THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Soviet Union H ampers
Weapons Test
Plan Remain
s Talks;
Unclear
IU.S. Claims
I d
Sdes Need
Clarification
Western Powers Ask
. On-Site Inspection
GENEVA (A-The Soviet Union
threw cold water yesterday on new-
ly, revived American nand British
hopes for an enforceable nuclear
test ban agreement.
Soviet Delegate Semyon K. Tsa-
rapkin refused to expand on Mos-
cow's own proposal ,for policing a
test ban with black boxes check-
ed periodically by international
personnel.
United S t a t e s Ambassador
Charles C. Stelle and British Am-
bassador Sir Michael Wright said
they welcomed the Russian sugges-
Stion concerning these uinmanned
seismic detectors as far as it went.
But they told the three-power
subcommittee of the 17-nation dis-
armament conference that the
idea needed expanding and defin-
ing.
Stelle and Wright saw the in-
ternational element embedded in
the Soviet proposal as a way to
break down professed Russian'
fears of Western espionage and at
last solve the four-year-old test
ban deadlock.
[ j The two Western delegates firm-
ly rejected Tsarapkin's claim that
black boxes would do away with
as- the need for any on-site inspection
ol of suspicious earth tremors. Stelle
and Wright saw 'the robot detec-
sh tors only as supplements to a
ng more elaborate international con-
trol system.
as Tsarapkin countered with a de-
he mand that the Western powers
first accept in principle the Soviet
n0 concept. of black boxes before de-
S- tails could be discussed. The So-
es viet delegate rejected again the
er on-site inspection Idea.
Now that the Soviet Union has
ce offered one concession, the United
n- States is insisting on more and
o- thus is "attaching a rock to cur
nk proposal and then sinking it,"
eo Tsarapkin said.
to Western sources described yes-
st. terday's subcommittee meeting as
t discouraging. This did not mean,
however, thzat the negotiations are
er breaking down.
gn Tsarapkin has said his govern-
is ment will allow the installation of
a- three black boxes inside Soviet
territory. The Western powers re-
an gard this as unreasonably small.
Renewed Chinese Attacks
Feared in Indian Crisis.
NEW DELHI (M--Red China's charge that Indian planes made
"provocative" flights over the Himalayan front raised apprehension
here yesterday the Communists are planning new attacks-possiblya
supported by fighters and bombers.
Peking called the alleged air incidents "extremely grave."
A spokesman for Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's government
denied the Peking charge of nine Indian violations of Tibetan air
ADENAUER PROMISE:
German Parties Set Cabinet
DEAN RUSK
..unified NATO
-AP Wirephoto
CLOSE IN-British troops run from transport aircraft on arrival
yesterday at Anduki Airfield, Brunei Town, Brunei, to go into
action against rebels. British troops have captured most of the
town of Seria and have closed in on a rebel stronghold.
Indonesia Supports Rebels
Inrorneo Fht w1ith Britsi
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya (AP)-Rebel use of nine Europeans a
hostages slowed British troops last night in their drive for full contr
of the Brunei oil town of Seria.
Seria remained the hottest spot in a rebellion against Briti
authority in Brunei, an oil-rich protectorate, and the neighborin
crown colonies of Sarawak and North Borneo.
In the background, Southeast Asian politics began shaping pa
Rusk Seeks
Allied Unity
PARIS (M)-Secretary of State
Dean Rusk called upon allied
statesmen to bridge their >policy
differences and turn their atten-
tion to consolidating the strength
of the North Atlantic, Treaty Or-
ganization yesterday.
The secretary said on his arrival
for the annual NATO ministerial
session that Western unity had
been a very important element in
the peaceful resolution of the Cub-
an crisis.
Almpst as Rusk was speaking,
President Charles de Gaulle spot-
lighted one of the chief policy dif-
ferences within NATO with a for-
mal message to the new French
National Assembly reiterating his
determination to give France her
own national nuclear striking
force.
"Inside the Atlantic alliance,
which is at present indispensable
for the defense of the free world,
the role of France cannot be con-
ceived unless it has its own modern
military power," de Gaulle said.
American policy opposes any
"proliferation" or increase in the
number of nuclear nations: Wash-
ington is'thinking in terms of mul-
tinational control of nuclear strat-
egy in the allied camp, but feels
command decisions must remain
in one hand-the American Pres-
ident.
The United States feels the West
already has sufficient- atomic
power in its arsenal, but is de-
ficient in conventional forces in
the European sector,
space and declared, "it appears
that these allegations are being
fabricated by the Chinese as part
of a malicious campaign for their
own purposes."
