SATURDAY, SEP'TEM ER 17, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 196~l TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PA(W THflEW .1 V I {+ 1 1 L 4 1-+ 1 s 4 War Mishap Investigation. Announced Follows Radio Charge By Peking; Rusk Says UN Policy Remains WASHINGTON (A) - Secretary of State Dean Rusk said yester- day the United States is looking into a Peking charge that U.S. planes strafed a Chinese village near the Vietnamese border on Sept. 9. But he said he had no in- formation on any such action. Rusk told a news conference that the only information he had been able to find on the incident alleged by Red China was a Sai- gon announcement the next day reporting an encounter between American planes and Communist- built MIGs. He did not identify the national- ity of the MIG aircraft. No Comment Pentagon sources .had no imme- diate comment on the Radio Pek- ing report of a strafing attack. Peking said two houses were dam- aged and an ox was killed. One American plane was damaged by Red Chinese planes the report 4said.. 'Rusk told his news conference that "we will be checking further into the matter." In discussing a variety of other questions, Rusk said: 'Major Obstanele' . Communist China "is a major{ obstacle to settlement" of the Vi- etnamese war and for this and other reasons, such as China's generally aggressive attitude, he "was confident that 'a bid to seat: China in the United Nations would be defeated. Rusk said he believed the pro- Red Chinese move in the forth- coming session of the U.N. Gen- eral Assembly would be a turn- back by "a substantial majority" of U.N. members. The United States is known to have decided, following a prolong-' ed review of its own opposition to' a Red Chinese seat, to stand firm on its policy in the General Assem- bly meeting opening Tuesday in New York. Holding Stand Rusk said the United States is holding to its long-time stand and this does not represent any new 4 decision in the sense of a major1 new policy determination. On other subjects, Rusk said7 there is still no evidence of any readiness in North Viet Nam tol move toward talks on ending the Vietnamese war. French President Charles de $ Gaulle in a recent speech in Cam- bodia on the Vietnamese war fail- ed to make "any suggestion" aboutI what North Viet Nam and Red China might do for peace inI Southeast Asia. Committee Endorses Defense Cut Says Cost Program Has Adverse Effect On Defense Structure U.S., Britain Consider Actions To Bar France fronm Secrets LONDON ( --) British authorities American and growing impatience with the atti-" are pondering tude French President Charles dea : moves to bar France from sharing the strategic and planning secrets of the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization. In reporting this, diplomats said Gaulle is taking in the wake of France's withdrawal from NATO military activities. Issues involve the defense of Eu- rope and West Germany's dual, x i I I' -Associated Press CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY CHAIRMAN Mao Tse-tung, left, is shown with Defense Minister Lin Piao; surrounded by the Red Guards youth movement during a recent rally in Peking. Lin Piao has moved to consolidate his position as second man in the party by channeling the energies of the Red Guards from their street rampages of past weeks into party cells. Pravda Attacks 'Red Guards' Overturning Chinese Culture WASHINGTON (A) - A House yesterday that officials of the two and sometimes conflicting attach-r subcommittee endorsed the Penta- countries also are considering ur- ments to France on one side andt gon's cost reduction program but gent action for the transfer of to the Americans, British and oth-t said that it has made "inflated NATO's political headquarters er allies on the other.t and unrealistic reports of savings"., from Paris to Brussels, Belgium.Speculation It charged that some cost reduc- Washington and London were said One result of all this has been tion has "had an adverse effect to want this switch quickly. They to touch off speculation among on our national defense struc- favor holding the year-end session mm ture.' of NATO foreign ministers in some Western diplomats aboutthe Brussels rather than in Paris as need, ultimately, for high-level In a report issued last night BtAmerican, British andi West Ger- after a study of the Defense De- usual. man talks partment's cost reduction program, Decision the House Armed Services Special A decision was to have been tak- As American and British offi- Investigations subcommittee said en by the foreign ministers of cials see things, De Gaulle is try- many reported savings "result France's 14 partner states at a ing to lead France nto a special from ordinary routine decisions special meeting in Brussels next and privileged position within the expected of management" and month. This meeting now seems alliance. They fear the process others "merely ended practices unlikely to take place and more could upset NATO concepts of which were grossly wasteful." probably will be held immediately fair burden-sharing and tempt in advance of the regular Decem-- others to copy France's example. Saves $7.6 Billionj ber 15th gathering. Rougher Attitude The Pentagon claimed that dur- The American-British studies Washingtonand London are ing the fiscal years 1964 and 1965 are taking place in a mood of i moving to the view that a rougher it saved $7.6 billion of which 52.6 percent was credited to a cate- gory of 'buying only what we need." The subcommittee examin- Report Neutral Zone ed cases from that category cover- ing $1.25 billion in total claimed The report said the Pentagon Site of Fierce Fighting program has produced significant savings