CORPORATIONS THREATEN U.S. See Editorial Page Yl r e Sir 41 ~Iad33 FAIR Nigh--$5 Low-53 Sunny with warming trends Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 67-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1965 SEVEN CENTS FOUR PAGES ENTER BATTLE ZONE: Americans Go to Du Co SAIGON (P) -American troops have moved into the central Viet Nam highlands to reinforce Viet- namese government forces seeking to lift the siege of embattled Duc Co, U.S. military authorities an- nounced this morning. Flown to Pleiku, 230 miles northeast of Saigon, were elements of the 173rd Airborne Brigade and the Second Brigade, First Infan- try Division, the announcement said. They were moved into the area Tuesday and Wednesday, it added. Due Co is 215 miles north of Saigon near the Cambodian bor- der. The special forces camp there, which includes 12 American ad- visors, has been under Viet Cong attack for more than two months. Heavy fighting took place in the area Monday as Vietnamese troops moved overland to relieve pres- sure on the camp. Not in Action So far as was known here, the American troops had not been thrown into action against the Viet Cong in the Pleiku-Duc Co area. The announcement said U.S. and Vietnamese commanders would coordinate the participa- tion of the Americans "if they are required in the operation." The 173rd and the elements of the First Division in Viet Nam are U.S.-JIET NAM RELATIONS: Controversy Develops Over L odge's Statement By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-A bit of a storm blew up yesterday over, the question whether Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge told senators the United States would keep forces in South Viet Nam even if the Saigon governm'ent should request their recall. A congressional source said Lodge did. A State Department spokesman said, "My information is that Lodge did not say that." The spokesman, Press Officer Robert J. McCloskey, said he had talked with Lodge. Lodge could not be reached by newsmen. The New based near Bien Hoa, 12 miles north of Saigon. They have been taking part in patrols and opera- tions in that area but this was the first time they have gone into the highlands. First Foreign Troops They are the first foreign com- bat troops committed in that area since the French fought a series of bloody engagements in the highlands in the Indochina War in 1953-54. Movement of the American " forces from Bien Hoa was classi- fied on grounds of military se- curity until they were deployed in the Pleiku area. Earlier, U.S. military sources reported Vietnamese relief troops shot their way through thin Viet Cong resistance to a linkup with the besieged garrison. Clear Gunners Americans expressed hope the relief detachment, described as large, could clear away guerrilla gunners ringing the camp's air strip so transports could start landing to move in supplies and move out the dead and wounded. Re-establishment of aerial con- tact was considered essential be- cause the Viet Cong were reported to have closed in behind the relief column and again cut, Route 19 between Duc Co and Pleiku, the 2nd Corps area headquarters, 30 miles northeast of the camp. Route 19 is Duc Co's only road. It is a strategic highway that crosses the central highlands from Qui Nhon, on the South China' Sea, to the Cambodian frontier at a point five miles west of Duc Co. Duc Co is 220 miles northeast of Saigon. Waiting for Weeks "We have been waiting for weeks for permission to clear the Viet Cong out of this natural- highway from Cambodia into Viet Nam," a U.S. source said. "We have enough forces there now to try to do the job." About a dozen U.S. advisers and 150 Vietnamese-Montagnard tri- bal irregulars and lowland para- troopers-held out in sandbagged bunkers of Duc Co _during bitter fighting earlier this week as Viet Cong battalions sought to block government infantry and armored units moving down from Pleiku. The siege began June 3. Both sides have suffered heavy casualties. House Begins Debate On Public Works Bill WASHINGTON (P)-The House started debate yesterday on a controversial $3.25-billion, five-year program of public works and economic development in almost every state in the union. A final vote on the administration-backed measure, which has passed the Senate, is not likely before late today or tomorrow. Despite almost solid Republican opposition, Democrats sponsor- ing the bill voiced confidence of passage. They'hailed it as a giant stride toward helping pockets of poverty and unemployment while providing needed public facilities. Republicans criticized the proposal as wasteful and ineffective. Leading off for the bill's proponents, Rep. Ray J. Madden (D- Ind) said, "This will make taxpayers out of tax consumers. This Affairs, Military Pay Hike Passed by Senate his not a spending program; it is an investment." Provide Jobs Madden contended that by pro- viding jobs for the unemployed, the bill would cut into heavy ex- penditures for relief and unem- ployment compensation. Rep. H Allen Smith (R-Calif) $1 Billion Boost Twice That Asked To Affect.25 Million Actives, Reservists ARTHUR J. GOLDBERG Cabinet Seat of Urban Merger, Plan For Reserve, Guard KO'd- WASHINGTON () - A House subcommittee yesterday apparent- ly killed at least for this year the Pentagon's plan to merge Army r reserve units into the National Guard. An armed services subcommit- tee headed by Rep. F. Edward Hebert (D-La) held the present merger plan is "not in our na- tional interest" and declined to act on legislation Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara sub- mitted to carry out the proposal. Hebert expressed belief in a =statement that the plan "would result in an immediate