THE ?MICHIGAN DAILY WEDN'ESjDAY,'MAY 17:0 11907 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. MAY 17. Th67 v v" a a a a, a a V V Tariff Cut ollows JFK Plan By CARL HARTMAN Associated Press News Analyst GENEVA - The successful con-j clusion Monday night of the long! Geneva tariff talks has filled in some of the details of President Kennedy's grand design for a part- nership between America and Eu- rope.I Walter Hallstein, chief execu- tive of the European Common1 Market, had predicted: "Only when it is united will Europe be strong enough to assume the rights and obligations of a full and equal partner and so determine its own destiny. "The Kennedy Round is the first example of this policy in practice. With these negotiations the economic dialogue of the con- tinents has been opened," Hallstein said. Two Leaders The United States and the Common Market have emerged as the world's two great trading units. What they decide determines the commercial policy of the non- Communist world. The Common Market has spok- en successfully for all six member countries: President Charles de Gaulle's France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. While the agreed tariff cuts will average 33 to 35 per cent in some 80 nations, many tariffs will be cut 50 per cent over a period of five years. Lower Auto Duties A $5000 Italian sports car now pays $325 duty in the United States. Beginning next year, $32.50 will be knocked off. .,{{":??:7" {- .r ",... } i A $2500 American car which ; that the process may only slow on the principle of the "most fav- now pays a tariff of $550 in West- down the natural increase. ored nation." That means if any ern Europe will only have to pay For the first time, farm prod nation gets the benefit of a tar- $440 beginning July 1, 1968. ucts have been included in a ma. iff cut, so must all the others Whether the savings will be jor tariff-cutting exercise. Though that belong to the club. passed on to the purchaser is an- the results are more modest than This arrangement may now be other question, expected, one new thing has been inadequate. Few of the 6300 items in the accomplished. President Johnson said yester- U.S. tariff book are sold directlyNA day much hard work will be need- to consumers. All pass through the An international food aid pro- ed in the weeks ahead to put Into hands, of dealers, wholesale and intent fd dr - concrete form the Kennedy Round retail, gram has been set up under which teareetrahdMna ih the world's richer nations ac- agreement reached Monday night Dealer Savings knowledge a joint responsibility in"Geneval If past experience is any guide, for feeding the poor nations. General agreement has been these businessmen will hang on to The program is less than half most of the savings. the size of the one the United This time the savings may be States has been operating on its morepereptile.own in recent years-the giving of The tariff cuts are expected to 10 to 13 million tons of grain average 33 to 35 per cent, which annually to India, Pakistan, Bra- is ,five or six times more than the zil Egypt and other countries R eaeto r last tariff-cutting exercise, the whose population is increasing Dillon Round of 1960. faster than their ability to feed it. Economists say tariff cuts stim- ulate business by facilitating a free Now a dozen governments will WASHINGTON () - James J. flow of trade. be in on the giving. Ramey, acting chairman of the Between 1948 and 1966 world The exporters will also rejoice Atomic Energy Commission, says trade increased from $53.3 billion in an increase of the minimum the AEC does not foresee the prob- to $180 billion. Five tariff cuts world wheat price. This means ability that it will reconsider areas in that period may have had more money in the pockets of their other than its recommended site something to do with the increase. farmers. . - near Westqn, Ill., as the location New Opportunities ' Spokesmen for the Asians, Afri- for the $375 million atom smash- Foreign exporters will certainly cans and Latin Americans say er. see new opportunities to sell their they want trade, not aid. If they Ramey's statement in support of goods in America, goods that would can only sell what they make, they Weston came in a letter to Rep. not have been able to compete be- can raise the tiny incomes of their Marvin L. Esch (R-Mich). fore the tariff cuts, Likewise Amer- people and make them less re- Ann Arbor, In Esch's congres- iean producers should find new ceptive to what they hear from sional district, was one of the six opportunities in foreign markets, the Communists about how their sites under final consideration for tariff cutting is a two-way country ought to be run and who when Weston was selected. street. they ought to cooperate with in Housing Question Businessmen all over the world world affairs. A statement by Glenn T. Sea- ought to be stimulated to improve The trouble is that the present borg, AEC chairman, that Con- their products and bring down system of commercial negotiations, gress might not approve of the prices to meet the new competi- the General Agreement on Tar- site at Weston if open housing tion, but prices are rising so fast iffs and Trade (GATT) operates and other