THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Prince Sihanouk, Bowles Discuss Sanctuary Issue PHNOM PENH, Cambodia ()- Cambodian officials reported yes- terday that the first meeting of U.S. Ambassador Chester Bowles and Prince Norodom Sihanouk was "frank and cordial" but they "disclosed few details of the hour long conversation. Bowles arrived in Phnom Penh Monday on a mission for Presi- dent Johnson to discuss the use of neutral Cambodia as a sanctu- ary by Communnist troops fight- ing in Vietnam. There was a pos- 4sibility the talks would range over the broader issues of Vietnam peace talks. U. S. Pursuit In Cambodia Doubtful WASHINGTON (R) - Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mans- *field said yesterday conversations with President Johnson have convinced him the United States will not permit the pursuit of Communist forces from South Vietnam into neutral Cambodia. "It would be tragedy com- ounded on tragedy," the Mon- ana senator said in an interview. "I commend the President for his unyielding attitude in that re- spect. 'Very Strong Pressures' "I think I have a pretty fair idea of the President's feeling on Cambodia," Mansfield said. "We have discussed it from time to, time." Mansfield, back at the Capitol after a between sessions vacation, said he believes the President "has been subject to very strong pressures" to authorize troop *bssings into Cambodia and per- haps into North Vietnam. Boost Commitment Mansfield said a policy of pur- suing Communist forces into Cambodia would force the United States to boost its Vietnam troop commitment to 700,000 or 750,000 amen. "It would make almost certain an extension of the war, making it open ended," he said. Mansfield added that such a step could lead Sihanouk to ask for aid from the Soviet Union or Com- nunist China to enforce his pro- claimed neutrality. "The real concern is that it would bring about a lateral ex- tension of the war," Mansfield said. "When you take the first inch you don't know when you're going to take the next foot or the ;,text yard." Seal Border Mansfield said Sihanouk is an intelligent and capable leader, determined to preserve his na- tion's neutrality and supported by his people. He said Sihanouk wants neither #de in the Vietnam war to vio- late his border. Mansfield 6aid any steps taken to seal the border to fleeing Communists would have to come through the International Control Commission, created by 1954 agreements which ended French rule of Indochina. India, where Bowles serves as U.S. am- bassador, is chairman of that three nation commission. An informed source said Bowles probably would confer with Siha- nouk again today and leave Phnom Penh tomorrow. Cambodian officials said "useful points of view were exchanged." Sihanouk said before the meet- ing that he cannot permit Ameri- can troops to pursue Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces into Cambodia. Bowles, U.S. ambassador to In- dia, was sent to Cambodia after Sihanouk said he would welcome an American envoy to discuss Communist use of Cambodian bor- der areas. Others attending the Bowles Sihanouk conference were Penn Nouth, Sihanouk's private coun- selor; Premier Son Sann; Gen. Duong Sam 01, the defense min- ister, and Australian Ambassador Sinclair Deschamps, who has rep- resented American diplomatic in- interests in Phnom Penh since Si- hanouk broke relations with the United States in 1965. Bowles and the premier met for an hour prior to the con- ference with Sihanouk. The Cambodian Foreign Office announced it is favorable to an American offer of two helicopters for use by the International Con- trol Commission set up by the 1954 Geneva conference to supervise the operation of agreements end- ing French rule in Indochina. But a Cambodian note to the Australian Embassy said the final decision on the U.S. offer must be made by the commission as well as by the foreign ministers of Britain and the Soviet Union-cochair- men of the Geneva conference. Ro-ky Waits SECOND FAILURE IN U.S.: For Results Brooklyn Tram Of Primary Dies 10 Hours May Seek Nominationi NEW YORK P- Louis Block, Barnard said If Romney Falters the world's fifth heart transplant going a heart try recipient, died yesterday, 10 hours ways have an en In New Hampshire after he was given a woman's because the disea heart a little more than half his to be removed wi WASHINGTON (I'-Gov. Nel-I size. normal. son A. Rockefeller of New York A spokesman at Brooklyn's He added: " expects to await the results of Maimonides M e d i c a 1 Center, States they wer( the March 12 New Hampshire pri, where Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz's unknown factor, mary before taking any final ac- team performed the 8 hour and tion." He was a tion on a GOP presidential nomi- 20 minute operation, said Kan- ring specifically nation draft movement. trowitz would not discuss the ;Block. If Michigan Gov. George Rom- transplant failure "until they get Barnard said if ney fails to make a satisfactory results of the postmortem and die because of showing in N e w Hampshire, report them to the proper medical could have been Rockefeller then will have to de- sources." South African cide whether to become the can- Officials of Maimonides attri- ahead. But if de didate of Republican moderates buted Block's death to "the pump- an unknown fa( against former Vice President ing capacity of the transplanted hit our heads ag Richard M. Nixon. heart and the poor condition of will have so stop Draft Movement the lungs due to the patient's long said. The New York governor's