, TTJESDAY, MAY 18, 1965 TH MICHIGrAN>. Aria s4 vs. I77R flf.. lk THs.ae iMiCHitrA1~T1 LL11V PACE THREE 17-' Lull in Air Strikes Remains Unexplained By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-For the fifth consecutive day, the United States has launched no air strikes against North Viet Nam. U.S. government officials in Saigon refused to say why the raids on North Viet Nam have been stopped. The New York Times reported from Washington that the United Senate Tries New Tactic To Solve Poll-Tax Issue WASHINGTON(,P)--The United field of Montana offered an States Senate leadership tried a I amendment which would make a new move yesterday to get around congressional declaration' that ina the state poll-tax issue which certain states the right to vote stands as a principal roadblock is being denied or abridged by to enactment of a voting-rights poll-tax requirements. law. This proposal, offered along Democratic leader Mike Mans- with Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R- Ill), the Republican leader, would supplant an earlier leadership W orld News proposal which would merely have -mNstructed the attorney general to challenge state poll taxes in court, R oundu without putting Congress on rec- ord that they serve as bars to voting. Farmer Vows Continued Housing Fight States had emporarily suspended the air strikes as a sign of good faith to support President Lyndon B. Johnson's offer to negotiate. Accidental Explosion Also, American and South Viet- namese air forces yesterday hit suspected Communist emplace- ments in South Viet Nam, but the most serious action was accidental. An accidental expplosives blast that shook Bien Hoa air base Sun- day, killing 27 and injuring 103 Americans, necessitated extensive and hazardous work yesterday by demolition experts to make the field safe. One Bomb U.S. officials said Sunday's mul- ti-million dollar disaster began with the explosion of a bomb that had been loaded aboard a B57 Canberra jet bomber. Wing to wing, neighboring planes on the flight line began exploding and burning within seconds. Concus- sion temporarily knocked out the control tower. An ammunition dump blew up later, without cas- ualties. The New York Times, besides suggesting the suspension was a sign of Johnson's good will to ne- gotiate, said Secretary of State Dean Rusk was believed to have cited this in proposing further dis- cussions on Viet Nam to Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko at a Vienna conference Saturday. DEAN RUSK across Campus TUESDAY, MAY 18 4:10 p.m.-George H. Ford of the University of Rochester will speak on "Three Stories by D. H. Lawrence" in Aud. A. WEDNESDAY, MAY 19 8:45 a.m.-The School of Public Health will sponsor a lecture, "The Education of the Diabetic Child and His Family" in 3042 PH Bldg. By The Associated Press SELMA, Ala. - Attorneys de- fending Sheriff James G. Clark against a contempt of court com- plaint tried to show yesterday that the sheriff was carrying out or- ders of a state judge in breaking up several Negro civil rights dem- onstrations. LA PAZ, Bolivia - The ruling military junta was attacked yes- terday in a violent street demon- stration by factory workers pro- testing the banishment of former Lefist Vice President Juan Lechin. A general strike shut down the city. Police used tear gas in an hour and a half battle to disperse some 7,000 demonstrators called out by the Bolivian Labor Federation (COB). At least 15 persons were reported injured, four with bullet wounds. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - A U.N. spokesman said yesterday Secretary-General U Thant was neither consulted nor informed about the dispatch of four high ranking U.S. officials on a fact- finding mission to the Dominican Republic. Four states-Alabama, Missis- sippi, Texas and Virginia - still require payment of poll taxes as voter qualification in state elec- tions although the Constitution bans them in elections for fed- eral offices. Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich), floor manager for the Voting Rights Bill which has been un- der debate since April 22, said he would support the new approach. The bill, among other things, would suspend literacy tests as a qualification for voter registration and would provide for federal reg- istrars in certain instances. Mansfield said earlier yester- day he planned to seek unanimous agreement to limit debate on the bill but laterbdropped that idea for the time being. Prospects. for an early vote on his new amend- ment seemed dim. Meanwhile, the Senate rejected another in a series of Southern- sponsored amendments. It defeated by 60 to 19 a pro- posal by Sen. Herman Talmadge (D-Ga) to eliminate from the bill a requirement that new state vot- er-qualification laws be approved by a federal court in the District of Columbia. By MARK KILLINGSWORTH Special To The Daily EAST LANSING-James Farm- er, head of the National Con- rsof Racial Equality, indicat- ed Sunday the next move in the fight of civil rights groups here for fair housing provisions will come after a ruling by the city's attorney on the legality of a city law banning housing discrimina- tion. Speaking with reporters after a luncheon meeting with members of East Lansing City Council, Farmer also said he "definitely" would return here to work with local civil rights groups to pub- licize and picket against landlords and realtors practicing discrimina- tion should the city attorney rule that the Michigan constitution does not empower East Lansing to write its own ban on local housing bias. A 1963 ruling by State Atty.- Approre Plans For Art Center WASHINGTON (P) -- Trustees approved final plans for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Per- forming Arts yesterday, even though a million dollars is needed{ by June 30 to assure construction. The envisioned $43-million cen- ter would have a grand foyer to rival Versailles' Hall of Mirrors, plus four auditoriums for theatre, opera, concert and cinema. The center planners envision all four theatres playing at once, with a capacity audience of more than 6,000 persons. They have provided for a luxury restaurant to seat 250, a cafeteria for 350 and means for serving refreshments at all theatres. FRANK KELLEY JAMES FARMER Gen. Frank Kelley, which has the force of law until overturned by the courts, says that all civil rights laws and regulations must come from the state level to be valid. Any local ordinances, under the ruling, are unenforceable. A court test of the ruling, involving Ann Arbor fair housing ordinances, is set for later this month. The controversy over fair hous- ing in East Lansing grew out of long standing discontent among residents of the city, mostly fac- ulty and students at Michigan State University, over the city's "lily white" status. Very Few Prof. Robert Lee Green of the education school and a Negro member of the city's Human Re- lations Commission, has said that in the city of more than 30,000, exclusive of MSU housing, only five families are Negro. prominentin obtaining 900 signa- tures on petitions favoring an open occupancy ordinance prior to the Kelley ruling in 1963. After opponents of the meas- ure amassed an equal number of signers, the City Council got "cold feet," explained one council mem- ber. And then, after the Kelley ruling, "we decided to wait," he said. Student Assistance "Thank God for the students," Green said. Observers here feel that the four civil rights groups at MSU have provided the major -perhaps the only-force behind the fair housing drive in East Lansing. They recently picketed the resi- dents of an elderly lady who al- legedly refused to rent a room to a Negro. City Councilman Max Struther, talking with Green Sunday, ex- pressed a similar view of the sig- aificance of the student's role-- and added "It's always students who aren't even from Michigan. They always point the finger at as but don't bother about what's going on back home." South in North "It was the South minus the Southern accent," said one observ- er afterward of some of the coun- cilmen's comments on "outside ag- itators." The city's Human Relations Commission maintains a Neigh- borhood G o d w ill Committee working on the block level to "ease possible strain resulting from minority groups" entering a neighborhood. The commission al-. so talks with realtors and real es- tate agencies, and keeps a list