1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAE THEE .'..' 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY [ nxrj iLinir1r, Soviets Assure U.S*. ofSupport For. LaosPeace MOSCOW (M)-Undersecretary of State W. Averell Harriman de- clared yesterday that Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev had as- sured the United States of full support in restoring peace and neutral- ity to Laos. Moreover, Harriman said he felt he had "laid at rest" some of the rumors that might have reached Khrushchev that the United States was responsible for the new outbreak of fighting in the Southeast Asia country. Harrimantalked at a Laos Chiefs Hold Parley KHANG KHAY, Laos (4P)-P mier Prince Souvanna Phou flew to t h i s pro-Commun Pathet Lao headquarters on peac.e mission yesterday -and w handed a new demand thata peared to broaden the cr threatening his neutralist gover ment. Souvanna flew to Khang Kh on the edge of the tense Pla des Jarres in another attempt end a month-long dispute t tween his own neutralist for and the Pathet Lao. He met with his leftist ha brother, Prince Souphanouvo the Pathet Lao leader, who sisted that any future talks mi include the issues he claimss dividing Laos' rightist-neutrali leftist coalition government. This would embroil the rig wing faction of Gen. Phoumi N avan, who like Souphanouvong a deputy premier. United States and other We ern leaders have expressed conc that the Laotian crisis might er into a bloody clash betweent rightists and the Pathet Lao. Souphanouvong charged a his meeting with Souvanna t American planes airlifted- right-wing troops to the Plainez Jarres Friday to bolster neutra forces there under the comma of" Gen. Kong Le. Kong Le denied Souphan vong's charge and Invited me bers of the International Cont Commission to go among his tro and see for themselves. Macmillan Calls Aides to Meeting LONDON VP) - British Pri Minister Harold Macmillan su moned his chief lieutenants to unusual weekend house party the British countryside yester and started plotting a course keep his Conservatives in powe British poll takers say that election now or soon would o Macmillan and bring Harold W son's Labor Party into power. news conference in a basement room' " of the United States Embassy to correspondents from both sides of the Iron Curtain, including Rus- sian correspondents. 'Vigorous, Strong Captain' When Harriman was asked if Khrushchev had lent any support to rumors that the premier was re- planning to retire, he replied: "I ma didn't think it was appropriate for ist me to talk about that. He impress- a ed me as vigorous and strong as was a captain of the ship of state." ap- Harriman sought to give the im- isis pression that he felt his trip to rn- Moscow had been worthwhile in trying to get Russian support for hay ending the Laos fighting. But he ile declined to indicate more than a to limited number of things that had be- been specifically agreed. ces "My purpose was to bring home to the officials of the Soviet gov- %lf- ernment that the United States ng, sees the agreements on Laos as im- in- portant and significant, and to ust see if we can achieve mutually are agreeable results." st- Move Freely About The specific measures included ht- agreement that the International as- Control Commission should be en- is couraged to move freely about in the troubled area, and that the st- United States and Soviet ambas- ern sadors should work closely togeth- upt er in Vientiane, the Laotian capi- the tal. In Washington, United States fter officials are reported somewhat hat encouraged by Khrushchev's new 500 declaration of support for a neu- des tral and peaceful Laos. But they list caution that what counts is what nd 'happens on the scene in the next few days. ou- Kennedy's Reaction? m- The White House made no com- trol ment on the message or Kennedy's ops reaction to it. One big question in the minds of administration officials is whether Khrusihchev, in view of his power struggle with Red China, still has the authority and influ- ence to control decisively the Com- munist side in the Laotian con- [me flict. im- The view of authorities here, an privately expressed, is that it re- in mains to be demonstrated by Coin- day munist actions in Laos itself to whether the Soviet influence can er. be exerted effectively and, In- an deed, whether Khrushchev will ust determinedly carry out the policy Vil- line which he reaffirmed to Har- riman. SEGREGATIONIST JUDGES--Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy (right) backed the appointments of Southern segregationist judges to the federal bench Friday. He made what he called "courtesy visits" to Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama (left) and Gov. Donald S. Russell of South Carolina. Attorney General Backs Segregationist Judges ATLANTA-Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy Friday defended the administration's appointment of Southern segregationists to the federal bench. Kennedy's remarks came as he wound up visits to governors and federal officials in three states in the Deep South. He made what.he called "courtesy visits" to Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama and Gov. Donald S. Russell of Sc World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - McGeorge Bundy, a top aide to President John F. Kennedy, said Thursday he will remain at the White House, passing up a possible chance to become president of Yale Univer- sity. Bundy said he had been asked informally if he wanted to be one of the candidates to succeed the late A. Whitney Griswold as Yale's president. He said he had de- clined in order to remain as Ken- nedy's special assistant on na- tional security affairs. Bundy was a dean at Harvard University before taking his pres- ent post. ' * . . SAN JOSE, Calif.-United Na- tions troops will be gone from The Congo by the end of 1963, but it would be foolhardy for technical experts to withdraw at present, says the chief of UN civilian op- erations in The Cor go, Godfrey K. J. Amachree. "It is time we allowed the Con- golese to manage their own af- fairs," he told a news conference. But later he said, "Until The Con- go gets its own highly-trained ex- perts it would be foolhardy to withdraw technical help." S. * MOSCOW - Cuban Premier Fidel Castro headed for a tri- umphant reception in Moscow yes- terday already covered with Soviet tributes dished out in a circus- like atmosphere. Soviet propagan- da seized the occasion to launch new attacks on the United States1 and President John F. Kennedy's Alliance for Progress. * * * ROME-The left-leaning gov- ernment of this NATO nation was put to the test of a crucial par- liamentary election yesterday. In the hands of the country's 34 mil- lion voters was the choice of 630 deputies and 315 senators for the Italian republic's fourth parlia- ment. WASHINGTON - The United States has deferred an answer to India on a $512 million loan for the construction of a controversial government-owned steel mill-a prime part of the Indians' third 5-year development plan. OT' AWA-United States Am- bassador Christian Herter yester- day wound up two days of talks with officials of Canada's new government and flew. back to Washington to report to President John F. Kennedy. As expected, there was no official announce- ment on the talks in which Herter sought to line up Canada's sup- port for United States efforts to- ward freer world trade. outh Carolina Thursday, the New 'York Times reported. Both in the meetings with the governors and in his public appearances, the at- torney general underscored his hope that Southerners would re- solve racial problems locally and thus make federal intervention un- necessary. Militia Needed However, sources close to Ken- nedy said he had come away from his conference with Wallace con- vinced that federal troops would be necessary to enforce, any court desegregation orders in Alabama. The public records of some men named to federal judgeships by President John F. Kennedy, and some of their decisions after tak- ing office, have brought growing criticism from civil rights advo- cates. At a news conference in the Old Post Office Building here, the-at- torney general was asked why persons known to have strong seg- regationist views had been placed in these positions. Good Judges "I'm very proud of the judges that have been appointed," he re- plied. "We looked into all of them for