FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAE THREUE Her atetHeln C1l I, 11114 L' L' At LBJ To Send Bowles To Talk with Sihanouk H eart Patient H ealing Quickly;, NBC Retains Sole Photo Rights WEAPONS CHARGE: Find Jones Guilty For Riot Activity 'On 'Sanctuary' Issue Chester Bowles U.S.-North Vietnam t Negotiations Possible' SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (')-Pres- ident' Johnson announced yester- day he is sending Ambassador Chester Bowles to confer with Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia on the question of use by Communist Vietnamese of his country as a sanctuary. The Texas White House state- ment said in part: "The United States government is sending a representative to.. Cambodia in response to the indi- cation given by His Highess Prince Norodom Shihanouk, chief of state of Cambodia, that he would agree to receive an emissary of President Johnson . . . . (they agreed) Mr. Bowles should arrive in Phnof Penh within the next few days." At issue in such talks, is what U.S. officials term the growing use of Cambodia as a sanctuary for North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops battling the United States in South Vietnam. ICC Experience Bowles was reportedly chosen for the Cambodian mission be- cause of his experience in work- ing with the Indian government on U.S. efforts to increase the ef- fectiveness of the International Control Commission (ICC) in Southeast Asia. He participated in talks in New Delhi with Cambodian officials in 1965 after Sihanouk broke diplo- matic relations with the United States. The prince at that time accused the Central Intelligence Agency of plotting against him. Bowles is known to have con- sulted in New Delhi with Indian officials on the sanctuary issue. Beef Up The United States has urged beefing up of the ICC. And Si- hanouk, in extending an invita- tion to a U.S. envoy, blamed Communist Poland for using its veto power to block an extension of ICC operations. India and Can- ada are the other ICC members. In the same statement-in re- sponse to questions posed by the Post-Sihanouk switched an ear- lier stand in acknowledging some, Vietnamese Communist use of his' nation as a sanctuary. And he said his nation would not fight U.S. troops engaged in "hot pur- suit" of enemy forces into Cam- bodia so long as no population centers were involved. In a New Year's Day statement, Sihanouk explained his position this way: "If Mr. Johnson wants to ,send an ambassador to Cam- bodia to negotiate, this is possi- ble, but what is going to be nego- tiated? There will be negotiations so that the two countries do not become enemies. CAPE TOWN, South Africa (P) -With Dr. Philip Blaiberg's con- dition described as very good, the medical superintendent of Groote Schuur Hospital said yesterday the chances are "very remote" that the 58-year-old patient's body will reject the heart he re- ceived in Tuesday's transplant. Blaiberg, the third person to ever receive a heart transplant, and the second by the staff of Dr. Christian Barnard, was described as being in "entirely satisfactory condition" yesterday by staff members at the hospital. Blaiberg remained in an oxygen' tent under constant observation and the hospital said he was mak- ing "satisfactory progress." Meanwhile, the National Broad- casting Co. was successful in court Wednesday in protecting its exclusive photo coverage and interview rights for history's third transplant patient. NBC said it contracted with Dr. and Mrs. Blaiberg last Friday to pay them $9,000 for exclusive films and interviews before the operation, $25,000 for "publication of the first exclusive film or pic- tures of the operation," and $16,000 for exclusive coverage afterward. Dr. Barnard refused to permit NBC to photograph the operation, and court sources said this ap- parently would reduce the Blai- bergs' take $25,000. But NBC in an affidavit to the Supreme Court said photographer Don McKen- zie slipped into the gallery of the operating theater and made pho- tographs of the operation before Dr. M. C. Botha, a member of the surgical team, ejected him. Justice Basil F. J. Banks issued an order temporarily restraining McKenzie from selling or dispos- ing of photographs relating to the operation. He was ordered to ap- pear for a hearing Jan. 17 to de- termine whether the restraining order should be made permanent. At the same time the retired dentist's lawyers announced that he and his wife will not keep for personal use any money they are due to receive under the contract. Geneva Commission Patrol Of Viet Border Unlikely NEW DELHI (A') - An Indian government spokesman said yes- terday the International Control Commission, set up to supervise the 1954 Geneva Agreements on Indochina, would not be able to investigate any incidents along Cambodia's border with South Vietnam. The spokesman said the com- mission's military components have been withdrawn from Cam- bodia and only political represent- atives remain. He said it was doubtful.whether the commission's By The Associated Press Washington officials have noted that U.S. Ambassador Chester Bowles' impending trip to the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh mould lead to contacts with North Vietnamese and Viet Cong repre- sentatives there. Interest in such a possibility has 'been heightened by a recent year-end statement by North Vietnamese foreign minister Ngu- yen Duy Trinh. He said North Vietnam "will talk" with the United States if China To Arm Cambodians PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (P)- The Cambodian government ac- cepted 11 planes and several dozen antiaircraft guns from Communist China Wednesday and claimed once again that it is threatened by the United States. Accepting the military aid on behalf of Prince Norodom Sih- anouk, the chief of state, Premier Son Sann said: "The important military aid that our friend China gives us has a great significance in the present circumstances. We see growing 'continuously the threat of Ameri- can intervention against our inde- pendence, our neutrality and our territorial integrity." They said money received "will be donated to organizations and individuals connected with the heart transplant operation.". The lawyers said the Blaibergs had avoided publicity until they were approached by NBC for ex- clusive rights. They