P Lwh -aii4 Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom LXIX, No. 368 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1959 FIVE CENTS SIX PAGES ittle Rock High Schools e-open Despite Faubus Hint of New Arrests In Cuba Crackdown Government Officials Announce Crushing of Rebel Conspiracy HAVANA (P) - New arrests were reported in the Cuban country- side yesterday in a drive against the first major conspiracy threat- ening Fidel Castro's regime. It was understood that government troops skirmished with coun- ter-revolutionary forces in Las Villas Province, Cuba's agricultural heartland. Communications Blackout A communications blackout prevented confirmation. But advices filtering through the military screen told of numer- ous arrests in two Las Villas cities, Santa Clara and Cienfuegos. Gov- ernment officials declared Mon- oyeotting O Be Use y Resistors Governor Warns Federal Troops Must Be Employed :TTLE ROCK (P)-Gov. Orval ,aubus said last night he saw iing to be gained by opposing schools today with violence.- high schools tomorrow with mce. aubus went on television to se' the school board and police f Gene .Smith ,of becoming pets for the federal govern- t but he urged citizens to fight gration through the election of lals who - would not betray 'No Victory Yet' He warned integrationists that "victory is not yet yours. Your trouble is only beginning." After his television appearance, - Faubus told newsmen the main :reason for his speech was to pre-' vent, if he' Gould; any' possible dis- order or violence today. The governor said he had re- ceived reports from over the state of caravans heading for Little Rock to protest the token integra- tion of the schools. Faubus said the reports were similar to ones he received in the.' fall of 1957 when mob violence broke out at Central High School over the integration of nine Ne- groes there. 'Quieter, but Bitter "It is quieter, now but more x bitter," Faubus said in comparing the feeling now with that in 1957. Faubus said he would not be at the atne capitol today fora seg- ,reg ationiist ;rally. He added he would be in close touch with the situation, however. Faubus declined to comment on reports he had called in a large number of state police to stand by. Earlier in' the day Faubus had said, "If the Little Rock situation is settled and if the schools are integrated, it will be under the compulsion of federal bayonets." - Faubus Quiet Faubus until yesterday had been strangely quiet. He had been ex- pected to call a special legislative session. He called none. But segregationists still rallied around him. They planned to gather on the Capitol lawn today and ask him to "do something." Faubus, speaking yesterday be- fore a Farmers Union meeting, gave no hint of any action he might take to halt desegregation of the schools. The school board buttoned down the details for integrating six Negroes into two of the schools under a state pupil placement law. Closed Schools Twice Faubus has stopped inte- gration in Little Rock. In the fall of 1957 he used the National Guard to temporarily. turn back nine Negroes at Central High School. 5 Last year he closed the schools under a quickly engcted state law recently declared unconstitutional by a federal court. The governor implied federal force was behind the integration and referred to reports of troop movements in the Pine Bluff area, 60 miles southeast of Little Rock. At Pine Bluff, Col. R. W. Dodds, commanding officer of the Pind Bluff Arsenal, said 110 Army re- servists are holding a two-week training course there but it had no connection with the Little Rock situation. To Attempt Bueking Veto On Housing WASHINGTON () - Senate Democrats decided yesterday to +rv in n,.,v.ieia P,.t. 4-4 l-a+ * MAN OR MOUSE?-These Little Rock teen-agers are asking passers-by this question, as they, demonstrate for segregation on the lawn of one of their members. Previously students of private all-white Raney High School, they staged the rally hoping to spark a ,fund drive which would allow the school to stay open in deflance of public school integration orders. USING BICYCLES: Reds Slip War Supplies into Sector day night the plot -- rumored to have called for an armed upris- ing today - had been crushed. Unofficial sources said as many as 1,500 persons were rounded up and interned at military camps for questioning. They expressed belief most would be freed after police sort them out. Many Must Talk Many, however, must do a lot of talking. One is ex-Sen. Arturo Hernan- dez Tellaheche, named by the newspaper La Calle. as the man chosen by the conspirators