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February 05, 1965 - Image 3

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FRIDAY, 5 FEBRUARY 1965

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE THREE

FRIDAY, 5 FEBRUARY 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SANELS ON WORLD AFFAIRS
Sackiey Views Economic Crisis
[Saekey PAESO OL F AR ____

EDITOR'S NOTE: This article and
the related one below are the sec-
ond in a series of discussions of
world issues held during the col-
lege editor's conference last week-
end.
By MICHAEL JULIAR
Special To The Daily
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - The
president of the General Assem-
bly told 200 college editors from
across the country Monday that
the United Nations' problem of
members with unpaid assessments
is like "the chicken or the egg
conundrum."
Alex Quaison-Sackey told the
students that while the United
States says that countries must
pay their overdue assessments
for peacekeeping operations be-
fore being allowed to vote in the
Assembly, the Soviet Union, one
of the delinquent members, says
that these countries must be al-
lowed to vote before they will
make their payments. The Gener-
al Assembly, which began its pres-
ent session on Dec. 1 after sev-
eral postponements over the as-
sessments question, has not taken
any votes so far.
No Vote
Article 19 of the United Na-
tions' Charter provides that coun-
tries two years behind in assess-
ments "shall have no vote" in the,
Assembly. The Soviet Union main-
tains that the assessments levied
by the Assembly for peacekeeping
operations are illegal.
The president spoke to the stu-
dents attending the Seventh World

Affairs Conference for College Ed-
itors 20 minutes before the As-
sembly met that afternoon. When
he left the conference room where
the editors were gathered, he went
down the hall to the General As-
sembly, where the international
body took another recess to avoid,

ALEX QUAISON-SACKEY
a showdown between the United'
States and the Soviet Union on
the assessments problem.
End Session?
It is expected that this recess
will be used to prepare to break
off the Assembly session if the
deadlock continues. At the ab-
breviated meeting, Quaison-Sack-

Yost Sees Further Delays
In Solving UN's Problems

ey did not go ahead with the elec-
tion of the Assembly's vice-presi-
dents and committee chairmenI
by acclamation. He had intendedt
to go as far as possible then with
committee considerations of vari-E
ous issues until a vote proved nec-c
ssary. Work would then have been_
suspended, as it has been since
December.
Quaispn-Sackey, Ghana's UN
representative, was made presi-
dent of the 19th session of the
General Assembly by acclamation
on Dec. 1 when it was first agreed
that as much business would be
carried out as possible without
taking any votes.
Nothing's Impossible
The president told the studentI
editors in answer to a question3
that "there is no problem whichI
cannot be solved." He said that ai
one-year postponenent was being
considered for those countries twof
years behind in their payments.t
Quaison-Sackey gave the gath-
ering a brief rationale for theE
United Nations' financing. He
pointed out that it was agreed andl
written into the charter in Sant
Francisco in 1945 that security of
the world should be in the hands
of the big powers through the Se-
curity Council.
There was no question that
there would be problems, such as
aggressive actions by some coun-
tries, the president said. The char-
ter provided for this and the Unit-
ed Nations has acted, for instance,
in the Congo.
Wrong Procedure
The Soviet Union's contention is
that the peacekeeping operations2
money should have been approvedJ
by the Security Council, in which
the big powers each have a veto.
The General Assembly passed the
measures instead.
The World Court, part of the
United Nations and located in Thet
Hague, Netherlands, said it was a1
legitimate expense of the organi-
zation under Article 17 of the
Charter. This negated the argu-
ments of the countries who refused
to pay their assessments for the
operations. Therefore, Article 19
applies, Quaison-Sackey said.
The World Court decision, which
Quaison-Sackey said was not a
binding but only an advisory opin-
ion, was accepted by the General
Assembly by a two-thirds vote.
19 Holdouts
In a recent report, Secretary-
General U Thant said that the
countries that are subject to Ar-
ticle 19 are the Soviet Union, Al-
bania, Byelorussia, Cuba, Czecho-
slovakia, Hungary, Poland, Ru-
mania, the Ukraine, France, Bel-
gium, Bolivia, Haiti, Paraguay,
South Africa and Yemen. How-
ever, several have since made some
payments.
Quaison-Sackey noted that the
United Nations cannot make coun-
tries pay for what they do not
approve. "The majority cannot
impose its views on the minority."
All kinds of solutions have been
offered, the president said. He
concluded by saying that he felt
that a deadline postponement and
voluntary contributions would fin-
ally lead to a solution to the prob-
lem.

