Friday, September 20, '1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, September 20, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three CITE Malaysia suspends ties with Philippines House slashes Thursday & Friday SIBRIAEN LADY MACBETH Directed by ANDRZEJ WAJDA 1963 , By the directorofl "Ashes and Diamonds" and leader of thb Polish "new wave." First time in Ann Arbor 4 7 5 c ' 7:00 & 9:05 ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM KUALA LUMPUR ;()-Malay- sia announced suspension of dip- lomatic relations and abrogation of antismuggling pact with the Philippines yesterday in response to a new Philippine law annexing Sabah, the Malaysian state on Borneo. In Manila, Foreign Secretary Narciso Ramos called the an- nouncement of Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman "a serious mistake . . . belligerent, belli- cose." But leaders of both nations said they had no intention of resorting to force. Rahman emphasized his nation was suspending-not ,breaking- diplomatic ties with Manila. "We will maintain only a skele- ton administrative staff there," he said. Demonstrators turned out in Kuala Lumpur and other major towns in Malaysia to voice support HILLEL Tonight at 6:15 STUDENT SABBATH r SERVICES 1429 Hill Street of Rahman's action and pledge to defend Malaysia "to the last drop of our blood." "Let us hope there is no blood- shed,' Rahman said. "Malaysia is preparing for the worst but hoping for the best." Support came also from a Brit- ish )military official in Hong Kong. "We fully support the case that Sabah is part of Malaysia, said Gen. Sir Michael Carver. He told newsmen five British Royal Air Force jet fighters flew over Sabah yesterday at Rahman's request. But, he added the request was made before President Ferdinand E. Marcos of the Philippines sign- ed the law in Manila Wednesday. Rahman's move suspending re- lations and abrogating the treaty was seen by diplomats here as a Malaysian attempt to shift the burden to Manila. "Now if relations are going to be completely cut, it's going to have to be Marcos who calls for it," one informant said. A presidential spokesman in Manila said Marcos planned no retaliatory steps at least until he receives official word of the Ma- laysian action. Smuggling between Sabah and the Sulu Is1pnds, at the southern tip of the Philippines chain, has! reportedly cost the Manila gov- ernment $100 million a year. Ss apropriation for foreign aid WASHINGTON () - The House passed and sent to the Senate yesterday a $1.62 billion foreign aid appropriation bill, smallest in the 20-year history of the program. The roll-call vote was 173 to 139. The House upheld after several hours of listless debate a 45 per cent cut of $1.3 billion recommended by its Appropria- tions Committee in the $2.9 billion of new financing requested by President Johnson, Only two attempts were made to increase the committee- approved funds. One, to add $50 million for Alliance For Pro- gress loans and grants tom South American nations, lost by voice v o t e. The other, to add $45 million for supportingaCnzeelo assistance, was ruled out of order on a technicality.i Not since it began in 1948 as then le Marshall Plan has the aid pro- gram been given such meager fi- nancing. Last year Congress ap- propriated $2.39 billion. rest S As the House voted on the mon- ey bill, the Senate completed ac- tion on a separate authorization PRAGUE (M)-Foreign Minister measure putting a $1.97 billion Jiri Hajek resigned yesterday and ceiling on the amount of money Premier Oldrich Cernik has been that could be provided for the appointed acting foreign minister, present fiscal y e a r ending next the official Prague Radio report- June 30. The House passed th ed. authorization bill earlier in the Haiek's removal had been de- -Associated Press Boston demonstrator s confront Humphrey Protesters ee .._._. ,t a k .' fr PRIOR TO BROADWAY! SEPTEMBER 17-29 MOL IFRF'S ti r a vI L / L.I L- %. "A RESOUNDING HIT-- WORTH CELEBRATING' F t (!! -I i - { i , i. 1 : I . I By The Associated Press Hubert H. Humphrey, with Sen. Edward M. Kennedy at his side, faced the biggest crowd of his presidential campaign yesterday in downtown Boston-and ran in-! to some of his noisest hecklers. Hundreds of antiwar demon- strators ringed the platform where the Vice President spoke, repeat-! edly trying to drown out his! words and even those of Kennedy as he stated his unhesitating en-! dorsement of the Democratic can- didate. Neither man could ignore the shouts and chanting, and both addressed the subject off the cuff. !"Your actions,"- Humphrey told' the demonstrators, "are going to! disgust the American people and harm the cause of peace." The demonstrators responded with a new chant, "We are thel American people." In introducing Humphrey Ken- nedy said: "I think if there is one lesson of 1968, it is that there is no room for anarchy, that there is no room for violence, and there is no so- lution to difficult and compelling problems by shouting and scream-: ink. gled their fingers at the Mas- sachusetts senator and started yelling in unison, "Shame on Ted- dY." Estimates of the number of on- lookers at the noon-hour cam- paign rally in front of one of Boston's largest downtown de- partment stores -ranged .from 10,000 to 20,000. It clearly was the largest throng Humphrey has seen in any one spot since his cam- paign began. Meanwhile ,in Springfield, Mo., Richard M. Nixon promised that if he wins the presidency he will choose an administration includ- ing Democrats and independents as well as Republicans. 