AY JULY 8, 1965 THE MiCIR1CAN DAILY PAGE THREE eY J L Y 8-1 6_T EIC IND A L_ ..E T h E i Santo Domingo Rebels) Clergy See New Prospects in Pope's U.S. Trip Seek UN, OAS Patrols' Unexplained _ Skirmishes' AN INTER-AMERICAN military police patrol is inspected by an. American lieutenant. The patrol is made up of Americans, Costa Ricans and Hondurans under the Organization of American States. Blame for a skirmish yesterday between Dominican rebels and an inter-American force was shunted around by both sides. Meanwhile, the rebels called for observers from both the OAS and the United Nations to be posted in the city to stop possible vio- lations of the cease-fire. STOPS UNION SCHEME: DeGaulle Still Stalls on common Market Plan PARIS (P)-President Charles DeGaulle's government yesterday maintained its empty chair tactics in the Common Market as trouble S loomed at home and elsewhere in Europe. DeGaulle called his regular weekly cabinet meeting and govern- ment officials from the five other Common Market nations awaited some indication that might point a way out of the week-old impasse. But after a relatively short cabinet session, the cabinet spokes- man, Information Minister Alain Peyrefitte, fended off a barrage of" questions from newsmen by referring them to a cabinet statement I I WANTED! 40 U. of M. Students Fellas and Girls to wea r 'made last week which had said France would boycott Common Market meetings for the present. France contends that its Comr mon Market partners-West Ger- many, Italy, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg-failed to keep a promise to establish agricultural financing provisions for the Cus- toms Union by June 30. Without such provisions, the agricultura chapters of the Rome treaty set- ting up the Common Market can- not be realized. Great strides have been made on the industrial side of the Common Market, but farm pro- gress has been slow. France-the biggest farming nation among the six, insists that the agricultura provisions of the treaty must be quickly realized. French officials have tried to give the impression that France might go so far as to cancel al of its relationships with the Comi mon Market. Most observers fee that France, with her industry al- ready committed to the Common Market, could not completely abandon the Customs Union. The French National Farmers Syndicate was showing increasing alarm about the freeze on the Brussels talks. Syndicate officials were press- ing for a reopening. French farm- ers have been looking forward t expanded markets when farm pro- ducts can flow freely across bor- ders of the Common Market na- tions. To pacify the farmers, Peyre- fitte said the cabinet had adopted a number of measures to benefi them. He did not spell out the measures. The Union of Industrialists o: the Common Market also express ed concern that the Commor Market would be compromised. I published a resolution saying there would be grave consequences i the Customs Union fell apart. In Brussels, ministerial depui ie from West Germany, Italy, Hol land, Belgium and Luxembouri met to study a new draft proposa for financing the market's farrr program. The proposal is expectec to reach Common Market capital by the end of the week. If a agreement can be reached by th five countries, France might finc itself in an uncomfortable spo if it rejected the proposition. In Vatican City, the weekl: Osservatore Della Domenica sai4 DeGaulle had placed France inr position of intransigeance tha jeopardized the Common Market. Start Again By The Associated Press SANTO DOMINGO-After an outbreak of shooting, with both rebels and inter-American troops charging the other side caused it, the rebel government in this city asked the United Nations and the Organization of American States yesterday to station observers in thencity to prevent further inci- dents. Neither the UN mission nor the OAS committee commented imme- diately on the proposal. But the rebels said the OAS had turned them down. The plan was disclosed at a news conference by Col. Juan Lora Hernandez, the rebel chief of staff. Lora charged that a series of in- cidents in the past two days have endangered the cease-fire and ne- gotiations for a political settle- ment. Request "We have asked for either UN or OAS observers to be stationed on our side," he said. "The answer we received from the OAS was that it is not necessary. But it is difficult to localize the origin of shooting incidents and this would help." The most violent flareup since mid-June broke out along the western edge of the international security zone in a sector guarded by Honduran troops. Lora charged the Honduram opened fire on a home owned by an engineer. He said the Hondur- ans shouted that they saw twc men moving in the house. Start Lt. Eleuterio Cardona, 26, 01 Honduras, said the rebels openec fire first from two homes facing his positions. A spokesman fo the inter-American force sai three rebels walking toward the Honduran positions shot first afte they were ordered to halt. The shooting quickly sprea along a six-block sector of th front line. For 30 minutes, the rebels exchanged fire with Bra zilian, Honduran and Nicaragua soldiers across a pleasant resi dential street