FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1967 THE MICHiIAN UTI PACF TMEI 3. tl L' 11 1. { l< l V ['11 1ltfl l 1 ' PAI"jr, 'I'UR'W a Rusk ForI Condemns North Viets For Violation Extension 'of Truce, Peace Negotiations Appear Doubtful WASHINGTON (P) - Secretary' of State Dean Rusk rejected yes- terday Hanoi's call for an uncon- ditional halt to U.S. bombing. He accused the Communists of viola- ting the cease-fire and intending to resume fighting afterwards. Rusk's Vietnam report, at a news conference broadcast by ra- dio and television, put a pessi- mistic note on prospects for ex- tending the four-day lunar new year truce and starting peace talks. Referring to Hanoi's hint that negotiations "could" be possible if U.S. planes stop hitting the north, Rusk billed this as a Communist propaganda drive to end an im- portant U.S. military action with- out calling off any Communist at- tacks against the south. Probes Failed "You can't stop this war simply by stopping half of it," Rusk de- clared-and he said repeated di- plomatic probes have failed to get any response from North Vietnam on what it would do in return for a halt in the bombing. On the allied-proclaimed Feb. 8-12 cease-fire, the secretary of state did not flatly rule out ex- tending the truce three more days -as proposed by the' Viet Cong- or longer. He said there had been "a dis- turbing number" of Communist violations already-Saigon reports N listed 128 incidents in the first 40 hours of-the truce. And 'there have been a "large number of boats and other vessels dashing south' to resupply Com- munist forces in South Vietnam and the demilitarized zone be- tween the north and south, he said. Intend to Continue "This indicates," Rusk said, "that they intend to continue their operations" after the cease-fire and that they are not particularly interested in observing the truce. Rusk's news conference was an- nounced by the White House Wed- nesday, rather than by the State Department as is the usual proce- dure. This led to speculation that there might be an important an- nouncement on Vietnam. Rusk doubted that Soviet Pre- mier Alexei N. Kosygin's skeptic- ism regarding American moves for a freeze on the buildup of antiballistic missiles was the last word on this subject. The United States, Rusk added, is willing to talk with the Soviet Union about limiting both offenive and defen- sive systems. Johnson Watched At the White House, President Johnson watched portions of Ko- sygin's conference, which was beamed to U.S. networks via transatlantic television. Press secretary George Christian gave this as Johnson's reaction: "Mr. Kosygin commented on the military action the United States should take in scaling down the Vietnam war but made no mention of military action the other side should take." Rusk noted that President John- son had told Pope Paul VI that the United States is prepared $ o talk at any time and place but not to reduce military action un- less the other side will do the same. Rusk said the U.S. aim has al- ways been a limited one, "This and this alone is our objective- to enable the South Vietnamese to determine their own future." Rusk insisted there must be "re- ciprocity." "They must not expect us to stop our military action by bomb- ing while they continue their mili- tary action by invasion," he said. In exchange for the possibility of formless talks, Rusk said, the United States is being asked to take a grave military risk. Asked to give an idea of the rate of infiltration by the North, Rusk said, "There is some time lag in our information on exact num- bers." But men and trucks continue to move south, he said. And from captured prisoners and other sources rather accurate figures areP available. Rejects Hanoi s Call, I CONTINUE IN AFL-CIO: UAW Wants Reconstruction, Elimination of Meany Tactics EJnd to U.S. Bombing * 7* * * * China's Lunar New Year Bare As Mao Pushes Austerity Plan TOKYO () - The usually joy- ous lunar new year holiday in China began yesterday in auster- ity imposed by Mao Tse-tung amid reports his backers were in trouble in some eastern and central prov- inces. Desertion of soldiers in Anhwei was disclosed by a radio broadcast from Hofei, capital of that eastern Chinese province. Next door in Hupeh Province of central China, the Wuhon ra- dio called on Maoists to'"utterly destroy the Black Hupeh Provin- cial party committee and the Black Wuhan Municipal party committee and seize all their powers." Peking Article An article in Peking's official People's Daily indicated Maoists may have been captured after they had left Tsingtao to seize the Shantung provincial capital of Tsinan; said to be held by Mao's foes. Shantung is in east China. The three-day lunar new year has been an important annual festival in China, but Mao, the narty chairman, banned any ob- servance as part of the austerity he wants to impose on China under his "proletarian cultural revolu- tion." Since millions of people nor- mally make pilgrimages to their ancestral homes and graves during the holiday, Mao also probably feared a greater disruption in farm and factory work. Demonstrations Continue While some children in Peking touched off the traditional fire- crackers, Red Guards, workers and students celebrated the lunar year by continuing their noisy demon- strations outside the Soviet Em- bassy, Japanese press reports