Wednesday, July 10, 1968 THE MICHIGAN/DAILY Page Three Wednesday, July 10, 1968 THE MICHIGAN1DAILY *!ULY WAR TALKS: LBJ, Thieu to confer SAIGON (P)-President John- son and President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam will meet in Honolulu around July 20 to discuss the problems of war and peace in Vietnam. Thieu proposed the meeting af- ter announcing Monday he was again forced to postpone this month's visit to Washington be- cause offthe threat of a new enemy offensive. An announcement by Thieu's office yesterday said the Honolulu conference will last for two days and will be devoted to the war and the preliminary peace talks in Paris between North Vietnam and the United States. White House Press Secretary George Christian said in San An- tonio, Texas, that the exact date will be set after Johnson confers with his advisers. The anouncement came as high South Vietnamese and U.S. offi- cials were holding a series of con- ferences in Saigon. Reports in- dicated a major development might be near. Some observers claimed signifi- cance in the call by Ambassador Bui Diem, South Vietnam observer at the Paris talks, for direct ne- gotiations between North and South Vietnam. Diem said' that before there could be a bombing pause North Vietnam must stop infiltrating troops into South Vietnam and put an end "to the aggression that is the very cause of the conflict." "Let North Vietnam yield to the evidence," he said, "and stop being taken in by its own propa- t ganda and we would certainly be closer to a solution than we are now." Diem said direct conversa- tions between the North and e South could then take place. Y At the same time, a change in emphasis in North Vietnam's propaganda drew the attention of officials. t Radio Hanoi accused the United - States yesterday of "trying to re- negotiate at Paris the 1954 Geneva agreement that ended the French n Indochina war.' De Gaulle to oust French premier rCouve de Murville to take over Pompidou post after policy split PARIS ;(R) - Georges Pompidou has split with President Charles de Gaulle over social reforms for France and will be replaced as premier by former Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville, sources close to the government said yes- terday. Pompidou, a former banker, was understood to boppose de Gaulle's "participation" plan for workers and students to share in maanging factories and universities. De Gaulle has offered the plan as his long-term answer to the social frus- trations that boiled up in the4 nationwide riots and strikes of May and June.;1O use Labor unions and business men 'J. also have voiced opposition to the participation plan, although De Gaulle has never spelled out its to a 1c O De Gaulle praised Pompidou highly at the height of the crisis six weeks ago. But a source close to the premier commented yester- day on reports of his impending -f ouster: "It's true." WASHINGTON (P)-The House It had been expected for soire Rules Committee voted yesterday time that Pompidou would step to send the gun control bill, which down as premier but only to es- would ban'the interstate sale of cape political entanglements and rifles and shotguns, to the ,House ready himself as De Gaulle's heir floor for action. aparent, for the presidency. Now The action came after 10 hours Pompidou's future course was un- of hearings during the past two clear. days. The premier is nominally chief The committee voted to permit of government but at the outset of De Gaulle's Fifth Republic the an open. rule which will enable presidency changed from a some- members to amend the bill. what ceremonial job to a position Many of the witnesses who ap- of great power. peared before the Rules Commit- Pompidou holds a National As- tee said if such a rule were per- sembly seat that he would retain mitted they would submit amend- as a political base regardless of ments. any change in the premiership. One committee source said the The new assembly meets tomorrow vote was 10-5 to send the bill to for the first time. the House floor. The changeover was expected to It was also understood that the be announced officially this week committee ruled that an amend- after. today's regular Cabinet ment by Rep. Bob Casey (D-Tex), meeting, sources said. Couve de would be germane, to the bill Murville was reported to have al- should he desire to introduce it ready held preliminary talks on on the House floor., forming a new Cabinet. An- Casey said his plan would re- nouncement of the new Cabinet quire mandatory sentences for list was expected Saturday. criminals convicted of crimes Couve de Murville spent an while carrying a firearm. hour and a quarter talking with , He told the committee Monday De Gaulle at the Elysee Palace. he sought to amend the bill while Later, Couve de Murville and it was in the House Judiciary Pompidou had a long talk at the Committee but was told the premier's office. amendment was not germane and -AssociAted Press I aids