to re- place President Osvaldo Dorticas if their plot succeeded. He is a follower of Carlos Prio Socarras, the former Cuban presi- dent ousted by Fulgencio Batista in 1952. Castro Helps Castro was reported by Jay Mallin, Havana correspondent of the Miami Daily News, to have played a dramatic personal role in smashing the plot. According to this account: Top leaders of the counter- revolutionary movement, includ- ing Hernandez Tellaheche, were in session in a house near Ha- vana when the bearded premier stalked in. With the aid of lieutenants who had pretended to go along with the plotters, Castro helped to herd the group out of the house to army headquarters at Camp Lib- ertad. Havana was quiet after a night of a dozen street. shootings. A po- lice spokesman said the shootings were staged by the conspirators in a vain attempt to create panic. No casualties were reported. VIENTIANE, Laos (A?) - Com- munist battalions' are using bi- cycles to move arms and supplies into Sam Neua Province from the direction of North Viet Nam, a Laotian official said yesterday. Sisouk Na ,Champassak, Secre- tary of. State for Information, said the bike batallions are using Jungle paths and generally imi- tating tactics used by the Com- munist Viet' Minh during the In- dochinese war against the French. He said the contingents were composed of rebellious ill tribes- men, former members. of, the Communist Pathet Lao movement and cadres'trained in Hanoi, capi- tal of North Viet Nam., Women Conscripted . Laotian women, and -children have been conscripted to help the operation, Sisouk added.. The. Laotian ,,government says 30 per cent of the population in Sam Neua Province is inclined to Communism because of indoctrin- ation when Pathet Lao exercised control over tie norther border province., This control ended two years ago, whereas the rest of Laos was freed of CommunisW control by the 1954 Geneva agreements end- ing the French-Viet Minh fighting in Indochina. The army is scouring the prov- ince for a fifth column and has apprehended 100 operatives so far. An additional .90 insurgents have been killed and nine captured. Laotian planes have spotted Red 'concentrations around five government outposts, Sisouk said, but the army has not made con- tact with the insurgenas in the past 48 hours. " . The situation remains tense and is kept inflamed by propaganda broadcasts from Radio Hanoi, the secretary said. .Sisouk said Astrid Road leading thr'ough North Viet Nam up to the Laotian border is an import- ant supply route for the rebels. The road is named after Bel- gium's late Queen Astrid. The government estimates the Red force at 3,600. Its own strength totals 3,000 lightly armed troops and 1,900 civil guards. The secretary said eight leaders of the Communist Neo Lao Haksat party, ,including Prince Souphan- ouvong, will be tried on charges of collusion with a foreign power and aiding in bringing foreign troops into the country. Trial Possible Souphanouvong is the former leader of the Pathet Lao. Sisouk did not indicate when the trial will be held or whether it will be a court-martial. . . Under the Geneva agreement, France was permitted to maintain a training mission here. But It was recently announced a United States mission has begun training Laotian troops in the use of mili- tary equipment. North Vietnam has warned that it would consider intervention by a foreign army in Laotian affairs a threat to its security. State Sets $3 Millioln" ''Payment The State Administrative Board announced yesterday that the University would receive a pay- ment of $3,000,000, the amount which was due Aug. 1. By the end of this week State Treasurer Sanford A. Brown stat- ed that he would have $15,400,000, including $8,400,000 in cash on hand. Michigan State will receive $2,- 300,000 and Wayne State Univer- sity $1,200,000 on this payment. The regular state payroll of $4,- 400,000 is due Thursday. At the end of June, the state paid off all its obligations to the University for fiscal 1958-59. The University, in turn, reimbursed its creditors. Because of a delay in payment of the July appropriation by the state, however, the University was forced to borrow one million dol- lars to meet its major payrolls at the end of last month. The July payment was received Aug. 4. The August payment, which was approved by the State Administrative Board yesterday. will be used to meet payrolls and other normal operating expenses. In normal times, the University receives itscheck from the state during the first 10 days of each month. Receipt of the August' check would thus restore a near normal