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March 06, 1964 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1964-03-06

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r FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1964

THE MICHIGAN .DAILY

IRA £V1'R1WI A£~Zd WZA

FRIDAY, MARCH 6,1964 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY

ralum iuu r,

nvite nspection
i 1
Of .S.Reactor
Move Designed To Halt Clandestine
Atomic Arms Production at Plants
GENEVA (P) - The United States announced yesterday that
one of its largest nuclear power reactors will be placed under per-
manent international inspection in a move designed to halt the spread
of nuclear weapons.
United States delegate Adrian S. Fisher told the 17-nation dis-

Cyprus Protest

NORTH VIET NAM:
Klianh, U.S. Quiet on Invasion

armament conference the United
Atomic Energy Agency to place
Davis Notes
ERAP Goals
By MAUREEN MILESKI
Students for a Democratic So-
ciety has formed the Economic
Research and Action Project. This
project will encourage protest an
change in local communities
1 through work with unemploye
Negroes and whites.
ERAP assists such people to or
ganize themselves to act on the
problems facing them, according
to Rennie Davis, Grad., director
of the project.
"Because SDS had not serious
ly discussed economic problems
we formed ERAP," Davis noted.
Multiple Needs
The multiple needs of certair
communities cannot be fulfilled b5
working with a single issue such
as poverty, Davis declared. Be
cause , of these multiple needs
ERAP research groups go to com
munities to find the roots of the
problems that are being attacked
The summer workshop center
in ten different cities will encour
age picketing, unionization and
rent strikes when necessary, Davi
said.
The localities for the summer
work are Detroit, Cleveland, Louis
ville, Hazard, Ky., Baltimore
Chester, Pa., Philadelphia, Newark
Boston, and Chicago. In Chicago
Joseph Chabot, '65, is trying to de
velop a union of the unemploye
in the northwest section.
Conferences
"There are five upcoming con
ferences this semester to study
problems about the communitie
to be worked in," Davis said. De
velopment of the working paper
for these conferences is going or
in Ann Arbor. The conferences wil
aid in training the organizers.
There are about 30 University
students helping with the project
Davis added.
Nixon Willing
'To Tr Again
WASHINGTON (P) - Forme
Vice-President Richard M. Nixo
said yesterday he will allow hi
name to remain on the ballot it
the Oregon presidential primar3
since he would be willing to try
again for the White House.
He repeated, however, that he i
not a candidate for the Republi
can nomination. Oregon law re
quires the Secretary of State tc
list the names of persons he re
gards as being generally advo
cated as candidates for the nom
ination.

States has invited the International
an inspection group in an electric
4'company's $57 million atomic pow-
er plant at Rowe, Mass.
Fisher said the action was
meant as a pilot project to en-
courage other countries-particu-
larly the Soviet Union-to submit
to agency inspection of their non-
military reactors.
Agreed System
The inspection will be carried
- out in accordance with an agreed
s system intended to guard against
d clandestine production of atom
sbomb materials in reactors intend-
ed for peaceful uses.
Fisher also suggested that all
- nations should place their ship-
ements of peaceful nuclear ma-
terials and equipment under agen-
r cy supervision for the same pur-
pose. American transfers of fis-
- sionable materials to other coun-
tries in any casew ill be brought
under agency surveillance "as
rapidly as practicable," he said.
n Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsar-
y apkin shrugged off the whole idea,
h however, and implied that the
- Russians viewed it with the same
,suspicion that they have expressed
- toward all other Western arms
e control, proposals containing in-
spection procedures.
s Doubts Control
- "What kind of control does this
d mean?" Tsarapkin asked newsmen
s after the conference session. "Con-
trol over" our nuclear industry?
,r You know this is a very difficult
subject. We are very sensitive
, about controls."
British delegate Sir Paul Ma-
,son and Brazil's Josue de Castro
warmly approved Fisher's state-
d ment.
American officials did not seem
discouraged by Tsarapkin's cool
-initial response. They said the
y Russians are as eager as the
s United States to prevent peaceful
nuclear reactors supplied to their
s allies from being misused for mili-
n tary purposes.
Inspection Procedure
Fisher recalled that the United
, States and the Soviet Union joined
in a unanimous agreement on in-
spection procedure reached with-
in the agency in Vienna earlier
this year. The procedure-largely
based on record-keeping-is to be
applied whenever one of the agen-
cy's 68 member nations requests
such an inspection.
r Fisher said the United States
n hopes the American move will en-
s courage the Soviet Union and all
n other nations operating or plan-
y ning industrial nuclear power
y plants to join in a worldwide sys-
tem to prevent these plants being
s secretly used to make atomic
- bombs.
- Fisher said it is in the interest
o of all the world to prevent the
- spread of nuclear weapons with-
- out impeding the development of
- nuclear energy for peaceful pur-
poses.

