MY 13., 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY _______________________________________________________________________________________________ U U Soviets Introduce Plan For On-Site Inspection A t GeeaCneec U.. Faces Dificulties With Bases ROME (JP)-The United States was reported last night encount- ering political problems in finding a Polaris submarine base in Spain or Italy. But an. American source said Washington is going ahead with plans to station three Polaris subs in the Mediterranean starting April 1. The source said the three will run long-distance patrols out of Holy Loch, Scotland, until a Medi- terranean base is found.. Italy Is Eager Premier Amintore Fanfani's left-leaning government faces. a general election in late April or early May and is eager to go to the voters with an Italy free of American mibsile bases. Jupiter land-based missiles are being with- drawn from Italy. Gen. Francisco Franco of Spain is said to be demanding admission to NATO as his price for permit- ting use of the base at Rota, Spain. United States Deputy Defense Secretary Roswell Gilpatric dis- cussed the Polaris problem with Fanfani and Defense Minister Guilio Andreotti. The source said Gilpatric told the Italians that Washington wanted to maintain April 1 as the target date for closing Jupiter missile, bases in Italy and Turkey, with the Polaris subs taking the place of the Jupi- ters in NATO defense lines. Unavailable The informant said Gilpatric and Andreotti .discussed alternal- tives of the Spanish base if Rota remained unavailable to the Polar- is subs. Washington, the source said, w'as not prepared to promise NATO admission to Madrid as, the price for a five-year extension on Unit- ed St'ates use of the Spanish bases. In Italy, the problem was one of domestic politics. Fanfani and Andreotti are Christian Demo- crats and staunchly pro-NATO. But the government needs the backing from the leftwing Social- ist party, which is neutralist and anti-NATO. Fanfani opponents have accus- ed the premier of playing a dou- ble game-pretending to get rid of NATO missile bases while plan- ning to let Polaris subs operate from Italian bases. JOHN F. KENNEDY . . .renews talks WARREN: Discovery Laws Lag ATLANTA ()-A world hasten- ing to find a link with the future is lagging in efforts to improve the law which must rule these amazing discoveries, Chief Justice Earl Warren said yesterday. "The law lags behind until crisis stirs it into action," Warren said in an address to an audience of students and faculty at Georgia Tech's Alexander Memorial Coli- seum., Warren spoke at a ceremony commemorating the 75th anniver- sary of Georgia Tech, which de- segregated in 1961. It was Warren's first visit into the deep south since the United States Supreme Court issued its school desegregation ruling of 1954. The Chief Justice arrived Mon- day night and left the Atlanta Airport under heavy security guard as posters calling for his impeach- ment were raised on private prop- erty in some sections of the city. Warren emphasized the close connection between science and the law. If science is to serve the peaceful purposes of mankind, "it must be given a peaceful setting. in both domestic and world law," he declared. "A society that is governed by law will not permit these great discoveries to be used for destruc- tive purposes," he said. "A world without law is hell-bent for de- struction with or without scien- tific discoveries." '2 West Rejects Latest, Offer From Russia Kennedy Encouraged On Test Ban Treaty GENEVA (P)-Thie 17-nation disarmament conference resumed yesterday with a call from Presi- dent John F. Kennedy for a safe- guard nuclear test ban agreement that would show "confidence and trust among the nations." The Soviet Union promptly threw in a blockbuster. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily V. Kuznetsov followed up President Kennedy's message with a proposal that would deprive the United States of the use of foreign bases for its nuclear deterrent forces. Kuznetsov's proposal - coming after United States and British expressions of optimism over a nuclear test ban-caught Western negotiators by surprie. The Soviet plan has no chance of acceptance by the Western powers. East-West Treaty The plan provides for an East- West treaty calling for a per- manent ban on "the use of foreign territories for stationing strategic means of-delivery of nuclear weap- ons." Kuznetsov accomplished his pro- posal with an attack on nations that have established submarine and other strategic nuclear bases on foreign territories "for the pur- pose of dealing a nuclear blow on vital centers of other states." This meant the United States. The bases, he charged "greatly aggravate the international situa- tion and increase the war threat." On-Site Kuzntsov repeated Moscow's position offering two or three on- site inspections a year in the Soviet Union under a test ban treaty. The United States position is that eight or ten are needed. But he put most of his emphasis on the new Soviet proposal and his remarks on the test ban treaty 'contained 'no new element giving rise tohopes for an early pact. President Kennedy's message was read to the conference by the chief American disarmament ne- gotiator, William C. Foster. "The prospects of agreement on a test