SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13,19h THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 19~5 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREW 'Rhodesian Move Denounced by U.N. UNITED NATIONS OP) - The Goldberg disclosed plans for the Rhode UN Security Council approved embargo, the recall of its con- first t without a dissenting vote yester- sul general from Salisbury and the si 'day a resolution condemning the other retaliatory measures in the lice st declaration of independence by the UN Security Council yesterday. At t "racist minority" in Rhodesia. It Ambassador Goldberg said he "W called also on all countries to hopel the response of the world ing a withhold all aid and recognition community would bring about a the shi from the regime headed by Prime "reconsideration of the senseless tary e Minister Ian Smith., and impetuous decision of a mi- desia. The action came at an urgent nority group motivated by desire measu session of the council, where the to preserve their special privileges United States announced the and to continue the political and -T slapping of an arms embargo and economic subjugation" of nearly lishm other tough measures against 4 million Africans in Rhodesia. portat Rhodesia in support of British ef- Stop Communism in 196 forts to end the rebellion in their In London, Prime Minister Har- -T central African colony. old Wilson declared Britain must all ap The vote on the resolution was solve the Rhodesian problem mentl 10-0 with one abstention-France. quickly to stop adverturous Com- to Rh It abstained on the grounds that I munist nations from seizing a to pot the issue was not an internation-, foothold in Africa. that c al dispute but one primarily of Wilson told the House of Com- -T concern to Britain. mons that Rhodesian Prime Min- Amer U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. ister Ian Smith and his white desia. esian cabinet are using "their "We are also considering what J the response of the world commu- taste of power to erect all further steps might be taken," he nity would bring about a "recon- ckening apparatus of a po- added. sidration of the senseless and im- ate." He noted also that the United petuous decision of a minority the UN Goldberg declared: States had recalled its consul gen- group motivated by desire to pre- e are immediately institut- eral from Salisbury, and deprived serve their special privileges, and comprehensive embargo on the minister for Rhodesian affairs to continue the political and eco- ipment of all arms and mili- and his staff in the British Em- nomic subjugation" of nearly four quipment to Southern Rho- bassy in Washington of its diplo- million Africans in Rhodesia. He listed these additional matic status. "Let us, by our prompt action, ores: About 1800 Americans live in make resoundingly clear our con- No Sugar Rhodesia, mostly missionaries and viction that a small and forlorn he withholding of the estab- some businessmen and diplomats. group of men cannot for long re- ent of any quota for the im- American investments there now verse the historic trend of 20th tion of sugar from Rhodesia total about $56 million, mostly in century Africa toward self-deter- 6. mining enterprises. mination and freedom," he said. he suspension of action on Asks Endorsement Stewart pplications for U.S. govern- Goldberg called on the entire At the UN, British Foreign Sec- loans and credit guarantees UN membership to endorse all the retary Michael Stewart appeal- hodesia and discouragement economic actions taken by Brit- ed to the council to condemn the tential American investors in ain against Rhodesia, to refuse Rhodesian independence declara- ountry. to. recognize the Smith- regime, tion, withhold aid and diplomatic he discouragement of all "and in particular to refrain from recognition, and to invoke the kindf ican private travel to Rho- I supplying it with armaments." of penalties already announced by. He expressed confidence that his country. --Associated Press RHODESIA'S PRIME MINISTER IAN SMITH, left, and Deputy Prine Minister C. W. Dupont share a joke as they arrive for the first cabinet meeting of the new Rhodesian government in Salisbury yesterday. 