SUNDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1965' THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Viet S Stagei (Continued from Page 1) tween the curb and streams of Saturday shoppers. At Oregon's capitol in Salem, 350 protestors gathered on the steps. They were met by more than 50 counter-pickets carrying signs reading "Get Out of Viet Nam-Go North." - Demonstrators a n d counter- demonstrators traded chants in Cleveland. "End the war in Viet Nam, send the troops home," one side yelled. "Hooray, hooray for the U.S.A.," the other group countered. A University of Kansas student marching outside the draft board office in Lawrence was arrested on a charge of gross indecency. Police said his sign assailed the draft law in abusive language. In Chicago, 150 protestors showing up for a rally in Grant Park found themselves outnum- bered by counter - demonstrators. The 250 hecklers marched around the 150 antiwar demonstrators. At another Chicago demonstra- tion, near Roosevelt University, 40 sign-carrying pickets were pelted with, eggs from nearby windows. Their banners read "Refuse to ympathy Demonstrations By Join the Bloody War" and "Stop the Dirty War." Several hundred persons march- ed along Los Angeles' Hollywood Boulevard. chanting such phrases as "LBJ, how many did you kill today?" At the University of California's Santa Barbara campus, a group of students appeared briefly around midnight, chanting "We love our draft cards, we hate the Reds." They did not clash with a larger group sitting on the lawn in an all-night vigil protesting the Viet Nam war. At Wayne State University in Detroit, a crowd of 400 at a teach- in angrily surged toward a speaker when he pointed to an American flag and said "that's your flag, baby, not mine." School officials quieted the crowd. Eleven demonstrators who at- tempted to make a "citizen's ar- rest" of the commander of Truax Air Force Base near Madison, Wis., were arrested themselves yester- day for obstructing traffic at the base. The group, including 10 Univer- sity of Wisconsin students, was taken into custody at the base's Groups main gate where members sat on bassy i the pavement to protest United ners sa States involvement in Viet Nam. Crucifie Fifteen University of Rhode Is- ing, the land students began a 24-hour of Lond vigil Friday night. James P. Walsh, huge U temporary chairman of the Stu- Square. dents for Democratic Action, ex- Thet plained the vigil: ized by "We are trying to bring pres- the-bon sure on the powers that be to let similar them know there is disagreement United on our policy inViet Nam." Leftis In Minneapolis, half a dozen Saturda students shouted opposition to the sels in Viet Nam war from a stepladder tary int set up at a downtown intersec- Police tion. Their audience totaled 100, 900 but including police, newsmen and number hecklers. The cro Overseas slogans, Other demonstrations took place sin," an outside the United States. Swedi In Toronto, a student group swords Friday night proposed a "U.S. gbv- day tol ernment in exile" in Canada to 300 you deal directly with the Viet Cong. Embassy Peaceful demonstrations involv- Viet Na ing a total of 150 persons, mostly Some youngsters, were held Friday night through in Bonn and in Oslo. test add More than 1,500 people marched Graham Saturday night on the U.S. Em- It ca Overseas in London carrying ban- ying, "We Want Johnson ed." Hooting and chant- crowd was met by squads don bobbies protecting the .S. building on Grosvenor demonstration was organ- various pacifist and ban- nb groups to coincide with protest marches in the States. t demonstrators paraded ay in the streets of Brus- protest against U.S mili- tervention in Viet Nam. e said they numbered about organizers claimed their reached 3,000 or 4,000. iwd shouted anti-American including "Johnson Assas- Zd carried Viet Cong flags. ish police flashed drawn and wielded clubs Satur- beat back a mob of about ths marching on the U.S. y to protest U.S. policy in Im. of the demonstrators got to present a written pro- [ressed to U.S. Ambassador n Parsons. lled on the United States to start "immediate peace nego- tiations." Some 2,000 young people met in Hanoi. A dispatch by the Soviet news agency Tass said they joined with American youths "opposing the United States military aggres- sion in Viet Nam." Washington Reactions There was little official reaction in Washington, although some sources said they fear the demon- strations will be interpreted over- seas as evidence of widespread American opposition to the Viet Nam buildup. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor said in Chicago-as 100 pickets paraded outside-that he is personally "indifferent" to the demonstra- tions. But Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore), a critic of American involvement, told the Senate Friday that "I thank God" for the thousands of Americans protesting the buildup. Morse said he was pleased by demonstrators "who will not be cowed into submission by the in- tolerant bigots who believe that because our country is on an illegal course of action, we must support its illegality." -Associated Press DEMONSTRATORS AT BERKELEY begin lining up for their march down Telegraph Ave. to the Oakland city limits to protest United States involvement in Viet Nam. A car bearing an American flag preceded the marchers with a sign reding, "We love our country!" I Sukarno Orders ToE By ANTOINE YARED JAKARTA, Indonesia (P) - Grim-faced and angry, President Sukarno yesterday in effect or- dered the army to call off its anti-Communist campaign. Sukarno installed