Friday, July 19, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAISY Page Three Friday, July 19, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Anyone they can WASHINGTON (AP)-Top Pentagon officials have told the t Senate the Soviet Union is nearing nuclear arms equality with the United States in an awesome standoff that could make all- out war suicide for both sides.i The Defense Department leaders said U. S. strategy is aimed at wiping out "essentially the entire urban population" of the Soviet Union in a nuclear war. At the same time, one Pentagon estimate of possible Ameri- can casualties ranged from 40 milliion to 120 million. In fact, the senators were told, the spectre of global dis- aster in an atomic give-and-take is so great that U. S. nuclearw might no longer can be counted upon to discourage conventional flareups-because like the other side just isn't likely to believe it will be used. Secretary of the Air Force Harold Brown and other military$ leaders appeared at closed hearings by the Senate preparedness$ subcommittee in late April and early May.V A heavily censored transcript of the testimony was made public by the subcommittee yesterday. Brown said the cities have been made targets because the United States can no longer destroy enough of the growing So- ' viet military arsenal to wipe out its ability to rain devastation on America.. The secretary of the Air Force said, "At the present time U. S. forces have a capability to eliminate about censored per cent of the Soviet population, essentially the entire urban population, by blast and thermal effects alone, after absorbing a Soviet strike. kill, we can kill LBJ, Thieu conference to center on war, peace How we'll win the war RACIAL OUTBREAK: Guard enforces Akron curfew THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC and DEPARTMENT OF ART Present Mozart's Comic Opera "THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO" (Performances in English) TWO PERFORMANCES ONLY THURSDAY, Aug. 1 and Sat., Aug' 3 HONOLULU (P) -- President, Johnson and President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam met at a mid-Pacific summit yesterday and Johnson gave his guest a pledge "to help your people defeat aggression" and to stand firm against all obstacles and decep- tions. Johnson flew in nonstop from Austin, Tex., and Thieu from Sai- gon, for two days of conferences assessing the war in Vietnam and maneuvers in Paris toward bring- ing it to an end. The Paris sessions between U.S. and North Vietnamese emissaries is the one factor around which the Honolulu session revolves more than any other. Secretary of State Dean Rusk flew down from Washington to Texas, where the President stop- ped overnight at his ranch near Johnson City. Rusk put the emphasis on Paris in a brief session with newsmen at Berstrom Air Force Base in Austin. He said the American team would be reviewing with Thieu the discussions in the French capital. "We are very much interested," Rusk said, "in, how we can bring about de-escalation on both sides. "We are still very interested in the central issue of what can be done to reduce the level of vio- lence . . . So far there has been no breakthrough." Told about reports that the Ha- noi negotiators in Paris were cit- ing a letup in rocket attacks on. Saigon as de-escalation, Rusk said: "We'll see-are they preparing another attack?" Secretary of Defense Clark M. Clifford and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, wound up a four-day mission to Vietnam and preceded Johnson to Honolulu for back- ground conferences yesterday. The Thieu-Johnson talks will be stretched through Friday and part of Saturday, at the hilltop head- quarters of the U.S. Pacific Com- mand, and at a Waikiki Beach hotel. The discussions are expected to range over the military outlook in Vietnam, the threat of another enemy offensive, progress toward building up the Vietnamese army to around 800,000 men, efforts to stabilize the government, and'the U.S. North Vietnamese peace talks at Paris. What concerns Thieu is a feel- ing that perhaps the door could be opened in Paris to a settle- ment his people would find un- acceptable. So he doubtless will be seeking reassurances to take back to Saigon on that score. In a recorded television address before he left home, Thieu prom- ised that: "I will not go to Hawaii to sur render to the Communists, to sell the nation, to concede territory, or to accept a solution involving a coaliton with Communists im- posed by the United States, Thieu said rumors to this ef- feet have been "falsely claimed." The South Vietnamese presi- dent said it was necessary to state this to counter rumrors being spread to split the allies. "Not only are we defeating the Communists, Thieu added, "but we are daily becoming