THEMICHIGANDAILY U.S. May Resume Tests Unless Russians Agree To Nuclear Ban Treaty O m ~ CallsSteps Necessariy' For 'Security Six Nations Protest About Health Danger UNITED NATIONS (M - The United States declared yesterday that unless a nuclear test ban treaty is signed it must prepare to take all steps needed to pro- tect its security, including tests in the atmosphere.! United StatesnAmbassador Ad- lai E. Stevenson delivered that warning to the United Nations As- sembly's main political commit- tee. He challenged the Soviet Un- ion to sign a treaty at once. "I pray we do not lose another chance to meet this challenge of qur time and stop this death dance," he declared. Just before Stevenson opened, debate on t e: test ban issue six nations most liable to be affect- ed by' fallout from Soviet tests made known their intention to put UN pressure on Premier Nikita S.. Khrushchev to call off plans' for testing a. 50-megaton bomb. The six - Denmark, Norway, Iceland, Sweden, anada and'Ja- pan-were reported ready to de- mand priority in the committee today for a resolution expressiog concern over danger to world health from such a big bomb test. tcontainedtasolemn appeal to Khrushchev not to test the .boitib at the end of the month, as he has announced he plans to do. Stevenson said the United States' was prepared to join Britain and the Soviet Union at the negotiat- ing table now. "But until there is a treaty and tests can be stopped," he added, "the United States, as a respon- sible nation, must prepare to take all steps necessary to protect its own security and that of the world community."' He said that in self-protection the United States reserves the right to make preparations to test in the atmosphere, as well as un- derground. He declared that the 50-mega- ton bomb will "poison the at- mosphere by creating more ra- dioactivity than that produced by any series of tests since 1945." He said the Soviet big bomb announcement was the climax to a, program of intimidation. NIKITA S. KHRUSHCHEV .,to continue tests ADLAI E.' STEVENSON .. asks immediate ban Soviet Union To Explode Bomb Despite Criicism UNITED NATIONS (RP)-The Soviet Union declared yesterday it resumed nuclear weapons tests to strengthen its defenses, and will continue on that path until the West accepts general and complete disarmament. The Soviet position was set forth in advance of full-scale debate in the United Nations General Assembly's main political committee, where the United States will advocate a fool-proof treaty to end nu- clear tests as a major step toward disarmament. Moscow's plan to test a 50-megaton bomb at the French Deport Rebels To Algerian Homeland PARIS (P)-Planeloads of Algerians, many of them nursing band- aged wounds, bruises and scars from battles with police in anticurfew demonstrations, were shipped home yesterday as French authorities started a deportation airlift. Security forces, reinforced by about 3,000 riot police and gen- darmes, took stern measures to prevent any new turnouts by Algerian nationalists. One rebel chieftain in Nanterre, scene of a bloody clash last Wednesday night, told a Par- is newspaper the Algerian cam- paign in Paris "is just beginning." Chou Attaks Exile Government Other sources said the Algerians of their women and children into U S 7 R s i were planning to send thousands o hi oe n hlrnit the streets ,of Paris today or this weekend in obedience to a call MOSCOW (a - Premier Chou from rebel exile government head- En-Lai of Red China tossed de- quarters in Tunis. fiant sallies at Soviet Premier The first two deportation flights Nikita S. Khrushchev and bitterly in requisitioned Air France super- asailed yesiden bor a meetin constellations carried 154 passen- of Communist leaders from gers plus 36 riot police guards. tougounit aerrld. The deportees were bound forthoguthewrd Constantine, in Eastern Algeria, "President Kennedy waves the where they will be taken to forced olive branch, but he is worse residence in their native villages. than those who preceded him," Chou declared in apparent refer- Cite Deportation ence to former Presidents Truman Authorities announced that at and Eisenhower, who were in the least 1,500 among the nearly 12,- White House before and after the 000 rounded up after a massive Reds seized the China mainland. demonstration by 20,000 to 30,000 Chou blamed Kennedy for the Algerians Tuesday night will be troubles in Berlin, Cuba and Laos. deported immediately. Reports of the day's meeting of After two straight nights of the Soviet Party's 22nd Congress demonstrations, clashes with po- trickled out yesterday. They said lice, and big-sdale roundups in Chou launched a defense of Com- Paris and the suburbs, some 9,000 munist Albania in the face of So- Algerians were still being detain- viet Khrushchev's bitter attack ed. Police were running identity on the little Adriatic country and checks on the prisoners in an ef= was .,immediately challenged by fort to cull out the ringleaders other Soviet leaders. for shipment back to Algeria. At one point in the sharp ex- Rebel headquarters said the change that indicated the split basic reason to the appeal to the between thenSoviet Union and Red 400,000 Algerians living in France China was not completely healed, was to force 'the French govern- Khrushchev showed by example ment to negotiate peace in Al- that the audience of 4,500 party geria. delegates should quit applauding The massive demonstrations Chou., started, however, as a protest Chou mingled his' frontal as- against a Paris curfew, applying saults on Kennedy and sideswipes only to Algerians, to reduce gang at Khrushchev with praise for the wars between Algerian factions Soviet Union's domestic program and rebel raids on police. and foreign policy. WORLD NEWS ROUND-UP: Aid