SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25,4967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE McNamara Denies War Policy Split Claims Differences With Administration, Rusk Are Nonexistent WASHINGTON 3) --Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara sought yesterday to dispel what he called "appearance of division" with Secretary of State Dean Rusk over the bombing of North Viet- nam. The administration is unified on the necessitiy of the air cam- paign against Hanoi's territory, McNamara told newsmen. Any "apparent divergence of opinion" between him and Rusk results from the fact that they are called upon to explain administra- tion 'policy before different con- gressional groups which hold op- posing views on the, U.S. com- mitment, the Pentagon chief said. Explain Policy McNamara said Rusk often must justify Vietnam) policy before doves and therefore has emerged as a hawk, supporting a strong stand in Southeast Asia. Much of Rusk's testimony is before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, some members of which oppose the Vietnam war. On the other hand, McNamara said he frequently testifies before groups which favor an escalation, -he appears before the Senate and House Armed Service com- mittees-and finds himself in a position of explaining why the United States isn't doing more in the way of military action. At the State Department, press officer Robert J. McCloskey also disavowed any differents between Rusk and McNamara about the bombing. Asked whether he knew of any aparent differences between the two about bombing North Viet- nam, the State Department spokes- man replied "I do not-neither ap- parent nor real." McNamara first called reporters to his office in an attempt to dis- pel what he considered an untrue image of division between himself and Rusk. Later he read a state- ment before' television cameras ex- plaining "the apparent divergence of opinion." "In one sense," McNamara said, "this is amusing to me because in looking back over two years of recommendations to the President on military operations in North Vietnam, I can't recall a single instance when the secretary of state and the secretary of de- fense have differed on bombing policy and not a single instance when their recommendations have differed on particular bombing targets." Apparently McNamara's volun- teer statements were an outgrowth of seeming conflict between his and Rusk's congressional testi- mony and public statements about the bombing campaign. In testimony given behind closed doors, in January but released only Monday, McNamara said he didn't believe the bombing "has signific- antly reduced, nor any bombing that I could contemplate in the future would significantly reduce" North Vietnam's infiltration of men and supplies into South Viet- nam. Word of this view leaked out before the testimony was distri- buted, and McNamara held a Pen- tagon news conference to declare that "the implication that I con- sider the bombing program inef- fective is not correct." Earlier, Rusk had defended U.S. resumption of bombing assaults on North Vietnam after a six-day cease-fire by saying, the raids con- stituted an important part of the American effort in Southeast Asia. Rusk said -Hanoi would have to take 'reciprocal steps of de-es- calation in the conflict if it want- ed the bombing stopped. Notes Difference t McNamara said he had noticed references to Rusk as a hawk while some people were calling him a dove, with the implication, that they differ on South Vietnam poli- cies. "I think the apparent divergence of opinion is a reflection of the fact that each of us testifies be- fore different groups in the Con- gress and, meets different groups of the public," he said. On the other hand, McNamara said, some groups believe we should bomb more heavily, while others believe the raids should be halted. Each of these differing opinions, McNamara said, fails to take into conisideration the United States' limited objective in South Vietnam and the way the bombing program is related to that objective. McNamara restated the admin- istration position that the United States is not seeking to destroy the government of North Vietnam nor its people, "nor are we seek- ing bases from which we can car- ry out attacks on Red China." -na* h ,aij4 +1ha TT 8 asm is -Associated Press STUDENTS PROTEST NAPALM University of Wisconsin students are shown above sitting in at their administration building on the Madison campus in protest to the arrest of 18 persons during demonstrations Wednesday against Dow Chemical Corp. recruiters. Dow is a major producer of napalm for use in Vietnam. The local chapter of the Students for a Democratic Society may lose its registration over the incident. Pentagon. Says Viet Leaders Have 'Obvious Lack of Realism' Ruling Party Makes Gains In Election Seven Lose Cabinet Positions as India Has Democratic Vote NEW DELHI, India () - The ruling Congress party, bruised but onbroken, made important gains yesterday toward winning a majority in Parliament despite the loss of seats by seven Cabinet ministers. A Congress candidate won an important victory over leftist ex-Defense Minister V. K. Krishna Menon. The Congress party position improved gradually as returns flowed in from the northern states of Uttar