ac- standing heart disease." tion could come in the signing- Block's was the fifth such op-I or the nonsigning-of affidavits eration in 37 days-and the sec- Kaspfrak required to keep his name out of ond to end in death for Kantro- primaries in Wisconsin, Nebraska witz. On Dec. 6 Kantrowitz trans- ImrHove and Oregon. This issue may come planted the heart from one in- to a head Feb. 29, the final day fant boy to another. The boy STANFORD, C to withdraw his name if it is en- lived only 61/2 hours. Kasperak's dona tered in the Wisconsin free for Block, 57, a retired fireman who tinued to functio all test on April 2. weighed 170 pounds, and had a terday and his c However, he would have until long history of heart trouble, was "significant iml March 22 to withdraw from the given the much smaller heart of doctors said. May 28 primary in Oregon, a 100 pound woman, Helen The world's fou where a draft movement :alreadyjKrouch, 29. who died of a brain transplant patie has been organized for him. tumor about noon Tuesdadangled hi legs a person under- ansplant will al- .larged heart sac used heart about ll be bigger than In the United e beaten by an it was not rejec- apparently refer- to the case of I Blaiberg should something that prevented, the program will go ath were due to ctor and "if we gainst a wall, we p and think," he cShows "alif. () - Mike .ted heart con- on normally yes- condition showed provement," his rth human heart nt set up and over the side of imes to encourage ssure is normal, he has no fever," ing medical bul- ificant improve- condition, then ll on the critical splant Patient After Surgery -Associated Press H. RAP BROWN, Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee leader and Black Power militant, last night took refuge within Cuba's UN Mission after an altercation with a New York police- man. Brown Eludes Police In Cuba U-N M ission husband, Charles, approved re- moval of both her heart and kid- ney for transplanting. Kasperak, 54, retired steel worker, had suffered a total heart failure, had lapsed into a coma and was dying when the heart transplant was made. * * * Research To Use Calves' Hearts WASHINGTON (P-A research project aimed at preconditioning the hearts of unborn calves for ultimate transplanting into hu- man beings was disclosed yeser- day by Dr. Charles A. Hufnagel, inventor of the first artificial heart valve. The project could lead to es- tablishment of a living heart bank-and eliminate the need to delay heart transplants until a suitable human donor can be found. Hufnagel said in an interview he is confident the technique ul- timately will be "the real break- through" in heart transplant sur- gery. He said the Georgetown re- search will center on treating calf embryos-still in their mothers' wombs-with drugs and radiation to eliminate or minimize the in- nate tendency of the human body to reject the animals' hearts as a foreign substance. Hufnagel said his research would concentrate on calves because their hearts, shortly after birth, are large enough for potential human use. "And the younger the heart, the better from the standpoint of further minimizing the immune response-the rejection problem," he explained. i i NEW YORK ( P)-Black Power1 militant H. Rap Brown holed up inside the Cuban United Nations Mission on Manhattan's East Side last night after police tried to arrest him during a pushing in- cident on the street outside. By telephone, Brown told a newsman: "This happened on mission territory. My rights are in a gun. . . My lawyer will be Soil Analyzes Failure Soil Analyzer Failure PASADENA, Calif. () - Sur- veyor 7 ran into its first mechani- cal hitch yesterday when a device to analyze soil radiation stuck part way to the lunar surface. A Jet Propulsion Laboratory spokesman said radio signals re- leased the 5x6x7 inch box from a door three feet above the surface but the string by which the box was suspended apparently caught in a ratchet. Scratching Operations Controllers said they would try to jar the box loose with an ex- tendable scoop like the one with which Surveyor 3 dug the first man made trenches on the moon last April. The scoop was expected to be- gin its scratching operations later. If the box is not lowered, one of the major experiments aboard the final unmanned U.S. lunar scout will be blocked. It contains instruments to bombard the sur- face with radiation and determine soil elements by their reaction. A similar device on Surveyor 5 last September established that lunar soil in equatorial regions is much like earth-basically basalt. One of the tasks of Surveyor 7 is to see whether the soil is much different in the south central highlands where it landed near the crater Tycho. The three-legged spacecraft, loaded with instruments to satisfy scientific curiosity, landed softly Tuesday night and televised 1,225 pictures of a science fiction land- scape: ragged ridges, huge boul- ders, treacherous craters. Most interesting of the instru- ments is a hand sized scoop on an extendable arm, a twin of that carried by Surveyor 3 last April which dug several trenches and helped prove the lunar surface is strong enough to bear the weight of manned landings planned as early as next year. During the next two weeks of lunar daylight scientists at Jet Propulsion Laboratory will com- mand the scoop to scratch the surface as deep as 18 inches, shove nearby rocks around and hammer holes in the soil. Analyze Soil It also will be used to move from spot to spot a small box containing a device to analyze the soil by radiation. ' Surveyor 7 is the last of a $500 