TUESDAY, NOVEMBER S, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY VAt".V. ITTMVV TUESAY, OVEBER ,196 13A fl' I??13~"1 £ Ak.XL4 A lnbr t, 'Right' Party Wins Seats In Germany Alleged Neo-Nazi Group Takes 8 Seats In Hesse Parliament Court Awards New Trial to Baker Aid CALIFORNIA WIND-UP: Reagan, Brown Sift State in Last-Minute Battle for Votes FRANKFURT, Germany ('P)-AY rightist German political party which won its first legislative seats in the state; election Sunday In Hesse, spread concern and mis- giving in West Germany.F The NFD placed only eight deputies in the 96-member state legislature but many politicians. saw the'7.9 per cent vote captured by the party as a warning that nationalism could be on the march again in Germany. Interior Minister Paul Luecke said that the United States and * Britain were partly to blame for the gains in the election. SAN MARCO SQUARE in Veni No Problem nrhr tl ti ekn.T The small National Democratic northern Italy this weekend T representation in the Hesse Par- air. The floods caused damage tc liament at Wiesbaden offered no reach 1000. immediate problem in itself. The Socialists have an absolute ED S UTARE- majority and can easily over-ride EU any rightist obstruction. There was concern, however, that a par-! ty harboring former Nazis and Dein proposing a nationalistic policy P ek in g should find even that much sup- port. The National Democratic party denies it is a neo-Nazi R ussian The language employed by the rightists was such as "I remem- MOSCOW ()-Red Chinese di- ber only from the Hitler period," plomats walked out on a 49th an- Luecke said. ni6ersary celebration of the Bol- Versailles Treaty shevik Revolution in Red Square The Versailles treaty at the end here Monday. The move under- of World War I required Germany scored the widening Sino-Soviet to pay high reparation costs to rift. the victors. Hitler railed against In Red Square, Marshal Rodion the treaty in whipping up German Y. Malinovsky, the Soviet defense nationalistic feelings. minister, charged that China wasl Luecko also proposed that West interfering with Communist aid Germany's electoral laws be efforts to North Viet Nam, there- amended to exclude such as the by encouraging what he called National Democratic from gaining "new crimes" by American im- seats in the federal or state parlia- perialists. ments. The senior Chinese diplomat The interior minister's remarks here, the charge d'affaires, Chang in an interview by the West Ger- Teh chun, stalked, out. Two Chi- man government-sponsored short- nese military attaches followed, wave radio, Deutsche Welle of crossing in front of Lenin's tomb Cologne, was the first criticism of where Malinovsky spoke. Bonn's allies since Chancellor Lud- Grim Faces wig Erhard's government was be- The grim faced marshal, flanked set by a crisis two weeks ago. by top Soviet leaders, talked about Crisis Erupts the United States in relatively The crisis was sparked when mild terms. the Free Democrats pulled out of Last May Day, at a similar mili- a coalition with Erhard's Chris- tary parade, Malinovsky accused tian Democrats. They opposed his the United States of conducting "a plans to raise taxes to balance the foul bandit war against the heroic 1967 budget and to help fulfill Vietnamese people." This time he West Germany's obligation to buy took the sting out of his remarks arms from the United States. The and made no specific mention of arms purchases are meant to off- U.S. bombings of North Viet Nam. set the foreign exchange costs of Malinovsky used standard Soviet stationing U.S. troops in Germany. phrases denouncing the United riugn Lotrt Ubjects LOS ANGELES P)-Republican Istate's 8.: To FBI Bugging of Ronald Reagan and Democratic was predi Gov. Edmund G. Brown flew Cali- tion. Baker Associate Phone fornia Monday enlisting uncom- Democri mitted voters in the furious wind- the regist Black Jr., onetime Bobby Baker up of their long campaign for the nians are asociate whose hotel suite was ad- governorship. lines. mittedly bugged by FBI agents, Brown, a two-term incumbent, If Brow won a new trial on income tax and Reagan, an actor in his first and wins. evasion charges from the Supreme run for political office, scheduled Democrat Court Monday. , visits to big cities and suburbs of three tim The vote was 5 to 2, with Just- the nation's most populous state. Warren,f ices Byron R. White, a former dep- An 80 per cent turnout of the U.S. chie uty attorney general; and Abe/ Fortas, whose former Washington N.Y. CAiMPAIGNS: law firm once represented