18, 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY VAIMV- I YAl f;liiK' Rusk Urge. O~f Top s Withdrawal from Laos CONGRESSIONAL ACTION: House Urges OAS Sanctions for Cuba -A? Wirephoto KENNEDY AND THE BUSHY HATS-President John F. Kennedy only comes just above the shoul- ders of theCanadian Guards as they marched in review in Ottawa yesterday. In Canada on a goodwill trip, the President visited with Prime Minister John Diefenbaker and also addressed the joint session of the Canadian Parliament. . I k. DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER presents Show's "DON JUAN IN HELL" Fri., May 19 Dantes "INFERNO" Translation by JOHN CIARDI Thurs. and Sat. May 18, 20 8:30 P.M. First Unitarian Church Admission: Thurs. $1, Fri., Sat. $1.25 Fri. and Sat. series $2 Reductions to DAC members and groups of 10 Tickets on sale at Marshall's Book Shop 1961 DRAMA SEASON PLAYING THIS WEEK "A COMIC TRIUMPH!"-N.Y. Times 'U.S..'Ready', To Establish New Force OTTAWA (,)--President John F. Kennedy said yesterday the United States is ready to establish an internationally-controlled sea- borne nuclear missile force and to beef up allied nuclear and con- ventional forces to convince world Communism and its "grand de- signs" will be resisted. The President, in a major ad- dress to the Canadian Parliament, also bluntly told Canada it is time she joined the Organization of American States in an all-out ef- fort to secure the whole Western Hemisphere against "the en- croachment of international com- munism." Kennedy reminded the parlia- ment the United States plans to commit five-and subsequently more-Polaris atomic-missile sub- marines to the National Atlantic Treaty Organization command area, subject to allied agreement. "Beyond this," Kennedy said, "we look to the possibility of even- tually establishing a NATO sea- borne missile forces which would be truly multilateral in ownership and control." The United States, he said, in- tends to strengthen the conven- tional capability of the alliance as a "matter of highest priority." See Eichmann As 'Watchdog' JERUSALEM (M-Adolf Eich- mann was depicted yesterday as a watchdog of the Nazi death ma- chinery who blocked all escape routes and then made the Jews pay their own way to death. Deputy Prosecutor Yaakov Bar'- Or introduced 80 letters, minutes, cables and decrees designed to show that Eichmann did not neg- lect a single detail when it came to achieving the "final solution of the Jewish question"-Adolf Hit- ler's phrase for annihilation. U.S. States Requirement For Peace Russia Asks SEATO To Renounce Pledge By The Associated Press GENEVA - Secretary of State Dean Rusk yesterday demanded the withdrawal of all military forces from Laos and charged the Communists are violating the ceasefire there. And Russia demanded that the Southeast Asia Treaty Organiza- tion renounce its support of the Royal Laotian government, and they too called for a withdrawal within 30 days of the peace settle- ment. Meanwhile, in Ban Namone, after four days of bickering, rebel and government negotiators agreed to discuss forming a coalition gov- ernment for Laos and a joint mili- tary committee to help supervise the cease-fire. Agreement Important The agreement, first of any importance since the talks opened Sunday, could clear the way for selection of a unified delegation to represent all Laos at the 14- nation conference in Geneva. At the Geneva talks, the Unit- ed States and Russia both en- visioned a neutral policy for Laos and evacuation of all foreign troops to end the isolated nation's role as a pawn in the East-West cold war. Rusk promised that all Ameri- can troops would pull out of Laos if foreign Communist forces ad- vising the pro-Communist Pathet Lao rebels also would leave. Air-Lift Supplies Meanwhile, a dispatch in Prav- da, the Communist Party news- paper in Moscow, for the first time admitted Soviet planes were airlifting supplies to pro-Commu- nist forces in Laos. In Laos, pro-Communist Path- et Lao rebel negotiators won their main demand-that top priority in future discussions be given to formation of a coalition govern- ment rather than military mat- ters. The Royal government, how- ever, won agreement to its chief demand that a joint military group be formed to work with the three- nation international control com- mission in checking on the cease- fire. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON ()--The House, by a 401-2 vote, passed a resolu- tion yesterday urging the Organi- zation of American States to im- pose economic sanctions on Cuba. The resolution, which goes to the Senate, describes the Cuba of Prime Minister Fidel Castro as "a base and staging area for Commu- nist subversive activity through- out the hemisphere." Supporters of federal aid to ed- ucation quashed two attempts in the Senate to revise President John F. Kennedy's $2.55 billion school bill. By lopsided votes, the Senate defeated a Southern amendment to protect segregated school dis- tricts and a substitute bill to re- vamp the administration program. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedyasked Congress to help the Justice Department go after hoodlums and racketeers who "have become so rich and so pow- erful that they have outgrown lo- cal authorities." Urging passage of a series of bills aimed at breaking up "vicious and dangerous criminal combina- tions," Kennedy said "only the federal government can curtail the flow of funds which permit the kingpins to live far from the National Roundup ] scene," beyond the reach of local' officials. In a hurry-up move to keep the Federal Housing Authority from running out of home loan insur- ance, the Senate Banking Com- mittee voted unanimously for a $1 billion increase in the agency's $37.5 billion ceiling. Make Plans, For Meeting By The Associated Press VIENNA - Preparations were well under way last night for an informal summit meeting early next month-possibly June 2 - between President John F. Ken- nedy and Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev here. Preparatory work began after the Austrian chancellery an- nounced it gave a "positive reply" to an American inquiry whether Vienna could host the meeting. In Canada Kennedy moved ahead with plans for the meeting by giving advance notice to sena- tors and to allies in friendly capi- tals. Informed sources said Kennedy and Khrushchev have reached agreement on a brief and informal get together but final details re- main to be worked out. The ARAB CLUB presents its annual SRA BIAN NIG H' " ^ . (semi-formal) fJ featuring I Q Princess Yasmina (Algeria Arabic Dancer) Oriental Music & Songs-Egyptian Dance Dabken Lebanese Folk Dance Clarence Byrd and his Quartet Friday, May 19, at the American Legion 1035 S. Main Street FOR TICKETS - Call NO 2-9607 or NO 3-9862 or the INTERNATIONAL CENTER or the AMERICAN LEGION Admission $1.50 8:30 P.M. Meanwhile, the Committee - working on Kennedy's $4.79 bil- lion general housing bill-approved two key provisions he recom- mended: 1) New government-insured 40- year, no-down-payment mortgages designed to help moderate in- come families. 2) Home improvement loans to run as high as $10,000 with ar25- Year maximum repayment period, And to speed up highway con- struction, Kennedy ordered the release of $818 million of federal funds that would not normally have become available until July 1. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON -- Theodore Kuss, a key designer of the off- shore radartower that collapsed last January, said yesterday he was surprised it stood up so long. Kuss told the Senate Preparedness Subcommittee he had considered it unsafe weeks before it toppled into the Atlantic off New Jersey. WASHINGTON - There has been no involvement of United States troops in the Korean re- volt, the government said yester- day. WASHINGTON - The United States yesterday announced $338 million in new credits for Brazil plus a rescheduling of other debts totaling $305 million. -i I * WASHINGTON - The House yesterday passed and sent to the Senate a bill to cut from $500 to $100 the amount of duty-freej goods a United States tourist may bring back from abroad. Miehifish and Michifins Present international Academy of Aquatic Art * WATER SHOW * Friday and Saturday, May 19 and 20 at 8 P.M. WOMEN'S SWIMMING POOL Tickets available at Women's Pool, Barbour Gym, Michigan Union. ADMISSION $1.00 See the Following in Action: California Surfins Michigan Varsity Divers Beulah Gundling -- Pan-American Champion Sensational Canadian Girl's Swimming Group N 7 FAYE EMERSON JOHN BARAGREY in "THE MARRIAGE-GO-ROUND" A Comedy Dedicated to the Proposition with LYNNE FORRESTER and STEPHEN ELLIOTT Evenings through Saturday at 8:30 P.M. Matinees Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 P.M. Box Office Daily 10 A.M.--Curtain Time GOOD SEATS FOR ALL PERFORMANCES SEASON TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE MUNION says: a' Litj u tn c~L th( III Traditional tables with checker table cloths and candles mI 11