M1ACKEY: ANOTHER TRUST QUESTION See Page 2 Y L Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 41OF AN L -M A, - F"M m I-M AN m *414ppol " t I]v CLOUDY, COOL LXVUI, No. 3S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1958 FIVE CENTS FOUR Pi FIECET FOUR P nmmunists Riot kt U.S. Embass 'Yankee-Go-Home' Demonstration By Russians Noisy but Harmless MOSCOW (IP)-More than 1,000 screaming, banner-waving Rus- ns staged a rowdy "Yankee go home" demonstration outside the acted States Embassy yesterday. Previous demonstrations heavily damaged the West German and nish embassies, but the United States Embassy emerged unscathed. e only stone thrown went through an open window. The crowd surged against 150 Soviet policemen forming a solid e on the sidewalk in front of the embassy. It made no serious effort, break through. The well-organized, well-controlled demonstration ? was in retaliation for Sunday's Sixth Navy Satelite Fails To O)rbi A. A. DORODNITSYN . Soviet academician ed Science demonstration against the Soviet U.N. headquarters in New York. A group of Hungarians there were protesting the executions of Imre Nagy and other Hungarian lead- ers. Last week's demonstrations at the Danish and German embassies came quickly after publication in Moscow of news about anti-Soviet demonstrations in Copenhagen and Bonn. The Soviet press yesterday re- ported the New York rioting. So the United States Embassy was prepared. Windows were boarded, the first floor cleared and all Rus- sian employees were given the day off. March in Columns Demonstrators marched up to the 10-story building in columns. They flaunted their b a n n e r s, shouted and shook their fists. Some of the Americans looked out upstairs windows. The crowd whistled. Some shouted catcalls. Others took out mirrors and flash- ed the sunlight into the Americans' faces. A few walked through the po- lice line and wired 60 or so anti- American placards on an iron picket fence flanking the embassy, walls. Police Arrive Two hours and 15 minutes after the demonstrators marched up, Soviet police cars arrived and or- ders, to disperse blared from their loudspeakers. An hour later, they were still dispersing the crowd, but the ban- ners were furled and many dem- onstrators had gone. At the height of the demonstra- tion, United States Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson said that as long as there was no violence he planned no protest. Second Stage Of Vanguard Rocket Quits Scientists Seek Cause Of Repeated Failure CAPE CANAVE RAL, Fla. (.) - A Vanguard rocket was launched here early today but its "basket- ball" satellite apparently plunged into fiery extinction in the atmos- phere. Eighteen minutes after the blastoff at 12:01 (EST), the Naval Research Laboratory said the second stage of the three-stage rocket did not ignite. "After attaining an altitude of approximately 35 miles" said the announcement, burnout of the first stage occurred at the proper point. "Second stage ignition did not occur and as a result the vehicle CP BULLETIN CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. () -The General Electric Co. an- nounced early today it is devel- oping a radically new rocket engine capable of launching a satellite weighing as much as 10 tons. The company said the engine will pour out from 500,000 to one million pounds of thrust. That much power was needed to launch Russia's 1 -ton Sput- nik III. together with the third stage and satellite did not achieve the de- sired altitude and velocity. "Records are now being exam- ined to determine the cause of malfunction." Two earlier 20-inch, 211/2-pound spheres met the same fate, drop- ping back out of space when the carrier rockets failed. This was the sixth firing of the intricate and tempermental three- stage Vanguard. Only once has it succeeded in its mission-when it launched the little "Grapefruit" moon last March 17. The 72-foot Vanguard was far behind schedule when it blasted off. The delays used up more than two and one-half hours. *' * w Lebanon Seeks Artms UN Force ToEI U.S. Backs UN Defense Of Lebanese Administration Said Gravely Concerned halt In I iltratioi. *R DEMANDS U.S. STOP TESTS: Kremlin Threatens Gen O 'ractical' -)orodnitsyn By SUSAN HOLTZi R "Practical application" is the ey to Soviet scientific studies, iussian academician A. A. Dorod- itsyn said yesterday. Attending a mathematics col- >quium as guests of the mathe- matics department. Dorodenitsyn nd two other Russian scientists pent a week in Ann Arbor quiet- y surveying the University. Gearing their work to their ountry's immediate needs, Rus- an scientists concentrate their fforts on technological and in- ustrial advances, Dorodnitsyn xplained. Research, while