TUESDAY', JUNE 2'7, 196 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1967 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Conference la es World 'Little Less Dangerou By JOHN HIGHTOWER NEW YORK QP) - President Johnson and Premier Alexei N. Kosygin have failed to resolve any of their differences over such major world issues as Vietnam and the Middle East, but they intend to keep in direct contact on these and other problems they debated ' in their Glassboro summit con- ference.. The conference ended Sunday night after the two men had spent almost 10 hours together in two days at the small New Jersey town south of Philadelphia. Both told a cheering rain-drenched crowd of their desire to promote peace in the world. Koscygin returned to New York in a helicopter provided by the President and held a news con- ference at the United Nations. There he abandoned the smiling countenance displayed at Glass- boro and reverted to familiar So- viet attacks on Israel in the Middle East and the United States in Vietnam. Johnson returned to Washington and said in a broadcast statement that "no agreement is readily in sight on the Middle Eastern crisis, and our well known differences over Vietnam continue." But he added: "I believe it is fair to say that these days at Hol- lybush have made the world a little less dangerous." Kosygin left New York about noon yesterday, returning to Mos- cow-via Cuba-to report in detail to his Kremlin colleagues on his talks with Johnson. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko, both now in New York, were left with the hard task of trying to negotiate sone concrete accords out of what Johnson called "the spirit of Hollybush." They are expected to begin a series of talks in a day or so. Hollybush is the name of the home of President Thomas E. Ro- binson of Glassboro State College where Johnson and Kosygin met on Friday and Sunday. The major impression left by the conference was that the two lead- ers, while failing to resolve any of their major differences, had at least demonstrated the intention to keep their conflicts in bounds and thus reduce the risk of nuclear war. The two leaders took sharply different lines in their postconfer- ence statements. Johnson con- ceded the persistence of disagree- ments but emphasized his hopes for the future. Kosygin focused on his demands for an Israeli roll- back in the Middle East and re- newed the Soviet accusation of U.S. aggression in Vietnam. Asked whether Johnson would receive as warm a welcome in the Soviet Union as Kosygin had re- ceived at Glassboro, the premier indicated that Johnson would not be invited under present condi- tions. "I believe," he said, "if aggres- sion were ended and a truly peace- tul policy were pursued, the wel- come of President Johnson in the Soviet Union would be truly cor- dial indeed." The premier called the Glass- boro talks "useful" because they gave the President and him an op- portunity to "compare positions on the questions discussed." He made no referennce to a point which Johnson stressed-the chance for the two to at least talk directly about their discords. Referring to Vietnam and the Arab-Israeli conflict, Johnson said: "I was very glad to hear the chairman's views face to face, and to have a chance to tell him di- rectly and in detail just what our purposes and policies are-and are not-in these particular areas." "Meetings like these do not themselves make peace," Johnson said at another point in his re- ;ort to the nation after returning to Washington. "We must all re- visers. member that there have been many meetings before and they have not ended all of our troubles or our dangers. "But I can also repeat on this Sunday afternoon another thing I said on Friday: that it does help a lot to sit down and look at a man-right in the eye-and try to reason with him, particularly if he is trying to reason with you. "I said on Friday that the world is very small and very dangerous.. Tonight I believe it is fair to say that these days at Hollybush have made it a little smaller, too, but also a little less dangerous." Kosygin's switch from the cor- diality of the summit meeting to the hard line of his U.N. speech a week ago was not wholly un- expected by Johnson and his ad- Some officials had suggested privately prior to the second round of talks Sunday that the premier might consider it necessary to do so because of his Arab and Chinese problems. The Chinese Communist have long accused the Soviet Union of conspiring with the United 'States to undercut North Vietnam and to abandon the interests