Page Three Thursday, June 6, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DA1 Y Thursday, June 6, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY o,. e ..hree U.S. move fails to end deadlock Peace talks recess for one week; Thuy remains adamant on bombing PARIS (M - North Vietnam parried an American attempt to seek a break in the deadlock in the peace talks yesterday and left the impression it will hold out until the United States surrenders on the issue of halting air attacks. At the request of the North Vietnamese delegation the sessions were recessed until next Wednesday, the longest gap thus far. The U.S. delegation spokesman said, "I can't say that any progress was made." Ambassador W. Averell Harriman, the chief U.S. nego- tiator, seized upon a Hanoi statement of last week which de- manded that the United States "acknowledge its responsi- billy" to halt the bombardment. That statement, it was un- ~Enemy; leaves ASaigon SAIGON P)-The allied com- mand detected yesterday a gen- eral withdrawal of the enemy units that attacked Saigon and its suburbs a month ago, and a pris- oner said the\Viet Cong would pull out to rest and refit for a new at- tack. Vietnamese rangers, in blocking positions to cut off possible es- cape routes, killed 21 Viet Cong in heavy fighting through the aban- doned shops and homes of the war-torn Cholon district. Government soldiers and U.S. Marines ambushed an estimated 300 Viet Cong and North Viet- namese apparently' trying to leave Gla Dinh. The marines killed ten enemy soldiers and captured ten more in a trap on the banks of the Sai- gon River. Vietnamese navy boats ma- chine-gunned a group of enemy soldiers that tried to swim the 300-foot-wide river and claimed 15 of the enemy were killed. Some- of the enemy units were reported heading westward from Gia Dinh into the residential dis- trict of Go Hap where they could establish new strongholds. The enemy maneuvers gave cre- dence to the report of a captured Communist cell leader who said the Viet Cong were beginning a 10-day rest in preparation for a June 15 attack. 4 He told interrogators the aim of the offensive is to prove to the city's residence and to U.S. and North Vietnamese negotiators in Paris that the Viet Cong can at- tack and enter Saigon at will. derstood, later was revised by Hanoi from the original word- ing in the official newspaper Nhan Dan. "You have asked," Harriman said, "that we acknowledge or de- termine our responsibility for a cessation of all bombardment. As we have stated, this has never represented an insurmountable obstacle for us, and we are pre- pared to cease the bombardment at an appropriate time and in ap- propriate circumstances. I hope that we will proceed forthwith to the discussion of other matters." William J. Jorden, the U.S. spokesman, said Harriman used "acknowledge and determine" to cover either version of the Hanoi statement which had been cor- rected from "acknowledge" to "de- termine." The indications now seemed otherwise, as if Hanoi is prepared to hold out as long as necessary for a U.S. retreat on the issue. Jordan said Xuan Thuy, the chief Hanoi negotiator, again "firmly rejected" any idea that Hanoi should respond to a cessation of bombardment by scaling down its own war activity. Harriman called the war in Laos "the forgotten war." He has called before for restoring Laotian neutrality-which would mean cutting infiltration trails from the North to South Vietnam. He said yesterday that if the neutrality were established in fact as well as in the 1962 Geneva agreement, then other results could be achieved. Harriman apparently felt free to talk about the issue at length even though North Vietnam has said the only subject for discus- sion now is action by the United States to halt all attacks on the North. Thuy said he recognized the bombing has been limited, but said: "Your perfidious design is ... pretending to 'de-escalate' with a view to misleading public opin- ion ..." -Associated Press Left and right clash during Italian elections 'EXTREMISTS' PROTEST: Yugos larv ffiarsrMay meet studentde BELGRALE (IP)-Yugoslav au- thorities were prepared yesterday to satisfy a large number of stu- dent demands amid signs that extremist students have decided to push for more than the gov- ernment is ready to grant. Students continued to occupy several university faculty build- ings. However, their headquarters in downtown Belgrade was under close police surveillance. Banners denouncing the police and proclaiming "Down with Red Bourgeoisie" still hung from a balcony on the occupied demon- stration building of the university but no further fighting or inci- dents were reported. ' Fresh posters on occupied uni- versity buildings indicated that some students, described by Com- munist authorities as extremists, have turned their campaign into a purely political one. New posters denounced "Social- ist princes" and demanded the resignation of 'incapable leaders" and widespread democratization. One poster at student head- quarters said they oppose "resto- ration of capitalism," a favorite slogan of the Communist Chinese. However, this was the only hint that pro-Peking elements were active among students. Previous student complaints had dealt with the details of student life as well as politics. The students have demanded democratization of the Communist Party, complaining it has fostered a rich, new class. They have also demanded freedom of the press and abolition of social privileges. Observers have surmised that student demands seem to be for a type of reform similar to the one which has taken place in Czecho- slovakia, a country many Yugo- slavs consider more liberal than their own. A report from Sarajevo, univer- sity city of the Republic of Bos- nia-Hercegovina, said that police and students clashed there Tues- day. The clashes marked the first violent protest in the country since the Communist takeover. From other university centers came reports that students are supporting demands of their Bel- grade colleagues, but that no sup- port was given to demonstrations and riots that broke out here Sun- \day and Monday. The Communist party took a strong stand against extremists, acusing them of "anarchist de- mands" and said that while jus- tified demands will be satisfied, disorder and riots will not be tole- rated. The Communist party-organized meetings of workers in factories continued to carry resolutions supporting the justified student demands, evidently those the gov- ernment is ready to satisfy, but strongly opposing demonstrations and riots. Italiar resign Socialists break ties ROME (P)-Premier Aldo Moro resigned yesterday as head of Italy's 27th postwar government, coupling a political crisis with a wave of student unrest. Moro's center-left coalition broke down last week. The So- cialist partners voted to pull out on the grounds that their ties with Moro's Christian Democrats ac- counted for Socialist setbacks, in last month's elections for a new Parliament. The Christian Dem- ocrats made gains. The government crisis is expect- ed tobe eased but not resolved by formation of a minority Christian Democrat cabinet. Moro submitted the resignation to President Giuseppe Saragat. a Following custom, Saragat asked Moro and his Cabinet to stay on for administrative work while the president looks for a new, premier. Mariano Rumor, Christian Dem- ocrat party secretary, and Emilie Colombo, another Christian Dem- ocrat and outgoing treasury min- ister, have been mentioned as the most likely candidates to form the new government. The old Cabinet approved the resignation hours after the seat- ing of the fifth postwar republican legislature, an inaugural which provided an indication that the Christian Democrats and the So- cialists would continue coopera- ting closely in Parliament. As the result of a trade, Chris- tian Democrat Amintore Fanfani, outgong foreign minister, was elected president of the Senate and Socialist Sandro Pertini was elected president of the Chamber of Deputies. For Moro, 51, the move ended five often stormy years as head of the- country's first governing coalition of Roman Catholics and Marxists. Violence struck the Moro gov- ernment in four major cities dur- ing the week where both workers and students held active protests. In Lanciano, east of Rome near the Adriatic sea, riot squads used tear gas to drive back striking factory workers. The laborers smashed windows in the City Hall, set fire to a postal truck, and battled police with stones and bricks. Students in Turin, Rome, and Naples vigorously demonstrated, brandishing red flags of revolu- tion and black flags of anarchy. At least a dozen students were reported injured in the Turin demonstrations. Left - Wingers armed with nail-studded clubs clashed with groups of moderate opposing students who tried to rip down flags andI enter a university building. In Naples, police with clubs broke up a march by nearly 200 employes of local schools demand- ing higher wages. - Armed police kept order in Rome where a handful of students returned under guard to the uni- versity to resume exams. Police had earlier cleared the Rome university of 2,000 rebel- lious students who had occupied it since Friday night. There has been no sign that the student and worker disorders are directly connected, howeyer. head fro m Aldo Moro Giuseppe Saragat First strikers report backi to jobs in Paris post Moro PARIS (MP)-The municipal tran- sport system announced last night that Paris subway trains and buses will start rolling today. This ap- peared to be the first major break-through in a strike wave that has crippled France for 19 days. The Socialist Trade Union Fed- eration, one of several involved in talks for a settlement, said the decision to restore the capital's public transport came "after long and difficult negotiations which, have brought substantial improve- ment" for the employes. Paris had been paralyzed at the evening rush hour by a colossal traffic jam as motorists made use of available gasoline. A joint announcement from all unions involved said the workers had