S £-, ir Force Officers Mssiles' Test Site Foreseen Start Revolt in Brazil Ei ht Seize Airline Plane To Fly North Take Military Planes To Amazon Valley, Make Jungle Base, RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil ()- B r a z il i a n air force officers launched a pocket-sized revolt against President Juscelino Kub. itschek yesterday by seizing sev- eral air force planes. One group forced a four-engine passenger liner to fly them to a remote spot in northern Brazil. The civilian plane, carrying 38 passengers and a crew of six from Rio to Belem, was seized in flight and forced to land at a jungle air strip near the town of Aragarcas, 1,200 miles southwest of Belem, a government spokesman said. The plane, a constellation be- longing to Panair Do Brasil, was then allowed to resume its course. Earlied sketchy reports from Ara- garcas said the airliner had been forced down by two small planes and passengers and crew ordered off. Say Eight Got On The latest version, filtered. through hazy communications, said eight officers got on the con- stellation when it left Rio at mid- night and took the plane over in order to reach the jungle town of Aragarcas. Passengers and crew were reported unmolested. Officials said one of the eight officers was Maj. Haroldo Velloso, ' who led a small-scale revolt in 1958: A group of air force officers then held out in the Amazon jungles for 18 days before capitu- lating, Velloso was captured but won amnesty. Three and perhaps four air force planes were seized yesterday, and flown northward, where the dissidents apparently intend to establish headquarters, again in Amazon river territory. Come Before Dawn The government gave this, ac- x count: From seven to. 17 officers ap- peared before dawn at the Rio air force base with Capt. Prospero Punaro Barata, 30-year-old chief flying instructor at Brazil's air force school. Barata told officials he wanted three planes for instruction pur- poses. His fellow officers then filed in the planes and they took off. Other sources said three planes also attempted to take off from Belo Horizonte, 210 miles north northwest of Rio, but failed. The pilots then stole a seven- passenger private plane and flew northward with three planes In pursuit. Nothing has been heard on the chase since. The war ministry and the army went on a state of alert. TO TOUR 11 NATIONS: Ike Starts Trip with Request For Free World Disarmament 'S. WASHINGTON (') - President Dwight D. Eisenhower set the theme for his unprecedented good will mission last night with a dec- laration that a start on mutual disarmament by the Western powers and Russia is the first re- quirement for reducing world ten- sions. But Eisenhower asserted that "until the conference table can replace the battlefield as the ar- biter of world affairs," the United States must maintain its military strength unimpaired. "Without this military strength," he said, "our efforts to provide a shield for freedom and to preserve and strengthen peace would be futile." He took his stand in an address to the people, prepared for radio- TV delivery nationwide less than an hour before his scheduled take off for Rome on the first leg of a 22,370-mile, 11-nation journey. Emphasizes Peaceful Intentions Eisenhower put his main em- phasis not on military strength but on -the search for peace and on the need he sees to portray America's peaceful intentions to other nations. "I shall try to convey to every- one," he said, "our earnestness in striving to reduce the tensions di- viding mankind - an effort first requiring, as indeed Khrushchev agrees, the beginning of mutual disarmament. Of course, I will stress the first requirement for mutual isarmament is mutual verification." Khrushchev Plugs Disarmament Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev has been plugging the disarmament theme heavily in recent speeches. The effect of the President's words seemed to be that in a western summit conference at Paris at the climax of his foreign mission, Dec._ 19-21, Eisenhower will be in favor of giving high pri- ority to disarmament as a subject for East-West summit conference negotiation next year. Names Delegation Chairman. Earlier yesterday Eisenhower named Fredrick M. Eaton, New York lawyer, to be chairman of the U. S. delegation in a ten-na- tion disarmament c o m m i t t e e scheduled to begin negotiations early in 1960 at Geneva. The Pres- ident then pledged every effort in these negotiations to work for in- ternational agreements "which will effectively control and limit armaments." He said economic strength is essential to the maintenance of the nation's military power as well as its prosperity. The steel dis- pute must be settled, he declared, "or else, in due course" the Amer- PRESIDENT ENSENHOWER asks for disarmament ican people will see to it that la- bor and management in this case "act responsibly." This sounded like a clear threat of government intervention, if and when Eisen- hower decides it is necessary. Talk Inadequate Expression: He said there has been a lot of talk about "peace and friendship" in the world - evidently referring to Soviet propaganda - but that this phrase is not adequaste to ex- press the aspiration of America. This nation's "real message to the