.. . .. ..... - CHANGING POLICY ON RED -CHINA See Page 2 C, r SAitr iAau ~Iaitii PARTLY CLOUDY High-82 Low-6 Chance of late afternoon showers or thunderstorms Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXI, No. 7 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1961 FIVE CENTS FOUR PAGES Government Charges Voter Discrmnination File Suit Accusing Mississippi Of Denying Rights to Negroes JACKSON, Miss. (P)-The Federal government hit Mississippi yesterday with two suits charging discrimination against eligible Ne- gro voters in two counties. Mississippi Gov. Ross Barnett promptly labeled the action as in- terference with local self-government. Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy said in Washington that Justice De- partment investigators showed "a clear-cut pattern of discrimina- tion."r The suits, he said, were filed "because the situation has not been rectified nor are there assurances that it ever will be rectified by local action." Denied Rights The legal maneuver contended eligible Negroes in Clarke and Forrest Counties, located in south-central Mississippi, were denied voting rights. Other voting rights Seek UN Supports For Sheik Security Council Discusses Crisis By The Associated Press Britain asked the Security Coun- cil yesterday to accede to requests from Kuwait that the United Na- tions guarantee its independence and territorial integrity. Sir Patrick Dean, the British delegate, introduced a resolution to that effect in the 11-nation council as it met for the third time since Sunday on the Kuwait crisis. He spoke in the council after Abdel Aziz Hussein, the Kuwaiti delegate, told newsmen that his Russia Joins in Defense With Communist North f j 1 1 t 1 ;1 .t Ij I 1 a ROBERT KENNEDY ...-hits discrimination BRITON: Warns West About Talks' BUERGENSTOCK, Switzerland (MP)-To believe thAt the Soviet Union actually wants a ban on nuclear tests "would denote a de- gree of optimism bordering on lunacy," a veteran British nego- tiator said last night. David Ormsby-Gore, British ambassador - designate to the United States and a veteran of nu- clear test ban talks with Russia, said the "Russians have made it abundantly clear that, for the time being, they are unfortunately not interested in an agreement on stopping nuclear tests." But, he added, the Russians realize the consequences of nu- clear war and at some time in the future may accept a test-ban treaty that includes. effective in- ternational controls. Addresses Session Ormsby - Gore addressed an opening session of a four-day for- um of United States and West Eu- ropean disarmament experts spon- sored by the American Assembly, a department of Columbia Univer- sity. The assembly is to draft a com- prehensive statement on what the Atlantic Alliance could gain or lose by trying to negotiate a con- trolled disarmament treaty with the Soviet bloc. It will also seek to advise the Western govern- ments in their future disarma- ment negotiating strategy. See Little Attraction Ormsby-Gore said the Russians' belief that their system will emerge victorious in any circum- stances "fortunately leads them to see little attraction in a nu- clear holocaust in order to speed up their victory." The Chinese Communists view is not identical, he said, "but even they are probably capable of learning." "What I do suggest," he said, "is that at some moment the So- viet Union will appreciate the ad- vantage of an agreement in the field of disarmament and may be prepared to pay the price, which is of course effective international control." Label Birch Subversive' The John Birch Society and the Ku Klux Klan have been added to the list of subversive organi- zations of the Wilmington, Del. investigations, the Justice Depart- ment said, are pending "in a num- ber of additional Mississippi coun- ties." District Judge Sidney C. Mize set a hearing on the government's petition for preliminary injunc- tions for August 7, probably at Jackson, the state capital. First Mississippi Action This was the first such action brought in Mississippi and came under the 1957 and 1960 Civil Rights Acts. Similar suits have been filed in Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee. "I don't understand why they want to interfere with local self- government," Barnett said. "Local self -government is the thing that made this nation great." Barnett declinedfurther com- ment and said he would refer the suits to Mississippi Atty. Gen. Joe Patterson, who would not com- ment on the move. Knows No Complaints Clarke County Circuit Clerk A. L. Ramsey, who is the county's registrar of voters, said he knew of no complaints from Negroes. "We