Tells Party
Nehru told parliamentary mem-
bers of his ruling Congress Party
the Chinese might be awaiting the
outcome of the Colombo Confer-
ence before deciding on their next
move.
Both Nehru and the Chinese
have been trying to enlist support
of the, six nonaligned nations
meeting in Ceylon. But reports
from Colombo said delegates there
have shown a wariness about step-
ping on the toes of either Peking or
New Delhi and appear stymied
about what stand to take in the
undeclared war between the two'
Asian giants.
Nehru made plain in his speech
to the legislators-delivered be-
hind closed doors Sunday and dis-
closed only yesterday-that the
next move was up to Peking after
his rejection of Chinese terms for
settling the boundary dispute.
No Confirimation
A foreign ministry spokesman
said yesterday, "so far there is no
positive confirmation (that the
Chinese) have withdrawn from
any forward positions.''
Chinese Communist' troops who
captured Bomdila and , nearby
areas in the eastern sector of the
disputed India-China border be-
gan withdrawing north Sunday
night, the New China News Agency
reported yesterday.
In a dispatch from nearby To-
wang, the Communist agency said
Chinese troops began pulling out
of Bomdila after holding the
mountain town, 25 miles north of
the. plains of Assam, for 20 days.
Irtz Predicts
Long Deadlock
NEW YORK (AP)-Labor Secre-
tary W. Willard Wirtz yesterday
canvassed the four-day-old New
York newspaper strike and found
himself confronted by a grim dead-
lock.
He said the city's news blackout
might last days-or weeks. Wirtz
huddled separately with striking
International Typographical Union
printers and a committee from the
Publishers Association- of New
York, then said, "I think it is an
extremely serious situation."
BONN (P) - West Germany's
three-week-old political crisis end-
ed last night with Chancellor Kon-
rad Adenauer still directing the
administration at the head of a
new coalition government.
The small, right-wing Free Dem-
ocrat Party agreed to team up
with Adenauer's Christian Demo-
crats again after a showdown fight
wrung a promise from the iron-
willed chancellor to retire next
fall.
Even though Adenauer will be
in a lame duck role, West Germany
is expected to carry on with the
same middle-of-the-road domestic
policy and foreign policy he has
shaped for the last 13 years as the
country's first and only postwar
chancellor.
Expresses Satisfaction
Adenauer expressed satisfaction
with his new cabinet-the fifth he
has formed-and said, "I hope for
Plan Given
Romney
By GERALD STORCIH
and WILLIAM BENOIT
Special To The Daily
LANSING -- Gov.-elect George
Romney yesterday outlined a cab-
inet-type structure for the opera-
tion of his executive offices when
he takes over on Jan. 1.
Romney will have six major as-
sistants: for legal affairs, legisla-
tive programming, agency coordi-
nation, public information,.patron-
age and budgeting.
These aides will have the au-
thority to make and enforce deci-
sions within their own functional
areas, as well as act in an advisory
capacity.
"This type of organization will
give each man the opportunity of
contributing to policy decisions,"
Romney said. "It will also efisure
that, in their own particular fields,
the assistants can conform to gen-
eral policy."
None of the positions have been
filled yet, but Romney said he
would announce "two or three" of
the appointments today.
The e x e c u t i v e office was
strengthened somewhat, in com-
parison to preceding administra-
tions. All the other top elected
state officials are Democrats, and
hence "cannot be expected to par-
ticipate as fully in a 'united ad-
ministrative effort as if they were
all members of the same political
party."
The new organization contains
one more assistantship-the agen-
cy coordinator-than does the
staff of Gov. John B. Swainson,
but Romney said he had no criti-
cisms concerning structural "clum-
siness" in Swainson's setup.
see BOB JAMES co-composer of
"Bartholomew Fair" & "cLand Ho"
better cooperation between our
two parties than before."
The Free Democrats walked out
of the old coalition, formed after
the Christian Democrats failed to
gain an absolute parliamentary
majority in the last elections, in
protest against the government's
handling of the Der Spiegel affair.
Adenauer was caught in the
crossfire of criticism that broke
out after the publishers, and edi-
tors of the weekly news magazine
were accused of suspected treason.
Charges were flung that the
crackdown smacked of Gestapo
methods and an attempt to muzzle
the press.
Missing from the new cabinet is
Franz Josef Strauss, who was forc-
ed out after six years as defense
minister for the behind-the-scenes
role he played in the Der Spiegel
case.
