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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 14

Location:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Thursday, September 2, 106. Tage 11 THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Ad- The largest single investor in Farmers Home A Ustration insured loans is the Amalgamated Cloihir ministration insured loans is ine Amuiyumuicu t.uHy Workers of America, with which cost farmers 5T, return 4l2' micrcsi. Slate Department Bares Rusk Apology To Singapore Foreign For Malaria Washington reporters that the denial was in error, explaining: "Those who were con sulted within the government on this matter yesterday were not fully aware of the background Damon Treated Dawson st VP'-' An Viet discharged Tokyo malaria. he was held Cong. U.

his third Capablanca The Havana from Department visit American who searched the Cong jungle of South Vietnam for his missing brother was Wednesday from a hospital after treatment for Donald Dawson, 28, said stricken with malaria while for four months by the Viet Bobby Fischer, 22-year-old S. chess champion, has won long-distance game in the Memorial tournament. tournament is being played in but he is cabling his moves New York because the State refused him a visa to Cuba. If i i I 1 1 'l I UN Session Ends On Tranquil Note Allen May Seek Congress Seat Stepping out of the stagelight and into the political limelight UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.

jp The U. N. General Assembly finally ended its paralyzed 19th session Wednesday after agreeing to put aside the U. dispute over peacekeeping assessments and return to normal voting procedures at its next meeting. The session had opened last Dec.

1 under the threat of a U. confrontation and had averted such a showdown only by a no-vote truce which permitted only a few housekeeping decisions by unanimous consent. Even the agreement to abandon the controversy over Article 19 of the U.N. charter was approved without a record vote, but all the key countries including the United States and the Soviet Union had accepted its wording in advance. Article 19 provides that countries two years behind in paying U.N.

assessments will lose their assembly vote. Until Aug. 16 the United as have Republicans George Murphy and Ronald Reagan may provide a cue for Democrat Steve Allen. Allen, actor, composer and pianist, said he's considering running for Congress in Los Angeles' 26th District, where Democratic Rep. James Roosevelt will resign to take a United Nations post.

Former ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy, 76, was reported resting comfortably Wednesday at New England Baptist Hospital. The father of President John F. Kennedy entered the hospital for what his doctors called a general checkup. Mr.

Kennedy suffered a stroke in December 1961 and has been partly paralyzed since. Dean Rusk an apology $3 million, and that Washington had replied through! an intermediary it would give Mr. Lee and his people's Action party $3 million to keep quiet. He linked President Kennedy with this, but later said the offer took place just before President Kennedy assumed office in January, 1961. The State Department issued a denial Tuesday, and expressed regret that Mr.

Lee had brought up the matter at this time. Wednesday Press Officer Robert J. McCloskey told II in I JIBWL, mwTOv-m MAIL AND PHONE ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY, 381-2345 771-3900 BOND'S I BOND'S SINGAPORE (. Secretary of State Dean Rusk apologized to the Singapore government, in 1961 in connection with the "improper activities" of U. S.

officials here, it was disclosed Wednesday. Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew produced the letter, and the State Department in Washington confirmed its content. The department also withdrew a blanket denial it made Tuesday to the Prime Minister's charges of an attempt to bribe him. Mr. Lee said the U.

S. government offered him S3 million not to reveal that a central intelligence operative had been caught trying to buy secret information here. The Prime Minister said the offer was made after he told the U. S. government he would keep quiet about the alleged CIA incident "I will say this for President (John Kennedy," Lee said.

"He said no, his government would give me the money if I wanted it, publicly, but not because I had him by the throat." Mr. Lee said Tuesday the Singapore government had arrested a CIA agent, that he (Mr. Lee) offered to keep the thing quiet if given the Shop tonight and Monday 'til 9 p.m. Teen-Agers! You Pay out of full-time Allen Schweitzer Suffers Fatigue Reports circulated in Shasbourg, France Wednesday that Dr. Albert Schweitzer, famed medical missionary, is coonfined to bed because of general fatigue.

