THE MICHIGAN DAILY Congo Leaders Demand UN Hand Over Lumumba t4 IToure Asks JN to Seat Ousted Head Admittance Debated For Rival Groups By The Associated Press The ruling group of Congolese leaders yesterday demanded in Leopoldville that the United Na- tions hand over Patrice Lumumba or face a fight with the Congo- lese army. The group charged the UN forces were preventing the arrest of the deposed premier. The ul- timatum gave the United Nations until 3 p.m. today to comply. Rajeshawar Dayal, resident head of the UN Congo operation, cabled Secretary - General Dag Hammarskjold in New York for instructions. Meanwhile, at United Nations, President Sekou Toure of Guinea, a favorite of the Communist bloc, t demanded that the UN Genera Assembly immediately seat the Lumumba delegation. Submit Resoluion Toure submitted a resolution asking such action in advance of a decision by the Assembly's cre- dentials committee on whether to seat the Lumumba group or a rival delegation sent here by Con- go President Joseph Kasavubu. Toure took the spotlight in the Assembly as a champion of Lum- umba, who appeared to be under! house arrest in Leopoldvlle on orders of Joseph Mobuto, Congo strongman. The ultimatum was issued by the technical commission appoint- ed last month by Congo strong- man Joseph Mobutu to run the #(vernment until the end of the year and was approved by Presi- dent Joseph Kasavubu. Issue Warrant Justin Bomboko, chief of the technical commission, said a war- rant had been issued for Lumum- ba's arrest. He warned that if the United Nations does not per- mit Lumumba's arrest today "the Congolese army will meet its re- sponsibilities." "If the population has to com- bat the United Nations it will do so," he said. The ultimatum followed a Mon- day attempt by Lumumba to whip up support for himself in a sur- prise tour of Leopoldville bars. The 34-year-old ex-premier tour- ed the city in a limousine with an escort of the Ghanaian and Moroccan soldiers of the UN force who have been guarding his villa since his ouster. A few weeks ago Lumumba tour- ed the city with an escort of UN Ghana troops. At that time Mo- butu and Kasavubu protested to the UN command that the Unit- ed Nations in the eyes of the Congolese was appearing to sup- port Lumumba. CastroCtes CU.S. Backed Resistance HAVANA () - Prime Minister Fidel Castro yesterday accused the United States of masterminding a resistance movement against his leftist regime. He said his Cuban revolution "faces an offensive of imperial- ism and reaction" that "will con- tinue more intensive every day." "-The counterrevolution is more' powerful than was the tyranny (Batista regime)," Castro said, "above all because it groups to- gether as directors and as a fun- damental force powerful interests of Yankee imperialism." Without that, he said, the counterrevolu- tion would be nothing. U.S. Plotted Invasion In a nationwide TV address be- fore the National Education Con- gress, Castro said an invasion of counterrevolutionaries in Oriente province last week was only the beginning of "Yankee State De- partment, Central Intelligence Agency and warmongering Pen- tagon engineering" against his government. He said Yankee imperialists would have to bear the respon- sibility if firing squads are re- quired to deal with "criminals they send." The reference was to the more than 100 insurgents captured by government forces in the Esca- bray mountains last week. The captives go on trial before a mili- tary tribunal at Santa Clara in La Villa province today. Threatens Executions "We do not want to see our- selves in necessity of executing," Castro said. "But he who lives by the sword dies by the sword." C a s t r o charged opposition groups were planning an invasion of Cuba from Guatemala and the Swan Islands off the east coast of Honduras. Both Honduras and the United States claim the Swan Islands, and the United States has a small naval party stationed there. Re-, cently there have been reports that a radio station is operating on the Islands. PaulingLoses Nuclear Case WASHINGTON WP)--Dr. Linus C. Pauling, the noted scientist, lost in the Supreme Court yester- day his challenge of the Presi- dent's power to order tests of nuclear weapons. The high court declined without comment to review lower court rulings which dismissed complaints by Pauling and 38 other individ- uals. VIENTIANE (A) - Peace talks intending to end civil war in Laos open today between neutralist premier Prince Souvanna Phouma and the pro-Communist Pathet Lao guerrillas. The negotiations come amid re- ports of a new split in the many- sided struggle for power in this strategically located kingdom in former French Indochi'na. At the same time the scheduled arrival here this week of two top United States governmentofficials raised hopes that the United States may be planning a new move to break the deadlock. American May Help The appearance of J. Graham