of those who sell and rent on a non- discriminatory basis. Only two of the 13 real estate agencies in East Lansing which are members of the area Board of Realtors are on the list, however. Open Occupancy The City Council has also pass- ed a resolution favoring "open occupancy,' 'and is placing adver- tisements in classified housing sec- tions of area newspapers saying the site is an "open community" and that all are welcome to settle there in an attempt to offset what council members admit is the city's "bad image." >;f . , r- U FREE DELIVERY, THOMPSON'S RESTAURANT Phone 761-0001 50 O F on large ; a50c OFF *",'' one item pizza PICKED UP OR DELIVERY ONLY Coupon Good Monday Thru Thursday, May 17-20 1 mmmmrismmwmrmwmmwmmrmmwmm"mmwmmwmsr..mmwmw.....wwmm.wmm N={) EOOOG q 0QO 04=:O.0 U<.' Add excitement to your iving- Make your surroundings more interesting with all handcrafted articles such as woven bedspreads--embroidered numbah rugs; carved screens- and painted scrolls. INDIA ART SHIP 330 Maynard (Across from Arcade) >*2><2><2"1u'"".""" I.0<"">0 "'">02">0""$ Students and faculty Were ..i.i. . . . . ..= ... T.{{.r . r". "V"A.sV."v -+w """ ": :v .. "." . r" +"r"fl vrflA..S w :^".-..... :s 4. s.t. t-s { { DAILY OFFIC-IAL BULLETIN tfr~t":", .t.vrxrfl"S"'+":":{."{: "A: r: :: .evr..":.... GOOD BOOKS BOB MARSHALL'S BOOK SHOP 211 s. State St./ OPEN 7 NIGHTS EACH WEEK 'til 10P.M. -I The Daily Official Bulletin as an official publication of The Univer- sitl 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 organiration notices are not accepted for publication. TUESDAY, MAY 18 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Per- sonnel Techniques Seminar - Dean Berry, University of Pennsylvania, "Planning and Conducting Useful Per- sonnel Research": Michigan Union, 8 a.m. Council on Medical Television Meeting --Registration, Rackham Lobby, 8 a.m. General Notices Soroptomist Foundation International 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. * * * Organizations who are planning to be active for the Spring/Summer Term must be registered in the Office of Student Affairs by May 26, 1965. Forms are available in Room 1011 Student Activities Bldg. Wellowships and Grants-in-Aid for graduate study by women have been announced by the Foundation. For application and information write to Soroptomist Federation of America, Inc., 1616 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa., 19103. Applications for Fulbright Awards for Graduate Study during the 1966-67 academic year are now available. The grants are made for one academic year and include round-trip transportation, tuition, a living allowance and a small stipend for books and equipment. All grants are made in foreign currencies. Interested students who are U.S. citi- zens and hold an AB degree, or who will receive such a degree by May, 1966 and who are presently enrolled in the Univ. of Mich., should request ap- plication forms for a Fulbright award at the Graduate Fellowship Office, Room 110 Rackham Bldg. The closing date for receipt of applications is Oct. 18. Persons not enrolled in a college or university should direct inquiries and requests for applications to the Institute of International Education, U.S. Student Program, 809 United Na- tions Plaza, New York, 10017. The last date on which applications will be is- sued by the Institute is Oct. 15. Final Payment of Spring Half-Termr Fees and first 50% of spring-summer full term fees are due and payable on or before May 20. Non-payment, pay- ment of less than the required amount or late payment will result in the as- sessment of a delinquent penalty of $5. In addition, a Hold Credit will be placed against your graces if your ac- count remains delinquent. Payments may be made in person or mailed to the Cashier's Office, 1015 Admin. Bldg.. before 4:30 p.m., Thurs., May 20. Mail payments postmarked after due date, Dial 8-6416 "A CINEMA MASTERPIECE! A powerful, luminous and violent existential thriller!" - Time Mcgozine 60 0§e Y911V §'1VOSIRgel 91; 7mendedDr}aleaning May 20, are late and subject to pen- alty. Identify mail payments as tui- tion and show student number and name. Foreign Visitors The following are the foreign