plenti-, ul, is also in "applied" areas, he aid, adding that there were, how- ver, "quite a number" of mathe- iaticians and others who con- entrated on theory. Different Amounts The basic difference between ussian and American scientific :iucation, Dorodnitsyn said, lies ot in quality but in quantity. "Our science courses are obli- atory," he said, "while here you ave a free choice of what to udy. "I don't know which ,is better," e added, but went on to say he lt Russian students received a etter background. "Scientific in- eests are difficult to forecast," e said. "You can't tell what will e of use and what will not." Boosts Independence Dorodnitsyn rejected the opin- in of some American observers hat Russia's standardized curri- ilum and formalized teaching nd to stifle independent think- 1g. "On the contrary, we stimulate dependent work," he saia. _ . andley Free To Run INDIANAPOLIS (P-Gov. Har- d W. Handley can run for the ,epublican nomination for the nited States Senatedespite the ate Constitution's clause against ivernors seeking other office, the idiana Supreme Court ruled yes- WASHINGTON (-) - T h e United States indirectly accused Russia yesterday of trying to block United Nations action to d e f e n d the independence of Lebanon. A State Department spokesman said the American government is backing the, UN and "proceeding on the assumption that the UN will succeed in maintaining the integrity and the independence of Lebanon." Administration officials were reported deeply concerned over the increasing gravity of the situ- ation. Some say privately- that unless the United Nations can move quickly and effectively, the government of President Camille Chamoun may not be able *o withstand the pressure of rebel operations against it. UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold, returning from a personal mission to Lebanon, seemed certain to get prompt United States support for any new step he recommends. So far the United Nations has put into Leb- anon an international observer force of fewer than 100 men. The C h a m o u n government charged yesterday that Lebanese government forces were shelled from Syrian territory. United States officials were initially skeptical on this point. They said Chamoun might be trying to build a basis for asking United States and British troop help - something Washington and London are reluctant to give. The thinly veiled accusation against Russia came from State Department press officer Lincoln White. "In the case of Korea," White said, "they claimed that the struggle was purely a civil war and that United Nations action there constituted aggression." MOSCOW (P)--The Soviet Union threatened last night to scuttle the Geneva conference of nuclear ex-, perts unless the United States will say a universal ban on nuclear weapons tests is needed. The Geneva conference is set to open next Tuesday. . Washington reacted quickly. President Dwight D. Eisenhower on learning of the Soviet move called off a golf game and ar- ranged to meet urgently with Sec- retary of State John Foster Dulles. New Cycle Begins The Soviet shift on Geneva came in the midst of a new cycle of Soviet anti-Western outbursts on such questions as Lebanon and the Communist execution of Hungar- ian ex-Premier Imre Nagy. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko handed United States Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson a note last night warning the United States government that Soviet nuclear experts would not attend unless the Kremlin's conditions were met. The new development broke less than a week before the nuclear Fire Threat Worries NY NEW YORK {A'}--Uneasy patrols ranged over the fuel-charged East River yesterday after a flaming ship collision which sank one ves- sel and covered miles of water with gasoline. Two crewmen were lost in the spectacular disaster which occur- red when a Swedish freighter plowed into an American tanker. Thirty-seven other persons were injured. Manhattan Bridge, high above the ships, caught fire briefly. The burning tanker sank, loosing a flood of volatile fuel over the river's surface. For hours all river traffic was suspended. By noon, backed up boats were permitted to creep warily past the wreckage zone." Armstrong Accuses Group n Stormy House Session WASHINGTON (P') - A House inquiry into alleged influence peddling got back into high gear yesterday at a gavel-banging ses- sion in which a former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission accused the investigators of trying to muzzle him. In turn, members of the House subcommittee on legislative over- sight charged the witness - J. Sinclair Armstrong, now an assistant secretary of the Navy - of evasion, filibustering and