and added: "The true accomplishments SAIGON, South Viet Nam - South China Sea, where enemy of the cost reduction program are Fateful moves on both sides have gunners had fired on troops of its best recommendation and are now enmeshed the demilitarized the 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Divi- sufficient reason to endorse and zone-the DMZalmost as fully sion, and others nearby downed support it as an imaginative and a helicopter and a fighter plane. effective tool of management." in the Vietnamese war as the cen- Newsmen in the field said they But it said "grossly inflated tral highlands. About the only had seen U.S. soldiers setting claims can only detract from its thing lacking is an infantry bat- some of the huts afire with mat- effectiveness. tie. ches. For some reason the divi- Questions Effectiveness sion's command denied this. It It called the present validating U.S. B52 jet bombers dropped issued a statement Thursday sug- procedure used to police the pr- tons of explosives over Communist gesting the ,flames were set by gram of questionable effective- troop concentration and storage preliminary air strikes and artil- areas within that border territory lery. nes.. ,,.yetrdyaugmenting attacks by "On numerous occasions," it yesterday g said, 'the opinions of service audi- lighter planes aimed at wiping out American pilots flew 121 mis- Red nests and damming further sions Thursday over North Viet tors questioning savings have been infiltration from North Viet Nam. Nam. They said they blasted three overruled by the office of the se- surface to air missile sites, along cretary of defense." The allies got wind i July of with 59 barges, 11 bridges, two Along the same lines, it said military trials, supply dumps and oil storage depots, 21 railroad box- that top Department of Defense gun sites built up within the zone I cars and, important to the airmen, 'management pressure on the and reacted to the violations of five conventional antiaircraft po- services to meet savings quotas the 1954 Geneva accords which sitions. has resulted in inflated and un- neutralized the DMZ.si attitude is needed to deal with the French, even if it means expelling France from NATO's top-secret strategic and planning groups. Informants listed in connection with French withdrawal from NA- TO's military network that France no longer intends paying a share towards NATO's military costs and that it has pulled its men out of the chiefs of staff committees in Washington: Supreme Hpadquar- ters, Allied Powers, Europe: the staff of Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer who is supreme allied commander, Europe. MOSCOW (/)-The Soviet Un-i ion sharply rebuked the Commun- ist Chinese for their culturalt crackdown on everything foreign. "The more backward a country1 is technically, economically and culturally," Pravda, the Commun- ist party paper, said, "the more she needs to draw on the best1 achievements of other peoples to, overcome her backwardness." Pravda said a true cultural rev-< olution builds on the best of the past, rather than rejecting it. The article did not mention China by7 name but it clearly was aimed atI Peking's "great proletarian cultur- al revolution," especially its anti- Soviet overtones. Pravda said Soviet Communists had rejected extreme leftist ele- ments and implied that Chinese Communists should do the same in their own country. It was the first direct comment by the Soviet press against the Chinese cultural upheaval, al- though the press has reported, without comment, on events in Peking and reprinted anti-Chinese1 statements by other Communistt partiest Continuing this pattern, the So-t viet government paper Izvestia quoted a Spanish Communist pa-1 per as calling the Chinese cultural1 revolution "a scandalous attacki against the Soviet Union and a1 stain on the history of the Chinese revolutionary movement."E In Belgrade, Yugoslavia, Prem- s ier Chou En-.lai warned Peking's Red Guards yesterday to halt at- tacks on Dr. Sun Yatsen's widow, who has been made a heroine of the Chinese Communist revolution, Tanjug news agency said. Sun founded the first Chinese republic in 1911. The Communists have lionized the widow, Soong Ching-ling, making her vice presi- dent of the nation and heaping other honors upon her. The Tanjug dispatch from Pek- ing indicated the rampaging young Red Guards had also been dis- respectful to the memory of Sun. himself.I T a n j u g 's correspondent said Chou's address to the Red Guards on in be in Sun never had been published Peking but its contents could learned from posters pasted up the Red Chinese capital. By these accounts, Chou met with Red Buards in the Parlia- ment building Sept. 1. He told them first there was no need to remove busts of Sun from various buildings. Then he admonished them against pasting up posters against Mrs. Sun. By the Tanjug account, Chou al- so demanded that the Red Guards stop beating up Chinese and throwing them out of their apart- ments, and told them to quit des- troying objects of art. FOLK SINGER BILL KIRCHEN AFTER-GAME ENTERTAINMENT 4:30-6:00 Cider and Donuts Met Opens To Musicians'! Strike; Iiaz, Price Star NEW YORK (R')-The Metropol- Voted last Tuesday, it already itan Opera opened its palatial new has forced the postponement of home at Lincoln Center last night next week's schedule and may af- to present the world premier of fect the Met's whole fall program. composer Samuel Barber's "An- The Musicians have been working tony and Cleopatra." without a contract for more than Bass Justino Diaz and soprano two years. Leontyne Price were in the title For .the principal event of the roles, before one of the most gla- New York cultural season, Mrs. morous