SUNDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SUDYCOE.,95TE IHGNDIYPG HE Indonesian Crisis Could Affect Chinese Prestige By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER Associated Press Special Correspondent WASHINGTON - In the ab-' sence of persuasive evidence to the contrary, United States offi- cials are becoming convinced that President Sukarno of Indonesia probably has lost the capacity to govern his troubled island country. The question of what has hap- pened to Sukarno is regarded by experts here as the key to the mystery of the political explosion in Jakarta, which has been mark- ed by an extraordinary silence on the part of the 64-year-old presi- dent of the republic. Speculation abroad has centered on the possible death or crippling illness of Sukarno. U.S. authorities consider either of these possibili- ties could prove true. Or there may be some other explanation. What they think likely is that while Sukarno clearly remains a symbol of almost godlike attrac- tion for most of Indonesia's 100 million people, his ability to exert effective political power in Jakarta probably is ended. Whatever explanation emerges as true will have an important bearing on how the results of the coup and counter-coup are to be assessed. This in turn could vit- ally affect Communist China's in- ternational prestige. A complete Communist take- over in Indonesia would have to be registered as a Red Chinese victory. An end to, or marked de- crease in, Chinese Communist in- fluence in Jakarta would be a severe defeat for Peking. The Communist aspect of the conflict is probably the most con- fusing single element, apart from the fate of Sukarno. Interest in this angle developed sharply Saturday with a report from Jakarta that the newspaper Harian Rakjat, an outlet for the Indonesian Communist party - PKI-had published a brief en- dorsement of the Sept. 30 move- ment, which reportedly carried out the original coup. The publication seemed to pro- vide a solid link for the first time between the pro-Chinese PKI and the rebel group that power early Friday. tried to seizeI This in turn raised a question. Why should the Chinese Commun- ists or a party favoring their poli- cies try to topple Sukarno, who has led Indonesia into close ties with Peking? Up to the disclosure of the en- dorsement some experts on Indo- nesia rejected the notion that there could have been a Com- munist element in the rebel move- ment because it did not appear to make sense. Assuming now that there was such an element, the question arises as to why it -should be. This in turn focuses new atten- tion on the fact that for the first day and a half of the crisis Su- karno, a man who loves public appearance, had not been heard) from. The fact suggested either that he considered his safety in grave jeopardy and felt too inse- cure to speak upnor that he was physically unable to do so. Without this issue being sharply posed the Jakarta crisis makes little sense from the Washington point of view unless some other radical development were assum- ed-for example, the possibility of a switch in policy or policy em- phasis by Sukarno, Authorities note that the Indo- nesian Communist party has exerted increasing influence with Sukarno over the past two years' and he has fallen into step along side the rulers of Communist China so that the Chinese Com- munist alignment of Indonesia has been virtually complete. Yet Sukarno stopped short of putting decisive power into the hands of Indonesian Communists. One of his strongest supporters has been Gen. Abdul Haris Nasu- tion, a nationalist who has long been considered pro-Western. Had Sukarno-which U.S. offi- cials think unlikely - decided to try to balance his own position by shifting somewhat away from the Communists and encouraging the nationalists it could have trigger- ed a pro-Communist revolt against him. Chicago Superintendent SKYRAIDERS COLLIDE: Two Viet Cong Explosions Kill 11 in Downtown Saigon HILLEL SUPPER CLUB TONIGHT at 5:30 p.mt. Kosher Delicatessen 1429 Hill St. Cost: 75c to members $1 to others All may come Blasts Aid i f k 4fpa yS rat " ' } -- -..,:._.,__,...._ r r ,14'f " Rw "t#: 1 r v' .Q t .f . ll 3 r 1 PW Willis Says I Cut Will Hurt Opportunty Charges No Warning Given By Keppel of Rights Act Violations CHICAGO ()-Chicago's school, administrator said Saturday the threat of holding back $30 million in federal school aid funds "for unknown, unstated reasons" will set back "an increase in opportun- ities for Chicago school children." This, was the comment of Ben- jamin C. Willis, superintendent of Chicago public schools, on a state- ment from the U.S. Office of Edu- cation that federal aid will be held back unless alleged discrim- ination is halted. "This is an alarming and threat- ening kind of procedure," Willis said at a news conference. "My first knowledge of the threatened action of the Office of Education came yesterday afternoon. No Indication "At no time-even now-have I received any indication of what the complaints are or what the probable noncompliances