WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY v A rzn+ n+rtmwlkp THE MICHIEAN BAILY PAGE THREEn 6 House Passes Foreign Aid Bill Without Change Corps Tries To Stay Young WASHINGTON (P-With Den yesterday passed a $3.37 billion f out changing a penny of the total. 'I All Republican efforts to amen easily defeated. The scene now shifts to the is over the future form of foreig amount for the coming fiscal year. Contrast to Past In contrast to previous years, the aid bill produced practically none of the fire and brimstone oratory that it used to. The two days of debate passed almost ser- enely. Republicans offered e i g h t amendments, knowing in advance they would be shouted down. These are the factors that markedly changed the reception this year: -The Democyats now hold a top-heavy majority. In addition, the program traditionally draws considerable Republican support anyway. -Associated Press AN AMERICAN LIEUTENANT inspects a military police patrol made up of American, Costa Rican, and Honduran soldiers under the OAS whose job it will be to patrol Santo Domingo, BundyReturnsTd 7 tRR e Ur . By WV. B. RAGSDALE, JR. 'erans back in the United States," Associated Press Staff Writer he said. "They will help provide nocrats firmly in control, the House j enlightened leadership in this oreign aid authorization bill with- WASHINGTON - Barely past country." The vote was 249 to 148. teady s o ,rihe Peac Corps ar - An estimated 50,000 volunteers nd the bill or cut the amount were of the arteries --more if the Peace Corps ex- Thefea istht scces wllpands beyond the 17,000 volun- The fear is that success will teens anticipated by midsummer Senate, where the main difference breed caution, conservatism and 1966-will be returning home by ;n aid rather than the monetary reluctance to try new ideas. 1970 The Peace Corps began life Efforts To Stay Young " j March 1, 1961 by executive order In its efforts to stay a "young of President John F. Kennedy. In agency," the Peace Corps is en- addition to amazing success ergetically reaching out for new around the world, the Peace Corps ideas. ~~s 11 has been widely copied. An example of the Peace Corps' SatellyiteFollowing Example continually 'stretching its wings, Sixteen nations either have trying new and more ambitious cyY started or are planning their own projects is the educational tele- a foreign peace corps-type organi- vision program in Colombia. zations. Nineteen - including the Normally, the Peace Corps pro- CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (} - A United States-have adapted the vides personnel for less skilled Saturn 1 rocket hurled a Pe asu concept for domestic purposes. jobs. In Colombia, volunteers are 2 satellite into orbit to measures There will be a reservoir of producing the programs, helping Potentially-dangerous meteoroids more than 6000 ex-volunteers by broadcast them, servicing the tele- postenialy-the end of the summer and there vision sets and helping teachers yesterday, are strong indications from the prepare to use the programs in As the huge 18-story' booster early groups of returning mem- the classrooms. thundered toward space, the pow- bers that the Peace Corps has left Educational Television er generated by 1.5 million pounds a permanent mark on them, often "After a year, we feel the odds of thrust sent a fiery tail fan- a desire for public service. are on our side in this project," ning out 300 feet. Night briefly The Peace Corps held a recent says one official. "This is the was turned into day as the blaz- conference to study how to involve most complex project we have un- ing exhaust reflected off the wa- returning volunteers in society, as dertaken and it will be at least ters of the Atlantic Ocean and Vice-President Hubert H. Hum- another year before we can say nearby rivers. phrey put it, "not just as interest- with- confidence that we can go After the pyrotechnics by the ed citizens but as leaders." into another country and do the booster stage, the hydrogen-pow- 'America's Profit' same kind of job." ered second stage took over and Humphrey, who conceived the Working with the Colombian propelled Pegasus 2 into an orbit Peace Corps idea and now heads Education Ministry, the Peace ranging from 316 to 460 miles high its advisory council, described the Corps' television program has be- -almost precisely the desired returning volunteers as America's come an integral part of the na- path. profit on an investment of young tional system of education. 