THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA '" THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAI~ ~ rrnl7Li A Sukarno Claims Attack * * * * * * Syria Asks To Reunite' With Nassar' s Regime After Army Rebellion CON-CON CAUCUS: Republicans Seek 'Rights' Solution LANSING (P)--Republican leaders of the Constitutional Conven- tion met in secret yesterday to hammer out a compromise on a pro- posed State Civil Rights Commission. The commission was provided for in a strongly worded proposal tentatively approved by the committee-of-the-whole last week. The proposal spells out broad powers for the commission. Some of the conservative Republicans, however, balked at the detailed listing of powers that would be included in the constitution Cif the full convention were to adopt the provision. Race Issue Caucus A general Republican caucus lat- iTT er approved changes described by ellate leaders as clarifying and improv- ing the original proposal. ' They tentatively put their stamp WASHINGTON (P)-A move to of approval on: deny Federal funds to some segre- -Expanding membership of the gated schools seems likely to be- bi-partisan commission from four come the John F. Kennedy ad- to eight. ministration's answer to dimming -Requiring the commission to prospects for major civil rights go through the courts to issue action in Congress this year. subpoenas. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said yester- day he will honor his promise to call up in the Senate this month a bill to make a sixth grade educa- tion the maximum permissible lit- eracy requirement for voting in elections for Federal office. While Mansfield would make no predictions on the outcome, there, were increasing signs that South- ern opponents may be able to keep the Senate from even considering this measure. The Southerners have been put on notice by Secretary Abraham A. Ribicoff that the Health, Educa- tion and Welfare Department in- tends to try to cut off federal funds for the education at segre- gated schools of children living on federal property. Ribicoff, disclosed also that the Department of Justice soon may file suits seeking desegregation of schools in the so-called federally impacted areas which receive sub- stantial United States aid because of population influx 'traceable to federal activities. uemove Cause -Removing a clause making commission members ineligible for any other elective or appointive post while on the commission and for two years thereafter. -Limiting the scope of its jur- isdiction to questions of discrimi- nation because of race, religion, color or national origin. -Striking out references to rights to equal opportunity in edu- cation, employment, housing and accommodations, since these al- ready are listed in the constitu- tion. India Releases Voting Results NEW DELHI (P)-The election commission formally announced yesterday the results of 489 par- liamentary contests in February's general elections. The remainder went to smaller parties and independents. Ref erendumn To Decide Final Action Leaders Ignore Rival Broadcast BEIRUT (R)--Syria's ruling jun- ta offered President Nasser an olive branch yesterday after north- er army officers announced a rebellion and demanded reunion with the United Arab Republic. Six anti - Nasser officers in Syria's six-day-old military junta were reported being snipped into exile in a move to avert civil war. Later reports said a compromise ending the Aleppo uprising against the junta was near. The final decision on reunifi- cation will rest with a popular referendum, a broadcast by the junta said. The junta, which led Syria out of the UAR Sept. 28, ignored rebel broadcasts from Aleppo claiming control of Northern Syria, threat- ened stiff punishment for trouble- makers, and closed land and sea frontiers. Statement But the same military leaders who last September accused Nas- ser of tyranny and of converting Syria into a prison, put out this statement over the radio in the Syrian capital of Damascus: "The high command of the arm- ed forces explained that it believes in unity with all liberated Arab countries, and first of all with Egypt, provided this unity is es- tablished on a genuine basis and with conditions guaranteeing the dignity of this country and its entity and avoiding the mistakes of the past-on the condition that these conditions are decided in a popular free referendum." Avert War . Striving to avert open civil war, junta leaders were reported try- ing to find civilian politicians to head a compromise government. Among those approached was de- posed President Nazem El Koudsi. He declined. Conferences were reported un- der way between the junta and the rebel officers to find a solu- tion. Sources in Damascus said demands of the pro-Nasser group included: Exile from Syria of several of the architects of the Sept. 28 coup; formation of a new 41-man mili- tary council to replace the revolu- tionary high command; formation of a civilian cabinet to negotiate ties with Egypt. Say Prisoners Alive in Laos Indonesians Land Troops At 3 Points New Negotiations Appear Imminent JAKARTA () -- Indonesia re- ported yesterday its guerrillas had landed at three points in West New Guinea. At the same time, government sources predicted that, under Unit- ed States pressure, talks soon will be resumed with the Netherlands in the island dispute. Defense Minister Abdul Haris Nasution, reporting the guerrilla landings, asserted "our navy and air force are patrolling along the beaches." He said the infiltrators went ashore at the oil port of Sorong on the northwest tip of New Gui- nea, at Fakfak, on the southwest coast, and at Kaimana in the south. The Dutch have acknowl- edged landings in all these areas except Sarong but said the infil- trators are being wiped out. Ba Faith Speaking to a meeting of univer- sity students at Bandung, Nasu- tion accused the Dutch of bad faith in the negotiations in Wash- ington which were suspended last week. The session was called at Wash- ington's urging after Indonesia threatened to use force to back up its claim to West New Guinea. Nasution asserted the Dutch used the talks as a delaying tactic while building up their military forces in West New Guinea. To Negotiate Sources close to President Su- karno said, however, he will agree to resume the negotiations be- cause of international pressure and because he is impressed by President John F. Kennedy's per- sonal interest in the dispute. But these sources made clear there would be no weakening of Sukarno's insistence that adminis- tration of West New Guinea be turned over to Indonesia. Ask Tests Of Missile' Systems WASHINGTON (A) - Defense1 officials say that the Joint Chiefs of Staff have requested White! House permission to conduct a! variety of nuclear detonations in- cluding air tests of complete weap-i ons systems. This was disclosed in a censored transcript released by