E- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Rusk Clarifies Viewpoint 'v Policies Asks Taxes To Finance Road Plans Kennedy Proposals Hit Big Truckers On U.S. Militai Asks More rConventional Armaments Secretary Attacks Inaccurate' Story WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Dean Rusk yesterday call- ed for strengthening the free world's conventional military force while. keeping its nuclear power. His statement, approved by President Jo.hn F. Kennedy, was sparked by a news story that Rusk called "highly inaccurate." The story, published in the Washington Evening Star Monday said Rusk: favored confining the United States atomic punch pri- marily to attacks on the United States. In his statement, Rusk did not, detail what he considered in- accurate about the Star story. U. S. Commitments The statement, which reaffirm- ed America's commitments to the defense of its allies, climaxed a tempestuous day for Kennedy's foreign policy chief. He spent nearly three hours under closed- door quizzing from members of the Senate foreign relations com- mittee. The Star earlier yesterday said that it believes "its story aecur- ately reflects the purport of the document sent by Secretary of State Rusk to Secretary of De- fense McNamara early in Feb- ruary. In its story, the Star had said the note from Rusk to McNamara suggested tentative proposals to "sharply restrict the role of nu- ear weapons in diplomacy and war." Rusk Suggests "Among other things," the Star had said, "Rusk suggests that even massive attacks on Europe should be met with conventional weap- ens." After the meeting of the Sen- ate committee, chairman J. Wil- liam Fulbright (D-Ark) said Rusk had disavowed favoring a com- plete defense policy switch. Fulbright said he agreed, with the Secretary and added, "The so- called free press is one of the hazards of this country in dealing with foreign policy." Proposes Tax ii on Books Sold By Colleges A measure to impose a four per cent sales tax on textbooks sold by the college-owned bookstores was placed on the House calendar Monday night. Sponsored by Rep. Russell H. Strange (R-Clare), the bill would do away with the present sales tax exemption granted official college bookstores selling texts. As the University does not have a college-owned bookstore, it would be unaffected by the bill. The Student Book Exchange would, however, be affected by the new taxation category. Most of the other state colleges and universities have college- owned bookstores. The bill was placed on the House calendar for a roll call vote after attempts failed to bury the pro- posal in the education committee. A similar bill passed the Legis- lature in 1960 but was vetoed by former Gov. G. Mennen Williams. Rep. Joseph V. Kowalski, the Democratic floor leader from De- troit, asked Strange to change his bill to exempt textbooks purchased at private stores from sales "tax, but was turned down. Private stores must now impose the four perecent sales tax upon textbooks. Union Loses Monitor Rule WASHINGTON () - James R- Hoffa yesterday won his three- year battle with the board of monitors assigned to clean up the Teamsters Union. Federal District Judge F. Dick- inson Letts, who established the monitorship, authorized the union to call a convention. When the convention is held, the board of monitors will auto- matically go out of business. -AP Wirephoto RUSK, FULBRIGHT CONFER-Secretary of State Dean Rusk, left, and Chairman L. W. Fulbright (D-Ark), of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee are shown yesterday. The committee called Rusk to a closed door meeting to discuss reports he favors a shift from a "massive retaliation" policy to increased conventional forces. ORAN MOB: Algerians Atta'ck Europeans WASHINGTON (A) - President WASHINGTON (A - John F. Kennedy proposed heav-> costs dropped slightly in ier taxes on big trucks yesterday for the first time in 12 because of lower prices fC to help pay for the superhighway ;ngcused o l ri fc program. ( The Bureau of Labor S He said truckers get the most said yesterday its consum benefit from the new roads. f index dropped by one t Kennedy asked Congress to one per cent, from a reco block a scheduled drop in the fed- in December to 127.4 last eral gasoline tax from four to In the index 100 represen three cents a gallon this July 1, age prices for 194749. but said he preferred nottog Because prices rose thr along with former President:, 1960, except for a pause in Dwight D. Eisenhower's recoin-t January. living 'costs weri mendation that the tax be raised: per cent from a year