TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1967 THE MICHIGAN D<1ILV PAGE T EN TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1967 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Anti-Mao Mao Element Appeals for Factions Spread Tank Clashes Mar Peace p Along Syria-Israel Border .sistance to South DAMASCUS. Syria (A) - Heavy gunfire sounded yesterday near the Sea of Galilee for the seventh time in nine days as Syria and Is- rael exchanged tank shells across their tense frontier. A Syrian army communique claimed one Israeli tank was de- stroyed. Israel claimed it destroyed two Syrian tanks and damaged a third. Four Hour Skirmish arrange a truce after four hours of I As usual, each side accused the I shooting. Border firefights have become almost routine between Syria and Israel, especially at this time of year, when farmers from both sides try to plow for planting in forbidden areas. But the frequency of the latest exchanges have in- creased the tension. other of starting the shooting. At U.N. headquarters in New York, Israel sent a letter to mem- bers of the Security Council say- ing Syrian attacks along the border "have created a grave situ- ation." It charged Syria with "seri- ous intensification" of aggression on the frontier, but did not request a council meeting. New Loyalty Reports of Violence May Be Exaggerated In New Conflict TOKYO, (A')-Bloody resistance to Mao Tse-Tung's purge was re- ported yesterday to have spread to south China: as powerful gen- eral and secret police leaders were said to be arrayed against Mao, and signs suggested Red China may be close to civil war. Red Guard posters appeared on walls in Peking saying "1967 will be the year of battle between the two lines Mao and anti-Mao and the proletarian forces represent- ing Mao must score total vic- tory." President Liu Shao-chi and others opposing Mao are called bourgeois reactionaries. Furthermore, the official Peking People's Daily printed an urgent appeal for help from elements loyal to the 72-year-old party chairman in the big city of Shanghai. Anti-Ma elements at- tacked Shanghai's water, power and transportation network and thousands of anti-Mao workers struck last Thursday. Judging from the call for as- sistance, anti-Mao forces appeared to be in command of Shanghai, where Mao himself may be stay- ing. He left Peking in December and was reported spending a win- ter holiday in Shanghai. Also last reported with him was his heir apparent, Defense Minis- ter Lin Piao. Further evidence that matters may be coming to a head was the exodus of Red Chinese diplomats to Peking from capitals in Brit- ain, Scandinavia and India. Chinese reaching Hong Kong told of the spread of the fighting to Canton, south China's major city. Japanese correspondents in Pe- king said Red Guards posters ap- peared Monday accusing Gen. Liu Chih-Chen, a member of the im- portant National Defense Coun- cil, of siding with Mao's oppo- nents. If true, this would be further evidence that leaders of Red Chi-1 na's 2.5 million-man army are cracking under the stresses and strains of the purge. Lo Juiching, chief of the ral staff, already has' been purged. The Tokyo paper Asahi's cor- respondent in Peking said the capital's security police headquar- ters was closed and Red Guards were stationed in front of the building. He reported the action came apparently because head- quarters was staffed with offi- cers loyal to President Liu. Asahi said the security police function was taken over by the Department of Security. Nanking's city officials were said to have called on the army and security forces to carry out house-to-house raids on pro-Mao forces after bloody rioting in which 54 persons were reported killed and 900 injured. Diplomatic advices reaching London said the story of violence in Nanking probably was exagger- ated and came from Red Guard posters in Peking. One diplomat' in Peking telephoned a Western friend in Nanking who said no fighting had taken place. By these accounts, reports of fighting had been exaggerated and clashes be- tween Red Guards and workers had been on a small scale. These did not include the report of fighting in Canton, however. A factor in the new violence may have been the Maoist denunciation of Tao Chu, the head of propa- ganda who had risen to No. 4 in the Chinese Communist party since the purge began. He was ac- cused of siding with President Liu and Teng Hsiao-ping, the party secretary general, in following a capitalist, pro-Soviet line. Drop Powell From House 'Committee Vote Overrides McCormack; Plan To Fight Seating WASHINGTON (A-l)-In an un- precedented move. House Dem- ocrats overrode their leaders yes- terday and voted to bounce Rep. Adam Clayton Powell as chairman of the Education and Labor Com- mittee. And indications