SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,,I TT-I. THE ICHGAN AIL PA(~' rrTrW **S~5L~s'-a x8 rrsu nnLrs See Possible Chinese Reconciliation with Russia E9DITOR'S NOTE: What's ahead for China? Manycrosscurrents of ideology and personalities enter the current purge there, putting fore- casts in the realm of fancy. Even the Soviet Union isn't sure of what's happening to its Commu- nist neighbor. In this article, last of a series this week on China, an AP specialisthin Communist affairs looks at some of the straws in the wind and weighs the impact. By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent The outcome of the slugging match between contending forces in Red China is a matter of tre- mendous concern for the rest of the world. What will it mean for the fu- turf of Chinese-Soviet relations, now at their ebb? What impact will it have on China's march to- ward status as a full-fledged nu- clear power? What will it mean to the Chinese people and their econ- omy? Is China facing a new eco- nomic disaster because of the pro- found upheaval now in progress? All these questions and many more are involved in the struggle, but the answers can be little more than speculation. There is always a possibility, for example, that China would make some sort of peace with the Soviet Union if the forces of Mao Tse- tung and Defense Minister Lin Piao lose the battle. All the so- called "revisionists" in China are closer to the Soviet. The Russians aren't betting on that, however. Their comments on the China scene leave the impres- sion that they have little expecta- tion of a victory by any pro-Soviet faction. There is a possibility, too, that a Chinese leadership in a death struggle to maintain itself might of adventurous course as a des- be prompted to take some sort perate measure to attempt to unify the country. This could, take the form of a military advance into India or involvement in Viet- nam. Clearly, the Russians are wor- ried about this, and display the worry frequently in their press comments on the China struggle. The strugle has been going on for years. What is happening now is only a new-though probably decisive-phase of it. Meanwhile, it has failed to impede China's march to membership in the nu- clear club, which she now claims by virtue of five explosions, in- cluding one which matched a nu- clear warhead to a missile and brought China's neighbors within range. Although scientists are re- quired to be indoctrinated Com- munists in China, both sides in the struggle have had a tendency to seal them off from the political wars of Peking, to permit them to concentrate on their job of push- ing China toward the rank of major power. Some impact of the struggle may yet be felt in Vietnam, since China is one of the two chief sources of help for North Vietnam and the Communst cause in the south. Disruption of the Chinese economy could mean disruption in the flow of supplies to Hanoi. Another result could be a les- sening of direct Chinese pressure' on Hanoi to fight to the last Viet- namese. Preoccupied with its in- ternal struggle, Peking is in no position to be preoccupied with Vietnam, and this could leave Hanoi some leeway should it want to respond to a peace overture. The most serious consequences of the struggle are likely to show up in the Chinese economy, al- ready weak and austere. China is a nation of 750 million, growing at the rate of 15 million a year. A half billion are peasants. Food already is short and rationed. Living standards are low. Now the "great proletarian cul- tural revolution," by which Mao evidently intends to secure his place in the pantheon of Commu- nist gods and prevent a new gen- eration from straying off the orthodox path, has extended to the hinterland peasants. This is dangerous for China if it interfers with spring sowing and the next crops. But serious damage must al- ready have been done, if even part of the reports from inside China are true. A mammoth struggle has been going on to command an impor- tant base of power: the urban proletariat in the factories and at the work benches. Correspondents of a number of nations, reporting from inside China, including Japanese and the Communist bloc, supply some hints. So do broadcast reports of the Red Chinese themselves, and documents coming out of the country. They tell of things like these: -Defense Minister Lin Piao, ap- parently seeking to deliver the coup de grace to his opponents, including President Liu Shao-chi, has ordered a Red Guard revolu- tionay onslaught among the labor unions. He has abolished the par- ty-dominated Trade Union Fed- eration and replaced it with a "federation of revolutionary reb- els." This has caused bloody clashes. In Nanking and Shanghai, both