Friday, July 30, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Bruce leaves Viet talks; " Cease-fire plan rejected Suggests metric switch Secretary of Commerce Maurice Stans briefs newsmen yesterday on his department's proposal that the nation switch to the metric system of measurement within 10 years. Dr. Lewin Brans- comb, director of the National Bureau of Standards is at right. LN.Y. TIMES REPORT: U.S. suspends spy P P0 missions over China NEW YORK (A) - Administration officials says the United States has suspended flights of all manned and unmanned reconnaissance planes over the People's Republic of China to avoid any incident that might interfere with President Nixon's planned visit to Peking, The New York Times reported today. Reconnaissance satellites, considered relatively unprovocative because they operate at altitudes of about 100 miles, will continue missions over China, the Times said. The White House declined comment on the Times' story. Ronald PARIS () - Ambassador David Bruce ended his term as U.S. negotiator at the Vietnam peace talks with a plea for immediate negotia- tions on an internationally controlled cease - fire throughout Indochina. North Vietnam and the Viet Cong instantly rejected the pro- posal, as they have rejected all similar American proposals over the past two years. Viet Cong Foreign Minister Nguyen Thi Binh called it "an arrogant maneuver to legalize the American military occupa- tion of South Vietnam." Bruce, 73, is retiring after a year at the head of the U.S. dele- gation. He is to be replaced in late August by William Porter, U.S. ambassador to South Korea. Until Porter gets to Paris, the U.S. peace delegation will be headed by Philip Habib, who then will replace Porter in Seoul. Appearing for the last time, at the 123rd weekly session, Bruce wished the delegations success in their search for a peaceful settlement. The Communist delegations re- plied that President Nixon alone is responsible for the continuing deadlock, because of his refusal to set a date for total and uncon- ditional withdrawal of American forces. "Mr. Bruce not only executed the directives of President Nixon, he was an advocate of Nixon's policies," said Hanoi spokesman Nguyen Thanh Le. Le went on to accuse Bruce of "real responsibility" for his pro- fessed inability to understand the Viet Cong seven-point peace plan submitted on July 1. Bruce has asked for clarification of the plan during the past three ses- sions of the talks, but received no reply. As Bruce left the conference room for the last time, he nodded to the Communist negotiators in a farewell gesture, but did not shake hands. Le and Viet Cong spokesman Duong Dinh Thao accused Bruce of "calumny" against their dele- U.S. AMBASSADOR DAVID BRUCE waves to newsmen as he arrives for his last session as head of the American delegation to the Paris peace talks yesterday. Ziegler, the President's press secretary, was asked several times by newsmen whether the account was accurate. He said he would not comment on "specu- lation." The State Department also re- fused comment. The newspaper said in a story from its Washington bureau that flights by U2 spy planes operated by the Chinese Nationalists from Formosa are not affected by the suspension. The administration move re- calls the 1960 incident when a planned summit meeting between President Dwight Eisenhower and Premier Nikita Krushchev was cancelled by the Soviet Union after an American U2 piloted by Francis Gary Powers was shot down over Soviet territory. The Times quoted informants as saying that the political rea- sons for halting the flights over China were considered much more compelling than occasional intelligence gained through the operations. Affected by the suspension are flights by the two-man, twin-jet, SR71 spy plane and the Ryan Firebee reconnaissance drone, the Times said. IT.S. to shave atomic plans WASHINGTON (') - The Unit- ed States announced yesterday it is "prepared to undertake dis- cussions" with 10 Western na- tions looking towardtherpossi- bility of sharing its hitherto sup- er-secret technology for produc- ing fissionable uranium-235 for use in atomic power reactors. U-35 is also an ingredient of atomic bombs, but the Atomic Energy Commission, in making its announcement, said any frui- tion of such discussions would be made only "under appropriate financial and security arrange- ments" - ostensibly to safeguard against use of the uranium for bomb-making. An AEC spokesman told a newsman the countries the United States is prepared to entergdis- cussions with are: Belgium, France, West Germany, Italy, Luxembourg and the Netherlands -all members of the European Community of nations-and also with the United Kingdom, Aus- tralia, Canada and Japan. gations in his final speech. This presumably referred to Bruce's formal complaint that a North Vietnamese buildup in the demilitarized zone violated the understanding under which the United States halted all bombing of North Vietnam at the end of 1968. In his proposal for a cease- fire, Bruce said it should be sup- ervised by international observ- ers, prevent infiltration of out- side combat forces, halt all kinds of warfare and violence, and cover all parts of Indochina. Binh and North Vietnam nego- tiator Xuan Thuy immediately reiterated their rejection of any HIFlSTUDIO ANNUAL SUMMER SALE Offering REAL price reductions that will not be repeated in 1971-START- ING NOW Some of our lines * Jensen . Acoustic Research * Garrard 0 Kenwood * KLH 0 DUAL S cott *Sherwood * Sony Tel. 668-7942 Unbelievable Sacrifices-Up to 40 % off Backed up by our FactoFy Authorized Service 121 W. WASHINGTON-Downtown-1 blk. W. of Main MICHIGAN REPERTORY '77 * TONIGHT * tennessee williams' A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Curtain: 8:00 Box Office Open Ph: 668-6300 12:30-8:00 $1 .50-$2.50 Joseph E Levine presents a Mike Nichols Fim star g ack Ncho s - Cana ce Be gen o c r "'CARNAL KNOWLEDGE' I have experienced only three or four movies that I was genuine- ly sorry to see end. I wOs3sorry to see 'CARNAL KNOWLEDGE' end!"er end -"Vincent Canby, N.Y. Tine' "'CARNAL KNOWLEDGE' is one of the best movies ever!" --Liz Smith, Cosmopolitar Mike Nichols, Jack Nicholson, Candice Bergen, Arthur Garfunkel, Ann-Margret and Jules Feiffer o Carnal Knowledge i ®_ ' An Aco Embassy Pitur 055'335,sor Iaanp3osna ra q 3 t so ss patssass a Doors .Shows at Open at 1, 3, 5, 12:45 i nn g" 7,deme 9,, ,' cease-fire unless it was preceded by a formal American commit- ment on unconditional withdrawal of U.S. forces. Such a commit- ment is the basic condition in the seven-point Communist peace plan. Both negotiators denounced the forthcoming presidential elec- tions in South Vietnam as an at- tempt of the Nixon administra- tion "to maintain in power the corrupt Fascist dictatorship of the traitor President Nguyen Van Thieu." returns thrill-packed chill-packed spellbinding mystery and terror dramas 6:00 P.M. Weekday Nights WNRS - WNRZ 1290 AM 102.9 FM