rage i wo THE MICHIGAN DAUY Wednesdav. Mov 1 . 1 968.'' t r II" g e t w o T H E M I C H I G A N D A I L CWlldIn JlIr /v Mm, 1 -/ ,1 VV A day with Humphrey on the Detroit swing. j"t Government reports threefold improvement in U.S. dollar drain (Continued from Page 1) no more " Once the candi- date is oil the dignitary-stud- ded platform, again smiling and waving, "Oh say, can you see" replaces the spirituals. A quick glance around the audience, all black save for members of thl'ie .,press and Humphrey's clutch of secret service men and staff mem- hers, shows a Sunday in mid- week. The women are wearing nicely flowered hats, the men are in Well-pressed suits, Church attendance pins - and, just as often, Democratic Par- ty pins -. dot their lapels. The incredible exuberance of the candidate's face is reflected off of thse in his audience. They know this rman in front of the room; you can be sure of that. Humphrey sits down. Far to his left, near the end of the f - platform, sits the only other white man up there, G. Me #- nen Williams - "governor, am- bassador, diplomat and states- man," Humphrey will- call him later' Between the two white men, and stretched far to Humphrey's left, sit congress- my.y1en., stat senators 'aind rep- °° resentatives, p a r t y :-officials, church leaders, all b ack. Each man stands and nods to &n approving audience when the speaker introduces him. But after the speaker is through, and after he has pat- ronized each of the dignitaries with an introduction, he warms up in pure preacher style for. 'controvers (Continued from Page 1) bers say were agreed upon. He was asked that the drafting not be done by him alone, and in in- terpreting this request he con- sulted with two faculty members and two students of his own se- lection. When SGC and the Commission became aware that the final draft of a bylaw' establishing Univer- sity Council had been prepared,' many expressed immediate con- cern that they had not been aware of the drafting and its pro- cedures. After they read the draft,, reactions ranged from .being "a little troubled" to, shocked indig- nation at the proposal. The consensus of those disturb- ed by the proposed bylaw is that more time is necessary. Although the Regents chargd Cutler with preparing the bylaw by their regular ,May meeting on Friday, mot bsevers feel that the Re- gents should delay action on the proposal until all complaints have been thoroughly considered and discussed Yesterday Cutler agreed not to recommend passage of the pro- posal-to the Regenfts. But the, final decisipn rests with them. If they decid to pass it without Cutler's recommendation, the University might face the possibility of an- other series of student teach-ins, sitins a'nd ultimatums, and per- haps even . another Presidential Commission. " the big one: "Since this is a non-political gathering," the, Rt. Rev. Alfred G. Dunston in- tones, "I take the honor of pre- senting to you Hubert Horatio Humphrey, the next president of the United States." After the friendly laughs comes the friendlier applause. The- voice is sharp, in the charateristic Humphrey fash-- ion, yet it is casual. It first is used to set the audience at ease. The warm-up lines reflect a keen wit, and a feel for the audience. But once the man gets into his .text, he show that he can read an audience for more than just laughs; when he'is serious, he invokes the past that he will have to rely on if he is to win the Ne- gro vote. "Let me say I am proud to be the original Senate sponsor of the African Museum of Washington,D.C.," he lets him- self say. "I am proud to say, I stood up (at the 1948 Democratic Convention) and called upon my Party to get out of the sha- dow of states' rights and walk forthrightly into -the bright sunshine of human rights"," he is proud to say.nh His eyes show determination and fire, his voice is molded and modulatd to fit the mood. He does not stand still. His arms are gesticulating passion- ately, his shoulders are now forthrightly pinned back, now possessively leaning forward. He quotes freely fromn Frank- lin Roosevelt and Martin