Friday, October 26, 1973
I HE MICHIGAN DAILY
Pge Three
Friday, October 26, 1973 I HE MICHIGAN DAILY
_ :.
, t uBATTLE NEAR PLEIKU:
N.
S.
Vietnam
troops stifle
Vietnam relief column
AP Photo
Horrified
Alvaro "Al" Garcia, director of the ill-fated Indiana trade mission whose plane crashed on takeoff
near Rio de Janeiro; Brazil Tuesday morning, describes the crash with intense feeling. Garcia, who
suffered muscle spasms in his back from the crash which killed'five of the sixty-five aboard the air-
liner, returned with six other members of the mis sion Thursday. Lt. Gov. Robert Orr and three other
members remained in Brzil. Garcia's wife and son are standing in the background.
FOOD CHEAPER IN SEPT.:
ost o Living chief favors
maintaining controls for '74
SAIGON (Reuter) - N o r t h
Vietnamese troops dealt a severe
blow to South Vietnamese hopes
of recapturing a central high-
lands border base by demolish-
ing the southern flank of a re-
lief column, military sources said
yesterday.
The South Vietnamese a r m y
spokesman said 30 government
troops were killed, two wve r e
wounded and 65 were still miss-
ing after a fierce 65-minute com-
munist assault 12 miles south-
west of Pleiku City on Tuesday.
THE OTHER 250 men from the
battalion of troops forming the
southern flank of a 7,000-man re-
lief column heading for Le Minh
Ranger Base retreated to the
operation headquarters outside
Pleiku leaving two forward bat-
talions exposed to attack from
three sides.
The spokesman said the gov-
ernment battalion reported kill-
ing 127 communist troops be-
fore pulling out of their position
south of the dirt road which
runs from Pleiku to the moun-
taintop base facing the Cambod-
ian border.
North Vietnamese and Viet
Cong troops have also crossed
from Cambodia into South Viet-
nam, massing for possible at-
tacks in the Mekong Delta and
Saigon regions, Western diplo-
matic sources said Thursday.
THE MOVEMENT, involving
four divisions, has been taking
place for the last few weeks and
may have a relation to the step-
ped-up level of fighting in Viet-
nam, the sources in the Cam-
bodian capital said.
In Phnom Penh the diplomatic
informants said North Vietnam's
5th Division moved across the
border into the region north of
Tay Ninh, while its 6th Division
crossed the frontier from south-
eastern Cambodia into the wes-
tern approaches to Saigon and
the delta.
Two other divisions; the 7th
and 9th, "just disappeared off
the Cambodian map" after mov-
ing across southeastern Cam-
bodia, the sources said.
STRENGTH of a North V i e t-
namese division is estimated at
about 6,000 to 7.000 men.
The most prominent specula-
tion was that North Vietnam in-
tended to reinforce its troops in
South Vietnam.
The communist ass_.ult on Le
Minh was not the first on that
base.
LE MINH was overrun in a
similar tank-backed assault by
the crack North Vietnamese
320th division in September.
President Nguyen Van Thieu
flew to Pleiku at the beginning of
October to urge the army to re-
spond "to an act of war with an
act of war."
Military sources said that now
that the southern flank of the
relief operation has disintegrated
the chances of the column reach-
ing the base were very slight.
ABOUT TWO WEEKS after the
fall of Le Minh Ranger Base
government troops, spearhead-
ed by a tank squadron, set out
from Pleiku City in searcn of the
North Vietnamese division.
But until last Tuesday, little
contact had been made with
communist troops which left the
base after overrunning govern-
ment air strikes."
Earlier yesterday, a Viet Cong
spokesman in Saigon said, "Our
forces in western Pleiku are har-
rassing the Saigon fortes to pun-
ish them for launching an im-
portant military operation in the
area in violation of the cease-
fire."
ELSEWHERE in the country,
the military command reported
a relatively high number of
Communist ceasefire violations.
Most of the violations were
ground and shelling attacks on
militia and infantry positions
throughout South Vietnams four
military regions.
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Vol. LXXXIV, No. 44
Friday, October 26, 1973
is edited and managed by students at
the University of Michigan. News phone
764-0562. Second class postage paid at
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published
daily Tuesday through Sunday morning
during the University year at 420 May-
nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104,
Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam-
pus area); $11 local mall (Michigan and
Ohio); $12 non-local mall (other states
and foreign).
Summer session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus
area); $6.50 local mall (Michigan and
Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail other
states and foreign).
ARTISTS
SUBMIT YOUR WORK
TO THE ri
UNION GLLERY
JURY
by Oct.'31
for November showing
1 st floor Michigan Union
GALLERY HOURS: Tues.-St. 10-5
'STAGGERINGLY SUPERIOR! THE
GREATEST 'FILM EVER MADE:
. AL GOLDSTEIN
a{
r {
sans souci
522 E. WILLIAM
761-9891
HIGH FASHION
WASHINGTON (A)-John Dun-
lop, director of the Cost of Living
Council, said yesterday he favors
continuing wage and price con-
trols into 1974.
He said it would be neither
desirable nor feasible to end
them in 1973.
LIFTING THEM before 1974,
he said, would bring about "a
magnitude of price increases
that would be unsatisfactory .."
Dunlop wad the first adminis-
tration official of his rank to
say he favored continuing the
controls into 1974. Under present
statutory limitations, the con-
trols expire April 30, 1974.
In another economic develop-
ment yesterday, new Agriculture
Department figures showed that
the annual retail cost of a mar-
ket basket of farm-produced food
declined $24 in September, the
sharpest drop in 17 years.
THE PRICE decline, the first
of the year, would have been
much larger had middlemen
passed along all the squeeze ab-
sorbed by farmers, the figures
indicated.
