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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

May 13, 1965 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1965-05-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

ThunSDAY, MAY 13,1965

TUIP Myruif' acv 'na TT.v

..... ,

'-- irSiL, MAYl13 1i IUA1'UN 21A lLTbA- '

PAGE THREE

I

2400 ADDED:
Viet Troops Upped to 46,500

_r

'NATO Asks Peace Talks
On Vietnamese Conflict

Rights Battle Centers on Poor

SAIGON, Viet Nam (A)--Trans-
portsd landed about 2400 more
United States servicemen yester-
day for the war against the Viet
Cong while Communist survivors
Of the battle of Song Be, Tues-
day's major engagement, hid out
in the hills.
The U.S. military force in Viet
Nam rose to about 46,500 men.
A third battalion of 1400 U.S.
Marines moved ashore at Chu
Lai, where the 1st and 2nd bat-
talions of the 4th Marine Regi-
ment established a beachhead last
Friday. Navy Seabees are to build
an air strip at Chu Lai, 52 miles
southeast of the strategic Da Nang
air base.
The' troop transport, Mann,
brought in 976 men o fthe 173rd
Airborne Brigade from Okinawa
Across
Campus
THURSDAY, MAY 13
8:30 a.m.-There will be a short
course on the Administration of
Natural Parks and Equivalent Re-
serves at 1040 Natural Resources
Building.
8:30 a.m.-The Center for Pro-
grammedLearning for Business
will present a workshop at the
Michigan Union.
FRIDAY, MAY 14
8:30 a.m.-There will be a short
course on the Administration of
Natural Parks and Equivalent Re-
serves at 1050 Natural Resources
Building.
3:30 p.m.-There will be a base-
ball game between Michigan and
Michigan State at Ferry Field.
DIAL 8-6416
"A hypnotic,
engrossing
film" .
Crowther, N. Y. Times
"A CINEMA MASTERPIECE!
A powerful, luminous
and violent
existential thriller"
-Time Magazine
"Enthralling! Right
up there with the
French and Italians
in nudity and
erotic passion!"
-Thompson, Journal American

to join 2000 other paratroopers of dia's President Sarvepalli Rad-
that brigade previously transferred hakrishnan for a Viet Nam cease-
by air. The newcomers, including fire policed by an Afro-Asian mili-
an artillery battalion, were as- tary force.
signed to help guard the Bien Asst. Secretary of State William
Hs airport, 12 miles northeast of St

SELMA, Ala. (P)-Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr., anticipating pass-
LONDON ()-The North Atlantic Treaty Organization declared age of the federal voting law is
last night that the war in Viet Nam threatens world peace and it shifting the emphasis in his civ-
expressed its understanding-but not its full support-of the United it rights campaign to other prob-
States role in the Vietnamese war. lems.
This stand taken by the 15 North Atlantic allies came after Sec- On his checkup tour of Ala-
retary of State Dean Rusk made a last-minute flight to London to bama's "Black Belt." King dwelt
explain behind closed doors U.S. policies in Viet Nam, as well as in on what he calls the "cancerous
the Dominican Republic. evil of segregation."

L I

Saigon.

I

Foreign Manpower
Further foreign manpower mayr
help to reinforce the South Viet-;
namese war effort. In Manila, the
Philippine House of Representa-
tives voted 56-18 to send 2000
troops-an engineering battalion
with security support. The meas-
ure now goes to the Senate.
In the aerial drive against North
Viet Nam, 12 U.S. Air Force F-105
fighter-bombers were reported to
have sunk two 70-foot junks and
hit a number of oil tankers at
Vinh, 140 miles north o fthe bor-
der. Barges and railroad boxcars

P. Bundy ,a key official in Viet
Nam policy making, called the In-
dian proposal very interesting and
said it is being given consideration.
IWorld.News
Roundup
By The Associated Press
SEOUL - Army authorities in-
vestigating an alleged plot by a
group of Army officers to over-

were among other targets. A throw the government said yes-
spokesman said all the F-105's terday they were still looking for
and their 12-plane escort returned a retired Army colonel whom they
safely. believed was a plot leader.

