PERSONAL ADMISSIONS Sira Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom :43 a ity LIGHT SNOW High--30 Low--18 Cloudy, with increasing coldness. See Page 4 VOL. LXXII, No. 77 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 7, 1962 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES I _ _ U.S. Revives Relations In Dominican Country 7 As OAS Lifts Sanction s INDONESIA: Sukarno Presses Toward Dutch War PAREPARE, Celebes, Indonesia (M)-President Sukarno fanned Indonesian war fervor over Dutch New Guinea yesterday but told his people to "be patient just a little longer." His counsel to be patient was taken to mean he still has hopes of winning the disputed territory by negotiation. Repeats Promise Sukarno, addressing a mass rally at this strategic South Celebes port, repeated his promise to take over New Guinea this year, how- ever, and said he already had chosen the Papuan natives of the territory who will govern' the 700,000 population. He said he could * Communists in Franc Riot Against Fascism, Forces of, SecretArmy O_ 4 To Include NwRimgime In Alliance Mission Dispatched For Santo Domingo For Negotiations WASHINGTON (P)-A hurry-up repair job yesterday restored for- mal diplomatic relations between the United States and the Domini- can Republic. SWay for the restoration was opened only last Thursday when the Organization of American States lifted sanctions imposed in August, 1960, when the Dominican dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo was held to be a menace to the peace of the hemisphere. Go Ahead Restoration means the United States can go ahead with steps to include the Dominican Republic in its alliance for progress to lift Latin American living standards through a 10-year, $10-billion pro- gram of grants and loans. It means also that the way is cleared for the Dominican Repub- lic to pick up an. estimated $25 million windfall in sugar sales to r the United States by claiming its share of the import allotment once held by Communist-dominated Cuba. U.S. Mission No time is being lost on bringing the Dominicans into the Alliance for Progress and a mission headed by Teodoro Moscoso is due at the republic's capital of Santo Dom- ingo today. Moscoso heads the Latin American division of the Agency for International Develop- ment, the United States' over-all foreign-aid agency. Restoration of formal diplomatic relations was a simple matter, mechanically. John Calvin. Hill, Jr.; who has been consul general at Santo Domingo, presented his credentials to the foreign ministry at the Dominican capital about midday. Nashville Drug Store Ejects Demonstrators ATLANTA (M)-Eighteen mem- bers of the Nashville Nonviolent Movement staged a sit-in demon- stration at a Nashville drug store and several of ther were dragged bodily from the premises by store employes, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee said last night. Bob Zellner, spokesman for the SNCC, said details of the incident were relayed to him by one of the demonstrators, Susan Wilbur. She was the only white person in the group. "This is the only drug company in Nashville which refuses to serve Negroes," Zellner said. "They usually have guards to prevent demonstrators from entering, but none was posted yesterday." Zellner said Miss Wilbur added that the demonstrators stood out- side for awhile and police arrived, but no arrests were made. Caribbean Case By LOUIS de la HABA Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON-When the hemisphere's foreign ministers. as- semble in Uruguay on Jan. 22 to discuss the Cuban question, the case of the Dominican Republic will be in the back of many minds. It will be present in some fashion such as this: "The Organization of American States. was able to clean up the Dominican mess, so why can't it clean up the Cuban mess in the same manner?" Aggressive Acts There are many similarities between the two cases. Under the late dictator Rafael L. Trujillo, the Dominican Republic was found Qguilty of an act of aggression --- -- .? t't JAWAHARLAL NEHRU ... colonial attitude Anticipates Goan Policy PATNA, India (M)-Prime Min- ister Jawaharlal Nehru said yes- terday the establishment in Lis- bon of a provisional government for Goa would be a test of the Western powers' fundamental at- titude on colonialism. Nehru told a cheering crowd at the annual meeting of his Con- gress Party that India will never withdraw from Goa and the two other former Portuguese enclaves seized three weeks ago. Nehru said if the Western pow-. ers covertly support Premier An- tonio de Oliveira Salazar'sdeclar- ed intention to establish a provi- sional Goan government in Por- tugal there would be more com- plications. The nature of the com- plications was left unexplained. He called Portugal a Fascist dic- tatorship. Nehru said India's basic poli- cies of seeking peaceful solutions to problems and of nonalignment