SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE4 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1966 THE MICHIGAN iIAILY PA4'~E TRflV1~ fCSAU 111LM Il 2 Progress of iet Nam War Pleases WASHINGTON ('P)-For many military men, Secretary of De- fense Robert S. McNamara's sum- mation yesterday that military progress in Vietnam the past year "has exceeded our expectations" can be put another way: The Viet Cong and North Viet- namese have not staged a sus- tained major offense since the bitter Ia Drang battle last fall. Pentagon sources acknowladge, however, there have been several significant battle initiated by the enemey this year-including a Viet Cong attack on a Special Forces camp at Ashau in the spring and some attacks against Operation Hastings near the Demilitarized Zone. But these can be measured in terms of days," one source said, pointing out that the Ia Drang battle lasted nearly four weeks last October and November. McNamara, upon his return early yesterday from a four-day inspection trip in South Vietnam, praised the war effort there. He said the Viet Cong have "been un- able to mount the monsoon offen- sive they had planned for the per- iod June through October of this year, and offensive designed to cut the country in half at its narrow waist." In his news conference Thurs- day, President Johnson also said a Viet Cong monsoon offensive failed. McNamara credited this failure to the combined military pressure of the South Vietnamese and U.S. and other free world forces. But many military men, both here and in Saigon, tend to play down the notion of monsoon of- fensives, saying there is no such thing as a monsoon that blankets Vietnam. When it's rainy in the South, these officers point out, it's usually dry and cool in the North. "This monsoon weather has been overestimated as a factor," one Pentagon officer said. "It's not' that bad." He and others said the increased firepower and mobility of helicop- ters offset the lessened U.S. capa- bility for low-level bombing in bad weather. Nor has the weather curtailed the effectiveness of the huge B-52 bombers, which fly over the clouds and use radar to find their targets. As a U.S. field commander in Vietnam said, "Don't forget that Communists, even guerrillas, get' rained on too. Their movements are slowed and their supplies and equipment get wet the same as anybody else." Thus ,these men argue, the same factors that prevented the monsoon attacks also have effectively bot- tled up Communist battle plans since last November. They describe these factors as, 1) the increased U.S. buildup, 2) improved intelli- gence-spawned partly by increas- ing Viet Cong defections and cap- tures-and, 3) U.S.-led search and destroy missions, the so-called spoiler oprations. Military men, however, are care- ful to note there is evidence to support McNamara's and others' contention that the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese anticipated a Bombing Viet Buffer Zone May Resume successful offensive during the monsoon season. Captured Viet Cong plans show that these planned offensives in- cluded: r A drive across the Demili- tarized Zone to cut off Highway 1 between Quang Tri and Da Nang.+ * Control of the rich, rice-pro- ducing central highlands, inclu- ding the cities of Pleiku and Kon Tum and Highway 19. Military sources say this apparently is the plan McNamara referred to as the drive to "cut the country in half at its narrow waist." " Control of the Key Phouc Tanh and Long Khanh provinces 7 McN amara near Saigon, including Highway average about 15,000 men a month. 15. The ultimate goal was to sur- McNamara also praised the mo- round and threaten Saigon. rale among U.S. troops and an- None of these offensives ever nounCed that 11,614 officers and materialized. One high source in- men had volunteered to extend dicated that the enemy still may their tours of duty in Vietnam. He attempt an offensive along the said again, however, that the Unit- Cambodian border, but described ed States has no intention of the Communists as "licking their sengthening the current 12-month wounds" elsewhere. tours. of duty there. After his arrival at Andrews Air On the gloomy side, the defense Force Base in suburban Maryland, secretary said, "The only area that McNamara repeated statements I obeserved in which I think pro- made earlier in Saigon that there gress has been less than satis- is no "reason to believe that de- factory was that of the rural de- ployments of U.S. forces" to South velopment program. It's an area Vietnam will change significantly that I think will require increasing in the future. Deployments now attention during the coming year." -< GE Agreement Ends PRESS CONFERENCE REACTION: Communist, Neutral Countries Demand Halt in Viet Bombing Major Strike Threat! Hanoi Is Warned Management, Unions Plan 3-Year Pact White House, Meany Announce Settlement; Pav, Benefits Raised WASHINGTON (P)-The huge General Electric Co. and 11 unions