Week-Long AID Campaign to Open Monday for Enlistment in Vietnam Civilian Posts A week-long campaign to enlist 2,000 he said. men and women for civilian posts in Vietnam will be conducted here beginning on Monday. The U. S. Agency for Interna- tional Development (AID), a unit of the Department of State, an- nounced that a team will arrive from Washington to interview civil- ian specialists needed "to help win the 'other war' in Vietnam — the war against hunger, illiteracy, and disease. Salaries will range from 55,000 to $19,000 a year, depending on the position and qualifications for the job. Up to a 25 per cent hardship bonus will be added to the basic salary, along with housing allowance, medical care and other benefits. William A. Platt, Vietnam public affairs chief, said that recruitment is being stepped up because the shortage of civilian skills in Viet- nam has reached critical propor- tions and is hampering the civil action program in that country. "We face massive difficulties ahead," he warned, "unless our civilian forces in Vietnam are doubled by the end of this year." Civilian specialists attached to the AID program now number nearly Temporary headquarters are in the Veterans Memorial Building, 151 W. Jefferson, where applicants may call for an appointment at 226-6140. Persons living out of town may call collect. Platt said that several top U. S. civilian advisers will be flown in from Vietnam to meet with com- munity groups and make personal appearances in behalf of the re- cruitment drive. In addition, they will help seek out candidates here with qualifications in the following job categories: Area development officers, economists, registered nurses, civil engineers, personnel offi- cers, public administration ad- visors, development loan offi- cers, vocational education ad- visors, analysts / programmers, provincial agriculture advisers, auditors, public safety advisers, and secretaries. Candidates must be U. S. citi- zens at least five years, it was pointed out. They must be willing to be separated from their fami- lies for at least 18 months, and may be assigned to remote and possibly hazardous areas of Viet- nam. Referring to the shortage of civilian skills in Vietnam, Platt described the civil aid program in that country as a "shirt-sleeves war as vital as the milit a r y action." He added: "The effort to bring a better life to the unhappy people of Vietnam must go on long after hostilities have ended. However, our immedi- ate goal is to help the Vietnamese resist aggression and to build the peace. This means working side by side with the people, helping them to build schools, hospitals, roads, and housing; helping them to become better farmers, nurses, teachers." He said that the battle to over- come the problems that beset the Vietnamese is made more diffi- cult by the swelling number of refugees—mostly women and chil- dren—who have been forced to flee from their homes. "The unfortunate victims of the war," he asserted, "need to be re- housed, resettled, clothed, fed. Most of them require medical at- tention. We need the skilled hands and the skilled minds to help do the job." He said that the AID program is helping to remove the root causes of the war such as the Dayan Victory Earns Him Promotion in Movie LONDON (JTA)—An American with Richard Burton, Albert Fin- film producer said here that Israel ney and Sean Connery under con- Defense Minister Moshe Dayan's sideration for the role of Wingate. role in a film biography of General Who will play the role of Dayan Orde Wingate, originally a small was not indicated. one, had been expanded to that of co-star. Dayan, who served under Gen. RIDE THE Wingate in Palestine between 1936 and 1939, when Wingate clan- destinely trained the pre-state Jew- ish defense forces, and the Middle East itself both will have a much larger role than was planned be- fore the June victory. Producer Jack Levine said "we have rewrit- Your Best Buy Is At ten the script to enlarge Dayan's part" and that "the area is so typical we have lengthened the part of the film dealing with Win- 10 Mile at Greenfield gate in Palestine." Filming will begin early in 1968, FORD For 1967 Northland Ford SALE! 1 /3 ON ALL SUMMER SUITS & WALKING SHORTS ALTERATIONS AT COST need to educate Vietnam's chil- dren, lack of medical care, far- mer discontent over low rice prices, high land rent, exorbi- tant loan interest, inflation, rival- ry among religious, political, and labor groups, and distrust of the central government. "These are some of the elements of the 'other war' that the Viet Cong exploit in competing for the support of the rural people," Platt pointed out. "They are the ele- ments that will likely determine whether our side can win the peace." The counties to be included in the area recruitment drive are Wayne, Macomb, Oakland, Wash- tenaw, Genesee, Livingston and Ingham. Nearly 2,000 persons from the Detroit area applied for Vietnam civilian posts when AID conducted a similar campaign here a year ago. Rothschild Hopes to Bring Peace to Mid East by Making Deserts Bloom These young students at the Phil Tho Polytechnic School in Sai- gon learn how to operate a modern table saw. The U. S. Agency for International Development (AID) is seeking vocational education advisers to help the Vietnamese train additional youths for woodwork and similar occupations. LONDON—Edmund de Roth- schild, "head of a bank that has been making dreams come true for a century and a half," now seeks to bring peace to the Mid- dle East and "comfort to the refugees by building three huge atomic desalting plants that would change the deserts into land capable of providing a rea- sonable living," writes Patrick Sergeant in the London Daily Mail. 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These children from Boa Binh are among the lucky ones who escaped with their parents from Com- munist aggression, leaving behind their meager possessions. The U.S. Agency for International Develop- 1,500,000 refugees. Registered nurses are ment (AID) is seeking civilian specialists to help resettle also in demand to help care for the civilian sick and wounded. e Lufthansa 1242 Washington Blvd. Detroit, Michigan 48226 — WOodward 3-6250