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April 03, 1963 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1963-04-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

""__THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Soviets Announce Shot

Of New Lunik

Vehicle

New Measures To Rush FLORIDIAN:
Negro Voter Registration Cubans Apologize f
WASHINGTON (M--Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy said yesterday WASHINGTON (P)-Cuba apol-
the administration has sent to Congress a four-point, "do-it-now" ogized yesterday for its March 28 edThe United States had demand-
bill aimed at speeding up the registration of Negro voters. MIG attack on the United States explast Friday a full and prompt
He predicted enactment of the measure would result in the freighter Floridian, and the United e bow and the sterng of the
registration of several hundred Negroes in the South immediately, States immediately accepted the United States freiahter by two

1imed for

LUNAR PROBE-The reported Soviet Luilik res
may be traveling toward the moon on this path.
agency Tass called it an "automatic moon station'
it projected yesterday.
LUNIK IV
U.S. Expert Specula
On Manned Soviet ]
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON-The Soviet Union's announc
launching of a new lunar spacecraft yesterday can
hours after a United States Air Force expert told a
mittee that the Russians could send a man on a fly-
right now, if they put the effort to it.
Norman V. Petersen, technical director of the A
Test Center, also testified: "If major emphasis wer

Moon Area
Reds Hope
For Surface
Monitoring
Rocket To Perform
Photographic Mission
MOSCOW ()-In terms sug-
gesting a piggy-back launching,
the Soviet Union announced it
.{Y../ shot the fourth and biggest of the
Lunik research vehicles toward the
moon yesterday and that it was
flying well.
Either a landing for robot mon-
itoring of lunar conditions or an
orbit that would permit detailed
photographs of the surface could
x".v :" give the Russians a significant
bootinthirace with thenied
States to land men on the moon.
Tass announced the instrument-
loaded rocket, officially described
as an "automatic moon station,"
weighs 3,130 pounds.
Outweighs Predecessors
-AP wireph6ot That is five times heavier than
earch vehicle its predecessors, all of which were
Russian news launched in 1959.
and reported Lunik I missed the mark by 4700
miles and went into orbit around
the sun. Lunik II was reported
to have landed on the moon and
the Russians said it proved the
planet has no magnetic field.
The flight of camera-packing1
tes Lunik III was followed by release]
of pictures purporting to show the1
hidden back side of the moon, con-]
Flight iming belief that it was largely
mountainous.
United States Efforts
The United States has effected1
ement of the one lunar landing, but instrument
less than 18 failure limited the worth of that
ie s than' 18 feat. Ranger 4, a complex 730-
House subcom- pound space craft, had brain fail-
by of the moon ure before it came down on the
back side April 26, 1962.1
ir Force Flight The Soviet news agency said Lu-
e given by the nik IV "will reach the area of the
le lunar mission moon in 31/2 days." That could
al rendezvous, mean Saturday. It was not dis-
he ability to ac- closed whether a landing or an
e present time." orbit was planned.,
Time Tass carried commentaries, how-
ever, by Soviet scientists which
also came at a indicated a photographic mission,
e United States plus a hint that Lunik IV or its
acing an econ- successors might place a robot ob-l
gress. President servatory on the moon to radio in-
has pledged the formation about the nature of its
beating the So- surface and other aspects.r
by the end of Moon Pictures
Kharkov's observatory chief Ni-e
ape Canaveral, kolai Barabashov wrote of both ar
d that the Rus- need for better pictures of the
would have to moon and the value of a robot
land a "live" in- observatory.
on the surface The latter would parallel a sur-k
reat amount of veyor project being promoted bye
. They said a the United States National Aero-
moon would not nautics and Space Agency to scoutr
ata to make an the terrain mechanically in ad-C
ng worthwhile. vance of any manned landing. ~

and of more than half a millionc
the statements during a news

4the administration has "a
deal of sympathy" with
Cubans.

great
anti-

JOHN F. KENNEDY
... new bill

Ask Revision'
In Aid Funds
WASHINGTON (P) - President
John F. Kennedy asked Congress,
yesterday for $4.5 billion in new
foreign aid appropriations, a cut
of $420 million from the amount
he originally proposed in his Jan-
uary budget message.
In submitting the smallest for-'
eign aid program in four years,
Kennedy made a special effort to
turn aside criticism. He fold Con-
gress in a 5000-word message that
his program was designed care-
fully and explicitly to meet chal-
lenges in underdeveloped coun-
tries "in this climactic age of de-
cision."
Congress members commended
the President's effort to trim his
own aid figures but served notice
that they plan to try for still
deeper cuts.
Republican Praise
Republicans commented that the
President was finally coming
around to agreeing with them that
the budget needs to be cut, Rep.
Otto E. Passman (D-La), chair-
man of the House appropriations
subcommittee on foreign aid, said
a "realistic program" would be
around $3 billion.
The administration - sponsored
reduction of $420 million was
termed "very unusual" by the As-
sistant Foreign Aid Administrator
Frank Coffin.
Incorporated in President Ken-
nedy's message was a potentially
significant new plan to give spe-
cial benefits to American taxpay-
ers who invest in the developing
nations.
Based on Clay Report

