THE MICHIGAN DAILY p India, Chinese Renew Northeast Front Battle; Claim Light Casualties Norstad Claims NATO Facing Lag in Strength SHOWS SKEPTICISM: Adenauer cautions U.S. bout Soviet Intentions BONN (A')-Chancellor Konrad Adenauer esaid yesterday the West should not negotiate with the Soviet Union until Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev shows more evidence of an earnest desire to settle East-West tensions. In this connection, the West German leader, on the eve of his flight to the United States for talks with President John F. Kennedy, cautionel Americans against optimism about Cuban developments. " Expressing skepticism that the Russians have removed their rock- ets from Cuba, Adenauer said the fact that Soviet ships have been photographed leaving the Carib- bean island with long, covered tubes aboard proves nothing. He said it was dangerous to let the Russians depict themselves as great peace-lovers by this move and declared the Kremlin wants to keep Cuba intact as a Com- munist center in the Americas. The 86-year-old Chancellor, who 4 is having his political troubles at home, expressed his views to a small group of American corres- pondents. He asked not to be quoted directly. Adenauer made plain that Ber- lin would be among the chief is- sues he intends to discuss with President Kennedy, but he showed KONRAD ADENAUER unmistakable concern that the U.S. bound Washington administration might ____. ._._U._._b _____be misled by Khrushchev's out- ward show of backing down in COUNCIL: the Cuban crisis. Adenauer, whose trip was de- layed a week at the President's U rge S u yrequest because of the Cuban situ- ation, said there was no evidence O f Calendar that Khrushchev sincerely wanted to settle East-West differences. VATICAN CITY (M---Steps to put the Roman Catholic church on record as agreeable to a uni- Fac R c u versal or perpetual calendar were taken yesterday at the Ecumeni- In M innesot. cal Council. Several bishops in St. Peter's Basilica urged study of both a MINNEAPOLIS (M-The closest fixed Easter date and the idea governor race in the history of of scrapping the Western world's Minnesota faces an almost certain 480-year-old calendar. A council adviser who sat in the recount, leaders of both political day's closed session on liturgy ex- parties agreed yesterday.' plained, "What the church could With results official from 70 of do-and, the council-is to say the state's 87 counties, Lt. Gov that there is no religious objec- Karl Rolvaag (D) had a lead of tion and that the church is willing 137 over Republican Gov. Elmer to go along with civil authorities." iL. Andersen. Nehru Asks Aircraft Aid From U.S.' To Receive Shipment Of Soviet Fighters NEW DELHI WP)-Indian and Red Chinese troops are exchang- ing shots again on the Eastern sector, of the Himalayan front, which had been in a lull for three weeks. A defense ministry spokesman yesterday said five Indians were wounded in weekend patrol clashes around Walong, a strategic town in the jungled valley of the Luhit river 15 miles from the Burma border. The fighting included what- he called a probing action by a Chinese party of unspecified size. The Chinese fired on an Indian position near Walong Saturday night and then withdrew. Reconaissance Missions A Peking broadcast said Indian artillery shelled Chinese positions north of the Towang river, loos- ing more than 100 rounds Satur- day. Indian planes, it said, flew repeatedly over the Communist lines on missions 'of "reconnais- siance, harassment and provoca- tion." Indian Prime Minister Jawahar- lel Nehru told newsmen he has asked the United States for planes to help India fight the undeclared war. He did not say what type he wanted. Air Transports A United States embassy spokes- man commented that there has been some discussion concerning inclusion of air transports in U.S. military aid to India. Nehru hopes to get MIG-21 supersonic jet fighters from the Soviet Union next month. A dozen are reported on order, though none has yet showed up. Minister of State K. Raghura- miah told parliament Indonesia has agreed to sell, India second- hand Vampire jet trainers. In addition to American air- craft, Nehru said India has asked the .United States for arms- making tools. PARIS (P)-Gen. Lauris Nor- stad, Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, told North Atlantic Treaty Organization parliamen- tarians yesterday his forces are "critically short" in many ways, adding up to 'deficiencies of ser- ious proportions." Norstad, who was kept on the job past his retirement date be- cause of the Cuban crisis, was reporting to