SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1967 THE. MICHIGAN DAILY PACE. - *tTU1 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY VAEW s r ur. innc. ri UN Asks Pullout Of Israeli Army Security Council Debates Proposed Solutions to Middle-East Conflict BOMBING HALT NECESSARY: Proposed Bid for UN Action In Vietnam Called Dangerous TUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (P)- The 10 nonpermanent members of the Security Council split yester- day over two different proposals for a UN special representative to go to the Middle East and seek a settlement of the Israeli-Arab war of last June. The split was apparent after a private, informal meeting of their representatives. The council president for Octo- ber, Japanese Ambassador Sen- jin Tsuruoka, told reporters two Soviet Ships, To Support Egyptians By The Associated Press Seven Soviet warships steamed into two Egyptian ports yesterday in a demonstration of armed backing to Egypt, which in less than a week has had two serious clashes with Israel. One destroyer, a communica- tions ship and two supply vessels docked at Port Said at the north- ern end of the Suez Canal. Hun- dreds of Egyptians cheered and waved flags. Officers and men on the destroyer returned ,the wel- come with salutes and martial music. To the west, two submarines and a destroyer sailed into Alex- andria to a tumultuous welcome by whistling tugs and cheers from those aboard fishing boats. The Cairo press described the arrival of the Soviet warships as a "cour- tesy call." But it was noted that the Russians, who first put into port in July, returned several units Sept. 4 after a brief Israeli air raid on Port Said. The sinking of the Israeli de- stroyer Elath by Egyptian mis- siles Oct. 21 and the fierce Is- raeli-Egyptian c a n n o n a d i n g across the southern end of the Suez Canal Tuesday again has brought the situation to a dan- gerous stage. The arrival of the warships was accompanied by an attack on Is- rael by the Soviet government newspaper Izvestia in Moscow. It declared "any minute the sparks of the old fire can burst into rag- ing flames." Izvestia accused Israeli leaders of "criminally playing with peace and. the destiny of their own country" and charged they were encouraged by the U.S. decision this week to send some arms to Israel. Izvestia again demanded that Israel surrender all the Arab ter- ritory it conquered in the June 5-10 war with Egypt, Jordan and Syria. Onathe east bank of the Suez Canal, an Israel colonel com- manding forces opposite the Port of Suez asserted that Algerian, Kuwaiti and Sudanese. soldiers had joined Egyptians in a grad- ual buildup on the west bank. proposals were put on the table and the group would meet again Monday morning to discuss them. Danish Foreign Minister Hans Tabor added that Canada and Denmark had submitted one of the proposals. The other one was drafted in long days of private consulta- tions by India, Argentina, Brazil, Ethiopia, Mali and Nigeria. Informed sources said that the two plans differed in that the six-nation proposal was specific on the aims the special represen- tative should pursue in seeking the settlement, while the Cana- dian-Danishproposal was rather, vague on that point. Each proposal was intended toI become the basis of a resolution for the council to adopt some time next week. The six-nation draft, it was un- derstood, would set forth basic principles for a Middle East set- tlement, including Israeli with- drawal from the Egyptian, Jor- danian and Syrian territory seized in the six-day Arab-Israeli war in June. This request was in reference to the hundreds of square miles of Egyptian, Jordanian and Syrian land taken over by Israel in the. June 5-10 war. The key point on which in- structions were awaited was on the wording of the withdrawal clause. The Indians want it to call for Israeli withdrawal to po- sitions held before the June fight- ing, while the Latin American del- egations back a formulation for withdrawal from "territories oc- cupied as a result of the recent conflict." But sources close to the six ne- gotiators said this difference would not stand in the way of unanimity among them. -Associated Press | BOUNDARY DISPUTE SETTLED- Dignitaries of the United States and Mexico met yesterday at the White House to end a century-oldI border dispute between the two countries. The foreign secretaries of the nations involved signed the Chamizal Treaty transferring the land along the Rio Grande River at El Paso and Ciudad Juarez. From left are: Mexican Foreign Secretary Antonio Carrillo Flores, Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz, President Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Standing is William Whittington of the State Department. IN BALTIMORE: War Protesters Spill Blood Over Selective Servi~ce Files By The Associated Press have many female components A U.S. bid for United Nations;and militiawomen regularly shoot action on Vietnam without halt- , at American planes over the ing the bombing of North Viet- , North, this is the first time wo- nam would not only be ineffec- ,men soldiers armed as well as