WEDNESDA3 ', JUNE "1,1967 THE MIC8ICA1ld' DAILY "ACF WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'PA ~'~P r. 4a. =. IS P Resolution Calls For Stable Peace Goldberg Introduces Five-Point Proposal, Arab-Israeli Talks UNITED .NATIONS (R)-In a tone of conciliation the United ^ States proposed yesterday that the Arabs and the Israelis negotiate for peace with third party help. At the ;same time, the United States rejected Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin's demands for punishment of Israel. U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Gold- berg introduced the U.S. resolu- tion which called on the assembly to set as its objective a stable and durable peace in the Middle East, to be negotiated "with appropriate third-party assistance." He did not elaborate on the , nature of the third party, and a spokesman said the U.S. position on this was flexible. In past speeches Goldberg had mentioned the'United Nations in a possible third-party role. U.S. Plan At the morning session of the assembly, he also introduced a five-pint peace plan based n President Johnson~s .plea for direct talks between the Arabs and Is- raelis. He spoke calmly but firmly in an obvious attempt to keep the debate at a moderate level. Kosygin did not come into the blue and gold assembly hall until after Goldberg 'had spoken. But Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko listened intently and gave his chief a fill-in. Also a new note of division was injected into the emergency spe- cial session of the 122-nation as- sembly when top Soviet bloc dele- gates left the hall as Israeli For- eign Minister Abba Eban took the rostrum to answer charges of ag- gression. Eban had made a dis- dainful walkout on a Syrian speech earlier. Opposition Gestures There was no organized walkout, such as has occurred in past as- sembly sessions, but groups of delegates have been following the practice at this session of leaving the hall in a gesture of opposition by one side to the other. At the afternoon session, Bul- garian Premier Todor Zhikov ac- cused Israel of sowing seeds of new war by refusing to give up Arab lands seized in the war. Kosygin was not in the assembly hall, but Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko was present with other high ranking officials. They walked out before Eban spoke, leaving a few minor func- tionaries behind. Some other So- viet bloc and Arab leaders refused also to listen to Eban, thus dem- onstrating their solidarity against Israel and any who would support the Israelis. roposes Third Party TOPIC-MIDDLE EAST: UN, Not Summit Discussed At Rusk-Gromyko Meeting in Negotiating -Associated Press ISRAELI FOREIGN MINISTER ABBA EBAN, left, and Ambassador Gideon Rafael listen to U.N. Secretary-General U Thant defend his role in the withdrawal of U.N. peace-keeping forces before the U.N General Assembly meeting on the Middle East crisis in New York yesterday. Eban had criticized the removal of U.N. troops from Gaza and other areas as too hasty. Eshkol Says To Forge Past, SHARM EL SHEIKH (VP) - Prime Minister Levi Eshkol of Is- rael, visiting this most remote of the Arab posts seized by Israeli troops in the Middle East war, said yesterday, "We want to forget the past and work for a lasting peace." Eshkol stated he was ready to meet President Gamal Abdel Nas- ser of Egypt, King Hussein of Jor- dan or any other Arab leader for peace talks "at any time, at any -place, on land or at sea." Dressed in khaki clothing and a black beret, the chief of state now 71, flew from Jerusalem to Sharm el Sheikh, at the tip of the Sinai Peninsula, where Egyptian troops formerly stood guard at the en- trance to the Strait of Tiran. Trouble Spot This is "the place where all the trouble started," Eshkol said, re- ferring to Nasser's order last month closing the strait to Israeli shipping. At the same time, he said his offer to confer with Arab leaders was not made from a position of strengthi and arrogance. In a prepared statement to cor- respondents, the prime minister said there once had been a time when Arabs and Jews worked to- gether. "The Middle East has a great future if we could work together in peace again," he said. "This op- portunity must not be missed. "We do not believe in armistices. We must establish a lasting peace Vork for with friendship and security so that neither side need be afraid of the other." In offering a hand of friendship in person-to-person talks, Eshkol said its acceptance by the Arabs often depended on the decision of individuals. He expressed the hope that his offer would fall "on open minds." If it is rejected, he said, Israel is capable of taking care of itself. Eshkol was accompanied by the deputy chief of staff, Gen. Haim Barlev, and the commander of Is- rael's navy, Commodore Shlomo Herel. Peace Together they traveled to the Ras Nasrani outpost, 12 miles north of Sharm el Sheikh, which is at the narrowest point on the strait. Heavy guns disabled by Israelis in 1956 were still in their positions. The Egyptians apparently had not had time to position new guns to carry out their declared blockade. Israelis said inspection had shown that no mines were