_____THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tsarapkin Denounces Treaty To Ban Testing, Demand for Inspections ELLENDER:- OHara Raps Senator For. African Remarks WASHINGTON (A')-A congressman who feels people talk too much took his cue from the State Department yesterday and admon- ished Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D-La) for remarks critical of Africa. Rep. Barratt O'Hara (D-Ill), chairman of the House Foreign Af- fairs subcommittee on Africa, commented:' "What the senator said has hurt us very much in Africa. The Africans are very sensitive. We want the Africans to know the " senator was speaking for himself Group Fights Constitution As members of the newly-formed non-partisan "S a v e Michigan Roads" committee, Professors Wil- liam S. Housel and Ward K. Parr of the engineering college are working for rejection of the pro- posed state constitution. The 25-man group will repre- sent Michigan business and road construction interests, and will maintain headquarters in Lansing to campaign against provisions which would change- the elected highway commissionership into a four-man appointed commission and restrict use of highway tax money to "highway purposes as defined by law," although the ear- marking of road-building funds would be continued. "Michigan's record in road build- ing leads the nation,' Prof. Hous- el commented. "Would it be the same if highway funds were under+ the same control as funds of other state agencies over the past few years?"' He criticized the new document for removing the safeguards against legislative control of high- way construction revenues, noting that there is now no guarantee- that the state Legislature would not use highway funds for some other purpose. In addition, it is "naive" to as- sume that complete revision of the state's basic laws will necessarilyt be good. "I recognize there are many out- moded provisions in the constitu-i tion, but there are other methods1 already provided for changing it1 besides a total overhauling." and not for the Congress "The senator was expressing a personal, regional feeling. He was expressing the sentiment of his constituency. I suppose we all play a little politics now and then. If a man comes from Louisiana, where. there is a race question, he may not be as careful of what he says as he would if he came from some- where else. "It's unfortunate that members of Congress talk when they go to foreign countries." Sen. Ellender was reported to have said in Southern Rhodesia that he has yet to see any part of the continent that is ready for self-government; that the aver- age African is incapable of lead- ership without white help, and that the policy of racial segrega- tion in South Africa was too late. Sen. Ellender denied making the statements. The South African Press Association then came for- ward with a tape recording it said confirmed Ellender said what news media said he said. Tanganyika, Uganda and Ethi- opia announced that Sen. El- lender would not be admitted, should he try to visit those nations. G. Mennen Williams, assistant secretary of state for African af- fairs, disputed Ellender's attribut- ed statement. Lausche Requests Formal Inquiry WASHINGTON (MP)-Sen. Frank J. Lausche (D-Ohio) called yester- day for an early meeting of the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee for a formal inquiry into published reports Russian planes have overflown the southeastern United States. Disregards Reiterated Assurances Warns of Possible Continued Deadlock GENEVA (M- - Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin declared yesterday that Moscow never will accepta nuclear test ban treaty designed to let the West honey- comb Russian territory with spies disguised as scientists. He shrugged off repeated assur- ances by the United States and Britain that iron-clad safeguards would prevent the treaty from be- ing perverted in this way. In one of his bluntest denuncia- tions yet of Western nuclear test ban proposals, the Soviet delegate said on-site inspections of suspi- cious earth disturbances are out so far as his government is con- cerned. Indefinite Deadlock If the two Western powers con- tinue to demand such inspections, Tsarapkin continued, the four- year-old deadlock in the test ban negotiations will continue indefi- nitely. The United States and Britain insist a test ban teaty can never be enforced unless there is some quota of on-site inspections to de- ter a power from sneaking an un- derground test. Tsarapkin addressed a subcom- mittee meeting of the 17-nation disarmament conference. Sessions Mount This marked'the 400th session in which the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union have sought agreement on a test ban. Yester- day their search seemed more hopeless than ever. Yet United States Ambassador Arthur H. Dean said he would not despair. Dean and Sir Michael Wright, acting British delegation head, said the West had granted the Russians a series of conces- sions only to have all of them spurned. The Soviet delegate's repetition of his nation's demand for an in- spectionless test ban came on the heels of a United States repection of a robot inspection plan. Russia Acts To Remove Cuba Planes WASHINGTON OP)) - Forty-two IL-28 Soviet bombers aboard three Russian ships heading eastward from Cuba were counted yester- day by United States Navy planes on Patrol Vigil, the Pentagon an- nounced. Informed sources at both the State Department and the Pen- tagon said the Russians had told United States diplomats that this is all of the 750-mile range jets the Soviets sent to Prime Minis- ter Fidel Castro. If so, this would mean Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev is acting well ahead of his promised deadline for their removal. President John F. Kennedy said Nov. 20 that the Soviet leader had promised to get all the planes out of Cuba within 30 days. Perfect Pair Perhaps by coincidence, the number of bombers matches the total of missiles which the Rus- sians previously withdrew from Cuba. The Defense Department an- nounced at noon that two ships had been spotted with 27 of the