UNIVERSITY EXPANSION: POTENTIAL DANGERS See Page 2 Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom Dadili1 a>* PARTLY CLOUDY FUV1~ i -7- IX, No. 358 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1959 FIVE CENTS FOUUNT SN Castro Shuns Conference Little Rock Feels Boycot (4 SANTIAGO, Chile YP) - Cuban Premier Fidel Castro will not at- tend the American Foreign Min- isters Conference here on Carib- bean tensions, the Cuban ambas- sador to Chile said last night. ' Conflicts between Castro's gov- ernment in Cuba and the Domin- ican Republic regime of Rafael Trujillo were a primefactor in' etting up the conference. Castro's decision means that neither principalrprotagonist of the Caribbean arena will, be on hand. Trujillo never attends such Latin American parleys. Roa Gets News A delegation headed by Cuba's Foreign Minister Raul Paul Roa left Havana last night by plane for' Santiago. Carlos Lechuga, Cuba's ambas- sador here, said he had a phone call from the foreign ministry in Havana advising him that Castro is not coming to the conference. There had been an announce- ment in Havana over the weekend that Castro might attend some sessions of the conference., The Cuban ambassador said Ar- mando Hart, described as one of the leaders of Castro's 26th- of July movement, would come here as Castro's personal representa- tive. To Discuss Plots As Latin American diplomats gathered here yesterday, few said they expected more than calming psychological' effects from the conference. Town Ca ught In Strangfe I C Laoian'War SAM NEUA, Laos (M)-Casualties are slowly mounting in a' strange war between Communist-led guer- rillas and royal troops in the mountains of northern Laos. Brig. Gen. Amkha Soukhavong, commander of the northern zone, said yesterday his forces have killed 90 Red soldiers,. captured 9 and wounded an undetermined number in Sam Neua province, which adjoins .Communist N6rth Viet Nam. Government forces of this Bud- dhist kingdom have lost about 50 men-about half are listed as miss- ing, Amkha said. Hold 20 'Villages The general said the guerrillas hold more than 20 villages within the province, and the situation is The program for the Inter- American Foreign Ministers Con- ference, which opens tomorrow, is discussion of the plots, invasions and invasion threats, revolts and counter -revolution that have made the Caribbean a sea of un- rest since Castro's forces took over Cuba Jan. 1. But Latin diplomats have a lot of other subjects to discuss with Christian A. Herter, who arrives today for his first meeting with them as United States Secretary of State. Up to now Herter had been tied up with the Big Four Conference at Geneva. Talk on Aid Topping the list for private talks is United States aid for the Latin republics. The talks will be held outside the conference. Y , SAW Head Asks 'Open', Hearings Pi ti s a: P w d v : "But if the North Vietnamese do not build up" reinforcements or send in regulars we can manage," he added. The government seems to have the edge in manpower. Reinforcements Brought In Amkha said six guerrilla bat- talions totaling about 3,600 men are involved. There are 3,000 gov- ernment troops and 1,900 civil guards in the area, he said. About 2,000 reinforcements, in- cluding parachute troops and in- fantrymen experienced in jungle operations, have been brought in' r since the border incidents started. Everything appears calm in the town of Sam Neua itself, a center of 25,000 population 35 miles from the North Viet Nam border. Half Partisans Amkha said half of the Red forces are partisans-some indoc-- trinated for years by the Laotian Communist Pathet Lao and some who were consteripted for Red t units - but all are equipped by North Viet Nam. About half of the infiltrators are reported wearing the green uni- form of the North Viet Nam Com- munists. The nearest action from Sam Neua is a two-day march away over mud roads that are impass- able to vehicles because there are no bridges over the rain-swollen streams. Russia Agrees To Draft New Test Controls GENEVA ()-The Soviet Union formally agreed at the nuclear test ban talks yesterday to write into a test suspension treaty a system to control high altitude and. outer space blasts. ISviet deapte Semvnn K Ta- WASHINGTON (P) - Walterc Reuther, president of the United Auto workers union, demandedo yesterday that the Senate Racketsf Committee open to the public thee investigation of his union sched- uled to start behind closed doorsa today.c The UAW president charged1 that the committee's RepublicanI members want the public barred so they can leak out allegations which, lie said, would never stand up in a public hearing. Accuses Republicans In a telegram to the committee chairman, Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.), Reuther accused the Re- publicans of "unprincipled and ir- responsible" tactics. ,McClellan told a reporter the committee could