SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREIt SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1966 TUE MICUIGAN DAiLY PAEW~ TWJU1'K a _1 Vf [ l II iI L. IT. r Moscow Attack on Neg:otiations Advocated BRy KAennedy Marines Search for Enemy Regiment in Pluoc Valley Area WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Rob- ert F. Kennedy (D-NY) urged President Johnson yesterday to in- vite Viet Nam negotiations on the basis of accepting some Commun- ists in a coalition Saigon govern- ment. Meanwhile, helicopters poured thodiands of U.S. Marines into battle yesterday against the Viet Cong tin the Phuoc Valley, 350 miles ndi'theast of Saigon. Striking through, light sniper fire, they hunted the enemy's hard core 1st Regime't. U.S. Navy fighter-bombers flew missions. in support of the Ma- rines. They streamed in from the carrier Valley Forge in the South China Sea. Calling for limited use of U.S. miliiary. power, Kennedy said any effort to destroy the "objectives and forces" of North Viet Nam probably would result in massive Chinese intervention in the war. Expgssed Reservation Kennedy expressed some reser- vations about the course Johnson is pursuing. He said, for example, that he, has such reservations about the resumption of the bomb- ing of North Viet Nam because he is unsure of its limitations and objectives. The c-monmittee wound up its public sessions Friday with an in- vitation from Secretary of State Dean Ryusk to Congress to vote on Viet Narn policy "if there is any doubt" about it. Chairman J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark) said he sees no need for further public hearings. The committee is to decide at a meeting tomorrow whether to ask Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey to appear at closed session. Both have declined to testify publicly. Focus on Bill The major focus of the policy dispute shifts to the Senate floor tomorrow in consideration of a $4.8 billion Viet Nam military authorization bill. Kennedy said that in the un- conditional discussions the Presi- dent has expressed willingness to undertake, both sides would bring at least ong ireducible demand. For the United States "it must be that We will xiot turn South Viet Narn over to the North," he said. "tior North Viet Nam it must be thatliey will not. accept a settle- meat~ *hich leaves in the South a hostile government, dedicated to the fipal physical destruction of all Communist elements, refusing any conomic" cooperation with the,,North, dependent upon the continued Presence of Afnerican military power." Kennedy said of the Viet Cong and its political arm, the National Liberatiog Front: "There are three things you can do with such groups: kill or re- pressthem, turn the country over to themi, pr admit them to a share of pqwer and responsibility. "The last is at the heart of the hope for -a pegotiated settlement. It is not the easy way or the sure way; nor can the manner or the degree of participation now., be described with any precision. It, will require enormous skill andy political wisdoi to find the point at whih participation does not bring :dorination or internal con- quest. h h . f' Are You Running S0S SEN. ROBERI (right) were t Nam war. Ken President Joh Wilson, sched "pro-American positive result Dims Visit Wilson Hopes HO Si Hit Pro-U.S. .rr> .""f Posi ol IOil :-,.t Eve ofTrip UNION, CONGR ESS CL ASH: AFL-CIO Demands Joimsoii Back Labor Wage Demands MIAMI BEACH 03) -AFL-CIO $1.60 next year and $1.75 in 1968, wins for labor.on those two bills officials said yesterday their po- they said. this year may determine w hether litical guerrilla assaults on the And even if Johnson does sup- organized labor-chief Democratic Johnson administration will esca- port labor, political strategists of supporter in the- 1964 elections- late into "a major war" unless the AFL-CIO predict a bruising takes a political walk in the 1968 Johnson backs labor's minimum fight in Congress over minimum presidential campaign, the soulces wage demands in Congress. wage and unemployment compen- said. Sources close to AFL-CIO presi- sation bills that will make the re- Union leaders at, theii, mid-win- dent George Meany said "there is cent union shop battle pale by ter- meetings here already are going to be a major war" if John- comparison. threatening to cut back money son goes along with the proposal Possible Filibuster ontributions to some Democrats of his Council of Economic Ad- Senate Republican Leader Ev- in this year's congressional elec- visers 'to increase the present $1.25 erett M. Dirksen successfully tions. This could cost Johnson minimum wage to no more than blocked the union shop bill. He substantial losses in the big edge $1.40 this year and $1.60 in 1970. "now smells blood," said a top the Democrats now hold in Con- The 13 - million - member labor federation political expert, and gress. federation, which, has long de- may filibuster wage and jobless Administration Split manded a $2 minimum wage, will pay legislation also. AFL-CIO officials said there is settle for no less than $1.40 now, Whether Johnson fights and a major split in the Johnson ad- Russia Says Britain Lacks Influence on W P*ntt A erA,. wes ern i eso MOSCOW P)-Izvestia sharply Elish YinisterQuits criticized the pro-American poli- cies of British Prime Minister l Harold Wilson last night, dimmingn / efenseControversy prospects for positive results from; his coming visit to Moscow. LONDON ,'- Fierce contro- both the F111 and a new carrier. The Soviet government paper in- versy over Britain's future military and he wasn't sure Britain could dicated no agreement is possible role in the world popped into pub- afford it. between Wilson and the Kremlin lic view yesterday with the resig- "I am in favor of drastic defense hune s andos nsupport for nation of Navy Minister Chris- cuts," he said, "but there must the UpoitedcStates in Viet Nam and topher Mayhew. Several top ad- also be drastic cuts in commit- other policies which put him on mirals also may quit. ments to match. the side of Washington. Mayhew said the British are "My main point during the de- ministration over the amount of the proposed minimuiin wage in- crease and that "we don't know which side Johnson is going to come down on." H The labor spokesiian said White House economists want to apply to the minimum wage, guidelines that say wage hikes above 3.2 per cent a year are inflationary. "We are not dealing with arith- metic, we're dealing with ;people," the AFL-CIO official said. Leaders of the labor federation count Secretary of Labor W. Wil- lard Wirtz on their side in the administration in fighting over the minimum wage. I Wirtz, sharply criticized by labor leaders on numerous 'ther issues, goes along with the AFL-CIO argument that the present $1.25 minimum is less than the Presi- -Associated Press T F. KENNEDY (D-NY) LEFT AND BRITISH PRIME MINISTER HAROLD WILSON' he focus of events yesterday centering around United States involvement in the Viet nnedy called for limited use of U.S. military power against North Viet Nam and urged nson to invite negotiations with the aim of establishing a Saigon coalition government. uled to visit Moscow, was attacked in the Russian paper Izvestia for his government's ,n line" in backing U.S. actions in Viet Nam. Informed sources see dim prospects for s from Wilson's Moscow visit. World News Roundup By The Associated Press party congress for final approval the move to the suburbs which MOSCOW - The Soviet leader- prior to its adoption as a formal characterized the 1940s and 1950s ship announced today economic government program. has been losing force in the past plans for the next five years that * * * decade. emphasized "a substantial rise in SANTO DOMINGO - Former The conclusion was reached on living standards" and stronger President Rafael F. Bonnelly an- the basis of the Bureau's estimates armed forces. -.nounced by radio yesterday his of population patterns and trends The 1966-70 development plan is intention to run for the Domini- during the first half of this intended to increase industrial can presidency as a candidate of decade. production at about the same rate a "third force." The Bureau said the metropoli- as the last five years, a period Bonnelly, 61 a lawyer, headed tan areas-the nation now has 228 when Soviet economic growth for a time the provisional govern- of them-increased twice as fast slowed down from its 1950s per- ment that surged from the col- as other parts of the nation but formance. lapse of the Trujillo dynasty. compared with the previous decade More cars, refrigerators and The "third force" is a coalition the upward trend appeared to be television sets and better diets of liberals and conservatives who slowing. More than three of every were promised to this nation's 232 petitioned the former president five Americans lived in these areas million persons. Average non- last week to accept their nomina- at middecade. agricultural wages will rise to tion. The group was created to * * * $126.67 a month, the plan said. fill what was regarded as a gap . LANSING - The Republican A summary of it, distributed by in the political spectrum repre- State Central Committee gave its Tass news agency, struck some in- sented by the Dominican Revolu- unanimous support yesterday to formed observers as a fairly real- tionary party and the Reformist Rep. Robert Griffin as the party's istic document. party, pre-election front-runners. "preferred candidate" for U.S. It contrasted sharply in its The Reformist party presidential senator. Michigan State Prof. Le- soberness with the bombastic candidate will be