FRIDAric JULY x4, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGF TMU FRIDAY. JUlY 14, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAE4F~ trrn 1 :7uL 1i1;Y, *Arab Bloc Insists Israel Surrender Claim to Old City TO CONSULT ALLIES: SEE Johnson, Westmoreland Agree on Need for Troops r UNITED NATIONS (P) - Amid delay over initial peace moves in Suez sector, the U.N. General As- sembly heard Arab and Commun- ist delegates voice new demands yesterday that Israel be compelled to give up the Old City of Jerusalem. A U.N. spokesman said no ob- servers would be sent to the Is- raeli-Egyptian Suez front until final agreement is worked out on their nationality and just where they will be stationed. Lt. Gen. Odd Bull, Norwegian commander of the U.N. Palestine truce supervisory organization, conferred with Egyptian officials in Cairo and planned new talks Cairo Parley To Consider June Defeat CAIRO (A')-The four most bel- ligerent Arab nations opened 'a summit conference in Cairo yes- terday to discuss means to erase the consequences of last month's war with Israel. Meeting in secret session in the Presidential Palace were President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, President Noureddin Atassi of Syria, President Abdel Rahman Aref of Iraq and President Hou- ant Boumedienne of Algeria. Ahmed Mahgoub They are expected to be joined today by Prime Minister Moham- med Ahmed Mahgoub of Sudan, who is flying from New York, where he attended the UN General Assembly meetings on the Middle East crisis. These five are the Arab leaders most determined to carry on the war against Israel until the con- sequences of the defeat in the June war are eradicated. Nasser,' however, is reported to favor building up the Arab ar- mies to a maximum of prepared- ness before launching what is oft- en called "the second round" of this fight against Israel. Boumedienne and Atassi appear to be pressing for an immediate resumption of military operations against Israel, and Aref and Mah- goub may side with them. King Hussein of Jordan met with Nasser and Boumedienne in Cairo early this week but is not included in the second Arab sum- mit meeting. Jordan Socialist Syria regards mon- archist Jordan with suspicion, and before the war with Israel was ad- vocating the overthrow of Hus- sein. That suspician was not eras- ed when Hussein made up with his old enemy, Nasser, signed a mutual-defense treaty, then join- ed in the war against Israel. As a militant Socialist, Bou- medienne is considered cool to- ward Hussein. He did not' attend the first meeting between Nasser and Hussein this week but enter- ed the joint talks later. Atassi was the last of the four leaders to arrive in Cairo, landing yesterday morning. today with the Israelis in Jerus- alem. Bull is trying to get agreement on a 25-man observer force, in accord with a consensus reached in the Security Council Monday. Both countries have agreed to accept observers. In the 122-nation assembly, delegates from the Communist and Arab countries threw their support behind a Pakistani reso- lution deploring Israel's refusal to rescind measures taken to put Jerusalem's Old City under its control. The resolution called also for the Security Council to take the necessary measures to ensure compliance with the resolution. A vote on the Pakistani resolu- tion is not likely until early next week. Approval Most delegates predicted the resolution would be approved in the assembly, but some believed Israeli moves to assure access to the holy shrines might influence the vote. Official Israeli sources said in Jerusalem that Israel and the Vatican were near agreement that special status should be given to the holy places. Msgr. Angelo Felici, Vatican undersecretary for extraordinary affairs, was wind- ing up a week of discreet diplo- macy in Jerusalem, including a meeting with President Zalman Shazar. Syrian Ambassador George J. Tomeh, who described himself as a Christian Arab, asserted that Jewish control over the holy places was unacceptable to Mos- lems. Soviet Union Meanwhile, Party General Sec- retary Leonid I. Brezhnev and Premier Alexei N. Kosygin re- turned yesterday to the Soviet Union after attending the East European summit conference in Budapest. The Soviet-bloc leaders, at the end of the two-day secret meeting issued a statement demanding that Israel withdraw from Arab territory conquered in the June war. But it made no threat of a "resolute rebuff" if Israel refused. The same East European leaders made this threat in a statement after a Moscow meeting June 9. -Associated Press ARAB SUMMIT CONFERENCE, opened yesterday in Cairo, included, left to right, Presidents Houari Boumedienne of Algeria, Abdel Rahman Aref of Iraq, Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, and Nur Eddin Atassi of Syria. -- - -- - - - - - - - - -- ----------- COMMUNIST TERRORISM: Hong Kong Rioting Continues As rits Squads Seek Calm WASHINGTON (A -- President question of McNan Johnson said yesterday he and his