schedule of payments. The state first missed' a pay- ment to the University last:De- cember which caused the. Univer- sity to borrow $4 -million by the end of January. The University repaid these loans by- June. - Throughout the spring, the state managed to meet payments to the -University, with checks. reaching Ann Arbor just in time to meet the faculty payrolls. The University has not yet missed a payroll, or paid one late., House Split over Labor Legislation Herter's arrival, He left almost im- mediately by car for the United States Embassy h inSantiago ac- companied by Chilean~ Foreign Minister German Vergara anid United States Ambassador Walter Howe. At the airport he read a brief statement saying "the peoples of America are determined to develop political and economic institutions which will meet the deep aspira- tions of all our people for a better, more fruitful life without at the same time sacrificing our cherished principles of individual freedom and dignity. "We are convinced that the Or- ganization of American States of- fers effective means of achieving these ends through rational and fruitful international cooperation." WASHINGTON (A")-The House waded yesterday into a bare- knuckle fight over labor control legislation, with the issue very much in doubt. Immediately, a bloc of Republi- cans and Southern Democrats went on the offensive for a bill supported by President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Northern Democrats counter- attacked in behalf of a rival bill backed by the AFL-CIO and other. segments of organized labor. A third force-led by Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex.)-appealed for an end to emotion and for passage of. a bill fashioned by the ..House Labor Committee. A bill described as a middle-of-the-road compromise. The air crackled with tension. World News RoundupI CAPE CANAVERAL (P) -,The Air Force fired its third success- ful Atlas in four weeks yesterday, moving the ocean-spanning mis- sile closer to operational status. The Air Force announced shortly after the launching: "Preliminary instrumentation .data indicates that the Atlas op- erational prototype launched at the Atlantic missile range achieved most of its test objectives." The 85-foot intercontinental range war rocket belched a tail of flame as it shot to the sky and headed for a watery target off Ascen- sion Island 5,500 miles away. The Air Force and Convair Astronautics, which builds the Atlas, hopes for a third straight success in their drive to make the missile operational by Sept. 1. If all went right, recovery ships would try to retrieve a data capsule set to pop out of the missile's nose cone near Ascension. MOSCOW (P) - The Tass News Agency reported last night that Mahmoud Bagir Ogli Eivasov is dead at age 150. He was described as one of the best known old men in the Soviet Union. He lived in the Caucasian mountain village of Pirassura in So- viet Azerbaijan. The :agency said Eivasov worked on a collective farm and was feeling fine until a few days ago. Most members were in their seats and the galleries were packed with observers from labor and industry groups. For months, the pressure has been building toward this climax -toward what shapes up as the most bitter floor struggle over labor matters since the Taft- Hartley Law was enacted 12 years ago. Before the House met, Republi- can Congressional leaders went to the White House and told Presi- dent Eisenhower the bill he wants will win out. It calls for stricter controls on unions than the two other proposals in contention. All three versions are 'modeled after an anti-corruption bill passed by the Senate last April. But they differ in the stringency of their provisions. Accuses Hoffa GOP House Leader Charles M. Halleck of Indiana accused agents of Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa of using "all sorts of threats" in an effort to win passage for the labor-backed bill introduced by Rep. John F. Shel- ley (D-Calif.). - Halleck made clear to newsmen he, didn't mean physical threats but "political recriminations, de- feat at the polls" and things like that. As debate got under Xvay in the House, the rival forces maneuvered back of the scenes for every pos- sible vote when -the acid test coimes. After perhaps two days of general discussion, the voting is expected to begin perhaps late today. Leading the attack of the Republican-Southern Democratic faction was Rep. Howard W-. Smith (D-Va.). He said the Eisen- hower-endorsed bill _would satisfy public demand for an end to racketeering and other labor union abuses spotlighted by