THE MICHIGAN DAILY U.S. Urges Conference To Seek New Methods Of Atom Arms Control I> -AP Wirepnoto WOMEN MARCH-50 U. S. "Women Strike for Peace" delegates were among the women who marched to the Palace of Nations in Geneva to present a petition calling for the end of nuclear testing to U. S. and Soviet delegates at the 17 nation disarmament con- ference here. Pacifist Women Denounce Disarmament Inflexibility GENEVA -A pacifist procession of 103 women from the United States "and nine other countries tramped through Geneva to United Nations offices here yesterday--and denounced American and Rus- sian delegates. as being equally inflexible over disarmament. Many of the women were weeping as they filed out of the sprawling Palace of Nations after a 20 minute interview with the two delegates. The women arrived as the morning session of the 17-nation disarmament conference was drawing to a close. After first being "barred by security police they were ushered to a conference room to House Increases meet chief delegates Arthur H. Federal Program Dean of the United States and el Pir Z f th it Experts Ask Organization Of Study Unit Dean Introduces Partial Arms Pact GENEVA (P)-The United States urged the General Disarmament Conference yesterday to start an immediate search for ways to eliminate safely the, world's nu- clear warheads and other weap- ons of mass destruction. An experts' group should be or- ganized at once to seek methods of halting the production of nu- clear material for war purposes and the conversion of existing stockpiles to peaceful uses, the United States delegation said. As part of this sweeping pro- gram, Ambassador Arthur H. Dean introduced a partial draft treaty looking toward complete disarma- ment. This would be carried out by safeguarded phases to protect the security of all nations. Each arms cut step would be balanced, the document specified, so that at no stage "could any state or group of states gain a military advantage." Dean also directed a firm appeal to the Soviet Union to accept a nuclear test ban treaty with ade- quate international controls. The Russians gave him a negative an- swer and accused the Americans of wanting to spy out military targets in the Soviet Union. Dean and Soviet Deputy For- eign Minister Valerian A. Zorin clashed over which of their coun- tries was responsible for the four- year failure to write a nuclear test ban treaty. Dean charged the Russians showed bad faith by conducting nuclear tests last autumn after 10 n g preparations undertaken while three-power negotiations were in progress. ROTC Units Chronicled By .Brucker By JAMES NICHOLS Former Army Secretary Wilber M. Brucker praised the Reserve Officer Training Corps program highly Monday night in a talk given to University ROTC units. "Patriotism is something that starts early in life, if you really mean it." He commended the patriot's willingness to fight for "his country and his loved ones." "Who are these,.people that are trying to ridicule the ROTC?" he asked. "Bless their poor little yel- low livers. How ashamed they ought to be." Patriotism is not "something you have to look down on," he said. Brucker said the United States should never have permitted the East Germans to build the wall in Berlin. "That barbed wire could have come right down," he said. "The best way is to stand strong. "I'm a little out of patience with some of these milk and water dip- lomatic exchanges," he said. Brucker was critical of the han- dling of last year's Cuban inva- sion. "In the old days, we wouldn't have tolerated a telegram or a cable from those banana republics down there," he said. "And now, there it is: A missile base 90 miles from the United States. "And why? Because on a certain day, the air cover was withdrawn" from the attackers, who then were "slaughtered like ducks when they came to the beach." Kennedy Rejects Hiss Declaration WASHINGTON (MP)-Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy rejected yes- terday Alger Hiss' declaration that his 11-year-old claim of innocence to perjury can now be proven by Richard M. Nixon's new book, "Six Crises." The justice department recently reviewed the case. carefully, Ken- nedy said, because of renewed con- troversy over a key issue - pos- session of a typewriter - but found nothing to substantiate Hiss' contentions. Walker Sees 'Co nspiracy~ WASHINGTON (M)-Edwin A. Walker, ex-general, told a Senate committee yesterday that both he and the American way of life are victims of dark forces in "collu- sion with the international Com- munist conspiracy." From President John F. Ken- nedy down, Walker raked high officials and even suggested that a one-time ghost writer for for- mer President Dwight D. Eisen- hower would bear looking into. As for the state of the armed forces, he said that with the na- tion's survival at stake they are "paralyzed by our national policy of 'no win' and retreat for vic- tory." The Senate caucus yoom was crowded with spectators, many of them Walker admirers, as the for- mer major general came to defend himself against charges that he tried to sway votes of his troops in the 1960 elections, in violation of Army regulations. The Army admonished the gen- eral, who was then in command of the 24th Division in Germany, and he later renounced his pen- sion rights and resigned to battle in private life against forces that he said "endanger the security of our country." BONUS PAYMENTS TO WORKERS: Pravda Calls for Incentives r,..... GEN. EDWIN A. WALKER - . . testifies MOSCOW (P Pravda, the voice of the Communist party, came out yesterday for individual bonus payments and incentives tok workers to speed up production. This represented an almostt revolutionary change in Soviet working conditions. It means the scrapping of the system of incen- tive payments to work brigades and other groups. Bonuses for the individual worker have not been general. Incentive payments to groups have been made to encourage team spirit and collective morale. This move is not surprising to me, Prof. Carl Cohen of the phios-] ophy department said. It has long! been orthodox communist doc- trine that during the socialist stage of their development the leading