TUESDAY, AUGUS'T' 3, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TV*EV TUESDAY, AUGUST 3,1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ThREE , Parliament Endorses SWilson's Government THIRTY-PLANE RAID: I|U.S. Bombers Hit Doxa Base In Vote of Confidence BRITAIN'S LABOR GOVERNMENT, headed by Prime Minister' Harold Wilson (right), won a vote of confidence in the House of Commons yesterday after an angry debate featuring ex- changes between Wilson and the new Tory leader, Edward Heath. During the debate, Chancellor of the Exchequer James Callaghan (left) predicted that Britain will be back in the black by the end of 19661 38 ARRESTED: Seize Civil Rights Pickets In, Allendale Sit-i Protests By The Associated Press ALLENDALE, S.C.-Thirty-eight, including nine whites, were ar- rested yesterday in Allendale, South Carolina, as state troopers and local officers broke up a threatened all-night sit-in demonstra- e tion at the Allendale County Courthouse. And. in Philadelphia, Martin Luther King said that "if the North is not eternally vigilant, it wont be long before the South runs ahead in race relations." The persons arrested, in Allendale were among a crowd of about 150 who jammed the courthouse corridor in front of the voter reg- Labor Wins By 13Votes Over Tories Socialists Achieve 'Breathing Period' LONDON (P)-The Labor gov- ernment won a House of Com- mons confidence vote last night after an angry confrontation be- tween Prime Minister Harold Wil- son and the new Conservative leader, Edward Heath. By a margin of 13 votes, Wil- son's Laborites defeated a mo- tion introduced by Heath express- ing no confidence in the govern- ment and deploring Wilson's han- dling of the nation's affairs. The count of 303-290 was an- nounced to the cheers of the La- borites, who had been roused by a stand-up exchange between Wil- son and Heath. Accusations At one point the two leaders were on their feet, with the cham- ber in uproar, pointing their fin- gers accusingly and in anger at' each other. The effect of the Wilson gov- ernment's triumph will be to give Laborites a respite, because Par- liament recesses Friday until late October. For months th ruling party has had to be on its toes, day and night, not daring to lose a crucial Commons vote for fear of being forced to resign. In hs first speech since being installed as Conservative leader, Heath introduced the censure mo- tion. He made Britain's economic woes the theme and dwelt main- ly on the way, as he put it, that Labor since taking office nine months ago, has undermined world confidence in this country's abil- ity to pay its way., Replies Wilson more than once hit back hard. Addressing himself to Heath and Reginald Maudling, Wilson said he had discovered since taking of- fice that the Conservatives them- selves had planned much the same type of emergency economic ac- tion as had been taken by Labor. Beyond the uproar little that was substantially new emerged from the debate. Economics Chancellor of the Exchequer James Callaghan forecast that Britain will, barring accidents, be back in the black by the end of 1966. , Without using the dreaded word, he appeared to rule out the need for devaluation of sterling as one remedy. But some drastic actions, Callaghan indicated, might have to be used to get the nation into credit again, and he listed at leash two. An analysis of the censure vote disclosed that 10 Liberal lawmak- ers, despite earlier indications they had given to the contrary, did not vote for the government but mere- ly abstained. -Associated Press SAIGON (P) - A fleet of 30 United States B52 jet bombers sought yesterday to destroy a sus- pected Viet Cong base near the Doxa, a mist-shrouded area in the central highlands between govern- ment centers at Kontum and Da Nang. A U.S. spokesman said the eight-engine Strategic Air Com- mand craft, flying from Guam, dumped 500 tons of bombs on "Viet Cong installations in Quang Tin Province, approximately 350 miles north-northwest of Saigon," in a 45-minute raid. Air attacks north of the border included strikes at the Thanh Hoa railroad bridge, 80 miles south of Hanoi, and two strings of barges 10 miles farther south. Thanh Hoa North Vietnamese gunners shot down a U.S. Air Force F105 Thunderchief on the Thanh Hoa mission. The pilot was seen to parachute successfully, newsmen were told, but efforts to rescue him failed and he was listed as missing. Radio Hanoi declared four of the raiders were downed. In the ground war, U.S. Marines and Vietnamese troops teamed up for an attack that overran the Communist - dominated village of Chan Son, 10 miles south of the Da Nang Air Base. U.S. PARATROOPERS examine an area Sunday near Long Cat on a mission to survey results of heavy bombings by Air Force B-52 bombers in this jungle area. No Viet Cong installa- tions were found in the bombed-out areas on this mission. They killed 25 persons-among them from three to five noncom- batants who had failed to heed a loudspeaker warning to leave-and captured 80 men suspected of serving as guerrillas. Helicopters Viet Cong ground fire downed three U.S. Army