Russians Protest Radio Station Plan; Attack West Germans for Propaganda Kremlin Protests Move To Western Big Three Unemployment Troubles Heard MOSCOW. (M)-The Soviet Un- ion thrust the dormant Berlin is- sue to the fore again yesterday by charging that the West German1 government plans to build a new radio station in West Berlin for propaganda. The Kremlin released a stiffE note of protest to the United< States, Britain and France askingI them to take measures to preventl such "unlawful" action.I It charged the plan was a pre- meditated attempt to interfere with the success of the forthcom- ing negotiations on the Berlin question. Hurts Chances # ~It said this came when the' Camp David talks of Soviet Pre- mier Nikita S. Khrushchev and President Dwight D. Eisenhower+ hadscreated more favorable condi- tions for reaching an agreement on Berlin. Setting up the West German ra- dio station, Deutschland Funk, in West Berlin, Russia charged, would violate the present status of the; divided city and was aimed at+ Rockefeller On Coast LOS ANGELES (AP)-Gov. Nel- son A Rockefeller yesterday pin- pointed the New Hampshire pri- mary as his likely target date for deciding whether he'll campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. The New -York Governor hitched his possible candidacy to his legis- lative program and how he goes over with Republican leaders. Rockefeller told a press e cne-ence, marked by a dispute with television newsmen, that entry in- to the first-in-the-nation New Hampshire primary next March would be his first specific decision. "The framework for dealing with the problems of New York will have been established by the time I have to make the decision," he said. More than 100 members of Cali- fornians for Rockefeller paraded and applauded as he arrived. V Rockefeller made quick note of the fact he was in Nixon's home state but said Nixon knew what he was talking about when he said the New Yorker would find a warm welcome here. "He will certainly be equally welcome on his next visit to New York next month-as he always is when he visits the empire state," he said. "fanning up the cold war" and in- creasing "subversive activity and hostile propaganda" against East Germany. West German officials in Bonn said the Soviet protest was against a legislative proposal by the gov- ernment to set, up national radio and television networks in com- petition with state-operated hook- ups. Three Cities Considered It calls for the radio headquart- ers to be built in West Berlin, tele- vision headquarters in Frankfurt, and a third headquarters for broadcasts beamed overseas at Cologne. The West Berlin headquarters would direct broadcasts to all Germany and neighboring coun- triesbut the measure does not say where the transmitters would be located. In Bonn it was considered ques- tionable whether the measure would ever pass, since opposition socialists and state governments strongly oppose entry of the fed- eral government into radio and television. Attack Setup Socialists argue that Joseph Goebbels used just such a setup to put over Nazi propaganda. Interior minister Gerhard Schroeder says however, the na- tional hookups would be managed by representatives chosen from public and private life and would remain free of government con- trol. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko made a major effort at the Big Four foreign ministers conference in Geneva earlier this year to have Rias, the American radio station in West Berlin, shut down.. The communists constantly as- sail Rias as a propaganda outlet that stirs up trouble in East Ger- many. May Check Propaganda The West refused to shut down RIAS, but showed some inclina- tion to curb propaganda in the di- vided city if the communists would do likewise. RIAS broadcasts in German and makes.a point of playing the hews straight. American officials in Berlin say it is very effective, de- spite Communist Jamming at- tempts, in keeping East Germans informed on what is going on. The new radio dispute comes at an awkward time. It could compli- cate matters even before an East- West summit meeting can be ar- ranged. Such a meeting, as things stand now, will not be held before April. --Associated Press wirephoto COMMITTEE MEETS ON UNEMPLOYMENT-Sen. Patrick McNamara (P-Mich), second from left, talks with some of the witnesses called by the Senate Committee on Unemployment. The group is studying the present economic plight of the Upper Peninsula, once a huge contributor to the wealth of the state. CRITICIZES FORCE ON INDIA: Herter Sayws Red China Wrong UN Official Visits Laos As Observer VIENTIANE, LAOS (1) - Dag Hammarskjold arrived in this troubled kingdom yesterday and was hailed by the government for making the visit despite commu- nist opposition. The United Nations Secretary General is expected to arrange for a personal representative to stay in Laos as an observer. The Laotian government con- siders a Hammarskjold represen- tative would serve to keep a dam- per on the Pathet Lao rebellion which has been quiet since a UN fact-finding -committee arrived here Sept. 15. "Laos is faced with problems wrhich are the concern of the United Nations," Hammarskjold said. He expects to stay about a week "to gather knowledge as complete and independent as possible" on the situation. A government statement said the visit was "courageous because it was made over the opposition of the communist bbloc. It added that "we must have an observer on the spot" to prevent communist iinfiltration from de- veloping into large-scale hostili- ties.- Referring to the failure of the earlier fact-finders to find evi- dence against communist North Viet Nam, the statement said "it is very difficult to find material in direct proof of 4n aggression of this kind, especially for strangers to the country here for a few weeks." The North Viet Nam radio called the Hammarskjold visit "in- opportune and detrimental to the peaceful settlement of the Laotian situation." ~BERMUDA