ex-President roy Augenstein, who was also promises made by former Premier Joaquin Balaguer. The Revolu- seeking the nomination, predicted 1ikita S. Khurshchev in 1959 for tionary party nominating conven- that he would keep Griffin below the 1959-65 , development plan. tion is scheduled next month and the 75 per cent mark in a can- Many of those promises were not is expected to pick Juan Bosch. vass of Republican leaders and kept. * * * thus force the nomination into a Premier Alexei N. Kosygin will WASHINGTON - The U.S. primary election run-off next Au- present the plan March 29 to a Census Bureau has concluded that gust. GET YOUR NEW CARD FOR '66 S Fill out application below. Bring it to our store and receive your discount card absolutely free, entitling you to 10% DIS- COUNT for the rest of the year. FREE 10% DISCOUNT CARD --APPLICATION BLANK ------- ---- NAME_____________ ADDRESS CITY PHONE 10% SAVINGS ON ALL Cough and Cold Remedies - Dental Needs-Cosmetics--Toiletries-Hair Preparations-Baby Sup- plies-First Aid 'Needs-Clocks-Watches-Razors-Vitamins and many other items.' ARSHAL L'S CUT RATE MARSHLLFSDRUG STORE 235 S. State St. Ann Arbor 662-1313 T ZCLIP COUPON 9 CLIP COUPON 9 S$1.10 MENNENS % $2.00 AQUA-NET W1 SKIN BRACER HAIR SPRAY 77c 59c Limit One with Coupon Limit One with Coupon Coupon Vaid thru Feb. 27 Coupon Valid thru Feb. 27 ,'-CLIP COUPON ; q9 CLIP COUPON 99Z Wilson is due here tomorrow for his first visit to the Soviet capital singe he became prime minister in October 1964. He will meet with Premier Alexei N. Kosgyin and other Soviet leaders during his three-day stay. Izvestia said London is appar- ently giving top priority to "jus- tifying the aggressive actions and intentions of the United States and West Germany -- no matter how dangerous this may be for the cause of peace." The paper warned Wilson that his support of U.S. actions in Viet Nam could not be isolated and ignored. It said this "has, poisoned to a considerable extent British- Soviet relations." Izvestia threw out veiled taunts about alleged lack of British in- dependence in foreign. policy and loss of influence in Western coun- cils. It also reminded Wilson that he and his party had taken a less pro-American line before they came to power. It indicated that the Soviet lead- ers will bend their efforts during Wilson's visit to get him to make a "more sober estimation of the dangerous consequences of the es- calation of the war in Asia by American militarists and the re- venge-seeking demands of Bonn."I trying to do too much with too little and could end up tied to American policy as merely "auxil- iaries rather than allies." He de- scribed government defense policy decisions as "dangerously mis- taken." This was the public climax to a secret struggle under way between the admirals, the air marshals and the politicians in preparing a gov- ernment white paper outlining British military strategy through 1970. It is to be published Tuesday. Defense Secretary Denis Healey is resolved to cut back by one- third, to an annual defense budget of two billion pounds ($5.6 bil- lion) by 1970 and to reform Brit- ish military strategy in the pro- cess. The dispute lay between buying F111A long-range nuclear fighter- bombers from the United States or building a new aircraft carrier for about $196 million. The navy appears to havelost. The British military presence east of Suez now is expected to be reinforced by stationing F11s on a chain of In- dian Ocean island bases instead of dispatching a more mobile, but sinkable, carrier force. But Mayhew cited a much broader issue in an interview an- nouncing his resignation. He said a world role would mean buying Mayhew, 50, is succeeded as dent's stated poverty line income navy minister by J.P.W. Mallalieu, of $3,000 a year, the AFL-CIO 57, navy undersecretary who was officials said. on the World War II Murmansk The $1.25 figure adds up to only convoy run. $2,600 for a full year's work. _ ___ _ _ _ _ _ _7 1 fense review has been that we cannot maintain a world role in the 1970s, including a presence east of Suez, on two billion pounds -not without excessive strain on the forces, or excessive dependence on the United States, or both." China Series Continues I! "INTERNAL CHINA: POLITICS OF CULTURAL CHANGE" Speaker: Richard Solomon: Asst. Professor of Political Science Center for Chinese Studies Sunday, February 20 PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER 1432 Washtenaw-7 P.M. Sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Ministry r 4 Hot new weapon forte Oop :3 : :s : ; :! : : :j :j : :j :! : : :j ,i :{ :{ :I :t :E : :Et : : 3 :i t rE :.f : z I ; ! 1 :! :; i : ti r i :! 1 t i ' t v s Diodge Coronet Shagtpip, budget-balancers. With Dodge Coronet, you can afford to. 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