ban treaty now seem some- what more encouraging than be- fore because of the acceptance by the Soviet Union of the principle of on-site inspection," the Presi- dent's message said. But Kennedy stressed that the Soviet Union must show a genuine willingness to negotiate. Foster told Kuznetsovthat two or three inspections a year were not satisfactory. He asked the Soviet Union to bargain on this point and on the number of black boxes-robot re- cording stations-which would be allowed on Russian soil. Kuznetsov merely restated the old Russian position and displayed no trace of a willingness to com- promise. Kuznetsov s a i d immediate adoption of his treaty draft "would be a major contribution to averting war." He said he hoped the conference would consider it. TONIGHT'S FEATURE 5:00-7:00 p.m. CENTER ROOM Michigan Union Cafeteria SAUERBRATEN with Buttered Noodles New Plans. On Defense Not Definite TORONTO (P)-Prime Minister John Diefenbaker said Monday fast-changing defense decisions among Canada's allies prevent any final decision being made now on Canadian defense policy. "All is not black and white: in this field there is change," he said in a luncheon speech to a combined meeting of the Canadian and Empire Clubs and the Toron- to Board of Trade. Must Be Studied Diefenbaker said Canada's com- mitment in the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance must be studied at a NATO ministerial meeting at Ottawa next May. Whatever deci- sion's taken there, Canada "as al- ways" will stand with her allies "and at no time in any weaker position than they are," he added. At only one point in his speech -the first since three resignations JOHN.DIEFENBAKER ... defense policy from his cabinet-did Diefenbaket refer directly to the issue of ob- taining nuclear warheads for Ca- nadian forces. But the issue was implicit throughout his references to Canadian defense policy. In a Small Area He said Canada's two Bomarc intene aiat mt ini a small area, a bomber threat that is being re- placedby the threat of intercon- tinental ballistic missiles, against which Bomarcs are useless. He said the government is con- tinuing negotiations to have ready access to weapons for the Bomarc -he didn't refer directly to nu- clear warheads-"in case of need." In these negotiations the govern- ment "will insist that Canada's sovereignty and rights as a na- tion will be upheld at all times." As for Canada's NATO com..- mitments, he said, "We have car- ied out our commitmets and arber no e ht isfalting any particular."e U S Charges WASHINGTON P)-The United States accused Russia yesterday of attempting to "exercise indirect censorship" on the National Broadcasting Co.urby codering NclersareaMo ncsco ueuoclosed." The press department of the Soviet Foreign Ministry has or- dered NBC correspondent Russell Jones to leave the country. By WEBB McKINLEY Associated Press Foreign Correspondent BAGHDAD (P) - Baghdad ap- peared quiet, restrained and un- der full control of Iraq's new mil- itary leaders yesterday. Observers who should know said that although there are undoubt- edly pockets of Communists still resisting the revolution which overthrew Premier Abdel Kassem Feb. 8, the entire country is effec- tively controlled by the new gov- ernment. In Baghdad national guard youths with green bands on their sleeves and rifles in their hands were halting cars and scrutinizing the occupants. About Three Miles A taxi coming approximately three miles from Baghdad Airport to a hotel was stopped four times by these anti-Communist vigilan- tes. When they saw foreigners in- side they waved them on in a friendly way. Heavy tanks, half-tracks and jeeps with recoilless rifles were scattered through the city. Sol- diers-seemed almost as numerous as civilians. For the second day in a row almost all shops were open except in Communist areas, and civilian cars and trucks bustled along the streets. Heavy Firing Monday night for the first time since the revolution heavy firing was heard in areas where national guardsmen were rooting out Reds. In other parts of , the city ob- servers said they had heard no firing. Two planeloads of foreign news- men arrived in Baghdad as revo- lutionary President Abdel Salam Mohammed Aref let down the bar- riers which had blocked them- since the uprising. Officials greeted them with more opurtesy than old Baghdad hands Hodges Sees Business Loss As Possible WASHINGTON (R) - Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges said yesterday the nation could lose business to foreign competi- tors unless more money goes into development of its own industrial capacity. Hodges; at a news conference, repeated the administration's in- sistence that a tax cut is ,essen- tial to put new life into the econo- my. A tax reduction probably would not have a significant impact this year, he said, but over the long pull would encourage business growth. Without a cut, Hodges said, the government might have to increase its own spending. He said he hopes this will not be necessary. Hodges said he would rather "leave it to the private community to make decisions as to what they do with the money rather than leave it to the government." The main problem, Hodges said, is finding and developing techni- cians for research and develop- ment. "We are actually in danger from