J-HOP LIMPS AMIDST CHANGES See Page 4 Lw 3U1 ~~Ati CLOUDY, SNOW Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom LXIX, No. 86 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1959 FIVE CENTS EIGHT Pik EIGHT P4 SGC Tables Idea Of Larger Board Herrnste 1,Noskin Oppose Motion; Council Seeks More Information By PHILIP MLUNiCH Student Government Council last night tabled the motion on increasing the number of non-athletic students on the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics with a request for more information. The two present student members of the Board, John Herrnstein, '59, and Stan Noskin, '60, both told the council they did not favor the idea. Noskin said he couldn't see how a student not connected with House Selects GOP, Pear Takes sasS Reins #OF Ipe aker ---------- I-z Corporation Calls Court DETROIT (M) - The Ford Mo- tor Co. yesterday accused the Michigan Supreme Court of usurp- ing a legislative function in its de- cision awarding one million dol- lars in state jobless benefits to 11,- 000 Ford workers here idled by an Ohio strike in 1953. , Ford's general counsel, vice- president William T. Gossett, said the court's opinion, handed down Monday, is being studied by the company. He did not say whether the decision would be appealed to federal courts. Workers Can Qualify The State Supreme Court ruled Michigan workers can qualify for' jobless benefits if a strike in an- other state involving the same parent company takes them off the job. Gossett said the decision "is a matter- of deep concern to Ford Motor Co., as it must be to every Michigan employer or to any pros- pective employer considering lo- cating a plant in Michigan." Examining Opinion "We are in the process," Gossett said, "of examining the court's opinion and reconsidering the is- sues in the case to determine what action, if any, might be taken to prevent unions from using state unemployment compensation funds to finance strikes against Michigan employers who provide those funds." Gossett said the Michigan Em- ployment Security Commission referee, the appeal board and the Wayne Circuit Court "all found that the United Auto Workers union had used a local strike it called at the company's Canton, Ohio, forge plant as a level to pry collective bargaining concessions from the company in the mid- term of a five-year agreement." Gossett said the court, in re- defining jobless pay rules, "has substituted its judgment for that of the Legislature and has usurped the legislative function." In Lansing, a Republican leader said the court has opened the way for use of the unemployment com- pensation fund by unions as a strike fund. Calling the court Democrat- dominated, Rep. George M. Van PeurseM hinted the legislature might step in to prevent such rul- ings in the future. vathletics could understand the workings of the Board well enough to make a good contribution to it. "I think we are fortunate," Herrn- stein added, "to have even two students on the Board." 4He said the decisioyis of the Board are usually never close enough to be decided by one vote and that the Board mostly fol- lows the "recommendations" made by Athletic Director H. 0. "Fritz" Chrisler. Replying to charges that the student members of the Board do not go to meetings, Noskin said that, although he never attended a meeting, it was because of con- flicts. JOHN FOSTER DULLES ...wins support Berl Appi WASHIN of State Jo firm backin eim Relati Meetings Held Fridays day for his Most of the meetings are held of Western on Friday evening, he explained. troops in B (Football players are required to A resold spend Friday night at tie Univer- stand was sity Golf Course Club House.) during a Herrnstein said that he went to Sec. Dulles all the meetings when he wasn't se.ua len injured or hadn't athletic con-siatkon. fiicts. He did not specify how backs Dule many meetings this was. side Comn Herrnstein is in the second year Germy of his term and Noskin is in his Grmany. first. Student members of the Sec. Dull Board are currently elected for ican peopl a two-year term in the spring of "full of da their sophomore year. They take fice and se office in the fall. "We shal The proposed change in the stu- to stand fi dent representation would involve gressive thr cutting the athletic representatives the Sino-S( to one member elected by the Formal a varsity teams for a one-year term, aimed at v Two non-athletic team students sentiment would be elected from a slate of Deputy Pr four people nominated by SGC. koyan's tal Need Regent Approval President I This proposal would have to be and Sec. adopted by the University Regents pending fu to go into