Maj. Gen. Suharto, a strong anti-Commu- nist, as the new army commander with the rank of minister. Then he shouted: "I order Maj. Gen. Suharto to restore law and order and that there should be no agitated emo- tion either from left or right." As Suharto stood at stiff atten- nd Communi tion, Sukarno declared that in an agitated atmosphere "I cannot make a political settlement." Sukarno was obviously referring to the Army's crackdown on Com- munists, several thousand having been arrested in a roundup of those who attempted a coup Sept. 30 against Sukarno. Suharto took over and broke up the coup and has led the anti-Communist drive. Sukarno's words undoubtedly hit deaf ears because there was no sign the army would back down. As Sukarno talked, demonstrators paraded through Jakarta's streets demanding the Indonesian Com- munist party be banned for tak- ing part in the coup. A government official said Su- karno wants to form a new Com- munist party to replace the pres- ent pro-Red Chinese one. This would be in line with his policy of building up the Communists to offset the influence of the mili- tary. The army aparently will have nothing to do with a new party. Army-controlled newspapers and speakers at anti-Communist ral- lies have been railing against the creation of The army moving to o party. An c the supreme banned all parties invo coup. Comn volved. Sukarnoc orders but t Brig. Gen. sources said lead to outl Communist GLOBAL MISSILE MALFUNCTIONS: Spy's Papers Show Soviet Missile Military st Pure a new Red party. The army-controlled Antara also appeared to be News Agency said air Vice Mar- )utlaw the Communist shal Omar Dhani, a leftist accused order issued by KOTI, by the army of backing the coup, operations command, would leave soon on a temporary activities by political assignment abroad. lved in the Sept. 30 This was confirmed to reporters unists were deeply in- by air Marshal Muliono Herlam- sang, attached to the cabinet pre- sidium, who will be acting air )rdinarily signs KOTI force commander. He said Dhani his one was signed by will negotiate abroad for the pur- Tu'stjipoto. rrDiplomatic KTI'order couldc chase of aircraft materials, awing the Indonesian Suharto, the new army chief of party and its affil- staff, looks tough but speaks with a soft voice. Many Indonesians feel he is well qualified to run the 270,000-man army. At 44, Suharto succeeds Maj. Gen. Achmed Yani, one of six generals tortured and murdered in the coup. army strategic command when the rebels struck. He rallied loyal re zeroing in on tar- forces of the army, navy and police and crushed the rebellion ev said the new weap- within 20 hours. )utwit U.S. radar and Suharto received his military tems in the north polar training under the Dutch and lat- use "the new global er under the Japanese who occu- fly around the world pied Indonesia in World War II. tion and strike a blow He received his commission as arget." major general in 1962. diplomatic side, Zorza Indonesia's right-wing army ap- e most important in- peared to have consolidated its arnished by Penkovsky hold. But Radio Jakarta broad- e Kremlin's hand could casts made it plain Sukarno, 64, ally called during the remains as head of state and the crisis, man who makes appointments. Just how much control the army maintains over the life-time pres- ident was not immediately clear. Qualified observers here who have kept close watch over the In- donesian scene speculated that ntouched by any ac- Sukarno and the army have nate may take on his reached some compromise that I nomination of Fran- has kept the president's father- sey as a federal judge. image intact but diminished the ion of Morrisey, a leftist influences that once sway- icipal iudge and long- ed him. Read and Use Mich~gan Daily Classifiedis 0 f9V I-;'' Now! The watch with a wardrobe of 4 straps O-MEGA IMAGINE! An ultra-precise watch with 4 straps of dif- ferent colors to complement your favorite ensembles. The Omega "Quartette" keeps pace not only with every tick , o. ;3; oonof a second but every flick r of fashion. Choose the color strap you wish to wear and presto! your watch . . . like your hat, shoes, and gloves ... matches your mood. In- side, of course, is the world- renowned 17-jewel Omega movement, for a lifetime of proud possession. I a . S a sreate s a n awhtu alk , mit contor fbra. YOU NG- i g 'SE C R E P. ..... 3 1 / Olga shapes o flattering, youthful profile for you " featerweight fiberfill*~ " adjustable stretch-straps * in white, black, blue mist, and pink mist. 32-32-36, A and B, 5.00 *polyester fiber JK.1d arine Steentj of Ann Arbor 209 EAST LIBERTY By MYRON K. MYERS LONDON (A) - The "fantastic" secret weapon that Nikita Khru- shchev rattled at the West in 1960 was a nuclear-propelled rocket that blew up on the launching pad, killing the Soviet commander of rocket forces and 300 others, the newspaper Guardian said Satur- day. The Guardian quoted from what it said were secret reports of Oleg Penkovsky, a Russian who was sentenced to death by a Soviet court in 1963 for spying for the West. He was close to influential Kremlin leaders and was regarded in London and Washington as the most valuable Western spy behind the Iron Curtain. Victor Zorza, Communist affairs expert of the Guardian, apparent- ly obtained an advance look at the spy's reports, which are being published soon under the title "The Penkovsky Papers" in Bri- tain and the United States. Khrushchev's Boast 4 Zorza said Penkovsky reported that former Premier Khrushchev's boast early in 1960 of a secret weapon annoyed Soviet military men and