FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1966 THE, MICHIGAN DAILY VAtM qlMW.W IeRIDAY, DECEMBER 9,1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY DL tlW ~wiDww rain "in6 A AcE 8 Gain Agreement on r at Pope Asks Extension of Truce. Into Armistice for Peace Talks 'To Ban Weapons in Space AUSTIN, Tex. WP) - President Johnson disclosed yesterday that the United States, the Soviet Un- ion and 26 other nations have agreed on a treaty to ban war and weapons from the reaches of space. Johnson saluted the terms of a draft treaty worked out by the UN Committee on Outer Space as "this important step toward peace." He said it translates into treaty form no-bombs-in-orbit resolution of the United Nations. "It guarantees," he said, "free access to all areas and installa- tions of celestial bodies. This. openness, taken with other pro- visions of the treaty, should pre- vent warlike preparations on the j one of the first countries to rati- [words in length. The pact is to be! moon and other celestial bodies." To become effective, the treaty must gain approval of the UN General Assembly and then the ratification of individual nations -by the Senate, in the case of the United States. In a statement read to reporters by presidential assistant George Christian at the White House press center in Austin, Johnson said he expects early action by the assembly. He said he plans to submit the treaty to the Sen- ate at the congressional session starting next month. The President voiced a hope that the United States will be i __ _ ., _... ,... ..,.. , .. ..... ., a .. ., r .. v ... w .,. fy this multination effort to quar- antine outer space against war. "It is the most important arms control development since the limited test-ban treaty of 1963," Johnson said. That treaty, which most nations have ratified, bars nuclear testing in the atmosphere but not under- ground. France and Red China, the two most recent members of the nuclear weapons society, have not ratified. The treaty, including its pream- ble, is about 2,000 words long. The actual test as distinguished from the prefatory statement of aims and principles, is about 1,700 of unlimited duration, although any nations in it may withdraw upon one year's written notice. The text was not made public, but it was learned the treaty avoids a definition of outer space and this is one of the problems which the drafting committee agreed should be left over for fur- ther work in the United Nations. The key provision in the pact, Article IV, is the following: "States party to the treaty un- der take not to place in orbit around the earth any object carrying nuclear weapons or any other kinds of weapons of mass destruction, install suchweapons on celestial bodies or station such weapons in outer space in any other manner. "The moon and other celestial bodies shall be used by all states party to the treaty exclusively for peaceful purposes. The estab- lishment of military bases, instal- lations and fortifications, the testing of any type of weapons and the conduct of military man- euvers on celestial bodies shall be forbidden. The use of military per- sonnel for scientific research or for any other peaceful purposes shall not be prohibited. The use of any equipment or facility ne- cessary for peaceful exploration of the moon and other celestial bodies shall also not be prohib- ited., The White House was silent on whether the fact that this country and the Soviet Union could come to terms on peacekeeping efforts for space might offer hopes fof cooperation in ending the war on this planet in Viet Nam. But Christian promised sympa- thetic consideration by the U S. government for the appeal of Pope Paul VI for a full-scale armistice to permit peace talks. "The U.S.. government," Chris- tian said, reading from a state- ment, "fully shares the desire of His Holiness, the Pope, for a peaceful solution in Viet Nam. His suggestions have always re- ceived sympathetic considera- tion on our part, as will his most recent proposals." The President, Christian an- nounced, will be flying back to Washington to wade into details of the new budget to be submit- ted to Congress next month. He said Johnson would remain sever- al days, then return to the LBJ Ranch near Johnson City, Tex.,, for the holidays. By The Associated Press VATICAN CITY-Pope Paul VI appealed yesterday