Page Two 'LITTLE FANFARE' 0 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, April 6, 1973 .1 --r r -r... r .... U.S. liaisons arrive in Peking PEKING (Reuter) - An ad- The seven - man group who will vance party of America officials set up the office - seen by diplo- headed by foreign service career mats here as an embassy in all officer and China expert Alfred but name - were greeted on ar- Jenkins arrived in Peking yester- rival from Canton on a Soviet- day to establish the first formal built Ilyushin 62 jet of China's na- American presence here for more tional airline by foreign ministry than 20 years. director of protocol Han Hsu. T h e r e were no welcoming Han Hsu, who has been. named crowds and no fanfare. as deputy head of Peking's officej The Chinese people were told in Washington, gripped Jenkins by that Peking and Washington have the hand and the two mean ap- agreed to exchange liaison offices j peared to chat cordially in a re- but not that the first Americans laxed atmosphere as Peking's air- would arrive yesterday. port loudspeakers played. The arrival of the Americans, whose office will be headed by vet- eran U. S. Ambassador David Bruce, came just 13 months after President Nixon's own visit to Pe- king. It has been almost two years since a Chinese invitation to an American table tennis team her- alded the era of "ping pong di- plomacy" and Sino-American rap- prochement after more than two decades of mutual hostility. Jenkins, who was a vice-consul in Peking in 1946, and has recent- IV IiAauv di t l nriertmefl4 S iy eaae e th6tate lDepartment s Asian - Communist affairs section iOts fe r m . o in the Bureau of East Asian Af- fairs, told reporters that the liai- son office would not formally open TO " until Bruce's arrival about May 1. Vi'et Congoffensive He said the full staff would con- sist of about 30 including diplo- mats and office personnel. SAIGON (Reuter) - Communist and South Vietnamese units bat- The Canadian and Australian tied it the fiercest fighting since the January 28 ceasefire yesterday charge d'affaires were on hand to in what military sources saw as preparation for a large-scale Com- greet the Americans together with munist offensive. Chien Da-Yung, head of the Amer- icanan Oceanic Affairs Diepart- The South Vietnamese military command reported that communist ment of theforeign ministr. - troops had increased their attacks across South Vietnam and described fighting, involving battalion-sized forces, as "significant."J After the liaison office is opened Jenkins will be one of Bruce's two Military sources said the attacks against government offenses top deputies, the other being John were probes in preparation for an offensive in the next few months. Holdridge, an aide of presidential But in Washington, a defense department spokesman' said there adviser Henry Kissinger on the was no-reason to believe the Communists had launched or were about White House National Security to start a major, offensive in the South. Council. t ti t' i The other diplomats who arrived today were Robert Blackburn, a foreign service official who will serve as administrative officer, and Charles Freeman Jr., an ad- viser and interpreter. The Chinese liaison office in Washington will be headed by Chi- na's former ambassador in Paris, Huang Chen. The date for the ar- rival of the mission in the U. S. had not been finalized Han Hsu said. The Chinese have been "con- ditioned" to the Americans' arriv- al in that toys featuring anti- American themes have disappear-I ed from the capital's department stores and cinemas in Peking are currently showing a color film of Kissinger's meeting in February with Chairman Mao. The MichigantDaily,tedited and man- agedi by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- Uay through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: 810 by carrier (campus area): $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Sa turcay morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Ohior; $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). -TONIGHT- a frontier of psychiatry. } Dr. Arthur Ja-o-'s Inner Revolution the PRIMAL THERAPY of FRIDAY 6 APRIL a 35-year-old college professor; witth music by (C JOHN LENNON duplex presentation withA NE R. D. Laing's ASYLUM Directed by HOWARD HUGHES, 1930. With JEAN HARLOW, BEN LYON, .complete duplex at 7:15 $1.25 coo t 9L:34Newsreelmany more. This widely heralded film cost $4-million to make. The aerial $1.25 cont. MLB 4-Newsreel scenes-WWI dogfights, Zeppelin Bombings, etc.