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June 11, 1966 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1966-06-11

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SATURDAY, .TUNE 11, 1966

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE TBRE9

SATURDAY, 3UNE 11, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG1~ TWRFN

laVli:l uaValR

(*a

HEAVY CONTACT:

Biggest Battle of War

British Seamen Offer
Terms for Settlements
LONDON (M-Britain's striking be paid for by a government sub-

4

BREZHNEV SPEECH:
New Soviet Effort Pledged
Tn Speed Viet Cong Victory

"Develops in

SAIGON ()-Fresh American
and South Vietnamese soldiers bol-
stered paratroopers of the U.S.
101st Airborne Division yesterday
in the four-day-old Kontum pla-
teau battle, which seemed to be
shaping up as one of the biggest
of the war.
Contact was reported heavy with
a powerful force of North Viet-
namese army regulars-officially
estimated at one regiment and
unofficially at two-in that cen-
tral highlands area near the Lao-
tian frontier 280 miles north of
Saigon.
Helicopters rushed a battalion
of the U.S. 1st Cavalry, Airmo-
bile, Division and a battalion of
South Vietnamese into t;1e com-
bat alongside the paratroopers. It
appeared anywhere from 3000 to
5000 men were locked in the bat-
tle, which opened Tuesday, dwin-
dled after the Americans had
mauled a Communist battalion,
and then flared Thursday.
Meanwhile, Premier Nguyen
Cao Ky sent 400 riot police into
Hue yesterday and, as if to show
his government has weathered the
Buddhist-led storm of opposition,
announced he will visit South Ko-
rea next week.
Planes moved the specially
trained policemen from Saigon to
the holdout Buddhist stronghold
in the north, where troops of the
dissidence-ridden 1st Vietnamese
Division have been taking their
time about restoring the city fully
to the government's control.
Buddhist militants, who are
headed by the hunger-striking
Thich Tri Quang, announced a
mass demonstration for today.
Quang in Hospital
Quang presumably will not be
on hand. He was hospitalized and
described as very weak in the
third day of his protest fast. But
he said he will carry on until
President Johnson withdraws
American support from the mili-
tary government.
The demonstration - to com-
memorate the third anniversay of
the first Buddhist human sacri-
fice by fire in Viet Nam for poli-

tical aims-could lead to
with riot police. It co
spark antigovernment a
local army units, somec
under Buddhist influence.
Monk Quang Duc set
aflame in a Saigon street
1963. He was the firstc
Buddhists to kill thems
that fashion in the upris
destroyed President Ng
Diem and his regime. N
burned themselves to d
the spring campaign again
Force Threatened
Radio Hue, again in
ment hands, announced t
dhist household altars s
tering streets of Hue ma
moved by force if the peo
them out.
Despite these signs of
Ky's office said the prep
fly to Seoul Monday fo:
level conference with So
rea's leaders.
Ky is also expected to
the Asia-Pacific foreign,
conference on economicr
tural affairs to be held th
week. His major aim, ho
to tighten his bonds with:
Korean Aid
Already 25,000 Korear
are fighting the Commu
Cong alongside the Vie
American, and other allie
Some 17,000 more Korean
pected in August. Ky fee
ticular debt of gratitude
Asian nation's military ai
Nevertheless, a majori
of rioting in Hue could l
postponement of the trip.
For the time being, the
ment appeared unperturb
weak and somewhat disc
Buddhist agitation.
Galloping Inflatio
Ky and his advisers w
concerned by the gallopi
tion and the steadily ri
of living. Since May 1965a
er prices have risen 55X
heavily affecting the Work
U.S. advisers are part
in efforts to stop the tren
icans feel at least partly
sible, largely due to the

