i- GERMAN TRADE BENEFITS ISRAEL See Page 2 iitiF Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom :43 PALTLYCLOUDY, WARM VOL. LXIX, No.13S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1959 FIVE CENTS FOUR PAGES Indonesian Post Taken BysSukarno Names Self Minister, Enlists Army Leader JAKARTA, Indonesia (P)-Pres- ident Sukarno appointed himself prime minister of this sprawling E ~island nation Yesterday an a broughtAbdul Hars Nasution, a tough and efficient Army general, into the' cabinet to help end po- litical bickering and sputtering rebellion. The country is in ceonomic dif- ficulties, too. Sukarno, leader of the nation since it fought for and won in- dependence from the Dutch 10 years ago, reshuffled his inner cabinet and barred all political parties, including the Commu- nists. Only Two Changes Although the press has been calling for "new and efficient men," there were only two new faces in the cabinet: Ipik Gada- mana, West Java governor, who becomes minister of home affairs and regional autonomy; and Lt. Gen. Nasution, Army chief of staff who virtually ran the coun- try during Sukarno's recent 67- day absence on a long world tour. The 40-year-old general con- tinugs as head of the Army and steps into politics for the first time by becoming defense min- lsetr as well. An iron-willed disciplinarian, he denies leaning toward East or West in the Cold War but says he is only "pro- my country." But he has been credited with a major role' in the recent fall of Communist popularity here as well as a corresponding rise in understanding between Indonesia and the West. Sukarno abolished the constitu- tion Sunday and restored the 1945 constitution. That meant the end of parlia- ment and cleared the way for what Sukarno calls "guided de- mocracy" - government by per-. sonal ability rather than political influence. Abolishes Assembly A constituent assembly had been dragging its feet on writing a new constitution including Su- karno's ideas and he abolished the assembly, too. The sequence of events demon- strated Sukarno was more deter- mined than ever to stamp out the guerrilla remnants of last year's t rebellion. Rebels in the outer islands had demanded a stronger voice in the central government and claimed their areas were being neglected economically by Jakarta. Their leaders are still at large. Seek Atlanta Integration ATLANTA ('P) - A federal dis- tnict judge yesterday ordered At- lanta school officials to produce a desegregation plan by Dec. 1. But he said the plan may be submitted contingent on action of the Georgia Legislature. This left in doubt whether At- lanta schools actually would be integrated or be closed under state laws. Reasonable Start The order by Judge Frank Hooper said the plan should pro- vide a prompt and reasonable start toward integration of At- lanta public schools and a method for achieving desegregation with all deliberate speed. ' l i 1 t 1 1 E t 1 i L } t I f f f 1 T S 1 t t C C E -Daily-Robert Dennis SOVIET CHALLENGE - The Russian economic aid program absorbed Prof. Berliner during his talk yesterday. Warns of Soviet Threat In Area of EconomicAid By KATHLEEN MOORE The Soviet economic aid program seems to have assumed the "modest role" of "furthering the forces of neutralism" in uncom- mitted nations. Prof. Joseph S. Berliner of the Syracuse University economics department suggested this as the primary objective of Soviet aid in a talk here yesterday, saying the popular notions of espionage and subversion as goals were probably false since a "few scandals" would -destroy the program's effective- ness., As for the concept of the Soviet Dcatbloc attempting to influence a na- tion's politics by threatening to cut off its aid, he predicted "a Nasser 'A ttack Ike or Nehru would say 'take your damn dam and go home,"' a pos- WASHINGTON (R-Democratic sibility the Russians are beginning Senate leaders lit into President to accept. n Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday Aid doesn't necessarily breed1 for vetoing domtstic housing legis- goodwill, he explained. lation while pressing for more for- However modest its goal, the eign aid spending. Communist world's program does eig aid present a very real threat to the Majority Leader Lyndon B. international position of the Johnson (D-Tex.) told the Senate United States, Prof. Berliner in- that eventually "the cloak of sisted He advocated stepped-up hypocrisy is goinig to be torn fromfrgnadrgrm tocner some of this propaganda." m foreign aid programs to counter the threat, warning against a "What's good for Burma ought United States of the future as a to be good for the United States," "shrinking oasis of uncertain free- Sen. Johnson said. doms