STHEMICHIGANDAILY President Urges Government Aid For 'Mentally Il By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-President John F. Kennedy's far reaching pro- posals to offer federal help to the mentally ill and retarded went to Congress yesterday and drew little comment. The first special mental health message ever sent to Congress by a President called for a sweeping program which would return all but a small proportion of the 600,000 hospitalized mentally ill to a use- ful life. Cut Retardation It would also cut drastically into the 126,000 new cases of mental retardation each year. He called for unspecified spending to help Senator Asks Filibuster Time Limit WASHINGTON (M-Senate ma- jority leader Mike Mansfield (D- Montana) aimed a one-two punch yesterday at the Senate's 21-day- old battle over its anti-filibuster rule. Joined by 15 other senators, he filed a petition to limit debate on a motion to call up a proposed rules change that would permit three-fifths of the senators voting to put a time limit on a filibuster. A two-thirds majority now is re- quired. He also announced he will move today to table the motion to take up the proposed rules change. CAPITOL HILL ROUNDUP: Fulbright Investigates Foreign-Paid Lobbies By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Chairman J. William Fulbright (D-Ark) refused yesterday to give names or cite specific cases under study by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee after a two. and a half-hour closed hearing on activities of foreign-paid lobbyists in the United States. The committee spent most of the session questioning Undersecre- tary of State George W. Ball, after brief interrogation of Edward R. " Murrow, director of the United Soviets See Threat in Pact Viet Forces BoxEnem By The Associated Press NAM CAN, Viet Nam-Govern- ment forces estimated yesterday they have boxed 10,000 Commu- nist supporters into a vast man- grove swamp at the southern tip of Viet Nam. The troops hope to starve them into cooperation w i t h i n two months. The American-supported opera- tion marks the first attempt by government forces to probe the jungles south of Nam Can. In Washington, a top Air Force general implied yesterday Army helicopters might not have been shot up by ambushing Communist guerrillas in South Viet Nam last month if they had been protected by Air Force planes. Lt. Gen. . Gabriel P. Disosway said there had been no such am- bushes between last November, when orders were issued for es- cort by fixed wing planes, and what he called the "recent unfor- tunate incident" near Saigon. In that incident, on Jan. 2 at Ap Bac, 11 of 15 Army helicopters were struck by Communist fire and one of them was lost. Disosway brought more into the open in a growing dispute be- tween the Air Force and the Army over Army plans to develop a bigger. air arm of its own. He suggested that a long look must be taken "before we start duplicating in another service what is available and proven." Suggest Lowering Of Smoking Age Special To The Daily LANSING-A bill lowering the legal age for purchasing of cig- arettes from 21 to 17 years old was introduced into the House Mon- day by Representatives Harry A. De Maso (R-Battle Creek), E. D. O'Brien (D-Detroit), Michael No- vak (D-Detroit) and William Ro- mano (D-Warren). The bill was sent to the House Judiciary Com- mittee.. finance a broad network of com- munity mental health centers-24- hour operations, set for emergen- cies and aimed at diagnosis, pre- vention and treatment. The President also offered a va- riety of new programs that would cost $31.35 million the first year. They would provide more care, training and rehabilitation for the mentally ill and retarded; more pre-natal, maternity and child care aimed at reducing mental re- tardation, and more research cen- ters to probe causes of mental ill- ness. Health Programs President Kennedy will send Congress a special message Thurs- day outlining his proposals for leg- islation to promote the nation's health programs. This was reported yesterday by Democratic congressional leaders after their weekly breakfast with Kennedy. The general health message will aim at alleviating the growing shortage of doctors, dentists and nurses and increasing hospital and nursing home facilities. It presum- ably will deal also with a plan to help increase the capacity of med- ical and dental schools. . Youth Plan The congressional leaders re- ported