FRIDAY. DECEMBER 20. 1957 Democrats Urge Trying New Disarmament Talks WASHINGTON, Dec. 19 (W)—Several Democratic sena tors today endorsed the idea of trying for new disarmament talks with Russia. A Republican colleague said this would just be a waste of time. They were all commenting on just ended Paris meeting tot the North Atlantic Treaty Or- Frank Receives l ga That nization . meeting reached agree ment in principle on a U.S. plan d• • ztiff Sentence to equip European bases with nu clear missiles, beginning perhaps in late 1958. The meeting also ap- As Illegal Agent ,proved proposals to explore the !reopening of East-West disarma 'ment talks. WASHINGTON, Dec. 19 UP)— Semi Hubert. M. Humphrey Attorney John Joseph Frank to- ax..mi ns o. most os iq oa l o f day received a jail sentence of those commenting, said Frail from eight months to two years! dent Eisenhower and Secretary for acting illegally as an agent of John F. Dulles had not actually Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo and won anything concrete on the missile deed.- the Dominican Republic. _Acceptance in principle does Frank, 42, former FBI agent!not nwan fulfillment in details," and attorney for the superseeretillumphrey said. Central Intelligence Agency, was; "What is more, because this ad convicted by a jury in U.S. Dis-:ministration has methodically—if tricit Court Dec. 9 on four chargesiunwittingly—permitted our mili of violating the Foreign Agents tary position to be weakened, we Registration Act Ido not have the missiles to furn- The crux of the allegations was:ish." that Frank acted on behalf of Tru- Humphrey said he hoped the AID and the Dominican Republic:administration would reconsider in this Country but failed to regis-:its earlier attitude toward dis ter with the 4stice Departmentlarmamerst talk proposals raised U.S. Dist. Judge James B. Kirk-I bY Soviet Premier Bulganin in a letter to Eisenhower earlier this land, who passed the sentence,i allowed Frank. to remain free un-! li m nth • tier $lO,OOO bond pending an ap peal. propaganda if th a t letter was a peal. propaganda effort." he said. "'we must at all limes be pre- Frank, a 6 foot 2, 217 pound for-1 pared to negotiate with Russia. rner football star at Georgetowni We must re-examine our dis- University, thanked the judge for armament proposals and make allowing him to remain free onl I up our mind what we 'want." bond while he appeals. I Two fellow members of the Sen- William H. Handley, chief pros- 1 ,ate Foreign Relations Committee ecutor in Frank's trial, a_sked fori--J. William Fuibright (D.-Ark.) a stiff sentence. land John J. Sparkman (D.-Ala.) Frank was indicted by a grandr—:igreed it would be wise to jury last May. !press disarmament, efforts. USSR to Increase Research Spending MOSCOW, Dec. 19 (.P)—Finance Minister Arseny Zverev told the Soviet Parliament today the U.S.S.R. will spend a total of 18,200,000,000 rubles in 1958 on scientific research. At the official echange rate of four rubles to a dollar, this is the equivalent of about $4.5 billion. Zverev also told the Supreme Soviet 1958 science research spending would increase by, 1,-, - 800,000,000 450 million —over 1957. Zverev announced that 1958 appropriations for The Ministry of Defense are scheduled at 96,300,000.000 rubles, compared with 96.700,000.000 rubles for 1957. He termed this small re duction a "reflection of the tire less efforts of the Soviet Union in directing the strengthening of peace and friendship among peoples." In Soviet budgetary practice, Ministry of Defense appropria tions include only a part of actual total spending for military pur poses. Other forms- of military spending are hidden in other ap propriations and cannot be esti mated. Western economists consider it, likely, in addition, that the prices charged the Ministry of Defense for war materials pro duced in Soviet factories are kept at levels much below the cost of their production—with the consequent factory deficits covered out of appropriations "for the national economy." best of modern literature comes to you in EVERGREEN BOOKS 'l7: The revolutionary soft-cover series, now at bookstores everywhere! 4EASON AND ENERGY. Michael Hamburger traces the development of modem German literature from Holderlin and Kleist through Itichner, Heine and the Expressionist poets. EVERGREEN REVIEW San Francisco Scene --poems, essays, and short stories by 17 of the San Francisco writers who are setting a hew Ace for American literature. Includes Allen Ginsberg's Howl and works by Lawrence Fey linghetti, Jack Kerouac, Michael %smoker. Kenneth Beeroth and many others. SLOG "SYCHOANALYSIS: EVOLUTION AND DEVTL CEMENT. 