FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DATi.V PAf 4W. IUI a. as Cah 1 .aavfIVlB A E1 )iw~~UU Yl']£AZ1bA !'AUfC. ttlt4C.Cr IV i Armed Forces Alerted ATHENS 4P) - Greek armed forces in the Athens area went on full alert yesterday in case of riot at the funeral of a leftwing youth killed in street fighting. The government of Premier George Athanasiadis Novas order- ed the alert as thousands of left- wing supporters of ousted Pre- mier George Papandreou readied for a mass funeral march through Athens. They promised to make the fu- neral turnout one of the bigger.- ever in Athens. This caused the worried government to make the first public announcement of a military alert since the crisis erupted July 15. Throughout Greece? There were reports that military forces had been alerted all over Greece, but the government an- nouncement spoke only of the Athens area. In another development, the premier accused Papandreou of bringing on the crisis to cover up his Harvard-educated son's in- volvement with a leftwing mili- tary organization. Athanasiadis Novas made the charge at a news conference where he also pledged a severe crack- down on further demonstrations such as the one Wednesday in World News Roundup By The Associated Press LANSING-Gov. George Romney yesterday signed two con- troversial birth control measures into law. The bills, sponsored by Rep. William Ryan, D-Detroit, provide families planning information to recipients of public welfare and set up clinics for women on medical assistance. Romney also announced yesterday that he hopes to have a bipartisan tax reform program ready in bill form when the Legis- lature returns for its fall session Sept. 14. * * *. * which the student was killed and 150 persons were injured. Athanasiadis Novas said Pap- andreou had been determined to become his own defense minister "despite written appeals by King Constantine to drop this demand." 'Obstruct Investigation' "Papandreou's demand," said the new premier, "exposed him as aiming to obstruct the investiga- tion which is now being carried out by justice authorities without outside influence." This was the first time the new government had openly accused Papandreou's son, Andreas, of in- volvement in Aspida-said to be a secret clique working within the armed forces to make NATO-al- lied Greece a neutral nation. The political crisis-worst since the 1947-49 Communist civil war- was precipitated when King Con- stantine fired Papandreou July 15 in a dispute over political ac- tivities in the armed forces. Pap- andrepu wanted to fire politically active officers-most of them roy- alist. Thetnew premier met with his cabinet during the day. It was after this meeting thatthe crack- down on further pro-Papandreou demonstrations was announced. rioting. Papandreou and Athansiadis No- vas continued to exchange harsh words. The fallen premier called for Athansiadis Novas to resign. 1mm igration Bill Approved WASHINGTON ()-An immi- gration bill to eliminate the 40- year-old system of quotas for in- dividual nations was approved yes- terday by the House immigration subcommittee. In place of the controversial national origins system, the bill would set a ceiling of 170,000 un- der which all present quota coun- tries would be treated equally. Western Hemisphere nations are not under a quota. The effect of the bill would be to increase present immigration by about 50,000. -Associated Press Leaders Confer on Viet Nam Manpower WASHINGTON ()-The expanding manpower demands for America's role in the war in Viet Nam were measured yesterday in the second day of top-level White House strategy talks, but no decisions or conclusions emerged. President Lyndon B. Johnson "asked each service secretary for his views, analysis and recommendations." Press Secretary Bill B. Moyers told newsmen. He added: "Conclusions and recommendations will be forth- coming after all the evidence, including all the recommendations and evaluations, is carefully weighed." There has been talk of increas- ing the United States military forces in South Viet Nam from 75,000 to 175,000, calling up some reserve and national guard forces, extending enlistments and in- creasing the draft call. As Johnson held a second day, of lengthy talks with his top mili- ' tary' and diplomatic strategists,:~ Republican congressional leaders urged him to be candid about the situation. - Senate Republican Leader Ever- ett M: Dirksen (R-Ill) said the President should tell the nation "precisely" how far the military situation has deteriorated in the embattled Southeast Asian na- tion. And House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford (R-Mich), ap- pearing with Dirksen at a news conference, suggested that John- son go before Congress so its members could ask questions about the outlook. REP. GERALD FORD THE VIETNAMESE SOLDIERS SHOWN above are carrying the body of a Viet Cong guerrilla from the still smoldering ruins of the Bu Dop Special Forces camp Wednesday after an all-night assault by the Viet Cong. Only 70 of about 300 strike force soldiers were still effective fighters when the Viet Cong withdraw, but the post was held. U.S. Jets Strike Two Targets BONN, Germany-W. 