28, 1963 DAY, m TRW MI(UIM AN UA ilr.v is A rllp MMID.IW I~~uJ~z, J.YJ 28, 1983' 1TW 1 ~~VAt 1 t1AVT? ,ajwiwm PAGE THREE eds Declare Attacks Violate Cuban Army Balks At Threats Against Junta SEOUL (A)-Important military factions yesterday were reported pressing strongman Gen. Chung Hee Park to resist both civilian and Washington pressure and ex- tend his military rule for four years. Informed sources said these fac- tions were advocating stern resist- ance to civilian demands for free elections even if it means blood- shed and an end to the United States aid that keeps this Asian nation financially afloat. Park, however, was understood to be trying to reach a compro- mise that might ease mounting United States pressure for quicker progress toward civilian rule. Kennedy Letter Major newspapers said Park had sent a personal letter to President John F. Kennedy explaining his position, but a junta spokesman said he knew nothing about such a letter. Well informed Korean sources said influential paratroop officers and members of the so-called Kim Chong-Pil group were embittered by what they considered Park's re- luctance to shed blood, if neces- sary, to stay in power. The government publicly main- tained its strong stand against civ- ilian demands for an immediate end to military rule but there was increasing feelings that Park would settle for a compromise. Military Coalition A formula put forth in pro- government circles involved a mil- itary-civilian coalition regime for perhaps a year before South Korea could get a truly civilian govern- ment. If approved by Park this would be a great retreat from his March 16 statement that another four years of military rule are necessary in South Korea.. Overt anti-Americanism was in- jected into South Korea's political crisis Wednesday. The tough line was reported gaining wide acceptance in elite para-troop units of South Korea's 600000-man army and the politi- cal machine left behind by Kim Chong-PiI. Kim, Park's former army col- league and at one time a master strategist of the military regime, left the country in February after he was accused of trying to grab power. . Kim is known to feel South Korea should cut away from the United States and develop closer ties with other countries, particu- larly Japan and Nationalist China. The leaflets followed by one day word from Washington that the United States government disap- proved the military regime ulan for four more years in power. TAXES-Gov. George Romney (left) seems destined to avoid the problem of dealing with a bill banning city income taxes that plagued his predecessor as the proposal of Rep. William Hayward died in the House yesterday. House Defeats Measure Voiding City Income Tax Working hard to meet a legislative deadline yesterday, the House killed a controversial bill banning city income taxes levied on non-residents. It was introduced by Rep. William Hayward (R- Royal Oak), also Royal Oak's mayor. A similar bill still awaits action in the Senate, this one from Sen. John T. Bowman (D-Roseville)-who had passed this bill as Irate Teachers Protest Wages At Parliament LONDON (AP)-Thousands of an- gry school teachers streamed to Parliament with military preci- sion yesterday and protested new pay scales set by Education Min- ister Edward Boyle. It was the second straight day of protest at Westminster against the Conservative government's ec- onomic policies. About 3000 unem- ployed workers from England, Scotland and Northern Ireland clashed with police Tuesday. An extra force of police was on duty before the Parliament build- ing as about 5000 teachers assem- bled, but stewards of the National Union of Teachers maintained or- der. Boyle called a news conference to justify his pay scales, which the teachers claimed had been worked out without sufficient ad- vance consultation. "I am not acting illegally," Boyle insisted. "Under the law I am re- quired to be the last to-move." The teachers union was not pla- cated. It set up headquarters at Church House, just behind West- minster Abbey, and sent teachers- across Parliament Square at reg- ular intervals. a representative last year only to have it vetoed by former Gov. John B. Swainson. In the Senate a bill passed which may benefit Washtenaw County: it allows a portion of a county not already served by a community college district to set one up. Its sponsor was Sen. Wil- liam G. Milliken (R-Traverse City), who noted that "local groups" wanted to form a new community - college district in Washtenaw. Gov. George Romney signed the Aid to Dependent Children of the Unemployed bill despite the health, education and welfare depart- ment's refusal to provide funds for Michigan's version of the pro- gram. The Senate also agreed on a Congressional reapportionment plan which would eliminate the state's congressman-at-large seat. The plan, including changes in six Wayne County and 12 outstate districts, passed by a 20-13 vote, would give the GOP a chance of capturing three presently-Demo- cratic seats, leaders of both parties predicted. Parochial-school students would enjoy bus transportation provided by the state, under a bill passed 31-1 by the Senate and sent to the House. A bill passed by the House and sent to the Senate requires cities to hold a referendum before start- ing or discontinuing fluoridation of its water supply. [ruce Blast Raids On Vessels By Refugees- U.S. Denies Charge, Condemns Sea Acts MOSCOW ()-The Soviet Un- ion