WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15 196: THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE House Rebuffs Plan to Change Poverty Program I WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP: California Delays Executions Pending State Court Decision WASHINGTON (A)-The House continued yesterday to rebuff at- tempts to revise the Johnson ad- ministration's antipoverty pro- gram. A proposal to shift work and training programs for the poor from the Office of Economic Op- portunity to other federal agencies was defeated 169 to 108 on a party line vote. Democrats then turned down 140 Philppines Vote Marred By -Violence MANILA (P) - Candidates of President Ferdinand E. Marcos' Nacionalista party led in impor- tant Senate contests Tuesday as early returns were counted fol- lowing one of the Philippines' most violently contested national elections. The national constabulary said seven persons were slain. But a spokesman said the voting was "less bloody than expected." Although there appeared to be no widespread terrorism, 25,000 troops were on the alert. Most of the violence occurred in the provinces away from Ma- nila. In Pampanga, a mayoral candidate, a municipal councilor and another politician were re- ported shot to death. Two gov- ernmhent election officials were killed and four wounded in an ambush in Ilocos Sur. Philippine News Service said 24 persons have been killed since election eve and put the total slaying during the political sea- son at 97. Thirty-three were killed' before the 1965 election that put Marcos in power. In the important race for may- or of Manila, Liberal incumbent Antonio Villegas, who once tried to ban American retailers from the city, claimed re-election. Re- turns had him leading over Pablo Ocampo, a Nacionalista. About 80 per cent of the coun. try's eight million voters turned out to choose the senators, 65 governors and nearly 14,000 pro- vincial and municipal officials. Debate focused on domestic pro- grams and Marcos' pro-Western foreign policy, including the sending of 2,000 troops to Viet- nam, was not an issue. to 104 another GOP amendment that would have established an on- the-job training program in pri- vate industry with the federal gov- ernment paying 25 per cent of the trainee's wages. Unofficial Votes Both votes were taken by count- ing members as they passed through tellers and individual po- sitions were not recorded. The amendment to transfer work and training programs to the De- partments of Labor and Health, Education and Welfare was of- fered as a substitute for the Neigh- borhood Youth Corps. It would have"retained some features of the youth corps and added provisions for job counsel- ors to help high school youths find employment in private industry and for job training with private employers. Four Times Rep. John R. Dellenback (R- Ore), said the contribution of pri- vate employers would be four times the $243 million cost to the federal government. The administration bill would allocate $579 million for work and training programs. After defeat of the substitute measure, Rep. Albert H. Quie (R- Minn) offered the provision for job training in private industry as a separate amendment to the Neigh- borhood Youth Corps. Opposition This move was opposed by Rep. James G. O'Hara (D-Mich), who said Congress should move care- fuly before deciding to pay 25 per cent of the wages of a private em- ployer in competition with other enterprises. The House has been considering the antipoverty bill for six days and final actions is unlikely today at the earliest. Still to be decided are amendments to the most con- troversial part of the legislation,. the Community Action program. An amendment adopted in the Education and Labor Committee would put Community Action agencies under the control of state or local governments. Members of both parties from several large cities object to the amendment and an attempt will be made to eliminate it. More Fighting Still further ahead is another fight over funding for the pro- gram. Republicans failed Monday to trim its $2.06 billion authoriza- tion to $1.4 billion, but will have another chance in a motion to re- commit the bill just before the holiday. By The Associated