l, W "I firer , ; IF, PAGE Macmillan Proposes PI RIGHTISTS SUFFER DEFE AT: os overnment Orders Cease-Fire For Limited Arms AT GENEVA CONFERENCE:' Britain Outlines Test Ban Plan ,. GENEVA (A) - Britain yester- day presented the Big Three nu- clear test ban conference a three- phase plan for a global network of control posts to police a test ban treaty. British delegate Sir Michael Wright said it was a six-year project that would create the basis p for a working control system with- in its first two years. The plan would provide for about 180 control posts, including 10 ships to ply the oceans and sample water an air for radio- activity. The first phase would cover the Northern Hemisphere, including the United States, Britain, the Soviet Union and the Pacific nu- clear test islands. Eventually there would be 20 control posts on the Soviet mainland and one on the Soviet island of Kamchatka.. Soviet 'delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin immediately protested that 15 would be enough on Soviet territory. He also urged that Aus- tralia and Africa be included in the first phase as nuclear test areas. The first phase - of four years - would provide for the setting up of 36 control posts, including 20 on islands and some on ships. The second phase - of one year - would complete the north- ern Hemisphere network and startj the installation of controls in theI Southern Hemisphere. The third and final phase would complete the control system in the Southern Hemisphere. It was suggested that the first phase be split up into two two- year periods. First 10 control posts would be set up on Soviet territory, 12 in the United States and on its is- lands, and 14 in Britain and its possessions. The remaining two-year period would be used to fill out remain- ing control gaps in territories of these original parties to the test ban treaty. Wright did not pinpoint the location for any of the posts. Tsarapkin said he found the number envisaged for the Soviet Union excessive because it has large areas where no earthquakes occur which could be confused with nuclear explosions. Dexter Cites Uncertainty As State's Big Problem William D. Dexter, assistant state attorney general, said yes- terday that Michigan's greatest tax problem is not the lack of current revenue, but uncertainty over the future. Speaking to attorneys attending taxation section's meetings at the Attempt Fails To Use Power Of Hydrogen LONDON (A--Britain's second big attempt to harness the pow- er of the hydrogen bomb has been abandoned because it cost too much money and manpower. The nation's Atomic Energy Authority announced Monday that, plans to build a revolutionary research machine code-named ICSE have been scrapped. convention of the state bar asso- ciation in Gran4 Rapids, Dexter pointed out problems that an at- torney might have in this area. Tax uncertainty is extremely disturbing to business. How can an attorney now advise a busi- ness that might want to come in- to Michigan? The uncertainty is more detrimental to us than any of the tax plans that have been proposed." Dexter named two major prob- lems in the state's taxation pro- gram: The fact that Michigan taxes on business are not com- petitive with other states and can not attract business into the state, and that any added in- come to the state or lowered busi- ness taxes must be made up from personal taxes. "The pressure to reduce taxa- tion in Michigan conflicts with the very real need of government for additional revenues," Dexter, said. Ban RI1I Requests UN To Establish New-Group Expert Committee Would Study Issues j UNITED NATIONS (P)-British' Prime Minister Harold A. Mac- Millan proposed a limited ap- proach to disarmament yesterday - but indications were his pro- posal, like all those before it, would bog down in the old quarrel over controls. He told the United Nations General Assembly it should set up a group of experts to solve the technical problems of stopping the spread of armaments guarantee- ing against surprise attack and gradually cutting down all arms - among them problems of con- trol. He denied that to do this would mean the "control without dis- armament" that the Soviet Union has accused the West of seeking. Khrushchev Shouts But Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, clearly still skeptical, at one point shouted: "You accept disarmamentand we will accept any control." Macmillan's proposal was sig- nificant in that he made it only hours before a conference with Khrushchev. It was the most elaborate scheme any Western leader yet had presented to the Assembly with the object of getting dis- armament negotiations resumed. No Comment Macmillan failed to express an opinion on Khrushchev's pending' resolution to add India, Indonesia, Ghana, Mexico and the United Arab Republic to the 10-nation East-West disarmament committee that the Russians walked out on in Geneva last June 27. He also withheld his view on Khrushchev's revised version of the year-old Soviet plan for general -nd complete disarma- ment, which the Russian leader put before the Assembly last week. Macmillan indicated his pro- posal intended as a supplement .rather than a competitor to others - "a modest step" toward pro- gress. He said the report of the proposed experts' group would be of great advantage to any dis- armament negotiating body. Recalls Geneva He recalled that the current American-British-Soviet talks in Geneva for controlled cessation of nuclear tests began with a re- port from an experts' group setting out a possible control system. "We should," he said, "apply this principle to the wider field of disarmament. This is theybet -perhaps the only - way to make progress.' He proposed that the group work inthese areas: "Preventing the extension of armaments"-keeping outer space from being used for military pur- poses, halting the manufacture of ! atomic materials for such purposes and detecting hidden stores of such materials. "Ensuring against a surprise at- tack by one side or the other." "Gradually reducing to a mini- mum all forms of armaments." Macmillan said the Assembly should tell the experts that any measures they might propose "should not give at any stage a significant advantage to either side" and "should provide for ef-I fective verification at all states." HILLEL'S Open to alI hungry persons! Begins SUN., OCT. 2 6 P.M. . . . 1429 Hill St. Tickets $1.00 Member 75c Menu: Juice Corned Beef or Pastrami Sandwich Dill Pickles Potato Chips Soft Drink Dessert -AP Wirephoto AIR SUPPORT -- Rightwing Laotian rebels dropped paratroopers into the beleagured city of Sam Neua earlier this week. Yesterday, the rebels' stronghold fell to Pathet Loa troops who represent the leftiit faction in the three-cornered sruggle going on for power in the Southeast Asian kingdom. VIENTIANE W-) - Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma said yesterday orders have gone out for a cease-fire throughout Laos. The rightist rebel followers of Gen. Phoumi Novosan had just suffered a significant defeat in the northas the general engaged in peace talks at Luang Prabang, the royal capital, with military representatives ofr Souvanna's neu- tralist government. The stronghold of Sam Neua. fell yesterday under a strong at- tack by pro-Communist Pathet Lao rebels, who may have been aided by parachute troops loyal to Souvanna. Souvanna also said Gen. Phou- mi had proposed in the Luang Prabang peace talks that forma- tion of a "Government of National Unity" headed by three leaders in Laos' three-cornered civil war. As it was described to newsmen such a regime would be headed by Souvanna; his half-brother, Prince Souvanna Vong, leader of the Pathet Lao; and Prince Boun Oum, political head of Phoumi's rebel regime. Asked if he would favor such a_ government, Souvanna said "I favor any solution which will bring peace and order back to Laos." Souvanna appeared confident the Pathet Lao would come to terms with him. There was no evidence, however, this hope was based on solid grounds. If Pathet Lao guerrillas are dominant in Sam Neua, which held them off for months, they could be in a strong bargaining position in future peace talks. U I PA PER-BOUND 50 PubliUhers Rcpresented PROMPT SERVICE On Special Orders OVERBECI( BOO KST OR E , 4' ,' i -I limited time only complete catalog 40 /% OFF ;, , SHELLEY BERMAN with the CUMBERLAND THREE WED., OCT. 12 8:30 P.M. ANN ARBOR HIGH Tickets $4.50-3.50- 2.75-2.25-1.75 (tax incl.) On Sale At THE DISC ,SHOP & THE MUSIC CENTER OPENING 31st SEASON NEXT WEEK ~t~'be44 a t 7l ft by SIDNEY KINGSLEY Directed by JERRY SANDLER Winner of DRAMA CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD Richard Watts, Jr.-New York Post-"Powerful modern drama." R. Coleman-New York Daily Mirror-" 'Darkness' prints a moral for today." O T r T OCT. 6, 7, 8 LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE BOX OFFICE OPENS MONDAY, Oct. 3, 10:30 A.M. ALL SEATS RESERVED Thursday $1.50 - Friday and Saturday $1.75 .....-- ...............-...------......- SEASON TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE BELL, BOOK, AND CANDLE Nov. 3, 4, 5 JOAN OF LORRAINE Jan. 12, 13, 14 THE FLOWERING PEACH Feb. 23, 24, 25 OUR TOWN March 30, 31, April 1 ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE- I P. O. Box 87 I Ann Arbor, Michigan I 4f Enclosed is $ for seats. Thursday Friday Saturday Name IAddress City Season tickets are Thurs. $6 or Fri. or Sat. $7. 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