"U' ENTRANCE COMPETITION GROWS See Page 4 5kF4h 471Ap i SHOWERS, COOLER Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXIX, No. 138 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1959 FIVE CENTS, EIGHT PAG House To Submit Income Tax Bill Bipartisan Sponsorship Increases Chances for Legislative Approval LANSING (A') -Introduction of the first income tax bill was assured today with bipartisan support. Rep. George W. Sallade (R-Ann Arbor) said today he and Rep. Walter H. Nill (D-Muskegon), both members of the House taxation committee, will submit the bill, a modified version of Gov. G. Mennen Williams' income tax proposal. Earlier, an emissary of the Governor conferred with four mem- bers of the taxation committee in a move to boost chances for legisla- tive approval by winning bipartisan sponsorship. Republican House 'leaders, however,.blasted the move and said they would resist the bi- Rivght partisan tack in lining up sponsors. .ivi I lg s Fears Tax Stand "Williams is afraid to stand up to his own tax program," Rep. Alli- B ill Faces son Green (R-Kingston), GOP majority leader, said. He was join- 4 * * ed by House Speaker Don R. Pears (R-Buchanan), who said he want- ed no part of the bill. Pears predicted the Legislature Opposition by Republicans and will adopt a flat-rate income tax real estate interests has dimmed and a business income tax as a the hopes of passing the Demo- solution to the Michigan financial crat-backed civil rights proposal. crisis. The proposed-bill, which would He said the state income tax amend the State Fair Employ- probably would be a compromise ment Practices Act to provide civil on Gov. Williams' suggested gradu- rights protection in the fields of ated-income tax plan. :,',!'.i "',: education, housing and public ac- commodations in addition to the fair employment protection, was isc'sed at an open hearing in Lansing Wednesday. Brereton Bissell, '61, spokesman for a group of University students who went to Lansing to defend the bill, reported that it was at- tacked by various realty interests. Bissell said that this was the first time in ten years that there had been any open opposition to civil rights measures at legislative committee hearings. "There is very little chance of the bill get- ting out of committee," Bissell commented. . Sources reported that the Re- publican members of the commit- tee were "gonsidering" introduc- ing their own civil rights measure. R bbMen To1Contract Agreement CLEVELAND ( - The United Rubber Workers and Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. yesterday reached a contract agreement. It is expected to provide a basis for ending strikes of 58,000 pro- duction workers against the other three members of the rubber in- dustry's "Big Four." ' Details of the agreement with Goodyear will not be disclosed for a day or more. It was arrived at in a bargaining session here It about 13 hours after the Union struck the Firestone Tire & Rub- ber Co. and the B. F. GoodrichCo. Last Thursday at midnight the URW struck the other member of the big four ,the U. S. Rubber Co. The new walkouts added 18,000 Firestone and 14,006 Goodrich production workers to the 26,000 U. S. Rubber Workers already out. Spread over 31 cities in 16 states, the strikes against Fire- stone, Goodrich and U. S. Rubber added up to the biggest URW walkout ever experienced by the tire and rubber industry, which employs about 250,000 persons, in and out o0f the union's jurisdiction. Because the URW and Good- year were nearing agreement for a contract covering 24,000 Good- year workers in 11 cities, the ' Union held off on a strike against Goodyear when it struck the othera two companies at midnight, the | expiration date of contracts for all three: Although details of the Good-] year agreement are to be com- pleted and the pact signed later this week, it appeared likely that3 the strikes against the other members of the industry's "Big Four" would go into effect next Week. Civil Defense Test Scheduled Relieve Manufacturers He said Michigan manufactur- ers should have some relief from present state business activities and property taxes if they are forced to pay an income tax. The state income tax should be adopted only as a last resort, Pears said, adding, "If it (flat-rate in- come tax) is enacted, it should reach all but the lowest income groups." Sallade said he favored a gradu- ated tax in rates from two to four, per cent rather than the two to six per cent range proposed by Gov. Williams. Exemptions also would be allowed in line with federal income tax provisions. Seek Other Methods Gov. Williams, told of the de- velopment in Washington where he testified yesterday before sa congressional committee, welcomed the Sallade-Nill proposal. "The Governor said that when he proposed his tax program, he did riot mean to indicate his plan was the only method of meeting the problem," a Williams aide said. "He said that any suggested rea- sonable changes deserve considera- tion." Sallade said his plan was broad- er based than the Governor's, reaching about 65 per cent of