helicopters in- volved in the operation, but a spokesman said there were no casualties among the, American or Vietnamese troops. Together the Marines and the Vietnamese made up about a regiment-per- haps 1,500 men. Farther s o u t h, government forces were on the move in two sectors. A spokesman said they killed 20 Viet Cong in Quang Ngai Province, 330 miles north- east of Saigon, and 17 in Binh Thuan Province, '95 miles north- east of this city. Government cas- ualties in both cases were de- scribed as light. U.S. and Vietnamese planes flew more missions against sus- pected Viet Cong concentrations and there was a body count on the result of one raid by two B57 Canberras. Ground forces said the Canberras killed 60 guerrillas. Viet Cong Moves Viet Cong bands staged a flurry of attacks on outposts in Long An Province, south of Saigon, and in one case inflicted extensive cas- ualties on a platoon of govern- ment troops. These were among 26 Viet Cong actions, mostly mortar harass- ment, reported in the'Saigon area over a 48-hour period. Asked about the increase in Viet Cong activity near the capi- tal, a spokesman said "perhaps the enemy wants to test our reaction." The B52 raid was the seventh and most northerly in a series launched June 18. The U.S. spokesman said it was carried out at the request of. South Viet Nam's government. The Viet Cong have controlled the Doxa for years. No Findings As in most of the past strikes, however, there was no immediate finding as to the results. The most obviously effective was the fourth. This was a raid July 17 on Mang Yang Pass, 240 miles north of Sai- gon, t h a t helped Vietnamese troops re-open Route 19 from coastal Qui Nhon to Pleiku, an inland base, to supply convoys. The Viet Cong, however, blew up a bridge yesterday to close the route again at least temporarily. Results from the sixth B52 strike, the blasting of a rocky, sector 35 miles southeast of Sai-' gon last Thursday, were meager. In all, three Viet Cong were re- ported killed and three captured. Five Americans were wounded in the sweep. They were hit by fragments of one of their own artillry shells that fell short. Intelligence In operations related to the war: -A reliable source said police agents have broken up a Viet Cong intelligence network in the Da Nang area and arrested four per- sons. -Twenty-one persons went on trial before a military tribunal in Wheeler Arrives for Asian Talks HONOLULU (P)-Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, declared yester- day that United States air strikes reaching within 35 miles of Com- munist China's border definitely were not intended to test Chinese reaction. Wheeler arrived here by jet plane from Washington for a strategy conference on deploying 50,000 more American troops in Viet Nam. President Lyndon B. Johnson announced last week the decision to boost U.S. forces there from 75,000 to 125,000 men. Wheeler went into conference with Gen. William C. Westmore- land, head of the U.S. military forces in Viet Nam, and Adm. U.S. Grant Sharp Jr., the Pacific military commander. "We will be discussing the problems in implementing the President's decision of last week," Wheeler told the air field news conference. Sharp said the manpower build- up of 50,000 men could not be ex- pected to be accomplished over- night, and Westmoreland didn't give a definitive answer on how long it-will take to move 50,000 more fighting men to Viet Nam.. "But, the buildup will move a 1 on g rapidly," Westmoreland said. "That's one of the purposes of this conference." Sharp added that another deci- sion will be made on the assigning of aircraft necessary for the boost in U.S. troops. Wheeler said the 50,000-man increase in American strength will help operations in Viet Nam. "Certainly it will help, there is no question about that," Wheeler said in reply to a newsman's question. "How mtch, it is im- possible to tell." Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, the retiring U.S. ambassador to South Viet Nam, flew 4here Saturday from Saigon with Westmoreland. Taylor flew on to Washington last night to make his final reports to the President. He did not par- ticipate in the military manpower deployment talks. Taylor called the boosting of American forces a "great encour- agement" to the South Vietnamese people. "This shows a deepening of America's willingness to aid," Taylor said. Saigon on a charge of undermin- ing the war effort by signing var- ious peace petitions. Canton Prepares Abroad;, Chinese arriving in the British crown colony of Hong Kong from Canton told of mili- tary preparations in that city. They said Canton's rooftops are bristling with antiaircraft guns, trenches are being dug and base- ments and corridors of major buildings are being outfitted as air raid shelters. In Tokyo the B52 raid south- east of Saigon last Thursday was the subject of a parliamentary debate. A demand that Britain break diplomatic relations with Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's Saigon regime was voiced by two leftwing law- makers in London on the ground that Ky made a statement Oct. 15 praising