FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18. 1986 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Report Ebb In Viet Cong Capabilities Inflict Heavy Losses; No Growth in Forces Seen in Recent Weeks By The Associated Press Signs of enemy deterioration In 4South Viet Nam are mounting. Some Pentagon officials believe the Viet Cong and North Vietnam- ese are finding it harder than ever to enforce their military will. This belief was strengthened yesterday with the addition of a major U.S. Maine victory in a clash below the demilitarized zone with Hanoi regulars. The Com- munists forces in Viet Nam were then estimated by the American command to have lost a record 2,000 men through death, capture and defection in the past week. A spokesman said the Leather- necks and supporting- South Viet- namese troops killed 33rNorth Vietnamese soldiers an~d freed 45 captive villagers in the overnight action 10 miles south of the zone between North and South Viet Nam. Allied casualties were termed light. Factors for Optimism Sources said yesterday they are basing their optimistic assessment1 of an enemy military deterioration on these factors: " The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong have not been able to increas their net number of troops in the past 15dweeks after a long period of steady growth. SViet Cong atrocities are mounting. Last month there were about 190 reported assassinations and sources said nearly half of the victims were local village officials. The rising number of atrocities is viewed as significant, an official said, because "when military units degenerate, atrocities go up." " Enemy defections are mount- ing. Last week 611 men returned to the South Vietnamese ranks under that government's open arms program. It was the largest number of defections in one week since the program began. " Enemy food losses are grow- ing. Last week U.S. forces captured a record total of over 2,000 tons of rice during Operation Attleboro near Tay Ninh., Unable to Build Up Most sources, although cautious, believe the enemy's apparent in- ability to increase its forces to be the most ' significant of these statistics. The Viet Cng and North Viet- namese troops in South Viet Nam were estimated at about 250,000 at the beginning of the year by Amercan intelligence officials. That total - reported weekly - grew steadily to about 280,000 by July 30. Since then, however, the number has remained between 279,000 and 11 283,000. A drop to 277,000 reported this week by intelligence sources could indicate that the enemy has reached a top limit in the number of troops they can support with food and ammunition, sources said. 358,000 U.S. Troops The U.S. Command announced the roll of American servicemen in Viet Nam climbed to 358,000 as of last Saturday. There were. some 6,000 newcomers, some in ' small units and others to fill out detachments already on hand. Briefing officers reported a rise in combat deaths on both sides, with 384 of the allies and 1,525 Communists slain against com- parable figures of 248 and 917 in the week before. Poor weather shrouded air war targets in North Viet Nam Wed-' nesday for the sixth straight day. The result was only_38 U.S. strike missions, about a fourth the usual number. American ana South Vietnamese pilots s t a g e d 503 single-plane attacks against enemy emplacements and suspected troop concentrations in the south. Far to the south, Viet Cong mor- tar crows staged a half a dozen attacks in the Mekong delta. They shelled Ben Tre, a provincial cap- ital 45 miles southwest of Saigon, and five militia posts. Students in New Delhi Plan Marchr Officials Fear Riots, Police Patrol Entry Points To Uphold Bail NEW DELHI, India OP) - Prime SMinister Indra Gandhi's govern- ment, already badly shaken by a violent demonstration last week, faces another severe test over a' students march on the capital planned today. The march has been banned by New Delhi exty officials who fear it may erupt into a bloody riot that would dwarf the size of last week's demonstration against the slaughter of cows. Eight died and 41 were injured in that rioting. Despite the ban, student leaders' in various parts of the country have said they are going ahead with their plans. And representa- tives of some university groups in f the capital have promised their full support. to the marchers, evho are protesting against what they feel has been police brutality in sporadicdemonstrations held in other cities this year. In an effort to head off the march, the New Delhi municipal government began checking all I entry points for arriving students. Police were stationed at bus ter- LEGISLA TURE DENIED: Maddox-Callaway Deadlock May Be Decided in Runoff ATLANTA, Ga. OP-A federalI court decision yesterday barring election