l TRW MiVVIIL AL IT Wl&TV v -- any m, ThN ils~uj, DAILY _. V n -V - - ___- I l A ' L T T - __ - . PAGE THREE X E c 'T T-y- ! 1' USSR spurs Wheat Trade IUMEBACK FOLLOWING WAR: By FRANCIS STILLY_ Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer The world's great staff of life -wheat--is being moved aroun the glome in the greatest quanti- ties in history. Russia, because of immense crop failures, suddenly found it neces- sary to buy upwards of 400 mil- World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The number of Americans with jobs increased 350,000 to a total of 69.1 million in October, the labor department said yesterday. The number of unemployed re- mained at 3.5 million, unchanged from September, but reflected a slight drop percentagewise as the total labor force grew 300,000 to 76.1 million, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported. * * * N WASHINGTON-Senate Demo- cratic and Republican leaders teamed up yesterday to try to head off deep cuts in President John F. Kennedy's $4.2-billion foreign aid bill by offering a com- promise amendment to reduce the total by $385 million. ROME - The Roman Catholic Bishops of Italy issued a warning to the Italian people last night against atheistic Communism. It was the first such joint dec- laration by the Italian Episcopacy, since the Church, starting in the reign of Pope John XXIII, began seeking a new relationship with Communist governments behind the Iron Curtain. * *.* UNITED NATIONS-The main UN political committee approved yesterday a resolution calling on the 18-nation disarmament com- mission to resume negotiations "with a sense of urgency" on a total test ban agreement. By a 97-1 vote, with three ab- stentions, the committee adopted the resolution sponsored by 30 nations. SAIGON-A Vietnamese officer spurred the hunt today for three missing United States army men, believed to be prisoners of the Communists, by offering his units $3,000 for their rescue. * * * NEW YORK - The stock mar- ket weathered some additional selling yesterday and recovered enough to show a mixed pattern at the close. Dow-Jones averages showed 30 industrials up .04, 20 rails up 1.36, 15 utilities up .44' and 65 stocks up .64. lion bushels. Some of the Soviet satellites also are in dire need. eRussian purchases are expected to total nearly $1 billion. S Japan too has experienced a shortage because of poor crops and will have to increase its im- - ports from the United States, Can- - ada and Australia by about 50 per cent. The import total for the year will be 2.5 million tons at a cost of about $190 million. South Korea is another country which will need a large quantity of foreign wheat. About a million tons, or some $55 million worth will be sent from the United States, $5 million worth from Can- ada and a lesser amount from Aus- tralia. Other large purchasers of for- eign wheat will be India and Paki- stan. Largest Transactions 'But by far the greatest purchase --and the largest transaction of its kind in the history of the world- is that just negotiated by Russia with Canada. It calls for 240 million bushels or 6.8 million tons, at a cost of $500 million. Shortly afterward, President John F. Kennedy authorized a United States sale to the Soviet Union of about 160 million bush- els, or some 4 million tons, which would cost the Russians around $250 million. Russia's need evidently is a des- perate one. It also turned to Aus- tralia for another deal which even- tually may involve purchase of another 1.8 million tons or more at a cost of about $200 million. As if that weren't enough, Rus- sia also has gone to West Ger- many, France and Italy to buy the equivalent of 100 million bushels of wheat already milled into flour. This wheat came from the United States and Canada. Commitment Needs Russia not only needs wheat to' cover its own large needs but ap- parently in addition to take care of commitments to East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Uoland and Cuba. These commitments are believed1 to total about four million tons. It has been reported that Czech-1 oslovakia, Hungary and Bulgaria are also seeking to buy sizable quantities from the United States. Russia's wheat deals alone al-' ready have produced some sweep- ing effects and could produce somex important others. They include: -A huge shot in the arm to Canadian economy. -The possibility of even greater trade, including many other com- modities, between Russia and the ; l actions. This has been running about $2.5 billion annually. --A possible propaganda vic- tory, in which wheat deals could be held up alongside previous So- viet claims that Communism of- fers a better system for producing the necessities of life than the West's free enterprise. -A tremendous outlet for huge United States and Canadian sur- pluses of wheat. Record Breaking Harvest The .Canadian wheat harvest this year was a record breaker- 720 million bushels. The United States already has in storage enough wheat for its own use for the next two years, and th"s year's crop would be suf- ficient to meet needs for another two years. Storage of America's surplus wheat has been a costly affair. The tab for fiscal 1963 is $290 million. Therefore any unusually large extra sales abroad would materially reduce this cost. Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman says United States wheat sales to Russia may boost ex- ports to a billion bushels thisl year.I Shipments to Russia under the' deal approved by President Ken-i nedy would save the United Statesi $200 million in wheat storage costs,1 Freeman said. I North Korea's economic recov- ery since the end of the Korean War has been so impressive that it makes United States-backed South Korea look bad in com-, parison. Although not much is heard about North Korea, from all re- ports the Communist regime has staged a remarkable comeback in the ten years since the end of the Korean War. Reports from the Japanese and other intelligence agencies, claim North Korea is better off in many respects than any other Commun- ist country in Asia. Sung Boastful' North Korean Premier Kim II Sung has been boastful about his' country's progress: pig iron pro- duction in 1962 was at 1.3 million tons, up five-fold from 1956; steel production exceeded 1.1 million tons in 1962 compared to 850,000 tons in 1961; coal production was 14.5 million tons in 1962 com- pared to 13 million tons in 1961. No Crop Failures Unlike Communist China, North Korea seems to have had no crop failures in recent years. The North Korean regime says it is self-sufficient in food, which is is now able to export trucks, trac- tors, machine tools and other equipment to Red China. when North Korea's only exports were raw materials, such as iron ore, coal and fishery products. Electric Lights North Korea also claims that 98 per cent of all its farm fami- lies have electric lights. However, North Korea's econ- omic gains have been achieved by concentrating on heavy industry at the expense of consumer goods. In Pyongyang, North Korean cap- ital, necessities such as shoes and clothing are scaitce and expen- sive. Meat is hard to find as is fruit. However, these items are exported. Wages in the country are low-- from $46-$50 a month for a skilled worker in a steel plant: but hous- ing, electricity and water are cheap. Several factors have contribut- ed to North Korea's growth. Economic Injection One was the huge infusion of economic aid from the Soviet Un- ion, Red China and East Europe. Another was a highly disci- plined Communist leadership that enforced political stability even though the regime had been shaken by repeated purges. South Korea, on the other hand, has suffered from chronic political instability since the over- throw of the Syngman Rhee re- gime in 1960. Also, South Korea has had problems which the North didn't. First, it has nearly 27 million mouths to feed, whereas the popu- lation of North Korea is only about 11 million. Basic Battle Much of the $3.5 billion dollars in economic aid the United States has poured into Korea since 1953 has gone to keep the people alive. Large sums also were used for reconstruction. For example, it cost $300 million to restore South Korea's rail system. Another enormous drain on the South Korean economy is the 600,000-man ROK arn'y, the big- gest armed force in Asia outside Red China. By contrast, North Korea's armed forces amount to only 380.000 men. U.^ e only 380.000 men. North Korean Recovery Outshines Southern Rival SYNGMAN RHEE .. outshined country a remarkable accomplishment, be- cause 75 per cent of its area is hilly or mountainous. The Japanese sources also say that North Korean industry has moved ahead so fast the country This is a switch from the days I t HELD WITHOUT BAIL: I Georgia Attorney Backs 1871 Insurrection Law By The Associated Press I I--- I i West. -Perhaps a further improve- ment in East-West relations and a further reduction in Cold War tensions. -A drop in the United States "balance of payments" deficit; that is, thu difference between in- come and outgo on foreign trans- 1 1 7 I t 1 i j t c z I s r f 1 s r t a r c t: F C c b tl AMERICUS, Da.-State prose- cutor Stephen Pace Jr told three federal judges yesterday that four out-of-state integration leaders encouraged resistance to lawful authority in street marches last summer. This put them in violation of an 1871 Georgia law, attempting to incite insurrection, said Pace, who is Solicitor General for this area. Pace was asked if a group pro- testing school segregation would be offering combined resistance to the law. "Possibly so, yes sir," Pace re- plied.. But he said there would have to be more than a simple march. Encouraged Violations The prosecutor said five men, including the four held under the insurrection statute, had encour- aged breaches of the peace and had resisted arrest. Some of them had assaulted policemen, he added. Pace was the first witness in a hearing on petition for an in- junction against state, county and city authorities to block further prosecution of charges or other interference with integra- tion activity. The prisoners are Donald Har- ris, of New York, a Negro grad- uate of Rutgers University, John Perdew, of Denver, a Harvard tudent; Ralph W. Allen, of Mel- ose, Mass., a student on leave rom Trinity College, and Zev Aelony, of Minneapolis, former tudent at the University of Min- nesota - all charged with trying o incite insurrection-and Thom- s McDaniel, an Americus Negro held in $12,000 bond on lesser harges. Petitions filed by attorneys for he men seek injunctions against Pace, State Safety Director Lowell 'onner, the mayor and city coun- ;ilmen, Police Chief Ross Chain- liss, Sheriff Fred D. Chappell and ,he City of Americus. Charge Officials The officials are charged in the omplaint with depriving citizens softest oxford that ever cradled a foot. 1194 CAMPUS MAST'S SHOP . F New glove-lined Clinic, so light - so right for young women in white. Get arch-cushioned comfort in the JAILED WITHOUT BOND-These four men are currently facing trial on charges of attempting to in- cite insurrection in Georgia. They are (from left to right): Donald Harris, Ralph W. Allen, John Perdew and Zev Aelopy. 