forced a premature test- ing of the rocket. In the fall of 1960, scientists assembled to rush through a test in time for the October Revolution anniversary, Zorza reported. "The countdown went according to plan," Zorza said, "but the new missile failed to leave the ground. The observers waited for some 20 minutes, then came out of the shelter. "At this point the missile ex- ploded, killing 300 people, among them the commander-in-chief of the Soviet missile forces, Marshal Nedelin." Plane Deaths The Russians announced Oct. 25, 1960 that Marshal Mitroran I. Nedelin and several other officers had been killed in the line of duty in an air crash. In an address to the Soviet Par- liament on Jan. 14, 1960, Khrush- chev declared: "The Central Committee of the Communist party and the Soviet government can inform you, com- rade deputies, that though the weapons we now have are formi- dable weapons, the weapon we have in the hatching stage today is even more perfect, even more formidable." "This weapon under develop- ment, you might say in the port- folio of the scientists, is a fan- tastic one." Then on March 16, 1962, in a speech in the Kremlin, Khrush- chev indicated his "fantastic" new weapon had been perfected, al- though he did not refer to it in that way. Nor did he mention his previous boast. "Our scientists and engineers," he said, "have created a new in- tercontinental rocket which they call global. This rocket is invul- nerable to antimissile weapons." Any nuclear - powered rocket would be global, since its fuel would permit it to make extended flights befo gets. Khrushch ons could o warning syst region beca rockets can in any direc at any set t On the d reported th telligence fu was that the be successfu 1961 Berlin Black Select the strap you wish to wear and simpy slide it through the ingenious slotted back. In 14K white or yellow gold, with 4 straps, gift boxed ...$135 World News Roundu BAY Arcade Jewelry Shop By The Associated Press TOKYO - Radio Peking said Sunday North Vietnamese forces shot down a U.S. plane and cap- tured the pilot Saturday. It quoted a Hanoi announcement. There was no independent confirmation. The account mentioned neither the type of plane nor the name of the allegedly captured American. VATICAN CITY - The Vatican Ecumenical Council was asked to- day to make drastic changes in the life of the Roman Catholic priest. The council heard appeals for bishops and priests to improve their relations, for priests to help brother priests who go astray, for monks and friars to come out of' their monasteries, and for the use of electronic business machines in the pastoral care of souls.. The bishops, meeting in a rare Saturday session, voted by a show of hands to accept the document for further consideration as an eventual council decree. It now will be rewritten on the basis of suggestions made in debate over the past few days. * * * SAIGON, South Viet Nam-U.S.. Sky cavalrymen told Saturday of fighting off Viet Cong guerrillas in Phu Yen Province, 250 miles northeast of Saigon, to save a downed American helicopter and its four-man crew. Seven guerrillas were believed killed and four wounded in the ex- change, a spokesman said. No American casualties were reported. * * * WASHINGTON - A smoulder- ing dispute over how to block the spread of nuclear weapons around the world has flared up again in- side the administration, creating a controversy which President Johnson will have to resolve. U.S. policy on two critical inter- national issues - a NATO nuclear force and a proposed nuclear con- trol agreement with Russia--is re- garded by informed officials as having fallen into disarray. The reason appears to be that no for- mula for handling these problems has been agreed upon by major policy makers as a workable and practical expression of U.S. in- terests. * * * politically u tion the Se controversia cis X. Morri Confirmat Boston muni 16 Nickels Arcade Authorized Omega Agency ... World's Most Wanted Watch 11 time associate of the Kennedy family, is not likely to come with- out some detailed Senate discus- sion of what critics have called his lack of qualifications for the bench. Conflicting stories about wheth- er the nominee got a diploma mill law degree in Georgia and whether he actually lived there at a time when records indicate he may have been a candidate for state office in Massachusetts are likely to be aired at length. * * * KEY WEST, Fla.-A congres- sional hearing call came Saturday as fed-up Cubans continued to swell south Florida's exile colony. In Washington, a House foreign affairs subcommittee on inter- American affairs said it would hold a hearing Tuesday on the Cuban refugee problem. .":..":. ,., ....... ".i .::; a":"::::.: . .::.iaa :::::.: ...:. :::.:":. r:' :... ,:i*?:4::"}:::::ii ..:::.::vti'v}:'.v::':.".".*;,. e.....oo:.":.":.s.. . For the first time! All you could ask of nature you get in a WASHINGTON - Johnsoi seems likely President to escape I I Now the loveliest decollete bra in the world-the famous Bali-lo- has been adapted for small figures! A lighter-than-air push-up foam pad lifts the small, or soft-tissue bosom to the front and center, pro- ducing full, feminine cleavage, rounded and real. The pad replaces flesh that would normally fill the undercup and sides. Use what na- ture gave you to best advantage- try on a Bali-lo More-so today. Nylon lace, bolstered with an all "Human Rights in Ann Arbor" Speaker: MRS. EUNICE BURNS City Council of Ann Arbor Pnc+ AAo m . o P m nL., P D + c - -;nm1 ;- r ice- Bali-lo More-so is cut low and wide, back and front, to show 11 1 .: I rr