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July 13, 1965 - Image 3

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Michigan Daily, 1965-07-13

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PAGE THREE

TUESDAY,. JULY 13, 1965

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUESDAY, JULY 13, 1 9 6 5 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE

I

Iraqi Shakes Up Cabinet,
Replaces Nasser Backers,

ESPIONAGE OR TRADE?

Argue U.S.-Soviet
Consulate Treaty

I

DAMASCUS, Syria (P)-Presi-
dent Abdel Salam * Aref of Iraq
shook up his cabinet yesterday, re-
placing six supporters of United
Arab Republic President Gamal
Abdel Nasser. The move fogged'
plans for a merger of Iraq and
the United Arab Republic next
May.
Radio Baghdad broadcast two
decrees on the cabinet replace-
ment and said they were signed
by both Aref and Premier Tahir
Yahya, who is believed to side with
Iraqi nationalists opposed to unit-
ing their relatively prosperous oil
country.
Reports from Baghdad 10 days
ago said that all six Nasser sup-

porters quit their posts because
Aref had rejected their demand
for a speedup of the Iraqi-U.A.R.
union.
Moves Toward Union
Iraq adopted the U.A.R. flag and
national anthem last May in an-
ticipation of the merger but even
in Cairo this was regarded merely
as a gesture of friendship and a
sort of down payment on the unity
to which both nations aspired in
principle.
Up to now Aref has been a
close ally of Nasser. The impact
of his cabinet shakeup, however,
could not be immediately assessed.
But there is speculation in
Damascus that Nasser followers

RIGHTS GROUPS PROTEST:

Katzenbach Testifies on
Judgeship for Southerner
WASHINGTON (I)-Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach said yes-
terday he is completely satisfied that James P. Coleman is moderate
enough on segregation to be confirmed as a judge on the Federal
Appeals Court that serves the Deep South.
But witnesses opposing the former Mississippi Governor's nom-
ination to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court described the nomination as a
political payoff, called Coleman a clever segregationist and urged
that Negroes be named to such judgeships.
Katzenbach, with Coleman seated beside him, was an unusual
leadoff witness before a crowded

would be ousted from key military
posts and the Arab Socialist Un-
ion, the Iraqi government's politi-
cal organization.
Other Disputes
In addition to their dispute with
Aref on a merger, the Nasserites
were reported to have opposed
Aref's handling of the rebellious
Kurds in the northern mountains
and an oil agreement the govern-
ment signed recently with the
Writish-owned Iraq Petroleum Co.
Nasser has resented the agree-
ment with the British company
partly because he is battling Brit-
ish Near East interests in a small
war in Yemen. Egypt is support-
ing rebels in that country while
the British are giving aid to a
royalist government. The war is
draining off many of the resourc-
es and capital needed for Egyp-
tian internal needs.
The war against the Kurds, who
seek autonomy, has recently been
resumed. Nasser is said to have
opposed any further use of force
against the mountain tribesmen.
The Nasserites have been in a
coalition with Aref since he oust-
ed the Baath socialists from power
in November 1963. Aref had allied
himself with the Baath in Febru-
ary, 1963, in a revolt that ousted
and killed dictator Abdel Karim
Kassem.
Ousted Ministers
The ministers replaced by Aref
were identified as Brig. Abdel Ker-
in Farah, minister of guidance;
Col. Sobhi Abdel Hamid, interior;
Abid Jader, industry; Abdel Sat-
tar Ali Hussein, justice; Aziz El
Hafez, national economy, and
Foud Ribaki, municipal and rural
affairs.
Farah flew to Cairo after he
resigned; the others are believed
still in Baghdad.
The new ministers are former
Ambassador Abdullatif Darrajy,
interior; Abdel Rahman Moham-
med Kiassy, culture and guidance;
Jamil Malaica, industry; Kazem
Abdel Hamil, economy, and Ab-
del Hadi El Habbouby, municipal
and rural affairs.
The announcement also said
Khadr Abdel Ghaffour was named
education minister, replacing a
minister who resigned some time
ago for reasons of health.

0
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By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON-The Senate Foreign Relations Committee with-
held a decision yesterday on whether to hold public hearings this
legislative session on the controversial Consular Treaty with Moscow.
The treaty, submitted by President Lyndon B. Johnson in June
of last year, had drawn an immediate blast from the Senate-House
Republican leadership.
The treaty would authorize negotiations for the Soviet Union
to open consular offices in major U.S. cities in exchange for similar

-Associated Press

THE MARINER 4 spacecraft is set to cruise in as close as 6,000 miles from Mars to take pictures of
that planet's mysterious surface. The pictures will be recorded on tape aboard the spacecraft as a
stream of numbers, each number being called a "bit" of information. The final result should be a
square picture of 40,000 dots, 200 dots on a side.
[orld NewsRounduAp

offices in the Soviet Union.
Reaction
Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper
(R-Iowa) said after a two-hour
State Department briefing that
he wouldn't oppose hearings, "but
I'd just as soon put the treaty
aside for this year."
Hickenlooper, senior Republican
on the committee, added that
some features of the treaty "are
not standard."
"There was a feeling among a
number of senators last year that
it might create additional centers
of uncontrolled Russian action, if
not espionage," Hickenlooper add-
ed.
Sen. George D. Aiken (R-Vt),
said he questioned, in view of
Soviet-U.S. differences over Viet
Nam, whether this is the right
time to ask the Senate -to ratify
the agreement. Aiken said he felt
he could support it "under favor-
able circumstances."
State Department Legal Advisoi
Leonard C. Meeker testified in
support of the agreement at a
closed session with only a hand-
ful of senators present most of
the tine.
Sen. Frank J. Lausche (D-
Ohio), another member of the
committee, said he is flatly op-
posed to the treaty.
Subversion
"I'm against Russian consulates
which would be used as, centers
for Communist actions, subversive
and otherwise," he said.
Consular offices are concerned
primarily with trade, and the
agreement was originally designed
to promote better trade relation
between Russia and the Unitec
States.

KING CONSTANTINE

Reveals Birth
Control Costs
WASHINGTON (P)-The chief
of the Federal Children's Bureau
estimated last night that 24 states
and territories are spending some
$1.75 million this year for family-
planning services, including birth
control.
Mrs. Katherine B. Oettinger dis-
closed the figures in a speech pre-
pared for the Institute on Health
Education at Peabody College,
Nashville, Tenn.
The Children's Bureau said this
is the first official federal esti-
mate of the scope and cost in
federal and state matching funds
of family-planning services now
being provided under such spon-
sorship.
The bureau said the 24 state
and territories offering such serv-
ices are: Alabama, Arizona, Ar-
kansas, California, Fl o r i d a,
Georgia, Hawaii, Kentucky, Louis-
iana,' Maryland, Michigan, Mis-
sissippi, Nevada, New Mexico, New
York, North Carolina, Oklahoma,
Oregon, Puerto Rico, South Caro-
lina, Tennessee, Virginia, the Vir-
gin Islands, and Washington.
A spokesman said the amounts
being spent in each state are not
readily available.
However, she noted that in Ten-
nessee some $75,000 is being spent
for family planning under the state
health department's program.

chamber of a Senate Judiciary
subcommittee.
Unique
The Attorney General told news-
men later he could recall only
two or three instances where an
Attorney General had testified on
behalf of a judicial nomination.
The last previous instance he cited
was over 40 years ago.
The Attorney General's appear-
ance caused some confusion over
the order of witnesses. After him,
the senators called opponents to
the nomination. John L. Lewis,
chairman of the Student Non-
violent Coordinating Committee,
protested this, saying Coleman
should testify first,
Lewis, testifying later, told the
committee that if "this outspoken
segregationist" is confirmed it may
cause Negroes of the Deep South
"to lose faith in the judicial
process."
Cause Civil Disobedience
"They may be forced, in the
name of freedom, to carry on mass
social dislocation and civil dis-
obedience throughout the South,"
he said.
Sen. Samual J. Ervin Jr. (D-
NC), presiding, asked if this was
a threat of a civil disobedience
campaign if the Senate confirms
Coleman.
"I'm not here to make threats,'
Lewis replied. He said it is not the
people of the South who determine
if there will be civil disobedience
but people like Coleman and Gov.
George Wallace of Alabama.

