HOSIER LAND' UBER ALLES. See editorial page (ZAP , riiganr 7.kriati, WARMER High-60 Low-40 Chance of rain tonight ( _. Vol. LXXVI1l, No, 5-S Ann Arbor, Michigan, Tuesday, May 7, 1968 Ten Cents Eight Pages _. ht Paae Saigon offensive icreased by VC Attacks aimed at influencing Paris peace talks later in week SAIGON (A-Fighting raged through the pre-dawn dark today on the outskirts of Saigon. It was the third day of an enemy show of strength apparently aimed at influencing preliminary Paris peace talks opening later this week. Saigon's Tan Son Nhut 'air base came under rocket or mortar fire, but the shelling was reported light. North Vietnamese soldiers were reported engaged close to the capital for the first time yesterday. It was generally agreed that the attack Sunday and yes- terday on Saigon and 121 other cities, towns' and military installations-mostly by shell- ing - was a show of force to I p o is infhlence preliminary U.S. - North Vietnamese peace talks " set for this week in Paris. s ru tin iz e U.S. officials said other pur- poses might be to shake U.S. public opinion, to strengthen the P r1 North Vietnamese bargaining po- ar 1s h ole sition in Paris or to scare the population of Saigon. . By The Associated Press Most of the action in the Sai- American and North Vietnam- gon area during the' morning ese envoys inspected the old Ho- darkness today appeared to cen- tel Majestic. near the Arch of ter near the Phu Tho rage track Triumph yesterday and it was south of the air base, where South Tripdh ..yesteay ndit wtas Vietnamese rangers earlier had reported that the United States been in heavy contact. Parachute had approved the building asmthe flares lit up the sky there place preliminary Vietnam throughout the night, and renew- peace talks. ed airstrikes occurred again short- If North Vietnam approves as ly before 5 a.m. well, the French government is U. . . expected to announce "that the U.S. oficials said about 300 NMajestic, now a center for inter- enemy troops were taking part-In national conferences will be the sporadic, hit and run fighting in- site of the negotiations, side Saigon itself. Informed sources said North The North Vietnamese were Vietnamese representatives were, reported battling South Vietna- awaiting final word from Hanoi. mese through a cemetery near The U.S. approval was said to I Tan Son 'Nhut military and civil- have come from Washington. ian airport on the western out- The talks are set for Friday or skirts. shortly thereafter. INFILTRATION The United St tes was reported, Other sources said there were seeking assurances that any site fears that larger numbers of en- inside Paris ,itself be free of dem- emy had infiltrated Saigon in onstre.tors. recent days, mixed with the popu- The concern about demonstra- lation and may not yet have sur- tions by Frenchmen sharply op- faced to take an active role in posed to the U.S. role in Vietnam the current offensive. apparently was heightened be- caue r ioytin ordandh yes- .U.S. officials said the fresh causeyY students ridhy Left fighting in Saigon had produced tIday by uent th L 5,000 new reftfgees, adding to the' and Right banks -of Paris over burdens of caring for the thou- conditions at the University of sands left homeless in the Tet Paris - Sorbonne - and alleged offensive. i The U.S. Command in Saigon DEMONSTRATIONS asserted that, the activities of the Students involved in bloody past two days "over-all remain clashes with police yesterday dis- considerably lower than during played leftist attitudes. Some the Tet lunar new year offen- marched through d o - n t o w n sive." boulevards singing the Interna- The Tet drive swept across the tionale, the Communist anthem. country, bringing sustained fight- The students threw up a barricade ig i parts of Saigon and in the at Boulevard Saint Germain. old capital of us. There had been apprehension o a d o km n . among some Americans that dem- Command s okesmen maintaN- onstatins urin th me~wsed that much, of the present ac- olstrations during the meeths tion could not be considered a reason, speculgation grew that the new enemy offensive, describing it Uedn, Stesantged toat m t as part of continued operational United States wanted 'to meet activity. j Hanoi's envoys in a Paris suburb. y ECINRegardless of the reasons, it REFLECTION appeared that the level of military Meanwhile, in- Washington, the activity was up and that in many White House stamped presiden- cases the enemy w'as choosing tial aiproval yesterday on the the time and place. view of U.N. Ambassador desig- Before Sunday's attacks, there nate George W. Ball that the had been almost a week of hard new Communist attacks in South' fighting near the demilitarized Vietnam do not augur well for'g zone around Dong a. Paris peace talks on Vietnam. d Press secretary Geors" Chv- in WITHDRAW tian said Ball's assessment rea- Col. Milton Hull, commander of sonably reflected President