FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1867 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I~'RTDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1967 TIlE MICHIGt~ lI~1IIX AL n% Thieu Offers To Talk PART-TIME: USSR To Draft ~To North V6-Year-Olds SMOSCOW () Accusing the increases in S o v i e Will Propose Halt in Raids Over North South Prefers Talks With Ho, But Willing To Meet at Any Level S A I G 0O N () President-elect Ngyuen Van Thieu will send a letter to North Vietnamese Pre- sident Ho, Chi Minh proposing that they meet to talk peace, a spokesman for Thieu said today. Thieu's letter will offer a one- week pause in the bombing of North Vietnam if Hanoi shows some willingness to talk about peace, the spokesman said. "Thieu would only- meet with Ho Chi Minh," the spokesman continued, "but he will not meet with any lesser official. If the North Vietnamese propose a meeting at a lower level, we will send a lower-level official of our own. We will meet'at any level." The letter will be sent through diplomatic channels shortly after Thieu is inaugurated Oct. 30, the spokesman said. The spokesman said even if Ha- noi did not agree to a meeting, the bombing pause would go into effect if the North Vietnamese "show their good will by stopping the infiltration of the South or stop making trouble in the South." Demands Meeting Thieu announced in August during the presidential campaign that he would offer a bombing pause if Hanoi showed some in- dication of willingness to meet with representatives of his gov- ernment. He later said he would make the offer a week or 10 days after his inauguration. This is the first time the gov- ernment has announced that a letter actually will be sent to Ho Chi Minh offering the bombing pause. The letter could go through a third country or be delivered by a member of the International Control Commission, whose In- dian, Polish and Canadian staff members are in both North and South Vietnam, theoretically to control observance of the 1954 Geneva agreements. U.S. Unaware The spokesman also indicated that the letter might be delivered via the press by releasing it to ews media for Hanoi to learn of t that way. But it more probably will go by diplomatic channels, he said. U.S. officials were unaware of Thieu's plans to write to Ho and it is known that many of them, especially on the military side, are not too happy about the pos- sibility of a bombing pause. Ha- noi took advantage of pauses in the past to increase movement of men and supplies south, they say. They also feel a pause might be taken as an indication of allied weakness. However, most observers think that Hanoi will reject Saigon's offer of a bombing pause since the North Vietnamese seem convinced that political events in the United States, and especially the 1968 presidential election, will have a greater effect on American parti- cipation in the war than events in Vietnam. AT PRESS.-CONFERENCE: Rusk Denounces War Critics, I Defends U.S. Peace Attempts United States of inpreasing mili- tary preparations, Soviet Defense Minister Andrei A. Grechko an- nounced yesterday a program of part-time military training for all Soviet boys beginning at the age of 16. Marshal Grechko also announ- ced that the age for calling youths to their required full-time military service was being reduc- ed from 19 to 18 years and the period of active service reduced from 3 to 2 years for ordinary WASHINGTON (A) - Aban- an administration campaign. Be-{Vietnamese "live there comfort- troops. doning his usual calm, Secretary sides, the State Department's ably" for 40 or 50 years and con- Addressing the Supreme Soviet, of State Dean Rusk turned vigor- head was reported personally fed tinued: Addressinthcupremei ously yesterday on critics of the up with much of the antiwar talk "Where would be the incentive ecteparliament whic uto eat-cal administration's Vietnam policy on Capitol Hill. for peace? . . . Now let's not be a new military service bill intro- -particularly Sen. J. W. Ful- "I have great respect for intel- children!" new m y rc e bilnso bright (D-Ark.). lectuals, but I don't feel that I'm Rusk, however, saw no problem ducminister byaccusedhko, the United Fulbright told the Senate Wed- intimidated by them," Rusk, a with the proposal by the new States of imperialism in Vietnam nesday that the United Nations one time professor, said when a So u t h Vietnamese president, and the Middle East at present "is deterred from ac- reporter asked about "intellec- Nguyen Van Thieu, for a week's tion by the opposition of the So- tual critics of the war" including bombing pause to get Hanoi into I the present situation, Grech- viet Union but even more, I think former administration aides Ar- negotiations. ko said, the Soviet Union is tak- by the failure of the principal bel- thur Schlesinger, Jr., and Roger He said that the reported Thieu ng all steps necessary to streng- ligerent, the United States, to en- Hilsman. plan poses "no problem to Wash- then its defenses. courage it to act." Rusk said he didn't understand ington . . . What is needed is a He warned the deputies that if Rusk, asked at a news confer- how senators could accept the response from Hanoi . . . There's a general war developed, "it will ence about the statement, re- declarations of the 1964 resolution no problem between