marking the western edge of the rebel's downtow stronghold. It is a street of larg homes, shade trees and spaciou lawns. Sandbag emplacement have been set up on the sidewalks The shooting ended only afte the Nicaraguans silenced two rebe 50-caliber machine guns with re coiless rifle fire. A bullet nicked Nicaraguan on the cheek. Ther were no other injuries reported o either side. While the Latin soldiers guar the western front, U.S. paratroop ers man positions along the edg of the rest of the rebel zone. Col. Manuel Augusto Nunez, a: - aide to Lora, said there had bee more than one incident in th last two days involving Lati: troops. Pravda Blasts e U.S. Asia Stand MOSCOW (P)-Pravda calle 0 on the United States again yester - day to accept North Vietnames - terms for ending the war i - Southeast Asia. The newspaper's "Commenta - tor" said this meant "discontinu d ation of the piratic raids o t American air craft on the terri e tory of the Democratic Republi of (North) Viet Nam, discontinu f ation of American aggression i - South Viet Nam and the with n drawal of American troops and ! t those of American allies from th e country." f The newspaper said continue American air raids "reveal one s again the real worth of the state. - ments of the leaders of thi g American government about the: l willingness to negotiate a 'peac n settlement' in Viet Nam. . . . I d the light of continuing American s aggression the declarations 'abou n talks' can be interpreted only a e an effort to camouflage plans fo d the escalation of war in Viet Nam t to decieve peoples who are wratl fully condemning the Americas y policy of imperialist highway rob d bery." a All Soviet newspapers stresses t that Moscow would continue to in crease its aid to North Viet Nar NEW YORK 0P) - American church leaders hailed the prospect of a visit this fall by Pope Paul VI to the United States-and pos- sibly to the United Nations-as an opportunity for strengthening the trend toward closer ties among Christians. It would be the first trip by the head of Roman Catholicism to this continent. The Pope would be "received' very warmly in America by all men of good will," said the Rev. James I. McCord, president of Princeton Seminary and head of a United Presbyterian Church- Unity Commission. Indication Such a visit, he said, would be "a dramatic indication not only of the Vatican's interest in peace, but also of the new ecumenical spirit which prevails throughout all Christendom. today." Likelihood of the trip, rumored for nearly a month, has been in- creasingly indicated by statements both at the Vatican and the Unit- ed Nations. Vatican sources have said the Pope has been invited to address the UN General Assembly and may accept. The Rev. Franklin Clark Fry, president of the Lutheran Church in America and chairman of the Central Committee of the World Council of Churches, said: Mutual Acquaintance "I am confident that Protestant leaders would gladly respond in Christian friendship in all ways open to them during such a visit. "Anything that furthers mutual Christian acquaintance a n d friendship is definitely an asset in the ecumenical movement." The Vatican broke weeks of of- ficial silence recently on published speculation about such an un- precedented papal visit to Amer- ica in a press office communique which said Pope Paul had express- ed his appreciation to UN Secre- tary-General U Thant for the in- vitation. Premature The communique said it is pre- mature to say when, or whether, the Pope might go to New York- but the very fact that the an- nouncement was made by the Vat- ican at all was taken as an indi- cation that the Pope has the trip under serious consideration. Gen- eral belief is that he has not defi- nitely made up his mind, but is inclined to accept Thant's invita- tion. There was no indication wheth- er he would travel in the United States beyond the UN. One report here was that he would strictly limit his invitation to the UN, fly- ing by helicopter between the UN building and New York's Kennedy Airport. The Rev. Edwin Espy, a Baptist, and general secretary of the Na- tional Council of Churches, which includes most of the nation's major Protestant and Orthodox denominations, said: POPE PAUL VI (third from left) poses with prelates and Indian officials in Bombay, India, last December. Present plans call for another trip for the Pope, in which he would visit the United States -and possibly-the United Nations General Assembly. World News Roundup By The Associated Press LONDON-Spokesmen for Britain's Labor government said yes- terday that Prime Minister Harold Wilson would not resign despite three staggering defeats in the House of Commons. The spokesmen said the issue at stake was not considered vital to the government's program. Most observers agreed the government had suffered great em- barrassment and its floor managers in Commons had been outwitted. The Conservatives apparently had , :.:.,. "::.. .:: ........... .. . . . ... . ... ... .. . ... .^ .*.. ..*r. .*... r ... ^.