Viet Nam
a clash American military and construc-
uld also tion personnel and the pressure on
ction by the economy by large-scale im-
of them ports of American products.
There also were indications that
himself Ky, an air force general brought
June 11, to power a year ago, intends to
of seven stay in politics even after a civil-
elves in ian government is named.
ing that Paragraph Deleted
;o Dinh Government sources said the
ine have premier deleted from the draft of
death in the projected electoral law a para-
nst Ky. graph banning candidates who
d have family ties in North Viet
govern- Nam.
,hat Bud- Ky, who comes from Hanoi, the
till clut- capital of the Communist North,
y be re- was thus hinting that he himself
ple leave may be running in the September
elections for the Constituent As-
tension, sembly. He has a house and rel-
mier will atives in Hanoi.
r a top- There were new signs of agita-
uth Ko- tion in Saigon's Buddhist Insti-
tute, none of them taken seriously
address by the government.
ministers Routine Communique
and cul-
here next In what by now amounted to a
wever, is routine communique, the institute
Korea. reiterated demands for the mili-
tary regime's resignation, giving
n troops the government 48 hours to react.
mist Viet After that time, the communi-
nsViet que said, "all monks will volun-
dnamese, teer to go to prison" and the in-
d forces. stitute will "not be responsible for
s* are ex-
ls a par- any action by Buddhists."
to that Still pondered at the United
d. Nations was the government's re-
outbreak quest for UN observers to oversee
ead to a the September election. The June
president of the Security Council,
Sgovern-Ambassador Frank H. Corner of
ed by the New Zealand, told newsmen in
organized New York that consultations
might go on for another week or
two.
3n Corner said he had consulted
ere more the 15 members on the request
ng infla- and found a majority for it in
sing cost principle, but there was "not a
consum- lot of steam behind it."

seamen came up yesterday with
their own proposal for solving the
26-day maritime strike. But hopes
of an early settlement were quick-
ly dashed.
Leaders of the 65,000-member
National Union of Seamen out-
lined their secret plan at the head-
quarters of the huge Trades Un-
ion Congress in a two-hour meet-
ing.
George Woodcock, congress sec-
retary, told newsmen afterward:
"I don't think there is much
change."
'A Little Happier'
He said he was "a little hap-
pier" about the situation and pre-
dicted further meetings with the
seamen's leaders early next week.
"It is unlikely there will be a
meeting over the weekend," he
added.
"But at least we are talking
now in a more subdued and hope-
ful atmosphere. All this is an
advance and an improvement."
Woodcock evaded questions
about the nature of the seamen's
new proposals.
Demands Unchanged
One report said the seamen still
were holding to their demand for
a 40-hour week and wanted it to

sidy to the shipowners similar to
that in operation in other coun-
tries, including the United States.
This idea already has been re-
jected, but if there was any glim-
mer of hope in the situation it
came from the seamen's willing-
ness to get back to talks. They
already refused even to discuss a
government report offering to re-
duce their 56-hour work week to
48 hours at once and 40 in a
year.
The seaman's 48-member union
executive, which is split between
militants and moderates, said in
a resolution that it supported the
union proposal unanimously.
Make or Break
For Prime Minister Harold Wil-
son, the strike is a make-or-break
challenge to his government's pol-
icy of voluntary wage restraint.
If the seamen finally win a
settlement regarded by Britain's
overseas creditors as inflationary,
the pound may be in for trouble
again.
If the government holds firm,
and the strike drags on, the pound
still would be in trouble-and so
would Wilson, with his union-
backed political supporters.

MOSCOW (P) - Communist
leader Leonid I. Brezhnev said
yesterday the Soviet Union is mak-
ing new efforts to help speed up a
Viet Cong victory in South Viet
Nam.
The statement was made with-
out explanation or elaboration. It
came after an oft-repeated prom-
ise of "the necessary assistance
to an ever-increasing scale" to
Communists in Viet Nam.
Brezhnev, the general secretary
of the Soviet Communist party,
voiced a moderate though some-
what harder line on Viet Nam than
had been expressed just two days
ago by Premier Alexei N. Kosygin.
The party controls the government
here.
Brezhnev also implied that there
was little prospect of an agree-
ment with the West on disarma-
ment or halting the spread of
nuclear weapons until there is a
solution of what he called the two
"most important problems" in the
world today: an end of what he
called "American aggression in
Viet Nam" and "ensuring Euro-
pean security."
Past Soviet statements and
Brezhnev's brief remarks on Ger-

many indicated that European se-t
curity means making sure West1
Germany is militarily week -and
especially that it does not have
nuclear weapons.
Solution of the two problems
"would alter the entire world sit-t
uation and thereby make easier
realization of other aims impor-
tant to all peoples of the world,"t
Brezhnev said. He listed such aimsI
as "termination of the arms race,t
nonproliferation of nuclear weap-t
ons and general, controlled dis-t
armament."c
Brezhnev spoke, as Kosygin had1
two days ago, to a meeting of
his parliament constituents. Soviet
voters will go to the polls tomor-
row to show approval for unop-
posed parliamentary candidates
chosen by the Communist party.
Kosygin's speech neglected to
endorse Vietnamese Communist
terms for a settlement. Instead,
it said that "most sober-minded
persons" in the United States were
worried about how to halt a war

that would inevitably lead to an
American failure.
This suggested to some here that
the Soviet Union was looking for
openings to try to talk with U.S.
officials about a Viet Nam settle-
ment.
Brezhnev ignored this aspect of
the Viet Nam war. He endorsed
Vietnamese Communist demands
that the United States abandon
the Saigon government and leave
the country to the Communist-
controlled National Liberation
Front.

