27, 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAIL'Y .3. .3*ruv 1 . PAGE THREE~L L Jobless Britons Riot, Seek Ouster Of Conservatives) Foreign Aid Chief Gives Support to Clay Findings LONDON (P)-In the shadow of Big Ben, mounted police yester- day drove back 3000 rioting job- less men and women. It took 500 police to stop the bitterest street battle London has seen in years. For the first time in modern history, a crowd almost forced its way into the Parliament building. HAROLD MacMILLAN ...,rioters protest' NEWSPAPERS-, Vote Nears In Walkout NEW YORK (P) - A 109-day blackout of eight major New York newspapers was within one word of settlement yesterday. All that was required to get the papers back on the streets was for 320 striking AFL-CIO photoen- gravers to-agree to a peace formula laid down by Mayor Robert F. Wagner. Publishers already had accepted the mayor's terms, with a warning that "we cannot and will not en-' large upon the mayor's proposal and all publishers agree there is no purpose to be served by fur- ther negotiations." Leaders of New York photoen- gravers Local 1 still are to de- cide whether to accept the formula and recommend it for membership ratification. The mayor proposed to them es- sentially the same terms accepted by the AFL-CIO International Ty- pographical Union and used as a basis for settlement with five oth- er newspaber craft unions. The formula provides the en- gravers with a $12.63 a week con- tract package over two years, with an increase of $6.50 in wages and fringe benefits the first year and $6.13 the second. Wagner also proposed to resolve a deadlock over the photoengrav- ers work week by reducing it in the second year of the contract from 36% hours to 35 hours-the same terms worked out with the printers. Bidault Reaches Portuguese Exile LISBON (P)-Traveling under an assumed name, former French Premier Georges Bidault slipped into Portugal from West Germany yesterday. He faces new obstacles in his search for a base to carry on his campaign against French President Charles de Gaulle. The demonstrators from eco- nomically depressed areas shout- ed for the ouster of the Conserva- tive government and demanded to be allowed into the building to make their complaints to Britain's lawmakers. Arrest Nine Nine rioters were arrested. Screaming encouragement to each. other, the rioters first overran hastily summoned police reserves on foot in a swaying battle and reached St. Stephen's Entrance- the Gothic door into the Parlia- ment building. / The jobless poured into London by plane, train and bus early yes- terday from Northern Ireland, Scotland and Northern England- all areas of high unemployment. The move on London was or- ganized by local trade union coun- cils but was billed as a peaceful attempt to lobby in the House of Commons. Some of the demonstra- tors wore nuclear disarmament badges and waved Communist pamphlets. Growing Frustration The demonstration spotlighted the growing feeling of frustration developing inthe heavy industry areas of the British Isles. Britain's unemployment rate is lower than the American figure of six per cent, but the misery is not evenly distributed. In areas in the south, where new night industries have been estab- lished since World War II, work- ers are still in demand and the economy shows all the signs of a boom. But in the old northern coal mining, ship building and steel- making towns the lines of jobless seem to have become a permanent part of the landscape. Unemployment in Britain rose to 878,356 in mid-February, the highest total since 1947. Labor ministry figures showed that 3.9 per cent of the nation's work force was jobless then. Conservation Study Group Set by Romney By The Associated Press LANSING-Gov. George Rom- ney announced yesterday the ap- pointment of a 21-member com- mittee to conduct a thorough study into the .state's conservation and recreation programs. Named to head the committee was Robert McLaughlin, vice-pres- ident of McLouth Steel Corp., a former deputy director of the state department of conservation. Prof. Archibald B. Cowan of the natural resources school is among the oth- er members. Gov. Romney outlined the fol- lowing five-point study program, adding that the committee will have a free hand in selecting oth- er areas for study: 1) Review and evaluation of the conservation department, its re- cruitment, training and morale. 2) Study the necessity for exist- ing scientific research projects and methods. 3) Examine the conservation de- partment's pub lc relations divi- sion. 4) Evaluate the pace and effec- tiveness of park acquisition and recreation development programs. 