WEDNESDAY, 24 FEBRUARY 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, 24 FEBRUARY 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Khanh Dispatched to UN, War Remains Under Minh SAIGON (P)-Switched by gov- ernment decree from military to diplomatic duty, Lt. Gen. Nguyen Khanh announced yesterday he is Gbecoming South Viet Nam's ob- server at theuUnited Nations. He said he will leave for New York in a few days. Chief of State Phan Khac Suu appointe4 the ex-leader a roving ambassador, apparently a genteel form of exile, in a sequel to the weekend coup and countercoup that cost Khanh his command of the U.S.-backed Vietnamese armed forces. It was through a similar ap- pointment that Khanh, got Lt. Gen. Duong Van Minh, a critic and potential rival, out of the country last fall. The man who overthrew President Ngo Dinh Diem .in 1963 was dispatched 'on a good will tour to Japan, Hawaii, and various Southeast Asian nations. Implications W h a t Khanh's appointment would mean to Ambassador Ngu- yen Phu Duc, Saigon's present ob- server at the United Nations, re-I mained to be seen. The mission in New York said it had received no official word on the situation. Neither North Viet Nam nor South Viet Nam is a member of the United Nations. The war went on under direc- tion of the new commander in chief, Maj. Gen. Tran Van Minh, a nonpolitical officer who is no. relation to Duong Van Minh. A U.S. enlisted man was killed and another American seriously wounded Monday night by a Viet Cong grenade tossed into a com- mand post 35 miles east of Saigon. American c9mbat deaths in Viet Nam rose to 276. Ambushes Warplanes and rangers joined in an effort to wreck Viet Cong ambuscades along a jungle road in Binh Dinh province, 300 miles north of Saigon. 'Seventy-one Vietnamese soldiers were missing after the Red guerrillas ambushed a detail of three platoons. "I am sad to be leaving my troops in this critical period," co- ' t. # : Sr Reports on 'Soundings' In Viet Nam LONDON (A)- Prime MinisterI Harold Wilson has confirmed that Britain is making confidential diplomatic soundings to determine whether the war in Viet Nam can be settled peacefully. It was the labor government's first public announcement on whatI already had been reported by dip- lomatic informants. Wilson cook the precaution of making it in a written answer to a question in the House of Commons. Wilson indicated that the con- tacts were proceeding at the top level-through himself and For- eign Secretary Michael Stewart. In Washington several senators and key House members summon- ed the nation yesterday to a tough, militant stand against insurgent Communism in Viet Nam and blasted recent calls for a negotiat- ed settlement., Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D-Conn) told the Senate in a long speech that a negotiated settlement would bring on a giganticbloodletting dwarfing the agony and suffering already experienced. A similar stand was expressed in the House with Rep. Clement J. Zablocki (D-Wis), chairman of a Far Eastern Affairs subcommit- tee, cautioning the United States has an obligation that can't be negotiated away. Negro Marchers Defy Polce, No Arrests SELMA OP)-About 200 young Negroes began a twilight march to the courthouse late yesterday but turned back about three blocks from their starting point after Wilson Baker, city public safety di- rector, stopped them. "It's only in the interest of your safety. I cannot permit you to march to the courthouse," Baker said. The marchers moved from -- the church in a Negro housing TENSION IN SELMA: Court Justices To Pay Tribute WASHINGTON () - Supreme Court justices will pay their last respects today for the retired jus- tice, Felix Frankfurter, dead of a heart attack at 82. Chief Justice Earl Warren an- nounced the private memorial service yesterday, and a court spokesman added there would be no public funeral and no word on other final rites. "It is with a sense of great loss both to the court and the nation that we pay our final respects to Justice Frankfurter on that occa- sion," the Chief Justice said. A court spokesman said in ac- cordance with the wishes of Frankfurter's family there would be no public service or announce- ments. President Lyndon B. Johnson praised Frankfurter as "one of the great figures in legal history," and Warren called him "a great man of the law." Egypt Sets Welcor For Visiting Ulbri -Associated Press LT. GEN. NGUYEN KHANH, the ousted South Viet Nam leader, is to rfpresent his country at the United Nations, his