SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Fibright Cautious Escalation; tUes. Rusk Dines, Talks With Gromyko Johnson Not Giving Up, Despite Cold Reception in Hanoi SAN ANTONIO, Tex. ()-Presi- 4 dent Johnson, rebuffed by Moscow on the administration's latest Viet Nam peace overtures, said yester- day he will "continue the search for peace on every front, what- ever obstacles we may confront." Johnson seized upon the fifth anniversary of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency to issue a statement pledging the peace quest will be pushed, "however long the road may be." The statement, distributed at White House press headquarters here, did not mention the chill Soviet response to a conciliatory Viet Nam policy statement read to the United Nations on Thursday by Ambassador Arthur J. Gold- berg. Nor was the Goldberg state- ment itself mentioned. Johnson simply noted the anni- versary, promised a persistent search for peace and said: "The highest priority goal of national policy continues to be: to lift from mankind the threat of nuclear war." Goldberg told the Assembly Thursday that, as a first step to- wards negotiations, the U.S. was "prepared to order the cessation of all bombing of North Viet Nam, the moment" it got assurance the North would respond by reducing or ending its military activities in the South. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko publicly spurned the newest peace bid Friday, demand- ed withdrawal of American "ag- gressors" from Viet Nam and re- newed Moscow's declaration of support for Hanoi. Yesterday Hanoi and Peking heaped more invective on Goldberg's proposals. Goldberg told reporters yester- day that he did not consider Hanoi's negative reaction "to be a considered reply. It's public propaganda." Secretary of State DeanhRusk, meanwhile, was slated to have a second dinner-and-discussion with Gromyko yesterday in New York. Ahead of the evening parley at Gromyko's uptown headquarters, the United States publicly en- dorsed at the U.N. a Soviet resolu- tion calling on all nations not to hamper efforts for a treaty to halt the end of atomic weapons. This was something of a sur- prise, because Gromyko had in- troduced the resolution Friday with a new blast at U.S. plans for nuclear sharing among the Atlan- tic Allies, including West Ger- many. But Rusk denies the U.S. plans would give independent atomic weapons control to any new coun- try. To iet Persist In Offer Fulbright Cautions Escalation Bombers Cover on DMZ Drive Nam Negotiations WASHINGTON A P-Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark) believes Red China is convinced the United States wants war and he thinks Peking will react to an expansion of the Viet Nam fighting by enter- ing the conflict. Fulbright, chairman of the Sen- ate Foreign Relations Committee, said in an interview that he has failed to convince President John- son and other administration of- more attention than the Ho Chi.It said that, as of Friday, they Minh Trail through eastern Laos totalled 385. The unofficial count, as a funnel for Communist rein- based on spokesmen's announce- forcements and supplies. ments, had been 371 with the de- Action dwindled for the Ma- struction Thursday of a U.S. Navy rines. Patrols probing along theiSkyraider. southern edge of the zone estab- Planes shot down in South Viet lished no significant contact. Nam were reported to total 123. The U.S. command disclosed re- This excludes parked aircraft lost ports of plane losses over North through enemy attacks and those Viet Nam have been incomplete. wrecked by mechanical failure. To Demand UN actio- ficials that there is grave danger e UN Action of such a development. China Formed Red Guards "I get awfully discouraged about sthe trend events are taking in Viet On S. Africa am"he:said. "Ifuthere is further To Teach Revolution's W ays 11 " es~calation of the war I am afraid ,. e may be in for it." Forty Nations To Ask After Elections HONG KONG (P)-Communist "It was explained to us," he . r Mandate Recovery In Monday Assembly UNITED NATIONS () - Forty African and Asian countries were reported ready yesterday to sub- mit R r UU1ii i imarU a+ loll Downcast by the rejection by China's rampaging Red Guards said, "that the Red Guard move- Moscow and Hanoi of the latest were formed as a vehicle to teach ment was meant for those young U.S. proposals for peace talks, revolutionary ways to youths who Chinese who were born after the Fulbright made it clear that he never had experienced revolution, Communists conquered the Chi- feels an expansion of the fighting the leader of a Japanese delegation nese mainland in 1949. is almost certain after the Novem- to Peking said yesterday. "We were told that these chil- ber elections. _ dren and teen affers had never ex- -Associated Press SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTER Andrei Gromyko (left) and