THE M T.Y e Committee Move Seems To Doom Tax WASHINGTON (IP)-The Senate Finance Committee dealt an apparent death blow yesterday to all hopes for 1963 passage of a tax- cut bill. Holding to the deliberate schedule advocated by its chairman, Sen. Harry F. Byrd (D-Va), the committee set Dec. 13 as the windup date for its hearings on a House-passed measure to slice $11 billion from the nation's federal tax bill for 1964. A Dec. 13 end to hearings, which already have run four weeks; means only a week would remain before the holiday recess which starts Dec. 20 and runs to Jan. 2. Based on all past records of tax-handling in the Senate, a week would be far from enough time to complete Home Sees Tory Victory PERTH, Scotland (R) - British Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas- Home asserted yesterday his elec- tion to the House of Commons showed the tide is turning for his hard-pressed Conservative party. His view was challenged by La- borites who claim they are going to return to power in elections next year. Laborites pointed to their vic-, tory in the industrial district of Luton, the other seat in the House of Commons contested in the two special elections Thursday. A Con- servative had held that seat. There were boos and jeers for his departed Laborite opponent and some heckling for himself when the 60-year-old prime minis- ter made a victory speech on the steps of the courthouse in this city in central Scotland. Kinross and West Perthshire district gave Home a parliamen- tary seat by a 9,328-vote margin over his nearest opponent, a Lib- eral. He resigned the peerage and quit the House of Lords two weeks ago to make the race so that he could lead his new government personally from the House of Com- mons. Sii' Alec declared the election constituted "a decisive vote of con- fidence in the government." A few hecklers shouted: "What about Luton?" But Sir Alec kept right on smil- ing and waving and claimed the tide had now turned in favor of the Conservatives. World News Roundup___ By The Associated Press TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras - The Honduran military govern- ment announced yesterday it has uncovered revolutionary plotting by Liberal party members, "Com- munist agitators and some work- ers and students." The military overthrew President Ramon Vil- leda Morales, a Liberal, Oct. 3. The announcement threatened a severe crackdown unless plotting ends. * * * BOGOTA - Colombia will ask that the United States be includ- ed in a proposal to create a nu- clear free zone for Latin America, -Foreign Minister Fernando Go- mez Martinez said yesterday. * * * NEW YORK-The New York stocks moved up sharply yesterday. The Dow-Jones Averages showed 30 industrials up 5.15, 20 railways up 1.64, 15 utilities up .24, and 65 stocks up 1.71. Senate passage, let alone to com- promise any differences with the House. Byrd opposes any tax cut with- out a balancing reduction in fed- eral spending. A principal objec- tive of the conservative southerner is to prevent Senate action until after President John F. Kennedy submits in January his budget for fiscal 1965. Working toward this end, Byrd has called 70 witnesses, another 100 are on the waiting list and he has said all who apply will be heard by the committee. I After yesterday's committee ac- tion, Sen. Vance Hartke (D-Ind) told newsmen he would move in the committee later this month to speed up the hearings to make pos- sible action this year. But a sim- ilar move last month failed and most observers figure this motion would meet a similar fate. 'officials Admit Wiret appin .During Probe WASHINGTON (M-)-Three State Department officials now have acknowledged to Senate investi- gators that the telephone wiring in Otto F. Otepka's office was rigged to permit eavesdropping on conversations in his office. However, they said no actual in- terception of conversations took place, none was authorized and the wiring was discontinued within 48 hours after a test of its feasibility proved unsuccessful. The officials said their state- ments were intended to amplify and clarify earlier sworn testi- mony to the Senate Internal Se- curity Subcommittee in which they denied knowledge of the installa- tion of any listening devices in Otepka's office. The subcommittee, headed by Sen. James 0. Eastland (D-Miss), yesterday made public the state- ments and the earlier testimony without comment. Otepka, a veteran State De- partment security officer, was no- tified Tuesday of his dismissal on charges of unbecoming conduct. Among other things, he was accus- ed of supplying the subcommittee with information from confiden- tial employe loyalty files. Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D-Conn), the subcommittee's vice-chairman, in a Senate speech Tuesday pro.- tested Otepka's dismissal as an affront to the Senate. He said then that the StateDepartment had installed a tap on the secur- ity officer's telephone. "Although a State Department official has denied under oath that this was done, the subcommittee has proof that the tap was install- ed," Dodd added. GOP Plans Grass-Roots Dixie Drive By The Associated Press CHARLESTON, S.C. - Republi- can leaders hammered out plans yesterday for organizing at the precinct level throughout the South as the way to win Dixie in the 1964 presidential election. "We are building a grass roots organization that will win this time," said Raymond V. Hum- phreys of Washington, a national GOP strategist who has spent most of the year in the South. Opening two days of strategy talks, Republican leaders from 13 states exuded confidence in this prelude to an all-out push for a bloc of electoral votes which they hope will be the springboard to the White House. Ripe - Obviously, top-echelon Republi- cans consider Dixie ripe for pluck- ing because of widespread dis- content with President John F. Kennedy's policies on civil rights, spending and the cold war. The big hitch, of course, is the question of whether Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz), very popular in the South, will get the GOP presiden- tial nomination. Humphreys is director of educa- tion and training for the Republi- can National Committee. He said in an interview that precinct orga- nization in the South is moving along rapidly with traditionally Democratic Mississippi and Ala- bama both organized. Goldwater's chief opponent, New York Gov. Nelson A. Rocke- feller, opened the nation's first presidential campaign headquar- ters for the 1964 elections at Con- cord, N.H., and proclaimed he would "fight every step of the way to get that nomination." A cheering, placard - waving throng of more than 350 support- ers was on hand as Rockefeller wound up his first two days of his campaign for New Hampshire's first - in - the - nation presidential primary March 10. Underdog He conceded that he is the un- derdog right now, but said that he would criss-cross New Hamp- shire many times over in the months ahead to overtake Gold- water's apparent lead. Rockefeller has tried without success to set up a meeting with publisher William Loeb of the Manchester Union Leader. The governor's press secretary said that Loeb informed Rocke- feller he "would not be in Man- chester today but would be in Pride's Crossing,.Mass.," where the publisher lives. Loeb's newspaper is backing Goldwater. Endorse New NATO Force PARIS (AP)-Members of parlia- ment from both sides of the At- lantic gave qualified approval yes- terday to proposals for a multi- national nuclear force under the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion. Delegates to the ninth annual NATO Parliamentarians' Confer- ence sidestepped a definite poi- tion on the controversial multi- lateral force. But they called for the coordination of nuclear re- sources and said NATO should evolve a system of joint political control of existing nuclear weap- ons. By The Associated Press BERLIN-The three Western powers sent convoys along the dis- puted highway to Berlin yesterday to test Soviet intentions and all got through without trouble. Lt. Ivan Scott Lewis, commander of a British convoy from the Prince of Wales' own regiment, said on arrival in West Berlin, "It was noticeable that the Russian attitude was much easier." Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev warned this week that the three Western powers must respect what he called Soviet control procedures on the autobahn from West Ger- many to Berlin. He predicted there / would be more holdups along thei tes V iet 110-mile highway unless these So- viet rules of the road are respect- ed. A "-"I"1 d U. S.N.S.A. Co-Operative, Inc. 5,000 common, par value $5.00 7,500 preferred-A, par value $10.00 2,000 preferred-B, par value $100.00 COPIES OF THE PROSPECTUS MAY BE OBTAINED AT 343 S. Dearborn Chicago, 111. 