PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1966 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1966 LAW SCHOOL: Regents Give Bishop Award For Outstanding Achievement U.S. Asks UN To Set Talks on Viet Nam War BOMBING RESUMES: Asian War Enters New Phase EDITOR'S NOTE: On January 21, the Board of Regents honored four University professors with the Dis- tinguished Professorship Award. This is the first of four articles honoring the recipients. By SUSAN SCHNEPP "It is especially nice to be re- membered in this way by one's own University and to be recog- nized by one's longtime friends," Prof. William W. Bishop, Jr., of the Law School, commented re- cently after being ,honored with the Distinguished Professorship Award. The award was named in hon- or ofhEdwin DeWitt Dickinson, a former professor at the Law School and given to Bishop for having "attained national and in- ternational recognition for orig- inality and scholarly achievement and demonstratedteaching skill and recognized breadth of inter- est as 'well as depth of achieve- ment." Bishop was a student of the late Dickinson and worked under him while he taught at the Law School. Their careers were also subse- quently "intertwined," he said, at the University of Pennsylvania and elsewhere. Legal Attitudes Law, especially international law, his specialty, is "new each time you think of it," Bishop' said. "Things no one worried about in the past now need to be regulated, such as radio broad- the American Journal of Inter- national Law, serving as editor- in-chief from 1953-55 and from 1962 to the present. Distinguished Career In the summers of 1961 and 1965 Bishop was honored with an invitation to give a series of lectures on international law and treaties at the Hague Academy of International Law. Born in 1906 in Princeton, N.J., he received his BA from the Uni- versity in 1928 and his JD from the Law School in 1931. He also attended Harvard and Columbia Law Schools, and was admitted to the Michigan Bar Association in 1931. From 1939-47 Bishop was an assistant to the legal adviser in the United States State Depart- ment. In this capacity he trav- eled as a legal adviser to the U.S. delegation to the Paris Peace' Conference in 1946. Fishing Treaties While with the State Depart- ment, Bishop became especially interested in treaties concerning fishing on the high seas, and since then has worked on treaties to regulate and protest fisheries and fishermen. Bishop who has taught at Princeton University, Columbia University, the University of Penn- sylvania, and has been here since 1948, sees the University as one "trying to melt together some of the best of the Eastern and West- ern schools, and a university I'm glad to be associated with after having worked at others." (Continued from Page 1) vidual voice for the National Front for Liberation, the political arm of the Viet Cong, in the pre- liminary talks. There was speculation that the Soviet Union would ask that North Viet Nam be invited to take part in the Council debate. It was understood the United States would not object if the Council decided to issue the invitation. Geneva Accord Both Hanoi and Peking have been demanding that the Viet Nam conflict be settled on the basis of the 1954 Geneva Confer- ence which divided Viet Nam into North and South and called for free elections to unify the coun- ORGANIZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to official- ly recognized and registered student organizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. S* * * UAC Symposium on future of Amer- ican individualism: "Students and 'The System'," Feb. 1, 8 p.m., Rackham. ULLR Ski Club, Film & talk by Hugo Bohm of Boyne Mt. Plans for weekend trip to Boyne, Feb. 1, 8 p.m., Union Room 3B. University Physical Therapy Club, Monthly meeting, Wed., Feb. 2, 7:301 p.m., 3rd floor conference room, U. Hospital. We will elect next year's of- ficers, view slides taken at a camp for handicapped children. Inter-Quadrangle Council-Assembly Association, House Presidents' meeting, Feb. 1, 7:30 p.m., Michigan League. try. They were never held. The 1962 conference dealt with Laos. North Viet Nam is demandingt also an immediate withdrawal of U.S. military forces from South Viet Nam, and is raising other conditions which the United Statesj finds unacceptable. In a letter to Ambassador Roger Seydoux of France, president of the Council, Goldberg said that in view of the failure to resolve the Viet Nam conflict outside the United Nations, the Council should exert "its most vigorous endeavors and its immense prestige to find- ing a prompt solution to it." Thant Informed The U.S. ambassador also in-1 formed Thant Sunday night of the U.S. decision to resume bombing of North Viet Nam. In a statement yesterday Thant said the resumption "is apt to hamper current diplomatic efforts toward a peaceful settlement in Viet Nam." The general reaction among U.N. diplomats was critical of the U.S. decision to resume the bomb- ing. Goldberg reviewed in detail the U.S. diplomatic peace offensive in which he played a traveling role and referred to the 37-day pause in the U.S. bombing of North Viet Nam which ended yesterday. He said this had evoked only charges by Hanoi and Peking that the peace offensive was a fraud and a swindle. He referred to a letter