an injured enemy U.S. forces block -Associated Press Rocky rocks with rockin' rockers Rocky urges GOP poll 104 new Sa1g4 SAIGON ') -- The U.S. Army and Navy teamed up yesterday to block enemy forces moving up on Saigon for a possible new attack, long threatened by the Viet Cong and Hanoi. Troops of the U.S. 9th Infantry Division turned back a force of unknown size in a skirmish in Long An Province 19 miles south- west of Saigon. The U.S. Com- mand said 13 enemy soldiers were killed and there were no Ameri- on, attack can casualties. While the enemy unit was un- identified, it may have been part of the North Vietnamese 9th Divi- sion. Intelligence reports say a regiment of that division moved into Long An recently. The intelligence reports place two of the enemy 9th's infantry regiments and an artillery regi- ment, possibly 4,000 men, west of Saigon in menacing positions. U.S. Navy river patrol boats and, helicopters, only recently commit- ted to the defense of Saigon, de- stroyed three enemy sampans on the Dong Nai River 11 miles east of Saigon. . Elsewhere, U.S. and South Viet- namese troops reported scattered contacts with small units in the endless sweeps around as they sought for enemy soldiers and weapons. There were no reports of new fighting at the other danger poin near the demilitarized zone divid. ing Vietnam, where U.S. Marinek engaged North Vietnamese ix battle Sunday and Monday. There was no letup in the a: war in North Vietnam's southern panhandle, where U.S. pilots flev 140 missions Monday. In addition, the movement of men and materiels was slowed b: cutting roads in 63 places an( leaving five bridges unusable. The crews also ignited by sec- ondary explosions, 20 petroleun and lubricant fires and 105 other sustained fires. They also silenced 26 weapons positions." NASHVILLE, Tenn. OP)-Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller challenged Richard M. Nixon yesterday to join in sponsoring a nationwide poll of voters to serve as "an im- portant guide" to the Republican National Convention in choosing the strongest presidential candi- date. He also invited Nixon again to meet in open debate of campaign isues on national television. Nixon has said in the past that such de- bates would only impair Repub- lican party unity. The New York governor com- rf 3' d It Johnson asks Senate to ratify arms pact, THIS WEEK ONLY! University Players' SAN ANTONIO MP)-President Johnson asked the Senate yester- day to ratify a non-proliferation treaty designed to halt the spread of nuclear weapons and ward off what he termed "nuclear .an- archy." "By 1985," Johnson said in a message finished in Central Amer- ica Monday, "the world's peaceful nuclear power stations will prob- ably be turning out enough by plutonium for the production of tons of nuclear bombs every day. "This capability must not be allowed to result in the further spread of nuclear weapons. The consequences would be nuclear anarchy, and the energy designed to light the world could plunge it into darkness." The message was flown to Washington and delivered to the Senate. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee plans to open hearings on the treaty today. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and William C. Foster, head of the U.S. disarma- ment agency, will be leadoff wit- nesses. White House officials said they believe the chances of ratification before Congress adjourns are good. Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana appeared uncertain, however, when asked about the prospects. "We'll see how things develop," he commented. The United States, Soviet Rus- sia, Great Britain and some 60 other countries already have sign- ed the treaty. The three big pow- ers and 40 additional nations must ratify it to bring it into effect. Ireland has led the way on rati fication. The two other nuclear powers, France and Red China, have balked at signing. The pattern for the treaty was a 22-year-old American law for- bidding transfer of nuclear wea- pons to other nations. The treaty would bind all nuclear powers to apply this ban. In addition, it would forbid non- nuclear countries to receive or make nuclear weapons or to seek or accept help in making them. But development of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes coutld go on under international safe- guards. Several "threshold" nations, re- garded as capable of making nu- clear weapons if they wish, have held back so far on signing the treaty. Canada, Japan,dIsrael, Sweden and Switzerland are among these. plained that Nixon had been silent on the issues since the presidential primaries and argued that "this kind of candidacy cannot be good enough-or strong enough-for the Republican Party in 1968. Rockefeller's dual move was re- garded as an effort to blunt the long lead in delegate strength Nixon compiled through primary victories and alliances with party leaders in various states. The governor issued his chal- lenges