FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TARES FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREt .r. , Goldberg Beulah Dev ChleBe1Billion Dlbt S SECOND DAY OF FIGHTING: Arab-Israel Truce Breached By Shots Across Suez Canal (I Cites U.S. . Offers of Bomb Halt Ambassador Demands Clear Viet Response To Peace Proposals UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Gold- berg challenged Hanoi and its allies yesterday to state categori- cally that meaningful negotiations would take place, without disad- vantage to either side, if the United States halted its bombing of North Vietnam. In a major address to the UN General Assembly, Goldberg re- iterated that the United States was committed to a political solu- tion, not a military solution, in Vietnam. But he added that "in fidelity to our commitment to a political solution, we will not permit North Vietnam and its adherents to im- pose a military solution upon South Vietnam." The chief U.S. delegate noted that Hanoi in its public state- ments had s a i d negotiations "could" take place if the bombing stopped. Other governments and Secretary-General U Thant, he said, "have expressed their belief or assumption that negotiations 'would' begin" if the bombing stopped. But he added that "no such third party has conveyed to us any authoritative message from Hanoi that there would in fact be negotiations if the bomb- ing were stopped. "We have sought such a mes- sage directly from Hanoi without success." Then he asked for "enlighten- ment" on two questions, one di- rected to North Vietnam and the other to Hanoi's supporters: -"Does North Vietnam con- ceive that the cessation of bomb- ing would or should lead to any other results than meaningful ne- 4 gotiations or discussions under circumstances which would not disadvantage either side?" -"If the United States were to take the first step and order a prior cessation of the bombing, what would they (Hanoi's) sup- porters then do or refrain from doing, and how would they then use their influence and power, in order to move the Vietnam con- flict promptly toward a peaceful solution?" Goldberg reiterated that the United States "continue to seek the active participation of the United Nations" - both by its members and its various organs- in the search for a Vietnam set- tlement. But he made no reference to the secretary-general's suggestion for a closed-door meeting of the Se- curity Council at the foreign min- isters' level to discuss world prob- lems, including Vietnam. In this connection, UN sources said that this suggestion and other problems would be taken up e't a dinner Thant is giving Tuesday night for the Big Four foreign ministers - Secretary of State Dean Rusk of the United States, British Foreign Secretary George Brown, Soviet Union Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko and French Minister Couve de Murville. to Negotia, AL Jesrucl nuUEIIFI CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. A"P - PREDICTS VIOLENCE The Rev. James Groppi (left), leader of recent Milwaukee housing demonstra that Negroes may resort to violence if nonviolent tactics fail to end discrimim Milwaukee that he told the President's Advisory Commission on Civil Di that federal funds should be cut off from cities "such as Milwaukee." Dwight member of the youth council of the National Association for Advancemento RECENT SURVEY: Negro Education Ham1 Due To Financial Diffi, Monstrous Hurricane Beulah may By The Associated Press; have dealt south Texas a half- Israeli and Egyptian troops, billion-dollar blow, making her as dug in on opposite sides of the costly a storm as any ever to strike Suez Canal and traded shots for the Texas coast. Federal and state the second straight day yesterday.; officers made the assessment yes- Losses were reported on both sides. terday.s s Each side blamed the other. i Tens of thousands of refugees Reot'nCio adtefgt who fled Beulah's 160-mile-an- Reports in Cairo said the fight-; hourwind wer bloked rom rg at El Qantara was the first i horninds we blocked fomre- in the northern sector of the 107- ...:;>n turning home by rising floodwaters mile canal since a Soviet naval fed by 16-inch rains.l Although Beulah began break- task force arrived at Port Said in ing up yesterday morning as her mid-July. The last Soviet warships w inds dipped below the minimum left the Mediterranean port Wed- hurricane force of 75 m.p.h., she nesday. vsistill spun off more deadly to- Breaches of the cease-fire that nadoes. The Weather Bureau and ended the Arab-Israeli war in June state police counted more than 40 have been frequent along the twisters, a record high for a hur- southern half of the canal. ricane. An Army spokesman in Tel Avivy The decayed storm center near- said 4 Israelis had been killed ed Laredo yesterday afternoon - and 6 wounded Thursday, the most some 200 miles northwest of where Israeli casualties since 7 were kill- it struck the coast near Browns- ed and 22 wounded in an exchange ville early Wednesday. across the canal July 14. The Weather Bureau issued ma- The spokesman said the Egyp- jor flood warnings for much of tians had begun firing small arms south Texas. Hurricane-driven and machine guns, then opened __ rains of seven to eight inches were up with recoilless rifles, tanks and -~ U. the average, Goliad, 60 miles heavy artillery. He said Israeli sol- north of Corpus Christi, record- diers, returning the fire, hit two ed nearly 16 inches, the Weather Egyptian tanks. Bureau said. Victoria reported T 20.12 inches. The intervention of United Na- Food, water and electricity re- tions observers halted the firing mained short in many Lower Rio after an hour but the Egyptians; a Mv M Grande Valley cities. Power trans- began shooting again before a mission lines were still down at cease-fire was finally obtained, the -Associated Press many places. Israeli spokesman said. Gov. John Connally urged all A military communique issued hurricane evacuees not to attempt in Cairo said the Israelis shot first. said to return to their homes untili An Egyptian message to U.N. Se- ations, said yesterday given official notice that it was retary-General U Thant demand- ation Groppi said in safe. ed that the United Nations issue sobedience Wednesday --__________-.----..