,1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILI PAGE T U.S. Halts Ceylon Aid' In Reaction to Seizure Of Two Oil Companies UNEMPLOYMENT: Wirtz Opposes Effect Of Cutting work Week WASHINGTON (P)-Cutting the work week by law from 40 to 35 hours would not solve unemployment and might actually reduce jobs in some industries, Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz said yesterday. Testifying before the House Ways and Means Committee, Wirtz described President John F. Kennedy's tax reducing and revising plan as "the top-priority item on the agenda of labor interests this year." The key to creating jobs, he said, is "to release purchasing power LOOK TO GENEVA: NResume Underround WASHINGTON ()-The United States resumed underground nu- clear weapons testing yesterday while the nation's top disarma- ment negotiator looked toward Geneva in a 'mildly optimistic mood over chances for progress at renewed talks. William C. Foster, chief of the United States Disarmament Agency, is to leave early today for Tuesday's resumption of the 17-nation disarmament talks at Geneva. United States officials said his emphasis will be on first step "confidence-building'" agree- ments looking to a test-ban treaty and he is at least cautiously hope- ful of some progress. The Atomic Energy Commis- sion announced resumption of the underground testing in Nevada with shots in the intermediate World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Soviet Ambas- sador Anatoly F. Dobrynin Thurs- day called on Secretary of State Dean Rusk to express Russian con- cern aver the treaty of coopera- tion between Germany and France. The meeting, held on Dobrynin's initiative, did 'not touch on Cuba and only lightly brushed the top- Ic of disarmament. * * * CHEYENNE-The Wyoming leg- islature Thursday passed and sent to Gov. Cliff Hansen a right-to- work bill, banning compulsory un- ion membership as a qualification for obtaining employment. TOKYO-Communist China ac- cused the United States yesterday of preparing for aggression in Northeast Asia by arming its troops in South Korea with atomic weapons. * * . WASHINGTON-Roswell L. Gil-. patric will leave his job as deputy secretary of defense sometime be- tween June and October, a Pen- tagon spokesman said yesterday. KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya-The British protectorate of Brunei an- nounced Thursday it will join the projected Federation of Malaysia this year, becoming the fifth mem- ber of the new nation which links Singapore, Malaya and the British Borneo territories of Brunei, North Borneo and Sarawak. WASHINGTON - Igor Cassini, the New York society columnist who writes under the nlame of "Cholly Knickerbocker," was in- dicted on charges of failing to reg- ister as a publicity agent for the late Dominican Dictator Rafael Trujillo. NEW YORK-The New York Stock Exchange yestrday demon- strated the kind of resiliency it has shown repeatedly in 1963, absorb- ing early selling and closing with prices on the upgrade. Standard and Poor's 500 index closed un- changed, with 425 lindustrials" also uncharged, 2A rails up 0.14 and 50 utilities off 0.02. range or less-meaning the equiva- lent of something between 20,000 and a million tons of TNT. The AEC would not say how many blasts were touched off but con- firmed there were more than one.x The latest prior test in Nevada was on Dec. 12 and was the 59th] one announced for the series+ which began 17-months ago. + President John F. Kennedy on Jan. 26 suspended the Nevada testa ing in an obvious effort to spur the test-ban talks then going on+ among the United States, the1 Soviet Union and Britain., But the Spviet;Union on Jan. 31] broke off the New York talks with a request that they be renewed' at Geneva this month. The next day, Secretary of State Dean Rusk announced Kennedy was ordering resumption of the Nevada tests. This was in line with the Presi- dent's Jan. 26 statement that ,he would not accept any prolonged,] unpoliced moratorium on testing.