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September 19, 1963 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1963-09-19

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

UNs teering Council
Asks for Consideration

WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP:
Senate To Begin Syndicated Crime Probe

'Of,

Chinese Admission

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INDONESIA: Russia Gives
Britai Threatens Full Support
Break After Riots To Request
LONDON (A)-Britain reacted yesterday against what Foreign Assembly To Discuss
Secretary Lord Home called Indonesian "uncivilized behavior" in Viet Nam Question
burning down the British embassy in Jakarta.
The British demanded that Indonesia protect British lives and UNITED NATIONS () - The
property or risk a diplomatic break. United Nation's powerful steering
A mob of more than 10,000 Indonesians sacked and burned the committee recommended yester-
British embassy and other British property in protest against Brit- dy t nar tersembly Uoner
sin's support of the newly formed nation of Malaysia. day thttersa ssuembl- cNsder-
Restore Order bership for Communist China and
By midnight, Indonesian troops appeared to have restored order.
Troops of the Jakarta garrison spread out across the city in treatment of Buddhists in South
"apparent response to the British Viet Nam.
demand.The vote on the China question
Rioters finally deserted the site was 12-1 with eight abstentions.
R eotrI~~et of the em'bassy building, which Nationalist China cast the lone moledasabrd-ushl.ngtvvt.
smoldeedas a burned-out shell. negative vote.
B b pDInfuriates Britons Nikolai T. Fedorenko, the Soviet
WasedtiuieBtdelegate, gave immediate support
What seemed to infuriate Brit- to the request of Albania that the
ons most was that Indonesian po Assembly take up once more the
agred yesterday to a Tk-rernt lice and troops made no efforts to China representation issue. He said
ed timetable next Monday so it control the mob. absence of the Communist Chinese
can vote Tuesday on the limited The Indonesians were demon- from the UN could only harm the
nuclear test ban treaty. strating against formation of the organization.
Under the unanimous agree- new anti-Communist British-bak- No Objection
ment, the Senate will take up on ed state of Malaysia. It is made up There was no objection from any
Monday reservations, understand- of four former British colonies- member of the committee as it ap-
ings and similar motions. Debate Malaya, Singapore, Sarawak and proved the South Viet Nam issue.
will be limited on each to one hour. North Borneo. The 21-nation committee took
However, the agreement provides When news reports of the burn- the action after hearing Ceylon-
for six hours of general debate on ing and looting reached London, ese and Indonesian delegates de-
the treaty itself. Lord Home summoned Indonesian clare that the situation in South
Senate Majority Leader Mike Ambassador Burhanudin Moham Viet Nam has become a matter of
Mansfild (D-Mont) said the de- ad Diah. He warned him that un- international concern.
bate limitation agreement will ap- less President -Sukarno's govern- It approved placing South Afri-
ply also to any proposed preamble ment forthwith promised effective ca's racial segregation policies on
to the resolution of ratification. protection of British personnel and the agenda despite an objection
Mansfield said he understands property, relations may well be from that country.
Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) in- broken. Demand Expulsion
tends to call up for the first vote Assurances Before the Assembly is a de-
on Monday his reservations to de- Diah communicated urgently mand from a special UN commit-
lay the effectiveness of the treaty with Jakarta and returned to the tee that the Assembly and the Se-
until Russian troops are pulled out foreign office to assure Home that curity Council consider without
of Cuba and the withdrawal is delay expulsion of South Africa
verified by on-site international "adequate measures have been from the UN because of its refusal
inspection. ~ taken." to abandon its racial policies.
In effect, this means additional London police were taking no The demand was contained in a
time may be parceled out for de- chances on retaliatory measures. report published by the 11-nation
bate on individual reservations or They stationed a guard in front Committee on Apartheid estab-
understandings if this is desired of the Indonesian embassy. lished last year by the General
and agreed to during the Monday London diplomats suspect Su- Assembly to keep a continuing
session. karno is ambitious to assume the check on how South Africa exer-
Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La) of- vacant leadership of the non- cises segregation and how to com-
fered a reservation to specify that aligned states now that -Indian bat it.
nothing in the treaty would bar Prime Minister Nehru has edged The voluminous report was made
the right of the President to use westwards in the wake of Red public just before the Assembly's
nuclear weapons in self-defense Chinese assaults. 21-nation steering committee went
into session to consider agenda
items.
Reject Objection
The steering committee reject-
ed South Africa's formal objection
that a debate on South Africa and
UN interference is illegal and as-
sured that the debate will go on.
Through its report, the commit-
tee called for the General Assem-
bly and the Security Council to
"consider with no further delay
possible new measures in accord-
ance with the UN charter which
/providesfor stronger political, dip-
lomatic and economic sanctions,
suspension of the rights and priv-
ileges of the republic of South Af-
rica as a member state and ex-
pulsion from the UN and its spe-
cialized agencies."
The committee hailed the action
of countries, most of them African,
Delicious Hamburgers 15c who have refused landing rights
to South African planes, cut off
Hot Tasty French Fries 12c trade and diplomatic relations
and sought the expulsion of South
Triple Thick Shakes . . 20c Africa-along with Portugal-from
UN meetings during the last year.
Portugal's colonial policies in Af-
2000 W. Stadium Blvd. rica are another target for many
UN members.

By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Chairman
John L. McClellan (DArk) an-
nounced yesterday the Senate in-
vestigations subcommittee will be-
gin Tuesday its massive new probe
of "syndicated crime" and the nar-
cotics traffic.
Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy
will be the leadoff witness.
McClellan still kept under wraps,
however, the date on which anoth-
er witness, former mobster Joseph
Valachi, is to take the witness
stand to describe inner workings
of a secret criminal organization
known to its members as Cosa
Nostra (Our Thing).
NEW YORK-A handful of New
York musicians assigned to try-
outs out of town yesterday held the
key in a contract dispute that
could close nine Broadway shows.
Pit musicians in New York al-
ready have voted 166-156 to reject
the offer. So the out-of-town
members hold the deciding vote.
TEHRAN-Incomplete results of
the Iranian general elections
showed an overwhelming victory
for government-supported candi-
dates.
The opposition religious leaders,
the national front and several in-
fluential politicians boycotted the
elections on charges that the gov-
ernment did not give them a
chance to campaign.
BRASILIA--Yugoslavia's Presi-
dent Josef Tito flew to Brasilia for
an official visit yesterday and im-
mediately came under the wing of
machine gun-equipped security
troops.
Brazil's Roman Catholics had
bitterly protested his visit.
To Propose
New Council
A National Advisory Council of
Education is necessary to appraise
programs of learning in the United
States Representatives Edith Green
(D-Ore) and John V. Lindsay (R-
NY) said recently.
Included in this appraisal should
be an estimate of manpower needs
and an evaluation of quality in
American education.
The United States Office of Ed-
ucation is not equipped to handle
this job, they added.
The House members have intro-
duced a bill which provides for the
establishment of a 13-member ed-
ucation advisory council to be ap-
pointed by President John F. Ken-
nedy. The group would contain in
its ranks representatives from the
professions, business, industry and
labor and several distinguished ed-
ucators.
The committee would propose
national education legislation as
well as creating programs design-
ed for the individual states.
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WASHINGTON --Secretary of
Commerce Luther H. Hodges indi-
cated yesterday the government
will undertake a study of whether
to ease its embargo on exports to
Communist-bloc countries.
A committee of industrialists,
participating in a White House
conference on export expansion,
recommended such a re-examina-
tion of American policy.
* * *
DAMASCUS-Syria's ruling Ba'-
ath Party has called for a Syrian-
Iraqi federal union without Presi-
dent Abdul Nasser's United Arab
Republic.
A rift between Nasser and the
Ba'ath Party, which rules both
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Iraq and Syria, wrecked plans to
bring about the three-power union
by Sept. 17.
The party command made its
call in a statement last night
marking expiration of the target
date for proclamation of a federa-
tion of Egypt, Syria and Iraq un-
der a unity plan agreed upon in
Cairo April 17. There was no im-
mediate reaction from Iraq.
*' * *
WASHINGTON-The House will
not debate President John F. Ken-
nedy's plan for health care for the

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usic 51010

aged this year, the House Rules
Committee was assured yesterday.
That word came from Chairman
Wilbur D. Mills (D-Ark), of the
Ways , and Means Committee,
which will handle the legislation.
*" * *
NEW YORK--The stock market
rallied again yesterday to a new
high but a late gust of selling
Jolted it to a fair-sized loss in
heavy trading. The Standard and
Poor's 500 index closed off .32, with
425 industrials down .35, 25 rails
and 50 utilities down .21 each.

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"Ablaze
with
Fashion"
Fall
Fashion
Show
Sept.
20th

&

21st

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SAN DLER OF BOSTON'S SONJA . .. warm up to winter
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with a
Trunk Showing
of Fall
Holiday and
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