THE MICHIGAN DAILY I._ 0 BURMA'S U THANT: U.S. Expects Agreement I1 On Interim UN Leader - UNITED NATIONS () - The' United States was reported high- ly optimistic yesterday that it could reach agreement with the Soviet Union for the naming of an interim UN secretary-general. U Thant, veteran Burmese dele- gate, was said to be acceptable $o both countries, and available for the post provided they could agree on the terms of service. One American source expressed "all the highest optimism" that a solution would be found to fill the gap left by Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold's death Sept. 18 in a plane crash in Northern Rhodesia. A neutralist diplomat in a posi- tion to know about negotiations on the subject that have,been go- ing on here stated his belief that United States-Soviet agreement was 90 per cent complete. Delegates generally said those negotiations had been suspended almost entirely during the day to see whether President John F. Kennedy and Soviet Foreign Min- Miller hits Administration For Censorship, Favoritism WASHINGTON (P)-Republican ;National Chairman William E. Miller said yesterday the Kennedy Administration has attempted to use newsmen as propaganda pipelines. In an article in Editor and Publisher, a trade magazine for the newspaper business, Miller (R-NY) said the Administration is guilty of censorship and favoritism. At the White House, Press Secretary Pierre Salinger said "I would think Miller and the Republican Party would be the last people in the world to talk about the Committee. To Get Reply Of Walker. ! , WASHINGTON (P)-Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker said yesterday, he has been invited to submit his views in writing to a Senate sub- committee investigating charges that the Pentagon muzzled mili- tary critics of Communism. Walker said the subcommittee -has not invited him to testify in person, and when reporters asked. if this was satisfactory to him he replied: "I have, nothing to say." The general declined to go be- yond a written statement in which he said he was considering the subcommittee's inyitation to file a statement. A friend told reporters he =was sure Walker would submit a statement to the subcommittee. Walker demanded an opportun- ity to reply to statements bySee- retary of Defense Robert S. Mc- Namara that. Wallker tried to in- fluence the. votes of troops under his command in the 1960 election. McNamara made the statement while being questioned by the Senate Armed Services- Commit- tee as to the Army's action in re-' lieving Walker of command of the 24th Infantry Division in Germany and, reprimanding him last spring. The Army's explanation was that Walker had pictured former Pres- ident Harry S. Truman and other prominent Americans as soft on communism. subject .of freedom of informa- tion" Miller said the American peo- ple's right to know is being "cruel- ly eroded and will continue to be until this administration comes to regard information as a public trust rather than a political puff .operation. "Perhaps the ,administration's crassest attempt to use newsmen as propaganda pipelines came in mid-September when a group of some 30 Washington correspond- ents met secretly at the home of a reporter for a favored Kennedy paper. They were to receive an off-the-record briefing from the White House," he'said. He said the Chicago Sun-Times was "slapped down" in March by Arthur Sylvester, an assistant sec- retary of defense, for reporting that Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had complained in writing that Kennedy's Pentagon appoin- tees were skirting the chiefs US. Opera Group Banned b Soviets AMSTERDAM () i-The Santa Fe, N.M., opera gi up cut short a European tour le , by Russian- born American c. mposer Igor Stravinsky and flew homeward last night after reported Soviet interference canceled its schedul- ed performances in Poland. Stravinsky, now 79 and a resi- dent of California, was reported, planning to go home later after stopping in Switzerland, and was not availablefor comment imme- diately. ister Andrei A. Gromyko would complete the agreement in their White House talks yesterday. With the avowed aim of getting "public reports back into focus," an American delegation spokes- man restated his government's re- corded position on the whole mat- ter in these five points: "1) The new secretary-general should have a clear mandate to carry out the full functions of his office. "2) The Troika concept of di- viding the world into three blocs is contrary to the -spirit of the UN charter and damages the in- tegrity of the secretariat. "3) There should be no politi- cal representation in the secre- tariat. "4) The General Assembly has full authority to appoint an in- terim secretary-general. "5) The new man should be