TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WAGE THREE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Greeks To Withdraw m Cyprus, BEGIN TALKS: UAW To Attack GM Automation Troops fro Accept Turkish Terms ANKARA, Turkey ('P)-A politi- Turkey claims were stationed on cal leader emerged from a meet- ing with Premier Suleyman De- mirel yesterday and said Greece had accepted Turkey's basic de- mands in the Cyprus crisis. He added that only differences over application of the agreement remain. Irfan Aksu, chairman of the New Turkey party, said the Greeks had agreed to the key Turkish demand that Greece withdraw some 12,000 troops the Mediterranean island nation in violation of the Zurich agree- ment setting up the independent Cyprus republic in 1960. Aksu and other opposition lead- ers met with Demirel during a recess in a Cabinet meeting called to discuss the latest Greek pro- posals. Demirel had called in all opposition leaders to get a na- tional consensus. Greece agreed to pay comoen- sation for the 25 Turkish Cy- Malaysia Race Riots Bring Mass Arrests p"]ots killed Nov. 15 in fighting with Greek Cypriot forces at two villages, Aksu added. This battlej brought on the latest crisis. Aksu said the Greeks had with- drawn Gen George Grivas from Cyprus. The Turks blamed Gri- vas, a Greek who commands the Cypriot armed forces, for the at- tack on the villages and de-I manded his ouster. He has beenl in Athens since shortly after the crisis erupted. The latest Greek proposals were brought to Ankara from Athens,1 by President Johnson's personal envoy, Cyrus R. Vance. He prepared to ieturn to Atnens carrying Turkish answers to the latest Greek proposals. Remaining Grievances Informed officials say the dis- agreements which remain are a matter of face-saving and tim- ing. Though the substance of thei negotiations are being kept secet, they are believed to be: -Which nation wizi make the first move. -How much tine will be al- lowed Gi eece to withdraw its troops from Cyprus. Turkey has insisted all along that Greece make the first move. One unconfirmed report was that Greece had offered to withdraw troops in three months. -Associated Press LEVELS ACCUSATION Comptroller General Elmer Staats charged yesterday before a Senate-House subcommittee that the government is losing millions because defense contractors use government-owned equipment for pri- vate work without authorization. De Gaulle Blasts U.S. Policies, Brtish Bid for ommon Mt E i a i j t I _ DETROIT (P') - The United Auto Workers, with Ford and1 Chrysler new contracts all wrap-1 ped up, moved on to General Mo-J tors yesterday with indications' that automation and use of com- puters would be major problems. UAW officials distributed a 24- page release in which they ac- cused GM of trying to remove some auto jobs from UAW cate- gory by putting them into com- puterized fields with white collar, nonunion workers. Bargaining Setting the battle line for some anticipated hardnosed bar- gaining, the UAW told GM: "The union never has com-] plained of automation. In fact, iti has staunchly defended automa-f tion, often in spite of member-t ship disbelief that automation isl good for the economy and the total community.4 "The union cannot continue to defend it if it coupled with con- tinuous displacement and erosion of the union with the new method arbitrarily assigned to salary." GM vice president of labor re- lations Louis G. Seaton had told newsmen earlier yesterday as he emerged from a preliminary meet- ing with the UAW that he was optimistic. Hard Work GM's spokesman added that with "hard work and a realistic attitude by both parties these ne- gotiations+ can reach a successfull conclusion." Seaton said he expected it would take until early next year to resolve all local issues at GM's plants. Currently, some 18,000 such unsolved issues remain from an original agenda of 31,000, he reported. GM's No. 1 labor troubleshooter also disclosed that the nation's biggest auto firm had submitted to the UAW earlier this month proposed language of pensions, insurance and supplemental un- employment benefits which he said were similar to the language in she Ford and Chrysler con- tracts. World News Roundup NEW YORK - The Columbia Broadcasting System reported yes- terdaw that Charles F. Frankel, assistant secretary of state for educational and cultural affairs, has resigned in protest against President Johnson's Vietnam poli- cies. The 50 - year - old philosopher and author has headed the State Department's Bureau of Educa- tional and Cultural Affairs for two 'years and three months. Frankel, however, declined to comment on reports that he is stepping out as a result'of differ- ences with President Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk on U.S. policy in Vietnam. BOGOTA, Colombia-Four chil- dren died of poisoning yesterday, bring to 80 the death toll in the weekend disaster at Chiquinquira, where insecticide called parathion became mixed with flour used for baking bread. * .* * LISBON, Portugal-- The death toll that struck west-central Por- tugal has risen to 316, the Interior Ministry announced last night. PENANG, Malaysia (P--Police made mass arrests yesterday in an effort to break up leftists and gangster-type Chinese secret so- cieties accused of triggering three days of racial riots in Malaysia. Curfews were imposed in Penang and the capital, Kuala Lumpur, 180 miles south of here, after riot- ing between Malays and Chinese beginning Friday took 11 lives and left nearly 200 injured, 93 seri- ously. Many Arrested The government reported 419 persons, including about 300 Chi- nese, have been arrested through- out Malaysia under the Internal Security Act, which provides for indefinite imprisonment without trial. Another 270 were detained as curfew violators. In Penang and the neighboring mainland port of Butterworth, po- lice arrested 295 persons, including 191 Chinese and 78 Malays. In Kuala Lumpur, where police credited the mass arrests with pre- venting a general strike, 106 per- sons, including 99 Chinese, were detained. Eighteen persons were arrested elsewhere in Malaysia. Tun Abdul Razak, deputy prime minister, told a news conference in Kuala Lumpur that 22 homes, two shops and