THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THRRES T H U R S D A Y , J U L Y , 1 9 6 6 T ~ i ~ M I C I G NA I YP E T H E Sees Hanoi Spirits Fall; Mayor Vows INDONESIAN COUP: More Jobs Sukarno Faces Power Loss; ;,. U.S. Ai r Strikes Continue By the Associated Press Undersecretary of State George W. Ball said yesterday that re- cent diplomatic reports show a growing war-weariness in North Viet Nam--but he refused to pre- dict when Hanoi might decide to seek peace. "I don't want this morning to create an overly optimistic pic- ture," Ball cautioned a news con- ference in saying information about deteriorating Communist morale has been received from foreign diplomats in North Viet+ Nam. The "prevailing attitude" in Ha- noi of discouragement about pros- pects for a military victory "is' one thing-its translation into a political decision- is another," he said. "I would not read too much into these things" and any political decision by the North Vietnamese to move toward a peaceful settle- ment "may be quite a long time off," he said. Committee Meanwhile, Premier Nguyen Cao Ky set up a committee of 20 gen- erals with court-martial powers to judge five other generals ac- cused of involvement in the Bud- dhist-inspired antigovernment up- rising in the northern provinces, finally qualled last month. The accused include Lt. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi, whose dis- I World News Roundupj By The Associated Press Wielding the big stick yesterday, BUCHAREST, Romania - The CHICAGO-Two major Negro Wilson routed left-wing Laborite Soviet Union and its East Euro- leaders, Dr. Martin Luther King members of Parliament demand- pean Communist bloc ended a Jr. aind Dr. J. H. Jackson, dis- ing a total British break with summit meeting yesterday with a agreed yesterday over King's plans President Johnson's Viet Nam declaration attacking U.S. policy for a civil rights rally in Chicago policies. in Viet Nam but with some of the on Sunday. * * bloc's internal problems appar- Dr. Jackson, who described his WASHINGTON-The Gemini 9 ently unresolved. 5.5-million-member National Bap- astronauts, in a tricky feat of sky The three-day secret meeting tist Convention as the nation's photograph from their spacecraft, concluded with a communique largest Negro organization, an- have provided valuable new data saying the members of the War- nounced he would not support the about one of nature's great puzzles saw Pact, the bloc's military al- rally. -the night time airglow. liance, had "a full mutual under- Informed of Dr. Jackson's de- This was reported yesterday by standing." cision, King said, "I don'tnthink the U.S. Naval Research Labora- Differences over the German Dr. Jackson speaks for one per tory in releasing photographs of problem and the extent of Soviet cent of the Negroes in this coun- the strange, dim illumination that control over pact armies seemed try." has nothing to do with starlight to remain, however, LONDON-Prime Minister Har- or moonlight. old Wilson will fly to Moscow The airglow is a blanket of lit- KYOTO, Japan-Leftist stu-. July 16 to visit a touring British up air which surrounds the earth dents attacked police last night trade 'fair and to confer with at moderately high altitudes, with large rocks and pieces of Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin mostly between 45 and 60 miles concrete near Secretary of State on world affairs, including Viet high. It is barely discernible to Dean Rusk's hotel, climaxing an Nam, Wilson's office announced the naked eye. anti-American demonstration. last night. Energy to make it shine comes Rusk had just met with For- The British leader's surprise from ultraviolet rays of the sun eign Minister Etsusabure Shiiana journey immediately was linked which are absorbed by atoms of of Japan, telling him that North speculatively with his declared in- various chemicals in the atmos- Viet Nam is beginning to feel the tention to try to get Viet Nam phere-such as oxygen, hydrogen military pressure and is no longer peace talks going. and sodium-during the day. sure of victory. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN missal March 10 as commander of the northern 1st Corps area touch- ed off the uprising. Long regard- ed as a potential politicsal rival of Ky, he professed loyalty to the government when Saigon police and troops were moved into Hue, the center of the dissidence. Air War U.S. jet pilots zipped safely through a Communist missile bar- rage, which one pilot said looked like a Fourth of July fireworks display, and blasted four missile sites and two oil depots between Hanoi and Red China's frontier. U.S. Air Force officers express- ed pleasure at the way their planes -aided by secret electronic de- vices jamming the enemy's ra- dar guidance signals-evaded the Soviet-built surface-to-air missiles known as SAM's that roared aloft in apparently record numbers over the Red River Valley. Pilots said some exploded more than a mile off target. The American counter-missile