questions of integrity and whether they would uphold the law of the land."r Kennedy acknowledged that some of the jurists had ruled against the justice department in civil rights cases. "They didn't decide for the gov- ernment on every matter and I wouldn't expect that they would," he said. The attorney general also con- tended that criticism of the Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation in civil rights circles was groundless. Some Negroes have accused FBI agents of stalling in investigating alleged violations of their rights. Educator Asks_ Fewer 'Frills' NEW YORK - Dr. Calvin E. Gross, New York City's new super- intendent of schools, called Friday night for a return to "intellectual development" in the schools. He asked that first place in the curriculum be assigned to English and reading and that such "frill" courses as driver training be dropped, the New York Times re- ported. Speaking before the New York Society for the Experimental Study of Education, Gross asked that far more stress be placed on the teaching of children "at the two extremes of the ability continuum" -the very bright and the very dull. Although he did not specifically connect his remarks with his plans for the city's schools, Gross is ex- pected to put much of his pro- gram into effect here. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) be made on behalf of Phi Chi Theta, Delta Sigma Pi, and Alpha Kappa Psi. The public is invited. COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES June 8, 1963 To be held at 5:30 p.m. either in the Stadium or Yost Field House, depend- ing on the weather. Exercises will con- clude about 7:30 p.m. All grads as of June 1963 are eligible to participate. Tickets: For Yost Field House: Two to. each prospective grad, to be distributed from Mon., May 27, to 12:00 noon on Sat., June 8, at Diploma Dept., 555 Admin. Bldg. Office will be closed Thurs., May 30 and Sat., June 1. For Stadium: No tickets necessary. Children not admitted unless accom- panied by adults. Academic Costume: Can be rented at Moe Sport Shop, N. Univ. Ave., Ann Arbor, or at Tice's Men Shop, 1107 S. Univ. Ave., Ann Arbor. Assembly for Grads: At 4:30 p.m. in area east of Stadium. Marshals will direct grads to proper stations. If siren indicates (at intervals from 4:00 to 4:15 p.m.) that exercises are to be held in Yost Field House; grads should go di- rectly there and be seated by Marshals. Spectators: S Stadium: Enter by Main St. gates only. All should be seated by 5:00 p.m., when procession enters field. Yost Field House: Owing to lack of space only those holding tickets can be admitted. Enter on State St., oppo- site McKinley Ave. Grad Announcements, Invitations, etc.: Inquire at Office of Student Af- fairs. Commencement Programs: To be dis- tributed at Stadium or Yost Field House. Distribution of Diplomas: If the exer- cises are held in the Stadium, diplo- mas for all grads except the School of Dentistry, the Medical School, Flint Collegeand Dearborn Campus, will be distributed from designated stations under the east stand of the Stadium, immediately after the exercises. The diploma distribution stations are on the level above the tunnel entrance. If the exercises are held in the Yost Field House, all diplomas except those, of the School of Dentistry, the Medical School, Flint College and Dearborn Campus, will be distributed from the windows of the Cashier's Office and the Registrar's Office in the lobby of the Admin. Bldg., following the ceremony. Diplomas may be called for until 9:00 p.m. on this day. Doctoral degree candidates who quali- fy for the PhD degree or a similar de- gree from the Grad School and WHO ATTEND THE COMMENCEMENT EXER- CISES will be given a hood by the Univ. Hoods given during the ceremony are all Doctor of Philosophy hoods. Those receiving a doctor's degree other than the PhD may exchange the PhD hood for the appropriate one at the Grad School booth under the E. Stand, immediately after the 4eremony, or at the office of the Secretary, 2564 Admin. Bldg., on Mon., June 10, and thereafter. Events Monday 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.