Sunday, September 15, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Pa_ Tre WASTE OF TROOPS, DOLLARS "Question expense o Vietnam War By PETER ARNETT Associated Press Writer second of Two Parts Despite the continuation of the war in Vietnam, the old and seemingly unsuccessful fight by doves to bring some end to the fighting is having an effect on the battlefield in demands for fewer U.S. soldiers and lower' costs. The argument that 200,000 more Americans couldn't w i n the war brings to mind its con- verse - would 200,000 less make much of a difference. And an- alagously, if pouring more funds in won't help, what effect will reductions have? Unfortunately, there is much that can be done that may ap- pease the cost-conscious public without changing the extent or nature of the war. The attitude of people in the United States to the war is now a major factor in its conduct. "Right now, people don't expect the war to be going on in Viet- nam in 1969," declared John Vann, a regional director of the pacification program. "They think the whole thing will be solved this year in Paris. But I tell you, the war will still Sbe going next year, and when Athey, find that out they won't like it at all." To avert what might turn out to be a complete rejection of the war by the U.S. public, Vann s a i d, a planned reduction of U.S. forces would be a necessi- ty. "We have to show them that this thing can end," he said. He would go about the reduc- tion by partly dismantling the elaborate military structure erected by Gen. Westmoreland. "The first 100,000 Americans ing $44 million this' ye a r for chemicals plus about three times that much to complete, is also criticized. "I havebeen unable to deter- mine one possible advantage from defoliation," o n e senior provincial officer declared. "The program is more trou- ble than good and is the No. 1 complaint by the people in all three corps. It is the accidents that cause all the trouble - dropping the chemicals in the wrong place, and wind changes that wipe out the back gardens of a provincial capital, the plane. leaks that spray the stuff over friendly paddyfieldg. Critics of the cost of the war divide annual expenditures this way: $800,000 U.S. economic aid; $1.8 billion military aid to the Vietnamese army, $2.6 bil- lion in direct support of Viet- namese operations such as na- val blockades and air support. The U.S. effortncosts an addi- tional $25 billion. "Our real costs," said one high-level critic "are the 11 U.S. divisions and telling them that the sky is the limit moneywise. Those here who see a U.S. Planned withdrawal as possible say they have no intention of selling out the Vietnamese. "I think that taking over the bur- den of the war is within their capability," Vann said. "Things are looking up, not enough but some. But as we phased out our troops, at some time we might have to make a value judgment, particularly if the other side was benefiting from our withdrawal." Vietnamese are taking over an increasing number of Special Forces camps in the highlands, and' the Vietnamese a rm y is moving in to some places, such as the Bong Son Plain, t h a t American divisions once policed. Senate vote on Fortas, nuclear treaty dutfu WASHINGTON (R) - Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill.) predicted yesterday the Senate will not act this year on the Abe Fortas nomination or the nuclear nonproliferation treaty. With President Johnson calling the legislative plays, both are being burnished by the Democrats as presidential cam- paign issues. Dirksen, the Senate Republican leader, said in an inter- view there is no chance that Johnson's appointment of Fortas to be chief justice can be brought to a vote by invok- ing the cloture rule to limit debate. "As matters stand," Dirksen said, "at least 50 senators would vote against cloture even though a number of them -Associated Press Destroyed bridges in Mekong Delta to leave would be for free," Vann declared. "They are the clerks, the laundrymen, the en- gineer battalions building offi- cers' clubs throughout the coun- try. So many extraneous things are soaking up people not essen- tial." In Vann's view, infantry divi- sions should be limited to one base camp each instead of sev- eral (the 1st Division has five base camps). Each base camp generally requires one battalion of infantrymen to secure, mean- ing that as much as one third of the trigger-pullers in each of the 11 American infantry divis- ions are standing guard duty. There are also critics of the constant B52 raids that rattle cities every night. "Those raids cost half a million dollars apiece," one official comment- ed. "I know of at least half a dozen raids where an infantry squad would have been better advised to check out the area- at one thousandth of the cost." The defoliation program, cost- Bridle couple at Tiger game -Associated Press Nixon calls for major changes in farm policy DES MOINES, Iowa (M-Richard M., Nixon campaigned for President in the sunny suburbs and flat farmlands of the Midwest yesterday, and declared "our farmers and ranchers have become the stepchildren of the Great Society." The Republican standard bearer picked the corn county of Iowa