stronger, both militarily and politically, for an early victory and early resto- ration of peace." Before Clifford left Saigon, he gave assurances the bombing of North Vietnam will keep on until Hanoi promises "important and serious reciprocal acts of re- straint." AKRON, Ohio (M)-City offi- cials, backed by 450 national guardsmen with orders to shoot, clamped a 9 p.m. curfew on Akron yesterday following racial dis- turbances along several blocks of a predomoniately Negro area. Soldiers and police yesterday sealed off the five-block area near downtown which contains some of Akron's estimated 60,000 Negroes in the rubber industry center of 304,000. The curfew was to last from 9 p.m. last night until 6 a.m. this morning, Mayor John F. Ballard said at a special Council meeting. He declared a state of emer- gency. There were reports of a grocery store looting and use of tear gas to disperse a group of about 150. Some car windshields were broken. At Akron General Hospital, sev- eral persons were treated for cuts from flying glass. Nearby Barberton and Cuya- hoga Falls also imposed curfews from 9 p.m. until 6 a.m. Gen. Sylvester Del Corso, Ohio Adjutant General, said at a news conference the troops sent in by 8:00 p.m.. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre ALL SEATS $3.00-BOX OFFICE OPENS JULY 29 Mail orders accepted. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope- Mail to:School of Music Opera, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan Make checks payable to "University of Michigan" The Gilbert & Sullivan Soeiety With Ann Arbor Junior Light Opera, Present 11 TONI.TE ON LY ! A T 7:30 P.M. . A LL 3 DR IVE I N T HEAT ERS 0 YPSI-AN N - WIL LOW -- SC*O THE GIGANTIC "BATTLE OF THE BANDS" IN PERSON COME AND HEAR AND VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE GROUPS... IN ADDITION TO OUR R EGULA R SCR EEN PROGRAM INDIA STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION-U of M-Ann Arbor Sr e s e n / s THE SUMMER SPECIAL NAV KETAN'S Gov. James A. Rhodes "are arm- ed . . . the weapons will be loaded." He added: "When we order someone to stop and surrender himself, if he does not stop he will be shot." The emergency laws prohibits sale of guns, ammunition and "in- cendiary devices" including gas- oline. Maximum penalty for violation is $100 fine, 30 days in jail, or both. Ballard said the disturbances may have resulted from police breaking up a fight between Ne- gro gangs in a park Wednesday. He said the Negroes turned on police. Detectives said older youths in cars urged younger teenagers to Sthrow rocks and break windows once the troouble started early yesterday. Ballard asked for Na- tional Guard help about 3 p.m. Police and Summit County De- puties had the situation under control by daybreak. Officers arrested 23 juveniles 3.nd 19 adults. During the special meeting yes- terday, a Negro minister accused police of "racist activities." Also, a Negro leader and Police Chief Harry Widdon got into a heated exchange over what hap- pened when police used tear gas. on Wooster Avenue early yester- day morning. The gas was used to break up crowds on the street, police said. Windows were broken in 15 stores by roving bands of young Negroes, and there was some loot- ing. The most serious fire was at the Murphy Lumber Co. beyond the area where the trouble started. A 16-year-old Negro youth, Leo Stegall, was hit in the shoul- der by police gunfire. Officers said he ran from a store that was being looted. Police said they did not know immediately the reason behind the disturbance.. SAIGON (P) -- U.S. troops smashed into an enemy force yes- terday near the Cambodian border and prisoners said it was part of a fresh North Vietnamese regi- ment which hadkjoined other units massed for an attack on Saigon. It was the first solid contact in several weeks between Amer- ican and North Vietnamese forces -Associated Pr GI's bandage wounded soliier U.S., enemy troops clash near Cambodia OLIVER 0 0 Me Sash HMit Musical bpok. Music and Lyrics by LIONEL BARy In* lahkmi ro. gIebm -owuvN W r ., t World news roundup IHUM IDONO Wednesday thru Saturday July 17-20 8 P.M. Special Saturday Matinee - 2 p.m. - Children $1.00 Trueblood Theatre All Seats Reserved! Price $2.00 ea. (With English Sub-Titles) Starring: DEVANAND, SADHNA, NANDA Place: NATURAL SCIENCE AUDITORIUM Time: 7:30 P.M., JULY 20,1968 Tickets: Members $1.00 - Others $1.25 NEXT ATTRACTION ON AUGUST 31, 1968 WAQT (color) BOX OFFICE OPEN DAILY - 12:30 P.M. TOKYO-Freed from captivity in North Vietnam, three U.S. pi- lots are expected to fly from Hanoi in an International Con- trol Commission plane tomorrow to Vientiane, Laos. Radio Hanoi and the official Vietnam News Agency announced the three were handed over yes- terday to an American antiwar committee in the North Vietna- mese capital by the "Vietnam committee for Solidarity with the American People.". The pilots are Maj. James FrederickLow, 43,VSausalito, Calif.; Maj. Fred Neal Thomp- son, 32, Taylors, S. C.; and Capt. Joe Victor Carpenter, 37, Victors- ville, Calif. WASHINGTON - The 'State Department reported yesterday it has received word from the North Koreans which it interprets as a denial of recurring rumors that the Pueblo's skipper, Commander HELD OVER 2nd Riotous Week ! .