- State Department sources indi-I cated Foster and his colleagues will concentrate at Geneva on modest aims, looking to a test-ban+ agreement because it felt there is virtually no chance for any major progress toward general disarma- ment. , The Geneva parley has made little headway since it first got under way last March. But theR conference could continue indefi-1 nightly. Keating gives Adm inistration Cuban Facts' WASHINGTON VP)-Sen. Ken- neth B. Keating (R-NY) said yes- terday he :gave the Kennedy Ad-] ministration additional informa- tion on the military situation in Cuba and recommended what, should be done about it. Keating said he passed his in- formation and advice along to John A. McCone, director of the3 Central Intelligence Agency. Neither Keating nor McCone would give details about what the senator told the CIA chief on a visit to Keating's office. But Keat- ing said, "Mr. McCone has told me these recommendations will be transmitted to the President." Keating added that none of his recommendations "involves mili- tary action against Cuba." He said the added data he gave the in- telligence chief involve reports of a military buildup "which I have not been able to confirm and which I have not publicly 'revealed." Organization To Remove Technicians Marks First Action Under Recent Law WASHINGTON (M)-The United States told Ceyloi yesterday that a $3.8 million aid program is being halted until Ceylon appropriately compensates two American oil companies for properties nation- alized last June. The Agency for International Development said that within 30 days its mission-including 15 technicians and five administra- tors-would be returned to the United States. It was the first such action or- dered by AID Administrator David Bell under an amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act which went into effect on Feb. 1. Wording of Law. In a note to the Ceylon govern- ment, Ambassador Frances E. Wil- lis drew attention to the wording of the new law which says United States assistance shall remain suspended until appropriate steps are taken to compensate American companies for private property which has been nationalized. This left an implication that when a settlement is reached on the claims for $3.4 million, the United States assistance program will be resumed. Ceylon nation- alized 83 gas stations belonging to the firms. Since July 1, 1955, the United States has extended $79.6 million to Ceylon in grants, loans, sur- plus foods and technical assist- ance. Will Stop Loan The effect of the suspension now will be to halt some $890,000 in technical assistance projects and a $3 million development loan to help expand and modernize the Kutanayake airport, 20 miles from Colombo. The modernization would permit use of the airport by inter- national jet airliners. However, the United States is ready to continue a food for peace program to Ceylon, the agency said. The United States move was made with apparent reluctance. and to stimulate investment in productive,labor-using enterprises by a tax reduction." Not for Substitutes Wirtz said he is not pushing for a tax program as a substitute for a shorter work week, which he agreed had been the historic ad- justment to the mechanization of industry. He said, however, that most of! the time the lessening of working hours had been accomplished "by collective bargaining and private adjustment." This is continuing,' and he approves of it. The AFL-CIO is urging a reduc- tion of the work week by statute. Increase Costs But, Wirtz said, a legislated, across-the-board cut in hours "would not in itself be the right answer. It would increase costs sa much in some industries that, with international competition what it is, it could lead to less rather than more employment." Already seven per cent of the work in the United States is be- ing done on an overtime basis, he told the committee. Wirtz acknowledged that there are jobs in some fields "looking for workers" and that retraining of the unemployed offers promise. But he said the gains being made in this direction are measured in the thousands, while unemploy- ment remains in the millions. Sees '64 Loss For Kennedy WASHINGTON (P)-New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller says a Republican standard-bearer can unhorse President John F. Ken- nddy in 1964 but that it would be a mistake for the GOP to settle on its champion now. "The important thing is to strengthen and unite the party," Rockefeller said. Republicans, he told a news con- ference Wednesday, must offer constructive alternatives to ad- ministration programs and develop all the talent they have. THE CHURCH OF THE SECOND BIRTH 427 S. Fifth Ave. Half block south of Public Library 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship Air Forces Hit Viet Cong AP BAI LAI, Viet Nam (W) American-piloted fighter bomberst laid down a blanket of fire bombs,I rockets and machine gun fire yes-t terday as South Vietnamese ground forces opened a major operation a g a i n s t Communist guerrillas hiding in tinder-dry1 countryside not far from Saigon.1 it was one of the heaviest air strikes in the war against Viet Cong from North Viet Nam. Doz- ens of fires were set in the area and columns of smoke towered in- to the sky. United States Army helicopters carried South Vietnamese troopst into the