THE MICHIGAN DAILY rrian-Asian Nations icker w Reds wr Congo Peace Plan EMERGENCY MEASURES: Kennedy Suggests Plan To Aid Grain Farmers, WASHINGTON (A)-President John F. Kennedy asked Congress yesterday to junk the Eisenhower administration's feed program and adopt an emergency plan aimed at raising producer incomes. Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman said the Kennedy pro- posal for 1961 would be expected to bring a 10-to-15 per cent boost in the gross incomes of typical producers without any measur- able effect on consumer food prices. Objectives of the Kennedy pro- gram, in addition to raising farm- er incoMne, would be to reduce -AP Wirephoto SOVIET-ARAB CAUCUS-Soviet Ambassador Valerian Zorin, left, and Aleksei Nesterenko, center, of the Russian delegation, confer with Omar Loutfi, delegate from the United Arab Republic about the Congo. Alius at Accord Rival A frican Parleys Planned in Congo Crisis Yo UN Concil- Continue Attacks On Hammarskjold LONDON (P)-Two rival confer- ences of African states were pro- jected yesterday to deal with the Congo crisis. UNITED NATIONS (R) - Dele- gates from key Asian -'African countries negotiated with both the United States and the Soviet Union yesterday in an effort to produce a Congo peace plan that will win approval in the, United Nations Security Council. ' The private huddles occurred as nations favoring Patrice Lu- mumba pressed their attack in the council on Secretary-General Dag' Hammarskjold, and others came to his defense. With, the public barred from the Council's galleries and Increased security precautions, there was no repetition of yesterday's wild demonstrations by supporters of the slain Lumumba. Only a hand- ful of Negro pickets marched quietly across the-street from the United Nations headquarters building.' Closed Doors Hammarskjold met behind clos- ed doors with members of his Congo advisory committee to con- sider recommendations from the Asian-African conciliation com- cission now in the strife-torn Af- rican nation. , The commission has proposed the release of all political prison- ers, reconvening of Parliament, widening of, the newly-constituted Congo government under Premier Joseph Ileo, and the replacement of the centralized system by some kind of federation. Some of the commission's re- commendations were being put in- to a resolution being drafted by Liberia, Ceylon and the United Arab Republic with help from In- dia, Guinea and Morocco. Delegates Confer Delegates from. Guinea, India and Morocco conferred with .So- viet deputy foreign minister Val-, erian A. Zorin n an effort to avoid a' Soviet veto on a possible Congo peace plan., In general, the resolution would urge the United Nations to take all measures, including use of force, to prevent occurrence of civil war in the Congo. It would demand also withdrawal of all Belgian and other foreign military personnel not under United Na- tions command, and call for an impartial investigation into Lu- mumba's death. The resolution would also urge immediate reconvening of the Congo parliament and reorganiza- tion of the Congo army. There was no chance of appro- val of a Soviet resolution calling for the firing of Hammarskjold, the scrapping of the entire United Nations Congo operation within. a month's time, and sanctions against Belgium if its nationals do not quit the Congo. Senegal's Premier Mamadou Dia urged independent and uncommit- ted African states to get together to shape a joint policy in the wake of the world-wide repercussions from the slaying of the Congo's ex-Premier Patrice Lumumba and the Soviet Union's proposals for the closing of United Nations operations in the Congo. Official Says Reds Threaten War in Congo By The Associated Press President Moise Tshombe de- clared yesterday in Elisabethville that the Communist bloc threat- ens to create a Korean-type civil war in the Congo. He expressed belief the West would avoid such a trap. The chief of independence- minded Katanga province also charged that a prime aim of the Communists in exploiting Patrice Lumumbe's death is to get rid of United Nations Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold. In Leopoldville, the new pre- mier of the Congo, Joseph Ileo, warned his countrymen yesterday against "violence and savage bru- tality" in the wake of Lumumba's death. He spoke out after partisans of the ex-premier knifed three Bel- gian priests