THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY V&fv VVTMIPU a v rMl lIE a% anI.V£U rub 1 HAMSZL1 I LBJ Reply to Pope Viet Claims CO UNTERATTACK: Radio Peking Warns Maoists To Prepare for Armed Coup t *s Pontiff Asks Extension of Viet Truce Rusk To Hold Press Conference Today On Diplomatic Action WASHINGTON (P) - President Johnson told Pope Paul VI yes- terday he hoped the current four- day Vietnam cease-fire "may be extended and may open the way to negotiations for a just and stable peace." Replying to a papal message sent yesterday to the heads of state of the United States, South Vietnam and North Vietnam, Johnson said, "The governments of the United States and the Re? public of South Vietnam together with others are devoting intensive efforts to this end." However; Johnson also told the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, "I know you would not expect us to redtce military action unless the other side is willing to do likewise." White House press secretary George Christian, while making public Johnson's reply tothe pon- tiff, also announced that Secre- tary of State Dean Rusk would hold a radio-television news con- ference at 4 p.m. EST today. Rusk is expected to outline U.S. diplomatic efforts for a Vietnam solution. The developments at the White House in late afternoon came as administration strategists kept a close watch on shooting incidents marring the Feb. 8-12 lunar new year cease-fire. How well the Communists ob- serve the true figures importantly in Washington deliberations on whether to extend the cease-fire. While initial reports indicated violations were averaging more than two an hour during the open- ing hours of the cease-ifre, offi- cials here were not prepared to say yet whether this amounted to serious Communist breaching of the truce. Yesterday's message, the Pope. praising what he termed John- son's dedication to a constant search for a peaceful settlement, asked the President "to increase even more your noble effort in these days of truce." U.S. sources said all options are still open. The general U.S. policy is to seek an end to the war through either peace talks or a scaling down of the fighting with- out a specific negotiated agree- ment, or a combination of both. One possibility would be quick resumption of full-scale military operations at the end of the four days. Another would be to hold back for an extra three days, until the end of the seven-day cease- fire period announced by the Viet Cong. Still another would be to pro- long the lull beyond the seven days. A peace message from the Pope{ has been described by Johnson as Desires Pe TOKYO (P)-Radio P e k i n g grade youngsters and turn them alerted the followers of Mao Tse- into future Red Guards. tung yesterday to be ready for a -Red Guards, on personal or-. la ic epalace coup" or "armed coup" in ders from purge chief Chen Po-ta China's power struggle. and his deputy, Chiang Ching, The official People's Daily also Mao's wife seized, Foochow party asserted the "class enemy"-pre- offices after bloody clashes with sumably President Liu Shao-chi j anti-Mao officials, said the Hong; K sa and his supporters-were plotting Kong newspaper Ming Po. "a new counterattack" on the Radio Peking broadcast an ar- farms, possibly to delay spring ticle fiom the Peking newspaper n U .S. sowing. , Kwangming Daily saying Maoists The twin warnings indicated have been "retaking one after an-; E nd A ttack S ;that while the 73-year-old party other the positions of power held I chairman appears to be winning the power struggle, trouble lies ahead in .the provinces and pos- (u ~ ' Soviets Insist Halt sibly in the Chinese capital itself .L oudspeaiers In Bombing Essential Other developments included: In Viet Negotiations anti-Soviet demonstrations forthe S o-Soviet T LONDN (E Preier lexe N.13th straight day at the beleaguer-: KLONninsisted yPremierday eon an ed Soviet Embassy in Peking. .MOSCOW (A)- Soviet loud- nd of all nsisted yestay an: The Chinese Foreign Ministry speakers blared complaints at thei e of American military ac- refused to guarantee the personal curtained windows of the Chinesej tion against North Vietnam as the safety in Peking of most of the Embassy yesterday while the So-I precondition for a peace settle- foreign diplomats, aside from the viet Foreign Ministry accused theI ment. Romanians and Albanians. Alba- diplomats inside of rudeness. 1 The Soviet leader's statement to nia is China's ally and Romania The R u s si a n loudspeakers, aathein of British ntabesu iis neutral in the Soviet-Chinese mounted atop two trucks in thez theuit ofl exndtny 15tcedtrye dispute. snowy street by the embassy,z guild hall exactly reflected the -SrnmnLnPaMosbodcast petitions that the em-'c public position of North Vietnam' .Strongman Lin Piao, Mao's broadcs eiin httee- Communist rulers. ms proclaimed heir, branded Marshal bassy had refused to accept. They Comut ru did le. shkeheChu Teh, a venerable warrior and protested demonstrations that But it did little to shake the one of the founders of the Com- have gone on for 13 days andt British govefrnment's cautious munist army, as a veteran anti- nights at the Soviet Embassy in hopes that befoie he flies home Maoist and "counterrevolution- Peking.