legislators of the NATO 15-member countries on the status of Allied forces drawn up as a protection against Soviet aggression. Despite the deficien- cies, however, Norstad asserted: Significant Force "Our force, looked at in the political and military context of today, is a significant one. It is force to be reckoned with on the land, on the sea and in the air.,, The commander said the Allied force is still shy several major units and that many of those that are available are seriously short in combat and service sup- port. He said there is a "general lag" in furnishing modern equip- ment. Grave Disadvantage The net result, he said, would be to put Allied troops at a grave disadvantage in the event of hos- tilities.- He pleaded with the legislators to see that their governments build up to the force goals which have been agreed upon for some years. Nevertheless, he said, "The progress which has been made toward the attainment of these goals permits me to make the judgment that, within the limits and for the purposes of our di- rective from the political author- ities, NATO Euroope can be de- fended. 'Unnecessary Risks' "But I must add-and hasten to add-that until the goals are fully met we are subjecting our- selves to unnecessary risks in the process of this defense. What re- mains to be done is relatively small compared to what already has been accomplished. We have only a short distance to go-but this distance is critical." Turning to the problem of ade- quate reserves, Norstad suggested an extension of the system of large-scale stockpiling to reduce the need for massive airlifts. As he put it, this system would per- mit the soldier to move as an airline passenger carrying little more than his rifle and 40 pounds of baggage. This, hie said, would permit "the fullest exploitation of the vast commercial air transport services available to the West." "We must have whatever mili- tary transport may be required to meet the normal needs of our services and our strategy," he added. Meany To Talk With Reuther About Union WASHINGTON MP)-Organized labor leaders George Meany and Walter Reutl'er decided yesterday to talk over their differences some more rather than take them to a showdown that might split the AFL-CIO. Reuther backed down from his reported determination of a few days earlier to challenge what he considers a veto power exercised by Meany, the AFL-CIO president, over recommendations made by former CIO unions. Reuther was head of the old CIO. Instead of the bolt from the merged labor movement that had been threatened by Reuther's auto workers union, it was announced the two contesting labor leaders had decided to make a new try for a mutually acceptable settle- ment of their policy differences. Reuther issued a statement stress- ing the need to preserve a unified labor organization. GEN. LAURIS NORSTAD ...'NATO commander CLOSE RACE: fReid May Ask. Cheek Republican Clarence Reid said he may ask for a vote recount in some counties in his narrow loss to incumbent T. John Lesinski for the office of lieutenant-governor. A recheck of the votes by the United Press International showed that he lost by 2,438. However, he explained that he would wait until after he report of the official state canvas before ,asking for a recount. The canvas is expected about Nov. 26. Tshombe Denounces UN Bombing Charge ELISABETHVILLE (P)-Katanga yesterday denounced and for- mally denied United Nations allegations that its provincial air force bombed five points Saturday in a North Katanga area controlled by troops of the Congo's central government. As if in reply, the UN announced in New York: "UN air fighter units have instructions to react immediately to Katangan aircraft engaged in offensive operations." Katanga President Moise Tshombe's regime charged that the UN is- sued reports of the bombing with- out confirmation-was applying psychological warfare to justify another military operation against Katanga-overrun by a heavy UN assault last year. A communique referred bitterly to the stalemate in negotiations about Congolese unity and said, "in spite of all our good will, Leopoldville refuses to accept all Elisabethville agreements." "The UN now thinks of only one solution, looking for an excuse to start a military action again," it said. "We have seen the man- euver and, although we still wish for a national reconciliation, Ka- tanga is ready." 