THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE' THE a! IC1L IGAVL31 bAiJY . AEU w.uj -; e 1EC cceptsO Copoise oni ,, - T i Potters Guild of Ann Arbor invites you to a 11ies * * * * * * *C (I Agree on Nuclear OADEN FINANCIAL BOYCOTT: Soviets Decrease UN Support Force U.S. Pledges Submarines, Plane Units I N1TED NATIONS UP?) - The et Union yesterday broadened boycott of United Nations fi- ces. viet Chief Delegate Nikolai 'ederenko said his government d stop paying on parts of the lar budget as well as refus- as in the past, to contribute eacekeeping operations in The go and the Middle East. He accused the Western powers of using "direct blackmail" in an effort to pressure many countries into helping pay for peacekeeping operations. Welshers Lose Vote His remarks were interpreted as a reference to United States em- phasis on a charter provision that says any country falling two years Kennedy Addresses Press 'On Race Crisis, Wheat Bill WASHINGTON ()-President John F. Kennedy noted at a press conference yesterday that the administration is searching for a legal outlet to remedy southern racial problems and expressed "grave con- cern" that the wheat growers' rejection of his control program would harm the growers without helping consumers. "I know there is great opposition in Alabama, and indeed in any state, to federal marshals and federal troops, and I would be very re- State Recount Cuts Margin From Victory State canvassers yesterday re- ported 76 votes cut from the new state constitution's victory mar- gin of 7,829 after completing a check of 141 precincts. The state Democratic Party re- quested a check on 1,892 precincts, and the Coordinating Committee for the New Constitution asked for the recount of 78 precincts in a counter-filing to the Democratic petitions. Greenwood Township of St. Clair County showed the biggest error of a 100-vote difference dis- covered in the first day's count. Election night workers there had reported 162 "yes" and 112 "no" votes, whereas the vote should have been the other way around. -Most Democratic Party leaders recommended that the idea of the recount be dropped which will ob- ligate the party to post $9,455. -nluctbnt to see us reach that point. But I am obligated to carry out the court order. That is part of our constitutional system. There is no choice in the matter," Kennedy said. The President voiced hope that Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace would abide by the court order. Both Parties Lose On the wheat control program, Kennedy explained that its de- feat "is going to cause more dif- ficulty to the economy, because it will provide large surpluses and, I think, reduce farm income, and that is not in the interest of the consumers or the farmer." One reporter wanted comment on charges that there is some kind of agreement for abandonment of the United States naval base at Guantanamo Bay. "I think that that charge indi- . cates, as some people suspected before, that there was some politi- cal motivation in some of the at- tacks upon our policy with regard to Cuba," Kennedy replied. s Completely Untrue "That of course is completely untrue. It has never been consid- ered. It will not be done." behind in its UN dues shall have no vote in the Assembly. He said Russia this year would stop paying the parts of its budg- et assessment earmarked for ex- penses of the $200 million emer- gency bond issue, the Korea Me- morial Cemetery, UN Korean Re- unification Commission, the Pales- tine truce supervision organiza- tion and the field service for peace mission personnel. Federenko also told the General Assembly's 111-nation budgetary committee it was "clearly wrong" to incorporate any technical assist- ance expenses in the regular budg- et. But he said the Soviet Union would make a voluntary 1963 tech- nical assistance contribution of the ruble equivalent of $1.1 million to be spent exclusively on Soviet ex- perts and equipment. Won't Pay Up Federenko made clear that the Soviet Union would continue its refusal to pay its special assess- ments for support of the UN forces in The Congo and the Middle East, for which it already owes $46.2 million. He said the expenses of these forces were unlawful because they had been assessed by the Assem- bly instead of the Security Coun- cil. He declared they were not bind- ing on UN members, even though the World Court had given an ad- visory opinion that they were and the Assembly itself had approved that opinion. The whole Soviet. bloc of 10 countries plus Cuba can be ex- pected to follow the Soviet poli- cy in refusing to help pay for budget items on the Korean, Pal- estine and other missions. World News Roundup By The Associated Press PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti-Dic- tator Francois Duvalier staged his second inauguration as president yesterday in ceremonies bristling with guns of his security men. From a secret hideout, his chief rival, Clement Barbot, vowed anew to oust him.' ** - DETROIT - Mayor JeromeP. Cavanagh and other area officials yesterday initiated big-city pres- sure for state fiscal reforms that will use a general income tax to bail out local governments from their financial troubles. x r w MOSCOW - The Soviet Union orbited another unmanned satel- lite around the. Earth yesterday. It was number 17 in the Soviet Cosmos series started March 16, 1962, to test conditions for event- ual lengthy manned space flights such as a trip to the moon. The Soviet news agency Tss said all scientific instruments abroad were working normally and the first orbit took 94.82 minutes. The apogee (maximum distance from the Earth) was 492.5 miles and the perigee (minimum dis- tance from the Earth) 162.5 miles. The orbit inclination to the Equator was 49 degreese2 minutes. * *; * NIKOLAI T. FEDERENKO ... Russians won't pay up 4 h 4 I STUDENTS LIFE MEMBERSHIPS Available Now In the Business Office of the Union TODAY: 4:10 P.M. Arena Theatre Frieze Building August Strindberg's MISS JULIE (translated by Elizabeth Sprigge) Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre Admission Free PROTEST MARCH: Set Denial Of Petition BIRMINGHAM UP)-A federal judge refused yesterday to order reinstatement of more than 1000 Negro pupils suspended for cutting classes to march in protest to seg- regation. Negro attorneys immediately went to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in an effort to reverse the ruling by District Judge Clar- ence W. Allgood. While Birmingham's racial is- sues were fought in the court- room, law enforcement officials at Tuscaloosa prepared for the June 10 desegregation of the University of Alabama. Gov. George C. Wallace has pledged to bar personally any Ne- gro from entering the university. He invoked state sovereignty yes- terday after Federal District Judge H. Hobart Grooms refused to delay enrollment of two Negroes in the university system because of ra- cial unrest. In other developments, Sen. Lis- ter Hill (D-Ala) said he will vig- orously oppose pending legislation to extend the life and expand the powers of the federal Civil Rights Commission. Ku Klux Klan Wizard Robert M. Skelton, a Tuscaloosa resident, warned that if police officers can't enforce the law, "then the Klan will enforce it." President Kennedy in a Wash- ington news conference said he hoped the people of Alabama would bow to court orders for de- segregating the state institution. Romney Urges Civil Justice WASHINGTON (A' - Gov. George Romney called yesterday for elimination of human injus- tice in the civil rights field, re- invigorated state governments and said again he will not seek the 1964 Republican presidential nom- ination. But he left the door open to a possible draft and sidestepped say- ing whether he will be Michigan's favorite son candidate at the 1964 GOP nominating convention. France Announces Approval for Plan OTTAWA (I)-The 15 Western allies yesterday agreed to the crea- tion of an allied nuclear force that will have at its disposal pow- erful submarine and bomber con- tingents pledged by the United States and Britain. The long-argued plan was quick- ly approved in a defense debate which was concluded in two brief meetings of the North Atlantic Council. The final obstacle was removed when France announced that it would not oppose the proposed structural change unifying the various national nuclear forces now available for NATO. The change takes the form of a series of actions to rearrange the nuclear armament resources of the alliance, including the assign- ment of American Polaris sub- marines and British V-bombers t~o Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer, supreme allied commander in Europe. Also in the new arrangement is the appointment of a deputy com- mander under Lemnitzer who is to take charge of nuclear weap- ons planning within NATO. A spokesman for the alliance an- nounced the agreement in a brief statement which said simply that the "North Atlantic Council of Ministers noted with approval the various practical measures" that have been taken and are being taken for the reinforcement and regrouping of the alliance's nu- clear force available for the de- fense of Europe." Leaders Cite Future Policy By The Associated Press Two leading officials of the Yugoslav League of Communists outlined Yugoslavia's. conditions for closer cooperation with the Soviet bloc countries Saturday, making it clear that the firm policy of governmental independence will be retained. Vice-President Mijalko Todoro- vic, a member of the Central Com- mittee, and Veliko Vlavohic, a member of the Communist League Executive Council, spoke to the Central Committee, Todorovic, an economics expert, indicated that there would be no substantial change in Yugoslavia's trade pattern. He called the coun- try's trade "well distributed." Negotiations To Reduce Trade Costs GENEVA (M) - The United States' main trading partners gave the green light yesterday to a new program of tariff slashes. A far-reaching compromise be- tween the United States and the European Common Market -the world's two major economic units --ended the threat of a new eco- nomic split of the non-Communist world. Under the compromise agree- ment, the United States formally recognized that some of its high tariffs require special treatment. The Common Market in, turn abandoned its demand that all high American tariffs must auto- matically, be lowered more than corresponding European tariffs. The two sides agreed that spe- cial treatment would be reserved for high tariffs that constitute "meaningful" barriers to world trade. A committee of experts has until Aug. 1 to work out where this applies. Ministers and trade negotiators of 73 nations at a six-day confer- ence of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade unanimous- ly endorsed the compromise and set May 4, 1964, as the starting day for the real tariff negotia- tions. The negotiations were made possible by the United States Trade Expansion Act of 1962. The act authorized cutting American tariffs across the board by one- half, in return for equivalent con- cessions from America's trading partners. 00 UORPTT ION D %N D Sunday, May 26th May 23 is ASCENSION THURSDAY II ' , i a HOLYDAY of OBLIGATION Masses at St. Mary's Chapel are at 6:30, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 12:00 and5 p.m. 10 A.M.-3 P.M. NEW ADDRESS: 201 Hill St., near Main ...... ur am- t I U, I i I FOLLETT'S will buy YOUR COLLEGE TEXTBOOKS for I I c ANY TIME I IT'S SO EASY to sell your discarded books to FOLLETT'S. Textbook values decrease rapidly as new editions and more up-to-date books are constantly being published. SELL YOUR BOOKS as soon as you have had your exams and get today's top value for them. at FOLLETTFS" MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE 322 South State Street POT SALE Notice to Catholic Students SPRING 11 'I1 I 1209 South U. 663.7151 I I U. .wnwMammomm I .,";::.:41.;1:. ". 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