Russia Demands UN End Debate Pn Bomb

Russia Demands UN End Debate Pn Bomb

AT«ra«« DaUy Nat Priaa Rtn m a Waathar r * r tiM WMk K a M r a w a t of D. 8. WMtfca Oetober 14, IM l f . / ' O Flkir aad n ild to AS. FiMajr aona i 1S;3 8 9 not ao wann wltti chaaea af ahaw* eta la aftornaea or aaaalaf. BDali HmoW •( tiM A a «t 6S to 7a . Bnnaa »t Oradattoa M anehM er^JlXity of VUlage Charm VOL. LXXXI, NO. 16 (TWENTY PAGES) MANCHESTER, CONN., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 (Claaalfled AdvertlalBg on Pago 18) PRICE FIVE.€SMT8 State News Jorgensen Says Roundup He Will Retire Russia Demands UN From UCon n i ____I___ __ ______ _ Ex-Meriden Mayor Storrs, Oct. 19 (ff)— Dr. Al­ bert N. Jorgensen says he Can Run Again plans to retire as president of the University of Connecticut Meriden, Oct. 19 {IP)— For­ by Oct. 1, 1968. End Debate pn Bomb mer Republican Mayor How­ ‘ Jorgensen, president of the ard E. Houston is eligible to university since 1936, notified run for office again this year. the Board of Trustees yester­ "rtc board of admissions voted day of his decision and asked unanimously last night to l»»vej Houston's name restored to the! J" name a successor Dj next W est Ready voting rolls from which is had! O ct. 1. .'S been stricken by the registrars of 1 Later, the 61-year-old admin- .'hO voters. I istrator told newsmen that he had To Oppose The registrar^ had claimed that j no plans to seek political office Houston lost his residency quallfi-1 after his retirement. He has been cations when he moved into a new i mentioned as a possible Republi- house on his Preston Avenue prop- ■ can candidate for governor next erty this summer. The house, the year. Huge Blast registrar.s said, was across the He declined to speculate on a town line in Middletown. ' successor, saying the appointment When Houston moved again last; would be up to the trustees al- United Nations, N. Y „ Oct. month into a house that was clear- j though he thought the faculty 19 (^P)— The Soviet Union ly within the Meriden limits, the i lUould make "suggestions and told the United Nations today board said there had been a break i I’^commendations." in his residency and he would b ^ e ; 25 years as president, the the Russians will not give up to wait six monthj to have nis university’s enrollment has gi-own their right to test nuclear named restored to the lists. | 750 students to 13,000. The weapons “ until the western powers understand the neces­ u ,“ *5^or " IJohn j”. E. Iters, the value of its physical plant has GOP town commlUMS cwdidate, ^ ^ ^ sity of embarkii^r on general and complete disarmament.” This blunt statement was made hoard I * fleeting In which the trustees by Soviet nuclear negotiator Sem­ ! At the board’s hearing u ,t yon Tsarapkin in the General As­ -night, he and his attorneys argued! Istratlons tightening of regula- sembly’s Special P o lit ic Commit­ that he had always considered tiuns concerning student activ- tee, which U debating need for Meriden his home and presently quick information on m e lissieaee had no intention of moving to any. However, he said the dispute in radioactive fallout coating from other towfi. ' *^he rules had nothing to do the current Soviet tests. They pointed out that Houston ■ with his retirement. He had said Tsarapkin demanded that tha had always voted in Meriden. Even ] previously he would step dhwn be- 101-nation committee choice off when he was away, they said, he ■ fore long. the debate and leave any discus­ used absentee ballots. I Students have held several sion of ending nuclear testa to fu­ In announcing its decision to meetings'on the campus in recent ture disarmament negotiations. Algerian rebels who lost sums and legs or suffered bone injuries overrule the re^strars, the board weeks to protest increased con­ The main political committee de­ in combat with French troops in Algeria iMt year leave plane at of admissions made no comment trol by the administration of ex­ cided yesterday, over Soviet op­ Idlewlld Airport in New York last night. The group of twelve on the claims involved. penditures made from the 15 ac­ position, to push ahead immedi­ will be in this country for about one year, receiving treatment at Houston, who has also served tivities fee collected from each ately with a debate on waya to the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York and the Kessler as State Welfare Commissioner, student. halt further nuclear testing. In.stitute of Rehabilitation in West Orange, N. J, (AP Photo- has in recent years held a number | This has been a matter largely U.S. Delegate Adlai E. Steven­ fax). of federal government assign-j controlled by Student Senate" in son was scheduled to spearhead • ments. Elarlier this year, hk was o n ! thetj,o past. western move in the political eaa^ a Statb Department miMion to ‘"niere ha# been some misunder­ mittee later today to head off t|to Peru. standing by students who had felt explosion of a SO-megaton huelwr His opponents in the Nov. .7 that the trustees were limiting bomb which Premier Khrushdimr election will be Ivers, who is run­ them in freedom to spend 'their own Recalling an Honor announced would take place latq ning as ha Independent candidate, money’,” the trustees’ statement President Urho Kekkonen, right, of Finland examines sword held’^by former President Herbert Hoo­ this month. and John W. Grant, the Demo­ said. ver during meeting in latter’s New York hotel suite. The sword was presented to Hoover by the In the special political comsdt* cratic nominee. ‘"The facta are that the monies ■University of Helsinki in 1938 when the Finnish institution conferred upon him the honorary degree tee, Tsarapkin defended his coihi- involved are collected by the Uni­ of doctor o f philosophy. (AP Photofax 1. try’s resilmpttion of bomb testing New Rebel Rioting Hit Bonn MiljbMry versity as a compulsory payment with a reiteration of the now fa­ Berlin, Oct. 19 GB — A Con­ requii^ of all studenU and are miliar Soviet stand that It had c<mgressmiia says that legally the complete responsibility to be done to strengthen defense necticut Camel Driver capabilities "beoauM the Unitod Paris, Oct. 19 IB—Itotefotced po-^000 o f their countrymen arrested West Germany should bo required of the board of trustees. to lengthen its military service "We have both a legal and moral USSR Renews Stand States and its alUto were inten^- lice checked a mob of 4,000 Alger­ Thesday ’ night, when 20,000 riot­ tying the arms race.” ed for four hours. The govern­ and contribute'"at least the $600 obligation to make sure that the ians that tried to rfot thtough the funds are properly handled and Still Smiling The mein debate was expected to ment today began deporting about million its costs the V.S. to main' take place in U\e main pt^Ucal streets a t Paris last' night for the 1,500 of thoee arrested Tuesday to tain its forces in Gerfhanv ” wisely spent Wew e intend to continucontinue On Berlin Air Lanes ‘ ^ e j ttls rsgard. Washington, Oct. 1ft — The committee. “7* ' Mcoiid night to. «acce*»l«*. "Three Algeria and said many more would - - - • • - The trustees also said they were The committee dsiiate waa ex­ Algerians were reported killed and follow. said in a priSs: statement issued happy camel driver from Pakistan in complete accord with the admin- is. talcing quite naturally to being pected to bring repeated calls fpr at least 15 Injured, and the police Police headquarters claimed last during a brief 'visit in Berlin yes­ Wasliington, Oct. 19 (/P> — Dl-'*'Garrisons in Berlin. The western Russia to caU oft the aupertaarab terday that the yoimg men of istration’s stricter enforcement of plomatic sources said today Mos­ powers regard the air lanes as a a VIP. arrested 1,500 demonstrators. night's demonstrations were a campus drinking regulations. explosion. The United Statoe and Ordered by the Algerian .rebel failure and that the workers had West Berlin should be drafted in­ cow has sent a note renewing a vital lifeline for the city, to be used Jet piaffes, flashing camera to the West German Army. The “students’ rights” issue was its Allies hoped the debate would government in Tunis to keep up been forced into the streets by Soviet stand on Berlin air cor­ for general civilian purposes and bulbs, sleek limousines and sights marshal sufficient antlteat opiuhm club-swinging nationalist agents. West Berlin is explicitly omitted ridors that is unacceptable to the otherwise without Red inter­ beyond his wildest dreants just their demonstrations against new (Coattoued on Page Twelve) to force the Rusalana to reconsider. curfew regulations, Algerian work­ However, several newsmen at the from the West German draft law West. ference. bring a broader smile to Bashir' because of the city’s occupation ers began grouping shortly after scene said they saw no such activ­ The text of the Soviet note, de­ The Soidet note was not regard­ Alunad’s mustachioed countenance. (Contiiiined ea Page Twelve) dusk near a key traffic intersection ity. statute. West German military livered to the American, British ed as a good omen In the sim­ Bashir smiles and smiles. H-e's service is 12 months at present. at the western outskirts of greater . The demonstrations were trig­ Cafe Society and French Embassies in Moscow, mering ^ rm a n dispute about amazed at how Americans are all Paris.

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