FRIDAY, MARCH 18,196b THE MICHIGAN DAILY vef4-v Itur FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 196b THE MICHTEAN DAily II A V~ U' N ~U'W AL~ih* THREW I U.S. Supports Ky Regime Against Buddhist 2,000 Said Slin Sine Midsummer Report Shows Last Week's Total Below Year Record of 240 <4 WASHINGTON (M)-More 2,000 American fighting men been killed in combat in Viet and nearly 10,000 wounded President Johnson ordered ground units into the war on scale last midsummer. than have Nam since U.S. a big A report yesterday of Viet Nam casualties in the week ending last Saturday showed 100 U.S. service- men killed in action, and 808 wounded. Total The killed total for that period was well below the 240 carried as a record for this year. That fig- ure was reached in the seven-day period ending last Nov. 20 and included casualties in the big Ia Drang battle near the Cambodian border. The wounded total for last week, though not high, did not set a record. In the week ended Feb. 28, the Pentagon, counted up 849 wounded in action. The new weekly report brought the over-all roster of U.S. combat dead in Viet Nam to 2,559 since Jan. 1, 1961-the point in time from which the Pentagon charts the human cost of U.S. involve- ment in the Viet Nam war. Roll The roll of wounded rose to 12,- 706 names in the week ending last Saturday. Of these wounded, 168 have sub- sequently died-a rate of only about 1.3 per cent. This is the lowest ever in any U.S. war. When Johnson ordered the 1st ' Cavalry, Airmobile Division and other forces into Viet Nam last July 28, the U.S. death toll up to that point stood at 536, the wounded at 2,847. But until then, U.S. involve- ment on the ground had been mostly- in the form of advising South Vietnamese army and marine combat outfits, although the U.S. air war both in South Viet Nam and over North Viet Nam had been in full swing for about six months. In late July, the United States had 80,000 U.S. servicemen in Viet Nam. The total now stands at better than 215,000. New Year Since the new year opened, 939 American servicemen have died in combat-more than 36 per cent of the total since the beginning of 1961. Keeping pace with the deepen- ing U.S. involvement in the war, the vast bulk of American casual. ties-the 12,706 wounded-have been suffered since the start of 1965. --Associated Press THE APPROXIMATE LOCATION of the Gemini 8 landing was east of Okinawa. The astronauts were forced ;down after having difficulties with control of their capsule. The astronauts were taken on board the destroyer Leonard F. Mason. Tapes Demonstrate Gemini Difficulties Lodge Tells Opponents 1 about View American Troops Hunt North Viet Nan Regulars near Saigon By The Associated Press The United States is supporting the nine-month-old government of Nguyen Cao Ky against South Vietnamese opponents who are pushing for an early end to Sai- gon's military regime. Henry Cabot Lodge, the Ameri- can ambassador in Saigon, was re- ported yesterday to have made known the U.S. view to Buddhist leaders and others on the scene. The Buddhists have been hold- ing public rallies demanding quick replacement of the present mili- tary rule with civilian authority. There have been mass demonstra- tions too, over Ky's ouster of in- dependent-minded Lt. Gen. Ngu- yen Chanh Thi as commander of the 1st Corps in the northern part of the country. U.S. View The U.S. view is that a stable government in Saigon is of top importance for winning the cam- paign against the Communists- and that turbulent demonstrations are a bad way of pressing for political changes. Ky has prom- ised a new constitution and elec- tions next year. Washington is keeping the pres- sure on Ky to keep moving to- ward representative government- and this was part of the endorse- ment President Johnson gave to the Ky regime at his Honolulu meeting with Saigon's leaders last month. War Front On the war front a broad Ameri- can quest for native Viet Cong in the D Zone jungles turned into an urgent hunt yesterday for a regiment of North Vietnamese reg- ulars. Intelligence agents said the regulars were deployed in the zone only 35 miles north of Sai- gon. U.S. B52 jets saturated the sus- pected staging area with hundreds of tons of bombs. They struck only about four miles ahead of the vanguard of nearly 10,000 troops slashing paths with machetes and jungle knives toward a showdown with the regiment-perhaps 1,2001 men. This was one of 40 air assaults in support of Operation Silver City, a ground drive launched 10I days ago. Find Bomb Near Coast Of Spain PALOMARES BEACH, Spain ( P) -The U.S. midget submarine Al- vin has found the long and an- xiously sought hydrogen bomb that was lost two months ago in an American bomber-tanker plane crash over Spain, official sources said last night. They reported it was