THE MICHIGAN DAILY [ome Requests Embargo )L Arms Shipments -AP Wirephoto LAOTIAN PARLEY-Leuam Insisiengmay, right, chief of the western-backed royal Laotion delegation to the Geneva conference 'has said he would boycott the meeting because the pro-Communist Pathet Lao and representatives of Prince Souvanna Phouma's self-styled neutralists were also Iegotiators DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER presents Shaw's "DON JUAN IN HELL" Wed. & Fri., May 17, 19 Dan e's "INFERNO" Translation by JOHN CIARDI Thurs. & Sat.'May 18, 20 8:30 P.M. First Unitarian Church I 9 Admission: Wed., Thurs. $1, Fri., Sat. $1.25 Series: Wed. & Thurs. $1.75, Fri. & Sot. $2.00 Reductions to DAC members & groups of 10 Tickets on sale at Marshall's Book Shop never enough Cw ±02 -C~~Z. E QCalionia COBB . N & 2 S- Strip Toes $59 CALl FOR N 1A C y . r4 Reopen Talks VIENTIANE, Laos (P)-- Gov- ernment and rebel negotiators re- opened talks yesterday in an ef- fort to get a unified delegation to the Geneva conference. The talks, recessed Monday, have stumbled over disagreement on whether to give top priority to cease-fire guarantees or forma- tion of a coalition government that would appoint a delegation to represent all Laos at Geneva. Informed sources said Western diplomats failed to convince Dep-' uty Premier Gen. Phoumi Nosavan he should order his royal delega- tion to attend the conference. He balked because the pro-Commun- ist Pathet Lao rebel, representa- tives were seated at Geneva as equals of the government delega- tidn. Phoumi Adamant Informed sources described Phoumi as adamantl in his refusal to order royal representatives to attend the Geneva conference as long as the rebel delegation is seated. United States ambassado~ Win- trhop Brown met with Phoumi several times. Phoumi was des- cribed as hurt and angry because of the United States decision to accept a compromise to permit the Pathet Lao to be seated at Geneva. Some Laotian observers inter- preted United States acceptan ;e of the Pathet Lao delegation as the latest in a series of diplomatic withdrawals. Tin-Rooted School The Laotians' efforts to settle their own problems will be made again in a tin-roofed schoolhouse in the village ofVBan Namone, 75 miles north of Vientiane. Some diplomatic sources said the opening of the Geneva con- ference may stimulate the Ban Namone negatiators to come to terms. Also, King Savang Vathana now is in Vientiane for consul- tation on the talks. The government has modified its demand that cease-fire details be worked out before political talks begin and further adjustments are likely. Conference Boycotted By Royalists Refuse To Attend Talks with Pathet Lao GENEVA VP)-Britain's Foreign Secretary Lord David Home called last night on the United States and the Soviet Union to cease supplying arms to warring groups in Laos. His appeal made as an interna- tional conference on Laos opened here, was followed by an attack on United States Vice-President Lyn- don Johnson by ChineseCCommu- nist Foreign Minister Chen Yi. The Red Chinese delegate accused Johnson of plotting war in South- east Asia. The conference itself opened without the representatives of Pre- mier Boun Oum's pro-Western Royal Laotian government, who refused to attend because the Communist-led Pathet Lao was granted a seat at the negotiating table. Home proposed that an embargo on the shipment of arms to Laos be policed by international in- spectors. Refrain from Mention He refrained from mentioning either the Americans or the Rus- sians, by name but stressed that one of the great needs in the Lao- tian crisis was to shut off the flow of weapons to that jungle king- dom. The United States has insisted that it shipped arms to the Roy- al Laotian government to preient that regime from being brought down by Communist-led Pathet Lao rebels supported by North Viet Nam. Home, Chen Yi and Prince Norodom Sihanouk, Cambodian chief of state, all proposed the es- tablishment of a neutral Laos as the delayed sessions got under- way. Proposes Program The conference, which convened after four days late-heard Home propose a four point program aim- ed at bolstering theeonmyof Laos and removing the landlocked Southeast Asion state from the spheres of either of the world's two power groupings. World News SRoundup By The Associated Press GENEVA-The neutralist chief of Cambodia, Prince Norodom Si- hanouk, last night began a new effort to endythecRoyal Laotian government's boycott of the Laos peace talks. * * UNITED NATIONS-The UN commission for the unification and rehabilitation of Korea sent word from Seoul yesterday that its staff had asked for a 24-hour guard of military police after the declara- tion of martial law in South Ko- rea. * * * WASHINGTON - The Senate yesterday ratified a treaty under which the United States hopes to put an end to the use of Brazil as a haven for fugitives from this country's justice. By LYNN HEINZERLING Associated Press Staff writer LEOPOLDVILLE UP) - The greatest single improvement in the scenery of Leopoldville in re-1 cent months is the disappearance' of the Congolese Army from the streets.a The ragtag military mob which roamed the streets and the coun- tryside last year, terrorizing whites1 and blacks alike, has become re- spectable. Maj. Gen. Joseph Mo- butu, the commander, has restored a large measure of discipline and the effect is startling. Soldiers who were committingj all sorts of high-handed outrages 10 months ago are now polite, neatly dressed and reserved. Mo- torists