ENGLISH PLAN WOULD BENEFIT "U' io r LwF41 7Iai44* iec Page 4 Seventieth Year of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXX, NO. 59 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1959 FIVE CENTS SIX PAGES 1Reds M ay Change Economlc Setup Bornstein Sees Decentralization; Reliance on Prices for Regulators By JEAN HARTWIG The Soviet Union economic system may move toward increased decentralization and greater reliance on prices in the future, Prof. Morris Bornstein of the economics department said last night. Speaking at a political science roundtable, Prof. Bornstein pre- dicted a further shift in decentralization of economic planning and a possible reliance on prices instead of physical allocations of com- modities as economic regulators. Through increased decentralization the Soviets hope to pass re- sponsibility from the central planning comnnission in Moscow to re- SE TE p SSES REDUCED BU .; Cagers Fall To Panthers In Opener Special to The Daily PITTSBURGH - Michigan's varsity basketball team lost its season opener to Pittsburgh last night, 73-57, before a slim crowd of 1,120 at the Pitt Field House. The game held no highlights for the Michigan squad as it trailed all the way. Pittsburgh jumped off to an early lead and dominated the play throughout the game.' The fIrst half ended with the Wolver- ines trailing, 30-22. The second half was a near repetition of the first. The Pan- thers started off fast by increas- ing their lead to 14 points. Mich- igan then made a slight comeback to cut Pitt's lead to only seven. But the Panthers again turned on the steam and increased their lead again, this time to 16 points, ,which was the final margin of victory. Cold shooting and lack of height were the prime factors in Michigan's loss. The Wolverines hit on only 32 per cent of their shots, while Pittsburgh made 41 per cent of its attempts. Although Michigan out-re- bounded the Panthers 49-40, Coach Bill Perigo said "we should have been better on the boards." John Tidwell, one of the finest sophomores in the Big Ten last See PITT, Page 6 Hatcher Urges Fight Against Youth Crime President Harlan Hatcher urged an attack on the, causes of juvenile delinquency before the annual Congress of American Industry yesterday. He compared the defective hu- man product represented by Ju- venile delinquency with a defective industrial product. Hatcher then said that any company with a high percentage of defective pro- ducts would spend whatever money was necessary to overcome the waste and loss. In completing the analogy, he declared the research into causes and conditions of delinquency must be broadened. Mentioning some causes, he be- moaned long exposure to the "great mass media of television, cheap magazines and rock-and- Sroll Jiukeboxes." He added that with the TV dramas featuring violent behavior and anti-social behavior, human life and dignity have become vulgar and trifling. The transfer of authority from adults to gangs has also contrib- uted to the delinquency of youth, Hatcher said. Plan Debate On Tax Crisis The Michigan tax crisis debate moves from the floor of the Legis- lature to the Multipurpose Rm. of the Undergraduate Library at 7:30 p.m. today. The debate will feature Re- publican senators Clyde H. Geer- lings of Holland and Paul C. Younger of Lansing and Demo- cratic senators George C. Steeh of Mt. Clemans and SBasil Brown of Detroit. Geerlings is chairman of the Senate tax committee. gional authorities, he said. In this. way, planning of details would be done on a level much closer to the specific area, freeing c e n t r a l authorities for more comprehen- sive policy-making. Adds to Decentralization Another factor that has in- creased decentralization in the past is political. Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's strength lay in the regional party organizations while his opponents had their supporters in the central bureaucracy, Prof. Bornstein said. Decentralization weakened the position of his opponents and in- creased his influence. Explaining that the Soviets have looked for further methods of im- proving their economic system since 1953 and have given in- creased priority to consumers' goods, he noted that they were relying more on incentives rather than coercion to achieve their eco- nomic objectives. In line with the new trend of thought, they have found that "to run a complex economy it is better to use a carrot than a stick," he added. Increase Officials' Authority As a result of this new incentive policy and the increased decen- tralization, regional officials have been given increased authority to determine output. But, in order to further increase the efficiency of the Soviet economy, it will be "necessary to abandon and reduce the reliance on physical plans and rely on prices," Prof. Bornstein ex- plained. These prices would reflect scar- cities of different commodities and would allow the enterprise man- agers to make their input and out- put decisions on the basis of these prices. Managers Seek Authority The chief forces which might lead to the new price policy are a desire for more efficiency and agi- tation by enterprise managers for an increased role in making eco- nomic decisions. The three strongest objections to such a change are ideological belief that reliance on prices goes away from Socialist economic ideas to a capitalist market; lack of confidence that it is feasible to rely on prices rather than physical allocations; and party members resenting their decreased role in policymaking and administration of the economy. As the chief factors leading to a new economic policy, Prof. Born- stein cited more priority for con- sumers goods, increased foreign aid both inside and outside the Soviet block, decrease in the sur- plus manpower pool, proposed re- duction of the work week and bet- ter-trained managers. 