million series of mechanical moon scouts and the fifth successful one. They have televised more than 67,000 pictures. here in a little while and I'll make a statement in a little while. They have no right to ques- tion me."' The mission claimed diplomatic' immunity, and police were not able to get into the building on East 67th Street. Brown, 24, and an aide in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Bob Smith, were stop- ped by an unidentified policeman as they emerged from the mission. Brown was said to have been carrying a package. "What have you got there?" the policeman inquired. "Why don't you mind your own business and go away?" Brown was quoted in reply. The policeman said a shoving match ensued as he tried to take the two Negroes into custody. No punches were exchanged and Brown and Smith ran back inside the Cuban Mission, while an arm- ed mission guard held the door open for them. The officer who claimed he was pushed by the Negro was de- scribed as a rookie, one of two uniformed patrolmen assigned from the East 67th Street station- house to routine guard duty out- side the mission, which is a few doors east of Fifth Avenue. Brown is head of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Commit- tee. At SNCC headquarters, Julius Lester, an official, was asked about Brown's presence in the Cuban mission. "Yes, we know it," he replied. "We have some people going up there now, trying to settle this peacefully. Lester said an attorney had gone to the mission from the of- fice of William Kunstler, a lawyer involved in numerous civil rights cases. UU11V1 UAMLiivv 1 uzuct. Hot Political Spot Kantrowitz said Miss Krouch's There is clear evidence that thes Oregon move and the action of heart was "rather small-about Gov. Spiro T. Agnew in launching half the size we would have a Maryland draft movement;thought best. have put the New York governor on a hot political spot. U .Difficulties Despite Rockefeller's predic- tions that Romney will spring an Puzzle Jarnard upset in New Hampshire, the gloom among his associates about CAPE TOWN, South Africa (1P) the Michigan governor's chances -Dr. Christian N. Barnard said is thick. yesterday he can give no reason If Romney flounders, they at this stage why the three heart think the heat on Rockefeller to transplants in the United States become. a candidate - which al- have all encountered early post- ready has produced offers to back operative difficulty while both of draft movements in many states his transplants made good initial outside the south-will be inten- progress. sified. Two transplant recipients in The Rockefeller camp is said the United States died within to have discounted the possibility hours and the third was in cri- that Sen. Charles H. Percy of tical condition four days after his Illinois is likely to become a ma- operation. jor factor in the GOP nomination The world's first human heart h v d th d of transplant patient, Louis Wash- Teyhavereadherecord kansky, made good progress at the moderates' delay insgetting first after Barnard's team gave behind a candidate against Barry him a newv heart Dec. 3, but died Goldwater in 1964 and feel that if1hdmaer fromDe uoia. the reluctant Rockefeller is to get 18 days later from pneumonia. into the 1968 race he cannot wait Barnard's second patient, Dr. for a draft at the Aug. 5 Miami Philip Blaiberg, was feeling fine Beach convention. eight days after the operation. Stereotyped Statement Barnard said he doubted if the Rockefeller's associates w e r e small size of the donor heart was notified in advance of the Oregon responsible for the death yester- and Maryland draft drives and day of Louis Block at Maimonides failed to dissuade those involved Medical Center in Brooklyn, N.Y. from acting. But the governor did not go beyond his stereotyped statement that he is not a candi- date and does not want to be- LAST WEE come one, and he left the draft question open by repeating that if it should arise at the conven-Dis tion "I will then face the situa- tion." PTP TIC Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller ofSOpen V Arkansas, the New York gover- nor's brother, said he is delighted that Agnew took the initiative in 4 the draft movement. He said he had not talked to his bother about it. i I 1421 Hill Street 8:30 P.M. his bed several tii circulation. "His blood pre his pulse 108 and said a midmorni letin. It noted "sign ment" in his added. "He is sti list." It was the fourth day after Kasperak received his new heart from Mrs. Virginia Mae White. Mrs. White, 43, died Saturday, night of a brain hemorrhage. Her Colorful Hungarian.-ZOLTON FERENCY- (Ex-Democratic State Chairman) -s-speaks his mind on "THE DEMOCRATS' DILEMMA-L.B.J." j FRIDAY-JOEL SAXE-singing folk, rock, and folk-rock, playing 12-string guitar. SATURDAY-DAVE JOHNS--singing rhythm and blues, folk-rock, and folk music, playing 6- & 12-string guitar and harmonica. GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe Friday, January 12 NOON LUNCHEON REV. RUSSEL FULLER Chairman, Ann Arbor Human Relationship Committee: "Human Relations in Ann Arbor" CINEMA U Federico Fellini's l0k 12 if FRIDAY Evening-6 P.M. Cost Dinner at Guild House For reservations call 662-5189 FIi ...._m._ ... ....._ ......._ ® .____ .._....___._._....._._...__....._.. _.____.____..._.._.J : I J he's here, Joey! LEN CHANDLER fridnv $1.75 with MARCELLO MASTROIANNI GLAUDIA CARDINALE Also: CHAPTER II "FLASH GORDON" Friday . ... Jan. 12 . Jan. 13 75c Aud. A-Angell Hall 7:00 and 9:15 P.M. r 111'29) lIDAVID 0 Aiunuv imcui rvc rnnAnwav O uiTfiewiI