Young Buddhists, demon- strating against South Viet Nam Premier Nguyen Cao BUDDHISTS FLEE Ky and the U.S. govern- ment in Saigon Monday flee tear gas used by riot police- men to break up the dis- | Third - year Med Student Seeks Governor's Role By KEN EMMOND WINNIPEG (CP)--A coun- try-wide student demand for representation on governing bodies of universities may soon get a practica! try-out. Eli Weisstub, a third-year medical student at the Uni- versity of Manitoba, has taken advantage of a loophole in Manitoba's University Act to become a candidate for the university's board of gover- nor's. Mr. Weisstub, 23, is running as an alumni representative by virtue of a Bachelor of Arts degree he received here in 1963. If the 22,000 University of Manitoba alumni elect him to the 14-member board in a mail-in vote this spring, Mr. Weisstub will be the first stu- dent to sit at the university's highest level of government. The board consists of nine government appointees, three elected alumni representa- tives and two ex-officio mem- bers--the university president and a local judge. As a board member, Mr. Weisstub hopes to breach what he believes is a commu- nication gap. between students and the administration. "A student who is respon- sible can contribute some- thing vital to the board of governors," Mr. Weisstub said, "There are many ideas which students have that could be put to use." FACULTY IGNORED He hopes to alleviate the "stifling influence' of the administration on students and faculty, and pians to pro- pose to the board a "faculty and student advisory council" at which the administration, faculty and exchange ideas. "If there were a board representing faculty, adminis- tration and students, I wouldn't even be running for | the board of governors," Mr. | Weisstub said. He said the board has not coped with faculty demands students would | for representation and this has led to antagonism on the part of the faculty. Prof. C. R. Hiscocks, for- mer head of the university's political science department, gave as his reason for leav- ing, in 1964, 'frustration' be- cause of lack of faculty rep- resentation on the board of governors." Dr. Hugh Saunderson, pres- ident of the University of Manitoba, said there is "'not much communication as there should be (between adminis- tration and students) but it should be focused at the working level and not at the board level." OBJECTS TO SECRECY He said most agenda items at board meetings are not ones in which students would be interested. The in - camera nature of board meetings would limit the communications channel created by .Mr. Weisstub to- being a onewway street--from students to the administra- tion, he said. Dr. Saunderson doubted whether a student representa- tive on the board would be as effective as the students hoped. David Sanders, newly- elected president of the Uni- versity of Manitoba Students' Union, disagreed. He said a student representative would "benefit the board greatly." Mr. Weisstub criticized the board for the aura of secrecy that surrounds it. He said it has failed to take stands on major educational iss ues-- free education, for example. He said the shroud of sec- recy on long - range develop- ment plans for the university is hurting its image. "When they don't publish their plans people get the idea there are no plans," EYE REACHES FAR The 200-inch Hale Telescope }at Mount Palomar, Calif., could |photograph a single candle flame 40,000 miles away By RALPH JOSEPH Canadian Press Correspondent KARACHT (CP)\--It has taken President Ayub Khan two inten- sive months of touring, speech- making, pleading and cajoling to convince Pakistanis that he has not abandoned the struggle for Kashmir. A burst of emotion followed signing of the Tashkent dec- laration without providing ma- chinery for a solution to the dispute over Kashmir, the pre- dominantly Moslem border ter- ritory two-thirds of which is under Indian control. This emotion so unnerved the Pakistani government that it had riot-prone students locked out of their schools and col- leges for periods ranging from a month to six weeks. The state of emergency de- clared in Pakistan at the out- break of hostilities with India last autumn has been carefully allowed to continue. Five Opposition leaders, ar- rested while gleefully attempt- TEAR GAS BOMBS orders. Police managed to break up the mob surging through downtown Saigon streets into small units. (AP Wirephoto by radio from Saigon) He Convinces Pakistanis Kashmir Is Forgotten ing to ride the wave of feeling against the regime, continue to cool in jail. At the same time, in his typ- ical political style, the presi- dent has made _ conciliatory moves toward others in the | Opposition. A demand for more | Powers for the legislatures was publicly acceded to at the open- ling of the National Assembly session. | Members of the ruling party and opposition were asked to sit down together and work out jrecommendations for a consti- jtutional amendment to give the National Assembly power to control expenditures "other than new ones." This may bring the legisla- ture's fingers close to the any paralle] with the Congres- sional check on _ presidential power provided in the Ameri- can constitution. So far, despite the over- whelming majority he com- purse-strings, but for the mo-| ment it would be rash to draw| mands in the assembly, the president has preferred to put unpopular laws into effect by presidential decree. Now, as though in a hesitant step toward democracy, the as- sembly may make changes in the decrees. But there has been no promise that new ordinances will be issued any less fre- auently. Another Opposition demand, for direct adult franchise, has been bluntly rejected. The pres- ident has said he does not in- tend to grant it until mass literacy is achieved. A reason nearer the truth may be that he would probably have lost the last election had there been di- rect franchise. At present the 150 - member legislature is chosen by 80,000 electors. While all this has been going on, the much-talked-of "spirit of Tashkent" has been wearing thinner every day--proving that the India-Pakistan detente was never more than an on-the-sur- face affair. Not surprisingly, the no-prop- aganda clause of the Tashkent Declaration is being forgotten with increasing regularity by Press and radio on both sides. When Indian public leaders, by implication, accused Pakis- tan of aiding and abetting Mizo southern Assam, dashed off a note to New_De charging that military action close to the East Pakistan bor- der was causing tension among people living in those areas. Even the withdrawal of troops from the forward posi- tions held at the time the India- Pakistan hostilities ended has NOL KONE Of as siliveuny ao first thought. Pakistanis quickly discovered that, 'Indian troops -had--net vacated three strategic spots near Sialkot. This was where Indian forces had made what some consider their most dangerous thrust into Pakistani territory last September. The Indian foreign minister, Sardar Swaran Singh, tried to \dismiss the whole thing as a matter of "details," but Pakis- tanis remained dissatisfied. The atmosphere for ministerial dis- cussions that followed the troop withdrawals was visibly fouled. The ministers, sitting across a table in Rawalpindi to iron out differences between the two countries, found the Kashmir problem still a hump that made the other: differences look like minor crinkles. .. Under extreme pressure, the crinkles and leav for later. Ultimately both sides the "1 told their public that itis we saeng eee across a table, India indicated she had softened on the issue of the partitioned border state. Back in New Delhi, Sardar Swaran Singh waved the notion aside. India had not backed down on its stand on Kashmir, he said. HEDGED ON AGREEMENT Mutual suspicions re main, like a sore that will not heal, After a military agreement was signed by the two sides to reduce their forces in Kashmit to the 1949 level, the Indians insisted this did not apply to their troops in the Ladakh area, facing the Chinese. 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