TUESDAY, 16 FEBRUARY 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Expect New Cvilian Re ime in Viet Nam Phan Huy Quat Emerges as Leader; Soldiers Break Up Demonstrations SAIGON ()-Troops broke up antigovernment demonstrations at two northern towns yesterday while Saigon awaited the proclamation of a new regime expected to be headed by Phan Huy Quat. The Viet Cong may have inspired both outbursts. About 2000 persons stormed the district chief's office at 'hang Binh, 20 miles south of the United States-Vietnamese air base at Da Nang, demanding an end to air and artillery warfare within populated b areas. Troops fired when the demonstrators pressed in, disregarding the district chief's attempt to explain the government's position. Some -persons were reported killed, oth- K ers wounded, the rest dispersed.. K 1 g8 !,_ Soldiers Intervene Other soldiers broke up another lllS crowd that gathered outside Tam Ky, 20 miles farther south. Skirmishing afield resumed its normal tempo after a week mark- SELMA. Ala. (P)-Martin Luth- ed by three U.S.-Vietnamese air er King, Jr. led a freedom march strikes at North Viet Nam in re- of more than 1200 adult Negroes prisal for terrorist Viet Cong at- on the Dallas County courthouse tacks against American and Viet- ithout incident yesterday. There namese personnel. were no arrests. Saigon authorities charged that Ariaddtioal 50 egr scooltroops from five Communist North An addstoace tNgo scholate Vietnamese divisions have infil- children also mrchwedr o she trated South Viet Nam since 1959. courthouse but were turned back They said at least 39,000 men by Selma's public safety director, have made the crossing and that, P Wilson Baker. of these, more than 25,000 rank- The teenagers arrived in a sec- ed as squad leaders or higher. Fnd wave about an hour after the Installations adults and were diverted across, A statement listed seven North the street from the courthouse. Vietnamese installations as figur- Baker told the Rev. Andrew khg heavily in the infiltration. By Young, an aide to King, "you Implication, all seven are poten- broke your promise. Take them tially targets for any future bomb- back to the church." Ing raids. Leader Complied The expected announcement of Young complied and the pupils a new government, the eighth marching two abreast, walked the shakeup in 16 months, was de- 10 blocks back to the church layed. Informed sources said there where they had massed. leas a snag about the appointment The safety director said the civil of a new interior minister. Tghseaery dir r ared t to The nominee was Tran Van rights leaders had agreed not to Tuyen, slated also to become a use the children. He had given eputy premier. He is of North the adults a parade permit Sun- detypmer. e is of Noth day ightVietnamese extraction and the day night. military, while liking him per- The march was by far the larg- sonally, questioned whether a man est since the right to vote cam- with such a background could well paign began Jan. 18. handle Interior ministry dealings Registration ; with the touchy religious groups No official figures are kept for of South Viet Nam. voter registration in Selma alone; Real Power the registration is county-wide. Of k The real power in the direction the 15,115 Negroes of voting ago of Saigon affairs, however, will throughout the county, about 600 ,emain with Lt. Gen. Nguyen are said to be on the voting list. Khanh, the armed forces com- The county has 14,400 white per- mander. He and his generals will sons of voting age and of these serve in a watchdog capacity. more than 9500 are voters. At Qui Nhon, 270 miles north- Since the drive began, the board east of Saigon, excavators recov- of registrars has not announced ered another American body from the number of Negroes who have the ruins of a U.S. enlisted men's registered to vote. The board is billet bombed last Wednesday under court order, however, to night. The known death toll rose process at least 100 applications to nine. Twelve Americans were each day it is open. still missing, presumably dead. World News Roundup By The Associated Press HAMMOND, Ind-A federal judge refused yesterday to order a recount of some 8,000 ballots cast in voting for president of the United Steelworkers Union. JudgeGeorge N. Beamer of United States district court ruled his jurisdiction under the present circumstances was limited to preserving the integrity of the ballot. He directed that the ballots, impounded Saturday, remain in the court's custody until proper steps are taken for their release. In Pittsburgh, a prominent MacDonald supporter said that Abel's forces will have an advantage in settling election disputes before election tellers. NEW DELHI - Fresh rioting erupted in south India yesterday and aembm'er of parlaent de- manded that Prime Minister Lal W STD TZIN TO Bahadur Shastri resign to end THE STUDENT ZIONIST C the bloody controversy over mak- AND THE ISRAELI STt *ing Hindi India's official lan- guage. INVITE * * * WASHINGTON-The Food and Drug Administration yesterday or- dered nasal methamphetamdine in-A . AT halers restricted to sale by pre- scription only because more and FEATI more people are using the con- -AG L gestion-relieving ingredients as a THENAGIL stimulant for kicks. SKITS SANTA MONICA, Calif.