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June 05, 1965 - Image 3

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1965-06-05

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).

SATURDAY. JUNE 5.1965

TIE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAC

GE THREE

Asks OAS Control of Aid
WASHINGTON (A) - Sen. J; Fulbright, floor manager of the Current United States machinery,'
William Fulbright proposed an bill and Chairman of the Senate Fulbright said, has sent money to
amendment to the $3.3 billion-a- Foreign , Relations Committee, almost every country except Cuba.
' year foreign aid bill yesterday made the proposal as the Senate OAS Approval
that would have the Organization began its foreign aid debate. Fulbright's unheralded proposal,
of American States take over tight The amendment would strip apparently inspired by the Domin-
control of U.S. military aid to President Lyndon B. Johnson of ican Republic crisis, would pro-
Latin American countries to pro- his present role of deciding which vid, that aid for internal security
tect their national security. countries should get such help. protection be given in accord with
OAS-approved plans "to the maxi-
ST mum extent feasible."
VOWS iotT0 LiHk Viet.Nam The proposal was introduced
without comment by Fulbright
gust before the Senate recessed!
10, ambdiuanl C 11erente "ntil Monday. But he issued a
statement saying his amendment
probably would reduce the amount
WASHINGTON (A)-The United States reaffirmed yesterday its of arms and restrain the Latin,
willingness to attend a conference on Cambodia which would American arms race.
guarantee its territorial integrity, without linking this to the Viet He said "the OAS would almost.
Nam problem. certainly provide a tougher screen-1
In reply to charges made by Cambodia's Prince Norodom ing for military assistance" since
Sihanouk which appeared in a letter to the New York Times, State a Latin American nation would be
Department Press Officer Robert McCloskey told newsmen that it reluctant to approve plans calling
________for military aid for a neighbor.
- -~ would not be in the U.S. interest! Johnso eh
to convert such a meeting on . Johnson Speech
Pto almo His amendment, Fulbright said,
o so a s Cambodia into a conference on"dee supports" Johnson's calf
1 Viet Nam. iisBavlorUniversitvsueechhoh fi

Marines To Leave

. .,..

Dominican Republic
SANTO DOMINGO A)-The last of the 6000 United States Ma-
rines who were sent to the Dominican Republic will leave over the
weekend, an American military spokesman said yesterday.
The announcement carme as a new three-man peace team sent
here by the Organization of American States launched efforts for a
political settlement in the civil war.
The military official estimated that the last of the Marines will
have left Santo Domingo by Sunday. All but 2000 Marines already have
departed.
About 12,500 paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division and

-Associated Press

ER1H A RD. JOHNSON HOLD TALKS

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Fa lCOn lave While Sihanouk severely cri- May 29 for "new international
ticized the U.S. for trying to drag machinery geared to meet fast- West German Prime Minister Ludwig
the Viet Nam issue into the con- moving events." to seek new ways to end the division of
WASHINgTON (P) - President ference, officials noted what they Where a country has an internal a day of continuous conferences, Erh
Lyndon B. ohnson said last night, considered a significant change security problem so serious as to Defense Robert McNamara (shown a
that he will call a White House from his earlier position on the require outside assistance "would _
conference this fall "to help the Cambodia meeting. it not be preferable for the inter-
American Negro fulfill the rights In the past Sihanouk has ob- vention to come from the OAS WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP:
h ch--after the long time of in- jected to the inclusion oi South rather than, as is now the case,:
justice--heis finally about :to se- Viet Nam. However, his new let- the U.S.?" Fulbright asked.
cu e President disclosed his in- ter leaves the problem of South Earlier, in a speech to an almost B ogalusa Susp
tendon in a ,commencement the five interested major powers- newed his appeal for "very sub-
speech at Howard University, an that is, Red China, the Soviet stantial changes" in the whole aid By The Associated Press not f
lnstitution with an enollment Union, Britain, France and the program. John
largely of Negroes. U.S. Committe e troop
Johnson. said the conference will US Comme,.Ertee ..M troopaiv
McCloskey recalled that on His committee refused to go move, Ernest R. McElveen waiv- .
bring together scholars ,experts, April 25 Secretary sof State Dean along with major changes Ful- ed extradition from Mississippi
Negro leaders and officials at Rusk expressed U.S. willingness to bright sought, but, since it ac- yesterday and was returned under
every level of government. attend a nine-nation meeting on cepted some, he relented an ear- heavy guard to face murder charg-' L
There will be addition.al objec- Cambodia. The nations would in- er ow not to handle the bill onthe nightrider slaying of a islatu
tive, he said. One will be to move clude Communist China, the So- the floor. He coud find no volun- Negro deputy. temb
from opportunity to achievement. viet Union, Britain, France, the teer to substitute for him. Sources indicated o f f i c e r s givef
Another v1ill be to "shatter for- U.S., North and South Viet Nam, One -of Fulbright's proposals ac- thought at least three persons of ta
ever, not only the barriers of law Laos and Cambodia. cepted by his committee drew the participated in the killing, which and
and public practice, but the laws McCloskey said the U.S. posi- immediate fire of Sen. George Mc- occurred Wednesday. McElveen is anno
which bound the condition of man tion is that the present Saigon Govern (D-SD). the only man arrested to date. Th
by the color of his skin." government is the lineal descen- The sweeping language of the B A - rt came
And a final one will be, the dent of the government that par- bill, McGovern said, might kill or BUEtgOS AIRES-Authoritative 'ced
President said, to dissolve "an- ticipated in the 1954 Geneva Con- cripple the "food-for-peace" pro- sources said yesterday President moti(
tique enmities of the heart which ference which resulted in the gram of which he was once direc- Arturo Illia's government mayhbe allow
diminish -the holder, divide the' agreements ending the. French tor. plunged into crisis because it has, three
g eat democracy, and do wrong to sovereignty innIndochina and dih
heGvidng Viet Nam at the 17thU

