PAGE TAVO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY 26, H PAGE TWO THE MICtIIf~AN DAiLY FRIDAY. MAY Z6, 1 I I FOUR WORLD TROUBLE SPOTS: Britain Struggles To Maintain Remnants Of Past empire Without Military Conflict Death Tolls AMA Survey in Chicago Shows li New High Wide Variation of Drug Prices TI XJ dE3t 4 LONDON (/P--Britain, the leon- tatingly would have used troops call off his harassment of Gi- ine power that dominated the or gunboats or planes as needed braltar. world at the turn of the century, to deal with trouble. And London has discreetly is struggling today against chal- Now local police are under or- handed the problem of the Rho- lenges in four remnants of an all ders to deal gingerly with rioting desian rebellion to the United Na- but vanished empire. demonstrators who brought Hong tions, hoping it may be able to It is trying to preserve, or re- Kong to the point of standstill. clear a way toward a settlement. assert, real authority in the trou- In South Arabia, Wilson's men The British, having deliberate- ble spots of Hong Kong, South seem to be going out of their way ly shed their imperial power and Arabia, Gibraltar and Rhodesia. to come to terms with radical na- many of their possessions, no In the past week straw effigies tionalists, backed by Egyptian longer feel strong enough to as- of Prime Minister Harold Wilson President Gamal Abdel Nasser, sert their old authority by using were burned before Britain's dip- who have used force in their bid force. lomatic mission at Peking in an forkpower. Wilson's socialist government, outburst of Chinese anti-foreign The British still are counting on on grounds of principle, has re- passions focused on Hong Kong. diplomats to persuade Generalissi- nounced any intention to under- Once imperial Britain unhesi- mo Francisco Franco of Spain to take imperialist ventures on the ............... ....,~. r...r :~.....R..,...,......"w.......,...... .... . .........r'r..!~",.n .n.«v......... "....."."::i4}""""Yf.".v 'X'DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN, "::rri.. . . . ...... ... . . .r '::' ':: :""'"::fY "r0^ :" ",:On V... .u «r55 E W#Er . . . V.. * * s'*}^*.n r " model of the 1956 Suez invasion: And Wilson's government, aft- er its confrontation with President Sukarno"s Indonesia over Malay- sia-Singapore, ruled out all other military expeditions that would, leave Britain to fight faraway wars on her own. Transcending both these factors is the grim fact that Britain sim- ply cannot afford costly military budgets. Hong Kong gets much of its water and food from the main- land. If Peking cut them off the British would face an uprising by the four million people of Hong Kong. Past British governments sought guarantees of U.S. aid in case >f aggression against Hong Kong. They never got any. Nor would they care for one now, believing this would provoke the already suspicious Chinese into action. 111 ! IU iL~ii IICHICAGO (A) - Persons who shop for bargains can really hit SAIGON (P)-A record 337 U.S. the jackpot in prescription drugs, soldiers were killed last week in an American Medical Association heavy fighting in Vietnam, push- survey indicated yesterday. ing the total for the war to 10,- An AMA task force made the 253-almost one-third the number rounds of 85 Chicago drug stores, of battle deaths in the Korean selected at random, to fill 353 War. prescriptions for seven commonly The U.S. Command also re- prescribed drugs. ported yesterday that 2,282 Amer.. They said they found that some icans were wounded last week and stores charged up to 12 times as 31 were missing, an overall cas- much as others for the same ualty record for seven days in, amount of an identical drug. It said doctors and medical so- ed only a few drugs and only a cieties in other parts of the na- small percentage of the city's 2000 tion "may want to do some com- drug stores. He said such "hid- parative shopping similar to that den" costs as delivery service, which the AMA did and inform credit services and store location their communities of the results." should be evaluated in any sur- Willard B. Simmons, executive vey. secretary of the National Asso- Simmons said the findings "cer- ciation of Retail Druggists, took tainly could not be considered rep- issue with the AMA survey find- resentative of the more than 52,- ings. 000 drug stores located throughout Simmons said the survey cover- the nation." US. Unveils Revolutionary Space Craft at Paris ShowV '9 Vietnam. The