T~JESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREI 4U.s. Plane ash Dumps Lunar Craft SIH ANOUK ANGERED: Flawless In State Department Discloses Test Flight Cambodian Border Crossing H - ob f lODCi rn1s I WASHINGTON (A2) - An Air Forge B52 bomber crashed off Greenland Sunday plunging per- haps four hydrogen bombs through seven feet of ice and into freez- ing" northern waters, government sources said yesterday. The Pentagon, announcing bare bone details of the accident, said the devices were unarmed "so there is no danger of a nuclear explosion at the crash site." The Defense Department dis- closure of the crash came 18 hours after the B52 smacked in nemrec landn ap- proch r No epanation o th dela hy as bfulgiven.ons confiberedvreport sith $10milionbeoberwson fie Of isen cndewmoe aboard pae rahbut etaetranduoe he enagondi not sur ay thowe omny nuer weaposn.er aoarnrthat they wrekg los Bustn source saidr the Br plum- met thr ioug the icasf the NorthSry Bayo ans the mass o wreces di appne armkin it" B5i2g hf 1ry fu thereaos coucldereoveri ed. egtn Itng ine rt theIeheldar torther fre.Afer o the wrecae fell bneth thae surace sthe ice fore ovraain.tcud ea- Appentlya the wreckpageo i rtingy on t the floro Not ta Bayrat eaet of about 800 feet. Ate then im of the crs h gre bucet as e warmednup" toabout, minus 18.icl cued BD2snftencarr forur mthero- nuar Tbombs In th 2 meatone- rag whleorit eine thefa nrtern raes fthe pAeriand wt otnentein dcaes ware wit the Sovie nioshouldrrp. suedtast aou four bob were aboarted losth plne bu Twcient meatis the expcosivne lions to no JTN. 1,16,w h Te accwiden was thet 10t dasine plaes eiped withe ee atmec laweapon ait quicklymcaused a Demawrk' feoregn minister aTbornagn ad msageys taydn ming rem 5 i ed Uniedates that panes oadedin witclearsevices. arme not0 ail-s any D as trio ryh.w str t TleB2Craer Sdain ot stelera of the ul earse ares, Spna. 17,iia 1r966r, whc ws ped damryrgen bob The Nlavy' fnalyatrecored the- ly was listed as missing but was located later, suffering from frostbitten hands and feet and a broken shoulder. He is Capt. Curtis R. Criss Jr., 43, of North Wayne, Maine. He was isted as being in fair condi- tion. The survivors all were taken to the Thule Base hospital but ex- cept for Criss the Pentagon gave no report on their condition. C ornputer Dlirected Ship T4' Transport Astronauts To Moon1 CAPE KENNEDY. Fla. () - Lunar Module I, forerunner of the spaceship expected to ferry U.S. astronauts to and from the moon's surface next year, rocket- a punshingt tet ofis l anding and takeoff engines. Guided by a computer directed robot nicknamed the "mechani- cal boy," the 16-ton unmanned mooncraft thundered away from Cape Kennedy at 5:48 p.m' aboard the famed 181-foot tall Saturn I rocket which was Apollo I fire that kiled three astronauts. The powerful Saturn I, weigh- ing more than 650 tons on liftoff, performed flawlessly as it ended a 16-month stint on the launch pad. It initially hurled the bug- like Lunar Module, still attached ea ori10t 138 mile hih - Eertig isgee, said flightr drectore Eugee F.pKratnz "asComete on lgtcnrles letslay t coo,"7he told persnsr manning thiedworldwided tackin bneo. trnIlstsae Durng itsafist obt, ver pAus- trasiae Lunar Module suless0- full parastoed on the tr last stagveor busyheies Tegine tetgt eterminellyf hoit is desind Lproel fordte t an frm. they moon' suae.un- troller reortws ped rspton- Wlve the 31,700m pound Lrunar Mro ulel reaned ated to othel burnedrot SepaturI la sae th cominkedt voehicle bemeeth seo ndk e aviest e ctn ev rn lce Tin spae Tewighttotale 7, 580pndse gtpe onlyt byrthect lgst laNovber bysthedUnedo Stat es' ' first n huprrocket.' ~apm.basMonaybut he nounat- I down clockgws stpe t e WASHINGTON (.P)--The United, "We regret the intrusion," Mc- States acknowledged yesterday Closkey said. "It was unintended that a U.S.-Vietnamese patrol had and undertaken without any hos- crossed Cambodia's border "dur- tile intent." ing the heat of battle" with Viet It was the first officially ac- Cong guerrillas. knowledged case in which Amern- The State Deptment sid it can forces invoked the right of information indicates that the clash occurred In a village on the South Vietnam side of the border between Prey Veng pro- vince In Cambodia -and Kieng Phong province in South Viet- nam. sent formal regrets for any Cam- self defense enunciated a week . Inside the Bend bodian casualties that may have ago by Asst. Secretary of State McCloskey described the village resulted from what it called m' William P. Bundy. as being "inside the bend Of the unintended intrusion 75 yards in- K Base for Attack border, two-thirds surrounded by side Cambodian territory last Bundy told newsmen that the Cambodian territory." Thursday. United States would continue to "Our reports Indicate the com- Prince N o r o d o m Sihanouk, exercise this right if Communist bined Vietnamese and U.S. patrol Cambodia's chief of state, has de- Viet Cong and North Vietnamese which came under heavy fire did manded that the International forces used Cambodia as