WEDNESDAY, tJCT(?BER 14, 2964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T REPa WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREJ~ AREA REDEVELOPMENT: GAO Knocks Fund Allocation Profit Plan Highlights Pope May Grant Support AMC-UAW Bargaining To 'Progressive' Cardinals WASHINGTON (P) - Adminis- trators of a federal program to ; create jobs in high unemployment areas let $26 million flow into places that had recovered eco- nomically, the General Accounting Office charged yesterday. The agency criticized by the GAO, the Area Redevelopment Ad- ministration, denied it had been inordinately slow in adjusting its policies to changed economic con- ditions. SPredictGO In South By The Associated Press SAN ANTONIO, Tex. - Two ' more Southern governors predict- ed yesterday that Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater's campaign is slipping rapidly in the 17 states below the Mason-Dixon Line. Texas Gov. John Connally told a news session at the 30th South- ern Governors Conference that his sources of. information indicate Goldwater's Southern strength is dwindling. But President Lyndon B. Johnson is still trailing in four states-Louisiana, Alabama, Mis- sissippi and Florida--he said. Florida Gov. Farris Bryant, how- ever, predicted Johnson will carry his state by a narrow margin. "In my opinion, Johnson is ahead at this time in Florida," he said. "The people of Florida want peace and prosperity. I think they feel more secure with Johnson than Goldwater." Bryant said the result in Flor- ida might be different "if the Re- publicans had offered a man with more apparent stability." Monday, MississippifGov. Paul B. Johnson had said Goldwater is slipping because he has back- tracked on key Southern issues of states rights and constitutional government. Meanwhile, 10 Episcopal bish- ops and 716 other Episcopalians charged Goldwater with racism. "We are profoundly disturbed by the transparent exploitation of racism among white citizens by Goldwater and his runningmate, Congressman. William Miller," a statement released in St. Louis by the third day of the 61st Trien- nial Convention of the Protestani Episcopal Church said. A program of federal projects1 should not be turned on and off instantaneously as the rate of un- employment in an area fluctu- ates, it said. Acknowledging "ad-' ministrative delay" of seven tol 13 months in some cases, it said this was a reasonable period for determining an area was no long- er eligible for help. The GAO made its report to' Congress, in whose behalf it over-' sees operations of the executive branch. The program under study' .was set up by the Public Works Acceleration Act of 1962, author- izing $900 million to provide jobs; quickly by building projects .in areas of "substantial and per- sistent unemployment." The GAO said Detroit was des- ignated as one such area in 1961, when its unemployment rate was 11 per cent. Projects totaling $44.7 million were allotted to the area. But the accounting office said recovery in Detroit started in 1961, Smolen Freed In enezuela 1'AR.AC'A (LPl Tf .C' i-d 1effinho by September, 1962, unemployment was down to 5.2 per cent, and by July, 1963, the Labor Department had removed Detroit from the "substantial and persistent unem- ployment" category. The depart- ment recommended Detroit no longer be considered a redevelop- ment area. The ARA did not, however, take the Detroit area off the list until Feb. 20, 1964, and some $23.4 mil- lion worth of projects were sched- uled to begin after October 1963, the GAO report said. The GAO said the ARA's poli- cy "is unfair to the truly depressed areas," since it dilutes the funds available for such areas. The ARA, in a counter-state- ment, replied that "the (public works acceleration) act clearly states that. a redevelopment area is automatically eligible for aid. To deny all benefits to such areas would be unreasonable in the light of the congressional lan- guage. "The seven to 13 month period of administrative delay . . . is a reasonable period of time for ter- minating an area's eligibility. "It would be harmful to turn eligibility on and off because of a temporary did in unemployment " ~f~oe DETROIT (J)-The auto indus- try's only profit-sharing plan was the subject of much ,talk but little negotiations yesterday as bargain- ers for American Motors and the United Auto Workers union work- ed under a Thursday midnight strike deadline. But the UAW and AMC did reach agreement on contract clauses covering supplemental un- employment benefits and wrapped up sections increasing pensions and expanding insurance, except for what spokesmen termed "a few apparently minor problems." Meanwhile, General Motors re- mained strikebound and walkouts hit Ford Motor Co. AMC said it still believes in the profit sharing concept-whereby some company profits are divid- ed among employes and benefit funds-but proposes to abandon it in a new thjee-year contract, Company spokesmen said they are considering this because the UAW is asking for both profit-sharing and the same economic package it negotiated with the big three -General Motors, Ford and Chry- sler. The UAW wants profit-sharing cortinued. It agreed that in prof- itable years AMC workers would get more than those at the big three.