audiences in the Met's long Lyndon B. Johnson came up from history. the White House. Attending as The debut came in under the her guests were the president of shadow of an orchestra musicians' the Philippines, Ferdinand E. Mar- strike. cos, and his wife, who are on a tstate visit to this country. The , opera was commissioned I especially for last night's opening, in with Thomas Schippers conduct- ing and Franco Zeffirelli respon- sible for the stagingsenand costumes, as well as the adaptation practice yesterday and crashed on of Shakespeare's text. the Nevada desert. The orchestra players, members The pilots, Capt. William B. of Local 802 of the American Fed- eration of Musicians, agreed to McGee, 31, La Jolla, Calif., and Lt. play Friday night despite their Chris Patterakis, 31, Modesto Cal- strike. They seek a new contract, ifornia, ejected and parachuted I including a new rotation system unhurt. so that each musician will have S;only five performances a week. At EWorld1 News Rot By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Senate ap- propriations subcommittee has ap- proved $7.5 million to revive the fledgling national Teacher Corps, it was learned yesterday. The House had refused to vote any funds for the corps in the current financial year in passing the money bill for the Labor and Health, Education and Welfare departments last May. WASHINGTON - Production of American industry climbed dur- ing August to another record, the 11th straight month, of advances in this key indicator of economic activity. LAS PALMAS, Canary Island - A Spanish airliner with 21 persons aboard ditched in the Atlantic Fri- day ary life off Tenerife, one of the Can- Islands. All but one boarded rafts and were rescued. * * * CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. - The Gemini 11 pilots flew back to Cape Kennedy yesterday for a hand- shaking, back-slapping reunion with fellow astronauts. They des- cribed their daring flight as "ab- solutely fantastic." Spacewalker Richard F. Gordon, Jr., showing no sign of the physi- cal fatigue which cut short his space stroll, pronounced their re- cord-shattering three-day mission "a lot of fun." INDIAN SPRINGS, Nev.-Two F100 jet planes in the Air Force Thunderbird flying demonstration team collided during formation l 1 3 t i WASHINGTON - Sen. Everett M. Dirksen R-Ill., yesterday pre- dicted Senate approval of a pro- posed constitutional amendment to permit voluntary prayers in public schools. But he conceded the House may not act this year. Dirktsen, the Senate Republicar leader, announced he will call up the prayer proposal-designed to nullify Supreme Court decisions- after the Senate votes Monday on a motion to limit debate on the civil rights bill. present they play seven, except that every third week they have one session free. They also demand an arbitra- tion procedure for discharges and higher pay for rehearsals. Friday night, the "old Met" on Broadway at 39th Street was dark and silent, but still intact. Origi- nally the wreckers were to have attacked it last spring, to clear the site for a 40-story office building. Efforts to preserve the old structure have stalled the ac- tion. realistic reports of savings." A reinforced battalion of more In addition, it said, "savings than 1,200 U.S. Marines, landed claims have been overstated be- Thursday by ships and helicopters cause of inappropriate devalua- in South Viet Nam's adjacent tion of assets or complete disre- Quang Tri Province, pressed ahead gard of asset values," and that with Operation Deckhouse Four "several claimed savings were bas- practically within rifle shot of the ed on actions taken prior to the zone. The Marines haven't found establishment of the cost reduc- many infiltrated units of North tion program. IViet Nam's 324 B division.. Notes Cutback The subcommittee noted that Briefing officers, with fresh de- over the strong objection of the tails of the first significant con secretary of the Navy, Secretary tact, said a Marine patrol killed of Defense Robert S. McNamara nine men of a platoon or more of had cut back sharply the Navy North Vietnamese troops encoun- force of F4 aircraft for fiscal 19- tered on a jungle trail Thursday.. 65, and the cost reduction program The Marines were reported to have was credited with a saving of $32,- s u f f e r e d moderate casualties, 575,000. which means the patrol was pun- But it added that "the sum was ished severely. more than offset by the cost of in- The U.S. Command, entering a creased procurement of F4s in the controversy over the burning of a regular and supplemental fiscal hostile village Wednesday, made year 1966 budgets." it clear that U.S. cavalrymen were The subcommittee said "the con- indeed responsible. A spokesman clusion is inescapable that certain suggested they were acting within cost reduction actions have had a their rights under unwritten rules significant, adverse effect on our of guerrilla warfare. national defense structure in terms The village was Lien Hoi One, of degraded combat potential." in the Bong Son area near the Announcing the DAVE BRUBECK QUARTET IN CONCERT Presented bA The Student Sesquicentennial Committee and the Women's Athletic Association ANN ARBOR'S JEWISH CULTURAL SCUOOL OPEN HOUSE AND REGISTRATION SUNDAY, SEPT. 18 ... 10 A.M. t6 12 Noon COME ANY TIME AND BRING CHILDREN at new location-218 N. Division See New Quarters Meet Teachers Discuss Program Refreshments ---- ----- - U.S. airmen over South Viet Nam left smoking craters in and around enemy trenches and other fortifications while flying 382 sor- ties in support of ground troops or hitting positions defined by intelligence reports. 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