THURSDAY, ,JULY 20, 196 i THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'PAGE THURSDAY, JULY 20, 196' TUE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Secretary Rusk Says Communists Hurting, Reports Gains in War WASHINGTON (A) - Secretary ahead unless Hanoi gets to the and dove critics of the administra- of State Dean Rusk reported mili- point where they are prepared to tion's Vietnam policy that the con- tary, economic and political prog- talk seriously about peace," he flict has run into a stalemate. ress in Vietnam and declared yes- said. "I don't see a stalemate there," terday the Communists "are hurt- Rusk spoke at one of his infre- he said. "I think that there is mil- ing very badly." quent Washington news confer- itary progress. There is, clearly, And while Rusk voiced regret ences. It was his first since March economic progress in dampening over Britain's long-range plan to 28. down the rate of inflation.' A pull most of her forces out of the Sticking to Johnson administra- On the South Vietnamese polit- P Iar East, he said this does not tion policy on bombing of North', ca. rnh detemv o mean the Communists "can take Vietnam, Rusk affirmed that the ical front, he added, the move to- any comfort from this particular United States is prepared to halt ward an elected, constitutional sey the air attacks when this is government is going ahead. The United States and those shown to be "a step toward peace." Washington Disapproved nations in Southeast Asia commit- However, as many ,times before, The secretary made plain Wash- ted to theirindeensec and se- he linked this to a need for a rp- ington's disapproval of London's curity "will get on with the job," ciprocal action by the Communists newly announced plan to with- he said. because "both sides have to make draw the bulk of Britain's mili- Substantial Losses a contribution toward peace." tary forces from the vast area But as for prospects for ending And, he added, no one among between Suez and the Pacific by the war, Rusk saw no North Viet- the many proposing a U.S. bomb- the mid-1970s. With her proposed namese readiness for this yet de- ing cutback has said what Hanoi evacuation of Malaysia and Singa- spite "very substantial losses" in-' will do in return. pore, the only reamining British flicted on the Reds. Meanwhile, Rusk rejected what garrison in the area would be at "There is still a long, tough job he called allegations by both hawk Hong Kong. Despite Britain's economic prob- lems forcing her cutback, U.S. 115 'Ic] §I'rcide A rins strategists have hoped the British U .S . would play a large role In the sec- urity of the region. Rusk said, "I regret any decision by Britain to In S p t o ro tei s reduce substantially its presence in Middle East WASHINGTON (P)-The U.S.I -The introduction of weapons On an another point Rusk said:' government shows no signs of into already distressed situations -The United States stil hopes backing off from its major role in has on more than one occasion for an agreement to curb arms then world's multibilliondollar traf- "provoked or hastened the out- shipments to the Middle East but ic in the instruments of war, de- break of fighting." prospects are not encouraging be- spite mounting congressional pro- The reports were prepared by cause of heavy Soviet weapons re- tests and the irony of American the Browne & Shaw Research supply to Egypt, Syria and Algeria. weapons pitted against each other Corp. of Waltham, Mass., under In line with its policy favoring in the Middle East war. contract to the Defense Depart- an arms balance in the area, the For the Pentagon's highly suc- ment and, through the Massachu- United States may therefore have cessful arms salesman, Henry J. setts Institute of Technology, and to lift its ban on U.S. arms ship- Kuss Jr., it's business as usual- Arms Control and Disarmament ments to Israel and from other and more if he can get it. Agency. Arab countries for their security. Search for weapons In Plainfield Stopped Funerals Mark Newark Scene; Violence Breaks Out Elsewhere -Associated Press STATE POLICE and National Guardsmen search homes in Plainfield, N.J., for a cache of stolen weapons. Some houses were left neat by the searchers, while others were messes of broken glass, upside-down furniture, and broken storage trunks. VIET ELECTION NEARS: Generals Say Political News' No Longer Faces Censorship By The Associated Press An aimed task force