FlUDAY, AUGUST 27,1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAtuE THEEE FRIDAY, AUGUST Z7, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY r.jI~1HKkE President ForNewRI) WASHINGTON QP)-Men be- Hershey, director of t tween the ages of 19 and 26 who Service system. got married after midnight yester- Advice day will be subjected to the draft He said Johnson a on the same basis as single men with leaders of .the under an executive order signed Senate Armed ServicE yesterday by President Lyndon B. tees and that they re Johnson. the change. Since Sept. 10, 1963, married The revised regulati men have been in a special cate- no effect on the draf gory and not subject to the draft men now married o as long as single men were avail- married before midni able. day. Joseph. Califano, a presidential If a draft-age man g assistant, said the change in draft after midnight and regulations to apply to newly mar- father before being ried men was recommended by service, he will then Secretary of Defense Robert S. same deferred class as McNamara and Lt. Gen. Lewis ers. Orders 1 Married SUMMER PROGRESS: Lraft Tx e Tax Refo arm Goes Slow r Y ' 7- Men By LEONARD PRATT, Michigan's tax reform muddle moved slowly towards clarity this ! summer, though definite solutions still appear distant. form measures through either a Republican controlled Legislature in 1963, or through the special session on tax reform which fol- lowed it. Having fared badly at the hands of his own party, he he SelectiveI lso checked House and es Commit- ecommended on will have ft status of r who got ight yester- gets married becomes a called into go into the other fath- Guam-Based B-52 I Blast one D' Jung] Generally this year's legislative was not prepared to take anyj Married men without children, each local draft board to decide session was marked by vague poli- chances at the hands of the op-] while not formally deferred, have whether to draft men married tical shadow boxing, as both Gov- position. been passed over for induction so after midnight yesterday. He said ernor George Romney and the Dems Unwilling long as they were living with their he did not think the number Democratic Legislature demanded The Democrats, on the other wives. Divorced or separated men would be particularly' large. that the other provide the initia- i hand were unwilling to take legis- of draft age were subject to call. A Selective Service spoicesman tive to introduce a reform plan. lative responsibility for such a: Califano said that with draft said Hershey approved of the Romney's hesitation stems from political hot potato in this session. quotas increased due to the war in change because he believes it will his failure to successfully push re- One tax reform bill was in- Viet Nam, some of the Presi- mean that married men who are I dent's advisers advised him there drafted will be younger than ! had been an increase in draft age would otherwise have been the marriages. case. W orldu An Associated Press survey last. He said the general approved week showed such marriages were the recommendation for this rea- on the increase in many major ci- son though still of the opinion, ties. A number of other cities, that enough single men will be By The Associated Press out the causes of such violent however, reported little or no available from the 19-to-26 age SINGAPORE-Th t outbursts." change in the marriage rate fill draft calls n the or- rounded up 21 persondy The President listed a 10-point Califano said it will be up to der of 35,000 a month, the sched- and announced it had smashed a mission for the group, headed by ule announced by the President joint Communist-Indonesian plot Ramsey Clark, 37, deputy actor-, Bsomerseeks aBgoGH ey gnegeral- some weeks ago. to assassinate Prime Minister Le nygnrl om ~~~~~~But in the event any married Kuan Yew and set up a Commu- !PTSUG-Selngta ~ me smen had to be called without aniisae change in the existing situation, The ringleader was identified as s, prodded by President Lyndon he pointed out they ,would likely B it iudi euiyp-. Jonson to reach agreemnenit A * ~ pontedouttheywoud lielySim Slew Lin, under security po- before- a. midnight Aug. 31 strike b considerably older than the lice surveillance for se e r a 1 d a met jointly yesterday A g ai men married after midnight yes- months. terday.n { with William E. Simkin, director First Information Sim was identified as the man of the Federal Mediation and who tried, to blow up the U.S. Conciliation Service, in an effort The American public received consulate July 31 by placing a to close the 16-cent gap separat- time bomb on a bicycle near the ing the two sides. larged draft on July 29, when front of the building.