Newspaper Page Text
Tenting
tonight?
It would certainly pro*
vide spacious shelter, but
that's not exactly the
idea here. A ground crew
prepares a balloon for a
flight at Washington'
Crossing, NJ., holding <
the mouth of the 60-foot I
bag open while propane I
burner hot air is forced in ’
by the gasoline powered •
fan in foreground. The
inflating burner has a
capacity of four million
BTUs per hour. Below, as
the hot air rushes in the
balloon begins to lift off
the ground, almost ready
to soar skyward.
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GEE MEN lookit how the new Federal Bureau of Investigation headquarters is
doming along in Washington. At $102.5 million it will be the capital s costliest build
ing. The J. Edgar Hoover Building by name, of course.
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PFMFMBRANCE OF STYLES PAST, in religious architecture and garments, is
REMEMBKAivLt cteenle peering over the ultramodern roofs of a new re-
of Cologne, West Germany. A
shrine since 1681, the newly remodeled complex includes a church, right, resem
bling a jagged mountain.
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China casts first vote in U.N.
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign News Analyst
To the considerable glee of
the Soviet Union, China has
cast her first veto in the United
Nations.
Chinese Ambassador Huang
Hua’s veto barring Bangladesh
from United Nations’ member
ship risked damaging China’s
U.N. image on a number of
counts. To the last moment,
Huang sought to avoid it.
But in the end, having
exhausted his alternatives,
Huang used the veto, coupling
it with a bitter attack on the
Soviet Union.
How it came about bears
some recounting.
Chinese opposition to Ban
gladesh had its beginnings in
the India-Pakistan war in which
China supported Pakistan and
the Soviet Union backed India.
In the United Nations, the
Soviet Union successfully fend
ed off action that might have
branded India an aggressor and
on the battlefield supplied much
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of the equipment that helped
India win the war.
From it emerged an indepen
dent Bangladesh from what
formerly was East Pakistan.
It placed China in an
uncomfortable dilemma.
China’s Support
Its support of Pakistan was
Analysis
based entirely on power politics
against India and the Soviet
Union and not upon ideology.
As a champion of new nations
and of violent revolution it
could have been expected to
support Bangladesh. As a new
member of the United Nations
it had sought to become the
voice of the Third World and
had pledged never to act as a
super power.
The veto violated all of these
precepts.
Eighty-six nations had recog
nized Bangladesh and Ban
gladesh clearly had the support
of the majority in the United
Nations.
Page 11
Seeking to avoid the veto,
China attempted delaying ac
tion.
She charged that Bangladesh
stood in violation of two U.N.
resolutions, one demanding the
return of all prisoners of war
and the other calling for
removal of all foreign troops on
Bangladesh soil.
She introduced a resolution
which would have delayed U.N.
action on the membership
applications until these two
conditions were met.
That resolution met defeat
with only the Sudan and Guinea
supporting China, three voting
against it and nine abstentions.
Somalia’s Amendment Fails
Somalia then sought to attach
an amendment to the member
ship resolution delaying action
indefinitely. With pressure from
the Soviet Union, it also failed.
Then came the crucial vote.
Eleven favored Bangladesh.
Three nations abstained. Only
China opposed. Huang cast his
first veto.
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, August 31,1972
He accused the Soviet Union
of acting with “honey in mouth
and dagger in heart” against
nations of the Third World.
“The Soviet Union,” he said,
“is trying to reverse black and
white, right and wrong, and has
now reached the height of
truculence.”
The United States remained
aloof from the infighting
between the two former Com
munist allies. It abstained on
the Chinese resolution, voted
for the Somalian amendment
and for Bangladesh member
ship.
China was left with the small
consolation that she had defend
ed U.N. principles.
What it would do to her new
friendships among the Third
World nations remains to be
seen.
SALTY WATER
It has been estimated that the
oceans contain as much as 50
quadrillion tons (50 billion
tons) of dissolved solids.
Quirks
By United Press International
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI)-
Expectant Siberian tigers usual
ly don’t look pregnant, accord
ing to Clyde Hill, curator of
mammals at the San Diego Zoo
—and he should know.
Hill didn’t realize the zoo’s
Siberian tiger was expecting
until attendants sweeping up
the enclosure Tuesday found
the two cubs, a male and a
female, under a pile of leaves.
The pregnancy doesn’t show,
Hill said Wednesday, because
an adult tiger weighs about 600
pounds, and the cubs only about
three pounds each.
STRUGA,Yugoslavia(UPl)—
The organizers of the Struga
poetry festival thought fire
works would add atmosphere to
the open-air readings by 200
poets from 22 nations.
But the firecrackers and
rockets frightened a horse into
bolting through the festival
grounds. Three poets were
injured and the festival was
called off.