0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY V&1 ^ V" vmftV% w THE 1~IICITIGAN IIAJI.V rAGE BTHRUEE I U Thant Fails to Hanoi Rejects P Three-Point Plan Halt eace War; Talk PAPAL DECREE: Roman Church Supports Birth Control Education WASHINGTON ()-U.N. Secre- tary-General U Thant unveiled a new Vietnam peace proposal Tuesday. The United States quick- ly accepted it but President John- son said he has "learned regret- fully" of an apparent turndown by Hanoi. Although Thant said he had re- ceived no "categorical rejection" of his plan, Washington strategists reported no signs that the North Vietnamese are moving any closer to the conference table. Johnson nonetheless praised Thant's "constructive and posi- tive" effort and declared "this na- tion will continue to persist" in a search for peace. Thant, at a United Nations news conference in New York disclosed he had communicated his pro- posals to the governments in- volved on March 14 following his UN Head Urges Truce By All Sides NEW YORK ()-United Na- tions Secretary-General U Thant, in a note sent to all nations on March 14, made several statements and proposals con'cerning the Vietnamese War. The text in- cludes: The secretary-general reasserts his conviction that a cessation of the bombing of North Vietnam continues to be a vital need, for moral and humanitarian reasons and also because it is the step which could lead the way to mean- ingful talks to end the war. ; The situation being as it is to- day, the secretary-general has now in mind proposals envisaging three steps: A. A general standstill truce. B. Preliminary talks. C. Reconvening of the Geneva conference. In the view of the secretary- general, a halt to all military activities by all sides is a practical necessity if useful negotiations are to be undertaken. Since the secre- tary-general's three-point plan has not been accepted by. the par- ties, he believes that a general standstill truce by all parties to the conflict is now the only course 4which could lead to fruitful nego- tiations. It must be conceded that a truce without effective supervision is apt to be breached from time to time by one.side or another, but an effective supervision of truce, at least for the moment, seems difficult to envisage as a practical possibility Once the appeal has been made and a general standstill truce comes into effect, the parties di- rectly involved in the conflict should take the next step of en- tering into preliminary talks. While these talks are in progress, it is clearly desirable that the general standstill truce will con- tinue to be observed. The secretary-general believes that these preliminary talks should aim at reaching an agreement on the modalities for the reconvening of the Geneva conference, with the sole purpose of returning to the essentials of that agreement as repeatedly expressed by all parties to the conflict. return from a Burma visit during which he met with North Viet- namese representatives. Thant's new plan was modified from his earlier Vietnam peace proposal which had listed a halt in U.S. bombing of North Viet- nam as the first step. U.S. officials welcomed his later version as pro- viding for a reciprocal military halt by both sides, both in North and South Vietnam, as the open- ing step. But Hanoi signaled its apparent turndown in a broadcast of a for- eign military statement Monday. The statement said that Thant's proposal failed to distinguish be- tween aggressors and their vic- tims and that the United Nations has absolutely no right to inter- fere in any way in the Vietnam question. World Opinion Rusk, at a hastily called news conference, sought to warn Hanoi against relying on world public opinion or policy differences in the United States as a means of win- ning the war eventually. "When they rebuff the United Nations," Rusk said of the North Vietnamese, "they must know this will not bring them support in other parts of the world. Divisions in the United States will not cause us to change our attitude. Our dif- ferences are trivial compared to the differences between us on one side and us and Hanoi on the other." Johnson gave a chronology of the American response to Thant in toasting visiting Prime Minister Mohammad Hashim Maiwandwal of Afghanistan at a White House luncheon. South Vietnam In addition to the favorable American response, Jolinson said, "the government of South Viet- nam also responded construc- tively." Johnson said after Thant com- municated his proposals to the governments involved on March 14, the United ,States responded the next day, telling the secretary- general he had pinpointed "con- structive and positive elements" toward achieving a settlement of the war.. On March 18, Johnson said, the formal U.S. reply was delivered by Ambassador Arthur J. Gold- berg. U.S. Reply The United States has been, and remains willing to enter into discussions without preconditions with Hanoi at any time. To this end, the United States accepts the three-step proposal in the aide-memoire of the Sec- retary-General on March 14, 1967, envisaging:o a. A general standstill truce; b. preliminary talks; c. recon- vening of the Geneva conference. The United States believes it would be desirable and contrib- utory to serious negotiations if an effective cessation of hostilities as the first element in the three- pgint proposal, could be promptly negotiated. It would, therefore, be essential that the details of such a general cessation of hostilities be discussed directly by both sides or through the secretary-general, the Geneva