from Ho Chi Minh, the North Vietnamese leader, which Goldberg said stipulated precon- ditions to negotiations that would in effect require the United States to accept Hanoi's solution before the beginning of negotiations. (Continued from Page 1) that the United Nations could ac- complish much at this point. It was noted that the Soviet Union holds Security Council veto power and that North Viet Nam has re- fused prior invitations to come to the UN. Harriman Pessimistic Roving Ambassador W. Averell Harriman predicted that the So- viets would not cooperate with the U.S. effort to achieve Security Council action on the war. In a news conference, Secretary of State Dean Rusk revealed that the U.S. offered Hanoi an ex- tension of the bombing lull if North Viet Nam would respond favorably to the U.S. peace pro- posal. The response from Hanoi "di-: rectly and otherwise has been: negative, harsh and unyielding," Rusk said.E Infiltration Continues The secretary of state reported that North Viet Nam had utiliz- ed the bombing lull to continue its infiltration of men and arms into the South. Military officials said that at least 3000 troops per month were now moving from North to South Viet Nam. State Department officials said there had been more than two di- rect U.S. contacts with the Ha- noi government in the course of the peace probe. At least one oc- curred within the past 10 days. Heavy ground operations con- tinued in South Viet Nam with at least four separate Allied offen- sives under way early today. Intensification Seen Reports from Saigon told of expectations that the war will grow more intensive in the days ahead. There is talk of a contin- uing buildup of American troops. U.S. forces in Viet Nain now number about 197,000. These plus another 123,000 aboard ships off- shore and in supporting ppsts in Guam, Okinawa and Thailand bring the U.S. military manpow- er involved in the war close tq U.S. strength at the peak of the Korean War. WILLIAM BISHOP, JR. casts and small pox vaccines." Of special significance, he add- ed ,is the growing importance of nuclear weapons, which have caus- ed legal attitudes toward the use of force to change considerably. In the field of international law Bishop has published the book "International Law Cases and Ma- terials" and several articles. He was a contributing editor to the Annual Digest of Public Interna- tional Law Cases from 1931-41. Since 1947 he has been a mem- ber of the Board of Editors of And Fred, Mary, Steve, Cindy, Ephren, Rick, Dinah, Vicki, Mike, Conrad, Jon, Ron, Barb, and the rest of the cast of thousands. General Staff Meeting is still going to be tomorrow, Feb. 2, at 7:30 in the Stud. Pub. to organize sales and preview the new issue-please be there! S N F -Y fi' s : a s a s. a F i Y-a''-Q a z a a s -: v a s s v a a s v s c a s s s a N Aeross Campus. MI .4 p',, i'.a.. a.:. a -il 8 t 8 a s o a . s TUESDAY, FEB. 1 8 a.m.--The Bureau of Indus- trial Relations Seminar will pre- sent "The Management of Man- agers" in the Union. 1:30 p.m. - The Management Development S e m i n a r presents "Better Letter and Report Writ- ing" in the Union. 4:30 p.m. - Donald C. Earl, of Leeds, England, will discuss "The Roman Aristocratic Ideal" in Aud. A. 7:30 p.m.-Kingsbury Marzolf, of the architecture dept., will speak on "Historical Architecture of Scandinavia" in the Architec- ture Aud. 8 p.m.--The PTP will present the ACT in Moliere's "Tartuffe" at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 8 p.m.-President Hatcher will introduce a symposium on "The Future of American Individual- ism," after which Dr. Kenneth Kenniston of Yale University Medical School will deliver the keynote speech, "Students and 'the System'," in Rackham Aud. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 2 8 a.m.-The Bureau of Indus- trial Relations Workshop will pre- sent "Letter and Report Writing" in the Union. 8:30 a.m.-The Bureau of In- dustrial Relations Workshop will present "Letter and Report Writ- ing" at the Union. 1:30 p.m. -- The Management Development Seminar will present "Problem Solving and Decision Making" in the Union. 8 p.m.-The PTP will present ACT in Moliere's "Tartuffe" at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 8 p.m.-The University Players will present Robert Anderson's "The Days Between" at Trueblood Aud. 8:30 p.m.-The Musical Society Chamber Arts Series will present Hermann Prey, baritone, at Rack- ham Aud. Use Daily Classified Ads 4 I DIAL 662-6264 SHOWS AT 1 :00 3:00-5:00-7:00 & 9:00 '1101) "TlHALR I a U I Ed 1 rd ! trd -.Y. ENDING THURSDAY Matinees: 1 :15 and 3:50 Evenings: 6:30 and 9:00 Prices: Matinees $1.25 Nights and Sunday $1 .50 IMCentury fo prtset. 1 r: sa Metv * I .1 *1 * U *1 :; . : , . _.<.:<. . :; . :.> . Y ; COLOR BY BE LIX CINEMASCOPE THIS FRIDAY NIGHT! First Concert of 1966 The 18-piece U of M JAZZ BAND * CONCERT: 8:30 P.M., HILL LECTURE: 7:00 P.M., HILL Nat Hentoff, noted jazz critic and author DON' TMISS EITHER OF THESE EXCITING EVENTS! FREE-sponsored by UAC and The School of Music * FEB. 16& 17th "OTHELLO" 11 K I I UAC's MUSKET '66 presents WEST STORY Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre February 9-10-1 1-12 Individual Ticket Sales February 1-12 TICKETS AVAILABLE MUSKET offices WArIIfAN I I AtIE III *5.au 114 I I ~,o.e'U U U K ~ff if,. U