CHIGAN DAILY W age Stand SEA ATO ST RAT EGY: Reaffirmed Call Stand on Laos 'Stroi OB B A N G K O K , T h a ila n d MP - U n it- r e c e t h c r t c l s a . B u h e T e U i d B Officalsed States Admiral Harry D. Felt reached the critical stage. But he The United 'hsnermrpilthailand (a- n said he does not believe a danger- in nmn worth WASHINGTON () - The John F. Kennedy administration said yesterday that despite reports of compromise it is standing by its proposal pending in the House t6 increase the $1 an hour minimum wage to $1.25 and boost coverage by 4.3 million workers. Rep. William H. Ayres (R-Ohio) said earlier that Kennedy had-ac- cepted. a key section of a more moderate minimum wage bill to avoid a crushing defeat in the House. As the House started to take p the legislation, Secretary of La- bor Arthur J. Goldberg issued the following statement: "Speaking for the administra- tion, I want to make it perfectly clear that the administration has not accepted the Kitchin-Ayres minimum wage bill or any part of it. "The administration is standing by the bill reported by the House Education and Labor Committee which substantially embodies the administration's minimum wage proposals made to the Congress." Sponsors of the proposed sub- stitute bill are Reps. Ayres and A. Paul Kitchin (D-NC). Pupils Boycott Against Ouster Of Principal SAVANNAH MP)-Negro pupils boycotted one high school yester- day and hiked absenteeism at two others in a dispute involving dis- missal of a principal Who report- edly supported a drive for Negro voter registration. Nearly 1,000 pupils remained absent from the Sol C. Johnson High School in suburban Thun- derbolt following the ouster of Al- florance Cheatham, the principal. About 200 pickets assembled in front of Thompkins High School and Beach High School in an ef- fort to spread the boycott. Police dispersed the pickets and ordered that picketing be confined to pairs of students who would not block school entrances. Savannah Superintendent of Education E. Leon McCormack said Cheatham had been notified that his contract would not be renewed for the term starting in September. He said the principal then requested his immediate re- lease and this was granted. No reason was given for failure to re- new Cheatham's contract. Student leaders at Johnson High School said they believed Cheath- am was dismissed because he had supported the Negro voter regis- tration drive. Thompkins High reported normal attendance. At Beach High School, however, 103 of the 1,000 students enrolled were absent. World News Roundup By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS -- United States Ambasador Adlai E. Ste'v- enson and Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei A. Gromyko met yes- terday apparently in another ef- fort to reach agreement on how to resume long deadlocked East- West disarmament negotiations. * di * LONDON-Prime Minister Har- old Macmillan last night denounc- ed South Africa's racial policies as "abhorrent to the ideals to which mankind is struggling in this century." * , SEOUL-Hurling stones, anti- government demonstrators battled police near Premier John M.. Chang's residence last night in the first major clash since the down- fall of Syngman Rhee regime last April. PARIS-The peace negotiations between France and the Algerian rebel government at Evian-Les- Bains will not take place before April 5, Information Minister Louis Terrenoire announced after :a cabinet meeting yesterday. IF CLASSIC SADDLE LOAFER Black or Brown 1, Rhode Island Approves Vote PROVIDENCE (A) -- Rhode Is- land yesterday became the 36th state to ratify the resolution giv- ing residents of the District of Columbia the right to vote. A total of 38 states are needed to make the measure, effective, and at least three other states are ex- pected to act in the next few days. The action in Rhode Island came in the 42nd day of the pres- ent General Assembly session. The resolution was passed quickly by both the state Senate and House after having been in committee files for several weeks. It does not need the governor's signature. Moccasin Center casw for hand-sewn* als Ha BIG c u I DANCING IN A NIGHTCLUB ATMOSPHERE tim I I I 11