Erhard and President Lyndon B. Johnson agreed yesterday
Germany and to resist weakening of the Atlantic Alliance. In
ard also saw Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Secretary of
bove on Erhard's left).
ect Waives Extradition,

7000 Air Force personnel will rer
into the newly created inter- !
American force under formal con-
trol of the OAS.
There was no immediate indica-
tion that the U.S. plans to with-
draw more men immediately.
President Lyndon B. Johnson
announced in a Chicago speech
Thursday night, that all the Ma-
rines would be withdrawn because
"conditions in the Dominican Re-
public now permit further reduc-
tion of our military personnel."
4The negotiators are embarking
on the seventh major effort to
negotiate an agreement in the
conflict, which is six weeks old to-
day. All have failed.
The OAS commission met with
Msgr. Emanuele Clarizio, the pap-
al nuncio, and with United States
Ambassador W. Tapley Bennett.
Msgr. Clarizio made one of the
first efforts to bring together the
civilian-military junta and the
rebel regime.
Members of the commission are
Ellsworth, U.S. ambassador to the
OAS; Ilmar Penna Marinho of
Brazil and Ramon de Clairmont
Duenas of El Salvador.
Their mission was authorized
Wednesday by a special OAS con-
ference on the Dominican crisis
and they left Washington Thurs-
day.
Informed sources in Santiago,
a city about 100 miles north of
Santo Domingo, said an OAS
group probing alleged violations
of human rights in the Dominican
Republic would visit cities in the
northern area this weekend.

9 a.m.-'The "Conference on the
Khrushchev Era and After," spon-
sored by the Center for Russian
Studies in cooperation with the
Extension Service, will feature
lectures by Prof. John Erickson
of the University of Manchester
and Prof. Nicholas DeWitt of In-'
diana University.
Erickson will deliver an address
on "The Rise and Fall of a
Military Myth: N. S. Khrushchev's
Military Image," and DeWitt will
speak on "Recent Shifts in Man-
power Training Policies."
7 and 9 p.m.-The Cinema Guild
will present Harold Lloyd in
"Never Weaken," Laurel and
Hardy in "Battle of the Century"
and Harry Langdon in "Lucky
Star" in the Architecture Aud.
FRIDAY, JUNE 11
7 and 9 p.m.-The Cinema Guild
will present James Cagney in
"Yankee Doodle Dandy" in the
Architecture Aud.
8 p.m.-The University Players
will perform "Triple Threat: A
Bill of Three One Act Plays" in
the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.