Retreat
Dominating the talk of U.S. mil-
itary advisors on ground opera-
tions was the retreat of the Viet
Cong force that temporarily over-
ran Son Be Tuesday-killing five
U.S. Army advisers and 42 of the
Vietnamese garrison-in one of
the heaviest onslaughts of the
war.
Song Be, a community of 15,-
000, was scarred heavily in the
fighting. In addition to the mili-
tary losses, there may have been
as many as 80 civilian casualties.
Both the public and military hos-
pitals were full.
In the political field, Saigon au-
thorities made plain they don't
want Maj. Gen. Van (Big) Minh,
the former chief of state, back in
the country. He was diplomatical-
ly exiled as a good will ambassa-
dor to Asian neighbors last fall.
Keen Interest
The U.S. displayed keen inter-#
est yesterday in a proposal by In-

* * *
WASHINGTON-A religious-led
"silent vigil" protesting United
States policy in Viet Nam broke
up late yesterday in a rain-
drenched row between a spokes-
man for the group and Assistant
Secretary of Defense Arthur Syl-
vester.
The row was over whether the
spokesman, Edward Snyder of the
Friends Committee, violated a
confidence in giving a public re-
port of a session between Secre-
tary of Defense Robert S. Mc-
Namara and nine leaders of the
interfaith demonstration.
* * *
WASHINGTON-President Lyn-
don B. Johnson asked Congress
yesterday to boost the pay of all
uniformed members of the armed
forces and most federal civilian
workers $853 million a year start-
ing next Jan. 1.

A communique issued afterf
Council of Ministers reflected a c
policies of the U.S. and France
in Southeast Asia and elsewhere.
Key Passage
In a key passage relating to
Viet Nam it said:
"The ministers reviewed com-
prehensively the international sit-
uation with particular reference
to areas of tension or conflict,
such as Malaysia, Viet Nam, the
Dominican Republic and some
African states where grave threats
have arisen to international se-
curity and peace.
"They reaffirmed the right of
all peoples to live in peace under
governments of their own choice."
Rusk had insisted on the inclu-
sion of the first sentence of the
passage, which defines the Viet
Nam war as a menace to world
peace.
French Foreign Minister Mau-
rice Couve De Murville had de-
manded the inclusion of the sec-
ond sentence which reflects Presi-
dent Charles De Gaulle's view that
all peoples, including the Vietna-
mese, should be allowed to settle
their own futures.
Carefully Chosen Words
The carefully chosen words deli-
cately balanced the positions tak-
en by Rusk and Couve De Murville
in a secret session of the Council
devoted almost entirely to the
Vietnamese crisis.
Rusk had set out to reassure
the allies about the course of
American policies in Viet Nam,
stressing American readiness to
enter peace talks with the Com-
munist powers, but noting that
neither North Viet Nam or Com-
munist China had shown any in-
clination for such talks.
Rusk did, not, however, ask for
a general NATO declaration of
approval of U.S. policies.
Made Plain
Couve De Murville made plain
France does not want a Commun-
ist victory in South Viet Nam. He
repeated France's belief that un-
conditional p e a c e negotiations
should start immediately and that
the Americans ultimately must
leave the country.
He implied, without putting for-
ward any demand, that American
bombing attacks on North Viet
Nam should cease.
In the secret 31/2-hour debate
three foreign ministers besides
Rusk and Couve De Murville spoke
out on Viet Nam-Britain's Mi-
chael Stewart, Belgium's Paul-
Henri Spaak and Canada's Paul
Martin.
All expressed hope of a settle-
ment could be reached in Viet
Nam without an escalation of the
war.
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES

a two-day
ompromise
DAI

meeting of the NATO
between the conflicting

King spoke of voting rights as
he has from the outset of the
four-month old struggle, but no
longer did he beckon his followers
to march on the courthouse.
The famed integration leader
apparently is convinced that en-
actment of a federal right-to-vote
law will take the edge off that
issue and leave other needs still
unmet,
Chance To Register
For one thing, King pointed out,
the chance to register as voters
will make it imperative for illiter-
ate Negroes to learn to read and
write. To meet that challenge, he
said, clinics will be started here
shortly to teach those "who have
not had these advantages of an
education."

DEAN RUSK

THE REV. MARTIN LUTHER KING on his way to jail last year
in the Albany, Ga., civil rights demonstrations. He was arrested
for praying during the demonstration outside Albany's city hall.

ILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Ann Arbor's First
"WORD OF
MOUTH"
hold-over-...

Usually a film holds over
because of big attendance.
However the title of "CAT
BALLOU" did not entice
large numbers of patrons.
But due to word-of-mouth
comment, business has built
daily. So we are gambling
that this neighborly gossip
will make the 2nd week big-
ger than the first one.
THAT WHOOP-IT-UP "W l lTUE r *,,g
FUNNY WESTERN! .-.-
CL
- "vMi -oa f

The Daily Official Bulletin as an
official publication of The Univer-
sitl 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.
THURSDAY, MAY 13
.Day Calendar
Administration of National Parks and
Equivalent Reserves Short Course-1040
Natural Resources Bldg., 8:30 a.m.
Center for Programmed Learning for
Business Workshop-Geary A. Rummler,
director, "Using, Evaluating, Selecting,
and Writing Programmed Materials":
Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m.
Continuing Legal Education Young
Lawyers' Seminar-Rackham Bldg., 9
a.m.
Training and Development, Personnel
Office, University Management seminar
-Lee Danielson, professor of industrial
Relations, "On-the-Job Interviewing
and Counseling": Michigan Union. 1:30
p.m.
General Notices
Parking: Effective immediately, Lot
N-18, Huron at Glenn, will be re-
stricted to staff paid permit parking.
Dept. of speech Tryouts for "Triple;
Threat," second University Theatre pro-;
duction of ILIA, Frieze Bldg., 4 p.m. and
7 p.m.
French and German Screening Exam-
inations: The screen examinations iny
French and German for Doctoral can-
didates will be administered on Thurs.,
May 20, 3 p.m., Aud. B, Angell Hall.
Doctoral candidates must pass the
screening examination before taking
the written test in French or German
unless they have received B or better,
in French III or German III. Those1
who fail the examination may take it
again when the test is administered
in June. Bring your own No. 2 pen-
cils.
History Make-Up Examinations: Will
be held May 22, 10 a.m., Room 435,
Mason Hall. Please consult your in-
structor and then sign the list in
the History Office, 3601 Haven Hall.
Language Exam for Master's Degree
in History: Fri., May 21 p.m., Room 435
Mason Hall. Dictionaries may be used.
Sign the list posted in the History
Office, 3601 Haven Hall.
Final Payment of spring Half-Term
Fees and first 50% of spring-summer
full term fees are due and payable on
or before May 20. Non-payment, pay-
ment of less than the required amount
or late payment will result in the as-
sessment of a delinquent penalty of $5.
In addition, a Hold Credit will be
placed against your grades if your ac-
count remains delinquent. Payments
may be made in person or mailed to
the Cashier's Office, 1015 Admin. Bldg..
before 4:30 p.m., Thurs., May 20. Mail
payments postmarked after due date,
May 20, are late and subject to pen-
alty. Identify mail payments as tut-

tion and show student number and
name.
American Chem. Soc. special Seminar:
Dr. Peter Yates, Dept. of Chemistry,
Univ. of Toronto, "Organic Reactions
in Concentrated Sulfuric Acid; Some
Oxacarbonium Ions," Fri. ,May 14. 4
p.m., Room 1300, Chemistry Bldg.
Placement
ANNOUNCEMENT:
Annenberg School of Communica-
tions, Univ. of Penn., Phila.-Announc-
es a combination creative & experi-
mental work program in mass media
for grads in any field, leading to MA
in Communications. Financial aid avail-
able. Detals available at Bureau of
Appointments.
POSITION OPENINGS:
Michigan TB & Respiratory Disease
Assoc., Lansing, Mich.-Attn.: Seniors
& recent grads-Various openings at
local & state level in voluntary health
assoc. work. Degree in phys. ed., educ.,
soc. & psych.
WJR-TV, Flint, Mich.-Sales Promo-
tion Ass't. Immed. opening for recent
journ. or speech grad. Bkgd. in radio-
TV. Exper. not req. Statistics & research
helpful.
San Diego County, Calif.-Architec-
tural designer. Degree in arch, or rel.
field plus 2 yrs. arch. or struct. engrg.
exper. Des. & supv. draftsmen in pub-
lie works. Apply now.
Pepsi-Cola Co., Long Island City, N.Y.
-Quality Control Field Repres. BS in
Chem., Biol. or rel. & Chem. minor.
Handle lab analysis, test plant machin-
ery, etc. Extensive travel. Midwest &
other locations.
Vickers, Inc., Troy, Mich.-Various
openings for Bus. Ad. & Engrg. grads..
1. Auditor, major in acctg. plus 2 yrs.
exper. 2. Budget Acct., major in acctg.
3. Res. Engr., ME or EE, knowl. of
analog computer. 4. Prod. Planning An-
alayst. Engrg./mktg, bkgd, or Bus./
Engrg,-bkgd.
For further information, please call
764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap-
pointments, 3200 SAB.
SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE:
212 SAB-
Summer Students: Spring Half Term
-A list is available of camps starting
July 1, secretarial jobs everywhere &
labor jobs for men. New jobs come
in every day. Come to Summer Place-
ment, 212 SAB.

