FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TIMEE FRID Y, E B R A R Y 23, 968T H E M I ~ i G A N B A I I P G E h R E Ask $10.4 Billion For Aid to Cities AUSTIN, Tex. ()P - President. Johnson attacked "the crisis of1 the cities" yesterday with a $10.4 billion package of help in the fields of housing, poverty, tran- 1 sportation and riot insurance. If the program goes through in' its entirety, the eventual price tag might run to $30 or $35 billions, some officials believe. Some of the program was new, some of it old. All of it was pulled together in a massive, complicated message to Congress that was! nearly twice as long as the one the Preident delivered on the state American city" and set a goal of building 26 million new homes and apartments in 10 years. This, he said, will meet an enormous na- tional need. Six of the 2'6 million homes would be subsidized by the govern- ment, in part at least. They would replace what the President called "the shameful substandard units of misery" where more than 20 million Americans live. Private in- dustry would get inducements to build the other 20 million units. 'Red-Lining' OneP facep of the nresidfntia l | AID STRIKERS: Longshoremen Vote To Boycott U.S. Foreign Copper Imports MIAMI BEACH, Fla. () - A loading or unloading of any cargo Wirtz, whose strike peace ef- longshoremen's boycott against at those ports. forts were rebuffed earlier by the multimillion dollar imports of for- Most copper imports have been labor leaders, called on both sides eign copper was announced yes- coming into U.S. ports from South in the dispute to "stop waltzing terday in a mounting AFL-CIO America. and return to bargaining." campaign to aid 60,000 U.S. cop- Wirtz earlier said the federal But Wirtz said there were no per strikers, government planned no further present federal plans to invoke "The International Longshore- intervention in the bitter copper an 80-day Taft-Hartley injunc- men have decided in the interest strike, but a boycott that shut off tion to halt the strike, and no of helping their fellow trade un- foreign supplies might force the plans to release government cop- ionists on strike against the cop- Johnson administration's hand. per stockpiles. per companies to refuse to handle all imports and exports of copper, in the United States and Can- ada," said President Thomas W.O Gleason of the International rn Longshoremen's Association. * r±es l Ue pC%.±± v t- V1UuZa'± eBu V1ule int..l., ia of the union last month. program for cities is aimed at "red Again, Johnson called for boost- lining" practices by which some ing income taxes through a 10 insurance companies mark off per cent surcharge, this time on slum areas and refuse to insure grounds that "soaring interest property and businesses of the res- rates will cripple the home- idents. building industry" and the tax Johnson called for companies boost will help prevent this because and states to set up pooling ar- it is anti-inflationary. rangements to spread the risks for Johnson also asked Congress for individual companies, backed by a a new housing and urban develop- congressionally chartered corpo- ment act that would write "a ration to provide reinsurance. The charter of renewed hope for the companies would pay 2 per cent of --- --~_ -- Itheir premiums to the corporation. The insurance project is in line Pentagon To with recommendations of a special panel of the President's commis- sion on causes and cures of riots. Part of the plan to help cities is getting Congress to appropriate the full $2.18 billion it already has authorized for the anti-poverty Proceedings program in the 1969 fiscal year. That would be up $41 million WASHINGTON (R) -Secretary from the 1968 figure. of Defense Robert S. McNamara Interest Rates ordered Pentagon security censors Other features would: yesterday to clear rapidly his con- 0 Authorize the Federal Hous- troversial testimony on the 1964 ing Administration to remove its Gulf of Tonkin incidents for fixed interest rate ceiling. piompt public disclosure. " Convert the Federal National Sen. J. W. Fnlbright (D-Ark.), Mortgage Association, from a part chairman of the Senate Foreign private part governmental opera- Relations Committee, urged speedy tion into a privately owned cor-. release of the transcript of