of the Arabs. The Arabs had been re- ported critical and fearful of any' Kosygin talks with Johnson. In his news conference Kosyginj stuck rigidly to his insistence that' a precondition of any general settlement in the Middle East 'must be Israeli withdrawal of troops from conquered Arab ter- ritory. He again accused Israel of ag- gression and said it should have to pay damages. Johnson has said troop pullbacks must be arranged as part of a peace settlement. Kosygin said a settlement Vietnam is possible "only on I basis of stopping the bombing a withdrawal of United Sta troops." When he was as1 whether he foresaw early steps end the war, he replied: wouldn't say that." On a proposal by Johnson U.S.-Soviet talks to avoid an e panded nuclear arms race for an ballistic missile system,nKosyg said the Soviet Union is interest in talking about general disarm. ment. He gave no encourageme to U.S. hopes for action in th field. Both Johnson and Kosygin ported progress in work on treaty to check the spread of r clear weapons to nations th don't have them. But this hb been reported in advance of t Glassboro conference. Hussein Says Peace Needs Land Return Albania Accuses Johnson Kosygin Of Domination Plot UNITER NATIONS-King Hus- ' sein of Jordan, his country reel- ing under the impact of Israel's military blitz, said yesterday that only a return of Arab territory will keep the Middle East from being engulfed in hostilities for years to come. The handsome monarch, 32, ad- dressed the emergency session of the 122-nation General Assembly. Earlier it had heard Albania de- nounce Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin as a traitor to the Arab People. Albania is regarded as the voice of non-member Red China in the UN and Peking accuses Moscow of letting the Arabs down in the Mideast crisis. Nesti Nase, the Albanian foreign minister, accused Kosygin of hatching a plot with President Johnson aimed at world domina- tion. "Down with the Kosygin-John- son plot," cried Nase, who spoke as Kosygin left New York for Havana at the end of a nine-day visit that included a two-session summit meeting with Johnson at Glassboro, N.J. Hussein delivered an emotional appeal for condemnation of Is- rael by the United Nations and a demand for return of land seized in Jordan, Syria and Egypt. He was given an almost solid minute of thunderous applause by Communist, Arab and many As- ian-African delegates. The United. States, Britain and Israel did not applaud. Speaking in English the king conceded his army was no match. for Israel's armed forces, Hussein got his military training at Sand- hurst, the British equivalent of West Point. He declared the Israeli attack on the Arab states could be com- pared with the sneak attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor. "That Jordan was unable to cope with it is a fact that I will regret all of my life," he said. He predicted that Jordan, "ground down by sorrow at the moment will rise again with all the Arab nations. It is apparent we have not yet learned well enough how to use weapons of modern warfare but we shall if we have to." W orld By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - A U.S. Air Force fighter plane strayed over Red China air space early yester- day and apparently was shot down by Communist aircraft, the Penta- gon reported. The incident, it was indicated, was caused by bad weather that created navigational problems. Two pilots aboard the plane, en route from Clark Field in the Philippines to Da Nang, Vietnam, were picked up unharmed by a Navy helicopter. UNITED NATIONS - Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gro- t myko plan a summit session fol- low-up meeting tonight, diplomat- ic sources said yesterday. Tusk canceled his afternoon UN appointments-including a date with Yugoslavia's foreign minister --to hurry to Washington. A spokesman declined to give Rusk's reason for going to Wash- ington, but his timing coincided with some administration briefings of congressmen on the Glassboro summit conferences. WASHINGTON-Sen. Joseph S. Clark (D-Pa) proposed yesterday Kosygin Met U.S. IMPLICATED: By Castro, Two Syrian Majors Executed No Crowds For Alleged Plot on Regime JORDAN'S KING HUSSEIN yesterday addressed the emergency session of the United Nations Gen- eral Assembly and called for withdrawal of Israeli troops from captured territory and a condemna- tion of Israel as the aggressor in the recent Mideast war. PLANE TOLL MOUNTS- U.S. Split on Bombing North; Few Major Targets Remain WASHINGTON (P)-Some top U.S. officials are beginning to think