FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE FRIDAY, JANUARY 7,1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE "Hints Show Impact of Peace Drive By The Associated Press There has been just the merest whisper of a hint that President Johnson's diplomatic peace offen- sive has had some impact in North Viet Nam. This does not necessarily mean that peace is about to break out. Indeed, things might get a good deal rougher in Indochina be- fore long. But in the long run, the peace drive may prove to have had a salutar'y effect. Hanoi propaganda has furious- ly denounced the U.S. moves as a[ hoax to permit Americans to ne- gotiate from strength. Yet the propaganda now sug- gests a distinction, however slight, between North Vietnamese de- mands and those of the Viet Cong's political organization, the National Liberation Front. There is no indication yet that this distinction is sharp enough to permit agreement on negotia- tions. But with renewed Soviet interest in taking a hand in the situation, it represents something which might eventually be devel- oped. On Dec. 29, when Ho Chi Minh responded to the appeal of Pope Paul VI for peace efforts, he re- peated the four-point demands of North Viet Nam's government. But he left out one phrase which al- ways had been attached before. He said the Americans must "let the Vietnamese people settle their internal affairs themselves," but failed to add the customary line: "In accordance with the pro- gram of the National Front for Liberation of South Viet Nam." By itself, this might have meant little. But with the U.S. diplo- matic drive in full swing, the Hanoi paper Nhan Dan a few days ago said that if there were to be That would mean recognizing a political solution, the United Viet Cong jurisdiction over a big States must acknowledge Hanoi's portion of South Viet Nam which four points and "stop indefinitely the Communists now hold. and unconditionally all acts of What might develop if the latest war against North Viet Nam." peace effort fails may worry not The sentence ended there. It only Hanoi but the Russians as did not add, as it customarily did well. The Hanoi paper professed to in other statements, a demand for see in the U.S. drive a sort of an end to "aggression in South ultimatum to North Viet Nam to Viet Nam." agree to unconditional negotia- Ordinarily this might not mean tions or face expansion of the war. much. But the Hanoi article was T signed "Observer," a tag used for This seems to worry the Rus- official party statements. It could sians. The leaders are committed represent just the slightest back- to an iternal economic develop- r nn ment program. uown from ne ail-or-nounng ae- mands of the past. The United States would not object to having the Viet Cong at talks as observers, or even with- in a North Vietnamese delegation, but will not' recognize the Viet Cong or its front as a political entity or negotiator. But there seems to be among some top Soviet elements a feel- ing that the U.S.S.R. could be- come embroiled in conflict grow- ing out of Asian events, and that thus Moscow should concentrate efforts and wealth on fullest prep- aration for any eventuality. Kosygi () I Tr ies To Ai*d Talks Retuains Sole Link Between Shastri, Ayub TASHKENT, U.S.S.R. ( P)-So- viet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin was the sole communications link yesterday between the leaders of India and Pakistan on the third day of their deadlocked summit conference. Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri of India and President Ayub Khan of Pakistan stayed in their separate country villas out- side Tashkent and their large del- egations of ministers also stayed home. Kosygin obviously was having difficulty with the explosive In- dian-Pakistan quarrel that has befuddled Washington for years. Talks The Soviet leaders spent hours in secret talks with Shastri and Ayub but as the day ended about the only thing certain was that the three mei would attend the, theatre together tonight. It was not even certain when Shastri and Ayub would resume their private sessions together - their first since India and Paki- stan went to war in September. The stumbling block was the In- dian-Pakistani quarrel over Kash- mir, the issue that for 18 years defeated the many and expensive efforts of the United States made By The Associated Press President Johnson, acting with- in minutes of a personal request from Mayor John V. Lindsay, dis- patched Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz to New York yes- terday to lend a hand in trying to settle the costly transit strike. White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers told newsmen: "The simple purpose is to ex- plore the transit situation with the mayor." But Wirtz also will consult with a three-man mediation team that is meeting with the New York Transit Authority and the Transit Workers Union. Requested Help The White House had let it be known that Johnson would take some sort of action any time New York official requested his help in trying to end the dispute. Then at about 6:15 p.m., Moyer said, Lindsay called Johnson and the two had their first personal talk about the strike. Previously Wirtz had been han- dling all conversations