system is "one of the most signifi- cant military advances of the war," a senior officer said. For Negroes OMAHA, Neb. (/P) - Omaha Mayor A. V. Sorensen promised yesterday to move fast to find' jobs for young Negroes and pro-c vide them with some place to go for recreation. The mayor and Gov. Frank B. Morrison, after talking to pre- sumed leaders in the three nights of looting, window breaking, rock and bottle throwing, said these were the most frequently quoted# causes for the frustration which erupted into violence. N e g r o spoxesmen wouldn't promise there would be no more demonstrations, but left the im- pression they would use their in- fluence to see that officials get a chance to deliver on the promises. "It's a good idea, but we'll be- lieve it when we see it," said Clenton Banks, 29, after hearing Morrison's proposal to open a special state employment office and to have city and state officials combine in a search for ways to help Negroes upgrade their job' skills. Agrees to Cooperation Policy JAKARTA, Indonesia (P)-Presi- dent Sukarno bowed yesterday to congressional measures stripping him of most of his power. But he seized on a last-minute compromise that permits him to work with the army strongman, Lt. Gen. Suharto, in forming a new cabinet. "I want to take part in leading the nation," Sukarno told the closing session of the Provisional Peoples Consultative Congress, the nation's highest legal authority. To Serve Freedom His voice sometimes sinking al- most to a whisper, Sukarno said of the loss of his title of president for life. "I don't want to be presi- dent for life. I have no desire even to be elected president. I want to dedicate myself to the people, to the service of freedom." Loss of authority to name a cabinet and his title were among a number of measures taken by the congress against Sukarno Tuesday. At first, the congress gave Su- Before the congress acted, about' 80,000 troops were moved to po- sitions in and around Jakarta, and others were dispatched to central and eastern Java to crush any uprising that might follow the measures. Sukarno is popular in the Java regions. Under the congressional deci- sions, Sukarno remains constitu- tional president, but Suharto holds executive power until general elec- tions in 1968. harto sole power to set up the new j sources noted the compromise cabinet. But a last-minute "clari- gave Sukarno a last foothold in fication" said the spirit of the power and might permit him to order meant that Sukarno and place men loyal to him in the Suharto were to work together cabinet. Treading Carefully Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution, The ruling military-civilian chairman of the congress and a group headed by Suharto has been close associate of Suharto, indi- treading carefully in consolidating cated to newsmen, however, that its power to avoid agitating fol- Suharto would make the final lowers of the still- popular Su- decisions, karno. Suharto called the resolutions New Cabinet I The congress has ordered Su- The formation of a new cabinet, karno to give a complete expla- to be named before Aug. 17, has nation of the events that led to become the focal point in the, the abortive coup attempts by the jockeying for power. Diplomatic Communists last October. Neg~roes Demand Power in of the congress a manifestation of the desires of the Indonesian people. "We should implement the res- olutions immediately and should not wait any longer," he declared. Nasution said Indonesia was starting a new era." "The most'disappointed groups are the Communists who have been saying this congress was planning to eliminate Sukarno," he said. While dodging the onslaughts of the "flying telephone poles," AirM Force planes teamed with NavyIY.~1 I.FJ fighter-bombers to mount one of 11 the heaviest raids of the 17- (Continued from Page 1 month-old war north of the bor- der. They flew a combined to- hand struggle with the nor tal of 106 missions, a new high its sympathetic whites. C involving at least 212 planes. A had been doing all it cou spokesman said, however, it was would continue to if only I not a record day for individual groes would not do so m combat flights, alienate their helpers. Ev Ball, acting secretary of state leftist New Republic tool while Secretary Dean Rusk is on a with the cry; saying that Far East trip, was questioned at power to the exclusion of w length about the implications of certainly no answer to the1 President Johnson's statement problem." Tuesday that diplomatic reports - The next few days non indicate the Reds no longer ex- leaders made a point of ch pect military victory in South Viet the call from "Black Pow Nam. "Black Freedom." SNCCd Ball said word from foreign ob- ed "Black Power," howe servers in Hanoi "within the past much the same words as p few weeks and more particularly their only major editoria within the past few days" portrays porter, The Nation: "Jus a cumulative process of depression does the white man want? among the North Vietnamese