SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGER THRE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9,1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY VA(~V TTIRWK a ClkA= A. asaaa:U u Tentative Approval Yiel ds TALKS COLLAPSE: Britain Fears Rhodesian Declaration of Independence New Strike Settlement C Gall1Bladder Removed Johnson Pronounced Ready To Make Any Necessary Decisions WASHINGTON (A) -President Johnson underwent a 2 -hour operation yesterday and his family doctor said it went beautifully. Three hours after the surgery was over, a top aide pronounced John- son ready to make any presiden- tial decisions that might be neces- sary. "The operation was a complete success," said White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers, after a team of greenrobed surgeons removed Johnson's gall bladder and a stone that had formed in his kidney. Moyers said at midday he be- livs Johnson able to make any decisions that might be needed. "Were he not able to make those decisions," Moyers told re- porters in response to a question, "procedures are in effect which would make certain those deci- sions are made." Humphrey On Stand-by That is the arrangement under which Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey can act in an emer- gency if the hospitalized President cannot. Less than two hours after he was wheeled, under general an- esthetics, from the Bethesda Naval Hospital operating room, Johnson was reported asking questions about the business of the presi- dency. Operation A Success Moyers relayed this report from Dr. James C. Cain, a transplanted Texan now with the Mayo Clinic of Rochester, Minn,, anc John- son's personal physician: "Everything went, in his words, beautifully and as expected." Johnson spent two hours and 45 minutes in the operating suite after the surgery was completed. Thank-You's Before he was placed under an- esthesia, he gave Moyers some assignments: thank House mem- bers who worked until the early morning hours to pass a highway beautification bill he and Mrs. Johnson want enacted; cable a quick report on the surgery to Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the U.S. commander in Viet Nam, "so that our men in Viet Nam wil know of my progress." Dr. George A. Hallenbeck, a surgeon from the Mayo Clinic, removed Johnson's gall bladder. It contained a stone about a half- inch in diameter. Dr. Ormond Clup, a urologist from the same clinic, removed the other stone, which was found in Johnson's ureter, which is a tube leading from the kidney to the urinary bladder. Another Stone? His doctors had not mentioned the possibility of another kidney stone, but Moyers said X-rays had indicated its possible existence. "The decision to remove the uretal stone was made in the operating room this morning by the doctors concerned," he said. The stone was ragged and about a quarter-inch in diameter. It partially blocked the right ureter. 10-14-Day Stay Moyers said the extra surgery, in which the ureter was opened by incision and the stone removed, does not change the prognosis for recuperation Hallenbeck's esti- mate of Johnson's time in the hospital: 10 to 14 days. Humphrey, as stand-by presi- dent, said he was kept fully in- formed on Johnson's condition. He left his suburban Maryland home after receiving word the surgery had begun, and drove to the Executive Office Building, across from the White House. In that office, just before the public announcement, he got word from Moyers that the operation had been successful. Later, with Johnsonnreported doing well, he went to Capitol Hill to preside over the Senate. -Associated Press A GEORGIA STATE TROOPER knocks down a Negro girl, and puts a flying tackle on a Negro youth, as they attempt to break through police lines and board school buses with white residents of Crawfordville. Negroes March on Courthouse To emand esegregat ion Guildsmen's Ratification Anticipated KheePs Plan Solves Job Security Issue; Safeguards Offered NEW YORK ()-A tentative agreement between the AFL-CIO New York Newspaper Guild and the strikebound New York Times yesterday paved the way for an end to the city's 23-day partial newspaper blackout. All that was needed to get the presses rolling again on six closed dailies was ratification of the peace terms by the Guild unit of the Times. Strike leaders forecast a favorable vote. The balloting was set for 1 p.m. EDT tomorrow, indicating the papers could be back on the streets with Monday morning