Black and Baker, taking themselves out " ~, 340.868 registered voters Acted for Tuesday's elec- ats claim 58.5 per cent of tered voters but Califor- fond of crossing party .n surprises the pollsters he will become the first ic governor to be elected mes in California. Earl a Republican and now f justice, was the only V -Associated Press ce, Italy is seen yesterday in the background after torrential rains hit he city looked like a floating island, with a heavy stench filling the o many priceless works of art, and it is feared the death toll will of the case. "Justice requires that a new trial be held to as to afford the petitioner an opportunity to pro- tect himself from the use of evi- dence that might be otherwise in- admissible," the court said in an unsigned opinion expressing the view of Chief Justice Earl Warren and Associates Justices Hugo L. Black, William O. Douglas, Tom C. Clark and William J. Brennan jJr. Rockefeller, UO'Connor Finish New York Race governor to accomplish the feat." A Brown victory also would help the state's 24 Democratic congres- sional candidates and cheer Pres- ident Johnson. Brown is a loyal advocate of Johnson policies. The Republican choice for pres- ident in 1968 could be affected by a Reagan victory. Reagan has pledged to serve all four years of his term. Beating Brown would be a major accomplishment for the handsome Reagan, 55, who was starring in the television series "Death Valley Days" less than a year ago. Once a Democrat and always In- terested in politics, he was boomed for governor after making a fund- raising television appeal for GOP presidential nominee Barry Gold- water in 1964. Brown, 61, appearing spry after a campaign that began in Janu- ary, aimed for a lastminute noon- hour appeal in his native city of Sarn Franacisco for "one final ef- fort to secure a victory in Cali- fornia." Brown portrayed himself as a moderate and charged that his op- ponent "stands shoulder to shoul- der with the extremists who want to halt our progess in its tracks." NEW YORK V P)-RepublicanI incumbent Nelson A. Rockefeller and Democrat Frank D. O'Connor, both claming victory, made final flying campaign swings through the state Monday in their hard- fought race for Lyvernor_ iplomats Walk Out on Revolution Festivities New Yorkers also will elect 41 congressmen, with the GOP con- centrating on a half dozen fresh- men Democrats who were carried in by the 1964 landslide for Pres- ident Johnson. The Democrats hold a 24-17 majority, including Rep. Adam Clayton Powell of Harlem, who is certain to be elected handily to a 12th term, despite a sea of trou- bles. States as the leader of what he called the imperialist camp "whose criminal actions in Viet Nam and other parts of Asia have increased the threat of a new world war." Kohler Absent U.S. Ambassador Foy D. Kohler skipped the Red Square rally to avoid having to walk out him self when American policy came under fire, but he attended a Kremlin reception for 1,000 persons Monday night when neither Red China nor the United States was assailed. Thousands of Russians filed through Red Square after the military parade, carrying banners and slogans with nothing stronger than "Shame on American aggres- sion" and "Get out of Viet Nam." Marchers in the May Day parade had carried signs calling the Americans murderers in Viet Nam and similar strong phrases. The signs are officially approved in ad- vance. Slash in Reserve Backlog Seen by Pentagon Officials WASHINGTON VP) - Pentagon those who otherwise would be sources predicted Monday that the huge backlog of Reservists waiting to be trained will be slashed in half-to 60,000-by next June be- cause of the administration's de- cision to cut back draft calls for the next four months. Four months ago, the backlog of untrained Reservists totaled 133,100. This brought congression- al criticism that the Reserve pro- gram amounted to a haven for U.S. Forces Lose Contact With Viet Cong After FourDay Battle SAIGON ()-American infan- trymen lost contact almost com- pletely Monday with a tough Viet Cong jungle force they fought four days in one of the sharpest clashes of the war. A U.S. commander said the outmanned enemy apparently was dashing across Tay Ninh Province toward the Cambodian border, leaving behind more than 400 dead. But other U.S. units reported clashes with North Vietnamese army regulars in two separate operations near the central coast and reported killing 51 of them. In another coastal area, 400 to 500 Communists attacked a 200 man South Vietnamese militia force but were