Ususal Unconcern Greets Davis Conviction See Page 2 C I 4L ink~i Y :4Iail 0 Vw IT'LL RAIN AGAIN Sixty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXVII, No. 4S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY. JUNE 28, 1957 FOUR PAGES 105 -mph Hurricane inds Kill 17 in Two States 4. * * * * w * * * * Nickerson Blasts' Wilson s 'Errors' Says Aircraft Industry and USAF Conspire Against Army Plans HUNTSVILLE, Ala. P)- - Col. John C. Nickerson Jr., standing every last inch of his ground, yesterday accused Defense Secretary 7 Charles E. Wilson of "grave errors" in curtailing the Army's guided missile program. "These are grave errors which greatly diminish our over-all com- bat powers - they are errors not likely to be balanced by correspond- ing Russian errors," added the 41-year-old colonel in a defiant state- ment directed at Wilson, second only to President Dwight D. Eisen- hower in American military power. Thus Nickerson followed 'the same lonely path trod 32 years ago by Brig. Gen. William (Billy) Three Dead, Three Hurt In Accident By JOHN WOODRUFF Special to The Daily SYLVAN TOWNSHIP - Three e persons were killed and three in- jured in a two-car crash here yes- terday. Washtenaw County Sheriff's office reported drivers of both cars (Willy Clayton, 50 years old, of Detroit, and Charles H. Ste- vens, 41 years old, of Pontiac) were killed. Walter Morris, 31 years old, of Detroit, a passenger in Clayton's car was also killed. Clayton's car went into a skid and was struck broadside by Ste- vens' car on Highway 12, east of Kalmbach Road, at 8:30 p.m. } ' Injured and taken to Univer- sity Hospital were: Lawrence Moore, 32, of Detroit, Clark H. Davis, 15, of Pontiac, Fannie Sykes, 30, of Detroit. Sheriff Erwin F. Klager said it was the worst accident in the county since May 18, 1956 when five were killed on Plymouth Road near Prospect St., Dixboro. Three University students were killed in the Plymouth Road acci- dent. Slum Changes Aid housing Desegregation DETROIT (MP) - The housing director of the National Associa- tion for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) said to- day "we are beginning to see slight improvements" in the housing I situation of Negroes. Maitin S. Jones of New York, who is in charge of. the NAACP's housing program, outlined the or- ganization's policy in regional meetings at the annual conven- tion here. The NAACP, he said, "is out to end discrimination and segrega- tion in the housing field. We can decomplish this just as we licked the educational 'problem." Jones advised NAACP leaders on the local level to find out what ' city officials are planning, He said practically every city has slum clearance. urban redevelopment and renewal projects: "We are building cities of the -future and it is incumbent that we get our oar in," he sid h Jones reported the housing pic- ture was slightly brighter for Ne- groes because "some builders have started to build for a free mar- ket." He said some financial in- stitutions-not too many of them i -are interested in financing such housing. "There are some indications." he said; "of a change in trend in public housing in many Northern , and Western areas where housing has been segregated." The NAACP Branch Leader at Baltimore, Md., Bowen Jackson, said, "It is a pleasure to report that public housing in Baltimore has been inegrated. There has not been one single racial incident of any consequence in any public housing project where integra- tion has been effected." Mrs. Constance Motley of New Mitchell. His career was wrecked qby his stubborn insistence that the then-infant air arm of the military was being dangerously neglected. Nickerson faces. the same pos- sible fate for his defense of the Army missile program. With a quick, tight smile for his attractive wife, Nickerson took the witness stand in his own defense in the third day of his court- martial at nearby Redstone Ar- senal, where the Army has devel- oped -its 1,500-mile Intermediate Range Ballistics Missile, the Ju- piter. Nickerson climaxed a 10-year- old interservice feud by using se- cret data in a fight to save the IRBM program for the Army aft- er Wilson turned it over to the Air Force. "I am as far out on a limb as I can get," Nickerson said rue- fully. He accused Wilson of ignoring expert advice and bowing to pres- sure from the Air Force, the air- craft industry and Congress in his Nov. 26 memorandom of de- cision. Rain Cheeks Fire College Car Burning A dilapidated car was saved from being set to flames yesterday after- noon at Ferry Field by the rainy weather. The schedule for the Fire College currently being held at the Uni- versity included true-to-life prac- East Texas, Louisiana Hit Hard Winds Losing Force Over the Coastline ORANGE, Tex. OP)-Hurricane Audrey, which took at least 17 lives andncaused wide-spread damage along the Texas-Louisi- ana coast was losing its punch last night as it pushed inland to- ward the Lower Mississippi Val- ley. Winds of 105-miles-an-hour ve- locity had sent thousands of coastal residents in the two states scurrying for higher ground. But the winds dropped to 75 'mph early last night and the United States Weather