', JANUARY 8, 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,JANUARY 8, 1963 S U.S., Soviet Discussions) On Cuba To Terminate While Troops Remain Viet Deaths Reach 122 SAIGON (P) - Fighting in the jungles is rising in fury, and in five days the South Vietnamese have lost 122 killed in action, gov- ernment figures showed yesterday. The Viet Cong guerrillas are hit- ting harder with larger forces than at any time since the Communist attacks began four years ago. Some say the Communist guer- rillas are trying to eliminate a weakness in tactics, failure to fol- low through after scoring initial successes. Others say the guerril- las needed successes to buck up morale that sagged under recent heavy South Vietnamese attacks. United States military advisers feel the South Vietnamese show the same weakness as the Viet Cong in failing to drive through to exploit early successes.' "Vietnamese soldiers are good," said one adviser, "but we think their officers do not push hard enough or follow through on oper- ations. "Too many troops think more about self-preservation than win- ning ,battles. There are too few qualified non-commissioned offi- cers in the Vietnamese army. Our advice often is turned aside." United States advisers have been quick to say the big battle of last Wednesday was thoroughly botch- ed. In that battle, 35 miles south- west of Saigon, the Viet Cong am- bushed Vietnamese after a bat- talion had been landed in United States-manned helicopters. To Select Body On Morality LANSING (P) - Michigan Gov. George Romney said yesterday he will appoint an advisory panel of religious and lay leaders to confer with him on the moral and ethi- cal aspects of basic state problems. "Let me make it clear the panel would have no official authority or responsibility," Romney said. "Separation of church and state must be mainta'ned." The members of the panel would not participate as representatives of their faiths, but merely as in- dividuals World New By The Associated Press . WASHINGTON - A bipartisan band of senators yesterday voiced hope that President John F. Ken- nedly will support their drive to adopt a stronger anti-filibuster "rule in the Senate. Their chief spokesman, Sen. Hubert H. Hum- phrey (D-Minn) contends that the Senate must make it easier to halt a filibuster if it is to function ef- fectively as "a democratic and representative legislative body." VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE--A satellite boosted by a Thor-Agena D rocket was launch- ed by the Air Force yesterday. This combination has been used in the past to launch Discoverer satel- lites, whose primary function is to test secret gear for Samos photo- graphic and Midas missile-detec- tion missiles. * * * DAMASCUS - Saudi Arabia charged that United Arab Repub- lic jet bombers from Egyptian bases made three raids yesterday on the Saudi Arabian town of Naj- ran. ADLAI STEVENSON ...reports to OAS BY JUNE: Early Vote May Favor Lower Tax WASHINGTON .(A)-A tax cut on part of 1963 income is possible if the House can vote on the is- sue by June, highly placed strate- gists calculated yesterday. . The chances for a reduction in- volving 1963 income-which Pres- ident John F. Kennedy is expected to ask-were not rated exception- ally high by congressional sources closest to the problem. But neither was such a possibility being writ- ten off. For a tax cut to be voted this year, one key strategist said, the House Ways and Means Commit- tee would have to finish its hear- ings and bill-writing by the begin- ning of June. Speaker -John W. McCormack (D-Mass) told a news conference he thinks the House will vote a tax cut bill this year if the Presi- dent wants one. McCormack made no predictions about the Senate. All tax legislation must originate in the House, specifically in its Ways and Means Committee. Chairman Wilbur D. Mills (D-Ark) has consistently opposed a tax cut unconnected with tax reform, thus in effect ruling out a quickly pass- cd stop-gap bill. rs Roundup OXFORD-The "Rebel Under- ground," an anonymous newslet- ter at the University of Mississip- pi, appeared in dormitories again early yesterday and said an organi- zation has been formed seeking impeachment, removal and execu- tion of President John F. Kennedy. * * * OXFORD, England - Ban-the- bomb enthusiasts wound up a three-day conference yesterday and announced formation of an international organization to work for nuclear disarmament. They said it would be neither anti-East nor anti-West. * * * NEW YORK-Trading was ac- tive Monday although the stock market's 1963 upwarddrive falter- ed. The Dow-Jones Averages show- ed 30 industrials down .09, 10 railroads up .92, 15 utilities up .73 and 65 stocks up .59. Ambassador Calls Island Red 'Threat' Stevenson, Martin Urge American Unity, WASHINGTON (R) - United States-Soviet talks on Cuba are ending with no final agreement, even though there are believed to be 16 to 17 thousand Russian sol- diers still on the island, it was learned yesterday. For this and other reasons, a State Department representative told the Organization of American States, the Communist beachhead in the Caribbean remains a threat. And, the United States spokesman added, the problem is one that must be tackled jointly by the American republics. Adlai