beaten off by ar- tillery fire. Officials reported 30 Communist bodies were left be- hind by the retreating enemy' units. The government force suf- fered two wounded. Air Strikes In the air war, U.S. planes flew 127 strike missions Sunday against N o r t h Vietnamese waterways, bridges, antiaircraft sites, truck convoys and petroleum dumps. Red guns brought down a U.S. Air Force F105 but the pilot was rescued. It was the 419th U.S. plane lost in the north. B-52 bombers from Guam car- ried out their ninth straight day of saturation bombing attacks on suspected North Vietnamese posi- tions in Kontum Province in the central highlands in support of troops of the U.S. 4th Division. Results of the bombing raids were not made known in Saigon. With the Viet Cong disappear- ance from Tay Ninh, U.S. officials totaled up the score of the battle: 433 Communist bodies counted; over all U.S. casualties light, but heavy in some infantry companies. The allies do not list their casual- ties by number for specific battles. Major Battle The battle pitted 10,000 Amer- icans against about 2,000 Viet Cong. Only scattered sniper ac- tion was reported Monday. U.S. officials expressed belief the American forces-units of the 1st and 25th Infantry divisions and the relatively green 196th Light Infantry Brigade-had been fighting troops of the Viet Cong's 9th Division, long the holder of the thickly jungled Tay Ninh ter- rain bordering Cambodia and about 50 miles northwest of Sai- gon. "That's our old friend out there, the 9th," said Brig. Gen. James Hollingsworth, deputy commander of the 1st Division at Dau Tieng. "It looks like he doesn't want to fight. Since there are so many of us here, they're probably head- ing for the Cambodian border. We'll try to stop them, but you have to have a rifleman every two yards. They can move a whole battalion through a 10 yard gap if they don't want to fight." The Cambodian border is about 25 miles west of the battle zone. drafted to fight in Viet Nam. And last month, Congress ap- proved legislation that gave Pres- ident Johnson unrequested au- thority to call up the untrained reservists for active duty without declaring a national emergency. McNamara Announcement Secretary, of Defense Robert S. McNamara announced Saturday that draft calls t hrough April would total under 25,000 monthly, about half the current levels. Sources indicated this would enable the Army to more than double the amount of Reserve training now being scheduled. The Army is scheduled to train only 7,000 Reservists a month under current programs because its training facilities are strained to meet the heavy demands of the Viet Nam war. Officials said that with the ease indraft requirements, as many as 20,000 Reservists could be trained each month. The Army now has the capacity to train about 55,000 men a month-both for regular service and Reserve status. Reduce Gap Sources added that the speedup in training of Reservists would re- sult in a reduction in their time gap between enlistment and basic training. Before the weekend announce- ment, some Reserve officials were known to be concerned over the prospect of even higher backlogs by the end of the fiscal year, as Reserve units to continue to in- duct more men than could be trained. Record Show Despite this, it had been wide- ly reported before last weekend that the Army is considering a cutback in Reserve enlistments. And although no offical announce- ment was made, the Army did in fact sharply reduce Reserve en- listments in the first three months of this fiscal year. Officials said the reduced draft calls will have no effect on the 150,000-man selected R e s e r v e force-the high priority units of the Reserve-because the training of their enlistees is a priority item and backlogs have been kept to a minimum. Two DissentI Sg Justice John M. Harlan, dis- Both were looking over their senting with Justice Potter Stew- shoulders at Franklin D. Roose- art, said the court should have velt Jr., running on the Liberal ordered a hearing in the District party ticket. Roosevelt also claim- Court here without up setting ed he will finish ahead in Tues- Black's conviction. This was the day's election, expected to bring course suggested by U.S. Solicitor out a record off-year vote of six General Thurgood Marshall. million. Justice Department spokesmen Democrats have a 3-2 edge in said Black will be prosecuted at a registration, with 900,000 more date not yet determined. IDemocrats than Republicans. Other Action Polls In other significant actions the The polls show Rockefeller and court: O'Connor fighting it out with! -Refused to rule whether the about 40 per cent of the vote each, Constitution bars police from and Roosevelt getting about 12 posing as homosexuals in order to per cent. The rest go to Conserv- rposin asomosexual sinor ative Paul L. Adams and two So- trap sexual deviates. ,cialist candidates. -Said it would decide whether The gubernatorial race was al- the 1952 immigration law consti- most overshadowed in New York tutionally permits deportation of City by an emotional battle with hooexuals alien. 