Bureau said they would continue to di- minish as the center of the sea- son's first hurricane moved to- ward n oth e as t ern Louisiana, northern Mississippirand Southern Arkansas. Downpours to Continue The heavy downpours that ac- companied the hurricane were due to continue as it moved inland. The center of the hurricane had moved northeastward to near Al- exandria, La., late last night. Winds and rains diminished along the Texas coast. Audrey, which since Monday had been churning its way across the Gulf of Mexico, virtually leaped upon the coast yesterday. The Weather Bureau at Port Arthur had predicted Wednesday night that the storm would not hit until last night. Center at Cameron But the bureau pinpointed its center as striking at 8 a.m. at Cameron, La., about 30 miles southeast of here The 50-mile wide eye passed over Orange in the familiar pat- tern: hurricane winds, followed by dead calm, then renewed severe blow. At least seven men drowned when the 78-ton fishing vessel Keturah struck an offshore drill- ing platform near Galveston Bay Wednesday night during the storm. $1 Million Damage Civil Defense Director Larry Stephenson of Lake Charles, La,, estimated 168 persons checked in- .to hospitals during the storm's passage over that southwest Lou- isiana city of about 50,000. He es-, timated damage at one million dollars. (Lake Charles is about 35j miles northeast of Orange.) At mid-afternoon the hurricane still was t h r o w i n g powerful; punches. The Weather Bureau said winds were 80 miles per hour near its1 center as it moved northward in the general area of the Texas-s Louisiana border.E It brought rain squalls through- out extreme east Texas and most of Louisiana. The winds tore down powert lines, broke off tree limbs andt threw them into the air, isolating7 many cities and towns from out-F side telephone calls.t High tides, estimated as much as nine feet above normal, com- bined with the wind to throw wa- ter over seawalls and block roads.f Not To (Russian ENGLISH CONFERENCE: Educators Cite Growth in Gifted Pupil Program s Warn Accept By ERNEST ZAPLITNY Recognition of a growing need for providing sound educational experience for ambitious secon- dary school students who are ca- pable of superior performance was stressed by speakers at the Advanced Placement English Con- ference begun here last night. 'A group of some 50 teachers from 20 states and a number of University and local high school faculty members gathered at Rackham Lecture Hall to hear leading proponents of the pro- gram. Featured speakers were Harold Howe, principal of Newton High School and director of Newton Junior College, Mass., and Robert Jameson, teacher of Advanced Placement English, Haverford College, Haverford, Pa. Nicholas Schreiber, principal of House Says No Foreign GI Trials WASHINGTON (A)-The House Foreign Affairs Committee voted 18-8 yesterday for a stiffly-worded resolution aimed at ending trials of GIs by foreign courts. It approved without change a hotly-disputed resolution by Rep. Bow (R-Ohio) saying the Presi- dent "shall" seek revision or de- nounce the status-of-forces agree- ments allowing for foreign trial et Urited States servicemen for some offenses. President Dwight D. Eisen- hower has spoken out in support of the status-of-forces agreements and his administration has long fought the Bow resolution. But voicing criticism concern- ing the celebrated case of Army Specialist William S. Girard, the congressmen overrode Eisenhower supporters in a day-long commit- tee session and voted for the bill. It will require Senate and House approval and President Eisenhow- er's signature before it can be- come law. The committee acted after re- fusing to put off a vote until after the Supreme Court considers the case of Girard, whom the Japa- nese want to try for the fatal shooting of a Japanese woman while she was scavenging on an Army firing range in Japan. The Supreme Court has slated a special hearing on the case July 8. Ann Arbor High School was chair- man. Dean Charles Odegaard, of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts prefaced the meeting with remarks on the responsibil- ities of colleges in the Advanced Placement Program. He stressed that colleges are faced with responsibilities to the entire student body - from fresh- men to doctoral candidates-and that planning under the advanced placement program must not overlook this. Dean Odegaard said that fo- cusing the superior abilities of these few students should result in a general upgrading in the abil- ities of all students. Schreiber remarked that the Advanced Placement program should not be regarded as a pana- cea for all educational problems. In time, he added, the program should settle down to a normal function of schools. Howe saidcthe program was conceived on the general notion that able students in secondary schools need a "better shake," and is based on the assumption that teachers have the skills to devel- op superior students if they are organized. U.oS. -Daily-Alan Winder HAROLD HOWE ROBERT JAMESON ... cites progress . . . urges more reading Germany There are definite signs of rec- ognition of the program in col-' leges, Howe