TRE MICHIGAN DAILY TFENSE VALUE DEBATED: Campaign Centers on Quemoy, Matsu WASHINGTON (P-The presi- dential campaign centered yester- day on one issue: Should the Unit- ed States commit itself to protect the far away islands of Quemoy and Matsu front Communist cap- Lure? Sen. John F. Kennedy, the Dem- ocratic nominee, was busy in New Sailor W1s U.S. ASylu11 NEW YORK P)--The seaman who fled Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's ship, the Baltika, two days ago won political asylum in the United States yesterday- and with it the freedom he sought. The seaman, Victor Jaanimets, was allowed to leave the immigra- tion service offices where he had been held pending determination of his status and background. The decision was announced by P. A. Esperdy, district director of the service. Esperdy said he made the deci- sion after consulting his superiors in Washington. He said that "after checking sources of information, we have decided that Mr. Jaanimets is a bona fide political refugee." The Internatonal Rescue Com- mittee has been selected as spon- sor for Jaanimets to "look after his welfare and get him settled," Esperdy said. Asked whether a guard would be provided to protect the seaman from possible reprisal by Soviet; agents, Esperdy said: "Definitely not." The rescue committee had an- nounced earlier that it would try to provide a home and a job for Jaanimets if asylum were grant- ed. He wants a job as a machin- ist. . . 1 York defending his view that to base the United States defense line in the Far East on those two islets might suck this country into a war without the support of world opinion. He reiterated that the tiny is- lands off the Chinese mainland, unlike Formosa, are regarded as strategically indefensible by the nation's "finest military minds." Defends Stand Vice-President Richard M. Nix- on, the Republican nominee, has been hitting hard at the theme that not one inch of free territory should be handed over to the Communists. The Vice-President said that to yield Quemoy and Matsu would only whet the appe- tite of the Chinese Reds for the Nationalist island of Formosa. Nixon's advisers let it be known they feel their candidate has hit on a politcially rich issue in Que- moy and Matsu and will keep hammering at it. The question was raised dur- ing last week's nationally broad- cast debate between Kennedy and Nixon. It seems certain to be raised again in tonight's show- alongside another foreign policy question: Has America's prestige abroad been shrinking? Nixon says no. Kennedy says yes. Debate Disagreement Meanwhile, Kennedy and Nixon continued not to see exactly eye- to-eye on expansion of the TV- radio debates. Kennedy has agreed to a suggestion that a fifth be added to the four debates sched- uled. But Nixon suggested that this time be handed over to the vice presidential candidates and that the fourth between the presi- dential candidates be expanded- from one to two hours. Rebukes Ike At a civil rights conference, Kennedy rebuked President Ei- senhower without mentioning himt by name. He said: "There is more! to the presidency than to let things drift and then suddenly call out troops." This was an obvious reference to Eisenhower's use of troops to quell mob resistance to the admis- sion of Negro students at Central High School in Little Rock, Ark., in 1957. Addressing the Associated Busi- n e s s Publications Conference, Kennedy denounced as "one of the great political myths of our time" what he said is the assump- tion that there is an inevitable conflict between the business community and the Democratic Party. Kennedy pledged that if he is elected he Will not conduct a busi- ness administration, nor a labor, nor a farmer administration. He said it will seek to serve all Amer- icans.' Cuba Rebels' Face Death HAVANA (P)-The Castro . re- gime yesterday demanded death for a Bostonian and seven Cubans in a rebel expeditionary force that landed last week on the Northeast coast. The man from Boston is Antho- ny Zarba, 27, on trial at Santiago, in far Eastern Cuba before a mili- tary court. At Santa Clara, in mid-Cuba, a defendant from New York City.! faced a lesser penalty if convicted in a military court mass trial of 174 other accused counterrevolu- tionaries. Demands Death The prosecution at Santa Clara: demanded death for six leaders in the big group but asked only a 5 to 30 year prison sentence for the New Yorker, Richard Pecor- aro of Staten Island, At Santiago, Zarba admitted taking part in the expedition in- to eastern Cuba, said he tried to pull out at the last moment, and was sorry for what he had done. Caught in Roundup Pecoraro was swept up in a roundup of suspected counter- revolutionaries. Except for four Russians, all foreign newspapermen were bar- red from the Santa Clara court-! room. The newspaper El Mundol gave a few details of Pecoraro testimony. . Exact identification of Pecoraro; was lacking in Cuban reports. But a New York City fireman named Pecoraro was fired from his job last month when he went to Cuba' and overstayed his leave, Party Votes To Support Arms Stand SCARBOROUGH, England (M- The ruling Conservative Party yesterday overwhelmingly sup- ported Britain's independent