the air war against North Vietnam is yielding diminishing gains while toughened ground de- fenses are raising the price in U.S. warplanes. The Air Force and Navy were authorized last Feb. 22 to start hitting what one military source called "more lucrative targets" of an industrial and economic na- ture. Now there are not many major targets left untouched. Yet the North Vietnamese continue to push their war effort in South Vietnam without any apparent let- up. Certain officials believe it might be' a good idea to limit the bombing essentially to the supply routes running south through the narrow neck of North Vietnam and to cut down strikes against heavily defended industrial-type targets in the Hanoi and Haiphong areas. But other authorities argue that to do so would result in swelling the volume of supplies and equip- ment to Communist forces in South Vietnam. Those holding this general view say the Communists have been emplacing many more antiaircraft guns in the 150-mile long North Vietnamese panhandle, and that concentrating attacks there would not likely reduce the toll of U.S. planes. Moreover, they contend that the movement of material should be interdicted not only at the low- er end of the funnel but at the top where it enters the infiltration pipeline. Officials inclined toward a slowdown in the air war are not all civilians. Some military men also have doubts about the ef- fectiveness of the bombing. And those favor at least con- tinuing the present level of air strikes-and possibly an inten- sification-are not all military. It is known, however, that the Joint Chiefs of Staff unanimously and vigorously oppose any easing off of the air attacks on Commu- nist military in North Vietnam. Many bombed facilities have been rebuilt or put back in shape for at least limited use. So U.S. raiders make repeated returns to hit them again. North Vietnam's biggest iron and steel complex, the Thai Nguyen steel mill 38 miles north of Hanoi, is reported to be com- pletely out of production. But it took at least 10 raids to achieve this. One of three major MIG jet fields has been bombed and strafed at least nine times. But military officers do not claim that the Kep base, 37 miles northeast of Hanoi, is out of action. They have seen too many examples of North Vietnamese ability to make quick repairs. The most important targets still untouched are Haiphong harbor and three MIG fields in the Ha- noi-Haiphong area. It is U.S. policy to spare Hai- phong harbor andeits approaches rrom attack for fear that raids might force the Soviet Union into a confrontation with the United States. The military chiefs long have urging closed Haiphong through which an estimated two-thirds of North Vietnam's military and civilian imports are channeled, much of it in Soviet ships. The Communists claimed again this spring that U.S. planes bomb- ed dikes in the Red River Valley. If the dike system were wiped out, great areas of rice-growing land would be flooded and spoiled, but not even the most hawk-like advocates of punishing North Vietnam advocate thus striking at the civilian food supply. Trip to Cuba First By Soviet Premier; Surprises Cubans HAVANA ( )-Soviet Premier, Alexer N. Kosygin flew to Cubaj yesterday for talks with Prime; Minister Fidel Castro on problems of the Western Hemisphere's only Communist nation. Castro was at the airport, butj there was no crowd or fanfare as] Kosygin arrived from a nine-day visit to the United States, where he championed the Arab cause at the United Nations and met twice with President Johnson in sum mit sessions at Glassboro, N.J. The visit to Cuba is the first for a Soviet premier and it was a surprise for most Cubans. There had been no announcement of his coming and no special prepara- tions appeared to have been made to get people out for welcoming ceremonies. After posing for photographs Castro and Kosygin got into a black sedan and drove off. Among officials welcoming Ko- sygin were Cuban President Osval-, do Dorticos, Foreign Minister Paul Roa and members of the Central Uommittee of the Cuban Commu- nist party. Communist block dip- lomats were also on hand. Cuban officials declined to say how long Kosygin would remain. Before Kosygin's trip, the high- est ranking Soviet official to visit Cuba was First Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan, who came here in 1962 folowing the U.S.