the House Appropriations Committee of tes- timony taken in closed session. Maj. Gen. R. H. Booth, director of the Defense Atomic Support Agency, said President John F. Kennedy told the operating forces to "go ahead and prepare for these things." Booth replied "not to my knowl- edge," when asked whether Ken- nedy had given a final go-ahead to conduct "the shot list that went to the White House for specific approval." Booth said that the tests which the '"joint chiefs are interested in are the entire system." He agreed with a comment by Rep. Gerald R. Ford (R-Mich) that this meant they would be "fired by operations' crews, from operational bases, with full weapons from beginning to end." Much of Booth's testimony was omitted from the published record, but remaining excerpts pointed to- ward a desire for complete tests of intercontinental ballistic mis- siles and Polaris missiles launched from submarines. Polaris and intercontinental test missiles have been test-launched many times, but none has ever been fired with a nuclear warhead et to detonate. Booth explained that his agen- cy worked up "an extensive series of tests drawn up in the event nuclear testing in the atmosphere would be resumed." He said these plans went to the joint chiefs and the defense di- rector of research and planning and "the plan then goes to the White House.'3, He said this was also the re- quired procedure for the under- ground test series which the Atom- ic Energy Commission has been conducting for several months. WASHINGTON (M-)-The Senate turned a critical eye on the United Nations yesterday before voting on a multimillion dollar loan to help the world organization out of a fi- nancial bind. Approval of the bipartisan com- promise loan proposal was expect- ed by overwhelming vote. Al- though the pending legislation is labeled a compromise, it actually would give President John F. Ken- nedy virtually what he asked. The General Assembly's value as a forum for thunder on great issues is fading, Sen. Mike Mans- field (D-Mont) said, and it is be- coming "increasingly a market- place for a trading of votes" and "the transmission of trivial poli- tics on a vast and international scale." As for the Security Council, Mansfield said that due to'Russian vetoes the Security Council has made "only minor contributions to order and stability" during the past dozen years. Mansfield said there is growing concern that most of the critical decisions in the United Nations, such as its decisions to go into the Congo and the Middle East, have been reached on the basis of "one- state one-vote procedure" in the General Assembly. Refusal of the Soviet bloc and other nations to pay their assess- ments for the Congo and Middle' East efforts brought about the UN financial plight. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D- Minn) said in a statement the Army Accepts Guido Cabinet; Pow/er Unsure BUENOS AIRES (P--With the army at his elbow, President Jose Maria Guido picked new members yesterday for a cabinet he hopes can ride out Argentina's political storm. But his own party turned on him and demanded the. return of ousted President Arturo Frondizi. The toughening stand of the dominant intransigent radicals, Frondizi's'party from which Guido resigned in accepting the presi- dency, raised serious doubts that the new regime could control con- gress. Guido's task was to pick a cab- inet acceptable to the military leaders, who ousted Frondizi last Thursday, and to his old party and opposition parties whose votes will be needed when congress con- venes May 1. v\ United Nations should seek new sources of revenue independent of member contributions. He said the United Nations should lay claim to tax rights in such areas as space, the oceans, and polar re- sources. The proposal before the Senate was sponsored jointly by Mansfield and Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, the Republican leader, and was approved by President Kennedy. It would authorize the President to negotiate terms and conditions under which the United States could lend up to $100 million to the United Nations. SPECIAL PROGRAMS: Educators Urge Schools To SumHelpSumChildren WASHINGTON (P)-A group of leading educators urged yester- day that the public schools design an educational plan especially tailored for the children of the slums. The educational policies commission said the type of schooling suitable for most middle-class children is not appropriate for those whose homes are characterized by poverty, disease, instability or con- flict. The commission, sponsored by the National Education Association and the American Association of School Administrators, set forth its views in a report, "Education and the Disadvantaged American." The school must make every effort to help the disadvantaged child sense that education has some meaning for him, the report said. The commission said "if present trends are not reversed, half the inhabitants of the large of city of 1970 may be disadvantaged-per- sons unable to participate constructively in their society." The disadvantaged persons generally forced off the land by mechanization, the report said, migrate to the big cities in five con- tinuing streams: Negroes from the rural south, hill whites from the Appalachian uplands, Puerto Ricans, Mexican-Americans, and reserva- tion Indians. "Ironically," it said, "the services designed to help them most- education, public health, police and fire protection, sanitation, and public welfare-often appear arbitrary and undesirable to the dis- advantaged . . . The disadvantaged citizen tends to look on the police not as the protector of law and order but as an armed enemy." Senators Air UN Views As Bond Ballot Nears world News Roundup By The Associated Press ALGIERS-The French army said yesterday it captured about 40 Secret Army commandos in a battle in the Quarensis Mountains south of Orleansville. WASHINGTON-The chairman of the Republican National Com- discount records, inc. SPRING CLEARANCE SALE "" mim i WHY PAY CAB FARE? Take W I LLOPOL ITAN busses to the Airports: WILLOW RUN . . . 1.25 METRO ... $1.50 TICKETS NOW ON SALE IN FISIBOWL mittee asked all Republican members him in co-sponsoring a bill for -- hospital and medical care for the aged. WASHINGTON-President John F. Kennedy sent Congress yester- day budget changes that would result in a net increase of $4,735,- 000 for the bookkeping year. WASHINGTON-President John F. Kennedy announced yesterday the establishment of a bureau of outdoor recreation GENEVA - Four middle group nations in the Geneva disarma- ment conference expressed regret and annoyance yesterday at the inability of the big powers to agree on a nuclear weapons test ban. NEW YORK-The stock market declined irregularly yesterday in quiet trading. Sixty-five stocks on the Dow - Jones Averages were down 0.74. 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