editions- their first since the Times strike began Sept. 16. Accept Recommendations He said both sides had accept- ed recommendations originally made by his labor epert, Theo- dore Kheel. The same proposal had been turned down Thursday by the Guild and the Times. The accord requires ratifica- tion by the 2,200-member Guild unit at the Times. The New York Post has pub- lished throughout the strike, and the Herald Tribune resumed pub- lication Sept. 27. These two papers have withdrawn from the Pub- lishers Association of New York. Close Papers Members of the association closed their papers, charging a breach of contract when mechani- cal unions refused to cross picket lines at the struck Times. John J. Gaherin, president of the publishers association, said the five suspended dailies would resume publication "as soon as practicable." Kheel's peace formula led Wag- ner to call Guild and Times ne- gotiators to City Hall for an emergency meeting. There the mayor urged the negotiators to reconsider the formula. Job Security Chief issues in the Guild-Times deadlock involved job security in the face of automation, pensions and the union shop. Kheel's proposal called for a separate pension fund for Guild employes of the Times, with the newspaper contributing to it a percentage of employe earnings. The Guild's demand for veto rights over the introduction of labor-saving automation devices into the Times was overruled by Kheel. However, he recommended safeguards in job jurisdiction un- der automation for the Guild. Kheel proposed the union shop for the Times commercial de- payrtment, but ruled it out for the editorial department of the news- paper. LONDON (U)-Talks on inde- pendence for Rhodesia collapsed last night. This raised fears the white-ruled African colony may proclaim sovereignty on its own in a break from Britain that could damage both economically and perhaps set off a race war. A week of negotiations left the prime ministers of the two gov- ernments, Harold Wilson of Brit- ain and Ian Smith of Rhodesia, at loggerheads. "Despite intensive discussion, no means have been found of recon- ciling the opposing views," a joint communique said. "No further meeting has been arranged." African Majority A major issue is the future of Rhodesia's 3.9 million Africans, who are ruled by 250,000 whites. The Africans are counting on Britain to prevent Smith's gov- ernment from imposing controls World News Roundup CRAWFORDVILLE VP)-Negroes march to the Taliaferro County Courthouse again yesterday and called a night march after their spokesman ruled out any halt in the demonstrations. "They are trying to talk us into giving away our freedom, but they are not going to do it," said youthful Jimmy Wells of Atlanta, a staff worker for Southern Christian Leadership Conference. SCLC has taken control of the civil rights drive. The state police have been the object of constant taunting at the rallies, but the troopers stand by quietly, sometimes smiling at the barbs. March to Courthouse About 95 demonstrators march- ed to the courthouse, following the daily attempt by a group of Negroes to board buses with white pupils transferred out of the county when faced with integra- tion this fall. The demonstrations started nearly two weeks ago as a protest to the bussing of white pupils to other counties and the shutdown of the white school here. But SCLC plans to use a local dis- pute and a 100-mile march to Atlanta to dramatize generally the issue of token school integration. The demonstrators went to the jail yesterday and listened to one of their leaders talk from his cell. In Atlanta, the SCLC's director of political education, Hosea Wil- liams, said at a news conference there would be no halt. to the demonstrations in this rural East Georgia town. Appeal for Moratorium Gov. Carl -E. Sanders had ap- pealed for a moratorium on dem- onstrations pending court deter- mination of the county's pupil placement law. The case is to be heard Tuesday by a three-judge federal panel. Williams said nine demands would have to be met before any truce could be called. He said on them that would bar the way to eventual rule by the Negro majority. If Smith declares independence from Britain, the Africans feel their last guarantees will have dis- appeared. African leaders have threatened violence if Smith breaks away. Wilson, while offering to fi- nance an education program to equip the Africans for self govern- ment, has threatened Rhodesia with diplomatic ostracism, eco- nomic