619 East Liberty NO 2-0266 -i -B NATURE OF SCRIPTURES DISCUSSED BY NORTHSIDE PRES In order to maintain its identity as the community of the redeemed, t h e Church needs an objective link between its contemporary self and \the original Church. This link is provided in the ' Scriptures, which are the Divine witness to the origin and development of the Church. These docu- ments were inspired by the Holy Spirit during the period of the early development of the Church, and bear witness to God's communcative acts, and to the conditions under which they were given. Thus, the Scriptures are the Church's source of understanding the basic theological scene as it prepares for worship. The Scriptures' also provide the Church with insights into God's perspectives. They further in- dicate the direction the Church may take in fulfilling its mis- sion and preserving its identity. Is the Bible the verbally-in- spired Word of God? Can the Church conceive of its Scrip- tures in other terms? How are the Scriptures to be employed by the Church? Members of the Northside Presbyterian Church, w h i c h C t t t f f t c t " t F of constitutional rights and corr- spiring "to injure, oppress, threat- en and intimidate" them. In his testimony, Pace said he considered an insurrection charge against John Barnum, local Ne- gro leader, because of material distributed by the integrationist Sumter County Movement, of which Barnum is an official. The prosecutor said he himself had sworn out a warrant against Barnum but destroyed it after de- ciding to pursue the matter be- fore a grand jury. He termed as insurrectionary a printed appeal to Negro parents and pupils urging a school boy- cott because truancy violates a state law. No Intention Although he 'estified he had not intended to prosecute the in- surrection charges, Pace said he opposed bond for the four out- of-state men "as prosecuting at- torney for the state." He said he felt he should take the strongest position in behalf of the state. Purpose To Deny Bond' He confirmed published reports that the basic purpose in filing the capital charge was to deny bond to the prisoners. 4sked if he had expressed hope of then negotiat- ng with attorneys for the youths, Pace said "We tried to convince them this was not the right way to go about this." Pace testified he had voiced bjections to Negroes being regis- ered for voting in groups be- cause he believed it was not in the best interest for them to be marched down by someone from outside of our area." Earlier attorney Morris Abram, representing Aelony, charged hat actions by Pace and other fficials were "a scheme to de- prive these people of rights se- cured by the constitution." "The point is that these state courts are operating as a sham and that what has happened here is that this is a 20th century ran- At the University, Voice in protest of the unlawful arrests of civil rights leaders in Ame- ricus, is planning a rally and picket of the Federal Building in Detroit on Nov. 7. In an at- tempt to encourage similar ral- lies across the nation. Voice has sent letters and articles to 200 college newspapers. Several other schools are staging ral- lies on Nov. 7. The demonstration is co-- sponsored by the University Fri dti of thw Stnnn d that is. leave the county, leave the state." As attorneys fought to prove state, county and city officials had conspired to deprive citizens of constitutional rights, Sallie Mae Durham, a 14-year-old Negro girl, testified she was struck by a policeman when arrested in a civil rights demonstration more than three months ago. Integration Suits The Federal Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit is presently hearing suits against interference with integration activities as well as the suit attempting to free the five men. She said police officers at the city and county jail refused to give her a bandage or an aspirin. FRIDAY, NOV. 1, 8:00 P.M. FIRESIDE CHAT led by Tom Marony, "Wherever White' and Black Meet, There is a Denial of Christian Justice." SATURDAY, NOV. 2 DUNKERS' HOUR after the Northwestern game. 5:30 P.M. HOMECOMING DINNER SUNDAY, NOV. 3 COMMUNION BREAKFAST after 9:30 Mass. Speaker-Rev. James Sheehan, What is the Catholic Impact in the Struggle for Civil Rights." o 0 o r O . y 0 O " NEWMAN CENTER 331 Thompson [nenus or theL1A! tuUa LNon- Miss Durham said she was con- violent Coordinating Commit- fined in a small place which was tee. not big enough to lie down in. "She has not been permitted som system." Abram said in an to make bail," County Attorney argument to the court. Warren Fortson told the judges. "These people are being held He explained that she was in cus- and offered bail only if they give tody of the juvenile court and the up their Constitutional rights - judge had been sick. ----- Y'esN .. ,.Say Pfeiffer NOW IN I U I IT'S! COMING I I I .w