FRIDAY, AUGUST 13,.1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T] a FRIDAY,~~~~~~_ AUUS 13_95_EMCIG NDIYP(E' #AJ a-" iiJJ SYRIA, ISRAEL FIGHT: k UN Agents Halt Border Clash ' DAMASCUS, Syria (JP)-On their third attempt, United Nations truce supervisors yesterday halted ,a three hour tank and artillery duel across the border between Syria and Israel. A Syrian spokesman, claiming "heavy losses" on enemy gun posi- tions and tanks, reported Syrian losses as four soldiers and two civilians wounded. Syria claimed an Israeli tank was set aflame. (In Tel Aviv, an Israeli army spokesman said four persons- three Arab girls and an Arab woman-were killed when shells landed in a Bedouin camp. An- other Arab girl, a baby and two F, Committee.Votes Broader Minimum Wage Coverage WASHINGTON (P-Pushing far beyond administration requests, the House Education and Labor Committee voted'yesterday to apply a $1.15-an-hour federal minimum wage to 1.3 million agricultural workers. This raised to more than 6 million the number of workers which the committee would bring under the minimum-wage law now applying to 29.6 million. President Lyndon B. Johnson asked that its application be extended to 4.6 million, not including farm hired hands, migratory workers and sharecroppers whom ' } ~the committee voted on yesterday. Israeli soldiers were reported wounded. He said three SyrianJ tanks were hit by Israeli fire and? went up in flames. A Syrian re-i coilless gun position was destroy-s ed, he added, and he called Syrian losses "severe," but gave no de- tails. (A UN spokesman at Tel Aviv said supervisors issued three cease-fire orders before the shoot- ing stopped.) No Air Conflict; A Syrian spokesman here said Syrian and Israeli planes flew over the battle area but did not make contact. (The Tel Aviv spokesman said Syrian positions opened machine gun and tank fire and "our forces' returned fire.") The clash occurred at the site of Syrian operations to divert the headwaters of the Jordan River. Syrian forces held their fire when UN truce supervisors in-l tervened, but the Israeli positions continued firing, the Syrian; spokesman said., "Our field artillery and tanks answered by intensive bombard- ment of enemy artillery and tank' positions. Fire was seen erupting from one enemy tank," the spokesman said. He said the shelling continued until the truce supervisors nego- tiated the cease-fire. An Israeli communique said the" incident started when a Syrian position opened machine gun and. tank fire toward a tractor operat- ing in the demilitarized zone in the Jordan River area. The fire was returned by an Israeli covering unit, so that a full-fledged tank and artillery duel developed between the hill positions on both sides until truce supervisors intervened and ended the shooting. The area is reported quiet. It was the scene of repeated border clashes during the last few years. Goldberg Confers with Thant on Assessments UNITED NATIONS (.'P)-Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg con- ferred yesterday with Secretary-General U Thant, the Soviet repre- sentative and other UN diplomats before flying to Washington to make final a new United States policy on past-due peacekeeping assessments. UN diplomats believe the U.S. will announce Monday that it is abandoning its attempts to deprive the Soviet Union, France and 11 other members of their General Assembly voting rights because they refuse to pay the assessments. But Goldberg insisted that the House OK's Public Works Bill A labor subcommittee has ap- proved extension of the law to a total of 7.2 million workers and the full committee will vote on the remaining categories Monday before going on to the question of raising the minimum wage for most workers from $1.25 to $1.75. This increase has been approved by the subcommittee. Chairman Adam Clayton Powell (D-NY) said the new coverage was approved yesterday by bi- partisan votes with little opposi- tion. The largest remaining groups for which extension of coverage will be considered include em- ployes of automobile and farm- implement dealers, numbering about 600,000, and workers in agricultural processing plants, totaling about 250,000. Johnson made no recommen- dation on the amount of the in- crease in the minimum wage, say- ing that Congress should deter- mine this. The subcommittee voted a three- stage increase, to $1.40 in 1966, $1.60 in 1967 and $1.75 in 1968, for workers now covered. The newly covered workers, ex- cept those in farming, would start at $1 next Jan. 1, go to $1.15 after six months and then rise in an- U.S. position