of Georgia's next governor by the legislature sent the issue of a winless contest toward the U.S. Supreme Court. State at- torneys prepared an immediate appeal. No remedy was offered by the three-judge court's ruling on a major question in the deadlocked, no-majority race between Repub- lican Howard Callaway and Dem- ocrat Lester G. Maddox. If the decision is upheld, a run- off between the two men or a spe- cial election eventually will result. But court battles could delay the final outcome for months, forcing Gov. Carl. E. Sanders to hold over past the Jan. 10 inauguration date. Move Anticipated "I applaud this decision," Calla- way said. Maddox, who said last week he was glad the legislature would decide the race, remarked that he had anticipated that'-the matter would be handed back to the state. The court,-formalizing its tenta- tive ruling a week ago-limited its order to striking down the Georgia's Constitution's 1824 pro- vision for election by the legis- lature when no candidate has a majority. Neither of the nominees man- aged to poll a majority in the Nov. 8 general election because of, write-ins for Ellis G. Arnall. It was Arnall, a former governor, who was defeated by Maddox for the Democratic nomination in a political upset. Complete Results Complete unofficial returns gave Callaway 451,032 votes, Maddox 448,598 and Arnall 57,832. The of- ficial returns have not been cer- tified to the secretary of state. In its deciskon the court granted a 10-day suspension to give the state time to carry an appeal up to the Supreme Court. State Atty.) Gen. Arthur K. Bolton said he might go to Washington todayI with the appeal, but l robably would wait until next week. Appeal Likely But since the, decision was very limited, obviously its ultimate re- solution still will leave open ap- peals to the Supreme Court on other issues - particularly the question of write-in votes in a runoff and also the matter of a special election open to any quali- fied candidate. Attorney Francis Shackelford, representing a bipartisan group seeking a runoff, said he was hopeful the court later will order a Maddox-Callaway election with- out write-ins allowed. -Associated Press FOLLOWERS OF MAO Private Housing Starts Drop To Lowest Rate in 21 Years Swarms of children suround a Red Guard propaganda truck in Peking sporting a large. picture of Mao Tse-tung. Reports indicate Chinese officials fearing concentration of the Guards in Peking yes- terday ordered all Guards to return home by next Monday. RECOMMEND COMMITTEE STUDY: Promote 'Realities' Formula For UN Talks on Red China By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Home building activity, already down from the scarcity of mortgage funds, fell to its lowest level in 21 years during October, the Commerce Depart- ment reported yesterday. The department's Census Bu- reau said privately owned housing starts slumped by 20.7 per cent during the month, the largest de- cline of- the year, to a seasonally UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. OP) - A formula for dealing with the U.N. China question on the basis of "political realities" was report- ed gaining ground yesterday on the eve of the General Assembly's annual debate on the question. It was regarded as a step toward the eventual seating of Commu- nist China and keeping Nationalist China in the United Nations. But for this year at least, the Peking government was expected to be kept out. Diplomatic sources said the for- mula, promoted by Italy, would have the assembly set up a special committee to make a year's study of the question of China's U.N., representation and recommend1 "an appropriate solution, taking into account the political realities in the area." Canada Favors Plan They said Canada had been pushing for stronger wording by which the committee would aim at a solution "recognizing that sovereignty over the Chinese mainland is vested in the Commu- nist People's Republic of China and recognizing that sovereignty over Taiwan Formosa is vested in the Nationalist R e p u blic of China." Sources said the United States; The other, sponsored by Albania at first was against having a and nine other Communist or study committee, later agreed to accept the idea as it picked up support. They said the United States now was mainly concerned about seeing that the wording was something it could "live with," and with getting prior votes on the two China-seating resolutions al- ready submitted. nonaligned countries, would have the assembly recognize represent- atives of the People's Republic of China "as the only lawful repre- sentatives of China to the United Nations," with full rights, and "expel forthwith the represent- atives of Chiang Kai-shek." minals. Others patroled railway stations. Several student leaders