effect.pedn u Prof. Karl Litzenberg of the Sec. Dull English department, and a mem- the need fo ber of the Board, advised the fice" may Council not to recommend these tions. changes to the Regents. In his p He said the proposal was (1) the commi "highly ambiguous," (2) made a public, Sec distinction between "students" and must be pi "athletes," (3) provided two dif- perhaps g ferent terms for different classes sacrifice a of students and (4) was poorly counter the composed. tary growtl Prof. Marcus Plant, of the law school, said the current composi- tion was good and the Board has almost always found the student 121 VJ members "excellent."C The Council also approved a mo- -tir tion by Jo Hardee, '60, adminis- 0 1 trative vice-president, to "direct the Education and Student Wel- BONN, G fare Committee to present . . . all Gammal Ab information it can gather perti- to recogniz nent to the proposed merger of gime of Ea Wayne State University with the man for t. University." ernment sa It passed six to four over the The spok objections of David Kessel, Grad., ance was g and Richard Taub, '59, Daily Edi- ambassador tor, that the information was al- Becker, by ready available and that the public presi decision was outside student con- This was r cern. yesterday Bert Getz, Grad., told the Coun- Heinrich V cil the University has nearly $45,- The Wes 000 in student automobile fines, was joltedv The funds so gathered are to be premier, Ot used to finance parking structures. after visitin Getz said there was now enough Nasser had money to purchase a lot but a lations. Bor parking structure would cost about off relation $30,000 per vehicle parking place, nizing the] in Stand roved senators GTON (M) - Secretary ohn Foster Dulles won ng from the Senate For- ions Committee yester- insistence on the right n Allies to keep their 3erlin. ition supporting this informally approved closed-door briefing by on the international The resolution also es' insistence on main- e access to the city in- nunist-dominated East es called on the Amer- e to face up to years anger" with self-sacri- lf-discipline. 1 need the national will rm in the face of ag- reats and probings from oviet bloc," he said. ction on the resolution, voicingthe committee's in advance of Soviet :emiet Anastas I. Mi- ks this weekend with Dwight D. Eisenhower Dulles, was held up rther discussion. Jes told the committee or "austerity and sacri- continue for genera- repared statement for ttee, which was made . Dulles said America repared to face up to generations of self- and self-discipline to e economic and mili- h of Communism. ) t Refuses i Relaions ermany (P)-President bdul Nasser has refused e the Communist re- st ,Germany, a spokes- he West German gov- id yesterday. esman said this assur- iven the West German in Cairo, Walther the United Arab Re- dent himself last week. eported to the cabinet for foreign minister on Brentano. t German government when the East German ;to Grotewohl, claimed ag Cairo last week that agreed to consular re- Fn threatens to break s with nations recog- East German regime. War Crime Executions Continuing HAVANA (A)-Cuba's provisional government appeared determined yesterday to continue executing Batistans adjudged war criminals, regardless of what the world thinks. Revolutionary tribunals moved swiftly to bring more suspets to trial. Just how many eventually will die is anybody's guess. The latest counts show 161 ad- herents of Fulgenco Batista's de- posed dictatorship have been shot. Estimates Swell Estimates of the number jailed in the island nation's six provinces swelled to from 4,000 to 6,000. Suspects are still being hunted down. Perhaps 5,000 or more re- main at large. Some are accused of acting as informers, others of a variety of misdeeds. Fidel Castro, the civil war vic- tor who now heads the Cuban armed forces, has recommended long terms at hard labor for those convicted of lesser crimes. He re- iterated Tuesday night that mur- derers and traitors must die. He ordered tribunals to speed up the trials. His topflight com- manders backed him up. Cubans Maintain Rights Castro and other Cubans con- tend that Cuba has as much right to exterminate war criminals as the Allies had in condemning Nazi leaders at the Nuenberg trials after World War IL There -Is evidence of a growing irritation among Cubans over world criticism of the executions, particularly from the United States, Cuba's man in the street said the critics had failed to condemn atrocities under the dictatorship and that United States arms su-. plied Batista had contributed to' the killing of hundreds of innocent civilians. The United States arms