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Wisconsin State Journal from Madison, Wisconsin • 2

Location:
Madison, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DIAL Aloina 6-311 WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1961 PAOC 2, SECTION 1 32nd Division's Area Troops r-; i WEATHER Will Start Leaving Monday US. WByt Khrush Eases Berlin Threat Promises to Blast 50 Megaton Bomb Continued from Pafe I Comtuumoi from I and there will be several hundred mea of the division who will fly to Ft Lewis. Currently, two Milwaukee companies will fly to the West aboard commercial 707 jets. Other State Unit Here are the other state unit departures listed for the division with the date, location, and departure time listed: Oct. Headquarters and Heodauar-, lDorit Blast Bomb Report Brings Dismay to Westerners tnvnnv un Western capitals expressed dismay Tuesday night over Nikrta wirusncneyi -nounced intention of exploding a nuclear bomb equivalent to 50 milliMi tons of TNT.

And there was no sign of great relief over the Soviet premier conditional offer- to delay signing an East German peace treaty beyond the Dec. 31 deadline ne had set Western officials noted Khrushchev in his keynote speech to the Soviet Communist party congress in no way altered Soviet aims to squeeie the Allies out of Berlin. Lord Home, Britain's foreign secretary, accused Khrushchev of deceiving the world and the Russian people themselves by resum-' tag nuclear weapons tests. A West German government w-t spokesman in Bonn saw win shchev's decision to explode a 5ft megaton nuclear bomb at the end of October was "an irresponsible tars Oelacftment and Company weukee. 010 p.

nv; company Meoicai Battalion, Racine. Oct. Can-mane 0, loud Armor ae Antieo. leavine Eland. 1J 30 p.

nv; Headouarters and Headouartert Company, 724 Eneineers Batiaiion. Superior. t. Company A. AsMand, II a.

nt.l Company B. Hay-eard, I p. Company O. Hurley, a. company t.

sooener, 2 m. m.i Transaortatian Battalion. Hcedauer- iert and Headquarters Company, Mil waukee. a. nv Company Berlin, leaven from 11 KiHb RrM.

4 fe-- -spr-9 I. S. FORECAST Cooler weather with a few accompanying enow flurries is predicted for today in the upper Lakes region and the northern Mississippi valley. Snow is also expected In the northern Rockies. Warmer weather is due in the Atlantic states and Ohio and Tennessee valleys.

wirwtwM mm Company Marinette, 50 million tons of TNT. a. company Green Bay, a. Company Oconto, 4:47 a. nv; Company Clintonville, will leave from snawara.

11:30 a. nv; ira Battle broup, 177 Inlentrv. Combat Support Company I rSJXriZ about high-yield weapons. Since the United States has had winona. i m.

m.i sad Battle the technical know-bow and the Group. 121 Infantry, Headquarters ndi uu, Headquarters Company, Entnorn, 10 materials tO produce 00019 in 50-100 megaton range and megaton ranee and i K-dr jt.i i lit aspvaji. Minister Andrei Gromyko's re cent exploratory talks with Presi dent Kennedy, U. S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, and British Prime Minister Macmillan, Khru shchev said: We had the impression thai the Western powers display a cer tain understanding of the situation and are inclined to 'seek a solution for the German problem and the West Berlin issue on a mutually acceptable basis." 'Little More Time' In his far-ranging report, Khru shchev told the 4,813 delegates and advisory delegates that "only a little more time" will be needed, if the present seven-year plan is completed in 1965, to outstrip the United States economically; that colonialism is dead; and that capitalism is unable to solve any of the urgent problems facing mankind.