Michigan's taxpayers as com- pared with about one-third to 40 per cent proposed by Gov. Wil- liams. Approximately $100 million in additional revenue would be ob- tained using either Sallade's or the governor's proposal. Both are also package bills. State Brown Says Money Here 'Next Week' Board Assures MSU Of Pay This Month By ROBERT JUNKER State officials yesterday assured payment of University payrolls, at least through May 5. Similar assurance was given Michigan State University. In a meeting with State Treas- urer Sanford A. Brown and other state administrative board mem- bers, the University was promised funds, "probably next week," to pay faculty salaries on April 30 and May 5, Vice-President in Charge of Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont said. Await Fund Action This payment is not dependent upon the liquidation or mortgag- ing of the Veteran's Trust Fund, Brown told Pierpont, but he de- clined to say where the funds would come from if action were not taken by the State Senate on the Veteran's Fund. Brown will wait at least a week to see if action is taken on the Veteran's Fund, Pierpont said. He described the University's situa- tion as "optimistic." "We hope the Senate (where the Veteran's proposal is current- ly tied up in committee) will act to provide the way for the State Treasurer to pay us," Pierpont de- clared. MSU Vice-President Philip J. May reported the pay promise from the state to the MSU gov- erning board yesterday. He said the state currently owes MSU $7,- 900,0000. The university has been paying faculty by borrowing and transferring money from other funds, May reported. Vote on Monday In Lansing Sen. Elmer Porter (R-Blissfield), chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said a vote will be taken in com- mittee Monday on whether or not to release the Veteran's Fund bill to the Senate floor. The bill must reach the gover- nor by April 24 to be used in meeting the University's April 30 payroll, state officials have pre- dicted. Pierpont said if the Fund is mortgaged, the University will need at least a week to negotiate a bank loan. "We've got to come to some conclusion pretty soon," Sen Por- ter said. "We've got to kill the bill, put it out on the Senate floor without recommendation or make a decision of some sort," he said. Assures ' * * * * * * * * * Grotewohi Dims Outlook For Agreement on s 13 'UNDERSTANDING' NECESSARY: Nasser Requests 'No Interference' of * PROF. ROY PIERCE .. on France Reds Gain In France, Pfierce Says By KENNETH MCELDOWNEY Communist resurgence in the November election constitutes. one of the most striking changes in French attitude, Prof. Roy Pierce, of the political science depart- ment, said last night. Last year, he declared, the Com- munists lost over one and a half million votes from their total in the 1956 elections. Local elections showed that the Communists have regained many of their seats, but few of these have been at the expense of the Union for the New Republic which supports President Charles de Gaulle. Speaking at a meeting of the Political Science Rountable, Prof. Pierce pointed out that it is hard to explain how this could happen over such a short period of time. Some observers, he went on to say, feel that trend can be at- tributed to de Gaulle's economic policy which some people feel has not been successful. "But in many ways it has been," Prof. Pierce added. A second reason is that many of the voters who deserted de Gaulle had thought that the French pres- ident would effect new sweeping changes. They too have been dis- appointed, he said. Many changes, however, have been made in the French consti-' tution and in their method of governing, Prof. Pierce explained. The ability of the president to dissolve the National Assembly and the need of a majority of the entire assembly to defeat the gov- ernment were cited as two of the important changes by the profes- sor. CAIRO (1) -- President Gamal sbdel Nasser says the old friend- ship between the United Arab Republic and the Soviet Union would be revived if Premier Nikita Khrushchev stops interfering in Arab internal affairs. "Our minimum demand of Mos- cow, as indeed of Washington or London, is that they understand Arab nationalism, appreciate its dignity and independence and support rather than subvert ,our stand on positive neutrality," Nas- ser said. Must Stop Communists In an interview with R. K. Kar- anjia, editor of the Indian weekly news magazine "Blitz," the U.A.R. president complained bitterly of Communist plots to establish an "Arab Soviet" in the Middle East. Nasser said that last December he had to act quickly to foil a Communist coup plotted by Red leaders in the U.A.R. province of Syria. Nasser charged that an all- Arab Communist underground was organied by Arab Commu- nists at the 21st Communist Par- ty Congress in Moscow early this year. Organize Subversion "Having secured an iron grip on Iraq, they (the Communists) set out to organize an all-Arab Communist underground for pur- poses of subversion and sabotage Scientist TO Deliver. 