wi, io THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TIS HW Announces Final Rejection OfADC-U Draft By The Associated Press Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Anthony J. Cele- brezze has "finally and formally" rejected the Michigan Aid to Dependent Children of the Unemployed law which was heavily supported through its Legislature passage by Gov. George Romney The controversial ADC-U bill, which would qualify 10,000 Michi- gan families of the unemployed for some $9 million of federal benefits, was found incomplete and "discriminatory" by the HEW department. Celebreeze had said last month following conferences with Romney that the bill was unacceptable because it included only those families qualified for un- you -~u.employment compensation under Link Debris state regulations. Formal Rejection CROSS BARRIERS: President Lauds Peace Message of Enc clical NEWTON OP)-President John F. Kennedy said yesterday Pope John XXIII's encyclical, "Peace on Earth," in its closeness to state- ments of men of other faiths, "shows we are learning to talk a language of progress and peace across the barriers of sect and creed." The President, in his first public comment on the Pope's message, said that "as a Catholic I am proud of it and as an American I have learned from it." Kennedy spoke. in his home state at a centennial convocation at Boston College. K Cuban Exiles Lose Hope By WILLIAM L. RYAN }present angry mood of many of AP Special Correspondent '' the Miami exiles. To Thresher PORTSMOUTH (P) -D e b r i s which included a piece of plastic shielding charred by what was de- scribed as a "rush of flame" was tentatively linked yesterday with the nuclear submarine Thresher, lost at sea April 10 with 129 men. Frederick L. Downs, a chemist at the Portsmouth naval shipyard, said tests showed that the piece of borated polyethylene plastic- about 18 inches square-is the type used for nuclear reactor shielding on submarines of the Thresher- type. He told a Navy court of inquiry chemical tests indicated charred marks were not fronm slow burn- ing, but rather "a rush of flame." The shielding was among about a dozen pieces of debris found floating at the last known posi- tion of the USS Thresher before she sank about 220 miles east of Cape Cod. Downs said some of the smaller pieces of plastic found also were charred and, like the larger piece, had jagged or torn edges. The debris was found in the Atlantic by ships searching for the sunken Thresher. Another shipyard chemist, John 1C Carrigan, said the large piece of plastic had several fragments of metal imbedded in it. He de- scribed the metal pieces as rang- ing in size from the head of a common pin to a split pea. He said some of the metal was analyzed as lead and some as a low alloy steel. Downs told the court the yard laboratory is still subjecting the debris to impact, tearing and com- pression tests in an effort to sim- ulate what might have caused it to break loose and float to the surface. The was no indication when the' debris was found near the Thresh- er's last know position. be the woman with Hugability in I(AYSn E R{ seamless hosiery! Yesterday's formal rejection came in a letter from the com- missioner of social security to act- ing director of the Michigan wel- fare department Lynn Kellogg. Romney had said pr vously that he would appeal to te courts if the Michigan bill was found un- acceptable. Michigan attorney General Frank Kelley, a Democrat, found the bill in violation of fed- eral and state constitutional equal protection clauses. Romney has refused to accept Kelley's judgment, saying he will try to determine the constitutional validity of the law through a panel of impartial lawyers. Crucial Week Romney also has a crucial week ahead of him on the. legislative front. The Legislature, which will recess Wednesday until June 4 has still not passed his high- priority Ford-Canton bill. Termed "a vital piece of legislation" by Romney, the bill outlines the ben- efits workers should get during a strike. Attempts to iron out House and Senate Republican differences on the bill were made in a Republican caucus Friday. The compromise version adopted awaits final GOP approval at another caucus this' Monday night. Senate Labor Committee Chair- man RobertVanderlaan (R-King- stun) has indicated that without House Republican agreement on the bill, Senate Republicans will kill it.$' House speaker Allison Green (R- Kingston) thinks that the cur- rent compromise measure "is very close to what will go through." He has announced his personal sup- port for the bill. NAACP Book The National Association for the ' Advancement of Colored People Friday began circulating a pam- phlet denouncing Rep. Adam Clay- ton Powell (D-Harlem) for his criticism of the NAACP. Powell had as ed that the NAACP be reorganized with only Negroes. in top policy-making po- sitions. He has claimed that whites now run the organization and this makes it impossible for Negroes to advance further in the area of civil rights. The NAACP calls Powell's attack a "racist stand" and says that he is "completely ignorant" of the organization's workings. The association also comments' that its "interracial partnership"' has compiled a good record in the civil rights field. RICHARD M. NIXON ..blasts policies Nixon Flays Kennedy's Cuba Policy WASHINGTON (;P) - Former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon urged President John F. Kennedy yesterday to risk the international consequences of unleasing Cuban exiles as part of a stepped-up power drive to liquidate Commun- ism in Cuba. Nixon told the American So- ciety of Newspaper Editors that "we have got to take what risks are necessary to do the job" of erasing the Soviet beachhead in this hemisphere. In response to question Nixon said he believes there should be "a fundamental change in policy" by the Kennedy administration in regard to this matter. Freedom Doctrine He called for substitution of a "freedom