UNITED STATES STAND ON ALGERIA CZI rP Sixty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom Daii4 THUNDERSTORMS See Page 2 vdwr, x.vrwyr . a . ---- . - - - - -__ - - - - - -- -- -- j TJ, Y Zd LrVARi '4,2U. O9 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1957 FUT PAGES u V Y l AUA, z" s S S 1 QUAKE TOTALS ;Any-one MaySe 3,01 -3 ,000 I H-Testng-Ike TEHRAN, Iran (A') -R es cu e ,, teams roving the still trembling . Scientific Advisors Favor Telling earth yesterday fearing that Tues- day's quake killed more than 1,000 Russia of Reduced Radioactivity persons. The known death toll soared to 750. WASHINGTON (')-President Dwight D. Eisenhower said yester- More than 3,000 persons were day that if this country ever tests another big nuclear bomb he will invite "any country in the world" to be on hand and see for itself that radioactive fallout has been reduced toward the vanishing point. N ew Co nt President Eisenhower also told a news conference his scientific l advisers favor telling the Russians or anyone else exactly how to make a "clean" bomb once this country proves it knows how. The President spoke out firmly and with a' touch of indignation Q g in denying the United States has grown a bit half-hearted in seeking disarmament agreement with the Russians since United States scien- Hits 700 ti ts h ve s id a h yro gen ubom b ttshvsadahdoebobAC completely "clean" of fallout can A E C ets be developed. LAKE CHARLES, La.()-When Urges Test-Ban the waters of Hurricane Audrey B" President Eisenhower declared seep back into the now calm Gulf 1 i lonhis administration will "always" of Minxico and her full ravages stand by its offer to try for a sus- are revealed, the Louisiana coast pension of nuclear tests - even may count about 700 dead. F or Pethough, he said, there would be The latest official estimate put o Peace scientific advantage in continuing the figure that high, Sheriff Ham 4 to test such weapons.RedoCacsuPrihtl - WASHINGTON (1)- President Turning to domestic affairs, the Re of cae a o e- chif eecuivefronedon pr.-porters yesterday. There are 296 Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday chief executive frowned on a pro known dead. allocated about a billion dollars posal by Sen. Richard Russell (D- Dr. Harry Snatic, the parish worth of uranium for use in Ga) that the administration's civil coroner, quickly added: "I think "atoms - for - peace" projects here rights bill be submitted to a na- at least 400 more persons are miss- and abroad, tionwide popular vote. ing. " The government sell or lease Pr e si d e n t Eisenhower said ny a the uranium but wi e s there's nothing in the Constitu- ever, has become more compli- away, won't give tion providing for such a step- ed a newoma o b th The President said all distribu- that it's up to elected Congress dead of nearby Cameron Parish a to decide on legislation. }tions will be subject to "prudent FodcdeoesarsUnounde wherever they are found. safeguards" against diversion into Fears Unfounded As the death estimate mounted, ,weapons. The President said, too, he the property damage total also PresidentEisenhower doesn't understand fears voiced by sote pared t mageC s te scie Esensiehor adeful Southerners that his right-to-vote sarld Dueto aeCals a tocusesbout131,d60oundSenatespeebill is, as Sen. Russell put it in a h eaud Io D nu rc LkAdjuslesnt atomlc uses about 131,560 pounds Senate speech Tuesday, a "cun- Bue au In. which handle in of uranium 235, which he termed ning device" to force racial inter- surance claims, put the expected . "the basic atomic fuel." mingling at bayonet point. .propertylamaget the state at This allocation will be distri- President Eisenhower declined to weretn 75 and 100 million dollars buted evenly between users in this commit himself on several ques- -ten75ad10_ilodlas country and abroad. tions. The total amount of uranium .He said, for instance, it's too H now earmarked for the atoms-for- early to tell whether the $6-a-ton j'i ;SS ii peace program is about 220,000 p r i c e increase announced by . pounds. United States Steel-just after the; * The President estimated this to President urged both industry andD be worth about $1, 00,000,000 at labor to go easy on price and wage current prices, fixed by the Atomic increases-was justified or would Energy Commission, prove inflationary.O f1U tud AEC Chairman Lewis L. Strauss Limits Himself y _r simultaneuosly disclosed that the And he limited himself to an I-1 United States o n1y yesterday hope-not reply when asked if he University Vice-president Mar- signed agreements with Germany expects Congress, for all its econ- vin L. Niehuss announced todayt and Italy under which this coun- omy talk, to spend more this year that the University would conductI try can provide fuel for power when the final bills are in than a study of prepaid hospitalization reactors in those countries, his budget called for. if the state provides funds. Previously the United States He agrees with Secretary of The action came at a meeting provided Germany and Italy with State John Foster Dulles that this here between a governor's commis- uranium for experimental reactors, country should offer to help both sion and the Advisory Committee rather than for full-fledged power sides in trying to solve the French- on Hospital Administration. plants. Algerian dispute rather than back NieL s, a member of te Hospi- _ _ _ _'the Algerians. tal Committee, said the t groups Thus, both the President and were agreed on the method of pro- Dulles took issue with a proposal cedure and objectives of the study.t Tudent Group by Sen. John Kennedy (D-Mass) "We're well on our way to carry-f that the United States start work- ing the study program further," TO' U ndertake ing "toward political independence he reported. "But the study stilli o U d t ke for Algeria." is in draft form."o A rSt dygr. President Eisenhower thinks the He indicated that a final outlinec Oiriean French are entitled to try United with a budget and plans for the States Army Specialist 3/c De- study probably would be ready byp Wayne McOsker in the killing of Aug. 31.s The United'States National Stru an Algerian in Paris. A study of prepaid hospitaliza- dent Association will send a group The President said he under- tion was planned a year ago, butp of students to Africa this fall to stood the episode occurred in a it was called off when the Michi-d determine African problems. cafe while the soldier was off duty, gan State Medical Society re-s nforming students at African and so McOsker is subject to trial portedly objected to Dr. S. J. Axel- Suniversities of the goals of Amer-in local courts just as an American rod of the University directing it.n ", tw 1:1ine wil a nor+ J4 ~ of +ha I MOUNT: i ran ians Feared Missing missing from ruined villages that means of communication through- persons in north Algeria in Sep- marked the quake's horseshoe- out much of the affected 50,000 tember 1954. shaped path around the south end square miles. The path of death and damage of the Caspian Sea from Soviet Shah Mohammed Reza Pahievi seemed to extend into the Soviet Turkmen to Soviet Azerbaijan. on vacation inSwitzerland Union on both sides of the Casp- ~~~nvctoni wteln with, no nbt ie fteCsi However, many of these were Queen Soraya, cabled order~s for{ an. presumedrto have sought safety in relief measures. But there was no word from the the open fields and woods. Russians on what happened north Official statistics pictured havoc The grimmest note of the day's of the border. and misery as mild after-shock rescue efforts cime from two vil tremors persisted: more than 100 lages unmentioned t in early ac- villages wrecked; 1,500 persons counts of the quake. These were H arrim an seriously injured; property dam- age estimated at more than 1211 Both were completely razed. million dollars, In the ruins, rescue workerstes Wire lines were down and ava- found 400 bodies, i lo lanches blocked roads, leaving The quake appeared the most runners and horsemen as the only I deadly since a tembler killed 1,409 1 t,1 i Fires Malenkov, ppoints Zhukov Kremlin Expels Former Premiers In Surprise Housecleaning Move MOSCOW (R)-The Kremlin yesterday expelled Georg Malenkov, V. M. Molotov, L. M. Kaganovich and Dmitri She- pilov from their high posts in the Soviet Communist party. They were accused of collusion and intrigue against the party's leadership. Apparently the Central Committee stopped short of the severe penalty of expelling them from the Communist party, as some committee members had urged. Instead, it expelled them from the- Central Com - i NEW RECORD COMING? NSC Sees53Det During Holiday Per By The Associated Press The long Independence Day holiday period began last n thousands of motorists on the roads. The National Safety Council estimated that 45 millio vehicles-13 for each mile of the nation's road and street n will be moving sometime or other during the four-day ob NSC predicted 535 Americans will be killed in trafficr during the extended weekend that began at 6 p.m. yester will end at midnight Sunday. ----- That many deaths would set a new record for the Fourth of July holiday period. The current high mark-491- was set during a four-day celebra- tion of Independence Day in 1950. Up to midnight (EDT) the death toll stood at 5, including 2 traffic, 2 drownings and a miscellaneous. Motor vehicle deaths so far this year have failed to match last year's high rate. Through the first five months of 1957 fatalities have averaged 95 per day. The Associated Press made a survey of a recent nonholiday per- iod to establish a statistical basis for comparison with the loss of life during the current holiday period. There were 347 traffic deaths in the survey period-from 6 p.m. Wednesday, June 19 to midnight Sunday, June 23. New Courses Set for Fall A new course for sophomores in the Law School will be offered this fall, Titled "Problems and Research," it will provide law students the, opportunity of applying legal prin- ciples studied in their regular courses to problems which will be presented in hypothetical fact situations. Individual work will include the preparation of a legal memoran- dum and the completion of re- search