'Wings' people overseas. Some 120,000 pupils are seeing I industry in his section of India. So he went to work. In only a little more than a year, the Peace Corps project has produced some 200,000 chicks, along with enormous egg produc- tion. In all the scrambling about for new ideas, Peace Corps officials say they don't plan to change one part of their operations. This is the rigid policy of staying out of both international and local politics. Because of this, volunteers have stayed on the job in a number of areas when all other U.S. person- .nel have been chased away by a SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (A)-McGeorge Bundy will return to Washington today after 10 days of intensive nego- tiations to bring the Dominican rebels and the rival military- civilian junta together in a coali- tion government. United States officials admitted a political solution was still far off but added that both sides in talks with American negotiators agreed any new government should be strongly anti-Commun- ist. They also expressed their ab- horrence of any rightwing dicta- torship. Johnson asked Bundy, his spe- cial assistant for national security, to return in advance of a foreign ministers meeting of the Organi- zation of American States in Washington tomorrow, U.S. offi- cials said. They added that Dr. Jose -A. Mora, OAS secretary- 'ge,, gen now has a leading role in the mediation effort. Vance to Stay Deputy Secretary of Defense Cyrus Vance, who came with Bundy to Santo Domingo, will re- main to help Mora, U.S. officials 'said.' With a new OAS peace force gradually taking strength, the U.S. has'begun to withdraw 600 troops. The number of Americans being pulled out about equals the influx of Latin American soldiers, mostly Brazilians. In about a week, the Latin American force will total about 1,700 men, and that number of Americans will leave. The U.S. has 21,000 Marines and paratroopers in the Dominican Republic, most of whom are assigned to protect- ing an international zone in the capital and a corridor across the city. Halt in Fire As the peace efforts took cen- ter stage in the month-long Do- minican drama, Santo Domingo enjoyed a respite from the sound of gun fire. The civilian-military junta as- serted confidentially that "abso- lute normality" had been restored in the country. It lifted martial law and a dusk-to dusk curfew in all areas under its control, except Santo Domingo. , -President Lyndon . Johnson The junta also turned over to has adopted a technique of ask- the OAS Radio Santo Domingo, ing for a pared-down minimal a government-owned station amount for foreign aid. The re- whose powerful voice extends quest this year was the lowest throughout the country. It chang- sought in the 17-year history of ed hands several times during the the program, which stems back fighting. to the post World World II Mar- shall Plan. 'Voice of OAS'. More said the station, with U.S. -The House Foreign Affairs technical help, will return to the Committee, which handles the bill, air shortly as the official Voice of forestalled possible amendments the OAS and the inter-American by adding bans on aid to any peace force. He promised complete country which ships goods to impartiality and objectivity in the North Viet Nam, and on aid to World News Roundup By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-The Soviet Union warned yesterday it would refuse any voluntary finan- cial contribution to the United Nations if the United States tries to make a "political game" out of the dispute over peacekeeping debts. ROME-Teachers and students in Italian universities staged a new 24-hour strike yesterday to demand a greater voice in running the schools and regulating courses. * * * CANBERRA, Australia - Police yesterday arrested 17 students who staged a sitdown in a busy Can- berra street protesting the Aus- tralian government's decision to send combat troops to South Viet Nam. About 60 students from'the Aus- tralian Students Labor Federation, which is holding a conference here, took part in a march through the city's main shopping area be- fore the sitdown. broadcasts. Rebel constitutionalist sourcesG reported meantime their forces clashed with junta troops in the central part of the country. There has been little fighting outside the capital throughout the war, and this latest rebel report could not be confirmed. any country which lets mobs de- stroy American embassies and other property abroad. 