THE MICHIGAN DAILY ortugal Bolts Assembly 7o Protest Angola UN Dle ate Asks African Aid Program UNITED NATIONS (3)-United Nations delegate Adlai E. Steven- son yesterday called on the new African Nations to seize the in-, itiative in developing a broad aid program "by, of, and for Africa." He said it should be divorced from the cold war, and pledged support of the Kennedy adminis- tration to it. But the Chief United States del- egate clashed immediately with Jaja Wachuku, Nigerian economics minister, who demanded concrete propdosals "that are not intended to hoodwink anybody; that are not intended to mesmerize us." Wachuku said he was disap- pointed because Stevenson failed to say just how many dollars the United States is willing to put up. The two spoke in the General Assembly's political committee, where debate opened on a help- to-Africa, plan originally put be- fore the UN last fall by President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Obviously nettled by Wachuku's reaction, Stevenson said the Ni- gerian was suggesting that "Af- ricans demand an American pro- posal for Africa." The American delegate said he would brush aside reference to tricks, mesmerizing and disap- pointment. Stevenson made clear it was not his purpose at this stage to ad- vance a detailed, rigid program. He, said that this was for the Africans themselves to determine. "It is also our hope," he added, "that the various African Na- tions, individually and -jointly, will want to assume the responsibility for developing a long-range pro- gram for their continent so that the Africans can develop Africa, in the last analysis." ANTAGONISTS-King Mahendra of Nepal, right, had- Premier B. F. Koirola, left, arrested last December when the monarch as- sumed personal control of the government. India's Premier Jaw- abarlal Nehru has called the arrest and disbanding of parliament a setback for democracy. Opposition Plots Move Talks, D~elegations Pass Move Over Boycott Afro-Asian Proposal Wins Large Majority UNITED NATIONS QP)-Portu- gal walked out of the United Na- tions General Assembly yesterday] to protest against a proposal for debate on the situation in the Portuguese West African territory of Angola. The assembly ignored the pro- test and approved the proposal, sponsored by 40 African and Asian countries and previously endorsed by the assembly's 21-nation steer- ing committee. The vote to put the subject on the agenda was 79-2 with 8 abstentions. The United States split with its allies and voted for the move, as it did last Wednesday in the Se- curity Council on an Asian-Afri- can resolution to investigate An- gola independence riots last month that were fatal to at least 38. That resolution fell two short of the seven votes necessary for adoption. The move for an As- sembly debate followed. Britain and France abstained from voting again yesterday, as they had in the Council. Portuguese delegate Vasco Vi- eira Garin had taken the rostrum early in the meeting and told the Assembly the recent disorders in Angola were a domestic matter and that the UN had no legal jurisdiction. He said his delegation, there- fore, was lodging the strongest possible protest against UN debate and added: "We are leaving the proceedings at once." Garin and the entire Portu- guese delegation then left the As- sembly chamber. A Portuguese source said Portu- gal would continue to take part in other debates in the Assembly and its committees. .Base Wage Hike Urged .ByKennedy WASHINGTON (A') - President John F. Kennedy said last night he finds it difficult to understand why anyone would oppose in- creasing the minimum wage to $1.25 an hour over the present floor of $1. Kennedy made the remark at his news conference whena re- porter told him there had been conflicting reports as to whether he is willing to compromise on an administration bill to raise the minimum to $1.25 and extend cov- erage to four million more work- ers. The President said he is hope- MOSCOW () -- The Soviet Union yesterday lifted direct cen- sorship on foreign correspond- ents' dispatches but warned they will be expelled if their outgoing reports displease Soviet authori-" ties. This announcement, made to a news conference by the Foreign Office Press Secretary, Mikhail Kharlamov, made it clear that foreign correspondents remain subject to what is known else- where as censorship of responsi- bility. None of this news was mentioned by the domestic press or radio. Challenges Moscow In Washington, a State Depart- ment statement yesterday chal- lenged Moscow to follow up its easing of curbs on outgoing news by lifting censorship on what goes to the Russian people. The statement welcomed the Kremlin's announcement of an end to censorship of dispatches' British Make Aid Effort' Equal To U.S. Prograi 1 - FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS: Soviet Union Lifts Censorsh and expressed American h that serious impediments to free flow of information into Soviet Union. . Retain Copies Under the new Soviet plan i correspondent must retain co of all dispatches he sends abr for as long as he remains in 1 sia. This, Kharlamov said, will able the correspondent to p whether what was publis abroad under his name actu was sent by him. Kharlamov disclosed that d, censorship has not yet been 11i for movement of photographs television film, adding that"1 is a new question and we will h to work it out.",He said, how- that radio broadcasters c send out tape recordings of t voices provided they kept ty written copies of all such re" ings. There was no relaxation the rigid internal censorship what may appear in the Sc Union. ful that measure istration call for $1.25 by 4" Congress will approve a in line with the admin- recommendations. These a step-by-step hike to 1963. I find it difficult to un- derstand how anybody would ob- ject to paying anybody who works in a business which makes $1 mil- lion a year, by 1963, $50 a week;. I think people who are paid less than that must find it extremely difficult to maintain themselves, and their families.. "I consider it to be a verymin- imum wage," he said. A House vote is due today on the legislation. Coach To Head Fitness Program WASHINGTON - President John F. Kennedy yesterday named University of Oklahoma football coach Charles B. (Bud) Wilkinson to head a national youth fitness program. Wilkinson, who is athletic di- rector as well as football coach at Okalahoma, will be Kennedy's special consultant on youth fit- ness. WASHINGTON (AP)-Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon says Britain now is making a for- eign aid effort roughly in scale with that of the United States. But Dillon said this country has had much less success in persuad- ing West Germany to shoulder a proportionate part of the burden of helping underdeveloped coun- tries. He said Japan is carrying out a fairly reasonable program, but could do more. Dillon, who as undersecretary of state in former President Dwight D. Eisenhower's administration su- pervised the United States For- eign Aid Program, gave his views at a closed-door session of a House appropriations subcom- mittee Feb. 16. The transcript was made public yesterday.- Dillon said in reply to a ques- tion that the United States has had some success during the past two years in persuading allies to help this country extend foreign aid to underdeveloped countries. "Great Britain, for instance, in the past two or three years has about doubled the amount of mon- ey put into the foreign aid field, so they are footing somewhat less than $500 million of governmental aid per year now. For England that is roughly comparable on a relative scale to what we are do- ing," he said. at both stores RAVCO P at FANTASTIC SAVINGS was now Puccini TURANDOT* Bjoerling, Tebaldi, Nilsen $14.98 Verdi AIDA $7 Bjoerling, Milanov . . $1 4.98 AgainstNej By HENRY S. BRADSHERf PATNA, India (A') - From this provincial capital on the Ganges, an opposition movement is trying to overturn the government of Nepal. For the second time in a dozen years, exiles from Nepal are brew- lng in Patna what could become a revolution against the regime in Katmandu, one hour's flying time to the north. Pamphlets are being smuggled into Nepal and a civil disobedience movement is being organized there by agents from Patna. The exiles of the Nepali Con- U.S., Britain Ask Soviet Help In Nuclear Peace Explosions gress Party recognize that the sit- down strikes and refusals to pay taxes of some future civil dis- obedience movement could easily lead to violence among the tough mountain people. The exiles do not preach armed action; neither do they flinch from the possibility of, violence. There was fighting in 1950 when the exiles had the king of Nepal on their side against the Rana clan of hereditary prime ministers. Now they are challenging the king in an attempt to restore an elected prime minister. In 1951 the exiles won their struggle. The new exiles face a tougher battle against traditional respect for a king who says Nepal must be run his way until it is made ready for democracy--say in about five years. Wins Election The leader of the first revolu- tion was B. P. Koirala. In 1959 his Congress Party swept Nepal's first popular elections and he became prime minister. Last Dec. 15 King Mahendra jailed Koirala because he thought the dynamic prime minister was working to abolish the monarchy. Since then Maren- dra has run Nepal with the hel of young ministers who had stood by Koirala's side in the first revo- lution. The top exile is the ex-deputy prime minister, Gen. Subarna Shamsher Jang Bahadur Rana. The grandson of a Rana prime minister by a commoner wife, therefore in a branch of the family ineligible for top office, Subarna became a rebel in 1948. Verdi IL TROVATORE* Warran, Tucker, Price . .