vitally important industrial cities, water and power supplies were cut off for some time as the teen- age Red Guards met armed resist- ance from workers. -Rail traffic between cities of- ten is cut. When the trains run, they often are the scene of wild disturbances. Already overcrowded trains are boarded by swarms of Red Guards without tickets, who throw others off and beat up crews. -Canton, another highly impor- tant industrial city, has been hit by a wave of strikes. Shanghai, China's largest city and hub of her commerce, is experiencing a desperate shortage of coal because dockworkers refused to unload ships. Factory production in many cases has ground to a halt. -On Chushan Island, off Shan- ghai, 6,000 farmers attacked Red Guard units and wrecked a radio station. -In Peking, a clash at an air- plane plant halted production. -In some areas, the Red Guards made propaganda attacks on the police as "a claw thrust out" by the supporters of President Liu., Police are helpless anyway, and just look on while the Red Guards rampage. -Fukien Province, a Mandarin language broadcast said, would have "very grave problems" soon if the cultural revolution did not prevail. Large numbers of work- ers there left the factories, it ad- mitted-with a charge that the opposition was plotting to blame the consequences on the cultural revolution. -Local "responsible party per- sons" at provincial levels are being called "monsters, freaks and rascals" because, it is alleged, they are inciting strikes and threaten. ing total stoppage in many enter- prises. -The "monsters and freaks" are practicing "economism," which is a pecularly Communist sin. It means promising workers a better deal. This will "corrupt the mass- es," the Peking radio says. There are elements in China who evidently feel that the nation should pull in its horns, become less bellicose and pay more atten- tion to the internal economy. They see a prospect only of long, bitter years of hardship for the entire nation under present policies. This might mean, should that side prevail, some sort of recon- ciliation with Moscow, although in any case it likely would be an un- easy one. Nevertheless, by all the signs coming out of Moscow, the Soviet Communist party is preparing its own rank and file for a long struggle against Peking policies. The Soviet Union is not alone in its worries about what the Chi- nese "great cultural revolution" may produce in the future. Na- tions on China's border and else- where watch in fascinated awe as the spectacle of the great upheaval unfolds. It could lead in almost any di- rection. That is the danger. Som( Join Report 100 People Dead In Clashes Uranium-Rich Area Of Sinkiang Province Involved in Struggle TOKYO (MP-Peking wall posters reported yesterday that seven of the eight army divisions in Sin- kiang Province have t u r n e d against Mao Tse-tung in an "antirevolutionary rebellion" and more than 100 persons have been killed in clashes. If the northwest province lines up against Mao, it will be a seri- ous blow to the 73-year-old party chairman's prestige. Sinkiang is Red China's nuclear testing grounds, is rich in uranium, and has many atomic plants. There was little reason to doubt the reports of serious disaffection. Sinkiang is ruled by Wang En- mao, first secretary of the party's provincial committee and com- mander of the province's military district. Maoists have denounced him for having ties with counter- revolutionaries." The Peking correspondent of the Japanese newspaper Asahi said only one division of 20,000 men remained loyal to Mao in Sinkian. With Sinkiang reported crum- bling, Radio Peking indicated set- backs to Mao in Manchuria and Shanghai by broadcasting thou- sands of words from Maoists there calling for "an all-around struggle to seize power." People's Daily, the official paper, said the appeal was "applicable to all other parts of China." Wall posters also indicated there was a long struggle ahead between Mao and the forces of President Liu Shao-chi. Japanese reports said the posters quoted Premier Chou En-lal as telling Mao "the recovery of authority has only started." With the civil conflict spreading over China, Chinese in Peking let off steam by staging a demonstra- tion outside the Soviet Embassy for the second straight day. Kyodo quoted wall posters as saying the fighting in Sinkiang centered in the new city of Shih- hotze, which previous dispatches had called Shihotzu. It is in the desert northwest of Urumchi, the provincial capital. Anti-Maoists were said to have seized the center of the city after fighting in which more than 100 were killed and scores wounded. Whether the army took part in the fight was not indicated: But pre- vious dispatches said 10,000 ex- soldiers