REPORT SHOWS LOCAL DISCRIMINATION See Pace 4 SitP Aa3i LITTLE CHANGE Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXIX, No. 117 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1959 FIVE CENTS SIX PAG Presidential Foreign A idill Requests $41 3i llio Wanted In Place Oi High Defense Visenhower Says Plan Would Buy U.S. More Security Than Military WASHINGTON () - President Dwight D. Eisenhower told Con- gress yesterday the almost four billion dollars he wants for foreign, aid would be money well spent. The President said in a special message that this would buy far more security than could come from stepped-up spending for this country's own armed forces. Some aCapitol Hill Democrats, who favor a higher defense budget than the President asked, quickly voiced doubt. Would Meet Red Threat President Eisenhower asked $3,929,995,000 for the mutual se- curity program in the year beginning July 1 and said it all is needed Nationwide Berin Talk, WASHINGTON (P) -- Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower will report to the American people Monday night on the war dangers involved in Rus- sia's campaign to force the Western Allies out of Berlin. In a special television and. radio broadcast, President Ei- senhower is expected -to stress the nation's determination to stand firm alongside its allies in the face of Soviet pressure. But he also is reported ready to make clear his readiness to ease 'tension"/bynegotiations toward settling the entire Ger- man issue. The White House announced that the President would speak for 30 minutes over all major networks, starting at 9:30 p.m. to meet "the enormous and grow- ing Communist potential to launch a war of nuclear destruc- tion" -- in the Berlin crisis, for example. "Dollar for dollar," the Presi- dent said, "our expenditures for the mutual security program, aft- er we have once achieved a reasonable military posture for ourselves, will buy more security than far greater expenditures for our own forces." Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.), one of the first lawmakers to comment on President Eisen- hower's proposals, said Congress may'cut the recommended sum to around three billion dollar. Mansfield, assistant Deocrat- ic leader of the Senate and a for- eign relations committee member, also told a reporter: Continue Overemphasis "The fact that the President proposed 62 per cent of the new program be devoted to military assistance and defense supports indicates that the whole pattern of overemphasis in this field is being continued." Sen. John Sparkman (D-Ala.), another foreign relations commit- tee member said he wanted to go over the whole program to see if cuts can be made "here and there." "I don't favor meat ax cuts," Sparkman added. A Republican member of the foreign relations committee, Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R-Ind.), took a somewhat similar view. Cautions Against Spending President Eisenhower, who re- peatedly has cautioned against too much defense spending, used vivid language in hammering his point that prudent foreign aid is a highly profitable United States investment. "We could," he said, "be the wealthiest and the most mighty nation and still lose the battle of the world if we do not help our world neighbors protect their free- dom and advance their social and economic progress. Adenauer Macmil1lan In Accord LONDON ()-Prime Minister Harold Macmillan flew back from Bonn last night with broad West German - and French - support for a program leading to summit talks with Russia by July, British sources reported. Macmillan hopes on a flying trip to Washington next week to win President Dwight D. Eisenhower's endorsement of the plan for East- West negotiations on German and other European problems. Essential features of the pro- gram, designed to achieve a set- tlement of the Berlin crisis and a relaxation of the cold war, al- ready have been cleared by key allied governments during normal diplomatic exchanges. In Bonn, Chancellor Konrad Adenauer said he and Macmillan "achieved complete unity" in their two days of talks. Speaking to reporters after see- ing off Macmillan on the plane to London, Adenauer said the talks were "excellent for us and for Europe." German Foreign Minister Hem- rich Von Bretano said the talks "produced a complete confirma- tion of our mutual policies" and demonstrated "that the solidarity of the West is unbreakable." The Macmillan-Adenauer talks had begun under a cloud of un- certainty. Adenauer was known to have misgivings over Macmillan's visit to Moscow last week. 'in Taylor Asks War Attitude WASHINGTON (A') -- General Maxwell D. Taylor told senators this country should determine "to go to war if necessary for Berlin," it was disclosed yesterday. "The effect of such an attitude would deter the Soviets from hav- ing a final showdown at this time,"' Taylor, Army Chief of Staff, said in a heavily censored transcript of top secret testimony. Taylor testified behind closed doors at a session of the Senate watchdog preparedness subcom- mittee Wednesday. The first part of his testimony was made avail- able to newsmen by Senator Lyn- don B. Johnson (D-Tex.), chair- man of the group. In it, Taylor said that many top military leaders now regard- the 1948-49 Berlin airlift as a mistake. The general said force should have been tried when the Russians blocked highways and other ground routes into Berlin. * * * * * * Senate R Williams' epublicans Velt Bond Pr oposa