THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 r['HE "ICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 TliU~ IYJICIIIGAN DAILY l"fzx + 1jujmKen :1 Ky Seeking Rebel 'Without Costly Lif Monks Want U.S. Support Against Kcy Buddhists Launched Hunger Strike While Police Disperse Rally SAIGON () -Premier Nugyen Cao KY talked yesterday of mak- ing peace with rebels in his ranks, but the threat of civil war inten- sified and American involvement mounted on the edges of the crisis. Seven hundred soldiers-rangers and infantrymen-joined the rebel forces in Da Nang only a few hours after Ky visited that hotbed of northern dissidence in an effort to woo support. The movement of these reinforcements was one in a series of developments: -Rebel gunners shot down a U.S. spotter plane on a flight over Da Nang. -U.S. Marines seized control of a disputed bridge over the Da Nang River. -Buddhist monks bluffed tank- supported government troops out of a march on a rebel-held pagoda by lighting a wooden pyre and threatening to burn themselves to death, as seven did in the cam- paign that led to the destruction of President Ngo Dinh Diem's re- gime in 1963. -Twenty monks and nuns, launching a 48 - hour hunger strike in Saigon, appealed for U.S. support against Ky's government. *Police broke up a slogan-chanting group of 600 that started to march from a Buddhist Institute rally, the action coming as artillery thundered against Viet Cng guer- rillas outside the capital. Buddhist Support Announcements and communi- ques of the Buddhist hierarchy pledged support to the northern dissidents for the sake of "free- dom and democracy." They ap- pealed to President Johnson "to protest disloyal and cruel acts on the government in South Viet Nam which may lead to civil war." While Saigon monks proclaim- ed to aroused crowds an all-out struggle to topple the military re- gime that Ky has said will remain in power at least another year, they urged caution for the time being. Ky said in an interview that all peaceful means will be used to end the dissidence, but "if we can- not end the crisis peacefully, then we will use the army." "We want to avoid bloodshed at all costs," he added. "We need every life to fight the Com- munists. 1 Dispatch Essential The premier said his dispatch Sunday of 2,500 loyalists troops to Da Nang was essential to combat "a clear case of Communist sub- version of the Buddhist move- ment," that the agitators were trying to expand to other areas. If he had not acted, he went on, "even sending a million American troops to Viet Nam would not help." As for complaints of U.S. offi- cials that they were not advised In advance of the troops move- ment, KY said "the American government and the Vietnamese government are close, perhaps closer than ever before, but it' does not mean that we have to discuss everything." Meanwhile hard fighting raged yesterday between large units of V American air cavalrymen and North Vietnamese army regulars in the elephant grass of a moun- tain valley 250 miles northeast of Saigon.. They were locked in close-quar- ter combat at the close of the third day of a running battle that started Monday 15 miles west of An Khe. Moderate Losses The latest casualty estimate was that made by an American officer Tuesday: 85 Communist dead, American losses moderate. Elsewhere in South Viet Nam, ground fighting lapsed again into isolated, small-scale skirmishes. COUPLE OF COURSES? THE SUCKING SWAMP WATER IN A DRAFT MAKING YOU SWEAT? SAVE YOURSELF WITH INSTANT SILENCE For information on how to improve your concentration and study more efficiently during finals, write to: ACADEMIC AIDS P. O. Box 969 MONKS AT THE Buddhist Institute in Saigon lie on mats as they began a 48-hour hunger strike yesterday in protest against the military regime of Premier Ky. LOS ANGELES AGAIN: Negro Resentment Peace e Loss U.S. Troops Take Bridge At Da Nlang Vital Link Saved as Marines Avoid Fight With Buddhist Rebels DA NANG () - U.S. Marines noved into rebellious Da Nang Yesterday and wrested control of a vital bridge held at one end by forces opposing Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and at the other by loyal- ist soldiers. Rebel gunfire brought down a U.S. spotter plane as it flew over Buddhist pagodas but two Ameri- cans aboard were unharmed. The Marines said they were forced under tense circumstances to take the Da Nang River bridge because it was the only link be- tween the city and U.S. installa- tions on the outskirts. ThenUnited States has large Marine encampments andsan air- base outside Da Nang, a coastal city 380 miles northeast of Sai- gon. Mostly they are on the east side of the river. So are headquar- ters and the home of Gen. Lewis W. Walt, U.S. Marine commander in Viet Nam. Buddhist Rebels The rebels, bearing the stand- ard of the Buddhist Struggle