-were never matched on film. These scenes are all that remain of a previous silent version which wa immediately scrapped and redone in sound. Plenty of action. This film has nothing to do with motorcycles. t AUDITORIUM A 7and 9 O'CLOCK ONE DOLLAR hMUSKET 7 $2.00 8:30 4. .4 .t The spokesman Maj.-Gen. Daniel James, was questioned at a press briefing yesterday about speculation on a major Communist of- fensive. "We don't have cause to think that a major offensive has been launched or is about to begin," General James said. He said there continued to be ceasefire violations, "far more than we like." But he added: "We haven't seen anything today that would give us more cause for alarm than yesterday:" The International Commission for Control and Supervision of the Vietnam ceasefire moved yesterday to break the deadlock between the Viet Cong and government forces over fighting at a ranger outpost near Saigon which has threatened a total breakdown in administering the truce. Both sides have agreed to provide liaison officers for an l.C.C.S. team due to investigate -the fighting at the Tong Le Chan ranger camp, but the Viet Cong insist that the opposing field commanders should meet first. A South Vietnamese government spokesman reported Wednesday that more than 100 rangers had been killed or wounded in the five weeks of fighting round the base. Fighting has intensified throughout the country over the past two days, with South Vietnamese forces suffering heavy casualties in two battles. __ "r.:r::6ir'it Y9Vr Gr. f~..; .::.r: iRr"" ,....rv:Y:t r DEER VAULT First and oldest in U.S. Drive in for beverages for parties, picnics, or home. KEG BEER. Drive Thru 9:00 A.M.-MIDNIGHT-MON.-SAT. NOON-MIDNIGHT-SUN. 303 N. Fifth 668-8200 R. C. PLAYERS present THE THREE SISTERS by ANTON CHEKHOV Directed by DOUG SPRIGG APRIL 4 - 7 at 8:00 MATINEE: SATURDAY, APRIL 7 at 2:00 EAST QUAD AUDITORIUM ADMISSION $1.25 Tickets on sale Tuesday, April 3 from 3:00-5:00 p.m. and one hour before each performance. FLAMENCO FREAKS Internationally known Flamenco guitarist Juan Serrano will be taking appointments for private instruction this week. Call: Ann Arbor Music Mart 9:30-9:00 MON.-SAT. 769-4980 336 S. State St. ...- -. STARTS TODAY! njj "BARBRA STREISAND IS COMPLETE REASON FOR TO THE MOVIES, AS GARBO WAS" A GOING VW hat's Barbra up to? Up the marriage trap. Upthe revolution. Upthe Zambesi River. And up to something surprisingly wonlderftul. --Pauline Kael, New Yorker Maq. "THE ULTIMATE WOMAN'S PICTURE!" Art Unqer, Ingenue DOUBLE FEATU RESee 2 fine films for the price of one 603 E. LIBERTY 0 665-6290 I STORE Open 12:45 Shows Every Day -< f at yy~f 1-3-5-7 & 9 p.m. { l '.. A1. . 't. I THE 'SAND 0 TmE SIG SHORE PRODUCTION m. 'fJ "If you have been withholding your patronage from black movies, and you want to see the best sample around right now, try 'Super Fly'." -Andrew Sarris, Village Voice . "The one recent black movie that has any original distinction as a film is Gordon Parks Jr.'s 'Super Fly.' Its story of a successful addict-pusher who attempts to get out of the game is tough, unsenti- mental melodrama of the superior sort that recog- nizes fate in circumstance, and circumstance in character. Priest (Ron O'Neal), the pusher is a man with style in a world where style is everything." -Vincent Canby New York Times "IT'S THE GREATEST!" -lack American "BEST PICTURE" * "BEST DIRECTOR * "BEST ACTRESS" -NEW YORK FILM CRITICS AWARD (LIV ULLMANN) Y 11 l + t, ri I [tJ I f lY W ' i ']Ii 1L'I .I t II G you can.- > O ;-f plus ALL ABOUT SEX! ameMB481-3300 , FR I l T Nine men who came too late and stayed too long, --PLUS-- William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Robert Ryan, Warren Oates, and- Sam Johnson star in Sam Peckinpah's violent, western classic 1 -FIt this double feature rated R l feature rated R I v FRIDAY SHOWTIMES-"Wild Bunch", 7:15 only-"Super Fly", 9:45 only SATURDAY and SUNDAY-"Super Fly", 5:30-"Wild Bunch", 7:15 only- "Super Fly", 9:45 NEXT ATTRACTION-Franco Zefferelli's "BROTHER SUN, SISTER MOON" 7661-9700mmm w A DANCE PARTY I PARAMOUNT PICTURES A MEMORA N [NIERPRISES FI[M If "GO!--FOR THE FURY, FORCE AND FUN OF "ANGRY, TOUGH AND FULL OF STING!".LIFE h Midnight Movie friday and saturday doors open 11:45 p.m. Malcolm McDowell, the star of "Clockwork Orange," is featured in Lindsay Ander- son's "IF . . ." plus chapter 10 of J"~ Le"eeA PICTURE YOU M T SEE THIS YEAR IS " -EE" -LADIES*HOME jouRNA A' A W 0k - L } U . 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