SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THRET SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREI Viet Nam Corruption Hampers US. Aid Efforts By The Associated Press SAIGON-Huge sums of money, loose controls, and the ancient Asian acceptance of corruption in government have hampered U.S. efforts to stabilize the Vietnamese economy and to get 100 cents worth of good out of each dollar. "Leakage" in the U.S. aid pro- gram has run into millions of U.S. dollars over the years. Probably no one knows for certain just how many. Premier Nguyen Cao Ky repeat- edly has pledged to clean up cor- ruption which the government has acknowledged as widespread. Some highly publicized moves have been made, but any concerted program would involve high government officials whose support Ky must retain to stay in office, reliable sources say. U.S. aid officials in the past have conceded that some U.S. aid even has reached the Viet Cong indirectly, and said steps were taken to reduce this problem. A huge black market in U.S. currency and commodities flour- ishes in Viet Nam. The biggest in both categories is in Saigon. American GIs help feed both. Post exchange items ranging from cig- arettes and cameras to high fi- delity sets and television sets find their way to the black market. Cigarettes are rationed and GIs are limited in the number of major items they can buy. Until the second half of 1965, GIs took part of their pay in U.S. dollars, which were eagerly snapped up on the black market. The American mission then be- gan issuing military payment cer- tificates, which became the cur- rency in the PX, commissary, American billets and U.S. officers' and enlisted men's clubs. There now is a black market in scrip. It brings somewhat less on the currency market than U.S. dollars. A black market favorite is U.S. postal money orders which GIs can buy under certain re- strictions. Some American GIs have been court-martialed for black market activities. The biggest problem lies in the aid program itself. A basic tenet of the program is that the Viet- namese must be allowed to run the show with American advice so that leadership and respon- sibility can be developed inside the Saigon government, The U.S. aid mission monitors the spending and disposition of commodities, but the intracacies of Vietnamese wheeling and deal- ing plus an element of chaos caus- ed by the war make total surveil- lance impossible. A cut of the U.S. aid pie is as tantalizing as political power in South Viet Nam, and bank balance considerations color what seem like political jockeying for power. During past shuffles some Ameri- can officials privately have made jokes about the new generals who would open bank accounts over- seas. The U.S. aid program, military and civilian, soon will run at about a billion dollars a year. At the grass-roots level, a Viet- namese district chief can pad the roll of his militiamen, thus getting pay for phantom fighters. He gets a kickback on road and other' construction work in his district, the rough equivalent of an Amer- ican county. Many district chiefs have homes built with U.S. cement originally destined for destitute villagers. Province, or state, chiefs can do the same on a grander scale and also extract a kickback from their district bosses. U.S. aid officials deplore the situation, and despair over the chance of making the East con- form to Western mores. However, they point out that there are honest men in government and that many hold corruption to what some U.S. sources consider an "acceptable" level. Some, they say, have gone completely overboard. The chief of Binh Tuy Province was removed after the aid mission cut off all funds directed there because of irregularities. The ex- chief was returned to Saigon. There have been no charges an- nounced by the Ky government. Black marketing in Saigon is so routine that it is anything but under the counter. Sidewalk stands with plentiful supplies of Ameri- can cigarettes line downtown streets. On several streets, sidewalk stalls sell American Army blankets, mosquito nets, insect spray, can- ned rations, whisky, toothpaste and dozens of other items. In a more remote sector, Army field tents, ponchos, field packs, fatigue uniforms, canteens and jungle boots are available. The amount of material falling into Viet Cong hands is possibly a more serious matter. Cans of cooking oil bearing the imprint of the U.S. clasped-hands symbol are not uncommon sights when troops move into Viet Cong villages. One U.S. construction worker said pri- vately that the Viet Cong was able to supply cement on a com- petitive basis with government- backed contractors. Some of the U.S. aid gets into Viet Cong hands because it goes into those gray areas of Viet Nam where the two forces are compet- ing for the population and the Viet Cong simply seize aid items. Through extortion and under the counter deals, some of the aid goods in local markets make their way into Viet Cong strongholds. New Ghana, Rulers Work On Economy Continue To Fire Against Last Stand Of Nkrumah Regime ACCRA, Ghana (R) - Ghana's new military rulers took steps yesterday to overhaul the country's virtually bankrupt economy while firing continued against a last stand by elite guardsmen of the fallen Nkrumah regime. A number of special guards were reported killed in a clash at Ac- cra's broadcasting house. At nearby police headquarters Lt. Gen. J. A. Ankrah, chief of the new National Liberation Council, appointed a seven-man group to get the country moving toward prosperity. 