visi- tors programmed through the Interna- tional Center who will be on campus this week on the dates indicated. Pro- gram arrangements are being made by Mrs. Clifford R. Miller, International Center, 764-2148. Benzion Marks, departmental admin- istrator, Department of Nuclear Physics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, May 14-22. G. A. Henrik Schaumann, chief li- brarian, Library of Parliament, Finland, May 15-18. Mr. and Mrs. Vladimir Milanovic, pro- fessor, Medical Center, Belgrade, Yugo- slavia, May 16-18. Geoffrey Hallam, university lecturer, Univ. of Aston, England, May 16-20. Alfred Morris, parliamentary private secretary to the minister of agriculture, fisheries and food, United Kingdom, May 17-19. Mr. and Mrs. Radoslav Radkovic, pro- fessor head of sociological dept., School of Political Sciences, Yugoslavia, May 16-June 5. Placement ANNOUNCEMENT: U.S. Public Health Service, Detroit - John Andrews will interview seniors & grad students Wed., May 19 for Public DIAL 5-6290 It's that wayut whopper of; funny wn' CO---A- ROD - PICIES HECHT ma Poducwie in COLUMBIA COLOR Jane Fonda Lee Marvinj Nat King Cole Coming Friday- "JOHN GOLDFARB PLEASE COME HOME" Health Program Repres. Degrees in Gen. Lib. Arts, Journ., Public Health, Speech, etc. Positions located in most large U.S. cities. Please call 764-7460, Bureau of Appointments for appoitment. POSITION OPENINGS: The Grover Co., Detroit-Engineer, BSME or EE with mech. des. exper. Des. products & controls for pneumatic tube systems. City of Waterbury, Conn.-1. Sanitar- ian, degree. in public health or sanitary science, pref. MA plus 2 yrs. exper. in environmental health. 2. Public Health Educator, BA in biol., soc. sciences, or educ. plus MA in Public Health. Appli- cation deadline May 27. Veterans Admin., Hines, Ill. -- Blind rehabilitation specialist, degree in Gen. Lib. Arts, Educ., Psych., Indust. Arts, Therapy, etc. Gen. exper. in rehab. work or teaching; spec. exper. in in- structing, orientating or motivating blind persons; or grad study will qualify for higher rating. * * * For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAM. TRAVEL INC. AIRLINE STEAMSHIP HOTEL CALL 665-3734 IN THE MAYNARD HOUSE WHICH GIRLS WILL LOVE From 2.95-6.95, gold filled and sterling. (Engraved at no extra cost) at lB AY 'S arcade jewelry shop A CAMPUS FASHION 16 Nickels Arcade--off State St. f,,.. "~ C,., ., ,,,,..,., ",,,.. i t . '. .-.,......,..,Y. a DIAL 662-6264 SHOWS AT 1:20-3:50 6:20 and 9:00 A family you'll never forget! INC. recommends our he Dufties COMING "ALL THESE WOMEN" A CAREER MESSAGE TO ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS ARE YOU- " receiving a BS or MS in June or August? " seeking research and development challenges? " interested in a broad range of technical problems? " anxious to work with a highly competent technical staff? " planning future graduate study for the MS or Phd? IF YOU ARE - investigate IITRI! IIT Research Institute's Chicago Laboratories conducts research and development in nearly all electronics areas. Technical groups are small so your contributions will be easily recognized by management. You will learn by working with an experienced staff, nearly 213 having at least a masters degree. While obtaining full time experience at an attractive salary you can participate in the MS or Phd. program at Illinois Institute of Technology. The school is right next door and IITRI pays full tuition for satisfactory performance. Sound interesting? A note or collect call to Bob Janowiak (CA 5-9630) will bring a speedy reply. Phd. Candidates.are invited too! ' +_s .c.=,i w v v w 'VJ G/ w t..y .v w v r. :/' v ry ' Sauvtone dryclea)vzg Catalina knows we have the touch for restoring that bold, fresh look and flattering shape to sportswear with our Sanitone drycleaning process and our skillful finishing and shaping. To prolong the smart good looks of your sportswear, or any garment, try our famous Sanitone drycleaning. WALT DISNEY pesent Those3 Cai:IInwavs THE ROMANOFFS GERMAN-AMERICAN CUISINE a Welcomes Ann Arbor Students German Style Hot Roast Beef Sandwich, natural gravy, whipped potatoes, buttered peas and carrots .............. 95c 11 11 li l