Cuban Exiles the attack.
But he emphasized that the jus- The Castro regime promised
tice department and other gov- that it will "adopt all possible
ernment agencies are examining measures to avoid a recurrence of
the efforts of some Cuban exiles to the incident."
conduct raids against Castro which
might contravene this nation's
policies and affect its security. Nti
The proposed legislation des-
cribed by the attorney general
would: .
1) Provide for temporaryaref; - L aos r e f
erees to pass on the qualifications f ego pplcatsin nycont
of Negro applicants in any county
in which court action has been VIENTIANE VP)-A 19-year-old
brought charging discrimination neutralist guard confessed yester-
against them and in which fewer day that he assassinated Quinim
than 15 per cent of those old Pholsena because the left-leaning
enough to vote are actually regis- foreign minister "wanted to over-
tered. throw the coalition government,"
2) Require that judges be ap- neutralist authorities announced.
pointed to handle voting-right law Feuding among the Laotian fac-
suits immediately, and that these tions already threatens the coali-
judges process the cases "in the tion government. The latest as-
most expeditious way possible." sassination puts a heavy new stress
Standardise Tests on the weakening governmental
3) Require election officials to structure.
use the same tests and other stan- The half-Chinese Quinim, a neu-
dards for all applicants seeking to tralist who had drawn ever closer
vote in a federal election. to the pro-Communist Pathet Lao,
4) Establish a presumption that was cut down by machine gun fire
anyone with a sixth-grade educa- Monday night as he and his wife
tion is literate enough to vote in returned home from a royal recep-
a federal election. tion. lris wife, wounded in the legs,
Kennedy said voting right cases was in a coma from loss of blood.
often take months to conclude, The commander of the neutral-
and that one is still pending after ist guard, Maj. Singh Insixieng-
22 months. He referred to a case may, read newsmen a statement
in Ouachita Parish, Louisiana, in he said was signed by Cpl. Kong
which a trial date has not been explaining why he shot Quinim.
set. The young soldier is in prison
"In the meantime, however, elec- while an investigation continues.
tions come and go and citizens The statement accused Quinim,
still are deprived of their right to among other things, of engineer-
vote," Kennedy said. ing the shooting down of an Amer-
Board Acts To Avoid Threat
Of Spring Strike on Rail Lines
CHICAGOW)-The United States government moved swiftly yes-
terday to sidetrack the threat of a spring strike on the nation's
vital rail lines.
The National Mediation Board notified the White House that an
emergency exists.
That cleared the way for President John F. Kennedy to name a
fact-finding board to investigate the tightly knotted dispute between
the Railroads and the men who
run their trains. NaFinish
The President was expected to ila
act late yesterday or today-de-
pending on when the necessary Of Coal Talk
papers and arrangements can be
completed. His action will delay
a possible walkout at least 60 days. PARIS ()-Union and man-
Developments came rapidly in agement officials were reported
the controversy involving $600 near agreement early yesterday in
million a year in railroad costs efforts to settle France's crip-
and the jobs of about 65,000 of the pling month-old coalstrike.
200,000 members of the five key Negotiators mdt through Tues-
operating unions. day, then at midnight recessed.
Firstinugenons.A union official said they had
First, Judge Joseph Sam Perry achieved an accord on many fun-
in United States District Court in damentals but some details re-
Chicago dissolved a temporary in- msained.
junction that had kept the rail- Joseph Delfosse, negotiator for
roads from changing the work the Communist-dominated Gener-
rules since last summer. al Labor Confederation, told news-
Then the railroads notified the men, "We sliould finish up by
National (Railway) Mediation Wednesday."
Board that the revised rules-aim-
ed at wiping out "featherbedding"
-will go into effect at 12:01 a.m.
April 8.
The NMB, in turn, informed
the White House that the 3/2-year
stalemate had taken on the as-
pects of a national emergency.
Both the unions and manage-
ment made clear they will cooper-
ate with the government.