had formed a field army in Shihhotze and were armed with rifles, macines guns, grenades and artillery. Tso Chi, deputy political chief in Sinkiang who is loyal to Mao, was said to have reported to De- fetnse Minister Lin Piao' that he was unable to handle the situation in Shihhotze and asked for in- struction. Lin is Mao's heir ap- parent. Chinese Anti-Mao Army Units CHICAGO HIT: Killer Snowstorm Paralyzes iMidwest; 16 Reported Dead Rebellion SURVEY SHOWS: Car Dealers Say Tight Credit Responsible for Sales Slump By The Associated Press Auto dealers pinched by a new car sales slump now in its tenth' month place a major share of thej blame on tight credit. Other factors cited in a nation- wide sampling of dealer 'views in- cluded rising taxes, the huge sales of 1965 and 1966, the higher costs of living, apprehension about the safety of 1967 models, the large number of men in the armed forces, and the threat of the draft to prospective young buyers who are eligible for Selective Service. Slumping sales and the forced layoff of more than 21,000 work- ers spell possible economic trou- ble for Michigan and some other states. If the auto industry cutbacks continue, supplier firms will be affected eventually, any sales tax revenues will go down and un- employment compensation pay- ments will go up. 60 Nations Sign Treaty For. Disarmament in Space WASHINGTON (JP)-Diplomats from 60 nations signed the new peace-in-space treaty yesterday at an unusual White House ceremony which President Johnson described as "an inspiring moment in the history of the human race." Representatives of the United States, the Soviet Union and Great Britain were the first to sign the document that aims at preventing territorial or military rivalries in outer space and at blocking the orbiting of nuclear warheads. Ambassador Anatoly F. Dob- rynin, after signing for the Soviet Union, told an East Room audi- ence: "Let us hope we shall not wait long for solution of earthly problems." Goal Sought Johnson, who proposed such a treaty last May, said that if dis- armament on earth still remains a goal to be sought, "we can at least keep the virus from spread- ing" to space. Secretary of State Dean Rusk said the treaty demonstrates that conflicts or disagreements among nations cannot be allowed to deter a persistent search for areas of agreement. Nations, he said, "must take even small steps" toward amity and cooperation. The 2,000-word treaty seeks to; block the orbiting of nuclear war- heads or any other weapons of mass destruction. It is aimed also at preventing territorial claims in space--such as asserting national title to real estate on the moon. Military Tests Banned Other provisions ban military tests or maneuvers on the moon or other celestial bodies and call for the prompt return of any astronauts, cosmonauts, and space- ships that might land accidentally on alien soil. Earlier yesterday, Soviet Pre- mier Alexei N. Kosygin presided at a similar ceremony in Moscow,1 where Ambassador Llewellyn E. Thompson signed for the United States. A third signing, which also drew American participation, took place in London. The treaty, while drafted under Lagging sales caused General Motors and Chrysler to announce this week that some 17,000 work- ers will be laid off next month. Earlier, American Motors an- nounced indefinite layoffs for 4,100 workers. While most industry officials said it is too early to predict how the production curtailment will affect related business, already there were signs of spreading de- velopments. The auto industry, a powerful force in the nation's economy, accounts directly or indirectly for about one out of every six jobs in Michigan. About 11,600 workers are to be laid off in Michigan. Chrysler's layoff will affect 1,600 at Los An- geles and 2,800 at St. Louis. GM, which already has laid off 2,800 at various plants, said it will lay off 800 at Tarrytown, N.Y. The American Motors layoffs primar- ily are in Wisconsin. An Associated Press survey in- dicated that auto industry pro- duction cutbacks may result in the layoffs of workers at Michigan supplier plants, if there is no im- provement in the sales picture. In Benton Harbor, Walter Laetz, vice president of Auto Specialties Manufacturing Co., which em- ploys some 2,000 workers, said: "We anticipate some cutbacks but we don't know just how severe they will be." United Nations auspices, resulted largely from negotiations between the United States and the Soviet, Union. This fact is seen as evi-j dence that the two superpowers' still can find areas of agreement despite the Vietnam war. U.N. Secretary-General U Thant in messages to Johnson, Kosygin and British Prime Minister Harold Wilson compared the new pact with the 1959 treaty