SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 196$. THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6,1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY New Honduras Regime Plagued by Resistance; Snipers Begin Violence TAX EXEMPTIONS: Patman Crticizes Investigating Team WASHINGTON (Pj)-Rep. Wright, Patman (D-Tex), a persistent critic of tax exemption rules for private foundations, says he thinks a Treasury task force looking into the question is stacked in favor of the foundations. Patman's comment came as sources disclosed that the group of experts have held two closed-door meetings at the Treasury Depart- ment, the second one Friday. Patman said he asked more than three Sees Japan Student Split LATIN AMERICAN COUPS: U.S. Severs Relations With New Governments. WASHINGTON (P)-The United States has raised a warning flag for any more Latin American military leaders contemplating a grab for power. It made an example of the Dominican Republic and Honduras, whose governments were toppled in quick succession. Going further than merely suspending aid and diplomatic rela- tions, the United States ordered withdrawal of their economic and Atmilitary aid missions from the DEAN RUSK views with alarm CHINA AGREES Aidit Wants Red Summit TOKYO (AP)-The Chinese Com- munists gave their blessing yester- day to a proposal for bringing the Soviet Union and Red China be- fore a court of world Communists to settle the two countries' ideolog- ical differences once and for all. Indonesian Communist boss D. N. Aidit, leader of the largest Com- munist party outside the Iron and Bamboo Curtains, had called for world Communists to sit as jury and decide who is right in the Peking-Moscow feud which has split the Communist world move- ment. Up to now, he said, the mud- slinging has only hurt the move- ment toward world domination. Similar but less forceful appeals for a Communist summit meeting have gained attention" recently in Moscow. Peking has demanded a world meeting all along in the be- lief it could document from the writings of Marx and Lenin its claim that world Communism must foster violent revolution. As Aidit sees it, the time has 4 / come to determine which is the villain and which is the hero. Nothing has been solved, he said, by meetings between the two Com- munist powers. rd two countries, making it that much more difficult for assistance to be resumed. 'Utmost Gravity' "We view the recent military coups in the Dominican Republic and Honduras with the utmost gravity,"" Secretary of State Dean Rusk said in a statement announc- ing the action. Earlier, the State Department suspended diplomatic relations and deliveries of military and eco- nomic aid to Honduras. The rapid series of actions came within a day after the Honduran army overthrew the government of President Ramon Villeda Morales and forced him into exile in Costa Rica. Bosch Ousted The Honduras coup came on the heels of a military clique's ousting of Juan Bosch from the presidency of the Dominican Republic late last month. The State Department's an- nouncements showed that admin- istration officials have become alarmed that military leaders, en- couraged by the coups in Hon- duras and the Dominican Republic might try to take over otherLatin American governments. Rusk said, "the establishment and maintenance of representative and constitutional government is an essential element in the Alli- ance for Progress. Critical Factor "Stable and effective govern- ment responsive to the popular will is a critical factor in the at- tainment of social and economic progress. "Tnder existing conditions in the Dominican Republic and Hon- duras, there is no opportunity for effective collaboration by the United States under the Alliance for Progress or for normalization of diplomatic relations." Lopez Coup Cites Policy, Against Reds Government States Army Has Control TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras ()- Anti-junta sharpshooters opened up with machine guns and small arms on the army yesterday in a show of defiance of the new re- gime. As if by a pre-arranged signal, snipers began their sudden attack at 2 p.m. in various sectors of the Hp9nduran capital. Hours later the shooing continued. The violence came on the heels of a statement by new government chief Col. Oswaldo Lopez Arellano that' the army was in full control of the' situation throughout' the country. Col. Lopez led a coup Thursday that, overthrew the six-year-old regime of President Ramon Ville- da Morales. He said yesterday. his government-eight civilians and two military men -- would keep power for about a year or "until the conditions which caused the move against the Villeda govern- ment are eliminated." The military claimed the depos- ed president was soft on Commu- nism. The new government declared itself ready to crush any uprising. The warning came amid reports that a pro-Communist student or- ganization was planning demon- strations in protest of the ouster of President Ramon Villeda Mor- ales in a pre-dawn strike Thurs- day. The government is also reported to have gained the support of two right-of-center political parties, the National, Party and the ortho- dox Republican Party. Party officials said they had sent their declarations of 'support to Lopez. Iellano but that a ban on political activities prevented offi- cial publication. Coupled with the military over- throw of President Juan Bosch in the Dominican Republic Sept. 25, the armed forces' seizure here set off fears of governmentupsets in other key Latin American coun- tries. It attracted attention to troubles in Brazil, Venezuela and Colombia. French Give Assurances To Ben Bella ALGIERS (P-The French gov- ernment is reported- to have as- sured President Ahmed Ben Bella of support in his struggle against the Berber rebellion in Kabylie. Highly reliable French sources said the assurances were given yes- terday by French Ambassador Georges Gorse after his return from consultations in Paris. Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle apparently feels Ben Bella should be backed as the best available statesman in post-independence Algeria. The French sources stressed the backing will not be impaired by continuing nationalization of French property and plans to block French bank accounts. Reliable reports say the main reason for the French attitude is continuation of French atomic ex- periments in the Sahara. France apparently plans to explode five more bombs before completion of its atomic program in the desert. Despite criticism of the French experiments and occasional threats -mainly for African consumption -the Algerian government has done nothing to prevent France from continuing this program. CHARLES DE GAULLE ... support for Ben Bella weeks ago for a list of who is on the task force but has not yet been informed. All-Star Cast However, congressional sources reported that among its members are: -Chairman Morris Hadley of -Chairman Morris Hadley of the Carnegie Foundation. -Vice-Chairman Barklei M. Henry of the Carnegie Institute of Washington. -President Henry A. Moe of the Guggenheim Memorial Founda- tion. -Vice-Chairman Walter M. Up- church, Jr.,of the Shell Co. Foun- dation. -President Donald Young of the Russell Sage Foundation. -Director F. Emerson Andrews of the Federation Library Center, a kind of trade center for foun- dations. Other committee members are reported to include at least three prominent attorneys, a Harvard Law School professor and three persons recommended by Patman. Investigation Outgrowth The study is an ;outgrowth of several investigations held by Pat- man, who headed the House Small Business Committee before he be- came chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee. Under Patman, the House Small Business Committee issued several reports that criticized the founda- tions as a powerful but virtually unregulated force in the nation's economy and in some cases a tax- dodging device. Early this year, Assistant Sec- retary of the Treasury Stanley Surrey proposed creation of a task force to look into the matter and asked Patman to suggest some names. Recommendations Patman recommended Robert Mueller, an Austin, Tex., lawyer; James G. Patton, president of the National Farmers Union;-and Jack S. Seidman, head of a New York firm of certified public account- ants. Patman was reported to have heard nothing more until Sept. 12, when Surrey called him to say the committee had been formed and would meet for, the first time the next day. Both Mueller and Patton are understood to have complained they were given so little notice of the first meeting that they were unable to attend. By DAVID BLOCK The ideological differences be- tween the Soviet Union and Coin- munist China have had a pro- found influence on left-wing stu- dent groups in Japan, Prof. Yuichi Takano of Tokyo University said yesterday. Prof. Takano is an authority on international law and serves as an advisor to the Japanesesministry of foreign affairs. He is visiting this country to attend the Ameri- can Society of International Law- yers' current conference at Prince- ton. "The Communist and Socialist youths in Japan, bisected at first by the Sino-Soviet split, are now further subdivided over issues of : World News Roundup By The Associated Press SHANNON, Ireland - Secret flights by giant Soviet military jets on the Cuba run have gravely imperiled trans-Atlantic air traf- fic, aviation sources said yesterday. The Soviet flights, according to Shannon air traffic control offi- cials, cut right through the Atlan- less international importance, Prof. Takano said. Position Weakened These student groups enjoy more political significance and national importance than do similar orga- nizations in Western countries, he noted. However, the increasing dis- unity in their ranks has tended to weaken their total position in Ja-' pan, Prof. Takano added. "The young Communists and Socialists comprise but a small fraction of the total Japanese student body, and their actual numbers tend to vary Inversely with their degree of fanaticism," he observed. "As the left-wing students be- come more militant and hostile to- ward the government, their pop- ularity within university circles declines," he said. Still Neutral A further problem facing the left-wing student groups is the fact that the Communist Party of Japan has not yet taken a side in the Sino-Soviet dispute, Prof. Takano said. "Two student groups may agree on the Communist domestic poli- cies in Japan, and yet differ in tic lanes which at peak times carry' a plane a minute between the United States and Europe. * * * WASHINGTON-President Chi- ang Kai-Shek says the split be- tween Red China and Russia; makes this an opportune- time for his Nationalist Chinese forces to try to regain the Chinese main- land. He said there is no chance of the split between the two Commu- nist nations healing until either Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev or Red China's Mao Tse-Tung is eliminated. WASHINGTON - Rep. Otto Passman (D-La) has criticized the State Department for withholding from the public the names of some countries that receive United States military aid. In secret hearings by his House appropriations subcommittee last May 17, Passman noted that the government had classified the names of five of the 70 nations that receive grants of military aid. Since the hearings, the department has revealed one of the countries, Indonesia. HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO 209 S. State St. 665-8001 respect to the conflict between Russians and the Chinese," he4 served. Prof. Takano observed that splits among the Communist- cialist student groups have da aged some of the worthy proje they had helped foster in the p To illustrate this, he cited the fI ure of this year's Hiroshima a ference. Test Protesters This