-Bureau of In- dustrial Relations Personnel Techniques Seminar No. 87-Dr. Dallas Jones, As- sociate Prof. of Industrial Relations, Grad School of Bus. Admin., "Evaluat- Ing and Improving Disciplinary Policies and Practices": Room 3D, Mich. Union. 8:30 a.m.-First Annual Community Planning Workshop-Registration: 2nd Floor Corridor, Mich. Union. 4:00 p.m.-Dept. of Engrg. Mechanics Seminar-Prof. Ernst Becker, Univ. of Damstadt, "Laminar Boundary Layr at an Undulating Wall": Room 311, W. Engrg. ORGAN IZATION NOTICES Congr. Disc. E & R Stud. Guild, Sem- inar: "History of Christian Thought," Rev. J. E. Edwards, 7:30-8:30 p.m.; Eve- ning Relaxer, 8:30 p.m.; April 28, 802 Monroe. m-a Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, Supper, 6 p., Election of Officers, 6:45 p.m., April 28, 1511 Washenaw. Gilbert & Sullivan Society, "Toledo War" and "Cox and Box," April 28, 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Ad- mission charge. Sociedad Hispanica, Tertuia: coffee, conversation, music, April 29, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB. U. of M. International Dancers, Dance Meeting, April 30, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill. * * * Wesleyan Guild, Seminar, 10:15 a.m., Pine Room; Student Cabinet, 5:30 p.m., Pine Room; Worship & Program, 7 p.m., Wesley Lounge; April 28. Lutheran Student Assoc., April 28, 7 p.m., Hill & Forest. Speaker: Juliet An- derson, "My Day in Tanganyika." procedures of the exam for acceptance into the Foreign Service Career Reserve Officer Corps. Please make appts; in person or call Ext. 3544. Qualification requirements: 21-31 yrs. old (age 20 if college grad or jr. yr. completed); citizen for at least 9 yrs. (if married spouse must be citizen); must meet rigid physical exam; must be willing to serve anywhere in the world. Seek- ing majoftsin Bus. Ad., PubI. Ad., Econ., Poll. Sci., Hist., Lang. & Area Studies, Geog., Intern'l. Affairs. Applications for written exam must be on file no later than July 22. Exam given Sept. 7. U.S. Dept. of State, 'Foreign Service - W. Broderick will speak to all- stu- dents who are interested in a Foreign Service Career. Underclassmen are wel- come. No individual interviews will be 8:30 p.m.--School of Music Degree Re- held by the State Dept. Meeting to be For further information, please come cital-Lorrie Pierce, pianist: Lane Hall held at 4:00 p.m. on Tues., April 30 in to Summer Placement. Aud.-Open to the public. Aud. A in Angell Hall. Qualification requirements are the same as those for POSITION OPENINGS: The Faculty Seminar on Conflict Res- the USIA. Applications are not present- Lahti of Ann Arbor, Mich.-Manager, olution will meet in the Kalamazoo ly available at the Bureau of Appoint- Service Dept. Prefer EE degree. At Room of the League at 12:30 on April ments but we do have literature which least college bkgd. with emphasis in 29. Speakers will be Prof. Robert Hef- gives detailed descriptions of the work electronics field. Some exper. desired. ner and Sheldon Levy. They will dis- of the State Dept. Foreign Service. An- Will service amplifiers, hi-fi installa- cuss their recent efforts on the topic: nouncement of the receipt of the appli- tions & FM tuner alignment. Knowl- "Multidimensional Scaling of Interna- cations will be made in the D.O.B. edge of circuits required. tional Attitudes." There will be no eve- FMC Corporation, Hoopeston, Ill. - ning meeting of the Faculty Seminar SUMMER PLACEMENT: Openings for Sales Trainees in the ma- on Arms Control and Disarmament. 212 SAB- chinery field. Will spend approx. 2 yrs. Manpower, Inc., Ann Arbor, Mich.- in sales trng. prog. before own sales ter- The Regular Spring Meeting of the Placement, part-time & temporary for ritory. Desire applicants In upper half Univ. Senate will be held on Mon., at all kinds of engineers at any class , of graduating class, have a better than 4:15 p.m. in Rackham Lecture Hall. level. Must have marketable skill: draft- average mech. aptitude & have either a ting and design, mech. or electrical BS or BA. Department of Economics: The next tech., secretarial skills, machine opera- YWCA, N.Y., N.Y. - Job openings meeting of the Univ. of Mich. Econom- tion, etc. Call them: NO 5-3757. throughout the U.S. in the following ics Society will be held on Mon. at 8 supervisors of Upper Merion Town- arear: Exec. Dirs.; Young Adult Prog. p.m. in the Multipurpose Room of the ship, Montgomery County of Prussia, Pa. Dirs., Health, Phys. Educ. & Recreation Undergrad. Lib. Speaker will be Prof. -Positions open for 3 male forestry Dirs.; Teenage Prog. Dirs.; & Multiple George J. Stigler of the Univ. of Chi- students. Surveying the trees on public Age Group Prog. Dirs. cago. His subject will be "Public Regu- right of way'& municipal grounds., , ILG Electric Ventilating Co., Chicago, lations: The New Laissez-Faire?" Camp Oakland, Oxford, Mich. - Coed ' III.