U.S. CONDEMNED Kosygin, Nasser talk CAIRO — (UPI)— Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin and President Gamal Abdel Nasser today opened formal talks covering such wide-ranging subjects as the Sino-Soviet split and Nasser's political quarrels in the Middle East. Nasser was expected to seek Soviet backing for his return to a policy of militancy with his Israeli and Arab neighbors and to urge measures to repair the ideological split between Russia and Communist China. HE IS CONVINCED that this split between the two Communist giants has weakened the Socialist "progressive front" against so-called Western imperialism and hampered the fight against the United States in Viet Nam. The talks, being held in Cairo's Kubbeh Palace, residence of the late King Farouk, followed a visit by the Soviet leader to a steel plant built with Russian aid money and a Polish-supplied coke plant in suburban Helwan. Kosygin, accompanied by his wife and a party of 30 officials, arrived here Tuesday for an eight-day visit and were guests of honor at a state banquet Tuesday night. BOTH KOSYGIN and Nasser condemned the U.S. role in Viet Nam during the banquet, but Nasser took the much harder line. "The people of North Viet Nam are exposed to horrifying aggression which shackles the conscience of the Free World, including free men in the United States itself who courageously raised their voices in condemning the war in Viet Nam." Nasser said. Kosygin joined the attack but his remarks were much less virulent. China's third test; its biggest so far TOKYO — (UPI) — Communist China's third and biggest nuclear test explosion Monday produced radioactive fallout 200 times greater than fallout from its first explosion and 100 times greater than from its second, Japanese scientists reported today. GOP leader recuperating WASHINGTON —(UPI)—Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen's political foes have tried to pin him down many times. Today they did their best to get him up from a hospital bed with words of encouragement. The 70-year-old Dirksen was reported recuperating satisfactorily from surgery for a broken hip suffered in a fall Tuesday at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center. SOME OF HIS FRIENDS sent cards. Some of them sent flowers. President Johnson sent a jet and a helicopter, to bring Mrs. Dirksen to her husband's bedside from the Tennessee home of their daughter. THE ILLINOIS REPUBLICAN, one of the most colorful and hardest working members of the Senate, has been hospitalized several times in the past two years for treatment of painful abdominal spasms of apparently unexplained origin. Dirksen was expected to remain at Walter Reed for two or three weeks. He probably will have to use crutches for several more weeks after he leaves the hospital. Services Friday for Dean's mother The mother of Dean Emily Taylor, Dean of Women at KU, died Monday evening at their home, 847 Avalon. Mrs. Pearle Rollins Taylor, 82, had lived with Dean Taylor since September. FUNERAL SERVICES will be at 2 p.m. Friday at the Methodist Church in DeGraff, Ohio. Mrs. Taylor is survived by three daughters, Dean Taylor, Mrs. Frank Calan of Houston, Tex., and Mrs. Gordon McMahon of Oswego, N.Y.; two sisters, Mrs. Ose Kirkland of Columbia, Ala., and Mrs. A. L. Snell of Ashford, Ala.; five grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Prof. Takeo Kosaka of Nigata University said 29 "giant radioactive particles" were detected in Niigata Prefecture, on northern Japan's west coast which faces China, less than 48 hours after the blast. ALTHOUGH THE LEVEL of fallout was high, Kosaka said, it was not sufficient to endanger humans. Red China said the test contained "thermonuclear materials," indicating that it may have been experimenting with a hydrogen bomb or a triggering device for such a bomb. Weathermen in Osaka, in central Japan, also reported they detected radioactivity in rain that fell Tuesday night. They had not yet determined the radioactive content, however. "IMPERIALISM IS resorting to conspiracies, provocations and aggressions in some areas," Kosygin said. "Viet Nam is one of them. They will be defeated there just as they were defeated here on your land." Japanese meteorological experts said they believed the bomb was of the 20 kilon class, having the destructive power of 20,000 tons of TNT. Nasser's strong words against the United States came barely four months after he sought to play a negotiating role in the Viet Nam conflict following presidential envoy Averell Harriman's visit here. NEW YORK — (UPI) — The Long Island Railroad, the nation's busiest commuter line, was running on schedule today after a federal judge halted a strike called over the issue of luncheon cocktails enjoyed by company executives. Strike ends for NY line The union, claiming the executives also must observe a company rule against drinking during working hours, struck the Long Island Tuesday for three and a half hours. SOME 12,000 homeward-bound commuters on four branches found their schedule disrupted by the walkout. The Long Island serves a total of 90,000 commuters daily. The union claimed that cocktail-indulging executives might indirectly impair the safety of the riding public. SAIGON—(UPI)—Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky, dismissing Buddhist charges that he was reneging on a promise to step down by Sept. 15, reiterated today that he expects to stay in power for as long as another year. Buddhist leaders who extracted the promise of civilian rule during a month of tumultuous anti-government demonstrations were meeting today to decide the next move. Ky will remain THEY HAD BEEN UNDER the impression that the military government would give way to a civilian one after elections for the constituent assembly, promised for no later than Sept. 15. Ky first made known his plans in Can Tho on Saturday. But Secretary of State Dean Rusk said in Washington that he had been Nuclear test goes on LAS VEGAS, Nev. — (UPI)— An underground nuclear device with a force of up to 200,000 tons of TNT will be exploded Friday at the Nevada test site, the Atomic Energy Commission announced Tuesday. The test will be the second large explosion at the site in the last week. The low inter mediate test, meaning something between 20,- 000 and 200,000 tons of TNT in force, might be felt by persons outside the test site area, the AEC said. Only when the blast is felt by southern Nevada residents does the AEC announce such tests in advance. Daily Kansas Wednesday, May 11, 1966 Don Henry Co-op (KU's "Cooperative" Living Group For Men) ★ Cooperative Environment ★ Small Group—Leadership Opportunities ★ International Atmosphere Close To Campus - Low Cost Applications Now Being Taken For 1966-67 Year. Contact Bob Wittsell, Membership Chairmon 1420 Ohio V13-0681 3 "misquoted" by newsmen. A Voice of America transcript of the prime minister's remarks showed that he had not been quoted incorrectly. Today the flamboyant marshal repeated his statement during an inspection tour of a new school. STARTING TONIGHT At Lawrence Theatres Shows 7:00 & 9:05 Open 7:00—Show at Dusk Lana Turner as "MADAME X" plus "CHARADE" Scrambling by ATHRIS BROS. Directed by DRAFT COMMON TECHNICOLOR* PANAVIEW* FROM WARNER BROS. Matinees Daily 2:00 p.m. Evenings at 7:00 & 9:35