of state police and National Guardsmen searched house by house for wea- pons in riotous Negro neighbor- hood yesterday, but pulled out when the quest built tension. They found no weapons. One Negro leader said state po- lice agreed to remove the forces because an agreement not to enter locked apartments had been vio- latd. After searchers left, groups of young Negroes gathered in the streets complaining about the search. The search mission met no re- sistance, despite an earlier warn- ing of "vicious resistance" to any invasion of the trouble zone sealed off after a white policeman was shot and stomped to death Sun- day. But Negroes objected as the searchers tore off doors, turned. over furniture and threw personal belonging around while seeking weapons. A newsman heard a plain clothes officer tell a Negro, "I know we; promised you there would be no breaking into apartments but ap- parently somebody didnt get the word. We're sorry and we're pull- ing out."- Newark Elsewhere in racilly tense north- ern New Jearsey, quiet prevailed. Newark, where warlike sniping battles claimed 25 lives, passed its second normal day while funerals were conducted for a slain white fire captain and three Negro vic- tims of riot bullets. A national conference on black power also opened in the city where Negro violence raged for five days. The Plainfield search was or- dered after a noon deadline for surrender of weapons passed with- out any sign of the military rifles. Racial incidents broke out in Nyack, NY., and Erie, Pa., and a house bombing in Baton Rouge, La., was connected by a labor leader with statements he made against the Ku Klux Klan. In Cario, Ill., the arrival of 50 National Guardsmen b r o u g h t SAIGON (A')-South Vietnam's ruling generals have decreed that,; effective today, political news in the Vietnam press no longer will be censored. The nation's newspapers pre-+ sumably will now be able to fill in with news about the presiden- tial election campaign some of the white spaces that have been de- noting censorship. Stories concerning military af- fairs, although freely transmitted abroad, remain subject domesti- cally to editing or deletion by! government censors. The move by the generals ap- parently means that they feel. they can control the press with- out resorting to full censorship. Bowed to Critics But they have bowed to domes- fair one for it to be meaningful, pressed strongly for a removal of political censorship. South Viet- namese newsmen, although they could not print the answers, fre- quently asked the generals at news conferences how they could call this a free election if cen- sorship continued. Where the line between political and military news is to be drawn will still be up to the discretion of the censors. Sporadic shelling in the north- ern 1st Corps area marked the ground war on the eve yesterday of the 13th anniversary of the! Geneva agreement that was sup- posed to bring peace and neu- trality to Vietnam. The South Vietnamese, who never signed the agreement, are observing the anniversary today as "National Shame Day." That's to express their disapproval of the partition of the country in the settlement that ended French rule of Indochina. peace after an outbreak of fire, gunfire and stabbing. Legal barriers against interra- cial marriage were dropped in Tennessee, and in Jerusalem the president of the Zionist Organi- zation of America said American Jews have become disillusioned with the civil rights movement. Jacques, Torcznyer told a news conference in Jerusalem that Jews have been disappointed by anti-Semitic statements by mili- tant Negro leaders, and by attacks on Jewish shops during New York riots. Outsiders A claim that outsiders stirred up trouble in Plainfield was made by Milt Campbell, decathlon champion in the 1956 Olympics who returned to his home town to help restore peace. "Those men' whocame in and started this violence have moved out I believe," Campbell said. Violence erupted in Plainfield last Friday night and hit its peak Sunday when a gang of Negro youths shot and beat a white policeman to death. kA few shots punctured the calm at Plainfield on Tuesday night, and a search of the city's sealed-off Negro district for the rifles renewed tensions. Charles Miller, Negro vice president of the city's Human Rights Council, told the National Guard that an invasion of the area would be met with "vicious 'retaliation." The Baton Rouge bombing out- side the home of Victor Bussie, president of the Louisiana AFL.