- UAW spokesmen said the union would be willing to forego other fringe benefits .it wants, if in lean years, the workers' share of com- pany profits is insufficient to sup- port these fringes. The benefits would include an additional week's vacation and two paid holidays. The union had agreed when it negotiated its 1961 contract that in lean years it would give up approximately 10 cents an hour in benefits-the cost of the vaca- tion and holidays. To date, only 47 of 130 UAW bargaining units at GM have set- tled. Report Alleged GOP Spinga VATICAN CITY (P-Progres- sive cardinals were reported to have gained Pope Paul VI's sup-r port last night in their struggle to keep conservative prelates from restraining the Vatican Ecumeni- cal Council's action on Jews, re- ligious freedom and other key topics. Dr. Gazton Cruzat, head of the Latin American Episcopate's press office, said the Pontiff agreed there should be no deviation from the current course of Ecumenical Council action. The Pontiff was handed a peti- tion from 15 cardinals Sunday; night listing four complaints against "traditionalist" tactics. Sources said it was not clear in what way the Pope would act on the complaints that Vatican Curia conservatives in top council com- mission jobs were: --Attempting to delay debate on a schema, due before the coun- cil, on modern world problems and simultaneonsly pressing for a quick end to the council. W orld New4 s By The Associated Press MOSCOW-=-The Russians said yesterday their 24-hour, 17-min- ute orbital flight of three men represented a big stride toward a moon landing. Speculation that the world's first flight of a multiseat vehicle may have ended yesterday, sooner than planned, was officially ignored. -Seeking to reduce to a sin- The Soviet government newspa- gle phrase an 800-word draft dec- per Izvestia saidhowever the as- WASHINGTON W)-Democratic laration on Jews, in which many tronauts were refused permission officials unveiled yesterday a plot council prelates have urged clear to remain in space another day. which they said involved a $1000 exoneration of Jews from ;any A leading British space author- payoff to an employe in their "deicide" (god-killing) implication ity had speculated that the cos- headquarters for funneling infor- in the Crucifixion; monauts were brought back early The employe, Louis Flax re- -Trying to transfer revision of 'because of illness among the crew. portedly told Democratic party of- the draft declaration on freedom * * * ficials about the alleged attempt of conscience in religious beliefs UNITED NATIONS -- India re- to get him to spy for the Repub- from the hands of the Vatican's quested yesterday that the United licans. Democrats helped Flax give Christian Unity Secretariat to a Nations General Assembly debate the GOP information, some of it special committee, whose member- at its session next month the spurious. shiD would be mostly conservative problem of how to prevent nu- John Grenier, executive director prelates admittedly against the li- clear weapons from spreading. of the Republican National Com- berty declaration; India has been concerned over The Mi chigan Iemorial- Project announces: The Fourth Dewey F. Fa erbur Lecture . . -physicist -recipient of the AEC's Enrico Fermi Award -U.S. delegate to the Geneva negotiations on a nuclear test ban * J- J,. .u ''"a rakes. ' Smolen, kidnaped and held 86 ------ - hours by a pro-Castro terrorist : group, was released late Monday< night. He said a primary reason for his release, as related by the kid- napers, was that "your publicity has been served." / Members of the Armed Forces of National Liberation kidnaped Smolen to make propoganda for their underground efforts against Venezuela's government, Smolen said his abductors told him. He said they never mentioned any plan to trade him for political prisoners in Venezuela or for a condemned Viet Cong terrorist in South Viet Nam. Venezuelan police announced last night they had rounded up all five pro-Communist terrorists who kidnaped Smolen. The bandit leader and two of his cohorts were picked up following the arrest of two other suspects Monday night, J. J. Patino Gon- zalez, chief of the security police, said. He disclosed that police had been tipped Sunday on the loca- tion of the apartment hideaway where the gang was keeping Smo- len but did not move in immedi-' ately for fear the American might be injured in possible gunfire. mittee, supposedly the recipient of Flax's information, said he knew no one by that name and didn't "know what's behind it." Most of the information on the affair was contained in an affi- davit given to newsmen by Flax. He had been asked to transmit teletype messages being sent from Democratic national headquarters to state committees, Flax said. -Working to delete the word the possibility of Communist China "full" from a reference, in the becoming the next member of the already-endorsed document on atomic club. shared Papal - Episcopal power, that bishops have full church au- a thority with the Pope; I To the readers and admirer of The y the PoeFountainhead, Atlas Shrugged, and for the New Intellectual, NATHAN- i - -- ,,. {;,, ilh. SATaeiL&r BEAUTY SALON IEL BRAND3EN Will Deliver. The Opening Lecture of His Series on THE BASIC PRINCIPLES OF OBJECTIVISM The Philosophy of AYN RAND Thursday, Oct. 15, 8:00 p.m. Northland Center Aud. A, Southfield, Mich. Admission Opening Night $3.50, Student Admission $2.75 Nathaniel Branden Institute, Inc. For escriptive Brochure .Contact NBI's Local Representative-Clark Burson, 15439 Ardmore Avenue, De- troit 27, Phone 838-5729. 609 S. FOREST Cnai NCB 8-8878 " -Associated Press 'COPTER HUNT On the lookout for Viet Cong guerillas In Viet Nam, a troop reconnaissance unit walks through rice paddies in the Mekong Delta area. The United States Army announced establishment of a third helicopter company in the largely guerilla-controlled delta region, in hopes of cutting down a number of recent distastrous ambushes against government ground forces. "; .- f " ":r"..t,.s.".:^+.*x..e".v>.va:w:."." 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MEMO TO: ALL STUDENTS AND FRIENDS FROM: BUS. AD. SCHOOL Subject: Bus. Ad OPEN-OPEN TEXT: following Purdue Game Scut., Oct. 1 7, 4-6 p.m. Rock-n-Roll by I NVICTAS Refreshments B'NAI B'RITH HILL EL FOUNDATION announces ISRAELI FOLK DANCING with DINA FINCK, leader Thursdays, starting Oct. 15 at 7:30 p.m. Registration fee for semester-Hillel Member $1.50 (single admission possible 50c)-Others $2.00 The Young Lovers I Join the Daily edit staff nnn nr ATTENTION ART STUDENTS: The Diag Art Fair is October 19-21 EXHIBIT YOUR WORK Calf 663-0118 or 764-1805 to reserve your work. and for further information 1429 HILL ST. 663-4129 'I _ F ,. ,.. Sponsored by the Union and Lea gue I i .- I e n. ,}' . . . , l £ ,Y > f:< 1. >:}} .$ :t:7 III will speak on DISARMA- MENT and STRATEGIC STABILITY Wednesday October 21 8 P.M. 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