Vol. LXXXI, No. 30-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, June 16, 1971 Ten Cents Twelve Pages TIMES ORDERED TO HALT WAR STUDY TEMPORARILY U.S. POLICY EXPOSED IN NEWSPAPER 1y Te Associated Press President Johnson decided on April 1, 1965 to use American ground troops for offensive a c t i o n in South Vietnam because the Ad- ministration had discovered that its long-planned bomb- ing-which had just begun -was not going to win the war, according to the Penta- gon's study of the Vietnam War reported in yesterday's New York Times. Johnson ordered that the de- cision be kept secret, the Times said, and be carried out rapidly but in ways that would mini- mize any appearance of sudden changes in policy. r The Times report today was the third in a series which the newspaper is publishing on a 7,000-page study made in 1967- 68 of how the United States went to war in Indochina. The study was ordered by the de- fense secretary in the Kennedy A and Johnson administrations, Robert S. McNamara. The Times was ordered to temporarily cease publcation of the documents yesterday by a federal judge at the govern- ment's request. The Timesrreport today co- S ered the period, beginning in 1965, of increasing U.S. involve- ment in ground combat. It high- lighted, "Johnson's decision that U.S. troops would take the of- fensive was followed by another decision in mid-July to commit 44 more battalions. This decision was perceived as a threshold- entrance into an Asian land war," the study said. ...The choice at that time was not whetheror not to ne- gotiate, it was not whether or not to hold on for a while or let go-the choice was viewed as winning or losing South Viet- nam" By the end of the year Ameri- can forces in South Vietnam, which had numbered 27,000 on March 8, had risen to 184,314. Their mission was no longer de- fense of installation but offen- sive "search and destroy" opera- tions. Air attacks on North Vietnam began on a sustained basis on March 2, 1965, in an effort to break the enemy's will and per- suade Hanoi to stop the Viet Cong insurgency in the South. "Once set in motion, how- ever, the bombing effort seemed to stiffen rather than soften Hanoi's backbone . . . After a month of bombing with no re- sponse from the North Vietna- mese, optimism began to vane. "The U.S. was presented es- sentially with two options: (1) to withdraw unilaterally from Vietnam leaving the South Viet- namese to fend for themselves, or (2) to commit ground forces in pursuit of its objectives. A third option, that-of drastically increasing the scope and scale of the bombing, was rejected See FAILURE, Page 7 EDITORS OF THE NEW YORK TIMES study their situation yesterday after a federal judge ordered the paper to halt temporarily publication of a series of articles based on a highly classified Penta- gon report on the Vietnam war. From left are Times foreign editor Jim Freenwield, chief Washington correspondent Max Frankel, and assistant news editor Robert Crandall. FINANCIAL PROBLEMS: School board electi~ons indicate shift to right By ANITA CRONE recent years that the board has a was brought to a head when the Daily News Analysis conservative majority, rather School Board fired 256 non-ten- Monday's school board elec- than a moderate leadership. In ,. tion took a definite turn to the the wake of recent attacks on the right as three conservatives over- school board for not being re- whelmingly defeated more mod- sponsive to the needs of black : erate, liberal and radical candi- students, women and teachers, a dates. conservative board may com- In spite of the conservative pound the district's problems. victories however, the Radical Theodore Heusel - forerunner Independent Party (RIP) seemed in the election - did not support ' to have gained increased support the "Humaneness in Education". report-a report that dealt spe- cifically with racism. Heusel rejected the report be- cause he felt it gave preferential treatment to blacks. Heusel be- lieves it is important that all stu- dents receive the same level of education. There is no indication that the other two members Robert Hefner elected to the board - Duane Renken and Ralph Bolhouse - ured teachers. The Ann Arbor feel any differently than Heusel Education Association has an- on that report. nounced that teachers will not - f Further, the defeat of the mill- sign a new contract until all of age proposal puts an already the teachers have been re-hired. troubled city into deeper financial At the present time, only 140 of trouble - especially in view of the teachers have been rehired. the upcoming teacher negotia- Included in the millage pro- Theodore Heusel tions. posal was a plan to fund an an- Losing by about 1,000 votes, the ticipated raise in teacher's sala- over their showing in the mayoral proposed millage would have ries. Bollrouse and Heusel have election - capturing 11 per cent covered increased operational both stated that they believe of the vote city-wide. expenses, as-well as salaries. there are enough funds to con- - This will be the first time in The problem of lack of money See RIGHT, Page 10 HEARING TO TAKE PLACE ON FRIDAY NEW YORK (U) - At the government's request, a fed- eral judge ordered The New York Times yesterday to temporarily cease publica- tion of a series on the ori- gins of the Vietnam w a r based on a Pentagon study. District Court Judge Murray Gurfein said the order will be in effect until 1 p.m. Satur- day. He scheduled a hearing on the government's request for a preliminary injunction f o r Friday morning. Gurfein rejected, however, a government request that t h e Times be required to surrender the Pentagon documents. "I do not believe that the New York Times will wilfully disregard the spirit of our re- straining order," the j u d g e said. In Washington, the Justice Department said the FBI had been asked to study possible criminal violations as regards the Times' publication of what the government said are top-se- cret defense documents. "The FBI investigates all al- legations of federal criminal violations and is doing so in this case," said John Hushen, chief Justice Department spokesman. In a statement, a spokesman for the Times said, "The Times will comply with the restrain- ing order issued by Judge Mur- ray Gurfein. The Times will present its arguments against an injunction at the hearing scheduled for Friday." In seeking the restraining or- der, the Justice Department cit- ed a law which makes it a criminal offense for any per- son "having unauthorized pos- session" of classified documents to communicate, deliver or to transmit such documents "to any person not entitled to re- ceive it." In addition, a Defense De- partment spokesman, said on Monday another law, making it a crime to publish information of a classified nature, may be involved. Penalty under either law is 10 years in prison or a fine of $10.000 or both. The Justice Department had maintained that exposure of the secret data on which the Times' articles were based could "re- sult in irreparable injury to the national defense. The Times series, which was published Sunday, Monday and yesterday, is based on a volum- inous study of American invol- vement in Indochina and t he country's role in the Vietnam war. The report was under- taken by the Pentagon in 1967 at the direction of former De- fense Secretary Robert S. McNamara, the Times said. In his restraining order, Gur- feih - the first federal judge to order a newspaper not to- print something - said: "I believe that the matter is so important and so involved See JUDGE, Page 7