Committee, occupied the west end of the bridge and planted 24 pounds of detonation charges under it. They had warned they would set them off if government troops tried to cross. The Marines sent a squad to take over the east end of the bridge and a platoon to secure the west end At one point, a shot rang out from the rebel side but it was not known whether it was intentional or accidental. A tense moment came when one rebel officer stood up after the Marines reached the west end, pulled the pin on a grenade and threatened to blow himself up if the U.S. forces removed the de- molition charges from the bridge. But the Marines talked him out of it and the rebel troops with- drew to a tree line beyond the west end. The charges were re- moved. "It was plenty tense for a time, believe me," said Lt. Col. Joshua Dorsey, commander of the 3rd Battalion of the 3rdMarine Regi- ment. "It was like handling excit- able little children and anything could have touched it off." Plane Incident The plane incident apparently was not connected with the U.S. takeover of the bridge. It had flown over central Da Nang after a government air force plane had dropped leaflets into the com- pounds of three pagodas guarded by rebel forces. The U.S. plane, a two-seater, was greeted by a storm of fire from automatic weapons and rifles from the rebels. It took seven hits in the engine, wings and fuselage, then belched smoke, and trailed off toward the sea. The plane made a crash landing on the beach three miles from the city. U.S. Wants Solid NA TO Lineup Now Atlantic Allies Will Revamp Plans Prior To Brussels Meeting WASHINGTON (P)--The United States was reported yesterday seeking a solid lineup among 14 Atlantic allies on NATO revamp- ing plans in advance of the for- eign ministers meeting in Brus- sels three weeks hence. Not all items relating to stream- lining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, relocating its mili- tary headquarters probably in Belgium, and perhaps moving the political headquarters there too, are expected to be thrashed out by then. But to the extent possible, U.S. strategists are said to be aiming at unanimity among the 14 at Brussels in order to prevent the 15th ally-France-from tossing in a monkey wrench or exploiting discord among the others. A united stand by the 14 min- isters would also weaken French President Charles de Gaulle's op- portunity to make a deal with the Russians during his visit to the Soviet Union in June by pointing to NATO disarray, it is reasoned here. Belgium's f o r e i g n minister, Pierre Harmel, arrived yesterday for talks with President Johnson. De Gaulle brought on the NATO crisis by announcing France's withdrawal from the alliance's in- tegrated military setup by July 1 and giving the allies a year to get their faciilties off French soil. He sees the defense system as outmoded a n d infringing on French sovereignty. Its dismantl- ing, in his view, would also im- prove prospects for reaching ac- cord with the Communist states. U.S. soundings have found con- siderable sentiment among the 14 nations against a sharp break with France at the Brussels confer- ence. Some here also expect the French would take the line that what happens to NATO's defense structure is up to the 14 who are going ahead with it, and therefore France would not actively inter- cede in those decisions. MONTREAL (YP)-U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara proposed yesterday that every young person in the United States be asked to give two years of ser- vice to his country, either in the military, Peace Corps or some oth- er voluntary work. McNamara said this would help remove what he called the inequity in the present Selective Service system. Associates in Washington de- clined to say whether this was an official administration proposal and said they were uninformed on the suggestion. Payments Balance Deficit Rises During First Quarter WASHINGTON (A)-The defi- States has done little more than cit in the U.S. balance of pay- hold its own in the balance-of- ments rose to a disappointing $582 payments picture since the Viet million, on a seasonally adjusted Nam buildup began in mid-1965. basis. during the first quarter of But he said no exact figures are this year. available to assess how much the Federal officials blamed the Viet war is contributing to the dollar Nam war and rising imports for drain. the increase. In addition to direct military But Secretary of the Treasury costs, Fowler said the nation's Henry H. Fowler told a news con- favorable trade balance is also ferencetthe administration's goal suffering because of other events is still to end the deficit this year, in Southeast Asia. although he conceded it will now be harder to achieve. On the import side, Fowler said "And it may be that we will have that as the economy's growth rate