SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SATU D A Y, N O V M BER 5, 966 ~lE I C H G A N A IL Romney's Pres tige To Ride Upon His Coattails EDITOR'S NOTE; This is the fifth and final part in a series on major statewide offices in the Nov. 8 election. It deals with the race for governor. By The Associated Press Political oddsmakers have peg- ged Gov. George Romney as an overwhelming favorite in next week's election, but the two-term governor is campaigning hard anyway-for other Republicans. Romney finds out Tuesday if he's really as popular as the poll- takers say he is. In most public opinion samplings, the governor is running about 2-to-1 ahead of his opponent, Democratic State Chair- man Zolton Ferency. Few observers give Ferency even an outside chance of upsetting the onetime American Motors pre- sident, although the challenger has been waging. a tireless cam- paign from one end of the state to the other. Romney's re-election bid has at- tracted as much interest outside Michigan as it has within. More than the governor's chair is at stake in this nonpresidential election year. If Romney wins with a whop- ping plurality and helps sweep into office a Republican senator and two or three congressmen- then he will have taken a giant stride on the road to the 1968 GOP presidential nomination. In previous campaigns, Rormney gained the tag "Lonesome George" by frequently ignoring candidates on the Republican ticket and going it alone. This year, however, he has gone out of his way to put in a plug for the GOP lineup wherever he goes. On a three-day airplane "blitz" to 40 cities this week, the governor invited local candidates to hop aboard while he was in their districts. Although Romney shrugs off questions about any White House ambitions, Ferency has attempted to make an issue of it. With Romney devoting most of his time to campaigning for Sen. Robert Griffin and others on the GOP ticket, Ferency has had little success in his attempts to provoke a battle with the governor over issues. As a result, the campaign has proved dull. The two candidates did engage in formal debates on two tradi- tional platforms, with Romney being subjected to boos and cat- calls at an AFL-CIO convention and Ferency greeted by groans and a chilly reception at a meet- ing of Detroit's Economic Club. Aware of Romney's reputedly quick temper, Ferency tried both a slashing attack and rapier-like verbal thrusts in an effort to up- set his opponent. But the governor remained unruffled throughout. From his first gubernatorial campaign in 1962, Romney has had the built-in advantage of al- most instant recognition on the part of most voters. For years, his likeness had appeared in news- paper advertisements when he headed American Motors. And as a vice president of Mich- igan's 1961-62 Constitutional Con- vention, he frequently was the principal subject of news photos. The first serious Romney-for- President talk began in 1963 when a man he never met-George Zim mermann of Dallas, Tex., started a movement in his behalf. The draft-Romney effort faded out, however, when the governor re- fused to have anything to do withI it. Although Romney accepted the role of favorite-son candidate at the 1964 Republican National Con- vention, he insisted during his first two terms as governor that his primary task was to set Michi- gan's house in order. His speeches indicate he feels the job is well under way. "Performance is what counts," Romney says. "We all remember the '50s and early '60s, and what happened to Michigan. "We remember Michigan's shat- tered reputation, faltering eco- nomy, political deadlock, special interest government, paydays, creditors banging at the door, hundred-million dollar deficits, unemployment, mounting human problems and needless human suf- fering." During Romney's first two years in office, he had a Republican legislature which he says started Michigan on the road to recovery. As part of his campaign strategy aimed at the independent voter, Romney also gives the Democrats credit. This doesn't set well with some hard-line Republicans, but the approach has paid off in a state noted for its switch balloting. "Our record of progress isn't just a gubernatorial record," Rom- ney says. "It isn't just a Repub- lican record. It is a Michigan rec- ord, accomplished under Republi- can leadership. "We began it with a Republican legislature and continued it with a Democratic legislature." "But," he says, "the record proves that this Republican Ad- ministration has supplied a long- missing ingredient in Michigan politics: Responsible leadership which refuses to descend to name- calling and spends its time look- ing for solutions-not for scape- goats." Romney acknowledges, in part, the Democratic argument that Michigan's economic