Parsons, assistant United States secretary of state for Far East- ern affairs, and John M. Irwin, assistant secretary of defense in charge of the United States 'mili- tary aid program, could bolster the position of Souvanna Phouma, who took over the government re- cently following a military coup against a pro-Western regime. Complicating the picture is the effort of the right-wing rebel' force under Gen. Phoumi Nosovan to split the neutralist government, and the announcement today'of a fourth rival regime by Touby Lyfoung, self-appointed king of the hill-dwelling Meo tribesmen. Western. diplomats regarded Touby's announcement as a se ous setback for Souvanna Phour Aid Suspension Harms The premier's bargaining pc tion with the Pathet Lao t been seriously weakened within own government by tempora suspension of United States mi tary aid. The United States acti prompted Souvanna. to indicg he would accept Soviet aid, if it offered. To newsmen's questio regarding such a possibility, said, "Why not? Are we neut or, aren't we?" But interest in this administr tive capital was centered for t moment on reports regardl Touby, who is Justice minister Souvanna's cabinet. LAOS WAR MAY END: 'Premier To Confer wi-th Rebel --..-,, >.+{. {." . i' $ir >r > ;r- .y. ar." "ryN s ,... ,. ." .. rrrt r: ate. .+{r :.. reA{ "X"Yd:' "Yv ": ... ...... :. ' r%":a.'. Ft - i::.rt'.SS: :;: S%$ 1 ! 6: " . 9.tiS:." ;,+"r . r{ .:..rs..:.....-iad .......a... as d.Ab} . . ,......rn:1"::".::?F i" 5w1 sh": W omen's October Week 10-13 -AP Wirephoto DEMANDS LUMUMBA-Col. Joseph Mobutu, army strongman of the chaos-ridden Congo, yesterday demanded that the United Nations move aside and allow his troops to arrest deposed Premier Patrice Lumumba. STILL NOT SATISFACTORY- Unemploymnent Situation Improving WASHINGTON (AP)-The gov- ernment yesterday reported a modest improvement in Jobs last month. But an official conceded the unemployment situation is "far from satisfactory by any stand- ard." The Labor Department said both employment and unemploy- ment went down in September, largely influenced by seasonal fac- tors. The main factor was the return of young workers to school. Lodge Favors Church School Federal Aid Henry Cabot Lodge said Sun- day that he would support fed- eral aid for parochial schools. Lodge said, "If you are taking a parochial school boy into the Army to operate guided missiles, you want the parochial school boy to know his mathematics as well as the public school boy. You want him to be as well educated, and as healthy." He also'favored the inclusion of parochial and private schools in any federal aid for such purposes as textbooks and bus rides. The rate of idled workers in the total labor force dropped slightly from 5.9 per cent in Au- gust to 5.7 per cent in September. Small Improvement This means that 57 out of 1,000. able and willing workers could, not find jobs, as compared with 59 out of 1,000 a month earlier. AFL-CIO economists discounted this small improvement. They said the 5.7 idle rate is the highest for any September in any non- recession year since World War II. And they said initial claims in September for unemployment compensation totaled the highest on record for the month. These are the government's job figures for September: Employment - Declined from 68,282,000 in August to 67,767,000, still a record high for September. The drop was 515,000-less than a decrease of 750,000 jobs that was expected in September for seasonal reason. Unemployment -- Declined by 400,000 from 3,788,000 in August' to 3,388,000 last month. Normal- ly a decline of 300,000 is expect- ed for the month. The less-than-seasonal decline in employment coupled with more than seasonal decline in unem- ployment caused the idle rate to edge downward a bit. But Seymour Wolfbein, deputy assistant secretary of labor for manpower problems, noted that the total of long-term unemploy- ed-those without jobs 15 weeks or longer--has stayed for several months at around 800,000. Focusing on the College Educated Woman TUESDAY, OCT. 11: Let's Look at the African Problem! --Dr. Bretton of the Political Science Deportment WEDNESDAY, OCT. 12: College Experience: Useful -Recent college grads relate college experiences to their present life --Speakers: Jo Hardee, Mary Wellman, Mrs. Robert J. Warrick,,Mrs. Marilyn Segel Oberman, Mrs. Robert Weaver, Ruth Alkema THURSDAY, OCT. 13: The Civic Leader: Backbone of America! -Ann Arbor Civic Leaders discuss volunteer activities available to the educated woman -Speakers: Dean Deborah Bacon, Mrs. Florence B. Crane, Miss Alice Beeman, Mrs. Frederik K. Sparrow, Mrs. Alison Meyers, Mrs. Willett Spooner 1:15 P.M. - Henderson Room of Women's League Sponsored by the Michigan League JOB OPPORTUNITIES! A General Motors representative will be on campus October 18 Contact your college placement office to arrange an interview. 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