spotted with its parachute still attached 2,500 feet under the surface of the Mediterranean Sea, five miles offshore. The weapon was reported ap- parently intact-indicating no lethal leakage in the waters of this holiday resort. Jubilation There was jubilation from here to Washington at the apparently successful conclusion of an in- tensive, multimillion-dollar search that occupied thousands of men for two months and sent diplo- matic repercussions around the world. Officials said it would take upj to three days for Rear Adm. Wil- liam Guest's Task Force 65 to bring the bomb ashore or put it aboard a search vessel. Armed warships ringed the area. Recovery operations were expected to start Friday morning. Wednesday' The official sources said the Alvin found the weapon Wednes- day. Directors of the search were just settling down to a long sweep of the sea bottom when word of the contact was flashed from the sub. world News Roundup SINGAPORE ({A'-Thousands of Indonesian students took to the streets of Jakarta in anti- Communist demonstrations yes- terday and occupied two govern- ment ministries, informants in Singapore reported. The students ignored a broad- cast plea by President Sukarno urging the people to cooperate with the armed forces in restoring calm and stability to the nation. The students demanded the resignation of pro-Communist members of the Cabinet, includ- ing Sukarno's right-hand man, First Deputy Premier Subandrio, who also is foreign minister. Resisting The Singapore sources said the demonstrations were staged as Su= karno was reported resisting pres- sure from the new military regime to set up a new Cabinet that will Indonesian Students Protest In Jakarta, Occupy Ministries By The Associated Press k 1 r L T { t t E r BONN. Germany - With the backing of Chancellor Ludwig Er- hard's government, a West Ger- man firm has taken the lead in supplying Red China a $150- million steel plant. An informed source said yester- day the West Germans were told the United States would rather other nations followed its own example of not trading with the Chinese Communists, but no for- mal American objection was rais- ed. NEW YORK - Police raiding Harlem's vitriolic Black Arts Theater have discovered a deadly arsenal inside the once federally financed haven for antiwhite writers and artists. Striking just before midnight Wednesday, police rounded up six men, and charged them with felonious assault after one shot was fired. They were held in $1,000 bond each. One high police official said the raid thwartedna plot by a fana- tically militant black nationalist group which had tried to infiltrate the theater group. * * * HAVANA-Prime Minister Fidel Castro has started a campaign to root out "corruptive influences and capitalist vices" he says are creeping into Cuba's Communist regime. Dozens of officials-including a deputy minister of the armed forces-have been arrested and accused of. irresponsible conduct, high living or "illegal and vice- ridden activities." drop Subandrio. Subandrio is reported to be de- tained by the army in a guest house on the grounds of Sukarno's Jakarta palace. The demonstrations-the first since Sukarno handed over power' to army chief Lt. Gen. Suharto Last Saturday-were staged by the proarmy Kami and Kapi organ- izations. The first is an organiza- tion of university students. Kapi is made up of high school pupils.' Encouraged The sources hinted that the stu- dents are being encouraged and supported by the new military re- gime. It wants to use them as a weapon to force Sukarno to give in to their demands for a re- organized Cabinet. Sukarno in a message to the Indonesian people Wednesday de- clared he was still president with1 full powers but admitted that certain people were trying to topple him and giving him ultima- tums on the formation of a Cab- inet. The sources said these "cer- tain people" obviously were the new military regime. "Myth" "The new regime wants to main- tain the myth that Sukarno is still 'the great leader'." one source said. "But whatever he does, Sukarno can never go back to what he was before. "It really does not matter what he says now. He can only delay what the army and people want. He cannot prevent it." Bargaining Informnants predicted there will be more bargaining with the new regime by Sukarno for, as one phrased it, "the regime wants to make sure that when the new Cabinet is announced it is an- nounced by what in fact is their stooge, Sukarno." The sources said several hun- dred students stormed the office of the minister coordinator for basic education, Prof. Priyono. Other students invaded the Min- istry of Labor where they were reportedly given the keys to the building by officials there. About 2,000 students then staged a dem- onstration outside the Ministry for Central Bank