recovery can be credited to the national pros- perity. "Sure, Michigan benefited from high national economic activity," he says. "But our most significant gain has been to reverse the new- plant policy of Michigan's job- makers. "Before 1963, they were locating most of their new plant expansion outside of Michigan. Now they are locating most of it in Michigan." Romney says there is still plenty of work to be done in the state and asks for a chance to continue the long-range planning. It took a presidential boo-boo to get Zolton Ferency's name in the public limelight. But with typically sharp wit and political astuteness, the Dem- ocratic gubernatorial candidate turned a momentarily embarras- sing incident into a campaign as- set. President Johnson stumbled over the pronunciation of Ferency putting the accent on the second syllable instead of the first in acknowledging the presence of fcl- low Democrats on a Labor Day platform in Detroit. Since then, Ferency has been getting laughs by referring to the President as "LBQ." Ferency, the son of Hungarian immigrants, landed the task of trying to topple George Romney from the governor's seat practi- cally by default. No other prom-' inent Democrat wanted the dubi- ous honor. Freely acknowledging his un- derdog role. Ferency .everthelbss is perhaps as well informed about his Republican opponent as any. Democrat in the state. As Democratic state chairman since 1963, Ferency has acted as chief spokesman for his party in critizing Romney's Administration almost from the day he took of- fice. But he has been frustrated at times in the campaign by being unable to find an issue against Romney that has shaken voter apathy. Ferency believes _Romney is shortchaging the people of Michi- gan and contends the governor has built up a phony "knight-on-a- white-charger" image to further his presidential ambitions. "When the real George Romney stands up, it comes as a shock," he says. After four years of Romney, Ferency says, Michigan is plagued by problems. "Our schools need money. Our mental health programs have de- generated. Our lakes, rivers and streams are becoming cesspools of filth and corruption. The air we breathe is heavy with poisons. "And our state faces a major financial crisis-yes, even payless paydays for Michigan employs- unless we achieve immediate tax reform and raise additional rev- enues before the new fiscal year." Ferency deplores one of the results of Romney's Administra- tion of which the governor points with pride to a surplus in the State Treasury. "Government is not in business to show a profit," Ferency argues. "Government exists only to serve the people-its stockholders. The only dividend the government can give the public is better services. Just as Romney has devoted much of his campaign to support Griffin, Ferency has frequently attacked Romney through Griffin. He says Romney displayed a negative political philosophy by appointing Griffin to fill the va- cancy left by the death of Dem- ocratic Sen. Patrick McNamara. Johnson Has No Worries On Surgery Hits Nixon's Views On Viet Nam Troops At News Conference WASHINGTON (R) - President Johnson took a relaxed view yes- terday of his forthcoming surgery and wielded his political scalpel on former Vice President Richard M. Nixon's stature in foreign af- fairs. The President cautioned the Communist world not to misjudge the United States' Viet Nam policy on the basis of next Tuesday's election-elections which he con- fidently said would keep the Dem- ocrats in control of Congress. Smiling, almost offhandish in manner, the Preisdent at a na- tionally aired news conference dis- missed the dual surgery he will undergo before Thanksgivingras ''not anything to make a great show over.' The highpoint the President's Asian tour was a joint communi- que signed at Manila Oct. 25 by the United States and its six allies in the Viet Nam war. Thursday, Nixon criticized the communique and said: "We are off base with our offer of mutual withdrawal of regular troops." The criticism obviously nettled the President and though he said in response to a question he did not "wan to get into a debate on aforeign policy meeting in Manila with a chronic campaigner like Mr..Nixon," he scored the former vice president. "If you will look back over his record, you will find that to be true. "He never did really recognize and realize what was going on when he had an official position in the government. You remember what President Eisenhower said, that if you would give him a week )r so he would figure out what he was doing." Johnson kept picking away. Nixon he said, "is out talking about a conference that obviously he is not well-prepared on or n- formed about." "Mr. Nixon doesn't serve his country well by trying to leave that kind