------rn--rn------ --------------- mm mm wmmmmm mi
1 ,
1 1
C CHARLIE CHAPLAIN
1s
I 1
r in
1 1
r ,
/
1I ,
IU also starring Jackie Coogan ;
1 1
| One of Chaplain's classic silents. It's the story of '
the Tramp and his humorous and warm adven-
* tures as .he takes the responsibility of caring for
* an abandoned child. Many of the scenes show ;
1 Chaplain at his very best and Jackie Coogan as 1
* "the kid" is unforgettable.
1 '
Also on the same program two U
fine color shorts-1
1
"BEAR COUNTRY" by Disney
I I N ONiKIGI
and I
g1
I ,
"CALDER'S CIRCUS"
I ,
Friday & Saturday at 7 & 9 P.M.
gU
II
I TECNM U
I
1 IN TH EARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM r
I I
ADMISSION:FIPTYCENTS I
1 .
I ,
mwwwwwwwwon mm m m mmmm m m mmmmwm m mmmm m m mmmm m m mmmm

In a speech delivered in near-
by Camden Tuesday, he blamed
the plight of poverty stricken Ne-
groes in part on the civil rights
campaign, saying that almost 200
have lost their jobs in Selma be-
cause they participated in demon-
strations.
Use Boycott
As King has said before, Ne-
groes hope to use the boycott
weapon to force employers to heed
their demands for better jobs.
King also has threatened re-
newed street demonstrations at
the state capitol in Montgomery
unless the state legislature re-
sponds to the grievances of Ne-
groes.
He said small delegations from
each county in the soil-rich "Black

Belt" will petition their legisla-
tors to grant the demands.
Not Concerned
King charged that the legisla-
ture is "not concerned one iota
about you and about me and about
the Negro people in the state. It
is concerned merely with preserv-
ing white supremacy and with is-
sues about keeping Negroes in
their place."
He referred again to the jury
deadlock which halted last week's
civil rights murder trial of a young
Ku Klux Klansman at Hayneville,
and declared:
"Alabama is a state where mur-
der is a popular pastime... There
is still a climate of terror in the
state."

JANE
FONDA

LEE
MARVI N

MICHIGIN

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.
* * *
Organizations who are planning to be
active for the Spring/Summer Term
must be registered in the Office of
Student Affairs by May 26, 1965. Forms
are available in Room 1011 Student
Activities Bldg.
* * *
Michigan Christian Fellowship, Reg-
ular weekly meeting, lecture-discussion:
"Can God Be Known?" Speaker: Ward
Wilson, Wed., May 12, 7:30 p.m., Room
3-D Union.
* * *
Organization of Arab Students, Lec-
ture by Dr. M. Mehdi on the Palestine
Question, Thurs., May 13, 7 p.m., Third
Floor Conference Room, Michigan Un-
ion.

I

Discount Records, Inc.
FOLK MUSIC SALE
ALL* FOLK MUSIC
*EXCEPT COLUMBIA
OFF

1

Your favorite folk
artists including-

CATALOG
PRICE

JOAN BAEZ, BUFFEY ST. MARIE, TOM RUSH, CHAD
MITCHELL, P.P. & M., KINGSTON TRIO, DAVE VAN
RONK, GLENN YARBOROUGH, LEN & JUDY, FOLK
MUSIC OF FOREIGN COUNTRIES, ETC.
EXTRA SPECIAL

The Fabulous
MIRACLES
Two Record
LP-"From the
Beginning"

TEMPTATIONS
Sing Smokey
Contains-
"My Girl" and
Other Temptation

- 'i~~E1A ii b

i

I

i

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1111

I

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