for the Viet Nam Christmas truce to be ex- tended into a lasting armistice for the negotiation of an honorable peace. In one of his most opti- mistic statements on the war, he said the prospect for an end of fighting is brighter. His appeal brought no imme- diate response from either side in the conflict. Hanoi has never re- plied to any of the papal pleas. In Saigon, South Vietnamese Premier Nguyen Cao Ky said recently any truce should be a matter of hours, not days. U.S. officials contend the Communists take advantage of prolonged truce to regroup and resupply. The proposal received a promise of sympathetic U.S. consideration from President Johnson yesterday. But U.S. officials see grave dangers, as well as the possibility of advancing peace hopes, in the proposal. The greatest danger seen by Johnson administration policy- 'Viet Combat Death Rate 'Lower Than Past Wars makers is that the proposal, which the Pope directed toward both sides, could be converted by foes of this country's Vietnamese policy into a weapon to press for a new one-sided bombing- pause. So far, Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk have ruled out any bombing pause like that which grew out of the Christmas truce last year and ran for 37 days-and failed to bring any re- ciprocal gesture from Hanoi to- ward scaling down the war or negotiating. Some of the best-informed Washington authorities agree with Pope Paul's assessment that the prospects for peace in Viet Nam now are brighter than they were earlier this year. But the reason for Washington's cautious opti- mism may be very different from the Pope's reasons. The view here is that the Com- munist forces are taking such severe losses from. the air and ground fighting in the south and from the bombing of the north- that they will be compelled in the next few months to reassess their position. They could choose peace, or they could ask for "volunteers" from Red China and other Com- munist countries, an act which would lead to expanding te war and bring on a great world crisis. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The ratio of American combatt deaths to non- fatal wounds in Viet Nam is run- ning much lower proportionately than during World War II and Iraq To Station Troops in Syria STo Join 'Battle Against Israel' '3 'I By The Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon-Iraq tight- ened the tension in the Middle East another notch yesterday v with reports that it was preparing to send troops into Syria to face the Israeli army. Baghdad radio said an Iraqi military delegation would visit Syria to confer on positions where the Iraqui troops could be station- ed along the Syrian-Israeli fron- tier. Earlier, Iraq's chief of staff said Iraqi forces had been moved to the border of Iraq and Syria, awaiting orders from the Arab unified command to join "the battle against Israel." Baghdad has made several sim- ilar gestures in past years but there have never been confirmed reports of Iraqi troops actually entering Syria. Reports from Cairo said the chief of the Arab unified com- United Arab Republic, told a meet- mand, Lt. Gen. Aly Amer of the ing of the Arab League Defense Council that Iraqi troops were necessary to bolster Jordan's de- fense against Israel. Jordan in R o mney Hits Johnson's Lack of Understanding By The Associated Press New York - Michigan's Gov. George W. Romney said yesterday he hadn't made up his mind about running for the presidency yet, but hit out at President Johnson and the "Great Society" as though he were already on the 1968 cam- paign trail. He said at a news conference that as a result of the President's failure to put through a tax in- crease last year, "the economy is now teetering on the brink of a slowdown." The reason Johnson didn't "ex- ercise the courage" to take this and other tough but needed steps, Romney asserted, was "because of political expediency and a lack of understanding." He also accused Johnson of cre- ating a "confidence gap" by not giving the American people full information about the war in Viet Nam. , "When you can't have confi- dence in what those who have a public trust are saying," he de- clared, "you are really in a tough spot." "If President Johnson had been running in 1966, he's have been licked," the Republican governor said. He spoke on the eve of the Re- publican governors' convention