THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY" oarsr .w .y+ T1TU1SDAY ?4A~fl 0, 167 TNE MCHTE1%T IATI PAGE THREE i FO Cha r: ged With Violation s Justice Dept. Files Suit in U. Court Asks Order To Stop Illegal Threatening Of All Nonmembers DES MOINES, Iowa (P)-The National Farmers Organization was charged in a civil antitrust suit yesterday with using coercion in an attempt to monopolize the interstate sale of milk in 19 states. The Justice Department filed the suit in U.S. District Court in Des Moines, Iowa, on the 14th day of an NFO milk-marketing boy- cott. The suit charged that the NFO had forced nonmember farmers, truckers and processors to join its withholding campaign. It did not challenge the holdback by NFO members themselves. The government contended the drive had unlawfully curtailed the interstate flow of milk. It asked that the NFO and its members be ordered not to threaten nonmem- ber farmers and others in the trade and not to try to monopolize the sale of milk by illegal means. The NFO had staked out 25 states for its campaign, but took little, if any, action in some of them. Earlier in the day, the NFO switched from dumping milk to turning it into by-products that can be stored. The new strategy has the same. aim as the old-keeping milk from normal channels in a movement to add two cents to the prices farmers receive, now generally eight to 10 cents a quart. The NFO president, Oren Lee Staley, announced "phase two" of the withholding action in Corning, Iowa. Under the plan, participating farmers will send milk" to pro- cessors who have signed four- month contracts to pay two cents more per quart. The milk, both grade A and grade B, will be con- verted into cheese, butter or pow- dered milk and put in storage. Staley did not say how many plants are taking part in the plan. "The key to success means keep- ing molk from going into the nor- mal channels," he said. "We are determined to show the, industry it cannot outlast us." Many farmers had been dump- ing milk from going into the nor- culated as high as $150 a day. Storing the converted milk raised the. possibility that the farmers, who will retain owner- ship, will be able to borrow money from banks on warehouse receipts. Keith Emenhiser, a district NFO coordinator in Ohio, said farmers can get federal price supports, too. Fifth alkout in Four Years Threatens New York Papers NEW YORK (M-Contracts be- tween five New York major daily newspapers and 10 unions expire at midnight tonite, and one union leader said a strike is "as likely as not." The unions seek New York ar- rangements to replace expiring two-year contracts for 17,000 sala- ried and hourly rated employes of the Times, Daily News, World Journal Tribune, Long Island Press and Long Island Star-Jour? nal, all members of the Publishers Association of New York City. Ntw York's sixth major daily, the Post, is not a member of the association and negotiates sepa- rately with the unions. Four Unions Four of the unions "are pre- pared to go on strike" after their contracts expire, said Thomas J. Murphy, chairman of the News- paper Unity Council and executive vice president of ere New York Defense DepartmentDenies Po'or Viet Supply System WASHINGTON (P)-A Senate from the government's mothball subcommittee reported last night -and the Pentagon denied-that U.S. air and sea transportation forces "will be stretched to the limit" to support massive military operations in Vietnam. The Senate report came from the armed forces preparedness subcommittee headed by Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss), and it mixed praise with criticism of the vast Vietnam sea and airlift. The criti- cism focused on the sealift. The subcommittee pinpointed as one potential trouble area a break- down rate of old ships pulled out of the mothball fleet-some 20 to 27 years old. This was placed at 5.2 per cent, more than double the 2.5 per cent rate for the pri- vately-owned commercial fleet under charter from Vietnam serv- ice. The Defense Department con- ceded, there have been problems, but blamed them on a lack of un- loading and handling facilities in Vietnam, not a ship shortage. The Senate report itself noted a great improvement in the berthing and offloading facilitiesand deliveries. "Both the interthreater and in- tratheater transportation require- ments of Vietnam are well within the limits of our capability," the Pentagon declared, adding: "Po- tentially available U.S.-owned sea- lift resources could support an operation 21/2 times the size of Vietnam today." The report referred to testimony by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara in January that al- though taxpayers are putting out $750 million annually to subsidize the U.S.