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U.S. OfI * *i * Criticizes Protest By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS-A resolu- tion urging Moscow to cancel a 50-megaton H-bomb blast was rammed through the United Na- tions Political Committee last night over bitter Soviet opposi- tion. By a vote of 75-10 with one ab'- stention (Mali),the committee ap- proved an eight-nation resolution recommending that the General Assembly confront Moscow with a solemn appeal to refrain from testing the big bomb scheduled before the end of this month. Only the Soviet bloc and Cuba voted against the appeal. Overcome Bloc The action capped a day In which the: Soviet bloc aided by some Asian-African nations' tried desperately to plunge the commit- tee into procedural wrangles that would delay ,action. The General Assembly will meet this morning. Denmark proposed arrangements be made to get quick ratification of the committee ac- tion at that time. IndexDrops For Detroit By The Associated Press DETROIT-The Detroit Con- sumer Price Index declined 0.7 per cent from August to Septem- ber according- to a report issued yesterday by Adolph 0. Berger, director of the North Central Re- gional Office of the Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics. The September index for Detroit is 124.9, 0.4 per cent below the level of a year ago. Nationally, a greater than ex- pected increase in clothing prices shoved the nation's September living cost level to the highest point ever reached. Practically e v e r y consumer spending category except food ad- vanced slightly to increase the Labor Department index by two- tenths of one per cent over the August reading. In the course of the debate the Soviet Union rejected any appeal to call off the 50-megaton blast. Second Test Almost simultaneously with the UN move the Atomic Energy Coi- mission announced that Russia exploded another nuclear test blast yesterday with a yield "prob- ably less than a megaton." Earlier reports from the Upp- sala (Sweden) Seismological In- stitute had said the blast was about a tenth as strong as Mon- day's superblast of 30-50 megaton. The AEC announcement said yesterday's Soviet blast, like most of the others, was set off in the atmosphere. A giant radioactive cloud spawn- ed by Russia's massive superbomb explosion last Monday raced across the Pacific at speeds up to 80 miles an hour last night - headed for the Aleutian Islands. It is expected there late today and over Alaska or Western Can- ada late Friday. Bearing only .a small part of the total fallout debris, the cloud crossed northern Manchuria, southeast Siberia and possibly brushed northern Japan in a 2,- 000-mile west-to-east swing dur- ing the day. In Washington, President John F. Kennedy gave the go-ahead yesterday for a long-planned 5- kiloton underground nuclear explo- sion in the salt beds of New Mex- ico to launch a new search for peaceful uses of atomic power. Sees Action As Serious Development Big Three To Confer On Russian Position WASHINGTON MP)-The United States said last night it regards "as a serious development," the rejection by the Soviet command- er in Berlin of a United States protest against interference with access by Americans to East Ber- lin. A State Department spokesman, Joseph Reap, said the United States is taking up the matter "urgently" with the governments involved-Britain, France and Russia. Reap made the statement, he said, after the Department receiv- ed a report on the meetings earlier in the day between the United; States commander in Berlin, Maj. Gen. Albert Watson II, and his Soviet counterpart, Col. Andrei I. Solovyev. Officials Confer Watson went into East Berlin to confer with the Russian in the wake of a series of minor incidents in which East German police in- terfered with the free movement of American civilians in official vehicles. The American general argued that such harrassment of free movement in Berlin was illegal. States Objections He said Watson objected to Sol- ovyev's statement that decrees of the East German regime were binding on access to East Berlin, and that the American General told Solovyev the consequences of such a position 'were potentially so serious that he would refer the matter to "his government on a most urgent basis." Earlier, the State Department insisted anew that United States officials in Berlin, whether in uni- form or wearing civilian clothes, must have free passage to all parts of the city, including the Soviet sector.. END OF CONFLICT: UN-K atangaEffect PrisonerExchange ELISABETHVILLE MA"- Ka- tanga and the United Nations ex- UN forces had moved to disarm UN forces withdrew from the "I believe they genuinely changed prisoners last night, foreign officers serving in Ka- Elisabethville post office and other tended the-exchange should marking an end to the armed con- tanga, an action which amounted strongpoints held during the through. But we had three brea f inabetween the secessionist Con- to an attempt to bring the pro- fighting. downs in the buses taking us flict nthe orld or- The exchange originally was the exchange ground and it v go province and the world or- vince back under control of the scheduled for last week. It was impossible for them to get ganization. central Congo government. delayed when the Katangans failed there in time." The government of President The UN returned some 250 Ka- de hen the t fhe e re in m f ~to get their prisoners to the ex- Tshombe formally accepted Moise Tshombe handed over the tangans, 45 of them in Elizabeth- change point from the prison tification of the Katanga-Z 190 prisoners-mainly Irish-cap- ville and the rest in other cities compound 250 miles away. cease-fire Tuesday. It provii tured in last month's fighting. in Katanga. At the same time 'rh esninr nffiers among the that the UN Secretariat in no y Gromyko Notes Agreement 'slodoe To Make' War Impossible" MOSCOW M-3-Soviet Foreign b aigta i onr ol Minister Andrei Gromyko said bysktat his countrywld yesterday he and Secretary of seek to take into consideration the State Dean Rusk were agreed at Western point of view at the nego- their recent talks in New York tiating table if the West really and Washington that the two big seeks understanding. countries should find a way to Gromyko declared that Presi- make war impossible. dent John F. Kennedy and Pre- Gromyko, speaking to the Soviet mier Nikita S. Khrushchev "must Communist Party Congress, offer- be presidents in a period in which ed a new olive branch to the West war becomes impossible." a World News Roundup By The Associated Press BRUSSELS-The six nations of the European Common Market took another step last night to- ward greater unity. They approv- ed a plan for progressive easing of restrictions on the free estab- lishment of residence and busi- nesses within their borders by citizens of member nations. CIUDAD TRUJILLO -- Police used clubs, tear gas and noise bombs yesterday *to break up a rioting crowd in Santiago, this country's second city. A number of persons were injured but no deaths were reported. About 50 were ar- rested. WASHINGTON - A federal budget deficit approaching $7 bil- lion will be forecast officially Sun- day by the Kennedy administra- tion. WASHINGTON-.The Air Force can't find the 350 million copper needles it thought it had released into space from an orbiting satel- lite, Lincoln . Laboratories an- nounced yesterday. WASHINGTON-President John F. Kennedy is giving considera- tion to a proposal to build a string, of big roadside -public fall- out shelters in .conjunction with, federal-state highway construc- tion, the White House said yes- terday. , *. * NEW YORK-The stock mar- ket made its first advance of the week in moderate trading Wed- nesday. Standard and Poor's 500 Index was up .36,.with 425 indus- trials up .38, 25 rails off .13, and 50 utilities up .36. H~ LLLZAPOPPIN' % 0 Dr. Joseph W. Mathews is member of the corporate mmisti is ow n of the Christian,. Faith-and-Lif Community. alongside the- Univer sity of Texas.at Austin. 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