THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4 ! Loyal Army, Ai r Units Stop Carupano Revolt By Venezuelan Leftists) Spanish Labor Strike Spreads to Provinces Franco Calls 'State of Exception';, Suspends Portions of Bill of Rights MADRID (P)-Labor unrest appeared to be spreading yesterday in the wake of government proclamation of a state of emergency in three northern provinces comprising an industrial heartland. At the same time, there was a student demonstration in Madrid to back striking coal miners. Reports fro Asturias Province, where around 20,000 miners have U.S. To Strengthen NATO, NAM THA: Support Laos Carges Of Red China Invasion VIENTIANE ()-American military sources supported charges of a temporary Red Chinese invasion of Northern Laos yesterday as advancing Communist forces put a tighter pinch on Nam Tha's half- encircled defenders. Nam Tha, in a valley 180 miles north of Vientiane, has been compared in some ways to Dien Bien Phu in Viet Nam, where the French surrendered and gave up t t" Oran Jews, Arabs Clash ORAN (') -- Moslems and Jews fought each other yesterday and by nightfall six Moslems were dead and two Jews wounded. The ancient animosity between Moslem and Jew flared on a day that saw European Secret Army terrorism t a p e r in Oran with strikes. In Algiers, the Secret Army in hit and run attacks killed three Moslems and w o u n d e d three others. In addition, five Europeans have vanished recently and it is believed Moslems kidnapped them, authorities: reported. The Secret Army terror drive to block Algerian peace and keep Algeria a part of France has turn- ed Oran into a battlefield. But. it was Moslems and Jews who did the latest fighting. The trouble began when a car carrying five Moslems sped through the Jewish quarter firing on people in the street, witnesses reported. The car crashed into a parked automobile, klling the driver. The four passengers ran down the nar- row streets and were killed by Jewish gunfire. Headquarters for' All Sheaffer Easterbrook Parker Pens Overbeck's the Indochina War eight years ago. SNam Tha has been withstanding a siege-like Conmunist threat since January, 1962. Lightning Blow American sources said they had* confirming information that about 200 Red Chinese troops and 100 rebel Pathet Lao struck the lighting blow that captured Muong Sing last Thursday. Muong Sing's airstrip, 20 miles northwest of Nam Tha, has been an alternate supply route and troop staging area since Nam Tha's own air- strip was made hazardous by in- termittent Communist mortar fire several weeks ago. The Red Chinese already have gone back over their border, five miles north of Muong Sing, . the Laotian government reported,leav- ing the Pathet Lao in control. The attack was considered by military sources particularly flag- rant, since it was on the an- niversary of the 1961 cease-fire in Laos and because Red China is one of the 13 nations at the Geneva Conference which has agreed to a neutral Laos under a coalition government. Significant Evidence The incident was taken as sig- nificant evidence that the pro- Communist Pathet Lao receives sanctuary and training facilities in Red China.. The Royal Lao government, in first reporting the fall of Muong Sing, said the attack was by two Red Chinese and one Pathet Lao battalion. But until yesterday United States military sources said they had no confirmation of Red Chinese participation. The, Defense Ministry said the fall of the town made "the situa- tion more tragic and more difficult at Nam Tha." Other military sources said capture might alter the tactical situation at Nam Tha. and have a bad psychological ef- fect on the defenders. Claim Heads Of Rebellion Imprisoned Betancourt Denounces 'Communist' Rebels CARACAS (R) -Loyalist forces supported by air force planes and navy ships pushed into coastal Carupano last night and smashed a marine garrison's revolt to un- seat President Romulo Betancourt, a government source announced. The source said the three top leaders of the rebellion had been taken prisoner. The action in seizing the city from rebels was violent, the source added, but casualty figures were not immediately available. 'Castro-Type' Revolt Romulo Betancourt, Venezuelan president, Friday night accused the 400-man marine garrison and its 50 military police who re- volted Friday of plotting to set up a Castro-type, Communist re- gime, and gave them an ultimatum to surrender by dawn. About 400 of the rebels ignored the ultimatum, however, and were reported to have scattered to posi- tions in dwellings in the city of 16,500 to make a house-to-house fight. Capture Radio Station Reports from the commander of the government forces announc- ed the capture of Carupano's ra- dio station, and said some of his* men had been wounded by mines planted on the approach roads. There were no reports of the casualties in the street fighting. Earlier, government spokesmen announced the capture of the small town of Jose Areacuar, two miles outside the city, and the landing of 1,500 loyal marines at Cariaco on a finger-shaped gulf of the same name which extends eastward to within about 30 miles of Carupano. Hughes Condemns Doctors' Refusal TRENTON, (R') - Cov. Richard J. Hughes' of New Jersey angrily condemned yesterday a declara- tion by doctors that they will re- fuse to treat patients under a proposed Federal medical care plan for the aged. WALTER REUTHER . slash prices been on strike for a month in quest of more pay, approximately -done third of the striking miners had returned to work following the government action. Reuther Calls For Reduction In Car Prices ATLANTIC CITY ( ) -- Union leader Walter Reuther yesterday asserted "exorbitant" auto indus- try profits require a significant slash in car prices under terms of President John F. Kennedy's eco- nomic stabilization formula. Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers, AFL-CIO, in a re- port to the UAW's 18th Conven- tion said guides laid down by Ken- nedy's economic advisers point "directly at the auto industry as one due for price cuts." The guides are the same as those under which Kennedy urged a moderate labor settlement in the steel industry and then acted to obtain a rollback of steel industry price increases. The formula also calls for price cuts in high profit industries. "By any reasonable criteria, the auto industry is one in which prices should be reduced, "Such price cuts are essential to offset the price increases which occur in other industries with lower than average productivity and which are unavoidable if the workers in those less productive industries are to receive wage in- creases comparable to other work- ers," Ruether said. Bilbao Workers Strike But in Bilbao, one of Spain's major industrial centers, strike fever seemed to be spreading to various major factories. Gen. Francisco Franco yester- day ordered a state of "excep- tion" (emergency) in the provinces of Asturias, Vyzcaya, and Guipuz- coa, all scenes of strikes large and small. This decree suspended var- ious sections of the Spanish Bill of Rights and gave government officials wide powers in dealing with disorders or disturbances, in- cluding a ban on the right of as- sembly and on the normal free- dom from search and arrest. Strikes are illegal in Spain. Late reports from Asturias said about 4,500 miners returned to their jobs yesterday after the gov- ernment action, but added more than 13,500 remained on strike. Strike Steel Plant Babcock and Wilcox, a massive complex including a steel plant, railway locomotive and car plant, and one of the nation's largest steel pipe factories, was among those in which workers were de- manding wage increases. This British-established company, now Spanish-owned, employs about 5,000 men. When the wage boost demands, began in the Asturias coal fields, government and syndicate officials said publicly the miners deserved more money. But what the Minis- try of Information called "activi- ties by outside agitators" appeared to bring fears of some move against the government itself. There was some reaction in Ma- drid, where a group of university students, meeting to assail govern- ment aid to certain Roman Cath- olic schools, rioted, shouting "long. live the miners." yJOHN M. HIGHTOWER Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - The United States is planning to strengthen its NATOrnuclear defenseforces with powerful new weapons. But if partnership plans adopted in Athens yesterday work out, President John F. Kennedy would be ready to drop consideration of a separate NATO nuclear striking force. The United States and Great Britain, as the two NATO nuclear powers, have now made extensive new commitments in Athens which do not substantially affect the East-West military balance but do have a vital bearing on relations within the Western Alliance. Directly at issue is whether NA- TO itself is to be split by a nu- clear weapons race beginning with -as Washington and London lead- ers would fear-an increasingly bitter rivalry between France and West Germany. Overcome Rivalries The aim of the new partnership program is to overcome as far as possible the- flowering of national rivalries within the alliance and attain through common planning a new degree of unity in respect to the handling of nuclear weap- ons. If this result could be achieved, informants say, Kennedy would unquestionably be delighted to scrap his announced policy of forming by agreement with the European allies a separate NATO nuclear force built primarily around Polaris submarines. These Clay Promises Berlin Support BERLIN, ()- Gen. Lucius D. Clay made a farewell pledge yesterday that United States troops would remain in Berlin un- til the city and all of Germany is unified, as long as Berliners want them. Gen. Clay spoke at a ceremony conferring on him the city's honor- ary citizenship. "As the United States Govern- ment talks with the Soviet Gov- ernment, and concerts its views with our allies to determine if there is a basis of negotiations, rumors of alleged misunderstand- ings between the Allies are cer- tain to be aired," he said. SWorld News Roundup GENEVA-,Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin has informally proposed a two-month recess of the deadlocked 17-nation disarmament conference and urged that the talks then be moved from Geneva to New York. The United States and other Western delegations are reported to dislike the idea of a long recess and oppose moving'to New York. i in SPRINGTIME IS TIMEl Our whole galaxy sparkles with Smartness-Full of newness- Full of color-Full of life! .... , ' Ir ROME-Parliament failed again yesterday-on its seventh ballot four days-to elect a President of Italy. Foreign Minister Antonio "Segni, the front runner, had 389 votes 39 short of the 428 needed to win. Rebels within the pro- Western Foreign Minister's own Christian Democratic Party still cast blank ballots or voted for minor candidates. WASHINGTON - The Army is fighting a Pentagon proposal to bring some 40,000 t r o o p.s back e from Europe. Informed Defense Department sources said the army has offered a compromise to limit the reduc- U ,* tion in the European garrison to about 20,000 men-but is resist- ing even this much of a cutback. LEOPARDVILLE -- Fighting broke out yesterday between cen- tral Congo government troops and n c e Katangenese gendarmerie. RICHMOND - Judge M. Ray I (~..,, Doubles ruled Thursday that en- ra I Sa es forced racial segregation at a local civic auditorium and baseball field was constitutional. I , You'll marvel at the variety of easy-care-for fabrics! 100/ cottons - Dacron and Poly- ester coons-Arnell and cottons- Avisco Linen look rayons - Arnel Jersey in seersucker-cords, prints, and solids.. The sizes, 5-15. 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