THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACE TIMES 'IHE MICHIGAN I~AILYPA(~E ThRFI1 i AAI% AW j6AA-" &P - World News Roundup T Y YY _ Sikes' 64 Leads Thunderbird \I Major League Standings 1 By The Associated Press MOSCOW-Leonid I. Brezhnev, head of the Soviet Communist Party, last night once again de- manded withdrawal of United States troops from Viet Nam. Breznev also said the Soviet Union, "as before, will render nec- essary aid to its Vietnamese broth- ers in the Just ,war against American imperialists." The Soviet leader made his re- marks in a statement issued for the 20th anniversary today of the Across Campu's FRIDAY, AUGUST.6 1:30 p.m.-The Audio Visual Education Center will present a film preview, "The Red Balloon" in the multipurpose room of the UGLI. 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-The Cinema Guild will present "Monsieur Ver- doux" in the Architecture Aud. 8:00 p.m.-The Department of Speech University Players will present Shakespeare's "Measure for Measure" in Mendelssohn Theater. atom-bombing of Hiroshima. It was in response to a request from the Hiroshima newspaper Tyugo- ku Shimbun and was carried by Tass. * * * CAIRO-A state of emergency was declared yesterday for Suda- nese army units, the Sudan gov- ernment radio at Omdurman an- nounced. It said strict security measures had been taken in the Sudan cap- ital, Khartoum, and that impor- tant buildings there had been placed under heavy guard. The broadcast came shortly af- ter Uganda announced it had closed its borders with Sudan "to halt Sudanese, southern rebels crossing the border." WASHINGTON-Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor gave a final account- ing of his tour of duty as am- bassador to South Viet Nam be- fore a meeting of top officials at the White House yesterday. No word of what he said was given out, but Taylor himself told newsmen Wednesday that "the future is far more hopeful than it was a year ago." * * * WASHINGTON - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. urged President Lyndon B. Johnson yesterday to send federal examiners into cer- tain key areas of the South im- mediately after he signs the voting bill in order to speed registration. "The President assured me they will look into this and asked me to talk with the attorney general before leaving Washington," King said. WHITEMARSH, Pa. (MP - Dick Sikes, generally acknowledged as pro golf's 1964 rookie of the year, rode a hot putter to an eight- under-par 64 yesterday for the first round lead in the $125,000 Philadelphia Golf Classic. The two-time former U.S. Pub- lic Links and NCAA champion blazed to a four-stroke lead over four bunched at 68-Bruce Dev- lin, Bob Charles, Bobby Nichols and Kel Nagle. Sikes, 25, used only 24 putts as he missed by one stroke the Whitemarsh Valley Country Club course record of 63 set two years ago in the Pro-Am Tourney by Gary Player. year's opening Whitemarsh lead; Jack McGowan of Largo, Fla.; Dean Refran of Boca Rotan, Fla.; Sam Carmichael of Martinville, Ind.; Dave Marr of Larchmont, N.Y.; Lionell Hebert, Tubac Val- ley, Ariz., and Homero Blancas, Houston. AMERICAN LEAGUE. W L Pet. GB Minnesota 69 39 .639 - Baltimore 62 43 .590 5. Cleveland 61 44 .581 61 Detroit 58 47 .552 9,:: Chicago 57 48 .543 101 New York 54 56 .491 16 Los Angeles 48 58 .453 '20 Washington 46 63 .4'2 23'. Boston 40 65 .381 271" Kansas City 35 67 .434 31 YESTERDA'S RESULTS Minnesota 8, Wasington 5 .bew York 3, Chicago 0 Cleveland 5, Detroit 2 Kansas City 5, Boston 1 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Minnesota (n) New York at Detroit (n) Was n at LosAngeles (n) Cleveland at Chicago Baltimore at Kansas City (n) Another stroke behind at 69 were Arnold Palmer; Tom Shaw of Portland, Ore., who shared last DAI LY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ' AA. 4.41 ki.. ".,..AA... ,::tt::.:.: yetr.: "AVN I sma ..