er, who were prese key advisers, including Gen. Wil- too. liam C. Westmoreland, "have McNamara sai reached a meeting of the minds" could be met wit on the need for additional troops draft calls and wi in Vietnam. the present one-ye Westmoreland, the U.S. com- of duty in Vietna mander in Vietnam, was an over- Westmoreland night guest at the White House, have made treme He joined Johnson at an im- militarily, that th prompty news conference and as- has achieved its serted, "I am being provided forces the Communists as I have recommended." No Figures Given Neither he nor Johnson would ~ ~ . give any figure on the number of additional troops to be sent to the fighting front. Each emphasized this will be determined after con-cutioswhSuhVena cultations with South Vietnam and other allies in the conflict, SAIGON 0P)-U who will be asked to boost their gaged elsewheref manpower contributions. threw their weigh He added that Westmoreland, day into theI Secretary of Defense Robert 'S. against the Nor McNamara and Army Gen. Earle build-up on the G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint tively stabilized fx Chiefs of Staff, were agreed on itarized zone. troop needs. But he said: "We Three waves of1 cannot today give you any specific slashed at enemy figure."~ zone whose fire The news conference, held in a for the death of sitting room in the President's Americans killed living quarters, obviously was in- third highest we tended to counter growing specu- war. lation that a split might be devel- Explo. oping within the administration The enemy posi on the question of troop reinforce- border buffer terr ments. dug in. It remai To emphasize solidarity, John- whether the explo son asked Westmoreland if the high-flying, eight general agreed with the "meeting fortresses were a of the minds" statement. tive than the day- "Yes sir," the Vietnam com- fire of American; mander replied. er-bombers. Silen Johnson then asked the same weapons has prov nara and Wheel- nt. They agreed, d troop needs thout increasing ithout extending ar limit on tours m. meet their goals, and that "t enemy has not won a single sig ficant victory in the past year." Since McNamara returned Tu day ight from his ninth insp tion trip to Vietnam, he has be pictured as feeling that perha better use might be made of Am ican troops already in that coi try. This led, as much as anythi to speculation of disagreeme the ni- es- ec- een aps er- un- ng, nts 'st- °T E said "we ndous progress" e United States objectives, that between McNamara and We have failed to moreland. 52 Bombers Renew tarized, Zone Attacks ;. ,r ++; U " wt +w', P' t l 'r wrf' ;,Fra ,' .S. B52 jets, en- for two months, ht again yester- American drive rth Vietnamese war's one rela- ront, the demil- the aerial giants gunposts in the was responsible mnany of the 282 last week, the kly toll of the sives tions within the itory are deeply ned to be seen sives lost by the -engine Strato- ny more effec- -to-day counter- guns and fight- cing the enemy ed to be quite a HONG KONG OP)-Communists bombed a police station, fought a brief skirmish with police, and stoned a brigade of firemen yes- terday as heavily armed riot squads patrolled this British col- ony, ravaged - by antigovernment terrorism for the past four days. Early yesterday a bomb was lobbed from a passing car into the police compound, damaging several vehicles but causing no in- juries. Police fired a single shotgun blast at about 100 teenagers at- tacking them on one of the main streets of Kowloon, across the har- bor from Hong Kong island. Crowds Dispersed Authorities quickly dispersed a crowd that was throwing stones at fire fighters trying to put out an apartment blaze. Hong Kong authorities yester- day lifted the dusk-to-dawn cur- few they had imposed on the colony for the past two nights. Brief demonstrations involving a few hundred persons broke out periodically and ended quickly. Police arrested two persons dem- onstrating with a crowd in front of a Communist-run department store. About 1000 left-wing workers gathered in a union hall yesterday but dispersed after a brief meet- ing without incident.; Three Arrested Three persons were arrested in# police raids in the small ruralX fishing village of Tai Po where" terrorists bombed and severely damaged a rural committee building Wednesday. Wednesday night, as Hong Kong began to recover from a night .of violence and destruction. riot squads, undercover agents and sol- diers forced their way into the quarters where large stores of two pro-Communist union head- weapons and propaganda material were uncovered. Police arrested about 40 suspected agitators in the two raids. Water Rationing The issue which, at least par- tially stimulated the violence, was the colonial government's an- nounced severe water rationing; policy chiefly because Red China1 had not yet announced if it would resume, its sales of water to the colony. Wednesday night's terrorist hit- and-run attacks, the most violent in four