of impression in the hope that he can pick up a pre- cinct or two, or a ward or two." There the matter did not rest. Campaigning in Maine, Nixon fired back that Johnson had shown a "shocking display of temper." "Despite the presidential tem- per, I will continue to speak out" about the war, Nixon said. Major Storm Hits Europe; Florence, Venice Flooded FLORENCE, Italy ( ) - The worst floods since World War II I inundated the historic cities of Florence and Venice yesterday in a general storm that lashed all Western Europe. Authorities re- ported Venice had the highest, flood level in 966 years. Floodwaters claimed 20 lives in Italy and cut the country virtually in half. , Two persons died in an ava- lanche in Switzerland. In the hardest hit European areas dozens were missing and1 feared dead, and hundreds wereI reported injured. In both the canal city of Ven- j ice and Florence, inhabitants fled Florence authorities feared for to the upper floors of homes and the safety of many major art palaces. works, but they said the archi- Florence, the famous Renais- tectural masterpieces and open-air sance art capital with 450,000 res. statues such as Benvenuto Cellini's idents on the Arno River, was cut bronze David in the Piazza della off from the outside world as Signorina could survive the flood, roads were blocked and normal Uffizi Gallery Flooded communications failed. 'Rescue The entire first floor of the Uf- teams from Bologna and Rome fizi Gallery was inundated. Water could not reach the city, poured into the convent of St. Along the Venice canals the Mark, endangering the famous Fra worst tides of the postwar period Angelico frescoes. Water also covered the city with more than poured into the Florence cathe- three feet water, making Vene- dral. tian streets impassable, breaking In downtown Florence the mud- sewers and water lines.'Venice has dy, debris-clogged waters of the 175,000 inhabitants. Arn uwi,.1w arond the abut- UN Warns N. Korea Of Border Dangers ments of the city's bridges. All bridges were closed to traffic, and Mayor Piero Bargellini called on citizens to lend 'all private boats to rescue teams. Owners of the antique, metal and jewelry shops on the Ponte Vecchio moved precious merchan- dise from their stores. Electric power, water supplies, rail lines and road networks were severed in a wide central belt that isolated the north from the south. A pilot who flew over the north- central Italian flood area said it looked like a stormy sea. PANMUNJON, Korea OP)-North Korean Communists, rejecting protests against bloody incursions below the truce line, drew a warn- ing yesterday from the United Nations Command that they are traveling a collision course. A North Korean spokesman de- nied his government's responsi- bility for the death of six Amer- and three South Korean sol- diers in two raids Wednesday. A savage, five-hour debate in an emergency session of the Mili- tary Armistic Commission in its long, blue building at Panmunjom wound up-as so many others in the 231 previous meetings of the commission over the last 13 years -with nothing solid accomplished. Totally Unjustified President Johnson, who was in Seoul, South Korea, in the final hours of his Pacific tour when the Americans were slain, declared in Washington the attack was "total- ly unjustified murder.' He said he hoped it was not an indication that North Korea planned to vio- late the armistice agreement. Maj. Gen. Park Chunk-Kook responded scornfully on behalf of North Korea's command. He re- fused to accept a letter from U.S. Gen. Charles H. Bonesteel III, the U.N. commander in Korea, to North Korean Premier Kim Il- sung protesting what Bonesteel described as 12 violent, unpro- voked North Korean attacks since Oct. 15. Park denied all the violations including the attack on the Amer- icans, which he dismissed as a "slanderous distortion." He re- jected Ciccolella's proposal that they make an immediate on-the- spot investigation. He charged that American and South Korean troops had set the 151-mile long zone ablaze with 15 gun-firing in- cidents since Oct. 25. Russ a Kills Middle East Resolution Israeli-Arab Accord Over Border Clashes Threatened by Veto' UNITED NATIONS OP) - The Soviet Union cast its 104th veto in the U.N. Security Council on yesterday and killed a mildly w o r d e d compromise resolution aimed at easing Israeli-Syrian border tensions threatening peace in the Middle East. In the climax to nearly three weeks of bitter Israeli-Arab debate the council voted 10-4 with one abstention to accept a resolution sponsored by six nonpermanent members in the hope of achieving agreement on a peace appeal. The no votes were cast by Jor- dan, the lone Arab nation on the council, and Mali, Bulgaria and the Soviet Union. The negative