for his first major pronouncement on farm policy. He accused Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and Secretary of Agriculture Orville. Freeman of compiling "A catalogue of failure" in farm policy. In a 19-point policy statement, Nixon called for im- proved market prices for farmers and a stepped up agricul- tural export program. Present policies that put farm price supports at 74 per ____ "SPIDER' JOHN, qt 1 Doors Open 'bring a friend' 8:00--the management $1.75 at the door ($1.25 after second set) EAST BOUND MOUND ERS -T-.E A Talks deadlock in N.'Y. teachers stri~k NEW YORK idy--Mayor John called top aides to an em V. Lindsay warned yesterday that meeting in his offices her( both sides in the city's public sought a way out of thei school crisis had adopted "extreme that k'ept most city, school positions" that have deadlocked for three days during thei efforts to end the teachers' strike. It was the second year it Nearly 1.1 million pupils have been that the AFL-CIO United I affected by the walkout.th T a erL- asUntrd New York States education com tion of Teachers has str missioner, James E. Allen Jr massive city school system - cent of parity are "intolerable in my book; farmers are en- titled to better," he said. Farmers, he said, must "be able to prosper in relation to the prices they pay for other products." Nixon promised "an open door for agriculture at the White would support the nomina- tion." Dirksen placed himself in this latter group. Debate limitation can be ap- plied only if two-thirds of those voting approve of the action. In discussing prospects for the treaty to hamper spread of 'nu- clear weapons, Dirksendsaid he has found such a sharp division of opinion among senators that he is convinced nothing will be done about it in the current ses- sion of Congress. Republican presidential candi- date Richard M. Nixon has en- dorsed the treaty, with some min- or personal reservations. But he has said that ratification should await more definite indications of Russian intentions in Europe following the invasion of Czech- oslovakia. But the Democratic nominee, Hubert H. Humphrey, argues that the tensions raised by the Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia make it all the more imperative to take steps toward reducing the, risk of nuclear war. President Johnson has called for action on both issues. He is said to have sent instructions to the Democratic leadership to dramatize as much as possible Republican obstruction to action on them. In an effort to put Republicans. on the spot, Johnson reportedly has suggested that the $72 -bil-; lion defense money bill passed by the House be held up in the Senate until after attempts were made to get action on Fortas and the treaty. Nixon has said action on, the Fortas n/omination is the Sen- ate's business and he would riot interfere. But Nixon's added observation that he opposes a filibuster brought the comment yesterday from Sen. Robert P. Griffin (R- Mich.) that "Mr. Nixon has said he wouldn't interfere and I wish he wouldn't." The Senate Judiciary Commit- tee, scheduled to vote Tuesday on the nomination, issued sub- poenas for a former White House aide and a magazine writer yes- terday. They are to be questioned about reports that Fortas helped in drafting presidential speeches. Dubcek. warns of 'excesses~ PRAGUE {.P)-The symbol of Czechoslovakia's liberaliz a t i o n drive, Communist party chief Alexander Dubcek, told the nation yesterday that it must give in quietly to Soviet demands for a return to iron curtain life. He said : "We mustureally avoid all excesses which could complicate and hinder our further develop- ment." But he added, apparently for the benefit of the Kremlin, that to abandon the democratization pro- gram entirely "would mean the disintegration of the political unity in our society. Doing this, he said, might cause "tragic encounters of social for- ces" which could nullify the Mos- cow agreement by which the Czechoslovaks agreed to tone down in their liberalization pro- gram in exchange for an eventual withdrawal of the Warsaw Pact forces which invaded the country Aug. 20. Dubcek appeared on television after new censorship regulations that include a ban on reports of casualties from the Soviet bloc invasion was announced. The party chief had been sched- uled to speak two nights ago, but the address was suddenly can- celed. Informed sources said this was because Dubcek's tone was likely to have annoyed the So- viets. Dubcek said "the basic question for us is the normalization and consolidation of conditions and the departure of the armies of the five countries from our republic." "What are we to understand un- der the expression of normaliza- tion"? Dubcek asked. Answering his own question, he said normal- ization must include' the full re- novation of the economic, polit- ical and cultural life of Czecho- slovakia. ) House." ergency Some of the other major points: e as he O Encouragement of farm co- impasse operatives. s closed 0 Use of Commodity Credit week. Corp. stores of grain and other in a, rnwI goods" "to improve prices, not de- Federa- uck the at the HHH Firm on Vietnam PITTSBURGH (IP)-Vice Presi- dent