Press I the election was very close, the SAN FRANCISCO-()P)The state closest mayoralty election in Supreme Court yesterday stayed Cleveland history." all executions in California. He cited the fact that the offi- The stay applied to a total of 60 cial count last Saturday reduced prisoners already under sentence Stokes' margin by one third- of death and to others who may from 2,501 to 1,644 and that receive such sentences before the Stokes had asked for a recountI court hears challenges of consti- two years ago when he lost by tutionality of capital punishment 2.143 to Ralph S. Locher. next January. The court announced last week AItIlC ~ G that it would hold hearings early A meican Held next year in all death penalty cases involving constitutional is- In East Germany sue action was taken in blanket BERLIN-U.S. authorities said cases originally filed in U.S. Dis- yesterday a 30-year-old Columbia trict Court. University history teacher will be U.S. District Court Judge Rob- put on trial by East Germany. ert F. Peckham had ordered the Ronald Wiedenhoeft of Mllwau- condemned men to exhaust reme- dies in state courts. Defense attorneys charge that California penalty juries were death oriented, that there were no judges in sentencing killers to PEN IN ( death, that capital punishment is cruel and unusual punishment, and that after the automatic ap- peal from a death sentence con- demned are not guaranteed coun- sel. I 4X i f !t i t t t { kee. Wis., has been held in East Berlin since Sept. 5. A spokesman at the U.S. Em- bassy in Bonn declared, "We know he will be put on trial but we do not know where or when." The spokesman declined to give fur- ther details. U.S. authorities in West Berlin said they knew nothing about a trial for Wiedenhoeft being set. beyond what was disclosed by the embassy in Bonn. Juergen Stangle, Widenhoeft's West Berlin attorney, said, "About one week ago East Berlin author- ities told me, 'We can tell you that an arrest order on suspicion of es- pionage has been issued.' " Apparently involved are picuures Wiedenhoeft took in East Berlin. -Associatea ress DEMONSTRATORS HAMPER RECRUITER Students at the University of Texas staged a sit-in yesterday in front of a Marine recruitment desk. Captain Roy DeForest, a graduate of the University of Texas, and a Vietnam veteran was sur- rounded by a few of the demonstrators. The demonstration was non-violent. ECONOMISTS PREDICT: Tax Raise Defeat May Spell increase i Prices, Interest ; SOONI SpyI Shop WASHINGTON (P)--In the ab- price rise roughly matching the sence of a tax increase in 1968, 5.5 per cent rate of increase dur- many economists expect a price ing the Korean war. rise of around 5 per cent for con-I sumers next year, along with in- terest rates of 8 per cent or more for business borrowers. Virtually all agree, however, that the Federal Reserve would imme- diately start clamping down on the credit supply if Congress goes home without acting on President Johnson's bid for a 10 per cent surtax. If the Federal Reserve moves off the easy-money stance it has maintained uneasily this year, the rise in interest rates would be ac- celerated. Rates already stand at . The forecasts indicated that sen- timent among professional econ- omists across the country matches that of the President's own ad- visers. Consumer prices would rise 4 to 6 per cent. The family dollar thus would lose about a nickel"s worth of buying power over the year. The loss might be 3 to 3.5 per cent, many economists said. if the sur- tax is imposed. The increase last year was 2.7 per cent. The Housing industry fears a 1968 recession if mortgage rates soar. Several administrations hous- i of $49.3 bilion. If the surtax were1 voted, at the same 10 per cent rate, as is proposed for individual in- come tax payers, the after-tax pro-j fits probably would not match the! 1966 total.z The President's Council of Econ- omic Advisers says the increase inj total national output might ap-1 proximate $75 billion without a tax increase-an unhealthy rapid and inflationary rate of expansion, in the council's view. Taft Requests Election Recount CLEVELAND - Seth C. Taft, who lost Cleveland's mayoral elec- tion by a slim 1,644 votes, asked for a recount yesterday