'Reliable' Reports The UNU story of the bombing Saturday was based on what UN officials called "fairly reliable" re- ports relayed from the Leopold- ville office of Robert K. A. Gard- iner, chief of the UN operation in the Congo. It was estimated that about 10 planes, including some DC-3s, might have carried out the raid. A road junction at Kaseya Lu- bunda, a hospital at Masemba' and the area of a Lukuga River bridge near Kabeya Maji were' said to have been almong thej targets., ENGLISH-RUSSIAN RUSSIAN-ENGLISH .British Set A tomic Test LONDON (P)-The British gov- ernment yesterday announced plans to conduct another nuclear test in America, despite growls from the Soviet Union that this could jeopardize the chances of securing a test ban treaty. . The trial of the low yield Brit- ish device will take place under- ground at the United States prov- ing ground in Nevada. President John F. Kennedy has authorized the test. Pocket-size dictionary-FREE to the first 75 new subscribers to MOSCOW NEWS-weekly. Pub- lished in the USSR in Eiglish. Deals with all aspects of Soviet life. Air- mail subscription is $2.00. Send payment & order to: IMPORTED PUBLICATIONS & PROD. 1 Union Square R-812 Dept. C New York 3, N. Y. FREE! FREE! FREE! It's worth repeating ... FREE!I ANY . SINATRA ALBUM WHEN YOU BUY ANY OTHER ONE Defense Minister Peter Thorney- croft informed the House of Com- mons that essential military pur- poses dictated the need for, the blast, believed concerned with de- velopment of a trigger mechanism. Though Thorneycroft emphasiz- ed it is in no sense the start of a new series, his announcement touched off an immediate political storm. The test will be the 23rd nu- clear explosion touched off by Britain. Thorneycroft's announcement came a day after Moscow radio claimed any new testing by Britain would seriously complicate the prospect of achieving a treaty banning all nuclear weapons tests. TRYOUTS-BECKET OPEN Tryouts for Jean Anouilh's powerful drama will be held Wed- nesday, Thursday and Friday, Nov. 14, 15, 16 at 7:30 P.M., A.A. High School, Room C 216. Cost in- cludes numerous male and several female roles. Ann Arbor Civic Theatre. BECKET-TRYOUTS 20 great albums to choose from. Buy as many as you like ... get an equal num- ber free! - Tell your friends, tell your neighbors, tell your relatives. Tell us what you'd like... I world News Roundup' By The Associated Press CAIRO-A pilot introduced as the Commander in Chief of Jordan's air force defected to the United Arab Republic yesterday in a Jordanian military transport plane. He told a news conference he preferred to seek asylum in the UAR rather than take part "in the contemplated attacks against Yemenites." *. * * * WASHINGTON-N. E. Halaby, administrator of the Federal Aviation Agency, said yesterday that European plans to develop a supersonic airliner may force! the United States to speedup its own plans. I Disc Shop 1210 S. University Hi-Fl TV, Center On Thayer across from Hill Aud. i U1 ------ ROME-Italian Premier Amin- tore Fanfani's center-left govern- ment last night weathered a cru- cial test from his own Christian Democrat party and won unquali- fied endorsement for continued cooperation with Italy's Socialists until next spring. ** * DAMASCUS-Yemeni royalists claimed yesterday that tribal war- riors ,of dethroned King Moham- mad Al-Badr shot down an Egyp- tian military helicopter Sunday in renewed fighting in Eastern Ye- men. MOSCOW-Soviet Premier NI- kita Khrushchev and advisors from the various republics ap- proved yesterday the Soviet indus- trial planning program for 1963 and the national budget. LONDON-British Prime Minis- ter Harold MacMillan said last night President John F. Kennedy "nobly fulfilled" in the Cuban crisis the hope the West had placed in his leadership. Negro Presidents View Integration WASHINGTON W-)-Two Negro college presidents predicted yester- day that all Southern colleges and universities eventually will be integrated, including thobe which now have an all-Negro sta- dent body. HYDE PARK on the DIAG Critics Acclaim' F TUESDAY 3:15 The Greatest' World's Music se "Where Great Minds Meet" I r + s THREE REASONS .4 WHY YOU'LL LIK OUR Bachelo undle 1. Everything comes back to you clean fresh and just raring to be shown off. "Anyone who is building a record library on a budget and seeks to get off to a flying start will find himself in luck with this remark- able ten-disc set from Parliament. Given the masterpieces recorded here, interpreted by such names as Richter,,.Oistrakh, Gilels, and Vac- la Tolich, it is hard to see this set as anything less than a best buy." Hi Fi/Stereo VOL UM E I vcwsu BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 3 "Eroica", Piano Concerto No. 5 "Emperor". MOZART: Piano Con- certo No. 21, Violin Concerto No. 3. 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