earl to 4 and one-half cents a gallon. The bureau said price ch "It is already clear that passen- large enough to affect ti their fair share now," Kennedy the auto and related in said. -AP Wirephoto Their pay is tied to livin In a 3,500-word special message SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTER-Andrei Gromyko will head the Single Factor to Congress, Kennedy said the Soviet delegation at the upcoming United Nations General Assem- Lower clothing prices N pay-as-you-go highway building bly meetings, Moscow announced yesterday. The announcement biggest single factor in ram Iin peril because of a squelched rumors of a meeting between Soviet Premier Nikita S. living costs in January. Khrushchev and President John F. Kennedy that might have fol- clothing tags were down Permit Completion lowed the UN session. cent, largely because o He said adoption of his plan Christmas sales of women would permit completion of 41,000 hN t and suits. miles of express roads on sched- ushchev To Rosrt . 3'i=-sP ule without dipping into general h'st misine oflaorZtais funds or resorting to a further bad weather in Decembe increase in the federal gasoline /ysadthe wartheclsohing UN Asemblythe way for the clothing tigax i hefdrl om U1 Genery al Assemb G said the weather discourag Practially all of the increase in pers and led to extra-lax reveues(rpla gthegeneral MSO )oeg insuary inventories which I revenues (replacing MOSCOW -Foreign minister Andrei Gromyko will head the price reductions. one-half cent rise in gas tax) Soviet delegation to the coming United Nations session in New York, Myers said the weather would come from the heavier Moscow radio announced last night. fected used car prices weigh over 26,000 pounds, Kenne= The announcement ended speculation about whether Premier dropped 2.5 per cent in dy said, adding, "this is'only fair, Nikita S. Khrushchev would head the delegation and use the oppor- changed. indeed, technical experts in the tunity for a get-acquainted meeting with President John F. Kennedy. . Food Costs bureau of public roads advise me Other members of the delegation will be the chief soviet representa- Food casts were down o that even this increase would tive at the United Nations, Valerian Zorin, and deputy foreign min- of one per cent with th not charge heavy trucks their fair inter Arkady Sobolev, who held' * reductions in eggs mil share of the cost of this program." Zorin's job until last year. fruits and tomatoes. Kennedy's reasoning developed Diplomatic quarters felt that the Sov etsS ack Most other major categ< differences of opinion at his week- decision to send Gromyko was - steady or showed declines ly meeting with Democratic Con- made because .Khrushchev feels Ukri1 e oss ception was medical cos gressional leaders and brought a the time is far from ripe for a rose by three tenths of rote from the American Truck- meeting with Kennedy. Informed LONDON (P) Moscow Radio icent. There werermiuas ing Association, sources said Gromyko plans to Lalip Diverse Opinions leave for New York by plane last night announced the dismissal pital room charges. House speaker Sam Rayburn of March 3. of Nikifor Kalchenko as prime Myers said the outlook Texas told newsmen on leaving Kennedy was the talk of the minister of the Ukraine, bread ruary was for relative the White House session that many town following an unprecedented basket of the Soviet Union. with little change eltb teleast f fim fom hs fist to .In a separate report, th diverse opinions were expressed as telecast of film from his first two The shakeup came in the wake said spendable earningsi to how the program should be f i- news conferences. of Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's ing power of factory wor: nanced. Generally he said these The Moscow man-in-the-street far-ranging tour of agricultural steady last month. After were based on whether the money greeted favorably what Kennedy areas where he denounced slack- of a factory worker Vi should come from general tax said and his easy manner'of talk- ness and demanded renewed ef- dependentsy was unch ness ~shntn esmn anteaddrnwde-dpnet a nh revenue or from gasoline taxes. ing to Washington newsmen, forts to increase productivity. $79.97 a week. Rayburn said he wants to listen to state governors and highway Ben-Gurion Bows commissioners testify at Congres- TONIGHT: Lecture 11 in series of five on sional hearings before he decided To Party Leaders "Great Traditions in the Christian F which course he favors. Kennedy proposed an increase JERUSALEM OP)-Premier Da- in taxes and fees on