MAY 4,1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE ,. . .. 1 { . NATO Leaders Review Plans, Berlin, Question Discuss Arms P Irojects NEW CORPORATION: House Approves Bill On Relay Satellites WASHINGTON () -- By a vote of 354-9 the House of Representa- tives yesterday approved a new kind of communications corporation, private and profit-making, but using government rocket research to loft space relay satellites into orbit. Even as the House was voting, proof came that the concept of bouncing messages and pictures off satellites to any point on the globe is feasible. Send TV Picture The Air Force announced that it had sent a television picture from coast to coast by way of the two-year-old Echo I balloon satel- lite, still orbiting 1,000 miles )ut. The picture was fuzzy but recog- nizable. The bill to set up the new cor- French Set poration was sent to the Senate with strong bipartisan support. It ltaA was rated as a compromise but o H OA included the feature the Kennedy Administration had insisted on- LGRS (-In the wake of that voting stock be made avail- the Secret Army Organization's able to the public. ,heSecre wn Army Organizatonn n v Reiterate Berlin Policy -A' Wirephoto WELCOME-Secretary of State Dean Rusk greets West German Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder, right, before the two NATO delegates discussed the Berlin impasse at a luncheon at the United States embassy in Athens yesterday. In the center is West German undersecretary Dr. Karl Carstens. World News Roundup- By The Associated Press, SANTIAGO - A strike by 3,200 government-employed doctors left thousands of ailing Chileans without medical care yesterday. * * *. BONN - The West German Defense Ministry said yesterday the Soviet Union has at least 80 intercontinental missiles capable of car- rying atomic warheads against targets in all parts of the world. * * * MOSCOW -An official Soviet commentator reaffirmed yesterday Russia's stand on United States suggestions for an international authority to supervise access routes to Berlin. NEW DELHI - Prime Minister Nehru said yesterday 150 Naga tribesmen have fought their way into East Pakistan to meet their leader, A. Z. Phizo, but he was reported not there. TOKYO - Two commuter trains piled into a derailed freight in northeastern Tokyo last night, killing 83 persons and seriously in- juring 147. "aamaaaaama aaaammaaamivnUammmmmmmmUUaminminmmmin "AT BOTH STORES" T B SI - f AN ALL RECORDINGS - SBY: a KLEMPERER RUBENSTEIN ; * I SCHWARTZKOPF TOSCAN N r - .DENNIS BRAIN OISTRAKH r I I i SCH NABEL VAN CLIBURN ; FISCHER-DIESKAU BIOERLING ; r , # ARIA CALLAS TEBALDI I I ROBERT SHAW S# PLEASE CLIP THIS' AD FOR TH ESE PRICES ; (fer good through 'Way 10, 1962>) # U I I U KLEMERE RUBPENTE I U 1210S. University 304 S. Thayer U I NO 3-6922 NO 5-4855 ; I I r SCNAE VA CLBR M aa awaraawaaa*aM Iaa ~~aaw U.S. Assures Schroeder On Gernany Stikker Dismisses Non-Aggression Pact ATHENS (A') - Leaders of the North Atlantic alliance launched a cold war strategy review yester- day with optimistic talk on the Berlin question and businesslike consideration of non-nuclear arms problems. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and West German Foreign Min- ister Gerhard Schroeder success- fully threshedout their views on Berlin at a two and a half hour luncheon. Berlin Problem Following the luncheon, Ameri- can and German circles said the substance of the Berlin problem had never been in question and other details were now smoothed out. They expressed hope that big power unanimity on Berlin would be assured when the foreign min- isters convene. West German sources said they were reassured "there would not be any settlement on Germany and Berlin thatwould not be in line with the interests of West Germany and could not be ap- proved by the West Germans." Defense Minister Defense Ministers of 15 North Atlantic Treaty Organization pow- ers followed up with a formal meeting lasting little more than an hour. They agreed, to speed some 20 joint armaments projects iow pending, largely for research and standardization of weapons. The most lively surface action came when NATO Secretary-Gen- eral Dirk Stikker expressed the personal view at a news confer- ence that a non-aggression pact between NATO and the Commun- ist Warsaw Pact countries would be unnecessary and unwise. Stikker's statement drew imme- diate, though unofficial, criticism from the West Germans, British and Americans. The Americans were upset be- cause they had recently suggested such pact might be part of a Ber- lin package. State Officials Plan To Move Mentally Ill A program to move from 1.000 to 3,000 patients over 60 years of age from mental hospitals into lo- cal boarding and nursing homes is gaining support from state offi- cials. The proposed move which would open beds in at least six institu- tions to persons considered more needful of psychiatric care is a departure from the usual demands for new buildings to take care of the continually increasing wait- ing list. Officials of the Mental Health and the Social Welfare Depart- ments are working out the details of the plan. So far proposals call for a shift to financial responsibil- ity from the mental health budget to the social welfare rolls to corre- spond with the changeover from hospitals to private housing. The governor and legislative appropriating committees are re- portedly pressing for the initiation of this plan by the coming sum- mer. There are several points still to be clarified but there is convic- tion among officials that they can be solved. Public Stock Under its provisions, half the stock would be offered to the pub- lic at $100 a share, and half to existing communications com- panies. The President would name three corporation directors, the public stockholders six and the companies six. The communications companies, led by the American Telephone & Telegraph Co., originally had asked that only they be allowed to own stock in the satellite cor- poration. The Administration re- jected this in favor of wide pub- lic stock ownership, contending this would be a safeguard against domination of the corporation by A.T.