- Soviet crisis over Russian missiles in Cuba. The Russians withdrew the missiles after communications between President John F. Ken- nedy and Premier Nikita Khrush- chev. The Kosygin visit comes only a week after Cuba was indicted by the Organization of American States for landing an invasion force in Venezuela last May. "Everything we have done here was in the name of peace," Kosy- gin declared just before his white Ilyushin turboprop airliner soared out of Kennedy Airport and head- ed south in a bright blue summer sky. Kosygin, now 63, displayed warmth and cordiality in his final meeting with American newsmen. But when they asked him if he had invited President Johnson to visit the Soviet Union, Kosygin's countenance became impassive and he replied: "First of all, I think we should have a relieving of tensions in the world." Thus Kosygin seemed to under- line what the world already knew, that neither he nor President Johnson had retreated from stated and conflicting positions on Viet- nam and the Middle East. The two world leaders met for more than 10 hours Friday and Sunday in Glassboro, N.J. However, Kosygin repeated his opinion, concurred in by John- son, that the Glassboro talks had been "useful." DAMASCUS, Syria (/P) - Two' Syrian army majors who returned from exile during the recent war with Israel were executed by a firing squad at daybreak yester- day. They were accused of taking part in a U.S. plot to bring down Syria's Socialist regime. They were Salim Hatoum, lead- er of an attempt to overthrow the government last September, and his chief assistant in that enter- prise, Badr Jumma. They fled to Jordan when that coup collapsed. Their presence in Jordan helped to strain relations with Syria, and the account of their trial included a charge that they were to make a comback by organizing rebels in Jordan. Arrested on Return The two were arrested June 10 on their return to Syria at the height of the frontier war with Israel. Reports from Beirut, Lebanon, said the two returned voluntarily to fight the Israelis under a Sy- rian amnesty for political of- fenders. Reporting their execution, Al Baath, newspaper of Syria's rul- ing Socialist Baath party, said a special military tribunal found the pair guilty of high treason and sentenced them to death. The two majors, in their early 30s, went on trial last Friday. Earlier broadcasts by Damascus radio said the pair pleaded guilty to "sneaking back to Syria" to overthrow the Baathist regime and install a pro-U.S. government of right-wing politicians in Da- mascus. They were quoted as naming the United States as the master-mind of the plot and Britain and West Germany as accomplices. The radio said the two majors at the trial outlined the mechanics of the plot this way: A terror campaign of sabotage throughout the country and mass assassination of senior Baath party leaders. Attack Border An attack across they southern Syrian border by an invasion force recruited and trained in Jordan. In working out details of the plot the two were quoted as testi- fying they had been in constant touch in Amman, Jordan's capi- tal, with U.S., British and West German intelligence agents. The pair received instructions to move to Syria and set the plot in motion when the Middle East war erupted, they were quoted as saying. "The timing of the plot was based on the assumption the war would minimize Syria's resistance, but when this did not materialize the two traitors tried to flee back to Jordan but were quickly appre- hended by Syrian authoriti Damascus radio said. Hatoum was a member of Moslem Druze minority, a sect dissident Moslems living in sou ern Syria and Lebanon. He i merly commanded Syrian ar commando units. His brother, A Hatoum, is said to be an offi in a Druze unit serving in Israeli army. Egyptian Cotton Infested; Failure Threatens Econon CAIRO ()-Disaster threaten- ing Egypt's cotton-the most im- portant factor in the economy- sent the nation into a virtual state of emergency yesterday. Less than three weeks after the Middle East war ended in a mili- tary debacle, Egypt was fighting an uphill battle against large- scale leafworm infestation of its vital cotton, A European expert said the pest was advancing across Egypt's fields at lightning speed. Authorities reported a country- wide check had established that fields were stricken by the worst cotton leafworm invasion in 15 years. At the same time, they ad- mitted their stocks of insecticide were practically exhausted. j The threat to the cotton crop' came at a time when the coun- try's economy was already reeling under other serious blows. With the closing of the Suez Canal and the slump in foreign tourists, cot- ton is the last source of hard economy. Around Clock Sayed Marei, newly appointed minister