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March 05, 1964 - Image 3

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THURSDAY, MARCH.5, 1964

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE

THURSDAY, MARCH 5,1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY RAGE

UN Security Council Approves

Peace Force

To PatrolCyprus

<>

Thant Receives
Power To Send
troops to Area
0 J
UNITED NATIONS OP) - The
United Nations Security Council
unanimously authorized Secre-
tary-General U Thant yesterday
to send a peace force and mediator
to Cyprus for three months.
Thant sent formal requests im-
mediately to five countries to sup-
ply troops.
He moved swiftly also for agree-
ment on a mediator. He called in
delegates of Cyprus, Britain, Tur-
key and Greece for separate con-
ferences on this and other aspects
of the Cyprus problem.
Victory for Both Sides
In Nicosia, the council vote was
welcomed by both Greek and
Turkish Cypriots, each faction
hailing it as a victory for its side.
President Archbishop Makarios,
leader of the Greek Cypriots, said
"treaties imposed on Cyprus five
years ago under unfavorable cir-
cumstances have been put to the
test before an international organ-
ization and it has become accepted
that their termination will be un-
avoidable."
He said that in the meantime
Cyprus has been safeguarded from
armed intervention.
Turkish Viewpoint
A Turkish Cypriot spokesman
interpreted the resolution as a re-
jection of the "Greek Cypriot at-
tempt to abrogate the treaty guar-
antees" to the Turkish minority.
The requests for troops went to
Canada, Sweden, Finland, Ireland
and Brazil. A spokesman for Thant
said that use of British troops-
now on Cyprus enforcing a shaky
cease-fire-was also contemplat-
ed. The goal is a 10,000-man force.
The spokesman said replies to
the request were being awaited.
More Violence
New -violence flared on Cyprus
between Turkish and Greek Cyp-
riots before the council acted. Two
Turkish and one Greek Cypriot
were wounded before British forces
restored order. A Turkish Cypriot
leader expressed hope the force
would be dispatched as quickly as
possible.

'ONE MAN-ONE VOTE':
Lesns i A nnounces
Plan for Districts,
By The Associated Press
LANSING - Acting Gov. T. John Lesinski yesterday said two con-
gressional apportionment plans are in preparation-one based on "one
man-one vote" and the other allowing no more than four per cent
variance between the largest and smallest districts.
In his first formal news conference since Gov. George W. Romney
left. on an Hawaiian vacation, Lesinski said "we are not heading
for an at-large situation, in my "
view."
Lesinski and Romney agreed by
telephone Tuesday that the Legis-
lature should consider congres-
sional districting in light of a fed-
eral court suit challenging a 1963 Hoffraionmenty

Program
To Train
Unskil led
WASHINGTON - Key features
of President Lyndon B. Johnson's
war on poverty will be a corps to
train youths for jobs and efforts to
create employment in depressed
areas by low-interest loans to in-
dustries.
Details of the President's pro-
gram have not been made public.
But it was learned yesterday that
much of the emphasis will be on
training of unskilled, unemployed
and needy youths identified dur-
ing Selective Service examinations.
The President's anti-poverty
message and legislation to carry
out the program have been draft-
ed by Sargent Shriver, special
White House assistant for organ-
izing and directing the program,
and his aides.
The White House said yesterday
it did not know when the message
would go to Congress. It is possible
it will be ready today, but it may
not be completed until early next
week.
The job corps, for youths be-
tween the ages of 16 and 21, will
have two parts as follows:
-About 100,000 youths would
be enrolled in camps for one-year
periods. They would be paid about
$30 a month, plus extra pay for
good work.
-About 70,000 other youths
would be enrolled in job training
centers, where they will be given
remedial education and taught job
skills. Efforts would be made to
interest industry in setting up job
recruitment services as part of this
plan.
Another phase of the anti-pov-
erty program also will be directed
toward young people, between the
ages of 16 and 21. Under this plan,
federal matching funds will be
made available to states, cities,
counties -or community groups to
finance part-time work for boys
and girls in school.

WASHINGTON--The State De-
partment announced yesterday
that Spain has taken "appropri-
ate steps" to prevent its ships and
planes from transporting goods to
and from Cuba and that U. S. aid
to Spain will now be continued.
* * *
DALLAS - The state suggested
yesterday that Jack Ruby may
have been on Lee Harvey Oswald's
trail some 20 hours before he shot
to death the accused assassin of
President John F. Kennedy. The
first testimony was heard yester-
day, after Ruby entered a plea of
innocent by reason of insanity.
* * * *
NEW ORLEANS--The Republi-
can party failed to upset Demo-
crat John J. McKeithen for the
Louisiana governorship but yes-
terday found itself with a minor-
ity leader and whip for the legis-
lature. Two Republicans who won
seats in the Louisiana House of
Representatives in Tuesday's gen-
eral election will be the first of
their political affiliation to sit in
the legislature this century.
* * *
LANSING-The House Tuesday
passed a bill to abolish Michigan's
one-man grand jury system and
relayed it to the Senate where
similar measures have died in the
past few years. The - House vote
was 70-38.
* * *
SAIGON-United States author-
ities said yesterday Communist
Viet Cong guerrillas have wiped
out a platoon of South Vietnam-
ese militiamen in the mountains
of Quang Ngai Province, 320
miles northeast of Saigon.
* * *
WASHINGTON-Former Presi-
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower has

WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP:
Spai Acts To Halt Aid to Cuba

come out in favor of a constitu-
tional amendment providing that'
whenever a vice president succeeds
to the presidency, he should im-
mediately nominate a new vice
president.
The nomination should be sub-
ject to approval by both the House
and the Senate, rather than mere-
ly by the Senate, Eisenhow r said.
* * *
WASHINGTON-Prime Minis-
ter Fidel Castro offered yesterday
to restore water service to the
United States naval base at Guan-
tanam&. The United States gave
him a quick turn-down.
SALISBURY, Southern Rhode-
sia-About 15,000 Negro school
children stayed away from classes
yesterday in Salisbury on the third
day of a growing boycott. The
movement began as a protest
N ~--

against the imposition of fees
amounting to $9 a term. Salisbury
authorities said, however, they be-
lieved the students are taking or-
ders from some political source-
presumably those opposed to the
white-ruled government.
WASHINGTON -C o n g r e s s
authorized $115 million yesterday
for the Peace Corps - the full
amount asked by the Johnson ad-
ministration.
House passage by voice vote
sent the measure to the President's
desk. The Senate had already ap-
proved it.
NEW YORK-The stock market
gave ground slightly yesterday fol-
lowing three days of heavy trad-
ing., Thirty industrials declined
1.02, 20 rails down .65, 15 utilities
up .07 and 65 stocks down .41.

U THANT
'RULES':
Pass U.S.
Pay 'Hike
WASHINGTON UP)-A bill that
would raise Congressional pay
$10,000 a year and provide in-
creases for most other federal
workers sailed through the House
Rules Committee yesterday and
headed for a vote next week.'
The bill would add about $545
million to a federal payroll now
running a bit over $14 billion a
year. It would benefit 1.7 million
career employes, federal execu-
tives, judges and members of Con-
gress.
For the average letter carrier
and government secretary it would
mean about $450 a year more,
starting July 1. But at higher
levels the increases would be much
more substantial.
The pay of the Vice-President,
speaker of the house and justices
of the Supreme Couit wou~d go
from $35,000 a year to $45,000,
with the chief justice getting an,
additional $500. Cabinet salaries,
would rise from $25,000 to $35,000
and those of representatives and
and senators from $22,500 to $32,-
500.

Lesinski said Romney's staff is
drafting an apportionment scheme
calling for a population variance
of no more than 8,000 people from
the norm. He said separate sources'
known to him are preparing a plan
with a still smaller variance, but
said both plans would avoid cross-
ing county lines.
In developments elsewhere:
-A Senate committee set in
motion a Democratic resolution
which would exempt such legisla-
tion from the Feb. 26 deadline for
new introductions.
-Secretary of State James Hare
asked that the entire election cal-
endar be shifted back several
weeks "in view of the fact that we
will have official decision from the
federal district court on Michigan
congressional apportionment until
March 23."
-Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley saw
three alternatives facing the state
if the ,court -invalidates the dis-
tricts: an at-large election of all
19 congressmen, enactment of new
apportionment by the Legislature,
or an appeal to the U. S.. Supreme
Court.
The state Supreme Court yester-
day assumed the task of selecting
a new legislative districting plan
for the state.
-Democratic and Republican
members of the Legislative Appor-
t o n m e n t Commission traded
charges Tuesday in the climax to
two days or oral arguments.

CHATTANOOGA (1) -- Team-
sters President James R. Hoffa
was convicted yesterday, along
with three other men, on charges
of trying to fix the jury which
heard Hoffa's conspiracy trial in
Nashville in 1962.
Hoffa, leader of the nation's
largest labor union, sat in silence
as jury foreman Hal W. Bullen
of Chattanooga read the verdict-
guilty on two counts and innocent
on a third.
It was his first conviction in five
federal trials dating from 1957,
and brought personal congratula-
tions to the prosecutors from Atty.
Gen. Robert F. Kennedy.
Hoffa indicated he would appeal
the verdict.
Hoffa faces up to 10 years in
prison and $10,000 in fines if the
two convictions stand up.

ARMY NAVY AIR FORCE
ROTC UNITS
Present
"BLUE MIST"
Annual Military Ball
riday, March 6-79:0 p.m.
Michigan League Ballroom
TICKETS ON SALE AT NORTH HALL
ALL MILITARY PERSONNEL INVITED

"

Today 4:10 p.m. Promptly
Arena Theatre Frieze Building
Henrik Ibsen's
BRAND (ACT IV)
-and-
James Broughton's
THE LAST WORD
Department of Speech
Student Laboratory Theatre
Admission Free

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B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation
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TOMORROW, MARCH 6
Will be conducted in the REFORM TRADITION

You are invited to attend a seminar
CONTEMPORARY POLITICAL THOUGHT:
THE ISSUES AND PROBLEMS
hosted by the University of Michigan Phileutherian Society
FRIDAY & SATURDAY, MARCH 6-7, 1964
Friday, March 6-Public Lecture-3rd Floor Conf. Rm., Michigan Union

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Dr. Niemeyer, professor of political science at the
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The Problem of Ideology
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Saturday, March 7-Seminar-Vandenberg Rm., Michigan League

9:00- 9:30
9:30-10:45

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11:00-12:15 P.M.

Registration-Coffee
Dr. Hauptmann, chairman of the department of
political science at Park College, Parkville, Mo.,
Realism and Absolutes in Political Thought
Dr. Tonsor, assistant professor of history at the
U of M, Conservatives and Social Responsibility
Dr. Niemeyer: Two Socialisms
Dr. Hauptmann: Stereotypes of Contemporary
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D 0 L

TODAY
"THE BAHA'I
WORLD FAITH"
Dr. Firuz Kazemzadeh,
Associate Professor of
History, Yale University
a4d
Chairman of the National
Spiritual Assembly of the
Baha'is of the U.S.

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Dr. Firuz Kazemzadeh, Chairman
of the National Spiritual Assembly
of the Baha'is of the U.S., is a
graduate of Stanford Univ., with
his Ph.D. in history from Harvard
Univ. He has, served as Research
Fellow in Slavic Studies at the

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