-- President Johnson announced he r was adding 50,000 troops to U.S. d ,SEOUL, South Korea - Army ;.; forces in Viet Nam, doubling thetros trmd nieiyca-Ek~ draft call and asking the United pruses an rmed convos ram 3 TIMES 1 H E Nations to start a new search for peace in the Southeast Asian war. his capita cit estera a more OF L GHT """"""'' 'r,<;: than 8000 defiant students contin- -FA Y IH In Michigan, the draft quota ued demonstrations against Pres- 4 from June to Septeniber this year ident Chung Hee Park's Japanese averaged 639 men per month. But policy and his security methods. 001.oArthurnA.iHolmesrstatetselec the new draft quota, according to :; tive service director, would send WAHNT -PeintL- the draft quota spiralling to 1400 d hns h order; :>:;::::: :>;per:::>;month:::::"in:>.<> eral task force to riot-torn Los ( o ts ...<: ::<:::..:::October. IAngeles "to make available theonths best program now known to wipe ' -f troduced, but its author, Rep. George Montgomery (D-Detroit), emphasized that it was intended more as a "vehicle" to stimulate legislative discussion of tax re- form issues than as a potential law. "Hopefully . . . discussions and arguments will lead to a com- promise position from where we can advance to fiscal reform this year," Montgomery said in intro- ducing the bill. Though the bill did provoke some better definitions of legis- lators' positions before= it was killed off the floor, it did not lead to any active consideration of tax reform during this session. That the bill's introduction did some good is illustrated by the fact that another special session of the legislature has been called for next month, supposedly to consider tax reform. This may have been Romney's intention in calling the session, but high Democratic sources are already predicting that no tax reforms will be passed- in September. They simply are not ready to take the chance, even though they have been demanding tax reform for years. HOMECOING '65 HOMECOMING '65 4HOMECOMING '65 HOMECOMING '65 HOMECOMING '65 SAIGON, South Viet Nam JP) - U.S. B-52 Stratofortresses staged their eleventh attack of the sum- mer on suspected Viet Cong in- stallations yesterday in South Viet Nam. A spokesman announc- ed the target was in the Zone D~ jungle 30 miles northeast of Sai- gon. The fleet of Strategic Air Com- mand bombers-eight-engine jets --flew in from Guam for anoth- er explosive contribution to the air war that smaller planes wage day by day from domestic bases.. The raid was the. fourth by B- 52's since June 18 on Zone D, a wilderness and old hideout of about 600 square miles ranging from a point north of Saigon east- ward toward the South China Sea. Supplementing the use of pam- phlets in psychological warfare, the Saigon government has be- gun putting its messages to the North Vietnamese into a newspa- per with the name and format of ~an old newspaper, called Nhan Dan-Human Knowledge. This was a publication banned in North Viet Nam nine years ago because of its criticism of Presi, dent Ho Chi Minh's Red regime, though the Communists later took over the name for their official paper in Hanoi. A U.S. spokesman said two Viet- namese Skyraiders dropped 88,000 copies over three North Vietna- mese towns in the night and thou- sands more will follow soon. The towns were Dong Hoi, Tuyen Hoa and Ha Tinh, ranging from 40 miles to 120 miles north of the The station also accused U.S. airmen of bombing another hospi- tal, describing it as the Uong Bi hospital in Quang Ninh Province. It quoted a Foreign Ministry spokesman as protesting this and raids on the Ban Trach hydro- electric dam as "wicked schemes to strike at public works in the service of the people's life." The dam, on the Song Chu River 80 miles south-southwest of Hanoi, has been bombed three times in the last six days. Current Paradox Behind the contradictory ma- neuvering lies tax reform's cur- rent paradox. On the one hand, tax reform is not immediately See POVERTY, Page 7 r.... Yy. i:: .V.'