already here plus some opposition party leaders were detained. The government said Wednes- day night that all schools and col- leges would be closed today so that students would have no excuse to come out on the streets and as- semble in large numbers. Whether the ban against the march should be lifted provoked a heated debate in Parliament, where opposition leaders have tried to gain as much political ad- vantage from the situation as pos- sible. Making his first statement in the House as home minister, Y. B. Chavan defended the ban, call- ing it "sound and in the best in-j terest of the students themselves." His statement led to a 90-min- ute turmoil in the House with the speaker forced to adjourn at one period for 15 minutes. t i , ,, Court Orders Powell To Serve 30-Day Sentence Bra ndt Says Coalition Must Include Social Democrats NEW YORK (P)-Harlem con- gressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr. has been ordered by a State Su- preme Court justice to surrender himself the day before Thanks- giving. to begin a 30-day jail sen- tence for criminal contempt of court. Justice Matthew M. Levy issued the order yesterday directing Powell to surrender to the sheriff at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 23. Levy had found the Negro Dem- BONN, West Germany (R) - Mayor Willy Brandt of West Ber- lin said yesterday he believes politicians cannot form a new West German government with- out his Social Democratic party. A government without his party would be tried only if other par- ties sought to make the present crisis last forever, he said, adding: "I believe that they will not suc- ceed." Brandt spoke at the opening of a two day meeting in Berlin of party leaders from nations of the Claim Viet Diversion .of U.S. AID Shipments Low SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP)- Diversion of American AID ship- ments to Viet Nam "is only about 5 per cent," senior U.S. officials said today. Officials of the U.S. Agency for International Development said early assistance efforts here "lack- ed the managerial controls we would have liked, but we are get-' ting close to them now." New Procedures They cited new accounting pro- cedures, tightened cargo controls in the port of Saigon, and stepped up police work-most of which were started in recent months. The U.S. AID effort here escalated sharply in the spring of 1965 in conjunction with the massive U.S. troop buildup. AID programs "hit the beach," officials said, with the same single-mindedness of U.S. combat troops. Loose bookkeeping proce- dures were tolerated only because the primary goal was to stop in- flation by pouring in goods. These imports were designed to absorb excess Vietnamese pur- chasing power caused by U.S. troops spending in the country, these officials said. They denied what they termed "recently published reports" that as much as 40 per cent of eco- nomic aid cargoes were diverted. Community Project Area Most diversion of goods paid for by U.S. taxpayers comes under the community project area, which is aimed at nation building, they went on. These goods offer the greatest opportunity for loss, theft or intentional damage because they pass from freighters to Sai- gon warehouses to regional ware- houses to provincial warehouses to the hamlets and villages. The officials noted that the Viet Cong can buy drugs or medi- cines and other goods off the shleves after they enter legitimate commercial channels. They also said the Communists acquire American goods as spoils of war war and questioned "whether that can be called diversion." Steps are being taken to ascer- tain that Vietnamese importers who buy U.S. goods use them only in legitimate commerce, officials asserted. European Common Market-West Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg. He . came out strongly for ac- cepting Britain's bid to join the organization a bid renewed under British Prime Minister Haroldi Wilson's leadership. "Mini" Coalition The favorite formula being dis- cussed to end the Bonn crisis was 'mini" coalition of Social Dem- ocrats and the smaller Free Dem- ocratic party. The "mini" part comes from the uncomfortable' fact that it would command only two votes more than the absolute majority of the Bundestag needed, to elect a chancellor. If such an3 alliance was , successful, - Brandt would presumably get the job. ' Another widely debated possi- bility was a grand coalition be- tween the Social Democrats and' the retiring Chancellor Ludwig Erhard's Christian Democrats, their standard now borneby-Kurt George Kiesinger. Chance of Revival There was also a chance to re-! vive the old coalition of Christian' Democrats with the Free Dem- ocrats, who pulled out of Erhard's government three weeks ago in7 oposition to his call for new taxes to balance the budget, Erhard presided at a meeting yesterday of the rump Cabinet, but it kept largely to routine mat- ters. Asked about the political mood, a sokesman-ex-Maj. Karl-Guen- ther von Hase- said he would use an old German military formula: "The morale of the troops is good -a lot better than their perform- ance." . There will be further talks. But before making any definite moves, politicians expect to await the re- sult of a state election Sunday in Bavaria. The outcome in that populous state could have an im- portant effect on political horse trading in Bonn. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - An improving President Johnson conferred yes- terday in his hospital quarters with former President Dwight D. Eisenhower and suggested he un- dertake a goodwill mission to Asia and other areas of the world. White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers said the whole idea is tentative. On the second day after a doubleheader operation, to cut a polyp from his vocal cords and repair an old incision in his ab- domen, Johnson pronounced him- self "doing very well" and a White House bulletin said his doctors agreed. " I Some officials indicated they felt the walkout was a power play to see who would run the school. NEW YORK-Astronomers in the New Mexico and Arizona deserts reported shooting stars fell over their observatory yesterday at the rate of 1,000 to 2,400 a min- ute and then built up speed until they were filling the sky so fast they couldn't be counted. It was the most spectacular dis- play of Leonid meteorites seen anywhere and neared the scale of the last great show 100 years ago this month, astronomel's said. World News Roundup ocrat guilty of two counts of crim- inal, contempt of court on Nov. 4 for willful' failure to answer two court directives in a $164,000 libel judgment against him. Out of Town Powell, who routed three op- ponents in the general e!ection last week and won a 12th term in Congress, was reported to be in the Bahamas. Levy directed Powell to sur- render the day after a scheduled hearing in the Appellate Division of Supreme Court on a challenge by Powell's attorneys of Levy's Jurisdiction. Decision Not Expected Conceivably, the five-man panel could issue a bench decision on the challenge but it is not ex- pected. The action stems from a court decision in 1963 finding that Powell had defamed a Harlem widow Ester James, 68, by calling her a "bag woman"-a collector of graft for corrupt policemen- on a television program in 1960. If Powell surrenders, assuming the sentence is not stayed,. he would serve the time in the civil jail in Manhattan, where many of the inmates are in for nonsupport and failure to pay alimony. adjusted annual rate of only 848, 000 units. This was about half the annual rate at the start of the year-.61 million in January. Larry Blackmon of Fort Worth, Tex., president of the National Association of Home Builders and a sharp critic of Johnson admin- istration mortgage policy, said he was "deeply distressed" by the new figures. The administration, he added, has delayed too long use of a bil- lion dollars in special mortage as- sistance approved by Congress' three months ago forthe Federal National Mortgage Association. May Get Worse Government officials anticipate an upturn in home building activ- ity early next year but there are indications conditions would get even worse in the immediate fu- ture., The Census Bureau said building permits issued during October were off almost 2 per cent from September's level to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 719,000. Building permits issued in one month formally reflect the trend of home building .activity in the next. A department spokesman said that' tight money and high inter- est have had a profound influence on the housing slump. Down 41 Per Cent t The builder's association said the flow of .funds during. the first 10 months of this year to the four major mortgage lending instit.- tions--commercial banks, savings and loan associations, life insur- ance companies, and mutual savings banks-is 41 per cent be- low the same period of last year. Congress had approved a 4.76- bilion mortage lending program, administered by the Federal Na- tional Mortgage Association.It has delayed using the final billion of this until, it has said, the effects ,of the $3.76 billion it has already begun using can be assessed. I 0 ori GRAND RAPIDS - Some3501 students walked out of a pre- dominantly Negro high school Wednesday after a ban was im- posed on mustaches, but most of them returned to classes today. The school board, in an emer- gency meeting after the walkout, warned students to call off their boycott or face possible suspen- sion. 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