According to the department,
the cost of a year's food supply
for a theoretical household of
3.2 persons was $1,629 in Septem-
ber, down 1.5 per cent from a
record of $1,653 in August.
At a news briefing, Dunlop
said Congress tried to undermine
petroleum industry price con-
trols and said consumers will
face much higher price for heat-
ing oil and gasoline if Congress
is successful.
HE ALSO announced that he
has asked "Chrysler Corp. and
the United Auto Workers to send
representatives to a meeting to
discuss a recent wage agree-
ment for the auto workers.
President Nixon said last sum-
mer in announcing the Phase 4
anti-inflation program that he
hoped controls could be termi-
nated by the end of this year.
FOOTWEAR
BOOTS, CLOGS,
PUMPS, LACE - UPS!
a
ri
The Academy Award Winner You MUST See Again
MON- WED
THUR+ FRI
SAT
11 -7
11 - 9
10-6
OPDI LY 12N .4ii 3 NW: iGON'
I
UI
UAW, Ford intensify
talks to avert strike
DETROIT (UPI) - United
Auto Workers and Ford M o t o r
Co. headed into an intensified
negotiating session Thursday,
hoping to avert a national strike
by 185,000 workers against t h e
nation's second largest auta com-
pany at 10 a.m. EDT today.
ELSEWHERE, the UAW and
Chrysler Corp. were involved in
two more local disputes, in o r e
than a month after a national
contract was signed following a
nine-day strike. A walkout at an
assembly plant in Detroit was
settled quickly, but a strike con-
tinued at the Missouri truck as-
sembly plant at Fenton, Mo.
THE TALKS at. Ford's world
headquarters in Dearborn have
been under a news blackout
since Monday with the company
expected to agree to a new, three-
year pact which closely follows
the Chrysler .settlement.
PLUS The picture you should NEVER
have missed!
i
DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
'y, :":".."."i .en ; s.: A M.s:' ': ' : . .° " .r
Friday, October 26
DAY CALENDAR
Reading & Learning Skills Ctr.: Reg-
istration for Speed Reading & Acad.
Skills, 1610 Washtenaw; call 764-9481
for info, 8 am-noon & 1-4 pm.
Macromolecular Research Ctr.: A.
Bever, Nat'l Science Foundation, "Ex-
perimental R&D Incentives-First Year
Look," 133 Chrysler Otr., 19:40 am.
Neuroscience: L. Altenau, "The Pos-
sible Role of Prostaglandins in Cere-
brovascular Vasospasm Following Sub-
arachnoid Hemorrhage," 103 Neurosci.
Lab. Bldg,, noon.
L. Radicati, "Modern Version of Fer-
Eastern Michi
PRES
Jacque
s AI
Living i
PEASE AUI
NOV. 2
$2 General
mi's B-Decay Theory," 205 P-A Bldg.,
2 pm.
Astronomy: P. Conti, Lick Obs,
"Spectroscopic Studies of O Stars," P-
A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm.
Astronomy: R. Sears, "Evolution of{
the Stars," Movie, Mars Minus Myth,
Observe, Mars, Jupiter, Aud. B, Angell
Hall, 8, pm.,
Professional Theatre Program: Fey-
deau's "Chemin de Fer," Mendelssohn
Theatre, 8 pm.
University P 1 a y e r s: Durrenmatt's
"The Marriage of Mr. Mississippi," Are-
na Theatre, Frieze Bldg., 8 pm.
Musical Society: London Bach So-
ciety, Paul Steinitz, conductor, 8:30
pm.
I
CLASSICS
LOEB
CLASSICAL
LIBRARY
o Scholarly English transla-
tions opposite definitive
C Greek and Latin texts.
The following are some of the
authors we hove in stock:
Cicero
Ii Virgil
Plato
Aristotle
Isocrates
Catullus, Tibullus &
Pervigilium Veneris
Euripides
Petronius & Seneca
Propertius
Sophocles
Terence
Augustine
Greek Bucolic Poets t
o Suetonius
^ Gorevidal I'
HoraceV
Tacitus
Caesar
'9 Ovid
Apuleius
Xenophon0
Pindar
Hesiod
Marcus Aurelius
VV Plautus
Greek Anthology
Longus
^ ~Boethius vj
f1Juvenal & Persius v1
Martial
Homer
Q0 Thucydides
Xaviera
Tacitus
Sallust(^
v ~Herodotus1
i0CallimachusC
Epictetus
Menander
_ Samervin
Lyra Graeca
LAeschylus
Demosthenes
Aristophanes (
t Diogenes LaertvuE
Pausanias
Lucan
Lysias
J ~Bede 1
Greek Elegy & Iambus
mu
__
Chemin De Fer Tonight !
Thur. & Fri. open 7 p.m.
"Poppa" at 7:30 only
"Cowboy" at 9 p.m. only
-Sot. & Sun. open 1 p.m.-
"Cowboy" at 1:30-5:20-9:05
"Poppa" at 3:45 & 7:25
U
Mr. Tony
I
gan University
ENTS
es Br ell
e and
'n Paris"
DITORIUM
8 P.M.
r.
GEORGE SEGAL: The son in the ape suit!
1214 s. university
AM-P 1S
wants to send
you to the
Bahamas!
(8 FREE DAYS!!)
B160AWING!0CC3ISp
MEEt DICK PURTAN(wvz
ENTRY PfDUNE: Suit O(XZ
"Fi tt ot nen~try blank -ioday aetlfier
one of auf~ cCtvvpus tocafrbn'; I (no povc$wseriecessey)
Admission
/ / iial i
I.
Tirrlra+c n41 cnln n+ PTP Rnv ASt;.-c
I
I