John-d the 3rd Marine Regiment, said son's own view. Ball had talked two regimqnts of North Vietna- with the President Sunday before, mese were 'withdrawing yesterday speaking out on a Sunday tele- after losing nearly 1,000 men in vision program. five days of battle near Dong Ha. INDIA NA PRIMARY Bobby's West Vi v" i ss i ; i t i I . r E i -Daily-.Jay L. Cassidy -rotest extemite1 terns Ann Arbor residents protested the extension of the appointments of Herbert Ellis, Cecil Creal and Bent Nielsen to the County Board of Supervisors. Action will be taken on a reapportionment plan for the Board by the county circuit court tomorrow. NAPALM DISSENT: Coffineected at Dow protest NP files for place on ballot By LESLIE WAYNE The New Politics party (NP) yesterday filed for a spot on the November 5 ballot. The party has gathered 18,000 signatures on a nominating petition, approximate- ly 5,000 more signatures than re- quired. New Politics hopes to have can- didates for the offices of Wash- tenaw County sheriff, for posi- tions on the University's Board of Regents, Wayne State Univer- sity's Board of Governors and Michigan State University's Bord of Trustees. The New Politics party aims at increasing participatory democra- cy by building new political strue- tures that "reflect the individual needs of local communities," said Bert Garskof, their candidate for Congress in Michigan's second district. The first goal of the party is to run candidates for local of- fices in areas where the party has a strong following. "We are using the campaign as a tactic to organize people in the sense of building a move- ment to initiate social change," he continued., Besides Garskof. a professor of psychology at Michigan ,State University, the party will endorse William Ayers' candidacy for the Ann Arbor School Board election. Other candidates will be deter- mined at the party's statewide .nominating convention to be held in early September. The strongest bases of support for the party are in Ann Arbor and in Flint where "We have a stable, tightly-knit organization," Robert Preston, party member, said. The group will attempt to de- velop mainly in these two areas and "spread slowly and carefully," darskof explained. New Politics candidates for out- state offices depends on local in- itiative, he added. "Right nov our base is not big enough to warrant the organiza- tion of a third party," he said. Yet Parskof said, "We have the spirit and the intention of going ahead and eventually developing our own p rty." In the local elections, Preston said, "We definitely see a chance of winning. If we can gather the necessary finances and the man- power, we can do as well'as any- one else." "However, we are not going to define winning in the traditional terms. If we can leave behind in stitutions that are relevant to the people and can watch them grow, we will be winning," Garskof said. In gathering signatures for their nominating petition, Preston not- ed that the people "were fairly receptive to our stand, especially in the nearby counties." For New Politics to remain on the statewide ballot ' after the November elections, the ticket- leaderon the ballot will have to draw 13,000 votes statewide. If Columba formal sec for rest of By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN has only a 32-man, police force Rev. William Slbane Coffin, and that there are five John Yale Universty chaplain, and Birch Society groups. leaders"' of Clergy and Laymen In addition, Fernandez said, C o n c e r n e d About Vietnam police have said they will not be (CALCAV) will address a rally able to protect protesters as they here tonight in preparation for participate in a planned dodr-'to- demonstrations a g a i n s t Dow door campaign. Chemical Co. in Midland tomor- "The thing they want least is row. publicity on napalm," said Fer- Rev. Richard R. Fernandez, nandez, commenting on the effect CALCAV executive secretary, ex- of demonstrations against Dow. pects several' hundred students Furthermore, Fernandez assert- from midwestern colleges to par- ed, protests were hurting Dow's ticipate in the protests against recruitment of personnel. While Dow's production of the incen- the company may be "filling quo- ;diary agent napalm. tas," he said, "they aren't getting Tonight's rally will take place all top people." For instance, he at Ann Arbor's First Methodist noted, Dow has not even recruited Church at 8 p.m. at 'several universities this year cancels ISSOioS Faculty ends final exams, falling arks NEW YORK (A) - Besieged Columbia University reopened its doors yesterday but a majority of the school's students will appar- ently be excused from', attending class for, the rest of the ters., Columbiar College, the 25,000- student Ivy League university's oldest and 1argest unit, decided Sunday to end formal classes al- most four weeks before the offi- cial end -of the $ern May 29. Some other units of the uni- versity