principle of payment would be "from each according to his ability, to each according to his work." Only in the higher stage of their development was that principle supposed to change to "from each; according to his ability, to each according to his need." In this way the present Soviet leaders can justify the return to individual bonuses on the grounds that it is necessary for the build- ing up of the socialist state, he added. The Pravda article said this current leveling of payments in many places was bad. The article, in effect a directive to get more production through in- dividual incentives, followed de- mands by Premier Nikita S. Krushchev that more pay be of- fered for more work, especially on farms where harvests have been lagging for three years. As a matter of fact many fac- tories have been paying individual and group bonuses for piece work, but these resulted in draining off most skilled labor from farms to cities. The author condemned the mag- azine Ekonomicheskaya. Gazeta (Economic Gazette) for publishing an article encouraging payment on a collective basis instead of in- dividually. The magazine writer 1said pay- ment for individual productivity "cultivates individuality and weak- f ens the strength of the collective." Ogonyok is put out by the man- The same views were expressed in agers and publishers of Pravda. a book recently and in an article Pravda said such articles introduce by the popular big circulation "harmful confusion" in workers' magazine Ogonyok (Light). ranks. American officials Predict End of New Guinea Confliet By 3. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst American officials are convinced the crisis between the Nether- lands and Indonesia over West New Guinea is about over, but you can get just about as many opinions as there are observers as to the future of the new nation. The Dutch presence in New Guinea has become unprofitable. Its cession to Indonesia now seems to be a matter of letting the Dutch government out gracefully-something which President Ahmed Su- karno is not eager to do, but probably will do to avoid the onus of violence. Does Not Wish There are indications that he does not wish to create an unstable situation at home which might put him in the same relation to his Communist constituents as Fidel Castro of Cuba. Sukarno is still the boss in Indonesia--with the aid of an army to which he gives sufficient power to check any too-forward Com- munist activities. For their part, the Indonesian Communists are playing a game which has been played before, elsewhere, as in France and Italy and some other European countries immediately after World War II. In Asia the pattern has been for the establishment of cadres, and recruiting for guerrilla action as preliminary to control of vil- lages and eventual establishment of footholds in governments. In Indonesia there has been greater emphasis on a more subtle phase of Communist tactics. That is the tactic of creating produc- tion troubles in industry and disruption of commerce, forcing gov- ernments to go adventuring into various forms of nationalization, spreading socialist practices which the Reds see as the last step before arrival at universal Communism. Sukarno Emerges The question is whether Sukarno will emerge from the Dutch dispute with enhanced support by the army-as he should-and whether he believes American economic aid will be offered under a true application of the new policy of full recognition for neutralism. A state department spokesman said recently that Indonesia had not received enough American attention. The implication is that she will get more. There is little indication, however, that the new nation can be drawn into any sort of anti-Communist front in Asia, political or military..There are strong indications it would be unwise to attempt to do so. At any rate the failure of SEATO to swing any real weight in Southeast Asia probably has taught a sufficient lesson about attempting to create such a front among countries whose govern- ments are poised on the points of some very prickly pins. I I WASHINGTON (M)-The, House yesterday 'added $15.7 million to the program of federal aid for school districts that serve children of federal employes. The money, added to a $447.5 million supplemental appropria- tion bill, would restore a cut in the program made by Congress last year. It is for the remainder of the fiscal year ending June 30, 1962. valerian A. forin o ne oviet Union. "Both men were polite but show- ed no sign of agreeing to our pleas," said Mrs. Nancy Mamis of New York. Mrs. Mamis was one of the 50- member "Women Strike for Peace" group which arrived from the United States Monday to exert "feminine pressure" on the dele- gates. .4IC f' I TH EINANOUSF COLLECTING SWEATERS (OR) WHY SWEATERS THAT ARE, VERY IN ARE VERY"ORLOWY acrylic tiber VERY IN VERY OUT washing your sweaters sending your sweaters in the nearest washing home to Mother for machine (you can, if fussy hand washing or they're "Orlon"* or whatever. "Orion Sayelle"* I saving on cleaning bills digging deep into fun with great sweaters of funds for seasonal- "Orlon" and "Orion and emergency-sweater Sayelle". 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The missions likely to be affected are the U.S. military assistance ad- visory group and the French mili- tary mission. ---"* * TURIN, Italy-President Charles de Gaulle of France and Premier Amintore Fanfani of Italy yester- day agreed that economic ties linking the countries of the Euro- pean community must be strength- ened and widened in the poiltical field. WASHINGTON-A Senate staff investigator testified yesterday the Douglas Aircraft Co. received $45.58 million of profits on 17 Nike missile system contracts, but that much of the work was done by others. * * * NEW ORLEANS-A 41-year-old Catholic mother vowed yesterday to accept excommunication rather than back down on her belief in racial segregation --- unless the clergy shows her error in the Bible. She faces an interview with Arch- bishop Joseph Francis Rummel, the 85-year-old prelate whom she said threatened her with expulsion from her church. 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