SUNDAY, SEPTENMER 17,1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1907 TIlE MICHI(AN DAILY PAGE U Thant Renews ombalt Plea UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (P) -- dangerous proportions u n 1 e s s Secretary-General U Thant yes- quick action is taken to end the terday bolstered a new Vietnam fighting. peace 'appeal with a report that Thant noted that the reported Hanoi's Communist allies had military agreements between Ha- agreed to send more military aid not and its allies were unconfirm- to North Vietnam, including air ed but he said there were definite crews, pilots, gunners and engi- indications that North Vietnam is neers. receiving increasing aid, both mil- Thant told a, news conference itary and economic, from friendly that he still felt that the key to countries. He declined to say Vietnam peace is a halt of U.S. which countries were supplying bombing of North Vietnam, that the aid. negotiations would follow within The main point stressed by the three or four weeks and that the secretary-general was that the risk was worth taking without end of the bombing must be the waiting for any commitments first step toward peace. He said from Hanoi. he did not feel any new initiatives His reference to passible in- on his part would be of any use creased aid to North Vietnam ap- until this happens, but he said he pered to carry the implication was ready to resume his efforts ae t car ation conditions change. that the escalation might reach ,,,,n~ n.,4A..«--4 UAW Aides Claim GM Main Target UAW Ready for GM Strike After Ford Walkout Settlement WASHINGTON ()-The giant General Motors Corp., and not the strikebound Ford Motor Co., is said to be the main target of the AFL-CIO United Auto Workers. This was reported yesterday by sources close to union President Walter Reuther. They indicated that although Ford was picked for first strike action, the battle with GM could make the Ford, struggle pale by comparison. The Ford strike of 160,000 workers is now in its second week amid predictions for a long walk- out. But the union is girding for an even tougher expected battle involving more than 400,000 work- ers at General Motors. The Auto Workers will take on GM as soon as the Ford strike is settled, sources said. "If there is not a substantial change in the attitude of General Motors' bargaining, we will most certainly have a strike," Auto Workers Vice President Leonard Woodcock said last week. The union struck Ford first in order to set an industry pattern on wages and other money items so it can concentrate on work- ing conditions and union practices at General Motors, regarded as the toughest employer, sources said. The union was described as par- ticularly angry at General Motors policies in some plants which the Auto Workers charge are designed to "corrupt" union officers. Union sources said this involves individual plant managers giving union grievance officials eight hours a day to work on union business, rather than the three hours provided for by official agreement. Romney May Enter Race in Two weeks ANNOUNCEMENT SOON: Johnson Decides To Deploy Limited Antimissile System, NEW YORK ( 1)A-Gov. George; Romney is understood to be giv- ing serious consideration to de- claring formally within the next two weeks that he will be a can-' didate for the Republican presi- dential nomination. The Michigan Republican, who toured Harlem yesterday and then made a helicopter journey into the Catskills as part of his "non- political" urban tour, is reported to be giving thoughts to throwing his hat into the ring before the national tour ends. There had been speculation that Romney would wait until af- ter a special session of the state Legislature which opens next month. However, Romney is understood to be getting some suggestions that he make the announcement while the momentum of the 19- day coast-to-coast trip lasts. After a 30-minute helicopter trip ,through gray and sometimes rainy skies, he visited a youth development camp in the Catskills. Romney stirred up some poli- tical heat by explaining his orig- inal approval of the U.S. commit- ment in Vietnam was due to "brainwashing" by U.S. generals and diplomats during a 1965 visit in Vietnam. He no sooner landed than he was asked about it. Romney re- plied, "You know the 'snow job.' He said he had been told that the South Vietnamese are "mak- ing all the deciisons. We're not making the decisions. We're not Americanizing this. It's a syste- matic story I got." Earlier in the day Romney vis- ited Harlem, talking to Negro businessmen, former street gang leaders and dope addicts being re- habilitated. 