'Blank Check' The bill also includes a "blank check" authorization for any amount the President may decide he needs to prosecute the war in Southeast Asia. Once in space, Pegasus 2 un- Statistics at the conference in- folded two wing-like panels to a dicated that of the 5000 Peace span of 96 feet-greater than most Corps workers who have already four-engine airliners-and began completed their service, 15 per soaring like a great bird around cent have taken government jobs, the globe, ready to squawk elec- 15 per cent have gone into teach- tronically each time it is punc- ing, 5 per cent are now with non- tured by a meteoroid. profit institutions and 8 per cent The "space bird" joined a twin, have gone into private business. Pegasus 1, which has been orbit- Nearly all of the remaining 57 per ing since Feb. 16. The National cent have returned to school. Aeronautics and Space Adminis- Although Peace Corps officials tration said they will be visible in appear as concerned as a dowager areas of the world over which they trying to conceal her age, no real pass in darkness. signs of approaching senility -.or They are orbiting about one- even bureacratic normality - are third of the globe apart. apparent to an outsider. 30 programs a week. In many cases, neither pupil nor teacher ever had seen television before a few months ago. Quick To Seize Idea Always quick to seize an idea that works, the Peace Corps now has half its more than 300 volun- teers in India in a poultry project that grew out of a volunteer's hobby. The volunteer had worked with poultry and found everything needed for a first class poultry DAILY OFFICIAL, BU LLETI N ..o , f::::"f.. ....... ......{J:f. . .. . . . .:" . *..*.. ..:f."..: :ll::........... ..:"r.v....4...v....... .v..A:,"y..":.f. ::v.. . . :r1... " 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 TYPEWRJTTEN 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. WEDNESDAY, MAY 26 Day Calendar No Events Scheduled. General Notices DIAL 8-6416 SHOWS AT 7 & 9 P.M. "Bergman, with his 'irst color film, proves as masterful as with black and white. A mischievously amus- ing free-style frolic. playfully throwing darts at critics, fame, censors and female admirers." -Cu r" ~Ingmar I ergtnis Fst Film n Color aLL thes2 DISTRIBUTED w JANUS FILMS COMING- "LOVE THE ITALIAN WAY" fairs, 1011 Student Activities Bldg. Priv- tor, and chief Architect, Republican ileges such as the use of the Organi- Institute of Urban Development, Skop- zation Announcement column in The je, Yugoslavia, May 24-27. Michigan Daily, use of meeting rooms Lasla Rehak, Federal Assembly depu- in University buildings, assignment of ty, secretary o fthe Main Committee Student Activities Bldg. facilities, etc. of the Socialist Alliance of Working are available to registered organizations People of Serbia, Yugoslavia, May 25- only. 27. Accompanied by a Department of State contract escort-interpreter, Serge Doctoral Examination for Clifton Lutchenkov. Sylvanus Goddin, Jr., Chemical Engi- Michael Serghi, director, Foreign Lan- neering; thesis: "Two-Dimensional Flow guage Institute, Nicosia, Cyprus, May of Two Ilnmiscible Incompressible Flu- 26-June 3. ids in a Stratified Porous Medium," Andreas Papadopoulos, senior master, May 26, Wed., 3030 East Engrg. Bldg., English and Greek, The English School, 1 p.m. Nicosia, Cyprus, May 26-June 3. Leonidas K. Koullis, inspector of Regents' Meeting: June 18. Commu- English for. Greek secondary schools, nications for consideration at this Greek Office of Education, Nicosia, Cy- meeting must be in the President's prus, May 26-June 3. hands no later than June 4. Ahmed Ali Nimir, headmaster, Khar- toum North Secondary School, Kartoun Physical Chemistry Seminar: Jesse W.r North, Sudan, May 26-June 3. Schilling, Univ. of Mich., Chemistry Laszlo Nyeste associate professor (do- Dept., "X-Ray Studies of Some Pro- cent), Institute of Agricultural Chemi- teins," on Thurs., May 27. 