haven't had any Negroes ask to vote," Ramsey said. "We have six registered this year. But there has been no election since they registered. One of them sat on a trial jury in circuit court." Ramsey also mentioned Missis- sippi's poll tax which places a $2 levy yearly on all citizens over 21, and they must present a tax re- ceipt in order to vote. Stores End Segregation In Oklahoma OKLAHOMA CITY (P) --Three downtown eating places, sites of frequent racial demonstrations for almost a year, have ended their segregation policies, it was, announced yesterday. Iarvey P. Everest, chairman of the Governor's Committee on Hu- man Relations, said the luncheon- ette in the John A. Brown Co. store, a lunch counter in the H. L. Green Co. store and the Forum Cafeteria were now serving Ne- groes. Everest said other independent city restaurants also have adopt- ed open policies, but Anna Maude Cafeteria and Bishop's Restau- rant, which have been picketed frequently by integrationists, were still maintaining segregation. Everest said restaurants in Ok- mulgee and Henryetta were now integrated, as is a major Tulsa hotel. He said steps are being taken in Tulsa to desegregate municipal recreation facilities. W alkout DAMASCUS, Syria (A)-Da- mascus Press reports last night said Saudi Arabia threatened to ; walk out of the Arab League if Kuwait is not 'admitted into membership. The reports said King Saud of Saudi Arabia conveyed this threat to Arab League Secre- tary - General Abdul Khalek Hassouna during Hassouna's visit to Saudi Arabia on the last stage of his peacemaking mis- sion over the Iraq-Kuwait cris- is. The Arab League Council is to convene next Wednesday to consider Kuwait's application. government could not ask British troops to withdraw unless the council guarantees Kuwait's inde- pendence as a state qualified for UN membership. Kassem Rejects Force In Baghdad, Iraq's Premier Ab- del Karim Kassem vowed his country will never use force to gain Kuwait. "We will never use any means but peaceful means. We will never resort to aggres- sion," he declared. Dean's mildly worded resolution asked the council to take note that British forces were sent to the oil- rich desert kingdom in response to an appeal from its ruler, Ab- dullah As-Salin As-Sabah, and that they would be withdrawn as soon as he considers that "the threat to Kuwait is removed." As-Sabah asked for the council meeting on the grounds that Iraq was, threatening to take military action to implement its claim that Kuwait is part of Iraq. Notes Iraqi Statement The resolution also asked the Council to take note of state- ments by Iraq that it would em- ploy only "peaceful means in pur- suance of its policy." The resolution calls "upon all states to respect the independence and territorial integrity of Ku- wait," and urges "that all con- cerned should work for peace and tranquility in the area." In his first interview since an- nouncing last Sunday's Iraq claim on the oil sheikdom, Kassem told three American and four British correspondents: "Again I must assure you Ku- wait will return to the motherland .. But we do not live in barbar- ian ages when brutal means are used to defeat the well-being of man." GERMANY: Peace Pact Requested By IUbricht BERLIN (A')-Walter Ulbricht, East Germany's Communist lead- er, yesterday asked for a peace treaty that would make all Ger- many neutral and he threatened to move against West Berlin whether he gets it or not. He insisted that his intentions are peaceful, that the Commu- nists would not use force unless attacked. But he said West Ber- lin must be eliminated "as a strongpoint of the cold war" and continued: "With the conclusion of a peace treaty, even if it is only with the (Communist East) German Dem- ocratic Republic, there will begin a new settlement of the West Ber- lin question. I want to leave no doubt about this." Promises Treaty Soviet Premier N i k i t a S. Khrushchev has promised to sign a peace treaty with East Germany by the end of the year, thus giv- ing Ulbricht greater power to close off the western road and rail lifelines to West Berlin. Khrushchev renewed his promise in a speech at the Kremlin yes- terday. The Communists used to talk a great deal about making Germany a neutral zone in Central Europe, and with Ulbricht's speech to the East German Parliament yester- day, they appear to be pressing the idea again. Ulbricht said nothing about So- viet and Western troops now in Germany, or what should be done about them. But under traditional definitions of East-West neutral- ity, troops from both sides would have to withdraw. Western troops also would have to get out of