SATURDlAY, 3 APRIL 1965 THlE MICIGAN DlAILY FArVmu rize .1 W 1 ~A"U 1 Ali L' 1, VIET NAM POST: U.S. To Add Personnel Legislators Assail Bombing . .....w.. ... MONTGOMERY, Ala. (P) - An arouse "the consciences of the Alabama legislative resolution de- good people of Alabama." WASHINGTON (A) -- Several thousand more United States mili- tary personnel will be sent to k South Viet Nam over the com- ing months, U.S. officials said last night. This was disclosed as Ambas- sador Maxwell D. Taylor wound up a, week's strategy review with President Lyndon B. Johnson and other administration leaders and told reporters he sees scant chance of Russian or Communist Chinese intervention in the lingering guer- rilla war. Taylor said some more men and equipment would be added to the American force of about 28,000 now in the Southeast Asia coun- ' try, though "I am not anticipating a large increase." To Return The ambassador, who is return- ing to Saigon today, also reported - plans for a step-up-by a sizable 160,000 - in South Vietnamese forces, which now total about 530,- 000. retary, is due to fly to the area in about 10 days. These moves were part of a British push for peace that has the backing of Johnson's admin- istration. The initiative by Prime Minis- ter Harold Wilson's government came as British, Indian and other officials claimed that Communist North Viet Nam may be soften- ing its terms for peace talks. Previous Demand Previously Hanoi, and other Communist capitals, had demand- ed total American withdrawal from Viet Nam as their price for attending a conference. But Pres- ident Ho Chi Minh and his North Vietnamese fellow-leaders are be- ing portrayed widely by a variety of people -now as being prepared to parley without preconditions. Such an attitude would con- form exactly with the terms of a peace appeal issued Thursday by 17 nonaligned states whose repre- sentatives met recently in Bel- mander in Viet Nam, flew to Duc Hoa to get a clearer picture of the tactical situation. Helicopter units throughout the Saigon area were alerted to be ready to fly more troops to rein- force a ranger battalian reported to have suffered five killed and 20 wounded in the first phases of the assault. Communist mortar and auto- matic fire was so intense that. medical evacuation flights were interrupted. The Viet Cong force, massed in an area on the western side of the Vaico Oriental River, evidently was considerably stronger than the original estimate of 100 to 200 men. Elsewhere 33 U.S. Air Force jet planes bombed and strafed sus- pected Viet Cong concentrations at several sites. Th ebiggest foray was a raid by 17 F-100 Super Sabre fighter- bombers in Quang Tri Province, which adjoins Communist North Viet Nam. nouncing as "inhuman criminals" the bombers who blew up a Ne- gro's home underscored growing official concern yesterday over ra- cial violence. Ninety-five members of the Ala- bama state House of Representa- tives joined as co-sponsors of a strongly worded statement of pol- icy which declared, "such threats to our tranquility will not be tol- erated." The resolution swept through the house without a dissenting vote and went across the hall for concurring action in the Senate. The Senate, however, recessed for the weekend before receiving the resolution. The statement bore the endorsement of Gov. George C. Wallace, who interrupted a flight to Washington Thursday. He turn- ed back to inspect the bomb dam- age after word of the explosion reached him in Birmingham aboard his plane. Economic Boycott In Baltimore, Rev. Martin Luther King called for an eco- nomic boycott of Alabama to The move was endorsed by the executive board of King's South- ern Christian Leadership Confer- ence. King said the first stage of the boycott would become effective immediately. He urged that all businesses planning to expand in- to Alabama suspend such plans, and called for vigorous enforce- ment of a section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act which provides for suspension of federal funds in states where racial discrimination is prevalent. No March At Camden, Ala., Mayor Reg Albritton stopped about 65 Ne- groes marching to the Wilcox County Courthouse to renew pro- tests at having to register in the county's old jail building. It was the third consecutive day that the mayor has halted such demonstrations. Albritton has told the marchers on each occa- sion that no parades of any sort will be allowed in the city until the voter registration controversy is over. The marchers turned back. The legislative resolution was prompted by the bombings Thurs- day of the home of Negro ac- countant T. L. Crowell, and dis- covery of other ready-to-explode bombs at the homes of Birming- ham Mayor Albert Boutwell and