100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

September 29, 1962 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-09-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 19'
Hevolu
Rebels Face
Possible Clash
With Royalists
Proclaim Regime
In Line with Nasser
ADEN (A) - Claiming firm con-
trol of San'a, Yemen's capital
army insurgents announced they
set up a revolutionary government
there yesterday headed by Brig
Abdulla Al Sallal.
But royalist rival warriors were
reported, moving in from the des-
erts for an armed showdown with
the rebel faction that proclaimed
a republic after disposing of the
king, Imam Mohammad Al-Badr,
reported victim of military assas-
sins on Wednesday.
Radio San'a said the Yemeni
army high command established a
seven-man revolutionary council,
a five-man presidential council
and a 17-man cabinet. Al Salla
was named prime minister while
retaining his job as army com-
mander-in-chief.
Statement of Policy
A statement of internal and for-
eign policy as broadcast by radio
San'a virtually proclaimed the
republican regime to be in line
with President Abdul Gamal Nas-
ser of the United Arab Republic.
The reported military moves on
Yemeni capital by tribal chiefs
coincided with an announcement
in London by Yemen's chief Unit-
ed Nations delegate Prince Sief
Al Islam Al-Hassan - an uncle of
the Imam reported slain Wednes-
day - that he intends to return
to his home to claim the 1,000-
year-old family throne.
Yemen sits strategically in posi-
tion to control the entrance to the
Red Sea and: the southern ap-
proach to the Suez Canal.
In London, after a flight from
New York, Hassan booked quick
air passage to Aden but later post-
poned his departure until Satur-
day and decided to fly first to
Beirut. He gave no reason for his
switch in plans.
'Will Crush It'
He said only a small group of
the army touched off the rebellion
and predicted, "The people will
crush it."
Radio San'a had this reply:
"Come over, Hassan, and see
with your eyes what will happen."
Other princes were reported by
some Arab radios as marching
with the tribal warriors toward
San'a.
Declare Allegiance
But San'a radio claimed tribal
chieftrAns hadi declared alleglane

162

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

1A f'W #r2*W'

62va rifE l IC I AN Dan~ ~aYAlY"'/,('4

L

tionists Claim Control
v, Yemeni Government

--')

. ,

1,
Y
t
r
e
n
3
e
}
,2
,
' ,l
e
0
e
e
4
1
i1S
V
f
f
e
z
0
s
f
z
,l
e
Y
.l
e

FEAR VETO:
Senate Pa
WASHINGTON (F) - Sen.
George A. Smathers (D-Fla.),
threatened yesterday to block
early adjournment of Congress to
prevent pocket veto by President
John F. Kennedy of the self-em-
ployed pension bill.
Smathers touched off the angry
exchange with fellow Democratic
leaders shortly after the Senate
passed the long-debated, much-
revised measure to permit self-
employed persons to set up tax
deductible pension funds.
The 70-8 roll call vote sent it
to the President, who has not said
what he will do but has hinted at
a possible veto.
Smathers finally agreed to let
the Senate go ahead with its plan
to take up a public works bill to-
day with the understanding that
the congressional leaders would
sound up Kennedy's attitude
toward the pension plan at their
regular meeting with him on Tues-
day.
Kennedy has said he will study
the self-employed pension bill
carefully but indicated that he
might veto it and reconsider the
proposal next year as part of his
tax overhaul plan. Kennedy said
he is concerned about the estimat-
World New
By The Associated Press

ed $115-million-a-year revenue
loss the bill would create.
Wide Margin
The vote by which the Senate
passed the measure suggested the
necessary two-thirds margin to
override a veto could easily be
mustered. The situation is the
same in the House, which passed
the bill 361-0 on Tuesday.
But if Congress adjourns late
next week, as the leaders hope,
this would be before the 10-day
deadline Kennedy has to act on
legislation. He could, if he desired
under this situation, wait until
adjournment and pocket veto the
measure.
Figure Benefits
Sponsors of the measure esti-
mated that seven million self-em-
ployed and 11 million persons who
work for them could benefit. Foes
contend that only high-income ex-
ecutives will be able to take ad-
vantage of the plan.
Under the compromise plan sent
to Kennedy, a self-employed per-
son could put as much as 10 per
cent of his earned income into a
pension plan each year up to a
$2,500 ceiling. Half of the contri-
bution would be tax deductible.
Under the original bill, all of the
contribution would have been de-
ductible.

isses Pension Bill, 70-8
' 1 ..J ... I ":" ' '' .'