>.:"': 1::.":::,^..,. ... ..... ....a m e s ht1 t?' QK M~kttJ.V V:7ftt'."::"".Y:1t'St~t.V.": 1:l::Ir":::::i t~:.::::{':?l:": :: :l:> ".ti{ : ": ":"r: 1 II Wolverine Five Wins Third Tilt ALEXANDRIA, E g y p t ( P) - Michigan's basketball team ended it U t fo E o JU u uy Ue- NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. Los Angeles 64 46 .582 San Francisco 58 46 .558 Cincinnati 60 48 .556 Milwaukee 58 47 .552 Philadelphia 56 50 .528 Pittsburgh 57 53 .518 St. Louis 55 53 .509 Chicago 51 60 .459 Houston 45 61 .425 New York 34 74 .315 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 6, silwaukee 3 San Francisco 18, Cincinnati 7 St. Louis 3, Houston 1 Philadelphia 4, Chicago 3 Ylttstburgh 11, new York 3 TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at New York (n) Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (n) San Francisco at St. Louis (n) Los Angeles at Cincinnati (n) Houston at Milwaukee (n) GB 3 3 6 7 8 17 29 The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan, for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- Ii) 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. FRIDAY, AUGUST 6 Day Calendar Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview-"The Red Balloon": Multipur- pose Room, Undergraduate Library, 1:30 p.m. School of Music Recital - Student Woodwind Quintet: Recital Hall, School of Music, 4:30 p.m. Cinema Guild-Charlie Chaplin and Martha -Rage in "Monsieur Verdoux": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m.d Dept. of speech University Players Production - William Shakespeare's "Measure for Measure": Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - Anita Fecht, soprano: Recital Hall, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. General Notices Doctoral Examination for Kenneth James McCormick, Microbiology; thes- is: "Selective Effects of Cell Popula- tions on Variants of Type 2 Poliovirus," Fri., Aug. 6, 1570 E. Medical Bldg., at 10:30 a.m. Chairman, W. H. Murphy. Doctoral Examination for Thomas Charles Griffing, Zoology; thesis: "Dy- namics and Energetics of Populations of Brown Hydra," Fri., Aug. 6, 2111 Natural Science Bldg., at 10 a.m. Chair- man, L. B. Slobodkin. University Players' Summer Playbill tickets are available for "Measure for Measure" and Humperdinck's "Hansel and Gretel" which will run Aug. 11-14. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Box Office is open for this week 12:30 p.m. until S p.m. Student Government Council Approval of the following student-sponsored events becomes effective 24 hours after the publication o fthis notice. All STUDGNT ROOK £SRVICG will open for the Fall term at. 1319 South University We will sell texts for less and buy for more We still need good used texts for all introductory courses Best prices in town! Call 761-0700, 761-0758, 663-1297 3 _ publicity for these events must be j withheld until the approval has become effective. Approval request forms for student sponsored events are available in Room 1011 of the SAB. Voice Political Party, Fishbowl table. Aug. 5 and 6, 8 a.m.-12 noon, Fishbowl. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Montgomery County, Rockville, Md. -Architect and Director of Dept. of Bldgs. & Grounds. Degree in Arch. or Arch. Engrg., grad study desirable. 7 yrs. exper.-2 in admin. capacity. Red Head Products Co., Oa k Park, Mich.-Process Engr. Degree in mech. engrg., bkgd. in shop practices. Exper. not required. Local Organization-l. Secretary-Re- ceptionist. General office work & some bookkeeping. lInmed. opening. 2,. Wom- an to manage store, also part-time sales position. Begin in October. City of Waterbury, Conn. - Public Health Educator, BS in biol. or social sciences or educ. plus MA in Public Health. Assist in program of communi- ty health educ. Application deadlinej Oct, 26.I Ayerst Labs., Inc., Rouses Pt., N.Y.- Various positions including 1. Chemist. BS Chem. or Pharm. or rel., no exper. ~req. 2. Pharmacist. BS plus 5 yrs. ex- per. 3. Ass't. Manager. MS pref., major in chem., knowl. of physics, biol. & microbiol. plus 10 yrs. exper. 4. Process Engr. BS Chem. Engrg. 2-5 yrs. exper For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: 212 SAB- Boyne-Mountain Lodge, Boyne Falls, Mich.-Needed. Waitresses & bus boys after Aug. 18. Part or full time. De- tails at 212 SAB. ORGAN IZATION NOTICES Use of This Column for Announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered student organiza- tions only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. Folk Dance Club, Folk dance with Instruction, Fri., Aug. 6, 8-11 p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. IS Lour oz gypt yesterday oy de- feating an Alexandria selection team 99-65 for the Wolverines' third straight victory. The Big Ten champions led at halftime 39-32. 0 . - r II UNIVERSITY PLAYERS 1 Tonight and Tomorrow Measure for Measure by Win Shakes peare The Most Talked About and Fought About Picture Ever Filmed! LOUIS MALLE'S THE LOVERS shown at 6:30 & 10:30 daily and LOLITA with JAMES MASON, SUE LYON, PETER SELLERS shown at 8 p.m. only 17121 Livernois at McNichols UN 2-4252 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre 8:001d peni. Box Office open 12:30 - curtain time ~XXXXXXX~XX.M~M.XXXX.M.~X..M.MJ F **.VI* V 4 -, , , , ,,T" GEORGE WEIN PRESENTS FESTIVAL PRELUDE 'rrlrlrrlr?% DETROIT'S GREATEST JAZZ CONCERT SUNDAY, AUG. 15-C8 ARENA 8 P. M. Oe:fl G401 4 ,, e l BASIS DAVIS n% Aft A SBRUBECK Q&/. GILLESPIE " DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH School Time is OLYMPIA TIME s, Carmen MCRAE *, .SMITH, o All SEATS RESERVED: $3-$4-$5"$b MAIL ORDERS: FESTIVAL PRODUCTIONS, INC. C/O COBO ARENA BOX OFFICE DETROIT 26. ENCLOSE STAMPED, SELFADDRESSED ENVELOPE. TICKETS ON SALE-DISCOUNT RECORDS 300 S. State, ANN ARBOR wmmwmm 4 CIVITAN JAZZ N BAND CONCERT REFRESHMENTS DANCING FRI., AUG. 6, 1965 8-12 P.M. GERMAN PARK DONATION $1.25 You Must Be 21 To Attend I University Typewriter Center - RR7I 11 613 E. William St. 665-3763 2 ENCORE CLASSICS!-. j"AT THE CANNES FILM FESTIVAL, ONE POTATO, TWO POTATO;" SCORED ITHE LONGEST, LOUDEST(1 1 jOVATION IN 9 YEARS!" Time fda gazin. AND 'A GREAT "N T11i MOVIE" B/NOTHING *1. BUT A MAN" "k &ne ~On. CARPENTER ROAD LOCATED 2 MILES SOUTH OF WASHTENAW ROAD NOW SHOWING THE SCREEN BLAZES WITH THE STORY BASED ON THE BLISTERING BEST-SELLER! CAR:1 RAER CO . H1ARLOW I Color" -PLUS- UNIVERSITY PLAYERS DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH Present THE OPERA DEPARTMENT, SCHOOL OF ,MUSIC i n ..Janiel and r'el immortal operatic masterpiece by Engelbert Humperdinck 3 English translation by Josef Blatt Wed.-Sat., August 11-14, 8:00 p.m. Matinee, Sat., August 14, 2:30 p.m. in. air-conditioned Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Box Office open daily 12:30-5 (until 8 on performance dates) CAMPUS lk I DIAL 662-6264 Features Start at 1:00-3:00-5:00 7:00 and 9:20 JeitWAYNE DEANMARTIN J I i n n i rrr Complete! Intact! Every spectacular scene! Direct from its record roadshow engagements! EXPLODES ON THE SCREEN WITH ALL. ITS BREATHTAKING ADVENTURE! HAVE A DATE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT You'll finally be able to afford to, if you get a Honda. Trade in your gas-eater for a thrifty Honda 50. Up to 200 miles per gallon, and at least that many laughs. Maybe more. Hondas are just the ticket for campus traffic and campus parking, and you'll notice a big difference in your pocketbook, too. It'll bulge for a change. And so will your date book. -- ER MICHAEL ANDERSON,JR: EARLHOLIMANJEREMY SLATE I I I N CINEMA GUILD l ; presents I I I U CHARLIE CHAPLIN n MONSIEUR VERDOUX d~~i Filmby RICHARD BROOKS; ' O ME SNJUGENS' W LIJAC PAUL CO-STARRING'4 A AC f HAWKINS LKATMIOFF ZAVI = EIIm Based on the novel by JOSEPH CONRAD . Music by BRONISLAU KAPER,. _ _ :: s; .. i I