He reviewed standing Soviet proposals for a three-headed sec retariat in the United Nations, a nonaggression pact Latween the Warsaw pact Comm tnist countries and the North Atlantic al liance, the plan of Poland's Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki, for atom-free zones in censral Eu-1 rope and the Far East, and disengagement zone' in central Europe. Attacks Albania He concluded with a violent tack on the Communist party leadership of Albania and Yugoslavia and an implied attack on the Red Chinese. He also announced what sounded like the threat of a party purge of in active and sluggards. He accused the Albanians of: Family Visit-Berlin Style Standing atop a ladder in West Berlin, a German mother shows her son to relatives behind the cement block wall in the Eastern zone of the divided city. Her husband and a daughter wait for their turn to "see" the family from the ladder-top vantage point act toward the welfare of human ity." Lord Home lashed put at Khrushchev in an address to the House of Lords.

"Until this morning, when Mr. Krushchev said he was about to explode a' very large nuclear bomb, the Russian people knew not one word from- their government that it had restarted nuclear tests," Home said. "So. not only were the. (Western) negotiators duped and the world mis led, but the Russian people themselves were deceived," he said.

In Ottawa, Canada's Prime Minister John Diefenbaker said Khrushchev appeared more reasonable in his approach to East-West problems but he was sharply critical of the Soviet leader on nuclear testing. Diefenbaker said Khrushchev "apparently believes that, having" done all he has done to poison the atmosphere and having ken the pledged word of Russia on a RUSS Ketfetlt Seems Likely State, Nation UfC PUTW ZONE FORECASTS ZONES I. a-Partly cloudy. ymwv. and colder.

Hiffhs in th 40s. ZONES A. i Mri Mostly fir, inar. 4 collier. Highs in the iOs.

Madison Skies WEDNESDAY, OCT. II SinsH today 5:11 m. Sunrise Thursdav la a. m. Mconset Thursday 12 5 in-Full Moon Oct.

2) tnt planet. Saturn, sett tonight at 'SS m. m. and orionter Juoiter sts about 25 minutes later. Al Itiat tim tr triangle of Vega, Deneb and Alteir will be seen the west.

Computed for The Wisconsin Stat Journal by Bailey R. Frank. Day in History fie started Frets International) Today Is Wednesday. Oct. II.

the 291st day of the year im to mm mi. On this day In history: In 187, at ceremonies marking the formal transfer of Alaska from Russia to the United Slates, the Russian flag was lowered in front of the governor's residence in Sitka and me U. S. flag was raised. In 1OT2, the first commercial long-d'S-tance telephone line was opened between New York and Chicago after messages were exchanged between the mayors of the two cities.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY: St. Thomas Aouinas said: "Three things are necessary for the salvation of man; to know wftat he ought to believe; to know what he ought to desire; and to know what he ought to do." I x-otr hscmiuioh otnoc j) pmc rims i IMIMLMHR WAIiUt X. lan'cuii 6tfH I I Mr LsJCMSSf 5) WK5I l(li-I 1 Kit Son W. Berlin usuia "the same methods as Madison, Area OFFICIAL MWIT UNITfO STATES W6TME BUtEAU Tempararurt Higt Low PreC- Jl Albuouerqug 7 77 43 50 45 40 40 55 42 51 54 34 44 53 4 51 41 27 3 4f SO 34 72 51 40 54 54 54 40 50 44 74 51 40 14 44 45 52 51 53 37 44 S3 40 34 43 Atlanta Bismarck Boise -Boston Brownsville Casper Charleston Chicago Cleveland: Denver Des Maine Detroit Duououd Dukjth Edmonton El Pao Ft. Worth Green Bay Helena Honolulu Jacksonville Juneau ad 1 mi ao S5 74 7a 7 77 1 7S 7 go 7t 7 73 50 7 70 a i Kansas City to LeCrosse Las Vegas (7 Los Angeles 77 Med.

Airport 74 Memphis Mami SO Milwaukee 7 Minneapolis BO. Montreal 4 New Orleans 7 New York City 70 Omaha 13 Park Falls 7 Phoenix 01 Portland, Ore. 62 5 Lake City 7S San Francisco 42 Sit. Ste. Marie 71 Seattle 54 Washington 71 Weuseu 75 50 MAOISON WEATHER (Municipal Airport) Tenv Rela- Wind Yes.

ter- para- five Veloo- Ckwdf-dav hjre humidity ity ness 4am 03 I mpn 0 Noon 7 50 Hmpti 0 m. a 51 12 mph 0 Highest temperature yesterday 74 at 3 Lowest temperature yesterday 50 I 5:40 4). m. Mean temperature yesterday 42. Normal 50.

