THE MICHIGAN DAILY KHRUSHCHE C I S E SUPER- E PO Says 'Global Rocket' Out-Dates Defenses Russian Leader Also Warns U.S. On Disarmament, Testing, Berlin MOSCOW (P--Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev claimed yesterday the Soviet Union has created a new "global rocket" which is invulnerable to anti-missile weapons and can attack the United States from any direction. The new rocket, he said, out-dates the United States' elaborate radar and warning systems intended to protect it from missiles aimed over the North Pole. He also announced the launching of a new Sputnik, but the official news agency, Tass, indicated it was an unmanned vehicle though it did not specifically say so. The announcement was made before several thousand people Washington Appears Calm Police Raid Radio Station GUATEMALA (M-A radio sta- tion executive said police shot five persons dead yesterday in a raid on a station that made an uncen- sored newscast in this riot-torn city. The incident, bringing the re- ported death toll in demonstra- tions since Tuesday to at least 20, occurred shortly after the ar- my took control of Guatemala City. The military had orders to smash a student-led revolt against Miguel Ydigora's conservative gov- ernment. Marco Tulio Illesca, station manager and president of the As- sociation of Guatemalan Broad- casters, said that when a crowd of 100 persons gathered at the station during the raid the police opened fire. The shootings resulted after an armed forces communique warned Guatemalans the army is prepar- ed "to take extreme measures to fulfill its mission of maintaining order." Meetings 'and gatherings of all types were banned. Algeria Faces New Anarchy Over Accord ALGIERS (M -Algeria tottered toward anarchy and complete breakdown of economic life yes- terday in the imminence of a cease-fire agreement ending the seven-year nationalist revolt. One by one European directed unions and professional organiza- tions called for paralyzing strikes. Officials feared the proclamation of; the cease-fire may trigger a chain of events difficult to con- trol. Well inofrmed sources said the authorities were preparing long lists of Europeans to be herded in- to concentration camps following a cease-fire announcement. Among those reported slated for preven- tive arrest were a number of Eu- ropean reserve officers and poli- tical personalities with pronounc- ed right wing views. When the cease-fire will come was still uncertain. French and rebel negotiators at Evian, France, wound up the longest session of their talks still short of an agree- ment. who came to cheer Khrushchev in his unopposed election campaign in a Moscow district for the Soviet parliament. In his Kremlin speech Khrush- chev declared: -"We will never agree" to the international inspection system proposed by the United States at the 17-nation disarmament con- ference in Geneva.. More Nuclear Tests -The Soviet Union will carry out a new series of nuclear tests if President John F. Kennedy goes on with his plan to conduct at- mospheric tests in'the mid-Pacific in late Ap c -The So t government is not sticking to any "fatal deadlines" for solution of the Berlin problem, and will "spare no time or efforts to, persuade" the West to accept its solution. He declared Americans no long-' er are immune from the conse- quences of war and it would take "a lunatic to trigger off war against" Communist countries. Intercontinental Rocket "Our scientists, and engineers have created a new intercontinen- tal rocket which they call global," he said. "This rocket is invulner- able to anti-missile weapons." He said "United States' brass" had erected a system of radar de- tection and warning against mis- siles across the North Pole, but "the new global rockets can fly around the world in any direction and strike a blow at any set tar- get." The United States detection and warning facilities have lost their importance because "rockets can fly to United States territory from quite a different direction." Titan II Tested Successfully CAPE CANAVERAL (A)-Amer- ica's mightiest war rocket, the Ti- tan TI, successfully flew more than 5,000 miles on its maiden test flight yesterday and bolstered this na- tion's military and space poten- tial. The missile was powered by rev- olutionary new liquid propellants which emitted a rose-colored glow of hot gases instead of the tail of bright flame familiar to most rockets. The towering 103-foot vehicle was topped by the largest warhead ever carried by a United States rocket. -AP Wirephoto "INVULNERABLE"-At a meeting yesterday for electors of the Kalinin electoral district of Moscow, Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev announced that the Soviet Union has created a new "global rocket," invulnerable to anti-missile weapons and able to attack the United States from any direc- tion. POLL TAX: Urge Constitutional Revision By LEWIS GULICK Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON-Premier Niki- ta S. Khrushchev's rocket-rattling left Washington