TUE SDAY MAY 22,19$2- THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THR TUESDAY, MAY 22,1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Kennedy Trade Program Passes Committee Action Hong Kong Riot Tries To Stop Repatriation Villagers Push Children Into Trucks As Nationalists Offer Refugee Aid By The Associated Press HONG KONG-Angry Chinese villages thrust their own children into the patch of a truck convoy to try to halt force repatriation of refugees into Red China yesterday as Nationalist China offered to take in refugees on Formosa and the United States ponders what to do in the situation. Truck drivers slammed on their brakes but two children were knocked down and injured slightly. Then the crowd fell upon a Brit- a B'NAI WRITE HILLEL FOUNDATION ANNOUNCES STUDY ROOM OPEN EVENINGS TO 12 P.M. Coffee, Soft Drinks, Doughnuts Available 1429 HILL ST. r _ Canada Asks U.SS.-Soviet GENEVA (M)-Canada proposed yesterday that the United States and the Soviet Union begin direct negotiations on banning nuclear weapons from outer space. The Canadian delegate, Gen. E. L. M. Burns, said the United States and Soviet co-chairmen of the 17-nation disarmament con- ference could draft a declaration forbidding the military use of out- er space pending the conclusion of a world disarmament treaty. "If the two great powers could agree on this the conference at least would achieve something," Burns told a news conference. A similar American proposal put forward last week was cold- shouldered by the Soviets. United States Ambassador Ar- thur H. Dean told the conference disarmament will not mean a uto- pia without discord and peace- keeping machinery is vital in a disarmed world. Outlining United States pro- posals for a United Nations force and other peacekeeping measures, Dean said if disarmament is achieved, the world will still be faced with conflicting ideologies and "social systems will be subject to disruptive pressures from within and without." "General and complete disarm- ament, on the one hand, and im- proved peacekeeping machinery on the other are but two sides of the same coin. We cannot have one without the other," Dean said. Nasser Sets Socialist Goal CAIRO (AP) - President Gamal Abdel Nasser declared yesterday that Arab socialism. would lead Egypt to true democracy under collective revolutionary leadership. He proclaimed a classless socie- ty as the goal of his socialist plans and said his revolt against Egypt's rulers 10 years ago had freed the nation's people from the chains of exploitation. MEDICORE-Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Pres- ident John F. Kennedy differed sharply over the value of the King-Anderson bill-the administration plan for medical care for the aged. AMA Denounces PFlan For Agedl Medical Care By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Leaders of the American Medical Association yes- terday denounced President John F. Kennedy's medical-care-for- the-aged plan as a "cruel hoax" aimed at establishing "welfare state medicine" for everyone. The AMArepresentatives said the public was in danger of being "blitzed, brainwashed and band- wagoned into swallowing" a plan that would disrupt health services and turn individual patients into impersonal "numbers." Dr. Leonard W. Larson, of Bis- marck, N.D., association president, said the administration's program would deprive older people of "the American system of medicine, bas- ed upon the private doctor treating the private patient." 'Serves Public Interest' The administration - backed King-Anderson bill "serves the public interest. It involves the gov- ernment because it involves the public welfare. The Constitution of the United States did not make the president or Congress power- less. It gave them definite respon- sibilities to advance the general. welfare and that is what we are attempting to do, Kennedy told an overflow crowd of 20,000 at Madison Square Garden Sunday. He said the bill which would U. have the government partially pay the hospitalization of persons over 65 under the Social Security sys- tem would avoid the personal tragedy of wiped-out savings due to illness and the indignity of sign- ing a relief roll to get aid. Former President Dwight D. Ei- senhower underscored at a Gettys- burg news conference Kennedy's medical help plan. Proper Approach "I think the proper approach to this problem is the voluntary and not compulsory approach under the Social Security system," Eisen- hower replied. Eisenhower said that as Presi- dent he made recommendations which led eventually to the enact- ment of the Kerr-Mills bill. Un- der this measure the federal gov- ernment matches state funds to provide health care for needy el- derly persons. The Kerr-Mills medical aid for the aged law, passed last year by Congress, is contingent on supple- mentary action by individual states. Urge Business To Drop Label Aid Economy WASHINGTON () - President John F. Kennedy appealed person- ally yesterday to industry and la- bor leaders to "drop party labels" and pitch in to help the govern- ment solve crucial economic prob- lems. "There is no presidential elec- tion until 1964," Kennedy told the 200 conferees he brought here for a town-meeting approach to the issues of wage-price stability, eco- nomic growth, and the payments deficit. Kennedy suggested that the foremost objective of both indus- try and labor should be to cooper- ate in raising the national output so that there would be more to share among workers, manage- ment and stockholders. "If we can operate this econo- my at full blast, then the division that comes out of that full blast is going to be a much easier task," he said. "If you don't like our proposals," Kennedy said, in specific refer- ence to his tax program, "what are your suggestions-and what are they specifically, not in a gen- eral way." "The fact of the matter is that most of the problems, or at least many of them that we now face, are technical problems and admin- istrative problems." House Unit Ends Work On Proposal Major Provisions Escape Revisions WASHINGTON (P)-All the ele- ments of President John F. Ken- nedy's sweeping new tariff-cut-' ting and trade promoting program came through intact as the House Ways and Means Committee fin- ished compiling a bill yesterday. These include authority for the President to eliminate some tar- iffs and to provide special read- justment aid for businesses and workers who might be hard hit by imports increased through recip- rocal agreements. The committee split on a num- ber of the provisions, but admin- istration supporters won on each test. The whole bill is subject to reconsideration by the committee after its staff puts is in final lan- guage, but the chances now are heavily against any changes in substance. Committee Lead If Congress follows the commit- tee's lead, Kennedy will get the authority for the "trade or fade" program he says is needed to hold and expand United States foreign markets despite the economic challenge of Europe's formidably successful Common Market. The next big test comes in the House, probably the first week of June. The committee set a meeting Thursday to- review a finished draft of the bill. Reciprocal Agreements Some tariffs, under the bill's major provisions, notably those on articles of which 80 per cent of world exports are supplied by the United States and its trading part- ners, could be eliminated entirely under reciprocal agreements. Oth- ers could be cut as much as 50 per cent. Reductions would be spaced over five years. This au- thority would substitute for the present tariff negotiating author- ity which expires June 30. The President also would retain discriminatory power to cancel tariff cuts in whole or in part if the tariff commission found they had worked considerable damage to a United States industry. But the bill's emphasis is on a new form of aid- Seek Funds For A-T esting WASHINGTON (P) - President John F. Kennedy asked Congress yesterday to appropriate addition- al money to help cover costs of nuclear weapons tests and to pro- duce atomic weapons. Kennedy sent Congress a pro- posed change in the proposed 1962-63 budget, including $120 mil- lion to restore current funds now being spent in connection with the test program. He recommended an increase of $44.5 million for production and for a detailed study of a new approach to the design of nuclear power reactors. ish policeman and beat him be- fore a police riot squad arrived and restored order. This was the first violence in the sad drama of Hong Kong, where the British say the hungry stream- ing in from Red China must be sent back because the colony can WASHINGTON (P)-The SenateI accommodate no more. In Taipei, Nationalist China of- fered to help solve the refugee problem threatening to overwhelm Hong Kong, saying it is ready to accept all fugitives from Red China who wish to come to For- mosa. This will furnish no quick solu- tion, however. Repatriation will be a slow and costly process and many of the Chinese in Hong Kong do not want to come to Formosa. Officials in Hong Kong declined, comment on th'e Nationalist pro- posal until more details are avail- able. United States officials in Wash- ington pondered what course to take in regard to hordes of hun- gry refugees fleeing Red China. And at least one congressman had a .ready answer. Rep. Francis E. Walter (D-Pa), chairman of the House Committee on Un-American Activities, said Nationalist China should admit at least some of the refugees who are trying to get into Hong Kong and the United States should help feed them. If this were done, he told the House, Nationalist President Chi- ang Kai-Shek could "deal an al- most mortal blow" to the Chinese Communists by dramatizing the Red regime's inability to feed its people. Investigations Subcommittee yes- terday plunged into closed hear- ings on the Billie Sol Estes case then imposed a tight lid of secrecy on what it had heard. N. Battle Hales, Agriculture De- partment official who has charged that Estes profited hugely from favored treatment in that agency, and Walter Berger, who was a top Agriculture Department official under the Eisenhower administra- tion, were quizzed separately and alternately for 4%jz hours. Forbid Talk Sen. John L. McClellan (D- Ark), the subcommittee chairman, forbade either man to discuss the testimony, and the senator him- self refused to acknowledge that they had been the witnesses. But McClellan said transcripts of any testimony taken in secret will be released if the witness does not later tell his story in public hearings expected to begin next month. He called that part of the cards-on-the-table probe he has pledged. Answer Questions. McClellan said both witnesses 'had answered every question. "What we heard here today," the senator said, "clearly estab- lishes the fact that this committee has a long row to hoe. It will be neither smooth nor straight, and the endis a long way away." McClellan said the questioning had dealt mainly with grain stor- age and cotton acreage allotments involving the 37-year-old Texan. moon ATTENTION ALL JUNE GRADUATES THIS WEEK SPECIAL PIZZA Made by Pizza Specialist Estes Case Probe Begins ORDER YOUR CAPS AND GOWNS IMMEDIATELY. at AROLD S. TRICK 711 NORTH UNIVERSITY if world News Roundup NEED MONEY? See "Help Wanted" Classified "ARE YOU A BALL OF FIRE ?" By The Associated Press PARIS-Official French sources .said yesterday a Secret Army plot to assassinate President Charles de Gaulle has been discovered and about 15 persons have been arrest- ed in connection with it. PARIS-The last of more than 40 defense witnesses wound up testimony yesterday at the trial of ex-Gen. Ra'ul Salan, depicting the captured Secret Army boss as a man who turned to treason out of patriotism. The court scheduled closing arguments for Wednesday. S* * * WASHINGTON - The Senate Foreign Relations Committee yes- terday restored most of a previous $270-million cut in aid to India and approved a 4-year, $3-billion alliance for progress program in Latin America. NEW YORK-Stock prices de- clined as the Stock Market exper- ienced its slowest trading since last July. The 30 Dow-Jones In- dustrials lost 2.11, the 20 Rail- roads, .11, the 15 Utilities, .12 and the 65 Stocks, .50. MEDIUM 13" SUPER-SPECIAL with everything $1.65 reg. 2.50 LASRGE 16" UPER-SPECIAL with exerything $2.10 1 ~reg. .$3.00 FREE FAST DELIVERY - CALL NO 3-7859 OMEGA Restaurant 105 N. Forest Young Sophistication Bridal Heacipieces* from Fogerty's p Hats and Accessories 117 East Liberty Hours9-5:30 . . .Until 8:30 Monday and Friday Hor-17EatLiet '.4; r, fo Jj)QHandbags You've never seen such beauties and such colors ... Soft leather pouches, gleaming patents, sturdy basque cloths and tapestries, gayly colored straws and braids. priced from 2.98 to 10.98 U I. I $ . .. 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