THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TFM THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Chinese Use Communist Chief's Quotes as Bible' By The Associated Press HONG KONG-Mao Tse-tung's quotations-the bible of his at- tempt to control China's destiny for years to come-compose a 270- page handbook, covered in red plastic and measuring 5 by 3% Inches. It resembles a prayer book. Millions of these books have poured off China's presses to de- lineate Mao's prescriptions. This is the book that is seen being held aloft in many pictures of Red uard gatherings. Even in fields where it gives neither platitudes nor instructions, Mao's followers credit it with pro- ducing miracles. A Chinese woman sharpshooter while performing in Moscow miss- ed her target. After consulting the red book she hit a bullseye. Chinese table tennis players, the Chinese Communists say, are the world's best because they follow the red book. It has been serving too as Com- munist China's answer to the American credit card-with one added advantage: no final bill to pay. Young Red Guards, armed with the red booklet, for months were able to travel free, eat free and get accommodations free. Its 3 chapters cover everything from broad Communist platitudes to specific instructions, beginning with the Communist party. Then come such topics as war and peace, the people's army, political work, patriotism and internationalism, and ideological self-cultivation. Chapter three, Socialism and communism, goes back to Mao's prediction in 1949 of a bitter power struggle in Red China. Mao apparently believes a third world war inevitable and he de- mands that the Chinese people be prepared. "After the countrywide victory of the Chinese revolution and the solution of the land problem, two basic contraditions will still exist in China," Mao says, "The first is internal, that is, the contradiction between the working class and the bourgeoise. "The second is external, that is, the contradiction between China and imperialist countries. "Consequently, after the victory of the people's democratic revolu- tion, the state power of the peo- ple's republic under the leadership of the working class must not be weakened but must be strength- ened." In chapter five, war and peace, Mao says: "War is the highest form of struggle for resolving con- tradictions, between classes, na- tions, states or political groups when they have developed to a certain stage, and it has existed ever since the emergence of pri- vate property and of classes. "We are advocates of the abo- lition of war, we do not want war; but war can only be abolished through war, and in order to get rid of the gun it is necessary to take up the gun." In chapter seven, people's war, he says: "Fight no battle unprepared, fight no battle you are not sure of winning; make every effort to be well prepared for each battle, make every effort to insure victory in the given set of conditions as between the enemy and ourselves." One of most consistently quoted statements in the present power struggle among the top Commu- nist leaders appears in the chapter, classes and class struggle. "We should support whatever the enemy opposes and oppose whatever the enemy supports." In one passage that interests China experts Mao quotes Chinese President Liu Shao-chi-his main enemy in the current power struggle. On the surface it appears that Mao, in that passage, is quoting him because the Liu is a "com- rade" and a Communist leader worthy of praise and study. But the red book was produced as a weapon in Mao's cultural revolution- purge - and many China specialists believe Mao had already determined to get rid of Liu when he started the cultural revolution. The statement was made in 1942 "With this aim, they draw some and is carried in the chapter on people in, push others out and "ideological cultivation." resort to boasting, flattery and "Comrade Liu Shao-chi once touting among the comrades, thus said of certain people that they have unusually long arms and are very clever in looking after their own interests, of others and of the party as a whole. 'What is mnine is mine, and what's yours is mine too,'" it says, "What are these people after? They are after fame and position and want to be in the limelight. Whenever they are put in charge of a branch of work, they assert their 'independence.' imposing the vulgar style of the bourgeois political parties into the Communist party. "It is their dishonesty that causes them to come to grief. I believe we should do things hon- estly for without an honest attitude it is absolutely impossible to ac- complish anything in this world." The book also discusses such things as classes and class struggle, socialism and communism, leader- ship of party committees, educa- tion and the training of troops, revolutionary heroism and "serv- ing the people." I Civil Rights Laws Asked By Johnson President Suggests Legislation To Assure Equality in Housing WASHINGTON (RP) - President Johnson recommended yesterday civil rights legislation, including a proposal to ban discrimination in housing. He proposed that it become effective in progressive steps. Noting that his recommenda- tions were not new, Johnson asked Congress also to: -Strengthen, existing federal criminal laws against interference with civil rights workers and oth- ers in exercising their constitu- tional rights. --Require that juries in federal court be selected on a nondis- criminatory basis and that they be representative of the communi- ty in which they serve. Eliminate all forms of discrim- ination in the selection of state court juries. -Authorize the Equal Employ- ment Opportunity Commission to issue enforceable orders against racial discrimination. -Extend the life of the Civil Rghts Commission for an addi- tional five years. -Increase from $1.4 million to $2.7 million the appropriations for the Community Relations Service. Proposed Legislation' Johnson's proposed legislation to ban discrimination in housing would work like this: First, the secretary of housing and urban development would carry on education and concilia- tion measures to seek an end to discrimination in housing. 