COUNCIL DECISION CRAMPS PARKING See Page 4 W EL Sir igan Dad4y , , .. + Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY, RAIN VOL. LXVII, No. 165 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 18, 1957 SIX PAGES Wilson Halts Soldier Trial, By Japaneser Orders Soldier Kept In Military Custody Gessert Refuses To Talk in Probe Takes Fifth Amendment 71 Times Before Senate Racket Committee WASHINGTON (P) -Norman Gessert, Dave Beck's cousin by marriage, took the Fifth Amendment 71 times in a 21-minute appear- ance before the Senate Rackets Investigation Committee yesterday. "I guess he made a record," Chairman John McClellan (D-Ark.) commented sourly at the end of the fruitless questioning. Gessert not only declined to talk about his profitable dealings with Beck, president of the Teamsters Union, but even refused to state his name or acknowledge that he knew his own lawyer sitting beside him. Fifth Amendment The Fifth Amendment provides that no one shall be required to testify against himself. Beck has invoked it more than 200 times but his appearances before the com- " 1 7 WASHINGTON () - Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson yesterday blocked any immediate ' "trial by a Japanese court of an American soldier accused of shoot- ing a Japanese woman on a mii-. tary firing range. The United States Far East command in Tokyo Thursday yielded to Japan the right to try Sc William S. Girard for what has come to be known in Japan as "The So-Magahara Shooting Incident." American officials said they had no other legal course. Last night, however, Wilson ordered United States military au- thorities in Japan to keep Girard in United States custody "pending a complete review of the matter." Far East Decision The Far East command's -de- cision to turn the soldier over to Japanese authorities was made after the incident had been aired in Japanese newspaper headlines and on the floor of the Japanese Parliament. Following announcement of the decision, the Supreme Court in Tokyo directed the prosecutor's office to indict Girard, who is from Ottawa, Ill., on a charge of acci- dental manslaughter. The woman was one of several attempting to salvage scrap metal from an American firing range last Jan. 30. . Killed by Cartridge She was alleged to have been r_ killed by an empty cartridge case ;propelled from a grenade launch- er after the women had been warned to leave the range. The Far East Command con- tended that Girard was on duty when the shooting occurred. The Japanese insisted the fatal shooting of Mrs. Naka Sakai did not involve "performance of off - cial duty, the exact words in the United States Japan status of forces. agreement. Rear Adm. Miles M. Hubbard and, ~hr United States officials said' the United States had no other choice because, in cases where the soldier's duty status is questioned, Japan has the ulti- mate say on all criminal cases within its borders. Wife FlaVors Hubby's Beer With Arsenic Mrs. Lucy Wireman, of nearby Chelsea, was arrested yesterday for putting arsenic powder in her husband's beer over the last four years. Mrs. Wireman was arraigned in /Municipal Court on the charge and through her attorney de- manded examination. She couldn't make the $2,000 bond and was re- turned to jail. The husband, Oron, 36, entered St. Joseph Mercy Hospital .last December. Authorities said he was suffering from poisoning of an un- determined character. He re-entered the hospital Ap- ril 10. Doctors said Saturday he was suffering from "severe arsen- ie poisoning." A check through Wireman's em- ployer, the Chelsea Spring Co., de-. termined that his job wasn't the source of the poison. Police began questioning Mrs. Wireman. She finally admitted having put powder in his beer "to cure him of the drinking habit."' The 30-year-old mother of three denied she was attempting to kill her husband and told this story: In 1953, a friend told Mrs. Wire- iian she could "cure" her hus- band by putting a rat poison in his beer. "I still love him," she said Fri- day. "I didn't want to hurt him. I just wanted to help." Neighbors said Mrs. Wireman appears to be a good mother to her children and that she and her husband appeared to get along well.. U ROTC Units. To Join March In commemoration of Armed Services Day the three' ROTC mittee extended over a much long- er period than Gessert's 21 min- utes. McClellan called Gessert's at- titude clearly detrimental to labor unionism. "These people owe an account- ing for their actions involving the use of union funds," he told news- men. "Those funds are held in -trust for the benefit of unionism, and not for the personal profit of union officials and their kinfolk." Gessert had been sought by the committee more than two months for questioning about his financial deals with