actu- ally planted in these sapphire blue waters, despite announcements to this effect from Cairo. ~eace Thant Deniesr UN Pull-out Disastrous x Points Out Israel's t Violation of Border t In Past Ten Years UNITED NATIONS ()-Secre-c tary-General U Thant retortedt angrily yesterday to Israel's charge that Thant's recent prewar with- drawal of UN peacekeepers fromf Egypt was "disastrously swift." t And Thant went on to accuse Israel of "creating provocations"1 by violating the UN-patroled bor- der between Egypt and Israel in the past 10 years.r Israel's Foreign Minister Abba Eban attacked Thant Monday atI the opening of the emergency ses- sion of the United Nations General Assembly on the Middle East. l Thant withdrew the UN Emer- gency Force, UNEF, from Egyptian soil on the demand of Egypt and has defended his decision since. The u s u a 11 y even-tempered Thant showed his anger when he told the assembly that he never before had to reply publicly to a speech by any delegate. But he said a public reply was warranted because he considered Eban's re- marks "very damaging to the United Nations." His unprecedented, unscheduledj statement was greeted by more ap- plause than the policy statements of Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosy- gin and U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg outlining the views of the great powers on the crisis.' In his speech Monday, Eban, said withdrawal of the UNEF "made Sinai safe for belligerency." That sarcastically referred to Eban's "Picturesque simile" and; noted that while Egypt had "vol- untarily permitted UNEF to oper- ate on its territory for more than 10 years, "Israel extended no such cooperation" to the United Nations despite requests that UNEF oper- ate in both countries. Eban took the rostrum to reply to Thant's rebuke and said he did not want the issue considered "a debate between our eminent sec- retary-general and myself." Eban quoted President Johnson, British Foreign Secretary George Brown and other world leaders as also being dismayed by the withdrawal. Eban made no reference, how- ever, to Israeli refusal to have UNEF troops on its territory or to Thant's charge of Israeli border provocations. Assembly President Abdul Rah- man Pazhwak of Afghanistan, try- ing to smooth the ruffled diplo- matic feelings, said he wanted to take official note that Eban had not been questioning the "good faith of the secretary-general" and that Thant's statement had only been intended to set the record straight. That said that because this deci- sion had been questioned before the General Assembly, he would "issue within a day or two a report giving a full account of my actions on this matter." Thant said he had last asked Israel to permit UNEF to operate on its side of the border just be- fore the withdrawal from Egypt. The secretary-general did not refer in his speech to the criticism from Western leaders of the speedy withdrawal when Egypt made its demand. Goldberg refer- red to the withdrawal yesterday in his review of events leading to the outbreak of hostilities, but he made no direct criticism of Thant. THE GRAND-DADDY OF ALL ESCAPIST FILMS,. LOST H ORIZON An unforgettable trip into the deepest mysteries of the Himalaya Mountains STARRING: Proposed Censure of Dodd Soon Comes to Senate Vote UNITED NATIONS (k')-Secre- tary of State Dean Rusk met with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko yesterday for the first time at the emergency UN session on the Middle East. There was no apparent progress toward a sum- mit meeting. Privately, informed sources said a get-together between President Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin was not even on the agenda of the 17-minute parley between their foreign affairs chiefs. Publicly, both would tell news- men only that, as Rusk put it, the two talkedabout "matters before the assembly." The Rusk-Gromyko discussion managed to look like a casual en- counter while both were attending the assembly this morning. A U.S. spokesman declined to call it an "appointment", even though the two strode separately to an out-of- the-way conference room at the same hour just before the assem- bly session opened. Time was running out for a superpower summit before Kosygin returns to Moscow. There were some reports, but not confirmed by either U.S. or Soviet sources, that the Soviet leader might leave in another day or so. Others ex- pected him to remain through the weekend. Kosygin, according to reports TOKYO (P)--Communist China may have fired its first hydrogen bomb by missile and detonated it at' an altitude of from 18 to 31 miles, Japanese scientists and de- fense officials speculated yester- day. If this is correct, it would be a shock to both the West and the Soviet bloc because it would mean Red China had produced a hy- drogen bomb small enough to be lofted by a missile. The U.S. Atomic Energy Com- mision said its data indicated the Chinese had tested "far below the figures quoted by the Japanese." from Washington officials, prefers to stay in the New York area for the UN meeting and has turned down Johnson's invitation to meet somewhere around Washington. Johnson was said to