Adolf Hitler for the way he instilled discipline 'in the German people.'Prime Minister Harold Wilson's Labor government rejected the demand. President S e k o u Toure of Guinea arrived .in Yugoslavia for talks with President Tito on a new attempt by nonaligned na- tions to bring the governments concerned in Viet Nam to the con- ference table. istration office and kept sing- ing hymns and clapping hands after the office had closed at 5 p.m. About 35 Negroes had complet- ed the registration process during the day. Allendale is the home of South Carolina Gov. Robert McNair. Negro leaders had complained to McNair last month that voter registration officials were deliber- ately slowing down the registra- tion process, but the governor said he had complete confidence that officials would obey the law. Continues Tour King, head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, came to the nation's fourth largest city in the continuation of a tour begun last week in Chicago to "get a first hand picture of condi- tions in the North" concerning ed- ucation, housing and jobs for Ne- groes. Beside meetings with civil rights leaders, King arranged rallies last night and today, including a speech at the wall of the all- white Girard College in the heart of the city's Negro neighborhood, before going on to Washington and then possibly to Americus, Ga., at the end of the week. Vance Announces Plans To Strengthen Reserve Forces WASHINGTON (AP)-Deputy Secretary of Defense Cyrus R. Vance disclosed plans yesterday to speed up training and increase combat power of certain Army Reserve units in case "a callup of Reserves should become necessary." "We propose to take special measures to raise the readiness of three Reserve divisions, six independent brigades and selected combat MARTIN LUTHER KING Across Campus TUESDAY, AUGUST 3 12:00 noon-The office of Re- ligious Affairs will present a book discussion, Charles Silberman's "Crisis in Black and White" in Anderson Room D of the Union. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4 1:30 p.m.-The Audio Visual Education Center will present a film preview, "Danial Webster," in the multipurpose room of the GLI. 8:00 p.m.-The Department of Speech University Players will present Shakespear's "Measure for Measure" in Mendelssohn Theater. Dial 662-6264 Ending Wednesday Shows at 1-2:50-4:50 6: 55 & 9:05 and service support units," Vance told a House Armed Service sub- committee. *Vance did not identify the units and a Pentagon spokesman said no final selection has been made. Vance told newsmen the idea is to pick them from the proposed realignment of the Reserves to be, brought about by a merger of Army Reserve units into the Na- tional Guard. The merger has had a difficult time in Congress. But the deputy secretary urged that the commit- tee quickly approve the disputed proposal and said the Pentagon doesn't agree with suggestions the merger be put off. However, Vance said that the plan to merge air reserve forces into the National Guard is being scrapped' temporarily. i .... World News Roundup 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 Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General. Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. TUESDAY, AUGUST 3 Day, Calendar Office of Religious Affairs Book Dis- cussion-Patty Gurin, Institute for So- cial Research, Tuskegee Project, "Charles Silberman's 'crisis in Black and White': Anderson Room D, Michi- gan Union, 12 m. Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview-"Mathematics of the Honey- comb" and "Moon Adventure in Space": Multipurpose Room, Undergrad- uate Library, 1:30 p.m. School of Music Lecture-Gustave Reese, "The Tritone": Recital Hall, School of Music, 4:30 p.m. Linguistic Institute Forum Lecture - Stephen Ullman, University of Leeds, "How the vocabulary Is Built Up": Nat- urfal Science Aud., 7:30 p.m. School of Music Baroque Trio Concert -Nelson Hauenstein, flute; Florian Mueller, oboe; John Flower, harpsi- chord; Lawrence Hurst, double bass: Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:30 p.m. Political Science Department Seminar on therstudy of Politics inIndia-Rajni Kothari, director of the Center for the Study of Developing Sciences, in New Delhi, has consented to give two sem- inars on "The Study of Politics -and Political Behavior in India," Tues. and Wed., Aug. 3 and 5, West Conference Room, Rackham, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Every one is cordially invited. General Notices Student ID., Cards: Any new summer term students who plan to continue in the fall term and did not receive a stu- dent I.D. card should make applica- tion for a card at Window A of the Registrar's Office. Any students who lost their cards or need a new one be- cause of name change should also make application at Window A. It is strongly recommended all cards be secured prior to the end of the summer term. A stu- dent I.D. card is required of all reg- istrants for the regular term. Master's Degree Candidates: Candi- dates for the Master's degree who have not yet picked up their tickets for the Masters Breakfast may do so be- fore Fri., Aug. 6, at 5 p.m. Office hours will be 8-12 and 1-5 Monday through Friday and 8-12 on Sat., July 31. The breakfast will be held on Sun., Aug. 8, at 9 a.m. in the Michigan Union Ballroom. Tomorrow Is Opening Night for the University Players' production, of Shakespeare's "Measure for Measure" which will run Wed.