Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY 1; Jr e Action o resolve ime Change Hampton Requests, Petition Certification To Speed State Vote LANSING (A-The House Re- blican floor leader yesterday put ssure on the state Board of nvassers to certify petitions Ding for a vote on the daylight ring time issue. Rep. William Hampton (R- omfield Hills), introduced a olution asking that the board form its statutory duties and 'tify petitions asking for a vote the people on the issue. " The resolution urged action "so e people will know the status of e time problem in their state."' rhe board decided Wednesday delay a decision at least until ay 24. Members said they wanted to ar arguments on both sides of e issue. They also said they pre- med to wait until a new member, than Conyers of Detroit, was orn in. Conyers was recently appointed Gov. George Romney to fill a cancy on the four-member yard 'OVerstepped Its Authority' 'This 'is a matter that needs trifying immediately," rHamp- n said. "The board has over- ped its authority in postponing s decision. The resolution said the board iored the advice of Atty. Gen,. 8nk Kelley and refused to follow e clear mandate of the election de relative to its administrative ties. Kelley has said the board should ss upon the petitions as speed- as possible despite any litiga- n pending in the courts. Saving time opponents have ed suits in both the State Court Appeals and the State Supreme urt in an effort to block the ne referendum. Hampton said the statutory ties of the board are clear and e function of the board is to nfine itself to the administra- 'e duty of the validity of the titions. Kelley had said as soon as the titions are ruled valid, Michigan uld have to go on eastern day- ht time-pushing clocks an hour ead. Meanwhile, Kelley received a quest that he seek to hold off tion on the daylight saving pe- ions until the government rules . the time status of the Upper minsula. The Federalgovernment has the wer to place the entire Upper ninsula in the central standard ne zone. Report FightDAILY OFFIC A ainst Mao The Daily Official Bulletin is an of.icial ubii.at.or. of the Univer- Increases TOKYO (P)-Violent fighting has swept at least four cities of Communist China's rice basket: province, Honan, Japanese reports from Peking said yesterday. There were signs that a titanic struggle between supporters and enemies of Chairman Mao Tse-tung was whirling toward a dramatic sity of Mlienigan for which The Michigan Oaily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TVl.Wl iT' .N form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Satairday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two Ames on request; ay Calendar items appear once only. Student organizattim' notices are not accepted for pulication. For more iniorination cal: I64-9270. FRIDAY, MAY 12 days 4-5 days a week, flexible. Must read and write Japanese fluently, Ac- " F re otnting, teranysai, cor rorn-c aAE with some edue. beyond high school; previous exper. not required. Dept. of Army, Finance Center, In- michigan Schoolmaster's Club Meet- dianapolis, Ind. - Computer Systems ing-"TheSchoolmaster, the Student. Programming Analysis graduate study- and the Electronic Book": Rackham work programs at Purdue, June-Dec Bldg., 9 a.m. , 21 grad credits, all majors considered. --- Professional trainee positions in all Cinema Guild-'"All the King's Men": areas of budget, mgmt., psych., person- Architecture Aud., 7 and 9:05 p.m. nel, placement, salary. computer, acctg. U.S. Dent. of Interior, Bureau of Professional Theatre Program -"ivory Reclamation, Facramento, Calif.-Geol- Tower": Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, ogist engineering positions. Geol. ma- 8:30 p.m. jors, BA/MA. For Geol. Engrs. in trng. at Aubur~n Field Office, --Parkes Tarzian, Inc, Bloomington, (feneral Notces Ind.-Chemist. Engrs. in Semi-conduc- tor, Design, Jr. levels, Mechanical, Elec- Doctoral Examination for Thomas tronic, TV dev., Broadcast Equip., Tech- Francis Lyons. Psychology; thesis: "A nical Illustrators, Reporters, Dist. Man- Study of Social-Psychological Variables agers, Technical Writers, Continuity as They Relate to Turnover, Propen- Writer, Photo lab technician. sity to Leave, and Absenteeism among Programs of Study and Training at Hospital Staff Nurses," today, South Colleges and Universities: Conference Room, 5th floor, ISR Bldg., Simmons College Hospital and Health at 10 a.m. Chairman, B. S. Georgopou- Services Administration-Undergrad 4 los. . yr. for women. University of Detroit-tRadio and TV Doctoral Examination for Robert Wa- graduate courses. Also U.S. Office of ger Gill, Zoology; thesis: "Soil Micro- Education, Ti; le VI-B Institute in "New Arthropod Regulation Following Old Media in Education," '67 summer ses- Field Litter Manipulation," Fri., May sion. full