&T. The Administration originally proposed that the stock be sold at $1,000 a share but went along with Congressional suggestions that it be $100. A third approach - government ownership of the satellites - was pushed by Rep. William Fitts Ryan (D-NY), but was shouted down Tuesday. Laos Rebels Capture Town With Hospital VIENTIANE (R) - The village of Muong Sing, where the late Dr. Tom Dooley founded a jungle hos- pital only five miles from' Red China's border, was reported cap- tured by pro-Communist troops today. United States military sources said they got word from Laotian army circles of the Communist victory on this first anniversary of a cease-fire order that has never wholly halted the kingdom's civil war. Official confirmation was lack- ing. But the defense 'ministry charged a Red Chinese regiment has moved into Laos from the Yunnan Province town of Meng Mang, 85 miles northwest of Muong Sing, and added "a raid of Muong Sing . .. is to be feared." The unofficial story was that the captors were not Chinese but Pathet Lao guerrillas and sup- porting units from Communist North Viet Nam.. Strategically, Muong Sing and its airstrip have bolstered supply lines of the Royal Government garrison at Nam Tha, 20 miles southeast, against a siege set up by Pathet Lao battalions last Jan- uary. Sends Letter To Berliners BERLIN - West Berliners got a message yesterday from Presi- dent John F. Kennedy saying he is convinced the city's freedom and "essential ties with the Free World" will be maintained. The message was brought by E. Allen Lightner Jr., who will be the ranking Unitcd States civilian in Berlin after the departure of retired Gen. Lucius D. Clay. It was announced that Gen. Clay will leave here .Tuesday. wors uerror wave, te rencn gov- ernment last night promised a stern crackdown on European ex- tremists seeking to block Algerian independence through chaos. Christian Fouchet, French high commissioner to Algeria, in a ra- dio-TV address to Algeria's million European settlers, said he has giv- en rigorous anti-terrorism direc- tives to Gen. Michel Fourquet, Su- preme Military Commander, and to the chief of the Algiers police. "If these measures do not prove sufficient they will be followed by m o r e rigorous measures," he warned. Fouchet's address came on the heels of Wednesday's bloodbath that killed 110 persons and wound- ed 147 more. Most were Moslem victims of the Secret Army. In Algiers alone 98 deaths were re- ported for Wednesday. Fouchet said that any civil ser- vant who does not do his duty to help stop terrorism will be shipped back to France. At least five Moslems were killed and eight wounded yesterday. Four were killed and four wound- ed by Secret Army commandos roaming the streets of Blida in automobiles. The deteriorating situation has obviocEly alarmed Paris authori- ties. President de Gaulle held long talks with Premier Georges Pompi- dou and Lous Joxe, Minister for Algerian Affairs. No detailsdof the conversations were released. This was a strike of fright and protest resulting from the explo- sion of a booby-trapped car in the port area Wednesday morning that caused most of the deaths. i ; By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion Secretary General Stikker, doubting the wisdom of a non- aggression pact with the Warsaw powers as being merely a reitera- tion of the United Nations charter,r takes a position which often has1 been invoked by the United States. The principle involved, however, is not being followed by the Unitedt States with regard to Berlin, at least in public. On the surface, or at least not formally denied, the objective there is to obtain reitera- tion of Allied rights which the Communists have abrogated, time after time, and will again. For this the United States is even reported to be willing to pay with agreement to at least a de- gree of East German participation' in access controls. New Reiteration On this point the Russians have just made a reiteration of their own--that any agreement depends on withdrawal of Western troops from the city and full recognition of East German Communist sover- eignty over all access including air. In the face of such talk, re- sumption of the Rusk-Dobrynin talks after the secretary's return from the NATO conference would seem merely to be for the purpose of not breaking them off. And the Berlin situation thus, will remain what it has truly been all the time-a confrontation of strength. .Release Brief On Guerrillas. SAIGON (R)-The briefest mili- tary report in months from the South Viet Nam government said today Communist guerrilla actions appear to have abated