By The Associated Press
PASADENA-Space officials are
awaiting a planned picture-posing
session tomorrow 134-million miles
away-on Mars.
The Mariner 4 spacecraft will
take 21 pictures Wednesday in 24
minutes when it nears the red
planet, each hopefully 100 times
better than pictures available with
earth-telescopes.
At noon yesterday, the space-
craft was 536,000 miles from Mars,
approaching at 9,876 miles per
hour. It will come within 6,000
miles of the planet.
* * *
LOS ANGELES-United Nations
Undersecretary Ralph Bunche
said yesterday the UN is working
toward a solution in the seating of
Communist China and admission
cannot be more than two years
off.
Only statements of a warlike or

threatening nature could stop the
general trend toward Communist
China's admission, Bunche told a
news conference.
* ' *
BOGALUSA-Switching tactics,
most daily Negro demonstrations
in recent weeks.
Asst. Police Chief L, C. Terrell
said officers acted to prevent a
threatened racial clash in this

r
t
5
3

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

fl~;

Ti1

Summer Session MIXER
at HILLEL
Thursday, July 15, 7:30 P.M.
A pleasant evening of relaxation is
planned with
MUSIC-DANCING-REFRESHMENTS
ADMISSION IS FREE
B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity 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 eay 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 organivation notices are not
accepted for publication.
TUESDAY, JULY 13
Day Calendar
Community College Leadership Pro-
gramJunior College President's Insti-
tute - Vandenberg Room, Michigan
League, 8:30 a.m.
Engineering Summer Conference-H.
Buning, D. T. Greenwood, co-chairmen,
"Flight Mechanics of Spacecraft": 1042
East Engineering, 8:30 a.m.
Leadership Training Workshop-Union
Ballroom, 8:30 a.m.
Conference on Nuclear and Space Ra-
diation Effects - Physics-Astronomy
Bldg., 9 a.m.
School of Music Conference on Piano
Teachers-Arthur Loesser, Cleveland In-
stitute of Music: School of Music, 9 a.m.
Summer Biological Symposium-"Bio-
logical Excitability and Membrane
Phenomena": Rackham Amphitheatre,
9 a.m.
Office of Religious Affairs BookBDis
cussion-The Rev. Daniel Burke, B.D.,
Episcopal chaplain, "Kenneth Bould-
ing's The Meaning of the 20th Cen-
tury: The Great Transition": Michigan
Union, 12 m.
Audio-Visual Education Center Film
Preview -- "Britain: Searching for a
New Role" and "why Explore Space":
Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate Li-
brary, 1:30 p.m.
ENDS TONIGHT
"THE 7TH JUROR"

