THE_MICHIGANDAILY' enne To dy Announces Direct New P Shriver eace ALGERIAN GOVERNMENT: Bourguiba Proposes Coalition CAIRO (A') - President Habib. Bourguiba of Tunisia has propos- ed that Algerian Rebel Premier Ferhat Abbas head a provisional coalition government in Algeria while French troops withdraw from' the territory, reliable in- formants said recently. French President Charles de Gaulle and rebel leaders reacted favorably to the idea during de- tailed talks with Bourguiba, who Ghana Chief Asks Meeting WASHINGTON (R) - President John F. Kennedy and President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana will confer at the White House Wed- nesday. The meeting, announced in both. countries yesterday, was request- ed by Nkrumah. "It will be the first- time these two chiefs of state have met," White House Press Secretary Pierre - Salinger said. "Their dis- cussions will be broad in scope, without a fixed agenda.' rapidly is gaining stature as a go between in negotiations to end the long Algerian rebellion, the sources said. The informants, who have close contacts with rebel headquarters in Tunis, Tunisia, outlined Bour- guiba's plan this way: Abbas would have a cabinet composed of two Algerians and two Frenchmen. The latter would not be residents of Algeria. The provisional government would rule for four years, during which time the French army would withdraw all its troops. Then, a plebiscite along lines de Gaulle suggested in 1959 would give Algeria's nine million Mos- lems and one million European settlers opportunity to vote for in- dependence or to remain a part of France.,. If the plebiscite resulted in a, vote for independence, as expect- ed, Frenchmen living in Algeria. would be given three alternatives: 1) Algerian citizenship with full political and economic rights; 2) Residence in Algeria as French citizens but with the guaranty of the same economic" rights and privileges as Algerians; 3) Depar- ture from Algeria. Bourguiba's plan envisions the vast Sahara petroleum concession remaining under French owner- ship. But profits would be split 50-50 with the Algerian govern- ment, a formula similar to con- cessions in Iraq and Saudi Arabia. FOREST EVASHEVSKI ... appointed to corps MERIWETHER: Foresee Confirmation Of Kennedy Nominee r sue. . Congratulate Your Friends With: Cards from n U . . rundage LbI II 304 S. State ANYONEO FOR COTTON KNIT? WASHINGTON (P) - President John F. Kennedy appears likely to, win one of his touchiest political tussles so far with Senate confir- mation next week of his nomina- tion of Charles M. Meriwether as a director of the Export-Import Bank. Meriwether, Alabama state fi- nance director, is an avowed seg- regationist. His selection by Ken- nedy for the bank post has been received with a noticeable lack of enthusiasm, if not open opposi- tion, by a number of Democratic senators who vigorously back the President's legislative program. Meriwether denied in testimony before the Senate banking com- mittee that he is anti-Negro, anti- Semetic or anti-Catholic. He de- nied any affiliation with the Ku Klux Klan. He said he would not let his segregationist views influence any decision on loans to African or Asian countries. Around the Senate the general supposition is that the Meriweth- er appointment was designed to please Gov. John Patterson of Ala- bama. Patterson was the first southern governor to come out for Kennedy for the 1960 Democratic presidential nomination. A frican Exiles Boo Verwoerd LONDON (A) - One hundred South African political exiles booed and hissed Prime Minister Hend- rik Verwoerd of South Africa yes- terday as he arrived for a meet- ing of British Commonwealth leaders. British police put into ef- fect one of the biggest security operations since Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's 1956 visit. It was the first time in 34 years Verwoerd had left his homeland. He has announced his determina- tion to maintain his country's ra- cist policies and still keep it in the commonwealth. Asks Unified Missile Plan WASHINGTON (R) - The De- fense Department was told by the House Appropriations Committee recently to put its missile base program under the direction of one person. To end what it termed divided responsibility, the committee said there should be "a single head responsible directly to the Chief of Staff and the Secretary of the Air Force." Such action, the committee said, following an investigation of the program, would remove a present threat to "the well being of the entire system." Meriwether manager Patterson's 1958 campaign. He has been serv- ing since under Patterson as state finance director. Senators Lister Hill and John Sparkman, Alabama Democrats, are understood not to have been consulted in advance about the appointment. However, Sparkman voted for the nominee when the banking committee gave him 5-4 approval