WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1984 TINE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREJ$ Candidates Enter Campaign Stretch Drive Johnson Attacks 'Iresponsibility' Of GOP Opponent PITTr8URGH (A) -- President Lyndon B. Johnson said last night Sen. Barry Goldwater "has voted to cut out or cut down almost every program of common respon- sibility for anything." He did not refer to Goldwater by name in a speech prepared for a Democratic rally, but spoke of the "opposition candidate." Johnson said the Goldwater votes he has in mind range from national defense to education to social security, and he added: 'Voluntary' "When he says 'make social sectrity voluntary' oui answer is that old age-and the sickness that comes with it-is not volun- tary. We believe in more insur- ance. not less." Johnson said Goldwater voted against urban renewal, against low income housing, against area redevelopment, against aid to edu- cation. "BUt these are thir.gs that have helped rebuild Pittsburgh," John- son said. "They will help build the great society. And we are for them." Second Stop The Pittsburgh stop was the second of the day on the Presi- dent's schedule, as he launched a coast - to - coast campaign t r i p which will keep him on the road almost constantly until the voters decide a week from now whether he or Goldwater will occupy the White House for the next four years. The day's first stop was at Bos- tot, a city which loved John F. Kennedy, and Johnson pledged there to follow the example of courage and judgment he credited to the assassinated President in the Cuban missile crisis. Courage and Determination Johnson said Kennedy's courage an4 determination then "brought a Communist withdrawal, and a memorable victory for the cause of freedom, and a turning point in the cold war." e told Pittsburgh partisans that Goldwater also voted against the Manpower Development and Retraining Act which, he said, has already helped 5,400 Pennsylvania workers "win their fight against machines." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) pboitments, 3200 SAB. S MER PLACEMENT SERVICE: zit S- Fst atIntal City Bank, New York City-Will Interview at Law & Bus. Ad. Schools Thurs., Oct. 29, men for for- mal summer training program. Camnp Roc~woo4, Ontario, Canada - Coed camp will interview at 212 SAB on Fri., Oct. 30 after 10:30 a.m. J. Bochfer will talk to specialists in dra- inatics, riding, music, arts & crafts, waterskiing, sailing & swimming. Also looking for gen. counselors and a pro- gram director, Will talk with married couples. ENINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- VI*WSenlors & grad students, please sign schedule posted at 1284;- w. Engrg. for appointments with the following: 6CT. 30- Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., E. Chicago & Youngstown, Ohio - BS: &hE, EE, EM, ME & Met. Also Bus. Sales & Acctg. Trainees. Trng. U.S. Navy, Civilian Personnel Div., Wash., D.O.. PS-MS: CE, EE & ME. MS: Constr., Pub. Works Admin., Sanitary. B$: NA & Marine. Dec. 'grads. Men & women. Dev. & Des. Los Angeles County, Road Dept. - --Flood Control District-BS-MS: CE. Dec. grads. Can consider non-citizens if they have filed formal declaration of intent to become U.S. citizen. Des., oupv., Testing & Res. Corning Glass Works, Company wide -All Degrees: ChE, BE, EM, ME & Met. BB-MS: CE, IE. MS: Constr. '& Instrumentation: BS: E Math, E Phys- ies, Mat'ls., oci. Engrg. Men & women. :an consider non-citizens If becoming a U.S. citizen. R. & D., Des., Prod. & taes. trolt Edison Co.--8-MS: BE & M} R. &-bl.' Sys. planning & oper. T'ech. Purchasing. Staled Power Corp., Muskegon, Mich. -8: ME & Met. Dev. & Prod. Make Appointment at Chem. Bldg., $p4- 202$: OCT. 30- Marathon Oil Co., Denver Res. Gtr., Littleton, OolO.