Mc- poration. Namara's give and take with sen- 4 Give a federal guarantee for ators over the questioned North mortgage bonds issued by mort- Vietnamese attacks on two U.S. gage banks. ships. "No single statement or message The incidents prompted the can embrace the solutions to the United States to launch reprisal city's problems. No single program, air attacks on North Vietnamese can attack them. bases and were a prelude to ma- "No one can say how long it jor U.S. intervention in Southeast will take, or how, much of our Asia. - fortune will eventually be com- McNamara presented a pre- mitted," Johnson said. pared, 21 page statement to the Spending Senate panel Tuesday, but Ful- The way the administration adds bright said dater the defense chief it up,, appropriations and author- failed to demonstrate that Ameri- izations for spending in the pres- can ships were attacked Aug. 4, ent 1969 fiscal year starting next 1964. 1 July 1 would reach almost $4.6 As is routine, the transcript of billion. McNamara's answers to questions But some programs would be had to be submitted through the set up or are set up for several security review, process to glean years. Over the next five of them out information that might be the total would go to $10.4 billion. valuable to an enemy. And that makes no allowance McNamara directed that it be for whatever the anti-poverty sanitized "on an expedited basis." program might cost beyond the The Pentagon said the tran- 1969 fical year. script was received at 10 a.m. yes- For that year, the calculations terday and a team of security re- include $2.18 billion for combat- view specialists went to work on ting poverty; $1 billion for model it immediately. city projects. -Associated Press SUPPORTED BY U.S. TANKS, Marines advance in a debris-littered area near the Citadel wall in Hue. Fighter-bombers continued to strafe North Vietnamese-held areas in the ancient city yesterday. Marines Stom Citadel Walls, Cut N. Vietnamese Supply Line, Copper Imports Secretary of Labor W. Willardz Wirtz, here to talk with AFL-CIO leaders, said earlier that copper imports amount to $2 million to $3 million a day since the seven month old strike halted most U.S. production. AFL-CIO President G e o r g e Meany also announced a major financial campaign among all 63,000 affiliated locals to "adopt a copper strike." It is the first'such effort to enlist virtually the en- tire labor movement in support of a strike in some 40 years, Meany said. Telegram Gleason's pledge to boycott all copper shipments at U.S. East and Gulf coast ports was made in a telegram to copper strike leader Joseph P. Molony. Gleason, in a boycott against shipment of U.S. wheat to Russia several years 'ago, showed the power of his union to halt the By The Associated Press TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-Reports that Florida teachers were begin- ning to return to their classrooms during the fourth day of a state- wide walkout were called "good news" yesterday by State School Supt. Floyd Christian. But Florida Education Associa- tion officials said the reports were "deliberate rumors to try to break the teachers and frighten them back." * * * LONDON-Prime Minister Har- old Wilson's government boasted yesterday Britain soon will be the strongest military power in allied Europe and foreshadowed greater British influence in North At- lantic Treaty Organization affairs. A White Paper on defense policy said the nation's "formidable con- tribution" to the security of the Old World will match its drive for, the political and economic unity of Europe. NEW ORLEANS-A U.S. com- missioner ruled yesterday that the government had enough evidence to pursue prosecution of Black Power leader H. Rap Brown on charges, he intimidated a Negro FBI agent by threatening to "get" him. "This does not mean I find you guilty of anything," Commissioner Fritz Windhorst told Brown at a preliminary hearing on the charge. "It merely means the government has presented evi- dence showing probable cause." * * * MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Gov. Lurleen Wallace, fighting perhaps against a third outbreak of cancer, was stricken early yesterday and taken to a hospital for emergency surgery. An aid said the 41-year-old gov- ernor, who had undergone two