shipments were suspended last spring, It looked for a while early yes- terday as if the revolutionists were relenting. Gives News John J. Skelly, a newsman from Washington accredited at the for- eign ministry to distribute govern- ment statements to foreign cor- respondents, gave news agencies a statement saying the prvisional government had ordered a suspen- sion of the executions. Franqui was quoted as saying the suspension was ordered after Castro conferred Tuesday night with provisional president Manuel Urruta and a presidential secre- tary, Louis Zuch. But key points in the statement' were denied later by the presi- dential secretariat and by Franqu. Reporters assigned to the presi- dential palace were told: 1) execu- tions in fact are continuing in accordance with due process of law and 2) Castro and Urrutia did not meet yesterday. 'The Presidential Secretariat said further that additional pub- licity will be given the processes' of revolutionary justice, which at times have been marked by se- crecy.1 ALGERIA, DE GAULLE: Amnesty Aids NegotiationRumors PARIS () - A general amnesty for thousands of Algerian rebels gave a tremendous boost yester- day to reports that President Charles de Gaulle is making a new effort to get a cease-fire in the four-yearwar in North Africa. Despite denials, reliable sources said that negotiations were in progress between the French and the Algerian nationalists. Paris newspapers headlined that a new initiative was being taken in the costly rebellion. Minister of State Andre Mal- raux, in a luncheon speech crypti- cally remarked: "Since there have been wars there have been nego- tiations . . . that which spells the difference between frivolous nego- tiations and the others is the re- sult." Pillon Asks Constitutionl A-mendment LANSING (M)-A Detroit attor- ney yesterday proposed to amend the State constitution to prohibit state income taxes on personal in- comes of less than $10,000. Attorney Gregory M. Pillon sub- mitted to the Secretary of State's office a proposed petition calling for a vote on the plan. Signatures of 231,000 voters-10 per cent of the total vote for governor at the Nov. election--would be needed to put the proposal on the ballot. Sends Letter "The best way I know to cut down the growing size of govern- ment and government expense is to limit taxes," Pillon said in a letter to Secretary of State James M. Hare. Pillon's proposal came in the wake of moves to bail the State out of its financial troubles with a personal income tax. Respond to Appeal Meanwhile State Treasurer San- ford A. Brown reported the first response to an appeal for early tax payments by Gov. G. Mennen Williams. A check for $48,727 was received from E. Davison Potter, president of the City Bank and Trust Co. of Jackson, in full payment of in- tangible taxes which would be due March 30. Potter also is vice-presi- dent of the Michigan Bankers Assn. The governor has asked large Michigan taxpayers to try and get their payments in early to help the state out of its financial crisis. The amnesty, which could be calculated to create a better at- mosphere for negotiations, came with these developments: 1) The provisional Algerian government in exile has been meeting almost continuously in Cairo for four days to discuss important matters. 2) Italian Premier Amintore Fanfani, who was in Cairo last week, arrived in Paris and was driven directly to Elysee Palace. for a 70-minute talk with de Gaulle. He will see premier Michel Debre today. Fanfani had been preceded by reports from usually well- informed sources that he would report on contacts with the rebel headquarters in Cairo, or at least on the views of U.A.R. president Gamal Abdel Nasser who gives strong backing to the Algerian cause. One French source had de- scribed Fanfani as de Gaulle's un- official ambassador on the trip to Cairo. But Fanfani emphatically denied being a go-between when he talked to newsmen after see- ing de Gaulle. "Absolutely no, this is not true at all," he said. Another denial came from in- formation minister Mohammad Yazid of the Algerian government in exile. He said in Cairo there had been reports that Fanfani J-Hop Moves To League A motion to move this year's J-Hop from the Intramural Build- ing to the League was passed by the Student Government Council last night. The motion, resulting from the low ticket sales, was necessary to save SGC a $2,000 to $2,500 loss on the activity, according to Murray Feiwell, '60, general chairman. With the present location of the dance, the quota of. 475 tickets necessary to meet expenses, "should be met with ease," he said. Due to the smaller size of the