62 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ilitary Plans Methods. 1 Aid Business, Labor ear Economic Policy TALK AT CONFERENCE-Secretary of Defense McNamara, left, and Secretary of Commerce Hodges, right, talked yesterday before the Conference on National Economit Issues. IEDICARE PLAN: Kennedy Claims Doctors 'Il-Informed, Confusing' .to Disclose Arms Plans In Advance Total Defense Outlay Set Over $50 Billion WASHINGTON (P) - Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara said yesterday the Pentagon is making. a five-year projection of military supply and research needs to help business, workers and com- munities gear their economic poli- cies accordingly. McNamara told the final session of President John F. Kennedy's Conference on National Economic Issues the aim is to alert the pri- vate economy well beforehand of intended changes and allocations in weapons orders and similar pro- curement. He said the advance plans will be laid out by industries and areas. The totaldefense spending, will average well in excess of $50 bil- lion annually for the next five years, McNamara said. h Asks Deficit Cut Also at the conference, Secre- tary of the Treasury Douglas Dil- lon said the various steps being taken by the government to cut down the present $3 billion balance of payments deficit are working out. He said these steps will cut the the deficit to an annual basis of $1 billion. He said increased ex- ports will have to make up the dif- ference. Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges kicked off an argument about demands -of some labor un- ions for a shorter work week. Hodges said those who favored a reduction in the 40-hour week are pessimistsclacking confidence in the nation's economic future. Charles R. ihdn spokesman for the National Association of Man- facturers, said workers. could have more leisure if they want it but it wouldberat the expense of higher living standards. Predicts Shorter Day John T. Dunlop of Harvard pre- dicted work hours will be cut even- tually in industries having per- sistently high uinemployment. The Economic Conference came to an end with participants saying that while it ,hadn't produced any general agreements among the in- dustry, labor and public groups it had at least broken the ice for more deliberate future considera- tion of key issues. Thailand May Ask More Aid LONDON (IP-Four Southeast Asia Treaty Organization allies last night expected formal invita- tions from the Bangkok govern- ment to send token military forces into Thailand. Qualified diplomats said the Thais have been urged by the United States in the past few days to make this request. The United States already is building up a force of 5,000 Marines and Army soldiers to strengthen Thailand's security. The Thais appear to have been persuaded that other SEATO forces would be a good sign of solidarity. The four awaiting Bangkok's word are Britain, Australia, New Zealand and the Philippines. French President Charles de Gaulle is expected to rule against F r en ch participation. Another SEATO member, Pakistan, is heav- ily engaged in an old dispute with India and has been somewhat dis- gruntled lately over some aspects of their military cooperation with the West. Ih Thailand's Foreign Minister Thanat Khoman said an an- nouncement would be made soon about other SEATO nations' con- tribution. Authoritative sources in Canber- ra said Australia may announce the sending of jet fighters to Thai- land. Government Plans To Move Stored Grain WASHINGTON (P)-The Agri- culture Department, in a surprise move, said yesterday it will re- move all government grain from elevators and warehouses owned or controlled by Billie Sol Estes. The only explanation offered was that Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman had decided "that the best interests of the de- partment would be served by mo- ing this grain out in an orderly manner." Estes has declared his financial empire bankrupt and is under in- 'dictment on fraud charges. So far, there have been no charges of irregularities inEstes' grain storage operations, but there have been allegations that Estes received favored treatment in keeping his facilities filled while others in the areahad available space. George A. Barnes, an assistant to Freeman, said the 42 million bushels of grain stored in Estes' facilities would be moved out through regular channels over a period of about 18 months. He said there would be no "crash" pro- gram to get it out. The announcement came at the first of a new series of two-a-day briefings on the Estes case. Dutch Move Women Out FAKFAK, West New Guinea (R) -Ships and planes are withdraw- ing about 700 Dutch women and children from peninsular villages of West New Guinea to remove them from the hazards of a jungle war between Dutch forces and in- filtrating Indonesians. Meanwhile Dutch Premier Jan, de Quay appealed urgently to UN Acting Secretary-General U Thant to intervene in the fighting and send observers to help check what he called Indonesia's aggression, "clearly prepared and intended as such." Lower House Debate The Netherlands lower house scheduled a debate at the Hague tomorrow on the crisis. The government in Hollandia announced yesterday it is permit- ting Dutch families to leave towns and villages along a vulnerable 500-mile stretch of the west and southwest coast which has been the target for a half dozen drops by Indonesian parachute troops. About 400 Indonesian soldiers are estimated to have landed in the campaign by President Sukar- no's government to capture this island territory, which the Dutch retained when they freed the rest of the East Indies in 1949. Military Base The women and children will be resettled on Biak, an island at the entrance of Geelvink Bay on the north coast. This was a Japan- ese military base in World War II and is now a relay station for Dutch reinforcements from the Netherlands. Normal life has come almost to a standstill in the southwest coas- tal area. Durant Files Suit on Stahiin DETROIT (M)-A $1-million suit filed yesterday accuses Sen. John H. Stahlin (R-Belding) and his press aide of libel when they com- plained Richard Durant was try- ing to take over the Republican Party in Wayne County. Durant, a Grosse Pointe resi- dent and "proud to be a member of the John Birch Society," said he will withdraw the suit he filed yesterday if Stahlin "retracts and apologizes." the number rounded up and forc- ibly returned. Crowded Tenement It is believed that at least 8,000 to 10,000 more got through the border patrols and found haven in Hong Kong's crowded tene- ments. Normally about 60,000 ref- ugees, legal and illegal, enter Hong Kong each year. Border police sources said tem- pers were growing short on all sides. The refugees, who at first submitted docilely to arrest and deportation, are growing more truculent. Hong Kong's thousands of Chinese residents crammed into squalid quarters are increasingly abusive of officials. And police and troops are showing the strain from almost continuous duty in the three-week crisis. Angry Chinese Crowds "The situation can blowsup at any time," a police informant said. A British police officer was as- sualted Monday by an angry Chi- nese crowd which tried to stop truck convoys forcibly returning captured refugees to the Red Chi- nese border. U.S. To Study Chinese Plight WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Phil- ip A. Hart (D-Mich.), announced yesterday a Senate Judiciary sub- committee will launch an inquiry next week into the plight of the Hong Kong refugees from Red China. Hart, chairman of the subcom- mittee, said in a statement that representatives of the State De- partment will testify at the open- ing of hearings Tuesday, to be fol- lowed by officials of private relief agencies with programs in Hong Kong. HONG KONG: British Colony Braces For Influx of Refugees HONG KONG (j) - A dangerously explosive situation built up in this British Crown Colony's refugee-infiltrated border area yes- terday. New waves of refugees seeking to flee from hungry Red China were reported en route to the guarded border. In the last 48 hours, it is estimated 9,000 refugees were caught after they got through the barricades. Since May 1, nearly 50,000 I, Full-of-Fun WASHINGTON (P) - President John F. Kennedy was reported to have told Congressional leaders yesterday that 'American Medical Association doctors fighting his' Medicare Plan are trying to con- fuse the people and are not prop- erly informed. Senf. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, Assistant Senate Dem- ocratic leader, relayed this word New 'eramic Glaze' Protects. Nails to reporters after a White House breakfast conference of the top Democrats and the President. He said Kennedy repeated a previous charge that the doctors, who contend the provisions for fi- nancing health insurance for the elderly through social security taxes means socialized medicine, have not studied the administra- tion measure. The AMA mounted a nation- wide, televised counter-attack last night against pro-Medicare rallies held, over the weekend -- one of them adressed bykthe President. Their leaders called it a "cruel hoax" which would "heartlessly ignore millions" needing coverage. The Medicare issue, one of the most controversial before Con- gress, is under consideration by the House Ways and Means Com- mittee. We are now Delivering PIZZA -and SUBS DOMIW(.KFS NO 2-5414! 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TOKYO-The government said yesterday it has signed a con- tract for Japan's first missile-equipped destroyer. The ship, to be com- pleted in 1965, will carry one sea-to-air missile launcher, two units of three-inch quick-firing guns and one torpedo tube. PARIS--The national chairman of the Centrist Radical-Socialist Party, a major French political party, said yesterday the United States would eventually share atomic weapons with a United Europe. WASHINGTON-Gen. Lucius Clay criticized West German and French allies yesterday for open talk about specific proposals for settlement of West Berlin's problems with Soviet Russia before there is Allied agreement. ALGIERS--European Secret Army commandos killed 27 persons and wounded 12 in a series of raids throughout Algeria yesterday. All but six of the dead were Moslems, and five of these were women. The. wounded included nine Moslems, one of them a woman, and three Europeans. BONN-West Germany will start increasing draft calls this sum- mer to give its armed forces a strength of a half million men no later than 1966, the defense ministry said yesterday. CAPE CANAVERAL-The weather odds' for Malcolm Scott Car- penter's orbital flight improved to 60-40 yesterday as space agency officials reported "absolutely no technical problems" threatened a launching tomorrow. HENRY H. STEVENSP inc. LONG ! SDISTANCE MOVING ,'sf i Shoes that take the casual approach ... to dress, street- wear or leisure. Flexible and lightweight as a shoe can be. Genuine moccasin construc- tion . . . incomparably com- fortable. MOCCASINS MAS'S Open Mon. Eve. 619 E. Liberty COUNTRY SET does printsand solids teamed in the most fascinating way. Arriel sharkskin knee pants with slot seam detail... in blue. Arnel-cotton print tops with elastic fit-$5.98, knee pants-$6.98, Jamaicas-$5.98, sizes 9-15 SEE LOWER LEVEL AND THIS WEEK'S WINDOWS Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 State and Liberty I 1 ____I__!'____ ___