333 Nickels Arcade Ann Arbor, Mich. 3457 Chestnut St. Phila., Penn. DEAN RUSK ---freedom of access RENDEZVOUS: Views Red Space Feat By JOHN WEILER The recent Russian launching of a steerable satellite shows signifi- cant progress toward a rendezvous in space, Capt. Robert Finley of the Department of Air Science said yesterday. He noted that the Russians need only to launch another steerable satellite in order to be able to ac- complish the rendezvous. Capt. Finley said that unlike the United States earth satellites, which can only change position inside their one orbit, the Russian satellite can change its entire orbit. He said that the ability to ren- dezvous or dock in space will be needed in attempting a moon shot. Visitors to Satellites "Militarily, it could lead to pow- er for the country first able to do it." Not only could the nation achieve meetings between its own space objects, but it could also rendezvous with other nation's satellites, Capt. Finley said. By attaching one of their satel- lites to an American satellite, the Soviets could learn how it is con- structed. He said that although the Unit- ed States has never steered a sat- ellite in an earth orbit, the Sin- com satellite and the Mariner II were both sterred in space. Duet inSpace Capt. Finley added that the United States Gemini program is directed essentially toward man- ned space rendezvous. A government .report indicates that rendezvous in space for the United States can mean that this country will be able to insert a space station into orbit. This space station would serve as an experi- mental base for operations in space. Although this Russian shot was unmanned, he commented, a try might be made soon with another manned shot with the attempt to rendezvous and dock the two cap- sules. Capt. Finley noted that there is some reason to believe the Rus- sians tried this on their last dual spoce shot, in which two cosmo- nauts were orbited simultaneously. In any case, the Russians' abil- ity to steer their satellites shows' that their capabilities should not be ignored, he concluded. Rusk Warns USSR At a Washington press confer- ence, Secretary of State Dean Rusk let the Soviet Union know that the United States will con- tinue to insist upon free access to+ West Berlin.1 Describing as "serious" the re- cent incidents on the autobahn,' Rusk expressed b e li e f that Khrushchev shares this view. At the same time, Rusk criticiz- ed Congress for its deep cuts in foreign aid and suggested that the tendency "to legislate foreign poli- cy" denies the President the flex-1 ibility he needs to protect United States interests.I The news conference was the first one by a secretary of state to be carried live by several radio networks.+ Rusk conceded that the inci-I dents, in which American army1 convoys were held up on the auto-1 bahn, sometimes look artificial be-1 cause they involve only questions of procedure. But that's not the real issue, he added. "The point is not whether a par- ticular tailgate is lowered," he ex- plained, referring to a Russian re- quest that the Americans lower the tailgates of the vehicles to allow a head-count of troops. Access Crucial "The point is freedom of access1 to West Berlin." This access, he said, is "utterly fundamental," and Warned thatr Russian insistence upon changing1 control procedures on the highway "could be converted into a power to interrupt access to Berlin." Rusk invited the Soviets to1 "work out better arrangements" on Germany and Berlin based on Western proposals. Rusk conceded he has no ready explanation for the incidents. He said Soviet actions on the highway appear "to cut across and interrupt a good many other things that they have been say- ing. It is very hard to know what is in the mind of the other side. I would just have to say I do not understand it." By The Associated Press SAIGON - A senior American military spokesman said yesterday "all reports indicate Vietnamese officer morale throughout the en- tire country has risen strikingly" since the Ngo Dinh Diem regime was overthrown last weekend. The spokesman told a news briefing that at junior officer lev- els in particular the "coup d'etat was greeted with widespread emo- tion." If this boost in morale can be translated into action against the Viet Cong, "our timetable for vic- tory against Communist guerrillas should be shortened," the spokes- man declared. He said the United States high command in Viet Nam would con- tinue to press for new approaches to the war in various fields, par- ticularly in effective civic action by armed forces. Aiso, Nationalist China an- nounced it has recognized the new government of South Viet Nam. In other developments, Father Cao Van Luan was reinstated as rector of Hue University. The Roman Catholic educator was removed from his post in Au- gust by the Diem regime. His re- moval was followed by widespread protest demonstrations by students and his reappointment to the post was regarded as an important con- cession by the new government to popular sentiment. Father Luan, 49, had been di- rector of the university in Hue, 400 miles north of Saigon, since the school was founded in 1958. 