iaxa'3THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Syrian Demonstrations Imperil Merger Plans Probe Yields Doubt n Cuba Weaponry WASHINGTON (P)-Senate investigators said yesterday United State intelligence chiefs admit "there is reason for grave concern" that Soviet long-range missiles and bombers may be hidden in Cuban caves. "Even though the intelligence community believes that all have been withdrawn," the probers said, "it is of the greatest urgency to determine whether or not strategic missiles now are concealed in Cuba." Absolute assurance can come only from "penetrating and con- tinuing on-site inspection by reli-" UN Allows OAS Arbitration With UAR', Iraq Units "- 0 PRESSURE: U.., Canada Leaders To Begin Conference WASHINGTON (M)-Stung by past allegations that he sought to Ih a Canadian prime minister, President John F. Kennedy meets niada's new chief today determined to avoid any suggestion of pres- e tactics. United States sources said there will be no formal agenda for the kend meeting at Hyannis Port, Mass., between the President and me Minister Lester Pearson. Kennedy plans no specific questions LESTER B. PEARSON .. diplomacy LESS SECURITY- Bill Disputes Clay Clams For Aid Cuts. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Foreign Aid Administrator David E. Bell yes- r terday disputed Gen. Lucius D. Clay's estimate that no more than $4-billion was needed for foreign assistance programs in the year ahead. Bell backed President John F. Kennedy's revised estimate of $4.5 billion and in a memorandum to Secretary of State Dean Rusk stated that, "any cut in Kennedy's request would entail corresponding costs to the program's contribu- tion to free world security and progress." Clay recently appeared before the House Foreign Affairs Com- mittee and said that $200 million could be cut from Kennedy's re- quest if the Clay committee's pro- posals for stricter criteria and ad- ministrative standards on aid were adopted. He also said $300 million more could be saved from Kennedy's proposed $900 million for the Al- liance for Progress with the Latin American republics because the self-help conditions required un- der that program would not be met in some countries. Clay's testimony allows for an appropriation of $4.3 billion with the understanding that no more than $4 billion would be used. to put to Pearson, no single docu- ment outlining what Washington wants has been drawn up and no hard commitments are expected. Their discussions are to start at noon today and conclude Saturday afternoon. The meeting may be an impor- tant one in ushering in a new era between the two North American neighbors. Washington-Ottawa re- lations cooled durin'g the six-year rule of John G. Diefenbaker, and during Diefenbaker's campaign this spring. Memo Leak One incident involved the leak of a 1961 memo by presidential aide Walt W. Rostow advising Kennedy to push for greater co- operation on a number of items at a meeting Kennedy then was having with Diefenbaker. United States authorities regard the. 191 memo as innocuous-but Kennedy advisers are taking no chances in the new start with Pearson, whom they rate as a good friend of the United States. Sensitive Position Administration sources said: Pearson is in a sensitive position domestically. Canadians will be watching his Hyannis Port visit to see how he makes out looking for any signs of a me-too attitude in his dealings with Kennedy. Kennedy will try to avoid any- thing that might look like pressure on Pearson. The United States government is well aware of Cana- dian sensitivity to the fact that the United States population is some 10 times that of Canada and that this nation's wealth and power are proportionately greater than the Canadians'. House Grants Right To Fire NSA Employes WASHINGTON (P)-The House voted yesterday to let the secretary of defense fire employes of the super-secret National Security Agency without explanation or ap- peal if he decides they are secur- ity risks. Overriding protests.that the bill tramples on individual rights, the House passed it on a 340 to 40 roll call vote and sent it to the Senate. The bill also would require a full background investigation of pros- pective employes of the agency. Identical legislation passed the House last year, but never faced a Senate vote. Before passing the measure, the House defeated proposed amend- ments that would have stricken the summary firing procedure. Pro-Nasser Protest Hits Damascus Aleppo Rioters Score Mass Army Firings DAMASCUS (P)-Gunfire in the north and noisy stonethrowing demonstrations in Damascus wid- ened yesterday the cracks in the merge between Iraq and the Unit- ed Arab Republic. The flaring demonstrations- accompanied by anti-government chants in support of UAR Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser-were in protest against the mass dismis- sal of pro-Nasser army officers and last week's walkout of pro- Nasser members of the govern- ment and revolutionary command. In the capital, student demon- strations erupted in five separate sections of the city. Armored cars and troops broke up four of them. Seize Control Hundreds of shouting students seized control of Damascus high school for four hours and drove back armed riot police with vol- leys of stones from the roof. Quiet returned late Tuesday. In Aleppo in the north, where rioters Wednesday attacked police with rocks, knives and guns from behind barricades of stones and overturned cars, heavy gunfire broke out again yesterday morning but the city quieted toward night- fall. Hundreds were reported arrested in the two cities, including one civilian member of the National Revolutionary Council from Alep- po. Wounded in Fighting Unconfirmed estimates here said as many as 20 were killed and scores wounded in the Aleppo fighting but a Western diplomat reported by telephone from there that "no one really knows." The diplomat said spasms of light firing rattled the ancient city throughout the morning but "the army appears to have the situa- tion in hand." American residents of Aleppo- where entire districts are staunch- ly pro-Nasser-were u2hiarmed, he said. . Tension Mounts Tension in Aleppo and Damas- cus mounted asthe week-oldrpoli- tical crisis cau~sed by the army dismissals and resignations left Syria under the virtual