League, booths will not be neces- sary and payment for the six already sold will be refunded. Asked about possible plans for a last-minute spurt of ticket sales, Feiwell said the central committee "hadn't thought of that," but this is probably the last J-Hop any- way." Blam'ing the low ticket sales on student apathy, he said the central committee had done "everything except line people up at thead- ministrative building and take" seven dollars out of their pockets." was attempting to act as an in- termediary, and also that a secret French delegation was in Cairo but "I deny strongly all these re- ports." Yazid said the French amnesty could have positive results only if Paris is willing to negotiate direct- ly with the exile regime "for a peaceful solution to the Algerian problem." - The Algerians still insist, he said, that the French negotiate in a neutral country on both a poli- tical and military settlement. Ike Admits U.S. Behind WASHINGTON () -President Dwight D. Eisenhower offered an opinion yesterday that "we would be more than a little stupid" not to believe that Russia is outstrip- ping the United States in some phases of missile development. After all, he said, Russia has been working at it many years but the United States began ur- gent work on long-range missiles only four years ago. But on the encouraging side of the missile and defense picture, President Eisenhower said: "I think we have made very remark- able progress." , That got him a round of ap- plause at a different sort of ques- tion and answer session with news. men. This wasn't the President's usual news conference, although it was the usual day for one, Rather it was his first appearance at the n-tional press club since he en- tered the White House. With the Presidential and Amer- ican flags at his back, and TV and radio networks carrying his words live to the nation, President Eisenhower said he was glad to help the press club observe its golden Jubilee year. Then for three-quarters of an hour he fielded questions relayed to him by press club president John V. Horn- er of the Washington Evening Star. Some of the high points: Seg- regation - the school integration problem "must be solved," Presi- dent Eisenhower said. He didn't say how, but he repeated an old position: that it will take time and dedication and "a standard of living by the concepts of the con- stitution." ' Politics-the President said that if a Republican aspirant for the White House in 1960 doesn't go along with his basic thinking on the relationship of the govern-" ment to the individual and on the need of free world cooperation, "I couldn't possibly support him." He went on to say, without naming them, that he could list a half dozen, 10 or a dozen "fine, virile men in the Republican party that I would gladly support." Saying he doesn't like terms he doesn't understand, President Eisenhower didn't directly answer a request to explain whether he has "drifted away from modern Republicanism toward traditional Republican conservatism." He said he doesn't see any real difference between Republicanism, modern Republicanism and pro- gressive Republicanism - that he believes in applying the principles of the founding fathers to the problems of today. Jludic Changes Late Minutes By JANE McCARTHY Changes in mechanics to coin- cide with the change in women'sA hours to go into effect next semes- ter were decided upon by Women'sj Judiciary Council last night, in- cluding an increase in penalties _ for lateness. IlDemocrat Causes New Power Shift Kowalski Warns Majority Needed To Approve Bills LANSING (A') - Bucking Demo- cratic protests, House Republicans took full control of the evenly di- vided House of Representatives yesterday. All of the 55 GOP members of the lower chamber showed up for the opening session of the 70th legislature to elect Rep. Don R. Pears (R--Buc h a n a n) House speaker. Democrats Back Kowalski The backed Detroit Lone session singer likely 54 Democrats present Rep. Joseph Kowalski (D- ) for the assignment. member absent from the was Rep. Josephine Hun- (D-Detroit), whose vote would have thrown the battle for control into a 55-55 deadlock. Mrs. Hunsinger was con- fined to Detroit Osteopathic Hos- pital where she underwent major surgery last Friday. Rep. Pears, former speaker pro tem and successor to Rep. George M. Van Peursem (R-Zeeland) as speaker, immediately announced plans to name Republicans as chairman of every House commit- tee. Republicans also will predom- inate in committee membership, he said. Boyer is Pro-Tem Elected speaker pro tem by the same one-vote margin was Rep, Charles A. Boyer (R-Manistee). Norman t. Philleo