mounted the House will refuse to seat him today, By an overwhelming voice vote, the Democrats replaced the con-. troversial Harlem Negro congress- man with Rep. Carl D. Pekins. D- Ky., for the 90th Congress which starts today. Although the House must approve committee assign-' ments. the action is considered conclusive. Move Called a Lynching Powell, visibly shaken called the move "a lynching, Northern siyle." He said that although the move is for one Congress only, "I'll never get it back." The latest skirmish along the!A 47-mile border of rolling hills, split by a demilitarized zone, lasted, four hours and threatened for a-- time to develop into something New Anti-HussemnActivities more seriousI It followed a warning by Israel last week that it would not tolerate further Syrian blows against its security, and a counter warning from Damascus that Syrian forces were under orders to strike heavily against Israel in future flareups. True Arraignes U.N. observers who man 10 points on the demilitarized zone sped into the fighting area in their white-flagged cars to investigate the hostilities. They managed to AMMAN, Jordan (W)-Jordan'sI Arab neighbors and allies are in- directly financing terrorist at- tempts to overthrow the regime of King Hussein. Police, desert troops and border patrols have captured caches of arms smuggled into the country on cars, trucks, camels and don- keys, security authorities report. Border patrols and police pre- cautions have been tightened. Cars entering Jordan from Syria are Georgia Seats Bond; To elect New Governor -Associated Press THESE CHILDREN ARE PART of a group of 11,000 youngsters aged 10 to 19 who participated in military training on a Chinese commune near Canton. The picture was taken by a Japanese pho- tographer visiting Communist China. Violence in China May Hinder Powell and his supporters insist# the actions against him are raci- ally motivated but his accuse~rs! deny this.'# ATLANTA., Ga. (A') - Georgia's' embattled legislature, its actions dominated by court decrees, quiet- ly seated a twice-barred Negro member yesterday and moved to- ward election of a governor today to resolve a popular-vote stale- mate. Court rulings opened the way for the legislative election of a governor and the seating of Rep. Julian Bond. 26, Negro Democrat from Atlanta. Bond, denied his seat .a year ago, took the oath of office with a group of other members. There was no challenge, although Rep. James Floyd of Trion staged a one-man walkout in protest. Nuclear weapons WASHINGTON (OP) - Violence' and terror now striking key Chi- nese cities threaten in time to slow down , Communist China's nuclear weapons program and re- duce its influence with North Viet- nam. This assessment of the course of the wild and puzzling events in the world's most populous country is based particularly on developments of the past few days as analyzed and evaluated by U.S. experts The experts also believe that there is no well-organized coun- termovement, aimed at overthrow- ing Mao or even his No. 1 lieuten ant, Lin Piao. The country may be nearin the road into civil war, but th best informed opinion here is tha it has not reached that point ye It is apparent that Peking ra dio's own broadcast reports c sabotage efforts by factory work ers, and Japanese news dispatche telling of bloody rioting in Nan king, have astonished the expert here by the degree of violence in dicated. Formerly it was assumed tha China's nuclear programs directe A compromise supported by eve lojp rite n t Speaker Jorn W. McCormack of Massachusetts which would have. taken the chairmanship from a- by scientists and dependent . on Powell temporarily pending an in- strong industrial support, was in- vestigation, was voted down 122 g sulated against what Communist to 88, n the closed Democratic e boss Mao Tse-tung calls the "Cul- caucus. t tural revolution" Will Question Seating Rep. Lionel Van Deerlin of Cali-: -t The present view is that the forma said the action does not - extension of what is reallyran change his plans to ask Powell to1 of enoi'mous purge movement from: stand aside when members are - the city streets and political of- swo r i today. m s s fices into the factories has opened He plans to offer a resolution a- a new phase which poses a serious to defer seating of Powell pending; s treat to China's whole industrial a study of his legal difficulties in - schedule. connection with a $164,000 defa- Since the Chinese capacity to mation judgment in New York. t produce lies behind the country's Powell's nonpayment of the judg- d ability to send arms into North ment has brought him contempt- Vietnam, some effect on Peking's of-court sentences. Vietnamese policies could also re- "I think that there will be a sult directly from anything that