DULLES VIEWPOINT USUALLY NARROW Y L Sixty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom P4aiI49 CLOUDY, WARMER See Page 2 VL. LVII, No. 58 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1957M FOUR PAGES 167 Killed, Hundreds Hurt 1* by Gulf Tidal wave * w * * * * * w Helicopters, fBoats Speed To Holocaust Damage Estimates Still Unavailable LAKE CHARLES, La. G)-Mam- moth tidal waves-receding slowly at nightfall-swamped the Louisi- ana coast yesterday in the wake of hurricane Audrey, leaving at least 167 dead and hundreds in- . Jured. No overall damage estimates were, available. SMaj. Gen. Raymond Hufft, state civil defense commander, said there were 150 known dead in the Cameron area alone and "it may be a week to 10 days" before the t final count is finished. 17 Others Dead Seventeen other victims were counted elsewhere. An armada of helicopters and fleets of boats roamed through the flooded Cameron area south of here in the southwest corner of the Mate. A 20-mile strip along the coast is below sea level. Cameron Parish county Sheriff C?. B. Cartei predicted the death toll would be at least 200. Rescue teams brought out hun- dreds from the town of Cameron and ordered helicopters into the Grand Cheniere and Black Bayou sections of the parish during the late afternoon. . A civil defense spokesman here said possibly 1,000 remained in those communities, waiting on rooftops and high spots without food or water. 1,000 Safe Red Cross sources said about 1,000 persons stayed in the parish when Audrey struck Thursday. Bill Mertena, an American Press reporter, toured the Cam- eron area by plane and helicop- ter. He said Cameron was about 90 per cent destroyed, with "at least 50 per cent of the buildings, de- molished completely and many others so badly damaged they were a total loss." "Only projecting foundations and chimneys told where there had been houses," Mertena said. "The resort community of Holly Beach no longer exists. It was completely wiped off the map." Bodies of dead cattle, horses and wild animals littered stretch- es of the marshlands. Four hundred persons were res- cued on one boat alone, the ma- jority picked off rafts, trees, rem- nants of rooftops. Some were swimming or just floating when spotted by rescuers. English Talks To Continue At High School Second day's activities of the Advance Placement English Con- ference will be held at Ann Arbor High School today. Prof. John Shaw of Hiram Col- lege will discuss "Advanced Place- ment Examinataions in English Literature" at 9 a.m. in the Com- munity Room of the high school. This will be followed at 10:45 by Prof. Arthur J. Carr of the English department who will lec- ture on "Teaching a Play." Completing the day's program at 2 p.m. will be a discussion on the "Teaching of a Novel." A brief schedule on Sunday morning in South Quadrangle will conclude the three day con- ference. Robert Jameson, advance place- mhent teacher at Haverford Col- lege, Haverford, Penn., and Mrs. Alice Coleman, teaching consul- tant in the Sa nDiego city schools. will be co-speakers on the topic, "Ways of Combining Literature and Composition in Advanced Placement Courses." Miller Cleared hOn one Count NO RED CHINA: Dulles Fears UN-0 UN Ruination SAN FRANCISCO ()-Granting membership to Communistj China would lead to the "destruction of the United Nations, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles declared yesterday. "Communist Russia, with veto power, already seriously limits the ability of the United Nations to serve its intended purposes," Dulles said. "Were Communist China also to become a permanent, veto- wielding member of the Security C Varied Acts Commence ELI Shows First of a series of weekly Fri- day -night shows was performed last night by students of the Eng- lish Language Institute. A Varied program was presented to an enthusiastic audience in thej Council, that would, I fear, implant 4in the United Nations the seeds of its own destruction. Tells Lions The secretary made this strong statement of opposition at the international convention of the Lions Club in the very city where the United Nations was born. Delegates broke into applause seven times during the 30-minute speech which was televised nation- ally, Recognition of the Soviet Union Iby the United States in 1933 set no precedent necessitating recog- nition of Communist China now, Dulles said. - 'Peaceful' Nonaggression "Soviet Russia, in 1933, had a decade of peaceful nonaggressive relations with neighboring coun- tries, while Communist China's past record is one of armed ag- gression," he declared. "The Soviet regime seemed to want peace for the future. In the case of Communist China, the sit- uation is quite the reverse." 