6 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wachuku Presents Plan For 'TWO Chinas' in UN African Asks DISPUTED AREA-The Red Chinese and the Indian governments disagree over the McMahon line as the true boundry between the two country's and India's Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru says his ;country will repel any intrusion by the R eds. Nehru Claims India 'Will Resist' Attack. (-. NEW DELHI ,VP)-Indian Prime\ Minister Jawaharlal Nehru as- serted yesterday Red China has threatened to enter India's north- east region and declared if an in- vasion comes "we shall resist and repel it." Nehru summarized before par- liament a new note from Peiping on the simmering border dispute which he said may be "a major trouble spot of the world for the next few years." The text of the note disclosed the Chinese said their troops would be justified in entering India's northeast region but added that Peiping intends to refrain from crossing the border there. In the parliamentary debate, Nehru omit- ted mention of this part of the note. Nehru said Peiping complained that India was "stepping up mili- tary positions and building new I i Worid News Roundup JI M . A I II/Ir1 A l r l o By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-House Demo-. crats apparently have decided to start the next session of Congress without an official majority floor leader. Their party caucus on Jan. 9, one day before Congress con- venes, will select only a candidate for speaker to succeed the late Sam Rayburn, who died last Intercollegiate Gabfest Craze Keeps 'Yaking' YPSILANTI M)-The talkathon craze continued on an intercol- legiate level yesterday. Eastern Michigan University got into the act Monday by initiating two conversations with students at the University. Meanwhile, gabfests still were going on at Michigan State and Western Michigan University at Kalamazoo. Western passed the 160-hour mark yesterday at 11 a.m. Michigan State passed the 109-hour mark at noon and held a 37% hour lead over the Univer- sity. Talks with Eastern Michigan put an added burden on University gabbers. But women in Stockwell Hall and men in East Quadrangle assumed the load. The women were making small talk with men at Buell Hall on the Eastern cam- pus, and University men talked with women at Eastern's Downing Hall. Officials of the Michigan Bell Telephone Co. weren't overly alarmed over the telephone tie- ups. A company spokesman, however, admitted that "the situation does represent the possibility of inter- ferring with serious communica- tion." But he added that "this activ- ity represents something of an in- tellectual improvement over such past college fads as swallowing goldfish and panty raids." Talk at the University centered on whether they could outlast Michigan State. "Our only real purpose is to beat State," Kenneth Larson, '64E, self- appointed straw boss of the opera- tion, said. month. A later caucus will be held to choose a floor leader, pro- vided the post is vacant. * * . LAGOS, Nigeria-An association of African states similar to the Organization of American States was proposed yesterday at a con- ference of lawyers and jurists from the Americas, Africa, Asia and the Middle East. * s * GENEVA - The Soviet Union said yesterday it has abandoned the idea of an internationally con- trolled nuclear weapons test ban because of the Western powers' refusal to sign a German peace treaty. *. * * BERLIN-United States troops yesterday crossed Red-ruled East Germany without hindrance de- spite concern aroused by vague Communist threats of dangerous consequences. * * * WASHINGTON-President and Mrs. John F. Kennedy, to drama- tizq United States interest in Lat- in American development pro- grams, will visit Venezuela and Colombia on Dec. 16 and 17. NEW YORK-Prices on the New York Stock Exchange gradually made up ground lost early in the session yesterday, closing mixed on somewhat reduced turnover. Standard and Poor's 500 Index was down .08, with 425 industrials down .04, 25 rails down .25 and 50 utilities down .28. posts" in the disputed Ladahk area of Kashmir and in such areas as Bara Hoti west of the Tibetan border. The area is more than 1,000 miles west of India's northeast frontier region supposedly threat- ened by invasion. Chinese Hint Nehru said the Chinese hinted that "if our military activities are not stopped they may have to take action by sending troops south of the McMahon line." India claims the British-drawn line is the northeastern border but China says the border lies approximate ly 100 miles farther south. Nehru was vague about which military activities the Chinese meant might touch off an inva- sion. He said the note complained, among other things, of Indian air- craft flying over Chinese terri- tory. Angry Debate The border situation has been a subject of angry debate in parlia- ment since Nov. 20 when Nehru said the Chinese had trespassed again along the Ladahk frontier. The Reds have occupied 12,000 square miles claimed by India in Ladahk. The latest Peiping com- munication was in reply to an In- dian protest that the Communists had pushed their outposts even farther into Indian territory. Denies Charge On A-Weapons WASHINGTON (M)-The State Department denied last night that it has prepared a document pro- posing United States nuclear weapons be turned over to the United Nations. Press Officer Joseph Reap said he had received inquiries over the weekend on a charge to that effect by