Degree days weiy 3. Barometric pressure 4 p. m. (sea level) 29.42 Ins. Total precipitation since Jan.

I 23.39 ins. Normal 25.55 Ins. TODAY IN OTHER YEARS Warmest iff 1947, 14 degrees. Coldest In 1941, 19 degrees. Wettest in 1081, 1.99 inches.

TrusconsinAStateJoumU Second-class postage, paid at Madison Published daily and Sunday except Christmas day. by Madison Newspaoers or. ana Dublishen. Editorial tery Ind Battalion, 12 Artillery, Bur-ttnoton, 0:25 0. nv Oct.

tSHeadquarters v4 Headquarters Company and Combat Support Company. 1st Battle Group. 127 Infantry. Headquarters and Headquarters Com-i pany and Combat Support Osnkosn, a. nv; company weupun, leaving from Beaver Dam.

a. Company Ripon, a. nv; Company Fond du Lac, I a. Company Plymouth, leavine from Fond du Lac, I a. nv; Battery 2nd Battalion, 120th Artillery, Waupaca, a.

m. Oct. 132nd Signal Battalion. Headquarters and Headquarters Company, Milwaukee, a. nv; Company Waukesha.

10 1st Battalion, 105th Armor, Company Merrill, teovinq Heefford Junction, 1:45 a. nv; Company B. Rhinelander, a. nvi Company Tomahawk, leaving from Heafford Junction. :45 a.

m. Company E. Medford. leavino from Prentice, 0-45 a. 724th Engineer Bettallon, Phillips, leavlno from Prentice, 0:45 a.

Combat Support Company, 1st Battle Group, 121th Infantry, Chippewa Falls. 11:30 a. nv; Crmpany Hudson, leevino from New Richmond, 1:45 p. nvt Company Mew Richmond, 1:45 Company Rica Lake, leaving from Cameron noon; 1st Battallcn, 120th Artillery, Headquarters and Headquarters Battery and Battery Stevens Point, 0 a. Battery Mosinee, leevino from Stevens Point, a.

nv; 2nd Battalion, 120tn Artillery. Headquarters and Headquarters Battery and Battery 8, Wisconsin Rapids, 7:45 m. m.t Battery A. 1st Battalion, 121st Artillery, Stan-lev, 10:45 a. Headquarters and Headquarters Battery and Battery 2nd Battalion, 121st Artillery, Marshfleid.

9:30 a. nv; Battery Abbotsford, staving from Marshfleid, 0:30 a. nv Driver Loses Fingers as Truck Rolls Away Fred Huffman, 51, Rt. 3, Bara- boo, suffered the loss of three fingers on his right hand Tuesday afternoon when they were caught while he was attempting to block a semi-trailer truck from coasting backward on a hill. The accident happened at the Gill farm, 4 miles south of Madi son on the Oregon rd, where Huffman was transporting a cat erpillar tractor to be used in house construction work there.

County Policeman Emil Schmale said the truck started to coast backward while Huffman was out from behind the driver's wheel to make certain he was not going to hit a stone pillar at the farm entrance. His fingers were amputated when the heavy truck continued to roll over a stone block he tried to brace un der the rear dual Schmale said. Huffman was taken to Madison General Hospital and released after emergency surgery. CONDITION AIRLY GOOD' Mrs. Helen Fairchild, 1910 Re gent was reported in "fairly good" condition late Tuesday at Madison General hospital.

