PAGE THREIR TUESDAY.-OCTOBER 27,1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY T U E S U A ~ O C T B E R 2 , 1 9 6 4T H E|MC|||A||AI L Power S"'4hifts in " LocalIssuesWORLD NEWS ROUNDUP: Saigon oca ssues Still Cripple Probe Viet Bc I- I order Incidents By The Associated Press SAIGON-The South Vietna- mese government began to change hands according to plan yester- y day, but in low gear. The mili- tary regime of Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh resigned to make way for a new civilian regime, but then agreed to stay in office a few more days as a caretaker. The new chief of state, Phan Khac Suu, asked the premier and h his cabinet to carry on until a new premier and other ministers are ready to take over. Suu, an ailing survivor of revo-. lutionary plotting against the late \ Ngo Dinh Diem's regime, will name the new premier. Speculation cen- tered around a former mayor of Saigon, Tran Van Huong. The pre- mier in turn, will appoint a cab- MAJ. GEN. NGUYEN KHANH met, from office yesterday, will remai The appointments are subject head of a caretaker governmen to approval by the 17-man high national council, a supervising agency and embryo legislature of AFTER RIOTING: which Suu is the chairman. Appointed The High National Council was Sudan Pres appointed by Khanh two months ago after rioting shook Saigon.1 The duty of the council, a coali- A l/, tion body of Catholic, Buddhist and student elements, was to name a civilian government to takek CAIRO (A.-Sudan's President over from Khanh's government. preme Military Council and cabinet At the time he appointed the his hands, the Sudanese radio at council, Khanh promised to step ported. down as soon as a new govern- The action followed five daysc ment was named. reported dead and 122 injured Uni The resignation of Khanh's gov- the U.S. embassy and attempted to b erment yesterday, marking the; The trouble apparently semma fifth governmental change in Vietsthetngblappart scum Nam in the last year, was sub- student meeting last week for discu mitted by Khanh and Maj. Gen. Sudan, where an anti-Moslem re- Duong Van Minh. The third mem- volt smoulders among African ber was Lt. Gen. Tran Thien tribesmen. The university was shut Khiem, who was dispatched abroad down Thursday and some profes- on a diplomatic mission last month sors resigned in protest. for political reasons. Minh was the Reports have indicated that dis- titular chief of state in the mil- turbances are continuing in Khar- tary government, but Khanh held toum and also going on in other most of the power. cities such as Port Sudan on the The US. is in favor of the switch from a military regime. TheRe Sea coast. However, a West- sern diplomat who asked to remain U.S. embassy described the devel- anonymous said Khartoum, Om- opments as "another positive ste durman and North Khartoum, toward the objective of estaub- three centers of the rioting, were lishing an effective civilian gov- quiet yesterday. Some shops were erment" Mil" Chief1reopening and government work- It will b up to he civilian ers were back on the job, he said. leaders to name a military chief Shops owned by foreigners also under their government. But if were attacked. No Americans were the military does not agree to the among the casualties. choice, observers say trouble can Communist elements have had be expected in Saigon. some influence in the rioting, but The head of the military will are not the prime reasons behind rein much the power in South it. A "National Democratic Front" Viet Na because of his cam- has been formed by banned oppo-I mand of the army. stion parties, professional people Informed sources said the out- and the Moslem brotherhood. Its going Premier Khanh won over- purpose apparently is to publicize whelming support from brother alleged government injustices and officers Sunday in his bid to be- organize opposition. come commander-in-chief. ., , , These informants said 39 offi- cers met with Khanh at Cap St. Jacques, a seaside resort and re- b gional military headquarters, and 31 voter for Khanh. The remaind- BEAUTY SALON , er were scattered among Minh and BS two generals whom Khanh put 609 S. FOREST under area arrest when he seized Col NO 8-8878 power from Minh Jan. 30. These were Maj. Gen. Tran Van