WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1965 Military THE MICHIGAN DAItY PAGE THIEE TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Th1U~E Rejects Pressure, Senate Vote Due Today. On Poll Tax Amendment To End Support of Junta SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican! Republic UP) -- The Dominican Armed Forces rejected official United States pressure yesterday to withdraw support from the civilian-military junta headed by Gen. Antonio Imbert Barrera, a spokesman announced. Instead, the Armed Forces Sec- retary, Commodore Francisco J. Rivera Caminero, speaking on be- half of the Dominican military proposed. a new government "of national harmony." He said it should be composed of members of the present junta, in- cluding Imbert, and "all democra- tic parties of the country." Conferred with U.S. Delegation The development was revealed by Rivera Caminero immediately after he and other top military officials conferred with an Ameri- can delegation at armed forces headquarters. U.S. officials could not be reached for comment. Four members of a top level White House fact-finding team led by Thomas C. Mann, Under- secretary of State for Economic World News Roundup By The Associated Press TOKYO-A South Korean plane, flying in the demilitarized zone, was shot down yesterday over Communist North Korea. The radio in Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, said it was a U.S. L-19 reconnaissance plane spying over the North. The United Nations command in Seoul said the light plane be- longed to the South Korean Army. * * * * SEOUL, Korea-Riot police in Seoul broke up yesterday an at- tempt by about 100 South Korean university students to stage a dem- onstration denouncing current government talks on normalizing dip- lomatic relations with Japan. LA PAZ, Bolivia-A general strike called by the Bolivian Labor Federation virtually shut down the nation's tin mines and paralyzed other sectors of the economy yesterday. Defying the military junta's crackdown on disruptive strikes, union leaders called workers into the streets to protest the govern- ment's banishment of former leftist Vice-President Juan Lechin. *m mmmm a m e m a mm mma a mma ms m m a a m m .m.mmmmmmm . n - mm m a m mai = m * I I FREE DELIVERYI I THOMPSON'S RESTAURANT I U Phone 761-0001 0 OFFon large a * u U U * ~one item pizza I * PICKED UP OR DELIVERY ONLY. * U Coupon Good Monday Thru Thursday, May 17-20 * Ia Ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmma a= m m a m m a m m =m m! .m.qm mm m ammm a m m ammmmmm Affairs, have been in the Domini- can Republic since Sunday morn- ing. The others are McGeorge Bundy, Special Presidential As- sistant, Cyrus R. Vance, Deputy Secretary and Jack Hood Vaughn, Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs. Offensive Meanwhile, the armed forces pressed a violent tank-led offen- sive to wipe out rebel pockets north of the U.S. controlled East- West corridor. Meanwhile, Secretary-General U Thant made a personal appeal yesterday to rival factions in the Dominican Republic to end hos- tilities and seek a peaceful settle- ment. "Peaceful means are the only ones which can bring about a lasting settlement of the conflict now besetting the Dominican Re- public, and no effort should be spared by those -concerned to put an end to the fighting which has already caused so much bloodshed and destruction," Thant said in a statement released at United Na- tions headquarters. In compliance with the council resolution Thant named Jose An- tonio Mayobre of Venezuela as his personal representative and sent him to Santo Domingo to report on the situation. Further Efforts In further efforts to establish a peaceful settlement in Santo Domingo, Argentina is trying to put together a conference of seven South American foreign ministers to discuss the Dominican crisis and bolster the inter-American system. Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Zavala Ortiz announced Monday night he had invited his col- leagues-from Brazil, Chile, Peru, Boliva, Uruguay and Paraguay- to Buenos Aires to seek a solution to the Dominican problem threat- ening hemispheric solidarity and consultation. WASHINGTON ( P)-Agreement was reached yesterday for a Sen- ate vote today on a bipartisan leadership poll tax amendment to the Negro voting rights bill. Majority Leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) offered the amendment Monday in an effort to resolve differences with a group of lib- erals who want to outlaw poll taxes as a requirement for voting in state and local elections. Indicating success of the com- promise move, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass) said he would support the amendment. "I think it strengthens the bill," he added. Kennedy Kennedy was the principal author of the anti-poll tax amendment rejected by the Senate last week by a 49-45 vote. Alabama,.Mississippi,.Texas and Virginia require voters in state and local elections to pay poll taxes. A constitutional amend- ment bars the taxes as a require- ment for voting in federal elec- tions. The bill directs the attorney general to test in court the con- stitutionality of the state taxes. Dirksen as Co-Sponsor The amendment offered by Mansfield, with Republican Lead- er Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois as co-sponsor, is designed to help MSU 'SIT-IN' Students Support Housing Bill EAST LANSING ()P - Police -the favorite song was "We Shall been refused rentals in East Lan had to carry out 70 chanting and Overcome." An original group of ing. singing Michigan State University 24 East Lansing police was assist- "There is a problem here, but w students late Monday night when ed by 12 Lansing police, six state are working on it steadily," Thoj they staged a sit-in at East Lans- police and six Ingham County as said. "It is easier to get suc ing City Hall to back demands for sheriff's deputies. housing in East Lansing now thi an immediate passage of an open White youths outnumbered Ne- it was five years ago." occupancy bill. groes among the demonstrators The council unanimously adopt The students, led by the cam- and nearly half were coeds. ed a resolution declaring it "r pus chapters of the National As- No t daffirms its long-standing suppc socation for the Advancement of o aress were mae but dem- of efforts to assure equal hou ao fo theAdvacemet ofonstrators were left on a lawn ing opportunity for all its cit: Colored People and the Student to the rear of the city hall. Some zensr" It also approved inserti Non-Violent Coordinating Coin- tdo,, vnn 1 n - EDWARD KENNEDY mittee, sat down in a corridor outside the council chamber while the council was in session. They ignored a plea by Mayor Gordon Thomas to "act like ra-' tional people" and clear the build- ing. When the demonstrators refus- ed to move by a 12:30 a.m. dead- line, police dragged them out one by one. . Strapped to Stretchers Coeds were strapped to stretch- ers so they wouldn't fall off while being carried downstairs from the second floor. Four policemen, two on the arms and two on the legs, were needed to drag out each boy. Ingham County Prosecutor Don Reisig asked coeds to climb on the stretchers so police wouldn't have to handle them. All refused. Most sang while being removed i is- wre re- ort us- bit- ioll the attorney general win a ruling from the Supreme Court against poll taxes. Inclusion of such a congres- sional finding was urged by lib- erals after the defeat of Ken- nedy's amendment, but until Mon- day Mansfield and Dirksen had only agreed to include a state- ment that poll taxes might be used to deny voting rights. "I don't think this will influ- ence the city council one bit," commented Thomas, a professor in the MSU speech department, who added that he still was will- ing to meet with the group at anytime. Attendance at the council meet- ing was limited to 130 with fire laws being cited, to cut the num- ber of students allowed in the building. Several hundred other lemonstrators paraded outside carrying torches and hand-letter- ed placards with such slogans as "Open Up Your Mind," and "Quiet, the Council Is Sleeping." Too Slow Byron Peterson, campus NAACP president, protested that the coun- cil was not moving fast enough in considering an open occupancy ordinance. The student groups have protested that Negroes have wiauwcniuana-iL of a non-discrimination clause in vigil but the demonstration broke future city contracts. up around 2:30 a.m. after a pa- The protest was, in part, spark- rade through downtown East ed by the appearance of James Lansing. Farmer, national director of the No Injuries Congress of Racial Equality, on "No one was hurt, and that's the MSU campus. the way we wanted it," said Po- Farmer has indicated that civil lice Chief Charles Pegg. rights groups must direct intensive efforts to end housing discrimina- tion in East Lansing. In another speech delivered on the MSU campus, Farmer said, "By all means go South. Missis- sippi needs you. But so does the North." "There is greater subtlety and greater refinement in Northern discrimination, but it hurts all the same," he said. Across Campus THURSDAY 8 p.m. - The Department of Comparative Literature will pre- sent William Shakespeare's "Ham- let" in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- ter. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ........:. .....::.::.:::..... vrn1V.V.*.V.W . le..%r"{. . .i}:iT'""... ":. ::....::Y.:4 ".h... 1'. . ............~. *** . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .VWI.W,1vfl...sw.tan wgfll 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 organization notices are not accepted for publication. WEDNESDAY, MAY 19 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Per- sonnel Techniques Seminar - Dean Berry, University of Pennsylvania, "Planning and Conducting Useful Per- ....., k7 DIAL 5-6290 It's that wayW-out whopper of -.-- western! ,f COLUIBIA a HAROLD PICTURES HECHT in COLUMBIA COLOR Jane Fonda Lee Marvin Nat King Cole Coming Friday "JOHN GOLDFARB PLEASE COME HOME" I Dial 8-6416 "A CINEMA MASTERPIECE! A powerful, luminous and violent. existential thriller!" -Time Magazine sonnel Research": Michigan Union, 8 a.m. Council on Medical Television Meeting -University Medical Center, 8:15 a.m. School of Public Health Institute - "The Education of the Diabetic and His Family": Registration, 3042 School of Public Health, 8:30 a.m. Training and Development, Person- nel Office, University Management Seminar-Daniel R. Miller, professor of psychology, "On-the-Job Interviewing and Counseling": Michigan Union, 1:30 p.m. Dept. of English Lecture-George H. Ford, University of Rochester, "Three Stories by D. H. Lawrence": Aud. A, Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. Dept. of Psychiatry University Lec- ture-Sidney Tarachow, M.D., Down- state Medical Center, New York, "Deriv- atives of Coprophagia": Aud., Children's Psychiatric Hospital, 8 p.m. General Notices 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 ORGANIZATION NOTICES 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-Term 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 grades if your ac- count remains Oelinquent. 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, May 20, are late and subject to pen- alty. Identify mail payments as tui- tion and show student number and name. 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 Student Activities Bldg. facilities, etc. are available to registered organizations only. (Continued on Page 4) GOOD BOOKS BOB MARSHALL'S BOOK SHOP 211 s. State St. OPEN 7 NIGHTS EACH WEEK 'til 10 P.M. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Full Time & Evening Employment 18-35 If you are free from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. four evenings each week end occasionally on Saturday, you can maintain your studies and still enjoy a part-time job doing special interview work that will bring on overage weekly income of $67. If you are neat appearing and a hard worker call Mr. Jones at 761- 1488 from 10 a.m. to 12 a.m. Monday-Friday. No other times. We are also interested in full-time employment. I , .. 'Woman in) the Dunes COMING "ALL THESE WOMEN" - "" k 9:klnikfr- -rnnav LNDING TODAY Walt Disney's "THOSE CALLOWAYS" STARTING THURSDAY DIAL 662-6264 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. Tutorial and Cultural Relations Proj- ect, Organizational meeting, Thurs., May 20, Room 3K, Michigan Union, 7:15 p.m.; students interested in tutor- ing culturally separated children are in- vited to this orientation meeting. * w Michigan Christian Fellowship, Week- ly meeting, Wed., May 19, Room 3D, Michigan Union, 7:30 p.m.; topic: "The New Morality Revised," speaker: Dr. Frank Sharborough, neurologist. University Lutheran Chapell, 1511 Washtenaw, Midweek Devotion, May 19, 10 p.m., "Not To Be Served, but To Serve," Rev. Scheips, speaker. ALL EUROPEAN CARS delivery in Europe1 PURCHASE@"LEASE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Total services: Registration, Insur- ance, Reduced Return Shipment Rates. Exclusively yours through EUROPEAN CAR DELIVERIES CORP. 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