WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6,1965 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE President Announces H e Will Have Surgery Friday .........~..**--* To ..... ............ ..,. ....?'~, .... R em ove .... Gall Bladder _ ..,,...~.. .'.,,. ..... In O peration ~> ~ VIET NAM WAR: Red Chinese Claim U.S. Plane Downed TOKYO (IP)-Red China said one small U.S. Army unit yes- its fliers shot down a U.S. fight- terday and American paratroop- er yesterday from a four-plane ers a few miles away battled the formation over Kwangsi, a main- Communists on a jungle hill hon- m iognof liaac apovoati AmTeia inus tek absed unit mie favorble."'lessthean 12 meSan ut d tgv presents WOEO ECKARDT ANOTHER LECTURE IN THE SERIES, "CAN A MASS SOCIETY BE A GREAT SOCIETY" p U -Associated Press PRESIDENT JOHNSON IS SHOWN CHATTING at the White House with two of his latest appointees, Morris B. Abram of New York, second from left, and William T. Coleman, Jr., of Philadelphia. Coleman and Abram were named as vice chairmen of the November 17-18 White House conference of Negro rights, which will consider problems and future trends in the Negroes' struggle for first-class citizenship. Law For Personal Safety slJ g~l.UO '. *JCL&JA. n.'. ayfl~t , and was intercepted by Chinese hVitCnjupdaUSM- Vice-President May pae.i~i~rli1tm aaagae- Assu e Eecui~e- I** id neotrpcf 380 miles north of Saigon and kill- Tebroadcast ddntpeiyed or wounded 10 of its 13 men. Duties in Absence the type of fighter allegedly down- ed, whether it was from the U.S. Air Strategy Works WASHINGTON (AP) - President Air Force or Navy, or what hap- Fifteen miles north of the am- Johnson announced personally pened to the pilot, bush scene, in the vast Viet Cong yesterday he will enter Bethesda Marshal Lin Piao, the defense stronghold of Zone D, a com- Naval Hospital tomorrow night for minister, commended the Chinese pany of paratroopers from the removal of a poorly functioning fliers, Radio Peking reported. U.S. 173rd Airborne Brigade gall bladder. Caulisfought a rugged day-long battle Johnsn, reding staementtosElewhee Reported with guerrillas. Johson redin a tatmen to alswheethere were these de- Paratroop casualties were de- reporters in the White House velopments: .scribed as lip'ht to moderate with Cabinet room, said "Doctors ex- --A South Vietnamese military 11 Viet Cong bodies counted by pect there will be a minimal time spokesman claimed that govern- late afternoon. during which I will not be con- ment forces killed 1,767 Viet Cong In North Viet Nam, four U.S. ducting business as usual." last week and the government Navy planes destroyed one build- The chief executive emphasiz- suffered 229 dead. He said 144 ing and damaged two others 90 ed that, should presidential ac- Viet Cong were captured and 68 miles north of the border. No tion or decisions be required at a government soldiers were missing ground fire was reported and all time when he could not personally in action. planes returned safely, a spokes- carry them out, Vice-President The government, in another rei' man said. Hubert H. Humphrey will act for port, said that from Sept. 26-Oct. Report Air Casualties him. 2, 877 persons returned to gov- But three Americans were lost The one- to two-hour operation ernment control. in air action, all in South Viet will be performed Friday morn.. -Premier Nguyen Cao Ky, on Nam, spokesmen said. Two crew- ing at the Naval Hospital in sub- a visit to Malaysia, said the Coin- men died when an Army helicop- urban Bethesda, Md., where John- munists are "gradually losing ter was hit by ground fire in son was a patient last January what popular support they had" Binh Dinh Province, 270 miles with a heavy cold. and the South Vietnamese people east of Saigon, and an F-100 Su- The President said his doctors are "now beginning to think of per Sabre pilot died in a crash have diagnosed his condition as certain victory." 