first mission being "to present the evidence of Viet Copg infiltration seized off the Communist ship on our coast last week." Khanh said. "But I shall continue tious man from taking over," he serving my country in other ways." said. No Bitterness Khanh displayed no bitterness. at the officers who ended his.13 months of supremacy, though he said his ouster was not carried out democratically. "They had their reasons for doing what they did," he said. "If they feel the war will get along better without me in charge, then I must go." A deputy premier in the Saigon government and a top figure in the Armed Forces Council, Thieu took issue with a statement in Washington by Sen. Mike Mans- field, the Senate Democratic lead- er, that jealous generals who en- gineer coups make it difficult for the United States to continue aid- ing South Viet Nam. 'United' "The military is sufficiently united now to prevent any ambi- Thieu and Khanh expressed con- flicting ideas on how the weekend events affected the war against the Viet Cong. Fear Reprisal in Bombing of Mosque Wiln Pled es Nuclear Aid To Asians Near Red China LONDON UM)-The Labor government pledged British nuclear weapons yesterday to support friendly non-nuclear nations like India living in "the new shadow" of Red China's atomic power. But Prime Minister Harold Wilson's four-month-old administra- tion, in an official outline of its defense program, ruled out virtually L all danger of "major nuclear war arising from a direct conflict" between the Soviet Union and World Ne wS''. Roundu By The Associated Press NEW DELHI-English will. con- tinue alongside Hindi as an offi-- cial language of India as long as non-Hindi speaking localities de- sire it, a conference of state chiefs agreed yesterday.' The chief ministers of the 16 states were summoned by /Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri af- ter widespread rioting in south India against imposition last Jan. 26 of Hindi as the official national language. * * * SANTIAGO, Chile - An earth- quake jolted four cities in mining areas late yesterday, cracking walls in many buildings and caus- ing some panic. There were no immediate re- ports of injuries. The quake centered in the area of Copiapo, 480 miles north of Santiago. * * * ATLANTA-The Grand Dragon of the United Klans of America Inc. could face the death penalty for allowing newsmen to witness an initiation ceremony, a riva Klan leader said yesterday. James R. Venable, leader' of the National Association of Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, said Grand Dragon Calvin Craig broke his sacred vows, when he allowe newsmen to witness an initiation ceremony last Thursday night. V-M~~~~ Cocr.ac Ognzto the West. A white paper (policy derision) on defense set before Parliament said on this point: "This (major nuclear war) can be almost entirely excluded as a result of mutual deterrence and deliberate aggression even on- a limited scale is unlikely in Europe. Evolution "An evolution in. both Soviet and Western thinking, brought about partly by increased under- standing of the consequences of nuclear warfare has therefore much reduced the likelihood of war between the Soviet and West- ern alliances." The British government, never- theless, warned that the allies must keep their guard up, saying risks remain of war arising from misunderstanding, miscalculation or accident. Instability, accom- panied by unrest and conflict, may well increase in Africa and else- where, the paper said. Then followed the government's offer to ease the fears of its friends living within the unsettled and uncertain area of Red Chinese influence. A high government source, elab- orating the thinking behind the government's concept,, said in it- self Red China's new-found nu- clear capacity does not profoundly change major tower relations. U.S. and British officials expressed the belief recently that the Chinese are preparing to set off their sec- I and atomic explosion. s d 1 >x:' t t NEW YORK R)-A Black Mus- lim headquarters mosque in Har- lem was wrecked by explosion and fire early yesterday 'in apparent reprisal for the assassination of rival Negro nationalist leader Mal- colm X. Elsewhere in the nation, Negro communities seethed with fear and unrest as the aftermath of the Sunday slaying of the well-known Negro nationalist. A Muslim meeting place in San Francisco was the target of a kerosene-fed blaze. Vengeance Party In Chicago, police confirmed a report that a six-man vengeance party of Malcolm's