'hen,, a flat prohibition against discrimination in the sale or rental of housing would become progres- sively broader over a two-year period. Apply Immediately It would apply immediately to housing financed or insured by the federal government--housing already covered under a presiden- tial order of November 1962 on equal opportunities in housing. During 1968, it would extend to dwellings sold or rented by some- one other than the occupants and to dwellings housing five or more families. Essentially, this phase would cover large apartment houses and real -estate develop- ments. In 1969 the act would apply to all housing, WOMEN STRIKE Police block a shoving, jeering crowd of women pickets to keep them from entering the Pentagon. The pickets, representing the Women Strike for Peace organization, demonstrated at the Pentagon yesterday in protest of the war in Vietnam. Hanoi Refuses Peace Talks, Calls U.S. Ter-ms insolent' By The Associated Press TOKYO--The North Vietnamese Foreign Minister said yesterday the Hanoi government will not talk peace under the terms put forth by the United States. His statement came after Ko- rean marines reported they killed 243 North Vietnamese regulars in a three-hour battle below the border. The Foreign Ministry's comment was carried in a broadcast from Hanoi, U.S. Terms Referring to the U.S. extension of the bombing pause from four to six days during the lunar new year truce, the statement said "obviously that was a U.S. ulti- matum insolently requiring the Vietnamese people to accept nego- tiations under U.S. terms." ' "But the U.S. aggressors are grossly mistaken. The Vietnamese people will never submit to force." The statement called the re- sumed bombing by U.S. planes "a very serious challenge to the peo- ples throughout the world." Sunny weather was back for the first time in several weeks and, by the Soviet news agency account, U.S. jet pilots "marked the second day of the . resumption of the bombings by massive raids on numerous districts" between the border and the Communist capi- tal. Refused to Comment The U.S. Command refused to comment. Its announcements of air operations ordinarily are issued 12 hours or more after they take place. The Hanoi area had been unmolested since raids on outly- ing targets, which the Communist said killed or wounded 100 persons within the city, raised an inter- national outcry in mid-December. Inl the ground war, the Com- munist-South Korean fightrwas the biggest battle in recent months. A surprise engagement in rice paddies 340 miles northeast of Saigon, it pitted two companies of Korean marines-about 400 men-against two enemy bat- talions, estimated to outnumber them 3 to 1. They often fought hand to hand, a situation for which the Koreans are trained in karate. Koreans Pursued A Korean spokesman said the North Vietnamese broke after 243 of their number were killed and the Koreans, with the support of jet planes and artillery, pursued them into the night. The Koreans' casualties were reported to be moderate. Elsewhere in the ebb and flow of war: * The Viet Cong scored against U.S. Navy minesweepers working on the Long Tau River, Saigon's main ship channel. Enemy gun- ners fired on three of the 80-foot vessels and damaged two, holing one so severely it had to be push- ed aground. A Communist mine sank another. In all, 14 American crewmen were wounded and one was missing. * The Vietnamese military com- mand announced a task force of government rangers and infantry- men killed 56 Viet Cong about 120 miles southwest of Saigon Tuesday in the ricelands below the Mekong River. Casualties among the troops were reported light. They said they captured one guerrilla, rounded up nine suspects and seized some Com- munist arms and documents. O U.S. infantry units pushed ahead with more than a dozen field operations that were marked by little contact with the enemy. B52 jets from Guam, after a Tues- day night i'aid on a suspected Communist position in the high- lands 300 miles north of Saigon, returned to blast at another 60 miles east of the capital. r In Saigon American officials announced U.S. civilians, including newsmen, "serving with or ac- companying" U.S. forces in Viet- nam come under the Uniform Code of Military Justice and that military police can apprehend and detain any of them. The an- nounce-isued jointly by Col. Ed- ward W. Haughney, staff judge advociate, U.S. council Robert A. Lewis and U.S. mission spokesman John Stuart-set off a flurry of discussion at the daily military briefing. The statement's premise was that Vietnam "is not in a formal state of war, but in a