1Italk Today. Nobel prize-winning scientist Linus Pauling will highlight a day's visit here with an address, "Science, Morality and World Peace," at 8 p.m. tonight in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Professor of chemistry in the California Institute of Technol- ogy, he will speak on "The Nature of the Double Bond," at 12:10 p.m., today, Rm. 1400 of the Chemistry Bldg. Prof. Pauling was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1954 for his research into the nature of the chemical bond and its ap- plication to the elucidation of the structure of complex substances. His contributions to, chemistry have been recognized by several other awards as well as honorary doctorates from 15 universities. against neighboring Arab coun- tries," Nasser charged. "Here was planned the master- plot of pan-Arab Communist un- deground to work for the break- up of the U.A.R. and the creation of the Red fertile crescent, with Baghdad as a command post of Appointnient OfSecretary Imminent AUGUSTA. Ga. (M)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower reportedly has decided to name Christian Herter Secretary of State-if Her- ter's health is up to it. That picture of the situation developed further yesterday as President Eisenhower and John Foster Dulles conferred for a sec- ond time on selection of a suc- cessor to Dulles. Dulles, 71, resigned from the Cabinet Wednesday because of cancer. Appointment Likely Herter, 64, is undersecretary and has been acting chief of the State Department since Dulles was stricken anew early in February. Herter suffers from arthritis of the hips. The word afterward was that the two men are agreed on selec- tion of Herter-providing there is n'edical assurance that the job wouldn't be too crushing a physi- cal burden for him. It had been generally expected that President Eisenhower would nominate Herter yesterday when he announced that cancer had in- capacitated Dulles. Health Approved But the President also an- nounced he would delay choice of a successor for a few days. He stressed he was not ruling out Herter, but added "there are all. kinds of considerations to be studied." A prime consideration, it now develops, is Herter's health. There were reports of a new medical check-up-something not at all unusual in the case of men being considered for top govern- ment jobs. Herter's personal physician, Dr. Theodore B. Bayles of Boston, said, Wednesday night the undersecre- tary is "perfectly capable" of handling the full burden. the Communist counter revolu- tion against Arab nationalism." Nasser accused Britain of back- ing Iraq's Premier Abdel Karim Kassem against Arab nationalism. "The British still suffer from Suez sickness," Nasser declared. "They are like wuonded wolves out for revenge against me for having taken the Suez Canal Company away from them. They will use any instrument - Kas- sem, the Communists, anything that comes their way - to de- stroy me." Lack Policy As for the United States, Nasser said: "The trouble with America is that she has no policy toward us. "They (the Americans) want to influence our area like every big, power and that creates a contra- diction between us. At the mo- ment, they appear to be quite pas- sive." Nasser said Arab nationalists have no foreign allies any more and he must depend on the Arab people for support. He said that is why he has made his sharp public attacks on the Iraqi re- gime and against the Soviet lead- ers. Declaring he had entered into controversy with Russia's leaders "with the utmost unwillingness," Nasser went on: "Moscow on its side had built a reservoir of good will through the length and breadth of the Arab world because of its support of' Arab nationalism and under- standing of Arab neutrality. Then came our troubles with Iraq and my attack on Iraqi Communists which was an Arab affair and no concern of Russia's. ' Festival The following event is sched- uled for today as a part of the Creative Arts Festival: Color Slide Lecture by Den- nis Lucey of Ansco showing the technique of- color photography, 3:30 p.m., Architecture Aud. 'U' Scientist Wins Praise Hunein F. Maasab of the medi- cal school was recently acclaimed by the nation's scientists for his work in reproducing virus. Evaluating Maasab's research, Prof. Thomas Francis, Jr., also of the medical school and chairman of the epidemiology department, noted the influence it will have on vaccinations. Virus reproduction will make possible a simpler way of making multi-strain varieties of influenza vaccine, he said. Prof. Francis, who also directed evaluation of the Salk polio vac- cine, pointed out that this is an improved method of making single vaccines to fight several diseases at once. Further, it can prevent diseases by "chemicoprophylaxis"-or, the use of chemicals rather than the present technique where viruses or bacteria are used. 