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April 14, 1964 - Image 3

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The Michigan Daily, 1964-04-14

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TUESDAY, APRIL 14,1964

THE -MICHIGAN DAILY

WAGE ''

TUESDAY, APRIL 14,1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE '1

" s ssv[.v x saa

(Ohio Rights Unit
SWarns of Boycott
Plan To 'Strike' Newspaper, Stores
In Cleveland 'Segregation' Protest

I f

I

Elections To Determine Chile's Foreign Outlook

By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON-While senators
on both sides of the civil rights
debate spoke yesterday against
violent and disorderly demonstra-
tors, United Freedom Movement
leaders called for both a strike
and a boycott in Cleveland.
The UFM leaders planned A
"buyers strike" against the Cleve-
land Press and two large depart-
ment stores and a school boycott
next Monday..
They contended that the three
new schools being built in the
east side Glenville area will "re-
segregate" pupils now being trans-
World News.
'Roundup
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON -Railroad un-
ion and management negotiators
renewed "active,' collective bar-
gaining" yesterday, the White
House reported, but declined to
say whether they made any pro-
gress.
White House press secretary
George Reedy said the talks were
on an "issue by issue" basis.
* * *
OSLO-The Norwegian Feder-
ation of Labor called yesterday
for a strike of 132,000 workers
Friday in some of the nation's top
industries.
The federation is demanding
wage increases of 17 per cent for
workers whose contracts expired
March 31. If the strike lasts, the
number of strikers, may reach
nearly 139,000 workers.
* * *
HOUSTON - Maj. Virgil I.
(Gus) Grissom, the second Ame-
rican in space, and Lt. Cmdr.-
John W. Young, a former navy
test pilot, were chosen yesterday
as the first crew to fly a Gemini
spacecraft into orbit later this
year.
* * *
CHICAGO - There were signs
that 'Ambassador Henry Cabot
Lodge may get a significant write-
in vote in today's Illinois Repub-
lican presidential preference pri-
mary.
The vast bulk of preference
r tally,' however, appeared certain
to be slated for Sen. Barry Gold-
water (R-Ariz) and Sen. Mar-
garet Chase Smith (R-Me), the
only two whose names are printed
on the GOP ballot. Goldwater fig-
ured to come up with a substantial
margin over Mrs. Smith.
* * *
NEW YORK-The New York
Stock Exchange closed down yes-
terday in moderately active trad-
ing. The Dow-Jones average was
up however, closing up .26. Thirty
industrials were down .44, 20
rails up .95 and 15 utilities up .02.

ported by bus to predominantly
white schools outside the over-
crowded Negro district.
Breaks Truce
Harold Williams, executive sec-
retary of the Cleveland chapter
of the National Association for
the. Advancement of Colored
People, accused the Cleveland
Press of supporting the breaking
of a truce agreement on school
construction.
Amid t h e s e protests, Sen.
Frank J. Lausche (D-Ohio) open-
ed the sixth week of debate on
civil rights legislation by deplor-
ing the recent disorders in Cleve-
land and other cities.
He said that civil rights leaders
must achieve their goals "within
the processes of law and not by
trespass, riot and flagrant defi-
ance of the rights of others."
'Abandon Violence'
Sen. Spessard L. Holland (D-
Fla) said that he hoped demon-
strators would "abandon their vio-
lence before the wliite people are
aroused to a pitch-and they will
be if they are kicked around
enough."
In Cleveland, a two-week truce
negotiated last Wednesday was
upset late last week by the re-'
fusal of Ralph McAllister, school
board president, and other board
members to accept the terms.
Under the truce, construction
of the new schools and all dem-
onstrations would have been halt-
ed for two weeks, with a possible
later extension to four weeks,
while -mutually approved experts
studied the school integration
problem and made recommenda-
tions.
In civil rights action elsewhere,
demonstrators arrested in San ,
Francisco over the weekend for
sit-ins at automobile agencies
pleaded innocent yesterday, de-
manded jury trials and had their
cases continued to Friday.
The demonstrations, sponsored
by the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo-
ple, were in support of chargesr
that the motor car dealers refused
to agree on a percentage of min-
ority group employes. The car
dealers countered a charge they
could get no assurance. that all
within a fixed percentage would
be qualifed.
Death Rumor
Proven ,False
MOSCOW (P)-A vague report
spread around the world yester-
day that Soviet Premier Nikita S.
Khrushchev had died, but there
was absolutely no confirmation.
The rumor originated with a
German press agency which later
asked editors to withhold it. It
was denied as "rubbish" by a So-
viet press official.