While there, are eight new faces
in the 20-man cabinet, two key,
ministers were held over-Foreign
Minister Gerhard Schroeder and
Economics Minister Ludwig Er-,
hard, who is in line to take over
as chancellor when Adenauer steps
down.
at
JAZZ on Campus
featuring
THE BOB JAMES TRIO
The Free Democrats were give
five posts in the cabinet, the sam
number they held in the previot
one, including the ministeries o
justice and finance. Dropped wa
former Justice Minister Wolfgan
Stammberg, who led the Fre
Democrats revolt in the old cat
inet by protesting he was kept i
the dark about the Der Spiege
case.
Defense Ministry
The controversial defense mini
istry went to Kai-Uwe Von Hasse
Christian Democratic ministe
president of the State of Schles
wig-Holstein.
The new government will nC
officially come into being unt
President Heinrich Luebke give
his approval to the cabinet lih
and the members are sworn in be
fore the Bundestag (parliament:
These formalities are expected th:
week.
The Free Democrats, who hav
67 of the Bundestag's 499 mem
bers, tend to speak for big busi
ness. Adenauer's party, with 24
Bundestag members, shows mor
interest in social welfare legisla
tion.
coming:
Sunday Evening, 8:00.P.M.
December 16, 1962
to the Michigan Union Ballroom
t
Admission $1.25
Tickets on sole at:
The Disc Shop
Record Center
Michigan Union
Main Desk"
Sponsored by the Cultural Affeirs Committee
of the Michigan Union.
Indonesia, which rules most of Boi
Guido Fires
Commanders'
In Argentina
BUENOS AIRES (-P) - President
Jose Maria Guido fired two top
air force commanders yesterday
and one of them flew to Cordoba
-"seat of revolutions"-to set up
a headquarters for rebellion.
Guido summoned his military
cabinet officers and defense min-
istry officials for a conference at
his executive palace in Buenos
Aires.
Later Army Secretary Gen. Be*-
jamin Rattenbach told reporters:
"All goes well. The situation is
completely overcome.",
However, military leaders met
secretly in Buenos Aires..
Guido is seeking to insure a
united military command that
supports' his government's pro-
gram for national elections in
'June..
irneo, made clear its support of ti
"rebels. President Ahmed Sukarr
hailed theeuprising as a manife
tation of "new emerging forc
which are bound to triumph ov
colonialism and imperialism.
Malaya placed its 21,300 poli
on emergency alert. This con
monwealth, a promoter of the pr
jected Malaysia Federation to lir
it with Singapore and the.Born
territories in 1963, sent troops
Brunei at the sultanate's reque
In the House of Commons Bri
isl Laborites wondered wheth
Brunei, whose defense and foreig
relations are in Britain's hands,
going willingly into the feder
tion. Colonial ,Secretary Dunce
Sandys assured them "as far as
know, nobody is trying to comp
Brunei to enter the federatic
against its will."
The United States State Depar
ment rejected an application fro
Sheik A. M. Azahari, the fro
man of the rebellion, for a vi
that would permit him to fly,
New York and appeal for Unit
Nations intervention.
I .
(Author o.f "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf', "The Many
Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)
somwimmommom- i
DECK THE HALLS
;I
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on
t-
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nt
sa
to
ed
World News Roundup
TONIGHT at 8 P.M.
H I LLEL presents
DR. GEORGE E. MENDENHALL,
Prof. of Near Eastern Studies
speaking on
"THE FORCE OF CONSCIENCE IN
THE FACE OF A HOSTILE SOCIETY"
Lecture No. 6 in its Series
on
"Mortal Values Reflected in Great Literature"
When you think of Christmas gifts you naturally think of
Marlboro cigarettes, leading seller in flip-top box in all fifty
states-and if we annex Wales, in all fifty-one-and if we an-
nex Lapland-in all fifty-two. This talk about annexing Wales
and Lapland is, incidentally, not just idle speculation. Great
Britain wants to trade Wales to the United States for a desert.
Great Britain needs a desert desperately on account of the
tourist trade. Tourists are always coming up to the Prime
Minister or the Lord Privy Seal or like that and saying, "I'm
not knocking ,your country, mind you. It's very quaint and
picturesque, etc. what with Buckingham Palace and Bovril
and Scotland Yard, etc., but where's your desert?" (Before I
forget, let me point out that Scotland Yard, Britain's plain-
clothes police branch, was named after Wally Scotland and
Fred Yard who invented plain clothes. The Amercan plain-
'clothes force is called the FBI after Frank B. Inchcliff, who
invented fingerprints. Before Mr. Incheliff's invention, every-
body's fingers were absolutely glassy smooth. This, as you '.
may imagine, played hob with the identification of newborn
babies in hospitals. From 1791 until 1904 no American parent
t
4 - '
.y7a-v ,x7
Lots of "time to do your
"last-minute shopping."