a base icross over about 75 yards into Control Commission investigate for attacking American forces in Cambodian territory during the the violation of his border and Vietnam and as a sanctuary for firefight," he said. the killing of three Cambodians retreat. "We have expressed regrets to during the fight. Bundy's statement followed a the Cambodiani government about Robert J. McCloskey, State protest by the Sovet Union on any Cambodian casualties that Department press officer, said Jan. 12 that it "will not remain may have occurred during the the incidents occurred while on indifferent" to U.S. violations of engagement," McCloskey said. American - South Vietnamese pa- Cambodia's frontiers. . Since diplomatic relations be- trol was defending itself from McCloskey said yesterday that tween the United States and Viet Cong gunfire coming from complete reports have not yet been Cambodia were broken off in both sides of the Vietnam-Cam- received on last Thursday's bor- April 1965 as a result of another bodian border. der fight, but he said preliminary border Incident, McCloskey said i e~By droincidnc the ipomaoticr '4inve er nt Southeast Asia." nucler arme US. 15 bomer near Greenland. Th aes, who are narn a snatinee ction v Greenland. Some of the signs read "Vote for Neutrality and disarmament" and "Now there are nuclear weapons in Danish territory." ASKS $3 BILLION SLASH: * To Lure Passage of WASHINGTON (IP)-The John- son Administration outlined to Congress Monday a $3 billion series of budget cuts ranging from space to highways in a new attempt to win quick passage of its 10 per cent surcharge on income taxes. Secretary of the Tr'easury Henry H. Fowler said some of the cuts slated for the next fiscal year in, existing federal programs willt b need for higher taxes. He called enactment of the 10 per cent surcharge on individual and corporate income taxes the "single most important and indis- pensible step" toward stemming inflation, defending the dollar abroad and maintaining stable economic growth. No Control Administration officials blame a ;>roposed $10.4 billion increase in spending for the next fiscal year on defense and expenses over which they have no control. Fowler was joined for the third time since last August before the House Ways and Means Commit- tee by Charles L. Schultze, budgbt director, and Federal . Reserve first half of 1938 but he foresaw a tapering of f by the end of the year with higher taxes. Under the administration's plan individual taxes would be raised effective April 1 and corporate taxes retroactive to Jan. 1. Even with the cuts proposed Monday, the deficit in the new fiscal year 'is figured at $8 billion -ven withabhigh$r0taxes-com- year. Schultze outlined a series of wud treduce existing programs b Surcharge almost $3 billion below this year's apropriations. He referred to the proposed $185 billion spending pro- gram for fiscal 1969 as responsible and tightly controlled. One of the most politically sen- sitive areas is the federal aid high- way program which Schultze said would be cut slightly below the current level which is the highest in history at a contract pace of He said the pace of federal aid highway contract would have risen 168 without this holddowandar giant happens to be Ford Motor Company, it can be a distinct advantage. See your placement director and make an appoint- ment to see the man from Ford when he visits your camtpus. We could grow bigger together. DATES OPF VISITATION. FEB. 1, 2 & 8 I'd like a big job please. -Associated Press Q UAKE VICTIMS NEED FOOD Villagers in Salaparuta, Sicily chased a food truck in vain fol- lowing last week's disastrous earthquakes in that region. The truck had already been emptied of food. Two-hundred and one bodies have been found so far and at least 200 more dead are expected. - LAST WEEKS SERIES SUBSCRIPTIONS presents, in cO-Operation with the Lbreative Arts F-estival WORLD-R ENOWNED VIOL IN IST--IN RECITAL hor cfarman William McCfes ney artieJr MONDAY, JAN. 29, 8:30 Four government witnesses, in- cluding Council of Economic Ad- i ilA dtru sisers chairman Gardner Ackley, talked of higher prices,. high in- terest rates and even a return of PROGRAM; Devil's Trill Sonata (Tartini); Chaconne for Solo. Violin the old boom and bust cycles of (3. 5. Bach) ; Sonata in F major ("Spring''); Three Caprices for Solo expansion sand recession if taxes Violin (Paganini) ; Nigun (improvisation by Ernest Bloch) ; and Intro- arent rased.duction and Tarantella (Sarasate) . Both Ackle and Fowler said the T ICK ETS: $6.0O-$5.50-$5.00-$4.00-3.00-2.O0 wage price- spiral which began in at 1966 will continue this year. With higher taxes, Ackley said the rate U iest u ia o it B ro of increase can be slowed from the Unvriy M sc lS cey, B ro Tower 4per cent of recent months to- IHours: Mon. through Fri., 9 to 4:30; Sat., 9 to 12 (Telephone 665-3717) ward 3 per cent by the end calen- 'dar 1968. (Also at Hill Auditorium Box Office 1 hours preceding performance) Fowlersaid 3.5 pr cen pric increase is nearly.assured forith WITH SPECIAL GUEST STARS