GOLDWATER'S BAD ARGUMENT See raze 4 Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom D43at MOSTLY FAIR High-45 Irw- 32 Mostly sunny, windy and warmer through tonight. - .. 'OL. LXXI, No. 61 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1960 FIVE CENTS SIX ,. : i n mir rnr.rr r i a OdVIETS: Demand- UN Aid Lumumba ' Students Repor t Increasin By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS (W) - The Soviet Union asked last night that Secretary General Dag Hammar- skjold report to the General As-j sembly immediately on what thel United Nations is doing to help Patrice Lumumba, deposed Con-1 golese Premier who was arrested yesterday. The Soviet delegation, in .a statement released to newsmen, said Luinumba's arrest yesterday was an arbitrary and illegal act against the lawful Congolese gov- ernment committed by an illegal, dictatorial regime. "The Soviet Union declares... ," said the statement, "that the UN Secretary General and the UN command in the Congo . . . are directly responsible for the safety -AP Wirephoto CAPTIVE LEADER-Deposed Congolese Premier Patrice Lu- + mumba, handcuffed and disheveled, is taken to jail by soldiers of Col. Joseph Mobutu. The Soviet Union demanded that the United Nations determine what can be done to aid Lumumba. BURNS IN A TMOSPHERE: Soviets Admit Faiure To Retrieve Dog Satellite MOSCOW (A -- The new Soviet dog-carrying space ship shot offI course in an attempt to bring it back to earth yesterday and burned up in the outer reaches of the earth's atmosphere, the Russians said last night. The test had been considered one of the last before a man might be safely rocketed into space and brought back alive. The failure to retrieve the two dogs aboard may be a setback for Soviet plans for human space travel. But the official Soviet announcemefit said testing and observa- tion of the dogs in space flight-before the fatal disintegration when the return signal went out-"yielded new data for manned space flight in the near future. Moscow radio said last night the signal sent to the globe-circling and the lives of the members of the Congolese government .. . "The General Assembly . . . should immediately have the ex- haustive information from the UN Secretary General about the situ- ation with regard to the prime minister of the lawful government of the Congo and about the steps taken by the UN command to en- sure his safety." Earlier, Hammarskjold sent Con- golese President Joseph Kasavubu two messages seeking fair play for deposed PremierPatrice Lum- umba. Learns of Arrest He dispatched the first on learn- ing that Col. Joseph Mobutu's Congo military regime had ar- rested Lumumba and would try him on charges of inciting the army to rebellion. Diplomatic sources said Hammarskjold asked Kasavubu to see that Lumumba was afforded due process of law. The Secretary General sent the second message tonight after re- ceiving a three-man committee from the Asian-African group. In- formants said the committee told Hammarskjold the 46-nation group was concerned for Lumumba's safety in view of unconfirmed re- ports he was to be executed, and Hammarskjold passed this along to Kasavubu. Seized in Interior_ Seized in the interior of the Congo, Lumumba was manacled and flown back to Leopoldville yes- terday to face trial on a charge of inciting the army to revolt. He was shoved and manhandled as soldiers hurried him off to jail. At the same time the UN re- ported that virtually the entire white population of Stanleyville- more than ,0d -was arrested and ill treated last Sunday by police supporting Lumumba. The ex-Premier had slipped past an army guard in Leopoldvlle Sunday and traveled into the Con- go's :wild hinterlands, apparently intending to reach Stanleyville. He was seized at Port Franequi, about a third of the way to Stanleyvile, by forces loyal to Col. Joseph Mo- butu, Lumumba's archfoe- USSR Planes Chase Stray U.S. Aircraft WASHINGTON (A) - Soviet fighter planes chased but failed to force down an American civilian plane that strayed over Russian territory on a flight to Japan last summer, State Department of- ficials reported yesterday. The incident led the Federal Aviation Agency to warn United States civilian fliers against flying close to Soviet territory on the Northern great circle route to Japan. The FAA said there had been instances of Soviet fighters buzz- ing and attempting to intercept American planes but did not specify whether these were civilian or military aircraft. State Department officials said the warning °to pilots had arisen from a near-incident last July when a D03 transport was being