remained. India would continue to pursue a policy of friendship even with nations that were "angered and who opposed our action in Goa," Nehru said. He had earlier identified the United States and Britain as two such countries. Nehru was speaking on a res- olution on international affairs which the party approved. It call- ed for the government "to seek 'all avenues of a peaceful settle- ment" to get the Chinese out of the Himalayan borderlands and Pakistanis out of disputed Kash- mir. against Venezuela. Diplomatic and economic sanctions were imposed on the Dominican government. In the Cuban case, the foreign ministers will be presented with evidence of Cuban-sponsored in- vasions of the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Guatemala, Nicaragua and Honduras. Condemn Cuba So the question arises: Why can't the OAS condemn Cuban aggression as it did in the Domini- can case and take steps to isolate Cuba from the rest of the Ameri- cas? What could be a preview of the forthcoming discussion at Punta del Este was seen Thursday whent the OAS council debated lifting7 of the Dominican sanctions. Everyone agreed the OAS-when it imposed the Dominican sanc-t tions, while it maintained them and when it removed them-had1 in no way violated the principles of non-intervention and self-a determination. Mexico pointed out that when it voted for sanctions in 1960 it did so "without passing judgment in any fashion and making no allu- sion to internal characteristics of4 the Dominican government." Sanctions cannot be imposed on Cuba solely on the ground that its, government is not a representa- tive democracy. Further, the pro-; posal that foreign ministers dis- cuss "threats to peace that may arise from extra-continental in- tervention" poses no concrete, charge that Cuba has been an ag- gressor. Therefore, sanctions can- not be imposed on that ground either. 'U' Committee Tables Action On Panty Raid .By GERALD STORCH The University Sub-Committee on Discipline has "tabled" clarifi- cation and revision of policy on panty raids until the formulation of an overall philosophy for the Office of Student Affairs, Prof. John W. Reed of the Law School, chairman of the sub-committee, said yesterday. Because the panty raid policy is merely one part of the general philosophy of the relationship be- tween the OSA and students, it is best to wait and see what this philosophy will be, he explained. Vague Category The re-evaluation' of the panty raid policy was started last fall at a sub-committee meeting, when the members, including represen- tatives from the deans' offices, thought that the "vague category of 'conduct unbecoming a student' should be clarified, as there was some question whether students penalized in the past had really understood that they were violat- ing University regulations," Prof. Reed said. After informal discussion, he composed a brief statement con- cerning panty raids in relation to "conspicuous participation" of stu- dents and also the right of peace- ful assembly. Deay Consideration This draft was later distributed to the sub-committee members and to the deans' offices, but the LUCIUS D. CLAY .. .reports on Berlin Rusk Hears Clay Re port WASHINGTON (/)-Gen. Lu- cius D. Clay told Secretary of State Dean Rusk yesterday that East- West talks on Berlin usually in- crease tensions in that disputed city, but Clay discounted any pos- sibility of a grave new emergency there. Clay is President John F. Ken- nedy's personal representative in 'West Berlin and will report tothe. President at the White House to- day. He spent an hour and a half wtih Rusk yesterday and both men denied there are any policy differ- ences between them. Authority To Act Comments which Clay made in a brief meeting with newsmen sup- ported the word circulated in ad- vance of his arrival here that he believes the United States com- mander in West Berlin must have authority to act in any future crisis-even if he lacks precise in- structions from Washington. Rusk, dealing with a related but different problem, has the respon- sibility of making sure that where possible United States actions are checked out in advance with allied countries, particularly Britain, France and West Germany. Vital Issues Clay and Rusk were reported to have discussed vital issues of com- mand responsibility, along with other Berlin problems. Clay was United States military governor in Germany in 1947-49. During the 1948-49 Soviet blockade of West Berlin he became, for the West Germans in particular, the hero of a whole airlift incident. Kennedy asked Clay to return to West Berlin as his personal am- bassador after the East Germans walled off East Berlin last August. iot disclose the name of the new 'overnor, however, because he was till in New Guinea and might be unished by the Dutch. Names Province Sukarno already has proclaimed Dutch New Guinea a province of Indonesia