THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 ations Condemn Soviet Est H-Bomb Test t :: .. ::.....~i.~nA..~ *4 For Lat( -AP Wirephoto .CONFERENCE-Japanese, Thai and Canadian delegates to the United Nations confer before the meeting of the Political Committee yesterday where several nations denounced the Soviet Union for its recent test of a 30-megaton hydrogen bomb. y NEW RULING: Close Off East Berlin TO U.S. Civilan Aes BERLIN ()- 'ihe United States Army yesterday quietly banned private trips to East Berlin by civilian members of the United States mission. American soldiers wearing civilian clothes also were affected by the ban, apparently imposed to avoid a clash with the Communists over Western access rights to East Berlin. Communist East Germany announced Monday that all - persons in civilian clothes must show their identity documents to East German People's Police, even if they are members of the Allied garrisons N obel WJ ner in Allied-licensed cars. New Order The new American order avoid- ed an immediate challenge of the AsTCommunist restriction, which look- Asks oyage ed like another chip off the long - established Western rights and JOHANNESBURG (M - Albert privileges in Berlin. John Luthuli, winner!of. a Nobel The ban was not publicly an- nounced. Nor' would spokesmen Peace Prize for his fight against formally admit that' it even exist' South Africa's white supremacy ed. The order from headquarters policies, said yesterday he will was quietly put into operation at seek permission to go to jEurope the Friedrichstrasse border check- sepesinto goceto Europerd. point at 3 p.m. to receive the award. United States counter-intelli- The South African government gence agent at the checkpoint dis- has exiled him to a Negro reser- creetly advised civilians in Amer- vation. It refused to indicate ican-licensed cars against crossing whether'it would grant a passport into East Berlin. and exit visa to the 62-year-old Not Allowed former Zulu chief. Officers at the Military Police Interior Minister Jan de Klerk border 'post said civilian members said the question is being consid- of the United States mission ered. would not be allowed to ignore It was reliably reported that the agent's advice. None tried. Prime Minister Hendrik F. Ver- The new ruling did not apply woerd himself will make the de- to American + civilians such as cision. newsmen who have army-licensed The African Congress of Demo- cars but do not belong to the crats supported Luthuli's requests. United States mission staff. Some ________________________American newsmen were stopped .. . . . . at first, but officials said this was a mistake. Heretofore Allied personnel en- tering border checkpoints have re- fused to submit to identity checks because the West does not rec- ognize the East German regime. MP's marched into the Soviet sector Sunday to escort a State Departzient official after he was stopped by East German police. COEDS: It's Hairstyling V ~Galore!1 No Appointment Needed Custom-Styling The Dascola Barbers :. Near Michigan Theatre T World News Roundup it By The Associated Press SAIGON, South Viet Nam -- South Viet Nam accused Commu- nist North Viet, Nam yesterday of dispatching hundreds of regular troops through eastern Laos into this pro-Western country to wage a war "of subversion, terror and direct aggression." President Ngo Dinh Diem's gov- ernment outlined its charges in a formal request to the internation- al control commission for an in- vestigation. The South Vietnamese action could be a move to lay a lega basis for United States interven. tion with American troops. Such intervention appeared to be gain- ing sentiment among the South Vietnamese themselves. * * * UNITED NATIONS-An emer- gency measure opposed by the Communists sailed through th UN Assembly Budget Committee yesterday, assuring the life of the military program in the Congo t the end of the year'. The measure permits the UN Secretariat to spend up to $1( million a month in November and December to keep the force of 16,000 men depldyed throughou the Congo until. the General As- sembly decides what the UN Congc program will be in 1962. The vote on the measure, spon sored by 11 countries, was 55-E with 15 abstentions and 22 coun- tries absent. WASHINGTON-The State De partment said yesterday the So viet airlift of arms into the rebel held area of Laos has been grad ually expanding over the past si: weeks. Press Officer Lincoln White said that as the monsoon seasor in southeast Asia drew to a close the Soviets stepped up the floc of arms and ammunition to point where it now exceeds the airlift rate of last May. LONDON-Britain has begur building a second nuclear sub marine called the Valiant, the Ad- miralty announced last night. Britain's first nuclear sub, the Dreadnought, was launched bs Queen Elizabeth II a year ago Built largely with Americar knowhow, it is expected to be commissioned early next year. Reaction Hits UN, Socialist Conference Eight-Nation Move On Testing Collapses UNITED NATIONS (A) - The Soviet Union was denounced in the United Nations yesterday for testing a giant H-bomb, but a small-nation move for an urgent appeal to Moscow to refrain from such tests collapsed. United Nations Day discussions in, the UN General Assembly's main Political Committee includ- ed debate on an eight nation res olution on the bomb tests, watered down to contain only an appeal to Moscow not to explode a 50- megaton bomb. Per Hakkerup of Denmark told the committee the sponsors had accepted an Indian amendment that deleted any expression of concern that it would have an adverse effect on health and wel- fare of mankind and were not pressing for priority. But elsewhere, ground swell of anger and fear of radioactive fallout surged around the north- ern hemisphere and penetrated to southern nations in the wake of the Soviet superbomb blast Mon- day. The shock over the explosion, generally estimated as having a force of about 30 megatons, or equal to about 30 million tons of TNT, was heightened by fear of an even bigger blast to come. Pre- mier Nikita S. Khrushchev has said Russia will test a 50-mega- ton bomb Oct. 30 or 31. From Norway's north cape to the Italian boot, the reaction in Western Europe was the same: x "Crimes against humanity" and " "war in peacetime upon the in- . fants jof the world," were news- papers cries. - Countries in Europe closest to a the test at Novaya Zemlya in the Arctic showed anxiety about the dangers of contamination of in- - fants' milk from radioactive 10- e dine. e In Japan, sometimes described e as the crossroads of radioactive e fallout currents, two major news- o papers gave nearly two pages each to editorial denunciation of the q nuclear detonation, furious read- 0 er comments and suggestions on d how to ward off the hazard. f The World Congress of Socialists t at Rome, in the name of 70 mil- - lion voters, protested that the ex- 0 plosion was a "monstrous crime against humanity" endangering the lives of those living and un- 9 born. Hugh Gaitskell, British Labor Party leader, told the Congress "wefeel deep disgust and cold -anger."~ . . 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