THURSDAY, JUNE 3,1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE THREE * DENOUNCE PROCEDURE: Reiect Junta Election Offer Labor Tax Reform Bill Will the Stock Market Crash? ~~~ I V ULU -,I LUC-' IL . I I ItIL .. 1n V.. V V 11 . is SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (P)-Rebel leaders yes-j terday rejected a junta proposalI for new elections to settle the Do- minican conflict. Col. Francisco Caamano Deno. who presides over the rebel re- gime, turned aside. as "a fable," the ' election formula laid down Tuesday by the civilian-military junta. Caamano told newsmen that be- fore any election could be con- templated by the rebel. faction a new government operating under the 1963 constitution must be re- stored. Calls'for Elections The junta, headed by Gen. An- tonio Imbert Barrera, called for elections as early as possible ,un- der the supervision of the Organi- zation of American States. The tD 9 Btndy Defends Foreign Policy WASHINGTON (P) - McGeorge Bundy said yesterday American power is being used in Viet Nam and the Dominican Republic in the interest of peace and the peo- ple involved. The U.S. action should be judg- ed by its results, he added. Bundy, who is President Lyndon B. Johnson's national security af- fairs adviser, defended the ad- ministration's policies against cri- ties of the right and left in a speech to an International Pub- lishers Association luncheon spon- sored by the Readers Digest. Bundy said that the United States entered the world scene as a big power with the fall of France in 1940 and since then has been faced with the need to act or not act in international circumstances that arise. But U.S. foreign policy goals have been steadily for peace and for the interests of others as well as Americans, he said. And while immediate and un- animous approval is not antici- pated, he said, "we expect . . . to be judged in the end by the re- sult, by the effect" of what is done. *mmm..........mmm.mmmmm m., SREE DI T HOMPSON'S Phone 50c OFF PICKED UP OR Coupon Good Monday Thrt * rrrrrrwirarrarrrirarrrrrmiimu -WN W '" " " -- By SAM DAWSON stock market had its worst crash the business cycle was old hat. ONOWYRoueoCo oscm pwtativo1929 since 1929. It revived and prices This belief was strengthened in election would be open to all LONDON ()-The House of Commons came up with a tie vote, YORK ()-Could the early this May were at record both instances by a long period pate.crash hphighs. FdealR "281-281, last night on a major tax reform measure of the Labor Party happen again? Federal Re- hs. The very heighth of these of economic growth. In both years In another development, battle-government. serve Chairman Wilam h prices make some observers dizzy. private debt was growing rapidly. In another developmnt, battle- The bil a Conservative whoney Martin sees the current boom picsUwngI ohyastem eyupl ready Brazilian troops pushed the The bill was saved by the acting chairman, psychology as having "disquieting BusinnUpswinglin both years the money supply international security zone south "went along with the tradition that the chair always votes to keep an similarities" with that of the Businessmen are more inclined was t15idifr and west to embrace the battered issue before the House 1920's toconcentrate on the evidence of But 1965 is different from 1929 national presidential palace. Jubilant Conservatives set up a roar as the tie vote was announ- But the Johnson administrati ,continuing strength of the 4-year in many ways: excesses of the The operation, carried out ed. holds that there's small likelihood olde the brakes on booms and the credit are under close supervision smoothly by units of a battalion of I Then Sir Herbert Butcher, deputy chairman of the Ways and of a repeat performance-if the " z cushions for downturns that have now, while Iin 1929 the sky was infantry, took out a sizable chunk Means Committee, gave his deciding vote to the Labor government for Federal Reserve, business and la- been do nce the 1929 the ky pas of city area lying between rebel a one-vote margin. Defeat for the proposal to introduce an American- bor all will cooperate with gov- besn dit h o there lines and the American controlledsyecrorto a i rti ernment in keeping the economygas. w.h'corporate profits.An ere east-west corridor. style rporationtax Brtai on a one-way street to prosperity. Bankers study the clash in eo- is now a vastly expanded middle Erwould have been a serious blow to nomic and monetary thinking in class with higher incomes and im- Effect of Operation n. a" ' FEF This doctrine is called the new The effect of the operation, N avy Planes the prestige of Prime Minister Washington to glean clues as to pressive liquid assets-as well as . Harold Wilson's Labor govern- economics. It