World News,
Roundup E
By The Associated Press
VIENTIANE, Laos - Loyalists'
held complete control of Vientiane
yesterday following a 10-hour
battle Wednesday that pitted
rightist against rightist. Rebel
forces were reported regrouping
at Paksane, 70 miles northeast of
the capital.
WASHINGTON-Despite a Sen-
ate rebuff and many protests from
affected communities, President
Lyndon B. Johnson stood fast yes-
terday on the decision to close
veterans' facilities in 12 states.
The legal and practical position
of the plan remains somewhat
clouded in the light of the Sen-
ate action. The Veterans Admin-
istration would not say what
course it would take if the House
should follow the Senate's lead.
* * *

plant.
Describes Area
The old barrack-type buildings
are gone and the area now is de-
scribed by Township Supervisor
Roy Smith as "nice subdivisions
and apartment houses, with resi-
dents earning up to $15,000 a
year."
However, a report prepared by
the Institute of Labor and Indus-'
trial Relations of the University
and Wayne State University and
the Willow Run Association for'
Neighborhood Development said}
in part:
"Willow Village by any stand-
ards is impoverished....
"(It) represents a common,
though overlooked, poverty situa-
tion ..."
Report
The report cited lack of news-
papers, stores, filling stations and
the like. It also said 27 per cent
of the men were unemployed.
Smith retorted, "we've got a
large, modern shopping center,
filling stations, barber shops,
newspapers from Ann Arbor, Yp-
silanti and Detroit.
"I didn't know we had any un-
employment problem," said Smith.
"As far as I know unemployment
is practically nothing. I don't know
of anyone out of work."

Ypsilanti Residents Deny
U.S. Poverty Assessment
YPSILANTI ()-An area of suburban Ypsilanti Township has
been called a "poverty situation" and a federal grant made to help
the area touched off a storm of protest.
Residents and township officials all deny that the area is pov-
erty-stricken. The area is the site of the old Willow Village, a com-
munity put up by the government during the war to house workers
----for the old Willow Run bomber

WASHINGTON OP) - Nearly I
simultaneous news conferences by
Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson and
Charles de Gaulle etched in con-
trast yesterday the two leaders':
views on some major international
issues.
The Franco--United States dif-
ferences flared up in four areas.
1) United Nations:
De Gaulle suggested t h a t
France, Communist China, Brit-
ain, Russia and the United States
meet at Geneva to resolve the
United Nations crisis. He said the
world body has strayed too far
from its charter and that the
United Nations Congo operation
had been used to benefit one big
power.
Communist China
It was pointed out that Com-
munist China is not even a mem-
ber of the United Nations.
De Gaulle, however, has broken
ties with President Chiang Kai-
Shek's Nationalist government on
Formosa. France has recognized f
Communist China and has voted
for its admittance into a number
of organizations affiliated with
the United Nations.
France and Russia are among'
the countries refusing to pay their
UN dues for the United Nations'
United States-supported Congo
peacekeeping operation, and the
argument over this has plunged
the UN into a constitutional crisis.
German Question
2) Europe and German reuni-
fication:
De Gaulle kept repeating his
Lesinger, Jr. E
ieak
Y, FEB.*
thne
Room at 8:00
*
G CHANGE
AFFAIRS"

theme on the need for reducing
United States Influence in Euro-
pean affairs. Specifically on Ger-
man reunification, he said it is
only "through Europeans that a,
solution can be found to a ques-
tion which will always remain a;
European one."
Johnson did not comment on
the matter.k
3) Monetary policy:
De Gaulle said there should be1
a new monetary system for worlda
trade founded on something more
than the dollar and pound ster-
ling.

