THE MICHIGAN DAILY -emier Hits Red Tactics in Laos 0. * *5 * * * v Soviet Attack on West S5Pil"s Doom for Offer 'On Test-Ban Deadlock LAOS, TEST BAN: West Hopes To Discover Position of Khrushchev LONDON ()--Diplomatic sources said yesterday the Western powers soon may learn whether Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev still exerts .all his own power and authority. A disclosure about Khrushchev's position may be near. It could r come, informants said, as a by-product of the current East-West discussions in Moscow on a nuclear test ban and Laos. Positions taken by the Soviet Union on both issues are expected to show whether Khrushchev remains in the saddle or whether he is' Theing pushed from behind by a I shadowy neo-Stalinist group in Rusk TO Make the Kremlin. The sources said an Makes- Clainm Of Western 'Sabotaging Officials Suspect Complete Rejection Of Allied Proposals GENEVA (P)-A Soviet attack on the West's disarmament policies yesterday spelled almost certain do'om for the latest United States and British approach to Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev to break the nuclear test ban deadlock. VIENTIANE (JP)-Premier Prince: Souvanna Phouma declared yes- terday that Communist tactics jeopardize the future of Laos and made what appeared to be a spirit- ed defense of the United States. lie spoke out as United States warships were reported in South- east Asian waters ready for possi- ble action in the crisis. Without mentioning the United States, Souvanna spoke of those nations that had sent unselfish aid and denounced Red charges that Chinese Nationalists and South Vietnamese are secretly in Laos. The Communists always link the United States with these charges. Pledges Soviet Support In Moscow, United States Un- dersecretary of State W. Averell. Harriman talked with Premier Ni- kita S. Khrushchev for 31/2 hours and the Russian leader, again pledged Soviet support for the, peace and neutrality of Laos. But Soviet news organs continued to carry charges that the United States provoked the Laotian crisis. In Rangoon, President Liu Shao- Chi of Communist China joined Burma leader Gen. Ng Win in a communique expressing "anxiety over the present situation in Laos." Charges that the United States is to blame for the Laotian crisis came from Red China, the Soviet Union, Communist North Viet Nam and the pro-Communist Pa- thet Lao faction of the Laotian government. The Pathet Lao is headed by Prince Souphanouvong, Souvanna's half-brother and a deputy premier. Responding to them, Souvanna said in effect that the Communists themselves sought to disrupt Laos' neutrality. Strict Neutrality Souvanna has sought to main- tain strict neutrality in the neu- tralist-rightist-leftist coalition re- gime. But he said the Communist charges had to be denied because they jeopardized Laotian neutral- ity and cast doubt on his impar- tiality. Group Asks Civil Rights. Work .Plana WASHINGTON W-P-Civil rights leaders challenged President John F. Kennedy yesterday to put teeth into his anti-bias housing order with able men, money and White House push to put it across. They said lax federal enforce- ment of the order'had proved to be little more than a sop for people in the North and South who "want discrimination conditions left un- changed." Clarence Mitchell, Washington director of the National Associa- tion for the Advancement of Col- ored -People, led the attack on the order which he said was "first hashed up, then watered down and finally issued (Nov. 20, 1962) in an apologetic manner." Joined by Officials In criticizing what he called the "ineffective posture" taken by the White House, Mitchell was joined by officials of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the Na- tional Urban League and Algernon D. Black, board chairman of the National Committee against Dis- crimination in Housing. Meanwhile, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, visiting Atlanta on Con- federate Memorial Day, praised progress made in Georgia and the 'South in solving civil rights prob- lems. He said progress had been made in desegregating schools, transpor- tation and other public facilities in many sections during the past few years and "we are on the right road now." CAMBRIDGE - The American university that is, emerging from the present ferment in the "edu- cation industry" will serve as a model for the rest of the world, University of California President Clark Kerr told a Harvard audi- ence recently. At a time when knowledge is "central to the conduct of an en- tire society mountain ranges of higher education are forming," Kerr said. He pointed out that al- ready three groups of universities, following the industrial strength and population centers were form- ing "great plateaus" of intercon- nected educational centers, the New York Times reported. The largest plateau runs from Boston to Washington. It embraces 46 per cent of the nation's Nobel winners in the sciences and 40 per cent of the members of the Nation- al Academy of Sciences. California Plateau A second plateau is the Pacific coast complex of universities in California, which