previous cancer operations in two years, was suffering fromr "an in- testinal obstruction." SAIGON (/R) - U.S. Marinesi stormed the south wall of the Citadel in Hue yesterday against1 crumbling enemy resistance while outside the old imperial city, American troops cut the supply = line that has kept the North Viet-, namese fighting for three weeks. IIn the air, the. U.S. Command! reported warplanes for the first time Wednesday bombed the Hanoi radio station beaming Com- munist propaganda from North Vietnam. But Tokyo reported Hanoi radio still was broadcast- ing. 543 Dead The ferocity of the fighting all up and down South Vietnam was reflected by the command's report that a record number of U.S. sol- diers-543-were killed in the Feb. 11-17 period. Another 2,547 were wounded. In the battle for Hue, a MarineI spokesman said: "We made a big break today. Spirits were pretty high around here."! As the Marines secured their! first lodgement on the south wall of the Citadel, a lance corporal ran up the Stars and Stripes on a makeshift staff.I Heavy Fire3 The Marines fought to within! about 50 yards of the walled inner palace grounds under heavy fire from the 300 or so North Viet- namese still believed holding out; in Hue. Resistance on the outer wall crumbled when Marines seized a key tower and killed 15 defenders.I The North Vietnamese melted away.j Associated Press correspondent George McArthur reported from Hue that as evidence of weaken- ing resistance, the North Vietna- greatest triumph was cutting the mese left behind many rifles and Communist supply line. two mortars set up for firing.- A U.S. patrol boat was hit in At the Citadel, AP correspondent the Perfume River that divides the John Lengel said it appeared that old walled city from southern Hue about 40 per cent of the Citadel and was badly damaged. The was in allied hands, with South North Vietnamese also struck a Vietnamese soldiers heavily en- U.S. landing boat carrying Viet- gaged. namese refugees with a rocket Outside the city, a strong force grenadedand several civilians were from the U.S. Air Cavalry Division wounded. and the 101st Airborne Division McArthur reported that military were driving toward the west and sources estimated 4,800 enemy north walls of the Citadel and troops have been killed in the were about two miles away. Their ( battle around Hue. HELD OVER IwI ~I Mon. thru Thur. 7-.9 Fri.-Sat. 1-3-5-7-0-11 Sun. 1-3-5-7-5-10:30 TONIGHT at "CUSTER'S LAST BAND" (Jug) -a massacre in progress I An I Saturday-8 P.M. 1421 Hill St. GLENDA FEARS-opera major 8:30 P.M. (with Instrumental Ensemble) singing Negro Spirituals, gospel songs and sacred music-showing the development of Negro music to the present day. and THE VOYAGE OF THE PHOENIX- A Canadian Broadcasting Co. documentary color film-showing the humanitarian voyage of the Phoenix to carry medicine to Vietnam. HORACE CHAMPNEY--(one who was on the voyage) will also be on hand for questions and discussion. (The film will be shown at 8 P.M. RICHARD LESTERt ]Row I-WOIVlE a~ "QUALITY AND IMPACT." -Ellen Frank, Michigan Daily "WW 1I WITHOUT IT'S PANTS ON!" --Ramparts Magazine "RUNNING-WILD SATIRE!" -N.Y. Daily News "I WOULD LIKE TO SEE IT 20 TIMES!" -San Francisco Chronicle "IT TRULY HURTS WHEN YOU LAUGH!" -Stewart Klein, WNEW-TV MICHAEL CRAWFORD JOHN (BEATLE) LENNON SNEAK PREVIEW-SUNDAY 9:00 P.M. A Brand-New Release, in Color, For Mature Audiences "HOW I WON THE WAR" follows at 10:20 THIRD WEEK NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRESM\ FO.AVILLA - 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769.1300 1 MON.-THUR. 7 :00-9 :00 FRI. & SAT. 3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00-11:00 SUN. 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 DOORS OPEN-Mon.-Fri. 6:30 p.m. Sat. 2:50 p.m. Sun. 12:45 p.m. ADVANCE TICKETS: Sat.-Sun. 5:30-7:00 show Saturday only 7:30-9:00 show 9:30-11:00 show WINNER 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS! I INCLUDING * BEST Picture * * BEST Screen Play * * BEST Cinema Tography'* '7\ iz I * BEST ACTRESS * -Anne Bancraft- * BEST ACTOR * -Dustin Hoffman- * BEST SUPPORTING, -Katharine Ross- * BEST DIRECTOR * -Mike Nichols- ACTRESS * JOSEPH E LEVINE MIKE NICHOLS LAWRENCE TURMAN I This is Benjamin. He's a little worried about his future. III >