in Colorado Springs, Colo., where an Associated Press survey showed few state chief executives ready to hop on a Romney bandwagon. Several said they want aspirants for a place on the next national ticket to display their political wares more fully. Some said they are looking for a winner without too much reference to political philosophy. Romney wil be among Friday arrivals for sessions et which the governors will discuss the results of this year's election, talk about 1968 prospects. Romney, who has said he is con- sidering the race in 1968 but has made no decision, was among a bloc of governors who declined to state any public preference for the nomination and refused to spec- ulate on the candidate the party convention might choose. the past has rejected proposals to station other Arab troops on its territory, and Cairo papers today criticized Jordan for his stand. In the past two weeks, however, Jordan has reportedly moved an unknown number of soldiers into the .country from Saudi Arabia, Jordan's moderate ally in -its feud with the more revolutionary Arab states. Jordan was also assailed by the Palestine Liberation Organization for not allowing its units to oper- ate on its frontier, and by the Syrian Socialist regime, which is urging Jordan to permit com- mando raids into Israel. Syria's Socialist government had yesterday seized all properties of the Western-owned. Iraq Petro- leum Co. and imposed new high royalties on oil being. pumped through pipelines for European markets. A communique broadcast by Damascus radio said the pipeline and other property of the company, were under "executive seizure" to force the company to pay increas- ed transit royalties for the first nine months of this year. It es- timated the back royalties at more than $9.3 million. The Syrian chief of state, Nu- reddien Atassi, offered yesterday to -arm oposition forces inside Jor- dan to overthrow King Hussein. Jordan itself was reported calm, and schools were scheduled to re- open following riots and demon- strations which swept the western part of the country last month. In the northern Jordanian town of Nablus, a 24-hour curfew was lifted as tension after an attempt- ed student demonstratioin Monday seemed to lessen. The attempted demonstration and a general strike with it were to protest the cancellation of a conference of local leaders in Je- rusalem to demand stronger meas- ures against Israel. Other towns on the River Jordan's west bank were reported calm. world News Roundup t to By The Associated Press guty of aggression in Viet Nam K TOKYO-Peng Chen, disgraced which is the ma jor obstacle to in- a former mayor of Peking, and ternatiornal peace.f Chiang Nan-hsiang, once minis- The premier, in a television ad-h ter of higher education, are to be dress on the French national net- denounced today before the pub- work, renewed that charge against s lic at a mass rally in Peking, a the United States. He asserted the C Japanese report from the Chinese ISiviet Union will continue mate- t capital said. rial aid to Hanoi until this "ag-k The newspaper Yomiuri's corre- gression" ceases.w spondent based in Peking said Kosygin said he and President 'Peng and others will be given al- Charles de Gaulle found "manyh most no chance to speak" at the ,, rally, called a "struggle rally' sin ofthei Vietnamese sitation, d against elements of "anti-party, but he stopped short of saying the C antisocialism and anti-Mao Tse- Soviet and French positions ared tung's thought." identical. d The mass rally will be sponsored s by the militant Red Guards. c UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-After 4 PIRAEUS, Greece - Loosened 20 years of debate, the United Na- from its moorings by a pounding tions has completed its work on Aegean storm, a 16-ton refrigera- a far-reachig treaty aimed at tor trailer became a monstrous extending basic rights to mankind, i. battering ram that tore open the It ail be years before the treatyn Greek car and passenger ferry- can be effective, and U.S. approval ship Heraklion and sank her in 15 is problematical, but completion minutes, survivors said last night. of the drafting comes in time for Officials counted 230 persons the celebration of Human Rights; missing and presumed drowned. Day, Saturday. Of the 281 persons aboard, rescue The rights are spelled out in' ships reported