on behalf of the federal government. The strike yesterday forced the New York Stock Exchange to its first early closing since the assas- sination of President John F. Ken- nedy. Republican Mayor John V. Lind- say reported from City Hall had exhorted New Yorkers, weary of an all-out subway and bus strike: "We must sweat it out. I ask you that you keep calm, keep your nerves." Talks Sluggish Peace talks between the striking AFL-CIO Transport Workers Un- ion and the Transit Authority moved almost as sluggishly as traffic in the streets during the worst days of monumental tieup. Motorists in vast numbers took to the highways as early as 5' a.m. in a vain effort to beat a traffic crush that continued until noon-only to resume again in the opposite direction later in the aft- ernoon. The rain stalled many cars, and vehicles backed up for miles at Manhattan's bridges and tun- nels. Rush Hour Traffic Commissioner Henry A. Barnes blamed the combination of the city's weather and its transit strike for "the longest rush hour it ever had." Commuter rail traffic was some- what smoother but very heavy, as ACTS ON LINDSAY'S REQUEST: Johnson Sends Wirtz To Help- Settle NYC' Transit Strihe Shel epin, Other Hanoi Leave Viet Cong Terrorists Jolt Saigon Heavy Bombings Kill One, Injure Four Americans SAIGON ()-Viet Cong terror- ists jolted Saigon last night with two bombings, the heaviest since they ripped the U.S. enlisted men's Metropole Hotel billet Dec. 4. A Vietnamese was killed and seven persons, including four Americans, were injured. Blasts an hour apart at the gate of the Tan Son Nhut mll- tary airport and at a police sub- station across town broke a lull in the terrorism roughly compar- able to American suspension of the bombing of Communist North Viet Nam, which rounds out two weeks today. Afield, explosions of another sort wiped out the guerrilla-dom- inated village of Vinh Boch, 18 miles southeast of Da Nang. A grenade tossed by a U.S. Marine to destroy a two-ton stock of rice set off ammunition secreted be- low the rice and a chain reaction of blasts and fire that demolished eight or 19 huts. Troops and Planes Troops and planes were cutting into Viet Cong resources else- where. A U.S. spokesman said they have destroyed underground installations of theuenemy in three widely separated areas of i South Viet Nam since Tuesday night. From Bangkok came a Colum- bia Broadcasting System report that the United States is main- taining air operations against North Vietnamese supply routes through Communist-held eastern Laos and is considering deploy- ment of more than 40,000 Ameri- can soldiers across Laotian trails. U.S. pilots based in Thailand "have been flying 250 sorties a day against the Ho Chi Minh trail in Laos since being waved off targets in North Viet Nam Christ- mas Eve," said CBS correspondent Murray Fromson. A sortie is a combat flight of one plane. Terrorist Weapons Terrorist weapons in the new Saigon outbreak were a Claymore mine, an armed device that fires hundreds of steel pellets, and a 4 plastic charge estimated to have weighed 60 pounds. Concealed under the seat of a motorized passenger cycle parked near the wire-guarded airport gate, the mine cut loose at 6:18 a.m. as U.S. servicemen were streaming out. The aiming was poor, however, and most of the lethal bullets bur- ied themselves in a huge tree nearby. A Vietnamese passer-by was kill- ed. Two U.S. Air Force men, a soldier and a sailor were injured Their wounds were described as slight. "This was a target of opportuni- ty for the Viet Cong," a U.S. se- curity spokesman said, "but it was done by a kid who was obviously not a Professional."I A bicyclist flung the plastic charge into the street by the po- lice substation in eastern Saigon an hour later. The explosion blew in a wall and collapsed the main building. Several small Chinese shops nearby were demolished. One policeman, a woman and a child were injured. ~1 on Soviets, M-ission May Affect War; Goals Not Certain Rocket, Production Experts Included In Russian Group MOSCO W()-A Soviet delega- tion is en route to Hanoi on a mission that could affect the Viet Nam war. The delegation is led by Alex- ander N. Shelepin, a top Kremlin leader and trouble shooter. It in- cludes an expert on military pro- duction and a rocket forces gen- eral. The rocket expert, Col. Gen. Vladimir F. Tolubko, went after Chinese charges that the Soviet Union has sent obsolete and inef- fective anti-aircraft rockets to the defense of North Viet Nam. The rockets have shot down 10 U.S. planes out of 160 missiles fired, accor'ding to American figures. Part Obvious Part of the Shelepin mission purpose seemed obvious to most rs of non-Communist observers here: to rport. make a strong bid for North Viet- namese support. in the bitter dis- pute between Moscow and and Pe- king. The big question, however, was G whether Shelepin would counsel Hanoi to try to bring a negotiat- ed peace in Viet Nam or whether he would report back to Moscow ould go that more weapons should be sent ug ath- in hopes of a Communist military eg, al- victory. The composition of the for lib- delegation suggested more weap- to mean ons. th. In view of savage Chinese accu- Co+nrr hn +n R iiain hnv REFUSE TO ANSWER