mommoA page three £Iirigatt 43 tit 69/70 NEW CAR LEFTOVERS 331 So. Fourth Ave_ 663-5403 NEllS Pillo I;: European Motor Service Ann Arbor 69 Simca 1204 Wagon Front Wheel Drive 69 Simca 1118 4 Dr. Sedan 691170 Sunbeam Alpine G. T. Automatic 69/70 Sunbeam Arrow 4 Dr. Automatic 69/70 Sunbeam Arrow 4 Dr. Standard Shift 69/70 Sunbeam Arrow 4 Dr. Stan~dard Shift USED CAllS 68 Fiat 850 Low Miles 1 Owner 68 Sunbeam Tiger 289 Demo 67 Sunbeam Alpine 64 Sunbeam Alpine G.T. 62 Volvo 1225 65 T. Bird Landau 61 Alpine Rate Car 30 Rolls oyce OPEN Mon. to Fri.-8:30 a.m.--8:00 Sat.-10:00 a.m.--4:00 p.m. %J.)- J-v 663-0110 $1982.45 1686.52 2507.58 2113.58 1949.58 1949.58 750.00 3200.00 1100.00 600.00 300.00 1000.00 750.00 3,500.00 p.m. Friday, May 29, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Labor WASHINGTON ( - A small but in- creasingly vocal minority of union leaders is opposing AFL-CIO President George Meany's support of President Uixon's war policies in Vietnam and Cambodia. "The AFL-CIO is not infallible, and many of us feel strongly that it is out of step with the thinking of the 13 mil- lion members it represents," says the 350,000-member Amalgamated Meat Cut- ters union. "Our members, like all working people and like the majority of all Americans want peace. And they want peace now, without delay, without further military adventures, without more killings," says President Jacob Petofsky of the 400,000- member Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America. These sentiments are echoed by several eaders split on other union leaders whose followers add up to about 10 per cent of th labor fed- eration's 13.6 million members in 122 labor unions. In addition, the two largest unions, which are outside the AFL-CIO-the United Auto Workers with 1.6 million members and the Teamsters Union with 2 million-oppose Nixon on the, war through their Alliance for Labor Action. Aides of the 75-year-old Meany say that within the federation nothing has really changed-that Nixon's Cambodian intervention merely brought more vublic comment from the AFL-CIO's small corps of long-time war dissenters. "There isn't'any new, sudden .hift of opinion," said an AFL-CIO spokesman. "I think I speak for nine-tenths of them," Meany said at a recent news con- ference when asked if his support on's war policies was represent the labor federation. "This union is opposed to the sion of the Vietnam war into C and urges withdrawal of :ll A troops from Vietnam consistentS safety of troops," said the 460,0( ber American Federation of Stat ty and Municipal Workers hey Jerry Wurf. That's the same position as o the same position as NiXon's," the Meany spokesman of the :Stat ty and Municipal Workers' Co resolution adopted after heated in Denver May 8. The resolution, coincidentally, the same day that AFL-CIO cons war issue t of Nix- union members were involved in a brawl ative of with student demonstrators in downtown New York, which prompted a protest oxpan- from another AFL-CIO leader. ambodia Only three of the AFL-CIO's 35-man kmerican Executive Council voted against the reso- with the lution of support for Nixon's Cambodian 00-mem- intervention. They were Wurf, President e, Coun- William Pollock of the 200,000-member aded by Textile Workers Union of America. and Herman Kenin, president of the 260.000 member American Federation of Musi- urs and cians, , who said he was voting his per- argued sonal conviction and did not know hcw e. Conn- nvention his union might vote at a convention. debate Petofsky was absent during the vote, and the meat cutters union is not represented came on on the AFL-CIO's policymaking Execu- truction tive Council. as Nixon Dont pack if you're coming back! STORE YOUR CLOTHES WITH US * FRBE E * Pay for your dry cleaning when you come back SHIRTS 33c with Dry Cleaning HOURS (Dry Cleanin) 740 PACKARD PHONE Mon. thru Fri. 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. 662-4241 Saturday 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Coin operwted loundry :3-10 p.m1662-4251 the news today by The Associvted Press and College Press Servict Stocks upI bo uys businessmen --7 - w - - - - w - - ---------------------------. if, -----------~-- - ---- ~---- - - -~ - I COMMUNIST FORCES launched attacks east and north of the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh yesterday. In an apparent attempt to obtain supply lines from Laos to make up for losses of bases to allied troops along the frontier communist command forces battled their way into the streets of Prey Veng, a provincial capital 35 miles east of Phnom Penh, but were reported withdrawing later. About 65 miles north of Phnom Penh, the North Vietnamese and# Viet Cong overran the district capital of Tang Krasang, cutting Highway 6 for the first time