'Averell Across Campus. FRIDAY, JULY 24 1:30 p.m. - The audio visual education center will present a film preview entitled "Artic Re- gion and Its Polar Bears" and "Japan: Its Customs' and Tra- ditions" in the UGLI. 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.--The Cinema Guild will present the Marx Brothers in "Horsefeathers" in the Architecture Aud. 8:00 p.m.--The Department of Speech and the University Play- ers I will present Peter Shaffer's "The Private Ear and the Public Eye" in Mendelssohn Theater, SATURDAY, JULY 24 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-The Cinema Guild will present the Marx Brothers in "Horsefeathers" in the Architecture Aud. Harriman, President Lyndon B. Johnson's special envoy, said last night the Soviet- Union and the United States have the same ob- jective in limiting the spread of nuclear weapons. "That is one of the subjects that will be discussed in Geneva," he told newsmen. Harriman will confer with high West German officials in Bonn today and on Saturday will fly to Munich where Chancellor Lud- wig Erhard will meet him. Harriman came here from Brus- sels after Moscow talks with Pre- mier Alexei Kosygin. PITTSBURGH - United Steel- workers President I. W. Abel announced yesterday that the union s International Executive Board and its Wage Policy Com- mittee would meet in Pittsburgh July 30, presumably to consider serving 30 days strike notice on the basic steel industry. BOGALUSA, La.-City officials yesterday predicted racial peace for Bogalusa-and the governor said a new state biracial commis- sion will end Louisiana's civil rights uproar. Arnold Spiers, city public safety commissioner, said the long crisis here has cooled because people aren't getting excited about dem- onstrations any more. SAIGON (P)-United States jets attacked Communist targets more than 850 miles apart in the Viet- namese war yesterday. One was a highway bridge only 41 miles from China's frontier, another a Viet Cong camp near the tip of South Viet Nam. A military spokesman said three U.S. Air Force B-105 Thunderjets destroyed the bridge, 105 miles northwest of Hanoi, in the clos- est flight of American fighters to the Chinese border. The nearest previously announced strike was an attack on a section of railway tracks 100 miles northwest of Ha- noi Monday. Bomb Cau Mau Far to the south ,eight F-100 Super Sabres bombed and strafed guerrilla installations east of Cau Mau, a government post on the Cau Mau Peninsula. The spokes- man said they destroyed 24 build- ings and are estimated to have killed 15 of the Viet Cong. One of the fliers said "over 50 per cent of the target was burn- ing when we left." Amid these and other air strikes, patrols of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division's 2nd Brigade cruised the jungle skirting their foxholes near Bien Hoa, 12 miles northeast of Saigon in a hunt for guerrillas who have harassed the brigade nightly since Sunday. Suspects They sighted and shot at two or three Viet Cong suspects, but all escaped. A heavy three-hour contact was reported between a small Vietna- mese government force and a DIAL 8-6416 REMARKABLE FILM!" -lift Magazin. guerrilla band in Kien PhongI Province, adjoining the Cambod-' ian frontier about 80 miles north- west of Saigon. The government's casualties were described as light. Communist losses were not deter- mined. Warships of the U.S. 7th Fleet were again punctuating patrol du- ties with occasional firing mis- sions against Viet Cong near the South China Sea shore. DIAL 662-6264 "DR. NO" at 1:30-5:20 & 9:20 "FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE" at 3:25 & 7:25 _________________ ENDING SATURDAY lse e ctemenmt wigh Double DDIEIIWIV I I FRA.NCOIS TRUGFFAUT' S man-powered flying contraption "A DELIGHTFUL MOVIE" >: -The New Yorker ° I 2.> __AL__ DiSNEY THE AREA'S NEWEST AND FINEST presents DRIVE-IN THEATRE a4 Enawtvee Ox. CARPENTER ROAD " TONIGHT 0 FIRST ANN ARBOR SHOWING JaMesGaI~eR JOIN THE FUN. Ja~mues Ne, b y 2 Y DICKWNDYKe x a:;. -.EaSm e 7,- r AN9ieDICISNSON "r>, starring E1HeLMeRmaN " T OMMY KIRK ANNETTE OWA eIMNS "MADAME COCO -. "" -,F . MKIK A N f w. ....."w". + LEON FRANK and ARTHUR Youth on the Run AMES - FAYLEN-'CN N ELL Special Title Song Treatment Features THE BEACH BOYS WITH mANNETTE WRITTEN etTOM AND HELEN AUGUST- CO-PRODUCER RON MILLER "DIRECTED By ROBERT STEVENSON pCE P K C t n mReleased by BUENA VISTA DISTRIBUTION CO INC. @1964 Watt Disney Productions MCAEL PARKS/CEUA KAYE th ame Dial 662-626T "ART OF LOVE"-8:30 & LATE WALT DISNEY STARTS "WILD SEED"-10:30 for the finest n family SUNDAY TWO CARTOONS entertainmentE I From the beginning, they knew it was wrong.... but nothing could keep them apart! t!' METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER AND FILMWAYS PRESENt ELIZABETH TAYLOR - RICHARD BURTON EVA MARIE SAINT IN MARTIN RANSOHOFF'S PRODUCTION STARTING le l 1Oh I- 1