Newspaper Page Text
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When U.N. goes home
By NEA/London Economist News Service
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. -
(LENS) — One thing which
contributed to the less than
harmonious mood of the
Kissinger trip to China was a
sharp disagreement over the
Korean question, which came
up for a vote in the United
Nations’ political committee
last week.
The United States and China
have been on opposite sides of
the debate over how to
replace the U.N. command in
Korea. The committee voted
59 to 51 in favor of the resolu
tion supported by the United
States (and its South Korean
ally) which calls for main
taining the existing armistice
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Would you believe
that this ghostly figure and
the elegant little lady at
her toilette, right, are one
and the same? The two
very different views are
the result of modern
technology applied to an
tique dolls at the Strong
Museum in Rochester,
N.Y. Scientists at Eastman
Kodak in Rochester took
radiographs of some of
the 27,000 dolls on dis
play to detect hidden
flaws, with some striking
visual results.
Elegant French court lady
in a radiograph, right,
reveals a safety pin
holding her skirt together.
Springs and levers that
cause her arms and head
to move are also visible.
Some dolls in the
museum’s collection are
valued in the thousands of
dollars.
The radiograph’s spectral
swimmer, below left,
appears somewhat less
graceful to the naked
eye. The 19th-century doll
has a cork body that
keeps it afloat and
wooden arms that thrash
for locomotion.
arrangements until a sub
stitute peace-keeping formula
has been devised
Kissinger has proposed a
four-power conference con
sisting of America, China and
the two Koreas to produce
such a formula
So far, so good. But then, in
a display of double-think un
precedented even for the U N.
the committee went on to vote
51 to 38 to approve the
communist-backed resolution
as well This endorsed North
Korea’s demand that the ar
mistice be replaced by a
peace treaty signed only by
the parties to the 1953 ar
mistice — that is, by the
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United States and North
Korea. It also called for the
withdrawal of all American
forces from Korea.
Since the Americans are
pledged to reject any arrange
ment that excludes the South
Koreans, and the communists
are committed to support
North Korea, which insists it
will not deal with South
Korea, neither resolution can
have any force whatsoever.
In any event, even the dis
solution of the U N. com
mand, which is now supported
by both sides, is the business
of the Security Council, not
the Assembly. And if the op
posing plans for replacing the
As for the American forces
in Korea, America’s U N. am
bassador, Daniel P.
Moynihan, reminded the
Assembly that fewer than 300
men are serving under the
U.N. flag; the other 40,000
Americans are stationed
there in accordance with a
bilateral security treaty. They
will not be leaving at the
pleasure of the U.N.
And, judging from hints in
private conversation, this will
not cause displeasure in Pek
ing.
Georgia
Trooper
cleared
OPELIKA, Ala. (UPI) - A
federal court jury Wednesday
cleared Georgia State trooper
Thomas Raines of charges he
violated the rights of an
Alabama man by chasing him
across the state line and fatally
shooting him.
The trial, in its fourth day
before U.S. District Judge
Robert Varner, ended in the
acquittal after nearly two hours
of deliberation by the jury.
Raines, charged with violat
ing the rights of David Pickard,
19, of Roanoke, Ala., told his
superiors he had persued
Pickard for a traffic violation
in Georgia and followed the
youth across the state line into
Alabama.
The officer said he and
Pickard got into a scuffle when
Pickard stopped near Rock Mill
Junior High School and, Raines
said, during the tussle he felt
his . revolver being removed
from the holster.
He testified Pickard broke
free and fled, then turned as if
to fire the trooper’s revolver.
armistice are submitted to the
council, both Koreas can
count on veto-wielding friends
there.
(<•) The Economist of London
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Booze: talk more and listen less
CHICAGO (UPI) - A study
costing several thousand dollars
shows what some people might
think is obvious: after a few
drinks, the average person
talks more and listens less.
Dr. Robert Smith of the
University of Chicago said
today he does not think his
study is a waste of money or
that the conclusion was so
apparent.
He said he thinks public
opinions “tend not to be based
on very accurate information.”
Most people think alcohol
tends to reduce anxiety. But
according to another study
Smith conducted, that isn’t
true, “even in a nonthreatening
situation.”
“Actually, it sometimes in
creases anxiety, which is quite
opposite to what the general
public believes,” he said.
To determine the results of
alcohol on social conversations
of “relatively normal people,”
not heavy drinkers, Smith used
18 volunteer couples aged 21 to
30.
Some drank 80-proof vodka in
two peppermint-flavored cock
tails. Some drank two pepper
mint drinks without vodka.
Smith said the peppermint
vodka drink was used because
“it had enough flavor so that it
was difficult for a person to
accurately say certainly wheth
er he had alcohol or something
else,” and because vodka is
used in many mixed drinks.
“Over all, alcohol appeared
Male dancers
arrested
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Two
go-go dancers were arrested
Wednesday and charged with
public indecency. Both were
men.
The male dancers, aged 20
and 24, were performing at a
special “ladies” show at a
suburban nightclub.
Three undercover police offic
ers —two men and a woman —
observed the performances and
arrested the two. The club’s
owner also was arrested and
charged with pandering and
obscenity.
Page 15
to make social communication
more disorganized and intox
icated subjects seemed less
likely to follow conventional
rules of etiquette in their
speech,” Smith said.
“Participants broke into their
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partner’s conversations more
frequently, and their responses
tended to show less acknowl
edgement of what their partner
was talking about.”
Smith said the study was
conducted while he was at the
University of California at
Irvine and was funded by that
school, the University of
Chicago, and a federal grant.
He doesn’t recall exactly how
much it cost but it was in the
“few thousand dollars range.”