followers' had slipped out of New York. They were believed bent on revenge against Black Muslim leader Eli- jah Muhammed, Malcolm's former chieftain. Muhammed has denied any knowledge of the assassina- tion. Black Muslims set up a security guard to augment elaborate police measures protecting Muhammed from assassins. Special police squads also kept close watch on nearly a half dozen other south side locations to prevent any revenge bloodshed or reprisals against the sect's various property holdings in Chicago. In Seclusion Muhammed, who has not asked for police protection, remained in seclusion. With him were guards from the Fruit of Islam, the ka- rate-trained elite corps of the Ne- gro sect.' A former Black Muslim official in Boston, Aubrey Barnette, ex- pressed concern for the safety of heavyweight champion Cassius Clay. The fighter was recruited into the Muslim movement by Malcolm X, before the latter's ouster in 1963. Barnette declared: "I believe somebody important will have to pay when Malcolm X's followers or the others anger- ed by his murder reciprocatl against the Muslims. They will try to get back at the Muslims in some way to make a big impres- sion, with someone the equal of Malcolm in national stature. Clay has that stature." Maximum Retaliation Before the Harlem mosque fire, one of Malcolm's lieutenants, Leon X4 Ameer, was quoted as saying: "We are going to repay them for what they did to Malcolm. There will be maximum retalia- tion." The early morning fire all but destroyed the four-story Mosque No. 7 at 116th St. and Lenox -------- project toward a waiting force of policemen two blocks away. Baker had said he would arrest the marchers. It was not clear im- mediately whether he had placed them under arrest. Dangerous When the Negro teen-agers and some children poured out of the red brick Brown's AME Chapel, Baker halted them and said: "A march of any kind at this time of evening is a very dangerous thing." "To do this will be unlawful. You are in an unlawful assembly here. "I am asking you not to do this thing." One of the Negroes yelled: "What about it being unlawful to vote?" The crowd of marchers cheered and yelled. In Federal Court Baker replied that the voter registration issue was in the hands of the federal court and he had no control over it. Baker had said he would arrest the marchers if they persisted in their demonstration because, he said, any such march at this time of day would only invite racial violence. The Negroes, starting the dem- onstration in the absence of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., disre- garded Baker's urgent, impassion- ed appeal at first and continued walking from a church two by two. About three blocks away, the veteran police officer stopped the procession. Dispersed Some 75 of the demonstrators dispersed to the opposite side of the street and fled. When officers tried to stop them, Baker told police to let them go. The remaining Negroes drop- ped to their knees on the side- walk and sang "We Shall Over- come," one of their "freedom songs." Their eader, John Lewis, in- toned a prayer. He is chairman of the Student Nonviolent Co- ordinating Committee. Once more Baker asked the Negroes to return to the church. This time they turned around and left. Threats Heavy police security continued for King following reports of threats against his life. One of his closest associates, Bernard Lee, said that he received information from very reliable sources. that two white men had plotted to assassinate King last week in nearby Marion. Baker said that he had checked out at least one report and found nothing concrete. Federal agents who constantly follow King de- clined comment. -Associated Press IN THE WAKE OF THREATS against the Black Muslims by followers of Malcolm X, assassinated rival leader, this fire swept through a Muslim Mosque in, the Harlem section of New York early Monday. Ave. It was Malcolm's headquar- ters when he reigned in Harlem as Muhammed's fiery, vitriolic chief aide in the Muslim move- mnent. Link with Campaign Preceded by an explosion at 2:15 a.m., the fire came 35 hours after Malcolm was ,hot and killed amid 500 of his followers at a rally in the Audubon Ballroom in Wash- ington Heights. Police sought a link between the assassination and Malcolm's anti-,Vuslim cam- paign. Funeral services for the slain nationalist leader were scheduled for Saturday. Overheard Threat Funeral director James E. Hal' said a man he knows telephoned him shortly after noon and told of overhearing a