____________THIE MICHIGAN DAILY British Laborites Present Platform Opposes Independent Atomic Arms, Favors Red China UN Membership - - - By The AssociatedPress The Labor party yesterday presented a general election platform based on the pooling of the West's nuclear arms and the strengthen- ing of the United Nations as a potential world government. Domestically, the party-which seeks a return to power after 13 years out of office-called for the re-nationalization of steel, the "purposive planning" of the nation's economy and the eventual integration of Eton and other private schools into the nation's school system. The platform, a document called "The New Britain," was the first of the campaign. Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home's Con- FEAR RIOTS Alert Malaysian Army; Police Seize Leftists servatives were expected to issue Douglas-Home announces the ' election date. Sources said the r date would be Oct. 15. Labor party leader Harold Wil- son introduced the platform by calling it a plan for a "social democratic revolution." But the platform contained few surprises and was mostly a restatement of previous Labor policy. The Labor platform did not say flatly that Britain should -scrap its; nuclear deterrent, but it made the' following points: -It called for the re-negotia- tion of the Nassau Pact which pro-; vides for the sale of American Polaris mi'ssiles for use in British submarines.* -It opposed ;both an independ-, ent British nuclear deterrent and the American planned multi-later-, al nuclear force. -It called for the integration of; "all NATO's nuclear weapons un- der effective political control so all the partners in the. alliance.; have a proper share in their de- ployment and control."; The platform urged UN member-; ship for the People's Republic -of China. It also called for UN spon-; . sored summit conferences and said, "for us, world government is the final objective-and the United Nations the chosen instrument." Goldwater Hits Court, Johnson CHICAGO (JP)-Sen. BarryGold-; water trained his campaign sights yesterday on an "arm-twisting. President" and a Supreme Court of "raw and naked power." He said they threatened to throw the United States system of gov-; ernment out of balance and pro- duce "a breakdown in liberty." ' Winding up his first stint of intensive campaigning, the Repub- lican presidential nominee scoffed at the polls that showed him be- hind in the race for the White House. Goldwater declared he will, carry President Lyndon B. John- son's home state of Texas. It staples term papers and class notes, photo- graphs, news items, themes, reports. I. : : .theirs next week shortly after World News Roundup By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Calvin Gross, city superintendent of schools, yester- day condemned the school boycott called for next Monday and Tues- day by opponents of the system's school integration program as "reprehensible and destructive." ALEXANDRIA-Leaders of the Arab world ended Iast night a weeklong second sumnit session with pledges to begin Jordan Riv- er projects in defiance of Is- raeli threats of armed retaliation. * * * LANSING - Michigan will be ready to participate in the na- tional anti-poverty program as soon as the federal government is 1 ready to pay for it, Malcolm Lov- ell, Jr., Gov. George Romney'E special assistant for coordinating the program, said yesterday. * * * EAST , LANSING-Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman pre- dicted yesterday that farm in- comes would drop 40 per cent if Republican Barry Goldwater wer: elected president. Freeman, at- tending a Democratic-sponsored meeting at Michigan State Uni- versity, said that without wheat and feed grain programs American farm income would drop from $12.5 billion a year to $7.5 billion. * * * HURON, S.D. - Sen. Hubert Humphrey winged into his native state yesterday for a