time of war.' Mao Faces More Revolt In Sinkiang Attempts To Gain Control of Provinces In Tibet, Mongolia TOKYO (MP-Mao Tse-tung faces further rebellion in the west, sour- ces indicated yesterday. Mao's forces were still running into trouble in efforts to wrest control from anti-Maoists in Tibet and Inner Mongolia, said Japancse pres reports. Peking is sensitive in Sinkiang Province because it contairs the nuclear testing ground, and the province borders with the Soviet Union are easily crossed. Wall Posters Peking wall posters yesterday classified Sinkiang on the Soviet Border as "a front line against Russian revisionism and imperial- ism" and said military controls had been clamped tighter in that rebellious province. Without confirmation elsewhere, the Hong Kong Star said a gen- eral from Sinkiang was meeting Rusians in Ulan Bator, the Mon- golian capital, to discuss possible Soviet aid against Mao Tse-tung's forces in Communist China's power struggle. The military head in Sinkiang is Gen. Wang En-mao, denounced by Maoists as a counter-revolu- tionary. He is said to be in Sin- kiang's mountains where troops sent from Peking seek to crush his rebellion. He is supported by seven of eight divisions of ex-soldiers sent into the province to help in agriculture, wall posters have said. The Hong Kong Star said it was Wang's deputy, Gen. Kwok Pang, who was conferring with the Rus- sians in Mongolia, an ally of the Soviet Union in its quarrel with Communist C h i n a. Reference works do not give a general by the name of Kwok. The Star quoted a "report from inside China." And in Peking, Foreign Minis- ter Chen Yi asserted anti-Chinese activities by the Soviet Union had put relations between the two Communist giants on "the verge of a rupture." In other developments, wall posters said Defense Minister Lin Piao had accused President Liu Shao-chi and party general sec- retary Teng Hsiao-ping of back- ing a plot against Mao last year. Other posters claimed Mao's for- ces had seized complete control in Kweichow Province in the south- west, Shantung province in the east and, with army support, had smashed a "frenzied attack" by opponents in Kiangshi Province of east-central China. Mao conferred in the Commu- nist Chinese capital with a gov- ernment delegation from Mauri- tania, Radio Peking said, in his second recent appearance. He was said to have conferred with an Albanian military delegation last week. JAKARTA, Indonesia (jP)-Pres- ident Sukarno has decided to fight to the end of his political power, authoritative military sources said yesterday. After rejecting Tuesday night the demand by leaders of the armed forces that he step down, Sukarno conferred at the presi- dential palace yesterday with some leaders of the Nationalist party. He appeared outwardly confident. There will be no more approach- es to Sukarno to give him a chance to resign gracefully, military in- formants said. Gen. Suharto, the nation's strong man, will listen to any concrete proposals Sukarno may make but will no longer go to the palace, they added. The sources, close to Suharto, said Sukarno's rejection of the armed forces commanders demand was their last move. The long-running power strug- gle in this populous Southeast Asian nation will now be taken to Congress, which meets early next month. Suharto has been struggling to overcome Sukarno for more than a year. He has been stymied by the poular support that Sukarno enjoys in much of Indonesia. Moving too fast against the 65- year-old president might trigger a civil war and a split in Suharto's own military ranks. If Congress goes ahead as plan- LAST CHANCE: Sukarno Rejects Demand To Quit Leadership Post DALLAS, Tex. (k)--An "under- ground church" whose members are concerned with poverty, war and peace, sex, and race is rapid- ly spreading across the United States, a controversial . Episcopal priest said yesterday. The Rev. Malcolm Boyd, some- times called the "espresso priest," added that this "religious revolu- tion" is largely unknown to the organized church leadership, "People in this movement are young and old, rich and poor, blackgand white," he told an over- flow audience of several hundred at a session of National Council of Churches' annual Christian education meeting. "They are 'Jesus people,' and Moyers Denounces 'Gap' In President's Credibility ned to investigate Sukarno in con- nection with his links with the Communist coup attempt of Oct. 1, 1965, it could spell deep trouble for Sukarno. A congressional investigation could lead to trial of Sukarno just what Suharto has been trying to avoid. By Suharto's reasoning, this-would be putting Indonesia on trial for Sukarno has been not only the leader but the voice of. the nation for most of its more than 20 years of independence. Sukarno has gone out of his way to indicate he plans to be here next month, even after Con- gress meets to discuss his future. Asked by reporters Tuesday night about reports he would leave In- donesia before Congress meets, he replied: "Just wait and see." Clergyman Analyzes Underground' Sect they include many Jews. God is not dead for them ,but his name is out" the Rev. Mr. Boyd said. He is assistant to the rector of Washington's Church of the Atonement and also travels widely as a chaplain-at-large to the na- tion's Episcopal college and uni- versity students. He has made .ev- eral night club appearances and