IL-28's. Less than three hours later, Deputy Assistant Secretary Nils A. Lennartson said the third vessel, Krasnograd, had been seen off the northern coast of Cuba with 15 of the jets on deck. Bon Voyage! ' The Krasnograd left Muriel and is moving on an easterly course in the direction of Europe, Len- nartson said. The figure of 42 is the highest official total yet provided for the number of IL-28's sent into Cuba by Russia. They are being taken out at U.S. insistence that they are offensive weapons with nu- clear capability that peril the U.S. and other nations of the Americas. Soviet diplomats at the United Nations earlier were reported to have told American officials that there were over 40 IL-28's in Cuba and that all would be on the way out no later than today. Stevenson Center Of Speculations By MAX HARRELSON Associated Press News Analyst UNITED NATIONS-Friends of Adlai Stevenson say he neither expects to quit his job as United Nations delegate nor to be fired as a result of the ruckus over his Cuba role. There is plenty of talk in UN corridors, however, about possible damage to his prestige here. There is speculation that he may be on the skids despite assurances that Stevenson has the full support of President John F. Kennedy. A letter from President Kenne- dy, expressing fullest confidence in Stevenson, undoubtedly bolster- ed his position. But many UN dip- lomats believe Stevenson's difficul- ties are more likely t0 mushroom than to subside. All-Around Opposition There is evidence that forces are aligned against him bothrin- side and outside the Administra- tion. Some of his friends seem con-s vinced that someone high in the Administration had a hand in the i controversial magazine articlet which touched off this week's hub-t bub. They say Stevenson's viewst were distorted in an effort to pic-I ture him as favoring a soft policy toward Cuba. Stevenson's associates firmly re- ject any theory that President Kennedy himself was connected with the Saturday Evening Post story although one of the authors was Charles Bartlett, a newspaper- man close to the President. Madly for Adlai The reasoning in the Stevenson camp is that the President and his chief UN delegate were never clos- er than during the Cuban crisis, from the early private discussions in Washington up to the present time. They say Stevenson advo- cated the successful Cuban policy of the blockade and won plaudits, even from normally critical news- papers and politicians, for his speeches here. THE COMPLETE RCA VICTOR 4 0% ioOFF CATALOGUE LIST PRICE MONO & STEREO INCLUDING CHRISTMAS ALBUMS BY: Belafonte, Marion Anderson, Perry Como, Mario Lanza, The Robert Shaw Chorale, The Boston Pops, Chet Atkins, Eddy Arnold, Blackwood Bros., Dick Leibers, and Others AND INCLUDING RECORDINGS BY: Monteaux, Munch & The Boston Symphony, Reincer & The Chicago Symphony, Leontyne Price, Elvis Presley, Peter Nero, and many more. ANGEL OPERAS 40% MONO & STEREO OFF LIST PRICE l I, ADLAI STEVENSON dirty pool Stevenson claims that every ref- erence to him in the Post article was inaccurate, but there were enough accurate statements in the rest of the article to convince him that someone high in the adminis- tration had leaked information on the confidential discussions which led up to the blockade. Uf ANOTHER PRE-I SPECI, IOLIDAY INCLUDING SUCH ARTISTS AS: SCHWARTZKOPF FISCHER-DI ESKAU SUTHERLAND STRETCH LUDWIG NI LSSON TADDEI WAECHTER CALLAS FLAGSTAD LEHMANN SCHORR GOBB1 DI STEFANO MOFFO DE LOSLANGELES FARRELL MICHEAU ALL ACK & ROLL 33'APC ALBUMS OFF LIST PRICE ALL LABELS MONO & STEREO World News Roundup CUBER ! BLUEBOOKS I CHRISTMAS SHOPPING By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The United States air defense chief said yes- terday reports of Soviet planes over the United States during the Cuban crisis apparently trace to flights by American planes which were temporarily unidentified. General John K. Gerhart, com- mander-in-chief of the North American Defense Command, said in a statement that because of intensified air operations in con- nection with the buildup for a pos- sible invasion of Cuba, "a few high-altitude flights were not ini- tially coordinated with our NOR- AD control system, and therefore were initially carried.. . . as un- known aircraft." OMAHA - President John F. Kennedy pays his first visit as President tomorrow to the under- ground stronghold where a team of military specialists shape super- secret United States nuclear war plans. President Kennedy, Vice- President Lyndon Johnson, De- fense Secretary Robert McNamara and other top defense officials fly here for a three-hour visit to Stra- tegic Air Command headquarters. SANTIAGO, Chile -Investiga- tors were reported last night on the trail of an unidentified top- ranking former .Nazi war criminal believed hiding out in Chile. He was described as "even higher" ranking than former SS Col. Wal- ter Rauff, who was seized earlier this week on an extradition war- rant issued by the West German government. * * * ROME-Premier Amintore Fan- fani last night won his second vote of confidence in 24 hours. The Senate voted 89 to 44 to ap- prove a recent reshuffle in cabinet posts. The Chamber of Deputies voted its approval last night. NEW YORK -- The New York Stock Exchange suffered a slight decline yesterday due to profit- taking following heavy trading. Dow-Jones Averages showed 30 in- dustrials down 2.26, 20 railroads down .32, 15 utilities up .42 and 65 stocks down .38. G RAFL EX CENTURY 23 THE MOST VERSATILE ROLL FILM CAMERA check these features: 1 Use Sheet, Pack or Roll Film i 101mm f/4.5 Graflar Lens i Kalart Rangefinder J Long Optical Viewfinder Factory Mounted Cable Release i Interchangeable Lenses Available ONLY $19950 PURCHASE CAMERA SHOP 1 116 South University "Purchase from Purchase I I Lwwwwww inminiwawwwwinwwwwwi wwwwwnwwwwis-min iawm, I-SPECIAL TODAY ONLY FRIDAY, DEC. 7th a rI ITHE FIRST, FAMI'LY!. IA 3.98 List Price TODAY ONLY f2.59 urmun~nuis~ MGM CLASSICS-LARGE SELECTION 1.98 Plus Many Discontinued Items Priced From 1.29 discountrecords,'m 337 S. MAIN ST. 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