but shaky control of Premier Salah Bitar's Ba'ath Arab reawakening party, with whom Nasser declared he would not federate. Nasser demanded a national front instead o fa one-party re- gime in Syria, with Ba'ath sharing power with Nasserite movements. The national front collapsed when non-Ba'athist members re- signed to protest the army dismis- sals, claiming Ba'athist was seiz- ing control of the armed fortes, and to demand a larger voice in the government. Reuther Seeks Goldwater As '64 Nominee DETROIT (')-Walter P. Reu- ther says he believes Barry Gold- water should be the Republican nominee for President in 1964 to give the people a clear choice be- tween Democratic and Republican philosophies. Reuther predicted President John F. Kennedy would win re- election decisively. The United Auto Workers presi- dent-a longtime political foe of the Arizona senator-expressed his views in an interview tape record- ed for broadcast last night over the ABC radio network. Reuther said he "would be pleas- ed if the point of view of Gold- water became the guiding policy of the Republican party. A STUDENT TOUR UNIQUE Summer 1963 TRAVEL AND STUDY IN RUSSIA Led by .Bernard Koten -- Russiam Instructor, N.Y.U. Meet Soviet Youth Face-to-Face. *Seminar ot Moscow Uni- able observers," they told the Sen- ate. Fidel Castro has refused to permit such inspection. The Unit- ed States relies mostly on aerial surveillance of the island. Total Dropped The Senate preparedness sub- committee also said that, despite President John F. Kennedy's esti- mate that the total of Soviet troops may have dropped to about 12,000, the intelligence community still uses 17,500 as the current estimate. This, the senators said, is "per- haps a minimumi figure." They noted anti-Castro Cuban exile re- ports that as many as 40,000 So- viet troops now are in Cuba. Looking Backwards The subcommittee said that in looking back at last fall's missile crisis, the performance of the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the military intelligence agencies "can be criticized in some areas." "While a reasonably competent job was done in acquiring and col- lecting intelligence information and data," it said, "in retrospect it appears that several substantial errors were made by the intelli- gence agencies in the evaluation of the information and data which was accumulated." In a summary of its major find- ings, the subcommittee said: Faulty Judgment "Faulty evaluation and predis- position of the intelligence com- munity to the philosophical con- viction that it would be incompat- ible with Soviet policy to introduce strategic missiles into Cuba re- sulted in intelligence judgments and evaluations which liter prov- ed to be erroneous." I' , FIDEL CASTRO ... hidden strength? I world News ORoundup I By The Associated Press NASHVILLE, Tenn.-A federal grand jury indicted Teamster President James R. Hoffa and six others yesterday on charges of conspiring and attempting to in- fluence the jury in his trial here last winter on charges of accept- ing illegal payments from a Detroit truck firm. TOKYO-Communist China ac- cepted yesterday a Soviet proposal to. hold talks in Moscow to discuss ideological differences between the two countries, the New China News Agency reported. * * * BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Ar- raignment of three officers of the Young Socialist Alliance at Indi- ana University on state subversion charges was continued yesterday after the defense moved to delete certain phrasing in the indictment. * * . LONDON-English Prime Min- ister Harold Macmillan's Conserv- ative Party ran into a major col- lective defeat in local elections yesterday in 370 English bor- oughs. The opposition Labor Par- ty and the smaller Liberal Party chalked up gains today through- out the country. * * * NEW YORK-The stock market weathered selling drives in some recent favorites and moved sub- stantially higher yesterday in heavy trading. Closing Dow-Jones averages showed 30 industrials up 3.43, 20 railroads up .69, 15 utili- ties up .89 and 65 other stocks up 1.28. Troops Note Cuba Tension GUATANAMO (R) - American Marines guarding the perimeter of this United States naval base said yesterday there has been a recent unexplained increase in hostile acts by Cubans on the other side of the dividing fence. Marines told the first party of United States newsmen to visit the base in two months that the activity consisted mainly of rock throwing and hurling curses and insults, The Marines declined to say what they are doing in response, but there are no regulations for- bidding them to return the hos- tilities. Marines Guard Curtain Pfc. Larry Burton, 20, Mans- field, Ohio, said Marines guarding the so-called cactus curtain used to chat with Cuban guards across the fence. "About a month ago they were friendly, but now they have start- ed throwing rocks. They were much more friendly right through the crisis last October than they are now," Burton said. Throw Rocks Pfc. Thomas A. Zuk, 21, Nor- walk, Ohio, standing guard with Burton at one of the isolated posts along the wire-topped steel mesh fence, said the Cuban rock throw- ing had increased but didn't bother anyone too much. A couple of miles farther along the border, at the northeast gate to the base, Lance Cpl. James W. Fletcher, 21, Mobile, Ala., said "this afternoon there were a lot of instances of rock throwing. It's just an attempt to harass us." Court Upholds Tax in Detroit By The Associated Press LANSING - Detroit's one per cent city income tax was upheld yesterday by the Michigan Su- preme Court on the basis that the tax is legally an excise tax and applies to residents and non-resi- dents alike. The Detroit tax was challenged in two suits which were combined in a hearing before Circuit Judge Neal Fitzgerald of Wayne County, who originally ruled the tax was an excise tax and therefore le- gal. U U Ann Arbor's Top Selling LP's Never Before at This LOW PRICE This WReek Only! Days of Wine and Roses Andy Williams My Son The Celebrity Allan Sherman, In Person New Christy Minstrels Bold Conceptions Bob James Trio Our Men in San Francisco The Limelighters No. Sixteen-Kingston Trio Limbo Party Chubby Checker Mono- $3.98 list now! S198 CAUGHT IN A MAZE? QUICK! PICK A DIRECTION HOME(OMNG * CENTRAL COMMITTEE Stereo-