THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THE ICHIAN AILYPA. Albarnian Russians Leaders Claim, Wreck Unity Labor Board, To Examine Racial -Bias WASHINGTON (A)-The gov- ernment has agreed to consider imposing a rule against employ- ers raising racial issues in cam- paigns to keep workers out of la- bor unions. The National Labor Relations Board has just decided to review two cases from Southern states in which unions seek such a ban. Regional NLRB officials had re- jected their plea. In both situations workers vot- ed against giving bargaining rights to applicant unions. The labor or- ganizations contend the election results should be cancelled and new voting held because they say the outcome was prejudiced by ra- cial issues raised by employers. If the five-man NLRB decides to adopt the union view, a court test islikely. The labor laws are not too clear on the point., On one hand the law says noth- ing should be allowed to inter- fere with workers having a free choice on letter a labor organiza-- tion represent them. But the law also says "the ex- pressing of any views, argument or opinion,, or the dissemination thereof, whether in written, print- ed, graphic or visual form "is per- missible to employers and unions alike. FEUD-Pravda yesterddy published a letter to the Communist Party Congress by Albanian Communist leaders, headed by Enver Hoxa (left), denouncing the leadership of Soviet Premier, Nikita S. Khrushchev (right) as wrecking the unity of the party. Police Arrest Protestors Of Soviet Nuclear Tests LONDON UP) - Police-yesterday arrested more than 500 ban-the- bomb demonstrators who staged a sitdown protest near the Soviet embassy against Russia's an- nounced intention of exploding a 50-megaton nuclear bomb. U 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. Universit ty. Free Delivery Free Deliver y Free Delivery ROCK HUDSON & DORIS DAY you can-see any time-but not at Gothic. At Gothic this season you will see films you can't see elsewhere: by masters like Eisenstein (THE GENERAL LINE), Vittorio de Sica (SHOE SHINE), Kurosawa (SEVEN SAMURAI), Rene Clair (SQUS LES TOITS DE PARIS), comedy by Charlie Chap- lin, Mack Sennett, Laurel & Hardy - plus new masters of the avant garde. This very Monday: After warning the demonstrators against sitting down on a public highway - the busy Bayswater Road along the north side of Hyde Park - the police began working ther .way along the 200- yard long column of seated dem- onstrators. One by one the pro- testers were arrested and carried off in trucks. Leaders of the demonstration handed in a letter to Soviet of- ficials 'denouncing Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's proclaimed in- tention to test a 50 megaton nu- clear' bomb at the end of this month. Organizers of the protest march said it was designed to draw pub- lic attention to the dangers of all nuclear testing -,- and particularly Russia's forthcoming mammoth blast. World News By The Associated Press LA PAZ, Bolivia-Students riot- ed here yesterday against a sharp increase in bus and taxi fares and the government ordered a state of siege in the La. Paz area. Two students were killed and about 20 persons injured.. The government ordered siege action when the students burned three cars, stoned others and at- tacked the drivers union building. POINT ARGUELLO, Calif. - A manmade copper cloud was spread 2,100 miles from the Earth yes- terdayto test prospects for a jam- proof radio system. UNITED NATIONS-The Unit- ed Nations estimated yesterday that its international force in the Congo would go on costing $10 million a month even though the force is being reduced from 18,000 to 15,900 men. The estimate was in a budget report issued for con- sideration in the General Assem- bly's budgetary committee. DETROIT - Despite top-level pressure from both union and management, not a single local- level agreement was reported yes- terday in at-the-plant bargaining between the United Auto Workers Union and Chrysler Corp. rava Hints PartyPlans Expulsions Condemns Malenkov, Other Stalinists MOSCOW ()-Albania sent a letter of angry protest to Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev yesterday and Pravda predicted the expulsion from the Commu- nist party of V. M Molotov and his Stalinist comrades. Sources at the Communist Par- ty Congress reported the letter from Albanian leaders accused