1 f WASHINGTON OP) - Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara has informed key Pentagon and congressional officials of Presi- dent Johnson's historic decision to deploy a "thin" (antimissile) system to guard against nuclear attack by Red China, it was learn- ed Saturday. McNamara gave the word at a secret Pentagon meeting on Fri- day, sources said. He swore all those present to remain silent until a formal announcement is made. Railroads, Describe Forced Settlement as Inflationary' Army, Navy 1a A Join in New Delta Attack' SAIGON (A') - A combined U.S. Army and Navy river force routed a hard-core Viet Cong battalion from entrenched positions in the Mekong Delta yesterday after a running four-day attack aimed at loosening the Communist grip on the rich rice bowl south of Saigon. The guerrillas faded into ad- Joining marshes and bamboo forests after losing 204 dead, kill- ing 15 Americans and wounding 125 others. But the action-Oper- ation Coronado 5-cost the Navy its worst combat losses of the war. Operation Coronado drew at- tention away -,.for the time being at least - from the continuing action along the demilitarized zone which divides the two Viet- nams. The U.S. Command report- ed only light and scattered fight- ing in that sector as U.S. B52 bombers and fighters hit once more at North Vietnamese gun positions in and around the buf- fer zone, U.S. Marines are holding the line south of the DMZ against the possibility of a heavy North Vietnamese push southward. In the delta, the Navy operated with the Army in a joint river t a s k force, ferrying infantry troops on gunboats up the muddy Rach Ba river. It; began last Tuesday and reached a climax with a landing of U.S. infantrymen at dawn Fri- day on the banks of the Rach Ba. The gunboats were heavily scored by B40 rockets, machine gun and recoilless rifle fire from guerrillas in deeply dug riverside bunkers. U.S. officers said the bunkers were so sturdy that U.S. 105 How- witzer shells 'only rattled them." The Viet Cong operating out of the bunkers were members of the 263rd Battalion, which has used .the delta area, 45 miles southwest of Saigon, as a stronghold and a training center for many years, the U.S. Command said. In the final fighting Saturday the task force lost 9 dead and 104 wounded. The guerrillas lost 70 dead, the command said. The Navy carried troops of the Army's 9th Infantry Division up the river in transports called bar- racks ships. For the attack the troops transferred to combined landing craft-gunboats bristling with mortars and small cannon. ixaint discountedreports that recent statements by North Viet- namese officials indicated any softening of their position. He said he, was convinced Hanoi would not agree in advance to match any U.S. moves, such as a bombing halt, but that they would be ready to talk if the bombing stops. "If Hanoi is asked to do some- thing as the price for an uncon- ditional halt to the bombing, Hanoi will not pay the price," he said. "I think the risk is worth taking in halting the bombing without any commitment from Hanoi." Thant acknowledged that he had recived no direct word from North Vietnam that it would be- gin negotiations, but he said he based his convictions on the views. of countries which have close ties with Hanoi.r He added: "Last January I volunteered the opinion that if the bombing was halted, meaning- ful talks would take place within three or four weeks. Hanoi has never refuted this." The announcement may come Monday in a speech McNamara is making to an editors group in San Francisco. But some authorities sugested there is a possibility that Johnson may order the announce- ment delayed. Rep. Charles E. Bennett said in a speech before the Reserve Of- ficers Association at Jacksonville Naval Air Station that the De- fense Department "appears to have finally broken the logjam which has held up the much need- ed development of an antiballistic missile system." $167.9 Million Bennett, a senior member of the House Armed Services committee, said "It has just been revealed that funds have been spent on hardware items for the deployment of an ABM system from the 169.7 million Congress provided for this but which the Defense Department has heretofore refused to use." Sources said the decision is to deploy a screen of missile-killing Nike-X batteries at a cost of from $3 billion to possibly 6 billion. Construction would take an esti- mated five years. Austere Defense McNamara has said that what he calls an "austere defense" against a Chinese-type threat probably could "preclude damage in the 1970s almost entirely." However, he has made it quite clear- that he believes the expen- diture of up to 40 billion to guard the United States against the kind of sophisticated saturation attack which could be mounted by Rus- sia would fall short of doing the job. Regardless of how extensive such a defense was, McNamara believes the Soviets could inflict millions of casualties on the Amer- ican population. So his strategy is to emplace so many U.S. offensive missiles in underground silos and sub- marines that a Soviet defensive system -would be overwhelmed. Knowing this, McNamara and his experts believe, the Soviets would be deterred from attacking the United States. But the Chinese present a dif- ferent case. McNamara has esti- mated the Red Chinese could have a significant intercontinental mis- sile force in position bythe mid- 1970s. Threat by 1972 The Senate-House' Atomic En- ergy Committee said Friday night that it believes the Chinese could have an intercontinental ballistic missile threat in place by- 1972- somewhat earlier than McNa- mara's estimate. If work on the Nike-X were to begin soon, the experts believe, the thin defense could be in place by 1972. Indications are that the John- son administration may have been prompted, in part, by.heavy press- ure from congressional critics, both Democratic and Republican, and indications that 'the GOP might make a 1968 presidential campaign issue of the antimissile question. WASHINGTON RP) - The na- tion's railroads are unhappy and union leaders quietly mollified in the wake of a compulsery $158 million wage package handed down by a White House board. "We conclude that it is clearly inflationary," said chief railroad negotiator John P. Hiltz Jr. of the two-year package covering 137,000 shopcraft workers. Case Supports Bombing At Risk of Chinese Entry world News Roundup WASHINGTON VP) -Sen. Clif- ford P. Case (R-NJ) said yester- day the United States must take the risk of Chinese and Russian involvement if intensified bombing of North Vietnam promises to end the war more quickly. Case, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he thinks President Johnson has decided to intensify the bombing of military targets in an effort to end the war sooner. He said he has "very great con- cern about this risky business" because no one knows what might trigger the Chinese or Russians to enter the conflict. 'Bombing Important' But he added: "I have not felt that the risk should not be taken to the extent that the bombing is important in reducing the supply of materials and men into the South. "My own judgment is that if we are going to have a war, we have to do everything that's reasonable to support our forces and if the supply of materials and men into South Vietnam from North Viet-, nam . . . is being significantly re- duced, then this isa risk we must take." Sen. John G. Tower (R-Tex), a Services Committee, complained that the Johnson administration "has led us into a no-win policy which refuses the use of American power to end the war and prom- ises us instead only unending casualty lists." Case recorded his views in a television program taped for New York stations. Tower expressed his view in the prepared text of an Owensboro, Ky., speech. 'Great Failure' Case said the "great failure" of the Johnson administration has been an-unsuccessful effort to get the South Vietnamese govern- ment to make social reforms that would give it wider support among the people. "One reason is that we have been hoping - and this includes the President and all of the rest- to win this war on the cheap without . . . doing the hard work of getting the South Vietnamese government to put itself in a po- sition with its own people which would attract their loyalty and support... .," he said. The wage hikes, endorsed by President Johnson, gave six rail- road unions much of their de- mands. The board announced its recommendations