would not be deter- mined until after further con- sultations. He and Secretary of State Dean Rusk will draft rec- ommendations today to lay before President Lyndon B. Johnson. Before Monday A decision by the President is expected before Monday, when Goldberg is to address the special 33-nation committee on peace- keeping operations. Goldberg spent the day in New York consulting representative delegates, including some from each of the main geographical regions. The new U.S. chief delegate spent 70 minutes with Thant and other UN officials, including Un- dersecretary Ralph J. Bunche, the top ranking American in the UN Secretariat. Refuse To Pay The Soviet Union, France and the other 11 nations have refused to pay the peacekeeping assess- ments on the ground they were illegal because they were approved by the General Assembly instead of the Security Council. The U.S. contended that under Article 19 of the UN Charter they faced loss of their voting rights in the General Assembly. Most diplomats expect the U.S. to come up with a plan that would not abandon its legal posi- tion, but could open the way for voluntary contributions by the Soviet Union and other debtor nations. The contributions would permit normal functioning of the Assembly and ease the precarious financial position of the world organization. WASHINGTON (P)-The House passed a $3.25 billion public works development bill yesterday after beating all attempts to cut it. The measure has been labeled by its sponsors as a long step to- ward wiping out pockets of un- employment and subnormal in- come in almost every state. Opponents, mainly Republicans, branded it a "boondoggle" and said it would not accomplish the claimed objectives. The Senate passed the bill June 1 after boosting it $750 million above the amount proposed by President Lyndon B. Johnson. The House made no change in the money total but approved com- mittee alterations which the Sen- ate is expected to accept without too much argument. Voting for the bill on the final roll call were 215 Democratic and 31 Republicans; against it were 45 Democrats and 93 Republicans., In a final gesture, Republicans lumped some of the rejected amendments into a package and forced a roll-call. They lost by vote of 224 to 163, wth 48 Democrats and 115 Republicans supporting the move and 211 Democrats and 10 Republicans opposing it. The bill is an authorization AMENDMENTS DEFEATED: measure spelling out the scope of the program but not financing it. A separate appropriation would be needed to put it into operation. Sponsors of numerous amend- ments made only token fights as it became apparent that admin- istration forces, with some Re- publican help, were in complete control. The only major amendment adopted was approved by the bill's floor manager, Rep. John A. Blat- nik (D-Minn). Its sponsor was Rep. Bernard F. -Sisk (D-Calif ) It broadened the formula for mak- ing depressed areas eligible for aid by adding about 100 counties in 29 states. It was adopted by standing vote of 90 to 56. Sisk's amendment also increas- ed from $400 million to $500 mil- lion annually the amount of grants that could be made to finance public works projects in eligible areas. But it limited that phase of the program to four years instead of the five in the original. bill, thus retaining the same money total. The grants could be for as much as 80 per cent of a project cost. In addition to the $2 billion for direct grants, the , bill would authorize $850 million for long SECRETARY-GENERAL THANT term loans and loan guarantees, $125 million for technical aid to depressed areas, $75 million to promote multistate cooperative programs, and $200 million for joint projects undertaken by groups of areas. Most of the authorizations would be for five years. Sienatre Unit Gives OK to 14B Repeal WASHINGTON (P)-Legislation to repeal Section 14B of the Taft- Hartley Law, which allows states to outlaw the uion shop, ad- vanced through a Senate labor subcommittee yesterday. But it ran up against a jam of other administration-backed bills in the full labor committee, and Sen. Pat McNamara (D-Mich) said he did not know when that body could take it up. The subcommittee approved the bill 7 to 1 after voting unanimous- ly to include a provision designed to benefit persons who have con- scientious scruples against join- ing a union on religious grounds. The "conscientious objector" amendment was sponsored by Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore). It provides that a person who is a member of a religious sect with tenets op- posing union membership