ferried to Japan by a pilot and co-pilot whose names were not given. Army Tanks Stop Revolt Of Leftists Students Surrender University Refuge CARACAS (R) - The last of the holdout leftist students surrender- ed before a government showing of tanks yesterday and abandoned their rebel fortress at Caracas University. With machine guns and other arms they had held out against the troops of President Romulo Betancourt for a week. Government troops reinforce- ments had been flown in all day from bases in the interior for the final cleanup of resistance. The university council in an an- nouncement to the presidential palace said the youthful Marxists gave up the entrenched position they had dubbed their "Stalin- grad," thus ending the last knot of die-hard resistance after seven days of bloody rioting. Tank Attac4 The surrender came soon after army tanks rumbled to the gates of the University of Caracas where the students had taken up posi- tions behind brick piles in an un- finished pharmacy school. The death of a woman doctor and a soldier by snipers' bullets today brought to 11 the number of persons killed in the distur- bances which the government charges were fomented by Com- munists seeking to replace the Betancourt administration with a regime like Fidel Castro's in Cuba. Demonstrations during the riots carried anti-American and pro- Cuban signs and shouted Cuban revolutionary slogans. Army loyalty and widespread civilian support for the moderate Socialist government of President Betancourt left the extreme leftists all but isolated. Breaches Sanctuary The students seized the Univer- sity buildings last Friday at the outbreak of the disturbances. Betancourt was reluctant to move directly against them in an effort to avoid unnecessary bloodshed and because of the traditional status of sanctuary enjoyed by universities in Latin American countries. Student ranks inside the Uni- versity building began to dwindle after the government's show of force and defenders began aban- doning their position. In two's and three's they crossed over to the Plaza Venezuela. Only the hard- core remained till the end. Some who defected said they had lost confidence in their ability to hold out against the govern- ment, fearing strong measures would be used to crush the re- sisters. They said the current series of riots had not been well organized. --Daily--David Giltrow HIGU TENSION-Venezuela was quiet last night, as the last students left their Caracas University sanctuary, but "in many cities it is quiet, wit a strong feeling of discontent," Senen Semidey re- ported. "You feel that any spark could light the torrent," his compatriot, Felson Carrillo added, predicting further struggles in his riot-torn country. LABEL CUBA COMMUNISTIC: U.S. To Aid Cuban Refugees Discontent Among Calls 'Session For Increase' Sales TamX LANSING (;P)-Gov. G. Mennen Williams has called a special ses- sion of the legislature to convene Wednesday to raise the state sales tax from three to four cents. Williams and legislators ex- pressed confidence this would only be a one-day session. The call by the governor was limited to this one issue. "Assurances I've had from lead- ers of the legislature convinced me that there should be no trouble in having a one-day session to ac- complish the will of the people in voting a one cent increase in the sales tax," Williams said. Williams issued the call yester- day. He had just returned from Washington, where he accepted the posh of assistant secretary of state for Africa after conferring with President-elect John F. Ken- nedy. Both Republican and Democratic leaders agreed'earlier on the ne- cessity for the session. The additional penny sales tax is expected to put into effect on Jan. 1. Revenue department ex- perth estimate it will bring in be- tween $15 and $20 million a year In new revenue. The penny sales tax increase was approved by the voters at the Nov. 8 election. Staebler Cool To Speculation State Democratic chairman Neil Staebler is "not taking very seri- ously" the fact that he is being considered for the post of the new national party chairman. Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Wash- ington announced Wednesday that hp wouild resign chairmanship of satellite failed to return it to earth on a pre-calculated orbit and the vehicle burned out. The broadcast did not mention the two dogs-Pchelka (Little Bee) and Mushka (Little Fly)--by name. The launching of the ship drew hearty praise from Russia's top political leadership. Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev said the new Sputnik represented "a great victory and a step to man's flight into space." President Leonid Brezhnev said the feat demonstrated "Our suc- cess in overcoming Russia's back-' wardness in one generation." E. K. Fedorov, vice-president of the Soviet Academy of Science, told newsmen after the launch- ing that the project's purpose was " o gather information about the response of living organisms to space travel and thus pave the way for putting a man into space." WASHINGTON MP-The United States yesterday took a $1 million step in behalf of Cuban refugees and in doing so officially described Cuba for the first time as a Com- munist-controlled country., The $1 million was released for the aid of an estimated 30,000 to 40,00 Cubans who are in Florida and elsewhere in the United States as refugees from the regime of Fidel Castro. The action was taken by Presi- dent Eisenhower under a provision of the Mutual Security Act which authorizes assistance to refugees from Communist-controlled coun- tries when the chief executive judges such spending important Fuentes Lauds U.S. Patrols WASHINGTON (A) - Guate- mala's President told President Eisenhower today the United States naval-air watch "you or- dered was decisive in. . . prevent- ing eventual establishment of a new Communist government in the Central Americas." In a message thanking Eisen- hower, President Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes of Guatemala declared that the U.S. patrol off the Cen- tral American coast "prevented outside forces from giving support to the Communist-inspired revolu- tionary movement." First Action Many United States officials, from the President on down, have publicly expressed conviction that the Castro government is Com- munist-dominated but yesterday's action was the first which made the designation official under United States law. Castro has consistently denied his revolutionary government is Communistic although some of his top aides are known to be Reds. But his growing hostility toward the United States has been ac- companied by increasing friendli- ness with Russia, Red China and other Communist nations. And he has received great quantities of arms and technical and economic aid from behind the Iron Curtain. For his part, Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev has threat- ened the United States with re- taliation through nuclear weapons if it takes aggressive action against Cuba. Formal Status Tracy Voorhees, who has been investigating the Cuban refugee situation for Eisenhower, was given formal status today as the President's representative to ad- minister the aid. Voorhees told newsmen he hopes to do the job without using all the money released by the presiden- tial order but said there is real hardship for many of the refugees to the States. security of the UnitedI which must be relieved promptly. He added he was returnig at once to Florida to get further in- formation on the number of acute hardship cases. Voorhees said he hoped use of federal money could be confined largely to the task of transporting refugees to places where they can find work. Much of the relief load, he said, must be borne by charitable or- ganizations corporations and in- dividuals. Voorhees said the problems has been aggravated recently by the arrival of many children unac- companied by parents and by the fact that Cuba allows each re- fugee to take witli him only $5 in United States money. James C. Hagerty, Eisenhower's press secretary, also stressed that the federal money should be re- garded only as supplemental to funds from other sources. Conservatives For Party At Universit By BUEL TRAPNELL A newly organized campus con- servative club, subscribing to the belief that "the individual's use of his God-given free will" is life's foremost value, is "growing rapid- ly," Bob Attaway, '62BAd, spokes man for the group, said. The purpose of government is to "protect freedoms," asserts the Sharon Statement of the Young Americans for Freedom, adopted last September in Sharon, Conn. This statement, which every ap- plicant for membership must sup- port, declares that "political free- dom cannot long exist without economic freedom." Division of Powers "The genius of the Constitution -the division of powers-is sum- med up in the clause which re- serves primacy to the several, states, or to the people" in spheres not specifically delegated to the national government. The organization also stresses the importance of "victory over, rather than coexistance with," Communism.. The Conservative group will be concerned mainly with national issues, but it is expected to be vocal on campus matters concern- ing