West Berlin. Asks For Neutrality "What would be so terrible," he asked, "about being militarily neutral and live for some centur- ies, perhaps forever, in peace and without war, like Sweden, Switzer- land and now Austria?" Several years ago a number of West European governments also toyed with the idea, but it was generally conceded to offer too many military advantages to the Russians-who would merely with- draw a few hundred miles to Po- land-and it was quietly dropped. Set Con-Con For Lansing A state preparatory commission decided yesterday it will make all advance arrangements to hold Michigan's constitutional conven- tion in Lansing next October. Backed by an $85,000 Kellogg Foundation Grant, the 18-mem- ber commission appointed by Gov- ernor John Swainson voted to keep con-con in Lansing to head off rivalry between several cities that have indicated they would like to host the convention. -AP wirephoto HOUSING BARRIERS-The Kennedy Administration assembled Washington real estate men yes- terday and warned that racial barriers around luxury apartments there may cost this country the United Nations votes of emerging African nations. Officials claimed progress toward solving a delicate international problem: how to find suitable housing for the growing African diplomatic corps in the nation's capital. Discussing the problem posed by the President here are (left to right) Frank J. Luchs, president of the Washington Real Estate Board; Federal Housing Adminis- trator Robert C. Weaver, and Washington realtor and builder Morris Cafritz. Cafritz said he would be willing to build any size structure, without profit. "We are spending billions for foreign aid, yet this situation gives us a black eye," he commented after the closed meeting. INVESTIGATE GRADUATE STUDENTS: 'U Unaware of HUAC Screenings Here Study Housing for Diplomats Ureaty Korea Reds Claim South Korea May Attack Say West Resists Soviet Proposals To Ease Tension MOSCOW (W)-Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev announced yester- day that the Soviet Union has signed a mutual defense treaty with Communist North Korea, and pictured it as necessary because of Western resistance to easing world tensions. The Soviet leader said the trea- ty was aimed at countering "a growing threat" of aggression from South Korea but he also pictured the East-West quarrel over the future of West Berlin as a factor. (Official Washington, reported surprised by the announcement of the pact, studied it for the possi- bility that it reflected a deepen- ing rift between Moscow and Red China, and also for indications of a possible bearing on Khrushchev's maneuvers regarding Berlin.) Provides Mutual Aid The treaty, Khrushchev said, provides for mutual aid in the event of an armed attack on eith- er the Soviet Union or North Ko- rea. He said the recent coup in South Korea establishing a "re- gime of open military-fascist dic- tatorship" poses a threat and he considered it his duty to "warn the aggressive forces that if an at- tack is made on the Korean Dem- ocratic Republic, then the Soviet Union will look upon this attack as an attack upon itself." "We, of course, are not in favor of military agreements," Khrush- chev said in his speech to a So- viet - North Korean friendship meeting in Moscow, "but we had to sign this treaty of a defensive nature because the governments of the United States, Japan and other powers have turned down all our proposals toward the relaxa- tion of tensions and insuring se- curity in the Far East." Brings Up Berlin Khrushchev also brought up Berlin in this connection. He said the Communist nations want peace, and added: "But it must not be overlooked that the ruling circles of the West- ern powers do not want a relaxa- tion of international tension and seek to delay the solution of pressing international problems. Especially alarming is the fact that there still is no German peace treaty." Publication of the North Ko- rean-Soviet treaty in itself raised speculation in Moscow that the Soviet Union has replaced Com- munist China as chief protector of North Korea, The Chinese Communists sent "volunteers" to intervene in the Korean war. But Premier Kim 11 Sung of North Korea said that all the Red Chinese "volunteers" had gone. E Bulletin A CAPE CANAVERAL (tP-The Air Force early this morning fired an Atlas missile on a record - shattering 9,054 - mile flight past the tip of South Africa into the Indian Ocean. It was the longest surface-to- surface missile flight on rec- ord, but only 12 miles farther than the 9,042-mile course cov- ered by two earlier Atlases last year. The Air Force announced the 