city councilwoman Nina Miglion- ico. Second Stage King said the SCLC would launch the second stage of its boycott in two weeks, if the first stage proves ineffective. It would involve private investment funds in Alabama and federal deposits in Alabama banks. Stage three, King explained, if needed, would be a boycott of spe- cific consumer products selected by the SCLC executive board. "This plan will move from stage to stage, in the event that the preceeding stage proves fruitless," King said. "This program of escalated eco- nomic withdrawal is designed to do no more and no less than to fulfill those basic requirements of human rights for all citizens in Alabama as we have so long, so long, struggled and we died for." "This is no attempt to destroy the economy of the state of Ala- bama," King emphasized, Aft The Gilbert & Sullivan Society presents o( the Wed., March 31 through Sot., April 3 at 8 P.M. Saturday Matinee at 2 P.M. Tickets on sale at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office Friday and Saturday Evenings Sold Out Rcad and Use Daily Classifieds These two increases in person- grade. nel are the major items in a The war still continued, how- long list of steps approved in an ever. Four Americans were found effort to boost the effectiveness among the combat dead as U.S.- of the campaign against guerril- supported Vietnamese rangers bat- las. tled on for possession of a heav- Meanwhile, Britain invited 11 ily defended Viet Cong stamping governments concerned with In- ground 20 miles west of Saigon. dochina's future to submit ideas A military spokesman announc- on how to end the war in Viet ed that along with the four U.S. Nam. Army men killed, six were wound- Arrange Meeting ed and two U.S. Army helicop- At the same time, British dip- ters were shot down in the ac- lomats in Peking and Hanoi tried tion that flared Thursday in Hau formally to arrange early meet- Nghia Province southwest of Duc ings for Patrick Gordon Walker Hoa. with high Communist Chinese and Reports from the field were so North Vietnamese leaders. Gor- fragmentary Lt. Gen. J. L. don Walker, onetime foreign sec- Throckmorton, deputy U.S. com- World News Roundup British Drop Plans for New Plane, Discuss Aiternative With French By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach proposed to Congress yesterday a tighter crim- inal law to combat fraud in fed- erally-aided highway construc- tion projects. The bill would forbid conflicts of interest involving state or fed- eral officers associated with the projects. And, it would expand an existing law forbidding false state- ments in connection with property acquisition for such projects. * * * WASH-INGTON-President Lyn- don B. Johnson told a congres- sional freedom of information subcommittee yesterday that he will not permit subordinates to invoke the claim of executive priv- ilege to withhold government in- formation from the Congress and public. * * * UNITED NATIONS-Secretary- General U Thant rejected yester- day a Turkish declaration that Salo Plaza Lasso should be dis- missed as UN mediator for Cyprus. Thant was replying to a Turkish charge that Plaza, former presi- dent of Ecuador, had exceeded his authority in making recommenda- tions for a Cyprus settlement in a report issued this week. * * * SAIGON-A sedan loaded with explosives was reported somewhere in Saigon yesterday with the United States Information Service or the Caravelle Hotel as its tar- get, police sources said. NEW YORK-In the face of disapproval by superiors, a Mary- land priest yesterday amplified his charges that Roman Catholic "doctrine is at stake" in present trends in the church. The Rev. Gommar A. De Pauw, of Mount St. Mary Seminary, Em- mitsburg, Md., told a news confer- ence that American Catholics "have been brainwashed by ex- tremists of the clergy" about re- cent reforms. PARIS (P)-Britain's Prime Mih- ister Harold Wilson and French President Charles de Gaulle near- ed agreement yesterday on joint French-British production of a variable-sweep plane to rival the American F-111. In London, the British govern- ment set off a political bomb- shell by disclosing abandonment of its multibillion dollar go-it- alone development program for such a plane. Soaring costs were given by British informants for the "drop it" decision. The British plane, the TSR-2, was designed to carry H-bombs at low altitudes under enemy ra- dar screens. Its abandonment in- dicated a major policy decision to give up Britain's role as an inde- pendent nuclear power. An uproar broke loose in Brit- ain immediately. "We will oppose the decision with all our strength in Parlia- ment," Christopher Soames, who speaks for the opposition Conserv- ative party on aircraft policy, said. London informants said the Labor party government may buy the U.S.