U.S. Wiling
To Consent
To Test Ban
WASHINGTON (l'') - President
John F. Kennedy reaffirmed last
night this country's willingness to
agree immediately to ban nuclear
weapons tests in the air or under
water if it is impossible for all
nations to consent to a ban on
tests of any sort.
Kennedy said also the United
States would vote for a UN reso-
lution calling on every nation to
stop nuclear testing in the atmos-
phere.
The President made the state-
ments in response to an appeal by
a delegation from India's Ghandi
Peace Foundation to end nuclear
experiments.
Also the Soviet Union submit-
ted to the UN General Assembly
yesterday a draft treaty on dis-
armament containing its latest
proposals on elimination of inter-
continental missiles, antimissile
and anti-aircraft missiles.
Under the new proposal a lim-
ited number of these nuclear wea-
pons would be retained by the So-
viet Union and the United States
until the second stage of the
phased disarmament plan is
reached.
A White House statement, set-
ting forth Kennedy's position, re-
ported that the delegation sug-
gested the United States should,
declare independently that it
would cease tests in the atmos-
phere if an international agree-
ment cannot be reached.
The President noted the diffi-
culty of this proposal because of
the previous Soviet breach of the
moratorium.

By HENRY S. BRADSHER
Associated Press News Analyst
NEW DELHI - The struggle
between India and Communist
China for their borderlands soon
may explode from the present
skirmishing into a real battle.
But even with fighting on a
larger scale there is little prospect
of all-out war between the world's
two most populous nations.
Neither is there any prospect
of settlement of the dispute over
51,000 square miles of rugged,
partly uninhabited terrain.
Potential Battle
The battle could develop out of
the shooting that began last
Thursday at the Che-Jao bridge
in a two-mile-high valley of the
Eastern Himalayas.
India accused the Chinese troops
of crossing the Tibetan border and
attacking a military outpost.
China, which claims 36,000
square miles of jungled southern
slopes of the Himalayas that In-
.Japanese Students
Protest Hearings
TOKYO (A) - Leftist students
battled police in downtown Tokyo
yesterday in the second straight
day of demonstrations against
public hearings on constitutional
reform. More than 250 youths-
members of the left-wing Zenga-
kuren Student Association -
charged 600 policemen guarding
the medical and insurance hall'
near Parliament where the hear-
ings were being held. The stu-
dents shouted that the hearings
are the first step to constitutional
changes that will return militar-
ism to Japan.

dia controls, charged that Indian
troops had attacked in Chinese
territory.
Dispute in Northeast
This disputed area in the North-
east had been quiet for three years
while attention was focused on
the northwestern part of the bor-
der in the bleak mountains of
Ladakh.
The Chinese have seized con-
trol of 12,000 out of some 15,000
square miles they claim there.
In Ladakh, India has been con-
tent merely to check further Chi-
nese encroachments, a process
that has led to four officially re-
ported clashes there since July.
. Not Ejected
But there has been no effort to
eject the Chinese from Ladakh.
When the Chinese came across
the northeastern border two weeks
ago, however, the Indian govern-
ment decided to use force to throw
them out.
Reinforcements were rushed up
rain-soaked jungle tracks to the
trouble spot just east of Bhutan,
a little Himalayan Kingdom.
Skirmish Begins
Skirmishing at Che-Jao bridge
apparently began before the In-
dian army was ready to launch an
offensive to push the Chinese back
two miles into Tibet. When the
time finally comes to carry out an
order to oust the Chinese, the skir-
mishing that started last Thursday
will provide convenient cover for
larger Indian operations.
There is recognition here that a
sizable battle probably will result.
The Chinese have nearby troop
concentrations estimated in the
thousands.
New Offensive
There has been no explanation
why the government decided to
take the offensive for the first
time in the Northeast, while re-

maining on the defensive in La-
dakh.
Other aspects of the border sit-
uation remain obscure.
Part of the obscurity is deliber-
ate. The Indian government usual-
ly announces border clashes only
after Peiping has reported them.
This is because of a feeling there
that otherwise India would appear
to be boasting of victories - pro-
voking the Chinese into taking re-
venge elsewhere on the border.
Prime Minister J a w a h a r l a l
Nehru has warned that border
clashes could grow into war and
such a war "may become a world
war." But neither India nor China
appears to want - or be prepared
for - an all-out war.
Rapacki Raps
Foreign Policy
UNITED NATIONS (RP)-Polish
Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki
yesterday accused the United
States of following an extremely
dangerous policy toward Cuba. He
also denounced the West German
government as "the most stub-
born and aggressive cold war force
in the West." I
The Communist diplomat made
the charges in a policy speech to
the 108-nation UN General Assem-
bly.
He declared the Cuban people
have the same right to live under
Communism as the American peo-
ple do under capitalism.
He said Communist states in
Europe live as neighbors with cap-
italist states.
He said Cuba is neither threat-
ening nor is in a position to
threaten "the United States or
anyone else."

