Page 2A EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD, Wed.. June 13, 196!
Laos to
Geneva Pact
By PETER ARNETT
Of the Associated Press
VIENTIANE, Laos Pro-Communist Prince Souphanouvong
will take temporary command of Laos' new coalition government
late this month.
Neutralist Prince Souvanna Phnuma, premier designate of
the new government, said Tuesday he and right-wing leader
Gen. Phoumi Nosavan will be in Europe at the same time. During
their absence, he said, "the whole burden n state affairs will
fall on Souphanouvong."
Phoumi, like Souphanouvong slated to become a deputy pre
mier, will lead a Cabinet delegation to Switzerland June 24 or
25 to ratify the 14-nation Geneva agreement on Laos pledging
Peru Awaits
Presidential
Vote Results
LIMA, Peru (DPI) Police
armed with submachine guns
patrolled the streets here Tucs
day night, alert for violence
arising from uncertainty over
the outcome of Sunday s presi-
riential election. No trouble was
reported.
All three of the principal prcs
idential candidates middle-of-the-roader
Fernando Belaunde
Terry, moderate leftist Victor R.
Haya de la Torre and rightist
ex-President Manuel Odria
claimed victory in the vote.
Most of what impartial in
formation there was appeared
to support Belaunde's claim of
victory. The independent news
paper La Prensa, however, re-
ported Wednesday that Haya
was ahead with S70.600 voles to
.166,800 for Belaunde and 487,
250 for Odria. These figures
gave Haya about 35 per cent
of the total vote, a safe mar
gin over the 33 per cent need
ed to insure election.
If none of the three leading
candidates receives a third of
the vote, Congress will choose
a president from among them.
Official vote-counting did not
begin until Tuesday, and it was
reported proceeding slowly. The
official results of the election
will not be known for days.
U.S. Extends
Training Plan
BAD TOELZ, Germany Itfl
Guerrilla warfare and counter
revolutionary tactics being
taught to a group of American
soldiers here will he extended
throughout the U.S. Army in
Europe, military officals dis
closed Tuesday.
It is part of President Kenne
dy's program for preparing
American armed forces for any
kind of hostilities.
Members of the 10th special
forces in this village south of
Munich are receiving intensive
training to operate as self-con
taincd battle teams behind en
emy lines.
Instruction, geared In the
Iron Curtain countries, covers
the languages, politics, and gc
ography of every major area in
Central and Eastern Europe.
Many of their activities are
still considered secret, but they
are learning judo, knife linndl
Ins and underwater demolition
The group here is headed by
Col. Salve H. Matchcson, 41, of
Monterey and Los Angeles,
Calif. It is composed of approxi
mately 500 combat-ready para
troopers. All are volunteers.
In Heidelberg, Gen. Paul
Freeman, commander of the U.
8. Army in Europe told a group
of visiting newsmen that the
training in how to deal with
subversive activities and politi
cal problems will he extended
tn other units under his com
mand. Woman Dies in Crash
SANDY OJPD Thclia Ann Kim-
hro, 26, Estacada, was killed
Tuesday night when her car left
Highway 211 four miles south of
Sandy. Slate police said the
woman was alone in her car
when it struck a guardposl and
veered off the road.
Pi:!iW!!Uiis!:n!i:i!!i::i!ti;!!ii!:i,:!''
for th.
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SERVED FROM
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Ratify
the little Southeast Asian nation
to neutrality in the cold war.
Souvanna said he is going tn
France to attend the wedding of
his daughter.
Just what powers Souphanou
vong will be able to wield while
running Laos was not clear. The
bulk of the Cabinet posts are in
vested in neutralists, and the
coalition agreement stipulates
that all decisions related to the
ministries of defense, interior
and foreign affairs must have
the unanimous agreement of the
Ihrce faction leaders Souvan
na, Souphanouvong and Phou
mi.