severe fighting exacted a heavy toll on the enemy. The U.S. Command said 2,464 North Viet- namese and Viet Cong were killed during the same period. This was below the record enemy losses of 2,774 killed in the week end- ing March 25. The number of wounded Amer- icans boosted the total to 61,425 by unofficial count. The number of Americanskilled in the Ko- r~an War wYC4.c 9Ra99 Brand Names They said some stores charged more for a generic or no-brand prescription drug than others did for the same drug bearing a brand name. The AMA News, which announc- ed the results of the survey, said the findings "challenge the con- tention that generic prescribing automatically assures the patient of obtaining drugs at the lowest possible price." The Daily Official Bulletin is an oficliai pubilcatior, of the Univer- sity of Micnigan for which he Michigan narly assumes no editor- al responsibllity. Notices should be .;sent in TVPEWKIITThN form to Woitm 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 8 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Satarday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. ptudent organization notices are not acepted for puidicatjfl. For more in;oruiation cal 264-8970. FRIDAtY, MAY 26 Day Calendar Bureal of Industrial Relations Scm- inar-"Effective College Recruiting and Interviewing": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"What Managers Should Know About Behavioral Science": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. Michigan Nurses Association-"Keep- lug in Step with Change": Rackham, Bldg., Registration, 9 a.m. Lecture-Dr. Francois Jacob, renown- ed French biologist and 1965 Nobel n. Pize winner to speak on "On the Regulation of DNA Synthesis and Cel- lular Division in the Bacterial Cell" (Part II): 5330 Medical Science Bldg., 4 p.m. Zoology Seminar-Dr. David Lloyd, Department of Microbiology, University mCollege 'of South Wales, Cardiff and SJohnson Research Foundation, Univ. of Pe nsylvania, "Some Aspects of Mito- chondria from Algae and Protozoa": 1139 Natural Science Bldg., 1 p.m. Cinema Guild - "Tillie's Punctured Romance": Architecture Aud., 7 and 905 p.m. General Notices Computing Center Course: The Com- puting Center announces a short course "The Use of the IBM 360/67 MTS Sys- tem, inctiding Fortran IV." Fri., May 26, 1-5 p.m., Room 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Regstration not necessary. Inquiries may be addressed to Prof. Bernard A. Galler. Seminar: On Fri:, May- 26, Dr Da- vid Lloyd, from the Department of Mi- crobiology at the University College of South Wales, Cardiff, will present a seminar on "Some Aspects of Mito- chondria from Algae and Protozoa," at 4 p.m. in 1139 Natural Science (Botany Seminar Room). This seminar is spon- ORGAN IZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. ' Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance with instruction open to everyone, Fri., May 26, 8-11 p.m., Barbour Gym. ANN ARBOR'S 1 st taste of theatre Avant-Gard for many a moon OEDIPUS REX June 13-16 Canterbury House sored by the Department of Zoology. Doctoral Examination for Lee James White. Electrical Engineering; thesis: "A Parametric Study of Matchings and Coverings In Weighted Graphs,' Fri., May 26, Room 2201 East Engineering, at 2 p.m. Chairman, E. W. Lawler, Placement ANNOUNCEMENT: Merrill-Palmer Institute, Detroit, Mich.-Summer '67 sessions for Gradu- ate and Undergraduate study. Sessions on Human Development and Family & Society. Quarter credits, several dates. Room and board available. POSITION OPENINGS: Parker Pen Co., Janesville, Wis. - Systems Analyst, trng. orexper., quan- titative bus, anal, operations anal,, IE, or mktg. Two positions for process engineers, ME degree with 0-5 yrs. ex- per., aptitude for small precision me- dhanical equip. Quality Control engr., engrg. degree, 0-2 yrs. exper. Industrial Engr.. IE with 0-5 yrs. exper. Computer programmer, min. 1 yr. programming IBM 1401 using autocoder. S/360 edu- cation and some exper, with 8/360 RPG desirable. Bronx Veterans Administration Hos- pital, Bronx, N.Y.-Manual arts thera- pist, industrial arts graduate, special- ity in woodworking, teacher' in Indust. arts, or Indust. education degrees. GS- 5 -7, 6-mos.