ourselves and involve not only armies but the plied: "I would say it is not true." on Southeast Asia-which approv- South Vietnam on that." populations of the fighting pow- Rusk said the Communists are ed of using armed force as neces- "Hanoi knows w h a t this ers." So, Grechko said, every citi- barring a U.N. role and that Ha- sary-and then "brush them aside means," Rusk told the newsmen. zen has an obligation to be trai- not is not interested in negotia- as having no validity." "We've had not the slightest in- ed for defense. ting. Nonetheless Ruskin nono Fulbright is one who voted for dication from Hanoi that they are The new program for 16- and ced himself "encouraged by pro- the resolution and later expressed interested in productive discus- 17-year-olds will educate Soviet gress toward peace in South Viet- regret about it and the course sions." youth in discipline and create nam" through military opera- Johnson has followed. On the Middle East question, conditions for the fastest train- tion, pacification and internal "If people change their minds," Rusk urged the nations involved ing of 18-year-old recruits in mo- political advances. Rusk said, biting his words for to work urgently toward solving dern military techniques, Grech- The secretary of state fired his sharp emphasis, "it's fair to ask their problems because, he said. ko added. defensive valleys in an unusually on which accasion were they "time is not working for a peace- In recent years, he went on, So- dfnievlesianuuulyright."i ful settlement." viet armed forces' have been long newsrconference-nearly an Told of Rusk's comments, Ful- u Secret diplomatic talks at the equipped with the most modern hour - repeatedly denouncing bright said he had stated many United Nations and elsewhere have type of weapons, made possible North Vietnam for what he called times that he was mistaken when not produced a settlement formula, by the industrial growth of this peace proposals from the United he first supported U.S. Vietnam he conceded, but said "progress is country. States and other countries. policy and added, "I believe I am possible." The marshal boasted of great right now." _.._ -- - -- Combined with House Speaker Rusk was asked why the Uni- John McCormack's recent de- ted States did not stop the bomb- nunciation of congressional criti- ing of North Vietnam in a new j cism of President Johnson's Viet- effort to get Hanoi into peace H E LD O V E R ! nam course, Rusk's meeting with talks. Rusk asked whether the newsmen appeared to be part of proposal was to let the North; WitnessCINEMA II Witness Acknowledges Plot; PRESENTS Klan Marked' Schwerner JASON ROBARDS JR MERIDIAN, Miss. () - A Ku Klan Meridian unit, and were Klux Klan "titan" told a federal told that a top-level decision to i court jury yesterday that the eliminate "Goatee," as Schwerner Klan set out to "eliminate" civil was known, had been made-but rights worker Michael Schwerner that another unit would handle by murder. the job. The Rev. Delmar Dennis of Unlike Miller, who said he hadCo Meridian, was the second witness been banished from the Klan, the to take the stand in the crowded Rev. Mr. Dennis testified he re- courtroom to testify that Schwer- mained a member of the terrorist ner had been a marked man for organization. several days before he was killed. At a meeting on June 28, a SHORT: CHAPTER 3, FLASH GOR DON Schwerner, 24, a Brooklyn so- week after the workers were slain, cial worker before coming to Me- Miller said a Klan member told ridian, was killed June 21, 1964. him the trio had been shot and Two men who accompanied him had been buried in an earthen FRI DAY SATU R DAY on his last trip-Andrew Good- dTm man, 20, of New York, and James dm Chaney, 22, of Meridian -also George Burley, an FBI ballis- C an . 22, of Meridian - alsotics expert, testified that the AUDITORIUM A 7 and 9:15P.M. The 18 men n trial are charg- rights workers were shot fromA IMn5 ed with conspiracy to violate the close range - an inch or closer A NGEL L HALL 50c civil rights of the three who were - with .38-caliber pistols. Four slain, the stiffest federal charge ofthe febulletswre from the applicable in the case,. same weapon, he said. ________________________________ rri l h Maximum punishment possible under the old Reconstruction era law is 10 years and $5,000 fine. . The Rev. Mr. Dennis, who said he preached in both Baptist and Methodist churches in this area, came under sharp cross- examination after his testimony, most of which corroborated ear- lier testimony by Meridian Police Sgt. C. W. Miller, 43, an ex- Klansman. Both Miller and the minister said they were members of the White Knights of the Ku Klux "INSPIRATION ... BRILLIANCE!"-Detroit Free Press "ELOQUENT & ELEGANT ... MAGNIFICANCE!"-Detroit News "SUPERB!"-Michigan Daily "POWERFUL!"-Ann Arbor News TONIGHT and SATURDAY at _HE ARK ----1421 HILL STREET 8:30 BOB WHITE-(from San Diego, California) returns-singing bal- lads, children's songs, and folk music, playing guitar, banjo, and AUTOHARP. (Bob did the Woody Guthrie Folk-in with Will Geer and will do one set in memory of Woody Guthrie) $1.00 Cover includes entertainment and refreshments I WT IIPta( iO USB the 3rd annual HUMPHREY BOGART film festival: TONIGHT-THE BIG SLEEP tnrize given to thoe pwho carncn lt-the. dced) __ - il UE1"A Li D I if _t0U