WEDNESDAY 24 MARCH. 1965 THE MICHIGAN UAILV PAGE. TARUR WEDNESDAY, 24 MARCH 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE. THREE i a MY1 ;i VOn1 { England Protests U.S.Gemini Shot ANALYSIS: Necessary to A r] bs, Israelis Clash Over Issues Use of Gas and Napalm Moon Hopes l 3LJL SOWJ On Vietcong Soldiers U.S. AIR FORCE F-105 THUNDERCHIEFS yesterday attacked early warning radar stations at Vinh Son. Earlier attacks have hit radar at Tiger Island and Vu Con, shown here. One plane was lost in the Vinh Son raid, btit the pilot was rescued. MORE EXPECTED TOMORROW: Rights Marchers Camp 20 Miles from Montgomery LOWNDESBORO, Ala. )--Rain-soaked civil rights marchers, bound for Alabama's capital, huddled last night under tents on a muddy noll near here after 'plodding 11 miles through heavy showers. The 300 spirited marchers camped within 20 miles of their destination-the white-domed capitol in Montgomery. The right- to-vote trek began Sunday in Selma. National guardsmen and Army ttroops activated by presidential Wilson Asks Explanation For Aetions Air Force Strikes Expand in North LONDON UP)-Britain will ques- tion the United States govern- ment about the use of napalm and nonlethal gas in Viet Nam and about U.S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor's statement concerning escalation of the war there, British Prime Minister Harold Wilson said yesterday. The Laborite leader, whose gov- ernment has officially approved: the' U.S.-Vietnamesefight against the Viet Cong and its extension to air strikes on North Viet Nam, answered critics in the House of Commbns. Wilson said Britain wants an explanation of a remark by Taylor that was represented here as a declaration the United States in- tends to wage "war without limit" in Viet Nam. He referred to a speech by the ambassador before the Saigon Lions Club Monday. Taylor told the club no limit exists to poten- tial escalation of the war, and he said the United States may enter the ground fighting directly if necessary. Wilson advised uneasy members of Parliament that English For- eign Secretary Michel Stewart, making a round of official calls in Washington, would raise the question of the use of gas and napalm fire bombs against the Communists. Stewart said yesterday he had expressed to U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk "the very grave concern"felt in Britain and other countries about the use of nause- ous gas against Communist guer- rillas in South Viet Nam . Meanwhile, the New York Times reported a U.S. military spokes- man announcing another Air Force attack on radar stations at Vinh Son, said that U.S. planes for the first time have engaged in un- planned attacks on North Viet Nam. All earlier raids have been pref- aced by careful photography and detailed planning. Today's attack involved planes searching for tar- gets themselves and so could rep- resent some "escalation" in the air war. Yesterday's principle target at Vinh Son was an early warning radar station some 60 miles north of the 17th parallel. Returning pilots reported that the radar sta- tion had been "virtually destroy- ed." Also for the first time, no formal statement on the purpose of the raid was issued. An embassy spokesman said only that the at- tack was "our response to their continued aggression." Continued from Page 1 The 12-shot manned Gemini program, which costs $1.2 bil- lion, will hold the spotlight again in June, when the U.S. is to try its first spacecraft emergence test, similar to last week's Soviet feat. Astronaut James A. McDiv- itt, who will be flying with Ed- ward H. White, is to at least partially exit from the craft. How- ever, Gemini operations director Christopher C. Kraft, Jr. Indicat- ed yesterday there was a possi- bility McDivitt might leave the vehicle completely as the Russian astronaut, Alexei Leonov, did. 4 Days Aloft McDivitt and White are to stay aloft for four days in a trip in- tended to provide significant med- ical and scientific data. It will also be the longest U.S. manned space flight so far. Astronauts L. Gordon Cooper and Charles Conrad are to mak the third flight late this year, a seven-day mission, also to gather medical and scientific data. Both tests also will practice the vital maneuvers needed for the sixth Gemini flight-the first American attempt to link the Gemini craft with another orbiting satellite. The exercise will involve precise steering from which the first three flights are to lay the ground- work. A total of six rendezvous missions are planned in the pro- gram, all aimed at perfecting this vital. maneuver for Project Apol- lo manned lunar landing. A two- man voyage of 14 days also is planned. Apollo Program The National Aeronautics and Space Administration hopes to complete the Gemini flights by the end of 1966 to clear the way for the first manned earth orbit flights in the Apollo program. Apollo aims at landing two men on the moon in 1969. U.S. space officials dispute the current status of the U.S.