction prohibiting inter- ference with orderly integration of the previously all-white high school. Those convicted could be sen- tenced up to six months in jail and fined up to $1,000, or both. Taylor indicated he will not pro- nounce judgment on the defend- ants until after argument on the new trial motions. He plans a vacation in August, so it is unlikely he will hear the attorneys' pleas until September or later. The defendants are free tinder bond. AEC Sets Off Atomic Blast, Ninth in Series ATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev. ()- A "mighty mite" atomic blast lit up the sky yesterday for an in- ternational audience. , The ninth shot of the summer test series was roughly one half as strong as atomic bombs dropped on Japan in World War II, but observers said it was one of the most jarring shots of the 1957 series. The bomb went off before sun- rise in a burst of bluish-purple. Thirteen miles from ground zero on News Nob, the shock wave banged like thunder over a group of civilian observers from nine foreign countries.J HITS NEW PEAK: Cost of Living Rises; Dollar Power Shrinks WASHINGTON (P) - The cost of living jumped another one-half of one per cent in June and probably has set still another record in July. The consumer price index, issued yesterday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, reached a new peak in June for the 10th month in a row, at 120.2 per cent of the 1947-49 average. This meant. the buying power of the consumer dollar had shrunk 3.4 per cent from a year earlier and almost a nickel - 4.8 cents - in the 15 months since March 1956 when the big price bulge began. The average factory worker could take comfort in the fact that his "real earnings" - the spending power of his weekly paycheck - New Bridge Built Minus Red Tat'pe CIBOLA, Ariz. (-) - All of a sudden there's a new bridge across the Colorado River. Federal officials are flabber- gasted. A group of Arizona, farmers built the bridge without bothering about red tape. The law says that to build a bridge they should have had the approval of the Army Corps of Engineers, the secretary of the Air,,, the Bureau of Reclamation, the California Division of Highway Department. No Permission But they didn't get anybody's permission. They built the 401-foot span and started hauling their crops across it and charging tolls to other users. The bridge is about 20 miles south of Blythe Calif., and about 40 miles north of Yuma, A'iz. The line men who built it at a cost of $50,000 farm on the Arizona side of the river. W. Y. Murphey of the Desert Ginning Co. originated the bridge idea. He and other cottcn growers wanted to haul their crops to a gin and railhead on the Califor- nia side of the river._ Murphy Wrote Murphey wrote.the Army Engi- neers in March -1956, asking 'how to go about building a bridge. He got back a bale of instructions. "It would have cost us $250,000 and a year's time to build that bridge with Army approval," he says. Gwent up in June for the first time since last December. His average spendable earnings, rose about one per cent, or 65 cents a week. A longer work week and higher hourly wage rates were enough to offset higher prices for the first time this year.. And an estimated 650,000 work- ers in the electrical manufactur- ing,. aircraft, trucking, building. and some other industries gained pay increases of two to four cents hourly under their escalator wage contracts geared to fluctuations in living costs. British Jets Hit Positions Of Rebels MAMAMA, Bahrain (A')-British jet warpla-nes attacked rebel tribesmen of Oman yesterday with rockets and machinegun fire. An official announcement in this Persian Gulf oil center said RAF jets based at Sharja, in Oman, knocked down the walls of Ft. Izki in the Wadi Halfin area. The RAP flew 12 sorties against the rebels threatening the throne of the pro-British Sultan of Mus- cat and Oman. Targets Named Targets for today, informants said, will include the rebel-held fort at Nizwa, ancient capital of Oman. Unofficial reports earlier said the official announcement of the attack had been deferred by the British until they could assess photos showing the results of the attacks. Although London officials said the use of ground troops was not planned, two companies of the Cameronian Rifles, veteran desert campaign troops, arrived at the RAF Sharja base from Kenya late yesterday. They were fully equip- ped for desert action. Possessions Named In Cairo; rebel spokesmen claimed that their forces hold most of the interior and that the British-officered army of the Sul- tan is losing men by desertion to the rebels. They said the Sultan now must depend on British support alone because his own army is melting away. About 1,500 rebels swooped out of the desert mountains of the Arabian coastal monarchy last week under the leadership of Imam Ghaleb ben Ali, former re- ligious leader of Oman. They are reported to have taken control of about 2,000 square miles of rugged foothills, and their re- bellion threatened