PAFE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVA ERA 6, 1966 PAFE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6. 1966 SUPPORT WILLIAMS-FERENCY: StateRaces To Dearborn Viet Nam Re ferendum Test Union Power Sparks Community Controversy port, the nation that he would make endorsed Williams - with re- DEARBORN (;P)-Mayor Orville referendum was removed Monday' Dingell said he favored with- the best presidential candidate luctance, he says - because of L. Hubbard, who has seldom lost when U.S. District Judge Fred W. drawal of troops *and a negotiated has in 1968? Griffin's sponsorship of the Lan- a political battle in 25 years as Kaess ruled a suit filed by former settlement "but only under honor- how !drum-Griffin Act. Imm'nrof thn"TIP,"it."nhnr hae T .q an-u "-rl ?,---a A "' _ '- " i 4 0131 i i NOW FTI It'd r rr,- DETROIT (AP) - A good test of how much political influence labor leaders have on the rank and file in heavily unionized Michigan could be provided in the state's two top races next Tuesday.' The contests match Republi- can Gov.. George W. Romney, seeking . a . third term, against Democrat Zelton A. Ferency, and U.S. Sen: Robert P. Griffin, trying for a full term, against former Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liams. Griffin, a five-term con- gressman, Was appointed by Romney to succeed the late Pa- trick McNamara in the Senate. Labor for Ferency-Williams Michigan's labor hierarchy is' unequivocally, and nearlynunan- imously, behind Ferency-Wil- liams. Ticket-splitting, however, is a tradition in this state and what labor leaders recommend, and how the rank and file votes, do not always correspond. Williams, who. won six terms as governor with labor supj recognizes this. "It isn't monolithic," he said. "I think the statistics s that about one-thigd of the 1 people in Michigan vote Re] abor pub- lican and two-thirds Demo- cratic." Expected to Win Romney is expected to win easily over Ferency, 44, a labor lawyer and state Democratic chairman. The latest polls have the Williams-Griffin race a tos- sup. Although the senatorial con- test holds the most interest in Michigan, eyes around the coun- try are on Romney. The question never really was whether he will win, but how big? Big enough to boost Griffin to victory and perhaps help three or four Republican recapture congressional seats lost in the Johnson landslide of 1964? Big enough to convince GOP leaders and contributors around Detroit Vital. Romney claims that he landed The answer to these questions about 35 per cent of the union appears to lie in the industrial- vote in 1962, when he first ran ized, and unionized, Detroit area. for governor. In 1964, he says, Traditionally, a Republican can- 48 per cent voted for him and didate has needed at least 35 this year "surveys indicate that per cent of the vote here, plus 82 per cent - that's right - 82 a good margin out-state. per cent of union members ap- Led by Walter P.. Reuther, prove of the job this administra- president of the United Auto tion is doing." Workers, and Auguste Scholle, Romney has brushed aside all president of the state AFL-CIO, questions about possible presi- union spokesman have been bit- dential ambitions, but he re- terly critical of Romney and cently said he didn't think it fair Griffin. The governor has been that his standing in the party attacked for what labor calls his might depend on what happens probusiness attitude; Griffin for in Michigan reces other than his his part in authoring the Lan- own. drum-Griffin Labor Act that regulates some union activities. Hoffa for Romney The only major labor figure in Detroit who is backing Romney is James P. Hoffa, president of the Teamsters Union. But Hoffa . The governor has devoted more than half his time to stump- ing for Griffin and the rest of the GOP ticket, unlike 1964, when he refused to campaign for or endorse presidential can- didate Barry Goldwater. ciadyoz 01 Lnls lJeLio2L suaura nas I v.b. rep. rlarola hyan a mien- made the Viet Nam war an issueI in the Nov. 8 general election. Dearborn voters will become the first in the nation to be asked by ballot: "Are you in favor of an immediate cease fire and with- drawal of U.S. troops from Viet Nam so the Vietnamese people can settle their own problems?" No Legal Status The vote, an advisory question, has no legal status, but it bears the unmistakable mark of Hub- bard, who opposes U.S. involve- ment in Viet Nam.t "I think the war is illegal," Hubbard has