Beck. He was finally subpoenaed Wednesday after a police chase in Ellensburg, Wash. Drew Union Expenses Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D- Mass.), committee counsel, said Gessert drew more than $50,000 in salary and expenses from the Teamsters Union from April 1954 to March 31, 1957, a period in which Kennedy said he spent most of his time doing chores for Beck. Kennedy told the committee Gessert also got about a $51,000 cut of the profits c4 the Union Merchandising Co., a firm Ken- nedy said specialized in selling toy trucks and other merchandise to Teamsters locals all over the country. Rain Persists; Floods Sweep Lower Plains By The Associated Press Downpours again fed floods in the rain-weary Lower Plains yes- terday and there were cloudbursts in the Ohio Valley and the South- east. Golfball-sized hail and, an inch of rain hit Nashville, Tenn., Sa- vannah, Tenn., reported 1110 inches of rain during the moning. And at Ardmore, in southern Okla- homa, rainfall since Thursday night reached 71/2 inches. Twenty-nine persons were killed in tornadoes and floods since Wednesday, 21 of them in a twist- er at Silverton, Tex., where 80 persons were injured. Extremely heavy rains in Okla- homa: and Kansas kcept streams on the rampage in the Sooner State, and new flood alerts were posted for residents of low areas in Tulsa and communities below Tulsa on the Verdigris River. The Cimarron in its worst food along its upper .nd central reach es, kept Guthrie and Perkins, Oka. G in muddy water. Flooding in the Wichita, Kan., area was compared with that of the worst inundation previously, July 13, 1951. At Tulsa, officials said that an unfinished flood diversion project apparently had averted the threat of a major flood in the city of 240,000. Cold weather also figured in the national picture, as a front from Canada moved into the upper Mis- sissippi Valley. Freezing tempera- tures were forecast for northeast North Dakota. U' Open House To Highlight Health Exhibit University Hospital Day open house tomorrow will feature ex- hibits in the medical and health sciences. During the hours from 2 to ,5 p.m. at the Out Patient Building visitors will become "imaginary patients." They will become acquainted STASSEN: Cites New D 0 Disarming Progress WASHINGTON (W)-Harold E. Stassen yesterday reported fresh progress toward an East-West agreement on partial disarma- ment. "There is no question that we are closer to agreement on a first step, a small cut in armaments, than we were when I was here at Easter," the administration's dis- armament chief said upon his ar- rival by plane from London. Negotiations with Russian repre- sentatives have been going on in the British capital for the better part of nine weeks. British, French ant Canadian officials are also taking part in the conference. Stassen said a plan now being considered would call for mutual reductions in weapons, manpower and defense spending plus aerial inspection of defined zones in both the West and East. Stressing that "many difficult issues" remain to be settled, he said he was "neither optimistic nor pessimistic." But it was at this point that he commented on the progress of the last four weeks. Stassen will meet with Secre- tary of State John Foster Dulles and report to President Dwight D. Eisenhower. He has returned for 10 day of consultations before flying back to London for renewed negotia- tions May 27. The main purpose of Stassen's round of meetings with top Eisen- hower administration leaders, of- ficials said, will be to decide on a specific counter proposal to be offered Russia. This would include agreement by the National Security Council on a zone of arms inspection to be laid bare under President Eis- enhower's "open skies" policy. Stassen declined to comment on Dulles' idea, expressed at a new conference Tuesday, that the most likely starting place for such an inspection system would be the arctic areas of Siberia, Alaska and northern Canada. IFC Passes New Proposal At Wisconsin Inter-fraternity council mem- bers at the University of Wiscon- sin passed a resolution this week reminding each member house of its duty to act to prevent a recur- rence of last week's water fight riot. The bill states that houses could ibe fined if "suitable precautions were not taken to discourage par- ticipation in future demonstra- tions." Wisconsin F;udent A-s ciation president and cllcials rre, with 43 presidents of housing units :o discuss their obligations and re- sponsibilities Uf their hcuses to protect the student community and the Uniursity. Several house presidents said scheduling supervised fights would not end spontaneous spring dem- onstratrons. The majority of the group felt that the two students .uspended for the participation in the riot should-not be