T MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. JUNE 26. 1962 TifE MICHIGA1~4i DAILY TT1V~DA'V.. JT~W 9~ 1QA9 4< 4 Welcome U. of M. Students" We, of Barnard's Campus Casuals, will be looking forward to seeing you . . . serving you ... helping you ... to plan a smart, bal- anced wardrobe for this fashion season. Our clothes are neither the cheapest you can find I nor the most expensive. But we have many well dressed customers who maintain that they are unsurpassed for value. We hope you'll find ours a pleasant store to shop in during your stay in Ann Arbor. BARNARD'S CAMPUS CASUALS 1111 S. University{ Phone NO 3-2645 gy 0400 Few Contests Mark Primary 'I A derth of statewide races marks the primary election ballot for the August 7 election. Only the lieutenant governor- ship nomination has opposition as Sen. John H. Stahlin (R-Belding), former Lt. Gov. Clarence A. Reid of Detroit and con-con delegate Rockwell T. Gust (R - Grosse Pointe) fight for the Republican nomination. Incumbent Democrat T. John Lesinski gained surprise opposition as former Hamtramck mayor Jo- seph A. Lewandowski filed for the Democratic nomination an hour before last Wednesday's 4 p.m. deadline. No Opposition George Romney and Gov. John B. Swainson have no opposition in their primary bids for their party's gubernatorial nomination. John Dazell of Detroit, the last of the announced candidates against Romney, faded out two minutes before the deadline when he failed to compile enough sig- natures. Dazell was 145 names short of the 14,542 needed and ' lacked any allowance for invalid' ones. w HOUSING State Appeals Decision Invalidating Rule Nine CANDIDATES-Republican George Romney (left) and Democrat Gov. John B. Swainson head their respective primary ballots fac- ing no opposition in the August 7 election. Other candidates are less fortunate although contests are the exception rather than the rule on the local ballot. Earlier, Lansing industrialist George Correy bowed out because of ill health and L. Montgomery P Fr I 3 i 1 i i Shepard of Niles refused a local draft. Former Congressman A l v i n Bentley of Owosso has no compe- tition for the Republican nomina- tion for congressman-at-large. Former state Democratic Patty Chairman , Neil Staebler has an equally easy path to the Demo- cratic nomination for the post. Locally, the Democrats will have primary races for congressman, state senator, and sheriff while Republican competition centers on state representative, sheriff and county treasurer. Democrats Thomas P. Payne of Ann Arbor and Joseph B. Gasior- owski of Monroe will battle for the right to meet incumbent George Meader (R-Ann Arbor) for the Second District congressional seat. Prof. Henry Bretton of the poli- tical science department and in- cumbent Rep. Gilbert Bursley (R- Ann Arbor) will run unopposed for the Washtenaw County first dis- trict nominations. In the Second District, incum- bent James Warner (R-Ypsilanti) faces a challenge from Roy Smith to face Democrat Charles F. Gray in November. I Challenges Several leading moderate and conservative leaders face pri- mary battles this year. Sen. Carlton H. Morris (R- Kalamazoo) gained opposition when constitutional convention delegate Garry Brown (R-Kal- amazoo) filed to run against him. Others facing battles are Sens. Elmer R. Porter (R-Bliss- field), Glyde H. Geerlings (R- Holland), Charles R. Feenstra (R-Grand Rapids) and Paul C. Younger (R-Lansing). Moderate Sens. Frederick Hilbert (R-Wayland) and Far- rell E. Roberts (R-Pontiac) also gained primray opposition. Several conservatives will not return in January. Senate Ma- jority Floor Leader Lynn O. Francis (R-Midland), Sen. Clarence F. Graebner (R-Sag- inaw) and Sen. Perry W. Greene (R-Grand Rapids) are retiring. Moderate Sen. John Stahlin (R-Belding) is seeking the GOP lieutenant governor nom- ination. Former Detroit Tiger outfielder Richard Wakefield switched races at the last moment and filed to run for the Democratic state sen- atorial nomination instead of Con- gress. Wakefield did not have enough signatures for the other race. He will be opposed by Prof. Robert J. Niess of the Romance languages department. State Sen. Stanley G. Thayer (R-Ann Arbor) is running unop- posed in his nomination bid. Democrats Elmer F. Klump and John W. Powers will battle for the Washtenaw County sheriff nomi- nation. Incumbent George A. Pe- terson faces two Republican chal- lengers, George Stanch and John L. Tice. County Treasurer William F. Verner faces Sylvester A. Leonard in the primary. The winner will battle Democrat Thomas E. Kaas for the position. Unopposed Democrats are: Van- zetti M. Hamilton, prosecuting at- torney; Adeline Drews, county clerk; Mae Hardenbergh, registrar of deeds; Richard E. Nash, drain commissioner; and Edward .L. Jonas, surveyor. Other Republican hopefuls are: incumbent William F. Ager, prose- cuting attorney; incumbent Luella M. Smith, county clerk; incumbent Patricia N. Hardy, registrar of deeds; and incumbent Herbert S. Hicks, surveyor. Urges Atomic Accelerator. A proposal to build a $79 mil- lion high intensity particle accel- erator has been submitted to the Atomic Energy Commission by the Midwestern Universities Research Association. The University is a member of the association and University President Harlan Hatcher, Vice- President for Business and Fi- nance Wilbur K. Pierpont and Prof. H. R. Crane of the physics department are members of the association's board. Prof. Kent M. Terwilliger of the physics department, who along with Prof. Lawrence Jones of the same department helped develop early models of the accelerator, said that it might be some time before the AEC would decide whether to approve the proposal, as much prior consultation and reviewing is necessary. Rule Nine, barring discrimina - tory practices by real estate brok- ers has been invalidated June 4 by Ingham County Circuit Court Judge Sam Street Hughes, but the decision has been appealed to the state Supreme Court by the state. Hughes said that the corporation and securities commissioner did not have the power to impose the anti-discrimination rule. The rule, imposed by the then commissioner, Lawrence +Gubow in 1960, bars discrimination by li- censed real estate brokers and salesmen on the basis of race, re- ligion, color or national origin. A broker in violation would lose his license. "The policy of our state, relatzve to civil rights and economics, must be determined by our Constitution and legislative enactments. The executive branch of our govern- ment, including the many boards and commissions are to execute and administer our laws," Hughes said, Reasonable Powers "of necessity, they must be giv- en reasonable rule-making powers; but policy-making powers they should not have," he declared. Hughes said that it would be unwise to grant boards and com- missions the right to adopt rules to ' establish or implement what they determine to be public policy. "To do so would be to move from government by law to gov- ernment by men, to have humani- tarian and liberal philosophies spelled out in our rules today, and the opposite spelled out tomor- row," he asserted. I McNamara, Urges Unity For Defense (Continued from Page 1) Gov. John B. Swainson tools is-, sue with Hughes' ruling. "The real issue is whether all the people of Michigan grant a license to dis- criminate against some of the peo- ple," he declared. "Some of our citizens are treated as second class citiz-ens. This I abhor. "Rule Nine at no time has in- terfered with home owners' rights to sell to anyone or not to sell to anyone. It only dealt with state- licensed brokers, and prevented any owner from using a licensed broker for purposes of discrimina- tion," Swainson said. Test Caste The test case brought by the Michigan Real Estate Association on which Street ruled has been pending for two years. The State Supreme Court last month directed Hughes to decide the case in time for an appeal to reach it by July 1. The high court action came after Swainson asked it to take over jurisdiction imme- diately because of the lower court delay. n.t0 rev] 3 job Market By PHILIP SUTIN Washtenaw County's labor mar- ket will be the subject of a study undertaken by the Bureau of In- dustrial Relations. The $15,000 study, supported by I the county, the City of Ann Ar- bor; the, Ann Arbor Board of Edu- cation, and otherinterested groups will be completed within a year.. to 15 months, Prof, George Odiorne, director of the bureau, said. The study will cover four areas: 1) An inventory of current oc- cupational skills; 2) An occupational guide of jobs available in the county; 3) An estimate of future man- power needs; and 4) A survey of county education- al institutions to determine what sort of manpower will be available. Depth Sturdy iax Value Vuestioned Partics Continued from Page 1) solved without enactment of an income tax, it is not clear that we need higher taxes." he said. He has proposed a "fresh new approach" based on administra- tive and fiscal reform. Speakin; in Ann Arbor last Tuesday, Senate Minority leader Raymond 'Dzenzel said that the nuisance tax package will cost the average citizen more than the governor's "fiscal reform" based on a three per cent personal in- come tax. Consumer Taxes He said that the consumer taxes which have more effect on middle and lower bracket wage earners will also hurt Michigan industry. He said the higher beer taxes endanger the states breweries who must compete with out-of-state breweries who are selling beer be- low cost in Michigan. Ten thou- sand jobs in that industry alone are threatened by the nuisance taxes, Dzenzel declared. Dzenzel added that bootlegging of cheap cigarettes from neighbor- ing states will' cut the revenue yield of the nuisance taxes. Bootlegging To head off that possibility, the Legislature appropriated $100,000 so that the state Revenue Depart- ment can hire agents to fight bootlegging. " Deputy Revenue Commissioner Donovan J. Pau said the State Cigarette Tax Act prohibits bring- ing cigarettes into Michigan for resale without a special license from the revenue department. ""There is no organized cigar- ette smuggling going. on now, but we expect it to start when the tax increase goes into effect," he said. Lucrative Smuggling Floyd Joyce; past president of the Vendors Association of Michi- gan, predicted the $20 a case dif- ference in cigarette prices between Michigan and Illinois and Indiana will make smuggling lucrative. "With that much money to be made smuggling cigarettes, boot- legging will thrive. The state is not going, to collect half as much as it thinks it is with the new tax," Joyce predicted. ',{ '~; ;ug. .. r ,_,w / .. It ,..1 4 . " WHITE e RED " WHEAT " BLACK $599 .- 4 REGATTA Inspired by the open sea and salt spray -- a jauntily rope-trimmed oxford. Carefree and casual, tailored for happy times. I A-40L M