4 p.m., cal Technology, Technical University Room 1400, Chemistry Bidg. of Budapest, Budapest, Hungary, May 27-31. Opening, Architectural and Ornament Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Bach, head of de- Drawings of the 16th to the early 19th partment for operations research, In- Centuries, at the Museum of Art, Wed., stitute for Electrical Power Research, May 26, 4 p.m and at 7 p.m. Budapest, Hungary, May 31-June 2. I Their panels present broad tar- gets for meteoroids-hot-rod bits of space debris, mostly remnants of disintegrated comets, which speed along at up to 136,000 miles an hour. Almost all are micro- scopic in size and could create a possible eroding sandblast effect on manned spacecraft orbiting the earth for long periods. Use for Data Data from the satellites will help in designing protective ma- aerials for future manned craft. For Saturn 1 it was the ninth' straight test flight success without. a miss. An updated version, Sat- urn 1B, will be used starting in 1967 to hoist three-man Apollo crews into earth orbit to practice for later lunar landing missions. The Saturn 1 first stage flownI yesterday was the first produced by industry, with Chrysler Corp. the prime contractor. The previ- ous eight rockets in the series were built by NASA's Marshall Spaceflight Center. 'Tough-Minded' There is still the tough-mind- ed devotion to ideals and abso- lute ruthlessness in eliminating failure. A sign in Director Sargent Shriver's office advertises there is no room for good losers. An official who served on the original task force with Shriver and still:holds a top job says run- ning the Peace Corps is no job for weaklings, that it at times can be "difficult, disagreeable, dis- heartening." "If enough new brains, new blood, new ideas and new insights -from experienced people - can continually flow into the Peace Corps, perhaps we can accomplish the feat of renewal and remain a 'young agency' for more than just three or four years," he said. Impact at Home Shriver has said that the Peace Corps will have its greatest impact at home, through returning vol- unteers. "Just wait until we have some 10,000 to 15,000 Peace Corps vet- Max Shulman for Kellogg's (By the author of Dobie Gillis, Rally Round the Flag, Boys, etc.) HOW TO SEE EUROPE FOR ONLY $500 A DAY 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- DIAL 5-6290 j r ...:.SHIRLEY MaCAINE .J PETER OSTINOY r }I}RICHARD CRENNA L A LJH UU I D M l 1 3i '. 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. Mr. and Mrs. Radoslav Radkovic, pro- fessor head of sociological dept., School of Political Sciences, Yugoslavia, May 16-June 5. Geoffrey Hallam, university lecturer, University of Aston, England, May 23- 26. Lazar Boris Koljozov, assistant lec- turer, technical faculty, Skopje Univer- sity, Yugoslavia, May 24-27. Mr. 1& Mrs. Metodija Trajkovski, as- sistant lecturer, technical faculty, Skop- Je University, Yugoslavia, May 24-27, Mr. & Mrs. Zvonimir Nikuljski, direc- DIAL 662-6264 Placement t , n-y mm mrniwwwwwwwwwwrw mmmm iw~winmmm mm -w POSITION OPENINGS: FR E ELVE Y Dow Jones &NCo., N.Y.C.-Productlon R RE *D E IV R Mgmt. Trainee, recent grad with some 3 newspaper exper. for publisher of Wall Street Journal & National Observer. T Columbia Cement Corp., Zanesville, * g THOM ON lS RESTAU RANT Ohio-Sales Trainee. Degree in Bus. Ad., major in mktg. pref. Will consider t other grads interested in sales. PhonI76 v"0 Wayne General Hospital, Eloise, Mich. ^ * -Lab Technician. Immed. opening, 1 0 F o ag man or woman, BS bkgd. in animal1 oe i biol; 2 yrs. college min. Research proj- I ect on blood circulation. Work with PICKED UP OR DELIVERY ONLY I animals. y Ayerst Labs., Inc., Rouses 'Point, N.Y. ;3 -Various openings including 1. Chem- *ICoupon Good Monday Thru Thursday, May 24-27 ist, degree in chem., pharm. or rel., no wwwsrrrwrsr rsmin,,,w... wwninminmmm I exper. req. 2. Ass't.' Manager-Quality - ._.__.__.. .___._.._.____ .___._..._.__._ Control ,degree in chem. pref. MS plus 10 yrs. exper. 3. Bacteriologist, BS Bac- teriol. or rel. plus 1-2 yrs. exper. 