* . .. . -.i*l".t . t*t :.". ^.".t.1.: t:'/t.t: t: ."X f.rV^ * "'t.t." r::. . . . "i:" : tricked a number of Labor mem- bers into going home too early. BALTIMORE - Catholic and Lutheran theologians yesterday affirmed together-for the first times in this country-a commor definition of the Holy, Trinity found in the Nicene Creed. The theologians released this joint statement after an historic two-day formal discussion on the Nicene Creed in a move toward Christian unity. ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. - The home of a civil rights worker for the Rev. Martin Luther King was set afire Tuesday night soon after a white student moved in for the summer. The fire department said it sus- pected arson. Witnesses said three white men drove off in a green pickup truck shortly before the blaze started. WASHINGTON -The Welfare Administration announced yester- day a study of public welfare pro- grams in six big cities to begin July 12. The study, expected to be com- pleted in October, will be on the question of how big city depart- ments of public welfare are deal- ing with the poor and their prob- lems. It will be conducted in Phila- delphia, Atlanta, Cleveland, Min- neapolis, New Orleans and Los Angeles. SELMA, Ala.-Civil rights lead- ers have rallied to the support of one of their number, the Rev. Frederick D. Reese of Selma, who is charged with embezzling $1,850 from the organization which he heads. Selma Mayor Joe Smitherman said that the investigation was begun only after Negro civil rights workers complained. "At this time," Martin Luther King said, "we have no reason to doubt either the interest or the integrity of Mr. Reese." SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Gov. Edmund G. Brown signed a bill yesterday requiring textbooks used in California schools to correctly portray the role of Negroes and other minority groups in the his- tory of the state and nation. Assemblyman Mervyn Dymally (D-Los Angeles) authored the measure, which will become law in 60 days. * * * BERGEN, Norway -The Nor- wegian Ocean Research Director- ate has started redioactivity test- ing of fish from the North Sea. It announced so much nuclear material is being dumped there that the tests are necessary. clothes in a "An appeal before the United Nations General Assembly by Pope Paul VI would be a strong public testimony to the aspirations of all Christian peoples for peace on earth. Negotiation "At a time when Christians are drawing closer to one another, they ought to encourage the people and nations in every way possible to discuss their differences." Reports have indicated that the trip, of five or six days duration, would be made when the UN As- sembly is in progress, and that the Pope would make a major appeal for negotiations and disarmament. "It would certainly represent the growing Christian dialogue with the world, and the concern not merely of Roman Catholics but of all Christians with the great issues lying before mankind of world peace and world hunger," said Peter Day, ecumenical officer of the Episcopal Church. Conversation He added that it also "is to be hoped" that the trip would re- inforce steps by the U.S. Catholic Bishops Ecumenical Affairs Office for direct conversations between Roman Catholicism and other churches. The Rev. John B. Sheerin, edi- tor of the Catholic World, said the visit would be an important manifestation of the Church's new efforts for "dialogue with the modern world." "It means getting to the heart of peace-keeping," he said. He said it also was in line with Schema 13, pending before the Vatican Council, that called for greater "opening to the world" and closer unity with it in service. Dr. Paul Empie, executive sec- retary of the National Lutheran Council, voiced hope that Pope Paul's agenda would allow for meeting a "cross-section of church leaders in America. It would give further impetus to the fresh un- derstandings and developing rela- tionships between Roman Catho- lics and other Christian churches." It would be the Pope's third trip out of Italy. He has visited the Holy Land and India. Sometimes called the "apostle on the move," Pope Paul voiced the breadth of his outlook in an address to the Vatican Council saying: "Let the world know this: the Church looks at the world with profound. understanding, with sin- cere admiration, and with the sincere intention not of conquer- ing it, but of serving it, not of despising it, but of appreciating it, not of condemning it, but of strengthening and savilg it." ..... ................ ..... ". a. ....f .. ... ..................................... . .. .. .... ... ... ... ." fl. It: v v{ EXCITING rs ..rj SUMMER : r} v CLEARANCE k.; .r. Very Important 'avtngs on law& r DRESSE 5 Juniors, Misses, Half Saes; Maternity and Bridal Dresses SKIRTS PANTS -- BERMUDAS SHIRTS SHIFTS - - ENSEMBLES } c SUITS MILLINERY BLOUSES r CO-ORDINATES HANDBAGS GLOVES t JEWELRY NECKWEAR r BELTS SWEATERS SHOES vr. G I RLSWEAR I N FANTS' and I$ :tiff. r TODDLERS' WEAR i f i : : . :: showing of campus duds on August 27th! If you're going to be here then and are interested (and you very well might be because some of the swingingest people will be doing it, and it's a chance to earn a gift certificate.) The guys should see "Frosty" Phelps at Saffell and Bush any dav of the week, and G RAD VFW Hall 314 E. Liberty I F il 11!1 1111111 sE:l.! lIIIiI1!