leadership motion to seat him and limits industrial activity. that it will be defeated," Van More important in Communist Deerlin told a reporter. China's relations with North Viet- Caucus Failed nam probably is the evidence of The caucus action against Pow- confusion and crosspurposes in ell, who has been under fire for the Peking leadership at a time excessive travel expenses and be- d when the North Vietnamese al- cause his wife was on his payroll ready are heavily dependent on even though she lived in PuertoI f Soviet supplies and advice Rico, was described by some liber- A question in the minds of als as the only thing that could Washington officials always has be done to save is seat. been whether North Vietnam would But a number of congressmen - be able to make peace if it wanted emerging from the caucus said t. to if the Chinese Communists op- they doubt he will be seated. Sposed such a step. Rep. Sam M. Gibbons of Florida,I The tentative belief here is that who led a revolt against Powell on the Chinese are now so entangled the Education and Labor Commit- 'sin their own internal struggle that tee last year, said he expects Pow- ton Powell, D.-N.Y., of his com- mittee chairmanship. Bond, who resigned from SNCC last year, said nothing. It was an SNCC statement that led to his being barred from the House. Approved The' legislature, meanwhile, got a last-minute Judicial clearance when the Supreme Court refused to reconsider its Dec. 12 decision upholding the assembly's right to choose a governor under provisions of the state constitution. The history-making joint ses- sion will convene at 9 a.m. in the high-ceilinged House chamber for the first judicially validated elec- tion of a Georgia governor in 143 years. Although Maddox ran second in the popular vote, the state consti- tution says the legislature may choose either of the two top men. Final unofficial returns gave Callaway 451,032, Maddox 448,598 and Ellis G. Arnall, former gov- ernor and moderate, 57,832 write-ins. A last-resort move to force a popular vote runoff failed last Friday when the Georgia Supreme Court by a 5-2 ruling upheld the legislature's right to decide the issue. thoroughly searched at the fron- tier. Roadblocks stop cars at ran- dom inside the country. Despite the tension, Jordan is calm and far from martial law. At least nine bombs havq been set off in Amman and the Holy City of Jerusalem in recent weeks, and police have discovered unex- ploded sticks of dynamite. Security officers report that no arrests have been made in the bombings. Half a dozen potential saboteurs have been picked up in the arms smuggling however, and police say they confessed to being sent by two organizations: the in- telligence service of Syria and the Cairo-based Palestine Liberation Organization. One official claimed that the Palestinian group had been in- creasing its activities. It was formed in 1964 at a sum- mit conference of the Arab world's 13 heads of state, to rally and organize Palestinian refugees against Israel.. Jordan has more than a million Palestinian citi- zens. The organization is headed by a former civil servant named Ah- med Shukairy. It has now turned its efforts against Jordan, calling for the overthrow of King Hus- sein. There is no sign Shukairy consulted the Arab governments that founded and financed his movement on this change of pol- icy. Also without consulting his sponsors-except perhaps Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt - Shukairy disbanded the executive committee which was elected at a congress in Gaza last year, and replaced it with a secret revolutionary council. The council is to direct the movement against Jordan, with the fight against Is- rael reduced to a secondary aim. This leaves even moderate Arab governments, which do not share Egypt and Syria's anti-Jordanian policies, helping to finance the un- derground struggle against Hus- sein. May Commit Treason? "I don't want to beassociated with a man who doesn't know whether or not he will commit treason," said Floyd, who took the oath minutes later with an- other group of legislators. Bond said only that he was not surprised that no challenge was made of him. The Supreme Court ruled in December that the House could not exclude Bond because he endorsed a statement labeling U.S. involvement in Vietnam as aggression and murder and calling on young men to seek alternatives World News Roundup I By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court set aside redistricting plans for the Florida legislature yester- day and the Indiana and Missouri U.S. congressional delegations. In the Florida case the high court reversed, 7 to 2, a decision of a three-judge federal court that had upheld the 1966,reapportion- ment plans for the state legisla- ture. Also, by a 