Wednesday, May 29, 1'968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednesday, May 29, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY v TONIGHT at. AHOOT- 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. with (Fish & Chip-Dr. Kenneth Pike & Son), Ashok Talwar & Sitar, Sara Melton, Barr Q'Niel, Grady Tuck and many others. Come and enjoy an evening of endless musical variety! FRIDAY AND SATURDAY PAT SLIMS and His ALL STAR BAND- sir ging contemporary and original folk music and playing Bacenova guitar iristrumentals. D Classifieds Get Results Viet Cong intensify attacks net SAIGON (IP) - Enemy forces struck the outskirts of Saigon yes- terday in attempts to infiltrate the capital itself. The U.S. mission said this was an attempt to win a battlefield victory in hope of insuring North Vietnam's success at the Paris peace talks. Residents fled from their burn- ling homes as-fighting raged in Saigon's southwestern suburb of Cholon, where from 300 to 400 Viet Cong resisted attempts by South Vietnamese and marines and rangers to dislodge them. Less than a mile away, the ene- my lobbed two shells into the compound of the U.S. Command's joint overseas switchboard, the largest communication facility in Southeast Asia. A U.S. spokesman said damage was slight, there were light cas- ualties among Vietnamese guards, and communications were unin- terrupted. ir Saigon Rockets touched off many fires in a shantytown area about half a mile square. Several parked oil trucks were also set blazing by the rockets, sending a column of black smoke over Saigon. The Viet Cong seized several major buildings and turned them into strong points. Vietnamese rangers tried to knock off the strong pointsand brought up two tanks. One tank was disabled by enemy fire and towed away. At one point, the Viet Cong seized an apartment house, trap- ping marines on the third floor. The building was set afire and at least some of the marines escaped. Fires also broke out in the northern suburb of Gia Dinh, which came under rocket attack. At the day's end, officials report- ed 19 civilians had been killed and 56 wounded in Cholon and Gia Dinh. Military casualties were not given. TALKS FALTER LBJ urges Hanoi to drop fantasy' Search for sub reports oil slick Navy orders rescue ships to area despite doubt of finding Scorpion WASHINGTON (P) - Pres- ident Johnson urged Hanoi yes- terday to substitute construc- tive work toward peace for "fantasy and propaganda" at the Paris conference table. Johnson pledged at a news conference that the United States will "continue patiently to see whether the Paris talks shall yield anything in the way of constructive results." But so far, he said, "The other side has been using the occasion of these talks for ob- viously very wide-ranging prop- aganda. Meanwhile in Paris, the United States is pushing hard in the peace talks to restore a nonmilitary buffer zone be- tween North and South Viet- nam. There was a hint yester- day that Hanoi's agreement to this might lead to an end to all U.S. bombing of the North. The prospects for North Viet- namese agreement at the mo- ment seem dim, with the pre- liminary talks still in their first stage of oratorical battle. Ambassador W.Averell lar riman has been insistently hammering on the theme of the demilitarized zone. He has rep- resented ae re-establishment of the six-mile-wide arms free buffer zone as a prospective "major step forward" which could produce significant re- sults. A US. spokesman was asked whether re-establishment of the zone would be a sufficiently positive North Vietnamese con- cession'to permit ending what Hanoi..calls "the bombing and all other acts of war" by the Americans against its soil.. Spokesman William J. Jordan said "the United States would heartily welcome the re-estab- lishment of the zone. As to whether it would be sufficient to end the bombing that would have to be judged by the Presi- dent and his advisers on the basis of all the circumstances prevailing at that time." The Paris talks, bogged down in a battle of words, recessed Monday until Friday. Johnson said the North Viet- namese have been unwilling "to enter into serious, quiet dis- cussion of the conditions for ending the bombing or any oth - er matters of substance." Nevertheless, Johnson offered no threat to step up again the bombing of North Vietnam, even in the absence of any signs of actionsfromHanoi to reciprocate in holding down the pace of the war. In contrast, there was no in- dication, either, of how long Washington's patience would continue. NATiONAL GENCRAL CORPORATION NOW SHOWING FOX EASTERN THEATRES FOH VILLarE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-"769.1300 WED.-MON.-TUES.-7:00-9:20 THUR-FRI .-SAT.-SUN.