the Senate Rackets committee, headed by one supported by Rayburn-- "is worse than no bill; it weakens existing law." He noted that only five of the labor group's 30 mem-1 bers endorsed the committee's bill. In his slow Virginia drawl, Smith said the committee's report setting out the many-sided views of its members reminded him of a tiny mountain railroad "that wig- gled in and wiggled out and left all the people in doubt." - Rep. Leo Allen of Illinois, senior Republican on the Rules Com- mittee. seconded Smith's argu- ments. When the time comes to vote, Allen told his fellow members, the House will have to answer this question: "Will racketeering, gangsterism and corruption in labor unions be allowed to go un- checked?" Williams Attacks Those" Upposing Corporate Taxes LANSING (P)-Gov. G. Mennen Williams yesterday assailed a, "few" Michigan business leaders for what he said was a "scare cam- paign" to state off new taxes on business. He declined to say exactly who he meant but clearly referred to a front page spead in a Detroit newspaper detailing objections of -corporation executives to a higher Report Sets City Byass A report to the Ann Arbor City Council showed that the contro- versial US-23 Eastbelt Bypass is scheduled to be completed in the first half of 1962. It was also stated that the hopes for an alternate US-23 route through the, city to divert heavy traffic in the meantime. The report was given by Mayor Cecil 0. Creal on the discussions he and other city representatives had. in Lansing last Friday with, S t a t e Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie and members of Mackie's staff. Creal said, "The Eastbelt plans are definitely made. Right-of-way plans should be completed by Oct. 1. Work will start in June, 1960, and construction time would be 18-24 months, or a tentative com- pletion date from Jan. 1 to June 1, 1962." The proposed bypass would be- gin at an intersection with the US-12 Southbelt Bypass' south- east of the city, running parallel to the existing US-23' on the west to -ha pointnorth of Washtenaw Rd. Swinging east to cross the Huron River a quarter-mile west of the Geddes dam at Dixboro Rd., the bypass would then run east of North Campus and con- tinue north to the Dhu Varren Rd. area. From there it would go west to US-23 north of Ann Arbor. Bus Operation Will Resumne In Setebr Ann Arbor will restore its bus service in early September. City Council Monday authorized execution of a lease - agreement with Arvin Marshall, who will do, business as City Bus Co. of Ann Arbor. Marshall has already signed the agreement. The city has been without bus service since last June 12, when Ann Arbor Transit, Inc. dropped it- ann-- 1 ac.4-,-.a. af.in-- a Ma.- Louisiana's Long Jokes Over Income Tax Charge BATON ROUGE P-Gov. Earl K. Long said yesterday he doesn't intend to return to a hospital to rest but he joked, "Maybe they might catch me on the street with a net." Long gave that answer to one of two piercing questions a battery of newsmen put to him in a news conference. The other key question asked the Louisiana governor was whether he was worried about a federal investigation into his income tax. "If you are as worried about going to heaven as I am about the income tax, then you're not worried at all." Long glared at the newsman who asked the question. At first he said, "I certainly am." Then he changed his stand to "not worried in the least." Long also said "I'm> slowing down some, but I'm. not even thinking about" returning to a hospital to rest. ' "I'm going to make six speeches this weekend instead of seven," he= tax load. "They are again raising the cry that if they are required to pay a single penny of the additional taxes needed to support the state, Michigan's 'business climate' will be ruined," Williams said. To Meet Today He said two years ago a similar campaign defeated his recommen- dation for a corporation profits tax but predicted the outcome this time would be different. The legislature, deadlocked for seven months, will meet again to- day to try to round out a tax pack- age based on a one per cent in- crease in the use (sales) tax. The House has demanded some of the additional burden be placed on business in such a way as to avoid injury to low ineone or pro- fitless concerns. The Senate is against this. Executives Object Executives of. the National Bank of Detroit, the Bohn Aluminum and Brass Corp., J. L. Hudson Co. department store, the Brower Fur-( nitur Co.no ChemicC. n conceded. ILong insisted he would slow down as his doctors ordered, then listed 13 speeches he plans to make m mm mn