QUESTIONS: Klansmen Cited in to bring peace to South Asia. CompelledC Kosygin, making his first per- parently felt compelled to find a By The Associated PressC way for some agreement to come - 1_ ---- __ 1 __ - fW A q-HIGTON_ C rn.tt of fof Court James R. Jones, grand dragon of North Carolina. hundreds of thousands waited in the rain to board crowded trains. A spokesman for the Long Is- land Railroad said: "We're moving a lot more peo- ple today than Wednesday or even Tuesday. It looks like World War II when gasoline rationing forced people to use the railroads." The strike of 34,400 employes of city-owned bus and subway lines began at 5 a.m. New Year's Day, cutting off transit facilities nor- mally used by five million passen- gers a day. The first citywide transit tieup ever to hit New York. was estimat- ed by business sources to be caus- ing an economic loss of $100 mil- lion per day, Mediation Panel Lindsay spent more than 17 hours Wednesday with his three- man mediation panel trying to work out a strike settlement. Afterward he reported: "There has been some movement, never- theless the gap remains wide be- tween them. New offers have been made." Lindsay finally broke away from the bargaining table, got three hours sleep and showed up at City Hall in the morning to dispose of piled up municipal problems. He Skept in touch by phone with the talks. Money Offer During the bargaining session, the Transit Authority laid on the table a new money offer-but its size was not disclosed. There had been an $187-milion gap between the union demand and Transit Authority offer for a two-year contract. Union attorney Ascher Schwartz sounded what might be construed as a note of mild optimism, de- claring: "The discussions are pro- ceeding constructively and quite actively." Acceded His remark was made before State Supreme Court Justice Ab- raham N. Geller, who acceded to Schwartz's request and for the second day in a row postponed for 24 hours further action against the union'. Geller is empowered to assess fines against the union equal to the losses the strike has caused the Transit Authority. The hearing was to have ex- plored these losses, with Geller. then deciding whether to impose damages on the union. Geller is the judge who on Tuesday sent the union president Michael J. Quill, and eight other union leaders to.civil jail for con- tempt, after they refused to call off the strike. The contempt ac- tion was based on the union's defiance of a no-strike injunction at the beginning of the walkout. Seizure Shortly after he entered jail, Quill, 60, suffered a seizure. Be- cause he had a history of heart trouble, he was rushed td' Bel- levue Hospital where he was being treated for a possible heart at- tack. Dr. Alonzo Yerby, city hospitals commissioner, said there was no change yesterday in Quill's con- dition. i out of this summit, the first on nRobert E. Scoggin, grand drag- Soviet soil involving India and Congress action was started yes- on of South Carolina. Pakistan. ;terday against Imperial WizardCon vioF.SothCaoiggna.rao Both India and Pakistan were Robert M. Shelton and six other alin F. Craig, grand dragon sticking to opposite stands on Ku Klux Klan leaders who refus- of Georgia. Kashmir-and were taking pains ed to supply records to the House Marshall R. Krnegay, grand Commtte n U-AmeicanAc-dragon of Virginia. of their own to make it publicly Committee on Un-American Ac- George F. Dorsett, imperial obvious. tivities. kludd or chaplain of the Klan The Pakistani spokesman, In- A subcommittee voted to cite the Real of North Carolina. formation Minister Altaf Gauhar. seven, who have appeared in its Robert Hudgins, imperial kludd told newsmen Pakistan maintains hearings into Klan activities. All of North Carolina. that to achieve peace this confer- declined to produce records for Aides indicated the subcommit- ence "should discuss in depth the which subpoenas had been issued. tee action was based on failure problems of Kashmir, which is the They also refused to answer vir- to produce records and not upon cause of trouble between the two tually all questions, citing amend- the witnesses' refusal to answer countries." ments to the Constitution. q u e s t i o n s on constitutional Traditional View Distributing Rifles grounds. India's foreign secretary, C. S. The subcommittee action was W Jha, told newsmen a few minutes announced by Chairman Edwin E. Wills announced that the group later this is "the traditional view Willis (D-La) at the end of a was canceling outstanding sub- of Pakistan which we do not luncheon recess which followed poenas for two of the men for whom citations were recommend- India and Pakistan fought over vestigator that Klansmen were re- ed intrying to otain mointer- Kashmir in 1948, shortly after ceiving and distributing rifles in timony from them. The two are gaining independence from Brit- case lots in Louisiana during re- Shelton and Craig. ain. Thy divided it, with India cent years. getting the better share, and have Willis also heads the full com- Wall of Silence been quarreling ever since. mittee, which must pass on the At yesterday's hearing, the com- Shastri and Ayub have not even subcommittee contempt action. mittee ran into a wall of silence, been