-Sat., Aug. 4-11 at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Box office is open daily 12:30-5, and until the 8 p.m. curtain on performance dates, Tickets are $1.50 or .$1 tomor- row and Thursday, $1.75 or $1.25 Friday and Saturday. Foreign Visitors The following are the foreign visi- tors programmed through the Interna- tional Center who wil ibe on campus this week on the dates indicated. Pro- gram arrangements are being made by Mrs. Clifford R. Miller, International Center, 764-2148.P Sreten Bjelicic, President, Mutual In- surance Co. of Yugoslavia, Belgrade, Yu- goslavia, Aug. 1-3. Placement ANNOUNCEMENT: Peace Corps, Wash., D.C.-Gov't. of Iran requests Master's degree volunteers to serve as assistant professors at Pah- levi Univ., Shiraz, Iran. Degrees need- ed include physiol., biol., biochom., hist., econ., soc., soc & physical anthro., math, chem., & physics. Trng. begins Nov. 1965 at an American Univ. Single men & women & married couples with- DAILY OFFICIAL BU LLETI N : . ... 1 A A :f : f . .. r 1 :{ {.. . . ..{. .r.. 11 . . r out dependents are eligible. Peace Corps questionnaires required-available at Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad stu- dents, please call 764-7460 for appoint- ments with the following: WED., AUG. 4- Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., Hart- ford, Conn.-Seeking degrees in Gen. Lib. Arts, Econ., Educ., Law, Lib. Sci., Math, Public Health, etc. Positions in insurance ingluding home office, claims, sales, acctg., surety bonds ,etc. Loca- tions throughout U.S. TUES., AUG. 10- City of Flint, Mich.-Personnel Tech- nician. Degree in bus. admii., public or personnel admin., educ., psych. or rel. 1 yr. exper. pref. POSITION OPENINGS: Local Organization--usical Instru- ment Salesman. Immed opening for malegrad. Sales exper. helpful. Sell to schools, colleges, churches, etc. Kordite Corp., Macedon, N.Y.--Plan- ning & Control Analyst, BS acctg., CPA or MBA desirable, or degree in Indust. Mgmt. or Engrg. 2 yrs. exper. in cost analysis, prod, control, etc. . Mobil Oil Co., Niles, 11.-Indust. Mar- keting Repres. BS ME or IE pref. Sale of lubricants, rust preventives, fuels, etc. to mfg. plants. By The Associated Press PALERMO, Sicily-Italian au- thorities announced yesterday yes- terday they had smashed the lead- ership of an international super- gang linking the Sicilian Mafia and the American Costa Nostra. A series of lightning predawn police raids from Bologna in north Italy to Taormina in eastern Sicily preceded the announcement and marked a new chapter in the war against the international underworld." * * * JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -Justice Minister Balthazar Vor- I #-in ster said yesterday his department has completed investigations into allegations of brutality in South Africa's prisons, made in a series of articles published by the Rand Daily Mail. A departmental report has been forwarded to the attorney general, who will consider whether the newspaper contravened this coun- try's prisons act, he added. Under this law anyone publishing false statements about jail conditions is liable to heavy fines, The series, published widely overseas, described physical and mental hardships suffered by a white political prisoner. LONDON - W. Averell Harri- Joe Moses is his name... stealing Africa * ~is his ame! man, President Lyndon B. John- son's special envoy, met with For- eign Secretary Michael Stewart at the House of Commons yesterday to discuss Viet Nam and other problems. Harriman has been talking with European leaders after conferences with Soviet leaders in Moscow. He also will see Prime Minister Harold Wilson while here. ADEN-Yemen's republican pre- mier, Gen. Hassan El Amry, de- clared at a political meeting in the Yemeni capital yesterday that his regime is "now ready for a decisive battle with Saudi Arabia." Saudi Arabia's King Faisal has backed the Royalist forces of de- posed King Mohammed El Badr in Yemen's three-year civil war. The Yemen republican regime has re- ceived support from the United Arab Republic. nc 4 CARPENT ER RAD LOCATED 2 MILES SOUTH OF WASHTENAW ROAD NOW SHOWING THE SCREEN BLAZES WITH THE FSTORY BASED ON THE i TODAY Lost in Luncheon Book Discussion Series: I DIAL 5-6290 TRAVEL INC. AIRLINE STEAMSHIP HOTEL CALL 665-3734 IN THE MAYNARD HOUSE Charles Silberman's- CRISIS IN BLACKI AND WHITE by MRS. PATTY GURIN Ph.D., Institute for Social Research, Tuskegee Project 12:00 Noon-Michigan Union, Anderson Room DISCUSSION FREE OF CHARGE-LUNCHEON AVAILABLE, 50c Sponsored by The University of Michigan, Office of Religious Affairs . CIVITAN JAZZ BAND CONCERT IF 1I 11 University Players Department of Speech present TH IS WEEK I Sha kesneare's I I I III ur..., CI=1 MWA'c,.,,,,, 11 r s I I.