She is the wife of Edward T. Fairchild, former chief justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, and mother of Thomas E. Fairchild, a State Supreme Court justice. wallop of 15 megatons of TNT equivalent Knowledgeable esti mates are that the United States has developed bombs packing up to 24 negations, and could make even more powerful ones if it wished. The destructive capabilities of American-model bombs can be roughly gauged by the following In 1952, a thermonuclear blast in the Pacific presumably smaller than the 15-megatonner exploded in 1954 tore a hole a mile wide and 175 feet deep in the uoor of the Pacific ocean.

I I MOW 111106 Is Russia's 50 Megaton? Continued from Pago 1 in diameter would cause sec ond degree burns out to a dis tance of 35 miles from the impact site and injuries, such as from flying glass and other debris, would occur out to 30 miles. FOUR. An area of from 10.000 to 20,000 square miles depend ng upon wind conditions would be contaminated by the local or quickly-falling fallout. Other ra dioactive debris would shoot into the stratosphere, to fall a or two later throughout the world. FTVE.

Well-built civil-defense underground shelters would pro vide protection if located 314 miles from the blast. Lapp worked on the original U. S. atomic bomb program but is not now connected with the government Compared with Past As for how a 50-megaton bomb packing the equivalent explosive punch of 50 million tons of TNT would compare with nuclear detonations of the past, the arith-j metic goes this way: ONE. The Atomic Energy Com mission estimates bombs having explosive power of 170 megatons were exploded by all testing na tions up through 1958, including the two 20,000 tonners dropped on Japan during World War IL Thus, a single 50 megatonner would pack an explosive punch equal to nearly a third of the total of those bombs.

TWO. Unofficial estimates are that Russia, in its current series of more than 20 blasts, has touched off devices having a total yield of more than 24 megatons This estimate is based on using an arbitrary figure of four mega tons for the five Soviet blasts de scribed by the AEC as ot "sev eral megatons. Several others among the 20 have been said to be in the megaton class, pre sumably meaning about one meg aton. U. S.

scientists have tended to discount the relative military value of such huge weapons. They say two 25-megaton bombs dropped on scattered targets would do more damage than one of 50-megaton yield. How It Compare How does a 50-megaton bomb compare with the largest so far tested by the United States? The largest announced thermonuclear test by the United States conducted at Eniwetok in 1954 packaged a total explosive Bomb, U.S. Asks Soviets I Continued from Paf I We call upon the Soviet Union to reconsider this decision, if in fact it has been made. We know hieher.

But we also know that such weapons are not essential to our military needs. Furthermore full-scale tests are not necessary to develop 50-megaton bombs. Such an explosion could only serve some unconfessed political purpose. "We believe the peoples throughout the world will join us in asking the Soviet Union not to proceed with a test which can serve no legitimate purpose and which adds a mass of additional radioactive fallout to that which has been unleashed in recent weeks." There was no formal comment on other portions of Khrush chev's 6-hour and 20-minute speech to the 22nd Soviet Com munist party congress in Moscow. Business Men's Groups to Hear Edward Wimmer A nationally-known exponent of free enterprise and small business will speak to the West Side Business Men's Assn.

IWSBMA) and the East Side Business Men's Assn. (ESBMA) this week. He is a rd Wimmer, i -president and public relations director of the National Federation of Independent i- ness, which has its headquarters in Burlingame, Calif. Wimmer will speak to the WSBMA at a meet ing at 6:30 to-tti night. He will ad- mmer dress the ESBMA at a social night beginning at 8 Thursday night.

His topic Thursday will be "What Do We Men When We Say Free Enterprise?" Wimmer has addressed groups throughout the United States in drive against practices detri mental to small business. Delinquency Control Group Meets Today The ninth annual Institute for. Delinquency Control for Law Enforcement Officers will open this morning at the Wisconsin Center for a three-day session. More than 100 chiefs of police and officers in charge of juvenile delinquency from throughout the state are expected to attend. The institute will include work shops, discussions, and speeches on delinquency control and new legislation dealing with the prob lem.