~^'n i" -- '--- '----- '-s----K n + er n n "?

ain. Tney nave been

The Week
To Come
SATURDAY, JUNE 5

integi

;i atecl

ollowed President Lyndon B. regular session.
son's strong line and sent The move to discharge the
s to the Dominican Repub-|House Policy Committee of con-
sideration of a Senate approved
resolution which extends dead-
le lines for tax and appropriations
NSING-The Michigan Leg- bills was made by Rep. James
ire will return "in late Sep- Folks (R-Horton) and defeated
er or early October . . . to 51-32 in a near party line vote.
full consideration to matters
xation and revenues," House.
Senate Democratic leaders CAPE TOWN, South Africa -
iunced Thursday. Opposition members of Parliament
e fall "fiscal reform" session accused the government yester-
to light in debate that pre- day, of a "diplomatic blunder of
[the killing of a Republican the worst possible type" in its
on to extend deadlines to handling of the planned visit of
fiscal reform action in the the United States aircraft car-
working weeks left in the rier Independence.
.m i M The U.S. cancelled the May 28-
31 refueling stop at Cape Town
after Prime Minister Hendrik Ver-
Lwoerd's government refused to let
ESLETINNegro air crew members from the
carrier land at any South African
........:: :: :: ........ ......... ... airfields.
.g experienced School Social Work- A broadcast over the national
'Therapeutic Nursery School. radio station accusing the U.S. of
onal Assn. of Housing & Redevel- "engineering the incident" touch-
mt Officials, Wash., D.C. - An- ed off the parliamentary row.
i ngdofrious o enine for coler e

Johnson said there is no single~
easy answer to the problems of
Negroes, and that for many of
that race and for others in groupsj
which also have suffered intoler-
ance, the wounds are. always open.
Perhaps the most important
wound, permeating every part of
life, he said, is the breakdown
of the Negro family structure.

parallel.

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mmm

DIAL 2-6264
THE PLACE: NORMANDY
THE TIME: D-DAY PLUS ONE

As it is understood here, the ULI .e
next step would be for Moscow to~ L ) iL
join with Britain in extending in-
vitations to the Cambodia con-:? :.;::;.,.;r<..
ference. Moscow is officially in The Daily Official Bulletin is an
favor of the conference but has official publication of the Univer-
been reluctant to act since Peking sy of Michigan, for which The
opposd th meeing.Michigan Daili yassumes no editor-
opposed the meeting. ial responsibility. Notices should be
In h's New York Times letter, sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
Sihanouk wrote: Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be-
fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding
'We Cambodians have come to publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday
the conclusion that the neutrality for Saturday and Sunday. General
a Notices may be published a maxi-
of Cambodia and our territorial mum o ftwo times on request; Day
integrity do not concern you at Calendar items appear once only.
all and that this conference is Student organization notices are not
simply, in your dyes, a good way accepted for publication.
to sound out the ultimate inten-
tions of the Vietnamese and the SATURDAY, JUNE 5
' Chinese in regard to South Viet!
Nam,and that you will link our y Calendar
problem to that of Viet Nam by
refusing to give any guarantee Conference on The Khrushchev Era;
whatever to Cambodia if the Com- and After-Rackham Amphitheatre, 9,
munists remain intransigent on a.m.
Viet Nam." Cinema Guild-Harold Lloyd in "Nev-
En- er Weaken," Laurel and Hardy In "Bat-
tie of the Century," Harry Langdon in
L - ORGANIZATION
DIAL 8-6416
jEnding Tonight _ - r CC

t

Eveitis Sunday
No Events Scheduled.
E' ts Monday
Bureau of Industrial Relations Per-
sonnel Techniques Seminar--Clarence
C. Walton, dean, School of General
Studies, Columbia University, "Ethics
in Management" : Michigan Union, 8
a.m.
Center for Programmed Learnin~g for
Business Workshop-Geary A. Rummier,
director, "Use, Evaluation, Selection,
and Writing of Programmed aMterials":
Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m.I
Training and Development, Personnel
Office, University Management seminar
-Clark C. Caskey, Bureau of Indus-
trial Relations; L. Clayton Hill, pro-
fessor emeritus of industrial relations,
"Orientation to Supervisory Practices":
Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m.
Placement
POSITION OPENINGS:
Mills Hospital Supply Co., Chicago -
Sales repr. for Mich., Kentucky & cen-
tral Illinois territory. Man, 25-35, with
exper. in selling.
American Chain & Cable Co., Chain
Div., Pittsburgh-Industrial Salesman
for 18 month training program leading
to Detroit based assignment. Grad,
mktg. background, with military ful-
filled.
Charles Read Zone Center, Chicago -
Social Workers, men & women. MSW
degree, exper, pref., for new mental
health program, State of Illinois. New
non-traditional approach to t eatment.
New buildings will open mid-July. Also