. 'M4hh *: ; 1 : :{: Tr'~hiri " "':i 0 . v':i, .'' i~t? $;.;: {f :Sr:y; .o Z: , ::; . .:..... ...... r :.::.... <. :w:: .:: ti.r . .. r.: .. ...,. ,......... H. ..!.. _.. Say Johnson To Lift Ban On Wheat Sales WASHINGTON QP)-The Wash- ington Post said last night Presi- dent Lyndon B. Johnson plans to lift within a few days the Ameri- can restrictions on the shipment of wheat to Communist countries. Under the; restrictions, 50 per cent of all wheat sold to Commu- nist countries must be transport- ed in American ships. By ending the restrictions, the President would open the way for large-scale sales of surplus U.S. wheat to the Soviet Union and other Communist countries. II 3 nai ' rith HlR'C Foun'cation AT THE UNIVERSiTY OF MICHIGAN 1429 Hill St. 663-4129 I 11 -Associated Press TROUBLED NORTH Viet Nam has been hit hard in recent weeks. Map shows cities or areas most often hit; there have been no air raids around Hanoi and Haiphong, shaded black on the map. ORIENTATION Friday, Aug. 27, 7:30 p.m.-Welcome Sabbath Service. Dr. Leon From, Rabbi, Temple Israel, Detroit, guest speaker. Sermon: "A Time to Make Decisions;" Kiddush and Oneg Shabbat following the service. Saturday, August 28, 9 a.m.--Morning Services. Highlighting d e v e 1 o p m e n t s abroad was a charge by Britain that the Soviet Union, which shared with it the chairmanship of the 1954 Geneva conference that split up French Indochina, is hampering all efforts to negotiate peace in Viet Nam. Prime Minister Iarold Wilson's Labor government made the charge in the preface to a white paper detailing "recent exchanges concerning attempts to promote a negotiated settlement of the con- flict in Viet Nam." "nJ":"re.........."""'{ "v:r.'.:6:r'rA:fi :::r.i'"}}>: vi."::.;.:.. .,:"Y4i:3:"5::%tiii"i::+": }::4Y:r _ r.4a:%<{{":"'vl.<%ifiJ:"Yiv Affiliated Members-free I e: .p UE - HIGH HOLIDAY SERVICES (In Rackham Lecture Hall-Auditorium) Rosh Hashana, Sept. 27-28 Sunday evening.. ....... .............Sept. 26, 7:30 p.m.* Monday ........................,.. . Sept. 28, 9:00 a.m. Tuesday .. ...........................Sept. 28, 9:00 a.m. Yom Kippur, Oct. 6 Tuesday evening, Kol Nidre............ . . ....Oct. 5, 7:00 p.m.* Wednesday. ..........................Oct. 6, 9:00 a.m. Reform Services at B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St., First day Rosh Hashana ................ Sept. 27, 10-12 a.m. Yom Kippur.... ................ ..Oct. 6, 10-12, 3-5 *Seats reserved for affiliated members until half hour before service starts. HOMECOMING '65 HOMECOMING '65 HOMECOMING '65 September 2 7:30 P.M. Union Ballroom SOPH SHOW YEAR-ROUND ACTIVITIES BLUE WHITE ENAMEL "Wednesday Evenings at 8" (Lecture Series by Faculty, Rabbis and Guests) WEEKLY SABBATH SERVICES-Fridays at 7:30 p.m. (conducted by students, including Hillel organizations, Fraternities, Sororities) Saturdays at 9:00 a.m. Israeli Folk Dancing-Nagila Dancers Music, Drama and Dance Workshops-Saturday Evening Parties A Special note: Sun. to Thurs.-Hillel's Kasle Library is open for study and reference use. Regularly, the building is open daily, Mon.-Thurs., 9-12, 1-5:30, 7- 10. Fridays it is open for Services and otherwise as indicated. Sundays, the hours are from 1-10. SS EETI C SWEATER SKIRT SOCKS 15.00 11.00 7.00 ..: -' t SPECIAL / EVENTS INCLUDE SUKKOT OPEN HOUSE, Sunday, Oct. 17, 3-5 p.m.-HONORS AND REC- OGNITION DAY-SCHOLAR-IN-RESIDENCE, to be announced-ANNUAL FACULTY LATKE-HAMANTASH DEBATE, March 6-ZWERDLING LEC- TURESHIP in Jewish Studies-MEMORIAL TO MARTIN BUBER, to be on- nounced. Wed., Sept. 1 Jaelrwill KICKY FASHION... . . designed with verve by Jane Irwill. 3-part color harmony in a strikingly patterned wool sweater and socks-solid skirt. . . a winning com- JEWISH STUDIES Hebrew; the Basics of Judaism; others to be announced. Bet Midrash classes in Hebrew, Talmud and Bible, sponsored by, the Jewish Theological Seminary of America and The Detroit Midrasha in cooperation with Hillel. SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS I I I -- illI