who give a soldier a lift often are astonished to see himj draw to attention upon leaving1 the car and voice his thanks. -No Gun You can walk the streets of the capital all day without seeing a1 sub-machine gun except in the hands of a UN soldier. Some diplomats who felt last year the only hope for the Congot was in disarming the army say to- day it could become the most powerful single force for forging and preserving the unity of the country.1 The army totals 25,000 men. Ofl these, Mobutu controls perhaps 17,000. Various units are on active duty in remote parts of the coun- try, but a large part of the army now spends most of its time in barracks and on the training1 grounds. About 8,000 men are in the Stanleyville area under Gen. Vic- tor Lundula, the- onetime army nurse's aid who has declared his allegiance to Communist-backed Antoine Gizenga. Legal Head Gizenga claims to be the legal head of the Congolese government and has invited the nations of the world to send their ambassa- dors to him for accreditation in- stead of to President Joseph Kas- avubu in Leopoldville. Attacks on the few white per- Discipline Restored In Congolese, Army, Secretary Sees Upturn In Economy WASHINGTON (A)-The coun- try's economy is out of the cellar, Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges said yesterday. Personal incomes rose last month to a record rate of $410.3 billion a year, and factory sales and new orders both were higher than in March. Hodges told a news conference' that rising sales and new orders in the steel and automobile in- dustries accounted for a large part of the improvement. New defense contracts helped, he said. , Hodges said sales by manufac- turers in April were four per cent higher than in March. This was still about five per cent below a year ago, he said, but new or iers rose to the year-ago rate to as- sure a continued upward trend in output. Hodges said the rise in individual incomes, pasing the March peak by $500 billion and surpassing the February rate by $4 billion, was concentrated largely in salaries and wages. It was the second straight month of advancing payrolls. GOODWILL TRIP:S Kennedy Begins Canada Vis OTTAWA (P) - President John F. Kennedy yesterday launched "It is fitting that I should come He repeated these ope his Canadian goodwill visit with a here to Canada, the oldest of our marks in French, a gestur declaration'that North America's neighbors and among the closest the French-speaking sect two neighbors must stand to- of our friends." population. gether more firmly than ever in trying to build a world of lasting \ peace. It was Kennedy's first trip out- side the United States since he - became President. He was greeted by the traditional 21-gun salute as ne left the plane. In a brief statement the Presi- dent reaffirmed United States- Canadian friendship and declared he came to Ottawa to renew the partnership which has held the two countries so closely for so many years. ,. The President will address par- liament today. He and Canadian Prime Minister John Diefenbaker will meet 2/2 .hours to. review ° world problems. They are expected to give special attention to aid s $ for underdeveloped countries - including those of Latin America --AP W -rand totherdisposal of surplus WELCOME CEREMONIES -- Canadian Prime Minister agricultural.products- Diefenbaker welcomes Kennedy on his first visit to Canad The Cuban problem also is slat- being elected. ed for discussion.____________________________ Kennedy, in noting that this is his first trip away from the United States since he took office TODAY'S SPECIAL observed: sons remaining in Stanleyville have largely ceased. But there are only about 150 left 'out of 6,300 who were there in 1959. They keep the brewery and the tobacco fac- tory and a few stores going. Mobutu and Lundula have been negotiating through various emis- saries. It is not inconceivable that they could one day reach an agree- ment which would accomplish what the politicians have failed to do. President Chief Under the new constitution drafted at Coquilhatville, the pres- ident of the federal government is supreme chief of the army and appoints its top officers. It re- mains to be seen whether Gizen- ga will agree to attend the com- ing parliamentary session sum- moned by Kasavubu to consider the new constitution. The entire officer corps con- sists of men who had no higher rank than sergeant only a year ago. Western military men would like to see some of the Congolese officers sent to Western Europe, the United States or Canada for training. The Kasavubu government is well aware of the threats made to assist the Gizenga regime in Stan- leyville with military help. These have come from the Soviet bloc and from the Casablanca group of African nations, notably Presi- dent Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana. Some of Kasavubu's ministers would like to see the army ex- panded to 50,000 men. COEDS: the 1961 flattering, new hair-dos are in our window See them at your convenienceII -- No appointments needed -- The D scola Barbers near Michigan Theatre 11 I YET PRETTY ENOUGH FOR DRESS-UP! This side pleated sleeve- less beauty. We show it in Dacron Polyester and of voile in gay pastel col- ors. I 1 48. till AA4 } s h i t3j F1 CS:'L , } VAi.i4i",..AL l J1 This is the final .week in' which to take advantage of ..J t "I i Y. n x it ¢ t. r; . S l ::~' $u + } ,Sy: yr rr::Sx'' . at 14.95 SIZES 10-18 Other Dresses from 10.98 Sizes 5-15, 8-44, 10/2 to 261, Tall 10-18 I I