WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER-29,1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER~29, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY World Bank McNamara's Confirms omination WASHINGTON ()-The World Bank confirmed last night that Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara had been nominated as president of the bank. The first official confirmation of the nomination came after the White House said McNamara's de- parture from the Cabinet would mean no change in the conduct of thet Vietnam war. Ix response to inquiries, the bank confirmed earlier reports that McNamara's name had been placed in nomination but it's still uncerr tain when any formal action will be taken by the bank's executive directors. Hardened War Effort Informed congressional sources indicated yesterday that McNama- ra's departure from the Defense Department is likely to bring a hardening of the Vietnam war ef- fort. Although job fatigue played a part in McNamara's expected transfer to the World Bank after nearly seven years in the Cabinet, the clear indications are that the hawks among President Johnson's advisers have won out. Relies on Rostow An official familiar with the situation said that in recent months Johnson has been leaning more heavily on Walt W. Rostow than on McNamara or any other adviser for Vietnam policy recom- mendations. Rostow, who is Johnson's spe- cial assistant for national security matters, is generally regarded as a hawk on the war. McNamara has advocated re- straint, questioning the increasing commitment of troops and their deployment. He has argued that expanded bombing of North Viet- nam will not win the war No Change At the White House, where Mc-, Namara's resignation was neither confirmed nor denied, a spokesman said his departure from the Penta- gon would mean no change in the conduct of the war. But some congressional sources think one result of the changeover may show up soon in the bombing of Haiphong harbor docks--a move McNamara has opposed. There was a wall of silence at both the White House and the Pentagon on a successor for Mc- Namara as head of the Defense Department, which he has ruled with a;firm hand for nearly seven years. But informed sources mentioned as possible successors Charles B. Thornton, chairman of the board of Litton Industries; and J. Irwin Miller of Columbus, Ind., official. of the Cummins Machine Co. It seems more likely to interested members of Congress, however, that Johnson will choose,a man of some experience in the Defense Department for the job. , Cyrus R. Vance, former deputy secretary currently serving John- son as negotiator in the Greek- Turkish crisis, was at the top of their list. Others mentioned included Gov. John B. Connally of Texas, a former secretary of the Navy; Robert B. Anderson, former deputy secretary of defense, and Harold Brown, secretary of the Air Force. White House press secretary George Christian was asked at his midday briefing whether McNa- mara's departure from the Penta- gon would mean any change in the conduct of the war in Vietnam. "No," Christian replied. "I don't know of any changes in the con- duct of the war for any reason." Christian also replied No when asked whether there are any sharp policy, differences between McNa- mara and Johnson over bombing North Vietnam. The questions were prompted by persistent speculation that the President has been listening more to the military chiefs and less to McNamara in recent months, and that McNamara is the principal spokesman for those who counsel against escalating the air war over North Vietnam. Although Johnson has freed more and more targets from the restricted list, he has thus far backed McNamara's strong op- position to hitting the port of Haiphong, the number one target on the Joint Chiefs of Staff list. UN Refuses Peking Bid' for Entry UNITED NATIONS (IP) - Com- munist China lost ground slightly yesterday when the UN General Assembly brushed aside for the eighteenth year bids to seat the Peking regime and expel National- ist China from the world organi- zation. The vote was 45 in favor of seating the Chinese Communists and 58 against with 17 abstain- ing. This represented a net shift of only one vote as compared with 1966, but it was significant in that it continued a trend away from the tie vote registered in 1965. Six-Day Debate The outcome of the six-day China debate left the Peking gov- ernment far from a UN seat since the United States had pushed through in advance a resolution asserting that this was an "im- WASHINGTON (R) -Chairman Wilbur D. Mills of the House Ways and Means Committee told news- men yesterday "it is impossible to develop and pass a tax bill through the House this year." Mills' remark provided the strongest evidence yet that the gap between President Johnson and some of the congressmen on whom he must depend most remained unbridged on the eve of the ad- ministration's climactic push for the income surcharge. The Arkansas Democrat's verdict theoretically left the way open for a start on the tax legislation this year, but he has indicated he does not consider the administration has yet come up with the kind of spending he thinks would justify even considering a heavier load on tax bill until Congress and the executive could agree on a scale- down in government expenditures. Mill's own position is that spend- ing cuts should match, dollar for dollar, any additional taxes im- posed. Administration spokesmen have indicated the reduced spending proposals they will submit to the committee total a saving of about $4 billion. The yield of the proposed 10 per cent surcharge on income tax, to- gether with postponement of re- ductions in excise taxes and speedup of corporate tax collec- tions is estimated by committee revenue experts at $5.1 billion for the fiscal year ending next June 30, $11 billion for the full year fol- lowing that. The administration mounted its new drive after Britain devaluated the pound sterling and heavy pressure on the dollar built up in international markets. A key argument for a tax in- crease, now especially stressed, is that international bankers will feel more confidence in the dollar and the payment imbalance will he eased if the United States reduces its budget deficit. NOT THIS YEAR: Mills Terms Acceptance Of Tax Bill 'Impossible' SITUATION TENSE: Greek Cabinet Rejects Declare Martial Law, In Malaysian States. Turkish Peace ATHENS, Greece (P)-An urgent Greek cabinet meeting on the Cyprus crisis failed last night to produce agreement to Turkish de- mands. Western alliance mediators immediately decided on new visits to Ankara, Turkey, and to Cyprus to deal with points of difference. Foreign Minister Panayiotis Pi- pinelis emerged from the Athens talks over Turkey's demands and said: "There has been no approval yet." This came after a long