'THURSDAY, MAY 6,11965 SENATE HESITATES: House OK's VIet Nam Funds THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ip~lw.ivt TH MC IG N DAL +a .al! ala s R/ Ask Shift in Teaching Method World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - As fighting continued in South Viet Nam yes- terday, the House of Represen- tatives voted quick approval of President Lyndon B. Johnson's re- quest for $700 million for the Vietnamese conflict and the Sen- ate prepared for controversy over the measure today. Many senators announced that they will approve of the measure, but several expressed misgivings about having their votes inter- preted as "blanket approval for waging . undeclared war any- where." That was the way Sen. George D. Aiken (R-Vt) put it. Leading the opposition, Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore) said John- son "from his own lips" had told Congress the extra $700 million is not needed. "He is using you," Morse shout- ed to his colleagues. Morse de- nounced what he called "this un- declared war in Asia" and said "we are following a policy of in- ternational outlawry." Roll Call House Republicans and Den- crats ran up a 408 to 7 roll call vote in support of Johnson's ap- peal Tuesday for a demonstra- tion that "we will do whatever must be done to ensure the safe- ty of South Viet Nam from ag- gression." All seven of the opposing House votes were cast by Democrats: Reps. George E. Brown, Jr. of Cal- ifornia, Philip Burton of Califor- nia, John Conyers, Jr. of Michi- -Associated Press A COMMUNIST P-T BOAT smolders in waters off Quang Khe naval base in North Viet Nam after being hit in a day-long attack by U.S. Navy planes. One of the plane's shadows glides over the wreck in the center. Navy officials reported four other boats de- stroyed in action some 50 miles north of the 17th parallel. By BRUCE WASSERSTEIN The curricular reform move- ment of the 1950's brought about innovations in the teaching of both science and foreign lan- guages. Following in the spirit of this movement the report of the College E n t r a n c e Examination Board's Commission on English, issued this week, advocates an overhauling of the English teach- ing conditions and qualifications of secondary schools. The commission said that fewer than half of the English teachers in the school system majored in English in college. To assure more qualified teachers, the report urged that certification to teach high school English be based at a minimum of work in the following areas: Courses -Formal study of the history and structure of the English lan- guage; -Study in rhetoric and compo- sition above the level of the fresh- man course; -Work in critical theory and practice with attention to biblio- graphy and library resources; -Two semester c o u r s e s in American literature; -Four semester courses in Eng- lish literature, of which one should be the study of a single writer (preferably Shakespeare) in depth, and of which others should represent approaches not exclu- sively historical; -At least one course in English social and cultural history; -Enough study of one foreign language to guarantee reading facility. In addition to these minimal re- quirements in subject matter, the commission said that English teachers should include the fol- lowing in preparations for their profession: Cognates -One course in the psychology of learning; --One course in the methodo- logy of the subject (selection of materials, lesson planning, cur- riculum development, review of1 relevant research) ; -One course in the history of American educational theory and institutions; -One semester of full-time practice teaching under close and; competent supervision. Noting that English teachers have an average of five classes a day with an average of 28 stu- dents in a class, the commission3 said that many teachers are over-{ loaded with work and cannot ade- quately deal with their pupils. Machines Furthermore, English teachers, according to the report, often find1 themselves overworked because of their sponsorship of too" manyR extracurricular activities, and thef lack of adequate help in perform-< ing secretarial functions such asj mimeographing exams. As a solution to these problems, the commission made the follow-f ing recommendations: -Space should be provided for an English office equipped with ax Across Ca-mpus THURSDAY, MAY 6 8 p.m.