Sen. Strom Thurmond (D-SC). "There is no such paper," Reap said. "The United States has pre- sented to the United Nations a program for general and complete disarmament in a peaceful world which is designed to control and eventually eliminate armaments. This program is a matter of pub- lic record." Acceptance Of 'Reality' Urge Peiping Submit Membership Petition UNITED NATIONS (-A "two Chinas" compromise to accept both Nationalist and Communist China as United Nations members was advanced for the first time in the General Assembly yesterday by a leading spokesman for Af- rica. Foreign Minister Jaja Wachuku of Nigeria told the Assembly it must "face the reality of two Chinas" and admit the Peiping government. But at the same time he said Nigeria would not agree to expel President hiang Kai- Shek's Nationalists as a condition for seating Communist represen- tatives. He suggested that Peiping submit an application for UN membership. Two States "Let us accept the fact that there are two states now exist- ing in what used to be the terri- tory of one," he said. "Let us stop cold war in this Assembly .. . Don't squabble over something that can be solved by common sense." The Nigerian foreign minister urged the Assembly to stop "shad- ow-boxing" on the China repre- sentation issue. He pointed out that under the UN charter a member can be ex- pelled from the world organization only by agreement of the Security Council, and Nationalist China could block such a move with its Council veto. Wachuku said a committee might be set up by the Assembly to study the problem and possibly look into a membership applica- tion from Peiping. "The decisive factor will be the willingness or the unwillingness of the People's Republic of (Com- munist) China to accept the obli- gations of UN membership," he said. Heavy Prestige The United States and the So- viet Union have heavy prestige stakes in the China question, and both have rejected the idea of two seats for China. So have the Na- tionalist and Communist govern- ments. Since the debate began in the Assembly last Friday, the issue has been strictly between the two rival regimes. The Soviet Union is push- ing a proposal to expel the Na- tionalists and seat the Commu- nists in "all organs" of the United Nations including the Security Council. Wachuku opposed this. To block the Soviet resolution, the United States has proposed that China be labeled "an im- portant question." Under UN rules, this means any decision on Chi- nese membership would have to be approved by two-thirds of the 103-nation assembly instead of a simple majority. U.S. officials are confident they have enough votes to keep the Russians from building a two-thirds majority for their resolution. U.S. Erects New Station .In A nt artic WASHINGTON (M -- Capping a feat of aerial logistics, the Unit- ed States has established a new scientific station in a remote area of Antarctica. This was reported yesterday by the National Science Foundation on the basis of a radio dispatch from its Antarctica headquarters at McMurdo Sound. The new station, called Ski- Hi, was set up Sunday in a for- midable area of ice-capped ter- rain lying between the Palmer Peninsula and the Sentinel Moun- tains. It is 700 miles from the nearest previous American station, Byrd Station, and some 1,500 miles from coastal McMurdo. It is designed to make new measurements of the earth's mag- netic field and of the ionosphere. The particular geographical site was chosen because it is'the "con- jugate point" for an invisible line of magnetic force whose northern terminal lies 8,500 miles away in Parc des Laurentides, northern Quebec province, Canada. Foundation scientists said that to learn more about the composi- tion and behavior of the ionos- phere-and the earth's magnetic field-it is desirable to make ob- servations simultaneously from both terminals. WASHINGTON (A)-Two for- mer State Department leaders said yesterday the United States must move toward freer trade, partic- ularly with the European Com- mon Market, or run the danger of enhancing Soviet power by divid- ing the Western world. , This was the message laid be- fore a Senate-House economic subcommittee by Dean Acheson and William L. Clayton, secretary and undersecretary of state re- spectively during the Truman ad- ministration. At the same time a House la- bor subcommittee studying the impact of imports on American, employment heard claims that foreign goods from bicycles to mu- sical recordings are throwing' Americans out of work. Dent Protests Chairman John H. Dent (D-Pa), heading the job inquiry, protested that the joint subcommittee's hearings were attracting more public attention than his, and added: "It just goes to show that peo- ple will go to a hanging and not to a christening." He compared the freer trade proposals to "the hanging of the American work- men." Acheson and Clayton lined up solidly behind President John F. Kennedy's drive for freer trade, just as former Secretary of State Christian A. Herter did Monday. Kennedy is expected to ask Con- gress next month for broad au- thority to cut tariffs across the board on entire groups of prod- ucts, instead of the limited item- by-item reductions now permitted under the reciprocal trade act, Crucial Stage Acheson said the highly suc- 'Blue Laws' ess ion Hel BATTLE CREEK (A) - An in-' terim study committee of the Michigan Legislature drew a pack- ed house here yesterday for a hearing on whether the state should enforce