1, 1965 THE,. MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN 1, 1965 THE 1WICHIGAN DAILY t a.wY UL 7 illy *Pakistan Threatens to Continue Fighting Until India Accedes to Plebiscite Demand LAND WAR SLOWS: U.S. Hits Viet Cong In New Air Raids YOUR 1065-66 STUDENT DIRECTORY - OCT. 5 & 6 ONLY OCT. 4&U5ONLYI NEW DELHI VP)-India and Pakistan accused each other again yesterday, of violating the week- old UN cease-fire along the fron- tier of the Indian state of Raja- sthan. The Indian Defense Ministry charged that 500 Pakistani rang- ers attacked across the frontier and that they were being rein- forced. A Pakistani government broad- cast said India threw two battal- ions against a Pakistani post in C -t "Send, her a CONTEMPORARY CARD by When you care enough to send the very best 307-309 S. STATE Rajasthan yesterday morning and the fighting was continuing. It said heavy casualties were in- flicted on the attackers. Fighting Will Continue Fighting against Indian forces in Kashmir will continue until a plebiscite is guaranteed, says the president of Azad Kashmir. President Abdul Hamid told a news conference Wednesday, "We will continue the struggle as long as we have not attained our objective"-a plebiscite on acces- sion to India or Pakistan. Abdul Hamid repeated the claim that guerilla warfare in the In- dian-ruled Kashmir valley was be- ing waged by Kashmiri Moslems who- want to be governed by Mos- lem Pakistan instead of the In- dians, largely Hindu. India has claimed the fighters are Pakistani and Kashmiris trained and equipped by Pakistan who infiltrated into .the valley. Abdul Hamid said his govern- nent, which rules 1.5 million Kash- miris west of the 1949 cease-fire line, has no connection with the Revolutionary Council, whose members' names have never been given. But he said he was certain the council would disband on achievement of a plebiscite. Pakistani Raiders The Indian Defense Ministry al- so claimed Pakistanis moved two tanks and a recoilless rifle to new positions northeast of Husseini- wala in the Lahore sector. And it said Pakistani raiders were fleeing Indian territory in Kashmir, but were burning houses and killing civilians on the way. Maj. Gen. Bruce mMcDonald of Canada, the chief UN officer, was in the Lahore sector reportedly seeking td have both sides with- draw 500 yards in response to the United Nation's Sept. 23 cease- fire plea. SAIGON (M)-Ground fighting dwindled yesterday in South Viet Nam, but U.S. planes pressed the air war with strikes on both sides of the border, a U.S. military spokesman reported. U.S. B-52's from Guam joined in the attack again, hammering a suspected Viet Cong concen- tration near Cambodia for the second time in four days. In the Phu Cu Pass area of the central highlands, about 45 miles northwest of Qui Nhon, Navy and Marine pilots struck at suspected Communist strongholds where a massive buildup of Viet Cong forces was reported earlier by U.S. advisers. The area is one where the Viet Cong and Viet- namese fought two bloody bat- tles. Ground Fighting On the ground, U.S. Marines tangled three times with Commu- nist guerrillas near Da Nang, 380 miles north of -Saigon, and killed five, a Marine spokesman said. He said that Marines suffered light casualties in one scrap, an at- tempted ambush, but beat off the bushwackers. In other scattered ground fight- ing, 39 Viet Cong were reported killed by government troops. The heavy air strikes by U.S. planes followed by hours threats from North Viet Nam to try American pilots captured in its territory as war criminals. There was no indication from Hanoi whether conviction would mean a death penalty. The Communists have an- 'nounced they executed two Amer- icans Sunday and one in June in reprisal for executions of Viet Cong terrorists by the South Viet- namese. One American pilot was shot down yesterday in South Viet Nam, but he was rescued unhurt. Five men were executed as mur- derers and rapists by a firing squad in the Saigon market place before dawn today. Plane Lost Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara said yesterday "the American plane ' lost over Viet Nam is presumed to have been downed by a surface-to-air mis- sile. McNamara told a news con- ference it is "not yet certain" that the plane was downed by one of the missiles in Communist North Viet Nam. He said that if it turns out to be true, it will mean United States has lost a total of four aircraft to the Soviet-built missiles. IMPORTANT NEWS!Y For University of Michigan Faculty and Staff Michigan Bell invites you to visit an activated demonstration of data-phone services and computer input-output devices. What's New at 764-1817 (Continued from Page 1) Long Distance Michael Smith, a University of Utah student in special education, has filed suit against three of his professors whom he is charging with "maliciously" persuading the University of Utah to expel him. Smith is asking for $102,400 in damages from Wilberta Moore, Glenn I. Latham and James E. Cole. 'Cole ,is head of the special education department. * * Colorado University President Joseph R. Smiley has declared that student' unrest on college campuses reflects a national trend. "Youth is frustrated and has rea- son to be," he said, because of the failure of the older generation to cope with the challenges- of our times." Smiley spoke at a Regis College faculty convocation Wed- nesday. When asked about the possibil- ity of student unrest leading to demonstrations and civil' disobe- dience at Colorado University, Dean of Men James Quigley said, "The student coming in to the University is more concerned about his education and having a say in his education than ever be- fore. The student is, more mature now in wanting to have some in- fluence on his own education." * * * The University of Minnesota Daily has announced issues for which their editorial page will be crusading this year. Among them: a program of course evaluation; student participation in political and social causes; and a master parking and mass transportation plan for the university. Oops, we goofed. The student directory will go on sale Monday for $1 at the Michigan Union, on the ,Diag and by the Engineering Arch. It was incorrectly reported that the directory would be going on sale yesterday. 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