or an individual with such scruples could be exempted from the union membership requirement if he agreed- to pay the equivalent of union dues to a charitable fund. If the union could not agree on such a fund, he could be exempt- ed altogether. Sen. Winston Prouty (R-Vt) failed in an attempt to have two amendments attached to the bill. Prouty's amendments would have: --Allowed an election to rescind a union shop to be decided on the basis of a majority of those voting. The present requirement is a ma- jority of those eligible to vote. -Provide that the National La- bor Relations Board could not invalidate the ,results of a repre- sentation. election on the basis of expressions of views by an em= loyer where these contain no threats of reprisal or force or no promises of benefits. rorld News Roundup By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH - The United Steelworkers Union accused the basic steel industry yesterday of risking a "shutdown of steel pro- duction rather than consider real- istically the urgent, critical needs of steelworkers." An editorial in the union's monthly publication "Steel Labor" criticized the industry for what it called frittering away bargaining time and for being obstinate, shortsighted and self-defeating. Although the publication went to press several days ago, a un- ion spokesman said its criticisms "still stand." The comment was the first clear indication that top- level talks, going on in an undis- closed location, were still dead- locked. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla.--Astro- nauts Gordon Cooper and Charles Conrad yesterday entered their final week of training for the eight-day Gemini 5 flight which REP. ADAM CLAYTON POWELL Aeross Campus. FRIDAY, AUG. 13 8 p.m.-The University Players will present Humperdinck's "Han- sel and Gretel." SATURDAY, AUG. 14, 8 p.m.-The University Players DAILY OF'FICIAL BULLETIN hopefully will erase any linger- ing doubts on whether man can live in space for the time it takes to rocket to the moon and back., Cooper, 38-year-old Air Force lieutenant colonel, and Conrad, 35-year-old Navy lieutenant com- mander, will run through a full- scale rehearsal today, the last major milestone before the sched- uled Aug. 19 blastoff of their Ti- tan 2 rocket. WASHINGTON - The Senate passed without discussion and by voice vote yesterday legislation giving Congress members more lib- eral fringe benefits. ** * BIRMINGHAM, Ala.-The dep- uty director of the 1963 March on Washington said yesterday that the civil rights demonstrator will eventually need to be replaced by a new breed of volunteer. "Today we are , going to have to sit down and become thinkers as well as actors," Bayard Rustin said during a panel discussion at the annual convention of Martin Luther King Jr.'s Southern Chris- tian Leadership Conference. Read Daily Classifieds will present Humperdinck's "Han- nual steps to $1.25, $1.40, $1.60 sel and Gretel." and $1.75. GEORGE WEIN PRESENTS FESTIVAL PRELUDE * DETROIT'S CONCERT GREATEST SUNDAY, AUG. 15-COB0 ARENA 8 P. M. 004 0 CBASIE O RBEK 1"s, DAVIS Q /jkGILLESPIE /. * s 'Carmen MRA[ *, SMITH - .. . -.- -...-- .-- -.-.. --- -- - - -- - -- --- - ALL SEATS RESERVED: $3-$4-$5-$6 MAIL ORDERS, FESTIVAL PRODUCTIONS, INC. C/O COBO ARENA BOX OFFICE DETROIT 26. ENCLOSE STAMPED, SELF-ADDRESSED ENVELOPE. TICKETS ON SALE-DISCOUNT RECORDS 'K F "K 300 S. State, ANN ARBOR 1'w The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan, for which The Michigan Daily, assumes no editor- ial responsiblity. 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. FRIDAY, AUGUST 13 Day Calendar National Association of Teachers of Singing Workshop-Registration, School of Music, 8 am. Programmed Learning for Business Workshop-Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. University Players School of Music Opera - Humperdinck's "Hansel and Gretel"; Josef Blatt, music director and conductor, Ralph Herbert, stage di- rector: Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital-Paul Young, trombonist: Recital Hall, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. Events Saturday "National Association of Teachers of Singing Vocal Workshop-Registration, School of Music, 8 a.m. School of Music Degree Recital-Ray- mond Marchionni, pianist: Recital Hall, School of Music, 4:30 p.m. University Players School of Music Opera - Humperdinck's "Hansel and Gretel"; Josef Blatt, music director and conductor, Ralph Herbert, stage direc- tor: Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. School of Music Composers Forum- Recital Hall, School of Music. Events