WEDNESDAY, APRIL.6,1966 TNF MICAit: d N nA ii V W EA R66IL " PAGE THREV I' Lack of Access to China Hampers U.S. Scholars CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (J) - For American scholars, the task of studying Communist China is a little like watching a baseball game through a knothole - they can keep track of the score but miss some of the atmosphere and details. Barred from mainland China, the Americans rely on what Prof. " John K. Fairbank calls "minimum contact but maximum reading matter." Fairbank, a history professor and director of the East Asian Re- search Center at Harvard Univer- sity, recently was a principal wit- ness at the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee hearings on Chi- maintain that the lack of access to Communist China is less of a handicap to forming an accurate just don't have contact with peo- ple." T he center reeiv es li th nint_ LIIUULI~ dev e an Le pi na. picture of life in that nation than ed Chin Exprtsis oten ssued. d matter available out of Con- China Experts # is often assumed. munist China.- "more than we Many of the witnesses were de- One researcher, Dr. Ezra Vogel, can absorb," one staffer said. scribed as "China experts," a a sociologist, said that given a Another source of news about phrase Fairbank rejects. choice he would rather go to events in mainland China are per- "I prefer the term China spe- Hong Kong than mainland China. sons who have just returned from cialist, rather than expert, Fair- Closed Society the country-tourists, business- bank said in an interview. The Vogel explained that even if men, diplomats and scholars from term expert, he said, would imply China permitted American schol- other nations. the ability to draw definite con- ars within her borders "it's still Many people who return from clusions. a closed society. The people are China express frustration at their Fairbank and his colleagues afraid to tell you too much. You failure to get people to say any-f thing beyond the official govern- "We don't get the other side," The old China hand often was a ment line, Vogel said. Fairbank said. "but we know what journalist, diplomat or missionary In their testimony at the Sen- the leaders think." who spent a lot of time in China ate hearings, China specialists One problem of lack of access and accumulated a large store of often stated with apparent confi- to the mainland, is that the Chi- information about the country. dence that Chinese Communist nese Communists can limit the Highly Trained leaders "believe" this or that. flow of printed matter and also Today's China specialists usu- ally are highly trained in a spe- Rigid Beliefs could cut off some of the best out- cific field aside from China. Fairbank and Vogel said there side listening posts whenever they Among the researchers working at is no problem for a researcher to wish, the East Asian Center are sociol- discover what the Chinese gov- Even without access to the ogists, economists, historians and" ernment leaders believe. Their be- mainland, the modern China spe- legal experts. liefs are rigidly reflected in every cialist is better qualified than the The center, set up with finan- paper and periodical published in old China hand, Fairbank claim- cial help from the Ford Founda- China. ed. tion and Carnegie Corporation, occupies a floor in an apartment building near the Harvard Yard. In the same building are the centers for Soviet studies and Mid- dle East studies. In the lunchroom of the- build- ing, the China, Soviet and Middle East specialists get a chance to compare notes. Fairbank wishes he had as easy liaison with China specialists of other countries. "We should have more contact with the Russians," he said. "They have a China problem and so do we." Ky Settles Da Nang SCIENTISTS INCLUDED: Issue; Wilson Appoints New English Planes HitN or th Rail Lin k Compromise .......'... 11b* .: U. :vnE. .{. :: . . ,:\Yti{"i'":::":: ......v.. r,:;y.......Y.."................... }. .... ......... I 1, UII11IL .1 Vif1~311111aju u- iLto LONDON (R) - Prime Minister Harold Wilson brought young sci- entists and technologists into Brit- ain's Labor government in a post- election reshuffle that sent some! of the old party warhorses out to pasture. Promotions also went to some women. The number of women in and the new woman In the gov- ernment. Meanwhile, Exchequer Chancel- lor Callaghan is already preparing an annual budget. Expected to be one of Britain's harshest since the end of the last world war, the new budget will most likely include higher taxes and various industrial galvanization measures. Wilson, who was returned to his post last Friday in a sweeping victory over Conservative leader Edwtrd Heath, will now have an approximately 100 seat majority with which to work for the next five years. In the past, the Wilson government has been hampered by the narrow majority it held in Commons, the margin at times as low as one seat. One Laborite phrased the situation quite frankly when he said, "Due to the slim majority in Parliament, .we had to hold our punches on important issues like Viet Nam last time." heads Offi New, Conflict Remove Troops as Tensions Ease; Curb New Demonstrations SAIGON (M)-Tension ebbed at Da Nang after overnight troop movements had raised the spec- ter of an armed confrontation there between loyal and dissident forces. A compromise arranged at Da i A.