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A-8 THE EVENING STAR Washington, 0. C., Monday, April 22, 19t3 li. S. Hopes Mindszenty Will End Legation Stay BUDAPEST, Hungary, April 22 (APi —Government officials, churchmen and foreign diplo mats agree it is time for Hun gary's Jozsef Cardinal Minds zenty to end his 6‘4-year refuge in the United States Legation here and move to Rome. A public survey on the ques tion would be impossible, since recent diplomatic moves to find a solution to the Roman Cath olic cardinal’s position have not been mentioned in the Communist controlled Hungar ian press. Relatively few Hungarians are aware that Vienna’s Fran ztskus Cardinal Koenig came here Thursday to talk with Cardinal Mindszenty and pre sumably suggest that he ac cept a papal invitation to go to the Vatican. But those in the know clearly hope that 71- year-old Cardinal Mindszenty will follow this suggestion. The legation has been in an , awkward position ever since Cardinal Mindszenty sought asylum there on November 4, 1956, when Soviet tanks moved in to crush the Hungarian re volt. Even American officials have admitted the extended i asylum granted to the Hun- i garian primate is not in strict accordance with United States diplomatic custom. But at the same time the Souvanna Phouma Seen Able to Hold Laos Line Malaya’s Deputy Prime Min ister sees the troubles in Laos as evidence that Communists •’tried to subvert" even "if you try to work with them." Tun Abdul Razak bin Hus sain, on a goodwill visit to Washington, told reporters to day that Laotian Premier Sou vanna Phouma is “doing his best and should be able to hold it.” An American show of strength in the Gulf of Siam might help to slow Red advances In Laos, he told a questioner, but “it is not so much a show of strength as settling the situation." The Malayan official's prin cipal mission here is to broaden understanding of the proposed federation of Malaysia, which is to be composed of Malaya, Brunei, North Borneo, Sarawak U. S. Says Red Stand Causes Geneva Impasse GENEVA, April 22 (AP>.—| The United States said today, the nuclear teat ban talks have | reached an impasse because' the Soviet Union refuses to en gage in meaningful negotia tions. United States Ambassador Charles C. Stelle told the 17- nation disarmament confer out the last 18 months has re ence the Soviet Union through fused to make known its views on the basic issues of a test ban treaty. “A delegation which does not make its view known, and par ticularly with respect to the basic questions which it has admitted must be agreed be fore a treaty can be reached, is not giving evidence of a se rious approach to the question of negotiating a nuclear test ban,” Mr. Stelle said. Tsarapkin’s Stand He recalled that Soviet Dele gate Semyon A. Tsarapkin re fuses all discussion of on-site inspection unless the West first accepts the Soviet offer of three inspections a year. The West insists on a minimum of seven. Mr. Tsarapkin spent nearly an hour restating the Commu nist allegation that the West ern powers originally asked for three inspections and then backed out when the Russians accepted. This has been repeat edly denied by Mr. Stelle and other Western speakers. Mr. Tsarapkin again charged that the Western powers were stalling to conceal their con tinuing development and build up of nuclear arms. Mr. Stelle said Mr. Tsarapkin went "to extravagant lengths and absurd depths” to misrep resent the American position and added: "This balderdash reflects the general merit of the arguments he has used to establish his case.” Briton Charges Contempt British Minister of State Joseph Oodber said Mr. Tsa rapkin clearly was "treating this conference with con tempt.” The United Arab Republic ADVERTISEMENT AGE 50 to 80? 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The for eign ministers of Malaya, In donesia and the Philippines are i scheduled to meet in Manila in mid-May to discuss the prob . lem. i The deputy prime minister l expressed his satisfaction with the work of 114 American Peace i Corpsmen in Malaya. They are i traveling throughout the coun , try and “doing very well in i deed,” he said, in advising ma : layans on problems of health, education, surveying and rural development. | He said he would not ask for United States military or economic aid during his visit ;' here. Delegate, Abdel FatUh Hassan, disclosed that a memorandum ; of compromise proposals ] worked out by the eight non aligned delegations was shelved because of the opposition of the nuclear powers. The memorandum was said to call for a compromise be tween the three inspections offered by the Russians and the seven inspections demanded by I the West. Mr.. Hassan said the memo randum suggested face-saving formulas.” It was , not formally submitted to the conference, he said, in defer ence to the wishes of the three j nuclear powers. SPEEDOMETER SERVICE Foreign and Domestic BUELL’S SERVICE 111 10th St. N.W. ME. 1-5777 ft«t. H oiK «r« tin <4 vee* | DISTRICT BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION offers you . . . • Accounts insured to SIO,OOO by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. • Savings received by the 20th of the month earn dividends from the Ist of the month. • Postage-free mall service. • Sale of American Express Travelers Cheques and Money Orders. • Sale and redemption of Series E Savings Bonds. • Free cashing of company checks for employees of established area firms. • First trust home loans. HOURS: 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. I Monday through Friday) ©DISTRICT# BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ORGANIZED, 1911 1 Thomas Circle N.W. • Washington 5, D. C. At 14th St., Vermont Avenue and M St. NA. 8-5927 FREE PARKING ADJOINING OFFICE— Sect Gets OK To Enter U. S. Between 200 and 250 mem bers of the Old Believers sect of the Russian Orthodox Church, who have been under pressure from the Soviet Union to return to Russia, have been granted permission to come to the United States from their present homes in the Lake Manyas region of Turkey. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy announced last night that their urgent appeals for admission to the United States have been granted. The prospective immigrants, including 78 children between the ages of I and 7. are de- j scendants of some 5,000 Old] Believers who emigrated from Russia more than 300 years ago and settled on the shores of Lake Manyas. Since 1959, Mr. Kennedy said, the Soviet Union has been pres suring them to return to their "homeland." and about 1,000 of them did go to Russia in 1962. Those remaining want to emigrate, he said, but not to the Soviet Union. “The Boviet pressures on those remaining in Turkey have intensified and the morale of this small group is declining,” Mr. Kennedy said. "Immediate action is required to prevent its complete demoralization.” He said the Tolstoy Founda tion of New York, headed by Miss Alexandra Tolstoy, has undertaken to sponsor the set tlement of the group and their transportation is being ar ranged by the Intergovernmen tal Committee for European Migration. Members of the group will start arriving in about six weeks. The sect split from the Rus sian Orthodox Church in the 17th century in a dispute over rites. Two Kept Running In Clock Collection TULSA, Oltla. (AP). - The sound of the cuckoo is a fa miliar one in the home of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Brighton here. They could easily have a chorus since they own 50 cuc koo clocks, but ever since their collection reached 25 they've kept only two runn’.ig. A quail announces the quarter hour on one, and a cuckoo makes the hourly call. One Black Forest clock is dated 1865 but at least two others are believed to be older. ADVERTISEMENT Sleep Like Log KiptlMseli (tt I Dm Fmir Tit* Btll-nts takkts with hot ntir at M tim. Rial in M until ayn shut, lall-ani tablets rilim ’ stomach H> hut to nccss j stomach acid. No harartul druis. Cot 8011-ant ' today. 55c at drunists. Sonocostal to Soll-ans, oran|taut|, N. v„ tor liberal frit sample. FREE DEMONSTRATION READING DYNAMICS* Read faster and Comprehend better New Dimension in Reading CALL 737-8122 711 14th St. N.W. Mansfield Hits Plan to Bar Mississippi From U. S. Funds Senate Democratic Leader Mansfield took sharp issue to day with the report of the Civil Rights Commission which rec ommended that Federal funds be withheld from Mississippi because of its racial policies.* He told the Senate President Kennedy was correct in say ing Friday that he does not possess the power to follow ; that course and that no Presi dent should have such power. Senator Mansfield pointed out that If a President had such authority and used It In Mississippi It could become a precedent to be employed against other States. Senator Morse, Democrat of Oregon, said he does not think withholding Federal funds woud be the right approach to the Mississippi problem. Bypasses Courts Senator Mansfield argued that withholding Federal funds would establish a “set apart” status for Mississippi and would be felt most deeply by the , ■ ■ Wherever you live in Suburban 1 1 Prince Georges and Montgomery Counties... f 1 4 < r -■■■■ ■ . 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YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD From Gaithersburg to Upper Marlboro... from 1^ the Potomac to the Patuxent... people depend on Suburban Trust for all their banking needs. l' /T Now with thirty-five offices to serve the com- 1 ( r , * munity,. Suburban Trust Company is a strong, |i I^ locally owned, managed and directed bank. 1 •• Indeed, wc are proud to be a part of the impor- yi tant growth and development of these two counties. Isn’t it nice to know your banker is your friend as well as your neighbor at ADMINISTRATION OFFICfi Suburban Trust? 6495 New Hampshire Avenue, Hyattsville, Maryland Suburban Trust ! Company v Ask ] ; , j • 35 friendly community banking offices in Prince Oeorgee end Montgomery Countiee. Phone 588-5000 R*Mourc9M Over 950 Million Dollar* MCMBES rEDCRAL DCPOSIT INSUWANCE COWWONATION wwiiMiimuii jw "n isiumi i— I» mihimii (iii~sivTiTTw«eri»retT-iirMaMMinßeHWrniiiwwrTWMWMWMr^firvißMMMMMM| • Negroes, who comprise about 45 per cent of the Bute’s population. He said it would bypass the courU In determining when the i conduct of a State conflicts ; with the Constitution. Senator Mansfield said Mis sissippi is not the only SUte In which the Government spends more money than It ' Ukes out in Uxes. He said patience and judicial process are the answers to the prob lems Involved in the commis l slon report Attorney Oeneral Robert F. Kennedy, meanwhile, predicted > yesterday that racial disturb ances will continue in the United SUtes for 10 more years before Negroes obtain full : equality- with whites.. 81gn of Progress “This Is not a problem that Is confined to one section," Mr. Kennedy said, and the dls -1 turbances will break out In ! both the South and North. In I fact, he said In a Uped radlo ! television interview (ABC— Issues and Answers), there Is much racial pxejudice In the North perhapa more subtle . . . more sinister than ... In the Bouth.” Mr. Kennedy described the Interracial difficulties as a sign of progress “that the people will not accept the status quo.” The Attorney General said he would not support moves to cut off Federal funds to Mis sissippi or othef Southern SUtes to force equal treatment of the races. “I don’t think that we should treat Mississippi ... as a for eign state that we are going to whip because we don’t hap pen to agree with what they are doing,” he said. Discounts Move Senator Robertson, Democrat of Virginia, said he doubts the success of any move to end the life of the Civil Rights Com mission this year. The commission, which Is- sued its controversial Missis sippi report last week Is sub ject to further congressional action this year to continue in existence. Roy Wilkins, executive secre- Ury of the National Associa tion for the Advancement of i Colored People, since 1955, < outlined his views on the racial : situation in a copyrighted in GILBEYS GIN M th« world agroos on'GILBEY'S, please’!'' % smooth, !S flavorf ul Mi i,.win ,li -.- 1 '■ terview In U. S. News Be World Report. He said the dominant mood of the American Negro is one of imporUnce with the pace of segregation. Mr. Wilkins said, "It’s a mixture of impatience and cynicism” and that the Black Muslims are an outgrowth of this sentiment.