although he said he is convinced Negro Carl B. Stokes is the winner. Taft told a news conference he had decided on a recount to allay the doubts of thousands of people who were unhappy with the result. "I have no evidence of error or irregularities sufficient to change the results," Taft said. "However, J... . t. V ,.. r W V 1 KOSHER STYLE BAKERY and DELICATESSEN 802 South State , 769-1 0 17 a 46-year high on some U.S. Treas- ing officials have endorsed con- ury bond offerings. gressional proposals to remove the But the money-tightening moves 6 per cent limit on mortgages in- could dampen pressures which- surel by the Federal Housing Ad- in the opinion of most government ministration or guaranteed by the and business economists whose Veterans Administration. views have been canvassed bythe Corporation earnings after taxes Associated Press-might set off a probably would top the 1966 record Don't miss DR BENJAMIN SPOCK also: Burt Garskof Art McPhaul Sponsored by THE NEW POLITICS PARTY DONATION Fri., Nov. 17, 7:45 P.M. AA High Auditorium ATID ISRA EL STUDENTS /4//el, SZO ORGAN IZATION I present INSTITUTE ON SOVIET JEWRY NOVEMBER 17 to 19 Friday at 7:15 P.M. Sabbath Service ONEG SHABBAT FILM: "THE PRICE OF SILENCE" A TONIGHT at i it I '(1JE ARK I 8:30 P.M. 1421 Hill St. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .";."{;.. . .. . ..:r:' 5::f " ." : v.{ '..Y :..;..Yv.". inAi"a "SHOULD THE PEACE CORPS BE SUSPENDED. IN VIEW OF PRESENT U.S. FOREIGN POLICY?" A DEBATE THURSDAY- IMAGES OF THE U.S.A. THREE DRAMA PROFILES "Was the unknown soldier a nigger, a mick, a kike, a wop, or a wasp?" FRIDAY AND SATURDAY- MICHAEL COONEY ;I ' i 3 jF (i! { 4rr I (Continued from Page 2), Friday, December 1, 1967 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Graduate School of Business, Cam- bridge, Mass.-All students interested in MBA and PhD. programs. Monday, December 4, 1967 National Security Agency, Wash. D.C. -M & F. All liberal arts students who qualified on NSA Test, or Math and Engineering students, who are not req. to take test, for EDP, Languages, Li- brary, Stat., Writing(Tech.), and Info. Anal. Indiana University, Graduate School of Business, Bloomington, IndI-M & F. Any degree, any major for MBA and PhD programs. Tuesday, December 5, 1967 National Security Agency, Wash. D.C. --See Mon., Dec. 4 listing for details. Tuesday, December 12, 1967 StanfordUniversity, Secondary Teach- er Education Program, Calif.-A.M. only BA/MA Anthro., Biochem., Chem., Econ., Engl., Fine Arts, For. Lang., Geog., Geol., Hist., Math, Music, Physics, Poll. SO., Psych., Speech, Soc. Drama. For 5th year teacher training program, (MAT). 4 1 Tomorrow & Friday THE MAN ON THE FLYING TRAPEZE Dir. Clyde Bruckman, 1935 Starring that master of inspired mayhem, the inevitable bumbler, W. C. Fields!! Saturday & Sunday ON THE WAqrcn TEACHER PLACEMENT The following schools will interview at the Bureau during the week of Nov. 20: Mon., Nov. 20 Orchard Lake, Mich. (West Bloom- field P.S.) - Elem. - Instrumental; Jr. High Library; Jr. High Type A - Spec. Ed. Tues., Nov. 216 Southfield, Mich. - Elem. - Vocal, J.H. - Math, Set, Vocal Mus., Couns., H.S. - Chem, Bus/Typ., Chem/Biol. Wed., Nov. 22 Howell, Mich. (Livingston Interm. Sch. Dist) - All Spec. Ed. - Type A, Type C, Counselor for Phys. Hand, Speech Corr., Sch. Psychologist. Make apopintments now. For additional information and ap- pointments contact Miss Donnelly, Bur- eau 'of Appointments, Education Divi- sion, 3200 S.A.B.° 764-7459. There will be no interviews asched- uled for Nov. 23 and 24 because of the Thanksgiving holidays. i (41 doing songs of all shapes and sizes from blues to children's songs, traditional ballads to topical songs, playing banjo, 6 and 12 string guitars, harmonica, penny whistle, uke, and kazoo. ', I --_ I;i I THE LIGHT BRIGADE The Maltese Cross Movement Presents A two-hour light show featuring The Magic Mandala "Eastern" Music Dancing Nurses Soldiers of H.R.M. 22nd Light Brigade CANTERBURY HOUSE, Wed., Thurs., Nov. 15, 16 9:00 P.M. Adm. $1.00 I TURKEY HUNT, FRIDAY, l Iii ,' GI I DROP OUT IN KUKURANTUMI in the Peace Corps Nov. 13-17 3524 SAB phone 763-3189 I U _' , 3 _ ,i I i 0 17 0 3:30 to 5:30 I I MARKLEY COURTYARD I I U 2