contends that the the future course of interest rates debts. Wholesale prices are fairly howeerpraticaly emoed te ~j- ~business cycle can be licked.01' at possibility of a dangerous clash meot Down nient. least tamed and that 1929 need and the recently noted trend to- stable now, while in 1929 they b nj r nGovernment Whips ward tighter money and credit. were declining. between the 350 junta troops innerhapngi. the palacek and the rebel forces °;,y;;'"aiieseIt probably would not have np. The trends-and the clash, if it Business expansion of capacity only a block away. brought the government down, butOld Memories becomes sharper-can affect both now is being tailored much closer Under the agreement reached the government whips responsible The Martin rattling of old men- the course of the domestic econ- to consumer demands. Social se- Unde theairementreacedhtevgoernmnthwipsgesposibl Tuesday between the contending SAIGON (R)-North Vietnamese for getting members of Parliament ones sent shiveis through U.S. omy and the troubled interna- curity. unemployment benefits, factions through OAS negotia- COL. CAAMANO DENO gunners downed two U.S. Navy into the voting lobbies would havea k London stock markets this tional monetary situation. dozens of government projects in- tions, the junta forces in the pal- planes in succession about 70 been called on the carpet-as they week There are a number of things sure against the disastrous drop ace will be reduced to a token ( The maneuver places the Bra- miles south of Hanoi and all their probably will be anyway. Stock traders were alarmed that that make 1965 look like 1929. But in private income that the 1929 force of 25 men. zilian forces within a few blocks five crewmen were reported killed The House of Commons was sit-; the smoldering dispute between even Martin concedes there are crash triggered, The extension of the interna- of rebel lines in an area where yesterday. A rescue pilot said there ting as a Ways and Means Com- administration economists and the many differences, too. Psychological Hold tional security lines began at 11 rebel exchanges with American was no chance they survived. mittee to consider amendments to money managers was coming out The similarities: in both 1929 And, as the 1962 stock market a.m. The Brazilian troops moved forces have been the heaviest. The loss of the five Americans the annual finance bill. That was into the open. and 1965 government and business crash showed, general prosperity in two columns on opposite side- Shooting Incidents was the heaviest on any single why Butcher was in the chair in- They also were aware that it leaders were convinced that pros- isn't as closely tied to the market walks of a street leading east to- Of the 19 shooting incidents day of the raids that were launch- stead of the house speaker, Sir was just three years ago that the perity would last forever and that as it was in 1929. The stock mar- ward the palace grounds. Tuesday night, 11 were in the cor- ed against North Viet Nam Feb. 7. Harry Hylton-Foster. ket still has great psychological Brazilian Troops ridor or in the area just north But other planes of the Navy and Hylton-Foster hold on the public. But the public At the head of the columns of the palace. One paratrooper U.S. Air Force maintained the Hylton-Foster, also a Conserva- F7 now takes the ups and downs of marched two infantrymen carry- was wounded by a rebel hand pressure with strikes at bridges, sip was retaed thespeaker- W o l e sou the market without panicking. ing the blue OAS standards. The grenade. boxcars and radar sites. ship by the Labor government The 1962 crash disturbed the Brazilian troops moved cautiously, Intensive gunfire was reported South of V C after its narrow victory the public arms at the ready, along the side- m the residential areas east of installations thebo dei, etCon last parliamentary elections. Theys little scars from it. walks. They were trailed by knots the Hotel Embajador. but there in the Ba Gia area Laborites chose this course rather! Y The Associates Press The 1929 crash in the market of newsmen and television crews. was no official account of the of the Ngai province, the scene than sacrifice one of their own WASHINGTON-The Peace Corps said 24 volunteers arrived in spread inevitably through the Dominican junta troops inside 1auses. e avet kby nealyfighting, 100members in the normally non-vot- the Dominican Republic yesterday with the approval of rival factions whole economy. It brought on both the geounds peered quietly through The rebel proess office reported cameundercattackrbydnearyi100ting role. in the strife-torn Latin American natin.g the fence at the Brazilians. There ight mortar shells were fired into American and South Vietnamese Edward H e