nu- clear deterrent and called for a stronger North Atlantic Alliance. Endorses Policies With only one dissenting vote out of 4,000, the conference en- dorsed the basic defense and dip- lomatic policies of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's Conservative government. The delegates emphatically dis- sociated themselves from the "ban the bomb" movement--an emo- tion-laden campaign aimed at get- ting Britain to give up its own atomic and hydrogen weapons. Point Won . Advocates of nuclear disarma- ment won their,/point in the La- bor Party conference held in the same Scarborough Hall last week. But they made no impact at all on the Conservatives. As a result of the decisions by the two party conferences, an odd three-way split on the nuclear question now has developed in the political life of this island na- tion. Support Need The Conservatives support the need for Britain to keep its own nuclear weapons, The moderate Laborites, led by opposition lead- er Hugh Gaitskell, also believe in an independent British deterrent with some qualifications. But the Labor Party's left wing now is actively campaigning against possession of the bomb and against Britain's continued membership in NATO. Goldfine Ruled 'Mentally Ill BOSTON (M) - Federal Judge George C. Sweeney yesterday rul- ed industrialist Bernard Goldfine mentally incompetent to stand trial on income tax evasion charges and ordered him commit- ted for treatment. Goldfine, friend of former pres- idential assistant Sherman Adams, is accused of evading $791,745 in personal and corporate taxes. Judge Sweeney acted after three court-appointed psychiatrists tes- tified they found Goldfine suf- fering from a manic depressive psychosis with suicidal tendencies. Goldfine, 70, was ordered com- mitted to the custody of the at- torney general until he is able to stand trial, or some other dispo- sition is made of the case. Japan ears errorism 0 - o ollowingAssassination Police Order Irnmediate sInvestgation Socialists Leaderlessrrim ay ga For National Election TOKYO yA)-The assassination of Socialist Party Chairman Ine- Jiro Asanuma raised fears in this shocked nation today that ultra-r nationalist terrorism may again become a force in Japanese poli- Stical life. The burly, anti-American poli- "tician was stabbed to death by a lfanatical right-wing student. The assassin, 17-year-old Otoya Yamaguchi, attacked Asanuma yesterday as he addressed a poli- . tical meeting, stabbing him in the v chest twice with a foot-long sa- -.P Wtrep mural sword. SECONDS BEFORE DEATH-Taken by surprise, Japanese Socialist Party Chairman Inejiro A Asanuma, an outspoken friend numa makes a futile gesture to ward off 17-year-old Rightist fanatic Otaya Yamaguchi's 12-i of Red China and militant foe of Samurai sword while Asanuma delivers a speech at a political rally in Tokyo. Asanuma, left, alliance, died en route toa hos- stabbed twice and died shortly after the young assassin was apprehended on the spot. The stabb pital. - first to involve a major Japanese poliical figure in 24 years, stirred fears of an outbreak of t Calls Leader Traitor rorism similar to that which raised militarists to power prior to World War IL The youth, overpowered on the__ spot, later told police he consid- ered the Socialist leader a traitor - S.GC trying to sell out Japan to the Communists. PLAY WOLVERINE CLUB SPONSOREI The government ordered an im- mediate crackdown on suspected PATS PAR3AWAY TRIPS terrorist organizations after 10,000 union members and leftist univer- 1GOLFCOURSE1.o. sity students marched on police ' 2 * 2. Oi Se headquarters and the official res- 2. Ohio State idence of Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda. at olie, tre tFor Information and Reservations About 500 of the marchers,.Cal 5-8215 between 3:00 and 5:00 any day hurling rocksatplcrido Read the ClassifiedsoCll586,..Iwnr2-16..Jd break through the lines of guards, or Call 5-8367.,..rwin or 2-3156...Judy Crowd Disperses The remainder of the crowd stood quietly and broke up after government officials promised to move swiftly to stamp out ter- rorism. Police staged a series of raids last night, including one on the headquarters of the Nazi-style Japan Patriotic Society. Yama- guchi had been a member of the organization until last May. Asanuma's murder, the first in- volving a major Japanese political figure in 24 years, recalled the bloody era of "government by as- sassination" that raised militarists to power before World War IL Germans To Hide All Jets- Nuclear Methods Sbet BONN, Germany (MP)-The West ; German government said yester- day it has agreed to a United States request to keep secret new developments in methods for re- fining raw materias used in nu- QU t 1 9 U clear weapons. Foreign Office and Atomic En- ergy Ministry spokesmen said the developments are based on the so called ultra-centrifugal process. The development had raisedULRICHBK fears in Washington that fission- able uranium could be made Opposite Engineering Arch cheaply enough for a dozen or more nations to manufacture their own atomic bombs. 14 See the COMPLETE STOCK of Eaton's Corrasable Bond of MORRIL L S 314 S. 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