said. The'demonstrations were touch- ed off by a skirmish between Rus- sian and Chinese students- in Mos- cow's Red Square Jan. 25 and are now in their 14th day. Commenting on the Russians, People's Daily said: Recent events "all point up the same fact. The Soviet revisionist leading group are notorious traitors of the rev- olutionary people and kneeling vassals and pawns of imperialism." Desertions Disclosed The desertions in Anhwei Prov- ince where disclosed by an an- nouncement by the Anhwei mili- tary district headquarters. The Hofei broadcast said on Jan. 29 headquarters sent out this appeal: "Those comrades who have left their units should return to their units immediately, plunge them- selves into the mighty current of the great cultural revolution." Other reports told of some suc- cess by Maoists against the fol- lowers of President Liu Shao-chi in the southwest, where Mao's forces have complained "black re- actionaries following the capitalist road" are in power. The southwest is made up of Yunnah, Szechwan and Kwangsi provinces. A broadcast from Kunming, Yunnan capital, said Maoists had "risen in rebellion against the Yunnan provincial committee" but it did not claim capture of the province. Wall posters in Peking, whose truth could not be verified, as- serted that party officials were seized, denounced as anti-Maoists, and dragged about Chengtu, capi- tal of Szechwan Province. Among those labeled anti-Maoist was Li Ching-chuan, first secretary of the party Central Committee's southwest bureau. Hostile Soviet Crowds Jeer Chinese Envoys in Moscow MOSCOW (;P) - Thousands of jeering Russians swarmed around Chinese diplomats yesterday in Moscow's biggest and wildest show of anti-Peking hostility. Many threw snowballs and garbage at the Chinese. A crowd broke through police lines at Moscow's Yaroslav rail- way station and surrounded a car and two buses from the Chinese Embassy. Chinese diplomats were trying to leave after seeing off another group of students being sent home U.S. Says 354 Men Held Prisoner by North Viets SAIGON 0P)-A Viet Cong am- bush that inflicted moderate casu- alties on a company of 120 Amer- ican paratroopers stood out yes- terday among a mounting flurry of shooting incidents marring the Tet truce. Each side blamed the other. Guerrillas in trees and entrench- ments opened up with hand gren- ades, small arms and automatic weapons on a company of the U.S. 173rd Airborne Brigade moving back to its base Wednesday from operations in the war Zone D jungle north of Saigon, a spokes- man said. That touched off a sev- en-hour fight. Attending the Vietnamese holi- days for the lunar new year was an announcement of a net increase of 6,000 men last week in the American forces in Vietnam, boost- ing the total to 410,000. American Deaths The U.S. Command said 117 Americans were killed, 920 wound- ed and 11 missing or captured in action last week. There were 10 deaths from accidents and other nonhostile causes. In all 8,873 Americans have perished in six years of war in Vietnam, 7,246 in combat and 1,627 behind the lines. Marring U.S. air operations was a Navy plane's flight, officially' described as the unintentional re- sult of a navigational error, over Communist China's Hainan Is- land. Apparently hoping to fore- stall a Peking protest against this violation of Chinese air space, Navy officers in both Saigon and Washington announced the in- cident. The U.S. Command here called in newsmen for this statement: Navigational Error "Due to a navigational error, an unarmed propeller-driven U.S. naval aircraft inadvertently over- flew a portion of Hainan Island Thursday, Saigon time. The pilot returned safely to his carrier. The circumstances are being investi- gated." Allied authorities listed 128 in- cidents, large or small, through the first 40 hours of the current truce. This compared with 122 for a 48-hour cease-fire last Christ- mas. The record for the 48-hour New Year's weekend truce was 178. Against American claims that the Communists were responsible, the Viet Cong declared in a state- ment broadcast from Hanoi that their forces have "strictly imple- mented -the cease-fire order, but have stood ready to punish any U.S. aggressors who would violate the order." The guerrillas said they killed five Americans in one incident Wednesday in Tay Ninh Province. from study abroad to take part in Mao Tse-tung's "great cultural revolution." Russians shouted abuse of Mao and China as the diplomats sat impassively inside their Russian- made car, its windows closed. Blocked Traffic The riotous scene lasted 30 min- utes and blocked traffic in Kom- somolskaya Square before the Chi- nese drove away. The diplomats, who had smiled blandly on the railway platform when Russians threw snowballs and refuse at them, seemed to ag- gravate the new incident by stop- ping their vehicles repeatedly, al- lowing the crowds to overtake them. The Soviet government, in a note delivered to the Chinese Em- bassy, demanded an immediate end to harassment of its embassy in Peking. The note charged that harassment was making it im- possible for the Soviet Embassy to get Soviet aid through China to Communists in Vietnam. The note said that unless the demands are met "the Soviet side reserves the right to take neces- sary reply mesaures." These were not spelled out. A similar threat of measures was made in an offi- cial