Stevenson, United States ambassador to the United Nations and director of the United 'States negotiations, gave a closed OAS meeting the somber news that the talks are being terminated with no agreement about the troops and on two other major remaining questions. Verification on Missiles There are United States efforts to get on-the-ground verification that all nuclear missiles, bomber planes and other offensive weap- ons have been removed from Cuba, and a Soviet effort to obtain a United States pledge .of no inva- sion against the Communist dic- tatorship of Fidel Castro. Edwin M. Martin, assistant sec- retary of state for inter-American affairs, appeared at the OAS meet- ing with Stevenson. Asked by the various Latin American nations "where do we go from here?" on the Cuban prob- lem, Martin is understood to have replied that this is not a matter for United States decision alone, but one for all members of the OAS to determine. Some Leave Cuba Martin gave the figure on the number of Russian troops remain- ing in Cuba. He said also that about 4,000 other Russian military men, mostly military advisers, al- ready'have left Cuba. The United States, the Latin Americans were told, has no in- formation that nuclear missiles and other offensive weapons still remain in Cuba. But it has no proof, either, that they have all been removed. United States officials have ex- pressed belief such offensive weap- ons have been removed under the October agreement. New Developments The appearance of the two Unit- ed States officials with De Lesseps S. Morrison, United States am- bassador to the OAS, was inter- preted to suggest two new develop- ments in the offing: the United States and the Soviet Union, after weeks of haggling in New York on the Cuban problem, are expected to make public shortly a carefully phrased statement saying the dis- cussions are terminated. The other development could be mounting pressure within the OAS. These could include pressure to prevent any ships outside the Communist bloc from doing busi- ness with Cuba, a cut-off in all trade with Cuba except for medi- cines and drugs and possibly even a shut-off on communications with Cuba by radio, cable and mail. USSR Reds Attack Plot By Chinese MOSCOW (P)-The Soviet Com- munist Party is openly accusing the Red Chinese of trying to over- throw Premier Nikita S. Khrush- chev's leadership of world Com- munism. In an editorial in Pravda, the Soviet Communist Party yesterday demanded that Red China and Al- bania stop attacking the Kremlin's policy of so-called peaceful co- existence. Pravda also lambasted the Chi- nese contention that American "imperialism" is a paper tiger and that the Soviet retreat from Cuba was a second Munich. Plea for Conference The editorial ended, however, with what sounded like a plea for an ideological peace conference. "The Communist parties," said the party newspaper, "have a test- ed method of settling contentious issues by way of collective discus- sion. Our party has always advo- cated this method." A date and place for a peace conference was not mentioned. But it came only a week before the leaders of the Communist world assemble in East Berlin for the Sixth Congress of the East Ger- man Communist Party. East Berlin Meeting Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrush- chev announced last week he is going. There are reports in Moscow that the Chinese delegation will include a number of important fig- ures. Beirne Views Requirements Of Economy WASHINGTON (P)-A top AFL- CIO leader said yesterday the na- tion is moving toward a state- steered economy which will require a far greater degree of restraint and cooperation by both manage- ment and labor. That appraisal is made in a book titled "New Horizons for American Labor" published yesterday by Jo- seph A. Beirne, president of the AFL-CIO Communications Work- ers of America. Beirne is an AFL- CIO vice-president, chairman of the federation's community serv- ices committee and among the possibilities for the group's presi- dency in the future. Beirne said labor unions must change their ideas and methods and start to "think modern." He predicted they will take an in- creasingly important role in com- munity and economic planning, as well as in politics at all levels. He predicted a continuing de- cline in labor strikes. "The bargaining function of to- morrow's international union will be subordinate to the service func- tion," he predicted. "The econom- ic factors of the employer-worker relationship will operate within predetermined limits outlined on a national level. "By this I do not mean that I believe we are moving toward a rigidly controlled state economy. Rather, I think, the signs point to a state-steered economy in which the general outlines are agreed upon at a national level and implemented on an industry group basis." January 8, 1963 To New York Times Subscribers, We are sorry about the in- convenience caused by the printers' strike in New York. Adjustments will be made before the end of this semester. Student Newspaper Agency. r i 0 ID SALE -1 I 4UP COATS s SUITS . DRESSES 11 SWEATERS 9 SKIRTS BLOUSES . SLACKS " JEWELRY SLIPPERS o PURSES * SNIP-IT SLIPS SCARVES * GLOVES r ; , -- }. ' i , y t n GREATLY REDUCED SPECIAL SELLING SELECTED GROUP OF GIRDLES, PANTIE GIRDLES I