were expected to follow Columbia College's lead but it was not known immediately what they would do. The university adminis- tration simply opened all build- - ings and left it up to the indi- vidual units how to carry on. The senior faculty at Cofumbia College decided' to suspend final examinations. The faculty ruled out faling grades for this se- nester. A 'student can request a "P" for passing in any course. If he desires a letter grade, he may receive an "incompl te" and fin- ish his work next failf/or he may complete a certain argiount .9f work and receive a grade at the end of this' term. The confusion was hlghtened by rebel students who renewed their' two-Week old protest by calling for a boycott of classes. Minor scuffling broke out at 'sev- eral spots yesterday Morning as staff members and unsympathet ,c students walked through picket lines set up to enforce the oy cott, Fewei tljan, 200 students mari- ned picket lines be ore a dozen buildings. No one was hurt in the quickly ended scuffles as rebel leaders scurried around campus urging ; their 'followers to use spoken'- persuasion rather than 'force. Dr. Orayson Kirk, president of Columbia, said Sunday he will not resign finder fire - a dissident student demand - and defended his summoning of police on cam- pus to break up sit-ins in four college halls and his office in bow Memorial Library. Henry Coleman, the. acting dean of' Columbia College who was held'inside his office for al- most 24 hours when the student" protest began April 2, predicted the univer4sty "will not be back to normal this semester." David Truman, Columbia viae president and provost, toured the campus to the jeers and shouts of the sAriker . The classroom doors swung open yesterday for the first time in 10 days. 1 -Daily-Richard Lee CWA strik ers an the picket line B ell 'strikers refu'se to, work despite 'kvote, - } PROXY Ferna member, proxies Dow's a ing tom CALC a resol board d bar the one wh for the life," Fe Hqwel 'board o: for a v obtainin able to the rule sary to C VOTE P Howei might b binding napalm dez said Dow i napalm for use is the; B, a mo: chemica Ferna, directly violence morrow FIGHT andez said several CALCAV s hav obtained stocks oi in order to participate ir nnual stockholders' meet- orrow. AV members will push for ution binding on Dow' f directors which would sale of .napalm to "any. o would knowingly use it destruction of human rnandez 'said. ver, Fernarnez noted, the f directors have preparec ote on the resolution b3 g proxies, and should be prevent the suspension of s which would be neces- consider it. 'OSSIBLE ver, CALCAV memben e able to secure- a non- vote on the question of at the meeting, Fernan- is the largest supplier of to the U.S. government in the Vietnam war and sole producer of napalm re ,"effective" form of the l, Fernandez said, ndez would not speculate as to /the possibility of erupting in Midland to- but noted that ,the city J. S' 1. e because of protests there. The use of napalm in Vietnam, said Fernandez raises. the ques- tion "at what point does one finally say no, that's enough?" Possiblle eview o . A trimester By JENNY STILLER The, Senate Advisory Commit-i tee on University Affairs (SACUA) will meet with President Fleming Monday to discuss possible, re- view of the trimester system, SACUA Chairman Irving Copi said yesterday. From Wire Service Reports Thousands of Michigan "Bell telephone workers defied a re- turn-to-work order issued by theE Communication, Workers of Amer- ica after a majority ,of 200,000 nation-wide strikers voted to, 'at- ify a iTw three year contract. Washtenaw County telephone workers were among those who ignored the agreement. Members of CWA Local 4011, continued to picket. Michigan Bell offices in! Ann Arbor yesterday even though they had approved the new corr- tract 157 to 109 in official voting Saturday, They continued the strike in sympathy with the state's largest CWA unit, Local 4000 of Detroit, which asked members to ignore . the new pact. Local 4000 represents about 5,- 300 of the 16,000 striking em- ployes in Michigan. National officers of the CWA met in Lansing yesterday with local presidents to discuss their, refusal to return to work. Indications were a majority of the' state's CWA members would follow the example 'of Local 4000.. Detroit president NormamtMac-, Kay said the locil executive board had voted to cpntinue the strike. "We expect negotiations to re- sume with Michigan Bell and we expect to remain on strike until such time'as our members apprveE a contract," MacKay declared. The Detroit union president said the Linsing meeting would not affect his local's decision. A spokesman for Michiga'n Bell said that- "as far as I know" the Michigan telephone system was, the only one in the country ex-n periencing local CWA refusal to return to work. In' another area of the phone strike, citing "irregularities", the CWA last night ordered its in-, stallers