the rule of the 47-year-old Sultain, Sail bin Tai- mur, a friend of Britain's in the Persian Gulf area. Treaties have linked Oman with Britain since 1839. Sultan Appealed The Sultan appealed to his Brit- ish allies for help, and the RAF dropped leaflets on rebel areas threatening offensive action if the tribesmen did not call off their revolt within 48 hours. The dead- line passed Tuesday night. British Foreign Secretary Sel- wyn Lloyd announced in London that British action would be con- fined to air strikes to discourage the rebels and prevent them from receiving arms from "outside" sources. He said the sending of troops to the hot desert areas would be a "military futility" although two planeloads of troops were flown out to Bahrain from East Africa earlier this week. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's re- election campaign. He did not ex- plain how. The Soviet Premier said that unless the West, and particularly Britain, show some reciprocity in getting some disarmament steps under way, the current United Nations Disarmament sub-com- mission talks in London hold little hope. Bulganin also told Macmillan tartly that expressions of indigna- tion in England about the- Soviet role in Hungary could be matched by Russian questions on British acts in Egypt and Cyprus. Macmillan Pressed Bulganin pressed Macmillan to reconsider an old disarmament idea first aired by the then Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden at the Geneva Big Four meeting in 1955. The plan, which the Allies have since disowned, would have set ceilings on Allied and Communist forces in West and East Germany, demilitarized a zone along the Iron Curtain, and opened it to a control and inspection system as a first step for confidence. Then came his idea of the joint pledge not to help any aggressor. House Group Kills One Bill For Canyon WASHINGTON (M)-The House Interior Committee yesterday kill- ed one of two Hells Canyon dam bills. Republican members said they would bury the other today. With two Southern Democrats Joining a. solid Republican minor- ity, the committee voted 16 to 14 to strike the enacting clause from a bill by Rep. Gracie Frost (D- Idaho) to authorize federal con- struction of a high dam in the canyon dividing Oregon and Idaho. The federal dam would have been built .in the same stretch of the Snake River in which the Federal Power Commission has authorized Idaho Power Co. to build three smaller dams. Rep. J. P. Sayl r (R-Pa.) later said Republicans plans today to indefinitely shelve the other Sen- ate passed Hells Canyon bill dur- ing a meeting of the House Recla- mation subcommittee. This bill also calls for federal construction of the dam. LETTER FROM MOSCOW: Bulganin Wants No A id For Aggressor Nations MOSCOW (A')-Premier Bulganin proposed in a new letter yester- day that the United States and European powers pledge t6 withhold aid from any aggressor in Europe. He also called for the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union as the world's nuclear powers to agree not to base nuclear weapons on either East or West German 'soil. Long Letter Sounded Moderate His 6,000-word letter to Britain's Prime Minister Harold Mac- millan was moderate in tone but it acoised the West of stalling disarmament talks. He said the West's aim was to help West German 'U' Student Takes Life Inside Jail Sentenced to 30 days in jail and five years probation for grand larceny, Clyde Brough, '60E, took his own life early yesterday morn- ing. He had been convicted by Cir- cuit Judge James R. Breakey, Jr., for theft of $3,000 in photographic equipment from a, local camera store. Washtenaw County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney William Ager said Brough's parents are seeking an immediate investiga- tion. The former University student smuggled poison into his cell in the heel of a shoe. He was report- edly seen opening the shoe during the early morning hours by anoth- er inmate. Other prisoners, hearing Brough in pain, attracted Sheriff's Office officials on duty and thq student was rushed to University Hospital at 3:20 a.m., where he died short-i ly after. Brough left several notes be- hind, one to a naval science pro- fessor, another to a friend, and a third to a girl. Brough's father also said he had received a letter with a possible suicide hint in it. After Sheriff's officers were informed of this Tuesday, they made a search but failed to discover anything on Brough's person. The student went before Uni- versity officials in May for his part in the theft of $300 worth of camera equipment from West Quadrangle. Brough had been a "B" student with particular interests in Naval ROTC, motorcycling and photog- raphy. Price To Play Arrangements for a three-and- a-half octave carillon will be in- cluded in a concert by Prof. Per- cival Price, University Carillon- neur, at 7:15 p.m. today in Burton Tower. Long Debate Ends in Vote Of 52-38 Southern Senators Achieve Victory With Amendment WASHINGTON (') - President Dwight