85-foot rocket successfully dropped its tactical-type nose cone in the intended target zone about 1,000 miles south- east of Capetown, South Africa. French Shoot Five Moslems By MICHAEL OLINICK University officials said yes- terday they have not received any communications from the House Un-American Activities Commit- tee in regard to HUAC investiga- tions of graduate students holding government fellowships. Vice - President for Research Ralph A. Sawyer, who also heads the Rackham garduate school, said he had not heard of any Univer- sity student being screened for political action or belief. He said the committee has not contacted him. HUAC began screening the list of government fellowship holders several weeks Lgo after it ques- tioned the National Science Foun- dation about a $3,800 scholarship awarded to a student previously convicted for refusing to say whether he was a Communist. Cancel Scholarships The scholarship was cancelled on the grounds that its holder, Edward L. Yellin, a graduate stu- dent in mechanical engineering at the University of Illinois, might be imprisoned before the grant expired. The contempt case is now awaiting appeal to the Supreme Court. "Every University student who has received an NSF grant through the University has signed the loyalty oath and disclaimer affidavit," Sawyer said. "We haven't had any reports of stu- dents objecting to them." 'U' Opposes Disclaimer Sawyer said he felt the dis- claimer was unnecessary and he pointed out that the University has gone on record as opposing it. Freeman Miller, associate dean of Rackham and the man who supervises the NSF grants for the University, also reported no know- ledge of investigations of local students. He said about 80 Ursiversity stu- dents hold NSF co-operative fel- lowships and summer fellowships for graduate teaching assistants. Sawyer said it is not the "Uni- versity's business to check on the loyalty of a student." He said that if a student did sign the oath and disclaimer and later was found to be a "subversive," he could face criminal charges of perjury. ' He said there was a natural fear among Congressmen that stopped them from speaking out, against the disclaimer. "If they do, their opponents criticize them for being soft on Communism." Some form of loyalty oath has been attached to research grants since the first Atomic Energy Commission awards in 1946, Saw- yer said. Rush Pleads for No Cuts In Foreign Aid Program WASHINGTON (P)-Secretary of State Dean Rusk told Congress yesterday that menacing conditions around the world make it inad- visable to slash President John F. Kennedy's foreign aid program. Rusk made his plea for the $4.8 billion program at a three- hour closed session of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. His views were reported by the chairman, Sen. J. William Fulbright (D- Ark). Fulbright said Rusk, in support of the program, made an ex- 'cellent presentation of the men- acing conditions in Berlin, Laos, and Cuba. Improve Chances The chairman added that these af1oI conditions have enhanced chances for the bill to win approval from 'FOR WARD LOOKING' CHIEF OF STAFF: Lincoln's Foresight Aided Struggling By DAVID MARCUS Foresight, the mark of successful statesman, was Abraham Lin- coln's chief attribute, Roy P. Basler, Director of the Reference De- partment of the Library of Congress said yesterday. Lecturing on "Lincoln as a Statesman," Basler cited several specific acts of his adminstration as particularly forward looking: Lincoln's plans for a long war were more realistic than the ideas of many of his generals who thought the war could be ended quickly without much bloodshed; Blockade Strangles South His blockade of Confederate ports helped lead to the strangula- tion of the South; His war policy and strategy, though sometimes poor, was on the whole the best possible plan for victory; His understanding of the postwar Negro problem as expressed in several of Lincoln's letters in which he called for education and Congress. "The pressures to approve it will be very great," Fulbright said. "The country is nervous about the outlook and the critical atmos- phere will resolve doubts in favor of the bill." Sends Formal Request As Rusk testified, the President sent Congress his formal request for the appropriations and bor- rowing authority needed to finance the foreign aid program. Fulbright listed some of the views of Rusk on various topics: -Laos is "not to be written off." Rusk is "still hopeful something can be worked out," Fulbright , o _ .. .... .......... ::Q , l _::::::::. ::::::: ':::::fit 'ti:b ....... < i:: :{i:i'it iii iii'iii .... . . ...