-Popu- AND DANCING lar singer Nat (King) Cole died yesterday at 45, a victim of can- COME AT 8:30 cer. CRITICIZES BLISS: Attacks GOP on Race Issue By CAL SKINNER, JR., 1 special To The Daily OBERLIN, Ohio - Republican Party chairman-elect Ray Bliss1 was verbally attacked in his home1 state last weekend. Speaking at the Oberlin College Lincoln Day Dinner, Grant Rey-; nolds of the National Negro Re- publican Assembly questioned "whether 'Dr. Bliss' has the pro- per medicine to cure this sick party. It is an exercise in futility to try to reorganize this party, without the Negro." Referring to "racial exclusive- ness" during the Goldwater cam- paign, Reynolds observed, "I find nothing within our party machin- ery to correct this party's mis- takes, but I don't propose to allow anybody to drive me away from my political home." Demands Removal Reynolds called for removal of the "architects of disaster" from positions of power in the Republi- can Party. Specifically, he urged Bliss' dismissal of national com- mittee executive director A. B. Hermann of New Jersey. 'His name is anathema in the Negro community," according to Reynolds. Hermann and the head of the GOP's minorities division Clay Claiborne were responsible for the preparation and dissemi- nation of campaign literature to the Negro community which used Martin Luther King's name with- out permission. Claiborne is now . under indictment in New Jersey, but still on the Republican Party payroll. e Reynolds also denounced the emerging Dixie Republicans. He advised the party to offer a "stan- d ard around which Southern Ne- that is done, the Negro can take care of himself." Admitting "I have no doubt that tomorrow I will be denounced by my party's leaders," Reynolds at- tacked 1960 presidential candidate Richard Nixon for not being "able to summon a modicum of human- ity during his campaign." Besides not sending a telegram to Mrs. Martin Luther King when King was jailed, Nixon ignored every center of Negro population in the country, according to Reynolds. "Nixon pulled defeat right cut of the jaws of victory." Reynolds took it for granted that Goldwater had ignored the Negroes and commented only that he is corresponding with Gold- water in an effort to convince ham the Negro community is important to the Republican Party. Negro Vote "We can concede sixty per cent of the Negro vote and win any- where, Reynolds asserted. He cit- ed election results in KansasrCity, Missouri, and Hyde Point, North Carolina, as evidence; that Re- publicans can attract Negroes. Commenting on GOP presiden- tial prospects for 1968, Reynolds predicted that one of the "big t h r e e, Scranton, Romney or Rockefeller." would receive the nomination. But, he conceded, "Every well-known Republican has a handicap. -NAACPRaps lfini Coaches CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (A) - Negro athletes are being advised by a University of Illinois chapter of the NAACP not to enroll at the Big Ten school. In a resolution, the chapter yes- terday charged certain coaches had warned Illini Negro athletes "to limit their coeducational so- cial contacts to fellow Negroes." The coaches were not identified. University President David D. Henry and a university athletic spokesman, both declined to com- ment on the resolution. AN INSIDE JOB? ON-THE-SCENE SKETCH by cartoonist Bill Mauldin depicts a United States helicopter exploding from the inside during last week's raids on U.S. facilities in South Viet Nam. The blast from inside, Mauldin said, "suggests hand-placed charges as well as mortars at this end of the landing strip." Shifts Strategy Against Viet Cong G-- AI Er SAIGON ,')--The United States I beat the Communist forces in VietI has tacitly recognized that it can- not currently beat the Viet Cong on the ground without commit- ting hundreds of thousands of troops. As a result it has in ef- fect taken to the air to try to Europeans Call For Negotiated Peace in Asia PARIS (A')-There is a steadily growing conviction in Western Europe that the explosive Viet Nam crisis must be moved from the battlefield to the conference table. This attitude, reflected