MARCH 22, 1963 TH MICHIG 'J s =~p~AN AILYaas. InAd"" MINMIMIM, MARCH 2, 1983 UI ##lICtIa Lv UblhE PAGE THR'UEE! 9. President Says Russians Pull Soldiers Out of Cuba McNAMARA'S JUDGMENT: Kennedy Gives Support To Plane Investigation WASHINGTON. ()-President John F. Kennedy said yesterday he thought the Senate investigation of the TFX warplane contract award was "a good thing" that would prove Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara's judgment was right. The President strongly supported Secretary McNamara's decision to award the TFX contract to General Dynamics Corp., rather than Boeing Co. The Senate hearings have been directed at the belief in TCites Pledge To Halt Reds In Caribbean Expresses Desire For More Pullouts WASHINGTON OP) - President John F. Kennedy estimated yester- day that Russia has "withdrawn approximately 3000 troops" from Cuba in recent weeks. He said he hopes the Soviets will pull out more. Kennedy also underscored at a news conference a seven-nation pledge at this week's conference in Costa Rica to take measures "to halt the flow of agents, money, arms and propaganda from Cuba to Central America." In the domestic field, the Presi- dent said he foresees no recession in 1963 and that "we plan to get the tax cut" he has proposed to Congress. Printers Set Second Vote OnM-otion NEW YORK (.P)-Striking union printers agreed yesterday to re- consider a City Hall formula for ending New York's 104-day news- paper blackout. A new vote on once-rejected set- tlement terms was set for Sunday morning. Strike leader Bertram A. Powers said the new vote was scheduled at the urgent request of New York Mayor Robert F. Wagner. Settle- ment of the printers' strike could bring the presses of eight closed daily newspapers back to life next week, possibly as early as Monday. Wagner arranged for striking members of Local 6, AFL-CIO In- ternational Typographical Union, to meet in Madison Square Garden and put city voting machines at their disposal. ITU leaders predicted that this time the printers would accept a $12.63 a week, two-year contract package originally outlined by the mayor. Last Sunday they voted down the settlement package by a 64-vote margin, 1,621 to 1557. Since then the strikers have been under intense pressure from their own ITU to reconsider. Printers across the country have been re- ported increasingly resentful of the financial burden placed upon the ITU by the strike. A sister union of the printers, the ITU mailers, reached a tenta- tive contract agreement early yes- terday with the publishers. Once it is ratified, their pickets will be withdrawn, leaving only the print- ers and the 375-member striking AFL-CIO Photoengravers Union. The latter's deadlock with the pub- RECONSIDERS DECISION: Berger, Park Discuss End Of Military Rule in Korea SEOUL (A -On instructions from Washington, United States Ambassador Samuel Berger called on strongman Gen. Chung Hee Park Wednesday and discussed the rising political storm over military rule. Reports from Washington said Berger asked Park to reconsider his decision to extend military rule for four years. Urges President Only a short time earlier, former Korean Premier Huh Chung, in an interview, urged President John F. Kennedy to call on Park's Soviets Cite Farm Graft MOSCOW (MP)-The Communist Party chief of the Virgin Lands Republic of Kazakhstan says wide- spread theft, corruption and inef- ficiency in his bailiwick have re- sulted in staggering losses to the state. . Ismail Yusupov, first secretary of the Kazakh Republic's party or- ganization, cited these figures in a speech Just published by Kaz- akhstan Pravda: Neglected Goats Twenty-nine million sheep and goats died of starvation and ne- glect in the last 10 years, or as many as the republic has at pres- ent. More than seven million ,rubles were stolen from retail trade or- ganizations last year, an increase of 1.6 million rubles over 1961. A total of 18,479 officials were dismissed from retail trade jobs in 1962 for theft, waste and other offenses. Mismanagement Virgin lands state farms lost 544 million rubles, nearly $600 mil- lion, in the last three years due to theft and mismanagement. Yusupov flaye4 party operatives for making a mess of the repub- lic's economy. He said about 20 per cent of the republic's industrial enterprises failed to meet their production plans. Incompetent Hacks Incompetent party hacks are largely to blame for this state of affairs, he added. Yusupov complained about ex- cessive red tape hampering pro- duction work. He cited statistical questionnaires containing 47,000 entries and noted that the Kaz- akhstan Econimic Council last year sent out 30,000 separate docu- ments. Yusupov told of a local party secretary who spent most of his time playing cards for big stakes with a manager who stole factory funds to pay off losses. He said other officials began to follow his example and "playing cards for money spread like an epidemic." "The chief of the Krasnoarmeis- ky production board, comrade Naz- arov, was right when he protested: 'when are we supposed to work, when are we supposed to visit the farms?'" Kadar Grants Full Amnesty To Hungarians BUDAPEST (M-Janos Kadar, Hungarian premier and Commu- nist Party chief, announced a sweeping amnesty yesterday for "political crimes," including parti- 'cipation in the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. Although Kadar did not say so, the amnesty could apply to Josef Cardinal Mindszenty, Hungary's Roman Catholic primate, who has been living in self-mposed exile in the United States Legation in Budapest ever since the uprising. Kadar told Hungary's newly elected Parliament the amnesty would be granted to persons who had been convicted as "counter- revolutionaries"-the Communist term for those involved in the uprising. some quarters the Boeing bid was the better of the