-A CIAI ("- AM Dial NO 5-6290 PROGRAM INFORMATION "NO ONE WILL BE SEATED DURING THE LAST 88 MINUTES... THEY'LL ALL BE ON THE FLOOR, LAUGHING4-LOOK MAGAZINE Pure lunaCy... uproariously, TIME /"\ riot. The fUnniest flicker since the * - Marx-rAtersE ( --MADEMOISELLE ,fir. Lloyd M. Bucher, has committed suicide. Press Officer Robert J. Mc- Closky did not identify the source of the rumor, which has circulated at times on Capitol Hill. In response to a U.S. inquiry about this at one of the recent U.S.-North Korean talks about the Pueblo at Panmunjom, he said, "They told us there has been no change in the condition of the crew since early February when they informed us about one death and three of crew who had been wounded." LONDON-U.S. officials stood ready last night to receive James Earl Ray from British custody and fly him to the United States to face trial on charges of as- sassinating Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. A U.S. plane was said to be standing by at Northolt, the clos- est Royal Air Force base to Lon- don capable of handling jets that can cross the Atlantic. The plane was expected to take off at night so as to land at night, probably at Memphis, Tenn., where King was shot to death April 4. * * ,, LONDON-Top model Twiggy says she'll marry her manager, 28-year-old Justin de Villeneuve. The announcement Wednesday night came after the manager's nine year marriage to Pamela Davies, 31, ended in divorce on grounds of his desertion. "The wedding won't be just yet," said Twiggy, 18, whose real name is Lesley Hornby. "I'm still very young and I don't believe in young marriages," she added. Said Justin, whose real name is Nigel Davies, "We are both very relieved and happy that the divorce has at last come through." He will be free to marry after. three months. along Cambodian border infiltra- tion routes. Spokesmen said North Vietnam- ese opened up with rocket-pro- pelled grenades on armored per- sonnel carriers of the U.S. 11th, Armored Cavalry Regiment, and this started a fierce exchange of small-arms fire. U.S. fighter-bombers and heli- copter gunships raked the North Vietnamese positions while artil- lery pounded the enemy until they pulled back toward the border. After the battle Americans found what was described. as a "pretty good sized" secret base camp to accommodate about 150 soldiers. It apparently had just been evacuated and nine AK47 assault rifles, magazines, rucksacks and various documents were strewn around. The documents and interroga- tion of three North Vietnamese prisoners identified the enemy as soldiers of the 32nd' Regiment. Earlier this week intelligence reported the 32nd and t3rd regi- ments had marched 125 miles south from the central highlands to join other enemy units refit- ting at4secret base camps in the area. Military spokesmen say 18 en- emy regiments are camped with- in a few days 'march of the Capi- tal. A third major offensive previ- ously anticipated this week is ex- pected any time between now and early September. Iraq -reopens border areas BEIRUT,,Lebanon (A)-lraq re- opened its borders and airports yesterday as the situation appear- ed to be returning to normal fol- lowing the military coup which replaced President Abdel Rahman Aref's leftist regime with a mili- tary junta. Baghdad radio said the dusk to dawn curfew would remain in force. The announcement said, however, there was no indication of resistance to the new Revolu- tionary Command Council headed by Maj. Gen. Ahmed Hassan el Bakr, a 'Baath Socialist. There was no confirmation of reports from neighboring Iran Wednesday of violence in several areas. Messages of support for the new regime from student groups, army and police officers and tribal lead- ers continue to be read over the radio. The military junta which as- sumed power after Aref's over- throw Wednesday night announ- ced the appointment of Bakr as the country's new chief of state. It named air force Gen. Hardan el Takriti, also a Baathist, as Tonight & Tomorrow Who gets the b PHILADELPHIA STORY Cary Grant Katherine Hepburn and James Stewart 7:00 and 9:05 ARCHITECTURE AUD. 75c only 4 0 Joseph E Levine Presents - - l[L0 M4ATIL[ in Mel Brooks' A Sidney Glazier Production .4 VELVEETA STATE OPERA COMPANY Presents: WEDNESDAY - SATURDAY 'AIJT DR II D V UAIIC E An.. CMe