continued. Many col- leges now place superior students in advanced courses, he said. Also, over 75 colleges this year have awarded semester hours of credit to these students. Howe said the program is an "organized way to do something for the small group of gifted stu- dents", and expressed optimism that it "will expand to become a recognized point in American edu- cation." Jameson dealt with specific problems in the English curricula of secondary schools in the Ad- vanced Placement Program. More expository writing, "me- ticulously exact," is needed, he SECURITY PROBE: Pair Refuse To Testify; Court Edict Responsible WASHINGTON (P)--Two Senate witnesses seized on a 10-day-old Supreme Court decision yesterday as grounds for refusal to say whether they were Communists when they had access to official government messages. The two, appearing before the Senate Internal Security subcom- mittee, were Howard V. Trautman and Salvatore A. Testa, both of New York and both members of said, in place of "creative" writ- ing now getting much attention. Reading should be expanded to "stretch the minds" of students, Jameson stated, but warned that there is danger of over-emphasis on literature to the detriment of composition. Man. Killed, Five Injured In Explosion WINCHESTER, Ind. OP)-- An explosion and flash fire In the Anchor Hocking Glass Corp. forming department last night killed a young glass blower and critically burned five other work- men. Dead was John Davis, 23, Win- chester, who was working on his day off and who only Sunday had moved up from apprentice to op- erator status. The explosion was heard two miles away, but it occurred in a fireproof section and did not cause extensive damage. Winchester firement brought the fire under control in a short time, and plant operations were not greatly affected. An appeal for blood for the vic- tims brough quick response from more than 25 prospective donors. Burned critically and in Ran- dolph County Hospital here were Carl Myers, 51, Union City; Tiv- eredy Green, 43, Winchester; Olan Noland, 35, Winchester; Everett Shaw, 46, Farmland, and James Harvey, 29, Winchester. Edward Monk of Winchester suffered burns on the hands in pulling Davis away from the flames after the explosion. Plant Manager Donald Mat- thews said the explosion was caused by a break in a paraffin oil line. Arms Armamiients May Disrupt Unification Political Conflict Ties into Proposals In London Meeting MOSCOW (RI) -The S o v i e t Union yesterday declared hopes of German reunification can be buried if West Germany accepts nuclear armaments from the West. In a note which appeared cer- tain to have repercussions in the United Nations disarmament talks now going on in London, the So- viet Union told West Germany "nuclear armament of Germany and German reunification are ir- reconcilable." A settlement of world political conflicts, which would include re- unification of Germany, has been tied into proposals submitted to the London conference. U. S. Proposes Plan The United States has proposed a three-phase reduction of Soviet and United States armed forces, provided it is accompanied by an improvement in East-West politi- cal relations. The United States also has as- sured West Germany, which Is not represented in the London talks, that it would be consulted on all measures undertaken to reach a disarmament agreement. The Soviet note--handed to West German Ambassador Wil- helm Haas by Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko - declared West Germany was setting itself up as an arbiter in the London negotiations. Note Accuses W. Germany The note also accused West Germany of trying to make agree- ment on disarmament dependent on "certain conditions." The Kremelin declared the Bonn government would have to bear full resoonsibility for the conse- quences of its cooperation with the West. This was an elaboration of a note delivered to Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer's government last April 27 warning that West Ger- many risked the horrors of nu- clear retaliation if it cooperated with the West on atomic arma- ments. West Germany Replies Germany replied on May 23 with a vigorous denial that it was being turned into an "aggres- sive atomic base." It asserted the Soviet accusa- tion was an attempt to influence voters at general elections in September. Adenauer's political future is at stake in the September elections. He has refused to back down on his statement that West Germany, as a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, is entitled to tactical atomic weapons. Court To End Monopoly Acts WASHINGTON (P)-Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell yesterday an- nounced the entry of a civil anti- trust consent judgment against the Greyhound Corp. of Chicago, designed to end alleged monopo- listic practices in the intercity bus field. Under this procedure, the Jus- tice Department filed suit in the federal district court at Chicago late yesterday, and the consent judgement, accepted by both sides, was entered immediately by the court. The action named General Mo- --Daily-Allan Winder tice in extinguishing a burning automobile. It was to