Lu- ther King and Alben Barkley, then from Christ Himself. He recalls his humble roots ("I was counting pills in my dad- dy's drug store before I was counting votes"'). He tells the crowd that "We. shall over- come." The response befits the sur- roundings. In addition to the applause, Humphrey's speech is punctuated by a muffled chor- us of "Say on," and "That's right," and "A-men." None of these ejaculations come with exclamation .points; rather, they come as reflex. The audience' + remembers Hubert Humphrey, and they like what they remember and what he is now reminding them of. Now the speech is over, and Humphrey sits by as a church official delivers a sermon of brotherhood. Now he gets up to leave, and 'walks off the platform followed by his aides and his protect6rs. Now he steps into the street, where po- lice barricades mark off a line of men and women and chil- dren waiting to shake his hand. In the forefront of the crowds behind the barricades, a group of little children prance to the beat of the ex- citement. They crane their necks and reach out their hands as the man in the dark blue suit and full-faced smile moves up and down the line of the crowd.' Later, they'll go 'home to, 'dirty flats too small for families of seven and eight, and ask their daddies who this man with the smile was., ,WASHINGTON (P)-The gov- ernment reported yesterday a threefold improvement in the U.S dollar drain during the first quar- ter of this year. But the outflow still far exceeds the long-range hopes of the Johnson administra- tion. , The Commerce Department said - results highlight the importance of the first quarter and imports $7.83 higher taxes, restoration of wage- billion. . price stability, a no strike pledge The department said the strikes in industries which affect imports and the threat of a steel strike re- and exports, enactment of the tarded exports and contributed to new export expansion program, rising imports. and removal of barriers to U.S. "These developments may have 'trade. reduced the trade balance $450 1 "It is clear that the real heart million to $500 million," the de- the balance of payments deficit of the problem is the restoration totaled about $600 million during of a healthy trade surplus" Fowler the January-March period, the said. -Daily-Andy Sacks Humphrey in Detroit REAGAN SURPRISE: Kenndy nwin decisive, (Continued from Page 1) lican nominating convention votes, there was no clear trend in' the Democratic balloting; to fill out that party's 30 vote delegation. Former Gov.:George Wallace of Alabama received one per cent of the Democratic vote and about the same amount from the Re- publicans. On his American Inde- pendent Party ticket, he had re- ceived only 358 votes. Kennedy renewed in a victory statement his invitation for Mc- Carthy to join'him in working together to change the course 'of the Demo ratic party. Both have been critical of Johnson's Viet- nam war course and of many of his domestic policies. Humphrey, who is seeking dele- gate support without entering the primaries, was the only visible target for such an alliance. But McCarthy would have none of it. He said he is going it alone into what he regards as the vital primaries in Oregon and Cal- ifornia. McCarthy said that Nebraska has provided him with a better showing than in last week's In- diana primary when he got 27 per cent of the Democratic vote in a three way race in which pov. Roger D. Branigin, running as a favorite son leaning toward Humphrey, placed second to Kennedy, The Minnesota senator said he was satisfied with about 30 per cent of the Nebraska vote. ,He said his showing will be better in Oregon, where he is about even with Kennedy now. He said Cal- ifornia offers him his best chance of winning. Nixon, after hearing he had 70 per cent of the Republican. presi- dential vote in Nebraska, said that, "It is better than we ex- pected-but we expected to do well." In West Virginia, contests for the Democratic and Republican nominations for governor settled down into neck-and-neck two man races in both cases in re- turns late last night' from the