WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY Z1,1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1968 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TflREE CnPe Communists Promise Saigon I aBe fore SAIGON ) - The Communist Private high command, thwarted in ef- that up1 forts in its opening offensive to Cong-p seize Saigon, is reported to have action we called for leveling of South Viet- But m nam's capital in second wave they had attacks before the month is out. cant inci Rumors raced through Saigon of in thei an impending Viet Cong assault capital. in the early morning hours today Saigon as artillery barrages and air were alr strikes rumbled in outlying areas. developm Flares lighted the sky and explo- which du sions could be heard clearly in the with rock heart of the city. 47 center TAX BILL DEFEATED: lestruction ad of Month $25,000 BOND FORFEITURE: H. Rap Brown Arrested For Illegal Trip To California NEW YORK (P) - Black Power firebrand among national Negro The Cambridge, Md., case in- advocate H. Rap Brown, chafing leaders, appeared Saturday at an volved racial rioting there after since September under court im- Oakland, Calif., rally to raise Brown made a speech July 24. posed travel restrictions, was money for a Negro accused there Brown was charged by Mary- arrested yesterday for making a of killing a policeman. land officials with Inciting to weekend speaking trip to Cali- The government said he made a arson and riot. He was arrested fornia. similar appearance in Los Angeles on a federal fugitive warrant in The arrest was made on a New before returning to New York. Virginia and currently is fight- Orleans warrant charging that his August Arrest ing extradition to Maryland. weekend appearance in California A New' Orleans federal indict- Even as Judge Mitchell in New violated a court order restricting ment charges that Brown last Orleans was taking judicial note him to New York, New Orleans August carried a rifle with him of Brown's West Coast trip, so and Atlanta. on a flight from New York to New was federal Judge Robert R. Mer- The journey could cost him Orleans and back, while under hige, Jr., in Richmond, Va., $25,000 in forfeited bonds. federal indictment in the Mary- Bonded In Court land rioting. .nded sources said they heard saults across the country Sunday. to two battalions of Viet Intelligence advices reaching the erhaps 800 men-were in U.S. mission said Viet Cong of est of the city. Kien Hoa Province, in the Mekong nilitary authorities said Delta, had been told the second no word of any signifi- wave would run to the end of dents there or elsewhere February, ordered them to supply immediate area of the maximum reinforcements for a new battle for Saigon, and said police and allied troops the aim was to destroy the city. ready on full alert for Communist Units ents in the second wave, The Communists were estimated windled after its opening to have 10,000 to 15,000 men ket and mortar attacks on within a day's march of Saigon, rs and a few ground as- including units of the 7th North Vietnamese Division and the 5th and 9th Viet Cong divisions. Far more allied troops are close at APearson Asks For Vote of Confidence OTTAWA (A') - Prime Minister tion,1 ster B. Pearson returned from word." 3,Caribbean holiday yesterday, The apparently prepared to ask the Pearso House of Commons for a vote of He is' confidence to save the five-year- will re old Liberal minority government Both that tottered while he was away. parties Government:Crisis the ta Without any mention of the de- Liberal feat 'of a Liberal sponsored bill The' that brought on the government Democ crisis, Parliament met and ad- Pearso journed in two minutes, giving call fo Pearson a chance to regroup his forces. The prime minister met with his Cabinet and Liberal members of Parliament who were called ur- gently back to Ottawa. Pearson's problems began Mon- day night after a clause by clause ' study of the income tax bill WAS which the government began im- Defens plenting Jan. 1 despite its lack of yesterd final legislative approval. intellig Approved in Principle classifi It had been approved in prin- ture" ciple earlier and on a second tneN reading as well. tacksc Forty-seven of them had been August absent Monday night when a gov- ernment income tax surcharge bill McN was voted down 84-82 by the testim( House. eign R The bill's defeat was considered gating an expression of nonconfidence in of Ton the government=-a situation that a turn requires it to resign or win, an war. immediate pledge of faith in Com- McN mons. the in Early Return Thet Pearson, who rose, at dawn for the U: a flight back from Jamaica, re- vancev portedly faced opposition to call- and Au ing a confidence vote from his sources Cabinet's younger members. Informants said they were will- MIA ing to risk a general election and leaders reasoned that any other course propose would make it appear the Liberals ringr were clinging to power. month Asked to comment on the situa- strike. Pearson replied: "Not a issue was complicated by n's reduced personal power. 