century he urged the N about the war. stay in his place, but nov "We do have quite a clear im- the Negro says, 'all right pression," he said, "that there is just what I'll do, and I'll n a change in sentiment not only a better place to be'-he is within the Hanoi government, but a 'black nationalist.' it is reflected in a greater war- "The difference betwee weariness among the people and a "The ditfyn between greater concern that the bright gro's 'staying in his pla hopes that they had been led to black nationalism' is only a have earlier have been frustrat- of temper: the former is ,, Ithe latter is angry. He said this is a natural reac- I "As for SNCC's refusal to Rights March a H I LLEL presents John Willertz t) rth and ongress tld and the Ne- uch to ven the k issue "black hites is Negro's n-SNCC hanging wer" to defend- ver, in robably al sup- t what ?For a egro to w when , that's make it s called a Ne- ce' and degree servile, o suffer Kissick put it, "We can't afford to put all our effort into one sin- gle goal anymore like we did in the march on Washington or in the Washington Rights Confer- ence. Internal policy maneuvering has nullified the new civil rights act completely. We get a law and then it doesn't do us any good. "It's just like they didn't want us to talk about the Viet Nam war at the civil rights conference. But you can't divorce it from the thought pattern. If we're going to be first-class citizens we have to be concerned with everything - we've got to be good citizens-all! the way." McKissick's latter idea was re-I jected at the Washington rights' conference, but such a statement has a good deal of relevance to Carmichael's. Negro leadership, whether or not they are willing to put it as bluntly as Carmichael, will increasingly see and talk of their problem as a total one-not just a voting law, but enforce- ment, independent registration drives and reliable Negro candi- dates, but enforcement in more than just test cases with enough economic freedom for the Negro to enjoy newly-opened facilities. Thus the struggle, too, be- comes a total one, as do some of its enunciations. Dept. of History BOOK REVIEW and DISCUSSION of THE MISSION by Hans Habe TONIGHT AT 8' HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 Hill St. Phone 482-2056 The Area's Newest Drive-in easy to reach-2 miles South a Washtenaw Rd. on Carpenter Rd Ett1aa Opt CARPENTER ROAD OPEN 7 P.M. FIRST RUN-NOW SHOWING-ALL COLOR THEY LIVE FROM SPINOUT TO CRACK UP! L g wi.AVALON Shwn _ FUNICELL0 at 8:40 12:15 FABIAN COLORt ucWILLS -ALSO-- is, of ±1 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. THURSDAY, JULY 7 Day Calendar Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview-"What Is Poetry?", "Language of the Mute Swan," and "Trace a Tale"* Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate Li- brary, 1:30 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - Glenn Wiesner, trombonist: Recital * Hall, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. General Notices Law School Admission Test: Appli- cation blanks for the Law School Ad- mission Test are available in 122 Rack- ham Bldg. The next administration of the test will be on Sat., Aug. 6 and applications must be received in Princeton, N.J., by July 23. Admission Test for Graduate Study in Business: Candidates taking the Ad- mission Test for Graduate Study in Business on Sat., July 9, are requested to report to Room 140, Business Ad- ministration Bldg. at 8:45 a.m. Satur- day. Graduate Students: Expecting to re- ceive a master's or professional degree in August 1966 must file a Diploma Application with the Recorder of the Graduate School by Fri., July 8. No student can be recommended for a de- gree unless he has filed formal appli- cation in the office of the Graduate School by that date. India Students' Association: Presents documentary films of India, Fri., July 8, 7:30 p.m., UGLI Multipurpose Rm. Placement Announcement: Upon request of the Kenya Ministry of Education two re- turned volunteers will be on the Diag today and tomorrow, July 7 & 8, in front of the Gen. Lib. from 9-5. New grads and experienced teachers are be- ing requested for Biol., Chem., Phys. Math, Geog., Hist., Gen. Scl., AB only needed, not teaching certificate. Trng. begins late summer or fall. Tests being given both days:. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: FRI., JULY 8- VD Branch of U.S. Public Health Service, Detroit-Men, all degree levels in Econ., Gen. Lib. Arts, Journ., Math, Fublic Health, for mgmt. trng. Loca- tions throughout U.S. For appointments please call 764-7460, Bureau of Ap- pointment,. WED.-THURS., JULY 13-14-- International Business Machines, Dearborn-Recent grads in all disci- plines of engineering and science for advisor positions to users of IBM com- puter systems, trng. classes and on the job. Call Bureau of Appointments for interviews, 764-7460. POSITION OPENINGS: Growth Services for Business, Inc., N.Y.