Affairs. MICKEY EISENBERG ask you to vote for John Kelly VOTE SCOPE SGC Elections--Wednesday CAPE KENNEDY (CP) - The Gemini 8 astronauts were riding a violently tumbling spacecraft during a hair-raising 30 minutes in space, tape recorded conver- sations with the astronauts showed yesterday. "We have serious problems here. We're tumbling end over end," command pilot Neil A. Armstrong told a tracking ship as he emerg- ed from a communications black- out over the Pacific. Emergency Minutes later, Armstrong said he had switched to an emergency control system because he was unable to do anything with his main engines. "We were just barely able to hold our own," Armstrong report- ed. "The rates were just too ex- cessive. After we got the rates down where we thought we could undock safely, then we regained control of the spacecraft slowly." "Relax. Everything's okay," the ship controller told the pilots. Evaluated The mission control center in Houston, Tex., evaluated the situ- ation quickly and told Armstrong and his space partner, David R. Scott, to prepare for an emer- gency re-entry. The trouble occurred seven hours into the flight at about 6:40 p.m. They splashed to a landing in the Pacific 500 miles east of Okinawa at 10:23 p.m. Until officials have a chance to talk with the astronauts, they said they would not be able to deter- mine precisely what went wrong. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration played the tapes at a news conference yes- terday after refusing to allow newsmen to hear them Wednes- day night. At that time, officials said reporters might misinterpret the astronauts' words and the tone of their voices. When the trouble began, the spacecraft was over Red China and out of communication range with ground stations. The ground got its first indication of the problem 15 minutes later when Gemini 8 passed over the tracking ship in the Pacific. 30 Minutes Armstrong required about 30 minutes to separate from the Agena and bring the spinning spacecraft under control. Data showed that the space- craft had separated from the Agena rocket to which it had docked only 30 minutes before in an historic space feat. The ship asked the astronauts whether they had separated and Armstrong replied they were and then made the comment about the serious troubles. The ship reported to flight director John Hodge in Houston, "He's separated from the Agena and he's in a roll and can't stop it. He says he's fired the RCS squib." 'II Cautious optimism gave way to£ joy when the first underseas pic- tures reached headquarters. Experts who looked at the pic- tures said there was no doubt it was the weapon. Parachute They said not only did the pic-f tures show the bomb, intact inI its casing, but also the attched parachute. This was a dirty gray rather than the white used for personnel. This word about the parachute confirmed statements by Spanish fishermen who said Jan. 17 they saw "another parachute with what looked like half a man" fall into the sea. They had just rescued four of the men aboard the B52 bomber and its aerial tanker, which colided in a fueling opera- tion. "Everything about the bomb is highly classified," said one official "Because of that fact, we can't permit pictures even of the para- chute attached to it." The Alvin was one of three tiny subs used in the search. They were brought here from the Unit- ed States to take part because they can dive to great depths. The sub found the bomb on a 70-foot slope among other hills and valleys of the sea bottom, of- ficials said. Consequences Consequences of the loss were tremendous. First there was worry over se- curity-some officials said the Communists, either t h r o u g h chance or espionage techniques, might get their hands on it. Then there was the fear of Spanish residents of the area that radioactivity might contaminate l them. I-- UAC's CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL 19611 WILL GEER, a theater veteran of real distinction, began his career in boat shows, tents, and repertory in the 20's with Sothern and Marlowe, and made WILL GEER his New York debut as Pistol with Otis n a Program of Frost, Whitman, Skinner and Mrs. Fiske in The Merry and wainW 7- ofWinTcr NP'm 4zn nn '- J 14!! 2nd ANNUAL JUDO Demonstration March 19, 1966 7:30-9:30 p.m. Ann Arbor YMCA Williams & 5th Ave. TICKETS AVAILABLE at The YMCA Donation: BOG RT! I Adults: Children: $1.00 $ .50 In CASABLANCA and The Caine Mutiny what else can we say? PLEASE NOTE: In order to show both films and eat, too, we will open at 8:00 p.m., the first movie beginning at 8:30. PH. 483-4680 FREE CAR HEATERS NOW SHOWING DORIS DAY-ROD TAYLOR DO NOT' DISTURiW CinemaScope-Color by DELUXE -.7 .1 A- 1. AA I i ;; tj ±{ ; r S; t i 4 ik ETHAN BRAND will speak on "Line and the Modern May" Bitrniizg 11 t" fI