vote of the Soviet Union, a per- manent council member, consti- tuted a big power veto. Nationalist China abstained. Israel brought the complaint to the council on Oct. 12, charging that armed guerrillas were being sent into Israel from Syria on mis- sions of murder and sabotage. Is- rael accused Syria also of openly trying to incite war. The compromise resolution in- vited Syria to strengthen its meas- ures for preventing border inci- dents, and Israel to cooperate ful- ly with the Israel-Syria Mixed Armistice Commission w h i c h handles border incidents. One-Sided Sovie Delegate Nikolai T. Fed- orenko assailed the resolution as one-sided and a reflection of what he said were Western attempts "to distort the real situation and to justify the extremist policies of Israel, which generate dangerous tensions in the Middle East." U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg expressed regret that the resolution was vetoed, but said the 10 yes votes reflected deter- mination of the majority to seek peace and stability in the Middle East. He pledged the continued efforts of the United States to bring an end to Israeli-Arab border vio- lence, and added: "The deem con- cern of the United States is that peace be preserved in the Middle East. This is, we trust, a common concern " Ambassador George J. Tomeh of Syria told the council his coun- try could not be responsible for reprisal actions against Israel that reflected the unrest of the more than a million Palestine refugees from the 1947-48 Israel-Arab war. REFERENDUM TUESDAY: DMayor Hubbard. Ntakes Viet Nam Local Issue DEARBORN, Mich. OP)-Mayor C7 rville L. Hubbard, who has sel- dom lost a political contest in 25 years as mayor of this Detroit sub- urb, has made the Viet Nam ward an issue in Tuesday's electiom Dearborn voters will be the first in the nation to be asked by bal- lot: "Are you in favor of an im- mediate cease-fire and withdraw- al of U.S. troops from Viet Nam so the Vietnamese people can settle their own problems?" . The question was placed on the Dearborn City Commission. The vote, which will have no legal status, bears the unmistakable mark of Hubbard, who has said: "I think the war is illegal. If I were a young fellow, I certainly wouldn't go to Viet Nam. I'd rather spend three years on a rock pile than to fight some poor little barefoot guys who have never done anything to us." The referendum has caused bit- ter debate, one law suit, and moved the Detroit News to com- ment editorially : "If the result is yes,' Hanoi will know the infamous LBJ is leading Americans into a war they don't want. If no,' it demonst a:tes j Americans are warmongers and l 8 Sailors Killed as Fire Sweeps Second Carrier SAIGON (M)-Eight American enlisted men were killed last night and 14 were injured in a flash fire aboard the aircraft carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt. It was the second fatal fire in the past 10 days aboard a U.S. 7th afleet car- rier off North Viet Nam. Elsewhere on the war front, re- inforced U.S. troops, backed by bombardment, locked in heavy fighting last night with Viet Cong forces entrenched in heavily forti- fied bunkers after having beaten off two Communist assaults during the day near the Cambodian bor- der. Unlike the ravaging fire and explosions that killed 44 men and put the carrier Oriskany out of operation Oct. 26, there was no fire on the flight or hangar decks of the Roosevelt. Navy spokesmen said the Roosevelt had no func- tional problems and thus would stay in the Gulf of Tonkin as one of three carriers from which air strikes over North Viet Nam are launched. The Navy said the fire had Statistics Say Jobs Up But IPrices Down the Reds must hang on to save Viet Nam from the imperialists." U.S. Rep. John Dingell, a Dem- ocrat whose district includes Dearborn, says, "the referendum really doesn't" give the people of this district a fair choice in de- ciding what direction their nat-on will take." "Are you going. to permit the first armed threat of the Commu- nists since World War II to go unopposed?" Dingell recently ask- ed a Dearborn audience. Maverick Republican Hubbard, who calls himself "maverick Republican," shared the rostrum at the meeting, and re- torted: Dingell " hasn't got, the courage to 'go back to Washing- ton and submit a bill asking Con- gress to declare- war. Congress hasn't had the courage to do it, and neither has Dingell." Dingell said he favored with- drawal oftroops and a negotiating settlement "but only under noaor- able circumstances." "This war should be the first order of business," replied Hub- bard. "We should either win it or get out." Dingell's Republican opponent in Tuesday's election, John T. Dempsey, said the ballot question does not "clearly assert the real complexities