Linguistic Institute Forum Lecture -
Floyd G. Lounsbury, Yale University,
"Voiceless Vowels, Their Conditioning
Factors,and Phonological Status in
Cayuga, Comanche, and Southern Pai-
ute": Natural Science Aud., 7:30 p.m.
University Musical Society Summer
Concert Series Recital-Sidney Harth,
violinist: Rackham Aud., 8:30 p.m.
Summer Education Conference-Tues.,
July 13, 11 a.m., Dr. Nila B. Smith, pro-
fessor of education, Glassboro State
College, New Jersey, "Pressures for
Early Reading." Chairman, Dr. Findlay
C. Penix,associate professor of educa-
tion, University of Michigan. 11:30-1
p.m., annual picnic. 2 p.m., Dr. Donald
E. P. Smith, associate professor of edu-
cation, chief of reading improvement
service, University of Michigan, "Pro-
grammed Instruction in Literacy."
Chairman, Dr. Stanley E. Dimond, pro-
fessor of education, University of Mich-
igan.
General notices
Law School Admission Test: Candi-
dates taking the Law School Admission
Test Sat., July 17.are requested to re-
port to Room 130 Business Admin. Bldg.
(Continued on Page 4)
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.
w *
B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Mixer,
Thurs., July 15, 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill St.,
no charge.
Michigan Christian Fellowship, Meet-
ing, Tues., July 13, with Bob DeVorez
speaking on "Faith and Scientific In-
vesitgation," Room 3B, Michigan Union.

Move To Cut
Space Funds
Stopped, 61-16
WASHINGTON (/P)-The Senate1
rejected 61 to 16 yesterday an at-
tempt by Sen. William Proxmire
(D-Wis) to cut $260 million from
the $5.2 billion budget for the
space agency in the current fi-
nancial year.
The agency's funds are in-
cluded in a $14.3 billion appropria-
tions bill covering 27 independent'
government bureaus and commis-
sions for the 12 months that began
July 1.
Majority Leader Mike Mansfield
(D-Mont) had planned to com-
plete work on the bill last night
but, with more amendments pend-
ing, finally decided to put it over
until today.
Timing
Proxmire sought to reduce the
budget for the National Aero-
nautics and Space Administration
by 5 per cent. He acknowledged
"this is certainly not a propitious
time to offer this amendment"
with recent space spectaculars
fresh in memory. But Proxmire
said he is convinced "there is ex-
cessive waste in the space pro-
gram."
A 5 per cent reduction, he said,
should not cripple the agency's
activities in any way.
Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore) sup-
ported the amendment, announc-
ing he would prefer a deeper cut.
"There is nothing sacrosanct
about this budget," Morse assert-
ed. "The American people are be-
ing taken in by real-life television
spectaculars.
National Ego
"It's all for the purpose of gra-
tifying our national ego."
Morse said he would much pre-
fer to see a part of the $5.2 bil-
lion spent on serious national
problems such as ending water
pollution and conservation of the
water supply.
However, Sen. Warren G. Mag-
nuson (D-Wash), floor manager
for the bill, argued that the space
research has many implications
for defense, weather, health and
education.
DIAL 662-6264
"DR. NO" at 1:30-5:20 & 9:20
"FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE"
at 3:25 and 7:25
JMES BON IS
BACKIJO BACK!
-D n'6E
Aft U^_I

Bogalusa police turned back yes-
terday an attempted civil rights
march on City Hall-site of al-
troubled Southeast Louisiana{
papermill town. He said large
numbers of whites had gathered
along the line of march.
Police action in halting the
march followed a closed-door con-
ference in New Orleans between
Federal District Judge Herbert
Christenberry, Bogalusa officials
and representatives of the Con-
gress of Racial Equality.
* *i *
NEW DELHI-The Indian gov-
ernment disclosed yesterday it is
planning a massive attack against.
the nation's population explosion
with the help from cheap plastic
birth control devices and educa-
tion.
A widespread information pro-
gram will begin Thursday to popu-
larize a family planning effort
which has been striving against
great odds to reduce the popula-
tion increase, now estimated at
12 million annually.
The main aim is to convince
women of childbearing age among
the nation's 480 million people
that use of the "intra-uterine
loop," costing about 1%/ cents, is
a safe and easy to stop having
children.
SANTO DOMINGO-Support is
building up for Hector Garcia
Godoy to become Provisional
President of the Dominican Re-
public. But informed sources say
an interim government probably
will not be installed before the
foreign ministers of the Organ-
ization of American States meet
in Rio de Janeiro Aug. 4.
Garcia -Godoy, a 44-year-old
businessman and foreign minister,
has conditional approval of the
civilian-military junta and full
support of the rebels. He is meet-
ing with political figures in an
effort to form an acceptable cab-
inet.