- CIO, was connected by him with what he called his comments urging an investigation of bomb- ings in which the Ku Klux Klan had been accused. presents CHARLIE CHAPLI N'S Burlesque on Carmen First Ann Arbor Showing Plus GLENN TYRON and BEN TURPIN in Selected Short Subjects FRIDAY & SATURDAY 7:00 & 9:05 P.M. ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM STILL ONLY 50c The same sign is out at the State Department's Office of Munitions Control-run by an official in the ranks of the Civil Service-which licenses arms for overseas 'export. Pentagon and-'State Department sources who decline to be identi- fied said there had been no hint of a change in arms export policy. The seeming reluctance to shift gears persists despite two highly respected, government-financed re- ports, unpublicized. until now, that conclude: -The weapons 'used in virtually every regional war since World War II have come from outside sources, the overwhelming major- ity from the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, and France. -Without major-power coopera- tion, the arms traffic will con- tinue, and strategic ballistic mis- siles may well be deployed throughout the Middle East by the erly 1970s. Arabs Discuss Plans For 'Second Round' New Secretary of Navy Dead In North Carolina Air Crash By The Associated Press A Cairo summit conference of five militant Arab leaders ended yesterday after a discussion of preparations for "a second round" against Israel, informants in the Egyptian capital reported. Just back from Moscow, Presi- dent Houari Boumedienne of Al- geria and President Abdel Rahman Aref of Iraq gave President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt fresh as- surances of Soviet backing against Israel. 'The meeting during the morn1ing was brief dealt with the Arabs' determination to carry on the struggle against Israel until all World News Roundup occupied Arab territory was re- claimed, the sources added. Reliable sources said the Alge- rian and Iraqi presidents had strongly urged Moscow to push up their arms support to the Arabs, who are impatient to reclaim the land lost to Israel in the June 5-10 war. Neither Moscow nor Cairo made public the Soviet reaction to this request, save for a statement de- claring Soviet backing. The Cairo report said Premier Mohammed Ahmed Mahgoub rep- resented Sudan. It made no refer- ence to Sudanese President Ismail el Azhari, who previously was re- ported' at the. series of meetings. President Noureddin Atassi of Syria apparently left early. The militant Arabs have been meeting in Cairo for eight days, excluding from their meetings such conservative Arab leaders as. those from Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Morocco. Boumedienne Militant Of the five, Boumedienne has, been the most militant, demanding action now against Israel. But his nation did not sustain damaging blows like those inflicted by Israel on Egypt, Jordan and Syria. The Suez Canal front was quiet as' Egypt and Israel obeyed a cease-fire under the watch of U.N. truce observers, but the war of Iwords continued. Gen. Moshe Dayan, 'Israel's de- fense minister, warned the Arab world that "Israel can afford to hold on to territory occupied by her for quite a long time." LtlTFI A II i tic and foreign criticism of their HENDERSONVILLE, N.C. -A') - censorship policies, which both A huge Boeing 727 airliner. collid- Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and ed in flight with a smaller plane Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu over the Blue Ridge foothills of had vowed to continue through western North Carolina yesterday, the campaign leading to the elec- killing 81 persons, including the tion Sept. 3. newly appointed secretary of the Both men are candidates in a Navy, John T. McNaughton. ticket headed by Thieu. There were no survivors among As late as last week. Thieu had the 73 passengers and five crew- said censorship would continue men aboard the Piedmont Airlines during the campaign. He con- plane, or in the smaller plane tended: "It is good censorship- which carried two Missouri busi- necessary in a wartime situation nessmen and their pilot. where the Viet Cong are every- Wreckage from the fiery crash where." showered down 50 yards from a Thieu Censored summer camp occupied by 145 But little of the political cen- teen-agers and their counselors. sorship had anything to do with Camp directors held a songfest to security against the Viet Cong. keep their charges away from the When Thieu and Ky were heading horror of the crash scene. separate presidential tickets sev- Wife, Son Killed eral weeks ago, even Thieu com- Also killed were McNaughton's' plained the Ky-controlled Infor- wife, Sally, and their. 