threat to throw a bomb into the funeral home. He would not identify the caller to newsmen. A similar but anony- mous call came later from a wom- an. CAIRO (P) - Communist East German flags were hoisted over Cairo yesterday as this center of the Arab world prepared to give East German President Walter Ulbricht a full dress welcome to- day. Uibricht's one-week visit could lead to a break in diplomatic re- lations between West Germany and the United Arab Republic, and possibly the rest of the Arab world. President Gamal Abdel Nasser and most of his top ministers will personally meet Ulbricht at the Cairo railroad station, where Ul- bricht will arrive by special train from Alexandria at 12:30 p.m. He is sailing to Alexandria by ship. Decked Out The station was decorated with bunting and East German and Egyption flags. Ulbricht will be greeted with the 21-gun salute reserved for heads of state. He will review an honor guard and drive at Nasser's side through Cairo's teeming streets to Kubbeh Palace, Nasser's top official guest house. Ulbricht's visit includes three formal conferences with Nasser, two official banquets, speeches and trips to the Aswan dam, Luxor, Liberation Province and the She- bin El Kom textiles center built by the East Germans. Ulbrecht Triumph The visit is regarded as a per- sonal triumph' for Ulbricht, who has never paid a state visit to a non-Communist country before. It is considered a diplomatic blow to Bonn and its doctrine barring relations with governments that recognize E st Germany. Western diplomats here fear they visit could provide an edge for East Germany in the rest of the Arab world. Representatives of Arab states declared their solidar- ity behind the U.A.R.-and against the West-in an official statement Monday. In a widely broadcast radio in- terview, Ulbricht warned the Arab world it would be directly threat- ened if Western powers equipped West Germany with atomic weap- ons. 'Not Hesitate' He said West Germany would not hesitate to provide Israel with these" weapons. Al Ahram glowingly described Ulbricht as "a leader opposing imperialism and supporting all liberation movements, whose gov- ernment gives all possible help to, nationalist governments in Africa and Asia enabling them to eradi- cate imperialism.' Ulbricht's visit has provoked the bitterest recriminations be- Labor Leaders Denounce AMA MIAMI BEACH 0P)-AFL-CIO leaders accused the American Medical Association (AMA) yes- terday of trying to kill President Lyndon B. Johnson's medical care legislation through a ruthless c a m p a i g n of "cynical" and "phony'' promises. The AFL-CIO executive called on all its affiliated unions,. em- bracing some 12 million members, to fight AMA efforts to substitute its own proposal for the admin- istration's legislation. The council said the AMA's so- called "elder care" bill would be so expensive that Congress and state legislatures would never be able to finance it. "The American Medical Associa- tion would have Congress enact legislation consisting only of empty promises," the council said. In another development, AFL- CIO President George Meany de- nied he was interfering with the United Steelworkers Union by call- ing for an extension of steel in- dustry contracts. i 'A 'Dsigned for student privacy ufl IVERS IIY TOWE RS " Now renting for Aug. '65 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. & FOREST AVE. PHONE: 761-268O L SGC Exchange $fore Comnmiffee on Planning & Development Interested persons contact Gary Cunningham or Sherry Miller 663-0853 by Feb. 26 Gold Bars and Braid presents WORLDWIDE HOLIDAY Military Ball *1I 9-12 P.M. Music by .9'I February 26, 1965, The Iguanas Tickets available at North Hall 2nd floor, Michigan League The Symphony of Swing * Formal Three Dollars per Couple * 1 'I Pr ._.. THE UNIVERSITY ACTIVITY CENTER OF THE MICHIGAN UNION AND WOMEN'S LEAGUE presents IN THE MIDST OF PLENTY A Symposium on ,American Poverty DR. VERNON ALDEN on U-M Concert Danice Organisation 15th ANNUAL E - Ry T- TODAY ONLY, DR. EDLER G. HAWKINS "SOME NEXT STEPS IN RELIGION AND RACE" 4:10 p.m., Angell Hall, Aud.'A' fc a r A -:n. : h C o.-_ madras fluting "THE WAR ON POVERTY" * k#g LADYBUG's most elegant idea**. kept LADYBUG-simple by blue cotton chambray denim in a quick fluid curve. The dress is classicism itself, but at the cuffs and around the low neck 'there's wonderful deep fluting of India madras... great theatre. 5 to 15. The Rev. Dr. Edler G. Hawk- ins is nresentlv Moderator of $1800 11 S11Il II I I I' I m . IIIII