'He Baia the Red Chinese am- bassador to Geneva, in talks con- cerning the Far East situation, "finally stated frankly that his regime contemplated using armed force to take Taiwan (Formosa) unless they could get it in some other way." USSR Not Faulty "The Soviet Union in 1933 was not flagrantly violating its in- ternational engagements," Dulles said. "The Chinese Communist regime is violating the 1953 Korean armis- time and the 1954 Indochina armistice." American recognition of Com- munist China would lead to dire consequences, the secretary de- clared. Dulles said, "If the United States recognized the Chinese Communist regime, millions of overseas Chinese in free Asian countries would. reluctantly, turn to acceptance of the guiding di- rection of the Communist regime. "The Republic of China, now on Taiwan, would feel betrayed by its ft:iend." Paperbacks. Of Book Fai $1 Billion More Added To Defense WASHINGTON (1P)-The Senate Appropriations Committee heeded President Dwight D. Eisenhower's pleas yesterday and voted to add $971,504,000 to the defense budget for the fiscal year starting Mon- day. Acting unanimously, it recom- mended atotal of $34,534,229,000 to run the Army, Navy and Air Force the next 12 months. A bill passed by the House con- tains only $33,562,725,000, nearly a billion dollars less. Difference Cited If the full Senate goes along with the' increase, the difference will have to be adjusted in a Sen- ate-House confei ence. While the Appropriations Com- mittee was restoring hundreds of' millons to the defense budget, President Eisenhower himself cut 4561/ million dollars from his budget request for military public works, covered in a different bill. The White House sent Congress a revised request for $1,665,500,000 for this purpose. Savings To Be Made The proposed savings would be made by deferring less urgent con- struction projects until next year or later. President Eisenhower had asked the House to restore $1,200,000,008 to the defense bill in what he termed the interests of national defense, but his plea went practi- cally unheeded by the economy- minded legislators when they passed their version of the bill May 29. The Senate Appropriations Com- mittee's figures are still about 11 ; billion dollars below what the President originally requested al- though they are much closer to the minimum he said he could get along with. Egypt Gives New Ruling BULLETIN CAIRO, Egypt 0 - A spokes- man for President Gamal Nasser says Egypt will prevent Israeli shipping from forcibly using the Suez Canal or the Gulf of Aqaba. Wing Cmdr. Ali Sabry said if Israel tried to force those water- ways "with foreign help," the out- come would be the same as last November's invasion of Egypt by Israel. ain opiC r at Eastern Voluntary Authorized ASIAN CULTURES PROGRAM: Indonesian Dancers To Perform by Insurance A 15-member Indonesian Em- bassy dance group and traditional Gamelan Orchestra, appearing in conjunction with the Summer Ses- sion program, "Asian Cultures and the Modern American," will per- form at 8 p.m. Monday in Hill Auditorium. Their program will include tra- ditional gamelan numbers and dances from their native country. Featured dancers on the pro- gram will be Djoko Sanjoto, edu- cational and cultural attache for the Embassy of Indonesia, and his wife, who have appeared all over the country, including for mem- bers of the General Assembly of the United Nations in New York. Other Numbers Set Three other dancers will also presert numbers on the program,! w i t h assistance from student dancers from Sumatra who are presently in Michigan. Ten other members from the Embassy will make up the Game- lan Orchestra. Unique instruments used in the orchestra are made of wood, metal, copper and brass, and skin drums, producing unusual sounds. Members of Embassy All :nembers of the group are. staff members of the Embassy of Indonesia in Washington, D. C. Peerformances are done in their spare time. Next event in the special Sum- mer Session series will be a lecture by Prof. Max Loehr, of the Far IEastern Art Program at 4:15 p .m. Tuesday in Auditorium B. Angell Hall. He will discuss "Aspects of Chinese Art." Films Slated Five documentary films on Asian cultures will be shown Mon- day, at Kellogg Auditorium. The films are part of a series of films on Asia to be shown through- out the summer session. The group of films scheduled for this Monday are: "Sampan Family," "Japanese Family " "Rice Farming in Japan," 'Scenes of Viet Nam," and "India and Pakis- tan: The Land and the People." The films will be shown in the afternoon from 4 to 5:30 and a re- peat showing in the evening from 8 to 9:30. The films wll be open to the public without charge. -Daily-Ian MacNiven KOOROSH E. SAMIT ...entertains audience -Photo Courtesy University News Service "THE KNIGHT AND THE DEMON"-Fifteen-member Indonesian Embassy dance group and traditional Gamelan Orchestra will perform vt 8 p.m., Monday, in Hill Auditorium. SMALL CROWD.- Untimely Rain Halts' Scheduled House Fire Ann Arbor Fire Department didn't feel like starting the fire, so the house at 1951 West Liberty was saved from flames yesterday. -Burning of this condemned farm-type house was supposed to occur at 2:30 p.m. The event was to climax week-long activities of the 29th annual Michigan Fire College. But rain cancelled the plans. Small Crowd Waited A small crowd of spectators, newsmen and fire-watchers had gathered by about 2:20 p.m. to witness the conflagration. Standing Assembly Room of Rackham Hall by representatives of many coun- tries. A rendition of "Uskudar," a Turkish love song, was given by Gungor Gozubuyuk. Koorosh E. Samii, of Iran, en- tertained on the accordian. His "C:ardas" brought clamors for an encore; he responded with the popular "Malaguena." A mixed chorus of eight drawn from Cuban, Venezuelan. Peru- vian. and Mexican students sang three 'Latin-American songs and concluded with "Cielito Lindo." Hyun Kim from Korea, bari- lone, sang a folk song from his home country. Fetured was an "Explanation of the Bullfight" carred out by Fer- nando Escribens, who, appropri- ately enough, intends to become a matador. UN Command Brings Planes SEOUL (I')-United States jet bombers and faster - than - sound fighters roared over South Korea yesterday. Health Plan Scheduled For 1957=58 Cost of Program Should Not Exceed $15,.Committee Says By RENE GNAM A Student Government Council authorized health insurance 'pro- gram will go into effect during the fall semester. Scott Guy Chrysler, '59, SGOC health insurance committee chair- man, was given authority by mail vote earlier this week to bind con- tracts on behalf of the Council. Contracts for the insurance program will be on an entirely voluntary basis, Mrs. Ruth T. Callahan, of the Office of Student Affairs, stressed yesterday. Will Be In Effect She indicated that arrange- ments will not be complete for at " least another month, but said the program will definitely be in ef- fect this fall. Complete insurance for fulltime students should not cost more than $15 for a full year, Mrs. Calo lahan said. The program may also include a semester plan with pro-rated premiums. 'Adequate Protection' It is expected to provide "more than adequate protection for the average student as well as provide coverage . .. for severe incidents. Program will include accident and sickness compensation, in- eluding hospitalization reimburse- ment up to 12 days and miscella- neous medical expenses. Available to both undergradu- ate and graduate students, the program is expected to have high- er premiums for married students who desire maternity benefits. Detroit Firm Premiums are also expected to be slightly higher for students' de- pendents. Plans call for the program to be written by Detroit Insurance Agency (which handles a large portion of the University's insur- ance) for American Casualty Company, Reading, Pa. Promotions for the voluntary health insurance plan will be set up by Detroit Insurance Company and approved by SGC. Indicated promotions include individual solicitation by mail and an all-out campaign at registra- tion. Promotions are expected to be continued through September. with the actual starting date of the insurance sometime about the first week of October. King Speaks To NAACP On 'Dignity' DETROIT ( P) - The Rev. Mar- tin Luther King told a mass meet. ing of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo- ple (NAACP) tonight that "close adherence" to the passive resis- tance method he used in Mont- gonery, Ala., "might even mean going to jail." "If this is the case," he said, "we must with dignity and love fill up the jails of the South." Accepting an achievement award from the NAACP conven- tion, the Rev. Mr. King said, "you are really honoring the 50,000 Ne- gro citizens of Montgomery, Ala., who more than a year ago came to see that it is ultimately more (. YPSILANTI-Plans are set to give intense concentration to paperback books at Eastern Michi- gan College's fifth annual Book Fair, to open here Monday. Highlight of the three-day affair will be a talk by novelist-critic Harvey Swados set for 10:35 a.m., Tuesday, in the auditorium of Roosevelt School. Tcpic of the lecture will be "The Reader, The Writer and the Pa-- perback." A panel will discuss "The Paper- back-Revolution in Publishing?" at 3:45 p.m., Tuesday. lish department, and Marjorie M.y Miller of Eastern Michigan's Eng- lish and Speech Department. Local James r. Green, EMC's develop- ment and planning director, will d meat and plnisnussiror, Swill' Lit 4 will serve as information source. A lecture on "Illustrated Books The Stan) and Art Education" will be given nounced a s by Prof. Howard S. Conant, of concerts in t Netw York University, at 2:15 p.m., Hall for the Monday. sented at 8:3 John B. Virtue will introduce and August 6 Swados, a member of the Univer- Included i sity's Class of 1940. bership of th Included in the fair's plans are Ross and Em more than 60 special book exhibits. bert Courte, Hours for the exhibits will be Swenson cell Monday from noon to 4 p.m.; Swenson i, Tuesday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; of Illinois's and Wednesday from 9 a.m. to He is repl 12:30 p.m. the summer. Quartet Concerts ley Quartet has an- series of three public the Rackham Lecture summer to be pre- 0 p.m., July 9, July 23, 6. n the summer mem- he quartet are Gilbert il Raab, violins; Ro- viola; and Robert o. s cellist in University Walden quartet. acing Oliver Edel for Professors Will Discuss Short Story "Teaching the Short Story" will be the topic of a panel discussion at 4 p.m., Monday, in Auditorium C, Angell Hall. The discussion will be the sec- ond in the seventh annual series of conferences for high school English teachers. Leading the panel will be Prof. A. K. Stevens of the English de- partment. Prof. Stevens is editor of Mich- igan Council of Teachers of Eng- lish's newsletter. Taking part in the conference' will be Prof. Clara Laidlaw of Michigan State University's De- partment of English. Also taking part in the discus- sion will be Eva Marie Van Hou- ten of Detroit Mumford High School and A. V. Williams of Traverse City High School. -in ankle deep mud which sur- rounded the premises they eager- ly waited. One youngster came equipped with fire helmet and boots to assist the city's firemen --who never showed up. University maintenance men had been there earlier to fill the building with papers and assorted garbage that was to help start the blaze on its merry way. The building, constructed of wood and looking (with its brok- en windows, leaky roof and dismal appearance) much like a haunted house out of a Hollywood who- done-it, is situated on a small mound overlooking a wooded and sparcely populated section of West Liberty, about two miles from the main part of town. "Phooey!" Photographers from press ser- vices were also present with full motion picture equipment to re- cord the fire. Setting their cam- era tripods up in the deep mud they waited for the wail of sirens that would indicate the coming of the fire fighters. But only a lone car dispatched by the University arrived to an- nounce the change in plans. The house still stands, still filled with waste, and surrounded by mud, its future still uncertain. Perhaps some worldly philoso- phers will look upon this event as one more example of man's eternal fight with the elements, but a local Aristotle summed it up best when he said, "Rain, phooey." Ieke Approves - *,.-. Military officials here and in Panel members will include Japan said privately they con- Roberta C. Keniston, librarian at sidered the flights a direct result the University's undergraduate of a United Nations Command de- library; Bob Marshall, Ann Arbor cision to bring in new arms in the and Ypsilanti bookseller, Prof. face of a large-scale Communist Arthur Carr and Prof. Frank military buildup in North Korea. Huntley of the University's Eng- AT LYDIA MENDELSSOHN: Summer Playbill To Open with 'Charley's Aunt' "Charley's Aunt", the rollicking Edwardian farce, will open the Department of Speech Summer Playbill at 8 p.m., Tuesday, under the direction of Prof. Jack E. Bender, The last of four performances of the play at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre will be staged Friday, July 5. In the all-student cast are William Hawes, Grad.; Marilyn Pearce, YW' 4".r:. yy t .f a