during a campaign stop in St. Louis, before flying to Nash- ville to pursue his effort to con- yince Republicans that he is a more likely winner in November, than Nixon. At St. Louis, Rockefeller spoke to Republican Leaders at a break- fast meeting, conferred privately with members of Missouri's pro- Nixon convention delegation and drew a crowd estimated by police at 4,000 for a noontime rally in the downtown section of the city. Noting that less than four weeks remain before the party convention opens in Miami, Aug. 5, Rockefeller said it was time to consult the people on their choice of candidates and speak to them freely on the issues. He said he had sent telegrams to Nixon and National Chairman Ray Bliss urging they join him in commissioning "an unim- peachable polling organization to test the respective strengths of Mr. Nixon and myself against any Democratic opponent." In Washington, Bliss said he was turning down the Rockefeller proposal. Bliss sent this reply to Rocke- feller: "Since assuming the chairman- ship of the Republican National Committee I have repeatedly stated that the proper role of the national chairman is to build a strong party organization from the' precinct to the national level. I have maintained a complete neutrality in the nominating pro-, cess and I will not engage in any activity directly or indirectly re-, lating to influencing the votes of the duly elected delegates to the Republican National Conven- tion." Rockefeller said the poll could take one of two forms: A poll of voters in each of the 50 states, from which conclusions might be drawn as to how the states' electoral votes eventually would be cast. A more limited survey concen- trating on states with large cities that Rockefeller said Bliss had described as being vital to Repub- lican victory. Rockefeller identi- fied the states as Massachusetts. New York, New Jersey, Pennsyl- vania, Maryland, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois and Missouri. He said he would be willing to add California to the list. Rockefeller suggested that Bliss himself analyze the findings and report them to the convention "as an important guide to delegates." Rockefeller estimated it would' cost an average $,000 per state-- a total of $250,000-to complete the national poll. Couve de Murville, 61, was named finance minister for an in- terim period starting at the end of- # i f May. thus ruled out of order. Meanwhile, in a Senate hearing, Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark renewed an administration appeal for the more rigorous proposal calling for federal registration of fire , despite a setback in the Hose. Sen. Strom ,Thurmond (R-SCY, brought the question up at a Sen- ate juvenile delinquency subcom- mittee hearing on the firearms registration and licensing bill urged by President Johnson. Clark, in his testimony before the Senate committee, rejected a suggestion by Thurmond that any registration of firearms should be left to the states and local gov- ernments. However, he said he hoped the states would set up their own sys- tems for licensing gun owners. He said the administration bill is de- signed to encourage this but ;the federal government must act if the states fail to do so. Thurmond, who contended na- tional registration of firearms "can eventually end up in confis- cation," said that many of the petitions supporting the admin- istration bill were gotten up by anti-war groups. x'' r ,t' i l"'.... r ', r' L' , r r' ,_ l -Associated Press Pompidou and Coftve de Murville t ~ x rN 0 " r I, } -.M The UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN I GILBERT AND SULLIVAN SOCIETY in cooperation with ANN ARBOR JUNIOR LIGHT OPERA present OLIVER!r The Smash HiMusikal , 8"k,' Music and Lyrics by LIONEL BART Ett* etsIM u 0ns w ' W ie' Wednesday through Saturday, July 17-20, 1968 8:00 P.M. - Trueblood Theatre Please send check and order form below to U-M Gilbert and Sullivan Society, Student Activities Bldg.; Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 -...-----------------""--- OLIVER:. I enclose $ for tickets'to OLIVER! number (Continued from Page 2) Therefore, in order to protect this process and to ensure that the opera- tions of the University proceed in a civilized manner, the Administrative Board holds that a student of this College who interferes with any other member of the academic community so as to disrupt that person's participa- tion in any activity or function con- versity should be subject to disciplin- ary action. While the Administrative Board will continue to hear and adjudicate cases where students of the College are al- leged to have been involved in cheat- ing, plagiarism, and disruption in th offices, classrooms, laboratories, and libraries of the College, it holds that in the interests of consistency the kinds of disruptive behavior mentioned in the second paragraph should be heard at the University rather than at the College level - with the tradition- al reservation that a student may ap- peal to his College any decision which affects his academic status. According- ly, the Administrative Board strongly urges that a judiciary be established Ott the University level and that this Board be consulted in its establish- ment. However, until the establishment of such a judiciary, or in the event that no University-wide authority as- sumes .jurisdiction, the Administrative Board reserves the right to hear and adjudicate such cases. DOctoral Examinations Christopher Vernon Kimball, Electri- cal Engineering, Dissertation: "Inter- symbol Interference in Binary Com- munication Systems," on Wed., July 10 at 9 a.m in Rm. 3513 E. Engrg. Chair- man: T. G. Birdsall. Charles Arthur Brackett, Electrical Engineering, Dissertation: "Harmonic Current Generation and Multi-Signal Effects in Beam-Plasma Systems," on Wed., July 10 at 9:30 a.m. in Rm. 2076 E. Engrg. Chairman: J. E. Rowe, Ramon James Betanzos, History, Dis- tory, Dissertation: "Franz von Baader's Philosophy of Love," on Wed., July 10 at 10 a.m. in Rm. 3609 Haven Hall. Chairman: S. J. Tonson. ' William Ray Mann, Education, Dis- sertation: "Changes in the Level of At- titude Sophistication of College Stu- dents as a Measure of Teacher Effec- tiveness," on Wed., July 10 at 10 a.m. in Rm. 6006 I.S.R. Chairman: R. T. Blackburn. Jack Edwin Peterson, Industrial Health, Dissertation: "Human Bio- thermal Strain in Relation to Environ- mental Stress Parameters," on Wed., July 10 at 1 p.m. in Rm.2009 School of James Alan Boyse, Romance Lan- guages & Literatures: French, Disser- tation: "Rhetorical Syntax ini Five Plays by Corneille," on Wed., July 10 at 2 p.m. in Rm. 2092 Frieze .Bldg. Chair- man: F. F. Gray. Louis Francis Centofanti, Chemistry, Dissertation: "Reaction of Fluorophos- phines with various Acids," on Wed.,. July 10 at 2 p.m. in Rm. 3003 Chem- istry. Chairman: R. W. Parry. /Placement BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS / 3200 SAB GENERAL DIVISION CurrentrPositionsOpenings received by General Division by mail and phone, please call 754-7460 for further information. Announcement: Vista --- Service of one year, after training of approx.'6 wks., and extend- able. U.S. citizen or perm. resident, min. age 18; married if no dependents under 18. Choice of location in U.S. and territories, but VISTA's concern is to match your experience and abilities to specific need in project as requested by sponsor. Selection made upon basis of application, encl. references. Special Film for VISTA Week shown today and tomorrow, July 10 and 11, at 3 p.m. in Rm. 429, Mason Hail. Interview Visit by VISTA Team, Rm, 3524, third floor of Student Act. Bldg., hours - 9f5 through .Friday this week. No appointments necessary. Come in for information, applic., and literature. Current Position Openings received by General Division b mail and phone,' please call 764-7460 for further infor- mation: State of Washington - Welfare Ad- ministrator, II, will administer small county welfare office, min. one year grad. trng. in sch. of social work and 2 years supv. work in public or private welfare administration. sAvco Corporation, Missile Systems Division, Wilmington, Mass. - Staff Engineer, Senior to work in area of ocean systems problems, degree and 8 or more years in related areas. State- of Wisconsin -- Education Pro~- gram Consultants in Early Childhood, Early Adolescents, and Young Adult areas, MA in curriculum and instruc- tion,'educ. admin., ed. psych., or rel, fads. Exper. in leading programs in school staff admin. Apprenticeship Mix> nority Group Specialist, degree in ed. soc. sci., Indust. mgmt. and 2 years exper. with groups of disadvantaged persons providing counseling in secur- gram Director, degree in social sci. and 2 years assisting persons having econ., educ. or social needs. Supervisor of "Operation Rehabilitation", degree and 2 years exper, with needy. Applic. due fort these positions July 15, 1968. .... .................................................. ....... ........ _..... ........ _........ ...;. ::: "v:::: :: .. ::.. .,, .. .. "kxr".a kyL yr" "rh yr x:::^v::;>... ... .. .. ... . ........ ....... ...:..... ...... r, r... . ..... ....... .....::::::.:. ,y.,r k... ........ {., mrr{a}L}- "':t';4: }?ifi:"}i L:"h". N O1. :'tii ..L":{ L rrr . .... ... .. .. : ..... ..... .. ...< .... ..... ...... .. J:. ":r r: .1 f } 'Lyti}rr" k.5,+... {. h:'h" rr " ^ ": X4. 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"ri'4' 'k"1" . l...: "::. .. .. .. .. . .............. ...... .. ..n ......, . ..:r:........ ,+.. ... .... ....k ......"......... J. ,... ..[... n. ..,,,,ArS.".,.,t...1F".,, .,.'^r...... J,.......... .. .. ...^M1. r.. .. ,7^y., JS. J e~ . ,,1".r. ..LS" ., ' on the date indicated below% Wed. Thurs. Fri. Sat. All seats reserved! All seats $2.00 each Please make checks payable to The University of Michigan CTonight and every Wednesday, at the filk Lydia II Ii v~~ r- AAu k A ri Ak A i