-_--_-_-_-- Benning (right) is a of Colored People. PRESENTS Harold Piner's wul nes esents a success story.'THE GUES1 s an academic survivor outstripped most of his (British Title: The Caretaker) egroes," Father Fichter that about two-thirds of ALAN BATES ROBERT SHAW lies of Negro college grad- DONALD PLEASENCE ve annual incomes below t seems remarkable" that ority come frorh such a! Directed by CLIVE DONNER - me stratum, while thej economic class among "A faintingffilm produces so few college n funny, eerie s, Father Fichter said. -Kaufmrman, The New Republic "One of the very best. The performances are brilliant, the total effect is stunning !" ®uudup -Winston, N.Y. Post ,n in all the previous six "Awesome and absurd ... raw drama., American involvement. Absorbing! Brilliant bone-deep acting. g out forecasts that a -Crowther, N.Y. Times .S. commitment would ing losses, unofficial data FRIDAY adCATURDAY land 915 PM 01 American combat dead 05 wounded in the 8% thrughlat SturayAuditorium A, Angell Hal 50C through last Saturday: was no immediate com- m American authorities. I a report on how the incident be- will appear overnight; but surely gan. enmity must at least give way to The Egyptian communique re- tolerance and to the will to live ported heavy Israeli losses in lives ; together in peace. Once that will and equipment. It said eight Is-|is manifest, the terms of settle- raeli tanks, two armored cars and ment can be evolved." a 106mm gun had been destroyed He repeated the principles laid and several fuel and ammunition. down by President Johnson last dumps set on fire. June calling for a withdrawal of Is- The Egyptians gave their own raeli troops, recognition of all that losses as 3 soldiers and 2 civilians : each nation has a right to live in killed, and 7 soldiers and 12 civil- peace, freedom of passage through ians wounded. They said Israeli international waterways, justice shells had damaged a mosque, a for refugees and determination of police station and a political party the status of all concerned. headquarters in El Quantara. Egypt denied that it had military At the UN yesterday Goldberg! appealed for flexibility on the part of all on the method of bring- ing peace to the Middle East. No appropriate method, including good offices or mediation, should be excluded, he declared. "In realism," he said, "it is per- haps not to be expected that reconciliation and magnaminity boats in the water. It said the Israelis had fired on an Egyptian fishing vessel and killed the fish- erman on board. In a report received at the Unit- ed Nations, U.N. cease-fire ob- servers said they had no con- firmation of Israel's charge that the Egyptians had tried to sail armed soldiers down the canal. ,i . PRESENTS JANUS FILMS PRESENTS THE ARCTURUS COLLECTION DIRECT FROM NEW YORK'S PHILHARMONIC HALL a collection of brilliant short films by the directors of the 60's (& 70's) 1 if a# New Cmema By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Negroes who graduate from college generally do so despite the handicaps of racial discrimination, often b r o k e n homes, poor school preparation and money problems, a govern- ment report said yesterday. The report, based on a survey of .1964 graduates of 50 Negro colleges, found that because of lack of money Negroes are more likely than whites to delay their entrance into college and more likely to have to interrupt their college careers. And Negro graduates are less likely to go on to postgraduate training because of finances, the study found. While the graduates recognized the inferiority of the predomi- nantly Negro colleges they attend- ed, they said they could not afford to attend better schools - even when they had been accepted. The 60-page report was written by the Rev. Joseph H. Fichter of Havard University under the joint sponsorship of three federal agencies-the National Institutes of Health, Department of Labor and National Science Foundation. The study found that the Negro graduates-most of them from the South-had little interest in at- .tending southern white colleges or universities. "The biggest problem or disad- vantage they see in attending a southern u n i v e r s i t y centers around the social discrimination they would expect to find there," the report said. "They would have been left out of things; they would have been lonely-" The Negro students also gener- ally were indifferent about having more white students attend their still repr schools. Another finding was that "He i Negro women graduates of college who has show far more interest than fellow N their white counterparts in con- said. tinuing their careers after mar- Noting riage. the fami] While Father Fichter notes that uates ha' the Negro college graduate does $5,000 "it poorer than the white graduate the majo on civil service examinations, low inco graduate school entrance exams parallel and tests for federal appoint- whites p ment, the Negro college graduate graduates Worldews PROGRAM NO, 2 Concert of M. Kabal Walerian Borowczyk, Poland All Boys Are Named Patrick Jean-Luc Godard, France Ai! Yoji Kurl, Japan Act Without Words Guido Bettiol, France Actua-Tilt Jean Herman, France Do-It-Yourself Cartoon Kit Bob Godfrey, England The Games of Angels Walerian Borowczyk, Poland The Apple George Dunning,- England The Most Richard Ballentine and Gordon Sheppard, Canada ALL WEEKEND-Thursday thru Sunday SEPTEMBER 21-24 Architecture Auditorium 7 & 9P.M. EXTRA SHOWINGS: FRI. & SAT. AT 11:00 P.M. SUN. MATINEE AT 3:00 P.M. "BILLIE C. & THE SUNSHINE" will begin playing and tickets will go on sale at 5:30 (Note: Due to high rental prices, admission will be one dollar) By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - An election observer for four U.S. peace or- ganizations said yesterday most Vietnamese believe there was widespread fraud in the Sept. 3 presidential election in South Vie.t- nam. "Consequently, they do not re- gard the government which results from such an election as legiti- mate," Prof. David Wurfel told a news conference. He is a member of the University of Missouri po- litical science department. Official U.S. observers named by President Johnson who returned recently from Saigon reported no evidence of widespread fraud and said the election apparently was conducted freely. SAIGON - Military statistics showed Thursday more U.S. fight- ing men had been killed and wounded in action in Vietnam this ? C Ili_ I TOMORROW NIGHT Grand Opening of The Hungry Ear" - TONIGHT! - League Cafeteria MOOD MUSIC by HILL AUDITORIUM c__. o2 lL7~ III 5