FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA[:F. TtRR.' IM FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY P £ I~.V mv~' i.l~ S lI1fAA L Hanoi Target of Leaflet' 'Bombing' by U.S. Planes SAIGON (P)-U.S. planes made their first propaganda leaflet raid on Hanoi while American mechan- ics worked yesterday to repair some of the damage wrought by Viet Cong attacks on the Marble Mountain and Chu Lai airstrips. A U.S. spokesman said the planes did not fly over the Com- munist North Vietnamese capital, but dumped 640,000 leaflets into the wind over the Red River Val- ley in which it lies and the wind did the rest. Hanoi has been immune from attack. throughout seven months of bombing north of the border by American and South Vietna-! mese squadrons. The leaflets were part of a se- ries intended to undermine Ho, Chi Minh's leadership. They said the Hanoi government is exchang- ing rice--the people's staple food -for guns from Red China to planes involved in individual mis- wage the guerrilla war in South sions was given. Viet Nam. U.S. Marine patrols moved out The spokesman said other in a hunt for Viet Cong, in- planes bombed an airfield 100 cluding survivors among the mor- miles west of Hanoi and a com- tarmen and infiltrators who de- munications station 130 miles stroyed 19 helicopters at Marble southwest of that city. All were Mountain, two miles east of Da reported to have returned safely. Nang's main base; and two Sky- Numbers Withheld hawk jet bombers at Chu Lai, Under a new security policy, no on the South China Sea coast announcement of the number of 52 miles to the south. In addition to the destroyed air-t craft, 21 helicopters were dam- aged. However, Maj. Gen. Lewis W. Walt, the Marine commander in Viet Nam, said several of these would be fyn gagain imme i l y. 39 Guerrillas Killed The Marines said they killed 3 guerrillas i the two raids and in turning away a larger force that seemed headed toward the main Da Nang base. Their own casual- ties were described as light. Walt said the main base, from MAY BE THIS YEAR: U.S. Sets Twin Gemini Flights JOHNSON CITY, Tex. () - Apparently king-sized "ifs" sur- President Johnson disclosed yes- round the plan. terday an attempt will be made Officials see a little better than by January to orbit two manned 50-50 chance of getting a pair of spaceships a few days apart for space capsules aloft, each with a , an unprecedented no-contact ren- two-man crew. But they are cit- dezvous. ing no odds on maneuvering them The crews may be able to see --twice, perhaps-to a point where one another through the space- they may be only feet apart while craft windows. But there will be streaking through space at 18,000 no attempt at docking or other miles an hour. actual contact and no space walks. There is some chance the twin flights can, be attempted as early as December fromCaeKndy Fla. 14-Day Flight To Arrange If all goes well, Gemini 7 and its two-man crew will be rocketed O rderly Exit aloft first on a 14-day endurance y flight. Then Gemini 6-the craft that failed to get away on a space i docking expedition last Monday- For C ubans will be put up seven or eight days later with two more spacemen. Gemini 6 probably will be up a WASHINGTON (P) - A U.S. couple of days. In this period, spokesman said yesterday that while the capsuless are orbiting to- only minor technical questions re- gether, they will try formation! main to be cleared up in order to flying and what space officialscal . A t , . , .: .. .ti :.::;.. . .: > . ;> . . ... .. which squadrons strike Communist reach a final agreement for order- visual meetings. targets both north and south of ly removal of political refugees Will Not Touch the border, "is the one that is from Cuba to the United States. They won't touch, but Gemini hurting them." The State Department was in- 6 will attempt twice to nudge up Main Base Hit formed by Swiss Ambassador Emil close to Gemini 7. They will be; The main base was hit by a Stadelhoffer that his discussions flashing along side by side, on small detachment of guerrillas in Havana with Prime Minister in tandem, or one over the other, July 1. They killed a U.S. air Fidel Castro were going well. The as close together as possible. policeman, destroyed three planes Swiss Embassy handles U.S. af- White House press secretary Bill and damaged three others. Six fairs in Cuba, since the United D. Moyers said they will be sep- weeks later the guerrillas blasted States has no representative there, arated by "a matter of feet." j part of a fuel storage depot near the base. Havana reports said that under1{The Unprecedented Paratroopers of the 101st Air- the prospective agreement between.Te Russians put twin, manned borne.killed 37 Viet Cong from a 3000 and 4000 refugees a month spaceships n orbit i June of force of 150 that was holding a will be flown from an airport out- 1963, But U.S. space experts fig- valley position near the port city side Havana to entry points in their closest approach was about of Qui Nhon, 260 miles northeast Florida. three miles. of Saigon. American casualtiesd in It is expected the United States A spokesman for the Manned the action Wednesday were de-? will pay the cost of transporta- Space Flight Center said at Hous- scribed as light. tion across the Florida Straits, us- ton, Tex., that the U.S. space- Inland Patrols ing civilian aircraft. craft would be "flying all around Inland, natrols of the U.S. 1st In recent weeks, since Castro each other, side by side, behind Cavalry, Airmobile, Division swept announced he would permit refu- and in front, up and down from abandoned enemy positions around gees to leave, Cubans have been each other." the Plei Me special forces camp making the trip to Florida in -.