PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JUNE 29 IRAQ ,. E E G TT ,M C I A N D I YT T E D V J h JL vVl~i'i ~r tla a Erhard Expresses Hopes for Reducing East-West Tensions ... ............r ...................... . . . . ...............,. .... . .. .........,..a....,,.........e..,... DAILY OFIIL BULLETIN ... h..... . .................. . . . ......r...... . a .o. v .....4 . ..,.. . BONN, Germany () - Chan-; cellor Ludwig Erhard said he isI ready to meet with Soviet leaders1 at any time here or in Moscow for talks on German problems. Renewed interest in the possi- bility of such talks has developed as a result of declining East-West, tensions in Europe, currently dra- matized by French President Charles de Gaulle's visit to the Soviet Union. Erhard told The Associated Press in the course of an infor- mal discussion of defense and foreign policy problems that So- viet leaders have a standing in- vitation to visit West Germany. Reunification Erhard did not specify what problems he would like to take up with Soviet leaders, but there is no doubttreunification would be at the top of the list. The chancellor praised De Gaulle's handling of this issue during his mission to Moscow. He said he was not concerned about the French president's trip. 'At my last talk with De Gaulle in February," Erhard said. "his trip to Moscow was already de-, cided on. He said then that he would under all circumstances re- present the German point of view in the sense and to the extent that he considers reunification in- dispensable if peace and security are to return to Europe. "We are ready to negotiate about everything and to find a formula," Erhard said. "Whether it takes more or less time seems to me not so important as to maintain that the situation on the first of July will also have changed for us because of what the French have done in pulling out of NATO. "Naturally we want to do this in a way that doesn't break any porcelain." "He also said that Russia must be interested in seeing on its wes- tern flank-that is, in Europe- not a restless but a pacified Eu- rope. DeGaulle Helps "DeGaulle in this has done us good service." On other major issues covered during the discussion the chancel- lor made these points: * He opposes any major with- drawals of U.S. troops from West' Germany on the ground that hea- vy cutbacks could increase the danger of nuclear war and under- mine the sense of security of the German people., * He wants modification of the agreement under which West Germany buys arms in the United States to offset American dollar expenditures for maintaining six divisions in West Germany. The agreement should be changed, Er- hard said, to allow West Germany to buy peaceful space equipment as well as arms for this purpose. French Troops * Some transitional arrange- ment will have to be made to cover French troops remaining in West Germany after they are for- mally separated from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization July 1. Erhard said he wants the French troops to stay but a new military mission and new legal ba- sis justifying their presence has not been negotiated with France. * Reunification of Gernany is essential to secure peace and sta- bility in Europe, but this cannot be obtained through the efforts of Germans alone. It is also a res- ponsibility of the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union. Only the Soviet Union has re- fused reunification, Erhard said, so the key to achieving it lies in Moscow. Final Flight Marks End. Of Era for Willow Run The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. TUESDAY, JUNE 28 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar -- "Developing Managerial Skills in the Technical Man": Michigan Un- ion, 8:30 A.M. American Chemical Society Fluorine Symposium - Auditorium E, Physics- Astronomy Buildling, 9:00 A.M. Botany Seminar -- Professor J. B. Hanson, University of Illinois, "Con- traction and Ion Accumulation by Corn Mitochondra", 4:15 P.M., 1139 Natural Science Building. Center for Programmed Learning for Business Clinic - "Advanced Program- ming": Michigan Union, 8:00 A.M. General Notices Box Office Open for season sales and individual tickets for University Play- ers Playbill '66. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 12:30-5:00. Coming Wednesday this week-Shakespeare's THE WIN- TER'S TALE. Doctoral Examination for: Lester"An- drew Ettlinger, Physics; thesis: "The Secondary Maximum in Pion-Proton Elastic Scattering from 2.5 GeV/c to 6.0 Gev/c," Tuesday. June 28, Room 629 Physics-Astronomy Building, at 2 P.M., Chairman: C. T. Coffin. Doctoral Examination for: Donald Ralph Rothschild, Electrical:Engineer- ing; thesis: "Design of Signals to Achieve Minimum Amplitude Varia- tions," Wednesday, June 29, Room 2072 East Engineering, at 10 A.M., Chair- man: A. B. Macnee. Doctoral Examination for: Walter Joseph Ziemba, Education; thesis: "Changes in the Policies and Proce- dures of the Accrediting Process of the Commission on Colleges and Univer- sities of the North Central Associaton of Colleges and Secondary Schools, 1909-1958," Wednesday, June 29, Semi- nar Room at 1100 South University, at 2 P.M. Chairman: J. S. Brubacher. Doctoral Examination for: Carl Wil- helm Reinhold de Boor, Mathematics; thesis: "The Method of Projections as Applied to the Numerical Solution of Two