and ser- ious loss in the combat readiness of the affected reserve units." The subcommittee's action, con- curred in by full committee Chair- man L. Mendel Rivers (D-SC) and ranking Republican William H. Bates (R-Mass), was not unex- pected. But in closing its hearings on the plan the subcommittee left the door open for more talks with the Defense Department and for a possible compromise later. McNamara had argued strongly for the merger which he said would streamline the reserve com- ponents-the Guard and the Army reserve-and give them more and faster striking power. The Defense Department issued a statement expressing regret with the subcommittee action and saying that failure to approve the Pentagon plan now "will compel the Army to retain nonessential units at the expense 'of forces which are required." Fil Sees Board Action on State 'Master Plan' By JOHN MEREDITH Within the next two weeks the State Board of Education prob- ably will approve the first in a series of steps toward formulation of a master plan for higher edu- cation in Michigan, board Vice- President Leon Fill said last night. Two months ago Fill proposed that the board officially begin to develop the much-discussed mas- ter plan by asking each state school to submit a definition of its unique role in Michigan's higher education system. Discus- sion of his suggestion has since been repeatedly postponed while the board considered urgent, short-range matters, but Fill said he expects the proposal to be adopted shortly. Fill also reported that the board is moving closer to a decision on inhmn . A rr Tnimvritv'c jn - *York Times published yesterday a report that Lodge had made such a statement July 27 to the. Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee. The committee questioned Lodge that day in closed session and later approved his nomination for a second tour of duty as am- bassador to Saigon. A congressional source gave a similar report to the Associated Press. Meanwhile in Hartford, Conn., the chairman of the House Arm- ed Services Committee told the National Exchange Club Conven- tion that the only effective for- eign policy is a military one. "We can beat anyone," Rep. L. Mendel Rivers (D-SC) said. "It makes no difference why we're in Viet Nam. We're there. And I will insist on victory. Any- thing short of that would be trea- sonable," Rivers concluded to a standing ovation. SCRAP MLF IN DEAL: Kennedy Urges. 'Trade' To HelpDisarmament By MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH Special To The Daily WASHINGTON-Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY) said yesterday that the United States "should be prepared" to offer to scrap its plans for an Atlantic Alliance multilateral nuclear force should the Soviet Union be willing to make similar concessions in the Geneva disamament talks, which now appear stalemated. Kennedy, speaking to a group of congressional interns working here this summer, emphasized that the "major, overriding problem" ' the world must face is nuclear disarmament. The Soviet Union has insisted at the Geneva talks that it cannot consider an arms control and dis- armament agreement unless the U.S. abandon its multilateral force plans. Decision on UN Coining -Goldberg WASHINGTON (A)-Ambassa- dor Arthur J. Goldberg said yes- terday that President Lyndon B. Johnson probably will decide by Monday what America's policy will be on the United Nations dues issue. Goldberg told newsmen he will spend the next two days in New York sounding out UN members on possible ways to solve the UN's constitutional-financial crisis. The world organization is in deep financial trouble because of the refusal of Russia and some other countries to pay dues for UN peacekeeping costs. The UN Charter's Article 19 says delin- quent UN members shall lose their General Assembly vote. The United States has failed to date in efforts to get theback- sliders to pay up. Now Washing- ton is faced with the alternative of pressing for application of the Ar- ticle 19 penalty or working out a compromise. Goldberg told reporters they will see from the President's decision whether the Johnson administra- tion will undertake "a repudia- tion" of the earlier U.S. stand fav- oring enforcement of the no-vote penalty. The 33-member UN committee considering the dues issue con- venes Monday and Goldberg said he hopes to be able to present the U.S. position then. At this stage, the ambassador said, he is collecting views from members of Congress and the UN members in order to work up a recommendation which he and Secretary of State Dean Rusk will make to Johnson this weekend. Pledge Allows Experimental School To Start AMHERST, Mass. (P)-A pledge of $6 million has enabled four colleges and universities to start a special project-a new coeduca- tional liberal arts college, called Hampshire College. A joint announcement by Am- herst, Smith and Mount Holyoke colleges and the University of Massachusetts said they will co- operate in establishing the new school on a 300-acre site. The undisclosed site will be only a few miles from each of the fostering schools which are clus- tered in c e n t r a 1 Hampshire County. The announcement said the col- lege is planned for about 1,000 students, and it may be ready for classes by the fall of 1968. Dirksen Introduces New Bill on Reapportionment WASHINGTON (P,)-Senate*Minority Leader Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill) introduced a new constitutional amendment yesterday on legislative reapportionment with the declaration "the fight has just begun." The new amendment, like one that fell seven votes short of the necessary two-thirds majority vote last week, is designed to overcome the Supreme Court's one-man, one-vote ruling that both houses of state legislatures must be apportioned on the basis of population. But Dirksen told the Senate the revised version takes into account every valid argument raised against the rejected amendment. He said .a.l. . . 