T__E MCHIGAN DAILY German Border Police Use Tear Gas Grenades To Stop Loudspeaker U.S. Issues -New Arms -AP Wirephoto TROOP ESCORT-E. Alien Lightner, Jr., top State Department official, sits behind the wheel of his automobile while American troops in Berlin escort him from the Soviet sector of Berlin Sunday night. ALABAMA: CourtAct To Accelerate l sa For Troops Soldiers Defy Reds To Escort Official BERLIN (AP)- East and West Berlin police fought a duel with tear gas grenades for nearly half an hour Sunday night, West Ger- man police reported yesterday. At Wollankstrasse, on the French sector border, the Com- munists tried to silence a West loudspeaker can by tossing five tear gas grenades at it.' Only two detonated, but the ex- plosion of one of them smashed the glass of a car in the west. Throw -Back Grenades The West police said they threw back six grenades "with good ef- fect." The West police patrolling the borders were issued submachine guns and tear gas grenades for the first time Sunday. 1 Also last night, three Americans defied a new Communist border restriction in divided Berlin and won an argument over East Ger- man, police. They refused to comply with an East German rule announced yes- terday ordering members of al- lied garrsons in civilian clothes to prove their identity when cross- ing to and from the Communist sector. Halt Car The regime announced the re- striction after the United States command in Berlin protested to the' Russians against the halting of a top State Department official by East German police. The halting Sunday night of the car of E. Allan Lightner Jr., deputy chief of the United States mission, brought tension to a high pitch. Eight United States military po- lice with fixed bayonets finally entered East Berlin to insure pass- age of his car. East Berlin police did not itnerfere. Following allied procedure, Lightner had refused to show his identification card to East Berlin police.. PEACE PRIZE-The late Dag Hammarskjold (left) and Albert John Luthuli were awarded the Nobel Peace Prizes for 1961 and 1960 respectively. Hammarskjo id9 Luthuli Win Nobel Peace Prizes OSLO (P)-Nobel Peace Prizes were awarded yesterday to Dag Hammarskjold and Albert John Luthuli, a Negro leader in South Africa-two advocates of' non-violence in a violent world. The 1961 award went to the late United Nations Secretary-Gen- eral. The 1960 prize was belatedly awarded to Luthuli for working to ease the effects of racial discrimination in South Africa. He is a Zulu Christian leader who will be unable to receive the prize .personally. The Norwegian parliamentary committee which omakes the awards noted that he is forbidden by South Africa's white ~ay B oycott supremacy government to leave his village. y The UN Secretary-General, who perished Sept. 18 on a peace mis- sion to the Congo, was the first UNITED NATIONS (P) - A to receive the award posthumous- group of African nations yesterday ly. The prize, worth $48,640 will go to Hammarskj old's estate. readied a demand for a sweep- ing political and economic boycott jold was mentioned by the com- against South Africa in reprisal mittee, but it may well have been for its white supremacist policies. the work for peace Jn the Congo South African Foreign Minister that finally cost him his life. Ob- servers noted the committee broke Ens Louwmp warnedhe wouldht with a past tendency to avoid con- any attempt to isolate his na- troversial candidates. Hammarsk- tion. He threatened to expose his jold had been under Communist main accusers as the real viola- bloc attack for his Congo policies. tors of the human -rights clause Luthuli is a member of the in the United Nations.charter. African National Congress which Louw launched a biting attack has been outlawed. He refused to on those 'spearheading the re- join the bloody demonstrations prisal action against his govern- against the white supremacy laws ment's racial policies, as the 101- launched by the rival Pan Afri- nation special political committee canist Congress last year., opened debate on the explosive is- But he burned his pass book, sue of apartheid in South Africa. required of all non-whites, and The debate promised to be urged his followers to do the stormy as the 27-nation African same. For this he was arrested. group sought support for a reso- Under rules governing Peace ,lution.which would cut South Af- Prizes provided from the estate of rica off from all trade and diplo- Albert Nobel, inventor of dyna- matic relations with the rest of mite, the list of candidates closes the world. each Feb. 1. The resolution, initiated by Adlai E. Stevenson, U. S. Am- Ghana, had also demanded that bassador to the United Nations, the Security Council expel South was among those suggesting the Africa from the United Nations. Peace Prize for Hammarskjold. PARTY CONGRESS: Russia Develops New Defense By The Associated Press MOSCOW - Defense Minister formed sources said he would re- on several occasions and most Marshal Radion Y. Malinovsky de- turn to Moscow before the Soviet cently at this congress when cared yesterday Russia has devel- Party Congress ends. viet Premier Nikita Khrush< oped a deadly accurate defense Removes Signs attacked Albania for swin against rodkets-supposedly an The informed report removed away from the line of Commu antimissile missile. some signs of a basic split in the doctrine supported by the Sc He also boasted the establish- Communist camp but did indicate Union. ment of a new armed service that the Soviet attack against Earlier, Dmitri Polyansky branch of rocket and nuclear- China-supported Albania had cre- member of the Party Presid armed troops "capable of inflict- ated a new problem that must accused ex-President Klement ing a crushing defeat upon the be discussed on a high level in Voroshilov of once conductir aggressor. Peiping. China's chairman Mao Stalinist suppression campaigi Destroy Rockets Tze-tung did not come to the Mos- the army. He also assailed cow congress. Premier and former Foreign M "The problem of destroying The division in the camp-of