ci THE MICHIGAN DAILY agrin Fails To Reveal MajorFlig h Information -AP Wirephoto ACCOLADES-Russian Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev led a mammoth reception at Moscow airport for the Soviet's "man in space," Maj. Yuri 'Gagarin Khrushchev hailed the 27'year-old flyer as a man whose name will live forever, and awarded him the nation's highest award, Hero of the Soviet Union. OFFICIAL PLANS TOUR: Goldberg Asks Program To Ad Migrant Workers WASHINGTON (A) -Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg yes-, terday called the lot of 400,000 migrant farm workers and their families "a black mark" on the American economy. Goldberg asked public support for a two-way administration pro- gram to provide more government safeguards for American migrant farm workers and to make it tougher to import laborers from Iviexico, the West Indies, the Phil- ippines and even Japan. The labor secretary said he may soon tour some agricultural areas to try t6 bring public attention on "the shadowy migrant world where poverty, privation; lack of opportunity and illiteracy are the stuff of everyday life." "This administration does not accept the proposition that Amer- ican agriculture is dependent on poverty and destitution to sur- vive," Goldberg said in a state- ment. "Nor do we believe the major- ity of American farmers, or the American public, accept this prop- osition. The time has come to back up our beliefs with action." Goldberg said that, under the preceding administration, the La-' bor Department proposed help for farm workers but the Agricuilture Department opposed it. Now,he said, "for the first time in his- tory" all departments are work- ing to improve labor conditions in agriculture. Goldberg said the average farm workers earn barely over $1,000 a year while unemployment and un- deremployment ase extensive. Mi- grants ase even worse off, he said. Jail .Brazilians For Criticism RIO DE JANEIRO (P)-Brazil's President Janio Quadros yester- day responded to criticism from a general and an admiral by put- ting them under military arrest. Gen. Idalio Sardenberg, who was president of the state oil monopoly Petrobras under ex- President Juscelino Kubitscheck, was arrested after telling news- men Petrobras was in a financial mess. Details of the charge against the admiral were not made pub- lic. National1 Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - President, John F. Kennedy has asked Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn) to report to. him Monday on the stalled Geneva conference on nuclear weapons test ban.w Gore was a member of the Unit- ed States team that has been meeting with representatives of Russia and Britain. Kennedy wants Gore's views on.Russian in- tentions. Differences on a nuclear +inspec- tions system have snagged the conference. Russia has proposed a three-member inspection com- mission. Its decisions would have to be unanimous; in effect, this would enable the Russian commis- sioner to veto commission actions. * * * . WASHINGTON-Americans are claiming larger average income tax refunds this year-$117 com- pared with-$108 in 1960. This was disclosed yesterday by the Internal Revenue Service which said $2.7 billion in refunds had been mailed to 23.2 million taxpayers by April 10. By the same date a year ago, $2.2 bil- lion had been refunded to 20.6 million taxpayers. IRS expects to pay out about $4.5 billion in refunds this year to about 7 out of every 12 tax- payers. s s s WASHINGTON - President John' F. Kennedy yesterday an- nounced he will appoint Cecil F. Poole, a Negro San Francisco lawyer, as United States Attorney for the Northern District of Cali- fornia. If the Senate confirms him, Poole will be the first Negro to serve as a United States District Attorney in the continental Unit- ed States. Justice Department records show that four Negroes have served as United States district attorneys in. the Virgin Islands, but none in North America. Poole, an active Democrat, would succeed Lawrence E. Day- to. Press Asks For Details Of Landing Unsolved Questions Include Space Gear MOSCOW (A") - Maj. Yuri A. Gagarin met representatives of the world press yesterday with poise, confidence and a minimum of scientific information about man's first flight into space. But he spoke freely of the plea- sures of space flight and said "I want to do a lot more." The 27-year-old Soviet astro- naut did little to clear up sev- eral discrepancies that- have aris- en about his 108-minute flight Wednesday. Several scientists flanking him at the crowded news conference fielded the tougher questions, and one said scientific data about the flight will be published as it is processed. Landing Method One unsolved mystery is how Gagarin landed after his flight. The original announcement by the Soviet Union said the space ship landed in a "pre-arranged area of the Soviet Union." One scientific writer said the ship came down by parachute to slow its fall. Westerners assum- ed Gagarin was inside when it landed. Then the Communist youth newspaper Komsomol Pravda said workers on a collective farm-its location not disclosed-saw him parachute and greeted him as he landed. A scientist said he land- ed "on both feet, without even tumbling." Parachute Possible Correspondents asked Gagarin about this at a news conference in Moscow yesterday. He would only say that a parachute tech- nique was one of several worked out by Soviet scientists and the flight demonstrated that "all sys- terns" of landing worked success- fully. Here are two other questions that arose in the West: Did the space ship have a win- dow in it? Soviet statements take both sides of this question. Did Gagarin really make his historic flight on Wednesday as the Soviet government said he did? Speculation on this question arose because of persistent rum- ors in Moscow early last week that a Russian already had been sent into orbit. As for the -fate of his space ve- hicle, Gagarin said: "The entire space ship and its parts can be used again." That was all Gagarin would say on the subject. Consider Eichmann Charges JERUSALEM (A'-- The his- toric trial of Adolf Eichmann hung in the balance yesterday as an Israeli court deliberated wheth- er it has authority to judge the one-time Nazi Gestapo leader on charges of directing the wartime murder of millions of Jews. Eichmann's German defense at- torney, Robert Servatius, has challenged that authority on grounds that: Eichmann was kidnaped in Ar- gentina last May and forcibly brought to Israel. Charge Coercion He signed a statement under duress saying he came to Israel of his own free will. The crimes with which he is charged were not committed on Israeli soil. And the law under which he is being tried-the "Nazis and Nazi Collaborators Law" passed in 1950 by the Israeli Parliament - was enacted after the crimes with which Eichmann is charged took place. A special panel of three Israeli judges began deliberating their decision on Servatius's challenge after the traditional Jewish Sab- bath at sundown. Major Climax Their discussions brought the trial which opened in the Beit Ha'am (community center) in Jerusalem last Tuesday, to its first maJor climax. They will announce their deci- sion at the resumption of the trial tomorrow. Servatius also has told the three-judge panel he will seek West Germany's protection for Eichmann-former chief of the Gestapo's Jewish affairs section. In a dramatic session yesterday the Cologne defense attorney de- slared: "The accused has a claim against his state for protection. He can demand intervention by suit if his government is inactive and he will do so. Shriver To Go On Corps Trip WASHINGTON () - Peace l Corps Director Sargent Shriver will leave for Asia and Africa shortly to discuss possible corps projects with the leaders of un- derdeveloped countries. The trip will take him to Ni- geria, India, Pakistan, Burma, Thailand and the Philippines, corps officials have announced. In India, he will be an official guest of Prime Minister Jawaharal Nehru. Nehru has invited Shriver to discuss the corps with him on May 2. PHOTOS by B ud-Mor r UN Sets No Time for Belgian Ouste pf KAYSER HOSIERY SPRING SALE, $1.35 KAYSER HOSIERY ON SALE FOR $1.50 & $1.65 KAYSER HOSIERY, INCLUDING FAMOUS FIT-ALL TOPS ON SALE FR$ 119 April 111o29 Save now.and stock up on the smartes nylons town! Choose from a wide collection of seamless and full 1103 S. 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