WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Im A d4 _'. I C I C A h h r s H E PAGE THREU 9 .Buddhists Boycott Meeting SET TWO-YEAR TIME: U.S. Rejects DeGaulle's Milhtary Oiister Deadgineu I W-monow -Mw As Ky Pledges Opponents to' Regime Plan Next Move Religious Group Asks For Elections Now; Await Demionstrations SAIGON ()-The next move i South Viet Nam's political struggi appears today to be up to th Buddhists. There is little doub that the Buddhists are ready t make it, perhaps as a show o force. The military government pedg ed yesterday to hold .elections fo a civilian regime as soon asa constitution is drafted and th voting machinery is set up. Bu the Buddhists boycotted the pre paratory congress at which th offer was made. Only 92 delegates, roughly hal the number invited, showed up. Knowledgeable political quarter said there was no indication th congress had opened the way fo any solution. No Demonstration There had been speculation th( Buddhists might put on a bi demonstration to show their op position to the congress, but thi did not materialize. The expecta- tion now is that it will com tomorrow. Before boycotting the congress leaders of the unified Buddhis struggle group declared they have no confidence in promises of the military government headed by Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and the chief of state, Nguyen Van Thieu The Buddhists are demanding the election of a civilian govern- ment "in a very short time." The military leaders have said they are willing to turn over power to an elected, representative govern- ment, but that working out the procedures and holding elections will take time. Buddhists Won't Wait Top government officials talk in terms of completing such action in six months. There is no indica- tion the Buddhists will be willing to wait that long. Addressing the opening session of the congress, Thieu declared that "If he people want to have an elected government in the shortest time possible, this desire is also ours." "It is not our policy to go against the aspirations of the en- tire people," Thieu said. "Neither do we want to cling to power." No Compromise Basis Despite such statements, con- vening of the congress did not appear to present any solid basis that would bring a compromise. In addition to the Buddhist boy- cott, Roman Catholic elements were represented by only two ob- servers, and two student leaders walked out because they objected to the way the meeting was being run. Represented were several politi- cal parties along with various worker and professional associa- tions and civic organizations. None represents any cohesive force. The idea of calling the congress was put forward by Ky on April 3 in an effort to quiet political unrest that has swept Viet Nam's cities and towns. The congress is intended to discuss the calling of a constituent assembly. This as- sembly would draft a constitution that would be submitted to a ref- erendum. After that step, election of a National Assembly would be1 held. Appointive Members In addition to the time element, the Buddhists also are demanding selection of members of the con- stituent assembly on a partly ap- pointive basis that it is believed would give the Buddhists domin- ance. Buddhist leaders have said they do not want actually to hold posts in a civilian government, but they have long made clear that they seek a dominant voice in such a regime. Ky is represented as personally feeling confident that his gov- ernment can survive the crisis, but pressures are building up. There is speculation that pro- longed political unrest might deep- en divisions within the armed forces, which again could be a deciding factor in whether the government stands or falls. Thursday-April 14th PRIME MINISTER NGUYEN CAG KY (right) and Deputy Prime Minister. Huu Co are shown at the opening of the political conference in NATIONS TO DECIDE: Greek Oil Run for Rh Poses Threat to UN St -}k Elections fSaigon Hit by Communist Mortar Fire Airbase Attack Sets 4" Fire to Fuel Dump; Destroys Transports SAIGON MA)--A Viet Cong mor tar attack early today killed two Americans, destroyed two Viet- namese C47 transports and set a fuel dump aflame at Saigon's Tan Son Nhut airbase. United States officials announced 34 Americans and 14 Vietnamese air force men were wounded. Shell-set fires aground and flares dropped by guerrilla-hunt- ing allied aircraft lighted the night sky for miles. Crews of armed helicopters that raced aloft said they hit the area of the mortar emplacements, but there -Associated Press was no estimate as to whether Major General Nguyen they hit any of the Viet Cong. Saigon. In addition to the two C47s ---- destroyed, other aircraft-both American and Vietnamese-were damaged. The five U.S. aircraft damaged a included a F100 Super Sabre fight- er bomber and one TVC121. The ) (fa latter is the craft that provides television relay to Saigon. The TV plane was described as badly n ddamaged. Two Vietnamese cargo planes, C47s, also were damaged. anuela sailed into Dur- Th Mauling Attack lanuea Brilhedintonur-The raid on the airport, only r a British warship, on four miles from the heart of Sai- iority, had stopped her gon followed u a mauling attack ering Beira Saturday and by Viet Cong-after two weeks of her out of the Mozam- evasion-on a rifle company in annel.