By The Associated Press
SAIGON-Premier Gen. Nguyen
Khanh declared yesterday "the
best defense is offense" but kept
his- own counsel on whether he
wants military action against
Communist North Viet Nam.
The question of some sort of ac-
tion against North Viet Nam for
activelyaiding South Viet Nam's
guerrillas has arisen in Saigon in
connection with the arrival Sun-
day of Defense Secretary Robert
S. McNamara.
McNamara and his top-level
mission will dig into the reasons
why the war against the guerillas
is going badly now. But Washing-
ton has cautioned against specu-
lation concerning any retaliatory
action in North Viet Nam or Red
China, chief supports of the Com-
munist guerrillas.
Before taking off from Washing-
ton, the defense chief told a news
conference that new and heavier
weapons, "obviously of Chinese
manufacture," have been appear-
ing in the hands of the Red forces.
"There has been evidence that in
the last six months North Viet-
namese support of the Communist
Viet Cong has increased," he said.
"Our trip is, of course, a further
affirmation of the United States

commitment to furnish whatever
economic aid, military training
and logistical support is needed
by the South Vietnamese to sup-
press this insurgency, and to con-
tinue to do so for whatever period
is required.
"I think that the American peo-

ple should expect us to conclude
our training in a reasonable time,"
he said. He did not say what he
regards as a reasonable time, but
he indicated that several hundred
more of the 15,500 American mili-
tary men now in Viet Nam will be
withdrawn before too long.

International Students Association
Michigan Union
present
International Image
NIGERIAN FOLK-SING PARTY
March , 7:30 P.M.

You'll
find

I

-Associated Press
COLD TURKEY-Greeks carry a banner with a sketch of Presi-
dent Lyndon B. Johnson wearing a Turkish hat as they partici-
pate in anti-American demonstrations in front of the American
Embassy in Athens yesterday. The banner reads: "Johnson take
off the Turkish hat." The demonstrators were protesting United
States policy toward Cyprus. Meanwhile, the explosion of a bomb
under the Turkish Cypriot legislative chamber and new com-
munal fighting on the North coast lent urgency to United Na-
tions' efforts to form a peace force and speed it to Cyprus.

Multipurpose Room

UGLI

Cole
of California

E

I

11

World News
Roundup
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The commis-
sion investigating the assassina-
tion of former President John F.
Kennedy held its first public hear-
ing yesterdayaat the request of
New York attorney Mark Lane.
Lane claims to represent the Pres-
ident's accused assassin, Lee Har-
vey Oswald.
WASHINGTON -- Secretary of
Defense Robert S. McNamara dis-
closed yesterday a further cutback
in the already curtailed program
for a new super-bomber.
McNamara disclosed at a news
conference that the program on
the B-70 now calls for building of
only two prototypes of the big air-
craft, rather than three,
* * *
NEW YORK-The stock market
yesterday absorbed additional sell-
ing following its recent rise. The
Dow-Jones 30 industrials were
down .93, 20 rails up .25, 15 util-
ities up .34 and 65 stocks up .03.

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FR. WILLIAM SHERZER
will speak on
"The Layman and the Liturgy"
Friday, March 6 3:00 P.M.
NEWMAN CENTER
331 Thompson

i

presented by Union-League

/

CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL
Tickets: March 2-7, 1-5 p.m.
Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office and at the door

Lydia Mendelssohn
Theatre

Orchestra
Balcony

$2.50,$2.00
$2.00, $1.50

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The University of Michigan
SYMPHONY BAND
at
Lane Technical High School
Addison & Western Streets
Chicago, Illinois
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, 8:00 P.M.

ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES

for Seniors and Graduates in

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Students $1.00

Adults $1.50

Tickets Available Now at 3522 Administration Bldg.

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Weekly Sunday Buffet
RBfGIK THICSl UDAY. MARCH R

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

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MARCH 16

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