1 A11 ~i l U 1. ~l , teeing off for the opposition, WASHIN( echoed the claim of the House voted the Republican Policy Committee that pay boost y the bill "does nothing to eliminate forces expe the causes of the mistakes and holds "inhe failures of two of the most dis- than the Ko credited programs of this nature Sen. Ric ever devised, the Area Redevelop- Ga) said, t ment Administration and the Ac- accept the o celerated Public Works Program." that the c( Expenditures Viet Nam w ed impact The bill would authorize, sub-dmy ject to actual appropriations later, "If we a these expenditures during each of butter and the next five fiscal years: of the Se. -$400 million for grants for Committee public works and development fa- Will have ac cilities with the government pay- having our( ing up to 80 per cent of the cost; which no g -$170 million for loans, loan tofore been guarantees and interest subsidies. The vote The loans would be for 40-year in varying periods to help finance public than 2.5 m works projects. Shorter term service wasZ loans would be available for pri- Difference vate business; ate pay hike -$25 million to provide tech- the Houser nical assistance and related func- conference, tions; the higher -$15 million for expenses of next month r e g i o n a1 development commis- Reservists sions to help states band to- personnel w gether for joint programs similar pay boost. to those provided for in the Ap- Both the palachian Development Program; bills are m -$50 million for each of four $447.5 mill years for economic development the adminis districts embracing more than one The Sena county. give the I2 To qualify for assistance, an creases to p area generally would have to have, two years a history of chronic unemploy- ate change ment and substandard average officers an income. more than t RESPONDS TO CRITICISMS: GTON (P)-The Senate military a $1-billion yesterday as its armed rt warned Viet Nam rent dangers" greater orean conflict. ,hard B. Russell (D- oo, he doesn't wholly optimistic view of some ontinuing build-up in will have only a limit- on the nation's econo- re able to have both guns," the chairman nate Armed Services told the Senate, "we complished the feat of cake and eating it, too, government has here- able to achieve." to raise military pay amounts for the more illion persons now in 89-0. es between the Sen- e and one approved by will be worked out in but indications are paychecks may start 1. s and retired military would also share in the House and Senate pay nore than double the ion recommended by tration. te and House versions argest percentage in- ersonnel with less than service. But the Sen- d the raises for both d enlisted men with wo years duty. SEN. RICHARD RUSSELL Voting Law Challenged In Lawsuit NEW ORLEANS ()-A Louis- iana voting registrar asked a fed- eral court yesterday to strike down the new federal voting rights law. It was the first legal chal- lenge of the entire act. Orleans Parish Registrar A. P. Gallinghouse filed suit for an im- mediate court order barring en- forcement of the act, primarily designed to make it easier for Negroes to vote. He also wants a ruling on its constitutionality. A court test of a provision of the law which waives English language literarcy requirements for voting was asked by a Brook- lyn couple shortly after President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the bill last Friday. Gallinghouse's suit came one day after federal voting registrars went into nine counties in Louis- iana, Mississippi and Alabama and began enrolling Negroes as voters. Gallinghouse's petition said the right of states to prescribe quali- fications for local and state elec- tions was reaffirmed in the 24th Amendment, which was adopted last year. This amendment banned the poll tax in federal elections. The suit also tclaimed the fed- eral act violates the 10th, 14th and 17th Amendments. Defendants Named as defendants were the federal government, Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Cen- sus Bureau Director A. Ross Eck- ler and Warren B. Irons, execu- tive director of the federal Civil Service Commission. "The matter is now in the court where it rightfully should be," Gallinghouse told a newsman as he and his attorneys walked out of the federal ;district court clerk's office here. Meanwhile, Louisiana Atty. Gen. Jack P.F. Gremillion huddled be- hind closed doors with most of the state's district attorneys and C. H. Downs, an aide to Gov. John McKeithen, to decide what action the state will take. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Morgan of Brooklyn filed suit in a Wash- ington federal court to challenge the English language literacy sec- tion of the law, which prohibits states from denying the right to vote for inability to read and write English'if the person has a sixth grade education in an ac- credited school commonly using a language other than English. Puerto Ricans It was specifically aimed at giv- ing Puerto Ricans voting rights. The New York City Board of Elections, opened voting booths yesterday for Puerto Ricans who can't pass the English literacy requirements but have had six years of schooling in Spanish. A Puerto Rican leader estimated 55,000 Puerto Ricans would be added to the New York registra- tion lists. Gallinghouse's suit asks for a ruling on the constitutionality of the law, which means that a Department Already Has House okay Will Tackle Growing Problems Faced by