nondiscrimination prac- reached on all the major issues in the trade negotiations," Johnson said in a statement. "The way is now clear for the conclusion of a final agreement covering billions of dollars worth of trade among more than 50 countries." Johnson said he hoped the end product will meet standards un- derlying this country's 1962 Trade Expansion Act-standards design- ed to stimulate economic growth at home, strengthen and vitality in the cause of freedom. No 'Shift Location : 4 -Associated Press STOKELY CARMICHAEL, who stepped down last week as chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, addressed students at Hill Aud. last fall. Carmichael, who organized the black power movement, said Monday that Negroes must rally around their own self-interest if they are to achieve real power. He did not seek reelection and approved the choice of his successor, H. Rap Brown. SNCC To Stress Oranizing Under Carmichael Successor By DON McKEE said the SNCC philosophy would be ephemeral, eye-catching, dramat- Associated Press News Analyst along the same line articulated by ic things."I ATLANTA, Ua.--indications are Carmichael. This referred to the black power tat the Student Nonviolent Co- Brown's prepared statement re- slogan vocalized last summer by -dinating Committee will shift flected Carmichael's views, calling Carmichael during the Mississippi ck into its traditional role of for nationwide antidraft program march and the resulting debate{ ndramatic political organizing and the building of political and within Negro leadership and loss- th a new emphasis on economic economic forces among Negroes. es in white support.j rce after .a year under black But there was perhaps a hint of A close associate of SNCC's for-I >wer symbol Stokely Carmichael. a difference. Brown spoke of "a mer chairman said Carmichael Carmichael was replaced as SN- programmatic approach," appar- voluntarily gave up the post be- C's national chairman last week ently indicating, more actual plan- cause he did not want to build a H. Rap Brown, 23, the Alabama ning and concrete programs as op- "personality cult" for himself. This eld director in elections by the posed to considerable emphasis fits with a long-standing distaste ganization's staff in Atlanta. on speaking tours by Carmichael. within SNCC membership for sym- Carmichael, 26, who won an Carmichael himself said he would bolic figures. ternal power struggle a year ago not continue his speech-making A leading role will be taken by take the chairmanship, appar- campaign. Several SNCC sources the new program director, Ralph ttly gave up the post without a said Carmichael would join in a Featherstone, 27, veteran SNCC ght. He had said long before the summer drive for home rule in field worker who spent much of aff meeting he wanted to step Washington, D.C. Carmichael said 1966 in tiny Philadelphia, Miss., ide. his assignment would be decided and once taught school in Wash- No Contest by SNCC's central committee. ington, D.C. None of the SNCC leaders would "I think Carmichael will con- I Economic Emphasis t that each presented a changing picture. "The conclusion that the Weston site is the most suitable location for the facility is, of course, bas- ed on a balancing of all the many factors involved, including those pertaining to equal oppor- tunity and nondiscrimination. "We believe that a positive ac- tion program, concerning the availability of open housing and other equal opportunities, can have a very significant effect in this area. The commission intends to have such a program throughout the life of the facility." Ramey also told Esch that wa- ter resources for the Weston site are considered adequate. Esch said he was disappointed with Ramey's reply. Reply Fell Short "While it dealt with my ques- tions," Esch said, "it fell far short of the searching analysis the com- mission should do on the two im- portant issues of water resources and civil rights. "If such an analysis has been done it should be published in full and if it hasn't been done it certainly should be." Esch said he interpreted the re- ply to mean the AEC has not com- pletely shut the door on consider- ing a different site. "The door is left open a crack, but it is a slim opening," Esch said. I it 3 n it L 1 ; , t . ... ::..... :.i '. . i ' u" I :S ' The Daily Official Bulletin is an officiaJ publication of the Univer- sity of Micngan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPIEWlfl'r EN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Satarday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; ifay Calendar items appear once only. Studentorganization notices are not accepted for publication. For more Information call 764-9270. OFFICIAL BULLETIN Urquhart, Electrical Engineering; thesis: taxes, etc. Some overnight travel, 28-30 "Degree Constrained Subgraphs of Lin- yrs. old, BA required; adv. degrees in ear Graphs," Thurs., May 18, at 2 p.m., journ., law, etc. asset. Newspaper or Room 1300 East. Engineering. Chairman, mag. exper., with some financial bkgd. E. L. Lawler. C Leuw, Cather & Co., Engineers, Chicago, 11.