NEGOTIATIONS: THE FIRST WORD See editorial page (ZAP gutriauP D~At& COLDER High-63 Low-40 Thundershowers today and tonight, turning colder by evening. Vol: LXXVIII, No. 155 Ann Arbor, Michigan, Thursday, April'4, 1968 Ten Pages Johnson Talks To .FK, HHH White House Remains Silent On Contents of Two Meetings WASHINGTON (R-President Johnson met yesterday for about an hour each with Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.). The two meetings were separate and the White House had almost nothing to say about either one. It indicated it would maintain silence.I Kennedy and Humphrey are possible finalists in the showdown for the Democratic presidential nomination, ,.. r rr along with Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy of Minnesota. Kennedy is actively campaign- ing now and Humphrey is expect-I ed to say within a week or two whether he will run. White House press secretary George Christian said he knew of no plans for Johnson to confer with McCarthy and was unaware of any request from McCarthy for a conference. Kennedy had asked for a meeting with Johnson, and Hum-! phrey had announced he 'planned to see the President, too-obvious- ly about what may happen now in the wake of Johnson's renun- ciation of any attempt for a sec- ond full term., Kennedy was first in, at 10 a.m. for a talk with Johnson in the Cabinet room. Humhprey came in' for a conference set at 11 a.m. Beyond announcing the times,' Christian had little to add and showed little intention of trying to provide d e t ai 1 s newsmen sought. Christian had no analysis tor offer as to whether the Presi-f dent's providing equal time to Kennedy and Humphrey was in-s dicative of his intention not to, take sides in the scramble tot pick a successor to himself fora ..LBJ.To Meet Commanders Schedules Honolulu Conferene To Consider Further Actions >y The Associated Press The North Vietnamese government offered yesterday to send a representative to contact American representatives with "a view to determining with the American side the unconditional cessation of U.S. bombing raids and all other acts of war against the Democratic Republic of Vietnam-- North Vietnam-so that talks may start," Australian cor- respondent Wilfred Burchett reported from Hanoi. This was the key paragraph in a 1,200-word declaration by the North Vietnamese government in reply to President s>;4, 'Johnson's March 31 declaration on a limited bombing -pause. In Washington, President Jdhnson said yesterday he will fly to Honolulu today to confer with U.S. officials on the war in Vietnam, including the North Vietnamese offer to jestablish contact "so that talks may start." allI Street The Hanoi statement released ; at a news conference last night -Daily-Thomas R. Copi follows over 48 hours of speculation Sets R e or d ten blocks to the Ann Arbor on how the government would re- grds read a statement repudiating '-act to, what was regarded here s considerable divergence between NEW YORK (/Pi-Trading on Johnson's statement and 36 hours the New York Stock Exchange ex- of bombings ,of areas over 200 ploded to an all-time record yes- miles north of the 17th parallel. terday in a burst of investors en- ( ~ It was considered in the highest thusiasm over Vietnam peace pos- Hanoi circles that the government sibilities. statement is a maximum effort by A total of 19,290,000 shares the Democratic Republic of Viet- changed hands and swamped the nam to get talks underway and exchange's ticker tape. that from now on it is up to The volume spurted well above President Johnson. the record of 17.73 million shares In announcing his plan yester- traded Monday, which topped the licemen were present at the local day, Johnson said "we will estab- previous mark of 16.41 million i board. There were no incidents. Lish contact with the repyesenta- shares. set Oct. 29, 1929, the day Only seven students had origin- tives of North Vietnam." of the historic market crash. ally planned to mail in their draft Meanwhile in Saigon U.S. Am- Hanoi's broadcast of its willing- cards, but an eighth, Foster, de- bassador Ellsworth Bunker and ness to talk with the United States cided to join the group at the the envoys of five other allied about a complete halt of the local board. nations with troops in Vietnam bombing of North Vietnam trig- Foster explained he had not met today with President Nguyen gered the powerful reaction. planned to participate with the Von Thieu to discuss North Viet- As trading volume set a first- other seven because, he "was nam's offer to meet with the Unit- hour record, prices jumped. How- afraid." ed States in a prelude to possible ever, profit taking and a closer He changed his mind, however, peace talks. examination of Hanoi's intent when he "saw all those people out Officials hope the talks might later resulted in a substantial there doing it," and decided to See HANOI, Page 5 whittling of the early.gain. join the other seven, because "you can't live in a country whereyo r a Ou raid.thloabadtee Outside of the local board the crowd of students sang the chorus OVER 650 STUDENTS participated in yesterday's Day of Resistance. Four-hundred students marche Selective Service Bureau where eight students who later mailed their draft cards back to their local boa the United States involvements. In the picture, a coed mails in the draft cards in behalf of the resisters Resisters March on Loca 'U' Students Return DraJ Sen. I-oberit Kennedy Endorse