-flag fleet for defense needs, these subsidized operators have done little in the Vietnam buildup. Instead, McNamara said, the Defense Department was forced to pull 161 World War II ships fleet and to use 73 subsidized tramp ships to get thousands of personnel and millions of tons of equipment and supplies to Viet- nam. Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Ga), chairman of the Armed Services Committee, in urging their elimin- ination, told the Senate this coun- try should "not unilaterally as- sume the function of policing the world." The subcommittee report told of a backlog of 141,052 tons of cargo awaiting shipment to south- east Asia from west coast ports last October. It said another 55,536 tons of Vietnam supplies were ready for sea shipment, but not even offered for booking be- cause of lack of ships. The Defense Department con- ceded that the cargo backlog reached 280,000 tons last fall, but said a lack of unloading and han- dling facilities in Vietnam was the chief cause. Newspaper Guild. He said these are the printers, electricians, de- liverers and machinists.' Two other unions are dus to meet before the contract deadline to vote on strike action, he said. If a strike comes it would be the fifth newspaper walkout in less than four years. Since Nov. 1, 1962, some or all of the city's major dailies have been shut down by strikes for a total of 41 weeks, or an average of one out of every five weeks. 140-Day Walkout That strike, resulting from the merger, was settled Sept. 12 1966. Other newspapers in the city con- tinued publication during the 140- day walkout. Negotiations between the news- papers - and the unions-in some cases joint meetings and in other cases individual sessions-con- tinued yesterday to avert another strike. John J. Gaherin, president of the publishers association of New York City, said: "If in fact the situation is nearing a crisis, it is not the fault of the publishers. Joint Negotiations The unions, with the exception of the guild and printers, are negotiating jointly wtih the asso- ciation. The Guild always has negotiated separately with each newspaper. In the current nego- tiations, the printers are holding separate talks with the Times, too. Powers and Frederick C. Van Cott, president of the photoen- gravers, said after a morning ses- sion with the publishers that no wage offer had been made. On Monday, the printers rejected the publishers' first wage offer, a four per cent increase for each year of a three-year contract. N.Y. Strikers Disrupt TV Scheduling Newsmen Contest Wage Rates Against 4 Major Networks NEW YORK (A)--An announ- cers' wage strike scrambled na- tional radio and television net- w o r k progamming yesterday, blacking out many of the faces and voices familiar to audiences coast to coast. All stations stayed on the air, however. The Federal Mediation and Con- ciliation Service set up peace talks for 10 a.m. Saturday in Washing- ton in an effort to break a con- tract deadlock between the four major networks and the 18,000- member American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. The main issue involved the 100 local news gatherers at network- owned stations in New York, Chi- cago and Los Angeles. They sought a base salary of $325 a week, plus 50 per cent of commercial fees until the fee income equals base salary. Then the announcers would retain 100 per cent of additional fees from sponsored programs. Hitherto, the newsmen have negotiated contracts on an in- dividual basis for salaries ranging from $225 to $350 a week, with fees bringing some incomes to as high as $800 a week. Among newscasts affected by the strike were NBC's Huntley- Brinkley, CBS's Walter Cronkite, and ABC's Peter Jennings. William Monroe, an office man- ager in Washington, was flown in to lend a hand on the Huntley- Brinkley news show. Daryl Grif- fin, a news production official, was tabbed by ABC to step in for Jennings. Such name entertainers as Dean Martin, Danny Kaye, Red Skelton and the Smothers Brothers were taped only a week or 'so in ad- vance, and could be eclipsed if the strike is prolonged. Weekend appearances of such stars ts Ed Sullivan and Jackie Gleason were in doubt, with CBS prepared to use tapes of their old shows, it need be. Supervisory personnel kept sta- tions on the air, digging into li- braries of old and all-but-for- goten shows to fill time left va- cant by striking news and staff announcers, actors, singers and dancers. Indepent stations were not affected. Daytime soap operas were hard hit and their pretaping extended only to the end of this week. This foreshadowed the sudden and un- expected network comeback of such long-absent stars as Jack Benny and Loreta Young, whose old shows were to be used as sub- stitutes. Captain Kangaroo re- portedly had tapes on hand through April 10. Directly involved in a dawn walkout at stations