-1 yr. exper. required for higher levels. George S. Armstrong & Co., Inc., N.Y.C. -Two young women for statistical aids in small consulting industrial engineer- ing firm. Graduates skilled in acctg., 'or mkt. res., adept at preparing stat. compilations. Local Firm--Scientific Systems An- alyst for EDP systems in Clinical In- vestigation. Supervise programmers and specialized clerks in developing sys- tems, acts as monitor and modifier of systems in operation. Wadsworth Publishing Co., Inc., Belmont, Calif.-Sales Representatives, responsible for territory sales and man- uscript acquisitions. Degree at BA level with sales aptitude, intelligence and ap- preciation of books and education. Lit- erature concerning sales reps, positions and applications available at Bureau. Professional Examination Service, American Public Health Association, N.Y.C-Director, Licensing and Cer- 'tification program. PhD in psychology. 3 yrs. exper. in administrative capacity in setting related to work, i.e., state licensing authority or speciality board. Director, Research and Statistics Dept.. PhD in education or psychology, min. 18 sem. hours stat. 5 yrs. exper. in res. & res. administration Director, An- nual Service Plan Program, PhD (or MA with 2 additional yrs. exper.) in psych., educ., or public admin. Three yrs. exper. in administrative capacity, in state merit system or personnel de- partment. For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB. Part-Time Employment Experienced Keypunch Operator - Needed immediately for two week as- signment. 40 hours per wek-day or evening shift available. Qualifled applicants please contact: Part-Time Employment Office, 2200 SAB, Phone 764-7283. THE INTERNATIONAL DINNER-FILM SERIES PRESENTS T HE INTERNATIONAL DINNER-FILM SERIES PRESENTS The Venice Film Festival Grand Prize Winner "UGETSU" "Billed as a successor to Rashomon but artistically superior" following a JAPANESE DINNER Some influential Britons argue At the current rate, the totalr that Wilson's stand on Vietnam U.S. killed, wounded and missing has caused the Chinese outburst w..ill 1,0 e end of I over Hong Kong. Wilson is under the year. ceaseless pressures to dissociaten Britain from the Americans over DMZ Casualties1 Vietnam. The largest number of the week's9 In South Arabia the British aim casualties came in the bloody to transfer power to an all-party fighting in and near the demili- caretaker government by next tarized zone cutting across the January and to pull out militarily center of Vietnam. by Dec. 31, 1968. But U.S. forces also were hitn To achieve this they have made hard in the central highlands,x offers to exiled nationalists even where the Americans fear a big at the risk of offending King Communist drive may be begin-1 Faisal of Saudi Arabia. ning. But they still await a response. The U.S. Command reportedI Butthe sillawat repone.that the last Marines from a 10 - At Gilbraltar British airliners , have been landing without in- 000-man American and South Vi- fringing Franco's newly defined etnamese force that swept into "prohibited zone" which was cre- the demilitarized zone last Thurs-c ated as part of Spain's campaign day had pulled out, but this ap- to force a showdown over claims peared to be-premature.t to the Rock. Walt Leaves Vietnam A real confrontation may come Lt. Gen. Lewis W. Walt, com- as soon as weather forces one mander of U.S. Marines in South, British airliner over the newly Vietnam, said yesterday the Leath- banned zone. erneck invasion of the demilitar- As for Rhodesia, Wilson has ized zone snatched away from the failed, despite concessions, to come Communist North Vietnamese "a to terms with the rebellious white- perfect sanctuary." settler regime of Prime Minister Gen. Walt will leave Vietnam Ian Smith. June 1 for a post in Washington In doing so Wilson risked, and as director of personnel for the! in some cases lost, the friendship Marine Corps. In his two years of African and Asian countries here as the top Marine command- that wanted Britain to use mili- er, the square-jawed, 54-year-uldI tary action against Smith's re- officer saw his forces grow from gime. 13,000 to 75,000 men. CINEMIVA I presents JACK MARILYN TONY LEMMON MONROE CURTIS SOME LIKE IT HOT'' (1959) "Outrageously funny! Vigorous, top-flight perform- ances. . . Miss Monroe contributes more assets than the obvious ones to this mad camp romp. -NY TimesI "Far and away Wilder's funniest movie"-Hubert Cohen "Objectionable in part for all"-Legion of Decency Friday and Saturday-7 and 9:15 P.M. AUDITORIUM A 50 ANGELL HALL C - - I Several witnesses who testified recently at a Washington hearing of a Senate Small Business Sub- committee contended the govern- ment could save