-the U.S. 1st Infantry Division's Africa, unlike Portugal, Operation Abilene 40 miles east w bound by a compulsory of Saigon.1 er to refuse Rhodesia- The company's casualties were 1. officially described as heavy. rime Minister Hendrik The bloody jungle fight, the first 'rime Minisgernen B52 raid on Communist North1 knows if his government Viet Nam and a flurry of 36 , or helps, the passage of missions north of the border -by4 is northern neighbor he smaller planes had highlighted1 eexposing South Africa military reports in a war shadow-a tion. ed by the Saigon political crises. Oil Sanctions The Tan Son Nhut airport has7 ould take the form of oil been a target of terrorist attacks,1 against South Africa but the raid yesterday was the nd these, in time, could first with mortars.t into a fullscale interna- Helicopters flew dead andt ckade. wounded Americans yesterday1 al, with two territories from landing zones that engineers7 , and South Africa are hacked out of the jungle at the only friends Prime Min- site of a five-hour battle Mondayc Smith's white settler re- night between the 1st Division :hodesia can claim. company, which at full strength ubscribe to Smith's broad would total 178 men, and a Viet reserving white rule in Cong battalion of 400 or so. ent dominated by newly Maj. Gen. William E. De Puy,1 ent African states. commander of the 1st Division,I said "apparently Viet Cong womenc Revert to Colony were following up behind the t their help, Smith's rebel enemy troops, killing American1 which grabbed indepen- wounded and dragging off theirI m Britain last November, own dead and wounded."c dly survive. Almost cer- Lt. Col. Melvin Owens, deputyc wouldrevert to colonial commander of the 3 75th Combat nding the formation of Support Group, said the attack acial parliamentary and on the base was carried out by ant system two and possibly four mortar sup- vhile the sympathies of ported b a force estimated at e and South African between 25 and 30 Viet Cong. re almost entirely with Owens, whose unit is responsible e rulers of both countries in part for the security of Tan Son too could quickly become Nhut, said several recoilless rifle ts of UN attack if they duds had been found and that evi- go on defying Security dence indicated 82 millimeter mor- esolutions. tars of Chinese make were used. WASHINGTON - (A) - Re- jecting French President Charles de Gaulle's one-year ouster dead- line, the United States yesterday set a two-year time for her mili- tary pullout from France and warned that French units stand to lose quickly their access to Ameri- can atomic arms. In a separate statement, Secre- tary of State Dean Rusk in effect accused De Gaulle of one-sided treaty-breaking which he said "strikes at the very heart of the sanctity of international agree- nients." "Fourteen nations, comprising 450 million people and possessing massive military power, will not i No Terminal Date The 1949 treaty has no terminal date. The four U.S.-French agree- ments cited included the 1951 Chateaurouh depot agreement, the 1952 air bases agreement, and the 1953 U.S. military headquarters and pipeline agreements. Noting that the- 1958 U.S.- French communications system agreement allows for termination by one party upon two years' no- up under the treaty. Four of the The diplomatic communication main U.S.-French pacts covering also questioned why NATO head- France are supposed to last as quarters should be removed from long as the treaty unless termi- France within a year, told Paris-- nated by mutual consent, the U.S. without naming a specific sum- note said. that it may be called to account ue paralyzed by the attitude of tice, the American note said that France," Rusk added. the U.S. would permit termination Diplomatic Note of the four other agreements only The U.S. position on French dis- according to such means as pro- engagement from the North At- vided by the 1958 agreement. lantic Treaty Organization and:; demand for removal of U.S. bases land some 30.000 troops fromre French soil was set forth in a diplomatic note to Paris. France VeT and her NATO allies have been trading a