that another special mes- sage on a youth opportunities pro- gram will be submitted by Kenne- dy next week. Last year, Kennedy lumped his controversial proposals for medi- cal insurance for the aged under. the Sociay Security system with his general health program. This time, the plan will be submitted separately in a special message later, dealing with problems of the .aged. Secretary of Welfare Anthony J. Celebrezze has said the health in- surance program, which died in the last Congress, is being rede- signed this year in an effort to make it "more palatable." Large Segment The youth opportunities pro- gram will be aimed at reducing the number of young people who drop out of school and fail to find jobs. These people constitute a major segment of the unemployed. House Speaker John McCormack (D-Mass), in a statement read to newsmen, emphasized the stress which Kennedy wants placed on his mental health legislation, go- ing to Congress yesterday. SEN. MIKE MANSFIELD ... anti-filibuster De Gaulle Hints U.S. Expansion Prompted Veto By The Associated Press PARIS -French President Charles de Gaulle dropped a hint yesterday that his real reason for shutting the Common Market door on Britain was to bar further American economic expansion into Europe. The Kennedy-Macmillan talks in the Bahamas in late December figured in this disclosure. "The big affair at present," de Gaulle was quoted by deputies, "is the international situation and the European problem." In Strasbourg, Walter Hallstein, chairman of the European Com- mon Market commission, yester- day indirectly accused de Gaulle of trying to impose French domi- nation on the continent. He also said "the manner in which one of the member govern- ments took and announced its de- cision to break off these negotia- tions is not in conformity with the duties of the community." May Provide Base Schools WASHINGTON tom)-The gov- ernment may have to provide schools at some military bases in Alabama, Georgia and South Car- olina this fall if children living on the stations are to attend non- segregated schools, Welfare Assist- ant Secretary James M. Quigley said yesterday. He discussed consultations with local authorities to implement a policy announced in March 1962: that segregated schools will not be considered suitable for such chil- dren after September 1963. The Justice Department, in a separate action, has filed suits' seeking desegregation of schools in Mobile and Madison Counties in Alabama, in Harrison County, Miss., Bossier Parish (county), La. and Prince George County, Va. Mansfield favors the three-fifths proposal, and said he would vote against the tabling move. He pre- dicted it would fail. Strength Test The vote on the tabling motion would come immediately and would provide a test of the strength of two opposing sides-Southern- led conservatives who favor the present two-third majority rule which permits them to talk civil rights to death and a liberal group that wants to make it easier to shut off debate. It is possible the Southerners may also vote against tabling to avoid moving any closer to a vote on the rules change, killing the value of the tabling vote as a test.' If the tabling move fails, Mans- field's debate-limitation petition will automatically come to a vote one hour after the Senate meets on Thursday. If it passes the re- quired two-thirds majority of those voting-67 if all100 senators vote-debate on the motion to take up the three-fifths proposal would then be limited to one hour for each senator. States Information Agency. It met informally to circumvent a ban by Sen. Mike Mansfield (D- Mont), Senate majority leader, on committee meetings for the dura- tion of a Senate floor fight over changing the anti-filibuster rule. No Request No request for permission to meet was made by Fulbright, and the committee staff said members were notified to appear for the in- formal session. Ball testified at a similar for- eign relations hearing Monday, opening an investigation into ef- forts by high paid United States agents for foreign powers to in- fluence United States policy deci- sions. He was noncommittal on leav- ing yesterday's session but did say that the committee went into some specific cases. Cuba Action In other action, calls for an in- vestigation of how much this country knows about what is going on in Cuba arose In both houses of Congress yesterday. Members grew increasingly edgy over charges that the Soviet