area, laced with canals and sprawling with dry brush, to engage guerrilla forces which hadI increased their activity over the past several weeks. The American-piloted B-26's and T-28's ripped into concentrations of enemy troops under trees, straf- ed and bombed up and down thet canals and blistered the entiref area with napalm fire bombs. Brush fires spread rapidly for miles over dry rice fields. One field was enveloped by a continu- ous sheet of flame half a mile wide. The battle scene is about 130 miles southwest of Saigon. None of the 13 troop-carrying helicopters was reported hit, al- though observation planes and the fighter-bombers reported they had drawn heavy machine gun fire from positions in and around a hamlet near here. Government officials maintain- ed tight security and did not dis- close the number of troops in- volved or casualties, GOP Heads Hit Tax Cut, As 'Gamble' WASHINGTON (P)-The Sen- ate-House Republican leadership yesterday assailed President John F. Kennedy's tax-cutting proposals as "undoubtedly the biggest eco- nomic gamble in the history of nations." A statement by the GOP leaders said the administration's program is based on a philosophy which says that "the only choice is be- tween two kinds of deficits. No Conference The statement was adopted Wednesday at the first meeting at this Congressional session of top GOP leaders in both houses. It was released yesterday without the usual televised news confer- ence by Senate Minority Leader Sen. Everett M. Dirksen and House GOP leader Rep. Charles A. Halleck (R-Ind). The Republicans said Kennedy has described as the "core" of his program for solving unemploy- ment a $10.2 billion net tax cut, a $4.5 billion increase in federal spending and a $12 billion deficit. Desperate Economics They charged the administra- tion 'is engaging in a desperate kind of-economics, because it has no solution to the unemployment problem." "The Republican goal in, this Congress will be a reduction in federal spending which can lead to a reasonable tax cut," they said. "It can be done because we have done it. The only two major tax cuts in the last 30 years were en- acted by Republican congresses and both times we cut spending substantially." _PIZZA KING 1308 S. University NO 5-9655 NO 5-3800 rmFree Delivery from 12 Noon, Daily PIZZA, CHICKEN and SANDWICHES * KLH " SHERWOOD " ELECTROVOICE * JENSEN " SONY 9 FISHER MPX. I' TAPE RECORDERS A SPECIALTY-WE RENT PRE-RECORDED TAPES FISHER KITS IN STOCK We Guarantee Evrything We Sell N ) You Will Be Glad You Bought It Here O i8-74 1319 S. University Ave., Ann Arbor I BLOCK EAST OF CAMPUS THEATRE, WEST OF WASHTENAW AL LOGELIN 1~. HI-Ft STUDIO Largest Inventory of High Fidelity Components In The Area " " 0 . WE STOCK REK-O-KUT AR'S SCOTT DYNA KITS CITATION GARRARD TONIGHT at 8:30!! ON Stage-Hill Auditorium 0 ! l o l 0I SELL EICO BOGEN MARANTZ JIM LANSING ETC. C1 a Ili', presented by THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM In Association with the U-M Dance Dept. Box Office Opens at 10 A.M. Orch. $3.00, $2.00; 1st Baoc. $3.00, $2.00 APA Members 20-40% Discount I .. ,. . . 1 .1 it C OME1 ro c uai crI If O N 7 r! E ~ABr BtATH I I An evening of Yiddish Entertainmeni The "DYBBUK" A film with English Subtitles With commentary by Prof. Herbert Paper Sunday, Feb 'i0th 7:30 P.) BETH ISRAEL CENTER, An Arbor Sponsored by B'nai Brith ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Streets Mgsr. John F. Bradley, Chaplain Rev. Alexander Brunett N THlE GOTHIC FILM SOCIETY ANNOUNCES 200 SUBSCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE FOR ITS RELIGIOUS SCHEDULE Sunday Masses: 8:00, 9:30, 11:00 A.M., 12:00 Noon and 12:30. Holyday Masses: 6:30, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 A.M., M. 12:00 Noon, 5:10 P.M. Weekday Masses 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 A.M. and 12:00 Noon. Novena Devotions: Mother of Perpetual Help. Wednesday evening, 7:30 P.M. Rosary and Litany: Daily at 5:10 P.M. EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM Weekly classes in Philosophy Tuesday at 8:00. Fundamentals of the Catholic Faith Tuesday and Thursday at 10 a.m., 2, 3, 8 p.m. Foundations of Christianity Tuesday and Thursday at 1, 3, 7 p.m. Sacred Scripture Monday at 7:00, Thursday at 8 :CJ. Medi- cl Ethics Thursday at 7:00. Nursing Ethics Monday at 8:00. Newman Classes Friday at 8:00. Open Forum Wednesday at 8:00. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND' STUDENT CENTER (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenow Avenue Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor James H. Pragman, Vicar Sunday at 9:45 and 11:15: Services, with Pas- tor preaching on "Worthy of the Gospel." Sunday at 9:45 and 11:15: Bible Study, Start- ing course on "The Theology of the Lord's Prayer." Sunday at 6:00: Gamma Delta, L'itheran Stu- dents, Supper and Program. 