Metropolitan Areas WASHINGTON (p) -The Sen- ate passed yesterday its version of a bill to create a cabinet depart- ment to deal with urban problems. By a 57-33 vote, and with little debate, it virtually assured the formation of the first new cabinet- level function since Health, Edu- cation and Welfare came into be- ing in 1953. The House has al- ready passed a similar measure. Thus a decade of congressional Jousting over a Department of Housing and UrbanmDevelopment has Just about come to its last oratorical word. It was a program unsuccessfully pushed by President John F. Ken- nedy and one that President Lyn- don B. Johnson tagged a "prior- ity," saying "our urban problems are of a scope and magnitude that demand representation at the highest level of government." Hails Action The President hailed the Senate action and in a statement released by the White House said he was "delighted that there was strong bipartisan support in the Senate" for the 11th cabinet department. Differences in the Senate and House bills will be worked out in conference. Senate sponsors said they expected little difficulty in settling, these. Ten Republicans joined 47 Democrats in voting for the bill. Fourteen Democrats and 19 Re publicans voted against. Speculation immediately began on whom the President would name to head the department when all details are worked out in a final bill. Wagner? One of those mentioned is re- tiring New York City Mayor Rob- ert F. Wagner, who was at the White House when Senate action came on.the bill. Wagner said he never discussed this possibility with anyone. He did say, though, that some people had talked to him about the possibility of his joining the cabinet. "Some without any au- thority to make the appointment," Wagner replied to a question. Four Johnson Nominations Meet Approval WASHINGTON (P) -The Sen- ate confirmed by voice vote yes- terday President Lyndon B. John- son's nomination of his longtime friend, Abe Fortas, to be a Su- preme Court justice. Senators John J. Williams (R- Del), Strom Thurmond (R-SC) and Carl T. Curtis (R-Neb) spoke out against approving Fortas, a Washington lawyer, to succeed Arthur J. Goldberg, who resigned from the court to become U.S. am- bassador to the United Nations. Williams quoted Johnson as say- ing he had searched for the best qualified man in the country for his first appointment to the court, but Williams said it was "appar- ent that his search didn't go far beyond his inner circle of friends." The Senate speedily confirmed Johnson's nomination on Thur- good Marshall to be solicitor gen- eral after acting on Fortas' appointment. Marshall, a Negro and former counsel of the National Associa- tion for the Advancement of Colored People, is stepping down from the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court in New York City to become so- licitor general. In his new post he will argue cases for the govern- ment before the Supreme Court. Not Unilaterallyi The junior senator from New York, who stressed the importance of reaching agreement on dis- armament in a major Senate speech recently, declared, "I wouldn't be willing to disarm uni- laterally, and I don't think we should offer to abandon our MLF plans unless the Russians give some indication they would be willing to make a similar move." But, Kennedy continued, the Geneva talks on disarmament are the "overwhelming" problem the world must face. If a treaty might be reached as a result, he said, we should be ready to offer a concession" on the MLF if the Soviets are willing to make one on some other point. As an example of a possible Soviet concession which might justify the offer to abandon MLF, Kennedy suggested disarmament of the Warsaw pact countries of Eastern Europe. Favors Report Although he did not refer to it, Kennedy appeared to favor the views of a recent top-secret gov- ernment report on disarmament his intent and desire was to write' "a fair and workable" proposal. Every 10 Years It provides that the legislatures of each state shall be apportioned by the people every 10 years, fol- lowing a decennial census. This was not mandatory in his original amendment. In the case of bicameral or two- chamber legislatures, apportion- ment of one house would be on the basis of population while the other could be apportioned "on the basis of population, geography and po- litical subdivisions in order to in- sure effective representation in the state's legislature of the var- ious groups and interests making up the electorate." This requirement "to insure ef- fective representation" is one of the key changes. A similar phrase is used with respect to apportion- ment of a unicameral or one- chamber legislature. Must Be Approved Like Dirksen's original amend- ment, the revised version. provides that an apportionment plan will become effective only after being' approved by a majority of the people voting in a statewide elec- tion. But it also provides that any plan submitted by a bicameral legislature must be approved first by both houses, one of which has been apportioned on the basis of substantial equality of population. SEN. ROBERT KENNEDY King Asks for, Rights Efforts BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (P)-Mar- tin Luther King, Jr., warned civil rights workers yesterday not to rest on their laurels and said the movement should ensure that at least one million new Negro voters go to the polls next election day. Tn his annnal renort to the SEN. EVERETT DIRKSEN Atlas-Centaur Test Succeeds CAPE KENNEDY (A') - The Atlas-Centaur rocket; which had been in the space agency dog- house, vindicated itself yesterday with a perfect flight that hurled a metal model of the Surveyor spacecraft toward an imaginary