THEGMICHIGAN DAILY rage 1'000 Tanaka offers Thais new This Weekend loan, demonstrations stop AP Photo A death in the family A Cambodian cries as he holds his daughter, killed yesterday when Khmer Rouge insurgents shelled Prek Phnau, eight miles north of Pnom Penh. Fighting has continued in this area for several days. Gand ury probes Kent State CLEVELAND, Ohio (P)-A fed- eral grand jury probing the 1970 Kent State University shootings questioned yesterday the man in charge of the campus at the start of demonstrations that led to the shootings. The panel also turned its atten- tion to the students wounded in the May 4, 1970 clash between student demonstrators and the Ohio National Guard in which four students were killed. At least three of the nine wounded were called to testify. DR. ROBERT MATSON, who was in charge of Kent State when student protests against U.S. in- volvement in Cambodiabegan several days before the violent confrontation, spent about two hours before the panel Thursday afternoon. He said he answered all the jurors' questions, but he declined to discuss them in detail, saying his attorney had advised against it. "Kent State is a topic of great sadness to me, and I'm never happy to have to resurrect that sadness," he added, "but If I can serve the people by serving the grand jury, I'll be happy to do so." Matson was vice president of student affairs at the time of the demonstrations and was standing in for the president of the univer- sity, who was at an educators' conference. MATSON SAID he hopes the grand jury "can come out with a complete story" from its investi- gation. "There have been too many bits and pieces over the period of years," he said. "I. don't think any one person that was there has the complete story." Matson was one of those who had attended a meeting at which former Ohio governor James Rhodes allegedly gave orders for the National Guard to keep the university open despite the dem- onstrations. Among those wounded who said they were called to testify yes- terday were John R. Cleary, 22, of Scotia, N.Y., Donald S. Mac- Kenzie, and Alan Canfora. All said they were sent away without a jury appearance and told to return Friday. Cleary, now a Kent State senior in architecture, was wounded twice in the chest, and spent 2 / weeks recuperating in a nearby Ravenna hospital. He said Thurs- day he was headedfor' class when he stopped about 110 feet from the National Guardsmen to watch the demonstration. HE SAID he understood the jury was trying to determine the relative positions of the students and the troops when the gunfire erupted. Asked whether he felt the Guardsmen were in danger, a matter other witnesses have said they were questioned about by the jury. Cleary said he saw no such danger. MacKenzie said he was about 730 feet from the troops and was wounded while running away from the flare-up. Canfora, who was wounded in the right wrist, said he was about 220 feet away at the time. Dr. Robert White, Kent State's president at the time of the demonstrations, flew back from the educators' conference May 3, 1970, the day after a campus building was burned during a nighttime demonstration. White testified Wednesday. BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Jap- anese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka offered Thailand easier loan terms yesterday but his ef- forts to smooth anti-Japanese feeling were only partly succe.s- ful. Sombat Thamrongtanyavoig, secretary-general of the 400,000 member National Student Center, said it is now up to the Thai government to prevent Japanese domination of the Thai economy He said if the government fails, "then we will have to do it our own way. We might act against every Japanese in Thai- land. So far we have aimed our demonstrations against officials, against the Japanese Embassy and the Japanese Trade Center. The next act might be against individual Japanese." THE UNITED STATES also was the target of a hostile demon- stration Wednesday, but it did not continue yesterday. More than 4,000 students, professors and others massed outside the U.S. Embassy for two hours, de- manding the expulsion of Ambas- sador William Kintner and the Central Intelligence Agency. The demonstration was sparked by the revelation last weekend that an American CIA agent had "sentPremier Sanya a fake letter purporting to be from a Com- munist insurgent leader offering a cease-fire in exchange for au- tonomy for rebellious areas in northeast Thailand. Kintner, whoj was attached to the CIA in Wash- ington in 1950-52, said the agent had been sent out of Thailand and disciplined. A student-professor group, Pe- ple for Democracy, continued its demand that the Thai govern- ment expel the American CIA from Thailand and Sanya said he would consider the request. The group also sent a tele- itain into sruption raise their offer above the con- troversial stage three limit. GORMLEY BRUSHED aside ar- guments that his union was be- ing swayed by leftwingers anxious to damage the government. "It Is our job to get the best pos- sible wages for miners, whatever the political climateof t h i s country," Gormley said. Workers throughout Britain are huddling in extra pullovers and woolly underwear because of the emergency restrictions on heat- ing, but strippers in London's Soho clubland have to carry on naked - and they don't like it. With street lights dimmed and neon signs switched off, Soho is not its bright, bustling self these days, but in the clubs and top- less bars it's "business as usual." Stripper Candice Kelly of theI Nell Gwynne Club, said: "There are 25 girls here and I don't thinkk one of us has escaped the flu or a bad cold. Some of us are even getting a twinge of rheuma- tism." gram in English addressed to "The Speaker of the U.S. Sen- ate" demanding the removal of ambassador William Kintnar "and