project. This work is in addition to-that now required by the school. Senatr S Civil Rigli GOP Bun WASHINGTON (k')-A Democrat hinted yester much of President Du Eisenhower's legislative might go down the dra the, Senate is battling o rights. The way Sen. A. W. R (D-Va.) put it was that publicans, if tney insis showdown on civil righ shoulder the rsponsibility ting through the rest of gram in the waning sessi Sen. Robertson discus situatirn after President hower reiected the idea o his civil rights pr)gram p in a national referendum The President told his n ference he didn't know provisions in the Constitu putting the question up people in such a way. Sen. Robertson said a'st on GOP responsibility w ably be made on the Sen Friday by Sen. Edward (D-Ga.), leader of the c opposition to civil rights tion. Behind the Southern Dei maneuvering was a thre Senate filibuster on the civ bill which could suspend legislative business the weeks. HAMILTON, N.Y. (A) - New York Gov. W. Averill Harriman last night sharply assailed Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower's con- duct of foreign affairs and de- j~~j livered what appeared to be a IO demand for dismissal for Secre- tary of State John Foster Dulles. The Democratic governor also told the annual Foreign Policy ight with ConferenceatColgate University that "it may only be a questicn of n motor time" until the United States etwork- would be unable to prevent ad- servance. mission of Commnunist China to accidents the United Nations. rday and Gov. Harriman, former New -day andDeal-Fair Deal diplomat who bid unsuccessfully for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1956 ays and 1952, maintained that the United States' world influence was "at a low ebb." its Leading into his attack on Dulles, Gov. Harriman said there was "grave concern" in Europe " over the motives and methods of our government in dealing with world problems. Southern "This distrust is focused With day that deep feeling on the one man they light D, hold responsible-the secretary of program state. in while "Unhappily this attitude has ver civil now become so deep-seated that it is difficult to see how it can be Zobertson overcome as long as Mr. Dulles is the Re- secretary of state," he said. t on a ,e-t ts, must for nut- enae Vots the pro- Million sed the t Eisen- For * Ff havingoFarming assed on WASHINGTON (R) - A four- ews con- year extension of the basic federal of any farm program-under whidh co- ution for operating farmers are receiving to the 250 million dollars or more an- nually in federal payments-was tatement recommended to the Senate yes-' ill prob- terday by its Agriculture Com- ate floor mittee. Russell The law is known officially as Southern the Soil Conservation and Domes-" legisla- tic Allotment Act and was origin- ally enacteo in 1936. mocratic The Senate Committee voted at of a an extension to the end of 1962" il rights for the program which the House all other report listed "as one or the sound-7 ere for est eierents of our agricultural program." I mittee and the Presidium - Politburo. The Central Committee elected a new Presidium including Mar- shal Georgi K. Zhukov, World War II hero of Moscow, and Mrs. Ekaterina Furtseva, the first wo- man on the ruling party body. Tass said Mrs. Furtseva made the announcement of this far- reaching shakeup to a mass meet- ing of Communist party members, apparently convened in the Krem- lin, explaining that the four ac- cused had been decisively con- demned for antiparty activities "directed at breaking up the party." The list of new Presidium mem- bers indicated that Maxim Sabur- ov and M. G. Pervukhin, two lead- ing economic and industrial ex- perts of the Soviet Union, also had been demoted. They were not listed as mem- bers or alternates of the new Pre- sidium, although the official com- Related Story Appears on Page 2 Professors munique did not mention them munique did not mention them in connection with offenses against the party. The newly elected Presidium-~- successor to the Politburo of Stal- in's day - included the names of only six of the 11-member group elected in February 1956. The event, evidently the biggest shakeup since Stalin died in 1953, was foreshadowed by an angry editorial in Pravda Tuesday warn- ing that no man was too big to be expelled from the party. Malenkov and Molotov, both former premiers; Kaganovich, a first deputy premier and indus- trial expert, and Shepilov, a prop- aganda expert and former foreign minister, were dropped from the Presidium, the most powerful body in the U.S.S.R., and from the party Central Committee. Shepil- ov was fired as an alternate mem- ber of the Presidium and from his post as one of the party's secre- taries. The six holdovers in the Presi- dium are Premier Nikolai Bulgan- in, Ukraine party boss A. I. Kir- ichenko, party First Secretary Nikita S. Khrushchev, the trade expert and deputy premier, A. I. Mikoyan, the party theoretician, M. A. Suslov, and the old Soviet warhorse, Marshal Klimenti Voro- shilov, who is president of the U.S.S.R. Moscow's statement said the group worked against the