FRIDAY, JUNTE 26, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1964THE MICHIGAN DAILY . v ... i aiwa'+is a SPEC ULATION Free Elector Slates in Trouble Tshombe: Congo Head? Sawyer Pursues End Of Cost Restriction 4 LEOPOLDVILLE ()-Congolese speculated yesterday that Moise Tshombe, returning from exile, may become premier of the Congo government which, with the help of a United Nations army, crush- ed his secessionist regime in Ka- tanga 18 months ago. Four factors figured in talk that the 47-year-old former provincial president, who headed home from Madrid Wednesday, possibly will be called on to succeed his old antagonist, Premier Cyrille Adoula: -Several members of Adoula's cabinet were among Congolese leaders advocating Tshombe's re- turn. Powerless -The Leopoldville regime has been apparently powerless to put down rebellions that have flared like brush fires over the last six months in North Katanga, Kivu and Kwilu provinces. -The last of the United Na- tions' peacekeeping force, which numbered 20,000 men at its peak, is departing Tuesday. -President Joseph Kasavubu expects to get vastly increased executive powers through a new constitution in a nationwide, 15- day referendum that will open tomorrow. The proposed new pow- ers include the right to appoint or dismiss a premier at will. The news of Tshombe's return electrified Elisabethville, the capi- tal from which he ran Katanga as an independent territory for more than two years after Belgium freed the Congo in 1960. Expect Passage In the constitutional referen- dum, a massive "yes" vote is ex- pected. Only men, 21 or older, will pass on the draft law of 206 articles. Negro Schools Get 13 Million The Ford Foundation announc- ed yesterday a $13 million loan to 13 Negro colleges to help them reach the highest quality possible. The money has been earmarked for such matters as scholarships, faculty salaries, fellowships for faculty research and summer teaching, the New York Times re- ported. The foundation said that it granted $5 million last fall to the United Negro College Fund for building and other capital im- provements. The new grants will go to eight Negro schools and to the Atlantic University Center, which consists of five predominantly Negro insti- tutions. 21 provinces, to advocates of a strengthened central government in Leopoldville. After 100 days of debate, the Luluabourg commission emerged with what ex-Premier .Joseph Ileo, its chairman, termed "a delicate oompromise." The commission members have been campaigning for adoption of the draft. Adoula once indicated his gov- ernment wanted to make some changes, but he had second thoughts when commission mem- bers sent up a howl of protest. MONTGOMERY, Ala,. OP)-The+ attraction of Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater to uncounted numbers of dissident Democrats has creat- ed a new problem for the un- pledged elector movement in the South. At least one states' rights Demo- crat has expressed fear that Gold- water's vote against the civil rights bill in the Senate may take some of the steam out of the free elec- tors' cause. But Alabama's Gov. George Wallace, the symbol of a hoped- for rebellion against both major parties, is quick to discount the Goldwater influence. He wants the South to assert its independ- ence and try to gain the balance of power in the presidential elec- tion. Withhold Majority Wallace, a Democrat, is labor- ing to corral enough Southern electoral votes to keep either Pres- ident Lyndon B. Johnson or the JOSEPH KASAVUBU Colored ballots are an answer to the illiteracy of the vast majority. The voter will cast a green ballot for "yes" or a black ballot for The new constitution, which would give President Kasavubu executive authority similar to that enjoyed by French President Charles de Gaulle, was written in Luluabourg earlier this year by factional leaders from all over the country, Compromise They represented almost all shades of opinion from Katanga's ex-secessionists, who pressed for increased autonomy in the Congo's Medic Doubts Smoking Role In Coronaries SAN FRANCISCO (R) - A New York heart specialist, reporting on a survey of 12,000 professional persons, said yesterday that job stress is closely linked to coronary heart disease-but smoking may not be. The survey covered 14 occupa- tional groups with "obvious differ- ences" in job tensions, Dr. Henry I. Russek, consultant in cardio- vascular disease for the United States Public Health Service Hos- pital, said. Persons who said they never had smoked showed significantly higher coronary heart disease rates than those who stopped smoking before their attack or be- fore the questionnaire,_he said. Draft To Check 18-.Year-Olds LANSING - Selective Service boards in the state will begin physical examinations of 18-year- old males in July to enable them to plan their futures better on the basis of their qualification or disqualification for military serv- ice. State Director of Selective Serv- ice Col. Arthur A. Holmes stressed that the examinations were not a speedup of the draft. The Service has initiated a program for re- ferral of disqualified registrants to community rehabilitation, and only those young men who are not deferred will be ordered for the examination. This will eliminate those who are married, attending school or enrolled in reserve officers train- ing corps programs. The early examinations will not have any effect when the men are actually inducted. GOP nominee from getting the re- quired majority. If Wallace can gain control of the electoral votes of half a dozen Southern States, he will have a block of at least 53. In a close election, he figures that will be enough