of the choice which faces this country," and called it "too dovelike." broken out in a storage compart- ment containing paint, oil and hydraulic fluid five decks below the hangar deck, but the cause had not been determined and was under investigation. No flares or ordnance were threatened by the fire, as was the case of the Oriskany, but as a pre- cautionary measure the Roose- velt's flare locker on the hangar deck was immediately flooded. The dead were believed killed in the initial flash. Four men were treated for minor injuries and 10 others for smoke inhalation. The Roosevelt, whose home Do t is Mayport, Fla., is commanded by Capt. G. C. Talley Jr. She arrived for her first combat tour last sum- mer. The Oriskany fire started with an explosion in a flare locker and swept through five decks, 'trap- ping many of the officer pilots in their quarters while they slept. It was the Navy's worst disaster of the Viet Nam war. There were no immediate in- dications of foul play or sabotage in the Roosevelt fire. WASHINGTON (M-The gov- vernment reported yesterday a slowing rate of job growth and a rare drop in wholesale prices in October, and described them as evidence of a slackening economic expansion. But no one would say whether this will make a tax in- crease unnecessary. Although the total number of unemployed dropped to a nine- year low of 2,521,000, a spokesman said labor shortages are easing because employers are making better use of available manpower. The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics reported total employment was up 500,000 to 74.7 million, about the expected rise for October. Commissioner Arthur M. Ross said there still are labor shortages in some. industries, but that the situation in general has improved because the economy "has had time to catch up to a situation that had gotten ahead of itself." H e reported also evidence that the rapid expansion of manufac- turing plants and investment in new equipment has tapered off, further indicating an easing of inflationary pressures since since, the earlier part of this year. The situation was described as not a downturn, but rather a slowing of the earlier rapid rate of growth that produced labor short- ages, higher wages and sharp price increases for many goods. Ross said the 8 per cent rate of growth in the gross national product of last year had been "ob- viously unsustainable" and in re- cent months has dropped to an annual growth rate of less than 5 per cent. The drop in the government Is wholesale price index from 106.8 to 106.2 was the first decline in two years' and the biggest in four years. Ross declined to predict whether the easing of inflationary pres- sures might cause the Johnson ad- ministration to drop consideration of a possible income tax increase after next week's elections. But he said the pressures have relaxed. world News Roundup By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS-The Gen-' eral Assembly ratified yesterday, a joint U.S.-Soviet resolution call- ing for all nations to avoid actions that might cause a spread of nu- clear weapons or hinder a area y' l to prevent such a spread. The resolution, viewed as an in- terim measure to serve pending adoption of a treaty on non-pro- liferation of nuclear weapons, was approved, 110-1 in the 121-nation Generally Assembly. Albania cast the negative vote. Cuba abstained. x M i tablish a direct air. link between New York and Moscow. Service is expected to start next spring, probably scheduling one flight a week with an additional light in the tourist season. The civil air transport agree- ment, signed in a State :Depart- ment ceremony by Ambassador- at-Large Lewllyn Thompson and by Yevgeniy F. Loginov, civil avi- ation minister of the Soviet tnion, was ready for signature five years ago, but the late President John F. Kennedy decided to shelve it when the East Germans built the wall dividing Berlin and brought a freeze in international relations. WASHINGTON - The States and the Soviet agreed formally yesterday United j Union to es- r: rr"" r:r v:n:".^. :.".":: oo::. .: : r: r.". .:"r::::: r:.".": r ::".'. ". r.. ..r..rrr. .r..... .. r err: r.".'r V......rr .................. ...r. .:.".. .i:V.".::rr.:'r."rrr.......... r.r. rA .. rr ..Vrrrr>rrr.r r .........r r ............. ". : irf:':':"r l 'iii::::Y:": }::":': ~: "::: ..r.. r.r.y. ..r ..1 r. .'. rr . ... ..._ i f -1 ALPHA PHI OMEGA and PERSHING RIFLES Present DICK GREGORY Plus Frank Hubbell and THE STOMPERS i N C AND R (folk singer and composer, Columbia records recording artist) IS TIRED OF PIZZA ...so... We haven't any, don't you know WIN YOUR FAVORITE ANIMAL CRACKER THIS WEEKEND WIN A TRIP TO YOUR FAVORITE TABLE FOR CLASS AND GAME ......:::....:. 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