'olk on his work by the Rev. Hugo List, Industrial Chaplain at the Dow Chemical Co., Mid- land. Monday ct 8:00: Course in Christian Doctrine. Wednesday at 10:00 p.m.: Midweek Devotion. SPRING 1963 SERIES ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 North Division Phone NO 2-4097 SUNDAY- 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M. Holy Communion and Sermon for Students. 11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon. 7:00 P.M. Evening Prayer and commentary TUESDAY-- 9:15 A.M. Holy Communion. WEDNESDAY-- 7:00 A.M. Holy Communion. FRIDAY- 12:10 P.M. Holy Communion. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill St. at S. Forest Ave. Henry O. Yoder, Postor Anna M. Lee, Associate SUNDAY- 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Worship Services. 10:00 a.m. Bible Study. 7:00 p.m. "After the End, Then What?"- Dr. George Mendenhall. Tuesday-7:15 p.m. Study Group-"Church- State Issues in American Life," Prof.. Paul Kauper, Leader. Wednesday-7:15-7:45 p.m. Vespers. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST1 183 Washtenow Ave. 11:00 a.m. Sunday Services. 8:00 p.m. Wednesday Services. 9:30 o.m. Sunday School (up to 20 years of age.) 11:00 a.m. Sunday School (for children 2 to- 6 years of age.) A free reading room is maintained at 306 East Liberty St. Reading Room hours are Mon- day thru Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. except Sundays and Holidays. Monday- evening 7:00 to 9:00. FIRST and METHODIST CHURCH WESLEY FOUNDATION REALITY and CINEMA' ENGRAVED GIFTS for VALENTINE'S DAY featuring CIRCLIE, PINS with her monogram Sterling from $2.95 Gold filled from $4.95 Engraved at no extra charge A series of filnes illustrating five cinematic approaches to reality February 11 Expressionism DESTINY by Fritz Lang March 4 Realism THE CRIME OF M. LANGE by Jean Renoir March 25 Documentary THE SILENT WORLD by J: Y. Cousteau and Louis Malle April 22 Expressionist Realism THE LAST LAUGH State and Huron Streets, Tel. NO 8.6881 Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister Rev. M. Jean Robe and Rev. C. J. Stoneburner, Campus Ministers SUNDAY 9:00 and 11:15 a.m.-Morning Worship. The Parables of Jesus, Brotherhood, A Basis of Divine Judgment, sermon by Dr. Rupert. This service is broadcast over WOIA 01290 AM 102.0 FM, 11:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. 10:15 a.m.-Seminar, "Christianity and Com- munism," "Prophetic Justice and Christian Communism in Scripture." 6:00 p.m.--Wesley Fellowship Cabinet Meet- ing, Pine Room. 7:00 p.m.-Wesley Fellowship, Lounge. Dr. Hoover Rupert will speak on "Renewal of Modern Church and Students." MONDAY 8:00 to 11:00-Open House, Jean Robe's j apartment. WEDNESDAY 5:10 p.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel. 6:00 p.m.-Wesley Grad Supper, Pine Room. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER 512 and 502 E. Huron Rev. James Middleton, Minister Rev. Paul W. Light, Minister of Education (Minister to students) SUNDAY 9:45 a.m. Discussion, "Christian Ethics and World Responsibility." 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. 6:00 p.m. American Baptist Student Fellow- ship. Faculty-Student Dinner. MONDAY 12:00 noon-Lunch and Discussion. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Services at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. "Swords Into Plowshares," Dr. William S. Harmon. BIBLE LECTURE, 10:20-10:40, Mrs. Luchs. CHURCH SCHOOL, crib-9th grade, 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. STUDENT GUILD, 802 Monroe, telephone 2- 5189. Radio broadcast, WHRV, 1600, from 11:00- 12:00 noon. MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tappon Streets Rev. Russell M. Fuller, Minister C."-'4^" 7.1(1 -.. -. ~m J.ou efo new stu- 11 THE CHURCH OF CHRIST John G. Malcin, Minister W. Stadium at Edgewood SUNDAY 10:00 a.m. Bible School 11:00 a.m. Regular Worship 6:30 p.m. Evening Worship WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m. Bible Study For transportation to any service coil 2-2756 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL REFORMED United Church of Christ 423South Fourth Ave. Rev. Ernest Kloudt, Pastor Rev. A. C. Bizer, Associate Pastor 9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Worship Service 9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Church School by F. W. Murnau May 13 tIl I, ..- _" w s * . . 1 Idi Ild I , A'Jn L~unacUy, /:.3vJp~m. vpen nuu e'iv new wu- 1: