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Publication: European Stars and Stripes Friday, March 23, 1962

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   European Stars And Stripes (Newspaper) - March 23, 1962, Darmstadt, Hesse                                Yield in disarm talks deadlock bade warns r tests in ton a the party s congressional i Iid thursday president hould not allow his resume nuclear weapons the atmosphere to be i Down at Geneva. Statements the re pub Okessen accused the willingness to forfeit o any advantage the Isbay have gained by their atmospheric tests and of brazilian and India against a resumption of bit m. Dirksen of said that no agreement British willingness to absolute minimum inn order to get a test receive a very warm Wel of submitted to the Senate Ion apprehensive Charles a. Hall Eek of voiced apprehension Over pressures to persuade the i states not to it sume at nos  Republican Leader in ate and Hall Eek party t loader in the House outlined views at a televised news Ace after a conference wit Republican leaders Here. Said in his statement i she american people Are fac 1� major question of Whethe Kennedy s commendable of March 2 on resumption Sheric testing is being to Down at Geneva to a point1 our nuclear supremacy will Avely  in said the British have used the soviets at Geneva a willing to accept the minimum in inspection test ban. And to let rus the military knowledge achieved from its tests if a treaty can be Nego Static re Dei. At sen. Goldwater bail was at a news conference if it he was Verajr fond of butter. Acknowledged that and old he Onee More Ion a Daws from one of his shaved with Peanut 044 he rot pretty Good too. No he added it your in kind of dry me like Petit butter couple of week. By Tom Ochiltree Geneva a the 17-nation disarmament conference thursday night hammered out the essentials of a program to keep arms be got tons alive at a time when the Biff Powers remained deadlocked on the problems of nuclear testing. In separate talks on Berlin the soviet Union proposed that the Access routes to West Berlin returned Over to the communist East germans who would control them under the supervision of an International authority an Amer ican source said. The United states rejected this approach. Soviet foreign minister Andrei a. Gromyko made the approach in a private conversation with . Secretary of state Dean Rusk it was Learned. The americans regarded the so Viet proposal As a variation in an old russian line but one which makes no Basic change to the Ber Lin problem. The Advance in the disarmament talks was attained after the so Viet Union backed Down on its demand that a russian draft treaty form the basis for the Dis armament negotiations. Under the procedure agreed on rival Ameri can and soviet proposals will receive equal priority. Both  at front. On Page 24, col. 1 the is european edition ripes army Navy air Force unofficial publication of the . Armod forc a in Europe North Africa and he Middle East volume 20, number 337 5 Cut Dally 10 cents sunday Friday March 23, 1962 Andrei Gro Myrko . Military Auto fired on by police in East Germany car reported riddled but occupants not Hurt Berlin a an american military staff car was shot up by East German police in communist ruled East Ger Many a reliable source reported thursday night. Although the car was riddled with bullets nobody was Hurt the Western informant said. . Authorities Are in touch with soviet authorities and the matter is not yet resolved said a spokesman at usar eur he in Heidelberg. Feather finish two pigeons hit the wire in a dead heat photo fun shh at the fair grounds Racetrack in new Orleans. It was almost a triple heat with a third Bird Only a beak behind. The two winners clocked in a Good 11 Pigeon lengths ahead of two neck and neck horse far left. United press International photo wind triggers Avalanche in Alaska 12 Homes hit Juneau Alaska a an Avalanche apparently triggered Bya violent windstorm swept Down thursday from the top of 3,500 foot it. Juneau and damaged 12 houses in this Alaska capital Cit of 6300 persons. The 200-Yard-wide slide and the Force of wind ahead of it shoved houses from foundations Tore off roofs and snapped Trees and Light poles. The Only injury reported was to one housewife who suffered minor cuts. The House started to shake said f. G. Nottingham whose Home was knocked from its foundation. There was a great Flash i guess it was the wires going out my first thought was that it was  the slide hit hardest at House sin the $25,000 to $30,000 Range on Juneau s North Side. The apparent cause of the giant slide was an East wind estimated at 50 Miles an hour in Juneau and at perhaps twice that velocity at the Mountain top. The spokesman confirmed that a vehicle from the . Military Mission at Potsdam was fired on while travelling through East Ger Many. Lie added that no further official informal Ion could be Given out be cause that might interfere with action in  the incident was similar to the shooting up March 10 of a British staff car in East Germany. In that incident the Royal air Force Driver was seriously injured by the Hail of bullets. The car involved in the latest incident belongs to the . Mili tary Liaison Mission to the soviet commander in chief in East Ger Many marshal Ivan s. Konev. The shooting happened tuesday cont. On Page b to col. 5 weather parity Cloudy with morning Hae. Outlook partly Cloudy. Frankfurt and Helt Folbert High 45, Low 28. Temperature recorded to Friday Central european time 44 44 . . . . Adana of 75 57 Madrid Al 50 44 Athani r 83 59 Munich cd 31 27 Aviano pc 49 36 Paris Al 43 34 Berlin i 41 28pret we do 48 36 Frankf t be 43 28 Rome a 50 42 Condon Al 43 28 who Elui i 81 54 cd Skudy be partly Cloudy a rain. Air weather service o is fire unleashed at army Algiers a general machine gun and Bazooka fire broke out throughout Midtown Algiers thursday night and French Mili tary sources said the right Wing secret army organization Oas was attacking military Points. The firing spread from the Cen Ter of the City to the Eastern areas of Belcourt and Hussein Dey and Westward to the populous bal eloped neighbourhood and adjacent districts. Fierce fighting was reported raging around the Tunnel under the University of Algiers in the Center of the City where bazookas were being fired at armoured cars and half tracks of the French gendarmerie. Authorities said the Oas at tackers did not seem to be attempt ing to capture any Public build Ings. Rather they said the attacks appeared to be part of a general font. On Pago Jcj. Col. 9. Nea assails Over sects schools Washington a the National education association Nea charged thursday that government neglect and broken promises Are seriously affecting the education of the children of . Servicemen stationed abroad. The Nea specifically cited what it called 1 inadequate teachers salaries in All department of de sense schools abroad and 2 in adequate facilities in schools opera Ted by the military in Western Europe which have resulted in crowded classrooms and half Day sessions. The defense department schools in 26 foreign countries enrol about 178,000 children from the 1st through the 12th grades employs nearly 6,500 teachers and spend about $45 million a year. The Nea said salary Scales Well below the . Standard have made it impossible for these schools to recruit enough experienced teachers. As a result it said the schools Are forced to employ relatively inexperienced teachers of marginal ability and career interest attracted chiefly by the lure of travel and the Opportunity to live abroad for a year or  vacant teaching posts the Nea said Are filled by the wives of servicemen and local teachers not qualified to teach in their own  Nea said the salaries of teachers hired for foreign service cont. On Page s3, col. 3  
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