to settle for an interim objective slows, as he expects it will, and as of equilibrium exclusive of the new productive capacity is at- costs of Viet Nam," Fowler said. tained "we will be better able to The administration defines equi- supply domestic demand for goods librium as $250 million either side and services f r o m d o m e s t i c h ffd sources." END SELECTIVE SERVICE: McNamara Proposes Two Year's Service From Youth The Secretary of Defense spoke at a luncheon of the American So- ciety of Newspaper Editors, at- tended by about 500 U.S. and Canadian editors. McNamara mentioned the con- flict in Viet Nam only in a brief reference but he spoke at length on the question of U.S. security and its relationship to security in developing countries. He suggested a flexible approach toward Red China in an effort to bridge the gap now isolating Pe- king from most of the rest of the world. Breaching the isolation of the Chinese Communists 'reduces the danger of potentially catas- trophic misunderstandings and in- creases the incentive on both sides to resolve disputes by reason rath- er than by force," he observed. "There are many ways in which we can build bridges toward na- tions who would cut themselves off from meaningful contacts with us," he said. "We can do so with properly balanced trade relations, diplomatic contacts, and in some cases even by exchanges of mili- tary observers." McNamara said the idea of gov- ernment service for all young people hadsbeen criticized as in- appropriate "while we are engaged in a shooting war." "But I believe precisely the op- posite is the case," he declared. "It is more appropriate now than ever, for it would underscore what our whole purpose is in Viet Nam -and indeed anywhere in the world where coercion or injustice or lack of decent opportunity still hold sway." The defense secretary warned that other free countries must shoulder part of the burden of helping contain the expansionist policies of Red China and in con- tributing in the maintenance of world peace. "The plain truth is," he said, "the day is coming when no single nation, however powerful, can un- dertake by itself to keep the peace outside its own borders." "The United States," he as- serted, "has no mandate from on high to police the world and no inclination to do so." LOS ANGELES (A) - A tense' watchfulness pervaded South LosI Angeles yesterday in the wake of two violent episodes kindled, police' said, by Negro resentment of a+ white officer's killing of a young Negro father. Small bands of roving Negro youths attacked two white news- men and partially looted a liquor store Tuesday night after the breakup of a large demonstration protesting alleged police brutality in the May 7 shooting of Leonard Deadwyler, 25. The newsmen were Karl Flem- ing, 38, Los Angeles, bureau mana- ger for Newsweek magazine, re- ported in good condition after be- ing beaten into unconsciousness with rocks and 4 x 4 timbers, and Newsweek reporter David Moberg, 22, who suffered minor face cuts and bruises. Police from the 77th St. Division, reinforced by 30 of ficers, called up earlier in the day from the Met- ropolitan Division, moved quickly into the area-devastated by race rioting last August-and dispersed crowds in about three hours. A few loud reports were heard. Police first called them gunshots but later said they could have been firecrackers. Several false fire alarms were turned in. Metropolitan Division reinforce- ments remained on quick call pending the outcome of tomor- row's inquest in Deadwyler's death. The Rev. H. H. Brookins, a Negro and head of Los Angeles' United Civil Rights Council, agreed that Deadwyler's death had stirred deep resentment in the Negro community. "In a tense atmosphere like you have here," said the Rev. Mr. Brookins. " a death like that of Leonard Deadwyler is almost ex- actly the worst kind of thing that could have happened. You couldn't ask for a more inflamatory set of circumstances. "All the ingredients are here to blow open all the pent-up frus- tration and anger. The commu- nity is just simply mad and it's going to continue to build. I felt it last night. There was as much anger and outright unreason as last August. "Unless something dramatic happens at the Deadwyler inquest to give Negroes the feeling jus- tice will be done, there's going to be trouble. The Negroes expect the verdict to be justifiable homicide. They're prejudging it. I heard sev- eral of them at the protest ask if anyone ever heard of a white po- liceman getting charged for kill- ing a Negro, and nobody had. If the inquest comes out negative to what the Negroes want, then I'm afraid we've had it." Deadwyler was stopped by a traffic officer, Jerold M. Bova, as he was speeding his pregnant wife, Barbara, 25, to a hospital. Mrs.. Deadwyler has said they thought their child was coming