______ and found 37 more Viet Cong bod- small boats. les. This raised to 201 the count "The exodus from Cuba has I of guerrillas known to have been been anything but orderly," press STAFF WRITERF killed since the camp came under officer Robert J. McCloskey told attack-the night of Oct. 19. a news conference at the State EX- TROTSKYI TE, A sokemansai 11 otersDepartment. "We have been in A spokesma said 115hes negotiations to establishborderlySPREADING INFL may have died during the siege, SPREAINGLINFTI which U.S. and South Vietnamese procedures." relief forces lifted Monday. The exodus has taken place through the Cuban port of Ca- U.S. military strategists believe marioca. Castro announced that the Viet Cong could never drive Camarioca would be closed to ref- American forces from their coastal ugee departures at midnight yes- installations, but considervulner- terday. McCloskey said the move- ability grows as the bases ex- ment out of that Cuban por~t in pand and that there is no fool- small boats "did not meet the proof defense against occasional standards we had in mind" for infiltration. orderly and safe methods. i I t { I t 1 i 1 1 I x Sports-minded V-neck golfer cardigan of mohair and wool. 34-40. Pullover $13.00 $11.00 Sweaters will be monogram- med free of charge by send- ing to Lampl Qoliins STATE STREET AT LIBERTY Re a S .n.seDaVa ssfl.. MARINES LOOK OVER damage to helicopters at Marble Mountain, two miles from Da Nang air base in South Viet Nam, after an attack by suicide squads of Viet Cong guerrillas. I 1I World News Roundup By The Associated Press has been in prison almost a year. vivor of a gang-believed to be BOGOTA, Colombia - U.S. aid Soon after his arrest, the airline pro-Communist-that held up an to Colombia is about to resume, dismissed him as head of its War- oil company office and then fought! an American source said yester- saw reservation and promotional National Guardsmen with machine -Motorcycle running poorly-Need a tune-up Need a complete overhaul or just an oil change Yamaha tune-up $10.00 on Twins plus parts Yamaha overhaul $40.00 on Twins plus parts Triumph tune-up Twins $12.50 plus parts BMW tune-up Twins $12.50 plus parts -Complete shop facilities (valve grinding and cylinder reboring) -All work guaranteed -NICHOLSON M/C Sales-224 S. First-662-7409 -Yamaha World Grand Prix Champion (250 c.c.) day. The aid, together with assistance from international institutions like the World Bank,- was cut off in January when President Guillermo Valencia's administration refused to meet a series ofbasic conditions. Foremost among them was adop,- tion of an economic policy of aus- terity, reduction of public expenses and better planning. * * ACCRA, Ghana-President Ga- mal Abdel Nasser of. the United, Arab Republic, now on a three- day official visit to Ghana after the African summit meeting, mo- tored to Cape Coast 90 miles west of Accra yesterday. Cape Coast once was the Gold Coast's capi- tal. * * * WARSAW, Poland - Zbigniew Kielbasinski, former chief War- saw representative of Pan Ameri-j can World Airways, will be tried soon on charges of smuggling for- eign currency and industrial dia- monds, Polish newspapers repor.t- ed yesterday. Kielbasinski, a Polish citizen, ounce. 1 k ROME-All parties in the Ital-j ian Parliament buried their differ- ences yesterday to give final ap- proval to an issue dear to their hearts-a pay raise for themselves. Despite warnings by government experts to the rest of the nation that the country's shaky economy could not support wage boosts in excess of 12 per cent, the nation's lawmakers voted themselves a 50 per cent increase. * * * 'BANGKOK, Thailand-Sen. Ed- ward M. Kennedy (D-Mass) said yesterday he-believes the Viet Cong launched attacks on Plei Me and Da Nang for psychological bene- fits. Kennedy spoke to newsmen after arriving from Vientiane for a two- day Bangkok visit before flying to Singapore Saturday. Kennedy is on an Asian fact-finding tour and earlier visited South Viet Nam. * * * CARACAS, Venezuela-A man- hunt was on in northeast Vene- zuela yesterday for the sole sur- gus Five gunmen held up the pay- roll offices of the Texas Petro-I leum Co. in Oritupano Wednes- day and made off with $13,000. LONDON-Two British scien- tists presented a theory yesterday that life began in crevices on dry land rather than in the sea. They said their work on the suspended animation of primitive organisms suggests their theory has advantages over the classic idea that the sea formed an "or- ganic soup" giving rise to life. * * * WASHINGTON - The Defense Department confirmed that a sixth U.S. warplane has been lost to fire from a surface-to-air missile in North Viet Nam. And officials said it is absolutely impossible to stop all guerrilla raids on U.S. air bases in South Viet Nam. The Army, Marine Corps and Navy will drop mental standards some- what in order to be able to enroll! a higher percentage of youths who volunteer for enlistment. The Air Force will stand pat. ;1 I -'Irl B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation 1429 Hill Street SABBATH SERVICE Student Address and Discussion led by Richard Corn "Is the Supernatural Concept of God Viable Today?" FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29 at 7:30 P.M. Sharp In the Zwerdling-Cohn Chapel John Planer, Jeff Rossio, Cantors The H I LLEL CHOIR under the direction of MIKE ROBBINS Joan Temkin at the Organ I i Ul iI for yourself.or for an important gift i we recommend ,; il AGAIN AVAILABLE! "MICHIGAN'S FAVORITE COLLEGE SONG" Words and Music of U of M songs, which U of M collegians will want to sing and play. Available at the L.M.S. and your favorite music or book store $t Agm Large enough to hold your future, small enough to know you. 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