officially and in the press, arises from genuine fear that holocaust may be just around the corner. Heightened Viet Cong activity and reprisal bombings brought the Viet Nam situation to a new crisis which has convinced most Euro- peans the time has come to stop fighting and start talking. While there has been no gen- eral criticism of recent United States air action in North Viet Nam-barring left wing and Com- munist groups-war-wise Euro- peans are frightened. Their fears of general conflict have put many on the side of President Charles de Gaulle of France. He has said all along that the only solution to the Viet Nam situation was negotiation, leading toward neutrality. De Gaulle would like to see Viet Nam's neutrality guaranteed on the one hand by Red China, and the other by America's Seventh Fleet. Britain, while in support of the reprisal attacks on North Viet Nam and American policy in gen- eral, is frankly worried that there is danger of escalation. To that end, some British officials also would like to see a brand new Geneva conference on the ques- tion. Nam with another type of war. This policy decision was many months in coming. It exploded in- to reality a week ago when Viet Cong raiders successfully attacked two major American installations at Pleiku on the same day. Re- taliatory air raids against North Viet Nam began. There seems little hope of ever' protecting American installations here against the guerrillas, no matter what is done on the ground. The Viet Cong now ap- pears to have opened a fullfledg- ed campaign against bases. Retaliation The Vietnamese and American retaliatory air raids last week on North Viet Nam are not expected to have a direct effect on the guerrillas. U.S. officials do not be- lieve the raids will seriously ham- per Viet Cong infiltration routes. These air raids are based on two assumptions. The first is that they will hurt Dr scare Hanoi and its Commu- nist allies enough that they will send cease-fire orders to the Viet Cong in the South. The second is that, if such or- ders should be transmitted by Neither of these assumptions is a certainty, and air raids are a longshot gamble. But it is a gam- ble worth taking right now, U.S officials feel, if all is not to be lost. Air raids so far have been confined to military installations It is difficult to tell how much damage the North Vietnamese forces suffered in last week's raids Photograhps taken by partici- pating planes show one-story bar- racks, some of them damaged surrounded by foxhole positions. Despite charges by Communist China and Hanoi that 10,000 wer killed in the Dong Hoi raid alone North Vietnamese casualties prob- ably have-been fairly light. The point is that similar re- prisal raids may be mounted against populous North Vietna mese cities and plants, including Hanoi itself. U.S. and Vietnamese leaders have refused to rule ou this possibility. iStudent Mar'cel To Ask Policy Shift Student for a Democratic So ciety is sponsoring a student pro test march to Washington or April 17 to call for an end ti VFW Hall 314 E. Liberty FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19 9-12 P.M. One Dollar Donation Stag or Drag Refreshments A RDEN MIESEN'S BAND Sponsored by Graduate Student Council This is the Last Mixer of the Semester '- groes can stand," instead ing them into the arm t Democrats." e d e t 1 - n 0 Attract Voters "If we believe in th right to vote we stand chance of attracting tl voters," Reynolds assert DANCE to WASHBOARD WI LIVE ENTERTAINA Tues. & Wed. 9 p.m at the SCHWABEN 215 S. Ashley Read DaIy Classifie d of dirv- m ee s of the ze simple 14 great hese new ed. "Once GERMAN-AMERICAN CUISINE WELCOMES THE STUDENT COMMUNITY LUE FOR LUNCH OR DINNER MENTFR IN45 TODAY'S SPECIAL INN r GERMAN STYLE ROLLED AND STUFFED ---- BEEF TENDERLOIN, SPATCEN, GREEN BEAN SALAD, ROLL & BUTTER .......$1.25 GERMAN MEAT PATTY ON RYE, KOSHER PICKLES ..35c 300 S. Thayer 665-4967 ~OPEN 7 to 7' id s 4 ,11y pa Hanoi, they would be followed by Unitel States intervention in Viet the Viet Cong. I(Nam. A L 'decorator furnished, fully carpeted . . mm ...... R 14 I PROFESSOR JASON H. TICKTON of Music Faculty, Wayne State University and1 Director of Music-Organist, Temple Beth El, Detroit GIVES AN ILLUSTRATED LECTURE onl "The Wonderful Heritage of Hebrew Music" Sunday, February 21, 8:00 P.M. ADMISSION IS FREE 1429 HILL STREET B'NAI BRITH HILLEL FOUNDATION I II i I THE UNIVERSITY ACTIVITY CENTER OF THE MICHIGAN UNION AND WOMEN'S LEAGUE presents N THE MIDST OF PLENTY A Symposium on American Poverty Symposium Introduction by PRESIDENT HARLAN HATCHER Keynote Address by MICHAEL HARRINGTON- "IN THE MIDST OF PLENTY" r o a R <, 1 ' i , , - I ?, E I I1 {::,,:. . .,: