WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, x.967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAC £AA iM.bE4IP WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4,1967 THE MICHIGAN IJAILV rAU intcr.C is House Postpones Surtax Approval Budget Bill Furnishes Temporary Financing for Government Agencies CONVENTION VOTE: Wilson Receives Labor Party Support for Economic Poliey WASHINGTON (P)-A fiscally worried House refused yesterday to order President Johnson to cut R the budget, but indirectly told him that if he doesn't it won't consider his tax boost request. The dual action came on the House floor and in its tax-writing Ways and Means Committee. The House sent to the Senate by voice vote a bill to provide temporary financing, until Oct. 10, for more than a score of fed- eral agencies which technically went broke last Saturday mid- Senate Votes To Restore Space Fund's WASHINGTON (Pl)-Rejecting some of the deep slashes the House had voted, the Senate Ap- propriations Committee voted yes- terday to add $95.5 million to the House-passed space money bill. It recommended a $4,678,900,- 000 appropriation for the space program for the fiscal year which began July 1. Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (D- Wash.), floor manager for the bill, noted that the total still is $421 million below the initial bud- get request and $289 million be- low the amount voted for the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration last year. President Johnson previously had said he would accept the re- ductions of $516 million voted by the House. Magnuson said the committee increases would permit contin- uance of work on numerous pro- jects to be carried out after the manned lunar landings in the Apollo project. Johnson initially asked $5.1 bil- lion to carry on the space pro- gram this year but Congress in an authorization bill cut this by $234 million. The House then slashed out another $282 million when it passed the separate money bill but the Senate panel restored $95.5 million of this. night. Their money for the fiscal year that started July 1 is tied up in pending appropriation bills. But first the House turned back. 213 to 205, a Republican drive to add to the financing measure a mandate to the Presi- dent tocut at least $5 billion from the current fiscal year budget. This was a reversal of last Thursday's 202-182 vote that recommitted another temporary financing bill because it didn't in- clude a spending-cut angle. While the House was engaged in debate over whether the Presi- dent or Congress should take the lead in cutting spending, the Ways and Means Committee, by a 20-5 vote, laid aside considera- tion of the President's tax in- crease proposal "until such time as the President and the Congress reach an understanding" on budget cutting. Such an "understanding" may be reached before the end of this month, for the Senate is expect- ed to extend the life of thel House-passed temporary financ- ing bill to Oct. 31 or longer. That would give the House Ap- propriations Committee m o r e time to work on the promise of its chairman, Rep. George H. Mahon (D-Tex.), to review past and current appropriations with the hope of cutting back moneyE available to the President forl spending. E The administration has claim-t ed it can't cut spending until allE the appropriation bills become law and the President knows how much money will be available. Only four of 14 regular money measures have become law. "The tax bill is dead; we killed it today," Rep. Melvin R. Laird E of Wisconsin told a reporter. Laird, chairman of the GOP Con- ference, was a leader in the los- ing fight to tie the mandatoryC budget-cutting rider to the emer-t gency money bill. But Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore.) 1 of the Ways and Means Commit-r tee said the odds are that a taxi bill will be passed. And Chairman Wilbur D. Mills (D-Ark.) said,I "The atmosphere is such that a X tax bill would not be approved by the committee or passed bya the House." HIPPIEVILLE RAID NETS Three members of the singing group, the Grateful Dead, were ja and five girl friends on suspicion of possessing narcotics. The arres Francisco headquarters. Rod McKernan, 22, is third from left an group's managers, is at right. Others refused to be identified. " I UReN VetS.mIGH olC SCARBOROUGH, England W)_- In a fighting speech that won at standing ovation, Chancellor oft the Exchequer James Callaghan persuaded the Labor party conven-] tion yesterday to endorst the gov-] erment's management of the wob-t bly British economy. It was a, smashing succes for Prime Min-1 ister Harold Wilson's Labor gov-1 ernment. ' Big trade unions leaders led the1 assault on Wilson's economic pol- icies, charging that the wage-price freezes and other measures were responsible for Britain's record 600.000 unemployed. Foreign Secretary Despite the economic debate, the -Associated Press talk among the 6,000 delegates was 'DEA T) mostly about thetempestuous UJII4AL)night of Foreign Secretary George Brown iled Monday with two managers Bwn. t came after a raid on their San The foreign secretary landed d Danny Rifkin, 24, one of the neck deep in trouble at midnight when in public view he protested loudly and bitterly to newsmen at the way photographers had been hounding his wife and himself. In lurid terms he acccused the cameramen of wanting to match pictures taken of him by American d photographers while he was dan- cing the Frug aboard the Queen Mary in New York last month. res ' S ;Bitish papers splashed those pic- es, o ls tures and it was believed that Wil- son subsequently addressed a termination for the people of withering message to his foreign South Vietnam is one of the U.S. secretary. goals, Fulbright questioned wheth- All day long the affair domi- er the recent election had been a nated talk among party delegates fair one. with most of them, and Brown's "You haven't mentioned any- ministerial colleagues among them, thing yet that makes me believe wondering how long he could sur- the objective is worth what we are vive in high office. doing," Fulbright said. Summoned by Wilson Dirksen and Sens. George Mui'- The speculation intensified when phy (R-Calif) and Democratic it became known Wilson had sum- Sen.nry M. Jackson andWar- moned his deputy prime minister ren G. MagnusonheWashingtonfor a heart-to-heart talk. Brown rallied behind Kuchel's assertionshwduwerndakgse. that the United States must not showed up wearing dark glases. abandon its Asian commitments. No one in authority was sug- 'Nameless Settlement' gesting Wilson would go so far as They supported his declaration to fire Brown or to transfer him that this country must not "throw from the Foreign Office at a time away what free people have fought when the need for governmental valiantly torachieve in Southeast unity is paramount. Asia" by accepting some "name- Yet leaders could hardly fail to less settlement" to end the con- realize that the image Brown is flict. projecting could tarnish the gov- Fulbright backed Symington's ernment and make life for it that call for a suspension of all Amer- much harder. ican military operations on a fixed' Brown, today and tomorrow, is date, to learn if Hanoi would re- due to defend the government's spond. -- - World News Roundup By The Associated Press SAIGON-A total of 1,240 can- didates seek seats in the 137- member House of Representatives to be elected Oct. 22, Vietnam P r e s s, the government news agency, said yesterday. A 60-member Senate was chosen Sept. 3 . The representatives will be elected from 53 constituencies throughout South Vietnam. Voters of Saigon, the capital, will choose 15. WASHINGTON - President Johnson has nominated Howard J. Samuels, a New York indus- trialist, as undersecretary of com- merce, the White House an- nounced yesterday. Samuels, 47, president of Kor- dite Corp., a plastic products Thursday & Friday The Iron Horse dir. John Ford, 1924 Uncut version of Ford's monumental epic on the Winning of the West. "A national epic!" -Arthur Knight Saturday & Sunday MARIUS TRILOGY PART II: FANNY WINE, WOMEN, AND SONG featuring Raimu 7:00 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM STILL ONLY 50cT policy of support for the U.S. posi- Monday could hardly have been tion in Vietnam and of seeking en- timed more unfortunate either for try into Europe's Common Market. himself or the government. Both aret hot issues. Fourteen Two left-wing union leaders, labor unions are demanding that Frank Cousins and Clive Jenkins, Britain dissociate from