day and night of consultations from which the government earlier had prom- ised a decision one way or the other, as a spokesman put it, for peace or possible war. The foreign minister told news- men, "No agreement has been reached with the Turks." He said he saw the situation as "delicate and dangerous.'" Asked if he thought war possible, Pipinelis appeared thoughtful and replied: "Yes, it is possible. It is less of a possibility now." He conferred with White House envoy Cyrus R. Vance, who there- upon made plans to fly to Nicosia, the Cypriot capital, to talk with Terms President Archbishop Makarios about some of the details involved in the main dispute about evacu- ation of Greek troops. Pipinelis also met again with Manlio Brosio, secretary-general of the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization. Greece and Turkey are NATO members. As a consequence of that conference, Brosio decided to fly back to Ankara.' As the Greek cabinet met earlier in the day more than a dozen Turkish warships maneuvered off the north coast of Cyprus for two hours, then returned to their bases. A Turkish source said it was a routine naval exercise, but it was widely regarded as another show of force to increase pressure on the Greeks. The new steps by Vance and Brosio clearly indicated that the stumbling blocks in the controver- sy involved details-undoubtedly the timing and manner of any backdown on either side-which needed very delicate negotiation to remove. The envoys travelling from Athens to Ankara and back for four days produced some kind of a package which resulted in the Greek government's efforts to find acceptance. portant question"} which meant !tapay.s that a two-thirds majority was required. Another member of the tax- As it turned out the resolution writing committee, however, said, was unnecessary. The vote left "We should not close the door to Pekingconsiderably short of even the possibility of getting a bill out a simple majority, of committee this year." Starting today, the committee U.S. Opposition .wi hear testimony from Secretary As usual, the United States led of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler, thein osition to admitting the Budget Director Charles L. Schult- Chnee Communists. It was ac- ze and William McC. Martin Jr., knowledged generally, however, chairman of the Federal Reserve that the major factors in the poor Board. chUwin Uf 2P akino lnv in f ts snowing of remig ay i u ideological split with Moscow and Seven weeks ago, the committee its internal political struggle. by formal resolution set aside the The intensity of the Peking- Moscow rift was reflected in the lukewarm presentation of the W o l N eV Chinese Communist case by the oride Soviet bloc. The deputy foreign minister of the Soviet Union, By The Associated Press Vasily V. Kuznetsov, spoke only OTTAWA-Prime Minister Les- nine minutes on behalf of Peking. ter B. Pearson yesterday coldly ac- Italian Resolution cused President Charles de Gaulle While the main interest was of intervening in Canada's dom- concentrated on the question of estic affairs by renewing his call seating the Chinese Communists, for an independent Quebec. Italy and a small group of other "It is intolerable that a head of countries were rebuffed in their a foreign state or government effort to launch a special UN should recommend a course of po- study on Chinese representation litical or constitutional action -a move generally considered as which would destroy Canadian a step toward a two-China solu- confederation and the unity of the KUALA LAMPUR, Malaysia (A)W -The government declared limit- ed martial law in northwestern Malaysia yesterday in the fifth day of growing racial rioting be- tween Chinese and Malays. Army and police units were given emergency powers and rush- ed to the worst areas, including Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rah- man's home state of Kedah in the s Roundup The statement came after a day of bitter condemnation of De Gaulle, once regarded as one of Israel's best .friends. De Gaulle's comments on the Middle East war' were made at his news conference Monday. LONDON-Prime Minister Har- old Wilson stonily declined yes- terday to withdraw Britain's bid to join the European Common Mark- et becauseofa new veto from France's President Charles de Gaulle. Wilson declared that "we have slapped our application down on the table, and there it will re- main," despite De Gaulle's restate- ment of determination to keep the British out of the six-nation trade community. country's prime rice-growing area. Police said three Malays and 14 Chinese have been killed and 77 Malays and 112 Chinese have been hurt. Two policemen and two soldiers were also reported injured. Broadcasting an appeal for calm, Rahman blamed the riots on Communist terrorists and sym- pathizers of Chinese Communist Chairman Mao Tse-tung. He ask- ed the Malays and Chinese to call a halt to their retaliatory attacks on each other and urged all Ma- laysians to help track down left- ist troublemakers. "By sitting on the fence you are only encouraging these people who are making more trouble," he said. "They've brought disun- ity where the people in the past have been united." Police said 851 persons have been arrested in a roundup of leftists and Chinese -secret society members following the worst ra- cial disturbances in more than three years. The situation in Kedah and neighboring Perak State was con- sidered so serious that some army and police reinforcements were sent in from the island city of Penang, where the disorders de- veloped last Friday out of a dem- onstration against currency de- valuation. } r tion. Canadian state," Pearson told an The Italian resolution was de- applauding House of Commons. feated by a vote of 32 in favor, 57 against and 30 abstaining. In JERUSALEM-The Israeli Ca- 1966 a similar resolution was re- binet rebuked President Charles jected 34-62 with 25 abstentions. de Gaulle early this morning for The United States was among the a "severe insult to the Jewish peo- minority voting for the Italian ple" 'in saying that Israel started proposal both times. the June war in the Middle East. -Associated Press INSPECTING TROUBLE SPOTS on Cyprus, UN envoy Jose Rolz- Bennett left, looks over Kofinoy, where 24 Turkish Cypriots were killed in recent fighting. At right is Finnish General Martola of the UN forces on Cyprus. AN EXCITING CHRISTMAS GIFT! SPECIAL GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE. SUBSCRIBE NOW! DISCOUNTS! Ticket Office Open Weekdays 10:00-1 :00 and 2:00-5:00 U I EIGHTH ANNUAL FALL CONCERT ANN ARBOR CANTATA SINGERS Richard Crawford, Conductor TWO EARLY AMERICAN CAROLS MOTETS by LAYOLLE & PURCELL VECCHI: MAGNIFICAT ROSSINI: HASS (Excerpts) MONDAY, DEC. 4 Rackham Lecture Hall 8:30 P.M. 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