Fll: THE MICHUNWAN UATV. ---c ... JN General Assembly Set To Consider Plea On 50-Megaton Testing SECRET 'LIST: Sorce Says Kennedy Keeps Succession Plan NEW YORK (A) -- President John F. Kennedy has a secret list the national director of emergen of persons who would assume ad- planning said yesterday. ministrative power should a nu- The director, Frank B. Eli clear attack or other disaster kill made the disclosure on NBC-TV present top government officials, "Today" program. He said Ke Assail Molotov as 'Revisionar Russian Bomb Won't A ffect Three Sciences. By JOHN McREYNOLDS Russia's recent large-scale hy- drogen bomb testing, according to three University professors fromf the astronomy, physics, and geol- ogy departments, will have little effect on their respective sciences. Prof. Fred T. Haddock of the. astronomy department said that the testing would have no effect unless "a great number" of them were exploded, putting enough particles in the air to obscure stars. This amount would, how- ever, probably be lethal to life. Another way -a nuclear explo- sion could interfere with astro- nomical research would be for' a large bomb to be ,exploded be- neath a great amount of rock, so that the expansion would shoot; thousands of tons of debris into, the stratosphere, much in the manner of the Krakatoa volcanic action.{ Pumice Streams The Krakatoa explosion in 1883 poured out such streams of fine pumice into the stratosphere that the skies over Europe had a, rosy. hue six weeks later. Prof. Crane of the physics de-+ partment, particularly interested+ in "the dating, by radioactive analysis, of such long-lived un-t stable atoms as carbon. 14," relat-E ed that fallout effects in physicsl experiments have always been guarded against. : "There was more trouble from the Nevada tests than is expected from the effects of the Russian devices, since those in the Neva- da desert were low-powered, thus sending fallout to low heights from which much fell on Michi- gan due to prevailing winds," he said. Particles Remain "The particles from a 30-meg- aton device, such as that detonated by Russia, remain in the high at- mosphere, descending over a per- iod of 10-20 years." Crane noted that the United States could probably have set off a bomb as large as the Russian one but didn't due to political strategy. Prof. Wilson, chairman of the geology department, said that the energy of a 100-megaton bomb would be small in comparison to the energy released by an earth- quake and would have a "very slight" effect on radioactive dat- ing processes, "but not enough to be serious." Earthquake Triggers Speculation that bombs are now getting large enough to trigger earthquakes is, in Prof. Wilson's. opinion, unfounded. A 100-megaton bomb has a pow-+ er of approximately one-sixth the evident power of the 1906 San1 Francisco earthquake, "but a great amount of energy in an; earthquake is dissipated in heat and shock waves."1 Tonight at 7:30 N F T Y REUNION SERVICE A REFORM SERVICE WITH UNION PRAYERBOOK; r at B'Nai B'rith Hillel Foundation 1429 Hill Street Followed by Oneg Shabbat Committee Adopts Plea In Meeting Ratification Seen As a Certainty UNITED NATIONS (A:?) - Th General Assembly will consider to- day approval of an appeal to Mos- cow to cancel a 50-megaton H- bomb test. The appeal won overwhelming endorsement Wednesday night i the Assembly's political commit- tee, and ratification is regarded a certain. Sponsors of the eight-natior resolution containing the appea succeeded yesterday in getting the issue on the Assembly agenda. They forwarded their reques for urgent action to Assembly President Mongi Slim, who agreed to list it on the items of busi- ness for the session opening at 10:30 a.m. Add Nations The Assembly is expected to take up first admission of Outer Mon- golia and Mauritania as the UN's 102nd and 103rd members, then plunge directly into consideration of the appeal. At a private meeting yesterday the eight sponsors--Canada, Ja- pan, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Iceland, Iran and Pakistan-laid plans to counter any delaying tactics by Soviet bloc countries similar to those whoch developed in the political committee. They are working against the month-end deadline mentioned by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev for testing the 50-megaton bomb. Recommend Approval The political committee rec- ommended ratification of the eight-nation resolution of a vote of 75 to 10 with one abstention- far more than the two-thirds ma- jority required for Assembly rati- fication. Fifteen members were absent when the vote was taken and two of them-Niger and El Salvador- indicated yesterday they would vote yes in the Assembly. They spoke in the political com- mittee, where general debate re- sumed on the nuclear test ban is- sue.I Equal Ground , Debate in that committee was marked by charges from United States Delegate Arthur Dean that India had sought to put the So- viet Union and the United States on equal ground as far as viola- tion of the voluntary moratorium on nuclear tests is concerned, He declared that India's atti- tude appeared to resemble that of Soviet Premier Khrushchev, who has declared that United States actions in Berlin made it neces- sary for the Soviet Union to re- sume testing in order to perfect its defenses. "The Indian delegation has a perfect right to take this strange action if it so wishes," he said. It also has the right to 'equate a 50 kiloton device exploded under- ground with a 50-megaton device exploded in the atmosphere. But I subscribe that it should have done so with some accuracy." Dean was replying to speeches in the committee made earlier by Indian delegates. Fallout Doesn't .Merit Concern WASHINGTON (A') - Fallout levels from Russia's nuclear ex- plosions thus far do not warrant undue public concern or drastic; action, a United States Public Health Service statement said yesterday. However, the statement added that present levels "do warrant continuous, intensive surveillance by federal, state and local gov- ernments and consideration of protective measures which might be taken if they should be found necessary." PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY secret list Reuther Posts N ew Deadline For Chrysler DETROIT (A') - United Auto Workers president Walter P. Reu- ther yesterday gave Chrysler Corp. until 10 a.m. today to sub- mit to the UAW a new economic offer on wages and benefits. "It has to meet the pattern of the Ford and General Motors set- tlements," he declared. In making this announcement, during a noon recess in contract negotiations, Reuther made no mention of strike action. Showdown Talks But the union previously set what amounts to a deadline in showdown bargaining with Chrys- ler by calling a meeting of its in- ternational executive board for 8 p.m. today. The board will con- sider authorizing a strike against Chrysler if complete agreement on a new three-year contract is not in sight then. The UAW's 60,000 members in Chrysler plants already have vot- ed in favor of strike action of nec- essary to back up their demands. Reuther said he was insisting on an agreement in principle on the broad economics of wage and ben- efits by today. Chrysler Considers Commenting on the union de- mand, Chrysler's Vice-President for Personnel John D. Leary said, "we told the union we would take it under advisement." Reuther said the union would have a technical staff standing by to help speed a final settlement when the company comes up with a new economic offer. Reuther said there were still some non-economic problems re- lated to working conditions that remain to be settled. He said the union had-subcommittees working on them. L 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. University Free Delivery Free Delivery Free Delivery "That which the Lord hath ordained as the sovereign remedy and mightiest instrument for the healing of all the world is the union of all its peoples in one universal Cause. 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