-For consulting engineer- Doctoral Examination for George Rob- ing services. Civil Engineers, design of ert Olsson, Aerospace Engineering; thes- highways, rapid transit systems, railroad is: "Acceleration of a Hypersonic Boun- and other systems Mechanical engi- dary Layer Approaching a Corner," neers, heating, ventilating, plumbing, Thurs., May 18, Room 1028 East Engi- ME plus 2 yrs. design exper. Electrical neering, at 9:30 a.m. Chairman, A. F. Engrs., lighting, power, for indust. & Messiter. transportation related projects, EE plus ________2 yrs. design exper. Doctoral Examination for George Jo- Ciba Corp., Summit, N.J.-Organic re- seph Quarderer, Chemical Engineering; search position. BS/MS organ. chem. thesis: "Photochemical Chlorination of plus 0-5 yrs" exper. to assist-a PhD in Sulfur Dioxide Utilizing a Plasma Light research for preparing new synthetic Source." Thurs., May 18, Room 3201 compounols. East Engineering, at 1:30 p.m. Chair- Mead Johnson & Co., Evansville, Ind man, R. H. Kadiec. rocess engineering in manufacturing ________dept., BA level in Indust. Pharm., food tech., or ChE, plus 1 yr. exper. in manut. 1 lfl- or process work. MA considered with- Pia em ntout exper. Senior; Process Engineer, Pharmaceutical Products BS/MS in ANNOUNCEMENTS: ChE or Pharm. 25-35 age, 4 yrs, exper. U.S. Civil Service Commission-An- in process dev.,in Pharm. industry. UiS . l i R nAr o e s d v . i n p h rmt i. n f o rd stirr tices were not assured for that area resulted in questions from various sources as to whether an- other site might be considered. Ramey, in his letter to Esch, said that during the long site selection process the AEC sought and received assurances of non- discrimination and equal oppor- tunity, as well as information on racial climates, from the six fin- alist sites that were then being considered. "After reviewing the assurances and information," Ramey wrote, "it was concluded that there were strong and weak points associat- ed with each of the sites, and WEDNESDAY, MAY 17 ve details of the week-long staff iecting. But neither Carmichael or other members indicated there as any serious contest. Car- ichael, in fact, showed plainly hat Brown had his blessing. At a news conference, Brown tinue to serve as a spokesman, a provocateur," an informed source said. "But no one thinks we can pull off any substantial change with rhetoric. I'm going to push with them not to get sidetracked. with these traumatic events, these Featherstone, a quiet, slender man, talked of the need for "posi- Day Calendar tive efforts in terms of establish- ' ing economic control by the black Second National symposium on Ra- commnitis."dioecology-"Energy in Man's Environ- comneities."ent: Past, Present and Future Prob- The economic emphasis, he said, lems": Rackham Lecture Hall, 9 a.m. will be added to SNCC'S political o organization efforts - such as the zoology Seminar: On Wed., May 17., Dr. Beatrice Mintz, senior member of third-party project in Alabama's the Institute for Cancer Research at Lowndes County, Fox Chase, Philadelphia, will present He said SNCC will draw volun- aseminar on "Gene Regulation of Dif- ferentiation in Mammals," at 4 p.m. in teers frbm Negro colleges for its |Aud. D,-Angell Hall. summer projects, still in the plan- ning stages. "We've done fairly Phi Kappa Phi-The annual business , meeting of Phi Kappa Phi will be well in terms of response," he said, held today at 2 p.m. in the East Con- )mney Insists I Unaffectedby 3 LANSING (MP)-Michigan Gov. H George Romney said yesterday he mig thought there should be no ques- the tion about his being eligible as a thin candidate for president. Ron Romney, considered. a leading R contender for the Republican nom- thei ination, was born in Mexico of to tl parents who were citizens of the iod United States. mon His Mormon parents were there mar at the time with other. members Pan )f the religious sect, fleeing per- C ecution. Ron Celler Question. man Rep. Emanuel Celler (D-NY) den had raised the question. inat Celler noted that the Constitu- tion said the President must be G a "natural born" citizen. ' New "Rep. Celler concedes that there for is no question about my being bor orn an American citizen," Rom- T ney said, after reading an Associ- bac] ated Press story quoting the head held of the House Judiciary Committee Ror o this effect. case "I know that I was naturally " born-during my recent trip out ler West, I met the son of the midwife Ror who delivered me. So," concluded satik Romney, "that makes me a natur- don al born citizen-as specified in the mis. Constitution." R Romney added that his own le- U.S gal experts had been researching as the question raised by Celler. vice Celler had suggested that Re- A publican leaders might appoint con some sort of commission to "come gibi up with an answer to this situa- ed x tion." fice. Eligibility lexico Birth e added the Republican leaders ht throw his suggestion "in ashcan if they wish, but I nk this is going to plague Mr. mney from now on out." omney's parents never gave up r citizenship. They returned he United States during a per- from 1911-12 when the Mor- n colony in Mexico was hit by rauders and bandits, including .cho Villa. eller had said a legal test of mney's eligibility could be de- nded if he appeared in a presi- tial primary or if he was nom- ted and elected. Rockefeller Support ov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of York said Romney can run president even though he was n in Mexico. he New York Republican, chief ker of Romney in the East, d Monday that the question of mney's eligibility was "an early e of politics." It's a matter of law," Rockefel- responded to Celler. "Gov. rney and all of his friends are sfied that he is qualified. I 't see why you need a com- sion." ockefeller also is supporting . Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-NY) Romney's running mate for -president. ides in Javits' office said the stitutionality of Romney's eli- lity could not be legally rais- unless he were actually in of- i Organizing Program ference Room of the Horace H. Rack- A key SNCC adviser, Dr. George hamrSchool of Graduate Studies. Hamilton, chairman of the politi- cal science department at Lincoln ;enel l [tw* es University in Pennsylvania, said in Computing Center Course: The Com- a telephone interview that he puting Center announces a short course would serve as a sponsor for the "The Use of the IBM 360/67 MTS Sys- Negro student program of politi-; tern, including Fortran IV." Fri., May 26, 1-5 p.m., Room 1400 Chemistry Bldg. cal organizing. Registration not necessary. Inquiries "This is where SNCC probably may be addressed to Prof. Bernard A. has its greatest impact," he said.: aller. "My own notion is that SNCC is Doctoral Examination for Robert John gaining following in the south on. black campuses. I think this will pay off in dividends this summer." ORGA N IZAT ON Carmichael on a book dealing withT black power, "The Political Forms N TICES We Feel Are Going to be Legiti-_ mate." nounces special examination o senior level positions recruited from outside the government. Most positions in Wash., D.C., area. Generally a total of 6 yrs. of educ., trng., exper., or com- bination thereof is required. File two copies of Standard Form 57, available at Bureau, and complete one card form 5001 ABC, send in to address available at Bureau. Application active 12 mos. from noticesof acceptance of applica- tion. Unless you have considerable high-level exper., a more appropriate examination may be better for entrance into many fields of federal employ- ment. Vogue's Prix de Paris-Care ercompe- tition for college seniors. Must re- ceive BA before Sept, '68, in '67-68 academic yr., fill out and return en- rollment card, available at Bureau, be- fore Oct. 20, 1967. First winner, 1 yrt employment on Vogue, accompany edi- tors covering Paris couture collection, second winners, six mos. junior editor- ship, third or honorable mentions, $50 bond, top consideration for Vogue andF other Conde-Nast magazines. .* *' * For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB. Phone 434-0190 Entrance Ow CARPENTER RODs OPEN 7:00 NOW SHOWING I HELD OVER., FEL LI NI'S LA DOLC E VITA UNCENSORED IN ENGLISH (not subtitles) Ann Arbor, Michigan 210 S. Fifth Avenue 761-9700 CINEMA II. PRESENTS Melina Mercouri and Anthony Perkins in JULES DASSIN'S PHAEDRA (1 62) FRIDAY and SATURDAY 7 and 9:15 P.M. Auditorium A Angell Hall A #1 Cultural Goal The new chairman. again taking a Carmichael text, spoke in his prepared statement of SNCC's cul- tural objecstive dealing with Negro history and seeking "to develop an awareness and appreciation of the beauty of our thick lips, broad noses, kinky hair and soul." It was learned that a part of the SNCC program, in the plan- ning stage, would provide a study of Negro political and economic movements, such as farmer coop- erative projects. The study would provide case histories and, if successful, would offer a tool for "mass collective action" in politics and economics. E D I A L, N 0 2-62.64.....::<; TATE. -1 USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student - or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1311 SAB. Deutscher Verein, Kaffeestunde: kaf- fee, kuchen, konversation, Wed., May 17. 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, midweek devotions, Wed, May 17. Rev. Richard Kapfer is in charge of the 10 p.m. service and his message is: "Vision from a Rooftop." U. of M. Rifle Club, Open shooting- .22 calibre rifles and pistols, Wed., May 17, 7-9 p.m., ROTC Rifle Range. All rifles and pistols furnished; am- munition furnished at a reduced price. Christian Science Organization, Week- ly testimony meeting, Thurs., May 18, 7:30-8:30 p.m., 3545 SAB. RECORD-BREAKING 3rd WEEK! POSITION OPENINGS: County of Westchester, White Plains, N.Y.-Social Case Workers in areas of Public Assistance, Child Welfare, and Hospitalization. BA in any field. Im- mediate appointments available. Medical Economics, Inc., Oradell, N.J.' -Two positions. Midwest Editor, one- man bureau in Chicago, light travel, write articles and gather source ma- terial from doctors, leaders of organiz- ed medicine, medical society exec., hos- pital officials and management con- sultants to doctors, Early 30's, degreeI preferred, min. 5 yrs. publication exper., good reporter-interviewer bkgd. Finan- cial Writer, write feature articles on in- vestments, insurance, estate planning, - ECH I OL 1.%RIRS01 1 Shown at 8:0 5& 11:40 ALSO ... 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