and isolating the provincial capital of Kompong Thom from Phnom Penh. Official sources said captured documents indicated enemy forces1 would try to get a new line of communications from Laos along the Mekong River because of the U.S. and South Vietnamese thrusts into ther bases just across the Vietnam border. THE SENATE ETHICS COMMITTEE cleared senators and their employes yesterday of bribe-taking or other misconduct in connection with introduction of bills to stay the deportation of ship-jumping Chinese seamen. On the basis of a closed-door investigation begun last September' after published charges of payoffs, the bipartisan panel said it found no evidence "that any senator or any employe of the Senate received or acepted a bribe, the promise of a bribe, or anything else of value inj consideration of the introduction or attempted introduction of any bill." However, the commitee reported to the Senate it had received ! viroi n h oi irm rn fi -t n ol:b nn of+ o1vn ne WASHINGTON IYI -- Presi- dent Nixon's prediction that his policies will slow inflation and return the slumping econ- omy to stable growth later this year buoyed some of the, nation's business leaders yes- terday. Some of the encouragement from Nixon's pep talk to business and financial leaders appeared translated to the stock market, rebounding for the second straight day after falling to an eight-year low. The key Dow Jones industri- al index advanced 20.95 points, an increase for the day of 3.15 per cent. "I am greatly encouraged by the discussion and comments of the President.a n d other mem- bers of the administration," said Chairman Robert 0. Anderson of Atlantic Richfield Co., one of 42 business leaders at Wednesday night's 2 2-hour dinner and talk session with Nixon at the White House. Want t Cut Strokes Off 'YourGlfGame? y f eS Try the New1v Maim St. Par-3t IR MAINJ 5t S A4K114 A¢0OOLPO e -It's the Best Golf Bargain Around- 0 Students Play for 50 cents, Adults Just Pay $1.00 0 ideal for the Ladies, Yet Still a Challenge for Men * No Waiting-Add Fun To Your Golf Game evdaence or apparent vioLations of Law oy some of the lawyers and U <" Accounts of those who attended lobbyists who sought the introduction of some of the bills." Associated Press generally agreed Nixon said he Peaceful commencement was sticking by his basic policies I of tight money, high interest and NUCLEAR POWERED Polaris submarine Daniel Boone and fedeghl mpnyightigt the the Philippine merchant ship President Quezon collided off Cape Several hundred University of Iowa graduates wore peace symbols federal spending cuts to fight the E.during their commencement yesterday. nation's worst inflation in 20 Henry, Va., at noton yesterday. years. Atlantic Fleet headquarters reported there were no injuries and "He said that he still believed initial examination revealed "only superficial damage to the sub- ' R BY PROXY' that the advice of his economists marine." was reliable - that we'd see a Damage to the merchant ship was not determined immediately. .-.. turn in the economy by the third In ~tsquarter of this year," said one THE UNITED STATES will attempt, probably next week, to U .S. corporation executive who de- obtain a precise description of Russia's expanded military role I ined use of his name. in the Israeli-Egyptian conflict, the State Department said yester- Dconet toude andst o nrwageprice day. pla s or Cambodia six per cent annual rate of in- Officials believe the Soviet role, as finally assessed by President lation and alarm in some quar- Nixon, will have a decisive effect on Nixon's decision whether or not ters o v e r rising unemployment, to sell jet fighter planes to Israel. the administration has continued Vietnam's Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky as "an Asian Ag- to insist its stringent policies, al- SIRIMAVO BANDARANAIKE was asked officially yesterday new," charged yesterday that Saigon's leaders are determined though painful, would soon begin to form a new government in Ceylon, one day after her leftist 'to keep the Americans mired in the swamp" of Cambodia. to slow price hikes and permit coalition swept to a landslide victory in the parliamentary The Arkansas Democrat also contended that the Nixon the gradual return to stable eco- coaltio swpt t a andlid vicoryin he prlimenarynomic growth. elections. administration "apparently intends to sustain an indefinite, "y Gov. Gen. William Gopallawa wrote to the 53-year-old widow, full-scale military involvement by proxy in Cambodia." door to formal wage and price who became the world's first woman prime minister when she headed The Senate agreed, meanwhile, to vote next Wednesday controls," said John Bogle, presi- Ceylon's government from 1960-65, after receiving the resignation on an amendment