'OF 34 RieS l.RXLOYAL' Sales Tax' LYA Formulas H By SU Supported B U p The app two teaches Merchants Attribute Massachuse Criticism to 'Politics' 1935, long After 9, LANSING W) - The Michigan the two te Retailers Assn. yesterday defend- the oath r ed its sales tax collection formula the Teach and termed as "politics" an opin- the upti ion by Atty. Gen. Paul L. Adams f the Unit holding it illegal. fte nt Adams ruled merchants now il- stitution legally tax customers when they to swear thl charge two pennies sales tax on charge the purchases in the 38 to 49 cents their abilit bracket and three cents in the 68 to 83 cents range. SGC: Old Bracket System - The old bracket system, in usee for 20 years, provided for no tax on purchases from one through 16 cents, one cent tax on the 17 T to 49 cents price range, two cents in the 50 to 82 cent range and three cents from 84 cents to $1.16. The new schedule advocated by By KENN the MRA calls for one cent tax on The ques purchases of 17 through 37 cents, the Studen two cents on the 38 through 67 ing new tex cents and three cents on 68 cents the Regent through $1.16. ernment Co Conflicts With Constitution In his mo Adams held that in addition to plained the violating the Sales Tax Act, the courage "c new schedule conflicts with the taking plac constitutional limitation of a ings. three cents sales tax, He went o "The opinion is not based on cil consider supported legal fact and is there- a service to fore ridiculous," a statement from an enterpr the retailers said, hopes that They termed it "a politically in- their polic spired curbstone effort to increase enough toi pressure for an unwanted gradu- Turne ated income tax." Thomas9 Combines Popular Methods tor, opposed The MRA said the new sched- ed out tha ule actually is a combination of motion wa the two most widely used methods asks the R of collecting the three per cent previous po sales tax. explained,t The old collection method, the fer a specif MRA said, resulted in an actual ask the Re out-of-pocket loss to some retail- on the basis ers. They added the retailers had Tables no reason to overcharge since the In other s entire amount must be paid to m proposed the Revdnue Department. due to a g Adams replied that he could not Council tha help it if his interpretation of the tion was ai law did not fit the wishful think- The motic ing of the retailers. er, '60, wou He termed the MRA statement endorseen "an outrageous political attempt Rice, chain to influence an elected state offi- partment, a cial." mortment, 1 1 as ilr TY OATHS: rvard Teachers Refuse Pledge o' SAN HERSHBERG pointments of at least rs have been rescinded 'd this year due to the etts teachers oath of considered a dead issue. vointment to positions, eachers refused to sign equired of them under ers Oath Act. hus refused to pledge >rt to the Constitution ted States and the Con- of Massachusetts and ey would faithfully dis- ir duties to the best of ies. fens SBX Regents [ETH McELDOWNEY stion of the legality of t Book Exchange sell- xtbooks was referred to s by the Student Gov- ouncil last night. otion, Phil Zook, '60, ex- Regents as a rule dis- ,ooperative" enterprises ce in University build- on to say that the Coun- s the sale of new books o the students and not ise. Zook said that he t the Regents clarify y, making it flexible include new book sales. r Opposes Motion Turner, '60, Daily Edi- d the motion. He point- at no matter how the s worded, in reality it egents to change their licy. For this reason, he the Council should of- ic proposal rather than gents to decide merely s of a general program. Freshman English action, an endorsement [changes in the fresh- h program was tabled general feeling of the at not enough informa- vailable. on made by Babs Mill- ld have sent letters of .t to Prof. Warner G. man of the English de- and to the literary col- ulum committee. How- ling the motion, most vcil members supported idea of revising the program. uncil member recom- t SGC's Education and ommittee look further reshman English pro- According to the provision, "No professor, instructor, or teacher who is a citizen of, the United States shall be permitted to enter upon his duties within the Com- monwealth unless and until such oath or affirmation shall have been so subscribed." Refusals Appear Rare There is no official statement on whether other'instructors have refused to sign the oath in the past, but it appears that such refusals must have been extremely rare. However, when the provision was passed in 1935, it was violently opposed by Kirtley F. Mather, now emeritus professor of geology, the "Harvard Crimson" notes. With- standing public opinion and prac- tically defying the President of the university, he spoke directly and issued several statements against the oath. His address the day after the issuance of the proviso, entitled "The Twilight of Democracy," em- phasized that "Teaching in an institution like Harvard must not become a state function; if it does, education is doomed to stag- nation and the twilight of democ- racy will deepen into blackest night." Mather Objects His main objection to the oath is that a professor, who is sup- posedly independent of the gov- ernment, be asked to take it. He said, "Education would then become the crassest of propaganda and the fascist spirit would domi- nate a land from which liberty had been banished."' Mather also at that time called the oath "completely antagonistic to the spirit which breathes through the Constitution of the United States and the Common- wealth of Massachusetts." Lists Arguments He recently recalled that the constitution of the Commonwealth was out of print then anyway, and he "couldn't find a copy of what I was swearing to uphold." "The law to which I object appears to transfer to state legis- latures and to officials appointed by partisar governors a responsi- bility which has constitutionally resided in non-political quarters," Mathers added in his 1935 state- ment. When finally convinced to sign the oath after repeated refusal, he added a proviso invalidating the oath. After the president of the university finally prevailed up- on him to sign it, the issue ap- peared to close. Conant Upheld Oath Though personally opposed to the oath, Harvard's former presi- dent James Conant explained then, "It is out of the question KIRTLEY F. MATHER . .. old-time doubter for Harvard University to consider not obeying the law." He further emphasized this stand in a letter addressed to the faculty in which he stated that any teacher who refuses to take the oath cannot teach at Harvard. One attempt to repeal the oath in the spring of 1936 failed in the House of Representatives. Later, Mather and several other faculty members formed the Harvard Uni- versity chapter of the American Federation of Teachers. Enrollment Increa.sing WASHINGTON (M)-The num- ber of students who enrolled in the nation's colleges and universities this fall hit a new high for. the eighth straight year. The total was 3,402,297. Reporting this yesterday, the office of education said the 1959 fall enrollment of full-time and part-time students was up 4.4 per cent, or 143,741, from 1958. The number of students enrolled in college for the first time jumped 5.9 per cent, to 826,969 this fall as compared with 781,075 in 1958. there were 2,173,797 men and 1,228,500 women among the fall enrollees, the number of men be- ing three per cent greater than in 1958 while the number of women increased by seven per cent. The first-time enrollees included 490,622 men and 336,347 women. The women comprised 40.7 per cent of the total, a slight increase from the 40 per cent figure in 1958. More than 1,900 institutions of higher education were included in the survey. ILLIO U IS CETT Approves 4 Bills On Vote of 18-13 New Taxes To Proceed to House, Review There Expected Next Week LANSING R - The Senate last night passed a $34 mil- lion package of nuisance taxes as the answer of Senate Re- publicans to the state's cash crisis. Th four bills each approved on an 18-13 party line vote, moved to the House where a showdown was expected next week. Their fate was uncertain. Gov. G. Mennen Williams, who for weeks has placed new revenue needs at $110,000 denounced the program as "miser- able and inadequate, dictat- ed by politics and devoid of U.S. Faces either logic or equity." Acts Swiftly The Senate acted swiftly after seeking to head off the threat of a Democratic one per cent pay- pp roll tax, closed ranks behind a solution it had rejected only Tuesday. However, the new package of American exports face a stiff temporary emergency taxes was competitive challenge in the re- a pale version of the $73.5-million- cently established European Coin- dollar tax bundle ditched 24 hours mon Market, Prof. Eric Stein of before. the law school declared yesterday. Missing from the revived cor- Prof. Stein said at the Ann bination of taxes was $30 million Arbor Rotary Club's weekly meet- dollars in proposed new levies on ing that the European Economic laundry, dry cleaning, auto re- Community has presented the first pair and similar services, outside challenge to American in- Taxe Smoersdustry in the past thirty years. Taxes Smokers A combination of tariff advan- As it re-emerged, the trimmed tages and lower production costs down plan calls for a new $4 mil- have caused the six-nation Com- lion tax on cigar and pipe smok- munity not only to threaten ers and an $8 million tax on tele- United States export trade, but it phone, telegraph and leased wire also may soon become one of this uItsets boosts of $9 million in country's toughest competitors, he It etsboots f $ milio inexplained the cigarette tax, $6 million from eads doubling the beer tax and six mil- In addition to the economic lions from doubling the four per threat, Prof. Stein sees a possi- cent