1961' THE MICHIGAN DAILY ussia A sks Resignation' Ha"mmar skj old )fUIN SSR. Urges Vithdrawal rom Congo Demands Removal Of Foreign Troops UNITED NATIONS (P) - The' viet Union demanded last night at the Security Council fire cretary - General Dag Ham- arskjold and stop all United tions Congo operations within e month. t called Hammarskjold the rganizer of violence" against the in Patrice Lumumba, [he demands were in a resolu- in announced for introduction the council at 10:30 a.m. today. rhe Soviet resolution also de- nded penalties - called sanc- ins-against Belgium under Ar- le 41 of the UN charter. Article 41 provides for complete partial interruption of eco- mnic relations and interruption rail, sea, air, postal, telegraphic dio and other means of corn- inication with a country against ich it is applied.'- Sanctions 'Essential' he resolution said the Soviet ion deemed it essential that ictions be voted against Bel- ini as "an aggressor which, by action, has created a threat to ,ernational peace." [he Russians also demanded in eir resolution that UN troops w in the Congo immediately ar- t Katanga, President Moise liombe and Congo army chief seph Mobutu "for purposes of art trial," and disarm all mill- 'y units and gendarmerie under eir control. he Soviet Union bypassed .mmarskjold for the first time circulating its resolution draft mid-evening. Normally such cuments go to the Secretary- neral, with copies to the cur- it Council president, for distri-, tion among UN members. But this time the Soviet dele- tion chief, Deputy Foreign Min- er Valerian A. Zorin, addressed s document to "the Undersec- ;ary of the UN, G. P. Arkadev," Soviet national who works for e UN as an international civil rvant and is the highest rank- r Soviet citizen serving under mmarskjold. v s -AP Wirephoto MOB STORMS EMBASSY - Demonstrators surged up the steps and crowed the entrance of the Belgian Embassy in Moscow during yesterday's protest against the slaying of former premier Patrice Lumumba in the Congo. The mob broke the glass doors and windows of the building before the police intervened. SOVIETS PLEDGE AID: Con go Rebels Obtain Recognition From UA U.S. Offers UN Leader Its Sunport Afro-Asian Nations Ask Congo Inquiry UNITED NATIONS (A) - The United States put its support quickly behind Dag Hammarsk- jold yesterday in the face of a Soviet decision to stop recogniz- ing him as United Nations secre- tary-general. A group of nations, mostly Asian-African, was working on proposals not as drastic as that of the Soviet Union, but calling for an investigation to pinpoint blame for the death of Patrice Lumumba and two associates in the Congo. These killings sparked Moscow's decision to withdraw recognition of Hammarskjold.' "The United States supports the secretary-general and I am happy to reaffirm that position here," Adlai E Stevenson, chief United States delegate at the UN said yesterday. Stevenson earlier talked with Hammarskjold. He said, he hopes the Soviet Union will "see the light" and recognize that the UN is impor- tant not only to smaller nations but to Moscow as well. He commented that apparent- ly irreconcilable positions can be quickly modified by events. Many UN diplomats believe that the new Soviet position will paralyze the Security Council, since the Soviet delegate can veto any Congo proposal in which Hammarskjold has a role. This gave rise to speculation that the General Assembly might be called into emergency session before it resumes as scheduled March 7. Dillon Says Senate Must Ratify Pact WASHINGTON (MP) - Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon testified yesterday "it would be' a lethal blow" to economic co- operation between this country and Western Europe if the Sen- ate refuses to ratify a 20-nation+ agreement he helped write. Both Dillon and George Ball,' under secretary of state for eco- nomic affairs, said the body set up in Paris Dec. 14 under the pact --the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development- can't begin to operate without the United States as a member. The two took note of growing opposition from some United States trade groups which appar- ently fear foreign competition. They assured the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that OECD would in no way infringe on Unit- ed States domestic law or the tariff-making powers of