-built F-111 to fill the nuclear-delivery gap until British- owned but U.S.-designed Polaris submarines become operational in 1967. One of the prime reasons for the disturbance in Britain was the threat to employment in the aircraft industry and, in fact, to the entire future of the industry. A new policy of joint develop- ment with France might save not only most of the jobs but the in- dustry itself. French informants said Wilson and de Gaulle decided to have four ministers--two from each na- tion--meet soon to examine coop- eration in the aeronautical field. Wilson and de Gaulle also dis- cussed a series of global problems. Wilson explained Britain's in- vitation to governments concerned with Indochina's future to offer suggestions nn how the Viet Nam war should be ended. De Gaulle outlined anew the French contention that a negoti- ated settlement is the only possi- ble way out of the situation. Wilson backed the U.S. position that Communist infiltration of South Viet Nam from the north must be halted as a pre-condition to any such negotiations. The two talked briefly about Germany. The discussion centered on German reunification. It should be studied further by the committee of ambassadors, which meets in Washington was the gen- eral conclusion. The committee in- cludes representatives of the United States, Britain, France and West Germany. Wilson's visit was the first by a British prime minister to France since 1962, when Harold Macmil- lan met with de Gaulle shortly before the French president ve- toed Britain's entry into the Eu- ropean Common Market. F- I.: COM~lE TO CHURCH U - ON THE SAB BATH =11111 REGULAR PRICE MEDIUM LOTON Y OU PAY ONLY 82' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN CAMPUS CORNERS (Continued from Page 2) Bldg. Doctoral Examination for Paul Nath- an Zietlow, Engiish Language & Litera- ture; thesis: "The Shorter Poems of Thomas Hardy and Edwin Arlington Robinson: A Study in Contrasts," to- day, E. Council Room, Rackham Bldg., 9 a.m. Chairman, A. J. Carr. Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies Lecture: William H. Lewis, Dept. of State, "Algeria, Social- ism, Arabism and Conflict": Aud. D, Angell Hall, 4:15 p.m. General Notices University Bibliography of Publica- tions: Any University employe who has not yet reported his publications or creative works for the period 7-1-63 to 6-30-64, is requested to submit the material as soon as possible. If bibliog- raphy forms are needed, call the Edi- torial Office of the Office of Research Administration, 764-4277. Bain-Swiggett Poetry Prize: Students competing for the Bain-Swiggett Poetry Prize must leave their entries at the Hopwood Room, 1006 Angell Hall, on or before Mon., April 5. New Orientation Leaders: A leader Training Workshop has been scheduled for Mon:, April 5, 7-8:30 p.m. You are asked to report to the third floor of the Michigan Union where you will be directed to your proper discussion group. These groups will also be men- tioned in the Daily announcement of new leaders. If you are unable to at- tend, please contact the Orientation Office, 764-6290. Placement ANNOUNCEMENT: Univ. of Southern Calif., Los Angeles --Announces a 2 yr. high school spe- cialist-teacher program leading to MA & teaching cert. 1st yr. includes work as paid asst. & study for MA in teach- ing field. Paid internship & complete cou.rse work during 2nd yr. Financial aid available. POSITION OPENINGS: Washington State, Olympis-Librarian V AMLS plus 6 yrs. exper., 2 yrs. at admin. level. Administer prog. of gen. lib. services. Application deadline April 9. City of Milwaukee, Wis.-Planner. MA in city planning or equiv. or BS plus 1 yr. planning exper. Winchester School, Vt. - Grads to teach Engl./hist., Fr./Span. and Math/ Sci. Mich. Dept. of Agriculture, Lansing -Insect survey help. Students from Cass & Van Buren Counties pref. Camp Oakland, Mich.-Coed. Two male counselors. Will interview before April 10. Rowe A. C. Mfg., Grand Rapids, Mich. -Electronics engr. Jr. with knowledge of transistor theory & application. Northeast New Jersey Construction Co. - Construction laborers; campus contact. Cabot Corp.-Grad students in chem.. physics, & chem. engrg. for work at Billerica, Mass., research facilities. Details available at Summer Place- ment, 212 SAB. ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please sign schedule posted at 128-H West Engrg. APRIL 8- Prestolite Co., Toledo, Ohio-BS-MS: EE & ME. BS: ChE. R. & D. & Des. APRIL 9- U.S. Weather Bureau, Entire U.S.