conference cochairman, or other- wise as may be agreed. -Associated Press CLAY AWAITS DRAFT Cassius Clay, heavyweight boxing champion wh o prefers to be called Muhammed Ali, is beseiged by fans as he leaves the gymnasium at Bishop C ollege in Dallas. Clay's bid for a court order to keep him from being Inducted into the Army was turned down by the Sixth U.S. District Court of Appeals because a Federal District Court in Louisville, Ky., will review his case tomorrow. MILK. STRIKE: VATICAN CITY (N)-Pope Paul VI gave the support of the Roman Catholic Church yesterday to civic birth control education to check the population explosion" so long as this education does not violate moral law." The papal statement, in an 8.000-word encyclical on social and economic problems, did not relax the Church's long-standing ban on artificial birth control. "The temptation is great to check the demographic population increase by radical measures," the Pope said. Jurisdiction Complicates Powell Case WASHINGTON (P)-Although a preliminary federal court hearing in the Adam Clayton Powell case is scheduled for Tuesday the Househseems likely to get another chance to resolve the matter be- fore any court rulings are issued.: Dist Judge George L. Hart 'Jr. is to consider motions by Powell's attorney in Powells suit for a court order directing the House to seat him and asking that a three-judge federal court be convened to hear constitutional arguments. But Bruce Bromley, the former New York judge hired by the House as its lawyer, plans to move for dismissal of Powell's suit on grounds that the court has no jurisdiction over an action by a house of Congress. Possible Outcome This motion would have to be decided by Judge Hart before he considers the two motions by Pow- ell's attorneys. If Hart rejects it. and says the court has jurisdic- tion, he faces the possibility of an effort by aroused House members to state by resolution that the court has no such jurisdiction. What is more likely to happen, sources said, is that the judge will take the matter under advisement, thus delaying any ruling on the jurisdictional question until after a special election in Powell's dis- trict set for April 11 and any sub- sequent House action. Other Punishment If, as expected, Powell is re- turned to Congress by the voters in New York's 18th District who have elected him 12 times pre- viously, the House then would be faced with the problem of con- tinuing his exclusion or reversing it and possibly substituting other punishment. The motion that excluded Pow- ell stated that the action was for "the 90th Congress." If Powell shows up here with a new certificate of election, Speak- er John W. McCormack would have to rule whether this resolu- tion was binding or not. Whichever way he rules, there may be a move in the House to overturn his ruling. "Public authorities can inter- vene, within the limit of their competence, by favoring the avail- ability of appropriate information and adopting suitable measures." Any governmental measures on birth control, the Pope said, must "be in conformity with the moral law" and "respect the rightful freedom of married couples." The encyclical's wording was regarded as the strongest state- ment by any Pope on the question of birth control outside the IChurch's own realm. Vatican experts said the new approach toward family planning would likely end organized re- sistance by Catholics in some na- tions to birth control legislation and dissemination of information on the subject. Some sources said it might even permit Catholics to accept laws that would permit distribution of contraceptive pills in welfare and public aid programs. The encyclical, entitled "Po- pulorum Progressio"-the Devel- opment of Peoples, is a wide- ranging document that describes modern social and economic jus- tice as essentials for world peace. In it Pope Paul: ; Rejected the idea that pri- vate property and free commerce I are absolute rights, saying that help for those who lack basic needs must come first. * Rejected unlimited capitalism as a "woeful system" that sees profit as the key to economic pro- gress. .r Appealed for a huge world fund using some of the money now spent on arms to help relieve misery. More Taxes f Suggested more taxes on the wealthy to help meet the cost of aid programs for the poor, better regulation of international trade and expropriation of estates if the way they are run blocks a coun- try's general prosperity. The Rome Communist afternoon paper Paesa Sera reacting to the document, termed it "explosive" and said it was a "tough denucia- tion of the evils caused by capi- talism." The Vatican said the draft was primarily the work of the late French Dominican priest and economist Perre Lebret. The en- cyclical went through seven drafts to reach its final form. It was dated March 26, Easter Sunday. British Warplanes Clear U.S. Tanker wreckage Un ion Official Drivers Back I CHICAGO (/P)-The first step toward breaking a five-day milk drought in the Nashville region came yesterday-the 13th day of the National Farmers Organiza- tion NFO milk marketing boycott. Patrick E. Gorman, secretary of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters Union, ordered members working as drivers for two Nashville milk processors to return to their jobs. Deliveries for more than a mil- lion residents of mi'ddle Tennessee and parts of Alabama and Ken- tucky have been suspended for five days, since driver members of a Meat Cutters Union local and members of a Teamsters Union local teamed up with the NFO and