heavy trucks, vid Ben-Gurion bowed to his op- "THE C H R ISTIAN COMMITMENI diesel fuel, tires, tubes and retread position yesterday and paved the A CATHOLIC YIEM rubber. Under his plan the fed- way for a new general election, eral truck license fee, applying to probably in October. Father William G. Ryan, Ph.D. vehicles of more than 26,000 The 74-year-old premier, who President, Seton Hall College pounds weight when loaded, would has headed the state of Israel for Greensburg, Pennsylvania go up from $1.50 a thousand all but one and one-half of its 13 pounds to $5 a thousand( The fee years, acknowledged for the first 7:30 P.M. First Presbyterian for a 45,000-pound truck thus time in his career that he could Admission free 1432 Woshtenow would rise from $67.50 to $225. not form a coalition cabinet. ORAN VP) - A rampaging mob, setting out as a mourning proces- sion for King Mohammed V of Morocco, became enraged today and burned two European women to death in their car. The outbreak of terror caused World News, Roundu By The Associated Press THE HAGUE-The Dutch gov- ernment yesterday proposed to. parliament a 10-year plan design- ed to transform West New Guinea into an independent self-govern- ing country. Possession of the area has been disputed by Indonesia since the! Dutch transferred sovereignty over the Indonesian Archipelago in 1950 but retained West New Gui- nea. * * * WASHINGTON - Rep. Oren Harris (D-Ark) yesterday an- nounced formation of a new per- manent subcommittee to check up on the government's regulatory agencies. NEW DELHI--For the second straight year, India will increase defense spending to strengthen.its forces along the disputed border with Communist China. French authorities to clamp a rigid curfew on the city. The rioting shattered hopes for calm while France makes a new effort to end the nearly seven- year-old war with Algerian rebels. The mob of about 250 youths, marching behind a green and white rebel flag, went into a screaming rage at the sight of three Europeans in a car. They overturned the car, poured gasoline on it and set it afire. They savagely resisted the efforts of the terrified occupants to escape and shoved them back into the flames. The mobs rampaged through the: streets of this second-largest city in Algeria, setting fire to four other automobiles. A European venturing into the streets on a motor scooter was badly injured in a hail of stones. A European child also was injured by the mobs. Before order was restored at nightfall, an Algerian policeman also was killed in the rioting. The Algerians, who are about equal in number to the Europeans in this western Algerian port, have come out more and more openly for the nationalist rebel regime set up in neighboring Tunisia. Ten- sion between Europeans and Al- gerians has been high. But it had been generally hoped that the meeting of President Charles de Gaulle and President Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia in France Monday would have a quieting effect on this volatile land. New outbreaks of Algerian ter- rorism can only °strengthen the resolve of Algeria's European set-a tlers to resist de Gaulle's policy of eventual self rule for Algeria. In their revolts against French policy, the Europeans have claim- ed they would be engulfed in an Algeria under Moslem rule. Officials in Paris and Tunis meanwhile, expressed optimism the rebellion might be approaching solution. De Gaulle and Bourguiba had issued a cbmmunique saying, they agreed there were possibilities1 and hope for a "positive and rapid turn in the rebellion. Randolph Asks Bias Reform In AFL-CIO, MIAMI BEACH WP)-The AFL- CIO executive council yesterday Issued a strong entreaty to its unions to end racial bias but put aside a tough enforcement plan advanced by the council's lone Ne- gro member. A. Philip Randolph, Negro pres- ident of the brotherhood of sleep- ing car porters, proposed expulsion of any AFL-CIO unit failing with- in six months to end membership or job discrimination against Ne- groes. The clash between Randolph and federation president George Meany featured the windup session of the executive council's 10-day winter meeting. by Harry Wagner, poised for. immediate take-off on a direct There are reasons, however; to suspect that Smedley may not be completely in step with the times. On campus today, mature discriminating style-oriented men and women proudly wear the emblems that identify their academic heritage. Your class ring is SMART. Its message is prestige. As a lifetime investment in BELONGING, its value grows with every passing year. RMWA. 12-M