--Crest will sponsor a travel lecture in Aud. A. 8:30 p.m. - The Philadelphia Orchestra under the direction of Eugene Ormandy and featuring soprano Leontyne Price will per- form in Hill Aud. This is one of the May Festival Concerts. FRIDAY, MAY 7 8:30 p.m. - The Philadelphia Orchestra, under the direction of Thor Johnson, and the University Choral Union Youth Chorus will perform in Hill Aud. Featured will be Janice Harsanyi, soprano, Maureen Forrester, contralto, Murray Dickie, tenor, Anshel Brusilow, violin, Joseph De Pas- quale, viola. typewriter and a duplicating ma- chine and clerical assistance should be available for manual duties; -English teachers should be assigned no more than four classes a day; -Average class size should be no more than 25 pupils; -The English teacher should be responsible for supervision of no more than one continuing extra- curricular activity during a school year. The report also emphasized the importance of mechanical equip- me-it to aid the teaching of Eng lish. The report emphasized that in addition to an annual budget for a school library, at least $1 per student per year should be allotted for purchase and rental of special equipment (slides, photographs, films). The commission said it hoped that its recommendations would be as effective in bringing about reform as similar study groups had been in other fields such as math and science. By The Associated Press HAYNEVILLE, Ala.-Collie Le- roy Wilkins Jr., who is be.ing tried for the night-rider slaying of Mrs. Viola Liuzzo was linked to the murder weapon yesterday in Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation tes- timony. An FBI plant in the Ku Klux Klan who was driving with Wil- kins said he thought bullets from Wilkins' revolver killed the civil rights worker. Cross examining re- vealed the FBI-informant did nothing to stop the shooting. BERKELEY, Calif.-Hundreds' of University of California stu- dents marched on the Berkeley Draft Board headquarters yester- day and presented the board co- ordinator with a black coffin. Forty students burned their draft cards. The march was a "symbolic pro- test" against "the invasion of the Dominican Republic," a spokes- man said. * * NEW ORLEANS, La.-Missis- sippi Gov. Paul Johnson and his predecessor Ross Barnett were freed yesterday of criminal con- tempt charges connected with their 1962 attempts to bar Negro James Meredith from entering the University of Mississippi. A Federal Appeals Court voted 4-3 yesterday to drop the charges, although two judges voiced vig- orous opposition to the decision. RAWALOPINDI, Pakistan-The Pakistan government claimed to- day that 20 more Indian troops have been killed in three encoun- ters near the Kashmir cease-fire line. A statement alleged that In- dians violated the line Sunday by shooting at civilians. * * * LONDON-Prime Minister Har- old Wilson expressed hope today that the lull in fighting in the Rann of Kutch may prove "pre- liminary to a cease-fire and the settlement of this whole question." gan, John G. Dow of New York, Don Edwards of California, Edith Green of Oregon, and William Fitts Ryan of New York. Meanwhile, U.S. Army para- troopers, fresh from Okinawa, dug in at two South Viet Nam air bases while U.S. Marines, who ar- rived in March, killed eight Viet Cong in their most successful combat patrol of the year. Transports Arrive C-130 transport planes also fer- DAILY OFFICAL BULLETIN ried in 1200 men of the 173rd Airborne Brigade for duty expect- ed to be similar to that of the Marines-defense in depth of key installations, plus a sprinkling of offensive operations. The rest of the 3500-man bri- gade, the first American army ground combat force committed to South Viet Nam, is expected short- ly. The buildup, officially explain- ed as intended to free Vietnamese garrison troops for combat, is in- creasing the U.S. military rolls to 36,000. In London, ministers of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organiza- tion failed to agree on how to de- feat the rebels' efforts to take over South Viet Nam. A majority of the eight-nation alliance-led by the United States and Britain-backed Johnson's call for sterner military action "until the Communist aggression is brought to an end." But Pakistan rejected that ma- jority position. Pakistan was con- cerned over consequences of con- tinuance of the conflict and voic- ing the hope determined efforts will also be made "to restore peace in that area through negotiations on the basis of the existing Gene- va agreements," The Daily Official Bulletin as an official publication of The Univer- sitt 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. THURSDAY, MAY 6 Day Calendar Institute for Continuing Legal Edu- cation Conference-Carl