- All Degrees: EE, ME & Meteor. & Ocean. ES-MS: CE. MS: Constr., Geodetic, Commun. Sci. MS-PhD: Instrum. BS: E Physics. Men & women. U.S. citizens except for PhD's. R. & D., Des. 818 S. State 665-4431 Corner Packard & State FLY TO0 EUROPE PAN AM JET New York-London-New York LEAVE JUNE 2-RETURN AUG. 17 C315 Call JIM PODELL 761-1635 UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Stephen J. Stein, Vicar Sunday Worship Services at 9:45 and 11:15 a.m.-"The Vocation of Recreation." Wednesday Lenten Vespers at 7:30 and 10:00 p.m.-"They Crucified Him." Gamma Delta Sunday Evening: Cost Supper at 6:00 Program at 6:45 President W. Harry Krieger of the Mich- igan District speaks on his trip to the Holy Land. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Ave. Erwin A. Goede, Minister Church School and Services at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. - Sermon Topic: "The Return to Tradition." ST. ANDREW'S CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 North Division Phone 662-4097 SUNDAY 9:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer and Sermon. 11:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. Breakfast following at Canterbury House. 7:00 p.m.-Evening Prayer and Recital, Rose- mary Russell, mezzo-soprano. TUESDAY 11 :00 a.m.--Hoy Communion. WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion. Breakfast at Canterbury House. FRI DAY 12:10-Holy Communion. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. NO 2-4466 Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm Brown, Virgil Janssen, John Waser 9:30 a.m.-Sundoy School for pupils from 2 to 90 years of age. 11:00 a.m.-Sunday morning church service. SUNDAY CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Services at 9:30 and 11:15 a.m.-"Faith- Fact or Fake?" - Rev. J. F. Robinson (Visiting Minister). Bible Lecture, 10:30 a.m.-Prof. G. B. Har- rison. Church School, 9:30 a.m.-Crib-9th grade; 11:15 a.m.-Crib-6th grade. Student Guild, 802 Monroe, telephone 2-5189. Wednesday Lenten Service, 7:30 p.m.-Doug- las Chapel. DISCIPLES OF CHRIST MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 730 Tappan 662-4245 Russell M. Fuller, Pastor Sunday Worship-10:45 a.m. CAMPUS CENTER GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe 662-5189 J, E. Edwards, Campus Minister 7:00 p.m. Sunday - Seminar on Christian Thought. Historic ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH 1501 W. Liberty St. Ralph B. Piper, David Bracklein, Fred Holtfreter, Pastors Worship Services-8:30 and 11:15 a.m. Holy Communion - Second Sunday of each month. Church School & Adult Bible Class-9:45 a.m. Holy Baptism-First Sunday of month. Nursery facilities during worship services and church school. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL 331 Thompson NO 3-0557 SUNDAY - Masses at 7:00, 8:15, 9:30, 10:45, 12:00, 12:30. MONDAY-SATURDAY - Masses at 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 12:00 and 5:00 p.m. WEDNESDAY - 7:30 p.m.-Marian Scripture Devotions. Confessions following. SATURDAY - Confessions: 3:30-5:30; 7:30- 9:30 p.m. DARLINGTON LUTHERAN CHURCH (Wisconsin Synod) 3545 Packard Robert A. Boer, Pastor Sunday Worship-10:30 a.m. Lenten Services-7:30 p.m., Wednesday For Transportation Call: Rev. Boer, NO 2-2091 or Dick Brucker, 662-1474. HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH Meeting at YM-YWCA 350 S. Fifth Rev. Walter R. Petersen, Pastor 9:45 a.m.-Sunday Bible School. 11 :00 a.m.-Service. 7:00 p.m.-Evening Gospel Hour. Thursday, 7:30 p.m.--Midweek Bible Studies and Prayer Service. BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 493 S. Fourth St. Rev. E. R. Klaudt, Rev. A. C. Rizer, and Rev. A. G. Hobermehl, Pastors 9:30 and 10:45 a.m.-Worship Service. 9:30 and 10:45 a.m.-Church School. 7:30 p.m.-Student Guild. CAMPUS CHAPEL Forest at Washtenaw The Rev. Donald Postema Morning Service, 10:00 a.m. Evening Service, 7:00 p.m. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDATION At State and Huron Streets Phone NO 2-4536 Hoover Rupert, Minister Eugene Ransom, Campus Minister Jean Robe Bissell, Associate Campus Minister SUNDAY 9:00 and 11:15 a.m.-Worship Services, Dr. Rupert: "To Qualify for Forgiveness." 10:15 a.m. - Student Seminar, Social Hall. Current Issues Class. 7:00 p.m.-Worship and Program, Wesley Lounge. TUESDAY 8:30 p.m.-Open House, Jean Bissell's apart- ment. WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel, fol- lowed by breakfast in Pine Room. Out in time for 8:00 a.m. classes. 5:10 p.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel. 6:00 p.m.-Wesley Grads, Pine Room. Din- ner. "Love in Psychiatry and Religion," Dr. English, psychiatrist. Worship at 9:00, 10:30 a.m. and 12. Presbyterian Church Center located church. at the FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. For transportation call 662-4018 1 1:00 a.m.-Sunday School for pupils from 8 to 6 years of age. I~ IF Brur riiabf'LI r frL1Dc- II