THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE PA(.l^i..PU co Cambodia Chief Ends Foreign Aid U.S. Fears Red Chinese Influence Indicated by Sihanouk's Decision PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (P)-Americans prepared last night to dismantle their aid machinery, fearful that Cambodia's refusal to accept further United States assistance will swing the nation into Red China's powerful orbit. United States Ambassador Philip D. Sprouse was summoned to the foreign ministry,.presumably to get the word that United States food and dollars no longer area Meyer Backs Council Draft ROME (W) - Albert Gregory Cardinal Meyer of Chicago led a group of American prelates yes- terday in defense of the proposed Ecumenical Council declaration. on Jews and religious liberty. The council also voted approval of allowing the use of modern languages in Mass, In another development, Pope Paul reaffirmed the position of the bishops in the hierarchy with the Pope at their head. U WINTHROP'S 'YOUNG LOOK" welcome. He has not seen Prince oNorodom Sihanouk, Cambodia's chief of state, for several months. (In Washington, the State De- partment reported Cambodia sent a note asking negotiations to end United States aid. Sihanouk was said to have expressed his thanks for aid and reaffirmed his friend- t ship.) Halt Work' Work on all aid projects halted Tuesday after Sihanouk told a cheering rally that as of now no more American aid would be ac- cepted. Despite repeated Washing- ton denials, he again charged that United States aid was being used to undermine his government. The United States has been pouring $30 million a year in mili- tary and economic aid into the country to try to keep it neutral in the struggle to save Southeast Asia from a Communist takeover. From Red China came enthu- siastic approval of Sihanouk's de- cision. Exchange Reserve While Cambodia has a $90 mil- lon foreign exchange reserve that should keep it going for several years, the impact on its economy will be severe now that aid has ended. Sihanouk will ask the three mil- lion Cambodians to tighten their belts, will nationalize a number of businesses Dec. 31 and has an- nounced the government will take over banks next July. Officials said aid programs, mostly agricultural and educa- tional projects, will be closed out as soon as possible. Offices will be closed and equipment sold or stored. Set Policy On Issues A t Parley_. Resolutions covering a wide range of topics and passed by the All-College Conservative Confer- ence which met on campus last weekend have been released by conference director Robert Able- son, '65. Statements included: Civil Rights-The federal gov- ernment should move to enforce the equal voting rights of all citi- zens. The Attorney General should have the power to initiate suits on behalf of individuals who can rea- sonably claim to have been the object of discrimination. Withhold Funds Federal funds should be with- held from federally-sponsored pro- jects which practice discrimina- tion, and projects which are com- pleted should be subject to order of the attorney general to desist from such practices. All segregation by state and local governments is clearly un- constitutional and immoral. (A minority of the 'conferees disagreed with this position and issued a report opposing segrega-. tion and supporting the lawful efforts of Negroes to gain equal treatment and voting rights.) United Nations-The UN should refrain from such action as will interfere with a country's domes- tic procedures. If the UN persists in such intervention, the United States should refuse to continue to finance it. Make Itself Heard The United States should regis- ter a more aggressive effort to make itself heard in the various UN agencies, many of which are controlled by Communist nations. The, United States should also explore the possibility of revoking voting rights of non-paid-up members. Viet Nam-The United States should take care not to offer its suport to regimes in Southeast Asia that may be controlled by Communists. (This is not to imply that the new Vietnamese regime is Communist, however.) By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Special Correspondent JAKARTA - Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution, Indonesia's deputy prime minister and minister of defense, says the Communists are a problem in Indonesia, but adds, "the problem is not as it is in other anti-Communist countries." He implies that Indonesian Communists are different from other Communists around the world. Nasution's thinking is not shared by Westerners. T h e Indonesian Communist Party has grown to enormous proportions. It now claims a mem- bership of 2.5 million whichr would make it the biggest in the world outside the Communist bloc. Only Power It has the only truly organized political structure in Indonesia. It would be capable of taking over a government and ruling the coun- try's 100 million predominantly Moslem people. But it shows no signs of impatience. T h e Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) under the leadership of veteran D. N. Aidit seems sat- isfied to work hard for respecta- bility, to cooperate with President Sukarno's regime and to be a po- tent force in Indonesian political life. It is not ready for a take- over. It is aware that it does not have enough strength in the mil- itary, and that Nasution's forces would hit hard if the Communists made an attempt. But it remains a potent threat to turn an enormously strategic nation, stretching for thousands of miles across the oceans below Southeast Asia, into a member of the world Communist camp. It is playing a waiting game, apparent- ly hoping that Sukarno will be pushed farther and farther away from the West into more and more reliance on the Communist bloc. Power Play The party does not yet have sufficient Soviet support for a strike for power in Indonesia. This has aroused dissatisfaction with Moscow and has played a part in the party's involvement in the Chinese-Soviet battle over how re- volution should develop. Policy statements of the PKI sound pro-Chinese, but there is no reason to believe Aidit is a Red Chinese puppet.. He shares the Chinese view that all American and British influence should be expelled from Asia. But he seems to be neutral in the Moscow-Pe- king war. Indeed, PKI seems to be taking advantage of it. The Moscow - Peking quarrel gives PKI an opportunity to ap- pear independent in the eyes of Indonesians. It pursues its aims in. the Moscow-approved