boycott and the penalties of rebellion if it breaks away. Settle Questions The British position, backed by the United States and West Ger- many among others, is that the political questions must be settled before Rhodesia faces the world on its own. In a final 21/2-hour session in the Cabinet room at No. 10 Down- judicial procedures are too slow and cumbersome and "too often have been circumvented by the likes of rabid segregationists." "A moratorium would merely perpetuate the 'bad' status quo, a status quo which1 is in total dis- harmony with the aspirations of the Negro community in Craw- fordville," said Williams. Ignore Marchers Meanwhile, the white residents of Crawfordville have begun to ignore the marchers' rallies. For the past two days, only a few white spectators have shown up. The Georgia grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, Calvin F. Craig, has called for white persons to pay no attention to the demon- strations. In the bus boarding attempt yesterday, four Negroes were pull- ed from a street when they sat down to block a bus. Troopers grabbed several other Negro pu- pils who tried to run through police lines. By The Associated Press[ WASHINGTON-Administration leaders declaring the time has come for the Senate to "put up or shut up," moved yesterday to try to choke off a filibuster on the union shop issue. They slapped down a cloture petition in time for a showdown vote Monday after Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois pulled the props out from under their plans for a preliminary test of sentiment. iTTnder Senate rules, the roll will be called at 1 p.m. Monday on the question of closing debate on Democratic Leader Mike Mans- field's motion to call up a bill to repeal Section. 14B of the Taft- Hartley Act. M JAKART-Young demonstrators burned the headquarters of the Indonesian Communist party- PKI-yesterday and demanded dissolution of the party, which the army blames for a leftist uprising here last week. "Long live America!" they cried in a motor parade past the U.S. Embassy, the scene in recent months of denunciation of things American by Red-led Indonesian mobs. Soldiers inflamed by the torture killing of six generals were still hunting Communist rebel sus- pects in Jakarta and its suburbs. The army newspaper Berita Yud- ha announced the arrest of three Communist youth front members and said they confessed taking part in the killing of the six gen- erals, who were found buried in a common grave at an, air base on Jakarta's outskirts. MIAMI-Several exile boats ar- rived yesterday in Cuba to pick up relatives under Fidel Castro's new open-door policy and will be allowed to take them to the Unit- ed States on Sunday, the Cuban government announced. Although Cuban officials did not say how many boats arrived, the announcement worried U.S. officials, who fear prospects of an unwieldly, small-boat exodus across the Florida Straits. * *i * MOSCOW-Tass insisted yes- terday that Luna 7 carried out most of the preliminaries for a soft landing on the moon before it crashed into the lunar surface. Instead Luna 7 crashed early yesterday in the Ocean of Storms area, 3 h/daysafter its launching. It was the third unsuccessful So- viet attempt in six months to make history's first soft landing on the moon. The braking system apparently did not function properly. ing St., Wilson gave Smith an em- phatic warning on the conse- quences if he severs the last links of British control over the self- governing territory. The British are especially wor- ried about the possible reaction of African populations against whites elsewhere in Africa. Wilson and his government believe it would be one of outrage and they fear violence. Nevertheless, the British report- ed Smith held fast and refused to agree to the British demand that Rhodesia recognize that the black majority eventually will gov- ern the country. "We have agreed to differ," Smith said. The Canterbuzry H-ouse opens at 8:30 p.m. on friday and saturday at 218 N. Division BUT: come early to insure yourself of: FREE FOOD STRANGE HAPPENINGS Oct. 8, 9 ED REYNOLDS doing folk and things like that -al others doing others COME CASUAL one dollar per person NOWA~1 ANN CURRENT ANNUAL RATE FE DERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATIO0N I r Keep your eyes to the shies at the game! U.S. SWEEP: Troops Employ Tear Gas; Attack Viet Cong Stronghold -SGC Committee on the University Bookstore L' SAIGON (P) - Thousands of United States paratroopers in- vaded a Viet Cong jungle strong- hold yesterday and used tear gas against the guerrillas, a U.S. mili- tary spokesman reported. It was the first authorized use of nonlethal gas since last Janu- ary. When news of that operation leaked out in March it caused such a world furor that use of tear gas was discontinued. In the air war, Guam-based U.S. B52s struck twice at the Viet Cong stronghold, 30 miles north of Saigon in D Zone, before the U.S. ground drive began. 