FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY £~"Z 'rZ LIL'. Sukarno Appoints Gen. S .. v<. s c i.Ilii i/ i To Post of Army Comn Conferees Agree on Aid Proposal Bipartisan Body OK's Broad Program for Federal College Help WASHINGTON (P) - A broad new program to strengthen high- er education-including aid for colleges, students and teachers- was agreed upon yesterday by House and Senate conferees. In settling differences over bills passed earlier by the House and the Senate, the conferees approv- ed a sweeping omnibus, measure carrying an annual cost of $841 million. That is more than twice what President Johnson requested. Compromise Bill The compromise bill, designed to help the nation's colleges meet an expanding enrollment that has doubled in 10 years, would: -Launch a new program of scholarship grants for needy stu- dents and provide federally guar- anteed, low-interest loans for students from middle-income fam- ilies. -Double the money available for college construction grants and start a new program designed to upgrade college libraries and library services generally. -Establish a national teacher corps to work with local school districts in improving teaching services in low-income areas. -Strengthen small, struggling colleges through direct financial aid and through teaching fellow- ship programs aimed at attracting outstanding scholars to such in- stitutions. MIouse Republican conferees ob- jected strenuously to the teacher corps provisions and said they would seek a House vote to have the item removed from the bill. It was in the original Senate bill but was not voted on by the House. The earlier bills received over- whelming support in each body. Major Change A major change in the field of federal education legislation is provided by the new aid program for needy students. The assistance, called educational opportunity grants, would amount to the first federal undergraduate scholar- ships. The bill would authorize $70 million for the first year, to be distributed among the states on the basis of their total college en- rollment and number of high school graduates. Student recipients would be se- lected by the colleges and would have to show they(need the money in order to get it. The grants would run between $200 and $800 a year, and would have to be matched by some other form of student aid-either loan or work program. Students in the upper half of their college class could get an extra $200, for a maximum of $1,000. iharto iander Leftist Fired From Main Military Post President Promises Arbitration Between Rebels and Armny KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (.) -President Sukarno of Indonesia named a new army commander yesterday-anti-Communist Maj. Gen. Suharto, who smashed the pro-Red coup attempt Sept. 30. " PHI KAPPA PSI LITTLE LE MANS SORORITY GO-CART RACES Sponsored by Kappa Kappa Gamma and Phi Kappa Psi HOMECOMING WEEKEND SAT., OCT. 16 RIGHT AFTER FOOTBALL GAME Corner of Washtenaw & Hill ri A f't1 ti r 5 -Associated Press FORMER PRESIDENT DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER berated President Johnson and Congress for being too concerned with quantity and not enough with quality regarding passage of legislation. Speaking on his 75th birthday, Eisenhower criticized the present administration for some of its policies. Ike Hits Johnson Policy, Calls Student Protests TVery Unwuvoise' WASHINGTON (A')-Republicans gathered in 28 cities across the country last night to toast Dwight D. Eisenhower on his 75th birth- day and hear him speak scorn- fully of legislation "bulled through just by political power." "The laws a nation lives by have to be hammered out by de- bate, by thoughtful discussion and by give and take," Eisenhower said. "They cannot be bulled through just by political power." "In legislation," he added, "it is not how many laws you pass, it is how many good laws you pass." Not Good Americanism At a New York news conference, Wednesday, he commented on this weekend's planned student pro- tests on the governmen't Viet Nam policy by saying : "I think it is terrible. Very un- wise. Not good Americanism." He said policy decisions on Viet Nam are based on thousands of pieces of information which are analyzed and weighed. Referring to the demonstrators he said, "What do they know about it?" Other GOP leaders, at a coast- to-coast chain of party fund- raising dinners, had criticisms of the present administration. "Power feeding on power is being used to undermine our two- party system under the Johnson administration," said Republican National Chairman Ray C. Bliss, teamed with Barry Goldwater in Los Angeles. "Not even a wartime adminig- tration has had greater power concentrated in the hands of the executive branch than is con- centrated in the White House today," said Goldwater, the Re- publican loser to Johnson last November. Accuses Johnson Goldwater accused Johnson of treating Congress and the people "as children to be scolded when bad and fed when good." In Cleveland, Ohio, Sen.