Communst speaker bans, Bill Sikkenga, '61, BAd, said. Direct Action" Members will be urged to take any direct action possible to, fur- ther the causes of conservatism. Castro ,Style Revolution May Result Hit Agrarian Policy Ask Fiscal Reform By FAITH WEINSTEN There is a 50-50 chance th Venezuela may soon erupt in student-led civil war, Venezuela student Senen Semdey, '62E, to The Daily yesterday. Semidey is a former Carac University student, who partic pated in the student riots of 195 which led to the overthrow the government of dictator Ge Marcos Perez Jiminez. Student a tion has great effect on gover ment in Venezuela, since 'pollt cal activity is centered in t young," Semidey said. Returns From Tour Semidey returned from a twi week intensive tour of his co try Thursday night, and report an atmosphere of great dscontei among the people with the polici of the present government. T discontent may result in "a Ca tro-like revolution," he said. "There are many people wi would prefer a Castro-like regIm to the presenthimmobilism ofge ancourt's government," Semid said. "They know that the fain ers in Cuba have land and tgo living standards.= Uneasy Peace Venezuela, suffering under a economic depression, and rack by the student-led riots of h1 last few weeks, settled into an u easy pace last night--but a pea which Semidey said would last. "The students may have gve up for a day or two, maybe 1 cause of lack of supplies or arms he said, but the active rev will continue as long as the go, enment retains its present, pol ties. The Venezuelan government o been under sharp criticism for I economic policies for a long tin The students especially oppose t agrarian policies of the prese government. Give Land The policies "look good on p per," Felson Carrillo, '62E, a con patriot of Semidey's, said, "but practice, all they are doing Is gi ing land to the farmers. T doesn't help the country peop -what are they going to do wi a piece of land? They need- go' ement support, and tools." The key to governmental r form, in the eyes of the oppos tion, lies in the elimination t the tenant-farmer, landlord stru ture. The agrarian problems, whIt have been intensified in the la few months by an economic di pression, have turned the studeni who initially fought for and lat supported the current gover ment, into an opposition group. Not Strong The students feel that "the go ernment has not been stro enough" to prevent the econon depression, the high unemplo ment rate, or to introduce ad quate agrarian reforms, The students seek a social re oluton--and a "revolutiona government which will solve ti social problems as quickly as po sible." In the fight for social ref o, they consider Castro a success, a "while they are not for a Castr like regime, they are not again it either," Semidey said. Popular Government The Cuban government is popular government, Carrillo di lared-it is primarily for the in terests of the people. "The peop in Cuba have arms, and coup fight if they disagree. They dor vote, but they have guns, whic is better than the vote, at leas in Latin America," Carrillo said "We used to have peaceful den onstrations," Semidey said, "pet ple would go through the stree and pass out pamphlets. But la month it rose to a climax. Ther were student riots." The pollic began to interfere with the den onstrations, with tear gas, ar LAST PERIOD GOAL: Toronto Skaters Ruin Wovernes' ebut, 4-3 " 41 By DAVE ANDREWS Michigan failed to hold a pair of early leads last night as a determined Toronto hockey team fought from behind twice to spoil the season opener for the Wolverines, 4-3.1 v 'Captain Bill Kennedy scored what proved to be the winning goal at 1:25 of the third period after the Blues had wiped out an early two goal performance by Michigan's Gordon "Red" Berenson, and a late first period goal by sophomore John McGonigal. , , y ,/ ; , h : . ' 1"q 'ERv Rush duplicated Berenson's two goal performance within ,three minutes, and winger Jim Murchie beat Wolverine goalie Jim Coyle at 8:09 of the second to set the stage for Kennedy's winning taRly.o - Renfrew Praises Toronto Michigan Coach Al Renfrew, following the game, called the Blues, "a real good hockey team." He cited Kennedy for special praise. But turning to the game, he said, "we made too many mistakes. Our defense made too many bad moves deep in our own end and we took too long clearing the puck." The Wolverines, confused and hesitant behind their own goal throughout the game yielded the puck innumerable times to the agressive forechecking of the Toronto forwards. Time and time again ;;,, ., .,, ., f f . .. ...