ister V. M. Molotov as hopele rockets in flight has been success- unknown depth-has shown itself sunk in Stalinism. fully solved," Tass quoted Main-_____________________________ ovsky as telling the 22nd Soviet Communist Party Congress in a World News Round rocket defenses. Informants attending the closed congress session said Malinovsky Dy The Associated Press spiracy to raid the Teams' also announced tha Soviet scien-I tists had "controlled" a 50-mega- BEIRUT - Lebanese Premierrasofm be. ton nuclear test bomb. There was Saeb Salam yesterday presented no explanation of precisely what the resignation of his government WASHINGTON - Commun this mean. to President Fouad Chehab. He tions Chief Newton N. Minow Meanwhile, Red China's Pre- said he would resign formally this last night a nationwide net mier Chou En-lai flew home last morning. for educational television coul night for the reported purpose of * * * created by utilizing UHF. 1 high-level party discussions. In- DETROIT-A million dollar libel stands for ultra high freque and slander suit was brought by and UHF channels run fro + James A. Hoffraand his Teamsters through 83. Secre ariat Union yesterday against Presi- dent George Meany and most of NEW YORK-A late-session the AFL-CIO top leadership, off drove the stock market sh Hoffa, president of the Team- ly lower yesterday. Disappoin D eat N ears sters, and his international accus- news on steel production, tax- ed Meany and 24 AFL-CIO Execu- selling and reverberations of UNITEDioandNATIONS(h)-Thetive Council members of making Russian super bomb blast m Soviet Union and the United icked and malicious" statements were credited with triggering States neared agreement yesterday about the Teamsters i a con- down turn. on installing a temporary United Nations secretary-general to re- MASONIC AUD. FRI. and SAT., OCT. 27, 28 - 8:15 P.M. place the late Dag Hammarskjold. DETROIT SAT, and SUN., OCT. 28, 29- 2:15 P.M Their progress came in an S. HUROK presents the LEGENDARY hour's conference of Soviet Depu- ty Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin and United States Ambas- sador Adlai E. Stevenson, who long B a lle t ago agreed that U Thant of Bur- COMPANY OF 200 formerly THE MARYNSKY BALLET ma should get the job. Fri. and, Sat. Eves. and Sun. Mat. - Main Fl. $5.50, $6.60, $7.70; Stevenson told reporters after Bale. $3.30, $4.40, $5.50. Sat. Mat. - Main Fl. $4.40, $5.50, $6.60; the conference that the two were Bac. $2.20 $3.30, $4.40, $5.50 now gred o th sustace f aMasonic Temple Box Office Open 9-6 Mon.-Fr., 9-5 Sat. now agreed on, the substance of a As nSl ononGinl' statmen theappinte isto mke ajiAlso on Sale Downtown Grinnell 's statement the appointee is to mak Mai. Orders to Masonic Auditorium, 500 Temple. of his intention to consult cer- Enclose Self-addressed, Stamped Env. tain principal advisers from among his under-secretaries.aHe said he thought they also had agreed on the timing. Zorin declared the only point FRIAR TUCK SAYS: that remained unsettled was the number of these advisers. He said y Lots of satisfied customers come here he hoped Stevenson would "give S+ again and again for TASTY food his consent" to the Soviet position. and POPULAR food. o SREMEMBER: Union Settles FREE STEAK DINNERS to these - -ID numbers. Local Issues 1910311 2005116 2084366 2162681 With Chrysler 22680807 SDETROIT (AP)-The United Auto Workers Union said yesterday it w 4T urk . uttrg has reached agreement with3 WA D Chrysler Corp. at 40 local bargain- ing units and expects to have less than a dozen unsettled units left UAW President Walter P. Reus-R ther reported results of an in- D iscount Records, i c tensive weekend of local negotia- tions as he returned to top-level Only branch in Ann Arbor of a coast-to-coach chain of record shops national talks with Chrysler.F NT'IN S "We would think that by this morning a number of key plants will be in line," Reuther told news THIS WEEK ONLY men. "By then we should have 12 to 16 more settled."C L MB A At Chrsyler the Union has re- CL M versed the bargaining tactics it used at General Motors and Ford F LWY and is attempting to settle localOLKW AYS problems before coming to grips with a national agreement on wages and fringe benefits. WASHINGTON UP) - The Su- preme Court acted yesterday to speed up. a legal test of a five- year-old ban on operation of the National Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People in Alabama. The court said that unless the state courts go ahead with a trial on the issues within a reasonable time--no later than next Jan. 2-- ,the federal district court in Montr gomery shall hear the case. Involved is a State Court or- i der: which NAACP says bars it notI only from organizational activi- ties in Alabama but prevents it from taking any steps to qualify to do business in the state. The State Court order stems from a 1956 complaint by Ala- bama's. attorney general, The NAACP turned to the fed- eral courts, it said, because it be- lieved Alabama's state courts nev- er would act on requests for hear- ings. r ..... 1' MICHIGAN UNION INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS COMMITTEE Presents A panel discussion including students from INDIA SWEDEN GERMAN FEDERAL REPUBLIC BRAZIL The second in a series of International Seminars TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24 4:15 P.M. UNION-ROOM 3R, S iII I. 11 i s>O :(koG704=0 0O©OG:7(GY0 0- 04=>0Op4 a ). O0 AID FOR HONG KONG CHINESE STUDENT CLUB a REFUGEES COMMITTEE CHINESE DINNERS 0 Prepared by Chinese Students For the benefit of Hong Kong Refugeesa Free Recipes FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Slides of Hong Kong Couple: $3.50Social Hall Single: $2.00 (Huron and State) Saturday, October 28 6:00 P.M. Tickets will be sold at the door as well as at the INTERNATIONAL CENTER y:0-0=0=>-<=0=><=0=0=yc=o""o=><"y<=o 0-><-02_ AI THE VICTORIOUS MEN OF TAYLOR ARE GLAD THE "MIGHTY" BOYS OF GOMBERG ACCEPTED OUR "SMALL AND INSIGNIFICANT CHALLENGE," AND HOPE THEIR BIG FEET ARE DRY BY NOW. WE WERE HAPPY TO LET YOU 0