competition abroad if we keep spending so much money and man- power on defense and space and so little of it in industrial devel- opment," Hodges said. MILITARY REGIME: Baghdad Reported 'Restrained' who traveled here during Kassem's suspicious regime were used to- and lined up a news conference today with Foreign Minister Taleb Hussein Shabib, Iraq's new press spokesman. Column of Smoke From the air, newsmen could see a column of smoke rising from the area of the defense ministry, where Kassem fought for 20 hours until his ammunition ran out and where he was executed. KASSEM'S SUCCESSORS Iraq Under New Rule, Reds Clamor To Leave BEIRUT MAP)-East European Communists who swarmed into Iraq during Abdel Karim Kassem's dictatorship are reported clamor- ing to get out now under harassment by the revolutionary council that is killing home-grown Reds. Whatever the implications, Red China yesterday joined more than a dozen other powers in recognizing the new regime. The United States, Britain and the Soviet The ministry was in ruins, like many of the nearby buildings. A taxi driver, hailing the new regime, told his clients: "Kassem, he asleep. They kill lotsa Communists. People out of jails now and everybody happy." There are no firm estimates of the casualties in the fighting here, but one source said the attackers lost 15 men and Kassem's defend- ers 100 during the siege of the ministry. Union extended recognition Mon- day. Gunter Stocker, a West German businessman, said the Iraqis have begun cracking down on Eastern Communists who entered along with the millions of dollars worth of arms that Kassem brought from the Soviet Union. Lebanese Airliner Newly arrived by a Lebanese air- liner from Baghdad, he said: "They are treating the Western- ers excellently, but for people from the Eastern European Communist countries it is a very different thing. "I was told that so far three East German military advisers at- tached to the Army under Kassem have been arrested. The East Eu- ropeans are trying to get out of the country." There are hundreds of East Europeans in Iraq, including arms specialists, technicians and busi- nessmen. New Regime Stocker reported, that, in the new regime's continuing effort to wipe out domestic opposition, "four' more Communists were executed this morning."~ A fellow German, Kurt Gartner. of the Lufthansa Airlines, told newsmen Iraqi troops pulled down hundreds of portraits of the exe- cuted Kassem and also ordered withdrawal of photographs of President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic and Iraq's new president, Abdel Salam Aref, that had been put up since the revolt Friday. "They seem to be trying to avoid the personality cult that Kassem created," Gartner said. Soviets Keep Past Demands In Negotiations By The Associated Press The latest Soviet proposal at the Geneva disarmament talks is a restatement of an old position with a Polaris twist. A constant Soviet demand in the long history of East-West dis- armament negotiation has been that the United States give up its overseas military bases. The Soviet shifted gears in Geneva Tuesday to demand that the United States liquidate nuc- lear deterrent forces on foreign lands and on oceans. That would mean an end to Polaris submarine and rocket bases abroad, and pull the. teeth of U.S. fleet units in the Medi- terranean and elsewhere. The Russians have been pro- testing to Japan and other na- tions about letting the United States use their port facilities. COEDS: It's Hairstyling Galore! " No Appointment Needed " Expert Cutting The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre t I I World News Roundup By The Associated Press THE HAGUE-The Dutch government announced yesterday it will form a volunteer corps patterned after America's Peace Corps. Foreign Minister Joseph Luns said the first 50 members will go to Africa. LANSING-Norman O. Stockmeyer, Detroit leader of Republi- can party circles, has turned down Gov. George Romney's offer of a post on the State Liquor Control Commission. * * * * UNITED NATIONS-The United Nations announced yesterday the first major reduction in its Congo military force since the end of Katanga province's secession. It said the entire 5,626-man Indian contingent will begin withdrawing in mid-March. WASHINGTON-The Navy will offer Vice Adm. Hyman G. Rick- over an opportunity to stay in service after retirement next year, either in his present three-star rank or as a highly-paid civilian, it was learned last night. WASHINGTON-The British embassy issued a formal denial yesterday to persistent reports that weapons are being shipped from Cuba to British Guiana. ** * * CAIRO-Bidding for friendly relations with Iraq's new regime, Kuwait announced its decision to dissolve Arab League security force. I InterQuadrangle Council and Assembly Association Present I 11 U This Week-End HILLEL Presents DR. LEONARD A. GREENBAUM, Editor of Phoenix Publications and Assistant to the Director of the Phoenix Project FRIDAY, FEB. 15, after Sabbath Services which start at 7:30 P.M. on "THE AMERICAN JEWISH NOVELIST IN THE 30's AND 60's" AND IRABBI HAROLD D. HAHN, Temple BethEl Detroit EXCLUSIVELY ONO Warner Brothers Records Saturday, March 2, 8:30 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM Tickets $3.00, $2.50, $2.00, $1.50 - --I fl 11