two. Meanwhile, Undersecretary of Defense Roswell L. Gilpatric ac- knowledged yesterday he was one of the anonymous Pentagon spokesmen who aroused senators by their reported comments on an investigation of the award of the TFX warplane contract. Gilpatric said his statements of last weekend were not intended to impugn the fairness ofthe Senate Investigations Subcommittee or to convey the idea any of its members deceived him about the scope of the inquiry. Nor did he concede that anyone in the Defense De- partment made such charges. Damaging Morale Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo) said that the temper-arousing in- quiry was damaging military mor- ale and he expressed hope it could be speedily concluded. The subcommittee chairman, Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark) replied he intends to continue un- til all the facts are in and would call a halt only if the Senate pass- ed a resolution directing him "to cease and desist." Some of the stories publshed after Gilpatric's briefing said the anonymous spokesmen claimed the defense had been entrapped and if it had known there was to be a fullscale inquiry the department would have led off with its top people instead of allowing the sub- committee to question military technicians first. Gilpatric denied that he has had any sort of business connections with General Dynamics Corp. since he became the Defense Depart- ment's No. 2 civilian official. junta to keep its pledge to end, military rule by August. An embassy spokesman said Ber- ger requested the meeting with Park "to discuss the situation on instructions from his government." He declined to give details. After talking with Berger, Park met with all members of his jun- ta and Premier Kim Hun-Chul. The meeting broke up after two hours with no word of what they. talked about. Leave Grimly Most of the junta members were grim as they left headquarters. They declned to answer any ques- tions from reporters. There was speculation that Park was preparing a statement in reply to Washington and that it would be made public within two days. Washington has left no doubt that it wants Park to keep his promise of a return to civilian ad- ministration. The nation is kept going by massive doses of United States aid. Too Busy In his interview, Huh said he had tried to get his'views to Ber- ger but was told the United States ambassador was too busy. Huh, leader of one of the main politcal parties, said Park made. his pledge for national electons in Washington in November 1961 To Examine 'Saudi Crash CUENO, Italy (JP)--Authorities yesterday opened an inquiry into the crash of Saudi Arabian King Ibn Saud's jetliner, which Saud's subjects have been told was blown up in a plot to kill the monarch. Saud was not aboard the Comet IV when it crashed Wednesday in- to an Alpine peak on the Italian- French border, killing 18 persons. Four of the regular crew were Americans. The jet had just 'taken Saud to Nice on the French Riviera from Geneva and was en route to Nice on a second flight with nine mem- bers of his household. Aldo Spaziani, deputy state at- torney in Geneva, said the inquiry would look into the possibility of sabotage. Officials at Geneva air- port said the plane was heavily guarded Radio Mecca broadcast a series of telegrams from princes in Saudi Arabia - congratulating the 60- year-old monarch .on his "escape from the mean plot." JOHN F. KENNEDY ... press conference IN SYMPATHY: Walkouts Hit France PARIS ()-French coal miners shouted for government action yesterday on the 21st day of their strike as rail, steel, postal and util- ities workers all over France back- ed the miners with token walkouts. In answer to a question on a test ban, Kennedy said "I am haunted by the feeling that by 1970, unless we are successful, there may be 10 nuclear powers instead of four, and by 1975, 15 or 20 ... I regard that as the great- est possible danger and hazard." That, he said, doesn't even take Heading for the Sun Country during Spring Vacation 2 Then come to our special showing of "SUN COUNTRY" vacation clothes on Sat., March 23 Modeling 1 to4 p.m. 598 i "z 598 r 798 slacks also come in matching yellow print. 7.98 skirt shown above can be purchased in solid white Arnel. 7.98 a: miss pat, I world News Roundup By The Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO-A Cuban exile leader charged yesterday that Brazilian President Joao Goulart is giving his support to a pro- Castro conference scheduled to open here March 28. Dr. Maximo Sorondo of the Cuban Revolution- ary Council said the conference will bring together Communists and pro-Castroites "in support of the Russian occupation of Cuba." *s " s MIAMI-Reports of a military buildup in Cuba for revolution in other Latin American countries continued to arrive from the Cub- an underground yesterday. A re- sponsible exile leader said he re- ceived reports of "the largest con- centration of modern arms since the October Cuban crisis" on Cuba's north shore. ROME-Italy yesterday reaf- firmed its desire to help the Turk- ish Economic Development Plan and back Turkey's association with the European Common Market. s s s WASHINGTON-Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn) disputed yes- terday the Food and Drug Admin- istration's defense of procedures in testing the safety of certain drugs offered for the market. The' controversy arose when Dr. John 0. Nestor, a medical officer of the FDA's Bureau of Medicine, testi- fied Wednesday that the FDA overruled expert medical opinion and permitted the sale of possibly dangerous drugs in at least three cases. * * * SANTIAGO - Communist and non-Communist newspapers trad- ed charges yesterday that interna- tional intrigue was behind the crash of a Bolivian airliner in Peru last Friday. The Communist Par- 2nd Annual IFC-Vulcans DR. 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