# wtMonday, Kosygin will yield some- ary" according to wall posters. The demonstrations there andi what to Prinme Minister Harold Cl was once bracketed with the here, plus angry anti-ChineseI Wilson's daily promptings for a four top leaders in China. meetings reported all over the more active Soviet peacemaking I etnsrpre l vrte role. -The party Central Committee Soviet Union and angry anti-So- There were signs that Wilson's decided to reopen primary schools viet meettings reported in China, statei em were klon talsois after the Chinese lunar new year were touched off by a Jan. 25 clash to seek a secret two-pronged peace ends Feb. 11 in order to instill between Russians and Chinese stur iynitinfiv,, mhnr o-nnn.1PIP Mao's thought in first- to fourth- dents in Red Square here. u by a taking handful of party people the capitalist' road. But it warned that such vic- tories would arouse attempts at a "counter seizure of power by the bourgeoisie" and said this is usual- ly carried out in two ways: "The first way is to cause de- generation within the proletarian revolutionary ranks. "The second way is to bring about a seizure of power from within, or a palace coupe.'" Blast Chinese, ension Grows That incident, which each side accuses the other of starting, has now brought to a boil the long- heating bad blood between Krem- lin leaders and what they call "the Mao Tse-tung clique." What will happen next? No one who counts was talking for the record here. But there was intense discussion. Russian delegations on the side- walks in front of the Chinese EM- bassy wondered aloud why their government was not more firm in the face of what the Soviet press pictures as. provocative insults to Ruslans in China. Workers Not Sure Asked what they thought their government could do, the factory workers standing in the snow were not sure. They Just had a vague -Associated Press Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin is surrounded by police as crowd engulfs him upon arrival at Boreham Wood, England, for a visit. ncidents Mar Vetnam Truce Allies Blame Communist Units 2 i jt' f uuUauive einur ac~s ,gpaiaue ei- forts by Russsia in Hanoi and IBritain in Washington to get the chief contenders to halt all mili- tary activities, at least temporarily, beyond the Vietnamese new year festival. Johnson Asks VTa J-)1f X aqf SAIGON ()'-Shooting incidents dotted the Tet truce at a rate 1 nearly two an hour in South Viet- nam on the eve of the lunar new year today. Allied authorities blamed the Communists. American retaliatory fire.killed at least four. While U.S. fighters and bombers were grounded, an FR01 recon- naissance plane was downed on a photo mission over North Vietnam. Presumably the plane, officially described here as unarmed, was nit by ground gunners near Dong Hoi, 40 miles north of the border. The pilot bailed out at sea. A U.S. aestroyer rescued him. Hanoi Broadcast A Hanoi broadcast declared the North Vietnamese shot down two planes and damaged a U.S. war- ship "which intruded into the ter- ritorial waters of Nghe An Prov- ince for provocative purposes and shelled a populated coastal area" after the truce went into effect. Though American authorities have announced their intention to keep an aerial watch on North Vietnam, there was no confirma- tion here concerning a second plane. Nor was there any word on te warship. Nghe An Province is at the waist of North Vietnam. Its capital, Vinh, is 160 miles south of Hanoi. Year of the Goat Vietnamese ushered in the Year of the Goat of millions of fire- crackers and the discharge of some live ammunition into the air. Some riverfront machine- gunner, sent a few red tracer bul- lets streaking over Saigon. A grenade exploding near a busy street killed nine persons and wounded four. Police said robbers threw it as policemen to cover their escape after they were dis- covered attempting, to rob a Sai- gon home. Police reported the I T 5 1 3 L t r i And India called for the United' States to stop bombing North Met- nam "indefinitely and uncondi- tionally," saying this was the only way to shift the conflict to the conference table. Pope Paul asked President Johnson, Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam and President Ho Chi Monh of North Vietnam to turn the truce into negotiations for peace. The Roman Catholic pontiff, in his message to Johnson, said "we pray to Al- mighty God to crown your en- deavors for peace with every suc- cess." The Pope made a similar appeal at the time of the 48-hour Christ- mas and New Year truces, recom- mending that they be extended until the Tet truce and that peace talks be held in the interval. But the fighting resuqied on schedule. Officials Say ;Je Incident Poses No Threat to Hanoi No Change U;11 A-Fin "r V II No change in Kosygin's basic} position has emerged during his WASHINGTON (A) - President long exchanges with Wilson on Johnson proposed yesterday a Vietnam so far. $650-million outlay of federal With Wilson an attentive list- funds to provide more than better ener at Lord Mayor Sir Robert health and educational