MER THEMES NVE EXPANSION Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 46P 43 zi t t W- -qw- 4 6y FAIR, WARM See rage 2 IIL, No. 35S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1958 FIVE CENTS FOUR PA cond Atom-Powered Sub impletes North Pole Voyage WASHINGTON (A) -The Navy ,4,announced last night that another of its atomic powered submarines 'lyhas crossed the top of the world beneath the ice of the North Pole, It was the USS Skate, which v ~crossed the pole Monday night, eight days after the nation's first ~..atomic sub, the Nautilus, wrote an Y'.. epic in naval history by being the first to steam under the pole. Docks in -England The Nautilus completed its transpolar voyage yesterday by docking in Portland. England, V ' where it received a warm welcome. ' wSen. Prescott Bush (R-Conn.) rose in the Senate chamber during a night session to spread the news f i of the Skate's achievement. "I am sure all senators will join in congratulating the Navy on the delivery of this one-two punch," he said. Eisenhower Mid-EastP To Announc rogram tAoWAN U 1 4 RILLONNEUR - Prof. Percival Price of the music school, the ,n who makes music with the University's carillon in Burton wer, works over the score of one of his original compositions. of. Price composes and plays many of his own works along with ditional and favorite tunes on the carillon. f. Price EXperiments ith So'unlds of Carillon By CHARLES SLEET he place is Burton Tower: the man, Prof. Percival Price, ian. [e sits isolated in his office high above Ann Arbor smoking his )etween inspirations in sound which he deftly converts into black on .a musical score. he Tower also houses a musical instrument, called the Carillon. d its unique keyboard huge grey bells await the dynamic strokes of the University's most widely ournment f Congress ue Aug. 20 LSHINGTON ) - The Sen- Republican leader yesterday out any chances of Congress trning this week. said Aug. 20 would be a more quitting date . here is too much legislation e mill to adjourn by midnight day," Sen. William F. Know- (R-Calif.) told reporters after ite House conference. nounting pile of legislation, of it in dispute between the t and House, seemed to add at least another week's work. Dozen Bills Wait . Lyndon B. Johnson (D- the Senate majority leader, dozen major bills still have handled in the Senate. It met hours Monday to reduce the og. e yesterday the Senate passed designed to simplify and y the federal excise tax sys- amendment which would cut the present 20 per cent et tax to 10 per cent was ed 51-39. nson refused even -to hint he thought Congress could 'We'll stay here until the job e," he said. Farm Still a Problem Democratic leader added mething must be worked out in legislation to help cotton ice farmers, who are faced arge reduction in their acre- ext year. The Senate and are far apart on farm legis- wland said he thought Con- still had time to agree on a bill, GOP leader of the House, Joseph W. Martin, Jr., of chusetts, said he feels it be better for Congress to soon, instead of adjourning, nish its business later in the Signs Bill' r School Aid 'Ta m{, . heard musician. Frequently, Prof. Price renders his own compositions along With familiar tunes and old favorites, while far below thousands of bare- ly visible people go their'own ways in the campus maze. Many, perhaps, have heard srange sounds coming from the region of the musical time-piece and wondered what wastaking place. One day it might have sounded like/ carpenters at work, when in. fact it was Prof. Price practicing on his semandron. (Se- mandron is a fancy name for two wooden planks suspended by ropes.) President Pleased President Dwight D. Eisenhower was given word of the Skate's feat while riding in his plane over Philadelphia en route to New York for his speech before the United Nations General Assembly.' V Press Secretary James Hagerty said Eisenhower was very pleased with the news, even though he had been expecting it momentarily. Commander Holds Medals The Skate, is under the com- mand of Cmdr. James Francis Calvert, 37-year-old native of Cleveland, Ohio. His family now lives in Mystic, Conn. I Calvert, a 1942 Naval Academy graduate, was in the submarine service in World War II and holds the. Silver Star medal with gold star in lieu of a second award. The Skate went from New Lon- don, Oonn., to the polar regions and is expected to come back out into the Atlantic. British Fete' Honors Men Of Nautilus8. PORTLAND, England (A')-The USS Nautilus sailed into port in bright sunshine yesterday from her' dank prowling under North Pole ice and her crew ptoudly received a Presidential Unit Citation for the epic adventure. Bands played "The Stars and Stripes Forever," bagpipes skirled, boatsawhistled and a crowd of spectators and men and officers of the British and American navies cheered as the atomic submarine's crew reached land for the first time in 19 days. Fluttering at the masthead was a flag newly designed for the occa- sion -- a blue flag bearing the words: "Submerged Polar Transit, Nautilus, 1958." On deck was Cmdr. William R. Anderson, the Skipper, who hadc flown by helicopter to rejoin his crew after being whisked to Wash- ington to receive the Legion of Merit from President Dwight D. Eisenhower. In full uniform, he escorted United States Ambassador John Hay Whitney aboard. The ambas- sador read the presidential cita- tion and conferred the emblem. Ori her 8,147-mile voyage from Pearl Harbor, the Nautilus came out from under the ice cap only 10 miles from the spot reckoned by its navigators. Union Local Paid Wages To Convicts WASHINGTON (A) - Senate probers were told yesterday the Teamsters Union paid $114,719.32 in salaries to four members of a