Thursday. World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-A second Po- laris submarine will move silently into undersea position within rocket range of Russia within a few weeks, United States officials have announced. This will double the number (from 16 to 32) of 1,200-mile range, hydrogen-tipped missiles set to blast Russian targets if the Soviet Union launched war. * * * HAVANA-Anti-Castro terror- ists yesterday fired into a crowd at ceremonies marking the first anniversary of the explosion of] the French munitions ship La Coubre in Havana Bay. At least eight persons were wounded, five seriously. Police said the terrorists, who opened fire from a speeding taxicab, escaped, but the cab's license plate num- ber had'been noted and a search was under way. * 0 0 VIENTIANE -- Meo tribesmen shot down a Soviet Ilyshin trans- port plane taking part in a mas- sive munitions airlift to leftist Pathet Lao rebels last month, the government said today. Information Minister Bouavan Norasing told newsmen the twin- engine plane crashed Feb. 17 near Ban Na Thong, about 100 miles north of Vientiane. It was the first plane reported shot down by anti- Pathet Lao forces. The Meo tribesmen, who consis- tently have resisted rebel troops, learned neither the nationality of the crewmen nor their fate, Boua- van said. * * * SANTIAGO -- Chile's political coalition of the Communists and pro-Castro leftists challenges the conservative government today in a congressional election neutral observers call the most important in the nation's history. Voters will decide between the anti-inflation austerity policies of pro-United States President Jorge Alessandri and his opponents' pro- gran of leftist economic planning and closer ties with the Com- munist bloc. Corps Relative Set To Head Unit Without Pay College Plans Credit For Youths in Corps WASHINGTON (P) - President John F. Kennedy announced yes- terday that his brother-in-law, R. Sargent Shriver of Chicago, will serve without pay as director of the peace corps set up on a tem- porary basis. Just previous to Shriver's ap- pointment, Fairleigh Dickinson University announced that stu- dents joining the peace corps will be given credits toward their de- grees. Peter Sammartino, president of the university, also said a limited number of peace corps students will be aided with $200 grants. Shriver called for an inter- national' service free from red tape, propaganda and "religious proselytizing." Asks Cooperation "This must be a cooperative ven- ture of the whole American people," said Shriver, who will quit his post as assistant manager of Chicago's Merchandise Mart to become the unpaid director of the new agency. His report, made public by the White House today, was the study which prompted Kennedy's deci- sion to launch the peace corps on a temporary pilot basis immediate- ly while awaiting action by Con- gress to establish it by law. Gordon Boyce of Putney, Vt., President of the Experiment in International Living, who will de- velop the program to bring private agencies into the peace corps ac- tivities. While there will -be no general age limit or restriction as to sex, some projects will require mature persons and some will be open only to men or to women, Shriver said. He added: No Draft Exemption "There should be no draft exemption because of peace corps service. In most cases service in the corps will probably be con- sidered a ground for temporary deferment." Among those named to posts in the corps in yesterday's White House announcement were: Thomas H. E. Quimby of East Lansing, business executive and former admissions officer at Har- vard University, who yesterday re- signed as Michigan Democratic national committeeman, Forest Evashevski, University of Iowa athletic director and former football coach, who will be a con- sultant on the' training program. Germans Plan Peace Corps COLOGNE, Germany ()-West Germany will establish a peace corps to aid underdeveloped na- tions, along the lines of the Unit- ed States peace corps proposed by President John F. Kennedy, For- eign Minister Henrich Von Bren- tano said yesterday. Von Brentano said in a televi- sion interview the government has canvassed about 1,000 young German technicians, engineers, doctors and teachers on volunteer- ing for work in underdeveloped nations. He said the government's query generally had met with favorable response. teetrii ac-oe r COATS CUM LAUDE . . a wonderful, wonderful collection of they're terrific match-mates in stripes and solids spring coats from S Fashion favors flat knits and it's the wise girl who chooses our very own cotton knit coordinates. Freshly styled striped tops mate with very fully-lined solid bottoms.., in blossom colors. Sizes 5-15. stripe cardigan jacket ., . 1 0.98 solid Capri pants .....,. 9.98 stripe belted blouse ..-.... 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