:S
We will be glad to gift-
wrap and mail for you.h
J01N LEIDY .
PhoNe O 8-6779 " 601 East Liberty;
c'',r ....' "xxv c . .w." . . t ......:'. 4- k<44x< '<"' ' :
By The Associated Press
LONDON-Britain made it plain
to United States Defense Secre-
tary Robert McNamara yesterday
that cancellation of the Skybolt
missile project could lead to a
complete reappraisal of British
policy and defense commitments,
British informants reported.
TEHRAN-The Shah yesterday
gave land ownership papers to
1,630 peasants. in Meshad, the'
KGuard Chief's
rDiscuss Plan
WASHINGTON (P)--After two
days of discussion, the state Na-
tional Guard chiefs failed yester-
day to agree on a unified view on
the Pentagon's controversial plan
for a massive overhaul of their
forces.
So they tossed the problem to
their governors. The" adjutants
genera of all the states except
Alaska met here and decided after,
their futile closed sessions to ex-
plain their difficulties, to Gov. Er-
nest Vandiver of Georgia, chair-
man of the Governors' Conference
committee on guard matters.
northeastern part of Iran known
as the "fortress of feudalism." At
the same time, the Shah announc-
ed huge shrine estates in the area
will be rented to peasants instead
of broken up under the govern-
ment's land reform program.
* **
ALGIERS - Algeria's Foreign
Minister Mohammed Khemisti
said yesterday France will give his
new country foreign aid for the
next three years but the amounts
have not yet been decided.
GREAT FALLS, Mont. - The
first operational Minuteman mis-
siles, half of which are armed
with nuclear warheads, were offi-
cially declared an active part of
the nation's defense yesterday.
**
NEW YORK-The Congress of
Racial Equality charged yesterday
that 20,000 Mississipp$ Negroes
have been dropped from federal
surplus commodities lists for at-
tempting to register to vote.
* * *
WASHINGTON-President John
F. Kennedy recommended yester-
day that the federal government
set aside $1 million to initiate a
thorough study aimed at improv-
ing transportation systems in the
thickly populated northeastern
states.
NEW YORK -- The Stock
Market, reacting to profit taking,
ended mixed yesterday. The Dow-
Jones 30-industrials were up .08,
the 20 railroads down .37, the 15
utilities up .18 and the 65 stocks
down .03.
Open to All
1429 Hill Street
«''Y
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Paintings,
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on a Budget
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Forsythe Gallery
201 Nickels Arcade - NOrmandy 3-0918
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U. of M. Folklore Society
Presents
ever brought home the right'baby from the hospital. This
later became known as the Black Tom Explosion.)
But I digress. England, I was saying, wants to trade Wales
for a desert. Sweden wants to trade Lapland for Frank B. Inch-
cliff. The reason is that Swedes to this day still don't have
fingerprints. As a result, identification of babies in Swedish
hospitals is so haphazard that Swedes flatly refuse to bring their
babies home. There are, at present, nearly a half-billion un-
claimed babies in Swedish hospitals-some of them well over
eighty years old.
But I digress. We were speaking of Christmas gifts which
naturally put us in mind of Marlboro cigarettes. What could
be more welcome at Christmas time than Marlboro's flavor,
Marlboro's soft pack, Marlboro's flip-top box? What indeed
would be more welcome at any time of year-winter or sum-
mer, rain or shine, night or day? Any time, any season; when
you light a Marlboro you can-always be certain that you will
get the same mild, flavorful, completely comfortable smQke.
There are, of course, other things you can give for Christmas
besides Marlboro cigarettes. If, for example, you are looking
for something to give a music lover, let me call to your atten-
tion a revolutionary new development in phonographs-the
Low-fi phonograph. The Low-fi, product of years of patient
research, has so little fidelity to the record you put on it that if,
for instance, you nut "Stardust" on the turntable. "Melancholy
I
THE, BEST IN FOLK MUSIC
te dlew X.bt CitV
2eare4
We cordially invite the Michigan Students
to attend a tea at our home on S. University
fLn L.C#,nAa , . V,1.n . '/I I4" +/ fn A A