Across
Campus
TUESDAY, JULY 13
12:00-Rev. Daniel Burke, Epis-
copal chaplain, will speak on
"Kenneth Boulding's The Mean-
ing of the 20th Century: the
Great Transition" in an Office
of Religious Affairs Book Discus-
sion at the Michigan Union.
1:30 p.m. - The Audio-Visual
Education Center will present
two f i 1 m previews, "Britain:
Searching for a New Role" and
"Why Explore Space" in the Mul-
tipurpose Rm. of the UGLI.
7:30 p.m. - Prof. Floyd G.
Lounsbury of Yale University will
speak on "Voiceless Vowels, Their
Conditioning Factors, and Phono-
logical Status in Cayuga, Coman-
che, and Southern Paiute" in a
Linguistic Institute Forum Lecture
at the Natural Science Aud.
8:30 p.m.--Sidney Harth, vio-
linist, will perform in a University
Musical Society Summer Concert
Recital at Rackham Aud.

Greek Royalty
Challenged i
Political Feud
ATHENS (P) -- Premier George
Papandreou formally demanded
the resignation of his defense min-
ister yesterday, a move that con-
fronted young King Constantine
with his gravest political challenge
since he became monarch.
At a 45-minute cabinet meeting,
Papandreou obtained approval for
the ouster of Defense Minister Pe-
ter Garoufalias, called by some
pro - government newspapers a
"palace stooge."
Hours after the cabinet meet-
ing, Garoufalias gave no Indica-
tion that he was ready to step
down and informants said he ap-
parently has no intention of re-
signing.
The struggle hinges on Papan-
dreou's announced plans for
"weeding out" army officers dab-
bling in politics. Garoufalias and
the King, who is commander-in-
chief of the army, are reported
opposed to such a purge on the
ground it would hurt morale.
Papandreou, a 77-year-old vet-
eran of the turbulent world of
Greek politics, and 25-year-old
Constantine, the world's young-
est monarch, conferred Sunday.
Apparently the politician Pap-
andreou has outmaneuvered the
King, who mounted the throne
just over a year ago.
Should Garoufalias refuse to re-
sign, Papandreou's next move pre-
sumably would be the drafting of
a decree dismissing him.
The King would either have to
sign the decree or ask for Papan-
dreou's resignation, and his resig-
nation probably would lead to elec-
tions, which he is confident of
winning.

pg

TODAY,
NOON BOOK DISCUSSION
by
THE REV. DANIEL BURKE, Episcopal Chaplain
THE MEANING OF THE 20th CENTURY:
THE GREAT TRANSITION (Kenneth Boulding)
Michigan Union-Anderson Room D
Discussion Free of Charge--Luncheon avcailable (50c)
Sponsored by The University of Michigan,
Office of Religious Affairs
Next Tuesday: THE PHENOMENON OF MAN
by Teilhard de Chardin

1429 Hill Street

663-4129

RENT YOUR TV
From
NEJAC TV RENTALS
Rent this 19"
GE or Zenith Portable
For only 10 per month
FREE SERVICE & DELIVERY
NEJAC TV RENTALS
Call 662-5671
TV Set on Display at Follett's Bookstore

WEDNESDAY *
"YESTERDAY, TODAY
TOMOR ROW"
PLUS
"DIVORCE
ITALIAN STYLE"

I

andfind the answer
comedy quefsffor
offheyear! 4
ChaesK efma e
presents
Peter Peter I
Sellers OToole
Rom Schneider
eauoine
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University Players

Department of Speech

present

and least but not last
Woodg Allen
and guest star
Ursula Andress;
Thpfte all together again!I

/v

sean Conery
as JAMES BOND in

T S_ ELIOTT'SI

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