'Bald Soprano' To Open Here The Dramatic Arts Center Workshop will present Eugene Ionesco's "The Bald Soprano" at Payroll Fun I* Perlin. Strict Stand Outlined In Assembly Speech Indicates Reunification 'German Affai. BERLIN (P) - Communist East Germany dimmed hopes yesterday for East-West.agreement at next month's Foreign Ministers Confer- ence. Premier Otto Grotewohl ruled out any accord at Geneva to re- unite Germany or place all Berlin under 'United Nations rule. In a belligerent speech before East Germany's parliament, Grote- wohl outlined an uncompromising policy that undoubtedly fore- shadowed the stand Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko will take at Geneva May 11. Geneva prospects also were darkened by another exchange o Russian and United States protests over the latest buzzing of a high flying American transport plane by Soviet MiG jets on a flight to Berlin. Call'InternalAffair' In his speech Grotewohl de- clared: "The question of reunifi- cation is an internal German af- fair and will not be a matter for debate at Geneva." Just as curtly, Grotewohl re- jected United States suggeston that his East Berlin capital be placed under international Qontrol together with West Berlin. "We have no intention of allow- ing this," the Premier snapped. Grotewohl demanded acceptance of a Soviet proposal-already re- jected by the West-for trans- forming West Berlin into a so- called demilitarized free city in- side a loose confederation of the two Germanys. Outline Directives Then Grotewohl disclosed what he-and undoubtedly the Russians -want to bring up at Geneva. He said the East German delegation to the meeting will have these directives: 1) A World War II peace treaty with Germany must be concluded as a prerequisite to reunificatdh. 2) Occupation of West Berlin must be ended because the present status of the divided city threatens world peace. 3) A thinning out of troops in Central Europe must be brought about tc relax tensions. Accuse West Grotewohl opened his policy statement by accusing the West of pursuing aggressive policies and equipping the West German army with nuclear weapons. The Premier then declared that the NATO Supreme Commander, Gen. Lauris Norstad, and Gen. Nathan Twining, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff "and other American generals are openly |threatening atomic war." Grotewohl did not mention the latest United >tates-Soviet Berlin air corridor dispute. WorldT News roundup By The Associated Pres DAMASCUS - A spokesman of the United Arab Republic's first army said yesterday a Syrian frontier post repulsed an attack Wednesday by 50 armed horsemen of Iraq's Yazidi tribe. He reported five Yazidis were killed in a half hour battle and said there were no U.A.R. casual- Nixon To Fly To Moscow To Open U.S. Exhibition AUQUSTA, Ga. 00)-Vice-President Richard M. Nixon will fly to Moscow to open the American National Exhibition in July, President Dwight D. Eisenhower announced from his vacation headquarters yesterday. Nixon's trip is designed as part of a "hopeful approach to under- standing between East and West," the White House said. The American exhibit will be opened July 25 in Moscow's Sokolniki Park. At the same j time, a Russian exhibit will be opened in New York City at the D Coliseum.DRAMA SEASON Highest Since FDR Nixon will be the highest rank- ing United States official to visit Soviet territory since President Franklin D. Roosevelt did at Yaltaf in 2945. The announcement had a note of political interest. Nixon has been wanting to go to Russia and his visit will center attention on him in the months building up to nomination next year of a Re- publican presidential/ candidate.o The Vice-President is regarded as an unannounced bidder for the n nomination.. Quote Statement . . A White House statement said: "The President has named Vice- . = President Nixon to open on behalf. of the American people the Amen-. ... ca. National Exhibition in Mos- cow next summer. ". "The possibility of such a visit has been under consideration in discussions between the President, SPECIAL: .s To Get Low Rate Tickets By JUDITH DONER Exam-harried students who would only attend three of the five Drama Season productions will be able to purchase a special season ticket for any three shows of their choice, it was announced yesterday. Prof. Hugh Norton, of the speech department, representing the Drama Season Committee, reported that the "special" tickets will be sold to them only and at a price lower than the rate for the same percentage of a regular season ticket. Reports Prices "We are offering these tickets for Monday and Tuesday at a price of $6, and for Friday and Saturday at an $8 rate," he continued. "And the seats which the students will be getting are the best in the house." Wednesday and Thursday tickets will not be sold on this basis only because regular season ticket sales orders were made available before the new policy had been affirmed, and "the audience got the jump on us for those nights," Prof. Norton added. He revealed that the policy change stems from the fact that for many years the Drama-Season Committee has been concerned because the Season dates partly fall outside the dates of the school year and All Washtenaw County residents rQ .Akrlto faiup 41)rminuites to I