agreed yesterday on a new three- year contract providing an esti- mated 51-cent increase in wages and fringe benefits. It-averted a scheduled strike of 125,000 work- ers. The settlement, reached in a sudden breakthrough after 12 days of seemingly deadlocked negotia- tions, was announced almost sim- ultaneously by the White House and AFL-CIO President George Meany. . The strong possibility of a Taft- Hartley Act injunction by Presi- dent Johnson to delay any strike for 80 days because of defense pro- duction appeared to have played a major role in the settlement. The negotiators were working against a Sunday midnight strike deadline. The AFL-CIO International Union of Electrical Workers-the biggest of the 11 unions with some 80,000 General Electric workers- estimated the value of the new contract at "something around five per cent per year," or about 51 cents in increased wages and fringe benefits over the three years. It includes 28 cents an hour in wage increases and a maximum of 10.5 cents an hour in cost-of-living pay increases over the life of the contract. Meany described the agreement as "a major accomplishment for collective bargaining" with Gen- eral Electric. But he dwelt at some length during a news conference on the failure of the unions to win new arbitration procedures to settle grievances which now lead to fre- quent strikes. "It doesn't make a great deal of sense to sign an agreement and then have a strike about the meaning of the contract signed," Meany said. The unions claim that the com- pany, at many of its approximate- ly 160 plants, changed wages and working conditions without notice and that the only recourse in most cases now is to strike. "The attitude of the company provokes such strikes," Meany said. He added that the 11-union combine would work during the life of the new contract to solve the grievances and if necessary "to exercise fully the right to strike if this becomes necessary." The conference board of the electrical workers union will meet in New York on Sunday and is expected to give final approval to the contract. The other unions, which have historically bargained locally with the company, will work out local plant issues and in most cases submit the contract to a vote of their members. The agreement was described by a government source as "a major !? victory" for Johnson. He had suf- fered his first setback in major labor disputes when the AFL-CIO International Association of Ma- chinists recently rejected a con- tract reached at the White House with five major airlines before going on to reach an agreement later. n1 Troos jUNITED NATION, N.Y. OP) - both sides, provided there were Communist and Neutral nations matching steps by Hanoi. U.S. Military Position pressed their demands yesterday The spokesman commented that for an unconditional cessation to Johnson spoke more forcefully SAIGON, South Vietnam ()-A the U.S. bombing of North Viet- when he ruled out a unilateral U.S. spokesman said yesterday nam despite emphatic rejection by pause in the bombing with the that attacks will resume on the President Johnson of any such statement that it had been tried eastern end of the old demilitar- move now. twice before with no letup by the ized zone, bomb-free for 18 days, Secretary-General U Thant per-; Communists in theii militay ac- unless Communist troops top in- sisted also in pushing for the tivity. filtrating there. unilateral action by the United "We are not going to allow our States as the first step in his own In Washington, Sen. Vance nmilitary position to be jeopard- three-point plan to promote Viet- Hartke, (D-Ind.), said that as "for ized," the spokesman said. B-52 nam peace negotiations. the tactics of bombing, I think this jet bombers hit again at Red trails While most U.N. diplomats de- is a matter for military decision." and bivouac areas across the zone's clined to be quoted by name in But he added that suspension of central sector. dinetnb ot byonm in the bombing "would be an essen- ThewaringtoHani t clarcommenting on Johnson's rejec- The warning to Hanoi to clear tion made at his news conference tial ingredient to ultimate negoti- its forces out of the seaward end Thursday it was obvious many ations." Hartke was a moving of the six-mile-wide zone followed hoped for an eventual change in force behind Senate doves who up President Johnson's reminder the U.S. position. sent a letter to Johnson last Jan- in a White House news conference uary asking him not to resume Thursday that the enemy had not Some speculated it might come bombing. paused during the American bomb- while Johnson attended the Asian. ing halts in mid-May 1965 and conference on Vietnam in Manila over the yearend. jHlate this month. The US. spokeman announced, A U.N. spokesman said Thant H opes the U.S. and South Vietnamese I would have no comment on the governments "will be obliged to IJohnson statement, but sources VI41.4D1 1- Ambassador Halim Budo of Al- bania, whose country reflects the views of Peking, said, "We are not interested in negotiations. The only issue is for the United States to get out of Vietnam and get out now." A British spokesman would not comment directly on the Johnson statement, but he said that there was no real conflict with the peace plan put forward here by British Foreign Secretary George Brown earlier in the ,week. The British plan calls for an end to the U.S. bombing after agree- ment by Hanoi to enter peace negotiations. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko, en route home to Moscow, denounced the U.S. stand and reiterated the Communist de- mands for a military withdrawal. r ooperation 'ower' Groups power slogan." He endorsed a statement issued Thursday by sev- eral Negro leaders aimed at repu- diating the black power philosophy but did not condemn or repudiate any individual or leaders of the black power movement. Instead, King read a statement defending his nonviolent methods as the most effective, and warning against extremism. The statement, resulted from two days of private talks between King and officials of the Southern Christian Leader- ship Conference which he heads. King said, however, that he en- dorses a statement issued Thurs- day in New York by seven nation- al Negro leaders aimed at repudi- ating black power and affirming integration as a goal, nonviolence as the method. --Associated Press OPEN AIRCHAT President Johnson pauses to chat with British Foreign Secretary George Brown during a walk yesterday in the south grounds of the White House. Brown came to Washington for tcp level conferences on the war in Viet Nam and U.S.-British security interests. APPROPRIATIONS BILL: Slash Anti-Poverty Allotment, Boost Educational Programs respond" to any continuation of what he charged.was Red military activity within the 30-square-mile sector of the border buffer terri- tory bewteen Highway 1 and the South China Sea. Washington orders put that sec- tor off limits to American war- planes Sept. 27. This was to pro- mote a study by the International Control Commission, a three-na- tion watchdog agency, of viola- tions of the 1954 Geneva treaty which delineated the zone as neu- tral territory. But the Communists stalled off investigators who sought to cross into their side of the zone. And commission sources said privately the risk of sniper fire was too great to keep the unarmed inspec- tion teams in that area. The spokesman said the decision to respond to continued violations was reached late Thursday near the end of McNamara's four-day visit to Vietnam. He said there has been a continuing North Vietnam- ese army presence in the eastern end and this presense is "heavy enough to justify a response." Among other developments: * The military command an- nounced U.S. warplanes flew a rec- ord 173 missions over North Viet- nam on Thursday, topping their previous high of 171 on Sept. 11. " Operations yesterday cost the Air Force an F-105 Thunderchief, the 399th American plane shot down above the border. Parachut- ing to earth 70 miles northwest of Vinh, the pilot was rescued by a helicopter. * A 700-vehicle convoy escorted by U.S. infantrymen and Vietnam- ese troops broke the Viet Cong hold on long stretches of High- way 13. The truckers delivered rice for 40,000 people in rubber planta- tion country 80 miles north of Saigon and returned with 2,500 tons of raw rubber, a vital export worth $2 million. Only a few guer- rilla shots were reported, and no- body was hit. close to the secretary-general said he was disappointed. The spokesman said Thant still Pas rushing his plan in private talks with U.N. diplomats. In ad- dition to the halt in the bombing he is urging a slowdown in mili- tary activity by both sides and recognition of the Viet Cong in peace negotiations. Both Hanoi and Peking have dealt harshly with Thant's plan, calling it a front for U.S. designs to keep military bases in South- east Asia. But Thant does not re- gard the criticism an outright re- jection by North Vietnam. A U.S. spokesman said John- son's stand corresponds with the offer made by Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg in the General As- sembly on Sept 21 to halt the bombing and agree to a supervised phased military withdrawal by ATLANTA, Ga. (/P)-Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., backing away from "furthering any divisions," said yesterday that the resolutely opposes violence and separatism in the civil rights struggle but held out hope of cooperation with "back power" groups. "The vast majority of Negroes seek only to share power," King said. He disclosed at a news con- ference plans for a nationwide campaign seeking a guaranteed annual income for the poor. The annual-income drive will be organized immediately, King said, and will necessitate demonstra- tions. "I believe this has real pos- sibilities for success," he said. King reaffirmed opposition to "connotations of violence and separatism attached to the