tive but dangerous, a former men are known to have directly State Department official said engaged in battle against any of! yesterday. the allied forces in South Viet- Ernest A. Gross told the Senate nam. Foreign Relations Committee this Women are generally used by country should not seek U.N. in- the Communists to assist in volvement unless it was prepared treating the wounded, handling to suspend the bombing. supplies and clearing battlefield Otherwise, he said, the United of bodies and weapons. States would expose itself to the - possibility of a formal expression of U.N. opposition to the air war.Rl Protests Proposal Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, (R-Iowa), protested the proposal for unilateral action by this coun- paign "I don't hear many people CHICAGO (M-Governor Ron- talking about stopping the inva- ald Reagan of California and sion by North Vietnam," he said. former Vice President Richard M. "It seems to be all the fault of Nixon denied at separate news the United States. We are being conferences in Chicago yesterday made the culprits." an NBC report that they had Gross. a former assistant sec- reached a "campaign under- retary of state now a lawyer in standing." New York City, testified on pro- Reagan told his news confer- posals to urge President Johnson ence "there are no deals" with to seek U.N. action. Nixon involving the 1968 Repub- Meanwhile Democratic Leader lican nomination for president, Mike Mansfoanasaidand added: "The ,understanding that about 58 senators now are between Nixon and myself is that co-sponsoring his resolution ask- I told him I was not a candidate." ing U.N. action on Vietnam. Mansfield also said that Soviet Reagan was in Chicago to ad- Russia and France are proposing dress the Illinois Chamber of a reconvening of the Geneva Commerce. In the political field, the lame- duck Constituent Assembly got a new speaker. Dinh Xuan Quang, 55, an independent, was approved 41-34 to succeed Phan Khac Suu, who resigned in a huff after the assembly validated results of the Sept. 3 presidential election. Suu charged fraud in the election, in which he ran fourth behind Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu. Quang will administer the oath of office at Thieu's inauguration as president next Tuesday. .opefuls Deny iderStandin' terday that there was a "cam- paign understanding" between Nixon and Reagan that the two men would not fight each other for the 1968 GOP presidential nomination. NBC News said the plan was to support Nixon first, and added: "If he, Nixon, is beaten fair and square in the first three primar- ies, then Reagan gets it." Nixon told a news conference that he has made no agreements with any potential contenders concerning the presidential nom- inatilon. "I have no understandings or agreements with any potential candidates," Nixon asserted. :T . BALTIMORE, Md. (T) - Three men, including a Roman Catholic priest, poured blood into file drawers at a Selective Service of- fice yesterday to protest "the piti- ful waste of American and Viet- namese blood in Southeast Asia." The demonstrators said the' blood was their own. They poured{ it from small bottles into 16 file drawers while a fourth man, a minister of the United Chruch of Christ, stood watch at the office door. UAW President Postpones Major Labor Convention Before and after the men ment property, mutilation of pub- Conference to deal with the poured the blood from small plas- lie records and obstructing Se- Southeast Asian conflict. tic bottles, they handed out a lective Service laws. Women Soldiers prepared statement saying they Two were released after agree- In the war Itself,assquad of were doing so to protest "the piti- ing to sign a personal $1,000 bond eight Communist women soldiers ful waste of American and Viet- that they would appear for a pre- made a suicidal attack Wednes- namese blood, 10,000 miles away." liminary hearing Monday. The day on a U.S. infantry company Colonel James L. Hayes, state other two, including the priest, that was deployed on ambush pa- director of Selective Service, said the Rev. Phillip Berrigan, would trol in the jungles 38 miles north the four walked into the Customs not sign the bond and were of Saigon. House, where seventeen draft placed in the federal section of Lt. Col. Walter E. Adams of boards have their offices, carry- the city jail. Washington, D.C., reporting Fri-3 ing a statement which announced The Baltimore Archdiocese of day on the encounter, said four their intentions. The statement the Catholic Church said in a of the women died under Amer- idetifieIteas heev, statement that Father Berrigan's ican counterfire. The others es- Philip Berrigan, chairman of the action appears to be self-defeat- caped, still shooting. Baltimore Interfaith Peace Mis- ing. Though the Communist forces sion (BIPM), the Rev. James -____ - ----__ Mengelof, David Eberhardt, sec- retary of the BIPM, and Thomas Lewis, a founding member of the BIPM. COME to the GUIlL D H A LLOWE EN "We shed our blood willingly and gratefully in what wet hope is a sacrificial and constructive act." the statement said.s I The four