Asia Dispute May Erupt

s Roundup

to the republic.
Saudi Arabia's official Mecca
radio remained silent on the coup.
But speculation was that King
Saud of Saudi Arabia would stand
as a staunch foe of the new Yem-
eni 'regime.
Evidence continued to mount
that the army coup was engineer-
ed by friends of Nasser. Some 300
Yemeni students demonstrated in
Cairo in support of the revolution
and the so-called free Yemeni
movement in Cairo warned Has-
san that he would be killed if he
set foot in Yemen.
Mrs. Granahan
Nominated As
U.S. Treasurer
WASHINGTON (Ri - President
John F. Kennedy yesterday chose
Rep. Kathryn E. Granahan (D-
Pa.), as Treasurer of the United
States.
Mrs. Granahan, whose appoint-
ment to the post had long been
rumored, will succeed Mrs. Eliza-
beth Smith Gatov.
Mrs. Gatov resigned the $17,000
a-year position last April to return
to California and participate in
the re-election campaign of Gov.
Edmund G. Brown.
Mrs. Granahan was first elected
to Congress to complete the un-
expired term of her husband, Wil-
liam T. Granahan, who died in
1956. She was re-elected to the
last two terms of Congress.
The White House said Mrs.
Granahan's nomination will go to
the Senate today.

HOLLANDIA, West New Guinea
-Pieter J. Platteel, lest Dutch
Governor of West New Guinea,
left by plane yesterday for The
Netherlands. His departure vir-
tually ended 134 years of Dutch
rule. The formal transfer of the
last piece of Dutch colonial terri-
tory in Asia to temporary UN ad-
ministration takes place next
Monday. Under the Dutch-Indo-
nesian agreement of Aug. 15, the
territory will go to Indonesia May
1, 1963.
NEW YORK-Pleas of nolo con-
tendere, (no contest), were ac-
cepted yesterday from five steel
company executives. charged with
price-fixing in sales of steel forg-
ings. At the same time, Federal
Judge Sylvester J. Ryan reserved
decision on motions by four steel
companies and a trade association
to change their original pleas of
innocent to nolo contendere. Ryan
set Oct. 25 for sentencing the men,
each of whom could receive a
maximum one year prison term
and a fine of $50,000. Nolo con-
tendere is a special plea made by
a defendant with the court's per-
mission. It permits the imposition
of a penalty without an admission
of guilt.
ACCRA, Ghana - The govern-
ment yesterday clamped censor-
ship on outgoing news and ordered
expulsion of a second British cor-
respondent in two days. Officials
were angered by news reports of
recent assassination a t t e m p ts
against President Kwame Nkru-
mah and followup security mea-
sures. A state of emergency was
imposed in Ghana last week. The
censorship action was taken under
Ghana's 1960 criminal code.
BARCELONA - Leaders of the
massive rescue operations in the
wake of. Barcelona's floods dis-
aster yesterday indicated the
death toll might exceed 800. Lat-
est figures said 473 bodies had
been recovered but additional vic-
tims were being reported found
every few minutes. Rescuers said
there was little hope of finding
any of the 400 persons still miss-
ing in Tarassa, Sabadell and Rubi,
three hard hit textile towns. The
inhabitants then returned to the
grim task of seeking the missing.
BIRMINGHAM - A white man
attacked the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr. yesterday as the Negro
integrationist was addressing the
Southern Christian Leadership
Conference. Observers said King
made no move to resist as the
six-foot, two-inch, 200-pound man

pummeled him with his fists. Per-
sons in the audience were stunned
momentarily, but then pushed for-
ward onto the platform where
King was speaking and the man
quieted down. The Rev. Wyatt
Tee Walker, SCLC Executive Di-
rector, said the man identified
himself as Roy James, 24, of Ar-
lington, Va., and a member of the
American Nazi Party.
* * *
TOKYO -- Communist China
announced it has 'decided to
strengthen peasant communes to
boost agricultural production. It
acknowledged pockets of resist-
ance to the regime, saying some
Chinese turn to capitalism every
chance they get. A 4,000-word
communique broadcast by Pei-
ping radio yesterday also attacked
the United States as an imperial-
ist aggressor and Yugoslavia as
the-same foe to Communism as
imperialism.
* * *
NEW YORK -- The New York
Stock Exchange yesterday ended
a dismal week and month with a
dull technical rally. Standard and
Poor's 500 Index closed ,at 56.27,
up .5, with 425 industrials up .58,
25 rails up .12, and 50 utilities up
.10.