in a world lost not by force The assistant Democratic lead- but default." er, Sen. Mike Mansfield of Mon- The Marxists, he said, have a tana, said President Eisenhower long-range view of history which was demanding "every dime the "is on the side of the growing administration asks" for foreign power, not the greatest power, at aid and at the same time putting any given moment." While the domestic needs on a basis of "not United States "spends its energies" all or nothing but little or nothing." on the solution of racial tensions Referring to President Eisen- and the upgrading of living stand- hower's veto of a broadscale hous- ards, the Soviets, unopposed, con- ing bill last Tuesday and the Presi- tinue to plough profits back into dent's news conference statement industrial growth, he explained. Wednesday that a special session Rapid Soviet industrialization, might be needed to vote sufficient he stressed, was "accomplished foreign aid funds, Sen. Johnson under a non-capitalistic system," said: an important factor to uncom- "On Tuesday we have a veto of mitted -nations where the "money a bill on the grounds that it would lender and merchant are tradi- authorize excessive spending. On tionally objects of contempt." Wednesday we are told that we The fact that the USSR was the might be called back in special only nation opposing the colonial session if we don't spend enough. powers and one of the few ap- Sen. Johnson added: "It would parently free of racial troubles be helpful if somebody would just also influence newly-independent lay down a few ground rules for and yet underdeveloped nations, this course." he added. Other Democrats continued to The Soviet program of loans take potshots at their national contrasts with and has some ad-1 chairman, Paul M. Butler,,for his vantages over the United States',I criticism of the Democratic lead- which is based primarily on out- ership in Congress. right grants NEW TALKS: Herter Hopeful On Berlin WASHINGTON ( - Secretary of State Christian A. Herter yes- terday saw some possibility - though he is not optimistic - of reaching an agreement with the Russians on Berlin. The prospects, he indicated, will depend on what answers the So- viets give to a pair of questions from the Allies when the East- West foreign ministers conference resumes in Geneva Monday. Two Points Sec. Herter said the Western Allies will want to know: 1) Whether the Russians are saying that Allied rights in Berlin will expire atthe end of an 18- month deadline, or whether they will continue even though no East-West agreement has been reached by then, and 2) Whether the amount of time allowed for negotiation on the German question is itself a nego- tiable point as far as the Russians are concerned. Charges Unclaity Since the Geneva talks recessed fruitlessly on June 20, he said, the Reds havg left unclear whether they are insisting on a deadline to push the Allies out of Commu- nist-encircled West Berlin. The Western powers have made clear they will not negotiate un- der a deadline which they regard as an "ultimatum." The United States foreign af- fairs chief declined to say wheth- er a favorable answer from the Communists on these questions would constitute the progress that President Dwight D. Eisehower says is needed from the Geneva conference before he would go to a summit meeting of heads of state. As the questioning ranged far and wide, Sec. Herter admittedly slipped up in saying at one point that he might not be welcomedin Berlin after the Geneva confer- ence. He said that the remark had been just an off-hand comment on the possibility of a bad deci- sion from West Berlin's stand- point, which he hoped would not occur. Reverses Statement On another question he re- versed himself completely. This was when he said he thought the Soviet at Geneva were really try- ing to find a solution to the Ger- man question rather than just reaping propaganda. In his ad- dress to the nation 17 days ago he'said the Reds gave no sign of interest in genuine negotiations. Sec. Herter voiced hope that the second go-around at Geneva would not last beyond three weeks. The fist stage lasted six weeks. Action Seen 'On ights Bill By Next Week' WASHINGTON (A) - North- erners and Southerners in the House Judiciary Committee sparred for an inconclusive open- ing round yesterday over pro- posed additions to the civil rights law. A drive is on to draft a bill by next week for House considera- tion later. The civil rights bill is part of the Democratic legislative pro- gram which one faction in the party now says is moving too+ slowly. Vietnamese American Blame Red Hatchers Greet Summer Students -David Giltrow OPEN AIR--Summer Session students were received