Pressure Welcomed
Souvanna, Sou phanouvong's
half brother and ally in pre
coalition maneuvering, wel
comed the American pressure
that forced the right-wing Vien
tiane regime lo give way to the
coalition. But Souphanouvong
has shown no softening in his
anti-American position.
The next step In what the
United States hopes will take
Laos out of the cold war will
be for Souvanna to present the
new government to King Sav-
ang Vathana. He plans In do
this in the royal capital of Lu
ang Prabang Monday.
Prince Bnun Oum, the prime
minister of the. pro-Western
royal government in Vientiane,
flew with Gen. Phoumi to Lu
ang Prabang Wednesday to sub
mit his government's resigna
tion. Troop Withdrawal
Photimi's delegation tn Gene
va will sign a pledge of neu
trality agreed upon 13 months
ago by such big powers as the
United States, the Soviet Union,
Great Britain, Red China and
France.
The Geneva accords call for
the withdrawal of all foreign
troops from Laos within 75 days
after the agreement is signed
by a unified Laotian delegation.
This applies lo Ihe several hun
dred U.S. military advisers lo
the royal army, and an estimat
ed 10,000 Communist North Vi
etnamese troops and some Red
Chinese advisers reported aiding
the Pathet Lao.
All foreign military personnel
and civilian, captured or in
terned during the civil war are
lo be released within 30 days
of the signing of the agreement.
Five Americans are known to
be prisoners of the Pathet Lao.
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Obstacle to Space
Soviet Cites Solar Menace
By JOSEPH L. MYLER
Of the United Press International
WASHINGTON A Soviet sci
entist warns that the Sun may
be firing deadly nuclear bullets
hroadsidc at any astronauts who
try to visit the Moon from 1968
through 1970.
This is precisely the period
in which the United States hopes
tn land three-man Apollo crews
on the Moon and bring them
safely home again.
A spokesman said the Nation
al Aeronautics and Space Ad
ministration (NASA) was well
aware of the solar menace to
space travel mentioned by the
Russian scientist, Prof. G. Pok
rovskiy of Moscow.
NASA, the spokesman said,
hopes means of forecasting so
lar bombardments, and thus
avoiding them, may he found
before the first Apollo crews
are sent into orbit around the
Moon in 1966.
From lime lo lime gigantic
eruptions, or flares, occur on
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A total of 1,179 of these Freedom Medallions, one for every man
captured in the invasion of Cuba in April, 1961, has been placed
on sale in New York and in Miami, Fla. The medallions are on
sale for $25 and the money raised will go toward a ransom fund
demanded by the Cuban government.
Flights
the face of the Sun. They are
associated with sunspnts. Some
of the larger eruptions, known
as cosmic ray flares, spew myri
ads of high energy particles into
space.
These particles are protons,
the core of hydrogen atoms.
Traveling at many thousands of
miles a second, they constitute
one of the most serious obsta
cles to manned space flight.
Material shields dense enough
to protect astronauts from them
Portland May Get Legion Convention
PORTLAND Four Amer
ican Legion officers will begin
a four-day study of Portland
Thursday as a possible site for
the 1966 convention.
Local officials estimate a na
tional legion convention would
bring more than 50,000 persons
lo the city.
The. visitors will Include
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will be prohibitively heavy un
til considerably more powerful
rockets are developed than any
now in the cards for 1966-70.
Writing on "Flights tn the
Moon, Mars, and Venus" in a
Moscow publication, Pnkrovskiy
said manned trips to the Moon
"should be made during the
period of the quiet Sun."
He said parenthetically that
"this would appear tn exclude
the years of high solar activity
1966-70."
Jamea V. Demarest, New York,
national convention chairman;
Harry L. Foster, San Diego,
vice chairman; Maurice Stem
ber. New York; and James R.
Ringley, Chicago.
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New Controls
Guide XI 5
On Test Run
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE, Calif. X15 Pilot Bob
White, testing a new control
system 34 miles above the earth,
says that for the first time he
saw whiffs of steam from tiny
jets that stabilize the rocket
plane in space.