SEN. GEORGE SMATHERS
... worries about veto
CUBA :
Report Use
Of U.S. Ships
WASHINGTON ()P)-The Soviet
Union has used in its Cuban mili-
tary build-up about five or six
lend-lease ships obtained from the
United States in World War II, the
State Department said yesterday.
Technically, State Department
officials said, these ships still are
United States property but there
is no current program for attempt-
ing their recovery, either by legal
prooedures or by seizure.
Department press officer Lin-
coln White, in reply to newsmen's
questions, said the Soviet Union
still is operating 84 of 121 mer-
chant vessels loaned to it during
the war. Five, or perhaps six of
them, have been used to carry sup-
plies, including military equip-
ment, to the Cuban Communist
regime of Fidel Castro.
The ships were part of over-all
lend-lease goods and equipment
valued at $10.8 billion which went
to Russia while it was fighting
Nazi Germany.
The latest effort to reach a cash
settlement on 'all lend-lease prop-
erty was made in January, 1960,
but broke up after a short time in
an apparently hopeless deadlock.
The United States asked an $800
million settlement while the Rus-
sians refused to go above $300
million.
During the long-drawn efforts
to settle the lend-lease question,
White said, the United States once
offered a separate deal to sell the
ships for $33 million.

r"""-"""

C

C

ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the
EPISCOPAL STUDENT
FOUNDATION
306 North Division
Phone NO 2-4097

7 H E

SUNDAY-
8:00 A.M. Holy Communion.
9:00 A.M.. Holy Communion
for Students.

and Sermon

11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon.
7:00 P.M. Evening Prayer and commentary.

TUESDAY-.
9:15 A.M. Holy
WEDNESDAY-
7:00 A.M. Holy
FRIDAY-
12:10 P.M. Holy

Communion.
Communion.
Communion.

Criii
URC,-I

ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL
William and Thompson Streets
Mgsr. John F. Bradley, Chaplain
Rev. Alexander Brunett ,
RELIGIOUS SCHEDULE
Sunday Masses: 8:00, 9:30, 11.00 A.M.,
12:00 Noon and 12:30.
Holyday Masses: 6:30, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 A.M.,
12:00 Noon, 5:10 P.M.
Weekday Masses 7:00, 8:00; 9:00 A.M. and
12:00 Noon.
Novena Devotions: Mother of Perpetual Help.
Wednesday evening, 7:30 P.M.
Rosary and Litany: Daily at 5:10 P.M.
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM
Weekly classes in Philosophy Tuesday at 8:00.
Fundamentals of the Catholic Faith Tuesday
and Thursday at 10 a.m., 2, 3, 8 p.m.
Foundations of Christianity Tuesday and
Thur'sday at 1, 3, 7 p.m. Sacred Scripture
Monday at 7:00, Thursday at 8:00. Medi-
cal Ethics Thursday at 7:00. Nursing
Ethics Monday at 8:00. Newman Classes
Friday at 8:00. Open Forum Wednesday
at 8:00.
LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER
AND CHAPEL
National Lutheran Council
Hill St. at S. Forest Ave.
Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor
Anna M. Lee, Associate
SUNDAY

Featuring your all time favorites* . - -
ST EAK - TU RKEY -SEAFOOD
pf us
COCKTAILS
and Imported and Domestic Beer and Wine
Preketes Sugar Bowl
Serving Ann Arbor and the U of M since 1903

109-111 S. Main

Phone NO 2-1414

BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL
REFORMED
United Church of Christ
423 South Fourth Ave.
Rev. Ernest Klaudt, Pastor
Rev. A. C. Bizer, Associate Pastor
9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Worship Service
9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Church School
7:00 p.m. Student Guild
MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(Disciples of Christ)
Hill and Tappan Streets
Rev. Russell M. Fuller, Minister
9:30 Guild House at 802 Monroe
9:30 Study Seminar at Guild House
10:45 Worship
FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
Washtenaw at Berkshire
Rev. Erwin Gaede
The sermon topic ofr Sunday, Sept. 30, 1962,
will be: "The Perils of Prayer."
Church School and worship services at 9:30
and 1 1 :00 a.m.
Student Group: 7:30 p.m.