expelled. Senate Cuts More Funds Off Budget Slash Ike's Request For Appropriations WASHINGTON (P) - The Sen- ate yesterday cut another $193 million from President Dwight D. Eisenhower's $73,800,000,000 bud- get request for new appropriations. This boosted reductions in three money bills passed thus far to more than $375 million. Yesterday's action was on pas- sage of a bill appropriating $613,- 584,290 for the Commerce Depart- ment for the 1958 fiscal year starting July 1. President's Request On paper the cut in this bill totaled $257,928,710. President Eisenhower had requested $871,- 513,000 for the department. Part of the cut was a bookkeep- ing transfer. It involved a shift of about $65 million in old appro- priations for ship operating sub- sidies to the new bill. The measure, passed by a voice vote after two hours of debate, now goes to conference with the House. House Votes Less The House, without recourse to the transfer in ship operating funds, had voted $25 million less than the Senate allowed. Thursday, the Senate cut the bill to finance the Treasury and Post Office departments and the tax court from $3,965,290,000 to $3,884,927,000; a cut of $80,363,- 000. Though these reductions have not been significant percentage- wise, they symbolize the difficul- ties President Eisenhower is hav- ing in trying to get his budget, calling for the expenditure of $73,- 800,000,000 in the year beginning July 1, passed by the Congress. Senate Given Union Report Bill by Hill WASHINGTON (P)-A biparti- san bill to require full public dis- closure of financial and other re- ports now filed by unions with the government was introduced in the Senate yesterday. Secretary of Labor James Mit- chell has requested such legisla- tion, and sentiment in favor of it crystallized during current hear- ings of , a special1Senate Rackets Committee. Sen. Lister Hill (D-Ala), chair- man of the Senate Labor Commit- tee, introduced the bill. In recent letters to congression- al leaders, Mitchell wrote that public disclosure of financial re- ports and other information filed with the secretary of labor by labor organizations under the Na- tional Labor Relations Act "would be in the interest of the public and of the members of labor or- ganizations." Sen. John McClellan (D-Ark), chairman of the Rackets Commit- tee, approved Hill's proposal as "a step in the right direction" but forecast the introduction of much stronger legislation later. President Dwight D. Eisenhow- er recently announced a two-point plan to help curb union corruption President Eisenhower's other proposal is enactment of a long pending Labor Department bill.re- quiring periodic filing of financial reports on health and welfare and pension plans. World New By The Asso CLINTON, Tenn.-- Clinton Hig gration - begun in August amid vio fanfare yesterday as 88 white senior Not once during the 70-minute high school gymnasium was there a CHICAGO - Cook County She craft crashed shortly before midnig Police said the plane was tryir Naval Air Station. Glenview officials confirmed th gave out few details immediately. WASHINGTON - Massed thou protest yesterday - three years, to Court banned segregation in public Ranged in a great semicircle be unprecedented "prayer pilgrimage Egypt About STATE: House OK's School Aid Distribution LANSING (P)-A plan for im- mediate distribution to school districts of $24 million in primary interest funds was approved by the House yesterday and sent to Gov. G. Mennen Williams. The plan was previously given Senate approval. The House refused to go along, however, with a Senate bill which would finance school aid during the 1957-58 fiscal year by a whis- key and cigarette tax. The Senate revenue provisions would raise $23 million in new taxes asdagainst $16 million from beer and whiskey taxes under a House-approved plan. Legislators obtained the quick cash for the schools by calling for payment to the districts later this month of the regular distribu- tion of school and primary interest funds formerly paid in August of each year. Clair L. Taylor, state superin- tendent of public instruction, said he planned to lump the extra $24 million with about $10,500,000 now on hand for the regular May in- stallment. The two amounts combined, Taylor said, would leave the dis- tricts only four of five million dollars short of the amount they should receive. Taylor said this would mean the schools would receive within $3 a child of the amount originally an- ticipated under the 1956 legislative school aid formula based on a payment of $190 per pupil. SGC Receives 11 Petitions Four more people handed in petitions for the Student Govern- ment Council position before the deadline yesterday, bringing the total to 11. The new candidates are Virgil Grumbling, '58, David Wood,"'60, James