by University President Harlan Hatcher and Mrs, Hatcher (insert) at their home last night. Guests heard evening music from the Hatcher porch. Terrorists Murder )fficer, Sergeant; s for Secret Attack 0 LEGISLATURE: Tax Battles To Continue LANSING WP-Michigan Law- makers scattered for their homes yesterday after drab House and Senate meetings that failed to produce any significant develop- ments on the overshadowing taxa- tion issue. They will return to the Capitol at 8 p.m. Tuesday for the 116th day of the marathon Legislative, session. They are still faced with the problem of raising about 140 mil- lion dollars in new revenue for the 9-day-old fiscal year which started July 1. Party leaders are having an in- creasingly difficult time keeping members in town. . Before they left yesterday, the legislators were told by Gov. G. Mennen Williams that the two per cent flat rate income tax is the "most equitable" plan before the Legislature._ "By and large it does not add an extra burden to low-income groups," Gov. Williams said. Gov. Williams had originally supported a graduated personal income tax, but compromised aft- er such a plan was rejected by the Republicans. Williams Hails Passage Of Record State Budgets By The Associated Press LANSING-Governor G. Mennen Williams signed five more 1959- 60 budget bills yesterday, including one for higher education, and claimed a victory in the "battle of the budget." The Governor praised the Republican-run Legislature for "recog- nizing the needs of the state" in adopting nine budget bills totaling $361 million which come within two per cent of meeting the Governor's spending recommendations. "Now if the Legislature will enact a tax program which is fair and' work- l e and which provides sufficient money to pay these appropria- tions, we will be back on the road # to solvency and restoration of theI state's dignity and reputation," he sai.Spending Bills NEW YORK ()-The New York Bills signed yesterday allocate City Commission on Intergroup $101.2 million for higher educa- Relations, set up to eliminate prej- tion, $70.9 million for mental udice and discrimination, sched- health programs, $10.3 million for uled today a hearing on charges conservation, recreation and agri- that the famed West Side Tennis culture, $16.1 million for public Club bars Negroes and Jews as health, and $9.6 million for regu- members. latory agencies. The Forest Hills Club, site of the The Legislature has yet to take United States tennis champion- action on bills providing for state ships and the Davis Cup matches, school aid and capital outlay, was criticised in Congress, too, for Lawmakers could boost totals to shutting its doors to Ralph Bunche, a minimum $405 million or as a Negro. much as $425 million, mostly de- Bunche, undersecretary of the, pending on the level of school aid. United Nations and winner of the (The University is expected to Nobel Peace Prize for his work in receive a share, perhaps -$4 or $5 mediating the Arab-Israeli con- million, of the capital outlay ap- flict, said Wilfred Burglund, presi- propriation.) dent of the club, advised him the Common Victory club's policy excludes both Negroes "This is a victory, but it is a and Jews as members. victory not of partisanship but of The commission hearing was set common sense on both sides," Gov. for July 21. Williams declared. Alfred J. Marrow, chairman of "It is disappointing that the the 15-member group created by Legislature, while doing a generally law in 1955, said the commission realistic job, did not provide ade- has subpoena powers. quately for such things as small He asserted that Burglund and colleges, the polio vaccine pro- other club officials would be called gram, assistance to the tubercu- to the hearing. losis programs of local commu- Officials of the United States nities and support for two new Lawn Tennis Association also may cauthor uidance clinics that were be asked to attend the hearing, the The Governor praised lawmak- chairman said. ers for allocating $500,000 for an Although the West Side Tennis Institute of Science and Tech- Club is a private organization, its nology at the University. facilities.are used for the United States tennis championships and the Davis Cup challenge matches. Indicate Lon"We find it unthinkable," said Marrow, "that major international M uch W ea ker athletic events for which the gen- Authorities Forecast New Riots Army Billet Attacked While Soldiers View Old American Movies BIENHOA, South Viet Nam (P) - Terrorists with tommy guns in- filtrated a United States Army billet last night and killed a major and a sergeant in a group watching an old American movie. The government blamed Com- munists. The attack went on