SUNDAY, MAY 13,1962 Church Defends Spanish Miners' Right of Striking MADRID M)-Spain's striking miners and industrial workers got a boost from an organ of the Catholic Church yesterday and there were indications Gen. Francisco Franco may try to settle the walkouts by granting better wages. Some 70,000 men-mostly coal miners in Asturias province and workers in industrial areas around Bilbao in the Basque country of the north remained on strike in an unusual wave of labor trouble for Spain. But there was no indication that the work stoppages were r tspreading, and some government THE MICHIGAN DAILY AGE TE FRANSCISCO FRANCO ... Church aid ORAN : Algerians Set Voting ALGIERS OP) - The Algerian Provisional Executive has decided on Sunday, July 1, as the date for Algeria's self-determination ref- erendum, informants said last night. Earlier last night the Algerian provisional executive- ordered hte breakup of the municipal govern- ment in Oran and a buildup of Moslem sharpshooters to meet se- cret Army terrorism there. A large Moslem security force was ordered by Algiers. The drastic new measures came after three days of meetings be- tween the provisional executive, headed by Aberrahmane Fares, - and the French high commission- er, Christian Fouchet, on prepara- tions for a new campaign to end the European Secret Army's slaughter of Moslems. The decisions announced by the executive from its headquarters at Rocher Noir outside this city ordered dissolution of the Oran municipal council. sources expressed the hope the movement had reached its crest. The Roman Catholic weekly magazine Eclesia, official publica- tion of the. Spanish Catholic ac- tion, defended the workers' right to strike as "a natural and Chris- tian right." At the same time sources in Bil- bao said Basque Catholic priests had been actively supporting the walkout of industrial workers from nearly a dozen important factories. The Catholic weekly is not sub- ject to government censorship which has kept most news of the labor crisiskout of the Spanish press. But Eclesia's editorials must have approval of the church lead- ership. With some of the Asturias mine strikes entering t h e i r second month, there were indications that Franco's government has decided to speed a settlement, not by the old-fashioned method of force and pressure, but by ordering negotia- tion of broadly based labor agree- ments. Officials would not say what plan Franco and his cabinet adopt- ed at a day-long meeting Friday. But official sources indicated it was a scheme based on better pay for improved production. Many Spanish workers keep families on wages of 40 to 60 pesetas a day. It takes 66 pesetas to equal a dollar. Asturias' miners, who spearhead- ed the strike movement, are paid better than -most. Citing higher living costs, they have been de- manding the equivalent of about $2.10 a day, compared with their present $1.40 to $1.60 a day in or- der to get on the same wage level with soiie industrial workers who recently got increases. Franco officials shouted "Com- munist inspiration" when the first strikes began. But they appeared to be coming around to the idea that economic rather than politi- cal demands were the basis of most strikes. Some pro-Communist under- ground groups have been nibbling at the fringes of the labor crisis, but they seem to have had little success in attracting support. See Easing Of Socialist Farm Plant HAVANA (P)--Indications mul- tiplied yesterday that the Fidel Castro government is easing its socialist farm policies in the inter- est of smaller farmers hit by ear- lier measures of the revolutionary regime. Foreign observers cited a speech by Prime Minister Castro saying that farms poorly administered by the government would be return- ed to their owners if necessary. Another sign of a softening of the line was a resolution adopted by the National Agrarian Reform Institute telling farmers they are free to slaughter cattle, hogs, sheep and chickens on their own prop- erty without requesting authority. They also may sell the meat, but not to middlemen. The Castro speech, delivered a month ago but made public only this week, acknowledged difficul- ties between the government and farmers due, among other things, to intervention. This is the admin- istration of private property by the state, a move one step away from outright nationalization. A few days before the speech, the government had returned to private ownership at least three farms it had been administering. Ball Deplores Expropriation HOT SPRINGS, Va. (/P)-Un- dersecretary of State George W. Ball told American businessmen last night that "gunboat diplo- macy" is dead, but he promised vigorous United States govern- ment support in making sure they get fair treatment for their en- terprises in foreign countries. In an address prepared for a dinner meeting of the Business Council here, Ball deplored out- right expropriation of United States property by foreign gov- ernments or what he called "creep- ing expropriation" through tax and other measures. W 117 m1A11i 'a ai BRITISH ECONOMY: Employers, Workers Avert Docki Strike LONDON () - A threatened national dock strike that would have plunged Britain into a state of emergency was called off last night just over 24 hours before its deadline. Dock union chiefs and port employers announced a settlement after almost eight hours of negotiations at the Labor Ministry. Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's government had mustered all its powers of persuasion to head off the strike. The nation's 75,000 longshoremen threatened to paralyze Britain'st - ports starting at midnight today in pursuit of their demand for higher wages. Employers Bow The agreement came after the employers bowed to the dockmen's demand for increases of one shill- ing sixpence (21 cents) a day. The employers had offered at the start one shilling (14 cents). About 30,000 troops stood by at key points throughout the land ready to move into the ports in the event of a strike call. Before the agreement, Andrew Crichton, chairman of the Port Employers' Association, told newsmen "we are on the absolute eve of what might be a national disaster." A strike would almost certainly have forced the Macmillan govern- ment to ask Queen Elizabeth II to proclaim a state of national emer- gency to keep vital foodstuffs and raw materials needed to keep Brit- ain going. Throughout London Throughout London's sprawling docks network, meanwhile, more than 90 ships were being feverish- 1y loaded or unloaded. Employers had arranged for longshoremen to work at expen- sive piece-rates through last night and today - right up to the mid- night deadline. Five ocean liners, including the