wrote a book of prayers entitled, "Are You Running With Me, Jesus?" The priest said he had become aware of the "underground church" about six months ago and that it had begun with a "tiny, committed group of men and women." Forcing Changes It is 'now "forcing changes on the church from. the middle and the bottom" and cuts through all denominational lines. "These people in the movement are refusing to worship God mere- ly along denominational lines. They ignore official structures and hierarchies." They "have decided simply not to worry about ecclesiological and doctrinal differences, which bore them and seem futile," he said. Big Issues "The big issues for them are poverty, war and peace, sex, and race. They reject phoniness ... They are for, Pope Paul and against Cardinal Spellman" - where the Pope is calling for peace now and the cardinal advocates a U.S. military victory in Viet- nam. The Rev. Mr. Boyd said mem- bers of this new group see offi- cial hierarchies as "the old Wi- zard-of-Oz type of church leader- ship, fearfully hiding behind high walls." He said that most of the stu- dents he has met recently on cam- puses are in the movement if they are involved with religion in any way. GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (I) - Former White House press sec- retary Bill L. Moyers denied yes- terday that there is "credibility gap" between the President and the public and said he does not believe the government ever "deli- berately lies." Moyers, 3,, at a news conference held as he took over as publisher of Newsday,! a Long Island daily newspaper, said: "The so-called credibility gap, I think, is the dif- ference between what the Presi- dent says and what the people would like him to say, or what they think he should say." Moyers also told newsmen he in- tends to continue his "strong per- sonal friendship' with President Johnson but "I plan to be my own man." Moyers said he had no in- tention of running for political of- fice or playing any role in the Democratic party in New York State. He vowed to operate as "a po- litically independent publisher" but reminded politicians that he would offer suggestions and advice from time to time as he feels it the duty of his job. Moyers noted that it has "been 12 years since I've been on this side of the newspaper desk," and admitted that "for the first few months I'm going to be a student -an apprentice here at Newsday. "Coming directly out of govern- ment, I think I need a period of decompression," Moyers said. "I need a period of deflation of my experiences in government." "I'm greatly in debt to the Presi- dent for all he has done for me over a long period of time," Moy- ers said. Asked his feelings on William Manchester's book, "The Death of a President," Moyers said: "I have not read the book and I prefer to withhold evaluation of it until I have read the entire book." World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Defense Department will, draft an esti- mated 25,000 Reservists who are "unable or unwilling" to partici- pate in Reserve activities, Secre- tary of Defense Robert S. McNa- mara announced yesterday. McNamara said congressional authority for the draft was con- tained in the 1967 Defense Department Appropriation Act, which provides that "certain in- dividual Reservists who are not satisfactorily fulfilling their ob- ligation will be eligible for up to 24 months of active duty service." The Defense Department also announced the callup of 100 doc- tors who now hold reserve com- missions. They will spend two years on active duty. A Pentagon statement said the callup will be made under author- ity voted by Congress in 1957 that applies only to physicians and cer- tain other medical personnel. PASADENA, Calif.-Lunar Or- biter 3 returned to earth yesterday pictures of possible landing sites on the moon. They showed a rela- tively smooth surface pocked with small crators. No scientific analysis was im- mediately available as tiny por- tions of the films were flashed on a screen at the National Aero- nautics and Space Administra- tion's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. * * * WASHINGTON - Adam Clay- ton Powell's estranged third wife flew in from Puerto Rico yester- day and said, "I intend to an- swer everything I know." She was summoned to testify today before a select committee investigating the Harlem Democrat's right to be seated in the House. Chairman Emanuel Celler (D- NY) said the committee plans to consider contempt action against Powell's secretary-traveling com- panion, Corrine A. Huff, 25, for not appearing after receiving a subpoena. See Kaiser Aluminum's eyeball- twirling poster on the bulletin board in the Placement Office. M= U I PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PRIGRAM Starting National Tour in Ann Arbor! DIRECT FROM BROADWAY! ,rte I . . { Ft. . t ,'ir: ..Tt :: SA PROFESSION THEATRE PROGRAM presents Po- , tgY a-d 4AL E LEVERN JOYCE HUTCHERSON BRYANT AVON LONG "PORGY AIND SS" Music by Librettob GEORGE GERSHWIN DuDOSE HEYWARO DIRECT FROM ACCLAIMED iNTERNATIOtAL. TOUR! What's Happening in CHINA? Prof. Donald Munro leads a discussion at the Ark 1421 Hill St. Tonight 9 o'clock Mon.-Tues., 8:30 P.M. February 20-21 Hill Auditorihm f. e.i .. Z y. 0 '*w e. . ::. GUILD HOUSE - 802 Monroe - Friday, Feb. 17-Noon Luncheon 25c U .I I nr..I U AiIKff G-r KI V n IsoA A AA rDITIC'C IDI 1 DFOIP7F