expected to provide the first real test of dent of Wellington Management of Conservative Prime Minister Ludley Senanayake. strength in the debate on U.S. involvement in Cambodia, now Co. in Philadelphia. . in its third week. Nixon also reportedly reassured those worried about his interven- CAMBODIA OPERATION The amendment by Sen. Robert tion in Cambodia that the action J. Dole (R-Kan.) would bar en- would shorten the war in Viet- forcement of the pending propos- nam, eventually reducing the na- al to cut off funds for "retain ing"'tbon's defense spending. Bodycount validity doubted U.S. troops i Cambodia until the Commnissrleasa llneric Nixon they believe the Cambodian prisoners in that country action was responsible for the re- I ______ + Use Daily Classifieds + r- "ago TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION As TaughtiBy MIAHARISHI 4AIESH YOGI SAIGON 0P)-If the figures can be believed, allied forces have killed a dozen communist soldiers in Cambodia for every allied soldiers lost. But the al- lied command's claim of nearly 10,000 Viet Cong dead in the operation is raising new doubts about the authenticity of such "body count" figures. Some American officers say up to half the total is credited to bombers, helicopter gunships and artillery. The number officially reported killed is supposed to based on an actual body count, but this is not always so. In many cases, both air and ground observers estimate the number killed after a bombing or artillery strike in thick jun- gles or rugged terrain that ground troops never venture in- to. This leaves room for error, duplication and in some cases exaggeration. From the air, even if a body is sighted, there is a good chance it is that of a peasant rather than a soldier. And newsmen accompanying South Vietnamese troops have reported only light contact on certain operations, but com- muniques covering these opera- tions told of up to 200 enemy killed. The announced total of enemy dead claimed for the Cambodian operations dating to March 20 would give the allies a kill ratio of almost 13 to 1. Even counting the claims made in a decade of fighting in Vietnam, the allies come out with only a little better than a 4 to 1 kill ratio, according to their own officials: 643,196 ene- my killed compared to 42.260 American and 107,579 South Vietnamese dead. The body count was used for several years in Vietnam as an index to progress in the war. By 1969 it became unofficially discredited. Now, to a certain degree, the body count is being resurrected in Cambodia operations. For example, a news sele-ase from the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division, operating in the Fish- hook region of Cambodia, says it has killed 1,900 enemy since American o p e r a t i o n s were launched May 1. " Then it adds: "Ground con- tact has been light thus far in the operation as the enemy has conintued to beat a hasl y ie- treat in the face of the Air Ca v' relentless advance." Although Fulbright indicatedj he will probably move to table andI thus kill the Dole amendment on Wednesday, even a vote on that move would indicate the relative strength of the two sides. Supporters of the fund cut-off proposal, known as the Cooper- Church amendment, believe they hold a majority. This is a factor: in the delaying tactics by pro- administration forces trying to hold off a vote on it until Presi- dent Nixon has a chance to make good his promise to have all U.S. troops out of Cambodia by June 30. Fulbright, however, noted that; since Nixon's M a y 8 statement that South Vietnamese forces: would be coming out about the time Americans did, officials have; indicated U.S. air and logistics support would be available. cent sharp drop in the stock mar- ket. Other administration officials followed up with a rash of state- ments yesterday supporting the President. "Economic controls are not in the cards at all," said Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz in a San Francisco talk. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew told a Republican meeting in Huntington, N. Y., that Nixon's decision to "clean out the Cam- bodian sanctuaries" will be the turning point towards peace in Southeast Asia, "I don't claim to be an expert on the stock market but if I had to make a decision today on the basis of the chances for peace, I would feel 100 per cent more as- sured than I would have 30 days ago." Agnew said. Robert P. Mayo, director of the Bureau of the Budget, said rising living costs reflected in the gov- ernment's Consumer Price Index would be the last to respond to Nixon's anti-inflation policies, but said there are signs the policies are working. EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE GROUP a A LA HOOP-DE-DOO I and IF E:ni ro*NC O i I i t lil