Pontiac, Mich., local while they were in prison. Robert F. Kennedy, counsel to the Senate Rackets Investigating Committee, also produced evidence from Union files to show that pen- sion fund contributions of the four were kept up. Asks Explanation Kennedy asked James R. Hoff a, international president of the Teamsters, what possible reason the union could have for paying out money to men who had been convicted, as he put it, of be- traying their trust. "Were you afraid they'd expose you?" Kennedy demanded to know. "I was not afraid they could expose me," Hoffa replied. "I had nothing to expose." The prisoners were -identified as Dan Keating, former president of Pontiac Local No. 614, and Lois Linteau LMichael Nicoletti and Sam Marrosso. It was not brought out why they went to jail. Makes Angry Denial Hoffa denied angrily that he had shared in shakedown payoffs to Keating and other members of the local. Carmine Bellino, a committee investigator-accountant, testified $20,000 in union funds was spent for the defense of Linteau, Nico- letti and Keating. Spent on Legal Fees He said $625,00 was spent for legal fees between 1953 and 1959 by the Teamsters Central States Conference and several locals. Bellino added that a substantial portion of it went to defend Team- sters in criminal cases. Meanwhile, in San Francisco, the trucking industry accused Hoffa of scuttling a contract agreement, with a resulting shut- down of trucking operations in 11 Western states. . Operations Suspended Major interstate motor carriers in the West were suspending oper- ations and laying off personnel. A spokesman for the California Trucking Assn. announced that letters detailing the alleged Hoffa interventibn were being mailed to some 50,000 shipper customers in the area. The carrier blockade began with Teamsters striking trucking com- panies in California's San Joaquin Valley Monday. Sixteen transcontinental com- panies as well as interstate opera- tors then closed down under the employer principle that a strike against one is a strike against all. Einar Mohn, president of the Western Co±ference of Teamsters, said the union would file a one- million-dollar-a-day damage suit in federal court against employer organizations. AS TENSION RISES IN JORDAN: Marine Unit Pulled Out of Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon (R) - About! 1,700 United States Marines will leave Lebanon today a few hours before the United Nations General Assembly opens debate on the Middle East. While the departure of the Marine unit underlined the relax- ing atmosphere in Lebanon, the situation in neighboring Jordan showed no signs of easing. Hussein Threatened. Authoritative sources in London said official warnings had been received that an army uprising against Jordan's King Hussein was imminent. One informant said three at- tempts had been made to kill the King since British troops landed July 17 to protect him from a pro-Nasser uprising. The first American dependents pulled out of Jordan in response to suggestions from the United States Embassy in Jordan. They were the wife and son of an Em- bassy official. Token of Promise Adm. James L. Holloway, com-, mander of 15,000 American troops here, announced the withdrawal. He said it was a token of President Dwight D. Eisenhower's promise to pull them out as soon as the gov- ernment of Lebanon felt they were no longer needed to protect this nation's independence. To Blunt Charges The gesture was meant to blunt Soviet charges in UN debate, of American and British aggression in Lebanon and Jordan. Leathernecks of the second Bat- talion, Second Division-the unit ordered to leave-began hauling their heavy gear to the evacuation beach soon after Holloway's an- nouncement. Saeb Salam, the Beirut rebel chief, said "this symbolic step" was welcome but "does not fully accomplish the desired aim of the Lebanese people for complete withdrawal" of all troops. Racial Issue Marks Voting" By The Associated Press A contest between two Negroes for a Democratic congressional nomination held the political spot- light yesterday as three states conducted primary elections. Voters in New York's predomi- nantly Negro and Democratic 16th District chose between Adam Clay- ton Powell and Earl Brown who waged their fight almost entirely on racial issues. Observers said their contest could provide a gauge of Negro feelings on civil rights. Powell, 49 years old, who has served seven terms in Congress, is an impassioned champion of immediate racial integration. Brown. 55 years old, a city council- man and an editor of Life maga- zine, takes a calmer approach while working for civil rights. UNEASY THRONE-British and Jordanian army officers back up seated King Hussein as he views a day-long demonstration of Army loyalty at Zerka, Jordan, over the weekend. Ironically, rumors are now thick in Jordan that there is an army conspiracy to overthrow the young king. OVER JOHNSTON ISLAND: U.S. Fi res Test Missiele-; Flash Seen 700 Miles HONOLULU (') - An atomic warhead missile exploded over Johnston Island yesterday with a flash so bright it lit up the heavens over Hawaii, more than 700 miles away. The mushroom cloud of the nuclear blast was also seen plainly in Hawaii. It was the second known firing from the United States nuclear testing range at the South Pacific base. There was speculation the Ike To Call For Forces, Fmancial Ai Proposal To Create Commission To Cur Propaganda Expecte UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.