nouncing variu openigsu eig
grads as Urban Renewal Trainees with
Public Agencies in 26 states, Recent
grads with background in gov't., law,
sociol., business or public admin., city
planning or general liberal arts.
Bausch & Lomb, Inc., Rochester, N.Y.
-Patent Attorney; patent prosecution
& searching. BS Engrg. plus LLB and
1-3 yrs. patent law experience.
American Medical Assn., Chicago-Re-
search Technicians for Institute for
Biomedical Research (blochem., virol-
ogy, chem., & immunology);Research
Ass't.s & Associates (Clinical Medi-
cine) for the Archive-Library Dept.,
and Manuscript Editor-Abstractor for
AMA Journal; BA with knowl. of Ger-
man. and one Scandinavian language.
For additional information, please
call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of
Appointments, 3200 SAB.

AMHERST, Va.-A suit by fash-
ionable Sweet Briar College to
amend the will of its founder so as
to permit the enrollment of Negro
students was rejected yesterday
by a circuit court judge.
Amherst County Circuit Judge
D, G. Quesenbery ruled, that the
college must abide by thewill of
Mrs. Indiana Fletcher Williams
and educate only "white girls and
young women."
The will of Mrs. Williams, who
died in 1900, "is not ambiguous
and therefore needs no further
interpretation," the judge said.

)FFICIAL BL
Howard, principal of the Christian
College of Physical -Education: Rack-'
ham Aud., 7:301 p.m.j

JI:
seekin
er or
Nat!
opmeu

I

Q a
~ P IIERC lCED IEARKIN GS
A Gif t that will be
Worn and Remembered for
Years to Cnome.
Many iln Ports from the world
Q ~capitals of fashion:'
FRANCE and ITALY 4
at
I B AY Sarcade jewelry hopd
16 Nickels Arcade-off State St.
85:n .c 'a c .ta c. a .'a

I

Cartoon - News - Novelty

Yc> &wTr NAV6 to
"TECHNICOLOR"
KE MMEIP
(the beautiful baby from "The Prize")
SUNDAY-
"MAJOR BARBARA"

Use -of This Column for Announce-
ments is available to officially recog-
nized and registered student organiza-
tions only. Porms are available in Room
1011 SAB.
* ., *
Graduate Outing Club, Hiking and/or
swimming, June 6, 1:30 p.m., Rackham,
Huron St. entrance.
"Lucky Star": Architecture Aud., 7 and
9 p.m.
Indo-American Seminar - A. W.

IN4 UII M., CO

._ _

rc MICHIGAN

SHOWS AT
1:00-3:35
6:15-8:50

I

. . .. .._ v _ . __. .. _ _
__....._

STARTS
SUNDAY

4~~X1 2i

COMING
SUNDAY

Deliciously satanic!
Brilliant and
stimulating!"
SAID BOSLEY CROWTHER
OF THE NEW YORK TIMES
OF
GEORGE BERNARD SHAW'S

go-IOFAI~'BOL
THE UNiVERSITY ACTIVTIES CENTER
p r e s e nts

Te new BANSK
Five sizes of vases
yt
in blues and greens.
Em Priced from $5.00-
Y0'l lie them!
JOhN B. LEIDY
Phne NO 8-6779 * 601 East Liberty
* U
* I
-
V }
acadegyassdwainnbng tifE u.C B
fiswnd We eedns
:r A
atonCNEMA679 GUILDatibrt
1 ,f
I1
NEVER WEATHER with Harold Lloyd,,
IBATTLE OF THE CENTURY and the
E
:academy award winning THE MUSIC BOXC *
* both with Laurel & Hardy
finally wacky and wild Harry Langdon
z: in LUCKY STARr

/

#4039 Average,
sie 32 to 40 q
White, B/ack.
#4039 Toll,
sizes 34 to 40 of
#4039A X.
sizes 42 to 46 of

4.00
4.00
5.00

#40:
sizes
Whi
An e
s"ipi
shod,
its w
rco
1 Tic
r J40,
u)Wes..

39 Shorf,
32 to 38 of 4,00
te, Block,
!egantly understated
n Rogers stay-/Duey:
tr'cot , .delicate
tow embroidery traces
ay over the bodice of
If sheer over opaque.
of sheer edges cmnd
nserts dd the
rng touch.
le Black,
39, sizes 5 to 3 of4.00

AZZ

SPRING
CENE

I

I11I11

Sunday, June 6, 5-8 P.M.
KDR

III

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