of agriculture, announced his office was working around the clock to coordinate the fight against the pest. Armies of children were roam- ing the fields to remove the worm's egg clusters by hand from the plants. European sources said they were trailing badly in their efforts in many areas, but Egyp- tian newspapers said the hand- picking campaign was successful. Twenty farmers were stripped of their plots by authorities, who charged them with negligence in combating leafworm. The plots had been given to them under the land-reform program. Authorities warned growers that there would be more expropria- tions unless they cooperated fully in the fight against the pest. During the' next two critical months, the fight will have to rely almost entirely on handpick- ing, with insecticides to be applied only in the most extreme cases. Mostly Imported The insecticides are mostly im- ported against hard currency from Western countries. West Germany is a major supplier and is one of the countries against which the Arab states are considering a total boycott. It was recalled that during the last serious infestation in 1961, an airlift was sent to speed emer- gency supplies of insecticides from Europe. The total crop then was 1.37 million U.S. bales. A record harvest of about 2.22 million bales was produced in 1964. Production dropped in sub- sequent years, but a 25 per cent increase in export prices left total value of sales abroad unchanged at $350 million a year. Most of the cotton exports go to Soviet-bloc countries, partly to pay for arms shipments. Ex- ports to hard-currency countries in the last fiscal year total $75.9 million. This last figure is equivalent to almost two-thirds of Egypt's es- timated total of gold and foreign exchange reserves before the fighting with Israel began. - News Roundup WASHINGTON - Chairman William McChesney Martin, Jr. of the Federal Reserve Board said yesterday prompt action by Con- gress to raise taxes is essential if the nation is to avoid another round of inflation. And Martin said he is prepared to support an even higher tax increase than the six per cent sur- charge'on individual and corpor- ate income taxes which President Johnson proposed last January. * * * NEW ORLEANS - William H. Gurvich quit yesterday as chief investigator for Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison and said Garrison's case against Clay L. Shaw should be dropped. Garrison has charged Shaw,j wealthy retired New Orleans busi-' nessman, with conspiracy to mur- der President John F. Kennedy. Gurvich went to the district at- torney's office and tried to see Garrison. He was physically bar- red by Louis A. Ivon, an investi-, gator. Gurvich told The New York Times Sunday he had "grave mis- givings" about Garrison's inquiry Press officer Carl Bartch de- clined to comment directly on statements attributed to Ky. But Bartch said the United States has declared time and again its willingness to have a negotiated settlement of the Viet- nam war. NEW YORK-Poet-satirist Dor- othy Parker left the bulk of her estate to the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the National As- sociation for the Advancement of Colored People, it was disclosed yesterday. Miss Parker's will, filed in Sur- rogate's Court Monday, named King as the beneficiary of cash, negotiable securities and the in- come from a trust fund derived from copyrights, royalties and contract rights on her writings. * * * WEST YELLOWSTONE, Mont. -Oregon Gov. Tom McCall warn- ed liberal and moderate Republi- cans yesterday that California's Ronald Reagan is "about the hot- test piece of political property" in the nation and could be on the march toward the 1968 Repub- lican residential1 nomination. Pope Makes Cardinals Of 4 American Prelates VATICAN CITY (P)-Pope Paul VI made cardinals of four Ameri- can prelates and 23 others yester- day in a consistory bringing Ro- man Catholicism's church princes to a record 118. In his consistory speech, the pontiff lamented the Vietnam and Middle East wars, called for in- ternationalization of Jerusalem through a "guaranteed statute," and for a just solution to the Palestinian refugee problem. based Francis Cardinal Brennan, a native of Pennsylvania. There would have been nine U.S. cardinals, but Joseph Elmer Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis died June 10, after the Pope had named his new choices. The senior American cardinals are Francis Spellman of New York, James McIntyre of Los Angeles, Richard Cushingof Bos- ton, and Lawrence Shehan of Baltimore. The Pope spoke in the closed