Monetary System details "will be made public as
The United States too has been soon as they are definite."
considering ways of improving the -"I judge it of the highest im-
international monetary system. portance" that the House accept
However, officials here disputed a Senate amendment that would
the political connotation attached permit the President to .:ontinue
by de Gaulle to the widespread sales of surplus farm commodities
use of dollars and pounds in in- to the United Arab Republic, if
ternational transactions, he deemed that to be in the na-
4) Viet Nam: tional interest.
Johnson described as "complete- -"There has been no change
ly untrue" a news dispatch from in the position of this country in
Paris saying that North and South regard to our desire or our do-
Vietnamese are holding talks termination to help the people of
about ending the war. De Gaulle Viet Nam preserve their freedom."
- i

5,;
t

DE G AULLE AND JOHNSON:
Leaders Voice Opinions

The personal way to say
BeC My Valentine,

TOKYO - Communist
Viet Nam has been put onf
footing following a meeting

North
a war
of the

has called for a negotiated solu-
tion to the Indo-China fighting
and withdrawal of outside powers.
Johnson said he does not anti-
cipate that the South Vietnamese
would ask the United States to
pull out.
Conference Highlights
Johnson, holding his first Wash-
ington new conference. since the
election, ranged across many
topics in a 33-minute session that
produced these other highlights:
-American and Soviet diplo-
mats are discussing a possible
presidential trip to Moscow and

Special To The Daily
UNITED. NATIONS, N.Y. - The
United States deputy representa-'
tive to the United Nations told
200 college editors Monday that
the world organization's problems
with members who owe it money
is not something that can be'
solved in one day.
Charles W. Yost said that there
will probably be further post-
ponements in trying to solve the
problem.
"* compromise has not been
successful so far and is not likely
to be successful," he told the stu-
dents attending t h e Seventh
World Affairs Conference for Col-
lege Editors.
The peacekeeping assessments
procedure was established in 1950.
"This procedure set up a system
whereby any peacekeeping issue
receiving a majority vote in the
Security Council but a veto by
one of the big powers, immediate-
ly and automatically goes to the
General Assembly. There, it needs
a two-thirds majority to pass," he
explained.
Congo, Mid-East
This was the procedure used in
the Congo and Middle East mis-
sions, and along the Arab-Israel
and India-Pakistan borders. Four
years and $400 million have so far
been spent in the Congo, Yost
said. It is mainly for the Congo
and Middle East operations that
the Soviet Union refuses to pay its
$52.6 million in assessments.
"Most countries want no con-

frontation between the United
States and the Soviet Union,"
Yost said. "Voluntary contributions
can help, as they have in Cyprus,
but the United Nations never
knows where its next money is
coming from."
Yost pointed out that the
United States hopes that Article
19, which calls for any nation two
years in arrears in paying its
assessments to lose its vote in the
General Assembly, will be upheld.
The United States has threatened
to consider all payments as volun-
tary if it loses. It would then not
feel obligated to pay its share of
United Nations assessments. The
Soviet Union has threatened to
pull out of the world organization
if it loses, Yost added.
Hard Way
"Peacekeeping operations could
be run on a voluntary contribu-
tion basis," Yost said, "but it is
difficult."
"But some method must be
found to allow the United Nations
to remain alive."
Yost commented on the possi-
bility that Red China will be ad-
mitted to the orgtnization this
session, if and when the financial
dispute is cleared up.
"We don't think it likely that
China will be admitted this ses-
sions since the Chinese insist that
they will not join until National-
ist. China pulls out. The majority
does not want Nationalist China
out of the United Nations," Yost
emphasized.

month, the New China News
Agency said today.
MOSCOW - Izvestia told its
readers throughout the Soviet Un-
ion yesterday that President
Johnson hopes to visit this coun-
try and have Soviet leaders visit
him.
Publication of the report of
Johnson's remarks on the front
page of the government newspaper
indicated official Soviet sanction
for the hope.

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