DAY, AUGUST 12,1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY * DAILY OFFICIAL ThSiiviet PreparedaToaSigiisai up d0 sr" a e TSi he Daily Official Bulletin is an Non-Proliferation Treaty. WASHINGTON (P)-The Soviet Union has told the United States it wants to join in presenting a treaty aimed at curbing the spread p of nuclear weapons.' U.S. disarmament chief William C. Foster gave out this word at the White House Friday-then ar- ranged to return at once to the 17-nation Geneva Disarmament Conference to wrap up final de- tails with his Soviet, counterpart, Alexei Roschin. "We are in the process of a final solution of the problem," Foster told newsmen after calling on President Johnson. Kremlin that it is ready to join in proposing a draft pact marks a major step forward in long nego- tiations-but there still is a long way to go before a treaty comes into force. ' Assuming the two nuclear super- powers speedily agree on final treaty language; it remains to be seen whether the atomic have-not nations will join. There has been mounting pressure in some against permanently renouncing future national rights to an atomic ar- senal. Under the proposed treaty, the nuclear powers would agree not The have-not powers would also pledge not to receive them, The United States and the So- viet Union already have parallel policies against giving any atomic weapons to third countries-but it has taken them more than two years of on-and-off negotiations to agree on the wording of a non- proliferation treaty for consider- ation at the Geneva parley. Safeguard Provision the world, \ Foster acknowledged that France and Red China- building their own nuclear wea- ponyy-do not intend to join. However, he also expects them not to be handing out their atomic warheads to others., The safeguards provision is in dispute primarily between the So- viets, who favor a uniform global inspection system for the have-not countries, and the West Europeans sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. SATURDAY, AUGUST 12 Day Calendar Iniversity of Michigan Cnferene School of 'Music Degree Recital - Louise Valley. Pharmacology: thesis: Wayne, Mlich.--H.S. Library. Maion Cambon, iPano: School of Mu- "The Relationship of Mesoridazine and Ludlow ille, N.Y. (Lansing sic Recital Hall. 8:30 p.m. other Substituted Phenothiazines to School Dist.1-H.S. Band. jVentricular Fibrillation," Tues., Aug. * * 15, Room 6314 Medical Science Bldg., For additional information Events 1"}o t, ay at 10 a.m. Chairman, H. H. Swain, the Bureau of Appointments, 3 a l AMiss Donnelly", 764-7459. University of Michigan Conferences' -'I ternational Congress of:Oriental- Placem en ists": Ann Arbor reception, 4:30 to 6:30 N;;VNA. GFERA1. CQRPORATIO p m.; meeting of Consultative Commit- POSITION OPENINGS: FoX EASTERN THEATRES 8F XCut,.8:30 p.m.: University of Michigan Sum- ,cial Services-Admiistrator of County teRos K andL Michigan Union Macm County, Mich.,o Det. ofSo- FOX VI L8 Smer Chorus and Orchestra, Hill Aud., I Medical Care Facility. MBA or MA in 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769- 8:30 p.m. For further information con- Hosp. Administration, and/or consid- tact Information Desk, Rackham Bldg. erable experience in the management of NOW SHOWING a large hospital or hotel. School of Music Concert - Summer Saline Area Schools, Saline, Mxicps. -e Session Choir-Thomas Hilbish, Con- Guidance Counselor to work in elemen- 20i1 Cen ury Fox p esents ductor, Janice Harsanyi and Elizabeth tary school with groups of children . Mannion, Soloists: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. and teachers, do consultant work with teachers, individual counseling of chil-l 'I Vj'f] School of Music Degree Recital - dren and families. MA or BA in guid- lE Marion Cambon, Piano: School of Mu- ance and counseling, psychology, social sic Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. work. Experience in guidance and withc AiLBErRT FINNEY General Notices For further information please call As matters now stand, Foster who prefer the inspection proce- said, the Big Two still have not dure already set up under their settled on a safeguards provision own peaceful atomic energy pro- to insure against treaty violations. gram. Thus the plan is to present a Landmark{ joint draft at Geneva with the ;If and when a nonproliferation The sudden word from the I to give atomic explosives to others.I 1 Congo Asks UN Aid In Quelling Uprisig safeguards proviso left blank. The idea is to let the other Ge- neva powers examine the proposed treaty and put it in final shape. Foster voiced hope this could be done in time for the U.N. General Assembly session this fall. Whether the treaty is presented at the United Nations or elsewhere for signature by countries around treaty wins a round-the-world ratification, it will stand as a companion to the first landmark in international control of nuclear warheads-the 1963 atomic test ban treaty. That pact, signed by more than 100 nations, though not by France or Red China, forbids all but underground nuclear ex- plosions. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. AP)- The Congo asked yesterday that that U.N. members help put down the mercenary uprising in that country and keep the conflict from spreading to neighboring Portuguese Angola. Congolese Foreign Minister Jus- tin Bomboko made the request in a letter to' French Ambassador; Roger Seydoux, president of the Security Council. The letter was circulated as an official document of the 15-nation council a day after Seydoux- got it through the Congolese U.N. delegation. Logistic Support Bomboko asked Seydoux to "in- vite the members of the Security Council and countries friendly to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to supply, as soon as pos- sible, logistic support or assistance f any other kind for maintaining order in the region." He said this should be done "in. order to combat the activities of ,mercenaries inside the country and to avoid a possible extension of the conflict which might en- danger peace in central Africa and particularly in Angola." Mercenaries Bomboko told Seydoux that a number of former mercenaries for onetime secessionist Katanga Pro- vince in the Congo were now at Luanda, Angola, 'with two planes. He said that at Lumumbashi, which was the Katangan separa- tist capital under the name of Elisabethville, radio communica- tions had been intercepted between two bases in Angola and anti- government troops in the Congo commanded by Belgian-born Maj. Jean Schramm. Schramm's force, which he counts at 160 European merce- naries and 800 former Katangan gendarmes, now holds Bukavu in the northeastern Congo and seems intent on escaping into neighbor- ing Rwanda. Government troops have been jockeying to cut it off. -"International Congress of Oriental- Regents' Meeting: Sept. 15, 1967. Com- ists": Registration, Lobby, Rackham nhunications for consideration at this Bldg., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. meeting must be in the President's hands no later than August 31. Cinema Guild - Alfred Hitchcock's I "The Lady Vanishes": Architecture Registration aMterials: For Graduate Aud., 7 and 9:05 p.m. students planning to enroll in the Fall Term may be picked up in the Rack- School of Music Concert - Albert ham Bldg., Aug. 21-25 and Aug. 28-31 Ierken, carillonneur, University ol' from 8-12 and 1-4. ID 'cards will be Kansas: Burton Memorial Tower, 7:15 availableain the ,Rackham Bldg. dur- p.m. ing the above dates, Dept. of Speech University Players- TV Center Program: On Sun., Aug. Rick Besoyan's "Little Mary Sunshine": 13, the following program produced Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. by the TV Center will have its initial telecast in Detroit: School of Music Concert--Contempor- 12 Noon. WWJ-TV, Channel 4 - ary Directions-Sydney Hodkinson, Jack "The Many Worlds of India. Saris Fortner, Conductors: School of Music and Careers." A look at the role In- Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. dian women play in their country's development. School of Music Degree Recital-John Carlson, Organ: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. Dept. of Political Science and Center for Russian andrEast European Studies Lecture: Dr. Jerzy Wiatr, vice-director E vents Sundand chairman, Department of Political Sociology, Institute of Philosophy and University of Michigan Conference Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences. -"International Congress of Oriental- "The Role of the Social Scientist in ists": Registration, Lobby, cRakham the Transformation of Polish Society," Bldg., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Opening session, Wed., Aug. 16, 4:10 pjm., in the Sixth Hill Aud., 2 p.m. For further informa- Floor Conference Room, Institute for tion contact Information Desk, Rack- Social Research Bldg. (Thompson St. ham Bldg. between East Jefferson and East Wil- liam Sts.). School of Music Degree Recital - __ms_ Glenn Ray, Piano: School of Music Doctoral Examination for Norman Lee Recital Hall, 4:30 p.m. Ford, Zoology; thesis: "A Systematic Study of the Owls Based on Compara- Dept. of Speech University Players- tive Osteology," Mon., Aug. 14, Room Rick Besoyan's "Little Mary Sunshine": 2009 Museums, at 9 a.m. Chairman, R. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 7 p.m. W. Storer. School of Music Concert - Albert Doctoral Examination for Hugh Steph- Gerken, Carillonneur, University of en Ogden, English Language & Litera- Kansas: Burton Memorial Tower, 7:15 ture; thesis: "Hyperion and the Crit- p.m. ics: A Study of Criticism and Scholar- Museum of Art Reception - "Special ship of Keat's 'Hyperian, a Fragment' Opening and Reception for Delegates and 'The Fall of Hyperion, a Dream.'," to the Congress" (International Con- Mon., Aug. 14, Room 1611 Haven Hall, gress for Orientalists): Alumni Memor- at 3:15 p.m. Chairman, A. J. Carr. e_ - . y _ .- s C ...iL T"4 _ n b world News, Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Amid mount- ing U.S. congressional criticism of the election campaign in South Vietnam,'that country invited the American legislators to send a delegation to observe the electoral process. The embassy move amounted to a quick folow-up to cries from a number senators on Wednesday who called for broad changes in policy toward the Southeast Asian c o u n t r y and complaints of "mounting and distressing evi- dence" that the elections will not be free and fair. * * * ATLANTA, Ga. - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., highly critical of the administration for its policies in Vietnam, plans to take his antiwar campaign to the Amer- ican people. He proposes a nation- wide referendum on whether the Phone434-0130 die0. CARPENTER ROD FIRST OPEN 7:30 P.M. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUN Discount Photocopies Immediate Servce 1 Sample Prices* 1 copy .08 25 copies 1.50 (6c each) 100 copies 3.00 (3c each) "From same original fighting should continue. King said 26,000 volunteers al- ready are at work on the project in communities throughout the nation. The campaign, supported by the organization Vietnam Summer, seeks to place antiwar referen-' dums on petitions on local and state ballots this fall and next spring. * * * WASHINGTON - The Senate voted yesterday to expand the Ex- port-Import Bank's landing at.- thority after forbidding it to fi- nance purchase in the United States of machine tools for an automobile plant in Russia. Sen. Jacob K. Javits of New York challenged the bill saying it cannot possibly effect Russia's supplying of arms to North Viet- nam. PETITION NOW . for membership on the CINEMA II BOARD OF DIRECTORS The ability to write pretentious program notes will be considered jn invaluable (but altogether unnecessary) asset. Call or Write TOM SELLGREN / BILL CLARK Apt. 5, 913 Mary 663-5832 I' i to 10 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Sharon JAMES HARDY PETER STEWART KRUGER FINCH FLIGHT OF THE, PHOENIX (Technicolor, 1965) FRIDAY and SATURDAY AUDITORIUM A 7 & 9:15 P.M ANGELL HALL 50c - - - PERFECT HIGH COPIES MADE ON THE SPEED XEROX 2400 1217 So. University 769-0560 Next to University Towers I "GREAT FUNI" --Times O HELD OVER FOR AMUSEMENT PURPOSES ON|4LY ra i tI I ALSO- HUGH O'BRIAN JOHN MILLS CEXAS iSEE COLOR Shown at 11:10 Only __ rl F1! THIS WEEK ONLY!Y. I ROBRT SANE CHARLES MILDRED REDFORD-FONDA-BOYElNATWICK "THEY GOT A MURDER ON THEIR HANDS. THEY DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO WITH IT" SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:05 P.M. MIHIGA Mats. $1.25 Eves. & Sundays $1.50 NEXT: "DIVORCE AMERICAN STYLE" .... 1 NOW SHOWING DIAL 8-6416 Look for a Sky of Blue... * * $r wcKRE a rollicking musical satire set in the Colorado Rockies Wednesday-Saturday August 9-12 8 P.M. Sunday, August 13 7 p inhd A new film by Ingmar Bergman "Very much out of the ordinary.., the film constantly absorbs." the Saturday Review on PERSONA "Haunting. Intense, A monologue describes a bizarre sexual encounter on a beach. It is 'verbal stimulation." the inTHE NORMAN JEWISONVALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION "IN lE EATOF TE NIGHT" W~sar ARNmm-F t;. RrCANIT .Gm ,,fTIRI lN1' i11I IPI4ANI I, I