and given it the name f West Irian. Speaking from the same plat- orm were two Papuans, J. Dimara nd Fritz Kirikeo, and two chiefs >f the Indonesian armed services. "We don't need to wait any onger to attack the Dutch in Vest Irian," Dimara, a Papuan Lationalist, said. "We are united in our great truggle to free West Irian," Kiri- eo, a student in the Netherlands, eclared. "No one will be able to' top us." Fifth Largest In his appeal to Indonesian Pa- riotic sentiment, Sukarno declar- d: "We are the fifth biggest na- ion in the world and our strong- st asset is spirit. We can be pa- ient just a little longer because am certain our red and white lag will fly over West Irian this 'ear." He asserted, however, that In- [onesia's patience is nearly ex- hausted. "When we have been patient in he past," he said, "we have been cheated by the Dutch. People used o think we were the softest peo- le to control but our revolution roved them wrong. We are not ,oft." Indonesia claimed Dutch New Guinea, western half of the world's second largest island, when it won independence in 1949. Grounds Crew. Battles Sleet On 'U' Roads The freezing rain and drizzle that has caused accidents and in- juries since Friday continued last iight, keeping the University ground crews at work around the clock, Ground Foreihan Robert Hanselmann reported Working in two shifts, a 36-man crew has been spreading sand and salt since Thursday night in an effort to clear ice from the esti- mated 27 miles of walks and roads n the campus area, Hanselmann said. Given priority in the ice-remov- al' operation are the University Medical Center and the women's dormitories, because of the hilly streets and sidewalks, he said. The classroom and men's residence halls area is cleared next. University Hospital reported 21 persons injured on the ice since midnight Thursday. Since 7 a.m. yesterday, there had been 15 auto- mobile accidents in Ann Arbor- which the police department call- ed an unusual number. his 17-months claim to independ- ence from The Congo. These points included the con- troversial first article of the Ki- tona Pact in which Tshombe agreed that The Congo's funda- mental law, or provisional consti- tution, applied to Katanga. Nawezi said, however, that the commission members were having difficulty with the eighth and fin- al point and that they wanted United Nations representatives to sit in with them to clarify it. Resolutions Apply This was the point in which Tshombe agreed all UN resolu- tions on 'The Congo applied to Ka- tanga. "We know that the resolutions require all foreign mercenaries and advisers to quit Katanga but we would like to have it spelled out to us by a United Nations of- ficial," Nawezi said. From Brussels, it is reported that Tshombe accused the United States State Department of hav- ing pushed the United Nations in- to a "murderous war" in Katan- ga. But he said he was sure only a minority of the American people were to blame. Katanga Statement His statement was i s s u e d through the Katangan delegation in Belgium. Tshombe said "it appears that it is more under the impulse of the State Department than on its own that the United Nations or- ganization, set itself on Katanga up to the point of leading there a murderous war" Protesting the destruction, he said "the reply which (United States Ambassador Edmond) Gul- lion gave me in Ndola, }beggars cannot choose,' is a perfect illus- tration of this mentality. To these people it does not matter whether children and women die." Says Reds Oppose Berlin Occupation MOSCOW (A')-The Soviet gov- ernment newspaper Izvestia last night said the Soviet Union has' no intention of negotiating an agreement for further occupation of West Berlin by the Allies. "One cannot seriously think." Izvestia said, "that the Soviet Union will sit at a round table to perpetuate the occupation of West Berlin by the Americans, the British and the French." MOISE TSHOMBE ' .,..murderous war WEST GAINS: Sees Bloc 'Failtering' COLUMBUS (P) - President John F. Kennedy said last night the Western alliance is gaining strength while the Communist bloc has begun to crack. "The past 18 months has seen the beginning of the fragmenta- tion of the. Communist empire," Kennedy told a Democratic fund- raising banquet here..' Kennedy flew in from Washing- ton in the rain to address the ban- quet at the state fairgrounds in honor of Gov. Michael V. DiSalle's 54th birthday anniversary. The President said East Ger- many, Poland and Hungary have been forced to stick with the Com- munist front. Red China and Albania, he said, have started to move away. Blowing apart Communist pre- dictions, Kennedy said the West- ern world has received its "great- est impetus toward, unity in his- tory." Kennedy declared that "free- dom is the handmaiden of abun- dance." The President called for sup- port of his administration's pro- posals to