stream of messages since the French formally declared their v eri or De Gaulle, who says the unified NATO defense structure is out- By The Associated Press moded and impinges on French sovereignty, has served notice of A highly -placed Democratic French withdrawal from the inte- source in Lansing revealed yester- grated system as of next July 1. day that State Democratic Cen- He wants NATO military head- tral Committee Chairman Zolton quarters and U.S. forces out of Ferency will seek his party's nomi- France by April 1967. nation for governor. Yesterday's U.S. note cited De Ferency said he expected to an- Gaulle's avowed intent to keep nounce tomorrow the time and France a member of the basic place of a news conference at treaty, even though quitting the which he would make his declara- NATO structure which was set tion. Peking Claims U.S. Aircraft Downed on China Mainland for financial costs from her "abro- gating or repudiating existing agreements," and left the door op- en for negotiations for keeping s ome U.S. - built facilities in France. s As for nuclear weapons, which the United States has stockpiled in Germany for use bythe NATO- assigned French air and ground forces there, the U.S. note said French withdrawal from NATO would automatically end that ar- trangement. Paris said the two French air wings and two divi- sions in West Germany, totaling some 70,000 men, will sever their NATO connection next July 1. o Declare Candidacy Support for Ferency continued to grow this week. On Monday, At- ty. Gen. Frank Kelley announced he was not a candidate and threw his support behind Ferency. In Ann Arbor, former congress- man-at-large Neil Staebler said, "I urge you to make your candi- dacy complete with a formal an- nouncement at the earliest possible time." Endorsement is also expected from Secretary of State James Hare, House Speaker Joseph Ko- walski (D-Detroit), and Kowal- ' ski's party caucus, which may ev- en endorse Ferency before he an- nounces his candidacy. Williams Endorsed In other state politics, it was learned yesterday that United Au- to Workers Ford Local 600, has endorsed former Gov. G. Mennen Williams for the U.S. Senate The local, which represents 35,- 000 active members and 18,000 re- tired workers, wrote " State AFL- CIO President August Scholle to notify him of the endorsement by its general council and to urge the state body to take similar ac- tion. The endorsement was a gen- eral council action and the gen- eral membership did not vote on the matter. One of the local's retired work- ers is Sylvester J. Cravanagh, f a- ther of DetroitrMayor Jerome Ca- vanagh, who is Williams' chieftop- ponent for the party's nomination for the seat being vacated by re- tiring Sen. Patrick McNamara. Mayor Cavanagh said he was disappointed by tne endorsement and contended he "never had a chance" to appear before the lo- cal's members..- "It is doubly surprising," he added, "since my father was an early member of Local 600 and is a retired Ford worker. I believe it is a mistake for an endorsement to be made before each of the can- didates has a chance to discuss the issues before the membership." k LONDON OP)-Two Greek tank- there were signs that technicians4 ers with oil for Rhodesia yesterday were trying to connect the six- confronted Portugal and South inch offloading pipe of the tanker Africa with a choice of flouting with the 10-inch intake of the the United Nations or failing their pipeline. Rhodesian friends. Portugal is under Security There were unconfirmed reports Council orders not to allow Rho- that the international syndicate desian oil to pass through Mo- that organized the oil run is ready zambique on'pain of reprisal. with a third ship, the Nichos V, In Durban, South Africa, 500 for yet another bid to breach the miles away, the sister tanker Man- Security Council embargo. uela lay in the outer anchorage In Beira the Greek-owned Ionna 'of the harbor. She is awaiting V, with 18,000 tons of oil aboard, permission to unload her 15',000- lay docked only 30 feet away from ton cargo of Iranian light crude the pipeline linking the port in oil into either Durban's storage Portuguese Mozambique with Rho- depots or refineries, among the desia. largest in the Southern Hemi-' Behind a tight security screen I sphere. WJorld News Roundup The M ban afte UN auth from ent escorted bique Ch South is not no UN orde bound oi But P Verwoerd sanctions fuel to h would be to retalia This c sanctions herself a escalate tional blo Portuge in Africa about the ister Ian gime in F Both s aim of p a contine independ I Withou regime, , dence froi could har tainly it status pe a multira governme Thus w Portugues whites a Smith, th fear they the targe were to Council rE