days, caused widespread! damage to public transportation vehicles and left two persons dead and several injured. Also, late that night, some mobs began breaking open water pipes and letting the precious water flow down gutters. The night of terror followed a statement by Hong Kong's colon- ial secretary, D. R. Holmes, that "Hong Kong may well be enter- ing a new phase of terrorism." De Gaulle Appeals to Continental Europe To Assert Freedom from U.S. Dominance Coigo Military Revolt Ends; Mercenaries Flee Kisangani KINSHASA, the Congo (A')-The when they left Kisangani, Radio military revolt in the eastern Kinshasa said. It reported the Congo appeared ended yesterday mercenaries were headed toward nine days after it began. Rebel Bunia, 35 miles to the northeast white mercenaries fled Kisangani, near the border with Uganda. and 28 Americans and Europeans The Belgian radio correspondent they had held as hostages there in Kinshasa, however, reported the were found safe, the Red Cross mercenary column was moving to- reported. ward Punia, 180 miles south of The Congolese government re- Kisangani. ported that loyal troops had seized If so, it could follow one road complete control of the northeast to Kindu, 120 miles south of Punia, city, formerly called Stanleyville, or to Bukavu, capital of Kivu pro- including the airport. The city was vince 190 miles southeast of Punia. reported quiet, Mercenaries Hostages White mercenaries with Katan- The Red Cross said there was gan soldiers also staged a mutiny no indication whether the merce- at Bukavu the day of the Kisan- nary troops had taken other Euro- gani uprising July 5. peans as hostages with them when It was widely believed the twin they quit Kisangani in about 30 uprisings were linked to the kid- trucks during the night. The naping of ex-Premier Moise Congo radio said they had. Tshombe and his detention in Al- According to earlier reports, giers. The Congo is trying to more than 150 Europeans, includ- extradite Tshombe, underdeath ing 2 visiting journalists, were held sentence on treason charges. hostage in Kisangani, along with The Katanga troops always have 21 Americans. The Americans were been loyal to Tshombe, who tried missionaries and professors and to break the mineral-rich pro- students of the Congo Free Uni- vinceakayhfrm iner es- ofc h e versity. vince away from the rest of the The hostages had been reported Congo when it got mdependence- under guard in a downtown hotel. from Belgium in 1960. Some lead- But when the first Red Cross team ers of the Kisangani mutiny were arrived in Kisangani, it reported known to be friends of Tshombe. job. Though the hotspot sector had been relatively quiet for 72 hours, A m e r i c a n military authorities consider it is there that Hanoi's high command will attempt to mount one of two" major offen- sives that seem to be in the wind this summer. The other would be in the central highlands, a per- ennial area of conflict. Northern Corps U.S. Marines form the principal bar to {Communist ambitions to take over the northern 1st Corps area. U.S. Army soldiers stand watch in the highlands. Intelligence reports list three divisions of North Vietnamese regulars, perhaps 35,000 men in the zone area. Nine regiments, which could mean 15,000 or 20,- 000 men, are estimated to be at jungle bases along the frontiers of Laos and Cambodia for a new drive into the central highlands. The B52 attacks were their first in the zone since May 11. Their long absence from that area ap- parently was due in part to the threat from North Vietnamese surface-to-air missiles. SAM Sites Some SAM sites had been de- tected in the area and knocked out in the interval. Though B52s fly out of range of most anti- aircraft guns, the missiles might be able to hit them. Elsewhere across South Viet- nam, only light, sporadic fighting was reported by the U.S. Com- mand. It has also been reported from near the Cambodian border that troops of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division had searched without success for 10 missing comrades who were part of a company cut up by a 1,000-man North Viet- namese force Wednesday. Outnumbered Americans Lt. Col. Corey Wright of Oma- ha, Neb., commander of the par- ent battalion, said the outnumber- ed Americans had killed 110 North Vietnamese troops by body count. A U.S. artillery battery, appar- ently firing in support of the 4th Division troops, wounded three Montagnard tribesmen when a shell exploded prematurely Wed- nesday over their village in the highlands. presents HIGH NOON The original psychological western starring: GARY COOPER KATHY JURADO GRACE KELLY Friday and Saturday 7:00 and 9:05 P.M. Architecture Auditorium -- STILL ONLY 50c . t3. ,I f BONN (P)-President Charles de Gaulle of France appealed to West Germany and other continental European countries yesterday to assert their national identities and escape any domination by the United States. Britain, he said, could only be- come truly European by changing its way