AY, OCTOBER 4, 1960 THE MIlCHIUGAN DAILY AY, OCTOBER 4, 1960 THE MICHIGAN DAILY jr- All H ammarskj old New Khrushch Rebuffs .v Tirade. SNehru Rises To Defend Australia Proposes New Summit Talks UNITED NATIONS (OP)-- Pre- mier Nikita S. Khrushchev mount- ed a powerful new offensive yes- terday against Dag Hammarsk- jold and ran into a defiant. re- buff from the United Nations Secretary-General, Khrushchev challenged Ham- marskJold to resign. He also -AP Wrephato threatened to ignore UN peace- raereid making machinery unless Ham- gansted marskJold's jobi s abolished and replaced by a three-man execu- tive,armed with veto powers. Hammarskold, to a tremen- dous ovation from most of the members in the 98-nation General News Assembly, said it was not the big powers who need the UN, but all the others. He retorted in his nidup fighting speech: To Remain ciated Press "I shall remain in my post IONS - Soviet during the term of my office as a chev said last- servant of the organization, in the meet President interests of all those other na- vided that the tions, as long as they (he stress- dmits that the ed the word "they") wish me to and the RB 47 do so." s acts." The dramatic development came made the state- shortly after India's Prime Min- to five neutralist ister Jawarahl Nehru lent his oduced a resolu- powerful voice as an outstanding d Nations urging neutralist leader to defense of the ng between him present structure of the UN's peace-making machinery. The Indian leader also brushed The Guatemalan aside Khrushchev's remarks cold- elgium, Mauricio shouldering the possibility of a ed yesterday and new meeting of the Soviet pre- ing smuggle $4 mier with President Eisenhower. pure heroin into Nehru said, in a major policy speech, that Eisenhower had not on defies the entirely rejected the idea and add- its magnitude," ed: reau head George Open Door IAMMARSKJOLD TALKS BACK - United Nations Secretary-General Dag Hamm Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, after the Russian launched a new campaign present UN system. 11 I I I I I I I I II HOUSE of VENUS Makes YOU More Beautiful Keep the right weigt~t in the right places through guaranteed spot reducing ... slenderizing . or supervised weight gaining programs of House of Venus. Visits arranged for your cmo- venience. 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Club-swinging police and spe- cial security men broke up the mob before it could reach the Elysee Palace, de Gaulle's official residence. There were some injur- ies and arrests. The tumult followed an earlier peaceful demonstration by right- wing groups at the tomb of the French unknown soldier. The demonstrators demanded strong- er government action against the nationalist Algerian rebels and protested the recent public "Mani- festo of The 121" in which some leading French intellectuals en- couraged young Frenchmen to dodge military duty in Algeria. March on Palace The march on the Presidential Palace was led by about 2,500 war veterans whose ranks were swelled to about 10,000 as they poured down the broad Champs Elysees into a side street leading toward de Gaulle's residence. The direction was soon taken over by the youths, many of them members of the Young Nation movement. Agitators from the movement placed themselves at the head of the marchers and with anti-rebel slogans gathered support from onlookers. Police Watch Police lining the Champs Ely- sees watched impassively as the mob grew. Men and women scur- ried from the sidewalks to join in the demonstration and motor- ists honked horns in the five syllable "Algerie Francaise" sig- nal. De Gaulle's policy of self-deter- mination for Algeria has of late been the target of increasing crit- -lcism from both the left and right. Test Control Plan Offered GENEVA (M) - The United States proposed yesterday that a nuclear test ban control system begin to operate with the instal- lation of the first checking de- vices on Soviet, British and Amer- ican territory. United States Delegate Charles C. Stelle offered this addition to a global control plan outlined by Britain last week at the Big Three nuclear test ban conference. So- viet Delegate Seymon K. Tsarap- kin said he would study the pro- posal. "Each control post and each other facility shall be put into operation in whole or in part as it is installed and the whole system shall be fully operational within six years after the treaty is sign- ed," the American proposal said. UNITED NATIONS (P) -King Hussein I of Jordan yesterday accused the Soviet Union of try- ing to wreck the United Nations, and the United Arab'Republic of seeking to destroy his Hashemite kingdom. In a speech to the 98-nation Notes Test WASHINGTON (P)-The head of the Atomic Energy Commission said yesterday that in the ab- sence of any proof to the contrary "I can only surmise" that the Russians are proceeding with un- derground nuclear tests. AEC Chairman John A. McCone acknowledged he has no evidence the Russians are continuing test- ing, saying "there is no instru- mentation from which evidence could be gotten." But, he told a news conference, it ;would be relatively easy and inexpensive for Russia to go ahead if she wished. "The detection chances would be virtually nil, and the advances to be gained would be substan- tial," McCone said. The AEC chairman said he feels the United States should proceed with underground nu- clear test explosions to perfect' a system for detecting such below- ground blasts. PAPER-BOUND BOOKS 50 Publishers Represented PROMPT SERVICE On Special Orders OVERBECK'S BOOKSTORE GOTHIC FILM SOCIETY The first of this year's programs, featuring Ingmar Bergman's THE NAKED NIGHT ("Sawdust & Tin- sel"), Sweden, 1954, will be given this Monday, Oct. 10, at 8 P.M., in Rackham Amphitheatre. Admission is by subscription only; a full subscription to all 10 pro- grams costs $5.00. Checks or mon- ey orders may be sent to 2396 S. State, Ann Arbor; subscriptions may also be obtained before the showings. For further information, call NO 2-9359 or NO 2-6685; or watch for detailed announcement in this Friday's Daily. ADDRESSES UNITED NATIONS: Hussein Attacks Soviet Union L. 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NEW YORK-The government yesterday asked a federal court to set aside the reelection of National Maritime Union President Joseph Curran, charging there were im- proprieties in the election. BOSTON (-The income tax trial of industrial Bernard Gold- fine was delayed yesterday until tomorrow while the Court of Ap- peals considers a petition for a writ of mandamus which would postpone the trial. Spaak Requests Unity for NATO WASHINGTON (') -- NATO Secretary-General Paul Henri Spaak said yesterday Soviet Pre- mnier Khrushchev's outbursts at the United Nations emphasize the necessity for the 15 NATO coun- tries to stick together. He made the comment to news- men after conferring an hour and a half with acting Secretary of State Dillon on long range plans to strengthen the North Atlantic Alliance. Spaak said that progress is be- ing made in working out a new 10-year plan for NATO which will set the long range objectives in the political as well as military fields. "The door is still open for con- sideration, and the President has expressed his deep anxiety to help in the lessening of international tensions." But Australia suddenly propos- ed a new four-power Summit con- ference as soon as practical as a substitute for the Eisenhower- Khrushchev meeting proposed by the neutralists. This move, pre- sented as an amendment to the neutralist resolution, complicated the approach to a vote on the whole matter of new top level talks, despite pressure of the neu- trals for prompt action. -&V N , No telltai9 traces... EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper It's easy to flick off your mistakes on Eaton's Corrasable Bond. Make a pass with a pencil eraser and typing errors are gone-like magic-no error evidence left. Corrisable has an exceptional surface-erases without a trace. Once does it-there's no need to retype. Saves time; money, too. The perfect paper for perfection-erasable Corrisable. @-- I I, SIZE CORRECTION to advertisement of r ! 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