excise tax on liquor. bility of the Community "bringing The tobacco levy, which also about a serious split in free world would include snuff and similar solidarity," as it could touch off a products, would be figured at 20 trade war with the seven outer per cent of the wholesale price. European nations. Rates To Rise These seven have banded to- The cigarette tax, now five gether to protect their own bar- cents a pack would go to six cents, gaining positions, because the Eu- the beer, tax from $1.25 a barrel ropean Economic Community is to $2.50 and the liquor tax from "so formidable and challenging" four to eight cents. The "outer seven" are Britain The rate on telephone and tele Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Switz- graph bills would be four per cent. erland, Austria and Portugal, while Coin installations would not be the "inner six" members of the covered. Community are France, Germany, In framing the revised program, Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg and Sen. Frank Beadle (R-St. Clair), the Netherlands. said, the GOP caucus relied on Should Remove Restrictions revenue estimates that were called Prof. Stein recommended that "fantastic" yesterday by State the United States should try to Controller James W. Miller, chief help these two group settle their state budget officer. differences, as a trade war between Developed by Sen. Clyde H. these two economic blocs could be Geerlings (R-Holland), Senate tax disastrous to the free world. committee chairman, they re- In addition, he felt this country lied on a "growth factor" of $63 should help its financial condition million from existing levies, by continuing to press for the Rely on Growth' removal of import restrictions on Geerlings said that receipts American goods in Europe in ex- from existing taxes from July change for lowering its own trade through Nov. 30 ran $42 million barriers. ahead of the comparable period This step was important in view of 1958. of the current deficit in our inter- Of this, $12 to $15 million national balance of payments. was "windfall" from tfle short-__________ lived use tax increase effective Sept. 1 and knocked out by the supreme court Oct. 22. P s i e Geeligssaid he was figuring on $28 million "growth" for the last seven months of the fiscal o Cp year. Gov. Williams called these es- Sydney Chapman, former head timates "misguided" and "deceiv- of the International Geophysical ing" to the people. He said the Year, has been appointed senior five months comparison was with research scientist by the Univer- revenue in the "worst months of sity's Institute of Science and the Eisenhower recession." Technology. "He's really going through the Robert R. White, Institute Di- stratosphere," the governor said, rector, announced hisappoint- Beadle said the Republican fl- ment, which will run from Sun- nancing was premised on release day until Feb. 20. Chapman's of the $50 million Veterans Trust duties will include lecturing and Fund, presumed to be worth $40 consulting with engineers and sci- million in cas. entists on research activities. However, he said the GOP cau- He has also been selected to cus was not specifically agreed on present the mid-year Commence- this point. ment address on Jan. 16. Assuming 40 millions from the Noted for his work as a solar- trust fund and 15 millions from terrestrial physicist and professor the nuisance taxes by next June of geophysics at the University of 30, the state deficit would be Alaska, Chapman is currently a shaved at that time to 165 mion-mmmaN+- +f tat...cprrh ia m Buying Days This is .to remind you there are 14 of them left before the Christmas exodus. lege curricu ever in tab of the Coun the basic freshman p One Cou mended tha Welfare Co into the fr gram. FOR HOSPITAL'S CHILDREN: Christmas Drive To Finance Galens' Workshop I By KATHLEEN MOORE Armed with buckets and tags, Galens members will seek donations tomorrow and Saturday to "provide a merry Christmas for the sick and disabled children at the University Hospital." Each year, for the last 31 years, the medical students' honorary society has conducted its Christmas Drive, collecting funds from both University students and townspeople to sponsor a festive seasonal party for all the hospital's children and to support its year-round Galens Workshop project, Morton Cox, '60Med., publicity director, explained. Donations Finance Workshop A jolly Santa Claus, decorations, treats and gifts for everyone are intended to add a little holiday cheer to the daily routine of the con- fined youngsters, he said, but the bulk of the donations (this year's goal is $7,500) will be used for operating the Workshop, established in 1928 with the funds collected in the group's first Christmas drive. Describing the Workshop as a "concentrated program of educa- tion and recreation for hospitalized children," Cox noted it provides the over 3,000 children who yearly enter University Hospital with both accredited schoolroom and handicraft instruction. Hospital Offers Classes Each morning children gather on the hospital's ninth floor for academic classes geared to each child's level of education, insuring that none lose time from school while hosnitalized. he said. x+ >y,