-S: C hE & Math. Dec. grads. Men & women. Petroleum Res. . , . Make appointment at Bureau of Ap- pont4ne nt 3200 AB: Campbell Soup Co., Napoleon, Ohio - S :l,*It & ME. Prod. Univ. of Chicago, Grad School of Business--A undergrads qualify as optlic ts. Grad study in Bus. PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON and Senator Barry Gold- water are going into the final week of campaigning for the presidential election. Johnson spoke yesterday in Pittsburgh while Goldwater was campaigning through Kentucky. NEWSPAPER STRIKE: Detroit Pressman Union Rejects Publishers' Bid DETROIT ('J)-The Detroit newspaper strike remained at ap- parent dead center yesterday after the pressmen's rejection of a publishers' offer. There were no announcements of new negotiations meetings as1 the strike entered its 106th day. The publishers, disclosing details of their offer, said it was Goldwater Blasts President in Trip Through Kentucky LONDON, Ky. ()P)-Republican presidential candidate Barry Gold-t water stumped in the hills of Ten- nessee and Kentucky yesterdayX before making a last effort to swing crucial Ohio to his side. ToI thousands standing at airports inI Bristol, Tenn., and here, the Ari- zona senator stepped up his tough-1 talking attacks on President Lyn- don B. Johnson.r But he made strong pleas for local congressional Republican candidates, at one point saying:I "When I am elected President I< don't want to be lonesome." 'Power-Hungry' He called Johnson the "most power-hungry man in Americant politics," and said the President didn't justwant to be elected, "he wants to be crowned." "He wants total trust, total love,, total power, over your total lives,"i Goldwater declared, asserting, someone should remind Johnson "freedom is a gift -of God and not from the government-no matter who runs it." His audiences shouted, "No," when he asked: "Do we want raw and naked1 power and ambition in the White House . . . power stripped of humility . .. common honesty ... devoid of any morality except the morality of get . . . grab . . . and gifts for the favored few?" Claims Kentuckyj Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R-j Ky), in introducing Goldwater in London, predicted, "Kentucky will go without fail" to the GOP nominee., Goldwater, said he wanted no mandate, only an "opportunity to prove that we are still wise enough and strong enough to govern our- selves." He told his audiences, "No one but your conscience can check on you when you get in that voting booth." He offered the voteis a choice of himself, a man who "will not promise you everything," because "I canpot give you everything." 'Honesty' "But I will give you honesty in the White House." The alternative, he declared, is to vote for Johnson, whom he characterized as "a President who will do anything, countenance anything, to further his own poli- tical ambitions . . . who will cover up corruption . . . will stoop even to political lies." With his attacks on Johnson getting stronger, the Arizona sen- ator claimed when the President says, "let us continue," he means "continue on his terms, on his course, at his price and at his pace. "I say that price is too high. The price is turning over to him all your freedoms." GM Returns To Limited Production DETROIT (M)-General Motors Corp. stepped up its activities yes- terday, but at best its production of autos was a mere shadow of pre-strike days. Local plant strikes limited the production rate to a trickle. At last count, 28 United Auto Work- ers union bargaining units lacked local at-the-plant settlements. These include 15 of General Motors' 23 assembly plants. One was the hydra-matic divi- sion at Willow Run, Mich., which makes automatic transmissions for GM cars. No Speculation GM officials declined to specu- late when all 360,000 workers would be back on the job. More than 300,000 were idled in the strike which started Sept. 25 over failure to reach a new national contract. The national contract was agreed upon Oct. 5, but the UAW stayed on strike until Mon- day in support of local demands. The first new cars tc come off the line since the strike were at Pontiac, Mich., in the Pontiac division. At Flint yesterday Buick's huge plant went back into full produc- tion. The Chevrolet assembly plant, however, was still on strike at Flint. An engine plant and metal fabricating plant went back to full production yesterday and a parts plant recalled 5,000 of its 8,000 employes. GM apparently planned to stockpile parts and hope for a break at assembly plants. The industrial city of Flint by afternoon had 45,000 of its 60,000 GM hourly workers back on the job. GM truck and coach division at Pontiac . also went back to full production yesterday Call It Off The UAW called off its national WASHINGTON (P)-The Soviet Union's new two-man leadership "is not likely to last very long," Patrick Gordon Walker, Britain's new