a factory had been burned in the riots in Penang and Butterworth over the weekend. He proclaimed the security situ- ation "well under control" in Pe- nang and Kuala Lumpur. Attacks Labor Party Razak devoted most of his news conference to an attack on the left-wing Labor party, whose top leaders have been arrested, ac- cusing them of instigating the ra- cial riots. He said numerous subversive documents, including books con- taining thoughts and speeches of Red China's party Chairman Mao Tse-tung had been found in party offices in Kuala Lumpur and Pe- nang. He said one poster urged that Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rah- man be hanged. In Penang, police said their ar- rests included 84 members of the Chinese secret societies. Confiscate Weapons Police confiscated an arsenal of weapons, including spears, long sword-like knives known as par- angs, slingshots with metal ball bearing missiles and steel hooks from members' homes. These types of weapons were used during the riots. Razak said similar weapons also were found in the leftist Labor party offices in Kuala Lumpur. Thousands of steel-helmeted riot police and soldiers armed with rifles patrolled the streets of Kuala Lumpur, some in armored person- nel carriers. But as a general strike called by leftists fizzled out, most of the' security units were with- drawn to outlying areas. PARIS (/P)-Charles de Gaulle attacked the United States dur- ing his 16th semi-annual news conference yesterday and declared Britain still isn't"ready for entry into the . European C o m m o n Market even though the British government has taken steps for financial order. Hitting at the United States, the 77-year-old French president demanded a halt to what he call- ed the abuse of U.S. industrial penetration of Europe into in- since he returned to power in 1958 flated dollars. And once more he -gave De Gaulle the opportunity blamed the lack of a peace settle- to present his first public reac- ment in the Middle East on the tion to Britain's devaluation of "odious" war in Vietnam. the pound sterling Nov. 18 from U.S. officials in Washington $2.80 to $2.40. Britain devalued in said there would be no comment hopes of strengthening its finan- on De Gaulle's remarks made at cial situation. one of his elaborately staged De Gaulle contended Britain's semiannual news conferences. entry now into the Common In London, British officials Market would wreck it. said De Gaulle's criticism would "The present Common Market not lead to withdrawal of the ap- is incompatible with the British plication for membership for a economy the way it is," he said. place among the six members of "A radical transformation is need- the present Common Market. ed for Britain to be able to melt "We formally applied to six into the Continent.". nations for membership," one of- ficial said. "We await a reply from To even begin negotiations, De six nations" lGaulle said, would be to give ad- De Gaulle needled Canada once vance approval for breaking up again by renewing his appeals for the European community. French - Canadian separation, a stand that created a storm when he visited French-speaking Que- bec Province last summer. Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, visiting in London, re-, Moss Blasts. Draft Policy, Demands Hershey Resign WASHINGTON A) -The dis- pute between Rep. John E. Moss and Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey flarea again yesterday when the California Democrat rejected the draft director's defense of his ac- tions and called again for Her- shey's resignation. "Your response further sup- ports my opinion that you are no longer fit to serve as the director of the Selective Service System," Moss told Hershey in a letter dated Nov. 22 and released yes- terday. Tells Hershey To Resign Moss, who heads the House gov- ernment information subcommit- tee, had told Hershey in a Nov. 17 letter that he should resign for recommending to local draft boards that they remove exemp- tions of students involved in an- tidraft demonstrations. Moss had criticized Hershey earlier for refusing to make public the names of local draft board members. In making his new attack on Hershey Moss made public a Nov. 21 letter he received from Hershey in which the draft director argued his aption carries nut the man- date "I the this that have chtic the r tive Hers Hes i the to a the such port, state Rive ed S Hers ofU1 Congress.fused direct comment on that De believe that had you taken Gaulle remark but said Canada's trouble to have looked into problems "are our problems, to be terb youwou have ond solved by us and not by outside matter you would have found Intreto n ordmsi all the questions that you ntervention in our domestic raised were resolved by spe- affairs." actions of the Congress in De Gaulle in effect vetoed Bri- ecent extension of the Selec- tain's immediate entry into the Service induction authority," Common Market by refusing to hey wrote. approve negotiations on its appli- 'Guided by Congress' cation for membership. "As sweet added that in administering as dreams are," he said, "realities draft law "I must be guided are there." large extent by the intent of De Gaulle blackballed the Brit- Congress" as gathered from ish when they first applied in things as the committee re- 1963. Membership requires the floor debate and a Nov. 16 unanimous approval of all six ment by Chairman L. Mendel market nations - France, West rs 'D-SC) of the House Arm- Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, ervices Committee endorsing Belgium and Luxembourg. hey's directive. The news conference-his 16th PRESIDENT ABDUL RAHMAN Ticket Office Open Weekdays 10:00 - 1:00 and 2:00 - 5:00 EARRINGS V4 Pierced or Pierced-Look r A WONDERFUL GIFT for a MERRY CHRISTMAS Select from our large assortment of shapes, styles, and finishes. Monogrammed earrings, our specialty, are engraved free. Prices from $4.50. arcade jewelry shop 16 NICKELS ARCADE Americans for Democratic Action pre.sents CONGRESSMAN JOHN CONYERS (Democrat, Detroit) speaking on "LIBERAL ACTION PROGRAMS FOR 1968" I I I CATHLEEN VICTOR NESBITT BUONO IN STUDS TERKEL'S Scenery and Lighting by ELDON ELDER Directed by MARCELLA CISNEY I I OAJL.u./r Mv . r- 1111