to take a new vote on a 'proposed contract with ,Western Electric Co., in an effort to re- move the last barrier to settle- ment of the telephone strike. It said the men would be expected to work until the new vote is com- pleted. The meeting was scheduled this is not accomplished,, state after the University Senate vot- law dictates that party organizers ed overwhelmingly last month to would have to re-petition before conduct an immediate review of the next general election. By DANIEL OKRENT' Co-Editor Special To The Daily ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL, Indiana--Two hard-campaign- the academic calendar. The Educational Policies Com- mittee had recommendec that the University maintain the current calendar until 1970-71, 'mean- while gathering data for a review of the trimester system. In other action yesterday, SACUA appointed Prof. Maurice Sinnott of the engineering school, chairman of the Campus Planning and Development Committee, and named five other SACUA mem- bers to act as liasons to other fac- ulty committees. SACUA Vice-Chairman John Gosling of the medical school will become a member of A faculty advisory committee to Vice-Pres- ident Arthur Ross. Prof. Robert Knauss of the law school, a new member of SACUA, was appoint- ed to the Student Relations Com- mittee. Prof. William Porter of the journalism department, another recently-elected SACUA member, was named to the Research Pol- icies Committee. Prof. Joseph Payne of the Edu- cation school and James Hay- ward of the dental school were appointed to the Education Poli- cies and Economic Status of the Faculty Committees, respectively. Mr. ing Tdemocratic presidential t contenders and a less-active lo- cal stand-in wound up their vote drives here this -weekend in what some newsmen are re- ferring to as "this year's West Virginia." With Sen. Robert Kennedy holding a solid lead over Sen. Eugene McCarthy and a hard- to-determine margin over In- diana Gov. Roger D. Branigin in most opinion polls, today's primary may do for the New York senator what West Vir- ginia's 1960 balloting did for his brother. By JENNY STILLER Mr. Smith is going to Wash- ington. Prof. Warren L. Smith of the economics department, a spe- c i a 1 i s t in macroeconomic theory, monetary and fiscal policy, and international fi- nance was appointed last week to the president's Council of Economic Advisors. He will succeed James S. Duesenberry, who will return to Harvard University July 1, aft- er serving two and a half years on the council. Smith is the third member of the University faculty to serve on the Council of Econ- omic Advisers. Prof. Paul W. McCracken of the business ad- ministration school served as an economic adviser to Presi- dent Eisenhower from 1956-59. Gardner Ackley, professor of economics until he resigned April 19 to become U.S. Am- bassador to Italy, served as a maintaining a satisfactory level of employment." To this end, he is "strong)y in favor of the President's pro- posed 10 per cent income t}x surcharge, which is currently being debated in a joint con- gressional committee. "We are experiencing too much inflation now," Smith says. "I'm not sure that we can stabilize prices at the current resource utilization level, but we can do better than we've been doing. I think we need the tax." Smith adds that unless the 10 per cent surcharge is adopt- ed, some other kind of, re- straint. probably monetary, would have to be used to curb inflation. "If we don't get the tax in- crease, we will be faced with tighter money and increased interest rates,' he says. And while tax restraints would be "fairly evenly distributed throughout the economy," the the coming months, there will be a decline in defense spend-' ing. I would hope we will be 4ble to move pretty- vigorous- ly to try to straighten out the problems we're faced with in the cities," he explains. Smith describes the Vietnam war as "an unhappy situatiop" and hopes "we can get out of it -, but- I'd kind of like to get, out o'f it in such a way that things are really stable in that Smith goes to Washington part of the world, so we don't find ourselves back a few years later." He adds that "apart from the tragedy of the war," he feels that "Johnson's administration has been very successful on the domestic front. Measures have been passed in the last few years that should have been passed at least 15 years ago." With regard to the nation's urban ills, Smith feels that it is important to begin t' act now. "These problems are not the kind that can be solved overnight," he says. "The more we deionstrate that we're really trying to do something, the more we can calm things down. "I don't have any panaceas," he adds, "but, I do think that it is important to keep the economy operating at a satis- factory level, to keep the un- employment rate down to four per cent. Nothing could be worse for the cities than a rise of unemployment back to five m