prema- turely. Bova said he was reaching for Deadwyler's ignition keys when the care began to move again, causing the gun he held in one hand to discharge accidentally, fatally wounding Deadwyler. Mrs. Deadwyler said that her husband asked Bova for a police escort to the hospital and that Bova reached past her and shot her husband without questioning him or answering his request. A passenger in the back seat,' Gamalyel Ferguson, 31, agreed with the widow's account. Dispute over the circumstances have renewed long-standing Ne- gro complaints of brutal treatment by police. an accusation frequently lodged and vigorously denied by police after last August's riots. Meanwhile, Negro sources said Deadwyler appears to have be- come a martyr in the minds of angry Negroes. Deadwyler's funer- al last Monday drew a crowd of more than 500 to the small Praises of Zion Baptist church, where the Rev. Joseph B. Hardwick told the congregation: "We don't want this man's death to be in vain. We will not hide this in a corner, We want it to be brought out into the light." "He has reachedhthe stage of martyrdom," said the Rev. Thom- as Coffee of Deadwyler. And among the crowd outside who listened to the funral over loudspeakers, young Negroes cir- culated pamphlets from the "Com- mittee to End Legalized Murder by Cops." The pamphlets called Deadwyler's death a murder and warned: "Murder comes on the edge of summer. Anybody can get it next time." of the zero in te aiierence Ae- tween the dollar outflow and in- flow. There had been speculation prior to yesterday's announcement of the first-quarter figure that the deficit this year could exceed last year's dollar drain and might even approach $2 billion. At the same time yesterday, the administration revised upward its estimate of last year's deficit from $1.3 billion to $1.35 billion. The secretary said the United SALES TRAINEE. Excellent opportunity with largest manufactureer of wom- en's apparel. Good beginning salary, expenses paid. Excellent opportunity for advancement. Begin June 1st. Prefer Ann Arbor area resident. Paid training program. No experience required. Call or Write: JACK RYBARSYK 347 Maryland Ave. NE World New By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - President Johnson's bill to facilitate the financing of $4.2 billion of next year's government operations in the private capital market was passed by the House yesterday. The bill, under steady attack by, Republicans during three days of debate, sets up a procedure for the pooling of various govern- ment-held loans and the sale of private investors of participation shares in the loans. The money would go directly to the agencies concerned, reducing the spending side of the budget by an equiva- lent amount. SHADE GAP, Pa.-A mad kid- nap-killer was shot to death yes- terday in a running gun battle with state police and two teen- age boys. His kidnap victim of al- most a week, 17-year-old Peggy Ann Bradnick, escaped safely. * * OTTAWA-A bomb exploded in a men's room near the offices of Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson and Foreign Secretary Paul Mar- s Roundup tin in the House of Commons yes- terday, killing an unidentified man who carried it. First reports indicated it was a "mad bomber" incident aimed either at the lead- ers or the House chamber. NEW YORK-The stock market turned around yesterday and staged a smashing rally after a long, steep decline. The averages piled up their big- gest gain in nearly a year. Trading was heavy, and the New York Stock Exchange ticker tape lagged as' much as six min- utes in reporting floor trans- actions. Blue-chip stocks soared as much as $7 a share, and the glamour issues posted even higher gains. All the auto makers scored gains. Brokers called it a rebound from an oversold condition. Grand Rapids, Mich. 458-0760 NOTICE The Student Health Insurance plan is now open to oil students not previously enrolled in the plan. Enrollment is open through May 23, 1966. If you wish to enroll, apply at 1546 Student Activities Building. BOOK FAIR SATURDAY, MAY 21, 8:30 to 5:30 --- -- SABBATH SERVICES Continue Weekly FRIDAYS at 7:15 P.M. BOOKS * RECORDS * BAKED GOODS FLOWERS " PICTURE FRAMES " JEWELRY John Planer, Cantor 1429 Hill Student Participation William Present Chapel 1 Noon" U 4 l ., r tl Campus Financial Wizards ... do all their banking at Ann Arbor Bank. They appreciate the economy and convenience of Ann Arbor Bank's Specialcheck checking accounts ... you pay just 10c for each check you write . . . there's no service charge either! Campus financial wizards also appreciate the fact that Ann Arbor Bank has 3 campus offices . . . and soon to be four .. . to serve their complete banking needs. If you're not a CFW (Campus Financial Wizard) see Ann Arbor Bank soon. 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