11-year-old mation Ministry was censoring son, Ted. The McNaughtons Thieu statements out of the boarded the airliner at nearby *papers. Asheville, minutes before the col- Pressures to remove the censor- lision. They had been in the area ship had come from candidates to pick up the son, who had been running against the Thieu-Ky in a summer youth camp. ticket, from South Vietnamese Witnesses said the smaller and foreign journalists and the plane exploded on impact with the U.S. Embassy. airliner. The heavier craft flew on The. embassy, feeling that the for a short distance, then it, too, presidential election must be a blew up. ./NY Uai4 ] ii Y V NV MY V1A UV \AV111LU . _ _ _ _ i The airliner was Flight 22. It had left Atlanta at 10:40 a.m. It carried a crew of 5 and 73 pas- sengers, 52 of whom had boarded at Asheville. The flight was to have ended at Washington at 12:57 a.m. To Succeed Nitze McNaughton, who had served three years 'as assistant secretary of defense for international se- curity affairs, had been appointed by President Johnson to succeed Paul H. Nitze as Navy secretary. The McNaughtons had come to North Carolina on Monday for their son, who had spent five weeks at Camp Sequoya near Weaverville, just west of Ashe- ville: Another son, Alexander, 18, is on a trip to Europe. A native of Indiana, McNaugh- ton was long a close associate of Defense Secretary Robert S. Mc- Namara, who relied heavily on him for advice on day-to-day problems involving international defense matters. Dial 8-6416 ENCORE TRIUMPHS! Phone 434-0130 gto Ow EMAPENERROAD FIRST OPEN 8:00 P.M. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUN Shown at :35only Also Shown at 11:35 Only 41a PLUS-"RODEO DAREDEVILS" COLOR CARTOON By The Associated Press. ALGIERS, Algeria - Moise Tshombe will learn tomorrow whether he must return to the Congo to face death on high trea- son charges. After a three-hour secret hear- in vyt _rdnvy the Algrerian iSu- Catholic pontiff's appeal for free interfaith access to Jerusalem and its holy places. "Whateverthe Pope thinks and does, I follow him," the 81-year- old spiritual leader of the Orth- odox Church said. -. * * 1ng yese uu, U lSI preme Court announced it will WASHINGTON-Soaring hospi- dedide then whether to grant the tal and medical costs will force Congo's request for extradition of an increase in the payroll tax for the former Congolese premier. medicare, informed congressional sources reported yesterday. -TOKYO - Communist China The House Ways and Means charged yesterday Indian military Committee, it was understood, has aircraft violated Chinese air space informally decided to include such over Tibet and Sinkiang 16 times an increase in the Social Security in the past week. Peking radio bill it is now preparing. said the government lodged a strong protest with India. SAN FRANCISCO-Republican The broadcast claimed intru- Milton Marks, endorsed by Gov. sions were made between last Ronald Reagan, led Tuesday nigh Wednesday and Monday. in a special primary election in- * * * volving control of the California ISTANBUL, Turkey - Patriarch Senate. Athenagoras, awaiting a visit by His vote, however, was short of Pope Paul VI next week, said yes- the majority required to avert a terday he supports the Roman runoff Aug. 15. DIAL NO 2-6264 TODAY! I { I PRESENTS J. M. SYNGE'S THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD (COLOR) "MASTERPIECE!" -N.Y. Post "A JOY: ABSOLUTE AND UNBOUNDED!" -Newsweek "BRILLIANT AND MEMORABLE!" -Cue ADVENTURE, LAUGHTER AND.LOVE ARE YOURS AGAIN! r* ** WaltDlsneys - a... ~0'~~~AND - U Whenever they talk about great suspense motion pictures, they always seem to mention DIABOLIQUE. If HELD OVER-3rd Week IN THE TRADITION OF "DEAR JOHN" makes 'DEAR JOHN' look like a fairy tale. Would you believe 'VIRGINIA WOOLF'looking like a S u nday o-to-meetin'?"=World Journal Tribune Seven Arts Productions presents Robert Dhery AS 90-0{/0 ,F / I RADLEY H. METZGER presents ,atta , ,a s WISH ESSY PERSSON SHOW TIMES: Fri. 7-9-11, c...4 7-9-1 1. . i,n FR-1n"MrorthruThujrs. 7-9 N W I