. AY, MAY 6, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY -G TRRanf * I ssXaa =s nnr jr, 14 Rusk Doubts Chances Of Castro Overthrow Due to Police Measures VIENTIANE SOURCE: Right Split Sparked Laos Coup K.. - Exile Aides Hint of Plan For Strike French Firm Sells New Diesels to Cuba By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Dean Rusk said yesterday Cuban Premier Fidel Castro's police state measures have become so effective that there is doubt the bearded Communist dictator can be overthrown in the near future. But Cuban exile sources said they believe now is the time to strike against the- Castro regime and hinted strongly that plans are afoot to do so. Some support for their reports of increased anti-Castro activity came with the revelation by the Havana government itself of the discovery of an arms cache near Vinales, in western Cuba. Havana newspapers said the arms were part of a subversive scheme which they blamed on Washington to spread terror through Cuba by attacks on economic centers. New Setback The United States campaign to tighten an economic boycott around Cuba will continue despite a new setback: The sale by a French firm of 20 diesel locomo- tives to the Castro government. That was the word yesterday from Undersecretary of State George Ball, who said the boycott policy has been succeeding and will be pushed further to make it more effective, Short of war, Ball said, most effective by far is the effort to seal off Cuba economically-a policy of economic denial." A State ,Department press of- ficer, Richard I. Phillips, said earlier that the boycott policy is considered to be succeeding and he added: "Our efforts to persuade other governments of the utility of this government's policy will continue." Phillips said the United States expressed "serious concern" to France about the locomotive sale before the contract was concluded. Informal protests were made to' senior French officials here and in Paris. While the United States eco- nomic clampdown might not di- rectly topple Castro, he said, the effort already has been very ef- fective and "the Cuban economy See U.S., Page 8 -Associated Press CYPRIOT PRESIDENT Archbishop Makarios (with binoculars) paid a visit to the Greek Cypriot National Guard Units on the front lines near St. Hilarion Castle in the Kyrenia Mountains yesterday. The Greeks and Turks are faced off against each other, with the UN peace force in the middle. World News Roundup By The Associated Press NICOSIA-Fitful shooting broke out again yesterday in Cyprus and the United Nations peace force reported one Greek Cypriot killed and a Turkish Cypriot wonuded. * * * * LONDON--Sen. J. William Fulbright (D-Ark) launched his Cyprus mission for President Lyndon B. Johnson yesterday in talks with British Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home and other top officials. * * * * WASHINGTON-Teodoro Moscoso has resigned as United States representative on the Inter-American Committee for the Alliance for Progress Monday, in order to return to private life in his native Puerto Rico. THUMAIR, Aden-A company of British paratroopers fought fierce Bedouin rebels under a pitiless desert sun yesterday in a con- flict that an officer said might become another Korea. The 120 Britons fought hand-to-hand with the Bedouins, known as the red wolves of of Radfan, in a mud hut village and scattered them. Then the para- -troopers themselves were pinned TOYKO W/P-The April coup in Laws sprang from rivalry among rightist generals and a clash be- tween their forces still is possible, a ,ell-informe i Laotian source said yes- day. The account given by the rank- ing Laotian, who was in Vientiane April 19 when the revolutionary generals struck, is a different ver- sion of an affair that threatens to rip a shaky coalition regime apart. The coup generally has been in- terpreted as aimed at neutralist Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma, who was put under house arrest for awhile, and the pro-Commun- ist Pathet Lao. These two factions and the rightists make up the coalition. The Pathet Lao has de- nounced the coup. Name Undisclosed The Laotian, who asked that his name bewithheld, indicated t .a real target was Gen. Phoumi Nos- avan, deputy premier and leader of the right wing. In fact, he said, Nosavan's pilot son took off from a southern base with a squadron of fighter-bomb- ers to bomb Vientiane April 19 on the belief the rightist coup leaders were holding his father prisoner. The son was turned back by a message from 'Photuni. The source said it generally is believed the real le.,dcr of sfne coup was Brig. Ges. Soho Lan- pl-±uthacoul, who co.nn-ands all civilipmnand h n mita-y police in the Vint'ane area. Current Setup The source gave this account of the reaz , for the coup and the current situation: Siho was angry with Phoumi for being sent on a study tour to Herter Knocks Many Delays In Tariff Talks GENEVA-Christian A. Herter, speaking for the United States, complained Monday at the open- ing of the Kennedy round of tariff negotiations that there had been too much procrastination and too little progress in the preparatory talks to date. A few minutes later, a spokes- man for the European Common Market, Jean Ray of the trade bloc's executive commission, in- dicated that the decisions the United States and other countries wanted would not be forthcoming soon. In a private meeting of the Common Market's six member na- tions, France