SATURDAY. /|\ARCH 8. 1958 WestAttemptsNewStart |k e Claims f/Co/i/er Axes UAW At Parleys With Russia Note J s ,o//er to Arbitrate UNITED NATIONS, N.Y... March 7 Western dis-j riODGCIQndQ i WASHINGTON, March 7 Unitea Auto Workers of annament stri tegy is aimed primarily at getting the Soviet Unionj r J fered today to submit their four-year-old stnke against the Kohler back into a new round of private East-West talks. i WASHINGTON*, March 7 UP) — : Co. to federal arbitration, but the company said no. Western diplomats said that is the purpose of the proposed meet-. President Dwight D. Eisenhower Lyman C. Conger. Kohler's general counsel said that while the ings of the 25-national UN Disarmament Commission and the Se-jwas reported today to regard So- Wisconsin plumbing fixtures firm is willing to listen to the advice cunty Council later this month. |v;et Premier Nikolai Bulganin's] of mediators it couldn’t allow any " | Authoritative sources said thatjnew letter as a propaganda docu-'outsider to write the terms of its! I i l |the two meetings, if held, would] ment which fails to ease the East-, labor contr act. JUTV WiCldlS V.nurcn tvroup Ibepur*. OuuUe.mitfuta.lotsmart.l_' . Wants Castro a Security] The Resident wnewrf gertoW theSenatelaS lliqiieSt _ . . „ •Council resolution simply calling. messa ° e pre- mittee. but “they couldn’t have! WASHINGTON. March 1 MV IO Air VI6WS i on all parUes concerne f t 0 tacklejdicted it would be rejected swift- too much knowledge about mak- A federal grand jury delving into HAVANAH March 7 The- toarmament t 'l I*"* 1 *"* emphatically ;ing bathtubs.” .the conduct of Richard A. Mack ' m ° re m pnVatC negotiatums-l They denounced Bulpnnjs pro-, The Senate-group is invest-gat-! 3 * a Federal Communications Views of Fidel Castro, a shadowy :There would be no mention ofPt* “S" mg violence Ind Vandal ism '.Commission member was report figure since he took a rebel band;which counties would take part, : rejertecTp^in^^ early P f rom £- K r , ohl f? pla , nt al Koh- ;ed today to have broadened its to the mountains more than ajsubjects to be covered, or where J „ g? ; ns .t~ad of winns !er - V, ' s " and attempting to fix nfh __ per mnu-r* year ago, will be sought by a Ro-!<* when the talks would be senous ! responsibility for it. m ? uj:y ,p oth " matters. man Catholic Church-appointed J Informed quarters said Am- j Bulganin’s goaL they said an- The-offer to arbitrate came; “ was * earnc “ lbat a group of committee trying to restore order! bassador James J. Wadsworth. ' peared to be to picture the Unit- from 1116 UAW’s secretary-treas- , witnesses not associated with the in Cuba. ; U. S.d i s armament negotiator, ed states as sternly and unrea-- urer . Emil Mazey. He told the Mack investigation have been The committee chairman, for-! had outlined the Western siral- sonably spuming a Soviet offer' senators the company had reject-Subpoenaed to appear before the mer Vice President Raul de Car- egy in detail to the Soviet dele- to end the cold war. ed arbitration offers in the pastL r __j • t t denas, announced that the group gate Arkady A. Sobolev, and t Secretary of State John Foster! but *e UAW hoped it would take, R y „I' IT o n naturally wants to hear from Cas- asked for his reaction. i Dulles, in leaving for a 14-day a new look at the situation. itrictoSr tbvthe Justice^Deoartl tro as well as from the leaders Western diplomats do not ex-, visit to the Far East, declined to' Mazey suggested the committee describe the reason for the ©r opp