manner, through participation in parlia- ment and hidden subversion. But if the party is parliamentary, it is because PKI has no other choice. It also manages to look pan-Asian, which pleases the Chinese. Smash Revolution If PKI tried violent revolution, the Indonesian army unquestion- ably would move to smash it. Thus, the party welcomes some- thing like the Malaysia-Indonesia crisis, which could build up to proportions sufficient to keep the army preoccupied on the Borneo borders. That would give the Communists an opportunity to get ahead in the capital. All the party's strength is in Java, the central and most popu- lous Indonesian island with 65 mlilion people. It is doubtful whether the Communists, should they try to take over Indonesia some day, could hold Sumatra or many of the other islands. If they took ,over, then, they would find themselves an island with many people and few resources a sort of super-Cuba 'whose support would drain the Communist bloc. There are about 10 political parties in Indonesia, but most don't mean much. All, except the Communists, are fairly disorgan- ized, including the Indonesian Na- tional Party founded by Sukarno himself. No Count Parties don't count under Su- karno's party who have leanings to the extreme left. Among them is Chaerul Saleh, a man with ex- treme leftist tendencies who is minister of industries and even a possible successor to Sukarno. Leaders of other parties, includ- ing the Socialist Sutan Sjahrir and the Masjumi party leader Mohammed Natsir, are in jail. They've been there since martial law in 1957 when there was a rebel attempt against the Jakarta government. Thus the Communists remain the strongest force. In addition, the Communists have control in the leadership of Sobsi, the big- gest labor federation, in the BI or Farmer's Union, in the Per- muda Rakjat, which is the youth movement, and other mass organ- izations. Still, Nasution says, "Commun- ism is obviously becoming a prob- lem in Indonesia, because, as it is with every other political creed, it has friend and foe. But its problem is not as it is in the anti- Communist countries. The Indo- nesian Communist Party accepts Panjat Sila (the five principles of peaceful coexistence), a state ideology which includes the prin- ciple of God Almightly and up- holds the political manifesto of the Republic of Indonesia. That's why this party was legalized . .." It's the sort of reasoning one expects fromthe Indonesian re- gime. If the regime really believes this, the Indonesian Communists already have achieved a signifi- cant victory. Pre diets Taxf Alternatives Michigan may have to adopt a state income tax soon or raise its' four per cent sales tax, Alan K. Campbell, director of research in metropolitan finance at Syracuse University, said. "It is inevitable that Michigan raise the sales tax or go to an income tax. With the prospect of vastly increasing expenditures these are the only broad-based sources left to Michigan," he said. In a paper he pointed out that spending has jumped 128 per cent at the state and local level in the last 10 years across the nation, campared to a 25 per cent in- crease in federal spending for domestic purposes. The biggest factor in the in- creases is education, while welfare, generally a big governmental ex- pense, has increased more slowly. Costs increase when suburban- ites ask for more services from cities where they no longer live. Also, the financial pressure of education remains in the central city. "The total impact is likely to create pressure for more expendi- tures," Campbell said. "There is a taxpayers' revolt largely because of the inaction of the Legislature to meet its responsibilities." Generally, he noted, states with an income tax or a sales tax are being pressured into adopting both as the demand for more revenue mounts. INDONESIA: Leader Views Local Communist Types racing, wools for sportive good loo ks to' UN Passes Declaration Scoring Discrimination UNITED NATIONS (P)-The United Nations General Assembly approved overwhelmingly yesterday a sweeping declaration calling on governments to eliminate all forms of racial discrimination. South Africa, condemned for its apartheid policies, did not participate in the vote. The 111-nation assembly endorsed by acclamation a declaration of general principles. It approved, 101-0, an appeal to governments "to implement and publicize the declaration. The third part of the package, W ord ews authorizing moves to convert the declaration of principles into an I Rouund~uinternational convention, w a s adopted 89-0 with 14 abstentions. The future convention would be By The Associated Press binding on nations that sign it. WASHINGTON - The Senate Although the declaration itself WASH TONm $ - Then Senthe was approved by acclamation and voted to trim $90 million from the announced as unanimously adopt-'cvla sp e pr g m y st d y e ,So h Afi 's G P. M se civilian space program yesterday ednouth Afa's GaimP.l Moost- after rejecting a move to slash theaedlaeuthatis G.le.aton be man-n-th-mon prjec by 519asked later that his delegation be man-on-the-moon project by $519 recorded as not participating in the vote. Voting followed a lengthy hassle CARACAS-Police and troops over one provision which the fought snipers in downtown Cara- United States claimed would in- cas yesterday, the second day of fringe on constitutional guaran- a pro-Communist campaign of tees of free speech. The final draft gave in to the United States de- mand. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ 1 ; I §. E p...i.. a. .,. 1 r. i.:_t ax 4 F 5 _.';. t 4 £ .rl.. d nY i .::.1...:...:: d .3 :. :, f I IL NEW YORK-The AFL-CIO called yesterday for a Justice De- partment investigation of all news- paper mergers or suspensions. It adopted a resolution asking Congress for a law requiring news- paper publishers to give the de- partment 90 days notice of any contemplated merger, consolida- tion, or acquisition. WASHINGTON - The Senate Finance Committee voted yester- day to go alone with the House on raising the temporary national debt ceiling from $309 billion to $315 billion. Senate action on the measure may come today. LANSING-Gov. George Rom- ney yesterday formally called the Legislature into special session Dec. 3 to consider laws imple- menting the new constitution. NEW YORK - Proposal of a two for one split by American Telephone and Telegraph Corp. helped push stocks upward on the Stock Exchange yesterday. 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