be against coming to see Kosygin at the Unit- ed Nations, where Kosygin has spearheaded the Soviet drive against Israel and denounced American policy, too. There was no sign from either Soviet Leader Goes To Talki with Nasser WASHINGTON ()-The Senate grappled with points of law and procedure yesterday as it struggled toward judgment of Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D-Conn), perhaps by to- morrow. In the sixth day of debate over the proposed censure of the Con- necticut Democrat, Senate leaders conferred with Dodd's accusers and defenders, and there were signs that a timetable for voting might be agreed upon. Sen .Russell B. Long (D-La), Dodd's self-proclaimed defense counsel, said he would agree to a final vote tomorrow if the Senate would act first on the charge that Dodd had requested and accepted double expense payments on seven official trips. Close of Business "We're willing to go to final judgment today on that one, and no later than the close of business tomorrow on the other one," Long said. The other one is the Senate ethics committee's charge that Dodd converted to personal use $116,083 in political funds. Long acknowledged that if the double-billing count, on which he feels the defense is strongest, should be upheld, "it would take some of the heart out of us." Voting Agreement Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy (D- Minn), a member of the ethics committee, said he anticipated a voting agreement along those lines. In the Senate itself attendance dwindled and much of the de- bate centered on legal points. "I don't believe any new argu- ments can be advanced," Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana told newsmen. Long pressed his argument that Think China H-Bomb Fired from Missile Since Red China has missiles, de- fense experts said it would be simple to fire a hydrogen bomb into the stratosphere if it had been tooled to a size of a nuclear warhead. Dr. Tetsuo Kamada, assistant professor at Nagoya University, estimated the blast Saturday took place somewhere in the strato- sphere. He added that others had calculated the altitude at between 18 and 31 miles. The stratosphere begins at an altitude of about seven miles, Informants quoted scientists at the government's telecommunica- tion Ministry as saying that an atomic detonation at high altitudes creates electromagnetic waves and disturb the ionosphere 100 to 200 miles up. The ionosophere reflects radio waves back to earth. The ionosphere ordinarily is disturbed only by sun-spot activ- ity and extraordinary atmospheric conditions. But Kamada said there.. were no such natural disturbances Saturday. Kamada reported the univer- sity's very long frequency oscil-' lograph had recorded a disturb- ance that interrupted radio com- munication at 7:24 a.m. Saturday. It lasted for 30 minutes. Government scientists said there also was a notable absence of microbarometric readings by their meteorological agency in contrast with the abundance of these caused by nuclear blasts at low altitude tests. Defense officials said that the Chinese in testing their fourth nuclear device last Oct. 27 were believed to have fired it from one of their missiles. side that their chiefs would budge, although press secretary George Christian left the President's in- vitation open. "The President has made it clear that Mr. Kosygin would be wel- come here or at Camp David or some other convenient place near- by for either a social visit or sub- stantive discussions," the White House spokesman said in Wash- ington. World News RoundupI carry the burden of proving Dodd guilty. Dodd has maintained from the start that th7e funds raised though testimonial affairs were gifts to be spent as he wished. He also denies knowledge of the double billings. He blames the billing both the government and private organiza- tions for air-fare on sloppy book- keeping in his office. it was up to the committee to' McCarthy told the Senate if the charges against Dodd were sub- stantialy rejected, "I would con-' sider resigning" from the ethics committee. He had told a reporter Saturday he could not justify con- tinued committee service if the Dodd censure case were not up- held. MOSCOW (A')-President Niko- lai V. Podgorny left for Cairo yes- terday, apparently for major talks with President Gamal Abdel Nas- ser of Egypt on the Middle East in the aftermath of the Israeli- Arab war. Podgorny left for the airport after a Kremlin meeting of the 19-member Communist party Cen- tral Committee, which heard a major policy statement on the Middle East from the top man in the Soviet Union, party Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev. A brief announcement did not give any of Brezhnev's remarks, Big Power Talk Not Ruled Out; May Follow Assembly Session but they presumably followed the same line as Premier Alexei N. Kosygin's address Monday to the U.N. General Assembly. Kosygin demanded that Israel be condemned for aggression, be forced to disgorge all territory it won in the early June war, and pay Arabs damages. Informed sources said Podgorny would go on to Cairo after an overnight stop in Belgrado for talks with President Tito of