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September 21, 1963 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1963-09-21

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Tr

VrUHiGAIh UATT.V

Ma nsfield Asks Response

T~o

New

Viet Nam Policy

Heads of State Seek
Retreat from A-War
WASHINGTON-Each of the two nuclear giants, the United
States and the Soviet Union, has internal divisions of opinon on how
to proceed and how far to go after the test-ban treaty.
At the moment the publicly stated desire of the two leaders,
President John F. Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev.
is to move yet another step back from the brink of nuclear holocaust.
the Washington Post said yesterday.
It cited the lead article appearing yesterday in the October issue

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314 S. State

Sukarno Pledges To Avoid
Nationalzin British Firms
LONDON (P)-Britain received with uneasy reserve yesterday a
pledge by Indonesian President Ahmed Sukarno's government to avoid
nationalizing any of the $450 million worth of British industries and
enterprises in Indonesia.
In an atmosphere still clouded by the anti-Malaysian fire rioting
in Jakarta Wednesday, the British government made known its
dissatisfaction with this response to its demand for a clearcut defi-

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VU
Senate Ends
WASHINGTON (M-)-The Senate
talked its way through the final
day of free-wheeling debate on the
limited nuclear test ban treaty yes-
terday and set the stage for show-
down voting on Monday and Tues-
day.
Sens. Olin D. Johnston (D-SC)
and Len B. Jordan (D-Idaho,)
thinned the ranks of undecided
senators-Johnson declaring he
will vote for the pact, Jordan join-
ing the small band of foes.
That made the line-up 82 sena-
tors indicating they favor the pact,
with 15 set against it. The only
ones who have not made public
their stand are Sens. Howard W.
Cannon (D-Nev), John L. McClel-
lan (D-Ark) and Margaret Chase
Smith (R-Maine).
Asks 'Full Inspection'
Jordan said he would gladly
vote for the treaty "if it provided
for full inspection to insure com-
pliance with the agreement to ban
testing in the atmosphere, under-
water and outer space."
On the other side, Johnston said
that if the Senate rejects the trea-
ty, "we are saying that we have
given up all hope for peace and we
are telling the world it must look
forward only to an endless dark
age of cold war and ever-threat-
ening nuclear attack."
In this 10th day of the big de-
bate, senator after senator con-
tinued to make arguments for or
against the pact- -
New Signatures
Meanwhile in Moscow, Tangan-.
yika and Bolivia yesterday signed
the Moscow copy of the limited nu-
clear test ban treaty. Eighty-two
countries now have done so.

nition of Indonesian policy toward
British investments.
Lists Points
Indonesian Ambassador Burhan-
din Mohamad Diah presented
British Foreign Secretary Lord
Home a note making these points:
1) There is no intention on In-
donesia's part of nationalizing the
British enterprises operating in
Indonesia.
2) Several British properties
taken over by labor unions have
been placed "under the protective
supervision" of the government to
insure output goes on.
Studies President's Decree
Lord Home studied the message
along with terms of a decree is-
sued in Jakarta by Sukarno him-
self.,
There were references in this
decree, British officialf said, to
"the former management" of seiz-
ed enterprises. And it included or-
ders to prevent new seizures ex-
cept on Sukarno's orders.
All this raised a question among
British authorities as to whether
the British stake might go the
same way as Dutch plantations
and factories in Indonesia six
years ago.
Romney Jibes
At Goldwater
LANSING (P) - Gov. George
Romney said yesterday it appear-
ed Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz)
has not disassociated himself from
the "radical right," but he de-
clined to add further criticism.
At a news conference Romney,
frequently mentioned as a possi-
ble presidential candidate, said of
Goldwater, "I haven't seen' any
statement on his part that changes
his position from what it has been
in the past.

Tacitly Blasts,
CIA; Warns
Of Disaster
Urges Conformity
To Kennedy Orders
WASHINGTON M - Senate
Majority Leader Mike Mansfield
warned yesterday that the Unit-
ed States effort in South Viet Nam
faces disaster unless all American
agencies there respond promptly
to policy changes ordered by Pres-
ident John F. Kennedy.
The Montana Democrat's Senate
speech was a thinly-veiled rebuke
to the United States Central In-
telligence Agency operations in
South Viet Nam, informed sources
said, for giving the impression the
United States speaks with two
voices in dealing with the Saigon
government.
Mansfield did not mention the
CIA in saying there are now more
than 15,000 Americans in South.
Viet Nam helping in the effort to
avert a Communist guerrilla vic-
tory.
'Gravest Consequences'

t

SEN. MIKE MANSFIELD
... cautions nation
LANSING:
Ask To Drop
Spring Vote
In Counties
LANSING (P) - A legislative
committee on implementation of
the new Constitution yesterday ap-
proved a proposed bill which would
keep present elected county offi-
cials in office an additional two
years.
If approved by the Legislature,
the action would provide that
county officials elected last year
for two-year terms would serve
until 1966.
Affected by the proposal would
be county prosecutors, sheriffs,
treasurers, clerks, registrars of
deeds, drain commissioners, sur-
veyors, coroners, and, in some in-
stances, Circuit Court and road
commissioners.
The vote on the action was 9-2,
with Sens. William Ford (D), Tay-
lor, and Farrell Roberts (R), Pon-
tiac, opposing the action.
The problem arose from the fact
that the new Constitution, effec-
tive Jan. 1, 1964, abolishes the
spring election in which many of-
ficials were elected.
The new document also provides
that county officials shall be
elected for four-year terms in-
stead of two, as at present.

Third Effort
The test ban marks the third
effort to push peaceful coexistence.
The relevant question is wheth-
er Soviet policy is to be rooted
in the interests of the Russian
nation and its people or rooted in
an effort to spread the cause of
Communism over the face of the
earth, Rostow says.
A vast majority of senators felt,
as was evidenced in the test-ban
treaty hearings, that the latter
view prevails for Soviet policy.
Feeling of Caution
The President is aware of this,
and one result of this feeling of
caution was that while Kennedy's
United Nation's speech would hold
open the door to next steps, it
would be devoid of any new spe-
cifics, the Post continued.
The pressures on Soviet re-
sources caused by our massive
arms and space budgets should be
kept up in order to further what
is now going on inside the Soviet
Union in its way to coexistence.
End Support
At Richmond
RICHMOND (IP)-Federal poli-
cies against participating in ra-
cially segregated activities has pro-
moted at least one Richmond fed-
eral agency to stop sending em-
ployes to the University of Rich-
mond for job-related courses.
Under a Small Business Admin-
istration directive, it was under-
stood, the SBA will continue , to
pay the fees for employes attend-
ing classes at Richmond profes-
sional institute but not at the uni-
versity.
Director Clarence B. Moore de-
clined to comment.

By The Associated Press
LONDON-Sir David Low, whose
penetrating editorial cartoons
never spared a public figure, is
dead at 72.
* * *
WASHINGTON - Rep. George
Huddleston, Jr. (D-Ala) asked the
House Veterans Affairs Committee
yesterday to investigate Veterans
Administration disclosure of the
disability pension received by Ala-
bama Gov. George C. Wallace. Sen.
Wayne Morse (D-Ore) told the
Senate on Sept. 5 the segregation-
ist governor is receiving disability
payments for a psycho-neurosis
OSLO-Norway's first non-so-
cialist government in 28 years fell
last night and normally stable
Norway was plunged into its sec-
ond governmental crisis in less
than a month. Norwegian Premier
John Lyng's conservative-led coa-
lition government was brought
down by a 76-74 vote in the Stort-
ing (parliament).
* *~ '*
NEW YORK - The New York
Stock Exchange posted further
new highs in popular averages
yesterday. Dow Jones averages
showed 30 industrials up .38, 20
rails up .15, 15 utilities unchanged
and 65 stocks up .13.
a PRINCETON
at MICHIGAN!
MICHIGAN UNION
BARBER SHOP
Daily 8:30 A.M.-5:30 P.M.

of Foreign Affairs magazine, wherein
ning chief Walt W. Rostrow ar- -
gues that we are at the beginning
of the third major effort since
1945 to establish whether co-
existence between the United
States and the Soviet Union will
work.

iState Department policy plan-
World News
Roundup

IL

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the Scripto Wordmasttrreffl bs
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- - - - - - - -

WE USE RADIOS to bring you, the Students of the'
University, the kind of entertainment you want at
the times you like to hear it. We have Rock and
Roll, Jazz, Folk, and Classical music. We have news,
sports and weather. We keep you up to date on
Campus events. But, why say more? Listen . . . we

We don't
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think you'll like it.