Hawkins, asso- ciate professor of law; Jerold Israel, associate professor of law, "Michigan Civil Procedure Before Trial": Rack- ham Bldg., 9 a.m. CREST Travel Lecture-Aud. A, An- gell Hall, 8 p.m. Mar Festival Concert-The Philadel- phia, Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy, con- ductor; Leontyne Price, soprano; Hill Aud., 8:30 p.rr. General Notices Student Organizations: Registration of recognized student organizations planning to be active during the Spring/Summer Term must be com- pleted by May 26, 1965. Forms are available in. the Office of Student Af- fairs, 1011 Student Activities Bldg. Priv- ileges such as the use of the Organi- zation Announcement column in The Michigan Daily, use of meeting rooms in University buildings, assignment of L\ Student Activities Bldg. facilities, etc. are available to registered organizations only. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Social Security Admin., Baltimore, Md.-Service Repres. Handle inquiries In regard to benefits. 2 yrs. college, 2 yrs. related exper. or comb. of educ. & exper. Opportunity for advancement. Schumacher & Forelle, Inc.,Great Neck, N.Y.-Attn.: 'Recent grads - Construction Exec. Trainees, BS Engrg. or Arch., MBA or MS in Engrg. Trng. includes estimates, plans, scheduling jobs, etc. and leads to mgmt. of proj- ects. Local Community Organization _ 'Nursery School Director, teaching cer- tificate, plus 15 hours study in child dev. & admin. ability. Also bookkeeper- secretary, good typing skill. Immed. openings. Man or woman. Crucible Steel Co., Detroit - Sales ORGANIZATION NOTICES Use of This Column for Announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered student organiza- tions only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. Organizations who are planning to be active for the Spring/Summer Term must be registered in the Office o Student Affairs by May 26, 1965. Forms are available in Room 1011 Student Activities Bldg. 14 IINSTANT SILENCE I Repres. Immed., opening for grad in any field for inside sales; Exper. not req. Military obligation fulfilled. Ford Motor Co., Transmission & Chassis Div., Livonia, Mich.-Produc- tion Foreman. BA any field, some gen- eral work exper. At least 21. 6-8 mos. trng. Inland Steel Co., Chicago - Art & Prod. Ass't. Degree in graphic des. or commercial art, 1 yr. exper. pref. Design & prod. graphic projects for indus. advtg. Mich. Chemical Mfr.-Lab Analyst. 1- 2yrs.= Chem., Ch. or Mech. Engrg. for control and product analyses. Lab. ex- per, helpful. Age 20's. Immed. opening. * * s For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB. BRING THE LITTLE WOMAN... MAYBE SHE'LL DIE LAUGHING! JACK LEMMON ERNA LI URDERn YOUR WIFE" TECHNICOLOR'eissed thIv UNITED ARTISTS ENDS DIAL TONIGHT CHIGAN 5-629 Winner of 3 ACADEMY AWARDS S MAD!MAD!I MADRAS! fA *. r ytiEv I DIAL Shows Start at 662-6264 P~ 1:00-3:00-5:00 7:00 and 9:05 ~JQON STURGES WHO GAVE YOU'THE GREAT ESCAPE" NOW B lrNGS YOU THE ULTIMATE IN SUSPENSE! GEORGE MAHARIS RICHARD BASEHARI ANNE FRANCIS DANA ANDREWS W W W' m0 N U "A HUGE AND BOLD PORTRAYAL!" -Bosley Crowther, N. Y. Times 4TH WEEK ! I "o 0 m mn Mo FRIDAY, MAY 7 DINNER-FILM-THEATRE SERIES "A RAISIN IN THE SUN" ANTHONY QUINN ALAN BATES-IRENE PAPAS iC-AELCACOYANNIS PRODUCTION "ZORBATHEGREEK" - Shows at 6:40 and 9:08 Dial 8-6416 sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Staff at the U of M Place: Presbyterian Campus Center 1432 Washtenaw-French Room 'ZORBA THE GREEK' i 6:30-Dinner 7:15-Film both for $1.00 Reservations: 662-3580 Discussion following film I out of the bag! -ALL STUDENTS WELCOME ............. lrt 1 i j .' .. . = Yp. "Why Grandmother, what big interest you get on savings at ' .:. :;;, '.* . : :z I Detroit Free Press May 5th "Cat Ballou" is the kook- iest Western I ever saw, a comedy with Jane Fonda and Lee Marvin (he plays two parts) which Harold Hecht produced. You'll love Nat King Cole, a troubadour with Stubby Kaye - They sing the narration. Everyone will want to see him. His one ambition was to star in a picture, but he never lived to see himself. The picture (which has its Midwest pre- miere this Friday at Ann Arbor's Michigan Theatre and East Lansing's Campus Theatre) has many quaint touches by Elliot Silverstein. It was his first Hollywood film. He'll be with us a long time. Y For information write: Academic Aids, Box 969 Berkeley, California 94701 DEPEN DABLE IMPORT SERVICE We have the MECHANICS and the PARTS. L IM~AI A r , A IEn No problems, no messages, no philosophies, no way-out art, no way-in techniques . .