ULRICHS, UAC
and the MARKSMEN
hope to see you
SATURDAY NIGHT

I

This is the

i

World Neu
By The Associated Press
LONDON - French diplomats
said yesterday that President
Charles de Gaulle hopes, on his
visit to the Soviet Union, to probe
prospects for a German settle-
ment that would leave a unified
Germany neutral and limited to
conventional arms.
De Gaulle is flying to Moscow
on June 20.
The diplomats stressed de
Gaulle is convinced the precondi-
tion of a German peace treaty
must be easement of East-West
tensions in Europe.
In the peacemaking process,
these informants said, France
would resist any Soviet bid to
squeeze the United States out of
a place at the negotiating table.
Equally, France favors the par-
ticipation of all European nations
in the overall settlement.

s Roundup

i
4

.

listening to Corrigan's statemenft
on the radio. "I am eager to at-
tain complete vindication."
* * *
BATESVILLE, Miss.-The high-
way patrol clamped new tight se-
curity on the Meredith "march
against fear" as the column mov-
ed deeper into Mississippi yester-
day.
The first encampment of the 6-1
day-old march was planned at
Batesville last night, with tents
and campfire cooking.
During the day, all cars were
waved quickly past the heavily
guarded column, with no stopping
nearby. The rule triggered a brief
argument between officers and
march leaders.
After some compromise, the 150
Negroes and whites resumed their
walk along the freshly mowed
shoulder of U.S. 51, past cotton
fields and woods, toward Jackson
150 miles to the south.
IE

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DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

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 3519 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.
t Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication..
SATURDAY, JUNE II
Day Calendar
Cinema Guild-"Sherlock Jr." and
"The Pilgrim": Architecture Aud., 7
and 9 p.m.
Events Monday
Bureau of Industrial Relations Work-
shop--"Basic Employment Interview-
Ing": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m.
Placement
} POSITION OPENINGS:
lIT Research Institute, Chicago, 111.
-Nuclear and Radiation Physics Sec-
tion has positions in low-energy nu-
clear studies for phys. and chem.
people with bachelor's degree; encour-
age part-time grad study at IIT.
International Atomic Energy Agency
-Four positions in Middle East, 2 in
Africa, 2 in Central and South Amer-
ica. Only the African positions re-
quire foreign lang. (French). Neutron
Physics, Ankara Univ., Turkey. Hos-

pital Phys., Teheran, Iran. Applica-
tion of radioisotopes in medicine, Teh-
eran, Iran. Maintenance of nucleonic
equip., Univ. of Teheran, Iran. Soil
Chemistry & Fertility, Rabat, Morocco.
Nuclear Engineering, near Leopoldville,
Congo. Med. application of Radioiso-
topes, San Salvador, El Salvador. Dura-
tions are from 6 to 12 months.
Management Consultants, East Cen-
tral Region-Senior Manufacturing Con-
sultant. Prefer degree in engineering
and grad degree in business, 5 yrs. ex-
per. Junior Manufacturing Consultant.
Same qualifications as above, less ex-
perience.
Singer Co., Metrics Division, Bridge-
port, Conn.-Chief Electronic Develop-
bent Engr. Engr. Eection Mgr. Electron-
ic Design Engr. Electronic Engr. Telem-
etry Instrument Design Engr. Digital
Design Engr. Microwave Component
Section Mgr. Microwave Solid State
Engr. Mechanical Designer of Elec-
tronic Equip. Mechanical Engr. Manu-
facturing Engr. Manu. Engr. Manager.
Sales Engr. Advanced study or de-
grees desirable for all, required for
manager positions. Three years exper-
ience required for most, 10 for man-
ager positions.
National Music Camp, Interlochen,
Mich.-Producer-Announcer for WIAA
Radio FM Station. Private, non-com-
mercial, specializing in serious, fine
arts, programming. FCC 3rd class ra-
dio-telephone operator's permit with
broadcasting endorsement, or the abil-
ity to obtain the permit within 3 mos.
Another opening for man with knowl.
of electronics, relating especially to
recording equipment, familiarity with
serious music helpful.
| * * *
| For further information please call
764-7460, General Division, Bureau of
I Appointments, 3200 SAB,