Doan Evenings by Appointment and Maj. Gen. TonlThat Dinh.,p , a, i(Tvi rtanrs -Associated Press center), who officially resigned in in office for a short time as t. DETROIT (,P)-General Motors Corp.'s hourly rated employes be- gan trickling back to work yester- day after voting Sunday to end their 31-day walkout, but unset- tled local-level grievances still crippled the auto industry giant. Some workers were on the job in the Pontiac division at Pontiac, Mich., and the Buick division at Flint. But at least 28 bargaining units remained idle, because of un- resolved disputes, including 15 of GM's 23 assembly plants. A company spokesman said it could not be determined imme- diately how many workers were ordered to report yesterday, since the decisions to call maintenance and make-ready crews were taken by the individual divisions and plants. The strike, which continued de- spite a national agreement reach- ed Oct. 5, ended Sunday when workers gave what the United Auto Workers union termed "over- whelming approval" to the pact. Among the deadlocked plants was the vital Hydra-Matic divi- sion in Willow Run, where auto- matic transmissions for all GM cars are built. Disputes remained unsettled at six Buick-Oldsmobile-Pontiac as- sernbly division plants, eight Fish- er Body division sites, 12 Chev- rolet Division units and the Del- co-Remy plant at Anderson, Ind., in addition to the Hydra-Matic plant. -A Sy The Associated Press DETROIT-Detroit's newspaper ;said the pressmen object to a WASHINGTON -- A spokesman strike dragged through its 105th publishers' proposal that the un- said yesterday the State Depart- day yesterday. Striking Local 13 of ion abstain from filing charges ment is trying to pin down the the Printing Pressmen's union against four unidentified foremen facts of several incidents which Sunday turned down-by an an- accused by pressmen of crossing involved firing and fatalities along nounced 230-17 vote-a new pub- picket lines. The foremen are un- South Viet Nam's border with lishers' proposal endorsed by Pres- ion members. neutralist Cambodia. Press Officer ident Lyndon B. Johnson. Robert J, McCloskey said that at NEW YORK-Ford Motor Co. the moment the government here The rejection dashed new hopes said yesterday it set all time highs tor a possible uick o peace in a is not able to "give a complete! assessment of the situation." At least four incidents haver occurred along the Viet Nam- Cambodian border in recent weeks. They have involved anti-aircraft fire, strafings, and guerrilla fights, At least one U.S. officer has been killed in the incidents. -i,. a Z v oiu-- * u Neal ill Uin worldwide production, sales and labor dispute which has kept De- profits in the nine months ended troit's two daily newspapers from Sept. 30. the reading public in a metropoli- Henry Ford II, chairman, and tan area of 3.7 million popula- Arjay R. Miller, president, said Stion. extra costs tied in with bringing Freeman Frazee, Local 13 presi- out 1965 models kept July-Sep- dent, announced the union's vote tember profits from setting any at a news conference. record. Still, they were $79.7 mil- Frazee indicated a new issue had lion, up 14 per cent from the $69.7 been injected in the strike. Hej million a year earlier. FLUFFY Y-N ECKS Since so many of you hove been storming our little store with big requests for V-neck sweaters, we thought that you would be pleased by this newly arrived outf it. iden t Takes iient Powers Ibrahim Abboud dissolved the Su- t yesterday and took all powers in Omdurman, near Khartoum, re- of riots that left up to 10 persons versity students stoned windows of burn it over the weekend. ed from official suppression of a ssion of problems of the Southern ( skx 'r INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION CHINESE STUDENTS ASSOCIATION LEAGUE, UNION p r e s e n t: it 1(ou 4etaee: CHINA *Of Its Cultural Character? Discussion: MISS NORMA DIAMOND Wed., Oct. 28 7:30 p.m. Multi-Purpose Room-UGLI *Of Its Role In Today's World? Discussion: DR. WILLIAM GABLE Thurs., Oct. 29 7:30 p.m. Multi-Purpose Room-UGLI *Of Its People On Campus? Oct. 30 7:00 p.m. PARTY-INTERNATIONAL CENTER ALL ARE WELCOME II I I =r V. UNION-LEAGUE Presents "DR. JEKYL & MR. 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