1.S. Viet Infantry Fights NEW PRESIDENT: Off 'Marcos winner in APPLIANCE S Overseas, Inc. Cong Shock TrooSn Philippine Election representing I S SAIGON (P-U.S. infantrymen detachment had deployed there helicopters for some time, but they battled off persistent Viet Cong Thursday night to secure the high- got in to bring out the wounded shock troops 40 miles north of way, scene of many bloody am- after fighter-bombers hit the ene-l Saigon with the help of planes bushes. my positions."1 and artillery yesterday and a A Viet Cong battalion-perhaps 40 Missions spokesman said at least 100 of 500 men-attacked shortly after U.S. fighter-bombers flew more the Red enemy were killed. dawn with a rain of shells from than 40 missions against the Viet Losses among the Americans, a mortars and recoilless rifles, then Cong. Armed helicopters, called 700-man reinforced battalion of hung on tenaciously. gunships, executed strafing runs. the 1st Infantry Division, official- +A California newsman who was Artillerymen fired howitzer shells ly were called light. The battle near the scene, managing editor into enemy ranks at close range. raged for 12 hours, then tapered Ross Game of the Napa Register, The Communist attack follow- off at dusk into occasional ek- reported "wounded soldiers said ed up the defeat Monday of an changes of small arms fire. later the fire came upon them sud- entrenched guerrilla battalion that The site was a section of High- denly and without warning." took on troops of the U.S. 173rd way 13, on the western fringe of "Relief forces also came under Airborne Brigade at an abandon- Zone D jungle that Communists fire," Game said. "Heavy ground ed village in Zone D 30 miles have , controlled. The American fire held off medical evacuation northeast of Saigon. L -Z V V ]r k__1 MANILA (,')-Unofficial elec- Macapagal-a lead of 679,975 tion tallies yesterday made Sen. votes. The remaining uncounted Ferdinand E. Marcos, 48, won- votes were scattered over the eight American authorities said more der-boy of Philippine politics, the major voting regions of the coun- than 400 Viet Cong were killed nation's sixth president. try and Macapagal was leading in, and U.S. losses were moderate in Incumbent President Dios only one of these. that fight, which reflected a'Macapagal,55, a dogged profes- Intimates of the defeated Lib- switch from the guerrillas' old pol- saonal g, eral party president said they hop- icy of genrally avoiding sustained sonal running for a second term. ed he would concede defeat later. contact with U.S. combat detach- Irefused to concede defeat and They said he hardly doubted his' ments. claimed the unofficial count by defeat but wished to announce it Civilian Killed the Philippine News Service could on the basis of official figures. In the Mekong River delta have been influenced by fake tally Vice-President Winning south of Saigon, a young Ameri- sheets. He said he would await Marcos appeared to be carrying can civilian aid worker, Petereturnssof t oficis Electin his vice-presidential running mate, PtrCommission - which is counting Sen. Fernando Lopez, who had' Hunting, 24, of Oklahoma City, slowly. Even there, however, Mar- 3 282,736 votes to 3,027,700 for his: was shot to death in a Viet Cong cos was posting a widening gap, e o o h ambush while he was making a cswspsigawdnn a opponent, Sen. Gerardo Roxas, the 20-mile drive from Vinh Long to that was beginning to appear un- son of the nation's first postwar 20-mle divefromVin Lon tobeatable. peiet Can Tho. president. U.S. officials said he was led to Marcos, standard bearer of the In the congressional contests his death by two Vietnamese com- Nacionalista party, finally spurted Marcos was losing control of the panions, apparently Viet Cong into a mathematically unbeatable House of Representatives and,' al- agents, who posed as his friends. lead, with counting of Tuesday's though six of his senatorial candi- They were missing when troops of election votes entering its fourth dates were leading, he would have a military convoy found Hunting's day. Only Macapagal appeared to at best only a precarious margin bullet-riddled body. doubt the accuracy of the unof- in the Senate. Hunting was a regional super- ficial vote-which he praised four The new president will be in- visor of the International Volun- years ago when it similarly named augurated Jan. 1 for a four-year tary Service. It is a private non- him president and Manila papers term. First he must be proclaim- orofit organization which has termed Macapagal s cause lost. ed elected next month by a spe- LWL~LJLLLLI ~[e1vz~z utor - - - .L! -. - U ~ -- REFRIGERATORS " FREEZERS . WASHERS " DRYERS RANGES 0 AIR CONDITIONING 0 WATER HEATERS TELEVISION - PHONOS-STEREOS RADIOS s SMALL APPLIANCES TYPEWRITERS u eu~rnsuuini %;ur, M offers appliances in all voltages & cycles for use throughout the world EXPOPT PRICES ... OVERSEAS WARRANTIES COMPLETE PACKING & OVERSEAS SHIPPING All prices reflect diplomatic discounts and are free of all taxes. WRITE OR CALL TODAY, indicating voltage, cycles, and country of destination - - .1 World News Roundup ___ By The Associated Prest KEY WEST, Fla.-A sealift of Cuban refugees stranded in their homeland by the halt of a hodge- podge exodus by small boats be- gins today. The 85-foot excursion boat Skip- per K sailed from Key West at, midnight last night to pick up the first of about 2000 Cubans left waiting at the fishing port of Ca- marioca on Cuba's north shore. The Skipper K will be joined Monday by another U.S.