Richman, '59 A&D, and Ar- thur Gaudi, '58. Other applicants for the posi- tion are James Park, '59, William Lawrence, '59, Dan Belin, '59, Jo Hardee, '60, Thomas Cleveland, '58, Arthur Epker, '58BAd, and Ann Heimerdinger, '59. .Ike Renews Opposition To Reductions in Budget CINCINNATI (A) -President Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday renewed his opposition to cuts in his foreign aid and military budget, and said years of sacrifice to keep the peace "can never equal the sacrifices of one week of global war." Hie told a Republican regional conference here by telephone from Washington that his legislative program, submitted last January "in the best interests of America," has made "little progress" in the Democratic-controlled Congress. Capehart Opposed But Sen. Homer Capehart (R-Ind.) took the floor here after the President's address and said,; "Whether I am right or whether I " am wrong, I am going to vote to cut the budget." The senator said the military budget is complicated by the fact F r l k) "we don't know what the enemy r Bis going to do." fo a- He said that after the Korean O f Leoislature War, "all our standing hardware almost overnight became obso- lete." WASHINGTON (P)-Sen. Pat- rick McNamara (D-Mich.) yester- day accused Harlow H. Curtice, President of General Motors Corp., of trying to "blackjack" the Mich- igan legislature into rejecting a proposed corporate income tax. McNamara referred to an April 26 statement by Curtice that state levels of taxation help determine where General Motors locates plants. "The timing of the threat ob- viously was to influence the Michi- gan legislature, which was con- sidering a corporate Income tax proposal," McNamara said in a Senate speech. Curtice was quoted az saying "The present level of Michigan taxation" had led General Motors to locate new plants in other states and "this also will oe taken into consideration" in the future expansion of the company. "With utter and callous disre- gard for Michigan and for the people who helped make General Motors the giant it is, Mr. Curtice sought to blacken the name of one of the nation's greatest industrial states," said McNamara. "His mo- tive could only be one of selfish- ness and greed." McNamara called the Curtice statement a threat to Michigan's economy and "a betrayal" by Cur- tice "of his state" in order to "gain temporary financial advantage." "And it would be only a tempo- rary advantage." McNamara con- tinued. "When other areas of the nation achieve the high wage, liv- ing and service standards of Michigan-and they must eventu- ally-then the likes of Mr. Curtice will have no place to hide." Warns I S ending srael Ship Budget Cut And later at a press conference, Capehart said he thinks the budget can be cut by $3 billion, including federal aid to education, foreign aid and public housing. The President, whose address received only perfunctory ap- plause at the meeting, said the Republicans "must win" control of the national legislature next year. He added, "It is clear that politi- cal responsibility can be definitely fixed only when one party con- trols both the legislative and exec- utive branches of our govern- ment." On his budget, he said, "In our desire to reduce our own tax bur- den, we must not weaken ourselves militarily or destroy our leader- ship in the free world." Two Deputies Catch Robbers On Expressway Two Washtenaw County Deputy Sheriffs won a t00 mile an hour race with two armed men down the Willow Run Expressway yes- terday. Deputies Virgil Harrison and Ed. Becker, searching for a holdup pair who robbed the Pinckney General Store of $800, spotted the speeding car headed east. They jumped the dividing strip and caught Herchell Bunch, 44 years old and Ben Leski, 30 years old, both of Ann Arbor after a four-mile chase. Harrison and Becker said the men's car contained a loaded sawed-off 20-gauge shotgun and six shells. Bunche and Leski were identi- fied at the Washtenaw County Jail by Gene, Edgar, co-owner of the Pinckney store and Mrs. Charles E. Hewlett, the store cash- ier, as the men who held up the store shortly after 4 p.m. yester- day. Bunch and Leski were turned over to state police for transpor- tation to the Livingston County Jail. Deputies said Bunch and Leski had won one race, eluding 18- year-old Bob Ward of Pinckney, who had given chase when the' men came out of thestore. Ward chased the men into Washtenaw County. Buried Child Found Alive In Deep Well MANORVILLE, N. Y. (A)-Sev- en-year-old Benjamin Hooper Jr. was rescued alive yesterday aft- er being entombed upright and all but motionless for 23/2 hours in a 24-foot-deep well. At a hospital where he was tak- en, he was expected to survive. He was conscious and called for* his mother. Rescuers clawed through the Israel