unshaken yester- day. . Experts figured the Soviet pre- mier was talking mainly for the Geneva disarmament negotiators. United States government agen- cies declined public comment while awaiting the text of Khrush- chev's Kremlin speech. Maximum Impact Meanwhile, from news accounts, it appeared plain to them that the Russian premier had ordered' the latest Soviet satellite timed for maximum political impact. A widely held presumption was that Khrushchev wanted to use his satellite demonstration, coupl- ed with his talk of a global mili- tary rocket, to put pressure on the Western negotiators at the 17- nation disarmament talks just started in Geneva. It was reasoned here that Khrushchev could not hope to cow the Western powers, who have shrugged off Kremlin threats be- fore. But it wa sspeculated that Reject U.S. Test Proposal T T IT GENEVA M)-The Soviet Union accused the United States yester- day of laying down impossible con- ditions for ending nuclear weap- on tests. American officials said President John F. Kennedy's proposals for a meaningful test ban treaty re- main open for negotiations, and refused to accept Soviet rejection of the proposals as final. The United States has announc-, ed it will fire a series of atmos- pheric tests in mid-Pacific late in April unless the Soviet govern-' ment has agreed to an inter- nationally policed ban by then. Khrushchev was attempting to worry the eight non-aligned na- tions at Geneva sufficiently that they, in turn, would plead with Western negotiators to offer con- cessions to Moscow. Preliminary Analysis A preliminary analysis found little new in the speech. However, The Soviet-American sparring was at the edge of the 17-nation disarmament conference. Soviet Ambassador Semyon Tsarapkin again rejected United States de- mands for an international in- spection system at a crowded news conference. While he was speaking, his boss in Moscow, Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev declared the Soviet Union would never accept the American proposals and threaten- ed the United States with a new global rocket. Khrushchev did not kive enou precise details about his "i global rockets" to shed much lig on this development. In declaring that his rocket invulnerable to anti-missile ml siles, the Soviet leader was or restating what had been said pr viously by President John _ Kennev. .aacaaaacuy WASHINGTON (A5 - President John F. Kennedy called yesterday for adoption of a constitutional amendment to outlaw the poll tax. The President's support of this method of approaching the prob- lem was contained in a letter read to the Senate by Sen. Spessard L. Holland (D-Fla). Holland is the author of an anti-poll tax amendment which administration leaders are now at- tempting to call up for action over the protests of southern. oppon- ents. Fight Developing A sideline fight is being re- newed over whether the poll tax issue could not be disposed of with a simple act of Congress. Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-NY) and some other civil rights advo- cates contend that trying to abol- ish the poll tax with a constitu- Air Corridor Threatened BERLIN (M-The Soviet com- mand last night introduced a threatened new harassment tactic in the air corridors to isolated West Berlin by making the first Soviet night flights there. Such flights scheduled for mid- week had been postponed without explanation. Four Russian military transport planes flew through the Berlin- Hamburg corridor between 8 and 9 p.m., but they did not affect Western flight schedules and no incidents were reported. Regular flights by planes of the Western allies-two commer- cial passenger planes and a num- ber of military craft-went off on schedule. The Red flights-the first in the corridor since Tuesday-were an- nounced in the Berlin Air Safety Center, where the Russians still work together with the West. Last week Soviet planes dropped metallic strips in the air lanes in an apparent attempt to confuse radar controlling Western flights. tional amendment is doing it the hard way-that this requires rati- fication by three-fourths of the states even after Congress ap- proves the move. Holland, in support of his con- tention that a constitutional amendment is the proper way, pro- duced the letter from Kennedy dated March 6. Constitutional Amendment In in the President said adoption of a constitutional amendment abolishing the poll tax "would constitute an important contribu- tion to good government." "It would encourage wider vot- er participation in the elections for President, Vice - President, members of the United tSates Sen- ate and members of the House of Representatives," he said. The President's letter to Holland went on: Shares Conviction "I share your conviction that the right to vote in federal elections should not be denied or abridged because of failure to pay a poll tax or to meet a property qualifica- tion." Kennedy recalled that as a sen- ator he had joined Holland in sponsoring such a constitutional amendment and