halted the flow of milk to all but hospitals and similar institutions. A U.S. Dist. Court dissolved a state court injunction against the Teamsters. Gorman said, in Chicago, the Nashville local had a no-strike agreement. A. J. Gasser, president of Purity Dairies, Inc., one of the largest distributors in Nashville, had an- Orders oWork nounced earlier he would seek police aid to deliver milk to gro- cery stores. Elsewhere, there were new sug- gestions for intervention by gov- ernment officials. Picket lines formed anew in many places. And in one of the major markets, Chi- cago, the supply was just about back to normal. The Pure Milk Association, which receives milk from farmers and delivers it to dairies in the huge Chicago market, reported-the volume there was "about back to normal." It had been down as much as 20 per cent at one time. Freeman Wisconsin congressman con- tinued to urge U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman to mediate, hike price supports, and reduce imports of dairy products. The NFO president, Oren Lee Staley, said his organization was signing four-mouth contracts with more processors, but he didn't say how many. Such contracts provide a two-cent boost above the cur- rent price to farmers of 8 to 10 cents a quart. LAND'S END, England {)- British warplanes blasted the shattered supertanker T o r r e y Canyon yesterday with tons of high explosives and then rained down incendiary bombs in an ef- fort to burn her leaking cargo of crude oil from the sea. The first strikes, by eight Royal Navy Buccaneer bombers, sent smoke and flames flaring up to 8,000 feet above the wrecked ship, which ran aground on the Seven Stones reef March 18 and broke into three parts Sunday night' while Dutch tugs were trying to pull her free. Behind the bomber strike, 20 Hawker' Hunter fighter-bombers dropped tank loads of gasoline and potassium chlorate incendiaries. Home Secretary Roy Jenkins told a news conference in London the planes would continue to pour down incendiaries through last night and today in an effort to keep the oil burning. Jenkins said the surface oil was burning well at the time of the news conference, but he was not sure how the fire inside the ship was going. The problem there, he said, was getting oxygen inside to feed combustion. Jenkins said the government de- cided Monday night to blow up the Torrey Canyon after it became evident she could not be refloated and towed into the Atlantic to be sunk. Oil from the ship already has polluted more than 120 miles of beaches around this southwest point of England and threatens the entire English Channel coast. "EXPLORATIONS" An opportunity for all interested students to share, clarify, and explore with others their feelings and concerns, problems and perplexities, ideas and questions, regarding any aspect of life. March 30, Thursday, at 7:30 PM. GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe St. Sponsored by: The Office of Religious Affairs World News Roundup By The Associated Press MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Gov. Lurleen Wallace and her husband, the former governor, sought legis- lative support yesterday for a dra- matic new federal-state showdown over school integration. It could lead to open defiance of an order handed down by a three- judge federal court last week or- dering statewide desegregation by next September. And it could dare the courts to put a woman gover- nor in jail for contempt. One legislator said Mrs. Wallace would seek to take control of all Alabama public schools and thus force the federal courts to deal directly with her office for imple- mentation of- the desegregation order. WASHINGTON - Arthur J. Goldberg, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, issued another statement yesterday saying "I am not a candidate" for senator from New York. There have been news accounts of political talk that Goldberg, a Democrat, would challenge New York Republican Sen. Jacob K. Javits next year. NEW YORK - The American Federation of Television and Ra-' dio Artists last night set a strike deadline for dawn in a contract impasse with major television and radio networks. "There will be a settlement-or a strike at 5 a.m.," said the union president, Donald Conaway. FOOD MART INC. Church and S. University Complete Food Service A Unique Food Store Serving the Campus Area f -- - -- BLOOD WEDDING (Bodas de Sangre) DRAMA By FEDERICO GARCIA LORCA presented by THE DEPT. OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES and LA SOCIEDAD HISPANICA The Dept. of Romance Languages presents Jean Giraudoux' INTERMEZZO (in French) LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Wednesday, March 29, 8:00 P.M. Thursday, March 30, 8:00 P.M. Tickets: $1.00, $2.00 at Box Office LYDIA MENDELSSOHN April 1-8:00 P.M. April 2-2:30 & 8:00 P.M. Ii-- Tickets: $1 & $2 2076 Frieze Building' Mon.-Fri. 9-12, 1-5 Ii II CINEMA II presents IRMA LA DOUCE FRIDAY & SATURDAY 6:30 & 9:15 P.M. Synchronized Swim Show tichfiIt Presents -ON STAGE I presents LYLE HARVEY TALBOT STONE IX i Who says God, is dead? Did intelligent man evolve in a mindless universe? Is there a divine law and power? Does God really make a difference? If you're thinking these questions through, here's a book with a refreshing approach. It doesn't ask you to accept God on faith alone. It challenges you to discover the power of God in your daily life. The book is SCIENCE AND HEALTH WITH KEY TO THE SCRIPTURES by Mary Baker Eddy. Come to a meeting of our Christian Science Organization Plae 345 SAR .1 U" A , 1 I