in Leopoldville, and pro-Lumumba soldiers in Kivu province seized and beat 12 Eu- ropeans, including a woman and a 5-year-old child. Followers of Lumumba went into formal mourning in the city of Luluabourg. The men solemnly doffed their ties and the women their 'blouses. Requiem masses were sung around the land. j (ate Gialerie presents OHELA HALEVY from ISRAEL Hebrew, English, French and Spanish NIGHTLY (Monday --talent night) 19940 Livernois, Detroit UN 2-4455 Dia said countries which at- tended neither the Brazzaville nor the Casablanca conference on the Congo should take the lead. - The Casablanca Conference included left-leaning states which are now supporting the Lumumbist Antoine Gizenga regime in Stanleyville. The Brazzaville Conference in- cluded most of the former French colonies that recognize President Joseph Kasavubu's government in Leopoldville. Dia's suggestion went to Niger- ia, Liberia and Togo, among oth- ers. Five of the nations at the Casa- blanca conference, meanwhile summoned their foreign ministers to Ghana for a meeting that may' produce tnited backing for Gizen- ga's leftist regime. Four of the five-the United Arab Republic, Ghana, Guinea, and Morocco--already in effect have recognized Gizenga as the head of the legal government of the Congo. Leftist-leaning Mali may soon do so. So far 16 Communist leftist and neutralist nations have extended recognition to Gizenga. U.S. Looks For Sateite WASHINGTON OP) - American scientists searched last night fox a "lost satellite"-one with polka dots on it-even as they claimed partial success for a major space mission. With the electronic ears and eyes of radio and radar, and witi telescopic cameras they patrolled the skies for a 12-foot balloon- type space vehicle that was hurled aloft by a huge Scout rocket from Wallops Island, Va. yesterday The balloon, folded like an ac- cordion in the nose of the four- stage rocket, was successfully ejected and inflated in space and began sending back radio signals It was heard as it soared ove: 'Johannesburg, South Africa at 8:42 a~m., at possibly 16,000 mile: an hour speed. Still Beeping- And it was still beeping when it zoomed over Woomera, Australia at 9:20 a.m. but since then silence Thus, scientists of the Nationa Aeronautics and Space Adminis tration say that they don't kno whether the sphere (2) actuall went into orbit but lost its radi( voice; (2) not only lost its voice but became deflated and is noR orbiting somewhere aloft "likee rag;" or (3) plunged to a fiery death in the friction of the earth' atmosphere. However, NASA scientists were heartened by two things: Fourth Stage 1) They were able to confirn that the fourth stage of the Scout rocket-from which the inflatable sphere was ejected-went into or. bit- However, it may take a cou. ple of days to compute the orbit 2) Allyevidence indicates Tha the Scout booster-dubbed the "poor man's rocket" because o its relatively low cost-performe its part of the job in excellent fashion. All four stages of the Scout Ig. nited on schedule in what wa. regarded as a big-league test fox this potentially versatile but hith- erto unproved rocket-first Amer ican booster to be fueled entirely by solid propellants. d r a e d hi d S t it government spending and arrest the piling up of more farm sur- pluses. Under the Kennedy administra-: tion's program, corn supports rise from $1.06 a bushel for the 1960 crop to $1.20 for 1961 produc- tion. Supports for other grains--oats, barley and sorghum grains, for example - would increase cor- respondingly. . To become eligible for these sup- ports, producers would be obliged to retire 20 per cent of their feed grain land and convert it to con- servation uses. In a letter to Congress, Ken- nedy said the Eisenhower admin- istration's feed grain program re- sulted in "accumulation of a bur- densome and dangerous surplus, mainly of commodities for which there is no adequate outlet ... "At the same time," the Presi- dent said, "it has failed to protect farm income, and it is theatening to drive down the prices farmers receive for hogs, cattle, poultry and eggs, and milk to disastrous levels." World News Roundup_ By The Associated Press LAGOS -- The Belgian and1 American embassies were attack- ed last night by thousands of angry Nigerians in protest against the slaying of Patrice Lunmumba. n BRUSSELS,- A crowd of about 300 angry Belgian students attack- ed, the