doctrine for the Amer- icas" for the Monroe Doctrine. He, said the United States can no longer afford to pursue a policy merely of containment of Com- munism either in this hemisphere or elsewhere in the world. "I think we should be ready to take the consequences of such ac- tion, and I believe that would be less risky than not acting at all." Involves Risks Discussing, Kennedy's restraint of refugee hit-and-run raids on the island, Nixon said this course also involves risks. "We cannot sit too long on this powder keg and say to the thou- sands of refugees we are going to quarantine;you instead of Castro." In wide-ranging criticism of the President's policies, Nixon said the administration'sastrategy since last October's missile crisis had been to "pull defeat out of the jaws of victory." His general appraisal of the President's handling of for- eign affairs was that 'the Atlantic Alliance is in disarray, Cuba is western Russia and the rest of Latin America is in deadly peril." "In its penetrating analysis of today's great problems-social wel- fare and human rights, disarma- ment, international order and peace - that document surely shows that on the basis of one great faith and its tradition there can be developed counsel on public affairs that is of value to all men and women of good will," he said. Notable Expression Kennedy said it adds to the im- pact of the document that "it closely matches notable expres- sions of conviction and aspiration from churchmen of other faiths- as in recent documents of the World Council of Churches-and from outstanding world citizens with no ecclesiastical standing." The President said his hopes for the future of higher learning are encouraged by a careful reading of the Pope's encyclical. He said ne wanted to impress on his academic audience "as urgently as I can the growing and insistent importance of universi- ties in our national life." Better Education He said this is the basic reason why those who are interested most in the progress of society are pressing for better programs in higher education. "It is for this reason that I' urge upon everyone here the press- ing need for national attention and a national decision - in the national interest," Kennedy said. The President's program for federal aid to education is tied up in legislative snarls in Washing- ton. Scientist Gives New Concept Of Earthquake WASHINGTON (P)-A New Zea- land scientist offered yesterday a new theory on the cause of earthquakes and argued that if the commonly accepted conception persists, it can jeopardize the lives and property of millions. F. F. Evison of Wellington said his theory calls for construction of earthquake-resistant buildings in wider areas of earthquake-prone regions, instead of merely in areas close to know earth faults or rifts. JOHN F. KENNEDY ... praises encyclical DEFICIT: IConsultants View .British Fiscal Plans (Continued from Page I, lion Kennedy deficit which sent Congress into shock. Maulding's tax cuts are heavily loaded for the low-income family, which has seemed to appeal to Conservatives and Labor alike, but nevertheless contain extremely liberal tax concessions for busi- ness investment, especially in de- pressed areas. The wonderment in the White. House is magnified by the fact that Britain's fiscal act, is being performed on a relatively precar- ious balance of payments. England ran a payments surplus in 1962, but this was not typical of the experience of recent years, and exports began to lag this winter. Domestic Crisis What domestic crisis 'moved the British to such extreme measures? Unemployment. It is about half as bad as this country's. The reports from London sug- gest that the many Britons who feel Maulding didn't go far enough to get England moving again are consoling themselves with the as- surance that he left room for For all practical purposes, any effectiveness of the Cuban exiles in the battle against Cuban Pre- mier Fidel Castro has been shat- tered. Hope dies hard among the 200,000 Miami-area exiles, and many of them seem reluctantly to be concluding that Communism is in Cuba to stay. The blowup between the Cuban Revolutionary Council and the Kennedy administration seems likely to leave exiles with nothing to do and nowhere to go. They may, as they have threatened, try again to hit Cuban targets, but their prospects for success are diminishing. Hot Debate Just how effective exile efforts were in the past is a matter of hot debate. Some authorities viewed their attacks as doing more harm than good to efforts against Castro-Communists. Only small groups of activists were in- volved in the attacks, although they had considerable support from exile organizations. Members of t h o s e fighting groups--a large number of the exile community-are boiling with resentment. "The Kennedy administration wants us to sit, do nothing and wait for the Communists to fall by their own weight," an indig- nant member of a fighting anti- Castro organization said in Miami. "But a Communist government does not fall by itself and it must be pushed."' 'Black Eye' To exiles and some Americans close to the situation in Miami this adds up to a "black eye" for the United States. Some say more trouble is in prospect. They pic- ture United States policy as hav- ing shifted from active efforts to rout Communism from the hem- isphere to one of containing the! Communists in Cuba and prevent- ing their expansion. The administration says it is not going to put itself in the position of having its policies dictated by sporadic acts of violence perpet- rated by exile organizations. The United States must think of pos- sible grave consequences of their acts. Secretary of State Dean Rusk says the United States is doing what it can to isolate Cuba eco- nomically. The administration is pictured as trying to make sureI Communist arms, propaganda,. saboteurs and agitators are not shipped from Cuba to other Latin countries and as urging other1 hemisphere governments to