7-2 vote, the justices set' aside a lower court decision that had approved the 1965reap- portionment of Indiana's 11 con- gressional districts. The case was sent back to the court for further consideration in light of the Flor- ida reapportionment decisions. By the same vote the high court affirmed a lower court ruling that Missouri's current congressional districting plan is unconstitution- al. WASHINGTON-The 90th Con- gress convenes at noon today with controversies already jarring the House and Senate. A bipartisan group of senators prepared to renew their perennial fight for a change in the rule that requires a two-thirds majority to choke off filibusters. Southern members lined up to resist any change. President Johnson lays out his program for the new session in a state of the union address to the House and Senate tonight. The speech will be carried on radio and television at 9:30 p.m. EST. * * * 'DETROIT - Robert B. Evans, board member of American Mo- tors, and Roy Abernethy, AMC president, both quit yesterday. Roy D. Chapin Jr. was name chairman and chief executive of fcrand William V. Luneburg was elected president and chie operating officer, AMC said that Evans' move wa an outright resignation, while Ab ernethy was retired as president Both men will remain as director of the nation's fourth largest aut firm. WASHIINGTON - The nation' unemployment rate inched up i December but 1966 still brought the lowest jobless rate in 13 years the Labor Department said yes terday. The unemployment rate went u: one-tenth of one, per cent las month, rounding out a 1966 aver age of 3.9 per cent. to military draft. _ Democrat Lester G. Maddox, who hit public view in 1964 with his cafeteria, segregation stand,! was favored heavily in the 259- member legislature which has 229 Democrats. No Majority Maddox and Republican Howard; H. Bo Callaway, a conservative who shifted to moderate views in the campaign, were thrown into a no-majority deadlock in the No- vember election by write-ins for a: third candidate. "The eyes and ears of the world will be focused on this chamber when a joint session isconvened to untangle one of the greatest governmental snarls of our day and time," Speaker George L. Smith told the House. "I know you are ready," he said. Leaving the capitol, Bond ap- peared at a news conference with Stokely Carmichael, chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordina- ting Committee (SNCC). Car- michael read a statement opposing the stripping of Rep. Adam Clay- !T T BET MIDRASH Courses in HEBREW and JUDAICA to fit YOUR background and interests- and we promise never to write your draft board! beginning this week at HILLEL n at 'S, S- p st - they could hardly intervene ef- fectively if the North Vietnamese wanted to open negotiations. The best-informed Washington authorities believe in spite of the reported outbreaks at Shanghai, Nanking and presumably wide- spread clashes elsewhere that Mao Tse-tung stil is directing the "great cultural revolution" in an ell to be deniedh is seat. Rep. Thomas P. O'Neill of Massachu- setts said: "He'll be lucky if he is seated." McCormack said he voted, against taking away Powell's chairmanship and would oppose any effort to take away his House seat. Will Fight Move "He was elected by the peoplE of his district, who knew the facts, at the time," the speaker tolds newsmen. "They are entitled to a representative in Congress." 1429 Hill NO 3-4129 This was down from last year's # effort to make China a perma- 4.6 per cent average and was un- nently revolutionary nation dedi- der 4 per cent for the first time cated to the violent expansion of since 1923, the bureau said. communism over the world. Jewish Theological Seminary-Detroit Midrasha ,..,.. .. . .. z SAIGON - Viet Cong frogmen -sank a huge American dredge while shellfire hit a British tanker and two South Vietnamese mine- sweepers yesterday in a concen- trated enemy assault on allied riv- er traffic. Two American dredgeworkers were killed and another is missing as the $3-million Jamaica Bay, the fourth largest dredge in the I world, sank in 20 feet of water near the Mekong River delta city of My Tho, 35 miles southwest of Saigon. A fourth American was wounded. The rioting and bloodshed are believed to occur when Lin Piano's Red Guards-the youthful shock troops of the purge-directly threaten the security of the work- ers in factories and the positions of Communist party leaders who oppose purge. The party is thus seen here as the source of reaction to Mao's re- volution" although officials also find significance in the fact that the army has never been used as a revolutionary agency but only to maintain or restore order. This suggest the army may include powerful anti-Maoist elements. TOMORROW at 4:00 "THE YOUNG RADICAL" II I