for ten minutes. One of the attackers was blown to pieces by his own home- made bomb. Two Vietnamese army guards and a Vietnamese boy were killed in an ensuing gun battle. Watching Movie Six American service men - members of a military aid group -were in the mess hall watching the movie. Beside the two dead, a captain was wounded. The three American survivors could see the attackers peering in through screen windows as bullets' smashed into the floor and walls. In a lull in the firing, the Ameri- cans made a break for the main door of the mess hall, sped outside and summoned two companies of South Vietnamese soldiers. Flee to River The Vietnamese drove off th' attackers, believed to total about ten, who fled to the nearby Dong- nai River. They apparently had come up by the river. Maj. Dale R. Buis of Imperial Beach, Calif., and M.Sgt. Chester M. Ovnand of Copperas Cove, Tex., were killed. Capt. Howard B. Boston of Blairsburg, Iowa, was wounded and flown to Manila for treatment. He was not wounded seriously said a joint communique from the Viet Nam government and the United States embassy. Team Members The six Americans were mem- bers of an eight-man United States Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) team training the sol- diers of anti - communist South Viet Nam in the use of American- supplied weapons. Indicating that this may be the signal for a new wave of terrror- ism, authorities said the attackers in this city of 200,000 seemed to be well informed of United States army habits. There had been no attacks on Americans here by partisans of Communist North Viet Nam since a series of bombings in the autumn of 1957 at Saigon, 20 miles south of Bienhoa. The terrorists chose a time when they knew the Americans would be assembled for a nightly movie. Steel Strike Still Possible Despite Tallks NEW YORK (M )- Steel. neg- tiators temporarily suspended di- rect talks yesterday to reach tlei minimum terms needed for a contract settlement before nxt Tuesday midnight's strike dead- line. Major steel company executives were reported huddling secretly to discuss the possibility of making a formal settlement offer. There seemed to be a good deal, of argument on this among: the top dozen steel firms guiding the negotiations. The Steelworkers Union, for its part, was reported to have whittled down its asking price for a new contract and seeking to win a possible meeting ground with the industry. Barring progress toward a settlement - and there seems to hae~ hPn nhivna.rn, , r,. o- v.v+aaj.. ... ..vaab+v .na. a abaav a wa vim Although informed sources dicted some plan would be pre- sub-, mitted by the board, there was doubt that the Legislature would provide what Hooper called "stat- utes permitting such a plan to be put 'into operation." Present state law provides for the closing of any schools ordered to integrate. Gov. Ernest Vandiver has said he may propose new segregation laws when the Legislature meets in January, but will not favor any changes which would lead to integration. 'Reasonable' Period Hooper's order enjoined the city and the Atlanta Board of Education from enforcing or pur- suing racial segregation in school HEADS EAST FROM CHICAGO: eandering Kozlov Surveys Farms, Business CHICAGO (P)-Capitalists and corn kept Comrade Frol R. Kozlov moving at a gruelling pace yes- terday. The touring Soviet first deputy premier clambered aboard a farm truck near the town of Morris, Ill., and surveyed the lush green fields of the sort of farmer who does not exist in the Soviet Union -the independent one. Obviously impressed by what he saw and learned, the right- hand man to Premier Nikita Khrushchev left the rurnl alnts- At another farm he inspected price cattle and automatic feed- ing equipment and complimented As Kozlov arrived at city hall for an official greeting from Chi-' bo 'x .}, ' ^« : rI cago's Mayor Richard J. Daley, a crowd of pickets waited across the street, carrying signs with such legends as "International Steal Company," and "Free the Com- munist Slaves". The orderly demonstrators were outnumbered by about 240 police. After- polite greetings in the mayor's office, Kozlov left for the Grundy County farm country, the boos of the demonstrators his only popular sendoff. Studies Corn A nn arm hPwnrip +hrah- pretty good at that sort of thing, hinted the Russians were getting too. Seldom, if ever, on this trip has he admitted that Americans do anything better than the Russians do. To the Communists, Kozlov's host today would be known as a "Kulak," or an independent farm- er hiring farm workers. The Ku- laks were liquidated as a class ruthlessly by Stalin. To Farmer Holderman's pretty 15-year-old twin daughters. Ra- ME"'IM-11