primary election. With returns in from 25 per, cent of the 2,509 polling places, no clear trend had been set in either the Democratic struggle between' James W. Sprouse and C. Donald Robertson or the Republican race between Rep. Arch A. Moore Jr. and former Gov. Cecil H. Under- wood. Sprouse, the state party chair- man, and Robertson, two-term at- torney general, quickly outdis- tanced three other Democratic candidates. But as the slow count of the extraordinarily long bal- lot dragged through the evening, the lead see - sawed between Sprouse and Robertson, changing with almost ever new tabulation. John D. "Jay" Rockefeller NV, nephew of the Republican gover- nors of New York and Arkansas, appeared headed for a decisive victory for the Democratic nom- ination for secretary of the state. t DAILY OFFICIAL'B r';". B. A;;{;:;::}:jL:::}::?:"'{rS 'r~:{::S ::;" "$'.;. + .Y .r. .1{ {""."r::.,;:{{i;}"?:.V .h.'i lowest in three quarters despite rising imports. This figures out to an annual rate of $2.4 billion. The department indicated the1 first quarter deficit would havel been as low as $100 million had it not been for strikes in the cop- per industry and the New York' port and increased imports ofj steel as a hedge against a possible steel strike later this year. Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler said the first quarterj deficit proves the need for early9 enactment of the 10 per cent taxI surcharge and related spendingc cuts as "the key to the solution, of our balance of payments de- Ii'icit." He said if the United States had maintained, a trade surplus com- parable to that of the 'last three years the first quarter balance of payments would have been in sur- plus rather than deficit. Fowler said the first quarter U LLETIN yrs. exper. in product dev. Process En- , gineer. ChE plus 3-5 yrs. in Chem. Process engrg. with packaging. Ceram- aciat chemist. 3-5 yrs. In 'solid state reactiorC powder materials. Packaging! Engineer, 1-3 yrs, in this fld., BS in Pack. Engr. or ME. Bedford Public Schools, Temperance Mich.,-'Director of Business Services, MBA pref. and min. 3 yrs. in another school syst. Automatic Electric Company, North- lake, Ill. -' Programmer. Fortran 'ex- per.. IBM 360. BS/MS, Technical writ er. BS/BS plus some tech. bckrnd. Ac- countant, BBA, Acctg. Process Engi- neers, BSME, EE, IE. Process ChE. Staff ~Operating Engrs., BSEE plus exper.,r in telephony. Planning Engi- neer, BS/MS EE. Sales Analysis. BS Mktg. plus 6 mo. mktg. exper. Cole National Corporation, Cleveland, Ohio - Director of Advertising and Market Research, 'MBA in early 30s, product or brand mgmt. exper., some food co sumer industry is likely bckrnd. The first quarter deficit com- pared with a $3.57-billion deficit in 1967 which included the $1.85 billion last quarter drain that fol- lowed devaluation of the British pound. The country runs a deficit when It spends more money abroad than foreign countries spend here. ItI has done this in 17 of the last 18 years. The most striking aspect of the first quarter was the deterioration in the U.S. trade picture, usually a bright spot in the nation's balance of payments. The department said merchan- dise exports increased about $460 million during the quarter but im- ports were up by $680 million. Exports totaled $7.93 billion in partment said. On New Year's Day, President Johnson outlined a balance of payments program designed to cut $3 billion from last year's deficit. It envisions a $500-million im- provement in the trade surplus. Some other parts of the admin- istration program were more suc- cessful, however, the department added. It said U.S. banks reported a net inflow of $360 million through reducing foreign assets held by themselves and their domestic customers. This helped the U.S. position. At the same time, the depart- ment said sales of securities to foreigners totaled $675 million and included $560 million in bonds sold in other countries by U.S. firms to finance foreign invest- ments. 0' Dial NO 2-6264 ~TATE 4F( FRANSCOPE ,"r+f r4=ROCOLOR Last CoMplete Shaw--7;45 *. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily 'assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. before 2 p.m. of, the day preceding publication,,and' by 2 p.m. Friday raturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mumof two times on request; Day Calendar items appear only once. Student organization notices, are Fnot accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. WEDNESDAY, MAY 15 Day Calendar The Initial Management of the Acutely Ill or Injured Patient -; Reg- istration, Lobby, Rackham Bldg.,, 8:15 a.m. Elements of Outdoor Recreation Plan- ning-Morning Session, Field Trip, 8:30 a.m. Tuition Refunds honored through 3 p.m. :":: ":r:t{{ :: ::. S i..:":} ti 4 ORGANIZATION NOTICES Use of this column for announce- Fments> is available to officially Srecognizedand registered student organizations only. Forms are available in room 1011 SAB. Bach Club meeting, Thurs, May 16, 8:08 p.m., Guild House,, 802 Monroe. Program: 1) election of officers for spring and summer; 2) Bach's D Minor Triple Harpicord Concerto. For fur- ther information call 769-2750 c r 769-2922. ** * Christian Science Organization Tes- timony Meeting Thurs., May 16, 7:30 p.m., .Room 3545 SAB. Doctoral Examinations Gerald Cecil Bailey, .Psychology, Dis- sertation: "A Study of the Effect of Staff/Line Role and Organizational Climate Upon Task Estimates," on Wed., May 22 at 10 a.m. in Rm. 5110 ISR..C hairman: S. E. Seashore Placement BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS 3200 SAB GENERAL DIvISION Current Positions received by Gen- eral Division, call 764-7460 for further information. Weyerhaeuser Company, Tacoma, Wash. - Production Engineering Con- sultant, in Cleveland, Ohio. Engrg de- gree plus 2 years exper. in home man- ufacturing and building. . Derr Manufacturing -Company, De- troit, Mich. - Project Engineer, 1-3 'T M TARTS TOMOR ROW ! a r - MICHIGAN --. PAUL, N EWMA N in "Cool Hand Luke" at 1 :20-5:30-9:30 2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEES AU DREY HEPBURN in "Wait Until Dark" at 3:30 & 7:40 only FRIDAY: "A Minute To' Pray-A Second to Die" I * A. I ENDS TONIGHT, r D al 8-6416 "LARGER THAN LIFE-AND JUST POSSIBLY TWICE AS SHOCKING!" -SATURDAY REVIEW 1.: v -s! :ai F THIS WEEK at TON IGHT A HOOT An evening of endless musical variety 'Come, do your thing and sing-a-long!.H 1421 Hill St. 'THURSDAY 8:30 ?.M. EZRA ROWREY (Head of C.O.R.E.) speaking on BLACK POWER FRIDAY and SATURDAY BOB WHITE al time favorite returns from his tour of coffee houses on the East coast to sing traditional ballads, fun songs and contem- porary folk music--playing guitar, banjo and AUTOHARP. RODGERS' & HAMMERSTEIN'S GREATEST! See the stars-GORDON MaCRAE, SH IRLEY JONES, ROD STEIGER and more! Hear the songs-"Oklahoma," "Surrey with the Fringe on Top," and more! Friday & Saturday-7:00 & 9:30-Architecture Aud. 75c (Note change in schedule-"Casablanco" will, not be shown this weekend.) r' i "* * * ! DOUBLE-EDGED SEX !" I~} I -NY. DAILY NEWS SANDY DENNIS THE KEIR DULLEA I I D. H: LAWRENCE'S BITTIa DvS STMANNIVEIARY Also Stating SHEILA HANCOCK - JACK HEDLEY - CHRISTIAN ROBERTS JAMES COSSINS - ELAINE TAYLOR -'Prduced yJIMMY SANGSTER . - . Directd by ROY BAKER- Screp ay byJIMMY SANG TER-colr by Deux"eAsav AitHammnrProdutios 4* Il I --U-..1' --.5.. 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1Th2 1 I I "A M ST EXTRAORDINARY FILM!" -NEW YORK TIMES j __ --- GECRA Ca I I r I / a FOX EASTELN THEAT.-ES-0 FORXIVILL6E 375 No. MAPLE RD. -76941300 LAST TWO DAYS "GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER" 7:00-9:30 1 "CERTAINLY TIE MOST EXCITINS AND MEANIN6FUL -FILM IN YEARSI" - LIFE MAGAZINE ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE PRESENTS m I An Agatha Christie mystery melodrama THE MOUSETRAP * STARTS FRIDAY * HARRY SALTZMAN DOLLAR BRAIN" COLORl by Deluxe PANAVISION oP 4 IEDATITS PLUS I Um i I I I t "REMARKABLE!I' BEAUTIFUL! THE' BEST OF ITS KINDIt -NEW YORKER MAGAZINE I, THE REVOLT THAT STIRRED THE WORLD!l 4 I w1 ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE PRFSNTS A MYSTFRY MF LODRAMA I E ' 1 { l 11 I I ww -010, -- ,.Tl "I I I