Hubert H. Humphrey ap- peared yesterday to bar any fu- ture change in his Vietnam stand, saying that the Democratic par- ty's plank "is my position." Humphrey explained that some- times he varies his answers on Vietnam in order to keep from opening of the fall term. The 55,000-member union shut down. the schools for 14 days last year in a contract dispute. The dispute this year centers on the refusal of a community controlled experimental school district in the Ocean Hill-Browns- ville Negro and Puerto Rican sec- tion of Brooklyn to reinstate 10 white teachers it had ordered transferred. Lindsay has said the community press them." 0 Improvement of the Food for Peace program and the improved supply of food to schools and the needy. As two bands played and the youngsters of the Up with People musical group sang, "Freedom Isn't Free," a table upon which news photographers were stand- ing collapsed under their weight, drawing cheers from members of the audience whose view had been blocked. At one point, the loudspeakers failed and Nixon said, "I don't mind their turning out the lights Ar PRIOR TO BROADWAY! SEPTEMBER 17-29 MOLIERE'S 0*-4*p "ENCHANTING !" . Toronto Globe & Mail Directed by Stephen Porter boring people. But when he changes" Humphrey complained, someone says, 'I think changed his mind. He bling.' " Humphrey, on a word, "Then he has is wob- a local board is composed of moderates in the White House, who feel they have been driven to don't have to turn out1 an extreme by union provocation. phone." The Rev. Milton Galamison, a militant Negro recently named by Lindsay to the Board of Educa- tion, said he felt the "issue of hiring and firing" should be set aside and "the children sent back to school." The issues, he said, By The Associated P could be negotiated after the chil- CASTEL GANDOLFC dren were back in the classrooms. Pope Paul VI inveighed but they the micro- Wo: Press o, -Italy - Iyesterday rid news roundup' R W FORGP I I 'l { l i I I television interview show, called himself a free spirit, saying he meant that sometimes his tongue. gets him in trouble. "I say some things and, gosh, I wish I hadn't said it," said Hum- phrey. HELP the victims of the IRANIAN EARTHQUAKE Send your contributions to IRANIAN RELIEF FUND ANN ARBOR BANK Lindsay appealed to the striking teachers and to the community group to "be reasonable and back off the extreme positions they have taken." The mayor was both applauded and booed in his speech to a meeting of about 400 members of the United Parents Association., There was no word from com- missioner Allen's office on ,what steps he might take in the effort to end the strike. against those who overstep what he sees as the limits for change in the Roman Catholic church. He told a private audience of Augustinian monks "The hour in which we live today is solemn and important, both for the Church and the world." WASHINGTON - The n e w North Korean exposure of the Pueblo crew has strengthened an assessment here that the Reds will _. .._ eventually set the men free. But it produced no signs of an imminent breakthrough in the deadlocked talks at Panmunjom. This conclusion came yesterday from U.S. officials who combed through extensive reports of the four hour news conference staged by the North Koreans Thursday. For the first time since the Pueb- lo's Jan. 23 capture, some non- communist newsmen saw the U.S. prisoners. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. - The most powerful communications payload ever built is scheduled for launching Wednesday night to serve as a space switchboard for telecasting the 1968 Olympic games and to more than double transatlantic satellite telephone and television links. A three-stage Delta rocket is to blast off at 8:09 p.m. EDT to hoist the Atlantic 3 satellite toward a stationary orbit 22,300 miles above the Equator, just east of Brazil. Once on station, the satellite will be able to relay up to 1,200 two-way telephone conversations or four color telecasts between ground stations in North and South America, Europe and Africa. Its first mAjor assignment will be television transmission of the Olympic games scheduled to start Oct. 12 in Mexico City. * * * BUDAPEST, Hungary - Buda- pest police said. today they have arrested a group of young Hun- garian girls and men who staged noisy parties in a downtown apartment 'and danced in the nude before open windows, Police announced that Attila Gerecz, an unemployed sports writer, was the ingleader and "talent scout" who recruited teen- age girls. A father looking for his daughter put police on the track of Gerecz. * * * DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania - The government banned all pay- ments by Tanzanians to S o u t h Africa starting yesterday. A statement said Tanzania ban- ned trade with South Africa five years ago as, a "demonstration of distaste for the policies perpetrat- ed by the partheid regime." ' Sponsored by Iranian Student- Community Association _. I Friday and Saturday Eves, and All Day Sunday $250 All Other $200 Performances Want to see the Sandpipers. They're coming with The Bob Hope Show SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 8:30 P.M. 0 M,