SGC Incorporation Plans to establish tnudent nv ov By STUART GANNES and MARTIN HIRSCHMAN About 400 University students marched ten blocks yesterday from the Diag to the Ann Arbor Selective Service Board where a statement repudiating "the ille- gal and oppressive actions under- taken by our government at homeI and abroad" was read to local board officials. Following the confrontation eight draft resisters mailed theirE selective service cards to their lo- Earlier, 650 University students- had gathered on the Diag to par-{ ticipate -,in a noon draft resist- ance rally. At least 250 students lined up at the request of one of the speakers to pass along ant envelope which contained the draft cards. Their action could be legally construed as participation, in draft resistance. In Bostn Collegiate Press Serv- ice (CPS) reports 200 draft cards collectively sent to Sen. Robert Kennedy (D-NY). Over 12,0001 persons participated in the rally there. Further CPS reports indicate 144 draft cards turned over to officials in the Federal Building in San Francisco during a peace- ful rally of 2,000 persons; 80 draft cards turned in at a rally in Cen- tral Park of 2500 persons; 250 s u p p o r t e r s marched through downtown Chicago to turn over 15 draft cards. The University students who mailed in their draft cards were Dennis Church, '68; Tom Beuk- ema, '68; Richard Swenson, '69; Darryl Dmytriw, '69; Michael Husted, '69; Ron Foster, '69; and Griffith Feeney and James Mal- ernment Council (SGC) as an in- the Democratic nomination. dependent corporation got into President explained he could high gear this week as two more not devote time for campaigning campus groups endorsed the pro- while taking on the "awesome" posal. duties of the President. i O e s cal draft boards. Last night the Panhellenic As-' ' - sociation approved the plan. Ear- lier in the week Inter-House As-" sembly had endorsed it. Sae Mediation Bo r The Regents are expected to consider the proposal at their 'u regular April meeting. At that mittee of the Faculty Senate will o report favorably on the plan to By RON LANDSMAN The representation election., the. Regents. They approved the which uniori leaders expect to be! proposal recently by a 7-1 vote. The State Labor Mediation held "in about forty days," will! According to the incorporation Board (SLMB) Tuesday defined offer employes Within the unit the plan, SGC would be organized as an "appropriate bargaining unit" ichoice of AFSCME or "no union." a legally autonomous, non-profit for 2590 non-clerical, non-acade- Fifty per cent of those voting plus corporation. Under the proposal, mic Universtiy employes and willEiseredofovingry. s SGC would be financed largely hold an election to choose a bar- one is required for victory. through assessment of its mem- gaining agent in the near future.' A spokesman for the labor' bers - all students. If themRe- The decision almost insuresa board, which will conduct the elec- gents agree, the University would victory in the election to Local tion, said they will meet with rep- sign a contract to collect the as- 1583 of the American Federation I resentatives of the University and sessment along with tuition. of State, County and Municipal the union to arrange the election Any increase in the amount of Employes, (AFSCME), which re- as soon as possible. assessment would have to be ap- ports that 1600 of the employes The election will be held, he proved by a campus wide referen- within the unit are already of their said, so as to insure maximum dum. local, participation by employes. The Davis explains that one of the The 2590 workers include all vote will be on University grounds major advantages of incorporation$ service and maintenance employes? during working hours. will be the ability of the organ- except those in the plant depart- The. decision by the state labor ization to obtain funds for projects ment and the heating plant, which board dashed the hopes of Local like SGC sponsored non-profit have already been designated se- 1 378 of the Building Service Em- apartments for students or a stu- parate units and chosen bargain- ployes International Union, which 1 dents-run bookstore. ing agents. had hoped to represent at least some of the 2590 employes. P - BSEIU Requests DetoihOt o E orThe BSEIU had asked the board; to designate the Law Club, the i Dearborn Center and University, R aps Guard R Rot Action housing as separate units, while large unit. 1 Chooses oy. grads. of "Alice's Restaurant", the theme The eight students had enter d song of the draft resistance move- Draws World Hope 111G Glrllb ., I:UU GIl bi> lIaLL Gt14G1GU I I 3 the local board on East Liberty ' and Main Streets to read the joint statement. One Selective Service of over 250 plant department em- official took several photographs ployes last September. of the eight students. Other of- The walkout ended when the ficials sat calmly at their desks. University and employes agreed The group them} proceeded to a to let the SLMB settle the issue, nearby mailbox where volunteers while the University continued its from the crowd mailed the eight court challenge of Public Act 379, letters. The action qf those who which gave the employes the right mailed the letters could legally to organize. 