neutralizing the antartic and the 1963 partial nuclear test-ban agreement as "landmarks of man's march to- ward international peace and sec- urity." Johnson proposed the treaty in a statement last May 7. The U.N. General Assembly endorsed the final draft on Dec. 19. Opponents Entrenched Everywhere Red Guards 'Falling Behind' in Battle; New Purges Begin TOKYO (A)-Mao Tse-tung and his foes appeared yesterday to be girding for a protracted strug- gle. Japanese reports from the main- land told of wall posters in Peking reporting that Premier Chou En- lai had informed Mao "the re- covery of authority has only start- ed." Other wall posters said that Mao's chief purge administrator, Chen Po-ta, had complained that Red Guards in the capital were "falling behind the rest of the country."- Mao's own propaganda outlets indicated the shape the struggle was taking. There was growing emphasis on the military, and the New China News Agency poured out thousands of words claiming that army support at the "de- cisive moment" had routed anti- Mao forces in Shansi Province and the Manchurian industrial city of Pinkiang-Harbin. But in reporting pledges of sup- port from pro-Mao forces in other parts of the country, NCNA ap- peared to be indirectly disclosing that his opponents, led by Pres- ident Liu Shao-chi, were en- trenched almost everywhere. In other developments reported in posters and Peking broadcasts: -Maoists were taking over con- trol of the Foreign Ministery and a reshuffle was in the offing. Re-+ ports said anti-Mao diplomats would be purged.+ -Radio Peking admitted new opposition in Heilunkiang, the northernmost province of Man- churia and indicated setbacks; around Shanghai. Mao's forces had claimed victories in both areas. The Chinese-language news-7 paper Tseng Po, quoting reports; from Canton, said, Gen. Wu; Hsueh-lin, military commander of Hainan, had defied Mao's orders1 and refused to allow Red Guards1 on the island. By The Associated Press A killer storm which smothered the Midwest with a paralyzing snowfall, and rendered Chicago a snow-h"aped wasteland with the heaviest accumulation in its his- tory, thundered toward the east yesterday. The storm,- which left at least 16 dead in Illinois, punished the nation's midsection with snows that closed schools, highways and airports. Chicago was crippled by a 23- inch snowfall. All three major air- By The Associated Press SAIGON - The ruling junta named Lt. Gen. Cao Van Vien as South Vietnam's new defense min- ister yesterday, ostensibly ending more than a week of political sparring that shared :attention with the war effort. Vien, 45, was among the offi- cers who overthrew President Ngo Dinh Diem's regime in 1963. He i, currently chief of the general staff. Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's gov- ernment announced after secret deliberations by the ruling generals that Vien will assume the post of commissioner of national defense, replacing Lt. Gen. Nguyen Huu Co. '* * * JAKARTA, Indonesia-The ap- pearance of troop concentrations around Jakarta in the last few days has sharpened fears of a misstep in the current war of nerves centering on President Sukarno. Veteran diplomats estimate that about 40 battalions of the army, marines, air force and police have moved into the city area. By their reckoning, part of these back Sukarno but most support Gen. Suharto, his adversary. These sources express fear that Sukarno, believing he has the people's backing, might make a desperate move. Suharto is rep- resented as believing that who- ever makes the first move will lose out in the end. * * * WASHINGTON - The defense said the charges against Bobby Baker were built on quicksand. The government said Bobby Baker betrayed the confidence and trust in him when he was a Senate Aide. With these closing statements the trial of Bobby Baker, 38, one- time secretary to the Senate Dem- ocratic majority, moved toward a climax yesterday. The jury will receive the case today after being instructed by U.S. Dist. Court Judge Oliver Gasch. Defense attorney Edward Ben- nett Williams said "we're fighting a phantom," referring to the charges of income tax evasion in 1961 and 1962, theft, fraud and conspiracy against Baker,. World News Roundup Pravda Demands Party Line For Opposing Journalists ports were closed and no schools were open. The expressway r-- sembled huge parking lots. Side- walks were impassable. Low Temperatures The hardship in Illinois and Wisconsin was furthered by the forecast of temperatures dipping to zero. To add to the complex weather picture, tornado watches were is- sued for northeastern Maryland, most of Delaware, southern New Jersey, east-central Virginia and southeastern Pennsylvania. The 23-inch snowfall in