American led the attack on the government's policy in Vietnam. Leftist and economic policies. They charged rightist factions have teamed up that Wilson's administration was to challenge British entry into the using methods that betrayed So- Common Market. cialist principles. Both demanded In the circumstances Brown's a change of policy, including a behavior over a six-hour period cutback in defense spending. Steel Haulers Warn Strike To Spread, Vow Roadblocks manufacturer, would succeed act- ing Undersecretary J. Herbert Holloman. His nomination re- quires Senate confirmation. * * * DETROIT - General Motors Corp., the giant of the nation's Big Three automakers, reported yesterday its sales in September were 61,000 above sales in the same month a year earlier. The totals for September's last 10 days were 206,532 cars and 22,872 trucks, compared, to 118,- 753 cars and 20,151 trucks sold in the last 10 days of September 1966, GM said. Ford Motor Co., its production lines idled since Sept. 7 by a strike of 160,000 United Auto Workers Union members, and the other member of the Big Three- Chrysler-have not yet reported their sales figures for September. CINEMA II PRESENTS JASON ROBARDS JR. in AThousand Cowns SHORT: CHAPTER 3 FLASH GORDON GOES TO MARS Friday, Saturday and Sunday 7 and 9:15 P.M. Auditorium A Angell Hall 50 I V e: v NN a d s; a F ii a A P If u ii n s s a V S f4 A WASHINGTON (,)-Sens. Ever- ett M. Dirksen (R-Ill) and J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark) clashed heat- edly yesterday over whether . a Communist takeover of Asia hing- es on the outcome of the Vietnam war. Dirksen, the Republican leader and defender of President John- son's Asian policies, and Ful- bright, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee and a critic of the President's policies, climax- ed a day of explosive debate over Vietnam. 'Shadow of Communism' In a dramatic arm-waving speech, Dirksen told the Senate that the defense of South Vietnam is essential to the security of the United States. If Vietnam falls, he said, the shadow of Commun- isi will darken all Asia. "Then the whole Pacific coast- .ie of the United States is ex- posed," he said. Rising directly across the center aisle, Fulbright replied softly "I don't agree at all." 'Not Only Vietnam' He argued that the security of this country lies at home and elsewhere in the world; not in Vietnam. He said continuing the war will weaken the United States at home and lessen its ability to defend its own security. Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo) sparked the debate with a propos- al for a U.S. cease-fire to test Hanoi's peace intentions. Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel of Cal- ifornia, Dirksen's GOP leadership assistant, quickly opposed any A.merican "stand-down that would permit the North Vietnamese uni- laterally to improve their position" while the United States grounded its planes and silenced its guns. 'Flank Will Be Turned' Dirksen said the CommunistsI mean to liquidate the freedom ofh South Vietnam. If they do, he said, "our flank will be turned." Fulbright challenged Dirksen's assertion that the loss of South Vietnam would force' the United States to bring its western de- fense line to a point "between Alaska and Hawaii and that San Francisco and Los Angeles." Did Dirksen advocate a perma- nent American presence in Asia? Fulbright asked. He had said nothing about that. Dirksen re- plied. He said a stable Saigon government could take care of its own military needs. No Jump-Off Point Fulbright argued it is not real- istic to assume that Soviet Russia needs South Vietnam as a jump- ing-off point if it plans attacks in the Pacific area. He said Com- munist China has shown no dis- position to fight the United States. The Dirksen-Fulbright debate grew sharp. "You've been quarrelling for the last year with the conduct of the war," Dirksen shouted at Ful- bright. "Tell us what you want to do-quit nowsand get out?" Fulbright replied that his rec- ommendation was to reconvene the Geneva conference, with Great Britain and Russia as co-sponsors, to propose a course of action. When Dirksen said that self-de- THIS WEEK AT. 1 421 H ill St. 8:30 P.M. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY T THE APOSTLES a four-piece rock combo "Nobody has as much fun as the APOSTLES.. . Except those who come to see them." (room for Dancing) SATURDAY --- BOB FRANKE singing ballads, Dylan Songs, and ORIGINAL folk music, playing guitar, banjo, and harmonica & JOHN MILLER $ 1.00 cover includes entertainment and refreshments I TONIGHT JOHN WATSON, Editor The Inner City Voice Detroit's new militant newspaper PAUL LOWINGER M.D. e Detroit Uprisings Slides and discussion at the less publicized side of the events in Detroit last July PITTSBURGH (A)-The eight- state steel haulers strike marred by stonings, shootings and beat- ings threatened to spread yester- day, when strike leaders vowed to stop everything on the highways "except wheelbarrows and bi- cycles." Calling Friday's proposed peace plan with the Teamsters Union a "standard line of doubletalk- ing, lies and contradictions," the steel haulers said it was voted down almost to a man. The rejection brought renewed violence in Pennsylvania and Ohio. A trucker was shot near Fremont, Ohio, and another was beaten unconscious in Canfield, Ohio. Trucking companies that had reopened hopefully with the weekend news of a truce began closing down again yesterday. "We don't make enough money to risk somebody's life out there," said a man at Pittsburgh Haul- age. "I had one man come in with a gun and say, 'Which one do you want me to take?' I didn't let him go anywhere, but I know guys who are.' 'Weapons on Seat' Another trucker said, "I don't want to -mention names but we had three men leave here yester- day and they had large, danger- ous weapons on the seat." In the steel centers of Ohio and Pennsylvania, the violence has re- sembled guerrilla warfare. Snip- ers fire from ambush along dark- ened turnpike overpasses. They drop rocks through windshields. Others slash tires and cut air hoses. Big steel producers, with no way to truck steel as the 10,000 to 20,000 drivers stayed off the road, have been forced to cut produc- tion and lay off some workers. Despite turning to the railroads, Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp., the No. 5 producer, estimates Septem- ber shipments were down 30 per cent. Monday night's violence was the worst since the wildcat strike started seven weeks ago in Gary, Ind., and spread east. Traffic was snarled for hours as gangs of angry men blocked trucks near Erie, Pa., and Canfield, Ohio. A 14-acre parking lot near Can- field was filled with 300 trucks. Pennsylvania state p o 11 c e, forced to double night patrols, spent hours untangling 70 to 80 big rigs snarled by gangs of angry men near Erie. More than a dozen windshields were shattered by rocks and pellet guns on a 100- mile stretch of the turnpike be- tween Pittsburgh and Everett. 'Never Go Back' "Most men feel we will never., ever go back under terms of our old contract," signed last spring, said William Kusley, 39, of Gary, Ind., organizer of the dissident group. "Our next move is to go out after everything that moves on the highways," Kusley told a news conference in Pittsburgh. No talks were scheduled. The dissident truckers want a 6 per cent increase to 79 per cent of the gross revenue they now re- ceive for hauling steel. They also want paid for time spent at mills to load and unload as well as a separate Teamsters contract. I1 U 330 MAYNARD ST. 8:00 P.M. STARTS THURSDAY "EXTRAVAPANTLY BOLD and BIZARRE' Bosley Crowther, N.Y. Times "MISS ZETTERLING MAKES EACH SCENE A WORK OF ART. STUNNING EFFECTS." -William Wolf, Cue Magazine "THE VOYEUR'S DELIGHT OF THE YEAR:" -Judith Crist, World Journal Tribune Night Games GRID THULIN ADMITTANCE RESTRICTED TO PERSONS OF AGE 18 MINIMUM Mon.-Thurs. 7, 9 P.M. Fri., Sat. 7, 9 & 11 P.M. Sun, 6, 8 & 10P.M. r STEPHAN'S Corner of S.U. and E. U. 769-5176 RESTAURANT Instant Service-Roast Chicken Carry Out 7:00 A.M.-9:00 P.M. NEWSPAPERS NEW YORK TIMES, Detroit News, Detroit Free Press, Michigan Daily Sundays and Dailies Patent Medicines-Drugs 7:00 A.M.-12:00 P.M. ! i ' f 3 i,', l . ff Mademoiselle is coming to U-M campus - CAROL NICKLAUS I College Board Competitions Editor invites YOU to an Open House i! 1 I ' I I I ' , I, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4 from 3-5 P.M. 3rd floor, SAB I I I BAGELS AI C11 kA. (rfnkVFDCATIAM W AITNI I I I I I! In is it