SATURDAY, JUNE' 19, 1965 TRX MICHIGAN DAILY SAGE TIMES SATUDAY JUN 19 195 T~E lJICIGANDAI ? PG_ H:. China Volunteers To Provide Troops If Asked by A statement last night said Viet Cong had been preparing to l next day or two against South N The mission had failed tot FREE DELIVERY! SI * I THOMPSON'S RESTAURANT : Phone 761-0001 on lag 50c OFF lrg U 50c OFF one item pizza, PICKED UP OR DELIVERY ONLY £ Coupon Good Monday Thru Thursday, June 21-24 II Ii"mrat w www r r w r w w ong rwr w wt w w w w I Shows at 1:00-3:30-6:15-8:50 Feature 20 Minutes Later intelligence reports sug launch a surprise attack Vietnamese villages or t destroy many Viet Con thHowever,rofficials in the raid resulted in dividends by scatter opening up to South forces an area previous nable, ruining a vital c tions center by cavingi nels, and doing other d According to the lates tion, 26 of the 30 bo started out actually dr bombs. Collision In addition to two th off the Philippines, of one plane had to turn another was unable1 bombs go because of a tion. Sources explained tha objective of the attac counter a new Viet C increasingly of late, so the Viet Cong has lau prise attacks on towns mounted big-scale amr South Vietnamese troop Substantial numbers Vietnamese soldiers hav down by the threat of a this concentration of u battalions - perhaps 2 rillas. No Entrance Because of the hea sources said, it was vi possible before this rai ernment troops to pen area about 25 miles Saigon. This area is describe between what are called C and D, long-time stro the Communist insurge Viet Cong J U.S. Battalions To Be Readied > For Asian War Peking Determined To Expel Americans By The Associated Press N 2 TOKYO - China was reported yesterday as ready to send volun- teers to Viet Nam if the Viet Cong requests aid and "if the United States intends to fight to the end." <> Meanwhile, in Washington, in- formed sources indicated that the U.S. would have what amounted ss to an army combat division in iated Press South Viet Nam within the next few months. The news of Chinese intentions was a broadcast of a foreign min- istry statement which declared "the 650 million Chinese people pledge themselves to back the Vietnamese people to the hilt." Preparations "We have made preparations," hat Thurs- the statement continued, "and territory when we receive the call of the Vietnamese people we will prompt- ration and ly send volunteers to Viet Nam to fight with the Vietnamese until of pounds the U.S. is driven out of Viet s, some 25 Nam." Peking had previously announc- sibly three ed that it was ready to intervene in the Viet Nai rWar. The stand- a. ing committee of the Chinese Na- tional People's Congress called gested the April 20 on the people to "make within the full preparations" to enter Viet Nam if the Viet Cong called for towns. help. g soldiers. The buildup of U.S. Army sisted that ground fighting forces is being important accomplished piecemeal. ing them, An infantry brigade of about Vietnamese 3,900 men and a paratrooper bri- ly impreg- gade of about 3,600 men are due ommunica- to be in South Viet Nam by late in the tun- July, sour hVes said. damage. Separate Divisions st informa- They are being drawn from mbers that separate divisions in the U.S. this opped their is the first time that the Army's strategic reserve has been tapped to this extent for the Viet Nam iat collided war. ficals said Six battalions announced by back and Secretary of Defense Robert S. to let, its McNamara as bound for Viet Nam a malfunc- duty are included in the two bri- gades, it was understood. McNa- at a major mara refused to disclose their ck was to origin. ong tactic. Sources said they expect a third urces said, Army brigade to go to Viet Nam nched sur- later, along with helicopter units and have and possibly a division base. Such ibushes of a base normally includes head- ps. quarters, plus service and ad- of South ministrative troops. e been tied The division (about 15,000 men) ttack from expected to move into Viet Nam up to four does not include the nine U.S. bat- ,000 guer- talions already there. vy jungle, The Week rtually im- d for gov- ietrate the north of MONDAY, JUNE 21 d as being 8:30 p.m.-Prof. Robert Glas- I war zones gow of the music school will give )ngholds of an organ concert in Hill5Aud. ants. FRIDAY, JUNE 25 '7 p.m. and 9 p.m.-The Cinema Guild will present Charlie Chaplin and Paulette Goddard in "Mod- ern Times" in the Architecture Aud. 8:30 p.m.-The Freedom Singers will perform in Trueblood Aud. SATURDAY, JUNE 26 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.