agreed by a large majority Britain to borrow international money *" Sfeepy TII'lME Ga1 LONDON (R) - Britain an- nounced yesterday it will borrow $1.4 billion from the International Monetary Fund to repay loans in- curred after devaluation of the pound last November. The three-year drawing in ef- fect gives Britain more time to repay the earlier loans, but has no effect on the strength of the country's reserves backing the pound. There was no adverse im- mediate reaction in London finan- cial markets. Provision for the drawing exer- cised yesterday was made at the time of devaluation, when the pound's relation to the dollar was cut from $2.80 to $2.40. At that time Britain incurred an undisclosed amount of short- term debts by borrowing from central banks. Britain's ability to repay these loans is linked to the economic benefits from devaluation, ex- pected to show up next year. After the announcement the pound eased a fraction to $2.3858 from $2.3895. Prices held steady on the London Stock exchange. The treasury also announced a drop during May of $26.6 million in the country's gold and con- vertible currency reserves backing the pound. They now total $2.775 billion. This was still well above the serious drop in reserves of $240 million last December, the month after devaluation, when the re- serves stood at $1.695 billion. The drop in reserves during May was blamed on a series of difficul- ties abroad rather than on do- mestic problems. These included pressure on paper money from demand for gold ,in the free market, uncer- tainty over American balance of payments difficulties and the pro- posed U.S. tax increase to com- bat them, and the weakness of the French franc. End search for ,Scorpion WASHINGTON (A')-The Navy on Wednesday officially pro- nounced the nuclear submarine Scorpion with its crew of 99 "lost in the depths of the Atlantic." Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chief of naval operations, said it was his "sad duty" to announce that the extensive air and ocean search the past ten days has failed to turn up any trace of the Scorpion. "Now, because of the lack of any evidence of Scorpion's presence on the surface or in waters which would permit rescue, we must' conclude that she was lost in the 'depths of the Atlantic," Moorer said. The submarine had been listed as overdue since failing to arrive as scheduled May 27 at her home port of Norfolk, Va., afters a sub- merged Atlantic crossing. to accept the proposed settlement and return to work. Details of the settlement were not .reported. The Paris subway has 105 miles of track and carries more than 1.5 billion travelers a year. The bus services carry about 300. mil- lion passengers a year. The government had asserted its intention of insuring the right to work of strikers wanting to return to their jobs. Elsewhere in France the back-to-work move- ment appeared slow but steady. There seemed to be a possibility of a general return of railroad workers. The unions said that, on the basis of votes already counted, the workers appeared to be choos- ing 3 tb 1 to end their strike. / Post office employes were get- ting down to work in many ci- ties, sorting the mountain of ac- cumulated mail. Air France personnel voted to, end their strike. Paris' Orly and Le Bourget air- ports began reopening. Some ports wete operating but the Chanel ports, Calais, Boulogne and Dunkerque, were still shut tight. The central strike committee of the French Postal and Telephone System anounced resumption of transatlantic phone calls, "because of the important event which oc- curred in the United States," the shooting of Sen. Robert F. KEn- nedy. The service resumed before the strikers completed a vote on whether to approve a proposed agreement. The railway holdout was set- tled last Monday night. After an all-night bargaining session with Transport Minister Jean Cha- mant, the union agreed to a 12 per cent wage hike. The Finance Minister gave a slight indication of the cost of the strike by announcing the nation's reserves of gold and foreign cur- rencies slumped $306 million last month to $5,720,500,000. I I - .I r: S y . r hS"V}+ .} (. . 4:":Y .1 L ' h :..1:.."11"}i:::: .Ya.1.'1 1 ( l, y '}J S J LaVY{:: "::;"!' .. ... ........1.fh...........-r. .. .... .... ... .... ... .......... ... ... .. ....SL'{L'.. .."".w...... ' "'sr':"} 'Y: MSL ":}}:".",'r.w.>n1a0'"i'."a^.Y: }':"}} {' J l' .Y.YM v}}r 13 " 'LN."dW .:V:: DAILY OFFICIAL BULLET'I'N. 4 ... ; ... ; .... - ... ..: 5. . :::. ::: ".;. ::":"::. :: ^ : ::. . . y. "h"JrJ.iVn. vn ::"Y:Mh . 4 ', r.. . y,, J TT ..... .. 7 .. - {."1. ? ..::' ia:, 8;inr.,..h". L.. .,r....1}h . R" . y{r'".. , .an, " ;. 4c 1".},...; + m}i 2+S ..1 .... .... .... .... .. ..... ..... 4 J . ':M}:": .4{" .LTLi1' f.:: ...... .. . .4..... r.... r... r.. ,...'r:},. n... ......... v,.r."TT}r... .......:.v."rn v."rr vo.}....:{4.i" 1:..::.4 .. .i}. r... 'h. ....... yy {V+{,, 1 .J yyL1 441111 ""rv"'w .5.