expenses paid to 25 college 12. Room 2111 Natural Science, at 2 p.m. teachers in any 'fieldto learn about Chairman, N~ C. Hairston.1 systematic utilization of electronic me- __ _ _ _dia, Doctoral Examination for Rusin Al- University of Wateroo, Wateroo, Ont. bertins, Chemical Engineering; thesis':-Management and Systems Engineer- "Experimental and Theoretical Investi- ing leading mto MA/PhD. Full or part- gation of Component Separation in a time programs in inter-disciplinary en- Column Crystallizer," today, Room 3214 vironment Some fellowships available. East Engineering, at 9:30 a.m. Chair- University Institute of European Stud- manJ. E Powrsics at Turin, Italy, Nov. '67-May 168 - man, .J. E. Powers, Advanced professional education in ec- onomics, history, legal and political Placemient problems related to cultural dev,of Eu- yrope. Applications filed by Sept. '67. Ap- I nn~mrny noatrwr~c.ply for scholarships before June 30. '67. I4 climax. Day Calendar A wall newspaper of Mao's Red Guards in Peking, quoted by the Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"The Management of Managers'. Tokyo newspaper Asahi's Peking 140 Business Administration, 8:15 a m. correspondent, said the clashes to 5 p.m., and 7 to 9 p.m., were as "bloody and oppressive" as those of Indonesia in 1966 when Bureau of Industrial Relations se - mnar-" Conf erence Leadership Tech - hundreds of thousands of Commu- niques for Managers"eMichigan Union, nists were slain in the backwash of 8:30 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. an abortive coup attempt. The only figures given were 10 persons Dept. of Engineering Mechanics Sym- posirnn-"Solid and ,Fluid .Mechanics": killed and hundreds injured, 300 Registration in lobby, Rackham Bldg., 9 seriously, a.m. Honan, in the heart of the area upon which already hungry China depends for rice, is only one of aO number of provinces caught up in RGA N IZATION confused fighting, according to, , -Associated Press PICKETING TEACHERS ARRESTED Over 130 teachers were arrested yesterday in Baltimore for picketing in violation of a court injunc- tion. The teachers, all members of the AFL-CIO Baltimore Teachers Union, were later released without charges when the judge received assurances that picketing would stop. The strike is sched- uled to continue today, since negotiations were deadlocked. NOTE SOVIET BUILDUP: Military Favors Nile Missile Defense System Deployment WASHINGTON (P)-Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has told Congress that U.S. superiority in strategic nuclear weapons was a factor in the decision that sent American forces to fight in Vietnam. Without that superiority, Wheel- er said, "We would have had even more hesitation" in deploying American forces. Wheeler discussed the balance of nuclear power in arguing the military case for U.S. deployment of 4 ballistic missile defense sys- tem, a $10 billion to $20 billion step, that is not now favored by his civilian bosses. Soviet Countermeasures Deputy Secretary of Defense Cyrus R. Vance said U.S. construc- tion of an antiballistic missile system undoubtedly would lead to Soviet countermeasures, and the end result would be increased de- fense spending with no real gain in security. Vance testified on Feb. 7, Wheeler on Feb. 28, in a series of hearings. conducted by a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on disarmament. The censored testimony was made public last Tuesday. Wheeler told the subcommittee the Joint Chiefs of Staff want the Nike X antiballistic missile system deployed to help maintain the total strategic nuclear capabil- ity or balance clearly in favor of the United States. The hearings also produced tes- million appropriated but unspent, timony that Communist China would provide enough money to could have, during the 1970s, a begin deployment work, Wheeler nuclear force capable of killing said. 10 million Americans. Despite the Soviet defense sys- But Vance said it will take tem. Richard J. Helms, Central China longer to deploy a signi- Intelligence Agency director - ficant offensive force than it whose testimony was deleted by would take the United States to censors-said the United States build a defense system capable of could now destroy Moscow. blunting a Chinese attack. "No question, I agree with him," "It is not clear that we need an said Dr. John S. Foster Jr., di- ABM defense against China" Irector of defense research and en- Vance said. Soviet Buildup gineering, who testified Feb. 3. Secretary of State Dean Rusk,j Noting that the Soviet Union is a March 3 witness, said if both erecting an antiballistic missile sides deploy antimissile defense system around Moscow, and ap- systems, then multiply their of- parently in other parts of the fensive weaponry to overcome the country, Wheeler said the Rus- new defenses, there would be an sians seek an exploitable capa- expensive standoff and the bur- bility in nuclear weapons. dens and the dangers would con- He said that would permit them tinue to increase. to pursue their national aims at Rusk said the administration conflict levels less than general decided against deployment now nuclear war. because of the weight of U.S. of- Wheeler said the United States fensive capability. should have its own missile de- fense system to deny thema that Phone 434-0130 option. t [sf fs Ii The Joint Chiefs of Staff seek dh ns LL1 .L .