are." Willis said so far as he knows, a team of three federal Office of Education investigators began its work on Aug. 26. He said he has not seen any of the three-man' team since then, does not know whether any person on the Chi- cago school staff was ever con- tacted for information, or if the federal teams "spent any more time here." He said that the 1964 Civil Rights Act specifically states that no "order refusing to grant federal assistance shall become effective" e6.e si-r.: .euntil the applicant has been ad- vised to comply with regulations. The money cannot be withheld "until there is an express finding of noncompliance on the record," Willis said, and added: "I have t not been advised wherein we do Some Failure Vvis U sThe Office of Education said rovisio n s Friday its preliminary investiga- tion indicated some instances of feel let down by loss of the battle failure in Chicago to comply with fee le don b los o th batlethe 1964 Civil Rights Act. It said against medicare. He contendeTl it believes that the "situation can r "the profession has been enslaved be resolved satisfactorily." 1 by clever politicians." No specific charges of discrim- A resolution introduced by Dr. ination in schools were made. John K. Glenn of Houston, Tex., Illinois is to receive $61.7 million asued the House to recommend under the 1965 Education Act, of that a boycott by individual phy- which $30 million would go to sicians "is legal, ethical and de- Chicago. 1 sirable." Allocate Funds A proposed resolution by Dr. State education heads, under the s Thomas Parker of South Carolina act allocate thefunds within suggested that the House state their states. In Illinois, Ray Page, , "it is ethical, proper and desirable state superintendent of public in- for reputable physicians as indi- struction, said he had been order- viduals not to participate" in the ed by Francis Keppel, U.S. com- medicare program.m i oo, to.wit- The Wisconsin delegation offer-hold hicao' hedae of the f h-. ed a resolution holding that, sincehPag s a tegrmst medicare is law, doctors should Keppe tat hiehasa teleen ad provide constructive leadership in vised about any complaints con- its administration and seek any cerning Chicago's school system necessary improvements. On July 1, 1966, Americans 65 and added: 'No investigator from and over will have hospital care the Office of Education has called under Social Security. Those who upon me and I am completely un- . want it can have voluntary med- informed as to the specific ical insurance under the medicare charges. What noncompliance is slaw. alleged?" The complaints were filed last July with Keppel's office by Al- bert C. Raby, Negro schoolteacher and convenor of the Coordinating ur p Council of Community Organiza- tions. The group has opposed Wil- lis' program for desegregation and has conducted dozens of street deputy premier, made earlier, was demonstrations in downtown Chi- confirmed by the Parliament - cago, at Willis' home and the , the Supreme Soviet, home of Mayor Richard J. Daley * * * in protest of what it terms alleged VATICAN CITY-Pope Paul VI de facto school segregation. appointed the first full-blooded Roman Catholic Negro bishop in Hundreds Arrested f the United States yesterday, and Hundreds of persons have been SAIGON (/)-Two bomb explo- sions in Saigon yesterday killed 11 Vietnamese and wounded 42 per- sons, including three U.S. service- men. The blasts, attributed to the Viet Cong, came six hours and two miles apart. The spray of deadly metal was the greatest here since Viet Cong agents hit the national police headquarters with explosives and machine guns Aug. 16. Those raiders killed six policemen and wounded 15. In the Air Afield, the collision of two U.S. Air Force AlE Skyraiders on a c o m b a t reconnaissance mission about 250 miles northeast of Sai- gon killed three Americans -_the pilots and news photographer Bernard Kolenberg, 38, of the ,Al- bany, N.Y., Times-Union. Kolenberg was on leave from his newspaper and was working on an assignment for the Associated Press. In the Da Nang air base area farther north, it was announced U.S. Marine patrols fatally shot seven Viet Cong in a series of en- gagements. A spokesman said three were killed by a patrol in the Marble Mountain area only two miles east of Da Nang. No Losses The Marines were reported to have suffered no losses in these actions, but incurred what were called light casualties from en- counters with a guerrilla mine and a booby trap four miles southeast of the town. The Saigon explosions came at noon and about dusk. The first roared at the base of a steel utility pole near the Cong Hoa National Stadium, a training center for Vietnamese police of- ficers. Police said nine persons- four Vietnamese children and five police officers - were Thirty - two Vietnamese wounded. Steel Pellets ki we illed. ere was can like apparently under the rear seat. It went off in front of a Saigon the- atre, near four American mili- tary installations, killing two Viet- namese and wounding 10 persons. One of the dead was believed