Khrushchev of making wrecking attacks against Communist unity. Sees Friends Mikhail A. Suslov, a member of the Presidium of the party's Cen- tral Committee and a top party theoretician, was reported to have declared after seeing the letter: "We now say finally that we understand clearly where our friends are." Khrushchev all but read the Al- banian Party out of the Commu- nist bloc Tuesday when he accus- ed its leaders of adhering to the Stalinist cult of personality and engaging. in Stalin-like repressions of the people. Forecast Expulsions The arrival of the letter 'was reported as Pravda, the official Communist P a r t y newspaper, clearly forecast the expulsion from the party of V. M. Molotov and his Stalinist comrades in the anti- party group of 1957. The paper said the 4,408 dele- gates at the Congress "unanimous- ly support the speakers who rais- ed the question of excluding from the party those participants in the dissident group." The paper named Molotov, for- mer foreign minister under Stal- in; Lazar Kaganovich, a former righthand administrator for Stal- in. former Premier Georgi Mal- enkov; former President Klemen- ti Y. Voroshilov; former Premier Nikolai Bulganin; former Presi- dium members Mikhail Pervukhin and Maxim Saburov and former Foreign Minister Dimitri Shep- ilov. This indicated all eight may lose their party cards. Albanian Boycott Albania's leaders, apparently expecting trouble, did not attend the party Congress here, although Communist Parties 'from about 80 countries are represented. The Albanian letter was said to have noted "with sympathy" that Premier Chou En-ai of Red China included the Albanians among fratenral Communist Parties and appealed for negotiations to settle differences quietly. * It declared thatiKhrushchev's "calumnies and anti-Marxist at- tacks" only helped the foes of Communism and that the Alban- ian leadership would produce doc- uments to show "the truth on re- lations" between it and the So- viet leadership. Egypt Arrests Reactionaries CAIRO P) - The government last night announced the arrest of 40 persons and confiscation of property owned by 167 others in a move to eliminate what it call- ed reactionary obstacles to Pres- ident Gamal Nasser's announced goal of Arab socialism. Informants said the measures were part of a sweeping reform program drawn up following Syr- ia's break with the United Arab Republic last month. Terror Hits ParisOran; .Fear More PARIS (M-Terrorism erupted again yesterday in France and Algeria and authorities alerted police for even more trouble today. One Moslem was killed and six Moslems and Europeans were in- jured in renewed racial clashes in the city of Oran in Western Al- geria. In Paris, six plastic bombs dam- aged buildings but caused no in- juries. Other bombs exploded at Lille and Avignon. Authorities blamed French rightists opposed to the government's policy of self- determination for Algeria. A police force 11,000 strong stood on the alert in Paris for a possible new upsurge of violence from Algerian Nationalists, who are being egged on by the rebel government in Tunis. About 10,000 Algerians still are under arrest after bloody demon- strations in Paris this week against a curfew. The curfew was imposed on Algerians to break up gang fights and to halt attacks on police. Authorities said they etpect Al- gerian Nationalist demonstrations in France and possibly Algeria to- day-on the fifth anniversary of the French capture of Rebel Vice Premier Ahmed Ben Bella. All sporting events in Oran, which draw' big crowds, were canceled. The curfew there was extended. May- Agree On Coalition BONN (-P) - Leaders of West Germany's Free Democratic Party voted yesterday to join a coalition government with Konrad Adenauer as Chancellor on condition that Foreign Minister Heinrich von Bentano is replaced. The vote touched off what ap- peared to be a clear break in the party between members for and against the aged Adenauer. The steering committee of the right-wing party, which holds the balance of power in the Bundestag (lower house) between Adenauer's Christian Democrats and the op- position Social Democrats, made the choice after an 11-hour meet- ing. They advised the party's Bunde- stag members to accept a coalition - if the Foreign Ministry ques- tion is settled. The Christian Democrats are scheduled to meet next week aed will consider whe- ther to accept