open the doors of the hearing 'room by a majority vote decision. He said he would be reluctant tot go on record as favoring such ai step "until I know a little moreI about it.".a McClellan said the committee's Republican members never have told him the full story of the na-c ture and scope of evidence they plan to present in the inquiry. I Opposes Demands. C Sen. Karl E. Mundt (R-S.D.) In a separate interview opposed Reu-t ther's demand for a public hearing1 at this stage. Mundt said it is usual to have some form of preliminary1 inquiry as a prelude to public hear-t ings, and that he believed thet closed session should go on as scheduled. Thedclosed hearings had been billed as a preliminary inquiry to determine whether evidence turned up by the committee's Republican members Js sufficient to justify public hearings. Union Leader, Sends Others Toa Negotiate NEW YORK (A) - President1 David J. McDonald of the United Steelworkers yesterday turned his back on peace talks in the- 27-day steel strike. He put in a second-string team of negotiators. "I got sick of that show in New York," McDonald told a group of strikers in Pittsburgh. "I will talk to people in authority. I refuse to talk with liaisons. " 'Must Bargain' R. Conrad Cooper, chief indus- try negotiator, replied that Mc- Donald's efforts to downgrade company negotiators to messen- ger status was' unfortunate and added: "Sooner or later he must con- front his responsibility to bargain with this team." WithMcDonald absent, peace talks here moved along on a hlf- hearted basis. Also absent was Jo- seph F. Finnegan, chief federal mediator, who was tied up with other matters In Washington. Deputy Talks Finnegan's chief deputy, Robert Moore, conducted the 'negotiations and claimed a certain amount of progress on contract details and language. But he reported "no progress on the question of the basic econom- ic differences of the parties." But they remain no less im- portant to the Latins, who feel hey are last in line for United States help - far behind Europe and Asia. The importance of Herter's presence to the sensitive Latins was underlined by the wave of dismay that followed news from Washington that he might stay only three days because of the press of cold war business. Plans To Stay Herter dispelled this fear by an- riouncing before his departure from Washington yesterday that he plans to remain in Santiago for the whole meeting. It will last six or seven days. But in the interim, some diplo- mats had expressed concern that the conference might fail if Her- ter did not stay around and dem- onstrate United States interest. OAS Calls Meeting The United States had been one of the most vocal in support- ing the idea of the meeting, called by the Organization of American States. , The OAS Council had found it was unable to deal with the May 31 invasion of Nicaragua and the June 19 invasion of the Domini-4 can Republic. Both those nations accuse Cuba of backing the attacks and called for a foreign ministers' confer- ence to take action. Castro, however, has demanded a more "democratic" OAS, ex- cluding all dictatorships. He aimed his remarks at Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic. Herter Calls For Candid WASHINGTON (') - Secretary of State Christian A. Herter yes- terday called for a candid exam- ination of Caribbean tensions by Latin American foreign ministers and agreement on measures to deal with them. As he left by jet plane on a two- day, 5,000-mile flight to Santiago Chile, Herter looked for helpful results from the special meeting of foreign ministers called by the Organization of American States in search of ways to calm the po- litically seething Caribbean. United States officials have looked with concern on the con- tagious unrest which has ruffled the Caribbean area, particularly since Fidel Castro took power in Cuba Jan. 1. The OAS called for the Santi- ago parley after finding it could not deal effectively with the May 31 invasion of Nicaragua and the June 19 invasion of the Domini- can Republic. I an airport departure state- ment, Herter praised the OAS and what he called principles and re- sponsibilities of international co- operation toward peace and prog- ress that have developed in the American 'community over the past half century. But he took note of the political tensions which have been devel- oping in recent months. I FIDEL CASTRO ... crushes 'revolution' Cuba Halts First Major Conspiracy HAVANA (W) -- Officials of Pre- mier Fidel Castro's government claimed last night the first major conspiracy against his eight- month-old revolutionary regime. has been crushed.; Unconfirmed reports said thei number of those arrested on sus- picion of anti-Castro plotting has reached 1,500. But even as top-ranking Castro; men said the conspiracy was smashed, there were indications, that cleanup operations were un- der way in strategic Las Villas province