col- laborate in these efforts. Neutralize Attacks After Cuban exiles attacked' Soviet ships and personnel, the' United States, with collaboration' of British naval police patrols, effectively neutralized the fight-' ing anti-Castro units. Bases they used have been put out of com- mission, boats and ammunition have been confiscated and finan- cial support is being cut off. All this, the exiles claim, mheans it will be almost impossible to supply underground anti-Castro forces inside Cuba with food, money, clothing, medicines and intelligence reports. Exile leaders report that expenditions aimed at supplying the undergi'ound havej been intercepted by United States authorities. The exiles assert that United States policy will create "anti- Yankeeism'" a m o n g resistance guerrillas inside Cuba, for which the United States will pay a penalty for even if Castro Come day is overthrown. cate a hope for internal rebellion and have said the United States would not stand by and watch Cuba converted into another Hun- gary, meaning, apparently, the United States would actively op- pose any attempt by Soviet troops to end a popular revolution. Economic Isolation Economic isolation is pictured as a weapon for paralyzing the Castro regime. But Rusk has noted an increase in the number of free- world flag ships in Cuban trade and has said the administration is taking this up with the govern- ments involved. It would be difficult to end this trade. There could be sanctions against ships involved which could be forbidden to carry United States foreign aid cargoes, but that threat does not appear to be highly effective. Can the refugees set up new headquarters and new bases out- side United States territory? Cen- tral American governments, al- ready under pressure of internal political troubles and external threats from Castroism, would most likely fear reprisals. Soviet Propaganda Soviet propaganda still insists that, with United States support, an army of Cuban exile invaders is being trained at basesin Hon- duras, Costa Rica, Guatemala and Florida. Exiles denyit and one member of the militant student revolutionary directorate (DRE) said in Miami that the United States embassy in a Central American country intervened to stop exile operations there. Unless they are permitted at least to supply guerrillas inside Cuba, the exile groups henceforth can have little effect en events in their homeland. There is a hint in recent man- euvers by the Castro government that it hopes to reap some bene- fit from recent events -- perhaps even a lessening of tension be- tween Cuba and the United States that might lead to easing the regime's heavy economic burdens. The Castro government seems anxious to have flights from Cuba resumed by Pan American World Airways and the KLM Royal Dutch Lines. State department sources say nothing definite has developed as yet in this respect. Reopening of air traffic could pose the danger of more trouble for the United States, given the JOSE MIRO CARDONA ... former council head He added that his concept might deeper tax cuts before the Con- make possible forecasting of servatives have to face another quakes. election. FIVE-YEAR AGREEMENT: Brazil SignsPact with Russia- By The Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO - Brazil signed a new five-year trade agreement with the Soviet Union yesterday. A Brazilian official in-, dicated it might be expanded into an economic and technical assist- ance program with the Russians. WASHINGTON-Yugoslav Pres- ident Josip Tito has sent President John F. Kennedy a letter saying Yugoslavia intends to remain in- dependent and non-aligned in the East - West, struggle, informed sources said yesterday. Tito was said to have called for a "normal- ization" of United States-Yugo- slav trade relations,.now impaired by a congressional provision against most-favored-treatment of Yugoslavia. rn Q. How's Tricks? A. Come a6. And Enjoy A meal.-------ah! COLLEGE PARK-Sen. Alan J. Ellender (D-La) said yesterday Africans are "ignorant people" who are incapable of self-govern- ment without help from their "European benefactors." * * * CONCORD - Pressure mounted on Gov. John W. King yesterday to head off the prospect of New Hampshire becoming the only state in the union with a sweep- stakes. A delegation of top-rank- ing Protestant clergymen called on the governor to urge him to veto the sweepstakes bill that has cleared both houses of the New Hampshire legislature. * * * LANSING - Rep. Gerald Ford (R-Grand Rapids) urged renun- ciation of status quo and support of Cuban exile groups, while his debate partner Democrat!- Con- gressman-at-Large Neil Staebler of Ann Arbor indicated present administration policies are correct. MADRID-The Franco govern- ment, scorning a clemency appeal from Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, executed a Spanish Communist leader Julian Grimau Garcia at dawn yesterday. Com- munists outside Spain stormed and called it murder. * * , WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Dean Rusk denied yester- day that United States aid paid for 48,000 cases of Metrecal to keep Indians slim. It was the Communists, not the Americans, who fouled up their foreign-aid projects by letting cement harden under monsoon rains and building a sugar-beet mill in sugar-cane country, he said. Sun. Supper Club HILLEL ... 1429 Hill St. Accept Status Exiles view recent events as meaning the United States accepts status quo in Cuba and it now is ready to coexist with the Com- munist regime in Cuba, steering clear of military action. The leaders of the militants deny their attacks were mere pin- pricks, helpful rather than harm- ful to Castro, as some United States authorities have suggested. The attacks, they insist, required Castro to disperse each time his defense forces to the benefit of guerrillas said to be fighting the regime in Las Villas, Matanzas and Camaguey provinces. 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