-The Cinema Guild will present Charlie Chaplin and Paulette Goddard in "Mod- ern Times" in the Architecture Aud. that V A~~kL-1 -00,-'y-A --.Y4 -.AV "--W I California President Clark Kerr "let a minority of Communist leaders" take over recent student uprisings on the Berkeley campus. Kerr replied that the report was loaded with inaccuracies. In its 13th biennial report, the state senate fact-finding commit- tee on un-American activities said that what started out as a legi- timate student protest turned into a Communist-inspired bid to wreck the university. BERLIN-An armed East Ger- man helicopter flew over West Berlin yesterday in defiance of the Western allies. Authoritative sources said the United States Army placed machine guns on its helicopters as a counter-move. The intrusion was the most serious challenge of Western rights on air space over Berlin since the East Germans began the flights last week. Until now the East Germans had restricted them to flying along the wail and the borders around the city. WASHINGTON - Republican NationaltChairman Ray C. Bliss said yesterday Barry Goldwater's new Free Society Association will hamper his quest for party unity and money to rebuild the battered GOP. Bliss indicated the conservative organization rallied around the party's beaten presidential nomi- nee may have made his job more difficult. MIAMI BEACH-Kansas State Sen. Tom Van Sickle, a conser- vative identified with the Barry Goldwater camp, was elected na- tional chairman of the Young Re- publicans yesterday. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 1: N:".; ".*~.*".S.."a...n ..",**\ "w. Associated Press Titan Takes Off World News Roundup By The Associated Press CAPE KENNEDY-Titan 3C, the most powerful rocket ever fired, scored a thundering success on its maiden test flight yesterday. In a spectacular launching, the triple-barrel rocket developed total thrust of more than three million pounds, spewed a tail of flame more than 600 feet long and flung into orbit a 21,000-pound dummy satellite-the heaviest payload ever ;launched. The heaviest known Russian payloads were Sputniks 7 and 8, launched in February 1961, and weighing about 14,290 pounds each. * ** * proposal.V Minimum Time The peace committee said that six to nine months would be "the minimum time required to make the necessary arrangements" for the elections. . It asked "the immediate ter- mination of the armed struggle, with the return of all members of the regular armed forces to their barracks and irregular forces to their homes under OAS supervi- sion." The committee also asked for the surrender to the OAS "of all arms In the hands of civilian pop- ulation." It said arms collection stations would be set up. Provisional Government The OAS appeal to the people suggested formation of a provi- sional government and "prepara- tion of an institutional act to serve as a provisional charter until the people decide the constitution- al issue through an assembly which will meet following elec- tions." The reopening of all commercial and indust'rial establishments and the return of all employes to their customary places of work was also part of the appeal. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan, for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Rtoom 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the eay preceding publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be nublished a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organisation notices are not accepted for publication. SATURDAY, JUNE 19} Day Calendar Workshop on Community Action to Promute the Oral Health of the Chron- ically Ill, Handicapped and the Aged- School of Public Health, 8:30 a.m. Cinema Guild-"Comedy Classics": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m. Events Sunday Center for Programmed Learning for Business Training Systems Institute - Geary A. Rummier, director: Michigan Union, p.m. ORGAN IZATION NOTICES Use of This Column for Announce- nients is available to officially recog- nized and registered student organiza- tions only. Formsrare available in Room 1011 SAB. Graduate Outing Club, Swimming and/or hiking, June 20, 1:30 p.m., Rackham, Huron St. entrance. Events Monday Doctoral Examination for Paul Jerry Brannon, Physics; thesis: "Pressure Ef- fects on the Vibration-Rotation Spec- trum of Hydrogen," Mon., June 21, 629 Physics-Astronomy Bldg., 1:30 p.m. Chairman, C. W. Peters. Center for Programmed Learning for Business Training Systems Institute - Geary A. Rummier, director, "Using the Systins Approach to Direct Train- ing and Manpower Activities": Michi- gan Union, 8:30 am. American Guild of Organists Pre-Con- qow, School of Music: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Motivation Dynamics, Inc., Yorktown Hts., N.Y.-Research Ass'ts. Men or women, MA'or PhD Psych, or Soc. Ex- B. F. Goodrich, Akron, tOhio-Vari- per. In motivating studies helpful. ous openings including Sr. Prod. Engr., Sr. Statistician and Bldg. Prod. Sales- men. Also Aerospace Ablative Engr., Chem. or ChE plus rubber & plastics exper., Graphic Arts Tech. Foundation, Pitts- burgh, Pa.