impertinence. It was the committee's stormiest session since some meetings * * experts of eight East-West govern- ments were to start the laborious process of trying to work out means for detecting nuclear explo- sions in the event of a universal ban on nuclear tests. Follows Riots I It came soon after a howling mob of more than 1,000 Russians demonstrated in front of the American embassy in Moscow in what was regarded here as part of a general sudden stiffening of Soviet policy toward the West. The United States yesterday ac- cused Russia of ordering the dem- eva Meetng onstrations against the United States, Danish and West German embassies. The State Department also charged Russia's official news agency Tass twisted the facts of last Sunday's demonstration by Hungarian refugees against the Soviet United Nations Mission in New York City, A formal note handed the Krem- lin before yesterday'sI disorders. outside the Embassy appealed for Soviet action to prevent such a development. The demonstration was held anyway. Sohi Seeks Police Help On Borders General Assembly May Be Convened To Deal with Reques BEIRUT (P)-Lebanon asked th United Nations yesterday to sef off this country's land and se frontier with armed force and sto the pumping of Syrian and Egyp tian war supplies to Lebanes rebels. Premier Sami Solh handed I Secretary General Dag Han marskjold the request for a U police force similar to that keepir the peace on the Israel-Egyptia border at Gaza. A special session of the Ul General Assembly may behcalle to deal with the request. Truce Broken Only a few hours after the re quests, dynamite blasts and heav mortar, machine gun and rifle fb shattered Beirut's unofficial truc in three sections of the capital. Rebels from behind their barr' cades on the outskirts of the Bast Moslem section opened fire dow the long avenue leading to th~ city's main square, quick~ly chaslin away all traffic and pedestrians. Other firing and dynamite blast came from the Christian quarter o Ashrafiah, and from near the pos office. Attack Expected President Camille Clamour whom the rebels seek to overthro' in favor of a regime favorable, t President Nasser of the Unite Arab Republic-Syria and Egypt- has predicted a concerted rebE attack no later than today. Reports from Tripoli said th rebel chieftain, Rashid Karam had issued an ultimatum for th surrender of the Americap Pres byterian Hospital. No American are there. Kamal Jublatt, powerful leade of Druse tribesmen, said at hi headquarters 16 miles southeast o Beirut, that the would not perm: UN ovservers access to the Syria border in his territory. 'U Institute Reorganized Challenge Gifted Pupils Panelist- Recommends fthat led up to the firing of the Bernard Schwartz, who steered the inquiry into its present direc- tion. Yesterday's hearing bore main- ly on whether President Dwight D Eisenhower's chief assistant, Sherman Adams, did more than he should have for his old Boston friend and benefactor Bernard Goldfine. Adams and Goldfine all but got lost in the shuffle, however, inf high-pitched exchanges betweenX Armstrong and committee mem- bers. Chairman Oren Harris (D-i Ark.) at one point whammed hisf gavel down and dismissed Arm- 1 strong from the witness chair, At a later point Armstrong, who has had trouble with Congressr before in the Dixon-Yates utility r case, shouted at the committee: "You're trying to muzzle me.", He was, indeed, called by gavela and otherwise to answer questions Y more briefly and directly. group's one-time chief counsel, World News Roundup By The Associated Press PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -- Cambodian royal proclamation re- ported yesterday troops from neighboring South Viet Nam have nvaded and occupied several Cambodian border villages. King Sauramarit urged the United States to intervene as a friend of both nations and to ask South Viet .Nam to "stop perma- nently these unjust annexionist maneuvers." WASHINGTON --The Senate agreed last night to meet two hours earlier than usual today in an effort to step up the pace in ts consideration of the House- passed bill to grant statehood to Alaska. There were cautious predictions from the bill's advocates that pas- sage would come this week, pos- sibly tomorrow, with no change "America talks a lot about in- dividual differences, but does little about" them, at least until recently, Dr. Miriam Goldberg of Columbia University said yester- day in a University-sponsored panel discussion on the guidance of superior secondary students. The talented student, Ir. Gold- berg said, should be challenged to use his capabilities to the maxi- mum. She explained this chal- lenge should come partly from the schools through effective guid- ance