Pradesh and Bi- har, traditional party strongholds which have a total of 138 seats. With returns in from 298 of the 520 seats in Parliament, the Con- gress party had 172, the right- wing Swatantra 28, independents 26, Hindu Communal Jan Sangh 24 and other parties, including Socialists, pro-Peking and pro- Moscow Commuist parties the re- Imainder. In Bombay, Krishna Menon running as an independent, was beaten by S. G. Barve of the Con- gress party by 1,2,896 votes. Never a friend of the United States, he was fired as defense minister by Prime Minister Ja- waharlal Nehru, father of the present prime minister, in Octo- ber of 1962. Critics said Menon had inadequately equipped the Indian army for war. Menon quit the Congress party after it refused to let him run on its ticket in Bombay. Cam- paigning as an independent, he asailed Western policy in Viet- nam. In the voting for state offices, coinciding with the week-long' balloting for Parliament, the Con- gress party so far has failed to win a majority in five state as- semblies, Kerals, Madras, Punjab Gujarat and West Bengal. There are 17 states. In Kerala and Madras oppo- sition parties gained majorities and will form new governments. In the other three, Congress is still the largest party but would need a coalition to form a gov- ernment. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, asked about the stunning defeat of party President Kunmaraswami Kamaraj for a state assembly seat in Madras, said: "I am dis- tressed, he was a stalwart. "But I want to pay a tribute, to the people of India. We have; proved to the world we do have a free and fair election. The whole idea of having a democ-I racy is this." Mrs. Gandhi said she was ig- noring the resignation of her de- feated ministers and was asking them to stay on,, adding: "the work of the government cannot stop so they have to continue." TOKYO (A')-Mao Tse-tung's leadership was reported shaken yesterday by opposition in the gov- ernment, party and army to Mao- its tactics in Red China's struggle for power. Japanese correspondents in Pe- king reported wall posters spoke of trouble in Peking and various provinces and autonomous regions. They reported these developments in an attempt to retrench on Mao's purge of followers of Presi- dent Liu Shao-chi that has con- vulsed the nation: -The Communist party Central Committee's military commission ordered a shakeup in the 2.5-mil- lion-m'an army, where lower ranks were believed using Mao's purge against their officers. -A ban was ordered on Maoist seizures of power in key party and government offices. Premier Chou En-lai has lashed out at Red Guards and others for such ac- tions, saying it created chaos. He is said to have moved in troops to protect some of his officials. -The theoretical journal Red Flag called on the teen-aged Red Guards, unleashed by Mao to spearhead his purge, to "seriously remold their world outlook." It said in this way "will they grad- ually mature and be able to tem- per themselves into successors to the revolutionary cause." The military commission's or- der said the purge of military units in such key cities as Peking, Shanghai, the northeast port of Tientsin and the Dairen and Port Arthur ports in Manchuria was being placed in charge of the Communist party. The order warn- ed soldiers not to try to seize power from "military leadership organs"-officers and political commissars. Army defections have been re- ported in Manchuria, Inner Mon- golia, Sinkiang Province in the northwest, Tibet and in several of the 21 provinces, including the breadbasket province of Honan in north-central China. The latest orders followed by a day a series of Red China broad- casts reporting widespread re- sponse to Mao's call for the army and peasants to get on with the spring sowing. The power struggle has seriously disrupted production on the rural communes. Radio Peking also reported trouble in Kweichow Province in the southwest, where Maoistst claimed victory Feb. 14. A Chi- nese-language broadcast said "a handful of persons in authority taking the capitalist road" were sabotaging farm production. A new directive, posted in Pe- king and reported by Japanese newsmen, banned Maoist seizures of power in key party and govern- ment offices in the capital, and ordered peasants, workers, stu- dents and others to return imme- diately to their posts. The decree was issued by the Communist party Central Com- mittee. Congressional Heads Reject Special CIA Investigation PURGES CONTINUE: Mao's Leadership Threatened By Civilian, Army Opposition WASHINGTON (P)-The Penta- gon accused Hanoi yesterday of a lack of realism in demanding an end to U.S. bombing if North Vietnam. It said this country has no intention of halting the attacks "unless something is offered in return." Meanwhile, the U.S. Command announced yesterday that long- range American artillery based below the border demilitarized zone is now supplementing the air campaign against North Vietnam. A spokesman said 175 mm guns hurled shells across the six-mile- wide buffer territory Wednesday in the first such attack of the war, probing for antiaircraft bat- teries that had shot at a small U.S. Air Force observation plane. The self-propelled 175s can fire 200-pound shells up to 20 miles. Even as this phase was officially