-Tech. Writer for tech. & scientific articles. Exper. in tech. writ- ing & knowl. of graphic arts pref. Ap- plication deadline June 30. Kimberly-Clark Corp., Neenah, Wis. -Tech. Librarian, BS Chem., ChE or Physics pref. 1 yr. Lib. Se. or equiv. exper. Knowl. of foreign language de- sirable. Federal Bureau of. Prisons-Correc- tional Treatment Specialist for soc. casework at pre-release guidance cen- ters. MBA (24 hrs. Soc. Set.) plus 1 yr. exper. or grad study in soc. or rel. Ad- ditional grad study or exper. qualifies for higher, rating. Located throughout U.S. National Homes Corp., Lafayette, Ind -District Sales Manager. Grad 25-35. 3-5 yrs. exper.-housing or bldg. ma- terials pref. Service & assist dealers, gather mkt. Information, etc. * * * For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: 212 SAB- Babysitting Jlob, Ann Arbor-Care of two children 8 & 7, Mon.AFri., 9-5.$25/ week. One hr. per day off for class OK. IRENTALS of TELEVISIONS TAPE RECORDERS III-FI's All Types Lowest Rates Ann Arbor Radio & TV 1319 So. Univ. NO 8-7942" WASHINGTON UP)-Presidem, Lyndon B. Johnson said yesterday initial benefits of the $4.6 billion excise tax cut voted by Congress will take effect Tuesday. Since the measure becomes ef- fective day after the President signs the bill, this indicated John- son plans the signing for Monday. Johnson issued a statement hail- ing Congressional action on the administration-proposed tax cut. "I believe producers and re- tailers will match the responsible conduct of the Congress with equal responsibility by passing these reductions along to con- sumers," he said. "This will bring us lower prices, more purchasinlg power and new jobs." Johnson said the treasury de- partment, budget bureau, council of economic advisers and White House legal staff will review the legislation during the weekend. The President noted anew that the nation is enjoying its 52nd straight month of expansion. The excise tax repealer does away with most of the federal sales taxes, hangovers from the Korean war days and even earlier. Requests Elections ill Dominican Republic SANTO DOMINGO {1P-The Organization of American States asked Dominican factions yesterday to end fighting and agree to OAS-supervised elections which would be held within six to nine months. Meanwhile, a provisional government would be set up. An opportunity would be provided, a spokesman for the OAS said, "for all leaders of democratic political parties abroad to return to the Dominican Republic under OAS safeguards to participate in the political life of the nation, including the election." An OAS conference in Washington dealing with the eight-week old civil war announced the plan and made an urgent appeal to the Dominican people to accept it - ------ as a settlement of their govern -j mental crisis. Cut Effective Both the rebels and the civilian- military junta are studying the i n " rU11£,Q 'I f I: SACRAMENTO, Calif-A legislative committee charged yesterdayI laxness by University of. . NGRO Rat vim Georg C. Scott 0 Jeanne Moreau S Aain Delon N O W DIAL 2-6264 WALT DISNEYS . TECHNICOLOR. t. :p: s;.};{.";..:".".;r.".".oor,."'." : 1.}yr M: {1.t" ":flirli 1.{l iM1"::.}}$:{f s{:,'."? ':{: r. ...Y."}?i:{'vo r:":i": :":{.,.;:.drr. 'M?:4yrabFf.:tios{vrfvr.r .W.4.1W sv. EVERYDAY1S W PLAYDAY FOR THIS NAPPY- O-LUCKY G CLOWNI Si VY FCT FgATUR ETTE And on the same all Walt Disney program! WALT DISNEY'S Jr TECHNICOLOR*-oMCMtXWa Disey Productions WN I~ WU ' . I i I DIAL 8-6416 "YOU'LL HOLD YOUR SIDES LAUGHING!"-Newsweek THAT WHOOP4T-UP a HAROLD HEGHT '" 9.:D FUNNY WESTERN:e. * , ... --- In CLMBA CORO Rent a TV This Term 19" G.E. PORTABLES only $10.00 per month FREE DELIVERY & SERVICE TV set on display at Follett's Bookstore Call NEJAC TV enta/4 phone: NO 2-5671 U / 40 4 400 I /r40 .1 1 This is another 1 1 I COMEDY CLASSICS WEEKEND at CINEMA GUILD I / 1 1 on the program: HUSBODIES-Laurel andHardy THE SODA JERK-- Buster Keaton THE GOLF SPECIALIST -W.C. Fields A DOG-GONE MIXUP-- Harry Langdon 1 and; ' THE NICKELHOPPER - Mabel Normand A marvelously supple little half slip of Rogers nylon tricot so discreetly simple ujntil, paul-a doring, dashing touch of lace of the hemline . . . and oh what lace! Exquisite im- ported French lace posed over fricot sheer for dramatic emphasis. i GROOME'S BATHING BEACH SAFEST BEACH in Southern Michigan Monday 10:00 P.M. Channel 2 CBS REPORTS McGeorge Bundy debates the academic community on ( White, Black/Petal Pin, Creme de Ia Creme/Et #4627 Short, sizes XS-S-M at #4627 Average, sizes S.M.L at White, Black/Petal Pink Creme de Ia Creme/Ecr J4627, sizes 5 to 13 of4 C II I