-Soviet space competition. Dr. Robert 'Seamans, assistant administrator of NASA, declared "I don't accept the premise we are behind the Russians. In many things we are doing, we are well ahead," while the Soviets "are doing some things before us. Ours is an extremely good program." On the other hand, many space officials were saying after last week's Soviet space spectacular that the U.S. may be up to two years behind the Russians. These experts also noted that Russia is apparently planning an all-out effort to reach the moon ahead of the U.S. Soviet Capsules It is known that the Soviet space capsules are larger than the American ones, while the thrustE of the Russian launching rock- ets are many times greater than the U.S. rockets. Whether this means the Soviets will be able tc reach the lunar target first is doubtful, some experts say. ' The mdst reasonable assump- tion at the present time is that the U.S. and Russia are approx- imately at the same point in the space race although they are per- forming important tests and ex- periments in a different sequence these experts add. EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the verted. Hence, a dangerous situa- salt into the Arab wounds, had4 cannot agree on many vital issues ing the current Arab-Israeli crisis. tion develops to which there is no only given Nasser more cause for except one, Israel. easy solution, especially when the preaching unity among Arab na- The Israelis prompt all the more By JOSHUA BARLEV Arab nations will not agree to tions and only made the chances hate and greater risk of war be- any third-party solution, and when for war between the two that cause they are managing to solve Ten years ago it became quite Israel will not agree to a plan dis- much greater. their problems without internal apparent to Israel that with its rupting their own water project. Arabs Lose dissension. The key to understand- scarcity of both good land and Another Issue And the Arab nations lost much ing in this problem of the Middle saei t hd tosfindrobemsay ofi'In the last several months, an- more than aid from West Ger- East today is to realize the tre- couldsgnotepossiblyssupportoitsother issue has been develop'ng many. Through their own dissen- mendous role that chauvanistic Scoulnot ossiysuport. which will also have significant tion, they could not even show a pride has in shaping each issue. great flow of immigrants, implications on Arab-Israeli re- united foreign policy front against For the Israelis, it is a matter of A plan was drawn up by the' lations and consequently on world Israel: only three of thirteen Arab honor to be stubborn when deal- Tennessee Valley Authority to di- peace. In this situation, West Ger- foreign ministers agreed to an ing with the Arabs, and any com- vert the Jordan River so Israel imany became the middle-man economic boycott of West Ger- i promise is taken as a sign of weak- would get 40 per cent of its waters. and tried to please both sdes, but many. Nasser was the biggest loser ness. The Arabs can only look to Jordan 45 per cent and Syria and finally caused dissatisfaction to of all when only six of thirteen the future and promise them- Lebanon 15 per cent. both while hurting its own image. Arab nations would agree to his selves that they will never again Israel decided it would proceed' It egan when West Germany demand for recognition of East suffer such humiliation from such with the plan over Arab objec- was forced to cut off arms ship- Germany. a small nation. Neither will con- tions and by 1964 had completed ments to Israel because Nasser As the situation is now, the cede. It seems that the problem the necessary pipelines going all had threatened to recognizeEast Arab countries are still disunified.' will not be solved without more the way to the Negev desert. Grany if the shipments oTheir own unstable governments strife from both sides. I ;Geman itth sipmnt o Less than Half American-made weapons did not Israel has been using less than cease. Then, because of Nasser'stph e-_ _ .___ I te 0 pr en ofth waeritenthusiastic recept on of Ulbricht - _______ was entitled to, but Arab nations from East Germany, the Bonn are so outraged that it is using government canceled economic aid any at all that several have begun to Egypt. To further humiliate Tomorrow'at 8 P.M to divert the waters themselves. the Arab nations and to sootheOW. The divergence of the Jordan Israel's anger over the arms ship- River has already resulted in sev- ments, West Germany established eral border incidents, - but the diplomatic ties with Israel and Arabs, with the proven might of was prepared to pay for the arms j DR. JOSEPH C. LANDIS the Israeli army fresh in their if a third party, such as France minds, are not considered likely or the U.S., would deliver them. Associate Professor of English, Queens College to go to war. Nasser, as unofficial The immediate result was that Author, Editor, Translator