statement by the Soviet Union last Saturday. The Chinese government on Monday said it could no longer guarantee the safety of Soviet diplomats in Peking. Soviet authorities earlier ac- cused Peking of trying to drive this country to a break in diplo- matic relations. A Soviet source said the Rus- sians might close their embassy in Peking, under seige for 14 days by riotous Red Guards, but em- phasized this would not mean a break in relations. Instead, the Russians would leave in the hope of returning when conditions are better. Soviet Head Lists World Policy Views Warns China Against Forcing Split; Insists U.S. End Viet Action LONDON () - Prime Minister Alexei N. Kosygin fired off a dual warning last night-to Communist China against forcing a diplomatic break with the Soviet Union and to the Americans against continued bombing of North Vietnam. And for good measure the vis- isting Soviet leader aimed a broadside at the West Germans: Whether they like it or not a treaty will be signed soon stopping the spread of nuclear weapons. In a question-and-answer ses- sion with 520 newsmen he offered it as his view that the current up- heaval insidesChina stems from "an internal strugle probably un- der the influence of various set- backs in foreign and defense poli- cies." He spurned a suggestion that it might spark "an armed conflict" between the giant Communist neighbors. Later, addressing British law- makers, Kosygin disclosed total disagreement with Prime Minister Harold Wilson in their top-secret talks on the causes of the Vietnam war and ways of ending it. He put all the blame on the Americans. Wilson said it was the fault of the Communists. The Russian argued that Wash- ington could begin peace talks with Hanoi if the United States stops all military action against the Communist North. Wilson in- sisted there must be a prior guar- antee of a North Vietnamese re- sponse to such an American ac- tion. A He voiced Sovietrskepticism at American moves for a mora- torium with the Soviet Union on the buildup of antiballistic missile systems. The best way of ending the nuclear arms r'ace he said, is to destroy. all nuclear weapons. He called for a treaty of peace, nonaggression and friendship be- tween the Soviet Union and Brit- ain which should not be "spear- headed against third countries." The Russians denounced one such pact, they signed with Britain in 1961 after Britain agreed to the rearmament of West Germany. " He urged disbanding of the North Atlantic and Warsaw treaty organizations because he said sec- urity cannot be built up on the basis of a Europe divided into po- litical and military groupings. * He served notice the Soviet Union has "no intention of ever allowing the Federal Republic of Germany to attain access to nu- clear weapons." And he insisted the West Germans must abandon "all ideas of revenge" or of changing their existing frontiers. He came out publicly for the third successive day in favor of all-Europe economic cooperation- even to the point of proposing a common market tiat allowed all the states of the Continent into it "on an equal footing." " He made a big pitch for the recognition of Communist East Germany, arguing it is one of Europe's biggest states, that to ignore it would not strengthen European security and to destroy it would not assure European sec- urity. I DEROIT (P-Reconstruction of' the AFL-CIO was a price set yes- terday by the United Auto Work- ers for its continuance in the federation. It expressed "deep concern the labor movement is vegetating" un- der George's Meany's leadership, and accused the 73-year-old AFL- CIO president of violating con- stitutional and convention man- dates which fail to meet his "per- sonal pleasure." Declaring there is urgent need "for a vital, vibrant, dynamic so- cially progressive labor move- ment," the UAW outlined an in- dependent program it proposes to pursue outside the AFL-CIO struc- ture. Its 1.4 million making up the largest union within the 13.5-mil- lion member federation, the UAW said its withdrawal threat is aimed at getting "the American labor movement off dead center." Massive Crusade It stressed what it said was a need for a massive organizing crusade, social action and help for struggling unions. There was no immediate re- joinder from Meany or other AFL- CIO leaders, who had ignored, publicly at least, the UAW's with- drawal threat since its first was disclosed last week. In Washington, an AFL-CIO spokesman said there would be no comment on the Auto Workers' demand for internal reform" un- til the manifesto containing it is received there. The 26-member UAW Inter- national Executive Board last week unanimously ordered the union's 59-year-old president, Walter P. Reuther, and its other three top* officers to sever all connections. with the ruling AFL-CIO Execu- tive Council. At the same time it directed, the agenda for an April 20-22 UAW convention be expanded to include a discussion of relationships with the parent AFL-CIO and a pro- posal that the Executive Board be authorized to take whatever action it deems necessary in this regard. Action could come first, how- ever, from the AFL-CIO Executive Council. It meets next week in Miami Beach. The old American Federation of Labor expelled John L. Lewis's United Mine Workers and others in the 1930s when they refused to drop a campaign of organizing industrywide - including