to be the cab driver. Experts believed the device a Claymore type mine, which be aimed to fire steel pellets a shotgun. The second device was an ex- plosive carried in a small taxi, Cuban Party Ousts Leader HAVANA (A) - Cuba's Com- munist party eliminated former Industrial Minister Ernesto Gue- vara from the party hierarchy yesterday. ' The Argentine - born guerrilla war expert was not included in a 100-member Central Committee named by the party's National Directorate. The committee will d i r e c t the party's activities throughout this island nation. Prime Minister Fidel Castro will head the committee's two major agencies-an eight-member Polit- ical Bureau and six-member Sec- retariat. Guevara disappeared early in the spring. Castro, in a speech Tuesday night, said he would read in a few days "a document from Com- rade Ernesto Guevara which ex- plains his absence during these months." The crowd in ,Revolu- tionary Plaza cheered the men- tion of Guevara's name. Guevara and Castro reportedly disagreed on the development of Cuba's Communist party, eco- nomic matters and the degree of cooperation with the Soviet Union and Red China. HAVE A' pURPOSE Everyone does. It's spiritual, it's demanding, exciting, and it's in- variably good . . . It brings new discoveries of what God is, and what man really is-- finding ful- fillment in a life directed by divine Love. Hear this one-hour lecture "You Have a Purpose" presented byJOSEPHINE H. CARVER, C.S.B., member of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship.. Christianscience ecture, Tuesday, Oct. 5th at 8:00 P.M. in FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave., Ann Arbor Admission Free . Everyone is welcone ?:':...^.}..:r.. "'':v. ^,.:. r{p;.. 2 a P anti- slip It's great Olga's exclusive Panti-slip is pretty half-slip and practical panty all-in-one. Nylon tricot with lots of nylon lace; white and colors; P-S-M-L-XL, 6.00 JK ' rivte .S'ieten.4 2 9E© , iTc. of Ann Arbor 209 'EAST LIBERTY tir * * :: W I&THW AY AMA Delegates Deb M F O f New Medicare P CHICAGO ()-Resolutions sug- like thing to do is to "try in the gesting that the nation's doctors most effective way possible to boycott medicare went before the bring about regulations and other House of Delegates of the Ameri- implementing actions that wil can Medical Association yesterday. mitigate the baneful effects." But A. Leslie Hodson of Chicago, Standing Ovation an attorney from the AMA, told Delegates gave Dr. Appel a the conferees that any "invita- standing ovation when he finish- tion" from the House for a total ed his speech-a possible augury boycott would be a violation of of the position the House will the anti-trust law. take. He pointed out, however, that "We must prepare amendments any physician-as an individual- to the law which will mitigate its can refrain from participation if harmful effects," Dr. Appel said he so desires. "and gradually mold it in the di- Policy-Making Body rection of eldercare, the insurance- The policy-making body of the based plan the AMA has advo- organization of 206,000 physicians cated." received 43 resolutions and threw Dr. Appel also said the AMA open its two-day sessions to de- must carry a good public image bate. The Reference Committee into what he said may be a new planned to bring in a report today battle-an effort to extend medi- for action by the 201 delegates. care from the 18 million Ameri- The AMA president, Dr. James cans over 65 to the 180 million Z. Appel of Lancaster, Pa., main- under that age. tained that medicare endangers Let Down the quality of health care for the At the outset of the debate, Dr elderly. Eugene S. Rifner of Van Buren He added, the only statesman- Ind., contended that the doctors UAC-LITERARY COLLEGE STEERING COMMITTEE present: STUDENT COUNSELING SEMI NARS Tues., Oct. 5, 2-5 ROOMS 3-C, 3-D, 3-G MICHIGAN UNION For Freshmen and Sophomores seeking advice on concentration FREE COFFEE AND DOUGHNUTS ' ... I'III r: xaa 21e VanI1uren Sop 8 Nickels Arcade 662-2914 ,, : -'Ili World News Io program schedule THE NEW YORK PHI LHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Tune in the Philharmonic each Sunday at 2:00 p.m., (WUOM-FM, 91.7 on your dial), brought to you through specialarrangements between the University of Mich- igan, Ann Arbor Federal and the Liberty Music Shop. The current program schedule is: Sunday, October 3 BERNSTEIN, Conducting; CURTIN, Soprano Sibelius: Symphony No. 7; Sibelius Songs; Nielsen: Symphony No. 3 l This classic paiama and coat set is made of opaque nylon tricot in aurora pink, deb blue, flamingo. By The Associated Press NEW DELHI - Indian troops exchanged shots with a 25-man Communist Chinese patrol in the bleak mountain frontier between Tibet and the Indian protectorate of Sikkim, Indian officials report- MOSCOW-The Soviet Parlia- ment approved yesterday a reor- ganization of Soviet industry and for the most part, put engineers rather than party politicians in charge of carrying it out. At the same time the Parlia- ment added to the prestige of 1 I+: '''J :j} ":":ti C