TOKYO (A)-Red China accus- ed the United States yesterday of aerial attacks on Chinese fishing boats and claimed its Air- Force downed a U.S. military craft on the Chinese mainland. In Washington, the Defense De- partment announced a U.S. Navy KA3B tanker plane was overdue on a flight from the Philippines to the South. Viet Nam war theater, but did not refer to the Chinese claim. The terse Pentagon an- nouncement did not acknowledge the plane was lost. A broadcast by the official New China News Agency said the U.S. aircraft, described as an A3B at- tack plane, was downed yesterday. It made no mention of crew. The KA3B normally has a crew of three. Downed by Red Chinese Peking said the U.S. plane was shot down by Red Chinese air force craft on Luichow Peninsula, Kwangtung Province, which faces North Viet Nam across the Gulf of Tonkin. The Pentagon said the KA3B, a tanker version of the AB, left the Philippines yesterday for the air- craft carrier Kityy Hawk cruising off South Viet Nam. It did not indicate whether the tanker was armed. Pentagon sources said that if the tanker plane did pentrate into Communist Chinese territory it was probably due to a navigational error. The area is well away from South Vietnamese waters. Fishermen Killed After announcing the downing of the plane, another Peking broadcast charged that two Chi- nese fishermen were killed and 15 wounded in attacks by four U.S. planes April 7 on the high seas in the Gulf of Tonkin. Peking said, "The strongest pos- sible protest has been made by the appropriate Chinese depart-' ment against this cutthroat be- havior of U.S. imperialism." It said the sending of "the heavy attack plane deep into the air space over China's mainland was an open violation of China's so- vereign rights." Protest B52s In Hanoi, a North Vietnamese broadcast protested the use of; Guam-based U.S. B52s in bombing North Viet Nam and called Tues- day's attack a new step in the escalation of the war. By The Associated Pres# PITTSBURGH-The number of striking soft coal miners swelled to about 58,000 miners in eight states in the biggest walkout in the nation's soft coal fields in 15 years. The strike continues in defience of a back-to-work order by W. A. "Tony" Boyle, president of the United Mine Workers. Compliance with the directive was generally spotty and there was no indica- tion of a general break in the strike. The workers struck at midnight reached a new contract with three Sunday, two days after the union independent coal producers, but fail to reach an agreement with the Bituminous Coal Operators Association, which employs about one-half of the United Mine Workers' 100,000 membership. Some miners have returned to work in Utah, Virginia and Indi- ana, and more are expected back in Pennsylvania and Ohio. Indications were that the two- day strike was not affecting the biggest users of coal-the steel in- dustry and utilities, who reported- ly had big stockpiles.7 * * *x JAKARTA - Indonesia's new government will launch a crash economy program in an effort to restore the shattered economy, an- nounced Economic Affairs Mini- ster Sultan Hamengku Buwonol yesterday.1 Not only does the nation have no money in the treasury to meet1 its $2.4 billion in foreign debts,. he said, but exports still are fall- ing and inflation may cause food prices to spiral by 1,000 per cent this year if not checked. Buwono said one of the main targets in the new program is' streamlining overstaffed govern- ment agencies. He added that his ministry would attempt to cut away corruption, mismanagement, misadministration and bureau- cracy. WASHINGTON-Two new Re- publican organizations calling themselves progressives yesterday' urged Republicans to grab the "torch of reform" and to go after the Negro vote in the South. Republicans for Progress, a citi- zens organization built around former administration officials of the Dwight Eisenhower years, and Republican Advance, a Yale uni- versity group, joined in demanding national committee action to erase any segregation practices in Southern GOP party organizations. They proposed revivial of the committee's lapsed minorities di- vision, a massive drive to register Negroes as Republicans, selection of Negro candidates for office, and campaigns to enlist volunteers on Negro college campuses. MIAMI-Employees of Alterman Transport Lines, a trucking com- I pany in Miami, Florida, have turned down membership in the Teamsters Union after a debate between their boss and a lieuten- ant to James Hoff a. k A YOU GOT, BOOKS WE GOT CASH STUDENT 1900K SERVICE I a 1215 South U. 761-0700 WE'LL BUY ALL YOUR why cart all those clothes home? * Call Greene's Cleaners today! 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