has 36 per cent of the American Nobel laureates in science and 20 per cent of the members of the NAS. A third plateau encompasses the Big Ten and the University of Chicago. It has 10 per cent of the Nobel winners in science and 14 'EDUCATION INDUSTRY': Kerr Vews Model University per cent of the NAS membership. He said that a fourth plateau appears to be forming in the Tex- as-Louisiana area. Many Facets Kerr went on to describe the broadening role of the university as creating a "multiversity" which combines undergraduate instruc- tion, graduate and professional ed House Group To Check Land By The Associated Press Luzi naU severari aeUis it should try, to :pattern: itself WASHINGTON -- Members of "A university anywhere car the House Armed Services Com- no higher than to be as Brit mittee flew to Puerto Rico yester- possible for the sake of the u day to look over land possibilities graduates, as German as pa in the Caribbean area that the for the sake of the graduat Navy wants for a new base. American as possible for the The move triggered speculation of the public at large--aid ai that it was a prelude to a pullout fused as possible for the sa from Guantanamo Bay Naval Base the preservation of the whoa in Cuba. The Defense Department easy balance." denied the possibility. He said that this "unlikelb Committee member Rep. Charles sensus" had come "out of E. Chamberlain (R-East Lansing) ments, experiments and cor noted grave concern over the sit- With multiversities havin uation. "All of a sudden we are many animating principles, asked for funds to build duplicat- is much debate on which ing facilities," he said. really deserve salvation." unreasonably tough line would look Official Visit To Yugoslavia WASHINGTON (M) - Secretary of State Dean Rusk left last night on a multi-purpose diplomatic mission including a visit with Yu- goslavia's President Marshal Tito, . Also during his 10-day trip, tim- ed for a meeting of the Central (Middle East) Treaty Organization in Karachi, Rusk plans to see Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru in India and leaders in Turkey and Iran. Rusk's Yugoslav visit, the first by a United States secretary of state since John Foster Dulles saw Tito in 1955, was announced by the State Department shortly be- fore his departure. The depart- ment described it as an official visit, at: Yugoslav invitation, re- ciprocating the May 1962 trip by the Yugoslav foreigrX secretary. Ever since Tito broke with the Kremlin in 1948, United States policy has been to nurture contin- ued independence of the Adriatic Communist state !from the Soviet bloc. I Rusk is expected to assure Tito that President John F.. Kennedy will press for repeal of the prohibi- tion against most-favored-nation treatment t o w a r d Yugoslavia which Congress adopted in 1962. to the West as if Khrushchev is [ Only 48 hours after new West- The College of Architecture and Design, Announces its 6th Annual on his way out. West Confused On the basis of present evidence Washington, London, Paris and the other capitals of the West clearly are confused. Since the first of the year there has been a flood of unsubstantiat- ed reports forecasting some change in Khrushchev's status and even 'suggesting that he was getting too old now to handle a big crisis. His policy on Cuba and his row with Red China were said to have got him into trouble. One Western source said the re- ports have served to cloak rather than clarify the power position, inside the Kremlin. Khrushchev now has provided the latest piece to the puzzle. Speculative Remark Two days ago, in a speech to industrial workers, he gave some substance to speculation about his possible, retirement, informants said. He reminded his audience that he was 69 and could not hold his present position indefinitely. As reported by Tass, Khrushchev led up to the matter by saying the Communist Party "is a tested leader of the Soviet people." "And the Party itself is choosing out of its ranks the leading nuclei to which the most worthy and tested leaders are being elected," he continued., F I ern test ban proposals were pre- sented to Khrushchev, Soviet Am- bassador Semyon K. Tsarapkin launched a scathing condemnation of the Western powers. He ac- cused them of deliberately trying to sabotage the conference. "Once again we are in an im- passe, with no move forward," he declared. Little Hope Western officials held out little hope that the new proposals-still a closely guarded secret-would meet with any favorable reaction from Khrushchev. The proposals were delivered by the United States and British am- bassadors in Moscow in the form of a message to Khrushchev from President John F. Kennedy and Prime Minister Harold Macmillan of Britain. Tsarapkin's denunciation was regarded by Western sources as the probable forerunner to a flat rejection of the proposals by Khrushchev. Western Suggestion The Soviet ambassador did not specifically refer to the Western suggestions. But he seemed to im- ply that the Russians did not re- gard them as a step toward break- ing the test ban impasse. "This matter has been under discussion for five