CLEVELAND-There will be a
USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- new trial for Samuel H. Sheppard,
NOUNCEMENTS is available to official-
ly recognized and registered student or- whose much-publicized first trial
ganizations only. Forms are available in in 1954 ended in conviction for
Room 1011 SAB. second - degree murder in the
d *p Rbludgeon slaying of his first wife,
Baha'l Student Group, Race unity
day picnic, Sun., June 12, 1 p.m., Is- Marilyn.
land Park. No cost--please call 668-9085 Cuyahoga County Prosecutor
between 6 and 8 p.m. John T. Corrigan gave his decision
* *
Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance on a new trial yesterday after
Mon., June 13, 8:30-10:30 p.m., Women's studying the U.S. Supreme Court
Athletic Bldg. ruling Monday which said Shep-
Grad Outing Club, Trip to Detroit pard did not receive a fair trial in
Zoo, Sun., June 12, 1 p.m., Rackham I1954.
on Huron St. Sheppard, who served nine years
in prison before getting out on a
Lutheran Student Chapel, worship federal court order in 1965, told
service, Sun., June 12, 10:30 a.m., Hill
St. at Forest Ave. Supper at Campus newsmen he will welcome a second
Chapel, 5 p.m., 1236 Washtenaw Ave. trial.
* * *
Newman Student Association, Picnic, "I know I can prove my inno-
Sun., June 12, 1:30 p.m., 331 Thomp- cence," Sheppard, 42, said after
son.

DISCOUNT RECORDS
and UAC
Hopes you like
the MARKSMEN at
the Saturday night
DANCE

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*' *
Michigan Christian Fellowship, Lec-
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14, 7:30 p.m., 3RD, Union.
Read
~ Daily
Classifieds

I

THE QUARRY
Wishes UAC a
successful
SUMMER UPRISING

I

Shows at
1, 3, 5,7,9 P.M.

rAA-IvA I

DIAL
2-6264

1

ENDING TONIGHT
"WAR OF THE BUTTONS"

STARTING SUNDAY
t e
AN CLORAO 3
Vittorio 6assman/ Annette stroyberg/cerard Blain/ Nino castelnuovol Gino cem
DIAL 5-6290
ccl AL2.1k,1111; im 1Shows at 1, 3, 5,7, 9 P.M.
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You must sit in from the beginning

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THEY STUNNED THE WORLD WITH THEIR INCREDIBLE VICTORY!
-4 F
SMRu DOUGLAS
SENTA BERGER
Guest appearances: Frank Sinatra, Yul Bruner, John Wayne
/ .
I I
ITONIGHT/
FOCUS-THE AMERICAN FILM DIRECTOR;
BUSTER KEATON
(1924)/
/ SHERLOCK, JR.
/ and
- .
CHARLIE CHAPLIN
THE PILGRIM

I

One of the greatest works in the dramatic literature of western civilization,TH E ORESTEIA
gave tragedy its vocabulary of values. A chilling trilogy of plays of mounting hor-
ror and fascination, it introduces the theatre's greatest tragic heroine-Clytemnestra.
JUDITH ANDERSON
IN AESCHYLUS'
THE ORESTEIA
TRANSLATED BY RICHMOND LATTIMORE
ALEXIS SOLOMOS Artistic Director R

Aristophanes' timeless comic masterpiece is a delightful, satiric romp through man-
nered Athens. THE BIRDS' extravagant plot and circumstance, outrageous clowning,
and spectacular fantasy make contemporary comment in side-splitting style.
BERT LAHR
IN ARISTOPHANES'
THE BIRDS
TRANSLATED BY WILLIAM ARROWSMITI
ICHARD KIRSCHNER Executive Director
S JOHN MICHAEL KING JACK FLETCHER

I

Also Starring
DONALD DAVIS

JACQUELINE BROOKEE

LLOYD HARRIS FREDERIC WARRINER DINA PAISNEF KAREN LUDWIG RUTH VOLNER
RUBY DEE
Scenery and Festival Stage Designed by ELDON ELDER Lighting by GILBERT V. HEMSLEY, JR. costumes for The Oresteia by MR. SOLOMOS
Costumes for The Birds by MR. ELDER choreography for The Oresteia by HELEN McGEHEE choreography for The Birds by GEMZE DE LAPPE
Music for The Oresteia by IANNIS XENAKIS Music for The Birds by HERMAN CHESSID
Entire Production Conceived and Directed by ALEXIS SOLO MOS

and it's
the
wildest

HENRY FONDA"
JOANNE WOODWARD
iAneI PnfIAP

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