FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY, PAdr E FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 19$~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SE M . Tshombe Claims UN Uses Airlift Of U Thant's Plan for Unification Diplonlats Fear Another Rejection UNITED NATIONS OP) - Katanga President Moise Tshombe ac- cused the United Nations yesterday of using Trojan Horse tactics in modern style to move UN troops into his secessionist province. The UN quickly denied this as it had yesterday denied Tshombe's version of a clash between UN troops and Katangans. Tshombe has repeatedly frustrated efforts of the UN to reunite his rich province with the Congo central government setup and now Republicans Show Gainst In Elections By GLORIA BOWLES Several upsets, and a conserva- tive Republican voting trend, marked primary election contests held across the nation this week. New Hampshire grabbed the primary election headlines, as con- servative Gov. Wesley Powell was defeated in a bid for a third term. in a contest that gave "Big John" Pillsbury a 13,582 vote lead. Pow- ell's hopes for a bid in the 1964 national GOP convention were dashed, and Gov. Nelson A. Rocke- feller perhaps encouraged by elec- tion results for Powell, openly op- poses any Rockefeller aspirations, however undeclared, for the Re- publican presidential nomination. In another New Hampshire con- test, the conservative widow of Sen. Styles Bridges, Mrs.i Dolores Bridges, tried to repeat the per- formance of Sen. Helen Neuberger who succeeded her husband in Oregon two years ago, but failed to win in /a close contest with United States representative Per- kins Bass! Mrs. Bridges may ask for a recount. Has Opponents Bass will be running against Democrat Thomas J. McIntyre for the Senate seat. John W. King, minority leader of the State House of Representatives is the Demo-, cratic nominee for the governor- ship. In other contests, State Senator Carl E. Sanders upset the come- back ambitions of former governor Marvin Griffin in Georgia, as he took- the Democratic nomination for Governor. The Democratic nomination in Georgia is tanta- mount to election. Political Newcomer Sanders, in his first state-wide campaign and a virtual political unknown who was given little en- couragement from veteran politi- cal leaders and observers, cam- paigned on the racial issue with promises to stem the tide of in- tegration. Also in Georgia, Sen. Herman Talmadge and Rep. Carl Vinson were returned to Congress. They had only token opposition. In Arizona, conservative state senator Evan Mecham defeated a close associate and speechwriter for Sen. Barry Goldwater, Stephan Sheddag. Mecham will be pitted against Democratic Sen. Carl Hay- den in November. has declared he has no faith in a new unification plan in the light of events - as cited by him - in1 the past two days. The newest accusation was that the UN airlifted 2,000 CongoleseI troops to North Katanga for a planned assault on three of his strongholds. He said the troops were carried .in planes disguised1 with Rhodesian colors and mark- ings. Some diplomats viewed Tshom- be's accusations as a prelude to formal rejection of UN Acting Secretary-General U Thant's plan to end the Katanga secession and unify the Congo. But UN officials stressed they had no such word as yet from Tshombe himself.. A Thant spokesman said "We categorically deny" the latest ac-f cusation from Tshombe. The spokesman had described earlier charges as "a cynical effort to gain propaganda advantage." "Let the United Nations be hon- est and declare war," Tshombe asserted. "We shall defend our- selves, but this will be the end of the United Nations - forever."' Tshombe's latest charges were made at a news conference in Elisabethville where he said he heard from very good sources that a mass attack was planned fory Sept. 18 on Kabongo, Kongolo and Mukato, near Albertville. Taylor Flies To Cambodiai PHON PENH, Cambodia (M) - Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor flew here yesterday to discuss increasing American military aid to this neutralist kingdom in the midst of Cambodia's fiery feud with pro- western Thailand and South Viet Nam. Taylor, who came direct from Saigon, sidestepped getting in- volved in the dispute between the neighboring South Asian nations. Taylor said he would discuss in- creasing United States military aid to Cambodia during a 24-hour stopover beforegoing to Thailand. Taylor told newsmen at the air- port that he had not yet had a chance to study "local problems." Advances Charged At Border NEW DELHI (;P) - India and Red China yesterday accused each other of making new advances across the tense border near the mountainous Himalayan trail tak- en by the Dalai Lama in his es- cape from Tibet. There were no reports of shoot- ing, but Prime Minister Jawaharal Nehru's government said a de- tachment of ChineseCommunist troops appears to have crossed Tuesday into Northeast India, but a spokesman claimed "we have the situation in hand." The Chinese incursion was re- ported just east of the Buddhist protectorate of Bhutan, which In- dia has pledged to defend. Unofficial Reports The Nehru government tended to play down the incident despite unofficial reports that an Indian outpost had been surrounded by a Chinese force outnumbering it 10-1. A New Delhi spokesman de- scribed the invading force as a "group." He said reports 300 Com- munist troops took part were ex- aggerated. The outpost, manned by Assam riflemen, was reported still in con-' tact with the Indian Army's East- ern Command Headquarters. The government spokesman declined to comment on the reports the out- post was surrounded. He said only that the Chinese were several hun- dred yards away. Indian "Aggression" Peiping's New China News Agency countered with a charge Indian troops had set up a new "aggressive strong point" in Tibet near Che Dong and protested: "This marks a new development in nibbling of Chinese territory." The Communists also accused Indian planes of violating Chinese air space over Tibet and conduct- ing "reconnaissance and harass- ments there." The Chinese Communists have strengthened their forces along the disputed frontier since the Dalai Lama made his escape three years ago. Morgan Says UN Needs U.S. Loan WASHINGTON (1-P)-The Unit- ed Nations will have to pull its troops out of the Congo in a few weeks unless it receives a sub- stantial loan at once, the House was told yesterday. Rep. Thomas E. Morgan, (D-Pa.), chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Com- mittee, urged the House to face "this fundamental fact" in voting on a bill to authorize a $100-mil- lion loan to the UN by the ,United States. Ann Arbor's Most Complete., on-the-premise drive-in laundry and dry ci eaners SERVICES* - Dry Ceaning * Alterations and Repairs e Shirt Finishing * Wash Pants and Lab Coats " Drop Off Laundry ! Coin Operated " Self-Service Laundry *A|l work done on the premises FEATURES * Shop-in-car Window Service : Off Street Parking " Persohalized Service s Guaranteed Satisfaction * Free Minor Repairs e 24-Hour Service . 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