{v v a ::" '.L.., }L ".n i'P..nM .! }. ...4:":'.......:':ti" 'M:YJrh hM... ...1A. is{..1++.: 11 .4 .4.4 _ 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. before 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 only once. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. THURSDAY, JUNE 6 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar- "The Maangement of Manag- ers No. 60, North Campus Commons, 8:15 a m. to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Advanced Fire School II - Registra- tion, Civil Defense Center, 8:30 a.m., Mon., June 3. General Synod of the Reformed Church in America - Registration, Lobby, South Quad, 1:00 .pm. Astronomical Colloquium - Dr. W. Kent Ford, Jr., Department of Terres- trial Magnetism, Carnegie Institution of Washington, "Astronomical Applica- tions of Image Tubes," Room 296 Phy- sics-Astronomy Bldg., 4:00 p.m. Department of Speech University Players - 0. B. Shaw's "Major Bar- bara", Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. General Notices French and German Prellimnary Ob- jective Test. The Preliminary objective Test in French and German adminis- tered by the Graduate School for doc- toral candidates is scheduled for Thurs., July 11 from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. All students plan- ning to take the test must register by 4 p.m. July 11 at the Information Desk in the lobby of the Rackham Bldg. For She's "on the fly" from the crack of dawn far into the night, making sure that every TIME Air Lines passenger gets where he wants to go. With daily flights from early morning until late at night connecting Benton Harbor, Chicago, Ann Arbor and Detroit, she's a pretty busy gal. Maybe we could put on another, but, young as we are, we'd rather spend our money on pilots and equipment. (We now have 10 fully qualified pilots and have just added a Beecheraft Queen Air Liner to our fleet.) So, wherever business or pleasure takes you, check in with our "sleepy TIME gal." She'll get you where you want to go. TAL flights into Detroit Metropolitan Airport connect with flights all over the world. Or, if Chicago's your destination, TIME flies into Meigs Field, right in the Loop, to put you close to business or shopping or enter- tainment. And, if you detect our bright-eyed alert TIME gal stifling a yawn when you call, please forgive her. She's not bored. Just sleepy. further information call the Informa- tion Desk, 764-4415. Doctoral Exams Ruben J. E. Greffenius, Conservation. Dissertation: "Development of Michigan Public Land Policy," on Thurs., June 6 at 9 a.m. in Conference Rm., Natural Resources Bldg. Chairman: L. E. Craine. Pai-Lien Lu, Aerospace Engineering, Dissertation: "The Structure and Kin- etics of the H2-CO-02 Detonations," on Thurs., June 6 at 9 a.m. in Rm. 1024 Space Research Bldg. Chairman: J. A. Nicholls. John Ilolman Gibson, Physics, Dis- sertation: "Self-Interaction of Acoustic Waves in Cadmium Sulfide," on Thurs., June 6 at 1 p.m. in Rm. 618 Physics- Astronomy Bldg. Chairman: 0. Wein- reich, Placement HUREAU OFAPPOINTMENTS 3200 SAB GENERAL DIVISION Current Position Openings Received by General Division by mail and phone --please call 764-7460 for further infor- mation: Methodist Children's Home Society, Detroit, Mich. - Recreation worker, male pref., BA in phys. ed., residen- tial program for 63 socially and emo- tionally handicapped boys and girls age 6-16 years. University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Pails, Iowa- - News Photographer, cover ;rama, musical productions, sports, buildings and scenes and varied stu- dent activities for many publications. News and Editorial Assistant, prepare news releases for news and radio-TV media, depth interpretative articles for Alumni mag. and other publications. Hercules Incorporated, Wilmington, Del. - Varied positions in engineering, Textile, Steam Power, Service, Sales, Instrument, ASME Code Design, IE, Explosive, Sanitary, Acoustics, Syst. .Anal., ME, ChE, Ink, Chem. Locations mostly in central eastern states, some midwest. Most, under 5 yrs.exper. Federal Power Commission, Chicago,' New York, and Washington - Urgent need for Electrical. Civil, Mechanical, and Industrial Engineers. Management Consultants, Boston area and Eastern seaboard states - Cooper- ative Search publication listing excel- lent positions of large variety. Most are. !middle management with few years exper.. degrees usually at: Bachelors level.Both technical, and all areas of Bus,, Ad. and combination of both are sought. Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, Ill. --"Large listing of technical and business positions. Most for BA/BS level degrees and few years exper., Some international. Writing, psych., pckg., math, research in areas of microbiol. & biochem. -KEATON CHAPLIN Canterbury House Thurs.-Fri. 9:15-75c T4 : Vigo's 1933 film of boys rebelling against their keepers in a boarding shool has always been TONIGHT at Confrontation on the Left (A Debate among Congressional candidates), 1421 Hill St. OQ-W D AA FOR FLIGHT INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS. CALL... r TIME flies ... to save you time .WA Ir ti I