gentlemen came in;PARTY to our receptionist, Mrs. Annie Eaton, and apparently asked her a question or two, said Col. Hayes. Saturday, Oct. 28 "She got up from her desk toj try and help them and with this 7:30 P.M. they walked through our recep- tion barricade of swinging doors(possible) over to our files, which are, of course, government property and Dance[to the "Overcoming Bond" confidential. "These four gentlemen proceed- GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE ed to pull open four file cabinets -16 drawers-and pour blood in them. Asked where they got the blood, THE ARK 1421 H i ll Street THE BUDDY JACK TRIO with Walter Blackwell, Harvey Hill, and Buddy Jack doing blues, pop-protest, Belefante-type songs, folk music, and classical guitar. $1 .00 Cover includes entertainment and refreshments, NBC News reported earlier yes- x' Tt'fT IG1 8:30 P.M. Grads uate Student Council BRUNCH WASHINGTON (]') - Walter Reuther's postponement of a ma- jor labor convention was inter- preted yesterday as strong new evidence that he plans to pull his 1.5 million United Auto Workers out of the AFL-CIO. Reuther, in calling off the No- vember gathering of the AFL- CIO's big Industrial Union De- partment, gave as his reason the press of auto industry bargaining. Sources indicated that many in -the hierarchy of the 14-million member AFL-CIO think Reuther canceled the meeting to keep his hand free for a major confronta- tion with George Meany at the AFL-CIO convention in Miami Beach, Fla., in December. Meany is president of the AFL- CIO and has been engaged in a feud with Reuther for over a year. The Industrial Union Depart- ment, embracing 60 of the AFL- CIO's 129 unions with some 6% million members, is Reuther's last remaining power base in the giant labor federation.! Reuther joined with Meany 12 years ago in uniting the old AFL and CIO. The other 24 members of the Industrial Union Department ex- ecutive board quickly approved Reuther's request to postpone the Nov. 15 convention, and report- edly were relieved to get off a potential hot spot. Reuther a year ago used the Industrial Union Department convention to begin his assault on Meany's leadership. Officials of the department said the meeting will be re- scheduled "sometime after the first of the year" -- which would be after the AFL-CIO convention. The Meany-Reuther battle is the biggest collision of labor's titans since the AFL-CIO kicked out the 1.8-million m e m b e r Teamsters Union on corruption, charges 10 years ago.! 1l ' ' ! iii it il (lox and bagels, and ...) Tomorrow, Oct. 29, at noon THE HON. GAD RANON Israeli Consul ISRAEL: By Right or Sufferance Affiliates $1 Others $1.25 B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation 1429 Hill St. I Father Berrigan replied, "Suffice to say that it is our own blood." All four men were arrested by the FBI and taken before a U.S. Commissioner. They were charged by U.S. Attorney Stephen H. Sachs with destruction of govern- CINEMA II I presents r' World News Roundup JONI MITCHELL 4 ANTHONY QUINN GUILIETTA-MASINA I in By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. -- ' The 122-nation Trusteeship Com- mittee of the U.N. General As- sembly approved a resolution yes- terday demanding that Britain use force to bring "an effective and speedy" end to the rebel Rho- desian government of Ian Smith. Britain, which ruled Rhodesia before Smith declared independ- ence unilaterally in November of 1965, has repeatedly told the United Nations it will not use force against the white minority government. TEL AVIV, Israel - Defense Minister Moshe Dayan said Friday King Hussein of Jordan was reported to have recognized Israel as a nation anti said this was the monarch's "first step toward realism." TONIGHT CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE dir. Val Newton, 1964 He referred at a news confer- ence to Hussein's answer in Paris Thursday to reporters' questions. Question: Do you consider Is- rael has a right to exist? Hussein: I suppose it is a na- tion, whether we like it or not. M A D R I D, Spain - Police clashed with three workers' groups and with students in Ma- drid yesterday and broke up dem- onstrations for higher wages and the right to organize unions. The first clash, with 300 stu- dents, occurred on the campus of Madrid University. The students, showing solidarity with the work- ers, threw stones but were dis- persed by helmeted riot police using high pressure water hoses and dogs. I FEDERICO FELLINI'S t _ E s i { { k }} }}( E1 kIi t(# 5t} t How can this group be the only contender in the -V - Conpetition being held Oct. 30-Nov 3 at North Campus Commons 0 Bands may obtain opplications and sign up for times to play at UAC office in Union or League LA STR DA SHORT: Chapter 6, FLASH GORDON TONIGHT and SUNDAY 8 P.M.-$1.50-after 2nd set-$1.00 FRIDAY SATURDAY 7 and 9:15 P.M. 50c I I gqJBULJ(Y iOUS~B AUD. A, ANGELL HALL woulamma No "IN CONCERT" UNION-LEAGUE iIuke ENTERTAINMENT SATURDAY 4 NOVEMBER MICHIGAN MEN'S GLEE CLUB OHIO STATE MEN'S GLEE CLUB o USA I r'" '1 rD PLUS: BOB McGRATH-Tenor THE FAR EAST TOUR SHOW } (IT'S LIKE A BOB HOPE SHOW) r 4