charged yesterday the United States is violating the agreement that eased last fall's Caribbean missile crisis by backing anti- Castro exiles making hit-and-run raids on Cuba. A Russian diplomatic note spe- cifically protested the attack on the Soviet freighter Lgov, shot at by exiles March 17 at the sugar port of Isabela de. Sagua, on Cuba's north coast. It declared the United States was responsible. Deny Charge The State Department in Wash- ington speedily denied Russia's charge. Even before the Kremlin protest had been officially received here, State Department press officer Lincoln White referred newsmen to earlier United States condemna- tions of the March 17 raid by anti- Castro Cuban exiles. "The United States government is doing everything it possibly can to prevent such incidents from happening from United States ter- ritory," White said. Refute Assertion The State Department spokes- man also denied that there had been any agreement between the United States and the Soviet Un- ion at the conclusion of last fall's Cuban crisis to prevent such in- cidents. Against strong United States op- position, the latest anti-Castro raiding party slipped into the Cu- ban port Tuesday night, attacked a Russian freighter and left it in sinking condition. The raiders, members of the anti-Castro action group, Com- mando L, said the attack was carried out in the Cuban sugar port of Isabela de Sagua. After the sneak attack the raid- ers returned safely and without casualties to their base "some- where in the Caribbean," he said. It -was in this same Cuban port on March 17 the members of the anti-Castro organisation, Alpha 66, shelled a Russian ship and mili- tary camp. In a note delivered today to the- United States embassy in Moscow, the Soviet Union held the United States responsible for the March 17 attack on the freighter Lgov. It declared that it expects the United States to "take decisive measures to prevent such pro- vocative actions in the future." The State Department quickly denied responsibility. Its press of- ficer, Lincoln White, said the gov- ernment "is doing everything it possibly can to prevent such in- cidents from happening from United States territory." We of MARILYN MARK'S welcome you to use the, facilities of our BEAUTY SALON Refuses TO Accept Contract New York Union Prolongs Strike NEW YORK (P)-A small band of 300 photoengravers last night voted to continue their own brief strike, thus thwarting the anti- cipated end of New York's multi- million dollar, 110-day newspaper blackout. The engravers' rejection of a proposed contract settlement stun- ned an industry geared for a quick return to the streets by eight clos- ed dailies, Two of the papers had announced an increase in news- stand prices, so sure were they of resuming publication. A desire for an immediate 35 hour work week, without waiting a year for it, apparently was the chief factor in the engravers' 191 to 111 vote to recall all terms of the proposed contract. Others Accept The general settlement formula had been accepted by other news- paper unions involved, including printers whose December 8 strike led to the blackout. The engravers rode out 14 weeks of the printers strike, before join- ing the picket lines March 18. This won them a pledge that printers' picket lines would stand as long as those of the engravers. However, the possibility of a revolt by other unions was voiced by James J. McMahon, president of the newspaper stereotypers un- ion. Raise Prices The Times and the Herald Tri- bune announced yesterday they will raise their newsstand week- day prices from 5 cents to 10 cents on resuming publication. The tab- loid News and Mirror said their prices would stay at five cents. The action by the Times and the Herald Tribune marked the first increase in New York newsstand prices since 1957, when the three Manhattan afternoon dailies, the Post, World-Telegram and Sun and the Journal-American, went from a nickel to a dime. These papers gave no indication of a price rise in the wake of the current blackout. Economic Pressure During the shutdown, there were repeated warnings that one or more of the papers might go out of business because of economic pressure from the newspaper un- ions. However, there was no pres- ent indication that any of the dail- ies was about to fold. TFX Probers Get Questions WASHINGTON (JP)-Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara in a surprise move yesterday gave Senate investigators a list of ques- tions they want witnesses to an- swer in the TFX warplane con- tract inquiry. Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark) would not disclose the contents of the McNamara questions, saying only they were intended to "bring out evidence they (McNamara and Kennedy) wanted in the record." By The Associated Press BERKELEY, Calif.