in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles were only about 100 on-the-air network news gatherers. But they were joined on picket lines by AFTRA members from other facets of the industry. Johnson Orders Stoppage Of CIA Private Subsides WASHINGTON () - President Johnson ordered the Central In- telligence Agency yesterday to get out of the business of subsidizing private groups through secret, under-the-table deals. Johnson at the same time prom- ised to give serious consideration to the creation of a new institu- tion that in effect would do so in the open. The President acted after re- ceiving recommendations from a three-man panel he appointed after an international controversy was kicked up last month by dis- closure that the CIA had been secretly financing overseas activi- .ties by private educational, labor, philanthropic and cultural organ- izations. In a key move, Johnson accepted the following recommended policy statement by the panel: "No federal agency shall provide any covert financial assistance or support, direct or indirect to any of the nations educational or pri- vate voluntary organizations... "Where such support has been given, it will be terminated as quickly as possible without de- stroying valuable private organ- izations before they can seek new means of support." The President, in a statement of his own, said he is directing all federal agencies to fully im- plement the new policy. The committee also recom- mended "that the government should promptly develop and es- tablish a public-private mecha- nism to provide public funds open- WASHINGTON (P) - President Johnson ended guessing in finan- cial circles yesterday by redesig- nating controversial William Mc- Chesney Martin, Jr. as chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. A symbol of "sound money" in the financial world at home and abroad but anathema to "soft money" advocates, Martin will continue as chairman of the board until Jan. 30, 1970. ' Some of Martin's most vigorous critics are congressional Demo- crats. They include Rep. Wright Patman (D-Tex), chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee, ,and Sen. russell B. Long (D-La), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. In particularly, the critics have blamed Martin for higher interest rates. Defenders of Martin, and fiscal conservatives generally, contend that the reserve board has voted both ways on monetary policy- with the votes hinging entirely on economic conditions at the time. Martin noted in recent con- gressional testimony that the board has been moving to', make money more readily available with the dampening of inflationary pressures. Johnson is the 'fourth President to designate Martin as chairman of the board. He originally was ap- pointed to the board and desig- nated chairman in April 1951 by Harry S. Truman.: One man generally regarded as_ a "tight money" advocate will be leaving the board at the end of April. George Christian, White House press secretary who announced that Johnson asked Martin to stay on as chairman and that Martin agreed, said a successor will be picked later for Charles N. Shep- ardson. Under civil service law, a gov- ernment official must retire at the age of 70 if he has at least 15 years service, barring a waiver by the President. Christian made it clear that no such waiver will bej forthcoming for Shepardson. Or- dinarily, Shepardson's term would expire a year from now. Both Martin and Shepardson were in the majority when the board in December 1965 voted 4 to 3 to increase the discount rate from 4 per cent to 4/ per cent, much to Johnson's annoyance. The board said it took the ac- tion to combat inflation, but it had the effect of raising interest rates up and down the line.. Martin Named to New Term as Fed Chairman ly for overseas activities of organ- izations which are adjudged de- serving, in the national interest, of public support." On this point, Johnson said: "to review concrete ways of accom- plishing this objective, I am re- questing Secretary Rusk to serve as chairman of a special commit- tee which will include representa- tives from the executive, the Con- gress and the private community." Chairman of the group that re- ported to Johnsonson was Under- secretary of State Nicholas Kat- zenbach. The other members were CIA Director Richard Helms and Secretary of Welfare John W. Gardner. This group said that many of the activities-such as those of the National Student Association-- that had been subsidized by the CIA were of great importance. However, it concluded: "The time has surely come for the government .to help support such activity in a mature, open manner.' The Katzenbach committee es- timated that most if not all exist- ing secret subsidy programs can be liquidated by Dec. 31. None of these programs, it said, would justify any