Congress. The OECD convention was drawn up with Dillon's help when he held in the Eisenhower admin- istration the same job Ball now holds. The pact is between the United States and Canada and 18 Western European nations. Its aim is to help solve mutual eco- nomic problems. The pact was submitted to Con- gress Jan. 17 by then-President Dwight D. Eisenhower. President John F. Kennedy urged in his State of the Union message that Congress quickly ratify it. The chairman during yester- day's hearing, Sen. J. William Fulbright (D-Ark) said 30 to 40 communications had been receiv- ed opposing the convention and only one or two supporting it. Scammon Named Bureau Director By The Associated Press Richard M. Scammon, director of elections research for the Gov- ernment Affairs Institute of Washington, D.C., and a former University student, has been named director of the Census Bu- reau by President John F. Ken- nedy. a SEVEN-MONTH CRISIS: Sutlers Leave Belgians and other European settlers began a mass exodus and the mutiny spread despite Lum- umba's promise to dismiss most white officers and build a Con- golese army. Belgium sent in troops to pro- tect its nationals. Katanga prov- ince, richest of the nation, seced- ed and asked Belgian military aid. The Kasavubu-Lumumba gov- ernment sought UN military as- sistance. The Security Council considered a Soviet request to UN Involvement In Congo Summariz UNITED NATIONS (') - The Soviet Union's break yesterday halt "NATO armed aggression" Lumumba was arrested a: with United Nations Secretary- against the Congo. liament dissolved. General Dag Hammarskjold came On July 14 the 11-nation coun- The Soviet Union protez seven months to the day after the ci authorized Hammarskjold's re- failure to support Lumu Security Council directed him to quest to organize a UN force of premier and to convoke send a UN force into the Congo. soldiers from small nations Lumumba parliament. What took the United Nations Enjoins Impartialit After Lumumba's arrest into the Congo? i viet Union stepped up its d The Congo republic, one of 16 Hammarskjold enjoined a poli- The UAR, Guinea and countries In Africa given Inde- cy that he insisted showed the joined It, ordered withdr pendence in 1960, declared its in- UN's impartiality. The force was their troop units. Then Cey dependence from Belgium June to take no sides in any domestic Indonesiaannounced pull 30.An xtesiv ciilin' id ro-dispute. He insisted that the Bel- of their troops. 30. An extensive civilian aid pro- gians get out and that no country gram was promised by the UN. send in aid except under UN con- The force dwindled toi2 Tribal chiefs began jockeying trol. A succession of Security Lumumba s continued f for power. Lumumba, leader of Council meetings and a special UNi supporters for new the Congolese national move- emergency session of the UN Gen- meetings. It was at this ment, became premier while the eral Assembly in September up- wit Hammas as presidency went to Joseph Kasa-l held his program. owi to take over Hammarskold alp vubu, leader of the opposition While Lumumba was still ac- tion in the Congo and re Abako party. tively premier he had threatened the Congolese army-that Tribal civil war broke out. The to invoke separate aid from the Lumumba's killing came army mutinied, seeking pay rises Soviet Union and was ousted as stunned UN. and dismissal of Belgian officers. premier by Kasavubu i s presents THE SAT., FEB. 25 Ann Arbor High School "Everyone stood up and cheered" -Yale Daily News "They enchanted a capacity . . . audience." -New York Times CAIRO (A - President Gamal Nasser's United Arab Republic yesterday recognized the Stanley- ville-based Lumumbist regime of Antoine Gizenga as the Congo's "legal and national governme'nt." Gizenga is in rebellion against the Leopoldville government of President Joseph Kasavubu, which is recognized by the United Na- tions, the major Western powers, and others. The Soviet Union earlier in the day demanded recognition of Gi- zenga's regime and promised it support. Cairo radio said Nasser sent word of his country's recognition in messages to Ghana, Guinea, Morocco, Mali and Libya-who participated in a recent African summit conference at Casablanca -as well as Comm nist Yugo- slavia, India and Indonesia. The Middle East News Agency reported Sunday that the UAR I I i I I I' ,' , / '