$14.98 Puccini MADAMA BUTTERFLY* Moffo, Valetti ....... $14.98 Bizet CARMEN Rise Stevens, Merrill .,. .$14.98 AID FOR HONG KONG REFUGEES COMM ITTEE OPEN MEETING (MOVIE ON HONG KONG REFUGEES) Sund~~~aarc2..PM Mozart DON GIOVANNI* Siepi, Nilison, Price ..... $19.98 $11.73 Mozar MARRIAGE OF FIGARO* $19.98 $11.73 Puccini LA BOHEME Albanese, Peerce, Merrill, Toscanini ..... ... Verdi RIGOLETTO Warren, Berger, Peerce $9.98 $747 $7.47 $7.47 $7.47 Room 3B Union Chinese $9.98 $7.47 i.S.A. Stu. Assoc.; Verdi REQUIEM Toscanini, Distefano, Siepi $9.98 $7.47 I GENEVA M-The United States and Britain asked the Soviet Un- ion yesterday to Join theme in a program of peaceful nuclear, ex- plosions designed to give the world more safe harbors and make des- erts bloom. The Soviet delegate took a dim view of the idea. y The proposal was advanced by American delegate Arthur H. Dean at a 17-minute meeting of the Nuclear Weapons Test Sus- pension Conference. Dean declar- ed nuclear power deployed for peaceful uses would provide great benefits for all mankind -- not just for the three atomic powers. He suggested that the world's newly emerging nations in Asia and Africa were .being penalized by failure to get such projects started. "This program represents a new frontier in applying basic sci- ence which our scientists are eager to explore,' Dean declared. For the second 'day in a row Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsar- apkin kept mum in the confer- ence. But talking to newsmen after the meeting adjourned, he expressed doubt about the whole concept of peaceful explosions. Under the American-British plan such a pact would prohibit the testing of atomic and hydro- gen devices for military develop- ment purposes. But it would al- low safeguarded nuclear explo- sions for scientific research and to carry out great engineering projects. The United States already has Tdone some preparatory work for two such peaceful blasts: one would be conducted underground in New Mexico for general re- search purposes, including the study of isotopes. The other calls for construction of a harbor in Alaska by means of a 200-kiloton blast, corresponding to the force of 200,000 tons of TNT. Church Disbands Priest Association WARSAW, Poland OP)-A Com- munist-backed group of 300 Ro- man Catholic priests has submit- ted to a church order to disband or be defrocked, informed sources reported yesterday. A majority of the governing board of the "Caritas" Priests As- sociation voted Wednesday to dis- band after Stefan Cardinal Wy- szynski, who is locked in. a new church-state struggle with Po- land's Communist Party, gave it until April 1 to do so. ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATER is proud to present a Classic in American Theatrical Achievement A Play To Be Seen Again and Again THORNTON WILDER'S_ Od IRE TFOWN" Berlioz REQUIEM* Munch & Boston Symph. $1.1.98 $8.98 ALSO AVAILABLE AT SIMILAR PRICES MASKED BALL PAGLIACCI BARBER OF SEVILLE* OTHELLO FORZA DEL DESTINO' FALSTAFFA MACBETK ILA TRAVIATA TOSCA*. LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR* MANON LESCAUT ' LA GIOCONDA* CAVALERIA RUSTICANA* SAND MANY MORE ' Stereo slightly higher DISC'SO &TTR 1210 S. University 304 S. Thayer NO 3-6922 NO 5-4855 C. E. STEPHENSON, DIRECTOR MARCH 29-APRIL 1 Box Office Opens Monday 10 A.M.-5 P.M. LYDIA MENDtLSSOHN THEATER Wed.-Thurs. $1.50 Fri.-Sat. $1.75 1 TYPEWRITER SALE OVERBECK'S BOOKSTORE "1 1216 So. Univ. NO 3-9333 I? WOULD YOU LIKE TO MAKE MORE MONEY? 11 E FAVORS by BU D-MOR B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation FINAL SUPPER CLUB until after Passover Sunday, March 26,6 P.M. 1429 Hill Street Followed by Social Dancing 11 11 I 11 BICYCLE AUCTION TO, BE HELD INSIDE GARAGE IN CASE OF BAD WEATHER 1103 S. University NO 2-6362 Morrie Richman's CAFE PROMETH EAN 508 East William NOW SERVING LUNCHES 11 :00 A.M.-1 :30 P.M. Monday thru Friday TONIGHT introducing FOLK SINGER CHICK JUNG 9-12 P.M. Adm. 75c open 'til 2:00 A.M. SATURDAY NITE _I I Would you like to SAVE more money? IF YOU DO .. . Why don't you shop, rent and sell through ~w i*aSECURWY SATURDAY, MARCH 25-Beginning at 9 A.M. at I I I i