Secretary of State Dean Rusk met again last night to discuss Viet Nam and other topics of international importance. The two veteran diplo- mats, shown above at a previous meeting, also held talks Thursday. RECESS DEADLINE: Late Passage of Legislation Ives Johnson Political Boost mta resolution aimed at having .h eoto omrFreg ~1 11 C1-ag bg m 1a x- the United Nations take over "Nobody knows what the Chi- The report of former Foreign perienced revolution and the Red South-West Africa from South nese will do," he said, "but I'm Mister Zentaro Kosaka of Japai Guards were formed to teach them Africa convinced their leaders believe the coincided with a broadcast dis- Grdstwer fmyt." Diplomats that helped draw it President is trying to get them in- patch from Peking that the Red osay as." up predicted that even more coun- volved so that we can destroy their Grdnow ar e ssgi-tr Goad atold nwd tat nuclar istalatios. training, along with huge assign-1 Red Guard activity had "greatly tries would agree to sponsor it be- nuclear installations. ments of political study, all based subsided" in recent days. fore it was handed to the U.S. No matter how far-fetched this on the theories of Mao Tse-tung Secretariat tomorrow for formal may seem to us. they are the ones the hees of ' "When we entered China Aug. introduction in the General As- who will make the decision wheth- the Chinese leader. 29," he said, "the situation was sembly the following day. er to send in their troops and not The youthful Red Guards have very, very confusing. But on our Informed African observers ex- us. been storming through Chinese way out we found the situation pected the assembly eventually Grave Danger cities trying to uproot all old very quiet in Shanghai, Hang- would adopt the resolution; that "I think there is grave danger customs and habits and replace chow and Canton." a period of sparring then might they are miscalculating our intent. them with new ones. Kosaka said his group did not follow between South Africa and We have flown over their terri- Kosaka, who led his 11-member attend any of the Red Guard ral- the United Nations, and that the ory a couple of times. If we were Japanese tour group across the lies held in Peking and elsewhere final outcome would depend on to invade North Viet Nam, I be- border into Hong Kong Saturday nor did they see any Red Guard whether the big Western powers lieve they would feel that they said government officials told his violence, "although some of their ,would permit Security Council couldn'ttake it any longer and group about the Red Guards. actions seemed very childish." action for the enforcement of a would come in themselves._________ N to vr . h wish I could do something ..; .:.... .; .......r. ..::::.. South Africa runs neighboring to keep us from heading into a South-West Africa under a man- world war, but I don't know w.~hat date from the now defunct League of Nations. Third Raid - r2 } t F } WASHINGTON () -The slow congressional pace early this year in paying political dividends for the Johnson Administration as a much key legislation becomes law in the weeks leading up to the Nov. 8 election. Politicians generally agree that voters are more likely to remem- ber a popular bill that is signed into law amid considerable fan- fare in October than one that was signed back in February. Most of the major "Great So- ciety" bills of this year with po- tent political appeal in the cities, to labor unions and among minor- ity groups have either won con- gressional approval in the last orld Neu By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Chancellor Ludwig Erhard of West Germany arrived in Washington yesterday and acknowledged that his forth- coming talks with President John- son "will not be easy." He express- ed the hope, however, that the two leaders can solve the problems they face. - KINSHASA, The Congo - A howling mob crashed into the Portuguese Embassy yesterday, seized three diplomatic personnel, ransacked the building and burned it. Radio Kinshasa said the crowd of 200 were Angolan exiles. month or are likely to attain it to dampen inflation by suspending before Congress goes home. the investment credit and accele- Just Signed Johnson has just signed two key measures: (1) a minimum-wage bill that raises the federal level to $1.40 next February and in- creases coverage, and. (2) a bill to authorize a clamp down on rising interest rates. Earlier this month, he signed such bills as the auto and highway safety package the urban mass- rated depreciation has won ap- proval.from the House Ways and Means Committee en route to congressional passage expected by the likely mid-October adjourn- ment date. Still To Come Still to come are both of the administration's big education bills -a four-year extension of the ele- mentary and secondary aid pro- transit bill and a measure to in- gram and a similar program for crease