# . the government rose by one to a total of seven. Mrs. Eirene White became the first woman minister Since Fall of state at the Foreign Office. T The first team remains about the same despite a total of 25 changes. Economics M i n i s t e r Nang between Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and his northern oppon- ents appeared to have lifted the threat of a civil war, within the Vietnamese armed forces. Ky had day-long talks at the airbase with Maj. Gen. Nguyen Van Chuan, successor to the dis- missed Lt. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi as commander of the 1st Corps area. The premier appealed by radio for the people to be calm and for soldiers and civil servants who had been demon- strating to return to their homes. Political Affair As he flew back to Saigon, Chuan told newsmen: "We are to- gether against Communism. I see the problems now as political and we will solve them by politics, not force. This is a political thing. We must try to solve the problem the political way." He minimized Ky's charge Sun- day of a Communist conspiracy in Da Nang, saying the premier's remarks had been misunderstood. He said there had been no men- tion in their discussion of Ky's declaration that he would have the mayor, Dr. Nguyen Van Nam, shot as the center of the conspir- acy. As Chuan exulained it, both sides made concessions: -The 4000 Marines Ky dis- patched -via U.S. air transports to the Da Nang air base will remain' on the base. They will not try to3 enter the city, a community' of 160,000 rolled by strikes, rallies and demonstrations since the pop- uar Thi was dismissed March 10 as the commander of the 1st] Corps area-South Viet Nam's five northern provinces. Rangers Removed -Chuan ordered elements of the 11th Ranger Battalion, which he had summoned to oppose the Ma- rines, to return to their station at Hoi An south o3(Da Nang. -Chuan has tried to use his1 influence to curb anti-Americant expressions within the corps area. He said there had been no anti- American broadcasts for two days from Hue, a former capital that isC a Buddhist center 40 miles north of Da Nang. In Saigon, paratroopers and riot police battled stone-throwing dem- onstrators with clubs, rifle butts and tear gas here yesterday. ; Crisis Boiling A Buddhist deniand for creation of a national assembly within three months-half a year or more ahead of the military govern-f ment's schedule-kept the crisist boiling.C Hundreds violated the 9 p.m.-5i a.m. curfew imposed by Ky's re-' gime in an effort to check the anti-government, anti-American marches that erupted into violencet here Saturday.t . tn .tl Wt'rnV nn1u' "I 1i a Bombs Drop Bridge, George Brown continues as No. 2 Break Main Railroad man in the government. Chancel- lor of the Exchequer James Cal- Supply Route to Chmia laghan, Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart, Arthur Bottomley, com- SAIGON (4) - Flying high monwealth relations secretary and through hazy weather, U.S. Air Housing Minister Richard Cross- Force fighter-bombers have struck man remain in the inner circle. for the first time since last No- The size of the cabinet is still vember at North Viet Nam's main 23 members. Wilson kept up the rail link with Communist China, a political balancing act that held spokesman disclosed yesterday. his left wing in check during. the Top targets in the raid Monday last Parliament. by tying down on the Peking Hanoi railroad were some leftist leaders in government the Phu Lang Thon bridge, only jobs. 25 miles northeast of the North Out of the government went Vietnamese capital; and a.section Welsh Secretary James Griffiths, of the line 27 miles farther north-; 75; Works Minister Charles Pan- east. nell, 64, and Sir Frank Soskice, Cloud cover prevented an accur- 64, lord privy seal and former ate measurement of the damage, a home secretary.l spokesman said, but bombs crater- Fred Lee, 59, the former power1 ed a switching yard in a related minister and a veteran union lead- attack. er, was shifted to the diminishing Yard Knocked Out job of colonial secretary. He said the yard, where cars Lee was replaced by Richard mak- Marsh, 38, a fire-eating Socialist are shunted and realigned in m Ik debater whose major job will be ing up trains, was knocked out. pdobthe mljornonize Ground action was desultory in pilting the bill to nationalize South Viet Nam, with only light Britain's steel industry through and sporadic contact in a variety the House of Commons. of operations. An Army authority? An -conomistengineer and un- E) Z 1 . 