TILE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T TTttTR.CTIAV_ APRIL 14_ 1 442 .'m~nrba1seM . a'D1cT, 1010, 9 AGE Kennedy F orgives 11Steel Record Peace Budget O7f $478 Billion Passes Unanimously in House, Lays Stress On Limited War Forces Approves Total Less Than Kennedy Asked WASHINGTON ()-A unani- mous House vote sent-to the Sen- ate yesterday a record peacetime outlay of $47.8 billion to modern- ize and bolster America's armed forces at home and overseas. The spending blueprint contin- ues to stress the buildup of con- ventional and limited war forces. Yet more than 18 per cent of the total is earmarked for strategic retaliatory forces, including 200 more Minuteman intercontinental missiles and six more Polaris sub- marines. The 388-0 roll call came afterI the House defeated several moves to amend the bill. Among those slapped down was a vigorous at- tempt by Armed Services Commit- tee Chairman Carl Vinson (D-Ga) to knock out a limit on the amount of repair and conversion work that can be done in naval shipyards. The total voted for the year starting next July 1 is $67.5 mil- lion less than President John, F. Kennedy requested, reflecting some cuts and additions by the House Appropriations Committee. But it is $1.3 billion more than Congress provided the military for the cur- rent fiscal year. The measure provides only for strictly military programs, includ- ing research, development and val- uation of new defense instruments. More billions will be provided in later measures for military con- struction, civil defense and foreign military aid. The bill provides funds for keep- ing half of the Strategic Air Force on 15-minute alert for retaliatory strikes. Also kept in was $171 mil- lion for development of the con- troversial RS-70 reconnaissance strike bomber plus $52.9 million to speed research for the ultra- high performance radar needed to make the plane a usable weapon. CARL VINSON . , . down to defeat GEMINI: Unit Seeks Astronauts WASHINGTON (P) - The Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration said yesterday it will choose up to 10 new astronauts in the next few months to fly two man Gemini spacecraft. The new astronauts will be drawn from the ranks of experi- enced jet test pilots-preferably those now engaged in flying high performance aircraft. They nmust have attained experi- mental flight test status through the military service, or by flying for a private company or for NASA programs such as the X-15, or must have graduated from a military test pilot school. They must also have a college' degree in the physical or biologi- cal sciences or in engineering. The age limit is 35, and the height limit 6 feet. The Gemini spacecraft, first of which is to be delivered to NASA next year, will weigh more than three tons, or almost twice the weight of the Mercury capsule. It will be launched by a Titan II rocket. Army Vows To Cut Profit On Missiles WASHINGTON (P)-The Army pledged yesterday to cut down some of the costly pyramiding of profits by middle men in its mis- sile programs. But Lt. Gen. John H. Hinrichs, ordnance chief, and Assistant Sec- retary of the Army Paul R. Igna- tius told critical Senate investiga- tors it is a mistake to judge the reasonableness of a missile maker's profits solely on the basis of how much it costs him to do a com- plete job. The Senate Investigations Sub- committee announced both men would be called back some time next week for more quizzing. The subcommittee is investigating prof- its the Army paid Western Electric Co. and Douglas Aircraft Co. as the two big contractors which de- veloped and produced the anti- aircraft Nike missiles system. Hinrichs announced plans to es- tablish an Army ordnance field office at Western Electric's con- trol center to help run the now developing Nike Zeus long-range missile program. Ignatius said he would recom- mend that the Pentagon consider establishing special -rules for fig- uring a fair profit for holders of prime contracts and chief subcon- tracts. Claims Basic Obj ectives Agreement By WHITNEY SHOEMAKER Associated Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON - President John F. Kennedy proclaimed peace yesterday with "big steel." Placated by victory last week in his battle on price-boosting steel manufacturers, Kennedy said there is no room for hostility or vindictiveness. What's more, his administration and leaders of in- dustry "are in basic agreement on far more objectives than we are in disagreement." While he was forgiving, Kenne- dy wasn't wholly forgetting his ad- ministration's role in the sequence of events which led steel producers to rescind their $6-a-ton price in- creases. A grand jury investigation of whether major steel companies may have violated antitrust laws will go on, Kennedy said, and the government will continue stressing its position against labor-manage- ment contracts that could breed inflation. His main theme, however, was one of harmony. "Let me make it clear," he said in a prepared announcement, "that this administration harbors no ill will against any individual, any industry, corporation or seg- ment of the American economy." He referred to the announced steel price boosts as a blunder that was rectified by revoking them. "When a mistake has been re- tracted and the public interest preserved, nothing is to be gained from further public recrimina- tions," he said. Kennedy wasn't asked, nor did he volunteer, what he and Roger M. Blough, board chairman of United States Steel, discussed at a White House meeting Tuesday evening. U.S. Sets New Offer In Geneva By The Associated Press GENEVA - The United States proposed yesterday that the world disarm by means of modern inven- tory control techniques similar toT those used by big corporations.1 The draft treaty submitted to the 17 nation general disarmament conference alms at a world which has cast its weapons away through three carefully enforced stages. American Ambassador Arthur H. Dean said the 35-page documentj "truly beats the swords into plow- shares." Then peace would be' maintained by a United Nations' force so strong "that no state can challenge it," he added. Kennedy Proposals The draft elaborates on propos- als made by President John F. Kennedy to the United Nations last September. Kennedy told his news conference in Washington the draft is an attempt to achieve a breakthrough in negotiations now stalemated. The program emphasizes the simultaneous buildup of United Nations peace keeping machinery as balanced arms reduction goes forward. Dean said the treaty outline pro- vides a final solution of the nu- clear weapons problem, the preser- vation of outer space for peaceful purposes and the adoption of measures to avoid the risk of war "by accident, miscalculation, fail- ure of communications or surprise attack." Cool Reaction The Communists reacted coolly Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin refrained from commenting inside the conference room itself. Later he told newsmen the American document "does not seem to contain much that is new." Kennedy volunteered his en- dorsement of United States efforts at Geneva in the news conference, but newsmen peppered him with questions about nuclear testing, an issue in deadlock at Geneva while the United States prepares to fol- low Soviet suit by resuming in- the-air shots. Kennedy said no specific date has been set for the start of the United States test series, to be held in the Pacific, but the gen- eral timing remains as previously announced. "Of course we shall proceed" with testing unless the Soviets agree to the western proposal for a test ban treaty with internation- al inspections, he said. Kennedy has not heard of a proposal, which a reporter said the Soviet representative at Gen- eva, Semyon Tsarapkin, had made to a women's delegation, offering l to negotiate a test ban treaty if the United States would close down one of its overseas missile bases. SCOTLAND YARD: Spy-Catcher Prepared To Bring In Defectors LONDON (M-Scotland Yard armed its top spy catcher with ar- rest warrants yesterday and told him to bring in Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean, British turncoat diplomats, if they ever show up from Soviet Russia. The question was: how, where and when? The Yard's move was based on reports that the runaways, who defected to the Soviet Union 11 years ago next month, were plan- ning finally to quit the Soviet* Union. The arrest warrants for the pair, Pair Charge both of whom had served at the British Embassy in Washington, 'Br *wh' charge violation of Britain's offi- UE)1 cial secrets act. In taking out arrest warrants,MOCW4'-wRusade Scotland Yard said it had reason MOSCOW ()-Two Russian de- to suppose the two defectors may fectors who returned home said either have left the Soviet Union yesterday they had been question- or are planning to do so. ed about rockets and launching But reporters found Maclean- ramps and subjected to "anti-So- onetime head of the American de- viet brain washings" by United partment in the Foreign Office- States intelligence agents. still in his Moscow apartment dur- ing the day. He declined to make One is Alexei Golub, a balding any comment on Scotland Yard's man with a little mustache. He is action. the biochemist whose defection Burgess was reported on vaca- from a Soviet tourist party in Am- tion elsewhere in the Soviet Union. sterdam last October provoked the Scotland Yard explained the recall of Dutch and Soviet am- warrants were issued for use in bassadors' case they appear in some country The other is Nikolai Vokhma- with which Britain has an extra- kov, an electrician at a mine i dition treaty or otherwise come Southern Russia. under the Jurisdiction of British They appeared at a news con- courts. ference arranged by Alexei Popov acting chief of the Foreign Min istry press department. Popov as- serted at the outset: "Imperialisi intelligence services use defector P' ~not merely for purposes of collect- Pol 1tical 1Its ing espionage, but also to whi up the Cold War and to slande the Soviet Union and Commu- TaX Ineentive nm. WASHINGTON (A) - President John F. Kennedy applauded yes- terday a bipartisan commission re- port recommending tax incentives Joi to encourage more people to con- ACTIVITIES STAFF of tribute to political campaign funds. "The Activity for Men W Kennedy expressed "profound LEADERSH IP, and Opport gratitude" to a nine-member group that unanimously proposed Organizati moves -to take the "shoddy" label off political giving and to reduce Tuesday, Ap presidential campaign costs. It es- timated costs of all political cam- 3rd Floor Conference Ro paigns ran from $165 million to $175 million in 1960. The President told his news con- ference the report is now being examined by his administration Faculty and T and "will be the basis of legisla- tive recommendations sent to the Congress which I think can pro- vide a significant advancement of TA K E the public interest in this very vi- tal field." Key recommendation by the ag nU