-Sales Engnr.-Degree required (not camp will interview for men counselors f necessarily Engrg., but some tech. bkgd. Math 809 - Approximation Theory: & arts & crafts director (M or F). helpful). Exper. not required. Willing- Prof. J. L. Ullman will speak on "Gen- Counselors can earn up to 12 hrs. of ness to travel (less than 25 per cent of eralized Section Theory; the Problem credit of Mich. State Univ. Will inter- the time). Auto necessary. of Real Zeroes." Meeting is in 340- W. view Wed., May 1. Time, Inc., Chicago, Ill.-The Chicago Engrg., Mon., at 2:00 p.m. Smith, Hinchman & Grylls, Detroit, Subscription Service Div. of Time, Inc. Mich.-Interviews will be held at 128-H offers employment opportunities to men W. Engrg. on May 2. Architectural & as Administrative Trainees & to women Engrg. Firm. Will consider for summer in a Supervisory Training Prog. Women ANNOUNCEMENTS: only those avail, in Feb. '64. I ill receive trng, in the summer months; Camp Arbutis, Mich.-Will interview in the fall will be assigned to supervise Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Mass. Tues., April 30. Positions open for 1st a group of people processing & entering announces its 16th summer course in & 2nd cooks, 3 or 4 kitchen girls & a magazine subscriptions. Will have re- Publishing Procedures from June 19 secretary. . sponsibility for the direction, counsel- through July 30. It is open to both Mueller Brass, Port Huron, Mich. - ing, trng., etc. of a sect. of from 8-15 men & women. Enrollment is limited Summer positions for engineers in people. Must have interest in business to 50. The lecture staff consists of fields dealing with the metal industry. organization. Courses in Stat., Econ., leading book & .magazine publishers. Interviews will be held on Mon., April Acc't., etc. particularly appropriate, but Must be recent grad unless at present 29 in 128-H W. Engrg. Bldg. not required. Men will receive bkgd. employed in some branch of publishing. Camp Chick-A-Mi, Mich.-Mrs. Garm- training prior to specific assignments Must have reasonable ability to express hausen will interview in the Summer, in such areas as Methods Engrg., Com- himself in writing & show critical placement Office on Mon., April 29. puter Programming, Cost Acc't., & Cir- judgment. Typing ability essential. positions open for male in golf and all culation Stat. Will lead to broader Must apply by May 15. types of women counselors who are 19 managerial oppor. U.S. Information Agency-Horace H. and older. * * * Holmes & Alan Carter, (U-M grad) wilibe Roy C. Ingersoll Research Center, Ili- For further information, please cell here from 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. on April nois-Mechanical engineer doing grad General Div., Bureau of Appts., 3200 30. Representatives will interview inter- work wanted by this firm. Salary open. SAB, Ext. 3544. ested applicants & acquaint them with____. CI a-, TOMORROW at 9 P.M. ISRAEL-AMERICAN CLUB U of M Invites you to celebrate with us the ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAY in the Michigan League Ballroom Speakers: PROF. WILLIAM HABER, Chairman, Dept. of Economics DR. JAMES M. DAVIS, Director, International Center Moderator: DR. HERMAN JACOBS, Director, B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation Folk dances and folk sings NAGILLAH GROUP PI { open Mondays and Friday 'til 8:30 measure-mae to-height ..the last word in skirtsmanship So very personally yours, a Sportempos skirt that gives you custom-perfect fit ... at a perfectly fitting price! 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