a t h, opposition m* n to correct it. was a wave here and there but no the rebel sector Tuesday night, war planes. Returning pilots said spokesman on taxation, challeng- These measures have expanded waesgnoregnin nounen one .hydsryd25bidnsadedtegvrmn oaohrvt PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia-President Tito of Yugoslavia arrived steadily and the latest refinements fortifications and damaged 110. as his party savored the near- yesterday for a week-long state visit to Czechoslovakia and a round on moderating the business and But the Viet Cong had struck victory of the tie. He laced into of talks on the Moscow-Peking feud. The tour will take him later monetary ups and downs are dub- again 100 miles away with an at- the Laborites, berating them for to East Germany and the Soviet Union. Tito was greeted at Ruzyn bed the new economics. CTOS am p u s-. tack on the district headquarters a failure to answer Tory argu- airport by President Antonin No -___ town of Le Thanh and a series of ments against the tax or muster a votny. three ambushes on the Pleiku-Le majority to get it through. Then W - Thanh road that left 175 South he called for a test vote toad- WASHINGTON- The United THURSDAY, JUNE 3 Era and After" will begin with; Vietnamese troops dead or miss- journ the t he finance States yesterday ordered a first 9 p.m.-Registration for a con- morning addresses by Prof. Mar- ing. bill. secretary of the Soviet Embassy ference on "The Khrushchev Era shall Shulman of the Fletcher This was the action, 220 miles The government regrouped its to leave the country as soon as and After" will be held in the Schol of Law and Diplomacy at northeast of Saigon, in which the forces on this vote, and came possible for engaging, In "activi- lobby of the Rackham Bldg. The Tufts University and Richard death of two U.S. army advisers through with a majority of 5. The ties incompatible with his diplo- conference will take place on June Lowenthal of the Research Insti- was reported Tuesday. The De- vote was 284-279. matic status." 4 and 5. For further information tute on Communist Affairs at Co- fense Department identified the - Th mn dclarpersna non l' w a ': :: l n v_ 4 .,i ': ' %.:¢ } I contact the Extension Service, 764-5304, FRIDAY, JUNE 4 I 9 a.m., 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. - "The Conference on the Khrushchev ........m..,............ m... £ ELI VERY I II RESTA URANT r 761-0001 on large | one item pizza DELIVERY ONLY u Thursday, May 31-June 3 rris or~~s~r wr~wyrrrws~rrw w lumbia University. At the afternoon s e s s i o n Prof. John Hazard of Columbia University will deliver an address on "Are Post-Stalin Russians Be- coming 'Rights Oriented'?" and Prof. Alec Nove of .the University of Glasgow will discuss "Economic. Causes and Consequences of Khrushchev's Fall." An address by Patricia Blake of the Russian In- stitute at Columbia will highlight the evening program. 7 and 9 p.m.-The Cinema Guild will present Harold Lloyd in "Nev- 'er Weaken," Laurel and Hardy in I "Battle of the Century" and Har- I ry Langdon in "Lucky Star" in the I Architecture Aud. American ambush victims as Maj. Bernard W. Dibbet, 38, of Fay- etteville, N.C., and M. Sgt. Hugh M. Robbins, 46, of Lawton, Okla. Three government battalions moved cautiously to reclaim Le. Thanh,_ which was overrun early Tuesday by a battalion or more :f the Red guerrillas. Survivors said that, of the 100-man militia garrison two-thirds were dead or missing. Ambushes on the road from Pleiku, 25 miles northeast of Le Thanh, accounted for the oth- er government casualties. Helicopter gunners said they be- lieved they killed 20 of the Viet Cong. This was unconfirmed by body count. Heavily Active Exchanges 0Dip NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market dipped sharply yesterday on the heels of Tuesday's severe setback, but cut the day's worst losses in half at the close. Trading was heavy, with, vol- ume rising to 6.85 million shares from Tuesday's 4.85 million. Bargain hunters bought heavily near the close, shrinking a loss that for a time looked as if it might equal- Tuesday's, one of the worst slumps of the year. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Full Time & Evening Employment MEN ONLY 18-35 If you are free from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. four evenings each week end occasionally on Saturday, you con maintain your,studies and still enjoy a part-time job doing special interview work that will bring an average weekly income of $67. If you are neat appearing and a hard worker call Mr. Jones at 761- 1488 from 10 a.m. to 12 a.m. Monday-Friday. No other times. We are also interested in full-time employment. ': W. Yrr : , ": W.Wr:"".W::."t."."r.: :Vt t: :::":::::: rr::::: uJ'."." .:.r. ..v .............. ..T ....... F{:' "f':",W'J. ::"{,;4"'{"1}{ WS ''-:y,'' :{lfl: PFr ;:J. rf, }f'N:tiJ:4{"; r':":^:'}''.A. sr".s::vr.. .:.".";.:,::.-Fn4.. {r}}:ff,.. {:! {'{Y :{?rn., }SS{% '$-1.}i;: 'v'" rr... Y. n.. r.r {..r..-rrr:f"44}r'-{.rj'rr'. "r { ir. ..v:...Yr...r... :}G;{:'"}.{:v. ,:>}:-.: :."r.{}:.Y......r..::a".":::.4::.rt:::.v.v-.:-XA:': r:"4Y.{{{A}:.o.... .:{:"r..e..::aa.4. :f:"' r::.. ... $.J{:;v........%"=:..... {5......:C.n viTd.........,:.,..4v.... rid,.. ..rr,.... r.A'rrrr..r:..A.......,....r... re:" D AI LYFFIAL BULLETI :};{ " vw.v ".^ ":: vw.".v: r.v:.". sv:v::v :":v': v: v:.v: r: "v:: " "rt : .vrti :} :L : : T ° ..'r'te:"; :.v:: i:"¢: . f ..}" r n' ^ tfr}r . .. N..: $ firY. n } f 4'r ^ .}; 'v: r v,::. . ..... .. J. SF": f . n. x..., r..:v..... r: irr...:.d -, i:"l.{:..v. .{C{::rR: .'': ...... "'rr.:rr:: rrrxv. vk? :.........:...:: rr.".".:r .. rJ ns}r."... .i....:.. r:".:{^.LV:."$. ..: }: ti :i"'tr''Y...{ r. r$}viY~. vrfl.r .. h+::-.s. rr.rff. . ih rRfi$' :AiX" . n i.:{ti. .rV' ,. grata" is Stefen M. Kirsanov. NEW BERN, N.C.-Three white men, one identified as a Ku Klux Klan leader, pleaded guilty yester- day to charges of dynamiting two cars outside a Negro church dur- ing a civil rights rally last Jan. 24. The three were given suspended jail sentences by Superior Court Judge Albert Cowper. DIAL 8-6416 YOU tDaN NAVSo . TECHNICOLOR* stARRNG &1KE!MOMMEP (the beautiu/baby from "The Prize ) _COMING "MAJOR BARBARA" DIAL 2-6264 THE PLACE: NORMANDY THE TIME:D-DAY PLUS ONE The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication ,of The Univer- sit) of Michigan, for which The Michigan {atiy assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TVI'hWItITTEN 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 organtzation notices are not accepted for publication. THURSDAY, JUNE 3 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Per- sonnel Techniques Seminar - George S. Odiorne, Bureau of Industrial Re- lations, "Human Problems of Quality Control": Michigan Union, 8 a.m. Training and Development, Personnel Office, University Management Seminar -Clark C. Caskey and Mitchell S. No- vit, Bureau of Industrial Relations, "Orientation to Supervisory Practices": Michigan Union, 8:30 am.' Michigan Fire College-Registration, Civil Defense and Disaster Training Center, 8:30 a.m. Conference on The Khrushchev Era and After-Registration, Rackham Lob- by, 9 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Soonsung Hong, Electrical Engineering; thesis: "Application of Conformal Mapping to Scattering and Diffraction Prob- 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. *. * * Christian Science Organization, Regu- lar testimony meeting, Thurs., June 3, 7:30 p.m., 3545 SAB. * ** Folk Dance Club, Folk dance with in- struction, Fri., June 4, 8-11 p.m., Wom- en's Athletic Bldg. lems," Thurs., June 3, 2310 E. Engrg. Bldg., 10 a.m. Physical Chemistry Seminar: Walter Duerksen, University of Michigan, Chemistry Dept., "Significant Structure Theory of Liquids," Thurs., June 3, 4 p.m., Room 1400, Chemistry Bldg. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Archer Daniels Midland Co., Minne- apolis, Minn.-Parlous openings for mir. of argic. & chem. products including 1. Admin. Chemist, B9 Chem. or Ch. Engrg. 2. Tech. Sales Trainees, BS Chem. or Ch. Engrg. or Bus. Ad., Lib. Arts plus some chem. bkgd. City Planning Comm., Allentown, Pa. --City Planner, MA, some exper. Up- date planning program & assist in com- Imunity studies. Chemical Fund, N.Y.C.-Attn.: Recent grads. Security Analyst. Chem. or Ch. Engrg. plus finance or bus. admin. Analyze bus., econ., & tech. factors re- lating to investments. Atlantic Refining Co., Phila., Pa. - Evaluation Engr. BS Ch. Engrg. Con- duct econ. analysis of research pro- grams. Financial aid available for grad study leading to MBA or MA Indus. Mgmt. Merck & Co., 'Rahway, N.J.-Virolo- gist. PhD. Conduct virus & immunolog- ic studies in cancer research program. Located in West Point, Pa. * * * For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB. &t £$, o r petite Miss 1 sumIn in a dotted skimmer scallop collared and hip belted in cool, crisp spun rayon.. perfectly proportioned f figures 5'2" a under. Navy w white bodice and dots. 3-13 sizes. 14.98. aers Fillet -o- Fish . . . . 24c Triple Thick Shakes,.. 22c Delicious Hamburgers 15c 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. RENT YOUR TV From NEJAC TV Rentals i I t 'or nd ith This Weekend Is COMEDY CLASSICS WEEKEND * Ii at CINEMA GUILD I a ON THE PROGRAM : NEVER WEATHER with Harold Lloyd BATTLE OF THE CENTURY and the N academy award winning THE MUSIC BOX both with Laurel & Hardy finally wacky and wild Harry Langdon :. 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