foreign secretary, predicted yesterday. He made this prediction at a news conference marking the end' of two days of talks with Ameri- can leaders. The visit, the first' contact between the new Labor government and the United States administration, was aimed at pav- ing the way for a possible post- lectionmeeting between President Lyndon B. Johnson and Harold Wilson, the British prime min- ister. Gordon Walker met with John- son for 45 minutes, crowning two days of almost uninterrupted talks with Secretary of State Dean Rusk. He also met with Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. All Problems The talks embraced all major problems of the Western world, ranging from the British-requested reorganization of the Atlantic al- liance to the expected effect of the dramatic changes in Moscow on East-West relations. The shakeup in the Kremlin, Gordon Walker told newsmen, will not affect East-West relations, because the present relaxation of tensions is "based upon the funda- mental interests" of the Soviet Union. Nikita S. Khrushchev was suc- ceeded by Leonid Brezhnev as secretary of the Communist Party and by Alexei Kosygin as premier. MS UTeacher .Resolve Suit EAST LANSING (VP) - Michigan State University said Monday the WASHINGTON TALKS: Gordon Walker Predicts Soviet Leaders' Downfall Charges Fly In Cambodia Border Rifts SAIGON (P)-Rival charges of hostile intrusions heated up the centuries-old frontier dispute be- tween Vietnamese and Cambo- dians yesterday. The enmity com- plicates South Viet Nam's U.S.- backed war against the Communist Viet Cong. The Saigon defense ministry protested that three Cambodian fighters strafed and bombed a Vietnamese area Monday on the Plain of Reeds, a largely flooded region 85 miles west of Saigon. It said 100 Cambodian sampans also crossed the border, but pulled back before making contact with defense forces. Officer Found Dead This was the area in which a U.S. Army special forces officer was found dead from a bullet wound Saturday. That was two days after he was captured, ap- parently unwounded, by a Viet Cong sampan flotilla that Viet- namese witnesses said had at- tacked from Cambodia. But a U.S. embassy spokesman wrote off the incident as nothing to complain about to Cambodia. He said there is not considered to be sufficient grounds for a pro- test and that the United States regards the case as closed. Charge Shooting In Phnom Penh, Cambodia's avowedly neutralist government charged South Vietnamese fight- ers shot up the village of Am Long Kres Sunday. The regime declared it will respond blow for blow to any further "aggressions" by U.S. and South Vietnamese .forces it has accused of attacking border communities in the hunt for V::t Cong guerrillas. Furthermore, it said that if the hostilities continue it will break relations with the United States and recognize both Communist North Viet Nam and the Viet Cong's political agency, the Na- tional Liberation Front. SECRETARY RUSK Gordon Walker said he did not regard this as a practical arrange- ment. 'Valuable' Both the U.S. and British for- eign policy chiefs termed their talks as "extraordinarily valuable" when they emerged from John- son's office at the White House. While the assessment of the changes in Moscow was high on the agenda, both sides are under- stood to have agreed that the facts are still obscure and neither Washington nor London knows why Khrushchev was ousted as premier. It is significant, however, that while American specialists tend to believe Khrushchev was depos- ed because of dissatisfaction with his domestic policies, Gordon Walker mentioned two foreign policy issues as the likely reasons for the ouster. They were, he said, Khrush- chev's insistence in "forcing the Chinese conflict into a dramatic crisis," and his decision to visit West Germany some time in 1965. worth $18.90 weekly in wages and1 World News Roundup By The Associated Press TOKYO - Liberal Democratic Party leaders decided yesterday to select a new successor to Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda by Nov. 10. Ikeda's decision to resign due to ill health was approved by par- ty leaders Monday. * *.* NEW YORK-The Fair Cam- paign Practices Committee has told Robert F. Kennedy in a con- fidential letter that it felt he had distorted Republican Sen. Ken- neth B. Keating's position on the nuclear test barn treaty. LA PAZ, Bolivia-Bolivia's labor unions joined university student groups yesterday in denouncing the government after student riots killed five persons and injured 60 in the past two days. WASHINGTON--The U.S. Court of Appeals by an evenly split vote upheld yesterday a Federal Communications Commission deci- sion that Sen. Barry Goldwater was not entitled to equal broad- cast time to respond to an Oct. 18 radio-television appearance by President Lyndon B. Johnson. TOKYO - Communist China charged yesterday that the United States is enhancing its military deployment in the Far East for "nuclear threats to (Red) China." fringes over a period of 45 months with the printers given the option of using part of it in pension in- creases, a health and welfare fund or expanded vacations. The offer was retroactive to last March 1. The offer also included a freez- ing of manning schedules for five years. A breakdown of the $18.90 was not given. The pressmen, going against President Lyndon B. Johnson's endorsement of the offer, rejected it by a vote of 230-17 Sunday. The offer followed federal mediation in Washington. The last publicized offer of pub- lishers on July 15, two days after the strike began, was for a total of $9.30 weekly in wages and fringes for 21 months. A publish- ers' source said the newspapers had made several alternative of- fers since then. The pressmen's base pay under their expired two-year contract was $140.55 for a 37/-houri work' week. Local 13 of the Printing Press- men and affiliated local 10 of the Plate and Paperhandlers struck the afternoon Detroit News and morning Free Press July 13 over terms of new contracts. British Defend New Tariffs LONDON (P)--The new British government responded yesterday to mounting world opposition to the 15 per cent protective tax it slapped on imports. A top cabinet minister-Doug- las Jay of the government Board of Trade-pledged immediate con- sultations with Britain's closest trading partners to head off any resultant damage to their own economies. strike Sunday with approval of one-time associate director of the new national three-year agree- MSU's Labor and Industrial Re- ment between the union and the lations Center has accepted an company. However, local strikes out-of-court settlement of his were permitted to continue. $750,000 suit against MSU. The local issues cover a wide University attorney Leland W. variey of subJects, mostly bear- Carr Jr. said Charles A. Rogers ing on working conditions at the accepted a terminal leave-which individual plants. The at-the- amounts to about $10,000 for an plant agreements supplement the associate professor. national contract. In 1961, Rogers was reassigned The new GM contract follows to another part of the university those agreed upon earlier at Ford after asserting the center's oper- Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. ations were slanted to favor labor. 14 I 0 -i S1AOIU#A G*VuCVARp du"ir) c w to I A W N W/ t r y\ O t v W W W W W t~, O Ipi 0 tT A W tV CA'T''E' P M Z BEAUTY SALON 609 S. FOREST Call NO 8-8878 Evenings by Appointment I* y a b ' 0 .. .f I :.. ... ........,.a:......:'.... -.-...v...r. :....''::i.=i. . . ......:.. {{ k. ..<: ..h ... +, . . .. . f. . . .. . . : c5.. . . . . . . . . . " ; .:.,,: v :: " . ,a. . ."">.::.....,:- .. c : : "; ..f:.A.r :F Cr t' ui S f <4. .n b{^::'tE.{., M ' .', ti >.i. a +s.::' t':;.i;'sa':#',,c.Ki,?:>:c3h?::if :.:k .+:k'..'t ,> .zoiw °s.; $:"<;.5 ?i.' .,.iY'::??>?:::>:{ ?s:i:w<: S. G.C. Announces .. . PETITIONING for:, * Student Grievance Committee " Off-Campus Housing Advisory Board " Committee on Membership f " 1 I.C r ;:s is r4:+i Tffj'.," F , ,' . MILLARD PRESS-An y our Miss J ha just the ticket for spectator sports... the stadium coat Point-scoring style in warm, unlined wool melton ... hooded and snap-closed with knit cuffs, oversized pockets. Navy, * * * Petitions are available in Room 1542 SAB i i 3 t I Jay loden or wine. Sizes M, L. 11.98 GIRLS! See What a MAN'S WORLD Is Really Like Get Your Favorite Guy .^ ^ i A .,11 r THE CHANGE starting thursc IN I i I SOVIET LEADERSHIP A PANEL DISCUSSION IAN LOW DR. WILLIAM MEDI ecturer, History Associate Professor of special zip-lined sportsters $1g90 Clearance Slacks and Stretch Pants 4.90 formerly 10.98 " Wool and Nylon MISS MAR Visiting L LIN Education