in mid-Cuba. Telephones Cut Telephone communications were cut off with Las Villas but tele- graph lines, were reported open. Reliable sources in Havana said the telephone blackout was or- dered by the 'government while arrests of counter-revolutionaries in Las Villas proceeded. Military camps in and around Havana were sealed off. They were reported holding hundreds of ci- vilians and army men bagged in" a, great military dragnet. Castro To Talk Entry and exit to the camps were permitted only on the authority of the commanders. The bearded Castro is expected to go on TV and radio today to give de- tails of the secrecy-shrouded con- spiracy to overthrow him. The newspaper Revolucion, or- gan of Castro's 26th of July move- ment, said possibly more than 1,- 000 people have been detained as a result of the discovery of the counter-revolutionary conspiracy. The newspaper La Calle, edited by Castro's former interior min- ister Luis Orland Rodriguez, said 1,500 are under arrest. Hernandez Arrested La Calle said one of those ar- rested is Arturo Hernandez Tellae- heche, a congressman under Car- los Prio Socarras, the former Cuban president ousted by ex- dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1952. The. newspaper said Hernandez had been designated by the con- spirators to be the new president if their plot succeeded. Castro's *president is Osvaldo Dorticos, appointed after Castro recently drove Manuel Urrutia out of office. LABOR: Rayburn Requests New Bill WASHINGTON (A') - Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex.) called last night for a middle ground ap- proach to labor reform, but spon-. sors of opposing bills signalled no compromise. Rayburn, in a nationwide radio network talk, said the proposal backed by President Dwight D. Ei- senhower would do "a genuine in- justice to the rights of honest, law- abiding working men and women." He appealed for passage of what he called middle-of-the-road legis- lation that "will correct the worst abuses in labor management rela- tions without trampling on the just rights of anyone." TV Debate But in a television debate, the sponsors of the Eisenhower-backed bill, Reps. Phil M. Landrum (D- Ga.) and Robert P. Griffin (R- Mich.), labelled their legislation "the minimum bill that a respon- sible Congress could enact in this field.'' Rep. John F. Shelley (D-Calif.), who authored a milder bill 'than the committee bill favored by Ray- burn, promised a fight for his pro- posal which he said would "get the, crooks in the labor movement and the crooks on management's side who have been working hand in- glove with them." The radio-TV debate came on the eve of a battle starting in the House today over the three pro- posals to curb labor-management racketeering. Right after Rayburn spoke, lead- ers of the various contending fac- tions in the House gave a televi- sion audience a preview of the heated debate expected in the House. Udall Backs Rayburn Rep. Stewart L. Udall (D-Ariz.) urged passage of the House Labor committee bill backed by Rayburn. Udall contended a measure sup- ported by organized labor would meet a veto and that the Eisen- hower-backed bill would be unac- ceptable to the Senate. "We've got to have compromise of reasonable men if we're going to get legislation," Udall said. He praised the committee bill as sound and strong. But no compromise stands were taken by Reps. Phil M. Landrum (D-Ga.) and Robert P. Griffin (R- Mich.), who introduced the bill President Eisenhower favors, and by Rep. John F. Shelley (D-Calif.), who is chief sponsor of the version supported by the AFL-CIO. Shelley said his measure would send the "scoundrels to jail" and guarantee democratic processes for union members without punishing honest labor. Still Going S ai Street Merchants Ignore Plan Council Pledges Fig On Any Integratioi L I TT L E R O C K (P) -MF Street, Little Rock, wad hit by economic 'war yesterday of schgol integration. A boycott was declared by t Capital Citizens .Council, pledi to fight racial mixing in put schools at all costs. Its spokesman and attorri Amis Guthridge,, accused dow town merchants of backing school board decision to reor public high schools tomorrow token integration. Guthridge, in a hastily cal news conference in a parkinig: charged the merchants h formed a coalition with the P goes. 'Run by Merchants' In Protest 'RECORD-BREAKER'-The crowds are still lining up to pay their rubles so they can see the American exhibit in Sokolniki Park, Moscow. Derogatory remarks and bad reviews by the critics in Pravda and Izvestia have not quenched the curiosity of the aver- age Russian, who still wants to see "American life first-hand." PLAYS GOLF: Presgident at Gettysburg T o Rest .before Tra-Vels GETTYSBURG (A') - President Dwight D. Eisenhower, wearing one golf shoe and one street shoe, went to the Hotel Gettysburg yes- terday and set up a temporary White House. Going directly to the hotel after playing 18 holes of golf, Presi- dent Eisenhower didn't notice he still was wearing a golf shoe until he walked into the lobby. A Secret Service agent hurried to the presi-. C ] S vc E ] t. t, d . 