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Put the first squeeze on non-Dutch Western business in 19 ('Pi—An Air Force Thor balls- Jakarta since the onset of the angry dispute with the Nether tic missile rose beautifully into lands over West New Guinea. the sky today and flew presurrh ably hundreds of miles out over About 300 American, British, French, Belgian and other the Atlantic. }Western businessmen were sum-, It was the third of America's moned to a meeting with nubta 'T big guns—the giant, long reach authorities and told they m u st hirteen Killed , weapons of push button war—to surrender a fourth of the houses; be test launched here this week. they own in Jakarta. Never before has this Missile. They were told the houses Test Center disposed of so much must be given up within a short s As Tornadoes destructive power so swiftly. And time and would not be paid for. Rip Mid-I/Vest it was as beautiful a flight to The reason was not c l ear. The watch, on a perfect sunny after-' businessmen sa i d at . proceed _ , noon, as veteran observers here ings were conducted in Ledo- ' WURPHYSBORO. In . Dec 19 have known. nesian so they did not under- ,' , 4l—Tornadic winds bearing hea- Within 25 minutes of the launch- stand everything that was said. , vy rain moved into twister town ing of the Defense Department m The action appearedsouthern Illinois again tonight, what many here say is a sharp Washington announced that the to reflect creating new misery for this dev- Thor intermediate range ballistic decline of U.S. prestige in Indo-,astated area generally known as nesia ,"Tornado Alley" missile—lßßM—had been test fired i In the wake of tordanoes that "The missile flew its prescribed They say the decline began with i the Little Rock school integration last night killed 12 persons in southern Illinois and another in course and landed in its preset- the which brought angry edi-; lected impact area," the announce . tonal., in the Indonesia press: and teastern Mmouri, a new storm I ment said. 'lashed the towns of Elkville, Roy -1 That was Pentagonese for a suc gamed momentum when the Rus sians launched their Sputnik. l E lkyille is just 15 miles altown and Waltonvil:e i cessful launch. a successful flight, north a successful everything. LafelY , some officials are least of Murphysboro, where nine The Thor, an estimated 60 feet, showing rising irritation about of last night's storm deaths oc- Jong and weighing probably more U.S. aloofness In Indonesia's curred Royaltown is in the same Ithan 50 tons—the exact figures campaign to pressure the Dutch genera! area. Waltonvilte is near are secret—was designed -to de- to surrender West New Guinea Mount Vernon. another, c ity liver a nuclear warhead against —or West Irian as the indones- , where -devastation was great last targets up to 1500 miles distant inns call it. knight Ilts average speed over that range Some officials blame U.S. neu- i No injuries v. ere reported im 'would be near 7000 miles an hour trality for the rising popularity ,mediately as a result of tonight's ; , of the Communists. ,wires described by state police as Green to Seek i Premier Djuanda said only yes-`of tornadic force. , terday that positive action by thel A small garage was wrecked at United States on the Irian_issue t Elkville and buildings knocked NATO Report _'resident ,ukarno told a visit- WASHINGTON, Dec. 19 (R)— ing U.S. congressman: "Indo-, Chairman Theodore F. Green (D.- ! nesians are slipping into the Com- RI) of the Senate Foreign Rela-'munist camp since America has] *ions Committee said today Sec-!consistently refused to help us, retary of State John Foster Dulles: over West Than. If the United! will be asked to tell the commit-!States backed us. I could guaran tee just what happened at the. tee our entire nation would be NATO meeting in Paris. , pro-American overnight." Results of the North Atlantic. Treaty Organization sessions have been obscured "by a flow of: Federal Jury 'Hung' on Hoffa Case words," Green said in a state ment. NEW YORK. Dec. 19 iiP)—A fed-,to ask you. It is your duty to de- Several other Democratic sena-1 eral court jury trying Teamsters; cide this case one way or the ,tors endorsed the idea of trying , boss James R. Hoffa on wiretaplother." for new disarmament talks with Russia, one of the proposals grow charges reported tonight that itl -) verdictn and unable to reach a; w e d nes d a y . The jury got the case at 4 p.m. ling out of the NATO meeting. A But the trial judge or-' Tonight they sent in Republican colleague said such dered them to try again. (this note to Judge Bryan: talks would just be a waste of "The jury has had this case for time. 1 U.S. Dist. Judge Frederick V. 28 hours. We cannot agree unani lßryan told the seven men and five mously." women on the panel: I Hoffa, with Owen B. Brennan, like Leaves Paris, 1"I am going to ask you to make 4 president of Detroit Teamsters t a further effort to see whether i Local 337, and Bernard Spindel, a P Hopes for P eace ; you cannot agree. Ido not know.professional wiretapper, ha v e PARIS, Dec 19 tin—President how you stand and I am not going been on trial since Nov. 22. . 'Eisenhower said a wistful fare-‘ well to Paris tonight. But his! final words were a hope for world pi . peace. 'II - I Speaking in a strong clear 'voice, Eisenhower said he thought the ;NATO summit meeting had "done! something to make the, ideal of peace a little closer—certainly the: 1 'chances of war more remote." ' His doctor said he was fine, but he looked tired after his stren uous five days at the conference. JAZZ: ITS EVOLUTION AND ESSENCE. Andre Hodder complete, authoritative survey of the world of jazz from its New Orleans beginnings to the present day. "By far the finest work on jazz I have read.”—savenomp nevtrw. 7/.45 NEW EIGHT ON THE MOST ANCIENT EAST. By V. Cordon Chade. The birth of civilization told anew through recent startling archaeo. logical discoveries. "Outstanding."—sArcanny SEVlrff. 31.95 MALONE DIES. A novel by Samuel Beckett. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers