THE MICUIGAN DAIIY_ U.S., Britain Requ( To Support A-Ban stUN Talks, Two PowersI Want Treaty On Testing Ask New Resolution Backing Control Plan, UNITED NATIONS (R) - The United States and Britain pro- posed yesterday that the United Nations General Assembly throw its weight behind President John F. Kennedy's call on Russia to resume talks on a nuclear test ban treaty. The two Western powers in- troduced a resolution asking As- sembly endorsement of the need, for completing action on a treaty providing adequate controls to prevent cheating. It was the latest development in an East-West race to present conflicting disarmament proposals to the 100-nation Assembly. Wednesday the Soviet Union brought in its detailed stand - including a demand that the test issue be submerged in over-all disarmament talks. Initial Debate Opening debate on the nuclear test ban issue will take place in two weeks in the Assembly's main political committee, where the United States and Britain will ask for priority. The two-power resolution would have the Assembly declare the urgent necessity for reaching agreement prohibiting all nuclear weapons tests under control. List Objectives Such an agreement would be a first step toward reversing the dangerous burdensome arms race, inhibit the spread of nuclear weapons to other countries, con- tribute to the reduction of inter- national tension and eliminate health hazards associated with tests, the resolution declares. It urges control machinery that would avoid self-inspection and not be subject to the sort of veto envisioned in Soviet demands for the three-headed supervisory ma- chinery representing Western, Communist and neutral interests. The resolution would have the participants in the treaty nego- tiations report to the UN dis- armament commission by next March of their progress. MARITIME TIEUP: Put Lookouts on Duty In West Coast Strike SAN FRANCISCO (M--Deck officers set up lookouts yesterday on the San Francisco waterfront but put off until today sending out pickets in a strike that could tie up West Coast ports from Los Angeles to Seattle. The lookouts watched the unloading of perishable cargoes. A union spokesman said no deck officers were signing on for trips, and should any ship be moved the pickets would go out immediately. The deck officers and four other maritime unions voted to strike June 16 but a Taft-Hartley injunction held that up for 80 days dur- ing which all but the deck officers settled their differences. I T r Wednesday the deck officers, whose West Coast membership to- tals 650, voted 404-24 at West Coast ports to reject an offer by the Pacific Maritime Association for, a four-year contract The spokesman said the dispute over a wage contract would pre- vent sailing of the Matson liner Lurline for Honolulu Friday and the American President Lines' President Cleveland Saturday on a Pacific cruise, but he said the President Polk had been cleared to start on around-the-world voy- age Saturday because she was car- rying military cargo. East Germans Condemn Lift BERLIN (P) - The East German Foreign Ministry last night called the lifting of seven refugees from Steinstuecken by United States Army helicopters an "act of or- ganized kidnaping" and a violation of East German "air sovereignty." The spokesman asserted that "the people who initiated this will have to bear full responsibility for such provocation." A spokesman for the United States mission in Berlin said merely "we do have the right to fly over territory within Berlin air space and this was well within it." Diesegregate Restaurants ATLANTA (M - Several lunch counters and restaurants in At- lanta stores were integrated yes- terday, six months after a truce was reached between merchants and Negro student sit-in leaders. No incidents were reported. Four young Negro women, one the sister of the first Negro stu- dent admitted to Georgia Tech, were seated for lunch in the tea room of Rich's, the city's largest department store. Simultaneously, Negroes were served at Davison's, another de- partment store, and at the lunch counters of four variety stores. A total of 182 Negro and white demonstrators were arrested in this city last spring when they sought to break the color bars at store eating facilities. I se complace al invitar a todos los boricuas y demos personas interesadas a una reunion general el dia domingo primero de octubre del 1961. Newman Club. 2 P.M. CHUCKLE ADS are coming to the Classifieds! NEW YORK-Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko is understood to have given Western leaders in New York some slight indication that the Soviet government may be seriously interested in getting into detailed negotiations on a peaceful solution to the Berlin crisis. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Foreign Minister Lord Home were described yesterday, however, as still uncertain whether Gro- myko is merely maneuvering to create a favorable impression or whether some definite result can be achieved in the diplomatic talks now going on. KIPUSHI, Katanga - Fierce tribal fighting swept through Ki- pushi township during the night. Police reported at least 20 dead. STOCKHOLM - The body of United Nations Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold arrived at a Stockholm a i r p o r t yesterday, where 250,000 Swedes gathered in silent tribute. Funeral services will be held to- day in the university town of Upp- sala. FREE THEATRE PASSES for the best chuckle ad every day in October. LOOK FOR THE RULES on the classified page NEW YORK-Dow-Jones aver- ages split today with 65 stocks closing 0.27 and 30 industrials down 0.85. INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION presents INTERNATIONAL MIXER DANCING * ENTERTAINMENT .