"I don't know why the jets
should be visible," the Air Force
major said after the flight Tues
day. "Perhaps there is more
air, more moisture at that alti
tude than we have thought."
Scientists have stated that the
atmosphere, for all practical
purposes, ends at about 90,000
feet. In the near vacuum ex
pected above that altitude, the
hydrogen peroxide steam from
the jets should disintegrate be
fore it can condense into visible
vapor.
The X15 has exceeded 80,000
feet on more than 20 flights.
None of the pilots, however, had
reported seeing the exhaust
from the peroxide jets, similar
to the ones that stabilize Mer
cury astronaut capsules in orbit.
In two of the three X15s, the
jets must be operated manually.
The advanced model flown Tues
day has a system that makes
their control almost automatic.
White said the new system
will simplify the pilot's job
when the X15 tries for a 400,000
foot altitude later this year.
White's flight, starting 218
miles north of here in Nevada,
lasted 10 minutes.
The XI 5 reached an altitude
of 130,000 feet and a speed of
3,545 miles an hour Tuesday. It
previously has gone to 246,000
feet and 4,093 m.p.h.
Attendance Climbs
SEATTLE la1! Attendance at
the Seattle World's Fair: Tues
day 68,889. Total 2,184.545.
Youth Listed AWOL
Korea Reds Claim
GI on Their Side
SEOUL, South Korea lift
Pyongyang radio says an Ameri
can solider has taken refuge in
Communist North Korea and
likes what he has seen "peo
ple leading free, happy and
peaceful lives."
The soldier was identified as
Pvt. Larry A. Abshier, 18, of
Cleveland, Ohio. The U. S. Army
said he apparently was the first
American defector to the Reds
in Korea since the end of the
Korean War.
Red Carpet Reception
Abshier, serving with a recon
naissance squadron along the ar
mistice line, was last seen run
ning across the no man's land
toward the north on May 28. He
ignored calls to turn back.
The North Koreans said they
gave the young GI a red carpet
reception, taking him to the
capital of Pyongyang and other
cities.
Pyongyang radio quoted Ab
shier as saying he was fed up
with the "doings of the U. S.
Army in South Korea" and call
ing on American troops to "op
pose the war machinations of
the American rulers and de
mand that they be returned to
their homeland at once."
The youth's father, George,
told of the comments attributed
to his son. expressed doubt that
I his son actually made the state
j ments. The elder Abshier said
his son had written a few
months ago that he liked the
Army and was considering mak
ing the Army a career.
Father Doubtful
Contacted at his home In Gar
field Heights, a Cleveland su
burb, the father told newsmen
the language used in the state
ment didn't sound like his son's
vocabulary.
Abshier has served in Korea
since May 26, 1961, two weeks
' "I
downtown cugens
mainttreet Springfield
augens hotel
after he joined the Army in
Chicago. His tour of duty here
was due to be completed in July.
The Pyongyang broadcast said
Abshier was surprised at what
he found in North Korea.
U. S. Army authorities in
Seoul had no comment on
Abshier's purported remarks.
He was officially listed as still
AWOL absent without leave.
Normally, a soldier is not con
sidered a deserter until he has
been missing a month.
U.N. Faces
Fund Crisis
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. OPI
The United Nations may have
to borrow up to $3 million with
in the next 10 days to meet ex
penses for its emergency force
in the Congo and Middle East
and its routine operations, offi
cials said Wednesday.
They said, however, that the
United Nations hopes to avoid
such borrowing by the sale of
U.N. bonds and the receipt of
new governmental contribu
tions. Officials said the U.N. cash
position is much better than it
was at this time last year be
cause eight countries already
have purchased $20,870,000 of
the $200 million bond issue au
thorized by the General Assem
bly last December.
Two Pilots Bail Out
TOKYO GT) Two Japanese
Sabre Jets collided Tuesday
and plunged into the sea off
Ojika Peninsula, 200 miles
northeast of Toyko. The two
pilots bailed out safely. One was
picked up by a fishing boat, the
other by a helicopter.