in the last few days. The communique announced only one operation. It claimed 10 guerrillas were killed last Monday about 20 miles southwest of here. By contrast there had been an increasingly militant tone of broadcasts from the Communist Viet Cong radio which began op- erating about February first. Informed sources said two United States Army and Marine helicop- ter companies supported an op- eration in the Mekong DeltaTues- day which captured 78 guerrillas and killed 10. The semi-official Viet Nam press agency said 9 Viet Cong were killed and 20 taken prisoner in another engagement Saturday. Something of this thought may be behind the reports from Athens that the United States is ready to consider sharing control of its nuclear weapons in Europe with NATO if the other important al- lied nuclear power, Britain, is ad- mitted to reasonable and working membership in a European poli- tical union. If this were done, it would re- duce a confusing number of, fin- Approve Bil On Smith Act WASHINGTON (P)--The Senate Judiciary Committee approved legislation designed to tighten the Smith Act, which declares it a federal crime knowingly and wil- fully to advocate the overthrow of the government, or belong to or organize groups dedicated to those purposes. gers on the trigger-or possible holdbacks on the trigger-to two, the United States and unified Europe. It would also ease British doubts about taking her nuclear power into a political situation in which she could not have the final say without risking a serious split. United States support for Euro- pean union all along has been based on consolidation of the strength with which the Allies face the Soviet military concen- tration in Europe, and the ability to meet economic and political infiltration of the non-Communist world. With a sufficient concentration of military, political and ecpnomic power in Europe--a concentration for which the components are fully available if the countries are willing to use them-the West will not have to face any thought of giving the Communists anything -in Berlin or elsewhere. N EWMAN CLUB "SPRING IS BUSTING OUT ALL OVER" 8:30-11 :30 P.M. Refreshments-Dancing Fr. Richard Center Members free 331 Thompson Non-members 50c ! ! ! ! "ATBOTH STORES" * ! !U ! ! " ! ! * U I I ON AL L RECORDINGS Ia ! ! * B King stonTrio Jonah ones * U Four Freshmen Elvis ,Presley S Frank Sinatra H arry Belafonte a " S Pegg Lee Glenn Miller I I Stan Kenton Chet Atkins Henry Mancini ! PLEASE CLIP THIS AD FOR THESE PRICES (offer good through May 10, 1962Y " ! SENTER 210 S. University 304 S. Thayer SNO 3-6922 NO 5-4855 . . ww* wwwwrwwwwwwww wwawwwI www Glenn, Titov Say Fuel Causes Space Fireflies WASHINGTON (M- - Astronaut John H. Glenn Jr., and Cosmo- naut Gherman S. Titov, put their heads together today and may have solved a mystery - the famous space fireflies. After their talk, Titov reported to a big international space meeting they believed the tiny luminous specks they saw were probably caused by fuel ejected from the rocket or space ship. Reject Paint Both had rejected another suggested explanation - that the specks were the results of paint peeling from their capsules. Glenn saw the fireflies four times as the sun rose in the path of his Friend- ship 7 capsule.1 'II As for Titov, "I observed them as soon as I entered orbit," he told the World Committee on Space Research. He also saw them when his retro-rockets fired to bring him back to Russia. "I believe, and I think Col. Glenn is of the same opinion, that they resulted from fuel being ejected. This will have to be checked by the next astronaut." Describes Spaceship Referring to his space ship and launching rocket, the Cosmonaut said, "The space ship - Sputnik Vostok II is a controllable rocket apparatus. Its weight without the last stage of the booster is 4,731 kilograms. "The ship-Sputnik was put into orbit by a multi-stage booster having six liquid propellant rock- et engines of the Vostok type. Total maximum thrust of the en- gines of all stages is 600,000 kilo- grams." MAIL ORDERS NOW!I THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM presents Fall and GALA %rintF ESTIVALS by, "AMERICA'S MOST HIGHLY SKILLED PROFESSIONAL REPERTORY COMPANY" ... HEWES, Sat. Review THE A12 BRILLIANT BROADWAY PLAYERS in 8 GREAT PLAYS "A TRIUMPH!" "IRRESISTIBLE!" "EXCITING!" "STUNNING!" -N.Y. Times -Lewis, Cue -New Yorker -Watts, Post "ENCHANTING!" "DELIGHTFUL!" "SUPERB!" "BRILLIANT!" -W. Kerr -Daily News -Variety -McLain, Herald Trib. Jrl-American MAIL THE APA SEASON COUPON NOW! 'mum u um .. .. ....mmm...mmm~ummmmm~nmmmmmuu S U U-M PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM APA SEASON MEMBERSHIPS MENDELSSOHN THEATRE, ANN ARBOR FOR EIGHT PLAYS STUDENTS NON-STUDENTS * Wed. & Thurs. eve.; Sat. & Sun: Mat.: 40% Off 20% Off * Orchestra $16.80, 14.40 $22.40, 19.20 Balcony $14.40, 10.80, 7.20 $19.20, 14.40, 9.60 * ' Fri. & Sat. eve. (Orch. only) : $18.00, 15.60 $24.00, 20.80 s Namco rcoru& c .fLafn APA DfCI11 KIT fIYZMANY AK iV . oa. ia.,r hIt nlavst$f A Eil I "' 4 COLLINS State and Liberty Collin's is having a LANZ FASHION SHOWING AT TENTION STUDENTS, FACULTY, AND MAY FESTIVAL VISITORS! SPECIAL FILM PREVIEW of the recent CBS-TV Program starring the new U-M CO. OF BRILLIANT BROADWAY PLAYERS coming next Fall. i I Saturday, May 5, 1-4 p.m. And you're all invited! -. aCome see the newest LANZ fashions on