United Arab Republic em- bassy yesterday and smashed all its windows. The attack was in retaliation for a similar onslaught against the Belgian embassy in Cairo Wed- nesday. WASHINGTON - A defense department research official 'yes- terday expressed "great pessim- ism" over the possibility of devel- oping a nationwide defense against missiles in the near future. The statement was made by Jack P. Ruina, head of the ad- vanced Research Projects Agency. Ruina told the house space com- mittee that although specific tar- get areas might be defended against intercontinental ballistic missiles a coast-to-coast umbrel- la to destroy or deflect enemy mis- siles appeared unlikely for some time. THE WEAVERS EAST LANSING (P) - About The senators said United States 3u a dozen Michigan State University policy must be based on the as- students staged a quiet march sumption that Red China could sa around the MSU campus yesterday be seated in the United Nations as no noon, mourning the death of Con- early as next fall, "whether we wit go Premier Patrice Lumumba. agree or not." ph The students, members of the "How high a price would the pC MSU Africa club, were followed by United States pay to defeat the a second group, made up of for- next effort to seat representatives tio eign students and members of the of Communist China?" they asked. an( student government, staging a "Does the United States have suffi- A: counter-demonstration. cient barganing power left to in- wf Not satisfied with the turnout sure representation for Formosa? fn yesterday, student leaders said "If so, should we attempt to ne- 10 they planned a similar demon- gotiate an arrangement whereby th2 stration Saturday morning. 'Two Chinas' might be represented t12 U Support UN, Senators As WASHINGTON (A)--Two United seem a minor matter," the sena- K States senators called yesterday tors said. for renewed efforts to strengthen They submitted a formal report and continue the United Nations to the Senate Foreign Relations in the face of Soviet efforts to Committee based on their service control or destroy it. as delegation members. Senators Wayne Morse (D-Ore), Aiken and Morse said there is no and George D. Aiken (R-Vt), who certainty th~at a permanent hostile served in the United Nations dele- gation at the last session, said "it majority will ever come to pass clear that the testing period and that "a decision to pull out seemsclathttetsigpro of the United Nations would be of United States membership incometed ationd the United Nations lies ahead. The report, drafted before Rus- "If the day comes when the sia's latest attack on UN Secre- United States is faced with a tary Dag HammarskJold and the hostile majority that situation will Soviets' accompanying demand for be a reflection of a deteriorating withdrawal of all foreign troops world erso serious as to make from the Congo, said the political an adverse United Nations vote .._- .i-A.--- The Theosophical Society in America invites you to a FREE PUBLIC LECTURE N: HIS PLACE IN THE SCHEME OF LIFE by SAMUEL H. WYLIE National Theosophical Lecturer FRIDAY, Feb. 17, 8 P.M. at the Ann Arbor Public Library, 343 South Fifth Ave. I CAFE PROMETHEAN 508 E. WILLIAM NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH Monday-Friday . 11:00 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. If d1 .t in 0ia Unnsponsors f r -J * Soak up the sun during Spring Vacation. The Mich- gan Union Flight to Nassau provides transportation to and from NassauonaBOAC ." DC-7 and lodging in two of Nassau's finest hotels, Carton House and Royal ._- E l iza be th for. ." ,," Only "$"75 # -s"* Deadlines for applications 4:- -..: .".;, February 24 11 i NEW MENU Soup du Jour .......................20c SANDWICHES Kosher Hot Dog . . ...........35c Swiss Cheese..... . .. .......... 35c Charcoal Hamburger .................35c Ham ... . . .. . . ...............45c Kosher Salami ...................50c German Knockwurst ..................50c Brotwurst ........... ...............50c I 11 Ham and Cheese ... Burger Promethean. Cube Steak ........ FetaCheese Plate . . .. ... . ..s. .s.".".. .. .55c .60c .70c .85c GRAD PARTY ALL graduate students ver 21 (and under 50) are welcome DESSERTS Frozen Dessert...... Cheese Cake ............. Baklava . ::::..:...... Promethean Torch ......... ......... 25c ::..:: .30c ..........45c ... .. ..40c 11 Oft r ! X 90 Ift J AV! !M M I II 1 F IR IF 11