of life, especially its re- lations with the United States. Until that comes about, de Gaulle wants Britain kept out of the European Common Market. He insisted that the United States is an old friend and that nothing he said was meant to be II World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Senate and House conferees failed Thursday to break a deadlock on legislation to head off a nationwide rail strike. But they called on six shop- craft unions and railroads man- agement to refrain from a strike or lockout pending resumption of talks Monday. Reacting to a union threat to strike after. midnight Saturday in the absence of legislative agree- ment, the conferees urged the unions and management "that in the national interest, there will be no strikes or lockouts pending resumption of the conference Monday afternoon." There was no indication the conferees had made any progress but Rep. Harley O. Saffers, (D- Va), said "there is still hope." 9 * * * DETROIT- QP) - Urging the United Auto Workers to bargain "in light of the realities" of a lack of profits, American Motors Corp. yesterday became the fourth and last major U.S. automaker to begin contract talks with the union. There were indications the UAW would not be as stern in its demands at AMC as it will be with the Big Three - General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. JERUSALEM - A foreign Min- istry official said Thursday Israel will let "tens of thousands" of Arab refugees return to the oc- cupied west bank of the River Jordan as rapidly as possible after Aug. 10. That is the deadline date for applications from those wishing to return to their west bank homes. An estimated 100,000 to 150,000 fled across the Jordan in and after the six-day war. The return will be coordinated by the International Red Cross, said Michael Comay, a Foreign Ministry adviser. Only, those Arabs deemed se- curity risks, such as former Pal- estine Liberation Organization members, will be refused read- mittance, Israeli officials said. hostile. He explained that he wanted to keep the American alli- ance as long as there was a threat from the Soviet Union. But he urged an effort at un- derstanding and cooperation with Communist countries and said this had led France to take positions opposed to the United States on Vietnam and the Middle East. De Gaulle came to Bonn for two days with six of his top cab- inet ministers. It was part of an attempt to revive the 1963 friend- ship treaty, which he signed with the late Konrad Adenauer just a few days after he vetoed Britain's first bid to join the Common Mar- ket. During the three years that Ludwig Erhard was chancellor, the treaty had little effect. The two governments are still far apart on many basic issues. Bpt the treaty provides that a major meeting be held every six months, and de Gaulle brought this one to a cli- Phone 434-0130 -NOW SHOWING- WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS max with major presentation on world affairs. Although the meetings were held behind closed doors, de Gaulle's statement was relayed to news- men in detail by Roger Vaurs, chief spokesman for the French Foreign Ministry. De Gaulle began by noting that the dominant fact in the world today is the enormous power of the United States. He said there were two ways that Europeans could respond. The first was to accept American hegemony and become a part of it. This he called the easy, comfortable way. No Hostility The second way, he said, was, "without hostility to the United States, to safeguard our national identities." De Gaulle also made his vow to maintenance of the American alliance. "So we do not disapprove in any way of the physical presence of the United States in Europe," he added. I there was no trace of any host- ages. The first Red Cross report listed those hostages found safe as 13 European newsmen and 15 Amer- icans and other Europeans. Wanted A Red Cross plane returned to Kinshasa with 30 wounded soldiers and a group of European women and children. The white mercenaries had some European hostages with them MEIBO-GOWOWYN-MAYER prsv A IKENNET[ HAYMA~N FPODUCTION U I HELD OVER IN THE TRADITION OF "DEAR JOHN" CINEMA U1 presents ADOLFAS MEKAS' HALLELUJAHI THE 1HILLS (1963.) "A slapstick poem, an intellectual hellzapoppin, a gloriously fresh experiment and experienm im, the cinema of the absurd"-TIME "The wildest and wittiest comedy of the sea- son"-N.Y. TIMES "A -rhinitc barnA of ra'rficill pievv film sLtyl I makes 'DEAR JOHN' look like a fairy tale. Would you believe "VIRGINIA WOOLF' looking like a Sunday go-to-meet -World Journal Trbun ~ 2 to RADLEY H. METZGER presents =10.US r ESSY ERSN SHOW TIMES: Fri. 7-9-11, Sat. 7-9-11; Sun. 6-8-10; Mon. thru Thurs. 7-9 I... I BIHAR (INDIA) FAMINE RELIEF COMM. presents .. . . i" ... CL VME900 -MAYER PREsam7 A CARLO PONi PRODUCTION DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORIS PASTERNAKS nnornn WHO IRf 111111O LPH BLI lly CLII 8 J ll METROCOLOR NOW SHOWING I II I i I II I