-Seeking business school grads with 5 yrs. marketing exper. in grocery products and food brokers. Trng. In Canada and product mgr. post in Chi- cago, Minneapolis or N.Y. Sangamo Electric Co., Springfield, Ill.-Engrs. Project and System engr,. DesigEner in Analog and Digital Cir- cuitry and Application Engr. in sales staff. No specific exper, stated, accept- able for U.S. secret clearance. Atomic Power Development Associates, Inc., Detroit-Junior technical writer, $-3 yrs. exper. Sombined English and science or engr. background, graphic arts and reproduction methods knowl. Charles A. Binswanger, Mgmt. Con- suit., Baltimore, Md.-Interested in men bkgd. in electronic engr., phys., math, operations research, phys. chem., cer- amics and mechanical engr. Openings: Betz Lab.. Inc,-Phys. Chem., BS, knows. of surface chem. Raytheon Co-Senior Systems Engr. BS/MS in Phys. or EE plus 7-10 yrs. exper. Andrew Corp. - Mechanical Product Design Engr., BS- ME new grad. Probation Dept., 3rd Circuit, Detroit -Probation Officer Grade No. 1. De- gree in one of the social sciences. 2 yrs. in probation field or masters. United States Marine Corps Supply Activity, Phila., Pa.-Librarian (Phys. Sci. and Engr.). BA with 24 credits in Lib Sci. 4 yrs. lib. work. 2 yrs. supervisory work in Admin., Acquisi- tions, Catalog, or Reference. State of Michigan, Adrian, Mich. - Girls Homelife Supervisor II and III. BA two and four years in institution caring for dependent or maladjusted children. Application receid by July 25. Exam Aug. 27, United Cerebral Palsy of Iowa, Des Moines, Iowa-Need Executive Director, prefer egree in Special Education. Administer entire program with re- school proram for children with learn- ing disorders.} Pth in m f iri W rin Al- # I Pu UIC Health NUIn Service, Allen- tion to: town, Pa.-Public Health Supervisor, MPA preferred. Combination agency 1. The strengthening, rather with staff of 16 nurses. than the Red-anticipated collapse, * *1i ~of the political structure in South For further information please call Viet Nam, 2. High Communist 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB. military loss rates in the South, 3. The rising cost of the war in- flicted on North Viet Nam and, 4. ORGA NIZATION Evidence of American will to stay in the fight. Ball said the sooner North Viet NOTICES Nam decides to seek peace the better, from everyone's point of view. USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- Washington, meanwhile, will NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially continue to push for a peaceful recognized and registered student orga- solution, he said. nizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. more talk about civil rights action, it does not really seem so radical. The school integration decision has been the law of the land for 12 years and less than five per cent of the Negroes of the South are attending integrated schools; the civil rights act has been on the books for two years, and Negroes are still beaten when they try to buy food in public restaurants; the Voting Rights Act has been on the books for a year, and federal registrars still have not been sent to Sen. James Eastland's home county." And as even "moderate" Mc- 3 TODAY DDIAL 2-6264 -- TEKV SHOWS AT 1:15-350-6:30-8:50 Feature 9 Minutes Later %bob r iiisli DIRECT FROM ITS RESERVED FIRST TIME AT SEAT ENGAGEMENTS! POPULAR PRICES! F * * * B'nai B'rith Ilillel Foundation, Book review and discussion of "The Mis- sion" by Hans Habe, John Willertz, Dept. of History, Thurs., July 7, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill. Christian Science Organization, Tes- timony meeting, Thurs., July 7, 7:30 p.m., 3545 SAB. Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance with instruction, open to everyone, Fri., July 8, 8-11 p.m., Barbour Gym. * * * India Students' Association, Docu- mentary films of India, Fri., July 8, 7:30 p.m., UGLI Multipurpose Rm. ctzon in modern Cooling Dial 5-6290 ENDS TONIGHT "THE FUNNIEST AMERICAN COMEDY TO COME ALONG!" °--Saturday Review - - - - ------------------ -- ------ - - - - -- - Cooled by Refrigeration 4qaykIjl;m DIAL 8-6416 4 Fun Fests Daily 1 ;20-3:45- 6:25-8;50 Feature jazine 1 5 minutes later ~NAiFY 1T;wwLF SIARRINA DP HENRY FONDAROBER SHAVVRBR IRYAN 'DANA ANDREAS PERANGELI The motion picture with an immoral all its own "ONE OF THE BEST NEA-LONi IMU --Lif Mg S$5.00 DEPOSIT HOLDS RESERVED SEATS .m. I FRIDAY-- "LT. ROBIN CRUSOE, U.S.N." '.mw"mmmmmmminm m mmmmmmmm m minmmwwwwww "rrwwwmw M I I Az~avoUR- * "BLoo M I[ IF CASS E L MANFREDI-MER 'J "OG NA ZI 'YITTIA A Magna Pictures-Distinbution Corp. Retease I I I U I U I I FRIDAY and SATURDAY FOCUS-THE AMERICAN FILM DIRECTOR I I I I I Passport Pictures Application Pictures Group Pictures Wedding Pictures Available at any time Ready Quickly CALL NO 3-6966 University of Michigan SAILING CLUB Regular Meetings Every Thursday, 7:45 P.M. in 231 Angell Hall. 'a a GEORGE STEVENS a a " Ir a a a a a a aa (1953) THE American Western Starring Van Heflin, Alan Ladd, lconn Artki r Rrrnnrinncri AWilelo I ", .ww.ir......... .w 1 I