1 a i LANSING (P') - The Michigan Supreme Court upheld by default yesterday one man-one vote ap- portionment for county boards of supervisors. The high court failed to reach a five-vote majority, thus its lack of positive action served to up- hold the population-only ruling of Kent County Circuit Judge Fred Searl. In his 42-page opinion, Justice Theodore Souris upheld equal pop- ulation districting for county boards, but added, "We believe that it is the wise exercise of judgment to defer to the Legisla- ture until the end of the 1967 session for corrective legislative or constitutional amendatory ac- tion. The Legislature now has under consideration a bill to apportion supervisor boards on a population basis. The measure has passed the House and was sent to the Senate, where it awaited high court action. Souris was joined by Chief Jus- tice Thomas Kavanagh, Justices Otis Smith and Paul. Adams. The other justices wrote individual and differing opinions. Justice Eugene Black, however, argued that the court should re- tain jurisdiction in the case and voted "against affirmance or re- versal at this time." Justice Harry Kelly voted to re- verse Searl and remand the mat- ter for a new trial, since "the Kent County Board of Supervisors is not apportioned in violation of the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution." Justice Michael O'Hara, joined by John Dethmers, reached "the contrary conclusion -from that reached in Souris' opinion, be- cause I proceed from a different premise. "That premise is that we have no right, much less duty, to strike down a constitutional provision adopted by the citizens of a sov- ereign state by analogous appli- cation of a judicial construction of the equality clause. of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States." He referred to a provision 'of the Michigan constitution that every organized township- be rep- resented on a county board f su- pervisors. In its landmark one man-one vote decision of 1964, the U.S. Su- preme Court "expressly limited its mandate to state legislatures. As of this date . at least there is re- served to the states the right to consider other factors in the elec- tion of representative bodies of local government," O'Hara added. State Court Rules on Vote, Apportionmenlt,. THE GREEK TANKER, JOANNA V, shown above, defied the British warship, Plymouth, and en- tered the Mazanbique port of Beira with 12,000 tons of oil that the British say is headed for South- ern Rhodesia. The United Nations has banned all oil shipments to the white supremist country. Oil Shipment to Rhodesia May Cause UN Forces To Intervene J { i a : I LONDON {P-Britain warned Portugal yesterday that if it breaches an international oil ban on Rhodesia the United Nations may use force against the Rho- desian white minority regime. Por- tugal indicated it would ignore the warning. The move by Prime Minister Harold Wilson's government fol- lowed the arrival of the 12,920- ton Greek tanker Joanna V at Beira. That port in Portuguese Mozambique is the oil terminal for land-locked Rhodesia. By sundown, conflicting ac- eounts came from Beira about the movement of the tanker chartered by the South African firm of A. G. Morrison in Cape Town. Unloading Oil A news dispatch from Beira quoted witnesses who said they saw Joanna V unloading her 12,000- ton load of crude oil into dock- side tanks. But in London, a Foreign Office statement quoted British Consul John Taylor as reporting from Beira that the tanker still is anchored outside the port. Taylor added that the Beira port captain "has stated categor- ically the Joanna V will stay an- chored in the stream until she sails." InsLisbon and London, the Brit- ish demanded firmly that Portu- gal act to insure that Jonna V's oil is not pumped through the 189- mile pipeline linking Beira with the Umtali refinery in Rhodesia. The pipeline, Portuguese control- led, has decided on principle to pump any oil to Rhodesia that arrives in Beira. Use of Force To do so, the Portuguese were told, could touch off a sequence of events leading eventually to the use of force by the United Na- tions against the white regime of Rhodesia, the Portuguese territor- les of Mozambique and Angola and even against the white-suprema- cist government of Premier Hen- drik F. Voerwoerd in South Af- rica. The most that Foreign Minister Franco Nogueira of Portugal seem-; ed ready to do was to continue] the dialog