over a longer period. Kennedy made
conference, at which he also said

Slate Lie Tests
To Aid Inquiry
In TFX Case
WASHINGTON (W - Persons
being investigated in connection
with a news leak on the 'FX
plane contract inquiry are being
asked to agree to lie detector tests
of the investigators decide that
procedure is warranted.
Assistant Secretary of Defense
Arthur Sylvester, chief Pentagon
spokesman, gave that answer yes-
terday to questions by newsmen.
He said the action applies to top
ranking officials as well as others.
Those investigated also are be-
ing asked to sign affidavits re-
plying to a number of questions
posed by Air Force Inspector Gen-
eral Maj. Gen. W. H. Blanchard,
he said.
Sylvester said he believed that
the lie detector test has not been
used tip to this point. He also said
that he knew of no instance in
which anyone has refused to sign
awaiver.
Secretary of the Air Force Eu-
gene Zuckert ordered Blanchard to
make the investigation and gave
him a "free hand" to carry it out.
Secretary of Defense Robert S.
McNamara had requested an in-
quiry to find the source of the in-
formation given to a reporter.
The controversy ,arose out of
publication by the" Washington
Evening Star of a report of rigor-
ous questioning to which two Air
Force civilian employes said they
were subjected by Senate inves-
tigations subcommittee staff mem-
hers.
See Citizenship
For Churclill
WASHINGTON (/P)-The Senate
passed and sent to President John
F. Kennedy yesterday legislation
to grant Sir Winston .Churchill of
Great Britain honorary citizenship
in the United States.
Kennedy, who has already ex-
pressed his approval, is expected
to sign the bill and issue a procla-
mation granting the unprecedent-
ed honor to Britain's World War
nI prime minister.
It will be the first act of its kind
by Congress in United States his-
tory. The nearest was the citizen-
ship acquired by the Marquis de
Lafayette.

,Russians to a sing
using earth-orbit
they would have tb
complish this at th
Critical
The Soviet shot
critical'time for th
space program, fa
omy-minded Cong
John F. Kennedy1
United States to 1
viets to the moon
the 1960's.
Meanwhile at C
scientists speculate
sian moon probe
orbit the moon orb
strument package
if it to provide a g
useful information
quick flyby of ther
produce enough da
expensive launchin

orld NewsRoundup
By The Associated Press
MANILA-Malaya has apparently written off any prospect of
reaching settlement with Indonesia on formation of Malaysia. In
a s5eech in Manila yesterday, Malayan Prime Minister Abdul Rah-
man branded Indonesia as an enemy and warned the Philippines
against snuggling up to President Ahmed Sukarno.
* * * *
CHICAGO-Mayor Richard J. Daley, one of the nation's most
powerful Democrats, apparently won re-election to a third term yes-
terday over Republican challenger Benjamin Adamowski. With votes
from 90 per cent of the city's 3,674 precincts tabulated, Daley had
605,442 to Adamowski's 494,444.
, * *
GENEVA-The United States and Soviet co-chairmen of the 17
nation disarmament conference met for an hour in Geneva yesterday
to draft their report on the deadlocked negotiations. There was no
word on whether United States Ambassador Charles C. Stelle and
Russia's Semyon K. Tsarapkin finished the report the conference
will submit to the United Nations General Assembly by mid-April.
- * * 4.
NEW YORK-The New York Stock Exchange nearly topped the
mid-February recovery peak yesterday before stocks halted a vigorous
rally and retreated irregularly. Dow Jones Averages showed 30 in-
dustrials down 1.59, 20 rails down 0.27, 15 utilities down 0.18 and 65
stocks down 0.49.

t
1
1
l
1
i
t
3
'
j
7
,

Kennedy took gre:.t pains to ar-
gue that the new aid program has
been tailored to meet suggestions
and criticisms made only ten days
ago by a presidential study com-
mittee headed by Gen. Lucius D.
Clay. This panel of 10 prominent
citizens appointed by the Presi-
dent and headed by Clay had rec-
ommended that the program be
tightened up, saying it was trying
to do too much for too many.
Senate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield of Montana told news-
men that President Kennedy's cut-
back in his $4.9 billion foreign
aid budget figure was "based on
a new look."
House, Speaker John W. McCor-
mack (D-Mass) said the Presi-
dent's recommendation is "within
range of the Clay report" and uti-
lizes the standards of the report.
But top Republican leaders in
Congress took a less laudatory
tack in praising Kennedy's action.
Senate GOP leader Everett M.
Dirksen of Illinois said the admin-
istration appears to be "yielding to
the demands of the people."

HONDA
.5
COMING

F7

I

-*
* *
- -, L 1 ;
*L

TONIGHT
FINAL LECTURE in series of five on
"Contemporary Literature and the Christian Faith"
by eminent educators brought to Ann Arbor
by the First Presbyterian Church
and Campus Center.

PVV IT j A I II

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1

11

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