9:30
10:00
7:00
i

and 11:00 a.m. Worship Services.
a.m. Bible Study.
p.m. "For the Life of the World"-The
962 Student Ashram in Review.

FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
and WESLEY FOUNDATION
State and Huron Streets, Tel. NO 8-6881
Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister
Rev. M. Jean Robe and
Rev. C. J. Stoneburner, Campus Ministers
SUNDAY
9:00 and I11:15 a.m.Morning Worship. "Be-
yond 'felief to Experience," sermon by
Dr. Rupert.
This service is broadcast 11:00 to 12:15,
WOJA, AM and FM.
10:15 a.m.-Seminar, Pine Room. Series sub-
ject, "Encounters With Other Living Re-
ligions." Topic, "Judaism."
7:00 p.m.-WORSHIP AND PROGRAM, Wes-
ley Lounge. Topic: "The Figure of Jesus,
Then and NE
WEDNESDAY
7:00 a.m.-HOLY COMMUNION. Chapel.
Interpretation of the Apostle's Creed."
Followed by breakfast, Pine Room. Out by
8 o'clock,
12:00 Noon -- Wesley Fellowship Cabinet
Luncheon, Pine Room.
4:00 p.m.-COFFEE HOUR,. Wesley Lounge.
5:10 p.m.-HOLY COMMUNION, Chapel.
6:00 p.m.-GRAD SUPPER, Pine Room. For
reservations call NO 8-6881.
THURSDAY
7:00 p.m.-KAPPA PHI, Youth Room.
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
AND STUDENT CENTER
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)
1511 Washtenaw Avenue
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
James H. Pragman, Vicar
Tel.: 663-5560
Sunday at 9:45 and 11:15: Services, Sermon
by Vicar Pragman, "Faith: A Special Kind
of Catalyst."
Swnday at 9:45 and 11:15: Bible Classes.
Sunday at 2:00: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu-
dent Club, meets at chapel to go to Con-
cordia College Cornerstone Ceremony.
Supper at Chapel at 6.
Monday at 8:00: Course in Christian Doctrine
and Practice. New members invited.
Tuesday at 6:00: Married Students' Potluck
Supper. Phone 663=5560 for reservation.
Wednesday at 8:15 p.m. University Lutheran
Chapel Assembly.
Wednesday at 10:00 p.m. Midweek Devotional
Service, with Holy Communion.
Friday at 7:00: Chapel Choir rehearsal.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND
BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER
512 and 502 E. Huron
Rev. James Middleton, Minister
.Rev. Paul W. Light, Minister of Education
(Minister to students)
SUNDAY-
Coffee Hour.
11:00 A.M. Worship Service.
SUNDAY EVENING-
6:45 to 8:00 - American Baptist Student
Fellowship; worship, discussion, and
fellowship.

'Celebrate your BIRTHDAY with us.
Surprises are waiting for you!

11

ST. CLARE'S EPISCOPAL MISSION
2309 Packard St.
The Reverend Albert P. Neilson
The Reverend Philip L. Schenk
SUNDAY
9:15 a.m. Morning Prayer-Family Service.
11:00 a.m. Holy Communion.
Nursery for infants, small children during 9:15
a.m. service.

Wednesday-
7:15-7:45 p.m. Mid-Week Devotions.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Avenue
NO 2-4466
Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm
Brown, Virgil Janssen
SUNDAY-
Worship at 9:00, 10:30 and 11:50.
Presbyterian Campus Center located at the
Church.
Staff: Jack Borckardt and Patricia Pickett
Stoneburner.
NO 2-3580
THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
W. Stadium at Edgewood
John G. Malcin, Minister
SUNDAY
10:00 a.m. Bible School
11:00 a.m. Regular Worship
6:30 p.m. Evening Worship
WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m. Bible Study
For transportation to any service call 2-2756

to select beautiful cards that say
MERRY CHRISTMAS
in just the way you want to say it

FIRESIDE FORUM
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
for single young adults
Meetings in First Methodist Church
in Youth Room
Sunday-7:30 p.m.

11 ,_ _ ,-,., , 11 . Family Cards !

11... ~ -i aml ad 1 A LIL A A D ~i~cmncAccEtmC.If

'I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan