THE WORLD Astros return HONOLULU, Hawaii—(UPI)—Astronauts Neil Armstrong and David Scott arrived in Hawaii early today for several hours of rest and debriefing on their aborted Gemini 8 flight. They were scheduled to continue on to the mainland later in the day. Armstrong and Scott boarded the plane at Naha just three hours after their rescue destroyer docked in Okinawa. It was revealed they had been seasick after the Gemini 8 splashdown in the western Pacific but were in top shape. BOTH WERE HIGHLY pleased with what fellow astronaut Walter Schirra called the "best landing" ever made by an American spaceship, but disappointed they had to abort their three-day space flight after less than 11 hours. The two astronauts walked briskly down the gangplank from the destroyer U.S.S. Mason. Doctors called them physically fit but said they suffered sea sickness after landing in the western Pacific Ocean Thursday afternoon. Officials said the astronauts would return to Cape Kennedy on Saturday and to their homes near Houston sometime Monday. BUT THE PILOTS WERE carefully kept away from the public. And it would stay that way, agency spokesmen said, until they could finish their "debriefing" and face a news conference about eight or nine days from now. Military takes Jakarta SINGAPORE—(UPI)—The Indonesian military today seized control of Jakarta in a lightning move apparently aimed at crushing Communist influence in President Sukarno's regime. Sukarno was taken under heavy guard to Bogor and tanks surrounded his palace. Army troops took over the city after military strongman Lt. Gen. Soeharto announced over Radio Jakarta the arrest of 15 cabinet ministers, including pro-Peking Foreign Minister Dr. Subandrio. SOEHARTO, the anti-communist military chief to whom Sukarno ceded "political power" last week, said, "security action" had been taken against 15 ministers for their own protection. He also sent troops to occupy the Jakarta Airport and all radio and television stations. Sukarno was expected to stay on as president, however, because the army seemed determined to maintain the constitution. Subandrio, who also served as Sukarno's deputy premier, was generally considered the architect of the "Jakarta-Peking axis" and the primary target of three weeks of anti-Communist demonstrations by thousands of students in Jakarta. Allies to query France WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The United States apparently intends to ask President Charles de Gaulle just how he expects to retain "political" membership in NATO, enjoying its protection, while withdrawing from its military arrangements. President Johnson and his top advisers are understood to have discussed at a meeting last night a proposed White House reply to De Gaulle's rather general demands on NATO. DE GAULLE DEMANDED that NATO headquarters, as well as U.S. and other foreign bases and troops serving the alliance, be withdrawn from French soil. He also said he would no longer permit his 70,000 troops in West Germany to be subject to NATO command, but added he wanted to remain a "political" member of the alliance. Bomb found in Spain MADRID — (UPI) — Armed U.S. Navy ships ringed an area five miles off the Spanish coast today while American underwater and surface craft began operations to recover an H-bomb found 2,500-feet down in the Mediterranean Sea. Informed sources said it would take about three days to raise the nuclear device lost Jan. 17 in the collision of a U.S. B52 bomber and jet tanker over southeastern Spain. Three other bombs aboard the B52 fell to earth and were recovered shortly. Disclosure yesterday that the bomb had been found, apparently intact and with no deadly leakage, ended an intensive two-month search that cost the United States millions of dollars and sparked an unfavorable foreign reaction in both Communist and non-Communist capitals. Youths riot in Los Angeles LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — Small banks of rock throwing Negro youths roamed the streets of Pacoima in the suburban San Fernando Valley for more than three hours last night. The riotscarred Watts area on the other side of the city remained quiet. PACOIMA AND WATTS are about 30 miles apart, and contain large numbers of Negro residents. Authorities said most of the targets of the rock tossers were Caucasian motorists. Streets in the area of mixed business and residential structures are poorly lighted. There also was community concern that with warming temperatures and the arrival of the weekend-with its leisure time—the possibility of renewed trouble in Watts could not be discounted. Laws should be changed says Harvard law prof Laws can judicially be changed without upsetting past decisions, W. Barton Leach, a Harvard professor of law, said last night. Leach, who will speak again at 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall, informally discussed the evolution of law and set the background for tonight's lecture. "IT IS A HOLLOW fiction to say that if a case is overruled today that it has to be retroactive," he said. "Law should not be made to stand still. A change in the law should be made in prospect only." coronated, Leach said. It is foolish to believe all judges have done since that time is to interpret the law; Blackstone, Kent and Holmes all rested the law. Common law was established in England on Sept. 3, 1189, which is the date Richard I was "LAW SHOULD be looked upon as performing a function of resolving disputes of whatever phase society is in now. We ought to be flexible. We can be flexible without disrupting the past," he said. He challenged the lawyers and law students in the audience to leave the laws better than they found them. He said there must be a better reason for a law than the common texts. It is the responsibility of the judicature to see that the laws fit the need of present day society. In tonight's lecture, Leach said he will talk about several instances where the law fails and how power lies with the courts to change the law. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers 10 Daily Kansas Friday, March 18, 1966 Don't let the low price scare you off. $1681.00 That's the price of a new Volkswagen. Some people won't buy one because they feel they deserve something costlier. That's the price we pay for the price we charge. And some people are afraid to buy one because they don't see how we can turn out a cheap car without having it turn out cheap. This is how: Since the factory doesn't change the bug's shape every year, we don't have to change the factory every year. 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