immediate cessation rf CIA activities and the U.S. military presence in our country." KINTNER had to cancel a scheduled meeting with students at the northern Chiang M a i University after two days of de- monstrations. The ambassador is on a three-day orientation tour of the far north of Thailand. A joint communique issued af- ter a meeting between Tanaka and Thai Premier Sanya Tham- masak said the leaders agreed to soften the terms of yen loans to Thailand but no figures were given. Tanaka noted that interest rates were lowered half a per cent to 2.5 per cent in Novem- ber. Student leaders who talked with Tanaka said they were not satis- fied with his answers to their de- mands that Japan take steps to reduce a trade imbalance of nearly $300 million a year and reform its aid and inverment practices in Thailand. TANAKA said Thailand could cut its Japanese trade deficit nearly in half by increasing pro- duction of rice, corn and sugar for export to Japan. l "I hope the Thai people will come to understand that the Japanese are very hard-working but they also can be very n i c e fellows . . . and willing to cor- rect our mistakes when we make mistakes," Tanaka said. Though there were no anti- Japanese demonstrations sucn as Wednesday's, signs reading "Down with Japanese economic imperialism" and "Jap get out" were still posted around Bang- kok as Tanaka wound up the se- coed day of his visit with a re- ception for the local JapaneseE community. Tanaka, his daughter Mrs. Ma- kiko Tanaka and an entourage of 29 depart today for Singapore. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, Number 84 Friday, January 11, 1974 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone ,764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session publishea Tuesday' through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and! Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail 'other states and foreign). Barbara Streisand Ryan O'Neil in Peter Bogdanovich's screwball comedy What's Up, Doc? 7:00 FRIDAY 8:40 SATURDAY 10:20 Modern Languages Auditorium -COMING-in January- STEVE McQUEEN ALI McGRAW FRI., SAT., Jan. 18-19 1 II sThree -;. ISRAELI DANCING every SUNDAY at 12:30 p.m. with ZIPORAH TROPE H I LLEL, 1429 Hill St. in Sam Peckinpah's film The Getaway -AND- GODARD Friday, Jan. 25 WEEKEND and the Rolling Stones in Saturday, Jan. 26 Jane Fonda Yves Montond Tout Va Bien and Tom Hayden, Rip Tom 1pm. with the Jefferson Airplane the weekend film festival friends of newsreel 769-7353 I al, in $1.25 cont. Railroad strike plunees Bri crisis as unions threaten di LONDON - (Reuter) - Brit- ish industry plunged still fur- ther into crisis yesterday with spreading rail stoppages and threats of'a new disruption from another key group of unions. Within hours London became almostberefit of trains. strand- ing hundreds of thousands :)f commuters. Servicetin other areas was heavily cut. As the labor situation worsen- ed, prime minister Heath called trade union workers to a surprise- talk last night in an attempt to discuss compromise proposals. THE LATEST challenge to the government's anti-inflation pro- gram came from 21 unions in the confederation of shipbuilding and engineering unions. Its leaders decided to order a ban on overtime work as soon as possible to back up the unions' wage demands, which are about four times higher than the of- ficially permitted level. Such a ban would spread dis- ruption through the nation's shin- yards and factories, most of which are already on short-time because of the fuel shortage which has been worsened by a similar overtime ban imposed by coal miners. THE CONFEDERATION'S de- mand also appeared to spell doom for a peace move made Wed- nesday night by Len Murray, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress (T.U.C.), which embraces some 10 million Brit- ish workers. He suggested the government should make a special exception in the case of the miners and relax the pay curbs prescribed in the current "stage three"' of the anti-inflation code.' In return, Murray said, t h e T.U.C. would seek to dissuade other unions from using the min- ers' example as an argument to advance their own demands. The proposal was promptly re- jected by Chancellor of the Ex- chequer Anthony Barber. The government has so far insisted that any special treatment for miners would bring a disastrous , flood or other pay demands. However, the government came, under pressure Thursday to give Murray's idea a second thought. BUT THE demands from the shipbuilding confederation seem- ed to dash these hopes. Hugh Scanlon, whose engineering un- ion is the second biggest in Brit- ain, said the demand would be pressed no matter how the min- ers fared. Another militant union chief, Clive Jenkins, said his White Collar Workers Union would not consider itself in any way bound by a special deal for the miners. Miners leaders met yesterd-iy to discuss Wednesday's fruitless talks with employment secretary William Whitelaw. Union Presi- dent Joe Gormley said I a t e r it had been decided to engage in no more discussions unless the state-run mines were prepared to IBOOK SALEI 40 ALL PAPERBACKS REDUCED 10-50% ALL CLOTH BOOKS REDUCED 20-50% EVERY BOOK IN THE STORE ON SALE LIMITED TIME ONLY ALL SALES FINAL OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY (13 volumes) was 300.00 now 239.95 DALI COOKBOOK.......................was 50.00 now 25.00 NICKEL MOUNTAIN (John Gardner's newest novel) ..... . ......was 6.95 now 4.95 VICTOR VASARELY-PLANETARY FOLKLORE was 15.00 now 10.50 THE BARN ............................ was 25.00 now 20.00 PLAIN SPEAKING (Harry Truman and Merle Miller) ..........was 8.95 now 7.16 THOUSANDS OF OTHER BARGAINS NO REMAINDERS NO PUBLISHERS' OVERSTOCK Centicore Bookshops 336 MYNARD only ,ems , ,, 0. 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