Ridicules Charges By The AssociatedPress WASHNGTO -A tateDe- WASHINGTON - The Inter- WASHINGTON - A State D American Human Rights Commis- partment spokesman yesterday sion will travel to the Dominican dismissed as "nonsense renewed Republic Sunday to investigate Rusian charges that spies, sabo- complaints that human rights' teurs and other .subversives have have been violated there. been flown into West Berlin by commercial planes of the three Western powers. NEW YORK - Wide gains by. o . * some utilities and other blue chips LONDON - Prime Miniser combined with steep losses of air- Harold Macmillan told Parliament crafts and growth stocks in a Wednesday he will not hesitate scrambled stock, market yester- to draft reservists if there is a day d further deterioration in the inter- Trading was fairly active. national situation. LONDON - Margery Michel- more, 23-year-old member of President Kennedy's Peace Corps, left for Bermuda by 'plane yes- terday without breaking her si- lence on the fuss that forced her Costly E.rrors Cause Arn - SupplyPile-Up P p WASHING'ON (O) - A unit- happy electronic machine was cited in a General Accounting Of- fice (GAO) report yesterday, along with human errors, for what the agency called a costly-pileup.of military aid supplies in the Far East. The GAO, which kepps a check. on government spending, reported its findings on why nearly half a billion dollars worth of spare parts had accumulated in Asian warehouses and at the Army's big supply and inventory depot in Ja- pan. In one instance, the report said a calculating machine reported the issuance of 111,146 items when the figure should have been 46. In another instance, the GAO said, the machine recorded issuanee of 111,129 items to foreign countries when the actual number was only 29. Replacements for the thousands of items that were never actually issued were ordered at a cost of $177,998, the report said. end of the 'month is expected to come under strong Western at- tack. S. K. Tsarapkin, the Soviet Un- ion's chief negotiator at the Gene- va test ban talks that ended in a deadldck almost 16 months ago, spoke in the Assembly's special political committee. The committee is debating the need for a speedup in informa- tion from experts on dangers to mankind 'due to radioactive fall- out from nuclear weapons tests. Tsarapkin said a militarily strong Soviet Union provided the best guaranteefor preventing the world from being plunged into the horror of nuclear war. "That is what the Soviet Union is trying to. prevent by strength- ening its defenses," he asserted. "We will have to continue to do this until the Western powers will have understood that it is neces- sary to embark upon general and complete disarmament." He said that when agreement is reached on general and com- plete disarmament "there will no longer be any need to test nuclear weapons." He demanded that the com- mittee end its debate and leave discussion of ending tests to future disarmament negotiators. out of Nigeria. 11 ethic, l ecle announces Subscriptions Still Available for the Current Series Oct. 23: QUAI DES BRUMES (written by Jacques Feb. 12: SOUS 4ES TOITS DE PARIS (dir. by Rene Prevert, dir. by Marcel Carne, France, 1938); Claire, France, 1930); and FANTASY FOR' and THE SMILING MADAME BEUDET (dir. FOUR STRINGS (dir. by Albert Pierru, France, by Germaine Dufac, France, 1922) 1957) Mar. 5: THE GENERAL LINE (dir, by Sergei Noa 13 FRAGMENT OF' AN EMPIRE (dir, by Eisenstein, USSR, 1929); and HIS MARRIAGE Friedrich Ermler, USSR, 1928.); and THE FIRE- WOW (dir. by Mack Sennett, with Harry Lang- MAN (dir.'by Charles Chaplin, U. S., 1916) don) Dec. 4: THE SEVEN SAMURAI (THE MAGNIFI- Mar. 26: SHOESHINE (dir. by Vittorio de Sica, (dir. by Akira Kurosawa, Jpan, Italy, 1947); and NIGHT MAIL (dir. by Harry CENT SEVEN) (i.bAkrKrswJpn, Watt and Basil Wright, Great Britain, 1936) 1954); and HIGHWAY (dir. by Hilary Harris, W U.S., 1958). This showing at 7:30 p.m. Apr. 23: BED AND SOFA (dir by Abram Room, USSR, 1927); and BIG BUSINESS (Laurel and Jan. 8: FARREBIQUE (dir. by George Rouquier, Hardy, U. S., 1929) France, 1947); and HAVE I TOLD YOU May 14: THE SET-UP (dir. by Robert Wise, U. S., LATELY THAT I LOVE YOU (dir. by Stuart 1949); and LE SANG DES BETES (dir. by Hanisch, U. S., 1959) Georges Franju, France, 1950) ALL SHOWINGS except that of Dec. 4 (see above) are on Monday evenings at 8 p.m. in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Admission is by subscription only. A subscription to the 9 remaining programs costs $4.50; the cost is pro-rated for late joiners at the rate of Sac per program. Send check or money order made out to GOTHIC FILM SOCIETY to.W. P. Kenney, 905 S. Division, Ann Arbor; sub- scriptions are also available at the showings. For further information call 663-6001 WASHINGTON-United States space scientists fired a rocket more than 4,000 miles high yester- day in a study of the ionosphere. DETROIT - Ford Motor Co. and the United Auto Workers' Union finally signed up their new three-year- contract yesterday, just when it looked as if a last- minute, one-plant dispute might shut down newly moving assembly lines next week. '* * * ATHENS - Greece told the So- viet Union yesterday that the So- viet protest against recent NATO maneuvers in Northeastern Greece "constitutes an interference with Cuba Grants Aid To Latin Students HAVANA (P)-The Cuban gov- ernment announced yesterday it will grant 1,000 scholarships to Latin American students for full courses in any of Cuba's three uni- versities. The announcement said the scholarships are open to Latin American youths "without dis- tinctions of race, nationality or religious belief." - S. .. Cihethna ruild TONIGHT at 7 and 9 Saturday and Sunday at 2 and 6:00 Cari Dreyer's A STAR IS BORN DAY OF WRATH