the federal National Mort- colleges, universities and graduate gage Association's borrowing au- schools. thority and thus ease pressure on The antipoverty program, ex- mortgage rates. pected to be approved, comes up The administration's program in the House next week and prob- ably in the Senate also. The House is expected to give approval to Senate-passed pro- 's Roundup rams for demonstration cities Senate is due to act on the House- passed bill to create a cabinet- WASHINGTON-The 104 mem- levelddepartment of transporta- ber nations of the International tion. Monetary Fund will open on Mon- An expansion of the Food-for- day a five-day meeting which Peace program is expected to gain could set the pattern for reform final approval from both houses in of international financing. a few days. No hard decisions are expected The last major administration at the meeting as most of the time proposal to get out of its House will be devoted to speech-making. committee, the truth-in-packaging It's here, however, that fund lead- bill, emerged last week from the ers hope to get the guidelines for House Commerce Committee after reform of the system which keeps being stripped of its mandatory the gears of world trade creased. package-sizing feature. GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe Monday, September 26 Noon Luncheon, buffet 25c Ed Geffner: "The Rationale for the Right End'' qaI'9.-le Proudly announces: key positions available on the ART EDITORIAL and BUSINESS The international Court of Jus- In Saigon, U.S. B52 bombers tice in the Hague ruled last July made their third raid of the week 18 that Ethiopia and Liberia had on North Viet Nam yesterday in no legal right to bring a case in support of American Marines bat- which they sought a judgment that tling to drive infiltrated Hanoi South Africa had violated the regulars from the border province mandate by introducing apartheid, of Quant Tri. or race segregation, in the terri- Cruising high out of range of tory. enemy guns, the eight-jet bombers African delegates here immed- from Guam dumped tons of explo- iately began consultations that led sives on Communist truck parks, to the drafting of the resolution in storage depots and infiltration the Asian-African group, which trails a few miles north of the old includes 61 of the 118 U.N. mem- demilitarized zone bestriding the bers. They led off a debate on frontier. South-West Africa in the assem- I Smaller warplanes struck at bly Friday scheduled to go on till!seven enemy storage areas within Oct. 7. the zone, which lately has drawn Academy Award Winning Movie MONSIEUR VINCENT The Story of the LifeI of St. Vincent De Paul (French Dialogue: English Subtitles) Sunday, September 25, 7 P.M. Wesley Foundation, corner State & Huron r,{:; .v },% : :i : D I A M O N D R GENEVA . . . . FR only the original c the name Orange E inside therin 3chfancerer ON SO. UNIVERSITY 1113 SOUTH U. Public Is Invited No Charge i ...:};":it;.:.:,:.i: ...:.':lti:'ti'};f::J ::t:"::""1:1}:". ................ --------- TUESDAY, 3:00 P.M. Hill Auditorium. Sept. 27 1 N G S ROM $125 an have Blossom g. SCh aneerer 208 S. MAIN ST. STOKELY CARMICHAEL Chairman, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee "One of the tragedies of the struggle against racism is that up to now there has been no national organization which could speak to the growing militancy of young black people in the urban ghetto. There has been only a civil rights movement, whose tone of voice was adapted to an audience of liberal whites. It served as a sort of buffer zore between them and angry young blacks. None of its so-called leaders could go into a rioting community and be listened to. In a sense,,l blame ourselves together with the mass media-for what has happened in Watts, Harlem, Chicago, Cleveland, Omaha. Each time the people in those cities saw Martin Luther King get slapped, they became angry; when they saw four little black girls bombed to death, they were angrier; and when nothing happened, they were steaming. We had nothing to offer that they could see, except to go out and be beaten again. We helped to build their frustration." "An organization which claims to speak for the needs of a community-as does the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee-must speak in the tone of that community, not as somebody elses buffer zone. This is the significance of black power as a slogan. For once; black people are going to use the words they want to use-not just the words whites want to hear. And they will do this no matter how often the press tries to stop the use of the slogan by equating it with racism or separatism." Room, Undergraduate Library STOKELY CARMICHAEL 7:30 p.m. Multipurpose "The Church and New Power Structures in the Urban Ghetto" Stephen Spottswood, Commission on Race and Cultural Relations, Metropolitan Detroit Council of Churches and o 'f ° O,, I I