skilled, semiskilled and unskilled in a single union. The AFL was built on unions of various crafts. Johnson Asks $3.1 Billion For Foreign Aid Programns WASHINGTON () - President Johnson urged an economy mind- ed Congress yesterday to provide $3.1 billion for economy and mihi- tary assistance to 70 count'ies "to reduce the chances of future Viet- nams." Calling this a minimum contri- bution to the security and develop- ment of Asian, African and Latin- American countries, the President's foreign aid message said "To do less would endanger all we have accomplished in the past two decades." Anticipating congressional op- position, Johnson acknowledged that some persons want to give up the foreign aid program because of U.S. domestic needs and costs of the Vietnam war. "Nothing could be more short- WASHINGTON - The House Democratic leadership was cele-1 brating its first legislative victory1 of the new Congress yesterday, but a check of the vote to boost the debt limit shows the admin- istration's troubles may just be starting. Strong support from conservative Souithern Democrats tipped theE scales Wednesday night as the1 House voted 215 to 199, over al- most solid Republican opposition, to increase the debt ceiling from $330 billion to $336 billion.c WASHINGTON - An unarmed{ propeller-driven Navy plane acci- dentally violated Red Chinese ter-e ritory yesterday and flew over' parts of Hainan Island in the Gulf of Tonkin, -the Defense Depart- ment reported. The plane returned safely to its carrier. The terse announcement ob- viously was aimed at preventing or limiting any Chinese protest. No protest was immediately forth- coming from Peking. * * * WASHINGTON - Despite slip- ping economic indicators else- where, the Labor Department re. ported yesterday that the number of jobholders last month totaled 72 million, a record high for Janu- ary. The report said the only weak- ness in the employment picture was in auto production, where layoffs reduced the number of jobs more than usual for January. Arthur M. Ross, commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, noted that the unemployment rate remained at 3.7 per cent last month and he said this indicates that "people have been drawn in- to the labor force" by brightened job prospects. * * * WASHINGTON - C o n g r e s s should pass PresidentiJohnson's bill for a six per cent income tax surcharge effective July 1, Fed- eral Reserve Chairman William McChesneyMartin said yesterday. The nation's money and credit chief, testifying before the Senate- House Economic Committee, show- ed little sympathy for arguments that the lawmakers should hold of f as long as, possible to see whether the economy might slip: enough to make a tax rise unwise. world News Roundup It was from that expulsion that the Congress of Industrial Organ- izations grew, gaining unstopped momentum 30 years ago next Sat- urday when the UAW won bar- gaining recognition from General Motors at the end of a three- month sitdown strike. Reuther, then president of the CIO, and Meany, president of the AFL, merged the two in Decem- ber 1955. To quit the federation, the UAW first must approve at its April con- vention a constitutional" require- ment which stipulates it shall operate within the federation. Then the Executive Board could pull the union out, assuming dele- gates grant the authority. Reuther is considered powerful enough to get what he asks. sighted and self-defeating," he as- serted. "This country-the wealth- iest in human history-can well- afford to devote less than seven- tenths of 1 per cent of its national income to reduce the chances of future Vietnams." The presidential request for aid funds came within $18 million of the amount he requested last year when Congress lopped off $450. million and gave the administra- tion $2.9 billion. For the fiscal year starting July 1, the administration asked for $2.53 billion in economic assistance and $596, million in military as- sistance excluding Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and some North Atlantic T r e a t y Organization expenses. White House aides said an addi- tional $242 million is being asked for military assistance to Laos and Thailand and NATO, but this re- quest is being made in the regular Defense Department budget, not in the foreign aid program. The Congress was asked to ap- prove eight programs over a two- year period instead of on an an- nual basis. This was bound to spark opposition in both houses of Congress. There was also strong empha- sis on self-help as the major quali- fication for U.S. economic assist- ance. "I will not ask any Americar citizen to contribute his tax dol- lars to support any country which does not meet this test," Johnson said. The program also emphasized more cooperation from other coun- tries, SALE Jo-O-Kay Jackets THE REAL WESTERN LOOK Schneider Western Supply 2635 Saline Rd. 1 mile S. of UM Stadium Phone 663-0111 I ______________________ ____ 1 KOOL, SUITERCUL!.' CINEMA II presents ANTHONY QUINN ALAN BATES IRENE PAPPAS in ZOBBA THE I "?, f /t}... t ' _t i. .i4..' "f :,' ,ti,'y PROFESSION TH EATRE PROGRAM presents FOS J-, -1 4AL E LEVERN JOYCE NUTCHERSON BRYAN I AVON LONG "PORGY AND BESS" Music by Librettob GEORGE CERSHWIN DUBOSE HEYWARD DIRECT FROM ACCLAIMED INTERNATIONAL TOUR! :. i - JOHN HAMMOND AA'icrr"n/ FYnprience Vmneit inrrl rc>rnrrlc rorrnrrlinn nrtiq I