group, headed by Dean Alexander MiChIg U Heard of the University of North Carolina graduate school, was for for you a $10 tax credit to apply to con- tributions given by individuals to A T national and state political com- A mittees. pw t 1 C C i ' 3 '' S n e n , ,- "s - A r - Asks Release Of Tshombe UNITED NATIONS (to)-Acting Secretary-General U Thant last night ordered the chief United Na- tions force officer in The Congo to have the Congo government release the plane on which Katanga Pres- ident Moise Tshombe was trap- ped yesterday at the Leopoldville Airport. A United Nations spokesman said that Tshombe, who was try- ing to return to Elisabethville after, conferences with Congo Premier Cyrille Adoula, had been in the plane all day, unable to move after the Congolese authorities blocked the airport with fire engines and other vehicles. Tshombe was reported in good health and United Nations troops were protecting him and the plane efficiently. I MOISE TSHOMBE ... trapped kN MEN!! in The the MICHIGAN UNION rho Seek RESPONSIBILITY, 'unity for ADVANCEMENT" naI Meeting ril 24, 4:15 P.M. om-MICHIGAN UNION t C Deadlock on College Aid Averted by House Group WASHINGTON-A threatened deadlock over the Administration's program to aid colleges was averted yesterday as the bill's managers in the House yielded a point to opponents of Federal scholarships. House and. Senate versions of the measure are consequently ex- pected to go before a conference committee for adjustment of differ- ences when Congress returns from a ten-day Easter recess. "The House Rules Committee has been blocking House-Senate con- ference negotiations for more than two months. The House panel op- each ing Fellows nion presents r children UR OF LD VILLAGE A ., I ...... MAUNDAY THURSDAY SERVICE university reformed church ALL STUDENTS WELCOME Special choral numbers accompanied by a musical ensemble. Sermon by Rev. Calvin Malefyt "The Joy of the Cross" 7:30 P.M. at the YM-YWCA Mrs. Gaillot's Husband Asks Same Penalty NEW ORLEANS OP)-A Roman Catholic-husband of a wife ex- communicated by their church in a wrangle over parochial school desegregation - yesterday asked the same penalty. "If she is truly excommunicated from the Catholic Church," B. J. Gaillot, Jr. wrote to Archbishop Joseph Francis Rummel, "then I, too, should be excommunicated." Gaillot said "my beliefs are in exact concurrence with my wife." Archbishop Rummel has ordered racial desegregation of all arch- diocesan parochial and private schools, effective next fall. Gaillot said he believed his wife had done no wrong- positively, not in any way." poses the Senate version's provi- sions for $925-million in Federal grants to provide college scholar- ships to talented and needy stu- dents. The committee chairman, Rep, Howard M. Smith (D-Va), said that the House managers of the bill had given assurances that they would not accept the scholarshir provision in conference without getting specific approval from thi House. -The assurances were relayed t the committee at a closed session yesterday morning. The result Smith reported, was an apparent consensus in favor of approving a resolution to send the bill to con- ference. The committee is expected tc act the week after next, wherm members return from the Eastei recess that starts today. The Senate - approved college- aid bill is patterned closely or Kennedy's recommendations. Copyright, 1962, The New York Times a. d e Y p t, r n ORIENTATION LEADERS? 1. Ne IUKEI'4rI Lt Mfore National Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-President John F. Kennedy yesterday announced the cancellation ofrthertrial of one disgruntled Army reservist and the release of another from confine- ment. "Theiroffenses were more misguided than criminal in in- tent," he said. WASHINGTON - The House sent to President John F. Kennedy yesterday a bill authorizing $32 million for the construction of ed- ucational television s t a t i o n s throughout the nation. MIAMI-A former Cuban army officer was reported conferring yesterday with heads of the Peo- ples Revolutionary Movement re- garding plans for possible anti- Castro warfare. WASHINGTON - The United States recognized the Guido gov- ernment of Argentina yesterday after delaying action almost three weeks. * * ' WASHINGTON-President John F. Kennedy's plan to set up a new Office of Science and Technology got an okay yesterday from the House Government Operations Committee. The plan goes into ef- fect automatically in 60 days un- less either the House or Senate dis- approves it. Sign up now UNION-LEAGUE Department of Speech Laboratory Playbill "BLESSED BE THE RED, WHITE AND BLUE OF HEART" HERBERT PROPPER 4:10 Trueblood Auditorium Frieze Building This Saturday, April 21 12-5 $1.50 For information and reservations Call the Student Offices from 3-5 P.M. L I ever be "., a sale like this!" TODAY Admission Free SAVE 1 ON FAMOUS LD I Reg. 1r in s flower- 50 lipsticks 100 pecial p topped cases U 8 BEST-SELLING SHADES BLOSSOM PINK PYXIE PINK CHERRY PINK CORALNECTAR APRICOT MOLLY BRIGHT MARIGOLD QORANGE PEPPER Pick your favorites or have them all at this*saving, for a "lipstick ward- robe" to accent all your Spring and Summer clothes. Buy them for gifts ... they're so pretty, so wonderful at University of Michigan Folk Music Festival This Weekend . . Friday 8:00 P.M. JESSE FULLER in the Union Ballroom SSaturday 8:30 P.M. HOOTENANNY Trueblood Auditorium ct i4P AI I i Annual Banquetan Ball' Given by the AFRICAN STUDENTS UNION of Michigan N. M W;as I