5) Study possible needs for sim- plifying and codifying conserva- tion laws and regulations. WASHINGTON (M)-Administrator David Bell of the Agency for International Development, who runs United States foreign aid, gave a ringing endorsement yesterday to the committee that criticized it. Following the line of the Clay committee's recommendations, he predicted the end of United States economic aid to Greece, Israel and Nationalist China in three to four years, and to Libya, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela some time after that. Meanwhile, further evi- dence mounted that the commit- 2-' tee's report has taken its first ef- fects. CO - -t Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D- Minn) said that President John F. Kennedy, in his foreign aid mes- sage to Congress next week, may suggest a cut in the $4.9 billion outlay he asked for foreign aid in WASHINGTON (M)-Three pro- his budget message last January. civil rights senators were named Bell gave his endorsement of by Sen. James O. Eastland (D- the Clay committee in a talk to the Miss) yesterday to the Senate ju- Magazine Publishers' Association. diciary subcommittee.which han- The committee, headed by retired dles civil rights legislation. Gen. Lucius D. Clay, made public Eastland, chairman of the Sen- its report to Kennedy last Satur- ate Judiciary Committee, himself day. an all-out foe of civil rights meas- "The judgments, policies and at- ures, appointed Senators Edward titudes that they expressed are M. Kennedy (D-Mass), Birch Bayh sound,aappropriate andproper," (D-Ind) and Hiram L. Fong (R- Bell said. "We do not have any Hawaii). substantial difference of judg- The addition of these three ap- ments on the main line of the pears to tip the subcommittee, committee's policy recommenda- headed by Sen. Samuel J. Ervin tions." (D-NC) in favor of the civil rights But Bell refused to interpret the program recommended by Presi- committee's report as a plea for a dent John F. Kennedy. heavy slash in the President's In the last Congress there was a budget request for foreign aid in precarious balance on the sub-1 the 1964 fiscal year, which starts committee, with Sen. Roman L. July 1.-, Hruska (D-Neb) playing a key The committee said that "if our swing role. criteria were now in effect, pres- Two vacancies were opened up ent programs would be reduced by on the subcommittee by election approximately $500 million . .." defeats last fall of Senators Alex- Bell said the committee, in oth- ander Wiley (R-Wis) and John A. er parts of its report, recommend- Carroll (D-Colo), both civil rights ed a boost in assistance to some supporters. areas. Eastland not only filled these 1 _i f 3 31 ;' 1 .4" i .) t. U.S. Reopens Berlin Talks With Soviets WASHINGTON (P)--New Unit- ed States-Soviet talks on the dead- locked Berlin issue opened yester- day in what was officially describ- ed as a "friendly and businesslike atmosphere." No new proposals were made by either side, but it was agreed to continue discussions. The first meeting between Sec- retary of State Dean Rusk and Russian Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin were held at the State Department for an hour. White Reports State Department press officer Lincoln White announced: "This was the first preliminary conversation in the resumed ex- ploratory talks on Germany and Berlin. There will be further dis- cussions, but no specific date has been set yet. "No new proposals were made by either side, and no papers were exchanged." Too Early Despite the absence of any new proposals, White said "it is a little early to determine whether these talks can be successful or not." Dobrynin took the position that discussions could go on for some time. "We just began exchange of opinion about the German and Berlin situations," and this is "a big question," Dobrynin said. Soviet Request The Soviets asked for resump- tion of the talks, which were sus- pended last fall during the Cuban crisis. Dobrynin was noncommital, as he ;went into Rusk's office, accom- panied by Russian embassy coun- selor Georgi Kornienko. Sitting in with Rusk were East- West affairs adviser Llewellyn Thompson and Martin Hillen- brand, head of a State Department task force on Berlin. Exploratory Talks In advance of the closed session at the State Department, press of- ficer Lincoln White described the meeting as "a continuation of earlier exploratory talks to see whether the Soviet position has changed to a degree to make pos- sible negotiations over a Berlin agreement." Previous Kremlin propositions, in one form or another, have call- ed for removal of Western powers from West Berlin. The Western occupiers - the United States, Britain, and France--say they are determined not to abandon the Communist-encircled city to the Reds. Cei. ____________ By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Senators gen- erally took a "fingers-crossed, wait-and-see attitude" yesterday toward the new United States agreement to loan Brazil $398.5 million to bolster its economy. Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) summed up the attitude of many senators when he said that "if it's a gam- ble, it is less of a gamble" than permitting the Brazilian economy to collapse and invite Communist takeover. "On the basis of reforms which have recently been inaugurated, 'it is good foreign policy to extend the loans to Brazil," Mansfield added. Congressional Responsibility Senate Minority Leader Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill) observed that Congress hasuaresponsibility to 'see that the funds are "wisely and prudently administered" to serve the broad United States economic and anti-Communist goals in Lat- in America. However, Sen. Frank Carlson (R-Kan) took a dim view of Tues- day's agreement, calling it "too hasty." Meanwhile, President John F. Kennedy plugged his proposal for a big tax cut and covered a wide range of other subjects in an off- the-record speech before the Mag- azine Publishers' Association. , -Key Problems He reportedly told the publishers that two key problems facing the nation are keeping employment up and recognizing a responsibility to assist newly emerging nations. At the Capitol, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn) said the ad- ministration will seek a showdown vote in the Senate before Easter on Kennedy's youth employment bill. Humphrey, the assistant Demo- cratic leader, told a news confer- ence he is confident of passage of the measure despite what he de- scribed as almost solid opposition by Republicans. In the Senate, continuation of the subcommittee inquiry into the TFX warplane contract will re- open today. Chairman. John L. McClellan (D-Ark) said he had other pressing engagements and that the subcommittee staff had informed him it needed the extra day to prepare for the hearing. Produce Harm A group of high-ranking Air Force and Navy officers is next on the long list of witnesses in a WASHINGTON ACTION: Senators Wait on Brazil Loan MIKE MANSFIELD ... Brazil loans French Strikers Return J to Jobs In Gas Fields PARIS (P)-Strikers in the nat- ural gas field of southwestern France agreed yesterday to go back to work, but workers in other na- tionalized industries spurned the latest government wage offer as insufficient. New walkouts were ordered among gas, electricity and railway workers. An end to the strike at the Lacq natural gas;field, effective today, should ease the country over one crisis. A number of industries in southwestern France that depend on natural gas as fuel had already closed down, since the pipeline flow fell to about 25 per cent of normal. The Lacq workers were given an immediate advance of 480 francs ($96) on a productivity bonus for which the total has not yet been fixed. Meanwhile, thousands of anti- Gaullist demonstrators clashed with police in Paris and other ci- ties yesterday on the first anni- versary of a street battle in Al- giers. More than 40 persons, half of them police, were reported injured. The day's violence, a symbolic remembrance of the loss of Al- geria, was separate from current strikers' attacks on the de Gaulle government., hearing which Secretary of De- fense Robert S. McNamara says can produce only harm. Also in Washington, Lt. Cmdr. George I. Thompson, one of the first two Negro officers tapped for the Naval War College disclosed that the Navy wants to attract qualified Negroes into its officer corps. But he indicated the going is slow, apparently because of past history in which Negroes did not fare too well. "It's as if we had the door shut for 180-odd years," he remarked. "We're trying to convince them the door is open." Kelsey Sees New Drug Unit WASHINGTON (P)-The wel- fare department is studying the feasibility of establishing a na- tional drug information clearing house. Dr. F. Ellis Kelsey, special as- sistant for science information to the surgeon general, said yester- day it is estimated the project would cost about $10 million a year. Kelsey said the center would function for the whole field of drugs in the same way the Public Health Service's poison control center now does for poisons: col- lecting and distributing data on them. Experts recently told a Senate committee that there is great need for a centralized system of record- ing, storing and reproducing in- formation on new and old drugs. Kelsey said the centralized sys- tem is a necessity for the Food and Drug Administration, since it carries out its new responsibilities. It has authority to reject new drugs on the basis of efficacy as well as safety. two vacancies, but added an addi- tional member, increasing the sub- committee's size from eight to nine. Appointments were also an- nounced to the antitrust unit of the Judiciary Committee that could put a curb on its operations under the chairmanship of Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn). The subcommittee's investiga- tions of the steel, drug, electrical and other industries have had a great reaction-not only with big business interests, but also with the parent Judiciary Committee. Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark), a conservative southerner, was ap- pointed by Eastland to replace Carroll, who consistently lined up with Kefauver. Sen. Kenneth B. Keating (R-NY) was named to re- place Wiley on the antitrust unit. The new lineup has five Demo- crats to three Republicans, with McClellan in position to join with the GOP members to create dead- locking ties in the future. EXTREMISTS: Senate Hits IRomney Plan By The Associated Press LANSING-Gov. George Rom- ney's bid to permit removal of extremists from power positions in political parties seemed doomed in the Senate yesterday. The plan, contained in a bill sponsored by Senators Farrell E. Roberts (R-Pontiac) and William G. Milliken (R-Traverse City) was hit by members of both parties in preliminary debate. The bill establishes a removal procedure at state, county and dis- trict levels of undesirable political officials. It would permit 20 per cent of a political committee at these levels to initiate removal pro- ceedings for any cause. Proceedings would then involve a vote of the state central com- mittee members at the state level, or delegates at county or district levels with a two-thirds vote re- quired for removal. STUDENT ZIONIST ORGANIZATION PRESENTS -DR. GEORGE L. GRASSMUCK Assoc. Prof. of Political Science speaking on "ANEW ARAB NATIONALISM?" Recent Arab Political Changes and Their Implications for Nasser WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP: Rio Leaders Halt Cuban Parley By The Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO - Police -Three slits in the huge Project nearly two weeks yesterday. The Stargazer balloon forced the high Dow-Jones averages showed in- blocked the opening last night of altitude test to be called off yes- dustrials up 2.21, rails up 0,02, a so-called Cuban Solidarity Con- terday. utilities down 0.02 and 65 stocks up ference to be held here. Its pro- ;k 0.44. Castro organizers announced they __*____.44. would hold the meeting across the DETROIT-Gov. George Rom- bay. ney predicts Michigan will end its * fiscal year on June 30 with a $34 HOLLOMAN AIR FORCE BASE million surplus for those 12 A". A rug / SUNDAY AT 7 P.M., after Supper Club 1429 Hill St. I ommumpoinsim , I -, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN j Ann Arbor Friends of the STUDENT NON-VIOLENT COORDINATING COMMITTEE (SNCC) presents a benefit .. . FOLK SING The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27 Day Calendar 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.-Federated Gar- den Clubs of Mich., Inc. and the De- partment of Landscape Architecture Landscape Design Study Course 1, Series II-Rackham Bldb. 8:00 p.m.-Dept. of Speech Univ. Play- ers Production-Federico Lorca's "The House of Bernarda Alba": Lydcia Men- delssohn Theatre. 8:30 p.m.-School of Music Contem- porary Music Festival Concert - Aaron Copland, guest composer and lecturer, "Composing Perspectives": Rackham Lecture Hall. Dept. of German Film: "The Devil's General," starring Kurt Juergens and Marianne Koch, Aud. B, Angell Hall, 8 p.m. General Notices Sports and Dance-Women: Women students who have completed the phys- ical education requirement who wish to register electively may do so in Barbour Gym (Main Floor) on Thurs., and Fri., March 28 and 29. Registration hours are 8 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. Instruction available in tennis, golf, bowling, rid- ing, swimming and modern dance. Dates of Spring Vacation: The dates of spring vacation are from Sat. noon, April 6, to 8:00 a.m. on Mon., April 15. School of Music Honors Program: Ap- plications are now being received for the first sem., 1963-64. Forms are avail- able in the School of Music Office, Lane Hall. Deadline for receipt of ap- plications and supporting statements by the Honors Council: Fri., April 19. Effective March 28, 1963 Lot E-3 will be closed for construction of the ad- dition to the Univ. Museums. Suggest- ed parking areas are N-4, N-12, S-5, W-3 in lieu of the closed lot. Faculty, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: Midsemester reports are due Fri., March 29, for those students- whose standing at midsemester is "D" or "E." The green report cards fcr freshmen and sophomores should be sent to the Counselors Office for Freshmen and Sophomores. 1213 Angell Hall; white re- port cards for juniors and seniors to the Counselors Office for Juniors and Seniors, 1223 Angell Hall. Students not registered in this Col- lege but who elected L.S.&A. courses should be reported to the school or college in which they are registered. Regents' Meeting: April 19. Commun- ications for consideration'at this meet- ing must be in the President's hands not later than April 5. Please submit twenty-two copies of each communica- tion. German University Exchange scholar- ship: One grant for study at The Uni- versity of Humburg has been made available to Univ. of Mich. students. This grant provides tuition fees and a maintenance allowance of DM350 per month, however, no travel is included. Candidates are selected on the basis of the following criteria: 1) General aca- demic achievement and potential, 2) Upperclass or grad standing by the autumn of 1963, 3) German language competence. Applications are available at the Scholarship Office, 2011 Student Activities Bldg. Deadline for receipt of (Continued on Page 5) .. 0 I I' I p N I 1 III U R Im z -to |CHARTER FLIGHT to NEW YORK 11 11