mili- tary threat in Cuba is more dan- gerous than the Kennedy admin- istration admits. In the Senate, assistant Demo- cratic leader Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota called a news con- ference to urge a public congres- sional inquiry at which the head of the Central intelligence Agency, among others, would be question- ed. Republican Criticism In the lieuse a brief but sharp debate broke out over Republican criticism of Kennedy administra- tion policies. Rep. William E. Min- shall (R-Ohio) proposed a joint congressional investigation into all federal intelligence agencies. Rep. Samuel S. Stratton (D-NY) accused Sen Kenneth B. Keating (R-NY) of "talking through his hat" when he said the Russians are maintaining missile bases in Cuba. Katanga Chief Leaves Congo ELISABETHVILLE (P)-Katan- ga President Moise Tshombe slip- ped out of Katanga last night, leaving some believing he may never return to Congo politics. Informants said the Katanga president flew to Northern Rho- desia for medical treatment. A spokesman for the United Na- tions said the Katanga leader had complete freedom of movement. The Congo central government yesterday took over the Katangan Surete-the internal security po- lice that guarded Tshombe in his days of power. Tshombe still commands a pow- erful following among the people of Katanga and even some backers of the United Nations campaign that ended his secession want him to remain as a political force in a united Congo. Tshombe said he was handing over presidential duties during his absence to his former foreign min- ister, Evariste Kimba. F L world News Roundup < The - fRetort I NIGHTLY FEBRUARY 8 TH I THROUGH FEBRUARY 14 TH U_ in the Mt. Royal Hotel 8841 Woodward TR 5.8775 9PM-2 AM FREE PARKING TNI! LOST CITY JOHN COREN.MNE SEEGMRTRAOV SCAWARZ 1 - a THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM presents Bj The Associated Pressj MONROVIA -The government announced yesterday it had uncov- ered a plot by Liberia's army com- mander to assassinate Liberian President William V. S. Tubman and seize power. * * * MOSCOW-Top Soviet Admiral Sergei Gorshkov said yesterdayj Russian submarines have success- fully fired rockets from under wa- ter. JOHANNESBURG-The govern-1 ment investigated y e s t e r d a y whether a new black terrorist group killed five whites in a terri- tory to be set up as an African self-ruled enclave. A mob of 100 African men attacked the whites with knives, battle axes and spears early yesterday morning, * * * NEW YORK-Four states now have ratified the proposed anti-poll tax amendment to the- United States Constitution. The measure,l must have the approval of three- fourths of the states to become law. PECOS-Dr. John Paul Dunn, who last year claimed he was pos- sibly the first to tip the Federal Bureau of Investigation to the f i- nancial activities of Billie Sol Estes, has been barred for the second time from practicing medi- cine at Pecos' only hospital. * * * LONDON-Lord Samuel, elder statesman of Britain's Liberal Party and a powerful influence since the Edwardian reform era, died yeserday at the age of 93. - * HOUSTON-The Manner Space- craft Center confirmed yesterday that * the scheduled April space flight of astronaut Leroy Gordon Cooper Jr. will be delayed due to wiring problems in the launch ve- hicle. JACKSONVILLE--Brutal waves lashed at south Atlantic beaches throughout yesterday and hamp- ered ocean shipping. Gale warn- ings were displayed from Cape Canaveral to Nags Head, N.C., and the Weather Bureau said that stretch of seacoast can expect rough waves and high winds to continue into today. * * * NEW YORK - Although the stock market appeared to be head- ing for a substantial decline in yesterday's activity, buying of aerospace issues upped over-all trading and paced a late recovery drive. Final Dow-Jones industrials showed thirty industrials down .70, 20 railroads down .05, fifteen utili- ties at .35 and 65 stocks at .30. FOUNTAIN PENS all makes Sales & Service by Factory-trained men Morrill's I' Zbti ePbitV TYPEWRITER Cehie STUDENTS-The beginning of the semester is the perfect time to get your typewriter cleaned, overhauled, or repaired 514 S. State NO 5-9141 I 11 Dealer for Remington and Olympia Typewriters, SWARTHMORE INTERCOLLEGIATE CONFERENCE ON DEMOCRACY AND DEVELOPMENT IN LATIN AMERICA FEBRUARY 15, 16, 17, 1963 'u** N i~' Ii 'im *uu..u aU,'km IU! 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