they had picked up two covenants-economic, social 49 survivors. and cultural, and civil and polit- * *ical. PARIS - Soviet Premier Alexei The covenants will become ef-I N. Kosygin told the French people fective when 35 nations have rati-l last night the United States is fied them. Korea, Pentagon figures showed yesterday. The latest count of battlefield lead and wounded in the South- east Asian conflict lists 6,236 men :illed since Jan. 1, 1961 while 35,538 have been wounded-a ratio f 1 to 3 with 33,629 men killed, and 10,284 wounded during three years of fighting. Just over 292,000 Americans died in combat in World War II while 670,800 were wounded-a ratio of to more than 2. Hit and Run War One big reason for the propor- ionately lower number of killed o wounded lies in the nature of he war. Viet Nam, in contrast to Korea and World War II, is a hit- and-run type of conflict, with no fixed fronts and few sustained battles. American casualties dropped harply last week, reflecting one of the periodic lulls in ground ac- ion. Forty-four Americans were killed and 521 wounded during the week ended last Saturday. Deaths listed "not a result of hostile action" rose by 25 to 1,436. These included fatalities in acci- dental plane and helicopter crash- s, disease and other causes. The count of American combat [eaths includes 4,362 men killed ince Jan 1 At the present rate ombat deaths this year .may top$ ,500 Yesterday's Action As action continued yesterday, US forces struck at three points in the Saigon sector today in a new drive to clear the enemy from bases that could be used to miount attacks against the capital. Troops of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division reported they killed eight Viet Cong and captured nine in a clash 22 miles north of Saigon, completing the operation without suffering any casualties them- selves. Bad weather again restricted U.S. bombing in North Viet Nam. A broadcast dispatch from Ha- noi, unconfirmed by authorities in Saigon, said two American jets had been shot down. i ,"Whosoever shall do the ili of my Father in heaven, the same is my brother, and sister, and inother." Matthew 12:50 CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 West Stadium REMEMBER WILL CONTINUE even after The Daily stops publication W. C. FIELDS FILMS I NORMAN NADEL REVIEWER FOR N.Y. WORLD JOURNAL TRIBUNE, PRESIDENT OF B'WAY DRAMA CRITICS CIRCLE will speak on "The Critic's Role in the Theatre- the Realities of Theatre Criticism Today" TODAY at 4:00 P.M. RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE (4th Floor) Public Invited 0 Admission Free 9 Discussion Period Will Follow * Sponsored by PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM, DEPT. OF JOURNALISM & DEPT. OF SPEECH MONDAY, Dec. 12, 7:00 & 9:00 MY LITTLE CHICKADEE (with MAE WEST) TUESDAY, Dec. 13, 7:00 & 9:00 MILLION DOLLAR LEGS (with JACK OAKIE) 4mmmininmm m=mm=n=mmi=mrnrnin === mmamamminmin..... I U U aI i i r ( dir. Rene Clair-1931)}. French, subtitles. Musical comedy in the tradi- tion of Sous s T it e Pa ri a d ." h ims ever made."--London Tirnes. rU SSHORTS:. A PROGRAM OF EARY CARTOONS IF LIFE-Dec.10 & 11 U (dir. Ingmar Bergman-1958 # Swedish, subtitles. The lives of three wom n Stold as each awaits the birth of her first child. Starring Eva Dahlbeck, Ingrid Thulin,,and Bibi Anderson. CANNES FILM FESTIVAL AWARDS: Bestacrsbs ietr. SHORT: "SOLDIER MAN" GOLD DIGGERS OF 1931-1 Dec. 15 & 16 ,r[ I (dir. Busby Berkley-1933) SAmerican. Starring Dick Powell, Joan Blondell, SGinger Rogers, Aline McMahon, Need,,Sparks. , # The campiest -of camp,."includes "The Forgot- . a ten Man" sequence. Pre-censorship and urn-cut. I I SHORT: "PARALYMPICS" * I THE CIRCUS-Dec. 17 & 1 (dir. Charlie Chapin-1928) American. Charlie joins the circus .by 'mistake i and ends up a lion tamer, tight -rope- walker, r and clown. With Myrna Kennedy' itAcademy SAward to Chaplin "for versatility and genius in . * wrictn o Suing, directing and producing." SHORTS: "WRONG AGAIN R Laurel N & Hardy, "OUR DAREDEVIL CHIEF,"" "SUB- MARINE PILATE" ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM STILL ONLY 50c NANCY WALKER ,SCOTT McKAY - the GREAT SOCIETY, I yes, it's true-all of it, spread before your very EYES featuring Jello ! LBJ! GREAT! Happenings! Protestations! SOCIETY! Spitzboo! ~#w~ m~ ~-~ ~rnw -~x ; . .a-w mm - m s - mv-