IUSDAY, MAY 11, 1961 . THE MICHIGAN DAILY Give Power ALGERIAN CONFLICT: N OPledges Defense To Johnson France Prepares ft fPARIS()-The French govern- rmentand the Algerian rebel re- The majority of European set- gime yesterday agreed to meet at tiers appeared grimly reconciled to WASHINGTON () - President the conference table May O in the Idea of the conference. But TA ,a4.. .. i s a ~rnA+ hoe of ending som sx.yrs o f the hard e fcore theEuropean extrem- 5 Char natik volts arous Quadros Hits Interference With Castro RiO DE JANEIRO (') - The Brazilian government, pressed by the United States to take a stand against the Fidel Castro regime, said yesterday it will oppose any meddling by foreign nations in Cuba. Foreign Minister Afonso Arinos said Brazil is against "any kind of foreign interference, directly or indirectly, (taken) .in order to im- pose on Cuba any form of gov- ernment." This was President Janio Quad- ros' answer to a United States appeal for point action against the Castro government by nations of the Western Hemisphere. And it was obviously a rejection of the United States contention that Castro has installed a Soviet- type government in Cuba. Arinos told newsmen earlier this week that Brazil would revise its friendly relations with' Cuba if Castro swung the Caribbean island into the Communist orbit. But at the same time he said his govern- ment had found no evidence that Castro had turned Communist. He said Brazil had called on its envoy in Havana to find out whether Cuba actually had be- come a member of the Communist bloc, as President Kennedy's ad- ministration claims. The envoy's reply arrived Tuesday but Arinos did not disclose its contents. -AP Wirephoto RUSK SWAYS NATO-Ministers gathered at the conference of NATO nations credited Secretary of State Dean Rusk with creat- ing the new 'world-wide' policy. TAXES, DEFICITS:r Nixon Criticizes Polic Of Economic Controls <" - 1 COLUMBUS (R) - Richard M. Nixon last night wound up his first political tour since the eec- tion with a blast at the Kennedy administration's domestic policies, t I ,I a . of 8~riiart !portswear Bermuda Shorts made to sell orig. 5.95 NOW \98 Hurry! Hurry! LIMITED TIME ONLY Navys, Taupes, Blacks Lodengreen-Tans Sizes 8 to 18 BARNARD'S pSput Unavuals IfI I South, University "The shape of the New Frontier is becoming clearer and clearer," the former Vice-President said in a speech prepared for a Republi- can fund-raising rally. "With every new program and every new proposal, slogans aside, it turns out to be pretty familiar territory after all: a return to the depressing old frontier of the late thirties and to the inevitable failures of a policy of systematic government intervention into the American economy. "It turns out to be the old worn- out country of government con- trols, pump-priming, high taxes, higher deficits and economic stag- nation. Here Nixon reverted to a theme he has been hamering away at ever since he began his tour, a week ago in Chicago. He contends that at a time when extra money is needed for national; security, Kennedy is ask- ing for 15 billion extra, of which 11 billions are for health, edu- cation, welfare, housing and pub- lic works. "The whole process of spend- borrow-and-inflate is, in the end, self-defeating. And it is a positive menace to our very security as a nation and as sheet-anchor of free world strength." See Fechmann As Relentless JERUSALEM (M)-Adolf Eich- mann was portrayed yesterday as a man who surpassed Adolf Hit- ler in relentless pursuit of the Nazi goal to exterminate European Jews.I But evidence introduced in his trial showed he, met with a big failure in 'Little Denmark.' Assistant Prosecutor Gavriel Bach produced evidence that even Hitler and high ranking army gen- erals objected at one stage to Eichmann's single-minded hunt for Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe. Bach submitted documentary evidence that Hitler opposed the suggestion on grounds that if car- ried through it eventually would mean that thousands of quarter- Jews serving in the German. army would be lost to military service. Credit Rusk In Widening Pact's Scope Parley Recognizes Need for Unification OSLO (-)-Fifteen Atlantic Al- lies pledged yesterday to defend vital areas around the globe against the menace of the Com- munist bloc, and they promised again to stand firm in West Ber- lin. Foreign ministers of the North Atlantic Treaty -Organization wound up a three-day meeting with a major decision to widen their activities beyond the defined region of their Atlantic allience. Stikker Credits Secretary-General Dirk U. Stik- ker of The Netherlands and oth- er delegates speaking privately, credited this achievement to Sec- retary of State Dean Rusk. He had sought with only partial suc- cess to instill some of the life-and- death sense of urgency seizing the Kennedy administration. It means NATO has recognized the total diplomacy conducted by the Soviet bloc on all the fronts of the East-West cold war can best be countered by the West's own total diplomacy. "The menace which drew the Allies together is now not only military but also has worldwide political, economic, scientific and psychological aspects," the final communique observed. Popular Will "Confident in their strength, in the will of their peoples and in the truth of the ideals they up- hold, the 15 Atlantic nations ded- icate themselves anew to building a world free from the false doc- trine of continuing and inevitable conflict." Rusk spelled out America's re- solve to defend allied war-won rights in the city and air, ground and water access routes. The Al- lies in the communique warned Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev to keep his hands off their part of the onetime German capital in these words: "With particular regard to Ber- lin, the ministers reiterated their determination.. . to maintain the freedom of West Berlin." World News By The Associated Press LEOPOLDVILLE-Sources here estimated yesterday that 60,000 African refugees have streamed into the Congo to escape a Por- tuguese military campaign aimed at smashing the Angolan uprising. ALGIERS - A French airliner en route from the heart of Africa to Paris under ideal weather con- ditions crashed in the Sahara yes- terday, killing all 79 aboard. WASHINGTON - Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara was shocked when Pentagon security experts released so much of his secret testimony on military mat- ters and said so in testimony re- leased yesterday by the Senate Armed Services Committee. * * * WASHINGTON - The executive vice-president of Westinghouse Electric Corp. asked Senators yes- terday for a breathing spell from officials investigations into price fixing, "to demonstrate that we really mean business and are go- ing to abide by the law." r LL~ 11 AZ -- ji 44 1t SWEBCOR IS BUILT for astounding FM-AM sound! Webcor Model 310 FM-AM Portable 7995 2.00 per week or 8.00 per month 9 TRANSISTORS WEIGHS ONLY 15 OZ. One quarter the size of any other FM set o Extra long-distance AM re- Lady Hathaway. or Mother's Day Enthusiasm for tailoring is most evident in Lady Hathaway. Shoulders are soft. W aists are tin y . T ails are long en ou gh tost y u c e in y t s ug no h to ta stay tucked in, yet snug enough to stay4 smooth and unwrinkled. 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