215 miles north of Saigon. The "a poorly functioning gall blad- -- U.S. military officials an- cause of the crash was not an- He a id th h s cans decided am t t l d 1 17 0 a of S p . g n e s h d h t d wn " 0 .S. it houd e rmovd.30. jet fighters." Peking's New China Johnson reported that he first U.S. Bombers Act News Agency, quoting Radio Ha- experienced difficulty on Sept. 7 Haroi radio assailed Thailand noi, said five U.S. planes were while on his Texas ranch. . for "collusion" with the United shot down in Quang Ninh Prov- "I felt some pains in my stom- States "in invaiding Laos, threat- ince, three in Nam Ha Province ach which seemed to be the re- ening Cambodia and continuously and one each in Lang Son and sult of something I 'had eaten," attacking North Viet Nam by air." Ha Bac provinces. he related. Hanoi has made repeated charges Further Conflict in North Johnson went on to say that the U.S. planes are using Thailand A U.S. spokesman reported White House physician, Vice Admn. bases for bombing attacks South Vietnamese troops on a George G. Burkley, suspected gall against North Viet Nam. multibattalion operation 22 miles bladder trouble and that further Early yesterday B-52 bombers southeast of Quang Ngai in the examinations confirmed that ten- hammered a suspected Viet Cong vicinity of strategic Highway 1 tative diagnosis. training area 70 miles northwest made contact with the Viet Cong. The operation will be performed of Saigon, near the Cambodian He gave no details on the latest by Dr. George A. Hallenbeck, 50 border. It was the 37th raid of the engagement but said 36 Viet Cong, who heads a section on general Viet Nam war for the Guam- confirmed by body count, have surgery and the section of sur- based planes. been killed in the three-day oper- gical research at the Mayo Clinic, In other action, Viet Cong guer- ation. Government casualties were Rohester. Minn.4 rillas ambushed and knocked out termed light there. WASHINGTON (/F) - As civil rights demonstrations in Georgia and Mississippi continued yester- day, a civil rights spokesman said Congress may be asked next year to take civil rights criminal cases out of state courts and put. them under federal jurisdiction. Joseph L. Rauh, counsel for the National Leadership Confer- ence on Civil Rights, told of the possible goal yesterday in report- ing on a private meeting last week of the National Leadership Con- ference on Civil Rights. Rauh is counsel for the body, which rep- resents more than 10') church, union and civil rights groups. "We had the Public Accommo- dations Act in 1964, the Voting Rights Act in 1965 and we look forward to the personal security act in 1966," Rauh told a news- S man. Ready in January "There's no bill ready yet. We Indonesian Red ackCers SINGAPORE (P)-Radio Malay- S sia reported that the army forces in control of Jakarta had begun a crackdown on Communists in the capital, arresting 200 Red sup- porters. Withoult giving the source of its report, it added that 5000 people at a rally in Jakarta had demand- ed that the Indonesian Commu- rmst party be banned. The armed forces newspaper Angkatan Bersendjata and the ar- my newspaper Berita Yudha are sponsoring the anti-Communist campaign. On paper .it backed the upris- ing led last Friday by Lt. Col. Untung, an officer of the presi- dential guard. But it failed to provide effective support. All communications with Jakar- ta were still suspended yesterday, but reports reaching Asian capi- tals indicated that 64-year-old President Sukarno was in control of his government. He called his cabinet ministers into session at his summer pal- ace at Bogor, 40 miles south of Jakarta, where he conferred Mon-- day and yesterday with various civilian officials and the armed 4 forces chiefs. Ai fce s sympathies general Untung in his Communist-backed attempt to seize power. Word here is that Untung now is at Jogiakarta, in central Java 250 miles southeast of Jakarta. The situation in central Java was uncertain. Reports through diplomatic channels said, 'however, that or- ganized resistance appeared to have collapsed. These reports said emai1 nnlrt nf 'rph1 fnvorce hal1 SU NDAY-OCT. 10-2:00 AU D. AA. H. know that this Congress is ready counties and put the children in a to go home and it won't be very highway march to the state capi- well received," Rauh said. "I think tol, a Negro spokesman said yes- a bill will be ready when Con- terday. gress comes back in January." "We probably will start the boy- Meanwhile, President Johnson cott tomorrow," J. T. Johnson of announced that a White House the Southern Christian Leader- conference on Negro rights will