with Britain. Britain's Royal Navy, which is hunting for embargo runners in the Mozambique Channel, report- ed a second Greek tanker seems tof be heading toward Beira. She was identified as the Manuela, carry- ing a load of Persian Gulf oil which the British suspect is des- tined for Rhodesia. For the Wilson government the stakes are high in this cat-and- mouse game at sea and on the African shore. Wilson is deeply committed to the peaceful over- throw of Smith's regime. The UN Security Council Nov. 20 backed the British embargopol- icy with a call on all member states to impose sanctions, includ- ing an oil ban, on the Rhodesians. If these sanctions fail, British officials fear there may be ir- resistible African-Asian pressure for direct action by the United Nations to settle the crisis forci- bly in favor of the African ma- jority in Rhodesia, who outnum- ber whites 14 to one. said the civil unrest which grip-; ped urban areas had not interfer- red at all with the military oper- ations. "Patrols are going out as usual: even in the 1st Corps," he said. The 1st Corps area, made up of South Viet Nam's five northern' provinces has been a focal point of agitation against Premier Ky's military government. Hit Supply Lines B-52 bombers from Guam, which have centered considerable atten- tion lately on Communist supply and assembly points and the bor- der in that area, slammed at an- other 25 miles fest on the Whue beach. The Peking-Hanoi railroad had been left unmolested since the end of the 37-day bombing morator- ium last Jan. 31, though there were attacks a month ago on a secondary line that wanders from Kumming southeastward down the Red River Valley to Hanoi. The Kumming-Hanoi line was hit again at Phu Tho, 46 miles northwest of Hanoi, and the raid- ers reported: "Bridge ' down and rails cut." Those were among 65 missions' flown by Ai' Force and Navy squadrons. The spokesman indi- cated, however, there had been no new realignment of targets in the North. LORMAN, Miss. (P) - A campus security police officer fired teat gas grenades yesterday at a band of laughing, taunting high school pupils who roamed the campus of all-Negro Alcorn A & M College demonstrating against the school's president. The Negro youngsters were driv- en from the vicinity of President J. D. Boyd's home by the tear gas and pursuing state highway patrolmen. One boy was arrested, raising the total number taken into cus- tody in two days to 36. Boyd was not available for com- ment. Campus Policies Alcorn students, cheering the high school youths on, emphasiz- ed that their quarrel with Boyd ion negotiator, Marsnf ormerly was a junior minister at the Ministry of Labor. Marsh's old job went to Shirley Williams, 35, a journalist Student Demonstration. Met by- Tear Gas, Police was over campus policies, not civil rights. Negro leader Charles Evers said the goal was to oust Boyd. "This is a fight between Ne- groes," he said in a midday pep talk to his followers just outside the college gate. "And you white folks ought to stay out of it," Evers added. "J. D. Boyd has got to go," Evers said. "We're going to get him sooner or later. He's only con- cerned with pleasing the white folks." Incompetent "This is my alma mater," Evers said. "I went to school here four years, and right now I couldn't pass a sixth grade examination." In talking to newsmen, college students complained about the Read and Use Daly, Classified Ads. food, the infirmary, the system and the teachers. grading I WOrld News Roundup By The Associated Press LAKELAND-Officials yesterday pinned a $29.4-million price tag on tornadoes that killed 10 persons, of dwellings in their cross-Florida injured 300 and tore up hundreds path. CAPE KENNEDY-The fifth at- tempt to launch an Orbiting As- tronomical Observatory was failed at the last moment yesterday when an automatic system sensed trouble and ordered the engines of the booster rocket to shut down after they ignited. The satellite carries 10 tele- scopes designed to give man his first clear look at the stars from above the atmosphere. * * * KALAMAZOO .- Gov. George Romney questioned Monday night whether the United States has a valid reason to fight in Viet Nam. "The only reason the United States should be fighting the war there is if the Vietnamese people want it," Romney told a group of Kalamazoo Young Republicans. "And there is some reason to believe they don't," he said. Romney did not expand on his statement, but he touched on la- bor unions and the nation's econ- omy: * I r t 4 Read Daily Classifieds a t t. a s f a (AMP WINNEBADDE OF PARRY SOUND, nfTAVI' ;1 HOLY WEEK NOON DISCUSSION APRIL 4-7 WED: The Meaning of RESURRECTION DR. WALLACE TEED, Practicing Physician -... ., . . ..-... ., . * I I I ~ ililU3wI cl I~umrc cII cn'2 1 I I I iI i I I t