Yugo- slavia. One report said Podgorny was accompanied by the chief of staff of the Soviet armed forces, Mar- shal Matvei V. Zakharov. The Foreign Ministry refused to say who had been with the president, the expected length of the visit or other details. If Zakharov went along, then Podgorny might be ready to dis- cuss with Nasser the question of rearming Egypt's army, which Is- rael smashed in the six-day Middle East war. Down the drain of war went billions in Soviet arms supplied to Egypt. Informed sources have re- ported that a new Soviet arms pro- gram was being launched, but it was not clear whether the Rus- sians intended to resume the Middle East arms race ondtheir old lavish scale. The hurried trip of Podgorny to Cairo convinced diplomats in Mos- cow that the talks with Nasser- would be of major policy signifi- cance. The Central Committee Is sup- posed to meet once every six months, according to party rules, to adopt major foreign and dom- estic policy decisions of the party's top organ, its 11-member Polit- buro. By The Associated Press TEL AVIV-Israeli officers dis- played military orders and maps yesterday purporting to show that the Egyptian air force was poised to attack May 26 and that Syria had organized a full army division for combat on the Galilee border for June 3. Israeli air force officers who showed newsmen the documents and maps, which they said had been captured, emphasized that the battle orders were not defen- sive in character. The fighting began June 5. *" * * WASHINGTON - The United States formally expressed regret yesterday, for damage to the So- viet cargo ship Turkistan off the North Vietnam port of Cam Pha, and gave assurances that every effort will be made "to insure that such incidents do not occur." In originally denying Soviet charges that U.S. warplanes had struck the vessel, the United States suggested that the damage probably was the result of anti- aircraft fire directed at American planes. GRAND RAPIIDS - August Scholle was unanimously re-elect- ed president of the Michigan AFL- CIO yesterday at the group's con- vention. Barney Hopkins was re-elected secretary - treasurer. Both men were unopposed in nominations. But William C. Marshall found himself with opposition in seeking re-election as executive vice presi- dent from James Cookenmaster. gj: By WILLIAM L. RYAN' Associated Press News Analyst Both the United States and the Soviet Union have left the door open to cooperative effort for peace, if either or both care to walk through it. There is considerable highlevel diplomatic activity going on dur- ing this special session of the UN General Assembly on the Middle East conflict. Perhaps it is in connection with a big powers meeting, not necessarily but pos- sibly at the summit level. If a summit meeting could not be held while Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin is in the United States, then, so far as Washington is concerned, there can be other times and other opportunities. This attitude was suggested in Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg's address to the special session. Careful Response The Americans, in effect, turned 4 the other cheek in responding to Soviet attacks on the United States. The carefully measured re- sponse seemed to bespeak con- tinuing active American interest in some sort of high-level talks on the Middle East conflict or any ntfhe touchy world issues which to go anywhere at any time in the interests of resolving dangerous conflicts. Up to now, there is little indication that he is willing to ex- tend this to a trip to the United Nations' headquarters. Avoid Irriating Arabs It would be difficult for Kosygin to go to Washington or Camp David for a meeting, given the Soviet anxiety to avoid irritating the .Arabs any more than they al- ready are irritated with lack of tangible Russian support when the chips were down in the Middle East. But there are other places where the two men could meet. Kosygin, despite his extensive and exhaustive attacks on virtual- ly every aspect of U.S. policy, did stress that the Soviet Union was actively interested in a formula for peace. Johnson says the same thing. The Soviet leader said his dele- gation is ready to work with any other countries toward resolving dangerous issues. So did Johnson. Hint About Meetingj Kosygin hinted at the possibility of a big powers summit meeting, not necessarily pinning matters down to just a meeting between 1 rnaf or a hn7TC m.racrir require an avoidance of explosive crises, despite continued Russian interest in spreading the Com- munist system around the world. In recent years, Moscow has dem- onstrated that Soviet national in- terests take priority. No Choice Kosygin may have felt he had no choice at this meeting but to take the positions he did. The Russians have made a big invest- ment in their quest for influence among the Arabs, do not want to see it all go down the drain. But in the long run, the current collective leadership of the Soviet Union is likely to wonder, as many in other nations are wondering, how many risky confrontations the Russians and Americans can afford. 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