was retained as House Clerk and John Klingen- berg as Sergeant at Arms. Both are Republican appointees. Fighting the GOP maneuver, Kowalski warned, that the 55-55 membership can become "a two- edged sword." "It takes 56 votes to pass a bill," he said, "and no bills will pass un- less at least one Democrat votes for it. We will wait for the day when we have a majority of mem- bers present to see what we can do." Organization Quiet Organization of the State Sen- ate was quiet and routine with Republicans in a 22-12 majority. Sen. Frank Beadle (R-St. Clair) was named as majority leader, Sen. Charles T. Prescott (R-Pres- cott) as president pro tem, and Sen. Lynn 0. Francis (R-Mid- land) assistant floor leader. Demo- cratic floor leader is Sen. Harold Ryan (D-Detroit); his assistant is Sen. Philip Rahoi (D-Iron Mountain). Attention today will focus on Gov. G. Mennen Williams' open- ing message to the legislature. In it, he will report on the state's general situation and recommend ways to pull the state out of its immediate cash crisis, Earlier, he indicated the state would need between 35 and 75 million dollars within the next month to pay current bills. Board S s Two Delegates The Ann Arbor Board of Edu- cation has decided to send two members to tomorrow's hearing on the proposed Eastbelt bypass, it announced at is meeting last night. Board President Prof. Harlan Bloomer, of the speech depart- ment, said that the Board believes the bypass is not against the in- terests of the school district. The Board made no formal reso- lution for or against the proposal. The Board members who will attend tomorrow's hearing are Mrs. Ruth Williams and Albert J. Coudron. Earler in the meeting, "Report- ing to P.aent". , t a . n f World News Roundup By The Associated Press JERSEY CITY, N.J.-A smiling Marie Torre, confident that she upheld press freedom by going to prison rather than disclose the source of a news item, was released from jail today. "I did it all for the principle," the syndicated New York Herald Tribune columnist told newsmen. "Actually, this was the easy way, the other way *would have been to betray my profession, my friends, my church, my parents -every- thing I believe in." * , * "*" NEW DELHI -President Tito PICKETS SHOUT 'BUTCHER': Mikoyan Lunches with Wall Street I 4tnancters By The Associated Press NEW YORK - The Kremlin finally shook hands yesterday with Wall Street-its ancient capitalist whipping boy-as Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan lunched with some of America's top financiers, In a highlight of his visit to this country, Mikoyan walked into the City Bank Farmers Trust Co. building as luncheon guest _of banking representatives. Tost Police Lines Police lines were posted in the famed financial district to keep the curious at a distance. rival at Idlewild Airport, and in Wall Street mustered only half that number. Picketing Intense During a just-completed trans- continental tour, Mikoyan was the target of intense picketing in a number of cities. New York City has assigned some 500 police to keep demon- strators in hand, in a display of security unmatched except for visits here of the President of the United States. Meanwhile, back in Moscow, a radio commentator, ignoring past picket incidents, lauded the warmthand friendliness of Mikoy- an's reception here. The broad- caster said it proved "howd-much the people of our two countries want to live in peace with each other and how alien to them is the cold war." No Cause To Fight Added the commentator: "There are no differences between Amer- "He went around feeling even leather," said Macy's board chair- man, Jack I. Straus. Furniture Draws Comment Synthetics and lightweight fur- niture drew Mikoyan's attention, and Straus told newsmen: "He said that in Russia they're getting rid of heavy furniture. He com- mented that we had, a much larg- er assortment of merchandise than they carry in Moscow's G.U.M. (Russia's leading department store). He was interested in our meat market, which I took him through. He said they don't have complained last night that big nations tend to interfere in the affairs of smaller countries. "There are many elements which have to be eliminated from pres- ent international practice in rela- tions between big and small states. * * S WASHINGTON - President Eisenhower said today he couldn't possibly support any aspirant for the 1960 Republican presidential nomination who was out of har- mony with his basic political phi- losophy. * * * WASHINGTON - Rep. Ray J. Madden (D-Ind.) said yesterday Anti-Picket NEW YORK (A') -A small band of pickets picketed the [Tces wh, ie AtpdRriip bI II