20 to 25 Killed Unofficial figures indicated 20 to 25 persons were killed in the coup, including 10 to 14 of the Soviet-trained presidential guard. No Americans were reported in- jured. The gunfire yesterday was re- ported to have erupted on a visit to radio headquarters by Col. E. K. Kotoka, believed to be active lead- er of the revolt that overthrew President Kwame Kkrumah Thursday while he swas in Peking. Otherwise the country of 7.3 million persons was calm, but a Tass, Soviet news agency, dispatch from Peking quoted Nkrumah as saying "I am returning to Ghana soon" and ordering army and po- lice to return to their barracks. Manhunt The army and police continued a manhunt for officials of Nkru- mah's Convention People's party, which was outlawed when Nkru- mah was deposed and the con- stitution suspended Thursday. Despite the manhunt, admin- istration of Ghana outside Accra was turned over to the regional civil service instead of the armed forces. This was considered sig- nificant here. The military rulers said they would meet monthly government payrolls due on Monday. Ankrah Ankrah, working closely with Police Commissioner J. W. K. Ear- iley, turned to some of the top experts of Nkrumah's government to get the economy going ahead. These men had seen their care- fully drawn plans distorted or ig- nored by the Nkrumah regime, the new regime said. Among them were Albert Ado- makoh, head of the Bank of Ghana; R. S. Amegashie, and B. K. Mensah. The latter two were educated in the United States, as was Nkrumah. The army swooped on the Kwame Nkrumah Ideological In- stitute ' 40 miles out of Accra Thursday and arrested the faculty. The. students had fled. Seek Bing Among those being sought in the countryside was Geoffrey Bing, 56, a left-wing British lawyer who has been Nkrumah's close friend and advisor since before independ- ence in 1957. Some called him the power behind the ousted president. The Ghanaian Times, formerly a special organ of the Convention People's ; party, quickly fell into line with the coup. Sukarno Retaliates After Demonstration SINGAPORE (P)-President Su- karno of Indonesia ordered a pow- erful anti-Communist student or- ganization dissolved, banned all demonstrations, and imposed a curfew on Jakarta, a broadcast from the capital reported yester- day. Sukarno acted after the student organization led a five-mile long funeral parade of 10,000 through Jakarta protesting Sukarno's "new Comnmunist Cabinet." Marines and police with machine guns watched the march but reports in Singa- pore said the army sympathized with the students. The students marched in a fun- eral parade for three comrades-- one a girl-who were shot and killed by guards in a demonstra- tion outside Sukarno's palace Thursday. The students were pro- testing Sukarno's firing of Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution, a anti- Communist, as defense minister in a Cabinet reshuffle 1onday. -Associated Press KWAME-KHRUMA, left, shown before his deposition as premier of Ghana Thursday. At the right is Lt. Gen. J. A. Ankrah, newly named armed forces commander of Ghana. Banned was the pro-army In- donesian Student Action Front. It led the demonstrations outside. the palace as well as the funeral parade. Jakarta radio said Sukarno also banned all student gatherings of more than live persons anywhere in the country and warned action would be taken against trouble- making students. The Jakarta cur- few starts at 10:30 p.m. and lasts until 6:30 a.m. Nasution, who led the Com- munist purge after the Red coup of Oct. 1 failed, has vanished from Jakarta. Reached by tele- phone in Jakarta, his wife said she did not know wheie he had gone. Promised Support The Voice of Free Indonesia, a radio operating secretly some- where in Java, said Nasution met with Maj. Gen. Ibrahim Aui, com- mander of the Siliwangi Division and was promised support "to the end." The Siliwangi Division, regarded as the best in the Indonesian army, has been stationed in cen- tral Java. Diplomatic travelers earlier this week said some Sili- wangi units had been ordered to Jakarta to protect Nasution. Student Feeling Reports from Jakarta said stu- dent feeling was running high over the killings and Nasution's dis- missal. -After the funeral, the Voice of Free Indonesia said the students issued a statement saying: "These students died, but not in vain. They went down as pa- triots. They