4racial overtones over a referendum -Refused to review a $265,047 to abolish a civilian-dominated damage judgment to the American board to review charges of police Broadcasting Co., over cancella- misconduct. tion of 22 telecasts by Kemper Al the candidates for governor Insurance Companies. Kemper except Adams supported the re- canceled its sponsorship of "Eve- iebor.SdiMarJhnV ning Report" after an announce- view board. So did Mayor John V. ment on the show of a subsequent Lindsay, Sens. Jacob K. Javits, , broadcast involving Alger Hiss. And Robert F. Keinnedy, D, who are not candidates this time, and -Upheld a ruling by the U.S. civil rights groups. District Court in San Francisco Referendum that the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co., Yet most observers expected the' violated antitrust law by acquiring rfenu osesTepce-h interests in two other breweries, referendum to pass. The police- men's union said it spent $500,000 -Refused a hearing to a con- on the campaign for the referen- victed Georgia rapist who ques- dum. tioned whether the death penalty for rape violates the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punish- Wrap Up Ca -Stepped into a major private public fight by agreeing to review at A a private combine's license to con- F Gn Lppe struct a giant dam on the Snake River in the Pacific Northwest. By The Associated Press The Federal Power Commission The 1966 political campaign1 granted the license in 1964 over drew toward a close yesterday as the opposition of the Interior De- virtually all the candidates made partment, which wants to build last-minute statements and voter the dam. appeals. No Declaration Republican Gov. George Rom- The court issued no sweeping ney held a morning news confer- declaration on eavesdropping in ence at his Lansing office. In it ordering a new trial for Black, a he blasted so-called "labor bosses" Washington public relations man. and promised to seek federal aid But it said all doubt must be re- for the Upper Peninsula-includ- moved in the district court as to ing elimination of Mackinac whether Black got a fair trial. Bridge tolls. By The Associated Press A possible 1968 presidential bid by George Romney may be on the line today when voters choose be- tween the Michigan governor and his Democratic challenger, Zolton Ferency. Romney, 59, has been given a 2-1 margin in most polls to win a third term as a governor. Ferency, 42, Democratic state chairman, has said Romney is 'considering a bid for the 1968 Republican presidential nomina- tion. Romney has turned aside questions on whether he has White House ambitions. Romney, former president of American Motors Corp., ended his campaign Saturday except for a news conference,'yesterday. But Ferency continued yester- day the active campaign he has been pressing among the normally 1 Democratic labor movement in metropolitan Detroit. Romney's potential to win in a mpagn wulh its to Voters nor candidate John Bruff. In a Detroit speech, Bruff said pollsters and pundits are going to have a big surprise the day after the election. The Detroit News. reported yes- terday its final pre-election poll gave Sen. Robert P. Griffin (R- Mich) 53 per cent of the vote com- pared with 44 per cent for his Democratic challenger, f o r m e r Gov. G. Mennen Williams. The percentage was a two-point, gain for Griffin compared with a News poll published Oct. 10. Three per cent of the sampling failed to mark ballots in both polls. The October percentage was Griffin 51, Williams 46.. The News said basic field work on its poll, conducted by Market- Opinion Research Co., was com- pleted a week ago, just prior to a campaign swing by Senator Rob- ert F. Kennedy (D-NY) in behalf of Williams and other Democratic candidates.I landslide is deemed a factor in the election bid by Robert P. Griffin, named by the governor last spring to fill a vacancy created by the death of Sen. Patrick V. McNa- mara (D-Mich). Polls Observers and polls have cited a close contest