expressed his con- tinued support of the proosal. The President said heregretted that although the Senate had Union Orders Strike Vote WASHINGTON C)-The Broth- erhood of Railroad Trainmen or- dered yesterday a strike vote among its members working on all the nation's major railroads. The brotherhood is the largest of the five operating unions soon to enter negotiations with rail managements. At issue are recommendations of a presidential railroad commis- sion proposing changes in work rules which the unions contend would cut the earnings and cause thousands of layoffs among rail workers. adopted in 1960, it. the proposed amendment the House did not act on L CO ME (0 cr!Ji ~ CAMPUS CHAPEL Woshtenow at Forest The Reverend Leonard Verduin, Pastor Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan 10:00 A.M. Worship Services 11:15 A.M. Coffee Hour 7:00 P.M. Vesper Worship Service 7T'IlE A BATH World ews Roundup MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Toppon Streets Rev. Russell M. Fuller, Minister. 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship. 7:30 p.m. Open House, 802 Monroe. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST,' 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 11:00 a.m. Sunday Services. 8:00 p.m. Wednesday Services. 9:30 a.m. Sunday School (up to 20 years of age.) 11:00 a.m. Sunday School (for children 2 to 6 years of age.)' A free reading room is maintained at 306 East Liberty St. Hours are Monday through Sot. and holidays. Mordoy evening 7:00 to 9:00 urdoy, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. except Sundays ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Streets Rev. John F. Bradley, Chaplain Rev. John J. Fauser, Assistant RELIGIOUS SCHEDULE Sunday Masses at 8:00, 9:30, 11:00, 12:00 and 12:30 Daily Masses at 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 ctnd 1200 During Lent on Friday there will be a Mass at 5:10 p.m. LENTEN DEVOTIONS Wednesday, 7:30 Friday, The Stations of the Cross and Benedic- tion at 7:15 MARRIAGE SERIES Sunday, March 18th-7:30 p.m. "The Physical Aspect of Marriage The Place of Sex in Marital Life Pregnancy and Childbirth Medical Advice for Chastity Dr. Edmond Botch and Dr. Gena Rose Rose Pahucki, Obstetricians and Gyne- cologists Wednesday, March 21st--8:00 p.m. "Birth Control: Moral and Immoral" Sexual Abstinence; Ovulary Rhythm; Con- traception Rev. John F. Bradley, Ph.D. "CATHOLIC VOICES" SERIES Friday, March 23rd-8:00 p.m. "Human Relations-The Challenge to the Modern Catholic" Justice Otis Smith, Michigan Supreme Court 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 followed by breakfast at the Canterbury House. (Morning Prayer on first .Sunday of month.) 11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon! (Holy Communion on first Sunday of month.) 7:00 P.M. Evening Prayer. Rev. Jack Borckardt. TUESDAY- 7:00 A.M. Holy Communion THE EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH Corner of Miller and Newport John G. Swank, Pastor Telephone NOrmondy 3-4061 Church School 10:00 A.M. i Morning Worship 11:00 A.M. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL REFORMED United Church of Christ 423 South Fourth Ave. Rev. Ernest Kloudt, Pastor 9:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship. 7:30 p.m. Evening Guild, 802 Monroe. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Woshtenow at Berkshire Rev. Erwin Goede The sermon topic for Sunday, March 19, will be:"Are These Trips Really Necessary? A Protest to Our Launching Rituals" Adult Discussion Group at 10:00 Church School at 10:30. Church Service at 1 1:00. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND BAPTIST STUDENT CENTER 512 and 502 E. Huron-NO 3-9376 Rev. James Middleton, Minister Rev. Paul Light, Campus Minister Mr. George Pickering, Intern Minister SUNDAY 9:45 a.m. Campus Class, Baptist Campus Center 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 6:45 A.D.S.F. "Franny & Zooey" and con- temporary theology By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Katanga lead- er Moise Tshombe in a letter to Sen. Albert Gore (P-Tenn) ac- cused the United States yester- day of withholding action against his secessionist Congolese province to bolster chances for United States purchase of UN bonds. * * * DAMASCUS-Syria and Iraq proposed yesterday a high level Pan-Arab conference within three months to promote active military, political, economic and cultural cooperation among Arab countries. The two countries have been working on a similar program of cooperation between themselves. DAMASCUS - A Syrian army spokesman said Syrian troops bat- tled off two Israeli gunboats on the Sea of Galilee for the second straight day yesterday. * * * LANSING-A bill providing a special $251,000 supplemental ap- propriation for mental health pro- grams was signed into law by Gov. John B. Swainson yesterday. . e e WASHINGTON - Secretary of the Air Force Eugene M. Zuckert indicated yesterday the Air Force is accepting Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara's decision against any immediate broadening of the RS-70 bomber program. * C * WASHINGTON-The Securities and Exchange Commission, for the first time in its 27-year history, is questioning all brokerage houses as part of a massive study of the over-the-counter stock market. WASHINGTON-Vice - Presi- dent Lyndon B. Johnson said yes- terday a permanent colony on the Moon may be only 25 years away. NEW YORK-Prices weakened as the stock market closed yester- day with active trading. But most of the session was moderate with up and down issues in most major groups. Dow Jones industrials were down .77 to 722.77. ANCHOR INN DANCING SATURDAY NIGHT featuring RON BELL'S QUARTET iI THE CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadium at Edgwood John G. Makin Phone NO 2-2756 10:00 A.M. Bible School. 11:00 A.M. Regular Worship. 6:30 P.M. Evening Worship. WEDNESDAY-- 7:30 P.M. Bible Study. For Transportation call NO 2.2756. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill Street at S. Forest Ave. Henry O. Yoder..Postor Miss Anna M. Lee, Counselor Phone: NO 8-7622 SUNDAY 9:30 a.m. Worship Service 9:45 a.m. Bible Study 11:00 a.m. Worship Service and Communion- 6:45 p.m. Meet at Center-Will join Episcopal Students in Evensong WEDNESDAY 7:15 p.m. Lenten Service THE FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR AND THE PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER 1432 Washtenow NO 2-3580 Services: 9:00 and 10:30 Kyle Haselden, Editor of the Christian Century 11:50-Minoru Mochizuki, University Pastor at Western Michigan University CAMPUS CENTER 10:30 A.M. Bible Study,C"The Book of Acts," Campus Center. 6:30 P.M. Quest and Question at Campus Center. MONDAY 9:00 P.M. Coffee and Concern, 217 S. Ob- servatory. WEDNESDAY 4:15 P.M. Noise of Solemn Assemblies. Protes- tant Foundation, 536 Thompson. THURSDAY 12:10 P.M. Chapel Service. Douglas Chapel. 608 E. William. 4:15 P.M. Bible Study, "The Book of Ro- mans." 217 S. Observatory. FRIDAY 6:30 Grad Group Dinner and Program. This week: Pat Pickett will speak on "Whose FIRST METHODIST CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDATION CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Streets Dr. Fred E. Luchs, Minister Rev. Edgar Edwards. Student Minister Guild House at 524 Thompson Services 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Sermon Topic: "My Name is David" Bible Lecture: 10:20-10:40, Mrs. Fred E. Luchs. Church School, crib-12th grade, 9:30 and -11 :00 a.m. Student Guild: 802 Monroe, telephone 2.5189. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER' (The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod) 1 511Washtenow Avenue Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Thomas C. Park, Vicar Sunday at 9:45 and 11:15: Services, with ser- mon by the pastor, 'A Cross That Recon- ciles." (Mr Robert'cReuter, Chairman of Organ Dept. at Chicago Musical 'College, Guest Organist) Sunday at 9:45 and 11:15, Bible study groups Sunday at 6:00: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- dent Club, Supper-Programr, talk on "Music in the Worship Service'' by Mr. Robert Reuter of Chicago Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Midweek Lenten Serv- ice, with sermon by Dr. Paul Zimmerman, Pres. of Concordia Lutheran Junior Col- lege, "The cup which my Father hath given me, shall I not drink it?" if 11 unclouds color... and your come out of the shade ! State and Huron Streets, Tel. NO 8.6881 Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister Rev. Gene Ransom, Campus Minister MARCH 18, 1962 9:00 and 11:15 a.m. Morning Worship. Len- ten Sermon Series 2. "What Jesus Taught about Man." Sermon by Dr. Rupert. The Service is broadcast on station WOIA. 10:15 a.m. No seminar because of Spiritual Life Retreat. 5:30 p.m. Fellowship Supper in the Pine Room. 7:00 p.m. Leave the lounge as a group for EMU to hear Dr. Paul Morrison report of World Council of Churches at Delhi, India. TUESDAYS 8-1 1 p.m. Open House, Jean Robe's opart- rment, 602 E. Huron WEDNESDAYS Coty lis NEW PURE BRIGHTS .1.35 Refills 1.10 All prices plus taxt Cooty " 24A" .ipstick by COTY Coty brings you the freshest look your lips can wear. Crimsons, corals, pinks ... so clear, so true, all other lipstiks seem a trifle off color 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion,, Chapel followed by breakfast in the Pine Room. Out in time for 8 a.m. classes. 5:15 p.m. Holy Communion in the Chapel. THURSDAYS 7:15 p.m. Christian Marriage Class. Green Room. FRI DAYS 5:30 p.m. Wesley Grads, supper in the Pine Room. Call 8-6881 for reservations by noon Thursday. Following supper, the group will join the Undergrads Square Dance. 8:00 p.m. Wesley Fellowship Square Dance, Caulkins Hall. ANN ARBOR FRIENDS MEETING 1420 Hill St. NL)"r'A --fK "k! !t T" exciting new shades: Pre Honey *" Pure Apricot* "Pure Mango " Pure Pumpkin " Pure Cranberry " Pure Strawberry Pure Cherry " Pure Peppermint " Pure Watermelon s Pure Orchid I..The U I II ur i E i SUNDAY PROGRAM