be ship Conference said during a held sNov. 17-18, with a follow- demonstration protesting segrega- up gathering next spring to con- tion. sider the conference's recommen- Most of the Negro pupils in dations. this county-Taliaferro-are boy- 'The leadership conference, Rauh cotting the school. The protest reported, agreed in last week's began after all the white pupils meeting that "every assault with transferred to other counties this a racial purpose or effect should fall when about 70 Negroes had be made a federal crime." applied to enter the white school Acquittal in Crawfordville. The group met shortly after a Natchez Hayneville, Ala., jury acquitted In Natchez, Miss., more than Thomas L. Coleman, a deputy i1d marching Negroes, including sheriff, of manslaughter in con- civil rights leader Charles Evers, nection with a slaying of Jona- were arrested by police Monday than .M. Daniels, 27, a white civil night. But officers had to return rights worker for the Episcopal Evers to the march route to con- Society for Cultural and Racial trol Negro teen-agers who surged Unity. toward a crowd of whites. In suggesting that the major Negroes filled the street when legislative goal of the leadership officers loaded a bus with arrest- in 1966 be to take civil rights ed demonstrators. They shook criminal cases out of state courts, their fists and yelled to police. Rauh said the group tried un- When Police Chief J. T. Robin- successfully to write similar pro- son had ordered the Negro march- visions in the Voting Rights Act ers arrested for parading without this year. a permit, the whites began cheer- Crawfordville ing, but the Negroes broke out In Crawfordville, Ga., civil with a louder cheer. rights leaders pushing for school The Negroes did not stop their integration will try to mount a Ne- jeers until Evers was returned gro pupil boycott in six other some 30 minutes afterwards. Pakistan1 Breaks Ties with Malaysi on Kahi a r how a Lanz girl copes with semi-.dressy occasions ... and calls for attention. The shape: soft, easy, knee-deep in fringe. The fabric: naked wool, light-as-air. The coloring: blue-and-green cued to fail. 5to 15 sizes $40.00 s~ 3~ .n .~ Dr. Hallenbeck, who met with newsmen after the President made his statement, said that the risk involved in the operation is min- imal Dr. J. Willis Hurst of Atlanta, who has been Johnson's heart spe- cialist since the chief executive's 1955 heart attack, also was pres- ale to stand the operation a anyone his age who never had a heart attack. In response to a question, press secretary Bill D. Moyers said the doctors expect Johnson will re- main in the hospital 10 to 14 allenbeck said that after the President leaves the hospital, "a reduced schedule would probably be necessary for a few weeks.", During that time, he said, John- son might "become tired more quickly than he normally would." Humphrey made a brief state- ment after Johnson's departure. Humphrey said, "The Presi- dent has fully discussed the sit- uation with me and with the Cab- inet and we are clear as to the procedures to be followed during his short absence if the necessity arises." He added that, "I shall of course be available ip Washington at all times during the President's ab- sence from the White House." Johnson, discussing Humphrey's role, said: "While I do not anticipate the need for presidential decision or actions during the short timue that I will not be available for the purpose, the Cabinet, and partic- ularly the secretary of state and the secretary of defense as well as my White House staff, will always be in contact with the vice- president." He said "these men have been a party to and participated thor- oughly in all major policy deci- sions." He said they are "fully and currently informed." Johnson concluded his state- ment by saying that "the public will, of course, be kept fully and currently advised of my progress." Worl Nes Rundu RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (IFP) - Pakistan cut diplomatic ties yes- terday with Malaysia, accusing that Southeast Asian nation of not supporting Pakistan's war with India over Kashmir. This conflict was the main cause of the diplomatic break, be- cause Malaysia is in conflict with neighboring Indonesia, a declar- ed supported of