added the Blaibergs contracted on the basis that shares of the income be paid to the hospital or to the recently established Christian B a r n a r d Fund for heart research or the estate of the heart donor; Clive Haupt. Haupt, a 24-year-old factory worker, died of a stroke. Mrs. Haupt declined to say whether she knew anything about the prospect of receiving a share in the contract. "It's a lot of money," the young widow said. Dr. Jacobs Burger, the medical superintendent, said pictures were not allowed because of the risk of infection from the filming crew. The South African photographer, Don McKenzie, was ejected from the gallery when his presence was discovered. "We caught some NBC people in the corridor and threw them out," said Burger. "I do not know if they had taken any pictures." Another hospital spokesman said that Blaiberg was in good spirits and although he had eaten no solid foods, he began taking fluids by mouth Wednesday, less than 24 hours after the five hour operation. The spokesman said he might be given some soft boiled egg today. Blaiberg is expected to remain in the oxygen tent for another three or four days. Checks are be- ing made on his pulse rate and blood pressure at least every half hour. His blood gases are an- anlyzed twice daily, and the chemical content of the blood is tested every four hours. NEWARK () - LeRoi Jones, { the Negro poet playwright who advocates separation of"the races, was sentenced Thursday to 21/2 to 3 years in state prison and fined $1,000 for possession of weapons during the Newark race riots last summer. Jones will not be eligible for parole for 21/ years. Essex County Judge Leon W. Kapp handed down the sentences to Jones and two co-defendants citing excerpts from Jones' writ- ings and calling them "a diabolic prescription to commit murder and to steal." Jones, in turn, shouted back: "I don't agree that this is a righteous court. You are not a righteous judge. You represent a crumbling structure of society." One co-defendant, Charles Mc- Cray, 33, was sentenced to 18 months in the Essex County Peni- tentiary-12 months in custody and the rest on probation and fined $500. The other, Barry Wynn, 23, also received an 18 month term-nine in custody and I nine on probation-and was fined $250. Judge Kapp turned down ap- peals by defense lawyers to stayt the sentences.1 Jones, 33, and his co-defen- dants were convicted Nov. 7 of possessing two pistols in their1 camper bus in the heart of the Newark riot area during the peakf of the July disturbances. Their trial was held in Morris town after their attorneys requested a change of venue. Before passing sentence, Judge Kapp read from an article he said Jones wrote last month in Ever- green Publications. He quotedl Jones as urging Negroes toI "smash windows, take what you and when the*Americans halt un- conditionally the bombing of North Vietnam and other acts of war. Previous Hanoi statements have said only that cessation of the bombing could lead to talks. Us- ually they said such an end to bombing would have to be per- manent, a word Trinh did not use. Cautious reaction from Secre- tary of State Dean Rusk in a news conference last Thursday was the first public comment from a top administration o f f i c i al amid swelling peace speculations. "I cannot tell you today kwheth- er there is a change or not" in Hanoi's previously tough line against peace negotiations, Rusk said. But he refused to rule out the possibility of a genuine peace feeler from Hanoi. "It would be premature for me to brush this aside as purely a propaganda ,play," he said. Rusk declared the U.S. position remains as President Johnson put it in a San Antonio speech last Sept. 29: "The United States is willing to stop all aerial and naval bom- bardment of North Vietnam when this will lead promptly to produc- tive discussions. We, of course, assume that while discussions pro- ceed, North Vietnam would not take advantage of the bombing cessation or limitation." three members-India, Poland and Canada-would agree to re-estab- lish military functions in Cam- bodia. The question of violations of the Cambodia-Vietnam frontier has been raised by American military officials seeking permission for "hot pursuit" across the border of Vietnamese Communist guerril- la units they say are operating from bases in Cambodian jungles. Not Intervene Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia has been quoted as say- ing his armed forces would not intervene if U.S. troops engaged in limited combat on Cambodian soil. However he has rejected an American proposal that the Inter- national Control Commission be strengthened to keep the Vietnam- ese Communists out of his coun- try. India is chairman of the com- mission, created at the 1954 Ge- neva conference, that brought an end to fighting between Vietminh and French forces in the Indo- china states of Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam. Hypothetical Question Secretary of State Dean Rusk said in a recent press conference that the issue of "hot pursuit" by U.S. forces into Cambodia now is a "hypothetical question." "We want to eliminatethe ques- tion by eliminating the conditions which cause it," he said. "If Cambodia and the Inter- national Control Commission can come to some arrangements that will remove the cause the presence of Communist forces on Cam- bodian territory we would much prefer that solution." LeRoi Jones want, take white persons' lives, but get what you need." Kapp told Jones, "I believe you were an active participant in burning Newark and were making an inspection tour" at the time of the arrest. "You have the ability to ,make a wholesome contribution but you are in the vanguard of radicals who would dstroy our democratic society," the judge commented. "You are sick," he added. "Not as sick as you," Jones shot back. The trio's convictions carried maximum sentences of three years. U JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE' on Suits-Sport Coats-Topcoits-Slacks Everybody saves on our ClothingSale ...Name Brands only, and the best of quality 'State Street on the C am pus Norodom Sihanouk 71 f HEAR HOWE "The most cheerful Marxist revisionist in America." Christian Science Monitor I I IRVING HOWE WRITER-IN-RESITDENCE JANUARY 15-28 I. iie £ir4igan Dail1 OFFICE HOURS Circulation-764-0558 Complaints-9-1 1:30 I I ,%VM