said. "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 any- thing to us." It has caused bitter debate, one law suit and moved the Detroit News to comment editorially: "If the result vote is 'Yes,' Hanoi will know the infamous LBJ is leading Americans into a war they don't want. If 'No,' it demonstrates Americans m u s t hang on to save Viet Nam from the Viet Cong." The last legal block facing the Ii Weign auz igan Democrat, was not within the court's jurisdiction. Sought To Prevent Vote Ryan sought to prevent the vote. He contended the question inter- feres with President Johnson's ac- tions as commander of U.S. armed forces. He also had charged it would furnish the Communist re- gime in North Viet Nam with propaganda material. U.S. Rep. John Dingell (D- Mich.), who represents Dearborn, calls the question ambiguous, say- ing: ''The referendum really doesn't give the people of this district a fair choice in deciding what direction their nation will take. "Are you going to permit the first armed threat of the Com- munists since World War II to go unopposed?" Dingell recently ask- ed a Dearborn audience. Maverick Republican Hubbard, a self-described "mav- erick Republican," shared the ros- trum at the meeting, and retorted: "He (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." DIAL 5-6290 IlPEE cHEAS FO/AFUNN/FL/ able circumstances. "This war should be the first Shown order of business," replied Hub- 9:10 Only bard. "We should either win it or get out." Also- Dingell's Republican opponent in next Tuesday's election is John Ursula T. Dempsey, a political science! Andress professor at the University's Dear-' shown born branch. Dempsey said the! at ballot question does not "clearly ol assert the real complexities of the: IS choice which faces this country." PlusRO He termed the question "too dove- co like.''1 some people will do anything forw JACK iemmon WBLTBR mai81ao . BILLY WILDeR'S TNe FmmTne cooKle, Phone 482-2056 T-ceOn CARPENTER ROAD OWING OPEN 6:30 P.M. FREE HEATERS- a u .M1OGW )FTOPS OF NEW YORK" OLOR CARTOON McNamara Predicts Cut in Viet Draft Call' Tired of PIZZAS and RATBURGERS- .. .Then . T. FILL YOUR BELLY WITH DELI ':; 1. (Continued from Page 1) pet number of their troops in the past three .months. (At the -beginning of the year, U.S. intelligence figures placed the number of enemy troops in South Viet Nam at roughly 250,000. That. number climbed steadily, as it had since the North Vietnamese step- ped up their infiltration in 1964, to about 280,000 by July 30.) McNamara reported these major decisions-"b a r r i n g -unforeseen contingencies"-on the shape and impact of the war next year: "Draft calls will be lower for 1967 than they have been for 1966. It is now apparent that the total number to be called during '.the next four months will be signifi- cantly smaller-perhaps no more than half as many-than the 161,000 called .in the four months of August through November." "A slowdown in our rate of de- ployment is planned . . . .The in- crease in U.S. forces in South Viet Nam will be 'substantially less than this year." McNamara said American forces will have been increased by about 200,000 men by the end of the cur- rent year. "The increase next year will be nothing on that order." "Here at home we have already ordered a cut of $1 billion in the planned annual rate of production of air ordinance, and today I have discussed with the President the probability of a second cut." Mcamara said the United States had more than 140,000 tons of bombs and other aerial weapons in Southeast Asia, with 140,000 more tons on the way. "I expect that this same trend toward stabilization will govern our deployments of air units to Southeast Asia and the level of our air activities." McNamara added that "no sharp increases" in U.S. air action over North Viet Nam are planned for next year. He said the current rate of at- tack-about 25,000 sorties a :month -is taking its toll in material and morale in North Viet Nam. A sor- tie is one flight by one plane. But in Tokyo, William P. Bundy, U.S. assistant secretary of state Far Eastern affairs, was Neported to have told Japanese government officials that the U.S. may step up bombing of North Viet Nam. Bundy was said to have told of- ficials that intensification of the air war would depend on North Viet am's future actions. Bundy went to Tokyo to brief Japanese officals on the Manila conference. "I expect that this trend toward stabilization . 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