Pakistan in its quarrels with India. Indonesia and Pakistan are the world's larg- est Moslem nations, each with a population of about 100 million. Malaysia largely is Moslem, as is Kashmir, the Himalayan. state claimed by India and Pakistan. Pakistan also charged Monday that India ignored a cease-fire declared under Unitied Nations auspicez on Sept. 23 and was at- tacking in the Chamb sector, which is in the same general area of Kashmir. Dispatch Sent A dispatch from Kuala Lum-. pur, the Malaysian capital, said the Pakistani decision was met initially with silence but that it had not been surprising. Announcing the break, Paki- stan's foreign minister, A. Z. Bhutto, said Malaysia "has taken an immoral position, has violated the solidarity of the African-As- ion world." Pakistan's ambassador was be- ing withdrawn, he said, and Ma- laysian diplomats were being giv- en time to wind up their affairs in Pakistan. Pakistani Suggestion Rejected. As Ehutto spoke at a news con- ference, the Malaysian govern- ment made public a note reject- ing any Pakistani suggestion that Malaysia sided with India in the Kashmir dispute. Bhutto quoted extensively from a statement by Indonesia's Pres- ident Sukarno pledging support of Pakistan in its quarrel with In- dia and said: "A distinction has to be drawn between aggressor and aggressed. Pakistan has broken all relations with Malaysia." Malaysia Sends Note The Malaysian note, which the government said was delivered to the' Pakistana embassy in Kuala Lurmpur last Friday, said Malay- sia has not behaved wrongly to a fellow Moslem nation; challeng- ed a Pakistani claim that Paki- stan had itried to mediate the Malaysia-Indonesia dispute; ob- jected to an "outburst" by Paki- stani High Commissioner Syxdl Muhammad Hassan against the Malaysian ambassador at the Unite.d Nations. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Senate Demo- cratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana announced yesterday there would be a~n initial test vote Friday in the fight over the bill to repeal the Taft-Hartley law section which allows states to ban the union shop. He told his colleagues that the leadership would take the unusual step of moving to table and thus kill the pending motion to take up the bill. Such a motion is not debatable. The leadership will then vote against the tabling motion, Mans- field explained. LONDON-Britian offered yes- terday to finance a multimillion- dollar program to prepare Rho- desia's Africans for majority rule after the' white-governed colony achieves independence. But Rhodesia Prime Minister Ian Smith, in London for the crucial independence talks, dis- played little interest in the offer and, instead again demanded in- dependence without conditions. * * * CHICAGO - Treasury Secre- tary Herny H. Fowler indicated yesterday that President Johnson is opposed to basic interest rate boosts by banks. In an address to the American Bankers Association convention, Fowler said the administration -"continues to believe that the sta- bility of long-term interest rates is an important factor in the eco- nomic environment which has given us the greatest and best balanced period of domestic pros- perity in our history." * * * WASHINGTON - Tentative agreement on an omnibus farm bill largely along the lines asked by President Johnson was reach- ed yesterday by a Senate-House conference committee. NEW YORK-C. Raymond Hul- sart, industrial relations direc- has been shut down for 20 days by a strike of the New York News- paper Guild, says an agreement reached Monday with the Mailers Union "might expedite the situa- tion." WASHINGTON The Senate gave final congressional approv- al yesterday to the $3.218-billion foreign aid money bill and sent it to the White House for President Johnson's signature. STATE STREET at LI BERTY First thing you notice about a shirt is the collar. Is it immnaculately clean? Smoothly, evenly pressed? Or does it look a little bit tired, not quite up to seeing the day through? When the collar looks superb, it's a pretty good sign the whole shirt is expertly done. You know -it's been handled by highly trained laundresses working skillfUlly. at the best of scientific equipment. The kind we have at Kyer. Call us to- Co Ins I The Canterbury H ouse - - iii m