15,000 Land At Qui Nhon, 260 miles north- east of Saigon, advance elements of a 15,000-man South Korean combat division began landing. The paratroopers, some of them equipped with tear gas grenade cannisters used the nonlethal gas at least once yesterday, the spokesmen said. They were joined by Australian soldiers. There were no details on the gas attack, part of a major op- eration launched by elements of the 173rd Airborne Brigade against the "iron triangle." This is an area roughly four miles wide and seven miles long that Com- munist guerrillas have ruled for years. Report Fighting A U.S. spokesman said the Americans made significant con- tact with the enemy and a num- ber of fights with the Viet Cong were reported throughout the day. U.S. casualties were described as light. A personnel carrier hit a Viet Cong mine and overturned. There were no reports of Viet Cong casualties. Sequel Sweep He said the operation was launched as a sequel to a two- week sweep in D Zone that ended Sept. 28. U.S. forces used the gas three times previously in field experi- ments-twice in December and once in January-in an effort to flush out the Viet Cong without injury to noncombatants or U.S. prisoners. But as a result of a world out- cry last March when these inci- dents were disclosed, it was stated that while Gen. William C. West- moreland, commander of U.S. forces, had authority to order use of the tear gas, it would be against U.S. policy to do so in field op- erations in Viet Nam. .1 I r WOULD YOU LIKE TO READ 1000 to 2000 WORDS A MINUTE WITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENTION EASE PRESSURE-SAVE TIME-IMPROVE CONCENTRATION You can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method. You'll learn to comprehend at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual material as well as to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish-in your required reading and in the additional reading you will want to do. No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READING method. In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon external equipment in reading. An n -arnnnr:-c nr -nn -: in n r : inArrFI F A TMn oAr N(C wil ht n in.h DIAMOND-SET > ': WATCH ES s r Fe y 1 '" syinm old w itther beautyf/wa'es... n epig with the Tissot tradition, comes Splendora .. . a collec- tion which combines the excitement of precious dia- monds with timekeeping dependability. To assure maximum accuracy, every Tissot 17-jewel movement i #-m fartnratPtPC.fo'7 davs.When rmou ivea nTissot R NEW PENGUINS ON CAMPUS IN A FEW HANDS: MONOPOLY POWER IN AMERICA. Estes Kefauver. The hearings he conducted provided Senator Kefauver with much of the material for this book, in which he points out the dan. gers of. monopolies and the measures needed to cope with them. $1.25 THE CONSUMER SOCIETY: A HISTORY OF AMERICAN CAPITALISM. Peter cl'A. Jones. A colorfully-written study of the economic, social and political forces that have made America the wealthiest country the world has ever known. $1.25 THE SCIENTIFIC ANALYSIS OF PERSONALITY. Raymond B. CattelL Professor Cattell's own summation of his renowned work in personality testing-one of the most exciting developments in psychology in recent years. $1.65 ELECTRONIC COMPUTERS. S. H. Hollingdale and G. C. Totill. A clear and thorough guide for the general reader. -$1.65 THE GEOGRAPHY OF AFRICAN AFFAIRS. Paul Fordham, A survey of modern Africa-its resources and its current economic and political status. With 28 maps and 35 tables. $1.45 LOGIC AND SEXUAL MORALITY. John Wilson. A philosopher's view of the irrationality of much sex thought and behavior...with proposals for more realistic and intelligent standards. $1.25 THE BREAKUP OF THE SOVIET EMPIRE IN EASTERN EUROPE, Ghita Ionescu. A fascinating account of Russia's weakening hold on the European countries behind the Iron Curtain-by a for. mer member of the Rumanian Diplomatic Service. 959 OHead AMEicAS F~oITE SHAMWPOO N~ VIABLE IN I I ii I1 r