exception to the new policy against secret financial aid. "At the same time, where the security of the nation may be at stake," it went on, "it is impos- sible for this committee to state categorically now that there will never be a contingency in which overriding national security in- terest may require an exception." Soviet Union Backs Of f On Planned 13loc Meeting world News Roundup By The Associated Press The opinion by the 12-man NEW YORK-Ramparts Maga- court endorsed the decision made zine, which last month exposed three months ago by a three-judge Central Intelligence Agency fi- panel of the court. nancing of American students and The integration order applies to other groups, says in its April issue students, teachers, school trans- the CIA is using foreign student portation and school-related ac- associations to turn members into tivities. spies against their homelands. * * * The magazine calls the cam- C1TERBOURG, France - France paign a major one of "recruiting took another long step into the and, when necessary, blackmailing atomic age yesterday when Presi- foreign students who are studying der L Charles de Gaulle launched in this country." the first French nuclear-powered WASHIGTON. bSearinethat will' be able to WASHINGTON - The Senate deliver Polaris-type missiles when ethics committee which investi- it bcomes fully operational in gated misconduct charges against 1970. Sen. Thomas J. Dodd has decided E . T nefther to" exonerate him nor to, PROVIDENCE, R.I. -The out- recommend his expulsion from the come of a campaign debate on Senate, it was learned yesterday. President Johnson's Vietnam The decision was reached at a policy remained in doubt yester- secret meeting of the six-member day until 1,899 absentee ballots bipartisan committee a week ago, are counted in a special election shortly before Congress started its in Rhode Island's 2nd Congres- Easter recess. sional District. *ul The Democratic candidate, State NEW ORLEANS, La.-The full Sen. Robert O. Tiernan. who gave 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals wholehearted support to the ad- aff'rmed yesterday a far-reaching ministration on Vietnam, held a decision that six Southern states 485-vote margin in the count of must integrate t h e i r public Tuesday's balloting to choose a schools from kindergarten up at successor to tlie late Democratic the start of the fall term this year Rep. John E. Forgarty. MOSCOW (M--The Soviet Com- munist party admitted yesterday it has not yet overcome obstacles to its proposed world Communist conference as a move to isolate China. Meeting resistance from several Communist parties including those of Romania and Cuba, tne Soviet party backed off indefinitely from the proposed conference,. and in- dicated obstacles might continue for a long time. Nationala. Communist parties, such as Romania, fear that any Soviet-led conference, although billed as a unity meeting, would be. designed to force them to choose sides in the Moscow-Pek- ing dispute. The next effect of the confer- ence, these parties say, would be to expel China's Mao Tse-tung group from the world Communist movement. The Russians strongly plugged' their conference idea last Novem- ber but began backing away from it in December with an acknowl- edgement that it "should be well prepared by mutual consultations among parties." The Soviet party backed away even further yesterday by em- phasizing the need first "to solve problems involved in the convoca- tion of this meeting." The further backing away came in a communique on secret talks here between Soviet party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev and Luigi Lon- go, head of the Italian Communist party. The Italian Communists have insisted in the past that any world conference must be preceded by preparation to eliminate contro- versy at the meeting itself. The Soviet stand yesterday seemed to agree. .._........ . d) BLOOD WEDDING (Bodas de Sangre) DRAMA By FEDERICO GARCIA LORCA XAVIER NICHOLAS exciting young poet from Tuskegee Institute discusses "A Poet's Eye View of Modern Poetry." at the Ark tonight GUILD HOUSE . 802 Monroe FRIDAY, March 31. Noon Luncheon-25c Prof. Edward Stasheff, Dept. of Speech: "MASS COMMUNICATIONS" (A Series) FRIDAY, EVEN ING-6:00 P.M. AMERICAN DINNER (For Reservations Call-662-5189) After Dinner: PATIA ROSENBERG will sing Japanese and other songs "STUDENTS, VOTE IN THE CITY ELECTIONS!" 1421 Hill St. 9:00 P.M. 11 I I Synchronized Swim Show . . I/ickA i i4k Presents ON STAGE M I I ~ROFIi&l THFATiuiRF.n PRIMitY PRESENTS THE REPERTORY COMPANY "The Nation's Finest Company" *4 A 6u' FALL FESTIVAL 3 NEW PRODUCTIONS I WT. 1024, OWT. 2". 1 'its 671.e~t Bsagednotie Michel de Ghelderode's eamm ~ye. raTs10.15 17-2? ' AMERICAN PREMIERE of Eugene Ionesco's Ah OML "4. OCT 3aa.,vi T h I 11 I I I' i