Shies From Move To Waterway Egypt Bars Canal To Israeli Shipping CAIRO ()-Egypt served notice yesterday she will exercise the "right of self-defense" if Israel attempts to send a test ship through the Suez Canal. Israel appeared to be shying away from any immediate move in that direction. Abdel Kader Hatem director of information, expressed the first official Egyptian reaction to Is- rael's announcement that 'she would try to send a ship through - the 103 - mile waterway which Egypt has nationalized. Hints Warning Hatem's statement hinted Egypt would try to halt any Israeli ship the moment it enters Egyptian ter- ritorial waters and before it could reach a canal entrance. Egypt contends she is still in a technical state of war with Israel. For that reason she has barred the canal to Israeli shipping and to vessels carrying anything con- sidered of strategic value to Israel. Hatem said Egypt will take "whateveg measures she deems necessary for the canal, which Is an integral part 'of her territory." Cites Article He declared Egypt has "the right to defend her territory and safe. guard her\security" under Article 10 of the donstantinople Conven- tion of 1888governingthewater : way. The statement said Egypt "will exercise this right fully and will hold fast to it, for it is her legal right as stated In Article 51 of the United Nations charter, which says that every state is entitled to the right of 'self-defense." Thursday night Israel decided against sending the Israeli-char- tered Norwegian freighter Mara through the canal on a voyage from Haifa to Japan withy4,000 tons of potash. The Mars will go via the Panama Canal-a trip the Israelis said will cost $40,000 more than if the Mars used the Suez. Israel said previously it did 4t regard the Mars as a real test. SFA To Hear Waltr Speak On'U' Growth Assistant to the President Erich A. Walter wil address the Student- Faculty Administration Confer- ence at noon today on the growth of the University in recent years. Approximately 90 people will attend the twice yearly confer- ence, designed to "promote under- standing and increase communi- cation" between the three groups, according to Robert Lebson, '60, chairman of the Union SFA con- ference committee. Dean of Men Walter Rea will speak at a pre-meeting, scheduled to start the conference at 10 a.m. Afterwards, the three discus- sion groups will discuss integra- tion of international students, stu- dent activities and student facul- ty relations. Afternoon discussion groups have been omitted this se- mester. Student Government Council member Jean Scruggs will lead the international student integra- tion committee, which will discuss current problems of' the foreign student and proposed solutions. Student-faculty relations com- -mittee, headed by Fred Wilten, '58, executive vice-president of the Union, will consider the present faculty-student ratio, the prob- lems presentedby both inferior and superior students, and facul- ty-student relations. MichiganNine Keeps-title Hopes Alive with 7-6 Win By SI COLEMAN Michigan kept alive its Big Ten title hopes when it rallied to defeat Minnesota, 7-6, yesterday at Ferry Field. The Wolverines will meet Iowa, the Conference leader, this after- noon in a doubleheader on the same field. The Maize and Blue trailed all the way until the eighth inning when Steve Boros blasted a 400-ft. home run to dead center field C to put the Wolverines ahead, 7-6. Girardin Sparkles in Relief s R oundupSharing the spotlight with' Boros } was crafty Glen Girardin who came into the game in the fifth - inning and pitched five innings of cated Press scoreless ball, chalking up his third Big Ten win without a loss. ;h School's first year of racial inte- Going into the eighth inning, )lence - ended quietly and without Michigan was trailing, 6-3. But s and one Negro were graduated. Gene Snider, back in the lineup e commencement ceremony in the after being sidelined by an injury, ny reference to integration. started the rally by working the S Minnesota pitcher, Jerry Thomas, riff's police reported a Navy air- for a walk, the seventh one issued ht, yesterday, injuring ten persons. by Thomas. ng to land at fog-bound Glenview Girardin flied out to center, but Ernie Myers kept this last ditch at there had been an accident but rally alive by doubling between the left fielder and center fielder. The * * ball just failed to make it over sands of Negroes met in prayer'and the fence, hitting the barrier on the eryhou, ater he upremea fly, the very hour, .after the Sueme With runners on second and schools. third and cxne away, Bruce Fox, fore the Lincoln Memorial, for this held hitless all day, singled for freedom," an estimated 15,000 through the third base hole to ..,11-"'anrni- 'G'inna'4t rn----A----iI--- -r ~s X I