disclpsed, Premier 14guyen Cao Ky said North Vietnam has massed three divisions along the zone, where massive Communist infil- tration set off some of the biggest onsiderable Uncovered in I WASHINGTON (P)- Consider- able new material, someof it de- scribed as potentially explosive, will be sent to the Justice Depart- ment by the select'House commit- tee which investigated Adam Clay- ton Powell, (D-N.Y.), it was learn- ed yesterday. Authoritative sources reported also that the committee antici- pates that the Justice Department will pursue every lead which sug- gests either indiscretion as a con- gressman or a violation of . any law. Some of the material relates to the shadowy Bahaman corpora- tion, Huff Enterprises, Ltd., while other portions deal with things that have not previously been re- ported, such as contracts of the Committe on Education and Labor which Powell formerly headed. "It involves some very serious matters," one source said, adding that it would be "really an ex- plosive situation if it develops." And another source said' that, "If any twvo pieces of this had fallen into place, the whole case would have blown wide open." Sources said the special com- mittee was hampered by its five- week deadline and also by the dif-' the Bahamas, where bank records ficulty of getting material from can be kept secret. Powell, meanwhile, remained on his island retreat of Bimini, de- clining comment on the commit- tees recommendation that he be seated, censured, stripped of all senority and docked $40,Q00 in pay. At one point, Powell sent word to reporters by handwritten note that he would hold a news con- ference today. But several hours later her received a telephone call at the island's only phone booth and then said: "The conference is off. My law-1 [New Evidence Powell Inquiry years said I should wait until I talk to them." One of the attorneys, Henry Williams, said in New York that he and the other lawyers' would meet to discuss possible legal ac- tion. Williams said he personally feels. that, "In stripping him of seniority and docking his pay, Congress denied him his consti- tutional rights." Meanwhile, scattered signs of resistance to the committee's rec- omendations began to pop up. Two northern Democrats, Reps. Clar- ence D. Long (D-Md.), and Sam- uel S. Stratton (D-N.Y.), issued statements calling for Powell's ex- pulsion. battles of 1966. He told newsmen "I think they still intend to con- tinue big fighting." The Pentagon statement came in response to remarks in Paris' by the Cambodian chief of state,j Prince Nordom Sihanouk, who said North Vietnam has no intention of de-escalating the war to get peace talks started. Sihanouk said he was citing the views of Mai Van Bo, North Viet- nam's diplomatic representative in Paris, who was quoted as calling for "an unconditional and final halt" to the bombing. Sihanouk also said Bo told him, on the question of a possible de- escalation of Hanoi's war effort, "it is impossible for Hanoi to stop helping their brothers of the South." Sihanouk was led into the re- marks about his conversation with Bo by a question from a North Vietnamese newsman, who asked him to comment on North Viet- nam's position on opening talks with the United States. Sihanouk also charged the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency was attempting to overthrow his re- gime by paying Thailanders, South Vietnamese and "Khmer Serei"-Free Cambodia-rebels to launch attacks on his country. In a rare response to such state- ments, the Defense Department accused Hanoi of "demanding a permanent free pass for its con- tinued aggression" against South Vietnam. Executive Council Fills Seat Vacated by Reuther WASHINGTON (A--Three lead- ers of Congress rejected yester- day any special investigation of the Central.Intelligence Agency and its subsidies to private organ- izations. Officers of a student group that received such subsidies called for a thorough investigation to get to the question of the use of private organizations to carry out U.S. foreign policy. The officers of the National Student Association called a news conference to announce the or- ganization would not "roll over and play dead" after recent dis- closures that it had been receiving up to $200,000 a year from the CIA. NSA President W. Eugene Groves, president of NSA, said the NSA had received about $26,000 from the CIA this year. "We will return what remains to be spent, about $5,000 or $10,000," he said. Groves said the preliminary re- port Thursday of a panel named by President Johnson to look into the CIA funding situation was "a whitewash." The report defended CIA activ- ities. "There should be an indepen- dent investigation to get to the question of use of private organ- izations as instruments of Amer- ican foreign policy," Groves said. Overseas Activities The NSA received CIA funds through p r i v a t e foundations. Spokesmen said the money was for overseas activities. In Congress, the Republican leaders, Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois and Rep. Gerald R. Ford of Michigan, told a news confer- ence that there already is ample congressional supervision of the CIA. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana told an- other news conference that the Senate panel which now supervises the CIA could oversee it ade- quately. Groves said that the NSA, oldest and largest of the country's stu- dent organizations, is represented on about 300 campuses. Schools Question None of the schools, he said, has disaffiliated since the disclosure of the CIA link but about a half- dozen have questioned what the association will do. Right now, he said, the NSA has about a $35,000 deficit. But it hopes to get contributions and is seeking additional support and "I confidently assure you we can survive," Groves said. The student group officers an- nounced they have received pled- ges of support from many cam- puses,, organizations and jndivid- uals. They said the NSA not only would continue but would begin new efforts. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (MP)-The AFL-CIO Executive Council filled Walter P. Reuther's vacant chair in the nation's house of labor yes- terday and President George Meany said the council worked better without him. But Meany said in announcing the election of Textile Workers President William Pollock to the vacant seat that he wished Reu- ther had not resigned and hoped the Auto Workers will not with- draw from the AFL-CIO. However, Meany said, "It's none of my business" what course Reuther and his Auto Workers Union take. The replacing of Reuther was called "hasty" by one council mem- ber, President Joseph Curran of the National Maritime Union, who said it might worsen the split between the 1.4-million-member AFL-CIO. Curran, who advocated leaving the council seat open, said Reuth- er was "wrong" in his harsh crit- icism of Meany's leadership but "I think we should explore the extreme limits to bring Walter back." "I'm for labor unity," Meany said at a news conference, but "when we get a resignation-we fill it." Meany and Reuther were the chief founders of the AFL-CIO 11 years ago. Reuther attacked Meany's lead- ership as undemocratic and said it had led to complacency in AFL- CIO activities in organizing new workers, social action, civil rights, and economic policy. Meany also announced the naming of United Steel Workers President I. W. Abel to replace Reuther as chairman of the AFL- CIO Economic Policy Committee. Meany said this week's Exec- utive Council meeting was more productive because of Reuther's absence. "Some members of the council seem to be reluctant to talk when Reuther is there," he said. World News Roundup 1~ .Y MUNICH, Germany--Maj. Gen. Wilhelm Harster, former head of the German Security service in Holland, was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment yesterday for aiding in the mass murder of Dutch Jews during World War II. Hamster, 62, was convicted of aiding in the murder of 82,854 Jews during his time as head of the SS in the Netherlands from 1940 to 1943. Harster's codefendant in the five-week trial, former SS Maj. Kilhelm Zoepf, 58, and Zoepf's aide, Gertrud Slottke, were jailed for nine and five years respec- tively. Zoepf was convicted of aid- ing murder in 54,982 cases and Miss Slottke in 42,729 cases. * * * UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.- Sec- cretary-General U Thant said in a report made public yesterday that 69 of the 72 nations who have replied to his inquiries have pledged full compliance with U.N. Security Council sanctions against Rhodesia. The three who have not done so, he said, are Malawi, Switzer- land and Portugal. Thant's report, issued here after his departure for a vacation in his native Burma, comprises a summary of the steps that have been taken against the white-min- ority government of Rhodesia in line with the Security Council's resolution of, last Dec. 16. . VATICAN CITY-The Vatican is studying a possibility of sending special envoys without diplomatic status to Communist capitals, the Vatican press officer, said yester- day. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Fausto Val- lainc told a news conference the Vatican was not considering es- tablishing consular-level mission in Communist countries but said under consideration was "the con- cept of sending apostolic dele- gates with the function of special envoys to the governments." HAVANA-Prime Minister Fidel Castro assailed some government officials yesterday for seeking too much publicity. He said that many times their information was ir- responsible. In a front-page letter in the Communist party paper Granma, Castro singled out an announce- ment Thursday that Cuba was buying 122,000 tons of fertilizer from a French firm. He said the story was partly erroneous and the bureau in the Foreign Commerce Ministry credited with conducting negotiations had little. to do with the deal. SARA MITLON and CHRISTOPHER DELOASH TONIGHT at the ARK 1421 Hill Street 9:00 P.M. F' E s - # I, II rA6V6AVkAj 0 presents the MINNEAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA STANISLAW SKROWACZEWSKI, Conductor IN HILL AUDITORIUM Sunday, Feb. 26, at 2:30 Program OVERTURE to "Euryanthe"................................. . . Weber SYMPHONY No. 3 in D major..................... ............ Schubert CONCERTo for Percussion & Orchestra ............... .............Finney SYMPHONY No. 10 in E minor ................................ Shostakovich TICKETS: $5.00-$4.50-$4.00-$3.50-2.50--$1.50 PRESENTS: THE LOVIN' SATURDAY, SPOONFUL MARCH 11 8:30 P.M. 111 i I