NE WIN

Relief Seen
For Burma
WASHINGTON - The military
government in Burma .has achiev-
ed its first major breakthrough in
a campaign to quell ethnic and
Communist insurrections that have
troubled the country for more than
a decade.
Western diplomats report that
a truce between Ne Win, head of
Burma's Revolutionary Council,
and Karen rebels led by Saw
Hunter Thamwe could become a
patern for ending some of the
other rebellions in Burma.
According to reports reaching
Washington, the truce, which was
arranged last month, has brought
fighting in the Karen state to a
virtual halt for the first time in
more than 15 years.
Western diplomats attached
considerable importance to the ac-
cord because it marks the first
progress in Gen. Ne Win's cam-
paign of nearly two years to re-
lieve the sore of ethnic rebellion
that has troubled Burma virtually
since its independence in 1948.
Copyright, 1964, The New York Times

By JOSE M. ORLANDO
Associated Press Staff Writer
SANTIAGO (P-Chile is at a
crossroads. Events of the next few
months likely will decide whether
the government will remain pro-
West in attitude or slide into or
near the Soviet bloc.
The presidential election is five
months away. Jorge Allessandri,
the country's middle-of-the-road
president, cannot under the con-
stitution run for re-election.
A national conference this week-
end of the powerful Radical Party
may go a long way toward de-
ciding which way the country will
go.
Three Courses
This party has three courses
open to it:
1) Support the extreme left,
Moscow-leaning candidate Salva-
dor Allende.
2) Vote for Eduardo Frei, candi-
date of the moderately leftist
Christian Democratic Party; or
3) Go to the polls with a candi-
date of their own.
Front-Running
Allende and Frei are the front-
running candidates'to succeed Al-
lessandri.
Allende, a senator, psychiatrist
and outspoken admirer; of Fidel
Castro, heads the Communist-led
Popular Action Front (FRAP).
This is a five-party alliance of the
Communist and fellow-traveling
socialist parties and three minor
leftist groups._
F r e i's Christian Democrats,
Chile's single biggest party, are
a reform-minded and basically
pro-West group.
Courting RP's
Allende has been courting the
centrist Radical Party for an al-
liance for the presidential elec-
tion. Many radical leaders are
ready to support him as the best
choice left to the party after the
collapse last month of a govern-
ment coalition including the rad-
icals.
This' group says the radicals, al-
though anti-Communist, will gain

means almost sure defeat in the
Rresidential election.
Any other course would divide
the party, with the radical left
wing going over to Allende and
the rest supporting Frei, this last
group claims.
Most of these leaders want to
keep as the party's candidate Sen-
ator Julio Duran, 25, who resigned
the candidacy last month in the
aftermath of a FRAP victory in a
special provincial election.
Ruled Chile
A government coalition of radi-
cals and two rightist parties-the
conservatives and liberals - had
ruled Chile for five years. It col-
lapsed as a result of the unex-
pected defeat of its candidate in
the special election at Curice
March 15 to fill one house seat.
Dunran, a radical rightwing
leader, resigned as the joint presi-
ment coalition March 16 and the
dential candidate of the govern-
radicals walked out of the Alles-
sandri regime two days later.
The conservatives and liberals,
meanwhile, unofficially agreed to
support Christian Democrat Frei
as the best choice to stop the
Communist-led FRAP from taking
over Chile.
Nothing Definite
There is no definite word on
whether Duran, if requested, would
agree to return as his party's
candidate.
Allende almost became president
in 1958 when Allesandri wad elect-

ed. There was a five-way race
then. Allessandri got about a third
of the votes, and Allende nearly
the same. Congress selected Alles-
sandri as the recipient of the larg-
est popular vote.
Nehru Delivers
Major Address
NEW DELHI ()-Indian Prime
Minister Jawaharlal Nehru took
a conciliatory position yesterday
concerning India's feud with Pak-
istan. In his first major speech
since suffering a mild stroke, he
also expressed regret that United
States ships with nuclear weapons
"should wander about the Indian
Ocean."
Nehru took the occasion of a
budget debate on the Foreign Min-
istry to make an hour long speech
in Parliament.
Earlier in the day, opposition
political groups called for Nehru's
resignation. They said the In-
dian government has become weak
and paralyzed since Nehru's stroke.

-Associated Press
CHILEAN DEMONSTRATORS used automobiles for protection as
police trucks sprayed water over them in an attempt to break up
a recent riot in downtown Santiago. Several people were wounded
and some 200 arrested.
bigger political advantages by en- favor voting for Frei as the only
dorsing Allende than by follow- choice to stop Allende. ,
ing any other part. Own Candidates
Other radical leaders, fearing A third group wants the party to
the FRAP's pro-Soviet leanings, carry its own candidate, even if it

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