THE M ICIGAN DAMNA FK Challenges R d Res. WIRE KENNEDY: 'Quakers Oppose U.S. Testing li Offers Atom Arms Plan UAW Calls Ford Offer Unacceptable DETROIT (A) - Ford Motor Co.' today offered the United Auto Workers .virtually the same eco- nomic package on which the union1 settled with General Motors Corp, UAW president Walter P. Reu- ther conceded Ford's offer follows broad outlines of the GM settle- ment, but added "the details are not satisfactory." Reuther declined to discuss specific details with which he was unhappy, but said "there are sev- eral things the Ford Motor Co. can do, ought toddo, and we will insist they must do." With final wrappipg. up of a GM agreement Sunday night, the union reiterated it expected to improve on it at Ford, and it has international, executive board authority to strike if demands are not met. The Ford offer-second in the big three 1961 negotiations in the auto industry - came as GM slowly picked up headway in car production after a crippling two weeks strike. The strike, based on local plant issues, hit GM in the course of its bargaining with the union and closed virtually the entire opera- tion of the world's biggest manu- facturing firm, employing 350,000 persons. -AP Wirephoto PEACE RACE - President John F. Kennedy spoke before the United Nations General Assembly yesterday and challenged the Soviet Union to a "peace race" instead of a nuclear arms race. He also proposed a six-point disarmament plan. Congressional Leaders Laud Ken nedy Speech WASHINIGTON WP) - Presi- dent John F. Kennedy's address before the United Nations won overwhelming bipartisan praise in Congress yesterday - particularly his no-backdown stand on Berlin and his disarmament plan.. It also received overwhelming approval from a great majority of Hi-Fi STUDIO * Largest inventory of Hi Fi in area * Area's authorized Citation dealer " We stock many brands of kits (Elco, Dyna, Scott, Harman Kardon) * We service all Hi Fi's, tape recorders, etc. * Elco Tape Deck Kits, Sony Recorders * We rent TV's and Recorders by semester, month, or week * Open evenings * 1319 South Univ. NO 8-7942 near Washt. and Si U. delegates. But the Soviet Union and its Communist bloc supporters refused to say a good word for it. Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill), Senate Minority Leader, called Kennedy's proposals a "magnifi- cent hope" of settling world prob- lems and Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn), Assistant Senate Ma- jority leader, called Kennedy's ad- dress "the most remarkable and moving message of any political leader in the history of our coun- try." Western reaction was the most enthusiastic, but praise came from leaders of the so-called non- aligned nations as well. UNApproved Troop Orders LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (MP) - A United Nations official said yesterday Dag Hammarskjold ap- proved the recent military opera- tion against secessionist,.Katanga and the troop's orders came from UN headquarters in Leopoldville, not from the Congo government. "It would be wrong to assume that we acted in Katanga without the approval of the Secretary- General," Michel Tombelaine told a news conference. " . . . there were so many cables at the time that I could not say who signed the actual go--ahead." Dares USSR To Compete For Peace Presents Program To Freeze Forces UNITED NATIONS (A') - P.resi- dent John F. Kennedy solemnly challenged Russia to a "Peace Race" yesterday and warned the 99 United Nations that unless men now quickly learn to control their weapons and their quarrels they may shortly destroy themselves. He laid out a six-point disarm- ament plan, offering to freeze nu- clear weapons production and pos- session virtually as soon as in- ternational controls to prevent cheating could be organized. He was challenging the Soviet Union "not to an arms race but to a peace race." Kennedy sought, too, to rally the :smaller nations of the world to a campaign to save the UN from what he considers Soviet wrecking tactics. Has Weapons The president asserted the United States has "the will and the weapons" to fight against Red aggression and in defense of free- dom. But he pledged himself to seek a peaceful solution of the Berlin crisis. He indicated readi- ness to accept temporarily the division of Germany between West and Communist rule. Kennedy summoned the non- aligned nations who hold the bal- ance of power between the Soviet Union and the allies to reject Rus- sia's "troika" proposal to replace the late Dag Hammarskjold with a three-man board. That would create anarchy, paralysis and con- fusion and would "entrench the cold war in the headquarters of peace," he said. Test Ban The president pressed Russia to sign with the United States and Britain immediately a treaty ban- ning nuclear weapons tests under international controls. Such a treaty said Kennedy is "the logical place to begin" disarmament. He recommended that all UN member nations start earmarking and training forces for a UN "peace-keeping" force, a kind of world police force. UN peace- making machinery also must be strengthened, the President said, and the peace-commitments of the charter should be extended to outer space before the cold war gets there. Luebke Notes CENTRAL COMMITTEE PETITIONING MEETING for POSITIONS on Publicity . Amusements * Refreshments * Booths Parades " And Many Other Committees THURSDAY, SEPT. 28 7:30 P.M. Union Ballroom Open to All Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors I German Faith In U.S. Stand BERLIN (A') -President Hein- rich Luebke was reported to have told Gen. Lucius D. Clay yester- day that the German people have full confidence in the firmness of their Western allies on Berlin and Germany. At the same time, informants in the West German capital of Bonn said Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev has indicated he may not rush through his separate peace treaty with East Germany. Bonn informants said the So- viet leader told Belgian foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak in Moscow lust Tuesday he was not committed to sign a treaty be- fore the year runs out. Bonn officials received this news with surprise. Khrushchev previously had stated many times he would sign such a treaty by the end of the year. .111 wS k rt Q .- YOU too can be n the Know. just ...Read I I