"Unless they function - all of
them, mentioned and unmention-
ed-as a unit, in prompt response
to such modifications of policies as
may be laid down by the President
and secretary of state, and these
two leaders alone, we will suffer
the gravest consequences in Viet
Nam," he said.+
Mansfield added that the United
States must first put its own bu-
reaucratic house in order, and if+
that requires "certain individuals1
be removed, then the sooner they
are removed the better."
"We cannot control the behavior
of the Viet Nam government. But
if we cannot control our own of-
ficial behavior, if we cannot insure
that the responsible man on the
spot will have prompt and full
support of all others involved , , ,
we are face to face with a disaster
in Viet Nam."
'Ugly Inadequacy'
Mansfield said it did not matter
if "this ugly inadequacy" in Amer-
ican administrative behavior in
foreign policy takes place in
Washington or in Saigon, or any-
where else.
He called for prompt and full
support of the new United States
ambassador, Henry Cabot Lodge.
The State Department said
Lodge already has full authority
to control the policies of all of the
United States agencies in South
Viet Nam.
Aid Dispute
The latest storm over United
States policy in South Viet Nam
apparently boiled down to a sharp
difference within the United States
government over the amount of
aid to be given to the Viet Nam
government.
The President has said military
assistance should continue, lest
there be a collapse of Vietnamese
President Ngo Dinh Diem's re-
gime; but he has not ruled out
selective aid cuts.
There have been reports that
the CIA is continuing payments of
$3 million a month to special forc-
es which were used by Diem's
brother, Ngo Dinh Nhu, to raid
Buddhist temples
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
CHURCH PLANS
DISCUSSION
The Church was founded as
a body to manifest personal
aspects of God's character. In
this body, God cultivates the
ability to distinguish between
good and evil in a non-mechan-
ical way, and to choose to do
good because its nature is to
love righteousness, truth, and
love.
How can the Church live true
to its fundamental nature in
this generation? In what ways
can the Church manifest the
character of God in a society
which appears to be too absorb-
ed with technological develop-
ment to listen to the voices that
raise questions concerning its
basic direction?
In discussions held regularly
at the Northside Presbyterian
Church, answers to these and
related questions are sought in
an atmosphere of friendliness
and urgency born out of the
seriousness of the concerns.
The next "Concern Period" at
Northside Presbyterian Church
will be held on Sunday, Sept. 22,
as part of the 10:30 a.m. Wor-
ship Service. The particular
f.nni wil a "ugminn nn nOur

,

p

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650
on your AM dial

WELCOME to the CHURCHES
of ANN ARBOR,

*..and a couple of lab reports
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thru refill says in no uncertain terms that you've got
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THE BAPTIST STUDENT UNION
Meeting in Room 528 D in SAB
The Baptist Student Union here at the Univer-
sity of Michigan invites anyone who is
interested to come join us and help make
our organization larger and stronger.
Monday evening from 7:00 to 8:00 p.m., we
are going to be studying Paul's letter to
the Romans in our Bible study.
Thursday afternoon from 5:10 to 5:40 p.m.,
we ore having a period of song and de-
votions. Leading these devotions will be
faculty members, local pastors, students,
and others.
Our sponsoring Church, the Packard Road Bap-
tist Church, invites you to come worship
with us each Sunday. Sunday School is at
9:45, Morning Worship at 11:00 a.m.;
Training Union at 6:30 and Evening Wor-
ship at 7:30 p.m.
The church is presently meeting in the Ann
Arbor YM-YWCA at 5th and Williams.
Everyone is invited regardless of race or re-
ligion.
ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the
EPISCOPAL STUDENT
FOUNDATION
306 North Division
Phone NO 2-4097
SUNDAY-
8:00 A.M. Holy Communion.
9:00 A.M. Holy Communion and Sermon
Breakfast at Canterbury House
11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon.
7:00 P.M. Evening Prayer and commentary.
TUESDAY---
9:15 A.M. Holy Communion.
WEDNESDAY-
7:00 A.M. Holy Communion.
FR IDAY-
12:10 P.M. Holy Communion.
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Corner State and William
Dr. Fred E. Luchs, Minister
Services at 9:30 and 11:15 a.m.
"How Live in World of Change?" Fart It, Dr.
Fred E. Luchs.
BIBLE LECTURE & DISCUSSION, 10:30, Dr.
Preston Slosson.
Church School: all ages, 9:30 and 11:15 a.m.
Student Guild: 802 Monroe, telephone 2-5189.

UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
AND STUDENT CENTER
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)
1511 Washtenaw Avenue
663.5560
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
John Koenig, Vicar
Sunday Services at 9:45 and 11:15 a.m. Ser-
mon, "A Special Brilliant Light.".
Sunday at 9:45 and 11:15 'a.m. .Bible Study.
Sunday at 6:00 p.m. Gamma Delta Supper
and Program, meeting at 5:15 for new
members.
Monday at 8:00: Course, "Life With God."
Wednesday at 10:00 p.m. Midweek Devotion.
Friday at 8:30 p.m. Fourth Friday Forum,
Grad-Staff, Mr. James Lumbantobing of
Indonesia, speaker.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND
BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER
502 and 512 E. Huron-663,9376
Rev. James H. Middleton--Senior Minister
Rev. Paul W. Light-Campus Minister
Mr. David Backus-Student Intern'
Sunday at 9:45 a.m. Campus Class, "The
Diversity of the Bible," Campus Center
Lounge.
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship, Mr. Light
preaching.
6:45 p.m. "Christianity and Culture in Ja-
pan," Mr. Tetsuga Kobayashi, Campus
Center Lounge.
Monday at 12 noon, Luncheon Discussion,
Campus Center Lounge.
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Midweek worship and
discussion, First Baptist Church.
BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF
CHRIST
423 South Fourth Ave.
Rev. Ernest Kloudt, 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.

WESLEY FOUNDATION AND
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
State and Huron Streets
Director Eugene Ransom
Associate Director Jean Robe
SUNDAY
Morning Worship at 9:00 and 11:15
"Christ's Surprising Imperatives," Dr. Rupert
10:15 a.m.-Student Seminar, Methodist So-
cial Creed, Pine Room.
10:15 a.m.--Young Married Couples Class, So-
cial Hall.
7:00 a.m.-Worship and Program: "Inter-
national Students, Opportunity and Chal-
lenge," Rev. Paul Dotson.
TUESDAY
7:00 p.m.--"Introduction to the Bible," 5
weeks seminar.,
8:30 to 11:00 p.m.-Open House, Miss Jean
Robe's apartment.
WEDNESDAY
7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel, fol-
lowed by breakfast.
5:10 p.m.--Holy Communion, Chapel.
6:00 p.m.-Wesley Grads-Supper and Pro-
gram.
THURSDAY
7:00 p.m.-Basic Protestant Beliefs, Pine
Room.
LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER
AND CHAPEL
(National Lutheran' Council)
Hill Street at South Forest Avenue
Dr. Henry 0. Yoder, Postor.
SUNDAY
9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Worship Services.
3:00 p.m. Meet for Picnic.
4:00 p.m. Bible Study.
Wednesday-7:30 p.m. Student Led Vespers.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenow Ave.
NO 2-4466
Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm
grown, Virgil Janssen.
SUNDAY
Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 A.M. qnd 12 Noon.
Presbyterian Campus Center located at the
Church.
Staff: Jack Borckardt and Patricia Pickett
Stoneburner.

FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
1917 Washtenaw Ave.
Rev. Erwin A. Goede, Minister
Church School and Services: 9:30 a.m. & 11:00
a.m.
Sermon: Bartolomeo Vanzetti: A study .in Re-
liaious Growth.

THE CHURCH OF CHRIST

it

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