or reject the de- mand the von Brentano must go. The majority that swung yes- terday's decision was reported by participants at the meeting to be very small. Guatemalans Express Fear Of Red Plots GUATEMALA VP) - President Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes conferred with military chiefs yesterday to tighten security against what the government calls "a Communist plan to invade Central America." The interior ministry told news- men Friday that documents pre- sented by Cuban exiles show Gua- temala is the target of a Havana plot involving Col. Jacobo Arbenz Guzman, a former president of Guatemala deposed by an anti- communist uprising in 1954. The first phase, a communique said, would -be to "spread terror with Russian planes, bombard- ments 'to destroy military posts and finally the landing of troops who would be led by Col. Arbenz, who knows the defenses of the country." WASHINGTON (M - Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver conceded yesterday that the or- ganization has had "some boo-; boos--at least some accidents," but said its initial successes abroad have been inspiring except to Communists. Referring to Communist charges of "Yankee imperialism" in Peace Corps activity, Shriver said: "The Communists are not at-; tacking the Peace Corps, but the threat to monolithic government it represents. They fear the Peace Corps not because of our guns because the image of a truly free man will be walking up and down the streets of foreign lands." Shriver said it had been almost providential that with more' than 350 volunteers sent abroad to as- sist nations requesting help in teaching, farm and health fields "only a postcard incident develop- ed." His reference was to Margery Michelmore, Peace Corps girl who stirred up a storm among students in Nigeria with her postcard com- ments on living conditions there. Miss Michelmore arrived in Puerto Rico yesterday to confer with officials at the Corps train- ing center there. She said in San Juan she went there to "recuper- ate and to consider whether I want to stay in the Peace Corps." Shriver, who turned down Miss Michelmore's offer to resign over the Nigerian incident, addressed a luncheon concluding the last of 14 area sessions on its goals. He said it was encouraging to see how officials and others in Nigeria had taken the opportuni- ty in the middle of the contro- versy to express support for the corps and to say it would be a great thing for that country. Meanwhile, in Ibadan, Nigeria, Dapo Falase, the Nigerian stu- dent who led the opposition to the Peace Corps after Miss Mich- elmore's post card report on prim- itive living conditions in this country, said yesterday he receiv- SUCCESS AND SETBACKS: Shriver Views Peace Corps .nr "La Culture Francaise Aujourd'hui" Lecture by: M. Morot-,Sir French cultural counselor in the U.S. MONDAY, OCTOBER 23 ed an invitation to visit the Unit- ed States. Falase said the cable he re- ceived added that a letter giving details of the invitation will fol- low. The invitation came from a Long Beach businessman, Russell Guiver, who offered an expense- paid vacation "to show him what America is like and what Ameri- cans stand for." Gulver was reported to have suggested that Falase's visit be around Thanksgiving week in November but that date is un- likely as Falase is in the middle of a term at the University Col- lege of Ibadan. 8:00 P.M. UGLI Multipurpose Room Cercle Francais and Alliance Francaise MICHELE MORGAN JEAN GABIN in Marcel Carne and Jacques Prevert's QUAI DES BRUMES GERMAINE DULAC'S Surrealist startger SMILING MADAME BEUDET TUESDAY, OCT. 24,18:30, in Hill Auditorium Tickets: $4.00 - $3.50- $3.00 - $2.25 - $1.50 UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY, BURTON TOWER (by makers ENFANTS DU of LES PARADIS GOTHIC FILM SOCIETY, Monday, Oct. 23 at 8 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheatre. Admission is by subscription only. A subscription for the 9 remaining film programs of the 1961- 62 series costs $4.50-available at the door. For further infor- mation call 663-6001. 1I I.Q.C. ASSEMBLY I POLITICAL PARTY presents CUR TIS HAYES McCOMB, MISS., PROTEST LEADER Presents the IA JL discussing -m v THE DENIAL OF FREEDOM TO THE October 28 8:30 P.M. Hill Aud. SOUTHERN NEGRO y ,I ALL SEATS RESERVED $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 v HIS RECENT ARREST AND F] lkU