Sunday School of Music Degree Recital-Ken- neth Snipes, pianist: Recital Hall, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. ORGAN IZATION 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. * * * Folk Dance Club, Folk dance with in- struction, Fri., Aug. 13, 8-11 p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. * * * University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, Sunday morning, Aug. 15: 9:15, Bible Class, "Hymns of Faith" (ps. 91); 10:30 a.m., Service, Vicar Stephen Stein to preach his final ser- mon. All welcome. , General Notices Special Notice to Staff Members, Stu- dents and Univ. Personnel: Applica- tions for ushering at concerts in Hill Aud. during the 1965-66 season will be accepted at the Box Office in Hill Aud. from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Mon., Aug. 23 through Fri., Aug. 27 and on Mon., Aug. 30 and Tues.; Aug. 31. See Mr. Warner. Doctoral Examination for Michael Stephen Spritzer, Chemistry; thesis: "Polarography and Voltammetry in Nonaqueous Media," Fri., Aug. 13, 3543 Chemistry Bldg., at 11 a.m. Chairman, P. J. Elving. Doctoral Examination for Jerry Lor- en McLaughlin, Pharmacognosy; thesis: "Identification and Biosynthesis of Cer- tain Alkaloids of Lophophora williamsii (Lem.) Coult," Fri., Aug. 13, 4032 Pharm. Res. Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chair- man, A. G. Paul. Doctoral Examination for Peter Rob- erts Klaver, English Language & Lit- erature ;thesis: "The Meaning of the Term Wit in English Literary Criticism: 1680-1712," Fri., Aug. 13, 2601 Haven Hall, at 3 p.m. Chairman. H. V. S. Ogden. Doctoral Examination for Perry Cliffe Daniels, Music: Performance; (Baritone); recitals in lieu of thesis, Sat., Aug. 14, 3046 School of Music, at 10 a.m. Chairman, Ralph Herbert. Doctoral Examination for Raymond John Schneider, Speech; thesis: "A Study of the Television Program 'Cam- era Three'," Mon., Aug. 16, 2020 Frieze Bldg., at 2 p.m. Chairman, K. E. Andersen. Doctoral Examination for Hussein Zaky Mohamed Barakat, Mechanical Engineering; thesis: "Transient Natural Convection Flows in Closed Contain- ers," Mon., Aug. 16, 2026 Heat Trans- fer Lab., N. Campus, at 10 a.m. Chair- man, J. A. Clark. Doctoral Examination for Julian Charles Boyd, English Language & Lit- erature ;thesis: "Deep and Surface Structure in the Accusative and In- finitive Expressions in Modern Eng- lish," Tues., Aug. 17, 2601 Haven Hall, at 9 a.m. Chairman, H. V. King. Doctoral Examination for Kendle Murray Wainio, Nuclear Science; thesis: "Calculated Gamma Ray Response Characteristics of Semiconductor Detec- tors," Tues., Aug. 17, 315 Auto. Lab., N. Campus, at 2 p.m. Chairman, G. F. Knoll. Doctoral Examination for Richard Willson Crain, Jr., Mechanical Engi- neering; thesis: "P-V-T Behavior in the Argon-Nitrogen System," Tues., Aug. 17, 220 W. Engrg. Bldg., at 9 a.m. Chair- man, R. E. Sonntag. Placement ANNOUNCEMENT: Peace Corps Placement Test-Deter- mines in what capacity you can best serve. Test will be given Sat., .Aug. 14, 9 a.m. at downtown Post Office, Main and Catherine. To take test question- naire must be completed. Details and applications available at Bureau of Ap- pointments. POSITION OPENINGS: Carrier R. & D. Co., Syracuse, N.Y. (Continued on Page 4) *1 : U d HAVE A DATE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT' You'll finally be able to afford to, if you get a Honda. Trade in your gas-eater for a thrifty Honda. 50. Up to 200 miles per gallon, and at least that many laughs. Maybe more. Hondas are just the ticket for campus traffic and campus parking, and you'll notice a big difference in your pocketbook; too. It'll bulge for a change. And so will your date book. I r 1 DIAL66 662-6264 j;1 Z S U FEATURE STARTS at 1 :00-3:35 6:15 & 9:05 OT H E NEWt1 Enace On.CARPENTERR AA Open at 7:00-Close at 10:00 A TONIGHT - I STRIPPED OF EVERYTHING- THEY LIVED AND LOVED AND FOUGHT AS IF THERE WERE NO TOMORROW... E: I SPREAD OUT THE BEACH TOWELS... GRAB YOUR GALS-and Go-GO-e0o BIKINII "Peter O'Toole 4. S fascinating!" -New York Herald Tribune' TECHNICOLOR@ I I See all the Honda models at I 1:00-3:35 6:20-9:00 HONDA OF ANN ARBOR NOW AT 3000 PACKARD RD. 665-9281 wYou Meet the NIcest People on a Honda .E"- STANLEY HOLLOWAY- BURGESS MEREDITH - FRANCHOT TONE,- PATRICK O'NEAL- CARROLL O'CONNOR $UM PICENS- JAMES MITCHUM- GEORGE KENNEDY- BRUCE CABOT- BARBARA BOUCHET STARTS AUGUST 19TH -PLUS- UNIVERSITY PLAYERS, DEPARTMENT OF SPEECR present THE OPERA DEPARTMENT, SCHOOL OF MUSIC TONIGHT (8 p.m.) and TOMORROW (2:30 & 8 p.m.) in - -3 - -------- . ... AM i