Dr. Schweitzer is 90 Herve Alphand, French ambassador to Washington, has been appointed Secretary-General of the Foreign Ministry, the government announced. He will be the highest-ranking career officer under Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville. No replacement for Mr. Alpand in Washington was reported by Information Minister Alain Pey- Dr.

Schweitzer refitte. Mother Claims Bias Right Mrs. J. B. Gaillot, whose segregationist activities got her into hot water with the Catholic Church in New Orleans, says her 19-year-old son has a constitutional right to serve in a segregated Marine unit.

Her son, Kenneth, was called up by Draft Board 155 last week for a physical. He balked when told the physical would be on an integrated basis. Mrs. Gaillot asked the draft board last Friday for written assurance her son would be assigned to a segregated unit should he enlist in the Marines. She handed the board a large Bible and a copy of the U.

S. Constitution, arguing that to put her son in an integrated unit would violate his constitutional right to freedom of religion. She said his religious beliefs include segregaton of the races. The draft board scheduled a hearing for Friday on don't need cash! Open your own account. earnings.

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km MMBaMt)MtMIMIIWiiMMllll I CARAYELLE dlvis'on of BULOYA Downtown, Vine at 6th OPEN MONDAY AND THURSDAY 'Til 9:00 Fret Pirklng-Avls, 526 Vint St. or next door tt Enquirer her request. States had Insisted that these penalties would have to be invoked against the Soviet Union, France and 10 other delinquent countries if the assembly attempted a vote. The only sour note in the windup proceedings was sounded by Halim Budo, Albania's deputy foreign minister, who claimed the solution was a resounding defeat for the United States and that the Johnson administration had backed down only because it had no other choice. Mr.

Budo charged that the United States had raised the voting issue in the first place simply as a pretext "to torpedo, for reasons that were not stated, the 19th session of the General Assembly." It was Mr. Budo who was responsible for the only vote taken by the 19th session, in February. Mr. Budo at that time unexpectedly offered a motion that the assembly "embark upon its normal work." Assembly president Alex Quaison-Sackey of Ghana ruled him out of order, but he challenged the ruling and demanded a roll call vote on his challenge. The United States decided not to Invoke Article 19 on the ground that this was a procedural matter.

Only tiny Mauritania voted with Albania; 97 countries including the United States and the Soviet Union voted against the motion. After that the assembly recessed to give a special peacekeeping committee a chance to resolve the deadlock. The big break came when U. S. Ambassador Arthur J.

Goldberg told the 33-nation committee two weeks ago that the United States had reversed its posi tion. Hong Kong U. S. Base, China St avs TOKYO upi-Red China demanded Wednesday that Britain deny the United States the use of Hong Kong as "a base for their war of aggression against Vietnam." It accused the British of shielding U. s.

operations in the crown colony. The United States has said it has used Hong Kong only as a place for rest and recreation for military men on duty in Vietnam. But this was swept aside by the Chinese in a note to Britain. "The Chinese government has noted that in recent months, as the government of the United States frantically escalates its war of aggression in Vietnam, warships, planes and military personnel of the U. S.

aggressor forces have increasingly frequented Hong Kong and made extensive use of it as a base for their war preparations," said the note broadcast by Peking radio. THE NOTE CHARGED the United States had acquired "large quantities of military supplies and provisions in Hong Kong for their use in Vietnam." "Far from checking these frenzied activities of the U. S. aggressor forces in Hong Kong, the British government has tried in many ways to shield and justify them in an attempt to evade its own responsibility," the note added. The note declared that if Britain allows Hong Kong "to be drawn into the whirlpool of the U.

S. war of aggression it must bear full responsibility for all the consequences arising therefrom." "THE BRITISH government's support of aggression is entirely one of deliberate hostility to the people of China and the whole world and is intolerable to the Chinese government and people," the note added. At about the same time as the note was delivered to British Charge d' Affaires K. M. Wilford in Peking, Red China once more proclaimed its readiness to fight if necessary in Vietnam, In a message to President Ho Chi Minn of North Vietnam, China's leaders said: "The Chinese people have made all necessary preparations and are determined to fight shoulder to shoulder with the Vietnamese people to the very end to defeat U.

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Pages Available:
4,581,924
Years Available:
1841-2024