deci- sions of the 20th Communist par- ;y Congress of February 1956, and tried "to impose wrong ideas," It acused Molotov specifically of having hindered the Soviet gov- ernment's policy of "peace among peoples." Khrushchev eased Malenkov out of the leading party position soon after Stalin's death and later was instrumental in causing Mal- enkov to step down as premier' with a confession of inability to to the job. Treasury Gives Debt Figures WASHINGTON W)-The Treas- ury reported yesterday the na- ional debt was $270,527,171,896.43 Give Views On Firings By FRED KATZ The la t e s t of the Russian "housecleanings" - demotion of Malenkov, Molotov, Kaganovich and Shepilov among others-came with no actual forewarnings, Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department said yesterday. Interviewed by telephone, Prof. Slosson said, "This is the typd' of thing that is always liable to hap- pen in the Kremlin. But what we have heard from Russia lately has concerned primarily their foreign policy." He continued, "There are two possible lines of reasoning concern- ing the dismissals. This could be one of the customary rotations that attempt to prevent those not in power from getting iddas or it could be a definite power struggle between two factions, in which case it might lead to prosecution similar to the Beria case," said Prof. Slosson. What will happen to the fallen members of the Presidum will give a clue to just what is the reason behind the sudden move. "If the men are reduced in power," said the professor, "then it wvill prob- ably have been the former. There have been no stable charges placed against the ousted; instead they have been accused of "working against the best interesta of the party." Prof. Slosson feels that a definite split in opinion might have re suited in discussions over the dis- cussion policy. Prof. Phillip B. Taylor, Jr. of the political science department ap- peared rather puzzled at the seem- ingly lack of pattern in the dis. missals. "It's a kind of conglomerate group that was ousted for Molotov and Shepilov have nothing in com- mon as far as policy is concerned. And in that respect neither do Molotov and Malenkov," Prof. Taylor said. He revealed however that Krus- chev might have ordered the move as a type of protection from losing Red China. Prof. Taylor said, "Kaganovich and Molotov are Bolshevists that believe that there cannot be df- ferences between the leader and the masses of the Communist Party. "Mao Tze-tung, Premier of Red China recently acknowledged that there was a difference be- tween the leaders and the masses Thus, Kruschev might have re- sented this," added the political science instructor. Of interest in the shakeup was the promotion of Mrs. Ekaterina Furtseva from alternate member- ship to the standing of a full mem- ber in the Presidum. Both Profs. Taylor and Slosson agree that this is mainly a matter of recognition, Prof. Taylor said, "Women play an important role in the Supreme Soviet, and a more important role than they do here in the United States. "The Russians believe in equal- ity between both sexes (including manual labor, also), and this move .s U1 5gen s wi oe part of the fob. At the end of the four month tour, which will run from Sept. 15 to Jan. 15, the students will report on their stay. Last summer, two NSA groups visited Latin America and India, and exchanged information with students there. NSA found that personal student contact was very effective in in- creasing understanding between the two countries. - Any student from NSA member schools, of which the Univeresity is one, may apply for a place on the delegation. The NSA pays all expenses in- cluding travel and lodging. They prefer students with a knowledge of French or Arabic, or who have experience in student organization or journalism. All applications are welcome, however. Accepted students should attend the 10th National Student Con- 'NEVER INTENDED' FOR BIKES: Union Bans Bicycle, Parking at Side Entrance By ERNEST ZAPLITNY - ___________ "The Union's loggia was never intended as a parking place for bicycles," Union general manager Franklin C. Kuenzel said yesterday, commenting on a recent action by the Union Board of Directors. Signs at the much-used side entrance to the Union went up this week announcing that parking of bicycles on the loggia (roofed, open gallery-the veranda) and adjacent sidewalk is prohibited. "The jumble of bicycles was becoming a terrific hazard," Kuenzel said. "After several instances of people getting entangled and injured weie reported, the Board of Directors undertook a study to eliminate the problem." Voted Unanimously He said that at its May meeting the 19-member board (of which 10 are students) voted unanimously to restrict further bicycle-parking there, but directed that enforcement of the ruling be deferred until suitable nearby space is provided. A part of the north drive was made available last week with room for 65 bicycles, Kuenzel reported. 1 t t t t s v f t J _ _ .. ...,.,,,.. aat.,u'0.+. ah ;*. '+ '+' :2 :5.,'3.i4 <..,, _ . .-- ..' .U i - : ' t .. . tat v. ..:e lir