have taken place yesterday, but the doomed vehicle was saved by the rains atj the last minute. However, the disappointed stu- dent firemen will not stay disap- pointed long. They're setting their sights higher today as they tackle the flames of a condemned house on West Liberty at 2:30 p.m. WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP: American Jets Sent to South Korea t h e American Communications Association. Their testimony produced these results: 1. They were suspended from their jobs. of automatic telegraph operator and radio operator, re- spectively, by RCA Communica- tions, Inc. The company said it acted in line with a policy "to guard against subversion and to maintain pro- tection for its employes and pro- perty against possible espionage or sabotage." 2. Their stand set up what may be a guideline for others instead of relying on the Constitution's F i f t h Amendment protection against self-incrimination, they used the First Amendment and the Supreme Court's June 17 decision in the John T. Watkins case. 3. Sen. Rohan Hruska (R-Neb) mentioned the possibility of a trial before the Senate-which has sent people to jail in the past for con- tempt-rather than in the courts. This was the first time witnesses in an open committee meeting have invoked the Watkinsdeci- sion, one of several recent odes by the court which have set off a storm of debate. Trautman said that under the Watkins ruling he could not be re- quired to testify about his "be- liefs expressions or associations." He said the question as to whether he was a Communist ex- ceeded the committee's jurisdic- tion. ELI Starts American Jets SEOUL - The United States: flew new-type jet planes into South Korea today to make good on its pledge to match the Com- munist buildup in the North. The United States Air Force an- nouncement did not specify the type of planes or how many, but shortly after noon four F100 Su- per Sabre jet fighters flashed over Seoul. An Air Force spokesman at Osan, huge American base south of Seoul, said, "All types of air- craft now in use by the 5th Air Force based in Japan are - or will be - flying the skies and us- ing the airways of South Korea." The United Nations Command told the Communists June 21 it was voiding the 1953 armistice Passport Rule Maintained WASHINGTON (P)-The State Department's right to require passport applicants to say wheth- er they are or have been Com- munists was upheld 5-3 by the United States Court of Appeals. Five of the eight judges voted to uphold District Court rulings which backed up the State De- partment's denial of passports to artist Rockwell Kent and Dr. Walter Briehl, Los Angeles psy- chiatrist. the Reds had consistently violated the armistice ban. Wilson Speaks . WASHINGTON - Secretary of, Defense Charles Wilson said yes- terday the banning of atomic weapons tests "would just be sort of a nuisance, but wouldn't stop anything" in the world armament race. Wilson was asked at a news conference what effect suspension of nuclear tests would have in development of new weapons. He replied that "it would fi- nally tend to slow it down some" -but then added that the ques- tion was not one for him, but for President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Secretary of State John F. Dulles. tier of West Germany for the past 11 years. Diplomatic sources said yester- day details of the plan to pull back the British forces are being hammered out by West German and British experts. The gradually expanding Ger- man army is to provide the for- ward NATO screen along the hun- dreds of miles of Iron Curtain frontier from the Baltic to Czech- oslovakia. New Capitol .,. LANSING - The legislature yesterday paved the way for early construction of a new 10 million dollar state office building and voted a study on tighter controls over sexually motivated crimin- als. OTHERS TO FOLLOW: Price of Steel Hiked By Leading Producer PITTSBURGH (MP-United States Steel Corp. producer of nearly one-third of the nation's steel, yesterday announced an increase in prices of approximately $6.00 a ton. The increase is effective July 1. The steel firm, biggest in the world, said the price increase is necessary because of increases in wages and benefits that will become effective for many of its employes on the same date under terms of a three-year contract signed a year ago with the United Steel Workers. Other steel producers in the nation are expected to announce sim- ilar prices increases very soon. Avery Adams, president of Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp., the na- tion's fourth largest producer termed the price increase inadequate. He said: "The price increase is grossly inadequate in so far as covering our total and anticipated cost increases is concerned." Adams said he had no comment at this time on J&L's plans for any price adjustments. U. S. Steel President Clifford F. Hood said in a statement that the increase will amount to about three-tenths of a cent a pound and Ta lent Series # - -__I The English Language Institute E "will bring the average U. S. Steel's carbon and alloy steel prices to will hold a talent program at 8aout 73 cents ncr nound." I I I i