Chicago in a 26-hour period broke a 37- year record. It bettered the 24- hour fall of 9.2 inches Mar. 25-26, 1930. The Police Department urged all Chicago workers to stay home. Most did. Chicago's normally bustling Loop was nearly deserted. A severe ice storm knocked out power, crippled communications and closed schools over a large area of northwestern Ohio. Air- ports were closed, telephone com- munications were knocked out, and small communities were with- out electricity as high winds snap- ped ice-coated power lines. Possibly the worst storm in In- diana history isolated the north- western part of the state. Freezing rain coated power lines which were then snapped by high winds. Indiana State Police threw up roadblocks on highways to prevent more motorists from moving into the huge traffic jams of snow- bound cars and trucks. Thousands of persons were marooned in pub- lic buildings, service stations and private homes. MOSCOW (A)-The Soviet Com- munist party severely criticized two magazines yesterday, leading a turbulent war of words between liberal and conservative Soviet writers. Pravda, voice of the party, de- manded yesterday that old Stalin- ists and young liberals "make the necessary conclusions" from the criticism, and work for "the unity of all creative forces." Pravda clearly was setting the stage for a middle line at the forthcoming writers congress in May, the first of its kind in eight years. The liberal-conservative dis- pute has long caused postpone- ments of the congress. Pravda again criticized the much maligned voice of younger liberal writers here, the magfzine New World, for stressing a negative side of Soviet life. The critique, however, was comparatively mild, making no mention of the maga- zine's controversial editor, Alex- ander T. Tvardovsky, by name. A magazine spokesman said Tvar- dovsky, long rumored about to be fired, is still editor. Perhaps more surprising was the accompanying attack on the magazine October, the organ of conservative forces. Banks Cut Interest Rate; Chase Remains Lower NEW YORK (P-First Nation- al City Bank of New York trim- med its prime interest to 5% from 6 per cent yesterday. The nation's largest banks followed, leaving Chase Manhattan virtu- ally alone with its reduction to 51/2 per cent. Within a fews hours, Bank of America, the nation's largest, an- nounced in San Francisco that it would join others in trimming its rate to 5% per cent. Wall Street speculated how long Chase, the second-largest bank in the country, could hold out. A Chase spokesman said later, "We have no present plans to make any chance in the prime rate of 52 per cent we announced yesterday." The prime rate is that charged a bank's most credit-worthy cus- tomers, usually large corporations. From it, all other interest rates are scaled upward. I don't see how Chase can hold out with everybody and their brother beating on the doorstep for loans," said an banker. "The pattern seems pretty wel established," said another as the Bank of America fell in line. Chase startled business and fi- nancial circles Thursday by de- creasing its prime rate to 51/2 pe cent in the first major bank re- duction in six years. The 6 pei cent rate, reached at the height of the severe money pinch las August, was the highest since th early 1930s. President Johnson hailed the Chase move as a contribution "t the sound and healthy develop- ment. of the American economy.' He had called for easier credi' in his Jan. 10 State of the Union message. But some bankers called it po litically inspired, precipitous an a case of bad judgment. Usually, other banks quickly follow the lead of the major one, in the New York money market But with one exception - First Western Bank & Trust of Loe Angeles-Chase stood alone among the large banks. l e -r Pravda rapped October for re- jecting works of "artistic merit" and failing to see "those qual- itative shifts in the creative works of the young poets and prose writers." The Pravda critique came in an editorial. Six columns criticized New World and four criticized October. "An excessive stress on the negative facts and wariness in describing positive events, per- sistence in defending erroneous views, these are the characteristic features of the magazine New World now," Pravda said. Pravda also panned specific works in October and criticized both magazines for criticizing each other. TON IGHT and TOMORROW Jean Vigo's ZERO DE CONDUITE 1933, French subtitles Rebellionin a boys' boarding school -- one ' lwwmmm wwwwmwmm wmm m inin mmmmin m mmininiininininin ininininiininine innininininninin mmm i t ! I !..... m .m... m m .i .. - - .. THOMPSON'S PIZZA.! e ~rr t U 'U 761-0001 n !I d! II00O~ ig -. r r tii SOc OFF i On a Large One-Item Pizza : _ I. I N