head of the Arab world, would like Israel had won a moral victory to use the entire situation as a by getting West Germany to makeHI source of unity, something the certain commitments to her while HO NEEDS Y.DD SH. Arab nations have never had. And giving up certain ones with Egypt. so it is probable that they will However, as Newsweek has point- try to defeat Israel by depriving ed out, no one was a winner, and her of water, rather than by wag- everyone was a loser. Israel had Hillel Foundation and Beth Israel Congregation ing a losing war. won West German recognition, 1429 Hill Street However, it is just as probable and .gotten back their cancelled that Israel will not stand by while weapons, though indirectly. But -_ its precious waters are being di- their victory had only poured ANN ARBOR'S NEWEST BOOKSTORE The Centicore Bookshop First Manual Flight Finished, (Continued from Page 1) It was the misadventure that led to the nickname for yester- day's ship, the "Molly Brown;" Officially christened Gemini 3, she was named after the Broadway musical, "The Unsinkable Molly Brown,", in the hope that she would float the astronauts until they could be picked up by the carrier Intrepid. The shot had an all-star watch- ing cast. President Johnson looked on by television in Washington. Vice- President Hubert H. Humphrey was here to give pep talks and congratulations in person. Orbit Change The spacecraft changed its path on the orbit, gradually dropping down so it began going around the world in an almost perfect circle, from 97 to 105 miles high. Originally the orbit had ranged from 100 to 142 miles above the earth. Grissom and Young became the 18th and 19th members to enter outer space. Of these, 10 men and one woman have been Russians. Russia was first with a multi- manned flight when three of their Cosmonauts went into outer space last Oct. 16. Five days ago, two more Russians were shot into outer space, and one of them scored a dramatic and historic first by stepping out of his craft and floating freely on his own. order ringed the camp of the marchers for the third night. Rev. Martin Luther King, lead- er of the Alabama civil rights drive, left the march before it started yesterday. He went to Cleveland, Ohio, but planned to return today. March leaders said hundreds more would join the demonstration today on the four-lane stretch which starts one-quarter mile from last night's camp. King has called for thousands to march the final leg of the pilgrimage tomorrow. Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy, King's closest associate, also dropped out yesterday and returned to Atlanta. There he described the march as "the greatest demonstration for freedom in the nation since Ab- raham Lincoln signed the Eman- cipation." At a news conference Abernathy said that after the march ends Thursday Negro lead- ers will mobilize voter campaigns in 10 counties of the Alabama "black belt." Abernathy said he plans to go to Louisville, Ky., for a program he hopes will raise $6,000 for the voter drive. A nun and several priests joined yesterday's march. In Montgomery, Police Commis- sioner L. B. Sullivan at a news conference appealed to all citizens to go about their business and stay away from the demonstra- tion. Twelve white and Negro pickets -yesterday tried to walk on the sidewalk in front of the capitol. State troopers kept them off the sidewalk and city police ordered them out of the street. G i 1 t r 5 E i 5 f s 5 1 5 r 'T-Me Ccnticorc& c& 1321 South University between Forest & Washtenaw ana me universiry or micnigan rress invite you to a reception for RADCLIFFE SQUIRES' NEW BOOK OAF POEMS "FINGERS OF HERMES" Mr. Squires will sign copies of the first edition at the bookstore Wednesday evening 7 to 9 Open Noon to Midnight Monday thru Saturday .,.,,.,, ...e., ......,... ........ ;;;;i .... (1 ;>' ;; our Miss J is smartly ensembled Full Time & Evening Employment 18-35 If you are free from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. four evenings each week end occasionally on Saturday, you can maintain your studies and still enjoy a part-time job doing special interview work that will bring an average weekly income of $67. If you are neat appearing and a hard worker call Mr. Jones at 761- 1488 from 10 a.m. to 12 a.m. Monday-Friday. No other times. We are also interested in full-time employment. 0 § ^- 5 §JUST ARRIVED NEW SHIPMENT OF GIRLS' TASSEL WEEJUNS CORDOVAN COLOR ... $13.50 'f i for spring a ( yr,, OEM 1 .lIi all set for Easter, too, in a versatile short sleeve dress with its own matching coat. Here, two favorites, sizes 5 to 15. A. Rayon/acetate ensemble. Navy, turquoise. 17.98 B. Checked cotton coat, solid dress. y v _ 6 For Passover. 9 Brown, green. 17.98 t ' , :, 3 : . ., ' o i i/i K/I :v U I Miniature chocolate matzos. Delicious chocolate blended with chopped nuts and shaped into bite-size matzo squares. Indi- a n . r~a n__. S f f it l we w ww R~ i UR'VA I 3g% I I I