ap- pointed promptly." A He added that "the United States and the USSR have not agreed either on appointing an interim secretary-general with full powers or on the man.. there is no lack of qualified per- sons, but we have no candidate." M cCracken Views Need For Growth Prof. Paul W. McCracken of the business administration school said in a paper presented befor the National Consumer Finance Association yesterday that failure to keep the present economic ex- pansion in the United States on an orderly and vigorous basis be- yond the next few months could result in another recession. Prof. McCracken, a member of the President's Council of Eco- nomic' Advisers from 1956-1959, said that three inter-related prob- lems need immediate attention to change the present recovery cycle into an orderly, sustained expan- sion of the economy. These prob- lems are: 1) Basic strengthening of our international balance of pay- ments. 2) The problem of finding the proper ratio between government spending and our national income should be faced squarely-with budgeting procedures set-up as guideposts to head the economy in the direction that, in the longer run, we want it to go. 3) Be alert for a resumption of price inflation. Prof. McCracken said that the United States has been unable to achieve a treasury surplus large enough to offset the unfavorable export-import trade balance. This must be corrected by a decrease in foreign aid and military operations and an expan- sion of foreign tourist travel. Unless measures are taken to reverse the balance of payments, further uneasiness among over- seas dollar holders and possibly another international dollar crisis could result. Majority Lost In Irish Vote DUBLIN (P) - Prime Minister Seam Lemass and his Fianna Fail (Soldiers of Destiny) Party suf- fered a sharp setback yesterday in Ireland's election. Final returns showed Fianna Fail has lost its former majority and captured only 70 of the 144 seats' in the 'Dail (Parliament). Fine Gael, the principal oppo- sition party, increased its strength from 41 to 47 seats, but not enough to control parliament. ROBERT S. McNAMARA defense costs A rms Co sts Could Near $50 Billion' WASHINGTON (P)-Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara has given the armed services guidelines for a new military budg-= et that could reach about $50 bil- lion. It would top this year's by about $3.5 billion which was boosted about $6 billion from last year as President John F. Kennedy sought to build up United States conven- tional power to meet the Berlin crisis. Pentagon sources stressed that any over-all figure at this stage must be regarded as highly ten- tative because the process of dis- tilling and shaping a military budget for the 1963 fiscal year is only now getting underway in earnest. Firmer figures may not be settled on until mid-Novem- ber, if that early. Kennedy will send to Congress in January his new military budg- et for the fiscal year starting next July. The Army-Navy-Air Force Jour- nal reported yesterday that Mc- Namara has told the services to plan. for a $53.71-billion budget and a cut of 147,720 men from the Army, Navy and Air Force. The Journal is a nonofficial publica- tion which is close to the services. Informed sources said the $53.71 billion figure is high of the mark by a substantial margin. Charles J. Hitch, the Defense Department's comptroller, said in a speech last month that "not- withstanding all of our efforts to effect economies in the execution of the defense program, defense expenditures are likely to continue their upward trend in fiscal year 1963." Kennedy Asks Rapid Action In CD Work WASHINGTON (R) - President John F. Kennedy urged Civil De- fense workers yesterday to strive toward a goal of fallout protec- tion for every American as rap- idly as possible. "Protection against a thermo- nuclear attack is within reach of an informed America willing to face the facts and act," he said. The Federal Government is working on fallout shelter space for large groups of people under very austere conditions, the Pres- ident said. Soviet Dleat Pot tomAenc's lecth U.S. UrgesPeace' Tea PartyUnt L Top Billing''CalLL On Test Ban UN Group Supports After Blafe Hearing on Radiation VIENNA (A- T UNITED NATIONS (1) - The delegate to the United States urged the United Ato'mic Energy. A Nation's main political committee walkout yesterda yesterday to give urgent top bill- against swearing ing to a treaty, ban oan nuclear lund of Swedene weapons testsl.. new director-gene It ran into immediate opposi- Vasily Emelyan tion from the Soviet Union, now m ened Thursday ti engaged in a series of such tests. may quit the orga No Decision of what he termed No .decision was reached con- j ~nation, stalked ou cerning the treaty by the 100-na- !attack on Eklund tion committee which met to or- The rest of the ganize its work program for the -AP Wirephoto tion, including V current session of the General PEACE MARCHERS SOCIALIZE-Mrs. Nikita S. Khrushchev tov, remained in t Assembly. But the committee (center) was hostess at a tea party given for western peace In a statement brushed aside Soviet opposition marchers. The peace marchers arrived in Moscow this week and inauguration Eme and supported a Canadian request were permitted to picket but not to make speeches in Red Square. Eklund's election to take up immediately the latest __position Tuesday v UN reports on possible dangers to negative consequ mankind involved in atomic ra- 11 AT agency" and wa diation stemming, from tests. to rId Ni/iRuSwedish nuclear s United States delegate Arthur enjoy the support Dean, who headed the American countries as... d team at the collapsed Geneva test Emelyanov repe talks, told the main political com- By The Associated Press ful Central Labor Confederation. tions that the Wes mittee the question of a test ban DETROIT-George Roxburgh,. It was the nation's third general the elections to j treaty should not. be buried in business agent of Teamster Pres- strike this, year. didate on the S over-all debate on disarmament. ident James R. Hoffa's home lo- Walkouts by railroad, city tran- African and Asian Different Problem cal, was indicted yesterday on sit workers and longshoremen contended earlier "The United States believes it charges of taking illegal payments paralyzed nearly all of the nation-' man should have very important and in all our in- from a Grand Rapids trucking al transportation system. of these countries terests that the question of nu- firm for employment. * * *. ganization's first t clear tests must be considered The six charges violating the. WASHINGTON-The presiden- W. Sterling Cole, separately from disarmament. Taft-Hartley Act, included taking tial disarmament adviser, John J. succeeds, was an . "The problems of each are -dif- retainers from the trucking con- McCloy, turned in a thick report "Do the Weste ferent and the results to be ex- cern. . on his work yesterday and then believe that they pected are different," he said.* * gave up his job solutions upon the Valerian A. Zorin, Soviet depu- PARIS-The Soviet Union ex- The White House said McCloy's tries?" asked E ty foreign minister, objected that plocjed at dawn yesterday the 18th advice in the disarmament field the United States no progress could be made unless and biggest nuclear test device in will continue to be available forgotten that thi 'the nuclear 'test issue is merged its current series, French govern- * . * holding company in debate on general and complete ment detection services reported. WASHINGTON-President John United States ho disarmament. . A similar report came from Ja- F. Kennedy and President Ferik Afskar "We are deeply convinced that pan's C e n t r a 1 Meteorological Ibrahim Abboud of neutral Su- ase hsgernir to isolate this question will not Agency in Tokyo, but hours later dan agreed yesterday on the im- fromadvise his gen yield any good results in the work Washington remained silent on portance of a nuclear 'test bn yrme agency of our committee," he said, the report. agreement based on an effective confereny, Emecy C di Pla * *, *conference. I c Canadian Plan * sstem of inspection and control, thatqeto o Paul Tremblay, Canadian dele- BUENOS AIRES - Argentina - question now gate, recalled to the special poli- slowed to a crawl yesterday as tical committee a report that ra- thousands of workers heeded a dioactive fallout over Toronto had general strike call by the power- "Bsautiful, vivid, strkang.N.Y. Times increased 1,000-fold due to re- T- remendous presente sumption of Soviet tests in the impact" INDIA STU atmosphere. ' We are now " ASS0CA-I He said the issue is "a matter of common and urgent concern to Debiverng us all." However, he did not press vvednesdaya the matter to a formal vote, and Pwith erancers Ann Arbor H.S. the committee chairman, Yordan andMusicians ',AN Tchbanov of Bulgaria, declared N TEMPLE RHYTHMS OF INDIA Tickets: $1.5( that atomic radiation would be II ItKSsr AscoNENTA.Y 1R at I nteatonc taken up at the first item of busi- NO 2-5414 PREENTSYDVASIA SC/1Y PERFORMI ARTSPROGRAD y8 ness. I Free Delivery Free Delivery Free Delivery The .Cottage Inn Pizzeria and The Brown Jug Restaurant PIZZA Free Delivery PIZZA Pizza delivered free in hot portable ovens. Real Italian food is our specialty. Cottage inn 3-5902 Brown Jug 8-9819 512 E. Williams 1204 S. University Free Delivery Free Delivery Free Delivery Choose from Ann Arbor's Largest Stock ELEVEN LABELS DUPLICATE BRIDGE Every Tuesday Nite 7:30 P.M. --,VFW HOME- 314 E. 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