70 and has announced he tire this spring. Canada's major opposition , who teamed up to defeat ix measure, called on the Js to resign. Conservatives and the New rats acknowledged t h a t n was within his rights to r a vote of confidence. hand. Far to the north, the fighting for Hue entered its 22nd day.' Though under heavy allied pres- sure, Communist troops still held out in rock piles that once were fwalls and buildings of the Citadel. Inch Ahead U.S. Marines and South Viet- namese troops inched ahead yes- terday toward Red pockets on the south side of the big compound, which flanks the Perfume River.' Though they had artillery sup- port, heavy clouds precluded the use of fighter bombers. Recent predictions of allied officers that the city would be cleaned up "in another day or two" were no longer being heard. Other Red forces controlled sections both east and west of the Citadel. world News Roundup -Associated Press FORCED FROM THE CLASSROOM by the current Florida teachers' strike, four children showed up to picket a rally of some 2,000 Pinellas County teachers held yesterday in St. Petersburg. Florida Starts Hiring Uncertified Teachers TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (,) -The anything in history except the State Cabinet authorized hiring of 1860 secession from the Union uncertified substitute teachers yes- and the bank closings of the 1926- terday in an emergency effort to reopen Florida schools closed by 30 depression. a massive walkout by teachers. Democratic Secretary of State And as the l artial shutdown Tom Adams blasted Kirk for re- threatened heav damage to the maining in California while the tate'n em several school crisis developed and called him a stae's vconom sneveralnt cool "Nero fiddling while the Florida boards went into county courts euainhueis brigdw. seeking injunctions to force the education house burning down." teachers back into classrooms. Officials of the Classroom U-M CONCERT DANCE T e a c h e r s Association (CTA) ORGANIZATION claimed that the walkout was 18th ANNUAL gaining momentum and that ris- ing pressure on teachers indicatedtw n ht they were winning their fight for more tax dollars for education. Schools were closed in 22 of the 67 counties and partially in others. In all, more than 25,000 of the state's some 60,000 teachers stayed off the job and more than 500,000 of Florida's 1.3 million public school pupils were shut out of their classrooms. In California, Republican Gov. Claude Kirk said, "I wouldn't call the situation excellent, but it R doesn't appear to be bad. It ap- pears that all the small counties are operating. Our problem is in the big 10 counties."T the ig 0 contis."FRI.,.FEB. 23, 8:00 P.M. Warnings that a prolonged SAT., FEB. 24, 2:30 MAT. school closing would bring disas- 8:00 P.M. trous economic consequences on DANCE STUDIO-BARBOUR the state came from Florida's top GYMNASIUM financial officers. $1.50 eves., $1.00 mt Comptroller Fred Dickinson said On Sale NOW 1 Centicor it would do more to "affect the and Barbour Gymre money image of Florida" than Brown, 24, head of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Commit- tee, currently is in the toils of federal courts in New Orleans and Richmond, Va. Brown was arrested here at the request of the New Orleans fed- eral court. Because of the West Coast trip, the government wants Brown jailed on a pending federal gun charge there, and his $15,000! bail forfeited.' At the same time, the U.S. at- torney's office in Richmond, Va., wants to put Brown behind bars there, and to foreclose on a $10,- 000 bond. That case involves a riot last summer in Cambridge, Md. The lanky, mustached Brown, a At the time of his arrest, Brown said in reference to Presi- dent Johnson, "If he is worried about my rifle, wait until I get' my atom bomb." Federal Judge Lansing Mitchell placed Brown under $15,000 fed- eral bond in New Orleans last September. Restrict Movements The judge ordered that Brown be restricted in his movements to New Orleans, New York or SNCC headquarters in Atlanta, unless he obtained specific permission to travel elsewhere. On Monday, Mitchell ordered Brown's bail revoked and said his West Coast trip "flagrantly vio- lated conditions for bail." Merhige had placed Brown un- der $10,000 bond in Richmond, and restricted his travels outside that area to New York, except for such trips as might be necessary in connection with the various charges against him. The government charged that Brown had violated this order, and Merhige ordered Brown to re- turn to Richmond for a hearing in the matter. Last Jan. 10, Brown took refuge for nearly six hours inside the Cuban mission to the United Na- tions after an altercation outside with a New York City policeman. He later received a summons, charging him with harassment of the officer. By The Associated Press SHINGTON - Secretary of se Robert S. McNamara said day the United States has Bence reports of a "highly ied and unimpeachable na- establishing without ques- orth Vietnamese naval at- on two U.S. destroyers in 1964. amara's statement came in ony before the Senate For- elations Committee investi- circumstances of the Gulf nkin incident that -marked ring point in the Vietnam samara did not specify what telligence information was. defense chief also disclosed nited States received ad- word of the attacks Aug. 2 ug. 4, 1964 from intelligence s. *. * * MI BEACH, Fla.--AFL-CIO rejected a government al yesterday aimed at spur- negotiations in a seven old nationwide copper Representatives of 26 striking unions, after meeting with AFL- CIO President George Meany, turned down a government sug- gestion that the unions drop their demands for company wide bar- gaining. NEW DELHI, India-Prime Min- ister Indira Gandhi's political woes mounted yesterday as the opposition presented a no confi- dence motion over the Rann of Kutch dispute and the govern- ment resorted to president's rule in the troubled state of West Bengal. Acting on advice from Mrs. Gandhi, President Zakir Hussain dissolved West Bengal's 11 week coalition ministry headed by Dr. P. C. Ghosh and shifted the state's administration from Cal- cutta to New Delhi. TONIGHT at A HOOT ! Bring your guitars, banjo, or just come and sing-a-long FRIDAY- 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. I * , Thompson's Pizza E THIS COUPON GOOD FOR' I1 -off 50c off-* ON A MEDIUM OR LARGE ONE ITEM (OR MORE) PIZZA .COUPON Is Good Only Monday-Thursday 1 Feb. 19-22 1 1 iwU wo*w wI w w w w ww"w w w w www rs a I CUSTER'S LAST BAND A Fantastic JUG Band from Detroit! 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