Page 2-Thursday, December 6, 1979-The Michigan Daily I Id No W thru December16 6 THAILAND WANTS REFUGEES TO RELOCATE Cambodian relief aid held back ~~Compee jreu' 0tpodeirOsa a nAA ; NAM - ----- --- - -- - -- - 11 From AP and Reuter NON MARK MOON, Thailand (AP)- The Thai military, in what one officer described as "subtle" pressure, kept food and water shipments from reaching a huge enclave of displaced Cambodians for a fourth straight day yesterday, and thousands began to move farther into Thailand. U.S. officials said yesterday the number of Cambodian refugees bun- ched along the Thai border was swelling toward the one million mark and there are fears Vietnamese troops might stampede all of them into Thailand. "THERE'S A steady stream of humanity toward the concentrations on the border," said Burton Levin, deputy chief of the U.S. Embassy in Bangkok, at a Congressional hearing. "The reason is very simple. The food (sent to Cambodia by international relief agencies) is not getting to the people in Cambodia. So they are moving to where the food is." Levin said officials estimate 3,000 to 5,000 new refugees are arriving daily at the border camps, where steady sup- plies of food and medicines are arriving by truck. "PEOPLE ARE now talking, about as many as one million crowding into that area," he said. Levin estimated there were up to 600,000 refugees massed along'the bor- der, with Thailand unable to absorb Israel frees Palestinian mayor after 25 days ,them-about 500,000 politically neutral people concentrated north of the town of Aranyaprathet, and 50,000 to 100,000 supporters of the ousted Pol Pot gover- nment to the south. THE GOVERNMENT last Sunday began barring relief supplies from the area in an effort to force some 200,000 of the Cambodians to move to the Khao I Dang camp, seven miles from the Cambodian border and farther from potential fighting zones. Leaders of the Free Khmer anti- communist guerrillas who control Non Mark Moon are resisting the move. The government said it also acted because Free Khmer guerrillas were diverting supplies for their own use. BORDER AUTHORITIES said 4,000 refugees had moved since Sunday, but camp leaders said 12 persons had died because no doctors were allowed in to treat them. Relief officials said they were trying to persuade the Thai government to lift the blockade. Prince Norodom Soriavong, leader of an estimated 250,000 of the camp residents, denied he was preventing the throngs from leaving this site, about 150f miles east of Bangkok. SORIAVONG, WHO claims to be a cousin of Cambodia's former head of state, Prince Norodom Sihanouk, said he has cabled the prince to lead his people, including 6,000 armed guerrillas, in their struggle against the Vietnamese troops who occupy Cam- bodia and the regime they have established.' Guerrillas of ousted Communist Premier Poi Pot also are fighting the new Phnom Penh government. A military source at the border said the government would continue the suspension of supplies for an indefinite period because it was the "most subtle" way to force the Cambodians into moving into safer areas inside Thailand, and to ensure that relief sup- plies will be distributed to the civilians. THOMAS BARNES, director of the State Department's Cambodia Working Group, testified that international relief supplies still were not being effectively distributed inside Cambodia despite the Phnom Penh government's statements to the contrary. He said international relief officials had confirmed that food and medical supplies were piling up at Cambodian ports, although he could supply no, figures on the reported backlog. Asked about allegations the Cam- bodian government was deliberately following a starvation policy, at Viet- namese instigation, Barnes replied, "I'm not going to say this is a policy of genocide." But he added: "We do know there are specific instances where rice fields have ben mined, where people have been shot for going into the fields to gather harvests." Richard Walden, head of a private U.S. famine relief effort that delivered 40 tons of supplies to Phnom Penh last month, said he had seen no evidence the Cambodians were deliberately holding. up aid distribution. - Sirloin Strip Steak Dinner * All-You-Can-Eat ALL Salad Bar Choieof e any Dessert " Choice of any Beverage (except milk) F OR ONLY 00 NMIlCUT OUT THIS COUPON CUT OUT THIS COUPON u t up to 12 "COMPLETE TREAT" $3.99 "COMPLETE TREAT" $3.99 " Sirloin Strip Steak Dinner - Sirloin Strip Steak Dinner - All-You-Can-Eat Salad Bar - All-You-Can-Eat Salad Bar Choice of any Dessert - * Choice of any Dessert Choice of any Beverage (except milk) -"Choice of any Beverage (except milk) Limit one coupon per customer per visit. Not Limit one coupon per customer per visit Not * redeemable for cash. Cannot be used in redeemable for cash. Cannot be used in combination with other discounts. Void where combination with other discounts Void where * prohibited. Applicable taxes not included. * prohibited Applicable taxes not included U tarticipating SteakhousesAt Participating Steakhouses * Offer good Nov. 30 U Offer good Nov. 30 t thru Dec.16,1979 thru Dec. 16,1979 "U COUPON COUPON Give Ponderosa Gift Certificates 3354 East Washtenaw Ave. -(Across from Arborlond Shopping Center) S On West Stadium Blvd. (*ust North of Intersection -of Stadium and Liberty) (Continued from Page 1) won in its long battles against oc- cupation for the achievement of its legitimate rights to self-determination and statehood." Fears of a widespread eruption of West Bank violence were behind inter- national appeals to Israel. The United States and Egypt had urged the depor- tation be rescinded, and both the U.N. Security Council and General Assembly passed resolutions supporting Shakaa. The decision eased nearly a month of tension in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, where 29 mayors and many town council members resigned in protest and general strikes were held. BOTH THE UNITED States and Egypt on Wednesday called the rever- sal a "positive step" that could give new impetus to the talks on Palestinians' autonomy in the West Bank and Gaza and bring stability to the occupied region. While no official charges were publicly brought against Shakaa, leaks from government officials portrayed the mayor as a leader of organized resistance to Israeli rule. The original plan was to deport him to an unspecified Arab nation. Shakaa had said that if deported he wanted to go to Jordan. Israel's West Bank military gover- nor, Brig. Gen. Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, summoned reporters to his headquar- ters and said he had decided, after con-' sulting with Defense Minister Ezer Weizman, to reverse the deportation order. BEN-ELIEZER SAID a military ap- peals board still felt the expulsion order had been "substantiated" by evidence heard in secret, but he had considered "the welfare of the city of Nablus and of Shakaa's family." The general said he warned Shakaa to confine himself strictly to municipal affairs. After arriving here, Shakaa told his supporters: "All the words attributed to me were twisted and distorted, and all the measures taken against me were unjust.. . I object to violence on the Israeli or Palestinian side. "AS LONG AS there is an occupation you can expect violence. Objectively, all circumstances on the West Bank may encourage violence." Smokers insurrection' forces airline pilot to mak NEW YORK (AP) - It was a variation on "Three Little Pigs" at 15,000 feet. When the non-smoker huffed and the smokers puffed, the pilot brought their plane down. Capt. Larry Kinsey was piloting Eastern Flight 1410 yesterday mor- ning when "an insurrection" in- volving smokers and non-smokers led him to land the Washington-to- New York 8 a.m. shuttle at Baltimore-Washington International Airport in Linthicum, Md. SOME OF THE 177 passengers canceled out in Maryland, but the rest were put aboard a different plane with a new crew, arriving at LaGuardia Airport nearly three hours late. The problem: A non-smoker seated in the smoking section of the filled Boeing 727 demanded his area be made non-smoking. When it was, the adjacent passengers - who thought they were still in a smoking area - lit up. At that point, just about everyone got fired up. EASTERN spokesman Gil Perlroth said the non-smoker was first offered a seat on the next flight. When he turned down that offer, and a call for a volunteer to change seats went unanswered, the non-smoking section was expanded. The Civil Aeronautics Board says airlines must provide enough seats in a non- smoking section to accommodate all non-smokers. Then, Perlroth added, the neigh- boring passengers refused to obey the pilot's order to stop smoking. "I'll show you how it's done," a senior flight attendant quoted the non-smoker, identified as Richard Lent, a Washington, D.C., tax lawyer, as saying to his companions just before the ruckus started. IN A TELEPHONE interview, Lent denied making the comment, saying all he "wanted was a non- smoking seat. Once I got that, I was out of it. The rest of what happened didn't involve me." He also denied having demanded that smokers near him stop, adding that he had not threatened legal ac- tion. He acknowledged threatening to complain to the CAB. "It was silly and childish," said Emory Kristof, a passenger from Washington. "I haven't seen a landing display like this since kindergarten. We had to land the plane and sort out everybody's dollies and metal toys." Kristof quoted the pilot as saying if the situation remained unstable, he would land the plane at the nearest airport. Passenger Harry Fisdell, executive vice president of the New York Newspaper Guild, said the dispute began when Lent demanded that everyone near him stop smoking. THEN, FISDELL said, "The pilot came on and said: "Those in the smoking section, smoke.' Fisdell said he and others con- tinued to smoke while Lent con- tinued to "raise hell." Fisdell said Kinsey then announ- ced: " 'I'm telling you people, this insurrection has to stop, or I'm going to land the plane.' " Two minutes later, the pilot comes over again and says, 'Well, the in- surrection hasn't stopped. I'm lan- ding.' "And he did. The airline said it had no plans to press charges against any of the quarreling passengers. Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan r------------ WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------. * 1 1 1 Ii ii - I - -------CLIP AND MAIL TODAY!------.--I USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST Words 1 2 3 4 5 add. 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 5.80 7.00 1.00 Please indicate 1521 2.55 5.10 6.90 8.70 10.50 1.50 where thisad is to run: 22-28 3.40 6.80 9.20 11.60 14.00 2.00 forren for sale 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 helpwanted helpwatesd 36-42 5.10 10.20 13.80 17.40 21.00 3.00 roommates personal 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50 etc. Seven words per line. Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words-This includes telephone numbers. A a a. I..,..L rL,...L .. Clinfaluids. The Michian Dahlv . m I CONTACT LENSES soft and hard* contact lenses $210.00 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, follow-up visits, starter kits, and 6 month checkup. * inciudes a second pair of hard lenses Dr. Paul C. Uslan, Optometrist 545 Church Street 769-1222 by appointment __________________ Daily Official Bulletin Thursday, December 6. 1979 Daily Calendar Center for Japanese Studies: Luiz Gomez/T. Grif- fith Foulk, "How American Are Zen Centers in America?", noon; Royal] Tyler. "The Forked Staff of the Mountain God: Biopolr Field Displays in the Japanese Imagination," Lane Commons, 4 p.m. Career Planning and Placement: Gerald Lundy, "Career Seminars for Graduate Students in the Humanities Who Are Interested in Non-Academic Alternatives," E. Conf., Rackham, 3 p.m. Guild House: Poetry readings, Toledo Poets, Joel Lipman, Nick Muska, Bob Phillips, 802 Monroe, 7:30 p.m._ Chemistry: Dimitri N. Coucouvanis, U-Iowa, "Simple Metal Mercaptide Complexes: Structural Properties and Their Use in the Synthesis of Metalloprotein Active Site Analogues," 1200 Chem.,.8 p.m. STAR BAR 109 N. 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