make 1962 a "year of progress" in this country and abroad. T alks *on Katanga Stall Over Foreign Personnel ELISABETHVILLE ()-The question of Katanga's employment of foreign advisers and soldiers appeared last night to be the chief hurdle in this seceded province's return to The Congo. Even this point did not seem to be giving United Nations rep- resentatives in Katanga too much concern. Decide on Ratification Jean Nawezi, press secretary of the Katanga Assembly, told news- men the Foreign Affairs Commission Thursday decided to recom- mend ratification of the first seven points of President Moise Tshom- be's agreement at Kitona to end' -,,. ; :: :: -TeenwAgers Decry Policy1 In Algeria,. Demonstration Calle To Protest Gunning PARIS (P)-Tightly checked by police, several -thousand Commu- nists demonstrated in a drizzling rain yesterdays against the rightist secret army that is campaigning to keep Algeria French. Fascism in general was de- nounced. Five thousand special riot police -helmeted and tough-augmented Paris' strong regular force in curb- ing the demonstrators and barri- cading them from the square in front of Communist Party head- quarters where they wanted to meet, Jeer, Shout . . Milling Reds, many of them teenagers, jeered police and shout- ed slogans against the under- ground followers of exiled Gen. Raoul Salan who are fighting President Charles de Gaulle's plan for self-determination in Algeria. "Death to the assassins!" they shouted. "The secret army shall not pass." But there was no violence and no arrests were reported. The Communist hierarchy call- ed the demonstration to protest the machine gunning of a guard 'at the party headquarters Thurs- day night, a shooting it blamed on the secret army. The guard was severely wounded. Red Victory The Communists won a victory of sorts, for any appearance en mnasse was forbidden by law. They got out in the streets and made known their sentiments. The lack of violence led some to speculate that the Communists had been ordered by party leaders not to,provoke the police. And the police were unusually mild in their behavior stolidly ignoring youths who leaned against the barricades to shout slogans. Demonstrators began to drift away after Auguste Gillot, 'Com- munist maqor of the nearby sub- urb of St. Denis, climbed a table outside a cafe and told them to go home. Ne roes Build New Tent City BROWNSVILLE, Tenn. (A) - Three bleak, olive drab tents, hud- dled in a snow-crisp cornfield near here, mark the beginnkigs of West Tennessee's second tent city. Negro leaders here say the settlement is necessary 'to house Negro tenant farmers who claim they were evicted in a prolonged cold war over civil rights. The first families are expected to move in tomorrow. I. UNION DANCING CONTEST:. Twinkle-Toed, Torrid Twisters Try To Triumph i1innegan Provides Margin As Michigan Beats Huskies By DAVE ANDREWS Associate Sports Editor Special To The Daily HOUGHTON--Michigan hung on to first place in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association here last night, grimly defending a one- goal lead for almost half the game, and then cashing in on an insur- ance tally at 18:46 of the final period to beat Michigan Tech, 4-2 be- fore 2,189 fans at Dee Stadium. The Wolverines who had seen the Huskies snap their winning streak at 10 Friday night, returned the favor and broke Tech's at nine, but it was far from easy. Union Competition Gyrating Success By HELENE SCHIFF and FRED RUSSELL KRAMER Io Saturnalia!-the first Union twist contest was held last night. Over 200 gyrating couples, as though invoking Dionysious, flash- ed their pettipants and crushed non-existant cigarettes in the wild ballroom frenzy. After flashing fannies for over half an hour, Eric Hall, '65E, and Jane Schember, '65, were declared all campus twist champions by judge Todd Fay, '62, Union execu- tive vice-president. Second place winners who also Complications Set in Around World By The Associated Press MANITOWOC, Wis.-A "twist" contest at the Capitol- Theatre was called off Friday night after the management received a protest from the pastor of St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church. The cancellation of the dance contest, announced by theatre manager Lou Ingram,,touched off a noisy demonstration by an audi- ence of approximately 700. Ingram explained that admissions would be refunded or tickets validated for future performances. About 200 persons got their money back, Many Requests The protest came from the Rev. John Landowski, who said he telephoned after receiving "many requests" from members of the parish. He added he had read many periodicals condemning the "twist" as immoral. "If I find any kids in my parish doing the 'twist' out they go," Father Landowski told Jay Wells of radio station WCUB. He would not elaborate. T £mmTThVNr T.i.A, Arnnmx avnctt rn ep a rich harvest from the