THE MICHIGAN DAILY Governors Debate Civil Rights Moon Momentarily Makes Midday Murky lini who recommended "that there of California favored Sawyer's be a discussion of civil rights at amendment and said that there the conference." were other important issues before No Panel the conference to consider beside The discussion is set for today civil rights. He noted that he had and will. have no panel of speak- prepared a petition on civil rights ers, but will be "open to all gov- which was being circulated among ernors with a time limitation of the governors during the confer- five minutes per governor." ence. Rockefeller issued a statement 'Tired of Rights' shortly after the vote and said Democratic Gov. George Wallace that "by- this action the resolu- of Alabama said that he was "tired tions committee, the Democratic of civil rights and didn't see why governors, on a party vote have the conference could not move onto gagged the voice of the governors other things of interest to the and undermined the effectiveness states. of the states in their role of na- "If this turns out to be a civil, tional leadership in the workings rights debating society, it will be of our- federal system. It' is a the last conference that I wish to tragically short-sighted move." attend." Rockefeller has been under fire The amended executive com- for his proposals on civil rights mittee proposals means that no and has been accused by other resolutions can be passed, but there governors of using the conference is some question over what would to further his political ambitions happen if a motion on an issue in the 1964 presidential election. were brought from the floor. It is Floor Debate possible that the rules, as they now There was extensive floor de- stand, would require a unanimous bate in the session as the gover- approval of any motion to be nors proposed their procedural adopted. changes. Hatfield stated that the No Replica executive committee proposals Most of the governors stressed amounted to a "gag" rule, because that they did not want a replica they "eliminated debate, and dis- of last year's conference in Heir- cussion is crucial." shey where an extensive civil Rockefeller, in supporting Hat- rights controversy all but destroy- field's amendment, said that there ed the conference. can be "no meaningful assumption Pickets from the Congress of of states' rights without taking re- Racial Equality picketed the head- sponsibility. This overriding prob- quarters of the conference de- lem of civil rights is important manding an end to segregation in here and now." key Southern states. They picketed Democratic Gov. Edmond Brown for two hours then left. GOP Governors Disagree On Politics at Conference -Daily-James keson ECLIPSE--The moon slowly overshadowed the sun Saturday as one of astronomy's rare phenomena occurred in Ann Arbor. The eclipse which was total in Maine and Quebec was 83 per cent total here. Viewers watched, their eyes either covered with exposed film or indirectly through pinhole reflecting devices, an astronomic show that would not be repeated here for at least 200 years. RUSSIAN HOLD WEAKENS: Soviet-Chinese Split Leaves West Unsure of Future I By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON-The deepening break between the Russians and Red Chinese has left the West as confused about the future as it' was when Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev suddenly repudiat- ed Stalin in 1956. Even Secretary of State John Foster Dulles admitted at the time "it is too early to judge its full meaning." The American Communist Party said an editorial in the Daily Worker, "The shattering revela- tions made by Khrushchev show that a gigantic transformation is taking place in the Soviet Union." Myth of Infalibility What was shattered was the myth of the Russian leadership's infalibility. Around the world Communist parties suffered con, vulsions. Some were heretical enough to criticize the Kremlin. Russia had to crush Hungary's anti-Red revolt. The Soviet hold on the satellites was weakened, if Cleague To Tall At SNCC Meeting Rev. Albert Cleague of Detroit will speak at the Friends of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee meeting at 8 p.m. in Room 3G of the Union tonight. only a little. But its hold on the Red Chinese was weakened enor- mously for a reason which may have been overlooked then but isn't now. While Khrushchev attacked the memory of Stalin at the 20th Party Congress on Feb. 24, 1956, 10 days before that he made sug- gestions which today are presented as the main cause of the Russian- Chinese split. Negotiate to Victory He said international problems should be solved by negotiation, that war isn't necessary for com- munism to triumph, and that the West and East should sign a nuc- lear test ban agreement and even a non-aggression