It is sponsored by the Wiscon sin Juvenile Officers the Wisconsin Sheriffs and Deputy Sheriffs the Wisconsin Chiefs of Police the Bu reau of Government of the Uni versity of Wisconsin Extension di vision, and the Division of Children and Youth of the State De partment of Public Welfare. THE MAN OF EXECUTIVE CALIBER Is easily distinguished by the way he dresses. We have helped many man achieve his success. 111 STTI JTtT I. 4- Continued from Pago I was really no ultimatum at all Khrushchev said.

In May, 1960. in the wake of the U-2 spy plane incident, Khru- renewed threats against exploded a summit conference. Within a week Khrushchev once again eased the threat. He told the East German Communist leadership it would have to wait. What is new today is Khru shchev's statement that President Kennedy and Britain's Prime Minister Macmillan are displaying certain understanding of the sit uation." He pictures them as in clined to seek solution of German issues on a "mutually acceptable basis." Khrushchev had told the Com munist world that President Kennedy would have to display such an attitude.

Now he pictures the President as coming around to it Therefore the time is at hand for easing the pressure. Why is Khrushchev pursuing this tactic? The answer likely will begin to emerge from the 22nd party Congress. The Soviet leader himself is be set by problems. There seems lit-j tie question he wants to get new economic program on the rails, and thus carve for himself a niche in history as the man who started the Soviet Union on the road to communism." He has apparently been under pressure from the Soviet military. It did not take too kindly to bis plan to demobilize large numbers of officers and men.

The Soviet premier seemed to be telling the Communist world it already had won something through the Berlin crisis and stood to win even more through dip lomatic warfare, without running the risk of nuclear war. The strategy he supports seems to be this: There are growing contradictions among Western powers. An economically strong USSR could exploit these con tradictions for communism's bene fit. But it needs time. And per haps it needs more patience thai some in the Communist leadership are willing to display.

IDONESIA PAPER MUX JAKARTA, Indonesia (A. In donesia's first paper mill will be constructed next year at Makassar in the south Celebes, the in dustries department announced. The $6 million cost of the plant will be paid for from Japanese war reparations funds. teaeeai VS. WLATMK KflttAU PT THIRTY -DAY FORECAST These maps, based on those issued Tuesday by the U.

S. Weather Bureau, show the probable temperatures and precipitation for the country in the next JO Wirephete Ma moratorium, we should regard discontinuance of the tests at the end of the month (following explosion of the 50-megaton bomb) as worthy of commendation." Delton Suspects Arraigned Oct. 26 BARABOO The three accused slayers of Sauk County Police man James Jantz and wounders of Lake Delton Police Chief Eu gene (Bob) Kohl will be arraigned at 9:30 a. m. Oct 26 in Circuit Court here.

Circuit Judge Bruce NeilLsvills, will hear the trio's ex pected innocent pleas and sched ule them for jury trial Defense. attorneys have 20 days after the arraignment in which to make motions for a change of venue. and separate trials. Sauk Dist-Atty. James R.

Seer- ing said he will oppose both mo tions which Defense Counsel James Hill Charles Drury, and Vaughan Conway have announced they will make. The defendants, Lawrence Nut- ley, 27, Richard Nickl, 28, and William Welter, 23, from Chicago and suburbs, are held without bail in the Dane county jail at They were ordered held for jury trial after a seven-day preliminary hearing before Sank County Judge Robert H. Gollmar Chief Kohl, recovering from a relapse caused by the strain of testifying at the preliminary hear ing, was reported in "very satis factory" condition Tuesday night at St Mary's-Ringling hospital here. i Enjoy quick nlief and speedily rmaawm aching eonw with thin, cuahio-faiff Dr. SchoU'a Zim pad.

Cowt but trifle. WHNJS You're on the right track, when you call us to handle your mov. ing problem. Our up-to-date vans and skilled movers assure you of a safe move wherever you go. Transfer Storage LOCAL LONG DtT amcc TEL.

AL 7-3914 rrTTTId current in our country at the time of the personality (Stalinist) cult" and said they must "re nounce their erroneous views" if they want friendship with the Soviet Communist party. In the list of 80 nations repre sented in the eSall, two Commu nist nations, Albania and Yugos lavia, were conspicuously absent. Yugoslavia has been at odds with the Kremlin since 1948, but Albania's defection has been apparent only in the last year. The little Adriatic country has been leaning toward Red China in its argument with Khrushchev over the theory of peaceful coexistence and the inevitability war. Chinese Silent During the entire speech, the two Red Chinese delegates sitting back of Khrushchev stared in stony silence.

Even when Khru shchev concluded, Preimer Cbou En-Lai of Red China barely patted his hands lightly in applause. Khrushchev again xipped into the "factional antiparty group," including former Foreign Minister M. Molotov, former Premiers Georgi Malenkov and Nikolai Bulganin and former Presidium President Klementi Y. Voroshilov.l who were purged from their high posts long ago. Khrushchev said they had fiercely resisted eliminating the errors and distortions and abuses of power" of the Stalin era.

The party is about to introduce its new program, the first since 1919, which intended as a blueprint to outstrip capitalism by 1980, Khrushchev said. Sometimes Pleasant Life in the Soviet Union must reflect the "period of the full-scale construction of commu nism." he said and added we cannot make a concession on this fundamental issue either to the Albanian leaders or to anyone else." Except for his attacks on fel low Communists and his an nouncement of the coming test of a 50 megaton bomb, Khru shchev appeared to be in a rela- tivelv pleasant mood. Before him in the nanasome new marble and glass auditorium was a colorful audience garbed in costumes from such places as Africa and Asia. For Your Fall Needs LAWN SWEEPERS SEEDERS ROLLERS SOD CUTTERS POST HOLE AUGERS POWER NAILERS STUD CUNS POWER SANDERS SAWS AND DRILLS TREE TRIMMERS GENERATORS 2144 Atwood Ave. CH 9-2189 We Rent Mott Anything front A'Z MY Clogett Named Phi Beta Kappa Scholar Prof.

KarsiIi Cagtt, fWervices by contract with Wisconsin State bimil niwiciMi Mi I mm Inc. i of the UB.verK'T ri srrwwin'e. -lSin 5 Institute for Resesrth Humanities and prcrW of his i tory Of science, has been ap- nnintnjf Phi P-nf a Kanns viit mg scnoiar ior me iwi-tu ata- demic year. The appointment, made annually by Phi Beta Kappa, national honor society, sends well-known educators to talk and hold discussion sessions at various universities and colleges in the United States. Clagett, one of seven educators honored this year, will visit 10 schools between Jan.

and April 27. DE5K and TABLE TOPS Plus Othci Class Replacements CALL ALpine 6-3181 R. J. OLSON GLASS CO. 625 Williamson Street jditon Wit.

city carrier delivery limit 4Sc par wee oayatle to the carrier boy. i By carrier tn Wisconsin bevond MadV 'son and Middleton carrier delivery limits per wee. i on k. r. d.

aaiiv nv man ana sun- say delhered to mail box by farm service carrier 35c oer week. 15c Sun day only payable either weekly or no more than five weeks In advance to farm service carrier. Bv mall In Wisconsin bevond earner delivery limits daily and Sunday. 1 year 111.20; months S9.10. By mail outside cf state of Wisconsin In the continental United States.

$24 per year. Sunday Only: lie per Issue or VM ier year Are You Planning to BUILD or REMODEL Want ideas on home build-in and remodeling? Let'i talk over your plans. We soecialize fn ideas and materials to make tout dreams come true. QI AMERICAN BUILDERS COMPANY 107 E. Dayton AL 6-5012 i Mkl fwf.

Iiitilltf hi 100 tun Kiilitl Sauitt. bJiiy'i lutiM tnta Jij (ii. JO fntL Cuil liidil SpuiU. Ill Sitter. 111.

I. listiiktlM" tj Maul litiiBin taiicts C..

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