years and still there is no prospect of agree- ment," he said. Tsarapkip ignored Italian dele- gate Francesco Cavalletti's plea for a favorable response to the new Western move. Instead he warned of danger to Italy and other North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization countries caused by the presence of nuclear-armed United States submarines in the Mediter- ranean. Western officials speculated that Khrushchev's apparently obses- sionalconcern over the formation of a NATO nuclear force may lie at the back of the Soviet stand in the nuclear test ban talks. Seek lPolitician As Successor BONN (P)-West German Chan- cellor Konrad Adenauer emphasiz- ed yesterday that he had wanted a successor with more political ex- perience than Minister of Econom- ics Ludwig Erhard, who has been nominated by their party. "I want to stress," he said, "that with all recognition for the great services of Erhard to us in the field of economics, I was still of the opinion that a federal chan- cellor must be 'more of a political nature than anyone can be who has so far devoted himself large- ly to economic policy." r_ II r world News SRoundup i *1* r. r . w r By The Associated Press LISBON - Portugal's Foreign Minister Alberto Franco Nogueira repeated an offer yesterday to con- fer with African countries on "matters of common interest." TOKYO-Student violence yes- terday marked mounting Japanese opposition to opening of Japan's ports to United States nuclear- powered submarines. Five hun- dred university students at Kyoto called a demonstration that end- ed in a clash with police. HAVANA-Prime Minister Fidel Castro hinted yesterday before leaving for Russia that the Ken- neay administration's recent curbs on anti-Castro Cuban exiles could bring about a lessening of United States-Cuban tensions. NEW YORK-The New York Stock Exchange closed yesterday with slight losses as volume tap- ered off to the lowest total in three weeks. Dow-Jones averages show- ed Industrials down 1.17, Rails down .07 and Utilities up .17. C OMEl ro 11 It's your tapered shape a and your M o I toi 10 I I a hopsacking look 7 that get me... 99 I I Wa no w a so a as up Owl other always ld me to k for the blue label' I! 1i 4 j 3 *1 ae=a 7 ll f. ' , a if #k Keds "Court King" Ke for tennis and Champ all casual wear breez -mm-u---.- MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Toppon Streets Rev. Russell M. Fuller, Minister Sunday, 7:30 p.m. Open House for new stu- dents at Guild House, 802 Monroe. Tuesday, 12:00 noon-Luncheon and Discus- sion. CAMPUS CHAPEL Donald Postema, Minister Washtenow at Forest Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan 10:00 A.M. Worship Services 11:15 A.M. Coffee Hour 7:00 P.M. Vesper Worship Service BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL REFORMED United Church of Christ 423 South Fourth Ave. Rev. Ernest Kloudt, Pastor Rev. A. C. Bizer, Associate Pastor 9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Worship Service 9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Churc' School 7:00 p.m. Student Guild FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenow Avenue NO 2-4466 Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm Brown, Virgil Janssen SUNDAY- Worship at 9:00 and 10:30. Presbyterian Campus Center located at the Church. Staff: Jack Borckardt and Patricio Pickett Stoneburner. NO 2-3580 rr- E Stay bright. Fight drowsiness and be at your brilliant best with Very" continuous action alertness capsules. Effective, safe, not habit-forming. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill St. at S. Forest Ave. Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor Anna M. Lee, Associate Sunday-9:30 & 11:00 a.m. Worship Services 10:00 a.m. Bible Study 7:00 p.m. Speaker: Miss Juliet Anderson, Missionary, "My Day in Tanganyika." Wednesday-7:15 p.m. Vespers. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 11:00 a.m. Sunday Services. 8:00 p.m. Wednesday Services. 9:30 a.m. Sunday School (up to 20 years of age.) 11:00 a.m. Sunday School (for children 2 to 6 year$ of age.) A free reading room is maintained at 306 East Liberty St. Reading Room hours are Mon- day thru Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. except Sundays and Holidays. Mondog evening 7:00 to 9:00. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenow Avenue Erwin A. Goede, minister Services and Church School 9:30 & 11:00 q.m. "No Labels" Prof. Wilfred Kaplan, Guest Speaker. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST John G. Molcin, Minister W. Stadium at Edgewood SUNDAY 10:00 a.m. Bible School 11:00 a.m. Regular Worship 6:30 p.m. Evening Worship WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m. Bible Study For transportation to any service call 2-2756 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER State and William 11 Nobody's really suggesting romance will be yours if you wear U.S. Keds. But it is true that Keds are the best-fitting, the most f rf,~iakla annit nnk ina and Inn-.wearing fabric casials you ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 North Division Phone NO 2-4097 I I mnI