PACE 10-B HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Oregon Wednesday. August 28, 1963
Birth Of Tiny New Nation Remains Uncertain
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
By PHIL KEWSOM
tTPt Pnroltrn KcwB Analvst
The flags were ready and the
musicians renearsed 10 welcome
on Aiip. 31 Uie ocaceful birth of
a new nation of 10 million per
sons to be known as Malaysia.
But the chances were increas
ing today that it may be a still
born birth.
Malaysia is or was a dream
diiW of the British who hoped
to weld into a single anti-Communist
nation former Southeast
Asia holdings comprised of Ma
laya. Singapore. North Borneo,
including the sultante of Brunei,
and Sarawak. The capital would
be Kuala Lampur in presently
independent Malaya.
Unquestionably in favor of fed
eration were Malaya and Singa-
oore.
Recent elections in North
Borneo and Sarawak had con
vinced the British that these
areas also wished to join.
Situation Eases
Despite occasional seemingly
conciliatory gestures, unalterably
opposed was President Sukarno
of Indonesia and less violently.
the Philippines, with a historic
but scarcely tangible claim of its
own on North Borneo.
Sukarno charged the plan for
Malaysian federation was a West
ern plot to surround Indonesia
and threatened it with a "confron
tation" similar to that by which
he at last wrested Western New
Guinea from tiie Dutch.
Tha situation eased after a
Tokvo meetinff between Sukarno
and chief federation mover Prince
Abdul Rahman, prime minister of
Malava and seemed to ease fur
ther ultrr a Manila meeting which
also included President Diosdado
Macpagal of the Philippines.
There the three Initialled agree
ment on a loose confederation
which would include the new na
tion and which would be called
.Maphilindo.
British Reluctant
So far as Sukarno was con
cerned these turned out simply
I to be delaying tactics.
In the Maphilmoud agreement
Back-fo-Campus
to
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was a clause calling upon United
.Nations Secretary General U
Thant to send teams into North
Borneo and Sarawak to deter
mine whether elections there had
been "properly" conducted.
The declaration also referred to
British and American bases
the area as "temporary."
The British reluctantly, and
Thant with the express reserva
tion that his findings should be
final, agreed to the inspection.
But back at home in Jakarta,
it also became obvious that Su
karno had not budged from his
previous stand in opposition to
Malaysia.
As British forces in Singapore
and North Borneo remained on
the alert and British naval ves
sels cruised off shore, it was
plain that Sukarno's "confronta
tion" was on in full force.
And the birth of Malaysia, al
ready set back by at least a
month, could be d e 1 a y ed indefinitely.
Vote Favors
Shelter Bill
WASHINGTON (UPI)-The na
tional civil defense program took
its biggest step forward in con
gressional history Tuesday when
the House Armed Services Com
mittee approved a limited fall
out shelter plan designed to pro
tect 11 million Americans.
By a vote of 32-4. the commit
tee endorsed a bill that would
permit the federal government to
spend $190.6 million on the proj
ect during the current fiscal year.
Congress would review the plan
next year and decide if it should
complete the rest of the project
ed five-year program to provide
95 million spaces at a cost of
more than $2 billion. Added to
existing spaces, the ultimate fig
ure would be 240 million spaces.
Committee Chairman Carl Vin
son, D-Ga., successfully beat
back Republican attempts to
trim down the size of the bill. A
cut would have ranged from 125
million to. 175 million.
The program w as recommended
by a subcommittee headed by
Rep. F. Edward Hebert, D-La.
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Injunction Bars
Title Changes
PORTLAND iUPH - Federal
Judge William G. East today is
sued a temporary injunction bar
ling any action that would affect
the title of status of the Pilot
Inn at Bend.
The injunction was issued al
the request of the U. S. attorney's
office, which has filed a com
plaint that owners William and
Gertrude Corbctt made a fraud
ulent mortgage assignment to de
feat government tax liens.
Trial on that complaint is
scheduled for mid-October.
The court order also stays ac
tion by the Deschutes County
Circuit Court foreclosing on an
ailcged second mortgage unlil
after the government complaint
has been decided.
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DAIRY
MR. AND MRS. LESTER
JONES entertained relatives and
friends with a picnic at their
home on Sunday. GuesLs were
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Miller and fam
ily, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Wolfe
and Juanita, Mr. and Mrs. J. B.
Horstey and family, and Mis.
(Hatha Jones, all of Klamalh
Kalis: Mr. and Mrs. Jolin Drown
and Alex. Bonanza: Mr. and Mrs
Harlan Prough and Mrs. Maude
Conquergood, Dairy; and Mr. and
Mis. Ray Jones and family.
Grants Pass.
MR. AND MRS. HARVEY
RL'TTS spent the weekend al
Roseburg with son Billy and oili
er relatives and friends.
ntl.l ni'RGDORF from Cali
fornia arrived Friday for a sur
prise visit wilh his great-uncle. Al
beit Burqdorf, and Mrs. Virgil I
Schmoe and family.
MR. AND MRS. RAY JONES.
and family of Giants Pass spent
the weekend with his paronn.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Jones. They I
look their two daughters home
after a week here.
MR. AND MRS. KEITH TI R
NEK and Roxie. Mr. and Mrs
John Robertson of Grants Pass.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Schmoe and
family, Albert, Eldon and Bilkf
Burgdoif enjoyed a picnic al
Moore Park Sunday. The Robert
sons returned to their home after
Lhe picnic. They had been visit-j
ing her daughter, Mrs. Keith Tur
ner, and family.
MR. AND MRS. ROY HILL
and sons of Fallon. Nov., spent
a few days with her parents, Mr
and Mi s." Frank Challis. The (our
buys slaved with their grandpar-
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