pact. The Chinese disagree on all counts. These are the main points they throw at Khrushchev now in their accusation that he is under- mining world communism. But in Moscow, Americans, Brit- ons and Russians are discussing a test ban. The Americans and Brit- ons are waiting to hear what Khrushchev says on a nonaggres- sion pact. There have been at num- ber of international negotiations. Party Split Once again around the world Communist p a r t i e s, watching world communism split into two huge camps, are having some con- vulsions and it seems plain that the Communist parties in the West will go along with Russia; partisan considerations in their proper role and making them pri- mary:" Rights Leaders, Romney also noted that Michi- gan has been a leader in proposing solid civil rights legislation, and "since 1888 has had a public ac- commodations law which is broad- er tpan President John F. Kenne- dy's proposed program. He said that he opposed Demo- cratic Gov. Grant Sawyer's of Ne- vada substitute amendment which went even further than the unani mity ruling originally proposed by the executive committee. the Asian parties will stick with Red China. Out of this division competition to win over the back- ward non-Communist countries everywhere is inevitable. Out of the competition will.come conflict of one kind or another between the two worlds of com- munism. This will take up much of the energy, attention and re- sources of the two camps. To this extent the West will benefit. The split may even drive Russia into closer association and coop- eration'with the West. Mixed Blessings But the blessing is not unmixed. The Russians are accusing the Chinese of promoting anti-white racialism. From this it can be assumed, if true, that the Chinese will appeal to all the non-white peoples to divide the world into big camps: white and non-white. For a while the Chinese may stay behind their frontiers, leav- ing the rest of Asia pretty much alone because they are not mili- tarily strong enough to challenge the West or risk a war. That won't last. They'll develop Kurath To Speak on Vowel System Prof. Emeritus Hans Kurath of the English department will speak on "A New Look at the History of the English Vowel System" at 7:30 this evening in Rackham Amphi- theatre. SPECIAL CAMPUS RATES ENDING TON IGHT DIAL 8-64 16 nuclear weapons, perhaps within two years. It may take them some time longer to complete good de- livery systems. Therefore, since the Chinese assert war is necessary for Com- munist victory, the Western world, particularly the United States, must get adjusted to the reality that sooner or later the Red Chi- nese will move to take over all of Asia. Then the West will have to de- cide whether it wishes to risk war to stop the Chinese. 4 DAILYOFFICIAL BULLETIN 4 "" . ."^J YJyA"" vv"r "..",r ::"a ..":J. r." .""r l .. v . v..Y 1..},"M . +y, " Wt%- 6" .V~fA.SWttn t.V. ,X } .0J...v~t :e ".w ; rr 'ti: !"1 M. ."r.4;\ 1ti:"' 1:4:"L::fii:i~'i~r : .J":":'is:""n .::. "J'1. : :W. .1"9 2..^r s "Y .l.X . >f.JSWtiV"}:i'lf."f.1NZS..:1M"":" Jrr}.4} I ..':lh'.%V.t'' The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial' responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. TUESDAY, JULY 23 Day Calendar 9:00 a.m.--School of Public Health In- stitute on Arthritis and Metabolic Dis- eases - Room 3042, Schol of Public Health. 12:00 Noon-School of Education Sum- mer Seminar for Students and Faculty -Dr. W. H. G. Armytage, Visiting Lec- turer from the Univ. of Sheffield, Shef- field, England, "Science and the Arts In Education": Gym, Room 1525, Univ. Elementary School. 1:00 p.m.-School of Education Film Program on Storytelling (Produced by the U-M Television Center) - "From Other Lands" and "The Child Creates": Multipurpose Room, Undergrad Lib. 2:00 p.m.-Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview - "Africans All," ; Sweden," and "The Nile Valley and Its People": Multipurpose Room, Undergrad Lib. 3:00 p.m.-Dept. of Speech Colloquium, Radio and Television - A. Donovan Faust, Vice-President and General man- ager, Station WJRT, Flint, Mich., "Pro- gramming the Local TV Station": West Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. 3:15 p.m.-CIC Far Eastern Language Institute Film Series-Japanese film, "Magnificent Seven": Architecture Aud. 7:30 p.m. - Linguistics Curriculum Committee Linguistic Forum Lecture - Hans Kurath, Prof. Emeritus of Eng- lish and Editor Emeritus of "The Mid- dle English Dictionary," "A New Lork at the History of the English Vowel System": Rackham Amphitheatre. Box Office open today for tickets to next week's U-M Players production of Dorothy and Michael Blankfort's great murder mystery, "Monique," presented 8 p.m., Wed. tru Sat. in the air-condi- tioned Mendelssohn Theatre. Wed. & Thurs-$1.50, 1.00. Fri. & Sat.