5706 S. University* Chicago, III. 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M1'Jty # r' ;:,, ;: 4; ''' ,° s PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH Meeting in the Ann Arbor Y.M.-Y.W.C.A at 5th and Williams Rev. Jesse Northweather, Pastor Phone 668-9894 SUNDAY- 9:45 a.m. Sunday School. 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. 6:30 p.m. Training Union. 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION Meeting in Room 528D in basement of S.A.B. Monday-7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Bible Study. Thuarsday--5:10 to 5:40 p.m. Vesper Service. ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 North Division Phone NO 2-4097 SUNDAY- 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M. Holy Communion and Sermon Breakfast at Canterbury House 1 1:00A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon. 7:00 P.M. Evening Prayer and commentary. TUESDAY- 9:15 A.M. Holy Communion. WEDNESDAY-I 7:00 A.M. Holy Communion. FRIDAY- 12:10 P.M. Holy Communion. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Woshtenow Ave. NO 2-4466 Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm Brown, Virgil Janssen. SUNDAY Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 A.M. and 12 Noon. PresbyterianCampus Center located at the. Church. Staff: Jack Borckordt and Patricia Pickett Stoneburner. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPELt AND STUDENT CENTER (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred T. Scheips, Pastorx John Koenig, Vicar Sunday at 9:45 and 11:15: Services, with Holy Communion.. S e r m a n: "Man's Whither, Whence, and Why." Sunday at 9:45 and 11:15: Bible Study. Be- gin study of Ephesians. Sunday at 6:00: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Students, Supper and Program, with Prof. Kenneth Pike as the speaker. Wednesday at 10 p.m.: Midweek Devotion. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL (National Lutheran Council) Hill Street at South Forest Avenue Dr. Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor. SUNDAY 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Worship Services - Speaker: Miss Esther Barnhart, Missionary from Japan. 7:00 p.m. Program: "The Selection of Ap- propriate Music for Worship Services." WEDNESDAY-7:30 p.m. Vespers. BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 South Fourth Ave. Rev. Ernest Klaudt, Pastor Rev. A. C. Bizer, Associate Pastor 9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Worship Service. 9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Church School. 7:00 p.m. Student Guild. 9:30 a.m. German Worship Service in Chapel. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. For Transportation Call 2.2756 9:30 A.M. Sunday School. 11:00 A.M. Sunday Morning Service. WESLEY FOUNDATION AND FIRST METHODIST CHURCH State and Huron Streets 663-5560 Minister-Hoover Rupert Campus Minister-Eugene Ransom Associate Campus Minister-Jean Robe SUNDAY Morning Worship at 9:00 and 11:15 a.m. "The Poverty of Busyness," Dr. Rupert. 10:15 a.m.-Student Seminar, Methodist So- cial Creed, Pine Room. TUESDAY 8:30-11:00 p.m.-Open House, Miss Jean Robe's apartment.- WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel, follow- ed by breakfast. 5:10 p.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel. 6:00 p.mn.-Wesley Grads, Supper and Pro- gram, Pine Room.G"Face to Face," Self- Identity of the Young Adult. CAMPUS CHAPEL Forest at Washtenaw The Rev. Donald Postema Morning Worship-10:00 a.m. Vesper Service-7:00 p.m. Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST W. Stadium at Edgewood Across from Ann Arbor High John G. Makin, Minister SUNDAY 10:00 A.M. Bible School 11:00 A.M. Regular Worship 6:00 P.M. Evening Worship WEDNESDAY 7:30 P.M. Bible Study Transportation furnished for al services- Call NO 2-2756 it NOW PLAYING (Fri. & Sa PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROG presents APA in ft.) RAM A free reading room is maintained at 306 E. !_hrt Re,,A;,,, ,room Ihours are10.00 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER - ;c - II I