'C , f r f t "Little Rock is being run politi- cally. by Main: Street merchants and the Negroes," he said, adding that it was- time the Negroes shared in the "suffering. What effect, if any, the boycott would have remained to be seen. Business seemed to be going on as usual. Shoppers were coming and go- ing with no outward appearance they were aware of the segrega- tionists' economic war. Houston-Buford,'president of downtown Little Rock Unlimited, Inc., ignored Guthridge's declara tion. So did the president of -the Chamber ofCp nmetr, E. Grain- ger Willipas. Students Rally On the student front, 50 Con- federate-flag-waving teen-agers gathered on the campus of the now-closed all-white private Raney High. School. Some carried white banners let- tered in red. They were aimed at parents and other grown-ups. One read, "Should your chil- dren call you Daddy or coward?" Another: "Have cowards, will in- tegrate." One girl, Sandra Jackson, called on the former students of Raney High to mass at the. state capitol tomorrow fort another anti-inte- g r a t i o n r ally. Sandra is the daughter of Mrs. Margaret Jack- son, president of the segregation- ist Mother's League of Central High.. dhentialcar to fe~tch the ot)hera street shoe. President Eisenhower's arrival at the hotel caught Gettysburg by surprise. Only a handful of people saw him enter. The word that he was there spread quickly and a large crowd, including many tourists, gathered outside. When he left 30 minutes later he got a big cheer. President Eisenhower's arrival at the hotel was the first indica- tion he planned to set up an office outside his farm for his stay here. He hopes to get in as much golf and rest as official business per- mits before leaving Aug. 26 for a. series of conferences in Europe with' fellow leaders of the, West- ern allies. These conferences are a prelude to the Sept. 15 visit to Washing- ton of Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. i House Group' Vetoes Hikei, In* GasTax c WASHINGTON (A)-The House Ways and Means committee yes- terday refused again to vote for an increase in the federal gasolinel tax to finance the nation's high- way construction program. The committee also put aside its previously voted plan to slow downl construction' of the 41,000-mile network, thus wiping the slate clean and leaving efforts to solvel the highway financing program right back where they started. Another meeting is scheduled1 for today in a search for, a way to keep the program from coming" to a halt for lack of money. Asks Tax Raise President Dwight D. Eisenhower; has asked for a one and one-half cents-a-gallon increase in the three-cent federal gasoline tax to keep highway building on a pay- as-you-go basis, but the committee has refused to go along. It defeated a motion .for such an increase two weeks ago and yesterday it knocked down a pro- posaf to add a penny to the tax. The reported vote on the mo- tion, offered by Rep. John W. Byrnes (R-Wis.), was 15-8 with three Republicans joining :12 Democrats to make up the ma- jority. Two Democrats voted for the motion. To Continue Work Byrnes's motion would have of Interatioi IN CHICAGO: Jazz Festival Presents Kenton, Others Adults 'Don't Care' ' Integration came to Little Rock in 1957-58 at Central High School. It exploded into mob violence and federal troops were called out to. police "integrated' attendance for the remainder of the term. Twenty to 30 adults watched the demonstration at Raney from their cars parked across the street. A police car cruised by but did not stop.' "We are being forced to attend integrated schools simply because grown-ups don't care," one of the students, 16-year-old Johnnie Es- kew, -said. Tighten Controls The school board moved to tighten ,its controls over public high school discipline, It warned any infraction of rules would be dealt with firmly. Identification cards were being issued 'to students and teachers to keep down traffic around the schools. Police Chief Gene Smith has or- dered all available patrolmen to be on duty tomorrow. He has kept his own counsel on his plans but he said whatever measures neces- sary to enforce the law would be taken. Six Negroes have been assigned to two once-white schools, Cen- tral and Hall, under a state pupil placement law which the board is using to limit integration. made the one-cent increase in the fuel tax effective over the next two fiscal years. He estimated it would enable the federal government to appor- tion $1 billion to the states during the current fiscal year and $1 billion in fiscal 1961. The House Public Works com- mittee, which fixes the amount to be spent on the program, has r Try To Start New Chamber >::: I