millions of dol- lars by purchasing drugs by their generic or chemical names rather than by brand names. Aspirin Unprotected Aspirin, for example, is a gen- eric drug unprotected by trade- mark registration and produced by many pharmaceutical firms. The AMA News, a weekly pub- lished under auspices of the AMA Board of Trustees, said it did not know whether the Chicago price, situation exists in other cities. "The AMA staff members who conducted the survey, however, be- lieve the results represent a mean- ingful indication of pricing prac- PARIS (P)-The United States' unveiled yesterday what officials termed a revolutionary air and space research craft at a preview, of the 27th Paris International Air and Space Show. The first manned jet "lifting body"-a, wingless tadpole-shaped vehicle-is designed to fly and maneuver at high altitudes, and craft of its type may one day car- ry spacemen back to earth, land- ing in much the same fashion as a conventional plane. This SV5J craft, and the Fill, a supersonic swing-wing fighter- bomber which is being put into production for the Air Force, are two of the outstanding entries in the air show, which has attracted exhibits from 16 nations in the biggest Paris air salon on record. Unveiling The SV5J "lifting body" was unveiled by Stanley Cleveland, economic affairs minister at the American embassy. The ceremony took place in drenching rain, which turned a portion of the tices and cost structures that Le Bourget Airport show area into may exist elsewhere," the News a sea of mud. said. The SV5J, a one-man craft, was Phone 431-0130 ESiraihCARPENTER RQAO NOW SHOWING OPEN 7:00 P.M. PRESL..EY Shown at 8:05 & 11:45 -- ALSO.« parked a few yards away from a replica of the Spirit of St. Louis, which Charles A. Lindbergh flew from New York to Paris 40 years ago this week. The SV5J is the smaller. Cleveland, pointing out that astronauts today must return to earth in capsules hung on giant parachutes, said the new "lifting body" vehicles may one day allow the astronauts to return from space trips with a "conventional airplane-type landing at the air- port of his choosing." Maiden Flight The SV5J, a jet-powered re- search vehicle, is to make its maiden flight this summer from Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. The wingless craft, with three tail surfaces, has a curving, teardrop- shaped body. The SV5J on disipay is designed to take off and fly to an altitude of about 17,000 feet, and is the forerunner of the type of craft which. may be used to ferry as- tronauts and supplies to orbiting space stations, on space rescue missions or for satellite main- tenance and repair. JEANNE MOREAU 'IAN BANNEN 'VANESSA REDGRAVE GUt SI STARS HUGH GRIFFTH AND ORSON WELLES ZA MOHYEDDIN I FRIDAY, MAY 26, 6 p.m. PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER, 1432 Washtenaw Reservations: 662-3580 or 662-5529 Americans-$1 Foreign Students-50c SPONSORED BY THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS MINISTRY I .--.".s"" mm"""" TEICOLor Shown at 10 00 Only PLUS "HOLIDAY IN NEW ORLEANS" COLOR CARTOON I.- I . - p- "EXTRAORDINARY! HONEST HUMOR!" Tme Magazine "DELIGHTFUL AND UNUSUAL, A COMEDY OF THE GRANDEST SORT" -Crowther.!N.Y. Times "A PLEASURE TO WATCH-A PLEASURE TO RECOMMEND"-Archer WinsteonNew York Pot .-- s° 4 i'' a ' ..' . . :--_ TO sCHARONS A A WOODr-ALL F IL DiS'~&8TEC BY LOER; PICTURES ORPORAIO SHOW TIMES FRIDAY 7, 9, 11 SATURDAY 7, 9, 11 SUNDAY 5, 7, 9 re "VERY MUCH WORTH SEEINGI" --Crist. World Journal Tribune "RARE ENTERTAINMENT! A GEMI" -Nwweek "MARVELOUS I" -William WON, Cue Magerine "WHOLLY MASTERFUL! REMARKABLE' -Arthur Knight, Saturday Review Mon. thru Friday at 7-9 P.M. Sat. & Sun. Shows at 1,3,, 7, 9 P.M. DIAL 5-6290 J -I L. MICH'ELI~AN *NOW* DIAL 5-6290 presents THE GREATEST COMEDY STARS OF ALL TIME in the LAFF-RIOT FUN-FEST OF THE CENTURY SPECIAL SELECTIVE ENGAGEMENT NO SEATS RESERVED Every Ticketholder Guaranteed a Seat The Most Popular Picture Of Our Time! WINNER OF 5 ACADEMY AWARDS Including "Best Picture" RODGERS HAMMERSTEIOS ROBERT WISE COLOR sY DcLUXI Spending the Summer in Ann Arbor? ENJOY IT MORE with UNIVERSITY PLAYERS! See 5 Great Shows! *THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD s MACBETH t THE PHYSICISTS # THE COUNTRY WIFE " LITTLE MARY SUNSHINE Season Tickets Now Available at the Box Office Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre ® Tnstuv iilrnt . ~eS1 crii DLI AWYIAI r aatMIunv .J~ ° JU.,IJIi I IUfllifJIJ11111M E1