'be considered participation in The University lost its case in draft resistance. circuit court but decided to appeal. Plainclothes policemen patrolled No further action has been taken. the Diag rally and uniformed po- ment written by Arlo Guthrie. The demonstration was planned by the Ann Arbor Resistance in conjunction with a "National Day; of Resistance." Prof. Eric Lennenberg of the psychology department who ledl the march carried a sign upon which was painted the Greek let- ter Omega. Omega is the symbol of the unit of electrical resistance, one speaker explained. A small incident occurred at the noon rally while keynote See 'U', Page 10 By The Associated Press Hanoi's announcement yesterday it would agree to preliminary talks with the United States pre- cipitated immediate reaction from other parts of the/world. President Charles de Gaulle,' after reported advance consulta- tion with North Vietnam on its intention to mbve toward Viet- nam peace talks, described the U.S. bombing curtailment as an CONF USION Peace Talks Alter Election Plans By JAMES JENSEN Kurt Luedtke photography di- rector for the Detroit Free Press charged the National Guard yes- terday with irresponsibility and trigger happiness during the De- troit riots. Substituting for Free Press! managing editor Frank Angelo who was scheduled to speak to journalism students, Luedtke cit- the results the deaths were caused To petition the board to desig- by stray bullets rather than the nate a unit a union must have supposedsnipers. signed up at least 30 per cent of Luedtke told the journalism the workers as members. BSEIU students the details involved in had the required number only in laying out a newspaper page. He the three units, which totaled illustrated his remarks with slides about 500 workers altogether. of actual Free Press pages from BSEIU might still have appear- the summer papers. ed on the ballot against AFSCME Luedtke briefly criticized the ed o he ma st AFSCE paper for its riot coverage i it could have mustered 10 per iing it with "lack of tone." "Read- ceto telre nta mmes By JACK BELL Associated Press Political Writer Hanoi's offer to talk about an end to bombing that could bring peace talks may force Democratic and Republican presiden- tial candidates to shift their tactics rapidly in campaigning for their party's nomina- tion. Even if the North Vietnamese proposition turns out to be a demand for an uncon- ditional halt in the air attacks without re- ciprocal Communist military deceleration, President Johnson has at least provoked a response other than the usual flat rejection of peace offers. Thus far Sens. Robert F. Kennedy, (D- NY), and Eugene J. McCarthy, (D-Minn), have focused their attacks on ,Johnson's policies. Even after he renounced renomina- tion, they have complained that his bombing reduction was not enough to bring results. Richard M. Nixon racked up-a better show- ing than he made in 1960- primary when he won the nomination and carried the state in his losing race with the late John F. Kennedy-are classed as partisanly anti- Johnson. When these are added to the 51,574 polled by California Gov. Ronald Reagan and the 28,453 that went to former Minnesota Gov. Harold E. Stassen, the Republican anti- administration total reached 465,079. In the two parties there was a total 15,614 vote of "no" against any of the candidates offered on the ballot, a further indication Camnpaign A of negative reaction to the general state of the nation. the ballot in Madison, scene of the Univer- sity of Wisconsin anti-Vietnam demonstra- tions, was defeated in party because of Johnson's change of stance. The referendum, voted down 27,555 to 20,127, called for an immediate cease fire and withdrawal of U. S. troops from Viet- nam. Maurice Zeitlin, university associate professor and chief sponsor of the referen- dum, said Johnson's action influenced the result. If Hanoi gives the President the oppor- tunity, he could become the country's sole agent of hope for an end of the fighting in Vietnam. As such, politicians think he would be under extreme pressure to reverse his decision and run again. If Johnson chooses to rest history's ver- dict on what he achieved while sacrificing a possible second term, Vice President Hu- bert H. Humphrey apparently would be the apparent "first step in the dirc- tion of peace." It was an unusually positive ap- proach in view of De Gaulle's close ties with Hanoi and constituted his first gesture in months favor- able to the United States. Informants said De Gaulle1 learned of North Vietnam's prob- able reply to President Johnson's peace initiative Tuesday, after his director of Asian affairs, Etienne Manac'h, met with Mai Van Blo, chief of Hanoi's delegation in Paris. r UN Response At the United Nations in New York, a spokesman for Secretary.- General U Thant said Thant wel- comed North Vietnam's readiness to meet with the United States and offered the UN headquarters in Geneva-the Palace of Nations -for negotiations. The British Foreign Office in ondon, in a statement made public after a meeting between Foreign Minister Michael Stewart and South Vietnamese ambassa- dor Le Ngoc Chan, said: "We wel- come this decision by Hanoi which encourages our hopes of progress toward a just and last- ing settlement." Prime Minister Harold Wilson, referring to Hanoi's announce- ment, said: "We believe that it may advance the prospect of a just and lasting settlement." Puts Out Feelers Stewart has put out feelers to the Soviet government, theother co-chairman of the 1954 Geneva conference on Indochina. In Ottawa Foreign Secretary Paul Martin said yesterday the