- Thrus- ton B. Morton of Kentucky charg- ed the Democrats have "let ex- tremism play a major role" in their party., "It's the Democrats who sup- port extremism, morally and with money-not Republicans," said Morton, who two weeks ago ac- cused the John Birch Society of trying to infiltrate the GOP, and said its influence should be ousted. Birchers of the Left "Birchers of the left," Morton said, "have a far stronger hold on the Democrats than any extremists ever have had or could have had in our party." Morton said the Democratic Na- tional Committee has contributed $10,000 to an organization called Group' Research, Inc., which he said turned out an "addlepated blacklist" labeling as "right-wing extremists" such public figures as Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R- Ill), Sen Paul Douglas (D-Ill), Sen. Thomas Dodd (D-Conn), and Eisenhower himself. "I say this is an exercise in extremism that matches Birch: pronouncements outrage by out- rage," Morton said. Draft To Reach 12 Year High WASHINGTON (P)-The mili- tary draft continued to climb steeply as the armed services ask- ed yesterday for 45,224 draftees in December-an increase of 8,774: over the November call of 36,450. It is the biggest request to the Selective Service System since near the end of the Korean War, when 53,000 men were inducted into uniform in May 1953. The rising calls are in line with President Johnson's decision to build up the armed forces to deal with the conflict in Southeast Asia and keep needed strength1 elsewhere. Plans are to increase U.S. forces by 340,000 men, bring- ing the total to about three mil- lion. Yesterday's announced quotas brings the total of draftees since September 1950 to 3,243,324. Suharto, who appears to be emerging as a strong man, sue- ceeds Maj. Gen. Achmad Yani,r who was slain by the pro-Com- munist rebels. Sukarno, in statements made to the official news agency Antara and broadcast by Radio Jakarta, noted that since Yani's slaying he has been in full control of the army. The appointment confirmed Suharto's rise to power since the coup attempt. Removes Leftist Sukarno removed Gen. Pranoto Reksosamudro, known to be left- ist inclined, from the top army post to which he had been named temporarily by the president shortly after the coup's collapse. The Jakarta broadcast made no mention of Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution, Sukarno's defense min- ister and armed forces comman- der, who presumably continues to occupy his positions. Diplomatic sources in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore, who know the Indonesian situation, have rated Dutch-trained Suharto as a good soldier and possibly the only commander with enough backing at present to fight and beat the Communists. Acceptable to PKI Suharto, in his mid 40s, com- pares with Pranoto, who, diploma- tic sources said, was first chosen by Sukarno as army chief im- mediately after the coup because he was "fully acceptable to the PKI," the Indonesian Communist party. Suharto has been in the fore- front of the army's anti-Com- munist campaign since it flared with the discoveryofthe bodies of six top army generals, includ- ing Yani's, Oct. 4. They had been apparently tortured by the rebels before death. Sukarno had appointed Suharto to direct the campaign against the rebels in his Oct. 3 message to the nation, in which he had nam- ed Pranoto acting army chief. This had seemed a demotion for Suharto at the time, but his name was repeatedly mentioned in Ja- karta reports, particularly in con- nection with the army's anti- Communist crackdown. I r -. '- 4w4~ whir throug her swinging campUs lif.. 1ead for alI the fun places in this striking green kidskn pump with black trim accents and museum heel. . . ifs a smash on campus and entirely in tune to your switched-on wardrobe. 9.0 I8 U N IVE RS IT Y OFP C A L F OR NIA L IV ER M OR E, C A L F OR N IA M O R P~h R OA G R A FOS M £1W AUD E R W AY: I' PLOWSHARE-Industrial and scientific uses of nuclear explosives. WHITNEY-Nuclear weapons fo" national defense. SH ERWOOD-Power pro- duction from controlled thermonuclea" reactions. BiOM EDICAL-The effects of radioactivity on man and his environment Far-reaching programs utilizing the skills of virtually every scientific and technical discipline. Laboratory staff members will be on campus to interview Science and Engineering students Tuesday, October 26 Call your placement office for an appointment. U. U&Citizenship Required + Equal Opportunity Employer Psst! it's time to I! [ al World News Roundup i'I start his Christmas sweater NEW PAKS-NEW YARNS-NEW BOOKS Tel. 662-0303 YARNCRAFT SHOP I11 NICKELS ARCADE--between State and Maynard - I By The Associated Press PARIS-Three French profes- sors of the Pasteur Institute re- ceived a Nobel Prize yesterday for research in medicine that they said can aid mankind's campaign against cancer. Earlier in the day in Stock- holm, the Royal Carolina -Insti- tute Medical College faculty an- nounced it was awarding the 1965 Nobel Prize for physiology and medicine to Professors Francois Jacob, Andree Lwoff, and Jacques Monod for discoveries concerning "the genetic control of enzyme and virus synthesis." The prize is worth $55,000. WASHINGTON-A weary Pres- ident Johnson lazed around his hospital suite yesterday. Though his recovery was said to be "com- ing along fine," an aide reported Johnson is "weaker than anyone thought." Press, secretary Bill D. Moyers said the President is "gaining his strength more slowly than any- one thought." ** * SAIGON-Thousands of Ameri- P0n trnnno ithdrew vesterav important Viet Cong territory. I The biggest U.S.-Vietnamese operation of the war ended in the central highlands, 280 miles north of Saigon, as 8,000 troops from the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division began pulling out of the Suai Ca Valley. VATICAN CITY-The Vatican Ecumenical Council yesterday en- dorsed state aid for parochial schools and beat down a last- ditch move to block a declaration on better Roman Catholic rela- L tions with Jews. I I NEw1 SONYMATIC 900 Nom'- AUTOMATIC PORTABLE RECORDER The new 5% pound easy-toting lightweight with amazing room-sized volume. AVC (Automatic Volume Control) for perfect recordings every time. Start/stop microphone. Operates on 4 flashlight batteries or can be instantly switched to household current. Voice activate optional. Only $67.50. i I > F t '' I 1 i ;';: I : E I I i :::: D I A M O N D R! 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