-Berkeley is trying to be calm about Ordinance 3915. But Berkeley knows the state capitol in Sacramento will be look- ing over its shoulder next Tues- day when it votes on whether to let Negroes who can afford it move up into the hills. The nation may be watching, proponents say, and perhaps the world, for hundreds of the 23,696 University of California students at Berkeley are dark-skinned visi- tors from our lands. Elimate Bias Ordinance 3915 is an attempt to eliminate admitted discrimination in housing in this college city of 111,168 on San Francisco Bay. It is the first such ordinance to be adopted by a city council in California. But a referendum pe- tition bearing 10,555 signatures took it out of the council's hands and sent it to a popular vote. The ordinance would make it a crime--punishable by a maximum penalty of six months in jail and $500 fine-to refuse to comply with a legal order to cease hous- ing discrimination. Oppose Ordinance Outgoing Mayor Claude Hutch- inson, vice-president emeritus of the university, is opposed to the ordinance. Nobel Prize winner Prof. Owen Chamberlain of the university of California is co-chairman for the ordinance. The Berkeley Real Estate Board opposes it as an unwise measure that "has become a divisive factor" in Berkeley creating "great ten- Soviet Writer Admits 'Error' MOSCOW (P)-Yevgeny Yevtu- shenko, a target of the Soviet Communist party's drive to bridle Russia's young artists, confessed his "mistakes" yesterday at a meeting of Soviet writers. The Soviet news agency Tass quoted the 30-year-old poet-idol of Russia's young generation as saying he is trying "to refute the reputation of an anti-Soviet rebel which the Western press ascribed to me." Don't miss the I S A Monte Carlo Ball March 30-League Ballroom 9-1:30 Tickets $2.75 at the International Center Gambling, International Entertainment sion -- emotional feeling runs high." Sign Pledge Geographically in the center is the university, which requires own- ers listing rentals with it to sign a nondiscrimination pledge. More than a third of the landlords re- fuse to sign and remain unlisted. Most of the city's Negro popula- tion-21,850 in the 1960 census-is crowded into the flatlands in the southern and western sections of the city. Last year the city council ap- pointed an 18-member committee to study the problem. In October, the committee re- ported unanimously that discrim- ination is "widespread and gener- al, in both rentals and sale of housing." By a split vote, it rec- ommended an ordinance with teeth. Opponents Absent Ignoring an opinion of City At- torney Robert Anderson that the ordinance was probably unconsti- tutional, the council on Jan. 15 adopted it 5-2. Two opponents were absent. The ordinance would apply to all housing except a duplex where $1.98 FORMERLY 5, 98, 4.98, 3.98 Fair Housing Faces Vote RECORD SALE CONTINUES AT.. FOLLETT'S STATE ST. AT N. U. an owner occupies one unit or to religious, fraternal or similar or- ganizations. A four-member board would be appointed by the council from the Community Welfare Commission. They would investigate, use per- suasion, conciliation, and, if nec- essary, hold public hearings. Fail- ure to comply with a board order would be a misdemeanor, subject to prosecution. Running Start' Councilman Wilmont Sweeney, Negro attorney who guided the or- dinance through the council, con- ceded that since 20,000 votes prob- ably will decide the issue, "10,000 signatures does give the opposition a running start, but it doesn't appear overwhelming." Wallace J. S. Johnson, a manu- facturer and candidate for mayor, has been the major spokesman against the ordinance. Johnson said he believes in the "free opportunity to buy and free opportunity to rent" but "the equally fundamental human rights of personal privacy of a home owner should not be subject to housing discrimination legisla- tion." Sol. 'El WUS World University Service BUCKET DRIVE Give TODAY! HELP STUDENTS HELP THEMSELVES AUCTION - DIAG 3:00 P.M. Thursday, March 28 IL World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Soviet Union firmly rejected yesterday United States claimsthat two Rus- sian reconnaissance planes pene- trated 30 miles into American air space March 15. * 4* * LISBON-Portuguese authori- ties questioned Georges Aidault for hours yesterday,rthen let it be known that the French anti- Gaullist leader will be expelled to a country of his choice. WASHINGTON-- House public hearings on President John F. Kennedy's $10.2-billion tax cut and revision bill ended yesterday in a blast of objections to pro- posed new rules for oil industry taxation, WASHINGTON - The United States Chamber of Commerce in- troduced its new president yester- day, Edwin P. Neilan, Delaware banker. * ** WASHINGTON-Damage from winter crop freezes pushed the na- tion's living cost level last month back up to its highest point in history, the Labor Department re- ported yesterday. Its consumer price index rose by one-tenth of 1 per cent in February to reach 106.1 per cent of the 1957-59 aver- age. TOKYO - Communist China said a United States military plane "intruded" into its air space over Yunghsing, Pei and Tung Islands in Kwangtung Province of South China yesterday. * * * GENEVA-Russia offered a mis- sile control proposal Wednesday at the 17-nation disarmament conference. The United States termed it inadequate. EXPERT and FAST REPAIRS on HI-Fl PHONOGRAPHS (pick-up and delivery) HI-Fl STUDIO 1327 S. University NITEROI, Brazil - Brazilian leftists looked last night to foreign supporters to fire up their pro- Castro pep meeting and salvage this week's so-called Cuban Soli- darity Conference. * ,' * NEW YORK-The New York Stock Exchange gained further ground yesterday, despite scattered weak spots. The closing Dow-Jones averages showed 30 industrials up 4.35, 20 railroads up .60, 15 utili- ties up .20, and 65 other stocks up 1.15. 548 Church St. 662-3055 or 662-4276 2222 Fuller Rd. 663-8155 or 663-9738 VICKIE WELLMAN has returned to the Church Street Salon Ideas for your wedding . .. -W EDIQUE T TE ,: _ ._ <- ;>.f