Point Boundary Value Problems," Wednesday, June 29, Room 336 West Engineering, at 3 P.M., Chairman, R. C. F. Bartels, Foreign Visitors Following are the .foreign visitors programmed through the International Center who will be on campus this week on the dates indicated. Program arrangements are being made by Mrs. Clifford R. Miller, International Cen- ter, 764-2148. Mr. Alexander Matejko. June 1-July 31, 1966-Department of Sociology, Uni- versity of North Carolina (from Po- land). Mr. Odinge Odera. June 20-July 22, 1966-Editor,gEast Africa Journal, East Africa Institute of Social and Cultural Affairs, Kenya, Africa. Mrs. Odinge Odera. June 20-July 22, 1966-Social Welfare Nurse, Kisumu Municipality, Kenya, Africa. Dr. Mohammed Abdel Aziz Rizk. June 25-July 22, 1966-Senior Lecturer, Fac- ulty of Medicine, Alexandria Univer- sity, Egypt. Dr. Noman Ahmed Sallam. June 25- July 22, 1966-Assistant Professor, Fac- ulty of Medicine, Alexandria Univer- sity, Egypt. Mr. Numa Marquez. June 29-July 2, 1966-Secretary General of the Accion Democratica Party of Maracaibo; De- puty of the National Congress; Colum- nist for "Panorama" and "La Repub- lica", Maracaibo, Venezuela. Mr. B. J. Williamson. June 30-July 2, 1966-Australian graduate student now at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Ekco Containers, Inc., Wheeling, Il. -2 accountants. Degree in Acctg., one for cost accounting, 2nd for gen. ac- counting. 1-5 yrs. exper. in public acetg. or mfg. pref. Local Firm-Programmer. 1 yr. ex- per, or demonstrated proficiency. Able to work with gen. supv.. Dev., eval. and revise programs. Immed. opening. Burroughs Wellcome & Co., Tucka- hoe, N.Y.-Med.'Sales Repres. to call on doctors, pharmacists, hospitals, etc. Degree in pharm., biol. or chem. sci- ences pref. or Lib. Arts with pharm., biol., chem bkgd. No exper. req. ORGAN IZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to official- ly recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. * * * Michigan Christian Fellowship, lec- ture- discussion (informal), Tuesday, June 28, 1966, 7:30 P.M., 3RD Union. Hillel Mixer, Thursday, June 30, 8 P.M. at Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill Street. For RESULTS Read and Use Daily Classifieds Union Carbide Corp., Nuclear Div., Oak Ridge, Tenn. - Oceanographer. M.S. orrPh.D. for Isotopes Div. Dev. & apply radio & stable isotopes to oce- anographical purposes. Some exper. Applic. avail. at Bureau. Village of Medina, Medina, N.Y.-Vil- lage Manager.Degree in related field. Some exper. pref. Small community needs capable man. For further info., please call 764-7460 General Div., Bureau of Appoints, 3200 SAB. 4 DETROIT () - A Boeing 727 jet marked the final airline chap- ter at Detroit's Willow Run Air- port when it took off for Chicago shortly after midnight Friday. With the transfer of United Air; Lines and three feeder airlines' from Willow Run to Metropolitan Airport last weekend, the Willow Run facility ended a 20-year ca- reer as one of the nation's major passenger ports. It was here that one-time paci- fist Henry Ford responded to his country's call in World War II and almost overnight built what was at one point the largest de- fense plant in the nation. The production goal was "a bomber an hour." Bomber Built Critics had said complex bomb- ers couldn't be built the same way and in the same numbers as the Model A automobile. But Ford, who is said to have declared "that's the end of air- planes" after once witnessing a crash, confounded them all. Willow Run, a $100 million in- stallation, employed 42,000 work- ers at one time and turned out 8,685 Liberators in three years. "If this plant has hastened the end of the war, it has served its purpose," said Henry Ford II. "It is as expendable as a battleship and no more expensive." United, Lake Central, North Central and Mohawk airlines will be joining American, Delta, North- west Orient, Trans World, Pan American, BOAC and Allegheny at Detroit Metro, New Concourse UAL and the three feeders will share a new $1.8 million con- course, part of a new $5.4 million second terminal, Willow Run, originally built for the production of B24 bombers in World War II, is owned by the University. The field was purchas- ed as surplus property for $1, un- der condition that its airfield op- eration remains active. The Federal Aviation Agency said it will continue to fulfill a vital need for general aviation because of its location in the mid- dle of a vast industrial complex. 0 1 - I -4 1 . . ...... . ...... P' P %% yu1,, Ib t UP, UP AND AWAY MISS J She's bouncing with // .4 fashion entirely in tune with fun's frequency Racisy, paceycotton corduroy casuais with go-togetherness unlimited.. from: or corcuroy-dloset collection. Sweater sizes SM,L, Pant sizes 5-15. A. Orlonacrylic chrrry poor girl. 7.00 Green flip skirt. Sizes 5 to 13. 8:00 B- O pr ined. . .demi-lit jacket plus slim skirt. Sizes 5 to 1B. 25.00 C. Tur-neck r ni krit sw'eater. Plum, navy. 6.00 Plum printed jean. 7.00 / I- A SINCE 1 883 NEW and USED TEXTBOOKS and SUPPLIES for all University courses for the Summer Term WAHR'S University Bookstore ; jy k. ' >a w ' , i 3ip"' }° E . k r " ! ,1 . _ i } I ( '\ r p ) ; , C fir D. Pullover. Grape powder burgundy/beige or navy, loden/navy, brown/ yellow go avy. 5.50 Jean. 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