11 1 His pledge of bipartisanship came in a radio address on the nature of the presidency, recorded for broadcast tonight and made public as the Republican nominee campagned in the Midwest. Nixon said he wants an admin- istration drawn "from the broad- est possible base," from all parties and all callings. He said if he wins the White House he will be an activist Presi- dent, taking positions which may not always be popular and telling the people why. "I don't believe in government by Gallup poll," Nixon said. He said "The blanket of concensus" means mediocrity. World news roundup day. The swift action resulted from a H o u s e decision to suspend a standing rule requiring that ap- propriation bills lie over for three days before being voted on. The vote on this procedure was 293 to 58 as members voiced a desire to speed up their work in expectation of an early October adjournment. The aid bill was the 1 as t of more than a dozen regular money measures. All h a v e cleared the House, but several are awaiting Senate action or adjustment of differences with the House. By The Associated Press ; SAIGON - South VietnameseJ battle deaths have exceeded Amer- ican losses every week for the past two months, indicating govern- ment forces are taking a bigger share of the fighting. Allied casualty figures released -V rity Directed by Stephen Porter Undaunted, the protestors wag- I yesterday showed that 1,824 Amer- icans have been killed in action since July 21 while government combat fatalities in the s a m e eight weeks were 2,604. It was the first time this year that South Vietnamese losses have been greater than those of Ameri- can units for such a long period. TEL AVIV - An Israeli lieu-l tenant colonel and a major were' killed Tuesday in an Arab ambush that also cost the lives of four other Israeli troops, it was learned yesterday. Four other Israelis were wound- ed. I ALL-TIME GREAT FLICK! KEY LARGO j 4 .- __ _ i am ti 4- t1 W UNION-LEAGUE TONIGHT 8:30 P.M. Bursley Cafeteria Absolutely FREE! The hanging was the best show in town. But they made two mistakes. They hung the wrong man aid they didn't finish the job. I s I "NIXON IS A LOSER" or "HUMPHI EY" BUMPER STICKERS We're neutral: Pick the man not of your choice. 2 for$1,5for$2, l15 for $5 Mix or Match LOSERS POLL, BOX 896 DENVER, COLORADO The Arabs were wiped out, but it was Isr'ael's most disastrous en- counter with guerrillas since the six-day war in June 1967. The clash occurred near the oc- cupied west bank town of Tubas, 1; miles from the Jordan River frontier and 9 miles northeast of the Arab city ,of Nablus. *. * * WASHINGTON - Senate Re- publican Leader Everett M. Dirk- sen of Illinois said yesterday that withdrawal of Abe Fortas' nomi- nation to be chief justice would save "a lot of juicy headlines." Dirksen, however, did not say he thought President Johnson should withdraw the nomination and made plain he does not expect him to do so. DENVER, Colo. - Continuing gains against cancer were reported yesterday by the government's Na-' tional Cancer Institute. But lung cancer was again the glaring ex- The third "End Results in Can- cer" report evaluated data on al- most 400,000 patients at about 100 hospitals over the past 25 years. The report noted increased sur- vival rates for patients with can- cer of the olon -and rectum, the most frequently occurring form I in the United States, and for pa- tients with cancer of the breast, which kills more women than any other form of the disease.! manded by the Soviet Union dur- ing Kremlin talks four weeks ago. He is one of three officials of the liberal Communist regime - headed by party chief Alexander Dubcek - whose removal the Russians demanded. The other two were Deputy Premier Ota Sik and Interior Min- ister Josef Pavel. Sik is reported to have been ap- pointed commercial counselor of the Czechoslovak Embassy in Belgrade and Pavel is on pension. Hajek is expected to seek a profes- sorship at Prague University. Hajek demanded the withdrawal of Soviet and other occupation forces from Czechoslovakia in a speech before the United Nations Security Council in New York the weekend of Aug. 24-25. Later he requested that the Czechoslovak issue be dropped from the pro- ceedings. Soviet and other occupation forces have taken a direct hand in controlling at least three Czechoslovak newspapers that of- fended them, the official Com- munist press reported. Wallace ma get equal time WASHINGTON ()-The House Commerce Committee modified yesterday its equal-time suspen- sion bill to insist that Richard M. Nixon, Hubert H. Humphrey and George C. Wallace be given the chance to appear on the same de- bate program. But after taking this step, the - committee ran into a parliamen- tary snag which left the status bf the controversial bill up in the air. Chairman Harley 0- Staggers (D-W. Va.) said the 'issue won't be resolved until the next com- mittee meeting, probably Wednes- day. "But the way it is now," Stag- gers said, "I expect the bill to be approved." Rep. Brock Adams (D-Wash.) a committee member, said Wed- nesday the measure was "in deep trouble." '" ^ h DIAL 665-6290 Twice Daily at 1 :30!and 7:30 P.M.. r r ction d I m odernGooli'x " FINAL WEEK!I LAST 7 DAYS Lose Something. Find. it with a Daily Classified I _ :...,:. r / I 3 I & ,' /. DIAL 8-6416 FINAL I , r . ' t >_ : f SIZZLER FROY FRANCE. Makes 'THE FOX' look like a milk-fed puppy. 'Therese and Isabelle' will be the most talked-about movie around." 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