dissented from a proposed declaration of some basic negotiating ground rules that most other countries had accepted, but several amendments are slated to be offered to the declaration to tone it down. Copyright, 1964, The New York Times PHOUMI NOSAVAN Formosa recently. Siho apr rently took this as an attempt to remove him from his power position. Siho Soviets Seek Identification As Nation of 'Asia, Europe' MOSCOW-The Soviet Union, in a further aggravation of its conflict with Communist China, demanded recognition yesterday as an Asian as well as a European nation. In a statement sent to all independent governments in Asia and Africa, it denounced the "racist" policies of Chinese leaders and by implication compared the leaders to the rulers of Nazi Germany. It was an answer. to a Chinese effort to prevent the Soviet Union's participation in a is regarded as an ambitious man. Now one of Siho's aims is to oust some of Phoumi's lieutenants from cabinet posts. Contrary to communiques is- sued by the revolutionary commit- tee, most troops outside Vientiane are loyal to Phoumi. The committee's strength vir- tually is limited to the special forces of Siho which have a large percentage of Thai and Vietnam- ese mercenaries in their ranks, the source said. Phoumi's forces are believed to be ringing the capital and a clash with the revolutionary committee forces cannot be ruled out, the source said. Also circulating in Vientiane was a story that Laotian leftists set up a shadow government in Red China's southern city of Kun- ming last Jan. 5, the source said. This was at a time when the Pathet Lao was bickering with the other factions and the coalition was facing' dissolution. da Almothers love Awys 'Fresh" Mother's Day is May 10 ASSORTED Crears CHOCOLA TE e nuts, fruits, chew. E Home Fashioned Foesrtnche egbons c 1 l. bx 1-6O 21b b ox $3.15 THE GIFT BOX of hocolates and butter bons 1 lb. gift 0 2 lb. gift 3 Q 312 S. STATE 1203 S. UNIVERSITY chocolEEates and butter bons,555%#9 major Asian-African conference scheduled for next March in In- donesia. New Development The Soviet statement was in- terpreted here as a major new development in the Communist conflict. Observers expect the Chinese Communists to reply that they consider the Soviet Union an oc- cupier of Asian territory rather than a genuine Asian nation. The Chinese have been saying that large parts of Soviet territory in Asia were seized from China in the 19th century. The treaties con- cluded then have been attacked by the Chinese as "unequal" and therefore unjust. Now Growing The ideological conflict and the Sinkiang border dispute, which in the past has been largely separate, are thus being telescoped. This is likely, observers believe, to lead to even greater tension. The statement today slaps back at Red Chinese Foreign Minister Chen Yi, who sought to ban Russia from the Second Afro-Asian Con-j ference on the grounds that itj was neither an African or an Asian nation. Chen is at odds with geography, the statement said. Copyright, 1964, The New York Times Negroes Make, Voting Gains Across Nation MEMPHIS-A Negro, running for city court judge in this Ten- nessee city rolled up a total of 42,000 votes, losing only by 812 bal- lots last November, but receiving the biggest vote total ever accord- ed a member of his race in the South. The political fortunes of the Rev. B. L. Hooks underscore the rising role of Negroes in Dixie elections, according to the Wall Street Journal. Although clouded by all the smoke of lunch counter sit-ins, street marches and other civil rightssdemonstrations, Southern Negroes are making some of their biggest gains at the ballot boxes. They're not only registering in larger numbers than ever before this year but a sizable group of them is seeking office in this See SOUTHERN, Page 8 Attention: Norelco Shaver Owners NORELCO CLINIC Thursday, May 7th 9 A.M.-5 P.M. The Quarry Inc. 320 S. State St. Get tkat great KEDS®feelng Barnett Raps Northern Cities Segregation YPSILANTI (R)- Former Mis- sissippi Gov. Ross Barnett Monday said northern city residents should clean up their own backyards be- fore attacking the South's "so- called segregation." Barnett addressed a capacity student-faculty audience at East- ern Michigan University. A group of some 20 pickets ap- peared, protesting Barnett's ap- pearance. Barnett said he is "categorically opposed" to the administration's civil rights bill.- "(Alabama) Gov. (George) Wal- lace's showing in the Wisconsin primary clearly indicates that the people, of the North are thinking far in front of the politicians." he said. down in the village when the Bed- ouins occupied the encircling hills. * * '4 NEW YORK-The face of the moon seems to be a layer of "fairy castle" fluff, and below that, crushable material many times deep, a prominent astron- omer said yesterday. Only small areas of the moon's surface ap- pear to be as dense as rock, Prof. Thomas Gold of Cornell Univer- sity said. *4 * ANKARA-Turkish Prime Min- ister Ismet Inonu warned yester- day that a dangerous situation exists in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization because of the Cyp- rus crisis. NEW YORK-The stock market yesterday stretched its recovery drive through its third straight session in moderately active trad- ing. The Dow-Jones average of 65 stocks was up .91, with 30 indus- trials up .80, 20 rails up .59, and 15 utilities up .39. 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