() President Dwight D. Esenhow will lay before the United Nati: today a Mideast stability progra calling for a mobile police -for and financing for better livn standards. Eisenhower arrived in New Yo: by plane at 6:57 p.m. last night speak before the emergency sessi of the TIN General Assembly tl1 morning. Wants UN Force Authoritative sources said Io night the President would ask t Assembly to establish a permane: UN force that would be on call stop any threat of aggression c subversion in any country in ti Mideast. He aso was expected to urge creation of a commission to morn tor and report any radio propf ganda broadcasts seeking to In flame hatreds. This apparently would be ii tended to curb the United Ar Republic's broadcasts to neighb nations. Such broadcasts ha been blamed as incitement to i ternal rebellion in the Arab worl special status Desired One o th main objectives the United States was reported 1 be isolation of Lebanon and Jo: dan, by common consent, from ti currents of Arab nationalism. This would be a sort of neutral zation of the two countries. TI United States feels they shoul have a special status. Eisenhower was expected 1 place heavy stress on a new ec nomic program for the area, bI other main political proposals 1 ease tension were reported to bi Evidence of Concern The stationing of modest size UN elements in Lebanon and Jo dan as evidence of UN interest I preserving the independence 6 those countries. A UN declaration repeating tU General Assembly's 1950 resolutic calling on all nations to refra from fomenting internal politic: troubles in other countries. Will'Be Broadcast These proposals were disclose as President Eisenhower flew fro Washington with a rough draft the speech he will deliver befoi the emergency Mideast Assemb of the 81 nations at 9:30 a. today. Informed sources said the Pres dent and Secretary of State Dulli would put final touches on Ut speech in New York. The speech will be covered b all major radio and television nei works. ABC, CBS and NBC wi televise and broadcast it live. Mt tual Radio will broadcast It. National Roundup By The Assoedated Press. WASHINGTON - The Sena yesterday passed by a 72-18 r call vote a bill extending the rel rocal trade agreements act for fo years. * * * SOUTH WEYMOUTH, Mass.- A Navy blimp came home yester day from an 8,000-mile trip to th arctic and- its skipper proudl claimed there is no question of i ability in polar research work.' Capt. H. B. van Gorder sa: lighter-than-air craft could ope: ate from large and small bases. The blimp - nicknamed Sne Goose by its exuberant crew - went within about 500 miles of ti N.+th ,h , Ti- 1nA hnin +he a Or they may have marveled at the voice of a low-flying angel or a, high-flying car horn. Both times it was rehearsals of voice and brass parts which the maestro was mold- ing into the awaited Concerto No.' I which is to be performed at 8 p.m. Aug. 13. Prof. Price has long been a pi- oneer in the field of campanology. His recent experimentation with percussion, voice and brass com- bined with the carillon sound may, begin a new era in darillon music here at the *University. The present work is the result of research on bell harmonics, caril- lon music and campanological data accumulated over many years., There are many impressive facts concerning "The man in the top of Burton Tower," yet they are mere evidence of the musical tal- ent and skill which is expressed through the medium of bells. tests attended development of an anti-missile missile. Edward von Geldern, a civil en-, gineer, calculated that yesterday's atomic blast occurred at a height of "at least 60 miles." He used four methods of computation. Final Issue With this issue The Daily ceases publication until fall. Following special orientation and registration editions the week of Sept. 15-20, normal publication of The Daily will be resumed Sept. 23. Daily busi- ness and editorial offices will be closed beginning Saturday un- til Sept. 2. 'TOMORROW AND TOMORROW S. U.S. Readies Moon Rocket WASHINGTON (M)-Man's first moon rocket may be launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., next week- end, but none of the men in charge would say so for publication. - The Defense Department, seek- ing to avoid an advance buildup of interest, is keeping its moon- shot schedule details secret. Best Times Set However, the department's Ad- vanced Research Projects Agency in charge of the five lunar probes already authorized, has said that the best times for a launching this month would be either next Sun- day, Monday or Tuesday. Thereafter 28 days would have to elapse before there would be another period when the orbital patterns to the earth and the moon are aligned to provide the best chances for success. No Long Delays For that reason, if the Air Force --assigned to make the first three shots at the moon - is unable for some reason to launch on the first three days of next week, it probab- ly will not try again until Sept. 14i to 16, and thereafter not until Oct. 12 to 14. Furthermore there can be no long holds or delays in the prelim- inary countdown as have been common with the Army and Navy} satellite launching vehicles and with the big ballistic missiles now under test. MIGs Fire On Quemoy Scurry of Final Exams To End Summer Session, I "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow . MacBeth may well have been talking about finals, as far as University summer school students are concerned. Tomorrow is the day when the eight-week students will start the two days of exams closing out the session. There's more to finals than the s tests, though. There are all those overdue library fines and other fees for which the Administration ,T% 4has sent out the usual little pink slips threatening withholding of grades and credit. And there are last-minute plane and train reservations to be made to get home. Thoughtful students will re- member to buy those bluebooks today to avoid the rush of book- AM -: .7777