and teaching programs. Ray LaFrey, '"principal of the Wayne Memorial High School, added that there should be in- creased understanding of the edu- cational rights of gifted students. Greater attention must be given Sto the probable futures of these students, he explained, in terms of the next few decades. To meet mediocrity with a. chal- lenge, he continued, action should be taken to boost teachers' atti- tudes regarding teaching as a profession rather than a mere job. Clyde Vroman, director of ad- missions, briefly 'discussed the North Central Association pro- gram which was designed to aid the gifted child through a con- centration of motivation. This Liftell To Talk On Religion association, he said, will include 100 high schools and cooperative associations throughout 19 states. Prof. Lester Anderson of the major concerns of the project: the education school discussed the ,sharing of ideas, coordination and careful evaluation. TO OPEN STACKS: Library To Initiate Changes Monday w it p By JUDY DONER Open stacks and check-out system similar to the one in effect at the Undergraduate Library will be enacted at the University General Library beginning Monday, Library Director Frederick H. Wagman said yesterday. Although initiated to facilitate use of the library, the action comes as a direct result of cuts in the University budget, according to Wagman. The State Legislature cut the University's 1958-59 operating budget $1,000,000 from the $31,000,000 appropriated last year. The $30,000,000 figure is nearly $8,000,000 short of what the University requested. May Cut Hours He said that neither the personnel nor book budgets are adequate to library needs and in view of this there is a possibility that library hours will be shortened next fall. The library does not anticipate any gretat increase in ,the use of stacks, according to Wagman. "Actually, the stacks have been opened to all students on Sundays during the regular year," he said. "Open stacks have come about rather gradually." Library personnel, who will be located at the main north door, will inspect all books, brief cases, large handbags and packages as patrons leave the building. This will be the only means of exit except in emergencies. Books will be charged at these exits also. Doors Changed The west basement door is no longer an entrance to the building and the west first floor door has been converted to an entrance only. Access to the stacks can be gained through entrances on the second floor. The desk service formerly given from the second floor corridor has been discontinued for all but the physically handicapped. from the House bill. Coordination of all Universit contract research programs is be OAK RIDGE, Tenn. - Eight ing undertaken by a reorganize atomic plant workers exposed ac- Engineering Research Institute. cidentally to a radiation overdose ERI research has been concen were walking about yesterday. trated largely in engineering an But doctors kept all of them the physical sciences. The Insti confined to hospital rooms. tute has been funneling project Examination showed that five to faculty members and conduct of the eight suffered some dam- ing research with its own full age to the bone marrow. time staff. The new organization, calle the "University of Michigan Re M cElroy Ends search Institute," will be an ad ministrative agency for all Uni versity contract research, hand eprisal Fear ling the non-technical "paper i work. It will not do research. WASHINGTON (M -Secretary The changes were approved b of Defense James P. McElroy put the Regents at their June meet in writing yesterday an assurance ing. that top Pentagon military and The contract research prograr civilian leaders are free to testify includes work sponsored by in before Congress without fear of dustrial companies, trade associa reprisals. tions, individuals, and govern The assurance, demanded by ment departments and agencies. Chairman Richard B. Russell (D- Willow Run Laboratories ar Ga.), of the Senate Armed Services now a separate research unit witt Committee, apparently ended a a director and executive commit feud between the two on that tee. Prof. Joseph A. Boyd, pres question. ently associPte director of ERI After Sec. McElroy's letter had will iAad Willow Run Labora ltaov rl-alitara n 01 Mt.%a a - tnrin ~iArt P rr..nlc n- he decision came just two days >re the GOP state convention ts here tomorrow with Gov zdley expected to win the Sen- nomination over State Sen. D', sell Bontrager of Elkhart inj only contest. i its decision, the high cnourt Franklin H. Littell will discuss "Religion in Post-War Europe" at 4:15 p.m. today in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Littell is currently representa- I I ...,