4 Process Engr. BS Ch. Engrg., 2-5 yrs. GOING _U OF B S E U.S. Civil Service Comm., Wash., D.C. -Psychologists (Research & Clinical). BS Psych. plus statistics course. HigherS rating for PhD or equivalent. For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB. OFF Michigan Jewelry ORGANIZATION Watches IoW/%0N41FF Lighters Naturally you are all going to Europe this summer, and nat- urally you are all asking the same question: what countries should you visit? Well sir, it depends on how much time you've got. If you're going to be there a whole week, of course you'll see all of Europe. But if, like most of us, you only have three days, it would be wise to restrict your trip to just 12 or 15 of the most interesting countries. First on your list should be Italy. Don't miss it! It's a fun country! Moreover, you don't even need to know the language to have a marvelous time. The Italians are a friendly, jolly people who make it easy to communicate. You'll get along splendidly if you'll learn just three simple phrases: "Buon giorno" which means "Good morning," "Grazie" which means "Thank you" and "Cosi fan tutte" which means "Your Fiat is on my foot:" In order to help you enjoy the fabled land of Italy, it is necessary for me to supply a bit of historical background. (It is also necessary for me to say a few words about Kellogg's Sugar Frosted Flakes because the makers of Kellogg's Sugar Frosted Flakes pay me to. write this column, and they are- inclined to brood if I, neglect to mention their product. Of course they don't stay gloomy for long, the makers of Kellogg's Sugar Frosted Flakes, for they are kindly, cheery folk, fond of Mforris-dancing, quilting bees and furry animals-fine, decent men, just as good down-deep as the flakes they make. And there, friends, is the secret of Sugar finally fell to the Goths, the Visi-. goths, and the Green Bay Packers. After the fall of Rome, Italy just laid around waiting for the Renaissance. Then, believe you me, the fat was in the firel Painters sprang up like dande- lions! In Florence alone there was Michaelangelo, Della Robbia, Tintoretto, and Alfredo Scarpitta. (Ironically, Mr. Scarpitta, the least famous of the Florentines, was the most important, for Mr. Scarpitta discovered canvas. Un- til his discovery, all painting had been done on the sides of burros. Who knows how many master- pieces were lost to the world, alas, during the moulting season?) The surge in painting stimu lated all the other arts-especially opera. First came Puccini, then Rossini, and then the greatest of them all, Verdi, who composed such immortal works as II Trova- tore ("The Dental Technician"), La Traviata ("The Lung"), and La Forza del Destino ("Why Johnny Can't Read"). In all the major cities of Italy you will find many peppy museums and opera houses. But you must not, like too many tourists, confine your travelling to just the major cities. The Italian countryside is filled with fascinating byways, if you will but look. For instance, in the little-known village of Formaggio, overlooking the Dolomites, there is a burro-beating contest on the second Tuesday of each month. In Ossabucco, a charmingly un- spoiled hamlet on the Ligurian coast, the world's largest sprat is on exhibit every Wednesday and Friday. In the junior high school of Malocchio, a quaint settlement nestled high in the Apennines you can see Garibaldi's penman- ship diploma from three to five p.m. daily. Get off the beaten track! Ex- plore the hidden nooks, the for- gotten crannies! Here is the real Italy. Here you will meet open, honest, hearty folk, brimming over with friendliness, who will be glad to show you their customs and teach you their language. I'll wager when you leave Italy you'll know far more Itali n than the three basic phrases. You'll also know "Arrivederci" which means "See you later," "Per favore" which means "Please," and "La donna e mobile" which I i I Use Daily, Classified Ads ENDS TODAY "NONE BUT THE BRAVE" i EXTRA "DIAL P FOR PINK" a Pink Panther Cartoon NEXT: "THE TRAIN" rnrrswsmwMai - r Lest you forget, FRASER'S SALE of 1Jnr T fl«T ADP .en I THURSDAY PETER ELKE SELLERS SOMMER ,,.The Screen commits the perfect COWiSL uX comedy! DAVID NIVEN PETER SELLERS ROBERT WAGNER CAPUCINE. ""THE PINK PANTHER;'l (CLAUDIA CARDINALEI TECHNICOLORWTECHNIRAMA* 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. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Reg- ular weekly meeting, lecture-discussion speaker: Ward Wilson, IVCF Staff; top- ic: "The Great Society," Wed., May 26, 7:30 p.m., Room 3-C, Michigan Union. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511, Washtenaw, Midweek Devotion, 10 p.m., Wed., May 26, Ascension Eve service: "God's Right Hand Man," Vicar Steph- en Stein, speaker. Communion will be celebrated. HALLER'S JEWELRY 717 North University NOTICES r U THE ROMANOFFS GERMAN-AMERICAN CUISINE a Welcomes Ann Arbor Students German Style Stuffed Cabbage Roll, Natural Gravy, Steamed Rice, Applesauce, Roll & Butter ... . 95c 1 Nr ML. Wedding Rings in stock