world," he declared, is "peace and friendship, in freedom." And he remarked that for many years the U.S. has been unjustly described in, foreign nations as a materialistic nation "p r i z i n g wealth above ideals, machines above spiirt, leisure above learn--1 ing and war above peace." Calls for Dedication Eisenhower called for Ameri- cans to join with him "in a re- newed dedication to our mdral and spiritual convictions." This nation, he also said, has much to learn from others and from an examination of its own shortcomings. "In this rededication," he said, "we will replenish the true source of America's strength-her faith; and, flowing from it, her love of liberty, her devotion to justice." Eisenhower also made an ap- peal for strong support of the for- eign aid program which, he said, provides "a peaceful barrier, erected by freedom, to the con- tinuous probings of predatory forces." "Our mutual undertakings sup- port those who strive to forestall aggression, subversion and pene- tration," he said. "It helps steady the struggling economies of free nations new and old. It helps build strength and hope, prevent- ing collapse and despair. "In a world sorely troubled by an atheistic imperialism, it (the mutual security program) is a strong instrument of hope and of encouragement to others who are eager, with us, to do their parts in sustaining the human spirit and human progress. "So we see that - whether by loans, or grants, or military equip- ment, or technical help - our na- tion's security, economic health and hope for peace demand of all of us a continuing support of these cooperative efforts, initiat- ed a dozen years ago. BY KATHLEEN MOORE An electric razor, in theory, could inadvertently trigger the fir- ing mechanism of a guided missile.1 Whether it would or not in prac- tice and just how the new elec- tronic weapons would react to each other on a modern battlefield is currently one of the chief con- cern. of Maj. Gen. Frank Moor- man, commanding general of the Army's electronic proving ground at Ft. Huchuca, Ariz. At the University early this week, the general paused in his tour of the Willow Run Labora- tories to talk about the Army's plans for an "electronic environ- mental test facility." "Probably the only one of its kind, the future testing ground will take the form of a 'miniature' battlefield in a section of Arizona where they hope to create all kinds of electronic situations that, may occur in war," Moorman noted. The general feels the test site is essential because 'no one knows what the electronic picture would be if we went to war tomorrow." The trouble lies with the electro- magnetic waves that are emitted by almost everything electrical, from portable radios to ballistic missiles and radar. Each wave puts out "harmonics," something like musical notes Moorman explained, but there is no way of knowing how the notes of modern weapons would blend in a full-scale war. Just as a portable radio played in an airplane could jam up the plane's navigation instruments, so the waves from dozens of planes,I missiles and artillery might createI a discord rather than a harmony, he added, with some of the weap- ons going out of control. The testing ground now being planned is aimed at preventing this possible state of affairs, he pointed out, by providing a situa-x tion where each new weapon de- veloped can be scientifically tested for its reaction to the mass of electromagnetic wavesfrom the otherweapons it would meet on the battlefield. The Army electronics experts would then work to eliminate those wave signals that cause trouble, he said. The modern battlefield could eventually be used not only by the armed services but by private in- dustry and the nation's universi- ties, Moorman indicated, for test- ng peacetime electronic equipment. Ft. Huchuca's present proving ground is utilized by a number of outside interests, he stressed, in- cluding the University. . V / ' ' y Give her: Gifts of luscious, filmy, lingerie, are that precious surprise she has been waiting for ... see our unusual cllection. this Christmas "~LUXURY in LINGERIE" (the 'special gift she'll love.) %Ipgtft -Slips . . from 4.00 Half-slips. . from 4.00 Fancy panties . ..from 1 .65 * REMEMBER MEN'S NIGHT. WED., Dec. 9th... 7:00-9:00 \ i .. . rom .4 .f. . rom 5.00 : , . .; ,, , 1 Waltz gowns ... from 5.98 Dusters, Robes.. . from 7.98 Peignoir sets....from 17.98 " 4 Shortie and Long Pi's Long Granny Gowns 'r Lounging Pajamas . . . from 16.98 4 It 0 Shop. .. tonight, Dec. 4 to 6 P.M. Mon., Dec. 7th and Fri., Dec. 11th to 8:30 state and liberty II Second Front Page December 4, 1959 Page 3 :.- - + Use Daily Classifieds + i -- MIUSIC Sliops -CAMPUS-- 211 S. Stat. NO 8-9013 --DOWNTOWN-- 205 E. Liberty NO 2-0675 III ii ,. "= ;E %- , . ,, fi' j ; y. ' w ANN ARBOR STORES' I - .r. now="% I S.G.C. [; Cliepta qdild I y , a 1 .* * BLACK or * WHITE 99 Tonight at 7:00 and 9:00 I "ADVENTURES of ROBINSON CRUSOE" with DAN O'HERLIHY and JAMES FERNANDEZ directed by Louis Bunuel "Gripping movie"-- MANNY FARBER, Nation SHORT:"VISIT TO PICASSO" SATURDAY at 7:00 and 9:00 SUNDAY at 8:00 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER From Here to Eternity" . . rnA lZ, r L 1 Arr) A . * " Cs - a -( -- 7,3 a as a a - k aa a CLwTH21