~ sVl V, Na yj1POSITION OPENINGs: _~ _ . _. . . ..~ - ---, +. the wall newspaper reports. In NOT ICES Atomic ower Development Application details at Bureau. central- China's Szechwan Pro- ates, Inc., (Japan Fermi Committpe), For further information please call vince, more than 10,000 persons Detroit, Mich.--Secretary to head of 764-7460, General Division, Bureau o: were said to have been killed and Japanese team, part-time, perhaps half Appointments, 3200 SAB. and wounded in recent fighting. USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- ~ - NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially Japanese Foreign Ministry ex- recognized and registered student or- perts on China speculated that the ganizations only. Forms are available in DIAL power struggle faction led by Mao Room 1011 SAB.86 and the Communist, party vice Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance chairman, Lin Piao, his heir ap- with instruction open to everyone, Fri., Holding for a Fifth Week ! parent, were consolidating their May 12, 8-11 pm., Barbour Gym.Hodn fra Fit k1 hold on the country. But they* hold o the aou ntgry.uttashey B'nai B'rith Hillel, "Hello" graduate aid the Mao i g ha su t mixer Sun., May 148 p.m., 1429 WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING ing trouble suppressing the op- Hill. Refreshments and free admissionE position to graduate students. _ BEST PCUEOf T V EAl.1 AN- BEST DIRECTOR-Fred Zinnemann BESTACTOR-Paul Scofield BEST SCREENPLAY FROM ANOTHER MEDIUM-Robert Bolt preserts T~ CINEMATOGRAPHY (Colorj psCGEORGE TOM JAMES BEST COSTUME DESIGN (Color) SEGAL COURTENAY FOX COLUMBIA PICTURES presents FRED ZINNEMANN'S in KINNG RAT IMA (1965; directed by Brian Forbes) absorbing, directed with skill . . filled with fineFR performances."-Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review. "One of the best-fascinating from beginning to end."A -Phillip Hartung, The Commonweal FRI. & SAT., 7 & 9:15 P.M. (o yB BOLT * * From the play ley ROBEfr BOLT -muCr ($ Aud. A Angell Hall 50c Mon. thru Fri. at Sat. and Sun. at 7:00and 9:15 1 :00-3:15-7:0Q-9:15 - l5 ~IV 1 2 ~ A ' t an area defense system covering the continental United States, and local defense networks for 25 cities. Johnson Budget Wheeler said President John-? son's budget seeks $817 million for research, development and limited advance production in the anti- missile field. That sum, with,$167 1. 4ELD OVER ! FELLINI'S LA DOLCE VITA THE INTERNATIONAL DINNER-FILM SERIES CONTINUES WITH FELLINI'S AWARD-WINNING "1LA ST RA DA" following delectable Continental cuisine Americans-$1 Foreign Students-50c FRIDAY, MAY 12-6 P.M. PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER, 1432 Washtenaw Reservations please: 662-3580 or 662-5529 SPONSORED BY THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS MINISTRY kRant# rCARMPENTER ROA0 FIRST OPEN 7:00 P.M. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUN ~OW-L- ~ TeCHNICOLOR Shown at 7:50 & 11:25 ALSO-Shown at 9:30 Only f"'ABIENE ,"SAI.TECHNICOLOR* BOBBY OARIN- EMILY BANKS PLUS "DUTCH TREAT" COLOR CARTOON =I U="FV±l UNCENSORED IN ENGLISH (not subtitles) E I " NO SEATS RESERVED every Ticketholder Guaranteed a Seat 2o- RODGERS and HAMMERSTEIN'S I 7 p A ROBERT WISE PRODUCTION r K I I . x. An Arbor, Michigan x10 S. Fifth Avenue -761-97.00 VHELD OVER 3rd WEEK!. I .t i& 1 i Tonight and Tomorrow ALL THE' KING'S MEN, * STARRING * Broderick Crawford as Huey Long CHARLES K. FELDMAN M~Slts PETER SELLERS A URSULA ANDRESS DAVID NIVEN TOO WOODY ALLEN JOANNA PETTET ORSON WELLES DALIAH LAVI DEBORAH KERR WILLIAM HOLDEN CHARLES BOYER JEAN-PAUL BELMONDO GEORGE RAFT JOHN HUSTON TERENCE COOPER BARBARA BOUCHET GABRIELLA LICUDI TRACY REED TRACEY CRISP KURT KASZNAR 4:30 ELAINE TAYLOR4: ANGELA SCOULAR 6 :20 9 :00 Near the~ CASINGO ROTALE" i,. wc p~red, in the III,, br HERE ALPE RT .and THE TIJUANA IRAS$ a nd on, She Cig, ., P.Sundtr~back lm. S1 :r SEE THE NEW JAMES BOND MOVIE! -9 ' .i i Y I I -L czup. Adw card 1i967 11 Prduced b HA (I4IS~K FE LMAN and .JERRY RRESU R." Dircted by JOHN IU10fN, KEN HOGES. YL GUES1,GT RB IPARRISH, JOE McGRATH -Screenplay by WOLF MAMY 1TZ , ;N, aa I ' I i E'a starrynp y ^t y "" '.. .... .. '"f' . ... ..: ...... '. s. -:,: nc[" "cz !.v t1 1x\ 't u i)A6i1\t VA tt S2 TAT 7 It I y- tNn , { r IK l i