opportuni- Bellinger's ceremonial luncheon, ties for young Americans. Kosygin accused the United States He asked Congress to expand of "aggression" in Vietnam. present programs and to add a "It is American aggression that host of new ones. His recommen- is the real, and in fact the onlydations range from expansion of cause of the war in Vietnam," the Head Start program for Kosygin said. youngsters who are educationally Geneva Agreement disadvantaged because of poverty "We Soviets are in favor of the to more federal money to help rigid observance of the 1954 Gen- states and communities fight ju- eva agreement, in favor of the venile delinquency. United States leaving Vietnam and iFrom the cost standpoint, a pro- giving the Vietnamese people the posal for an average increase of at right to resolve their own affairs least 15 per cent in Social Security without outside interference. payments to children led all the "The first step should be the rest. Administration officials esti- unconditional termination o f mated this would cost $350 mil- American bombing and all othei lion a year. acts of aggression against North 3,000.000 Qualify t i i G F r r t i 1 1 1 7 l I 11 L .ag. hatl ilthe soviet union should not be putting up with in-" sults and physical assaults on its More Aid ciizns The delegations followed a pat- tern set Monday and repeated Gi ed ouths Tuesday. TGroups of about 25 persons de- ployed just outside the low em- and parent centers in areas of bassy fence while 'thre members acute poverty. passed through the barrier of uni- Johnson said such centers would formed police. provide a wide range of benefits, The tree tried unsuccessfully to including health and welfare serv- hand in petitions, which were ices, nutritious meals for needy resolutions passed at factory meet- preschoolers, counseling of parents ings, while their comrades planted in prenatal and infant care, day signs in the snow facing the sev- care for children under 3, and a en-story embassy. training base for specialists in Shame On Mao child development. "Shame on Mao Tse-tung, down To help provide trained workers, with the Red Guards," was a typi- Johnson recommended legislation cal sign. to increase to 75 per cent the fed- Pravda, the Communist party eral matching funds for child wel- paper, commented that "the Chi- fare personnel, including training nese diplomats were so yellow that programs. they didn't even come near the Another proposal is for federal tightly shut glass doors" when grants up to 90 per cent to assist petitions were offered. state and local communities to de- The Soviet loudspeaker trucks velop plans to improve their ju- were a new touch on the third day venile courts and correction sys- of demonstrations outside the Chi- tems and to build shortterm de- nese Embassy. They broadcast for tention and treatment facilities 'about two hours in a three-hour for youhtful offenders as well as demonstration whereas Chinese federal aid for research and ex- loudspeakers outside the Soviet perimental projects in juvenile Embassy in. Peking are reported delinquency, blasting away around the clock. WASHINGTON (P) - Pentagon officials say the reconnaissance jet downed over North Vietnam posed no threat to the enemy- but they aren't calling the incident a violation of the cease-fire. It is presumed in Washington that the Communists shot down the plane shortly after the lunar truce began. Officially it is listed as downed from "unknown causes" pending debriefing of the pilot, who was recovered from the Gulf of Tonkin. The plane was described as an unarmed RF1O1 jet carrying only cameras to photograph the ene- my's miltary activities during the four-day truce. Will Continue Penetration Because American supersonic reconnaissaince planes will re- peatedly penetrate Hanoi's air space during the cease-fire, offi- cials apparently feel the United States is in no position to com- 'lain about violations. But Hanoi should have no grounds to protest since the Com- munists have been given advance notice that reconnaissance patrols would continue during the truce period, officers said. Bombing raids have been halted in both North and South Vietnam in observance of the agreement. Regret Plane Loss "Of course we would regard any loss of reconnaissance planes as a regrettable circumstance," one of-' ficer said, "but I doubt that we' woulu want to call it a violation." Ths implication was that Hanoi could be expected to react rather testily to the U.S. overflights. At the same time, this officer said, "we would still be bombing North Vietnam if we wanted to be] hardnosed about the truce agree- ment."] The bombing might have been continued on a technicality: the cease-fire is the result of an agree- ment between the Viet Cong and1 the government ofSouth Vietnamz -not between the United States and North Vietnam. Hanoi does i not admit that its troops are in- volved in the war. The United States will conduct an estimated 200 photo recon- naissance missions over NorthI Vietnam during the four-day bombing halt. Officers say these flights are vital to keep the military com- mand posted on enemy troop movements and other activities which would tip off U.S. strate- cists on what Hanoi is doing dur- ing the cease-fire.. 11 Vietnam. Thi step is essential if there are to be talks .between the deocratic representatives of Viet- nam and the United States." Diplomats detected significance in Kosygin's failure to mention Viet Cong representation at the talks he envisages between Hanoi and Washington. Powell Declines Reply To Subcommittee Query More than three million childrenf now qualify for Social Securityf benefits because of the death or1 disability of the breadwinner in their families. The Head Start program, now limited to preschool children, would be expanded to include a follow through in the early grades and taking in more 3-year-olds. Johnson asked the Office of Economic Opportunity to explore the effectiveness of taking even younger children into Head Start. This would add an estimated $135 million to the cost of the Head Start program. Johnson announced in his mes- sage to Congress that he is asking Sargent Shriver, director of -he Office of Economic Opportunity, to begin a pilot program of child I - - -- . --- [I We regret that due to a mistake in printing, MARK LANE was erroneously listed as scheduled to speak at 11 :00 A.M. in Hill Aud., Fri., Feb. 24. He will speak at 11:00 PM on that date. influential in his thinking a year blast had no connection with Viet ago when he extended the halt in Cong iterrorist activity. U.S. bombing of North Vietnam Amid celebrations and hostilities, for a month beyond the 1965 Pope Paul VI made another ap- Christmas-New Year truce. peal for settlement of the war. orld NewsRoundup WASHINGTON (R)-Rep. Adam Clayton Powell refused on con- stitutional grounds yesterday to answer questions from a select committee considering his quali- fications for House membership. Although Powell was following the advice of eight lawyers in taking his position, it undoubted- ly hurt his chances of winning the committee's recommendation that he be seated. "You will have to be judge of that yourself," said Chairman Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y.), when asked the probable effect of Pow- ell's performance. "But it certainly, didn't help him." Committee Established The nine-man committee was established by the House Jan. 10 when it asked Powell to stand aside while his qualifications are xamined. The committee has until Feb 23 to make a recommendation which will then be voted on by the House. Powell D-N.Y.), was the first witness called, and he brought seven of his eight attorneys with him. They played a much larger rle in the proceedings than he did. It was their unanimous argu- ment that neither the committee nor the House has a right to in- quire into any qualifications for membership other than those list- ed in the Constitution: age, cit- izenship and inhabitancy in the state electing the member. Within that area Powell re- sponded readily to the committee's questions. But when the committee wanted to find out about Powell's legal difficulties in New York and about allegations made by another com- mittee that he had misused gov- ernment travel funds, he declined to answer. { I WASHINGTON - The House voted yesterday to raise the ceil- ing on the national debt from $330 billion to $336 billion until July 1. The Treasury had said that un- less it received additional borrow- ing power, payment would have to be delayed on half the government bills due in March, as mounting expenditures; especially for Viet- nam, consumed government cash. * * * NEW DELHI, India -- A stone hurled from a heckling group struck Prime Minister Indira Gandhi at an election campaign rally yesterday in eastern India, giving her a bloody nose and a' swollen upper lip. The prime minister, 49, ignored pleas from her aids to leave the dais after a group of young men began a stone-throwing barrage. Officials with outstretched hands tried to shield her from the show- er of stones, as Mrs. Gandhi con- tinued speaking for two minutes and asked the crowd, "Will you vote for such hooligans who throw stones?" "This is an insult," she said, "not to me, but to the country." * * * FREETOWN, Sierre Leone - Prime Minister Albert M. Margai announced last night his govern- ment had crushed a military plot to kill him and seize power in this former British African colony. He named four men, including opposition leader Siaka P. Ste- vens, who he said would, have been appointed by the plotters as a committee of advisers to help run the country. He added that an African coun- try, which he did not name, had been mentioned as a source of help for the plotters. SUPERIOR OFF-BEAT, AND - ORIGINALIL-N.Y. TIMES i0 TONIGHT & TOMORROW THE TRIAL Orson Welles creates Kafka's novel into a frightening, poetic and inspiring tale of human isolation. 1963. dir. Orson Welles. Starring Anthony Perkins, Romy Schneider & Orson Welles. SATURDAY, SUNDAY SMILES OF A Turn on the love thing in you at the GRANDE BALLROOM Friday Night THE TYME THE PEOPLE Saturday THE RATIONALS THE ZYMODICS & THE WHA? Grande River at Beverly, one block south of Joy in Detroit. You must be 17 and prove it. 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