-2:20-4:45-7:00-9:20 This is Commander Taylor. Astronaut. Ve landed in a world where apes are ' -ariviiMI nlac an mnnfha anc 7 is Nova. The wild human animal captured and selected for special mating purposes. This is Dr. Zaius. Brilliant scientist. Only he has the power to save or destroy the animal called man. f usual aid importn frou the autor .d "the Bride utile River~ Ka" I WASHINGTON UP) - The Navy said yesterday an oil slick was spotted five days ago along the homeward ecourse of the missing nuclear submarine Scorpion. This would have been two days after the 252-foot vessel sent a routine message to its home port of Norfolk, Va., where it was.headed with its crew of 99. Capt. John F. Davis, in charge of the Navy's massive search in the Atlantic Ocean, told reporters: "With the pas- sage of time we are more ap---- - - prehensive of what the pos- sibilities are." H "We atach at this time no -~ o s n portance whatsoever" to the slick, Davis said. He said the oil slick report, b ill h ips in the area for any possibly significant observations, doesn't lead the Navy to believe the Scor- eUZIII pion has been located. Nevertheless, the nucleai' sub- WSIGO A)-TeSi marine Simon Bolivar and the WASHINGTON 1P) - The Sen- sub rescue vessel Preserver were ate passed 67 to 4 yesterday a ordered to the area some 1,400 far-reaching housing bill contain- miles almost due east of Norfolk ing subsidies for poor families to to look for any other surface evi- buy homes or rent apartments dence. and insurance for riot or flood SEA HUNT -victims. SEA~~ HN The measure now goes to the The vessels are part of a 37- House where similar legislation ship armada and some two dozen already has been approved by a planes thrown into a far-ranging ranking subcommittee. But. the sca hunt for the Scorpion. Al- bill's backers fear it may run into though the Scorpion is atomic trouble in House debate later. powered it has oil-lubricated aux- The $5 billion price tag is well iliary diesel engines which are below the $7 billion asked by used when the ship is in port and President Johnson, but the bill fueled, carries most of his recommended Exactly how much oil it car- programs. And more authoriza- ried is classified but a spokesman tions could be added' later.' The said it would be enough to cover cuts were made mainly by reduc- a large area of water. ing authorizations from five to The problem now is to locate three years. the slick and search the area for The bill includes continuation any evidence of the Scorpion - of some old+ programs to help the whether debris or perhaps special impoverished such as rent subsi- signal-emitting buoys it might dies, low-rent public housing, ur- have sent up in :case of trouble. ban renewal and Model Cities. Davis told a Pentagon news Partly because of the new.pro- conference the oil slick may be gram for government subsidies for difficult to find. With the pas- home purchases or apartment sage of several days it may have rentals by the poor, the Senate broken up or drifted aawy from halved to $250 million another the sighting point. program to subsidize apartments TRAINING MOVE for low and moderate-income The submarine started home families. from the Mediterranean May 17: It rejected an effort to cut in after participating in what was half the $1 billion proposed for described as an extended training the Model Cities program. operation. The various new programs for The USS Monrovia, an attack poor people are designed to help transport whiclY was part of an the administration meet its goal amphibious squadron in the Med- of 300,00 government-subsidized iterranean, found the first clue housing starts for these groups on May 23. in the next year. Hasta La Victoria Siempre Historia De Una Batalla = and films on the guerrilla struggle CANTERBURY HOUSE 330 MAYNARD ST. Sponsored by: 20TH CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS A wrdChARITON ESTON gonemin an ARTHUR P JACOBS oroduction mad! TIE RODDY McDOWAL[ MAURICE EVANS KIM HUNTER JAMES WHITMORE JAMES DAlY LINDA HARRISONYA 1968 Dinner-Film Series FRIDAY, MAY 31st t/ l/ "The, Burmese Harp" Presbyterian Campus (enter 1432 Washtenaw Dinner at 6 P.M. Coffee and informal discussion follow the film. Reservations needed: 662-5529 or 662-3580 V is I I - NOW SHOWING Cars On fire! CartC Drag-De sfirel RTIANIAMTIR eat' MAPHWNUNTIRSF lKffoni o 11 MAY 31, JUNE 1 SHOWINGS at 7:00 & 9:00 General Admission: 75c Patronage: $1,50 "SUMMER REVOLUTION" Radical Film Series THE LOOKING GLASS Advance tickets available at 330 Maynard and Discount Records (State St.) RUSS GIBB PRESENTS IN DETROIT WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY, MAY 29-30 CRAZY WORLD of ARTHUR BROWN WED.: TOAD-CAROUSEL THURS.: JAGGEDGE-RHINO of SOUL FRIDAY-SATURDAY, MAY 31-JUNE 1 LOVE CRAZY WORLD of ARTHUR BROWN FRI.: WILSON MOWER PURSUIT SAT.: PSYCHEDELIC STOOGES GRANDE BALLROOM .mu **" .h rFj' .w I/ 'rl ; . f ! . rfi f9 r f rlF r' rf: 5 4 + . ti' ,, g,,... .. K fi93 r : 3 Twww- --17