or alter its Sunday blue laws. The committee, headed by Rep. Chester S. Wozniak (D-Ham- tramck) told the pro and con ad- vocates of enforced closing of com- mercial establishments on Sunday that Michigan already has a set of laws prohibiting virtually all public activity on the Sabbath ex- cept church services and concerts of sacred music. Under current laws, committee- men said that sports events on Sunday are illegal and contracts signed on Sunday are no good. Elder Marvin Loewen, secretary of the Department of Public Af- fairs of the General Conference of Seventh Day Adventists, said "only confusion" had followed passage or enforcement of Sunday blue laws in Virginia, Pennsylvan- ia and Massachusetts. FRB Chairman Stresses Challenge To Defend Dollar NEW YORK (M)-Federal Reserve Board Chairman William Mc- Chesney Martin, Jr. said last night the nation faces eventual decay unless it meets what he called an urgent challenge to defend the dollar. In a prepared speech, Martin said mounting international con- petition eakes it imperative to check the wage-price spiral and bal- ance the federal budget so the government isn't "perennially pass- N ing out IOU's in lieu of paying its bills." Martin prepared his remarks for the annual dinner meeting of the Tax Foundation. American Products He said the nation must con- vince the world by performance, "that the value of American prod- ucts and of American dollars will always equal or better that of other countries' products and cur- rencies." Martin said, "it seems to me we have no choice but to make the try or else resign ourselves to eventual decay." He said that apart from mat- ters bearing on the question of peace or war, "the most important single development of recent times has been the entry of the world into a new era of vigorous eco- nomic and financial competition." Need Quality To meet this competition he said we must "come up with the right goods and services, at the right times and at the right prices." In addition, he said Amer- icans "need a quality for which we have not thus far distinguish- ed ourselves-and that is the qual- ity of self-discipline." In this connection, Martin said employers must realize they are competing with other businessmen around the world for sales and profits and workers "must re- member they are competing with other workers around the world for jobs as well as wages." He said "there is a mutual need of an urgent nature for labor, management and government each to measure up to its separate re- sponsibilities." r LEAVE Your PHOTO FILMS for Processing Anytime Special Outside Film Drop-Box at Our Front Door PHOTO DEPARTMENT State St. at N. University cessful European Common ket had reached a crucial sta "It is going to move towa: exclusive European market, a high tariff wall against ou ers or associate itself with other great market, North A ca, and with the remainder o free world," he said. The Influence of the U States, exerted now, could N cisive in determining which native Europe chooses. If We Europe turns to high tariffs exclusiveness, "then the world will be split and the r of Soviet Russia and the Con nist bloc will be vastly increa Acheson said. "If then the United State Canada should associate I selves with the trade aspec the Common Market moven Clayton continued, "the S would face a united west w political and economic aggreg so powerful that their cold objectives could not be realiz EatGerma BERLIN (P)-A group of Germans led by a daring y railroad engineer stole an German train last night and c it at high speed past startled i munist guards into West Be The locomotive and eight carrying 32 persons, roared the East German guards a mph and screeched toa halt t fourths of a mile inside the sector. Flee in Tra International Students Association has the pleasure to invite you to an International Art Show. The Show will open the International Tea, Thursday, 7 December at 4:30 P.M. in the International Center, and continue through Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 1to 9 P.M. each day, ,; SOVIET DANGER: Truman Aides Call for Freer Trade 11 ".... IF University Players Present -4 KJ hPEA"Rto"ti TONIGHT Through MONK with Matinee Sum SHE Tickets available 12-8 p.m. d Trueblood Box Office, Frieze B AKESI SPEARE' ' ON THE NEW SEMI-ELIZABETHAN STAGE TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM, Frieze Bldg. Iily Bldg. Curtain at 8:00 P.M.-Sunday Matinee at 3:00 P.M Tickets $1.50, $1.00 plus 25c Fri. and Sat. Evening If f , ,C....' r I Igloo For You? WASHINGTON (P)-Here's a switch from the old story about' Americans trying to sell refrig- erators to the Eskimos: Canad- ians are trying to sell igloos to Americans for fallout shelters. They're not the old-fashion- ed ice and snow igloo but are of a fibrous plastic material in an igloo shape and can accom- modate eight persons. Canada's civil defense organization has approved them as underground shelters. RECORDS and PICTURES of ARE STILL AVAILABLE ORDERS BEING TAKEN TODAY and THURSDAY 3-5 P.M. at the MUSKET Office, Second floor ... Michigan Union Opening H.M.S. PINAFORE Tonight FLOWERS from PRESENTED BY BUD-MOR NO 2-6362- GILBERT AND SULLIVAN I I 1 Performances continuous through Saturday STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL I announces -- MICHIGAN SWIM GALA WATER SHOW-FANCY AND CLOWN WAATERD UCOW/ EXTENSION OF PETITIONS for Wed. -11 1.25 Fri. and Sat. 1.75 ja ' ~ n%*nifni nAA m k c omw ra i. 1 ---_ C^ -1. A .,.L -