gave their lives for their country. Every drop of their blood will be avenged. The blood debt will be paid with blood. We will not keep quiet. Flowers Is Candidate In Alabama Moderate Asks for Negro, White Vote In May Primary MONTGOMERY, Ala. (P)-Atty. Gen. Richmond Flowers plunged into the governor's race yesterday with an undisguised plea for Negro votes and a promise to fly the U.S. flag on the dome of the state Capitol. The appearance of the big, red- haired Dothan, Ala., attorney in a field already crowded with nine other candidates gave him a chance once more to challenge Gov. George C. Wallace's strong segregationist views in the May 3 primary. Flowers formally quali- fied after making his announce- ment. Flowers' announcement came 24 hours after Wallace's wife, Lur- leen, made known her intention to run as a "stand-in" candidate for her husband, who is prohibited by law from seeking re-election. Mrs. Wallace made it clear that the present chief executive would con- tinue to govern the state if she is elected. The attorney general, a self- styled racial moderate, frequently has taken issue with Wallace in the handling of Negro problems. Flowers told reporters crowded into his office that "I want the vote of all the people. I want the Negro vote and the white vote." An estimated 200,000 or more Negroes are registered as voters in the state, thousands of them as the result of the presence of fed- eral examiners sent into Alabama under the new Voting Rights Act. Flowers made no mention of Wallace in his announcement. World News Roundup By The Associated Press- DAMASCUS,'Syria-Syria's new military regime named a chief of state and a prime minister last night to replace Gen. Amin Hafez and Salah Bitar, who were over- thrown in a coup d'etat Wednes- day. Damascus radio announced a decree making Dr. Noureddin Atassi, 36, head of state and Dr. Youssef Zayyen prime minister. Zayyen is 35, the youngest premier in Syria's history., There were indications the new government would be formed along the lines of that of former Premier Youssef Zayyen. During a govern- ment crisis last December, Zayyen resigned and turned over all power to an international command of the Arab Socialist Baath party. MIAMI BEACH-The nation's top labor leaders said yesterday President Johnson's efforts to stabilize prices do not deserve, top priority and "what we will push for is substantial wage and salary increases." The AFL-CIO Executive Coun- cil argued there is no major threat of inflation despite the sharpest rise, in living costs in five years, and said soaring business profits, not wages, are mainly to blame for, rising prices. Denouncing the "magic num- ber" of the White House wage guideline that seeks to limit pay increases to 3.2 per cent a year, the AFL-CIO Economic Policy Committee said "There are no government guidelines oan profits or dividends."u KAMPALA, Uganda-Uganda's army commander, Brig. Sabama Opoloto, affirmed yesterday his loyalty to Prime' Minister Apollo Milton Obote and said he would take no action to oppose Obote's suspension of Uganda's constitu- tion. "There is no chance of any army coup in Uganda. We do not want to do the things other coun- tries have done. As a soldier who has to maintain discipline, I would not invite other ideas. I would likepeople to be loyal and do what they are told," Opoloto said. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - A Ku Klux Klansman charged with murdering Mrs. Anthony Liuzzo, a white civil rights worker, received a two-year prison term yesterday for violating a federal firearms law. A District Court jury convicted the Klansman, Eugene Thomas of Beesemer, earlier this week on a charge of failing to pay taxes for possession of a sawed-off shotgun. His sentence will run consecutively with a 10-year sentence received for conspiring to violate the rights of civil rights workers in the Sel- ma-Montgomery area last year. Thomas and two other Klans- men were convicted of the con- spiracy charges after Mrs. Liuzzo, of Detroit, was shot to death in Lowndes County last March 25. BLAST APPROPRIATIONS BILL: Morse Decries War Policy Seek, Humphrey. Senate Quiz, By The Associated Press Sen. Wayne Morse denounced U.S. tactics and policy in South Viet Nam yesterday. "The U.S. is leading mankind into World War III, out of which will come no victory," the Oregon Democrat said. While Morse renewed in the Senate his long-standing attack on President Johnson's Asian policy, Secretary of Defense Rob- ert S. McNamara reported U.S. fighting men are scoring new suc- cesses on Vietnamese battlefields. Morse charged that a $4.8-bil- lion bill to help pay for war ma- terials is an "open-handed .invi- tation to the continued expansion and escalation of the Viet Nam war." In a related development, Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark) sent Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey an invitation yesterday to appear be- fore