to keep either of the ma- jor party nominees from getting the 270 electoral votes needed to win. And then, he says, the South, with the balance of power, could demand concessions on civil rights. Gain Commitment In half a dozen states he is striving to get the electors com- mitted to him as a presidential candidate or left free to vote for somebody else besides the major party nominee. At the moment, he cannot be sure of any state except his own. The Democratic elector slate in Alabama has refused to promise its support to Johnson but is not committed to anyone else, includ- ing Wallace. In time, however, the unpledged nominees will almost certainly come out openly for the governor. Wallace has run into opposition in some instances from Democratic leaders unwilling to go against the national party. To offset that, his backers have circulated peti- tions asking the voters to put his name on the ballot as a third party candidate. Petitions are being passed around in North and South Caro- lina and probably will be later in Arkansas and Georgia. Similar ef- forts also may be made in Vir- ginia, Texas and Florida. Choice in 'Ole Miss Voters in Louisiana and Missis- sippi are already assured of a choice between elector tickets pledged to the Alabama governor and rival slates committed to Johnson. Wallace sees no basic difference between unpledged electors--where that is possible-and a third par- ty ticket elsewhere. In both in- stances, he says, the effect is the same-to keep the votes away from the major parties, the indirect cost question. In pressing his case, Sawyer has been helped by an accounting document from the government's executive branch. Issued by the Bureau on the Budget, it is known as Circular A-21-intended for use in both contract and grant cases. The form provides an ac- counting for indirect costs facts. These costs, the circular states in part, "aie those which . . . are not readily subject to treatment as direct costs of research agree- ments or other activities." The legislative response is that grants are an outright gift to the University and administrators should be willing to bear part of the outgrowing costs. While Sawyer concedes that this point has some justification, he rebuts that "the grants have been contracted because they are of value to the national welfare." In addition, he observes that many of the grants are for highly spe- cialized services which are more than compensated for. His arguments have not gone on deaf ears. With the death of Clarence Cannon (Do-Mo), pow- erful House Appropriations Com- mittee chairman, a major ob- struction has been removed. A i GOV. GEORGE WALLACE (Continued from Page 1) "If Goldwater wins the Repub- lican nomination, he will have to embrace the party platform, and that's what is important rather than a single vote on the civil rights bill. And the Republican platform certainly will endorse the civil rights bill," Wallace said. "If the Southern votes go to Goldwater we won't have any bargaining power. The only way we can exercise our power is to withhold our votes from both par- ties." HEW Report: School Costs Up The cost of a college education has risen, A 5.1 per cent increase for men and 4.5 per cent increase for women was reported for students attending private colleges and uni- versities by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare in a recent survey of 92 per cent of the nationas colleges. Also reported was a one per cent increase for both men and women attending public institutions out- side their own state and a 4.2 per cent increase in costs for students attending a public school in their home state. , spokesman for George Mahon (D- Tex), the new chairman, sees "def- mnite possibilities in the future for reduced restrictions on indi- rect expenses." Sawyer will retire within months now, but there are a flock of oth- er educators from Harvard to Berkeley who will continue in their fight to have the limitations eased or dropped. Whether they succeed or not, the University will always remem- ber its quiet, just fighter of the unjust cost. Students End ILUAC Protest MINNEAPOLIS - A group of citizens and students from Min- neapolis will finish a three-day picket of the House Un-Ameri- can Activities Committee today. Placards carried by the demon- strators emphasize their "opposi- tion to the basic premise of the committee (HUAC) -that 'certain ideas are somehow 'un-American' and should be suppressed," Denis Wadley, press secretary for the committee, said. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN, 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 3654 Administration Building before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publica- tion, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Satur- day and Sunday. FRIDAY, JUNE 26 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar No. 115a-Thomas L. Moffat, The Management Institute, the University of Wisconsin, "Skills Workshop in Em- ployment Interviewing". Room 3-D, Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. Institute on Areawide Planning of Medical Care Services and Facilities- Conference: Room 3042, School of Public Health, 9 a.m. Institute on Collegfe and University Administration-Third Floor Conference Room, Michigan Union, 9:30 a.m., Educational Film Preview - "The Lawyers," at 1:30 p.m. in the Under- graduate Library Multipurpose Room. General Notices French and German Screening Exams: The screening exams in French and Ger- man for Doctoral candidates will be ad- ministered on Mon., June 29 from 3-5 p.m. in Aud. B, Ar1ell Hall. Doctoral candidates must pass the screening examination before taking the written test in French or German, unless they have received B or better in French 111 or German 111. Those whogfailthe examination may take it again when the test is administered in July. Regents' Meeting: July 24. Commu- nications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than July 10. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: State of Michigan Civil Service - 1. Social Worker Al-2 hrs. recent exper. in social work or related areas. OR 2 yrs. of study with courses in the so- cial sciences. 2. Child Welfare Worker Al-BA degree with not less than 30 hrs. in the social or related sciences. Research Organization in Ann Ar- bor Area - Seeking Assistant in Re- search. Will be Ass't. to a Res. Psy- chologist. Permanent position. Will work with minimum of supv. BA in Psych. pref., but other considered. Trng. in Experimental Psych. pref., knowledge of Programming highly desirable. Age 22-30. Would consider someone who has not finished degree. Eli Lilly & Co., Indianapolis, Ind.- Many & various openings including: Microbiologist, Indust. Engnr. Com- mercial Chemicals Specialist, Account- ant, Cost Acc't., Budget Analyst, Inter- nal Auditor, Financial Analyst, Sr. Plant Physiologist, Sr. Bacteriologist, Sr. Pharmacologist, Chemists (org., analyt., phys.), etc. U.S. Civil Service-Openings for Staff Nurses-3 yr. course in an approved school of nursing or 2-yr. course & 1 yr. exper. For further information, please call General Div., Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544. ANNOUNCEMENT: Agency for International Develop- ment-Need secretaries to serve over- seas in the foreign aid prog. An AID rep. will be in Detroit for 2 weeks conducting interviews from Mon., June 22 through Thurs., July 2. Miss Doro- thy Boulos will interview at the Michi- gan State Employment Service office, 1145 Griswold St., 9th floor, Detroit, weekdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Group interviews will be held Wed, evening, July 1. Aptps. may be made by phoning Miss Boulos at 222-1855. Open to wom- en with secretarial exper. & good short- hand & typing. Must be single, high sch. graduate, at least 21 yrs., U.S. citizen- ship. Appts. are for 2 yrs. Positions also avail, ateWash., D.C. hdqts with min age here of 18. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Barry Lands Possibility Of War with Red China ... O-- By The Associated Press TUCSON-Presidential aspirant Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) yesterday lauded recent statements that the United States would risk war with Red China to preserve freedom in Southeast Asia. He made the statement in a speech calling on Henry Cabot Lodge to address the people and "tell them why the policy in Viet Nam went wrong and how it can be repaired." Lodge, who resigned as ambas- sador to South Viet Nam two days ago to help Pennsylvania's Gov. William Scranton defeat Goldwa- ter for the GOP presidential nom- ination, had stated that he did not think Viet Nam would be an issue in the November campaign. Carry a Big Stick Goldwater said that if the U.S. had spoken of possible war with Red China months ago, it would not have the current Southeast Asia problems. Red China would have backed down just like Russia did in Cuba, he continued. Goldwater said the United States is headed for World War III if it continues its present foreign poli- cy and that the nation must have a full and frank accounting of what has gone on in Southeast Asia. "This administration has been building a crisis in secret." B-47's The senator decried reports that the U.S. was considering the burn- ing of B-47 bombers for similar action by Russia. "We can't find one instance of a strong nation ever going into war," he said. "It is foolish to think you can appease an enemy by becoming weaker than they." Dial 8-6416 TWIN CLASSIC ENCORES Alfred Hitchcock's "THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY" and t I wombs DIAL -. Shows Start at 2-6264 o .-_1:15-3 :44-6:15 & 8:50 1111,11.1tiliff wqprqmmvqpwww4"m I IMc I ES1 -Is1T s .. aM M . ! EJAP -I C T uII REATEST Joseph E. Levine presents NOW'TILLJUNE27 MMIKE AND JUDY CALLAAN DOORS OPEN 8:00 FIRST SHOW 9:00 Cover Charge: Monday-Thursday 1.00 Friday-Saturday 1.25 COFFEE HOUSE 114 E. Washington (at Bimbos) 668-9135 >SO<-y 7qO<-) }J()<- ()! ?)G<:- Y f)1. - !{J } .,= Ie 4 far- - - -- - - =I GREGORY PECK AUDREY HEPBURN in "ROMAN HOLIDAY"/ 1 4, f x + : / f - W, ® SALES " SERVICE * RENTALS ': A Stantey Sake- c, En MOM d rodvcbo MHi~c Wco TMCHNIRAMWA -" NEXT: "THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN" .:. University Typewriter Center 613 E. William St. 665-3763 r r I The towering adventure triumph that must be seen ...and seen again! The Winner of 27 Internation- al Awards...7 Academy Awards! ALEC GUI NESIC HWKINS USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered organiza- tions only. Organizations who are plan- ning to be active for the Summer Term should be registered by July 3, 1964. Forms available, 1011 Sturent Ac- tivities Bldg. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation talk by Rev. Paul R. Dotson, director, Prot- estant Foundation for International Students, speaks on "Southern Hospi- tality: Mississippi Style," Wed., July 1, at 7:30 p.m., Hillel Bldg., 1429 Hill St. s* * 4 Graduate Outing Club, Swiming and/ or hiking, June 28, 1:45 p.m., Rackham, Huron St. entrance. Rent a TV this Summer NEW 19" G.E. PORTABLES only $10.00 per month FREE DELIVERY & SERVICE TV set on display at Follett's Bookstore CalNEJAC TV 7 phone: NO 2-5671 I B'nai B'rith H SABBATH SERVICES [illel Foundation Saturdays, 9 a.m. 11 I I ... w ' ..ern. _LR.. ., '\Q :. . ... ,. i d _. b!: 3dp