Queen Elizabeth, are due to dock at Southhampton tomorrow. So far none of the shipping lines in- tend any rerouting. The dispute with all its over- tones of calamity, came at a time when Macmillan's government is reeling under a huge anti-Con- servative vote in municipal elec- tions throughout England and Wales." (EDITOR'S NOTE: Red China's National People's Congress in Pei- ping last month set agriculture, light industry and heavy industry as the new national priorities, in that or- der. This analysis is based on in- formation from diplomats of a doz- en Western and neutralist states.) By ARTHUR GAVSHON Associated Press News Analyst LONDON-The rice paddy is still the boss of China, even Red China. That hard lesson has been learn- ed by the rulers of Peiping, from Mao Tze-Tung down, in the past three lean years of crop failure and calamity. Their discovery may produce a chain reaction of profound impor- tance to the peace of the world. It has set back China's dreams of in- dustrial greatness. And this is like- ly to limit Peiping's capacity for trouble-making in the rest of the world. Chinese Reliance In turn, Chinese reliance on the Soviet Union for big machines and tooling installations has been re- stored. Moscow is left unchallenged, at least for the time being, as capi- tal of the Communist empire. These conclusions have been reached by non-Communist au- thorities attempting to fathom Red China's agonizing reappraisal of policy. Steady Trickle A steady trickle of information about the secret proceedings of the Chinese National People's Congress in Peiping last month appears to support these suggested trends: Tension between the Chinese and Soviet Communist parties lately has lessened. A trade pact has recently been renegotiated. But Mao and his followers in no way have recanted their views on the nature of Communist ideology and strategy which Premier Nikita Khrushchev finds heretical. Hos- tility between the political leaders of the two giant Communist states remains bitter. Josef Stalin's, not Khrushchev's, picture was featured at Peiping's May Day celebration. The Chinese are methodically cutting back their program of heavy industrialization and expan- sion. Great railroad systems in the southwest, designed to open up the hinterland, have been abandoned. The long-planned linkup between the Great Trunk Railway through Kansu and Sinkiang in the north- west and Russia's central Asian system remains unbuilt. Big bridges and dam projects have been started but postponed. But the sudden suspension of these operations has not yet been accompanied by the shelving of Red China's nuclear energy de- velopment. The program to trans- form the nation into a nuclear power still ih edging ahead. The Chinese leaders have not eaten their words about the sacred duty of Communist to spread their revolution. But they have begun to slow down the communization of Tibet and a big part of their garrison has been pulled out, pre- sumably to help out in the food and agricultural production emer- -gency. Control of grain and water has become the major national pre- occupation. This has been the re- sult of administrative bungling as well as natural disasters. But there have been no sure signs of local revolts of the sort that marked the pre-Communist era. The Red grip is still too tight. SOHSHOW Mass meeting for PUBLICITY and PROGRAM COMMITTEES Wednesday, May 16 §IheIarCE uren S 4P 8 NICKELS ARCADE NO 2-2914 By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The United States conducted two more nuclear tests yesterday-an air drop near Christmas Island in the Pacific and an underground test in Nevada. * * * * REDLANDS, Calif.-A huge 10-foot-diameter, solid fuel rocket motor-largest ever produced for the Air Force-was tested yesterday for the first time. It contained many features to be used in future solid fuel moon rockets. * * * * UNITED NATIONS - United Nations Undersecretary Ralph J. Bunche said yesterday he "definitely would not consent to become a candidate" for the United States Senate from New York. * * * * s LEOPOLDVILLE-President Joseph Kasavubu has declared a state of emergency in Kivu province because of tensions among poli- tical factions, a communique announced yesterday. * DUESSELDORF-Hans Luther, former chancellor and finance minister of Germany in the Weimar Republic, died at his Duesseldorf hiome yesterday. He was 83. WASHINGTON--Two Senate investigators flew to Texas yester- day with apparent assurances that Billie Sol Estes will talk to them about complicated grain and cotton deals. Chairman John L. McClel- lan (D-Ark) of the Senate Investigations Subcommittee which is looking into possible Estes influence deals with high Washington offi- cials, told a reporter he believes the indicted financier is ready to talk. RIO DE JANEIRO-President John F. Kennedy will address Bra- zil's congress in the new capital of Brazilia on July 31, a source close to the foreign ministry said yesterday. WASHINGTON-Aides said yesterday that Chairman J. William Fulbright (D-Ark) of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee had been ordered to bed for several days because of a ruptured blood vessel. WASHINGTON-President John F. Kennedy's proposal for tax withholding on dividends and interest has improved its position in the Senate Finance Committee, Democratic members said yesterday, but is still far from being out of the woods. 11 Si Chinese Crop Failure Alters Dream I HAROLD MACMILLAN ... ends strike BAILEY: School Bill Adds Support .For Patssage WASHINGTON (P)-The fight for federal aid to schools, which blazed spectacularly on several fronts last year, has quieted to a sort of guerrilla warfare that is beginning to show some prospects of success. With little outward assistance from the Administration and con- gressional leaders, a House sub- committee is rounding up support in hopes of fanning the sparks into a full-scale offensive in the next Congress. Directing the low-keyed cam- paign is Rep. Cleveland M. Bailey (D-W Va). The aim is to win the support of educators and the gen- eral public for a bill Bailey has introduced, and have them get their congressmen to vote for it. The core of Bailey's bill is a pro- posal to channel federal funds di- rectly to a state's educational agency for use solely as the state decides. He calls it "a states rights education bill" and sees it as the answer to opponents who say fed- eral aid means federal control. Cape Postpones Carpenter Flight CAPE CANAVERAL (A') - The orbital flight of astronaut Mal- colm Scott Carpenter was delayed two days to May 19 because of problems with the capsule's auto- matic control system. 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