-$1.75, 1.25. Box office hours are 12:30-5:30 daily. A purchase of reservations- this week is recommended to insure good seating and choice of performance next week. General Notices Seniors: College of L. S. & A.q and Schools, of Education, Music, Public Health, and Business Admin.: Tentative lists of seniors for Aug. graduation have been posted on the bulletin board in the first floor lobby, Admin. Bldg. Any changes therefrom should be re- quested of the Recorder at Office of Registration and Records window Num- ber A, 1513 Admin. Bldg. Placement ENGINEERING PLACEMENT: ,For further information on the fol- lowing position openings, please see Engrg. Placement at 128-H W. Engrg.: Cellasto Co., Ann Arbor, Mich.-Seek- ing BS in MS or ChE-student attend- ing night sch. or recent grad. Swift & Co., Chicago, Ill.-1) BS in ChE or Chem. for Agricultural Chemi- cal Research. 2) BS in CE, Architectural Engrg. or Arch. 3) BS ChE for Chemi- cals Pilot Plant in Hammond, Ind. E. W. Bliss Co., Canton, Ohio-Seek- ing BS in IE-recent grad for Produc- tion & the scheduling & planning of production schedules to line up with IBM procedures in Office Artificial Control System. The Boeing Co., Seattle, Wash. - 1). Facilities Planning & Equipment Re- search-BS in CE, ME, ChE, EE or Met. 2) Test Instrumentation Engrg.-BS- MS in EE or Physics. 3) Weapon Sys- tems Engrg.-Cape Canaveral, Fla.-BS in EE or ME. 4) Propulsion Research MS-PhD in ME or AE. 5) Performance & Stability & Control Analysis-BS-MS in AE. 6) Engineering Programming- New Orleans & Seattle areas-all de- grees-Math, Engrg. analysts or Engrg. Bechtel Corp., San Francisco, Calif.- Materials Engineer-BS-MS Chemical or Met. Engrg. interested primarily in fields of corrosion & metallurgy. Would include selection of materials of con- struction for process plant, consulta- tion with engrns, on special materials problems & inspection personnel on fabricating problems. Westinghouse Electric Corp., Chicago, 1.-BS-MS graduates in Electrical or Mechanical Engrg. with interest in de- velopment or design of power transform- ers with min. ratings of 10,000 kva. Lo- cation: Muncie, Ind. in new power tran- former plant. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS, Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad stu- dents, please call Ext. 3544 for inter- view appointments with the following: TUES., JULY 23 (TODAY)- Des Moines Community Playhouse - Seeking a Technical Director, with background in Scenic Design. Position will be equivalent of Assistant Direc- tor. Would like to interview men or women with such desire and back- ground WED., JULY 24- Socony Mobil Oil Co.-Seeking men with any degree in any field of con- centration for Marketing Training Pro- gram. Socony Mobil has no formal Mgmt. trng. prog. as such. Instead,' Management & administrative person- nel are selected from among the Mar- keting & Sales Promotion Trainees. Several openings in Detroit as well as world-wide locations. POSITION OPENINGS: Univ. of Mich., Resiaence Halls - 1) Night Assistant in Women's Residence Hall (co-ed)-male-hrs. 11 p.m. to 7 a.m., 5 nights per wk.-also 10 women for same position. 2) Three Associate Advisers-full time from 8/63 through 5/64-for men's houses-will act as hostesses, meet parents, assign rooms, manage social programs-prefer widows. 3) Two women as Resident Directors & Ass't. Directors at Stockwell. Four men In same capacity needed for S. Quad. May work during summer also-have use of suite or apartment all year-, prefer degree-age 55 or under. 4) Also need graduate students as counselors- female. Th e Trane Co., La Crosse, Wis. - Opening for Research Engnr. BS or MS in Engrg. or Physics. Special emphasis on acoustics & vibration. No exper. re- quired. Michigan Dept. of Mental Health, Puanning Div., Lansing, Mich.-6 or 8 openings for people interested in com- munity organization. Sociol., Social Work, Bus. Ad., Psych, with community clinic exper., Educ., & Public Health graduates to work with community or- ganizations in setting up mental health consultation clinics for Federal Mental Health Grant. Will work in State of Mich. (perhaps 1 in U.P.). Civil Service positions. Exper. required. Greenville Steel Car Co., Greenville, Pa.-Chief Engineer-Mech. or Civil En- grg. Degree. Railway Freight Car Design background is desirable, but are not restrictive on this point. For further information, please call General Div., Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544. ORGANIZATION NOTICES German Club, Coffee Hour, July 23. 10-12 a.m. & 2-4 p.m., 4072 FB. Conver- sation, Music, singing, refreshments. Herzlich Willkommen! U. of M. Friends of SNCC, Talk by Rev. Albert Cleague of Detroit, July, 23, 8 p.m., Union, Rm. 3G. Open to pub- lic. Magazine Time Life Sports Illus. Newsweek Fortune, Arch. 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