black f I SUBSCRIPTIONS NOW ON SALE! I WASHINGTON (A )-The House Appropriations Committee aimed a financial body blow at the anti- poverty program yesterday but voted to finance fully new educa- tion programs. It sent to the House floor for consideration next week a bill to provide $4.9 billion in new funds for miscellaneous agencies, most of it to be used during the fiscal year ending next June 30. Included are $1.56 billion for the Office of Economic Opportunity, wL ich administers antipovertlj programs, and $2.17 bilion for various forms of aid to education. The education allotment is $18.5 million more than the administra- tion had requested. The antipover- ty share is $187.5 million less than requested-a cut which Sargent Shriver, director of the antipoverty program, claimed last week would threaten the "very existence" of communityhaction undertakings to aid the poor. The over-all reduction in the bill was $2.03 million. It is the 15th and supposedly final appropriation bill this year and helped clear the way for planned adjourment of Congress late next week. Along with the previous bills, it represents administration requests for $130.7 billion in appropriations, in addition to an estimated total of $13.8 billion in permanent ap- propriations for such things as in"- terest on the national debt. The current outlook is that the total House-voted appropriation cuts when Congress adjourns will be in the neighborhood of $260.5 million, but final action has not been completed on several meas.- ures. The committee cut the allotment for the Neighborhood Youth Corps program $85 million below the $410 million ceiling in a pending authorization bill but still left it $25 million more than Shriver had originally requested. Other cuts in antipoverty pro- grams include $11 million from the Job Corps, $50 million from spe- cial impact programs, $18.25 mil- lion from projects to provide jobs on highway and park beautifica- tion, $18.25 million from projects to employ adults who have dif- ficulty getting work elsewhere, and $5 million from the VISTA pro- gram known as the Domestic Peace Corps. For Operation Headstart to help train preschool children, the coin- mittee recommended $352 million, the amount included in the pend- ing authorization bill. For various education programs,, developing institutions, $722.7 mil- lion for grants and loans to col- leges and universities, and $76 mil- lion for public library services and construction. To finance the new readjust- ment benefits program for vet- erans who served after Jan. 31, 1955, when eligibility under the previous GI Benefits Act expired; the committee approved the full $327 million requested. The $815.07 million for the De- partment of Housing and Urban Affairs is $30 million less than re- quested. Meanwhile backers of President Johnson's demonstration cities bill won key votes on cost and school- busing issues and pushed for House passage of the big slum ze- habilitation measure. The House turned back, 141-110, the committee approved $1.34 bil- a Republican-backed move to lion for elementary and secondary knock $900 million operating schools, $30 million to strengthen authorization out of the bill. f i) 7' I world News Roundup I By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS - A major diplomatic hassle appeared to be developing at the United Nations yesterday as a result of the inva- sion of the Syrian U.N. mission in New York by a group of young Zionists. The incident touched off an Arab-Soviet attack on the United States in the U.N. Security Coun- cil and brought expressions of re- gret from numerous U.N. diplo- mats. In private conversations, some revived the sometime talk of moving U.N. headquarters to another country. WASHINGTON-Imperial KlanI Wizard Robert M. Shelton yester- day drew one year in prison and a $1,000 fine-the maximum sen- tence - for refusing to produce books and records for the House Committee on Un-American Ac- tivities. The 36-year-old imperial wizard of the United KMans of America, Inc., of Tuscaloosa, Ala., was con- victed of contempt of Congress by a U.S. District Court jury here on Sept. 14. It was in connection with demands made on him by the com- mittee when he testifed last Oc- tober during its investigation of Klan activities. NEW YORK - Supreme Court Justice Wilfred A. Waltemade has ordered the arrest of Rep. Adam Clayton Powell for civil contempt "when the Congress is in recess." Waltemade based his order yes- terday on a finding by another judge that Powell was guilty of civil contempt for his wilful failure to answer a Dec. 15, 1965, sub- poena in proceedings connected with the collection of $164,000 in defamation judgments against the Harlem legislator. It was the second arrest order made against Powell. The first was in June 1964. Appearing in the GREEN AND WHITE SERIES at Eastern Michinan University PETITIONING PETITIONING v iLwLivnriT V nrt 1 1 iTorirr _ I U L#L alkA iY afLU#fl4G *i7#LAdR~nanAI1A i