able to agree on an agenda Then approval by the House itself buttressed with Fifth Amendment for their talks because they dif- is required to refer the citations pleas, when it questioned men fer on whether to discuss Kash- to the Justice Department for pos- from the area of Bogalusa, La., mir. sible prosecution. about reported movement of rifles The Indians, who say Kashmir 1 Contempt of Congress is pun- and other weapons. rightfully belongs to them and is ishable by a maximum of a year But Donald T. Appell, chief in- not negotiable, insist on talking in jail and a $1000 fine. vestigator for the committee, told in general terms about relations Shelton, imperial wizard of the of finding records of extensive with Pakistan. Ayub wants to talk United Klans of America, has purchases from Howard M. Lee, about Kashmir. iheadquarters at Tuscaloosa, Ala. whom he described as a holder Kosygin's efforts seemed aimed Hold in Contempt of a firearms dealer's license who at finding some language that! Others against whom contempt went to jail for violating the fed- would permit a face-saving way citations were voted by the sub- eral firearms control law requir- out for everybody. i committee: ing keeping of accurate records. ALEXANDER SHELEPIN (RIGHT) and Charge D'Affai North Viet Nam Le Chang shake hands at the Moscow ai World News Roundu By The Associated Press cifically that this aid wt SANTO DOMINGO - President to the Communist Viet Corn Hector Garcia-Godoy yesterday er than North Viet Nam it ordered the top military leaders though the term "fighters of the rival factions in last April's erty" might be interpreted1 of he iva fatins n lst pri'sthe Communists in the Sou revolution out of the country. The UiS.S.R. has been Among them was Commodore Tep.nS.Rhsetn Francisco J. Rivera Caminero, weapons to North Viet rN armed forces minister, who was defense against U.S. air ra shorn of that title and posted to aircraft and missiles n Washington as naval attache. mentioned might be in the The president acted to end the gory. But the North Vie at home would not have gravest crisis threatening his pro- need for conventionala visional government. Before issu- Rashidov said "artillery" ing the transfer orders Garcia-Go- than anti-aircraft guns. dio rnfri d ifth fhA nlitiri thnat-irrf us I J sending lam for ids. The Zashidov at cate- tnamese urgent artillery. 'rather uy cunmerrea w inTe poilcai committee of the Organization of American States. Top rebel leaders ordered abroad were Col. Francisco Caamano De- no, as military attache to Lon- don and Col. Manuel Ramon Montes Arache to Ottawa as the same. The president named navy Capt. Emilio Jimineztorbe the new armed forces minister. HAVANA-A Soviet representa- tive told the tricontinental confer- ence of revolutionaries yesterday the U.S.S.R. is "doing everything possible so that Soviet technical equipment-planes, missiles, artil- lery, ammunition and other aid- reach the hands of the Vietna- mese fighters for liberty as rap- idly as possible." Sharaf R. Rasidov, heading the Soviet delegation, did not say spe- ATLANTA, Ga.-The chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordi- nating Committee urged Saturday that persons in the civil rights movement avoid the draft in or- der to continue their work to as- sure the rights of Negroes. "It's in the national interest be- cause we are strengthening dem- ocratic processes," said John Lew- is. "Violence is obsolete as a means to settle conflicts between peo- ples and nations." However, Lewis said that the de- cision on whether to avoid the draft would be left to the individ- ual because "we cannot decide for the people." Lewis told a news conference that the U.S government has been deceptive in its claims of concern for the freedom of the Vietnamese people. sations that the ussiansn ave failed to provide much military equipment support for Hanoi, the delegation might have been made up this way to avoid Chinese charges, some quarters suggested. Favor Peace The basic Soviet position is be- lieved to favor peace in Viet Nam in order to allow the Soviet Union to concentrate on domestic eco- nomic development without a dan- ger of expanding war. The last top-level Soviet group to visit Hanoi, led last Februarw by Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, stop. ped in Peking to talk with Mao Tze-tung. The Chinese charged Nov. 11 that Kosygin had in February "stressed the need to help the United States 'find a way out of Viet Nam.' This was firmly rebut- ted by the Chinese leaders." The Kremlin has publicly voic- ed strong support for Hanoi and severely assailed U.S. policy in Viet Nam. It has been sending anti- aircraft weapons and other defen- sive arms since early last year. Two weeks ago, a new agree- ment was reached here for So- viet aid to Hanoi on credit. Five Soviet ships now are en route to North Viet Nam, Moscow radio says. ~ __ BOOKS and SUPPLIES MEDICINE DENTISTRY NURSING PUBLIC Our store is specially equipped to fill your every need, and a well informed staff, including MEDICAL and DENTAL students r University of Michigan Gilbert & Sullivan Society announces MASS MEETING for the production of will HEALTH serve you. ®I I EI ®M ftm Ip-® AtNAt / R 111 '' 1111111 I