for the Senate be- tween Griffin, 42, a former five- term congressman, and G. Men- nen Williams, former governor and one of the state'smost popu- lar politicians in decades. Chief difference between the two has been Williams' support of the Johnson administration and Grif- fin's votes against many Demo- cratic programs. Most state election officials ex- pect 2.7 million voters to turn out today-aboutthe same numberas in 1962 when Romney, gave . the Republicans their first Michigan governorship in 14 years. Republican Lt. Gov. William G. Millilken has, been favored for re- election over a Democratic un- known, John B. Bruff, a lawyer. Hare But James M. Hare, Democratic secretary of state, and Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley are favored over their GOP challengers, George Washington and Lawrence Linde- mere. Washington is the first Ne- gro to occupy a place as high on the ballot as secretary of state in Michigan. Nip-and-tuck races by Republi- cans against Democratic incum- bents have been staged in five of the state's congressional districts. Democrats hold a 12-7 edge on the House seats now. A full State House of Repre- sentatives also will be elected. Re- publicans are outnumbered 73-37 in the state House. Ballot Voters also will decide whether to grant the right to ballot-cur- rently limited to those 21 or older -to 18-year-olds. On the ballot in Dearborn, a Detroit suburb, will be a proposal asking: "Are you in favor of an immediate cease-fire and with- drawal of United States troops from Viet Nam so Vietnamese peo- ple can settle their own prob- lems?" Presidential Prospects May Follow Big Romney Victory world News Roundup By The Associated Press than continuing on the present WASHINGTON-Chief federal basis of plant-by-plant contracts. mediator William E. Simkin said * * * yesterday the Westinghouse Elec- MOSCOW -- The Soviet Union tric Corp. strike is affecting the put on a restrained celebra- nation's defense effort and called tion yesterday of the 49th anni- for stalled negotiations to move versary of the Bolshevik Revolu- here tomorrow. tion with no new rockets in the Simkin, director of the Federal traditional military parade and Mediation and Conciliation Serv- none of the usually harsh attacks ice, said officials of the corporation of past years on U.S. policy in and the striking AFL-CIO Inter- Viet Nam national Brotherhood of ElectricalVitNm Workers have agreed to his request But there was a walkout by Red to move -the talks to Washington Chinese diplomats from a Red from Pittsburgh. Square rally, underscoring wors- There have been no formal ne- ening relations with Peking. North gotiations since the strike began Viet Nam and North Korea issued Oct. 31. warm praises of it. The union contends the offer * * * amounts to a few cents per hour CAPE KENNEDY - The two less because the workers affected astronauts picked to write the fin- are now earning a lower rate of al chapter in the nation's Gemini base pay. series by jockeying Gemini 12 Sources in the case say the main through four days of intricate issue is the union's demand for a spaceflight got the word yester- company - wide contract, rather day: "We're go for Wednesday." Black was associated with Baker in some business deals when -the latter was secretary to the Dem- ocratic Senate majority. Criticizing the new-trial order, Harlon wrote in his dissent: "The only basis I can think for justifying this decision is that any governmental activity of the kind here in question automatically vitiates so as at least to require a new trial any conviction occuring during the span of such activity. CINEMA 1 presents SUNDAYS AND CYBELE (ACADEMY AWARD-- BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR, 1962) "Exhilarating.. . a cinematic miracle!" -Crowther, N.Y. Times FRIDAY and SATURDAY 7 and 9 P.M. Aud. A, Angell Hall Then the governor went to De- troit for a brief stint of hand- shaking in the downtown busi- ness area.' Republican Senator Robert Grif- fin campaigned in the Detroit area yesterday morning-then left for his home in Traverse City, where he spent the night. Romney's Democratic opponent, Zolton Ferency, campaigned in Detroit yesterday, and so did his running mate-lietutenant gover- ___ QTH E UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC and DEPARTMENT OF ART present Goetane Donizetti's Opera DON PASQU ALE Nov. 17, 18, & 21, 22 8:00 P.M. DIRECT FROM BROADWAY! Mon.-Tues. Nov. 14 & 15 8:30 P.M. Hill Auditorium ,., , ,.. ;..+.. -Afi II ;I I ?Y?$$1%.. :": 2:3 ._,..._____ _v'"K . I 11