-charter- ed vessel, the New Pan American, a 75-footer now en route to Key West from its home port of Bi- loxi, Miss. * * BATON ROUGE, La.--A silt- coated barge and its, deadly car- go of chlorine were lifted from the muddy bottom of the Mis- sissippi River yesterday, ending a tense situation begun by Hurri- cane Betsy. The million-dollar salvage oper- ation, two months in the plan- ning, went off without a hitch. Then the capital city area's 300,000 residents were told the threat that had been with them constantly since the barge cap- sizd and sank during the hurri- cane was ended. The thousands who evacuated their area began streaming home. . * * MOSCOW-The Soviet Union launched another attempt to probe Venus. A 2,123-pound unmanned space- craft was started on a journey of 31/2' months toward the myster- iously clouded planet. An official announcement said everything was going well. * * * RICHMOND, Va.-Harry Flood Byrd, Jr.,, was appointed yester- day to the U.S. Senate -- a day after the, retirement of his 78- year-old father. Gov. Albertis S. Harrison, Jr., put a quick end to political spec- ulation by 'choosing the 50-year- old state senator, newspaper ex- ecutive and orchard owner, a man closely attuned to the philosophy of conservative Harry F. Byrd, Sr. WASHINGTON--A nuclear test of low yield-meaning equivalent to less than 20,000 tons of TNT- was conducted underground yes- terday at the Atomic Energy Com- mission Nevada test site, the com- mission announced. It was the 21st announced weap- ons-related test of 1965. There has also been on "Plow- share" test aimed at peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and one test detection experiment. LOS ANGELES-The Air Force yesterday named eight of 20 pilots who will be assigned to manned orbiting laboratories slated to go aloft starting in 1968. In the first group were six Air Force and two Navy piolts. The manned orbiting laboratory -MOL--program is a military project. The national space agen- cy's astronauts fly as civilians. * * * WASHINGTON - Government and industry power experts ex- pressed hope yesterday that a de- tailed study next week of basic operating data of six companies and organizations may disclose the origin of last Tuesday's mas- sive power failure in the North- east. , i , I about 60 specialists in agriculture, Substantial Lead education and public health work- With approximately 80 per ing in South Viet Nam under a cent of the vote tallied, Marcos contract with the U.S. aid mission. I had 3,477,905 votes to 2,797,930 for cial session of Congress. The man who will proclaim the newly elect- ed candidates is the president of the Senate-Ferdinand E. Marcos. ______ LAST CHANCE Ir { LAST CHANCE LECTURE DEAN ROBERTSON Speaking as if it were his last chance to address students MONDAY, NOV. 15 ... 7:10 P.M. Michigan Room of League coffee and dessert I i ---- , MARSTON BATES will speak on HUMAN ENVIRONMENT 11 1' UAC Free to Michign Students 25o to others A new booklet, published, by a non-profit educational founda- tion, tells which career fields lets you make the best use of all your college training, including liberal-arts courses-which career field offers 100,000 new jobs every year-which career field produces more corporation presidents than any other--what starting salary you can expect. Just send this ad with your name and address. This 24-page, career-guide booklet, "Oppor- tunities in Selling," will be mailed to you. No cost or obli- gation. Address: Council on Op- portunities, 550 Fifth Ave., New York 36, N. Y., MICH 11-8 f i i I the eanterbury house has new things happening this weekend Andrea, Barbara and Susan doing great FOLK THINGS, a film short, "THE HOLE" to be shown at 9:30 and 12:00 B.S., J.G. and "THE SHADOW" co-starring JOHN MILLER Due to our limited space, We suggest that you COME EARLY! -1 ..r... . Sunday, Nov. 14 7:30 P.M. Betsy Barbour sponsored by: The Honors Steering Committee 11 PETITIONING IS NOW OPEN FOR MEMBERSHIP ON JOINT JUDICIARY COUNCIL AND COMMITTEE ON STANDARDS AND CONDUCT 11 Sunday, November 14 STUDENTS AND THE ECUMENICAL TASK illustrated with slides of the PHILIPPINES and the MIDDLE EAST Speaker: Paul R. Dotson Director of the Protestant Foundation for International Students and the Presbyterian Campus Ministry. Mr. Dotson served overseas with the church for fifteen years in higher education. door opens at 8:30 fri. and sat. 11 one dollar per person 218 N. Division 91 Petitions available in The Office of Student Organizations 1011 Student Activities Bldg. Petitions accepted to Nov. 17, 1965 Interviews: Nov. 21, 22,1965 S. "I: I i I I ELECTION S Vote Presbyterian Campus Center 1432 Washtenaw 7:30 P.M. French Room SORORITY RUSH REGISTRATION GROUP N V. 17 U U WHO? All Freshman Women HYDE PARK Downtown HONDA ON THE DIAG WHERE? Stockwell-Lloyd South Quad Lounges Nov. 15-16, 4-6 P.M. p A A chance to meet Women's League II . I -_ J._. _ -. Kn Inmazoo Room II I E;. U U. n U W.