Friday. The board, created by Congress in a special law to halt a nation- wide strike, set wage increases of 11 per cent plus 20 cents an hour in extra skill pay increases for about 100,000 of the workers. The raises will become manda- tory in 30 days unless there is a voluntary agreement, viewed as an extremely slim prospect. The initial two-year cost to the railroads was-cut 'own somewhat by scattering the wage hike over the two-year period. "We're not jumping up and down in glee," said a union source, "but we're better o&f than we were." The unions remained offi- cially silent. The shopcraft workers now av- erage $2.90 per hour and skilled men $3.05. The sticky case, rife with political implications, marked the first time in history that Congress took a direct hand in setting wages except for general wartime wage-price controls. Johnson praised the board's recommendations as "one of the finest products" ever to come from a presidential board. Then he slipped swiftly out of the White House Fish Room, leaving the explanations to Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.), chairman of the five-man board. Morse, who aroused organized labor's wrath by sponsoring the special law to halt the two-day nationwide walkout in July, called the wage recommendations "a much to be desired public service in this time of great national emergency." The law forbids any further strike until Jan. 1, 1969. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 928 East Ann St. Ann Arbor, Mich. Phone: 662-3153 By The Associated Press RICHMOND, Va.- A federal district judge yesterday ordered Virginia authorities to show cause at a Monday hearing for holding H. Rap Brown without bond. At- torneys for the Black Power ad- vocate urged Judge Robert R. Merhige Jr. to grant Brown bail and afteranerhour-long hearing Merhige ordered 'Brown to be brought into the U.S. District Court at Richmond at noon. WASHINGTON - U.S. officials have heard reports that Egyp- tian President Gamal Abdel Nas- ser, speaking to other Arab lead- ers, recenlty retracted his charge that the United States and 'Bri- tain had joined with Israel in its war with the Arab states in June. * * * MILWAUKEE, Wis. - Three powerful Lutheran church groups in Wisconsin joined forces yester- day with other religious bodies which have endorsed open nous- ing demonstrations in Milwaukee. The statement proclaiming Lutheran support of "lawful" demonstrations came as represen- tatives of various faiths were gathering in the city to join Negro marches. *. * * SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Cali- fornia Gov. Ronald Reagan will ask that his name be removed if it is proposed for New Hampshire's 1968 Republican presidential pri- mary ballot, a governor's aide said yesterday. LONDON - Scotland Yard de-' tectives wrestled on the steps of a Moscow-bound plane yesterday to free a Russian student who was dragged aboard the Soviet jet, ap- parently against his will. A Scotland Yard statement said police went to the airport after the Russian was kidnaped on a busy London street, forced into a Soviet Embassy car and driven to the airport. 9:30 A.M.-Study-Discussion Groups 10:30 A.M.-IS THE CHURCH IRRELEVANT? Calvin Malefyt 7:00 P.M.-FLOW AND COUNTERFLOW OF IDEAS Prof. Kenneth Pike 1_* CANTERBURY HOUSE FRI., SAT., SUN. Sept. 15, 16, 17 8:00 P.M. with the WEIRD SISTERS Bert Hornback Margaret Albright a'<" Peter Ferranw Roger Staples Larry Glover Wendy Roe Tom Garbaty r.: Perry Innes Reg. Malcomson Frithjof-Bergmann Robert Oneal Donald Hall and more 330 MAYNARD - "A Reading" 6111 UILD1 PRESENTS: JANUS FILMS PRESENTS THE ARCTURUS COLLECTION DIRECT FROM NEW YORK'S PHILHARMONIC HALL a collection of brilliant short films by the directors of the 60's -(& 70's) A ART PRINT LOANS P STILL AVAILABLE 512 SAB 6 Mon., Sept. 18-3-5 P.M., 7-9 P.M. Tues., Sept. 19-7-9 P.M. Wed., Sept. 20-7-9 P.M. Bring Your Student ID (v .+amo -oo oo o e ~mw I .a Uillel ic tiitie TUESDAY- HEBREW CLASSES 'I Elementary-7:00 Advanced-8:45 THURSDAY- BASIC JUDAISM CLASSES- 7:30 P.M. . nnnm I I No PROGRAM NO. 1 Enter Hamlet Fred Mogubgub, U.S.A. Renaissance Walerian Borowczyk, Poland Les Mistons '67 Francois Truffaut, France Running, Jumping, and Standing Still Film Richard Lester, England Two Castles Bruno Bozzetto, Italy The Fat and the Lean Roman Polanski, Poland rm...:.....--..:n.. nn mhfla n..a e r'