D. Eisenhower's civil rights bill was stripped in the Senate yesterday of all its enforce- ment powers except those covering voting rights. The vote on the crucial issue,' coming after five hours of debate, was 52-38. It was a solid victory for South- ern senators, who have argued for weeks that the bill as it came from the House would permit the feder- al government to force racial in- tegration in the schools in their states and impose other social changes. Parties Mix Thirty-four Democrats and 18 Republicans joined to adopt an amendment by Sen. Clinton An- derson (D-N.M.) and George Aik- en (R-Vt.) to eliminate almost all of Section 3 from the measure. Thirteen Northern Democrats and 25 Republicans voted against the amendement. Michigan's senators, Patrick McNamara (D) and Charles Pot- ter (R), both voted against the Anderson-Aiken amendment. Section 3 would have empowered the attorney general, on his own initiative, to seek federal court in- junctions against all kinds of civil rights violations or threats of vio- lations. Charges Ready Persons flouting the injunctions could be charged with contempt of court and tried by federal judges without a jury. Northern supporters of the amendment hailed the vote as di- minishing the chances of a South- ern filibuster against what's left of the bill and increasing the chances of passage. "I think this vote makes the en- actment of a workable civil rights bill very likely," Sen. Aiken said. Still in the bill is authority for the attorney general to seek in- junctions in voting rights cases. In addition, persons who felt their right to vote was being denied il- legally could bypass state courts and go directly into federal courts with petitions for restraining or- ders or demands for damages. Provisions Included Also in the bill are provisions to set up a bipartisan commission with broad subpoena powers to ln- vestigate the civil rights problem, and to create a civil rights dvi- sion in the Justice Department. But all the remaining provisions are under attack in varying de- grees, and further efforts probably will be made to soften the legisla- tion. Immediately after adoption of the Anderson-Aiken amendment, Majority Leader Sen. Lyndon. Johnson (D-Tex.) called up a jury trial amendment proposed by,.Sen. Joseph O'Mahoney (D-Wyo.), This was a surprise, since sup- porters of the bill had expected to go to work next on amendments, to the commission part of the bill, Nixon Presiding Vice-President Richard-M. Nix- on, who was presiding, followed Senate custom and recognized the' majority leader first, although Mi- nority Leader Sen. William Know- land (R-Calif.) was seeking rec- ognition at the same time, Sen. Knowland heads the bi- partisan coalition backing the bill, The O'Mahoney amendment would provide for jury trials in injunction proceedings where per- sons were charged with contempt and threatened with criminal pen- alties. ROBERT B. ANDERSON ... to take over Monday HOUSE BILL OPPOSED: Administration Fights Overseas Tra a WASHINGTON (R) - The administration fought yesterday against barring foreign trials for offenses committed on United States servicemen while on duty. A bill to forbid such trials encountered solid opposition from State and Defense Department officials before the House Armed Services Committee. They said it would break with international law, compel the United States to violate treaties, undermining mutual defense alli- ances and American security, and result in more foreign and fewer Treasury Post Transfer Set For Monday WASHINGTON ()-The White House announced yesterday Sec- retary of the Treasury George Humphrey's resignation will take effect Monday. Robert B. Anderson will be sworn in to succeed Humphrey on that date in a Cabinet-room cere- mony. Both Humphrey and Anderson a t t e n d e d yesterday's Cabinet meeting. The White House announced May 29 that Humphrey would leave the Cabinet about the time Congress was winding up its work. At the same time, it was an- nounced that Anderson, a former deputy secretary of defense, would succeed him. Humphrey is expected to be- come chsirmnan of the board of, National Steel Co. Vice-President STUDENT PUBLICATIONS: Library, Shop Changes Under Way Alterations in the Student Pub-, licatoins Building involving con- struction of a library and changes in the shop floor plan are under way this summer. Already completed As a new office for Kenneth L. Chatters, superintendent of printing. Other changes in shop layout designed to separate different operations have been made. The changes have been "pri- marily to increase the efficiency of the shop," Maurice Rinkel, busi- ness secretary of the , Board in Control of Student Publications, explained, Wt%+ " nn* a" ' n" " +V 0 I Social Science Lecture Topic United States trials for GIs over-( seas. Hundreds more GIs might wind up in foreign jails, they contended. The target was a bill by Rep. took a stand alongside the admin- istration. He said he is "completely con- I vinced" of the "benefit to Ameri- I losilz