conference. is an ann gathering in Hiroshima, on the niversary of the atomic explos there, to protest the internatic testing of nuclear weapons. participants in this traditic demonstration are the citizens Hiroshima as coordinated by s dent groups. "As a result of the recent dis, tion among the Japanese 1 wing, this year's gathering in H shima fell into a session of bi ering between the several facts of the young Communists and cialists," Prof. Takano said. "Furthermore, no signific discussions or motions toward creation of world peace were solved during the conference," concluded. HOOTS DAILY .. IF I SCIENCE AND CHRISTIANITY: ARE THEY COMPATIBLE? (Panel of Four Scientists from Dow Chemical Company, Midland.) INSTRUMENTS and INSTRUCT SUNDAY AT SEVEN university reformed church YMr+CA - East William & Fifth Ave. 11 ยง14 VanI2u renShop 81a SUPREME COURT RECONVENES: DiCivil Rights Cases on Docket SLIP INTO SOMETHING SENSATIONAL i 4 arcade jewelry shop. at 16 Nickels Arcade invi tes you to- stop by, see, and listen to our fine selection of \ 1 Featuring a choice of one to five tunes in wood, gold-on-white metals, or mother-of-pearl inlaid in wood music boxes. WASHINGTON (A') - The Su- preme Court reassembles tomor- row for a new term destined to bring historic decisions in racial sit-in cases and in litigation over state legislative and congressional apportionmsent. The high tribunal already has agreed to hear several -appeals in which the justices 'face the basic issue of whether a private busi- nessman may on his own volition, refuse service to Negroes and whether he- then may be backed up by prosecutions under state trespass laws. The court also has granted hear- ings in seven appeals attacking the way Virginia, Maryland, New York and Alabama have divided the seats in their legislatures and the way New York and Georgia have divided their congressional districts. Rural Sections Favored Basic complaint in these cases is that metropolitan area voters are discriminated against by divi- sions that favor rural sections. Final Supreme Court decisions are expected to substantially -affect the kind of state governments that develop in the future and to set new standards for congressional districting. Questions left unanswered when the court decided the famous Ten- nessee apportionment case in March, 1962, are now before the justices in the new cases. In the Tennessee decision, the tribunal said for the firpt time that the division of seats in state leg- islatures is subject to challenge in federal courts. But it gave no suggestions as to what degree of equality or fairness the Constitu- tion requires. Unanswered Questions Similarly, the court left unan- swered important questions when last May it decided a group of sit- in cases, saying demonstrators de- manding service may not be ar- rested under local segregation lyw or policy. The court then had nothing to say about private segregation poli- cies. The sit-in cases to be heard in the new term include trespass convictions of demonstrators in areas where, so far as is known, there are no segregation laws. In 1883 the Supreme Court struck down a statute passed by Congress to requite equal accom- modations for all persons in inns, transportation facilities and thea- tres. The Supreme Court then said the Constitution's 14th Amend- ment allowed Congress to prohibit only state discrimination and not private action. One Black Muslim Eighteen, new appeals asking hearings for Negroes also wait court action. They involve a va- riety of charges resulting from ra- cial demonstrations and include A LISTEN Ito COLLEGIATE BILLBOARD on WOIA-FM 102.9 . ..at 11 p.m. nightly Brought to you-by State Street-That Great Street the case of a Louisiana Black Mus- lim. He was indicted on an allegation he desecrated the United States flag. The Negro was charged with "displaying publicly a picture of the flag of the United States as representing a place of 'hell, slav- ery and death'." Similarly, eight new appeals asking hearings on apportionment issues were docketed during the court's summer recess. The new appeals are from Oklahoma, Ohio, Washington state, Delaware, Flor- ida, Michigan, 'Colorado and Queens in New York City. Chief Justice Earl Warren, be- ginning his 11th year on the high bench, will supervise the handling of a record-breaking , number of docketed cases. At the start of the new term they total almost 1200 cases.. At the same time last year the total was only a few over 900 cases. The court's work load has more than doubled during Warren's 10- year regime: In the 1952-53 term, only 1,426 cases were docketed. Each of the last 10 years has seen a sharp increase in appeals filed. In the closing weeks of the last previous term, the court agreed to hear arguments in 95 cases. A Few Choice Words Argument sessions begin Oct. 14 and the court has allotted 124 half hours to hear the 95 appeals al- ready granted. By long tradition, Monday's session is_ devoted to brief opening ceremonies. Among the appeals- soon to be argued is that of Gov. Ross R. Barnett of Mississippi. He wants the court to rule he is entitled to a jury trial in the criminal con- tempt case pending against him and Lt. Gov. Paul B. Johnson, Jr. They were accused of refusing to obey lower .court orders not to in- terfere with admission of Negro James H. Meredith to the Univer- sity of Mississippi last year. b~y ST RE T C HB RAW Style 1239 cotton Style 1059 lycra $3.95 $5.95 WARNER'S*: NICKELS ARCADE ,- THE r COMING TUESDAY! An Address by ALBERT BIGELOW on I CHRISTMAS FLIGHTtoEOP ROUND TRIP -w rk9Pi December 22 -New York to Paris U "THE POWER AND PRACTICE OF NON-VIOLENCE" Pertinent to an understanding of the freedom revolutions of our time .,. * By a man qualified in terms of his personal participation in world events such as: ' Attempted Sailing into A-Bomb Test Area, 1958 * Original Member of FREEDOM RIDE 1961 'A il 5 I A ~Aj ~ LL- IKIIIA -rrn f"LIKIA