the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. But Humphrey showed no eagerness to accept. "I suggest congressmen should be looking for new issues and new copy and not having replays," Humphrey told reporters. Grinning, Humphrey said as to Fulbright's invitation, "I haven't heard anything about it." When a reporter offered to show him a copy of the letter Fulbright said he sent to the vice president, Humphrey replied, "I want to see my own." The Viet Nam appropriations bill is expected to reach a' Senate vote early next week. There ,is little doubt that it will pass by a wide margin. "A vote for this bill is not a vote to support the men already there," Morse said. "It is a vote to double the men already there, to expand the war into Thailand and to pro- vide American financing for a mil- itary force in Asia." McNamara appeared b e f o r e members of the Senate Armed Services and Appropriations com- mittees to talk about the defense budget. Later, he told reporters U.S. troops have staged "very, very successful military operations in the last four weeks." Morse has said he will seek action Monday on his move to re- peal the August 1964 resolution in which Congress approved the use of American military force in Viet Nam. In Viet Nam action yesterday U.S. B52 bombers and the 7th Fleet destroyer Mason struck at Viet Cong emplacements through stormy weather in support of gov- ernment troops campaigning near North Viet Nam's doorstep. The eight-engine Jets from Guam flew in heavy rain that lim- ited other air activity and aimed tons of explosives at Red targets 15 miles west of Hue, the old im- perial capital 400 miles north of Saigon. In ground action troopers of the U.S. 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Divi- sion and F4 Phantom jets of the Air Force knifed deeper into enemy strength in the Bon Son sector 300 miles northeast of Saigon. I.i JENSEN Hi Fi Speakers World's largest manufacturer of loudspeakers presents their fabulous 1966 line. Hear them exclusively in Ann Arbor at H wih STUDIO 19 So. University 1 1668-79 compare with most other makes Moyers Denies Charges Of Church Interference 131 942 State Department Moves ITo Hold Off Docker Boycott WASHINGTON ()) -- White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers denied 'again yesterday that he interceded with the Na- tional Council of Churches to tone down a resolution critical of U.S. policy in Viet Nam.. Moyers said he has checked and found no one else at the White House who might have called the council. Telephone Calls Some sources at the council in St. Louis, Mo., told the Associated Press, on condition their names not be used, that Moyers had placed several telephone calls in an attempt to head off a resolu- tion which in effect would have endorsed a World Council of Churches statement. The council sources reported this Thursday night toward the end of a three-day meeting of the General Board of the National Council. Good Faith In New York, a spokesman for the Associated Press said the AP, in good faith, reported what it had been told by certain members of the council, even though they declined to be identified. The AP said it also promptly reported the denial by Moyers as soon as he could be reached. The board adopted what these sources said was a revised state- ment on Viet Nam calling for re- conciliation and peace with justice as both the immediate and long- range goal of American policy. MONDAY, Feb. 28 CARL OGLESBY National Chairman of SDS w i ll speak on "American. Containment & World Revolution" AUD. A, ANGELL HALL 800 p.m. WASHINGTON. (ie-The State Department moved yesterday to stave off a dockers' boycott of the shipping of any nation whose ves- sels take cargoes to North Viet Nam. It called U.S. maritime union leaders to a Washington meeting next Thursday. This was the essence of a care- fully worded statement issued after New York longshoremen picketing in protest against Brit- ish trade with Viet Nam held up departure preparations for the famed liner Queen Mary for about an hour. Press officer Robert J. McClos- key said the United States does not want free world vessels going to Communist North Vietnamese ports, and U.S. diplomatic efforts have succeeded in cutting down this traffic. "We believe. that the national interest would best be served by continuing to seek a solution at a government-to-government level," McCloskey said. The possibility of a boycott against ships of any country whose vessels go to North Viet Nam was raised in a telegram sent to Presi- dent Johnson and Secretary of State DeanRusknon Feb. 14 by the executive board of the AFL- CIO Maritime Trades Department. It said the unionists were going to "demonstrate their protests" against shipping going to a coun- try fighting U.S. forces in South Viet Nam. Gleasonrand others said a general boycott of all for- eign-flag ships of countries trad- ing with North Viet Nam might begin at any time. 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